Jackson to Be Dpty Commish. WP’s Favorite Daught, Fitzsimmons 1st Woman Chief

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. By John F. Bailey. April 5, 2006: WPCNR has learned  The Department of Public Safety is expected to announce this afternoon that Inspector Daniel Jackson will be promoted Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety replacing David Chong, and  current Deputy Commissioner of Public Safety Dr. Charles Jennings will be promoted to First Deputy Commissioner, second in command to Police Commissioner Dr. Frank Straub.


The Department is also going to be reorganized into three different divisions: Community Policing, Operations and Detectives, effective today.



“Liz Smith” Moves on Up! Captain Anne Fitzsimmons, long a resident of White Plains, and Detective Gus Fazzino addressing the North Broadway Civic Association last month at George Washington School on the burglaries in the North end. She is the first female police officer promoted to Chief in Westchester County. Photo, WPCNR News Archive. 


 


Captain Anne Fitzsimmons, long time resident of White Plains will be promoted to Assistant Chief and be in command of the Community Policing Division.


 Lieutenant Edward Ignaszewski will be promoted to Inspector and command the Operations Division that will be responsible for Patrol, Traffic and Neighborhood Conditions Unit.


First Deputy Commissioner Jennings, in his new position will concentrate on strategic planning for the department to build organization capacity, and continue to supervice department technology, communications, budget and the fire bureau.


Deputy Commissioner Jackson will have responsibilty for operations, crime control strategy and the Compstat crime tracking program. Eight detective promotions will also be announced this afternoon and two department members promoted to Lieutenant.

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Council to Learn About the Budget, After Seeing It in JN. No Violation

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WPCNR Quill & Eyeshade. April 5, 2006. UPDATED 12:17 P.M. E.D.T. 12:59 P,M. E.D.T.,: Paul Wood, Executive Officer of the City of White Plains threatened to sue WPCNR moments ago  for reporting City of White Plains has now violated New York State Open Government laws twice in less than a week, based on comments from Robert Freeman of the Office of Open Government.   Mr. Freeman, based on further information on the circumstances now tells WPCNR the city is in compliance with open government.


Mr. Wood reports that for the first time the city will be charging $25 for copies of the 2006-2007 Budget Book, (said by the Budget Department not to be available in physical carryaway form until next week). It is the first time the city, in this reporter’s experience, has affixed a fee for a copy of the budget book.


On checking further with Mr. Freeman, WPCNR has learned from Mr. Freeman that the city complies with the open government law by making the book “available” only at the City Clerk office and the Public Library, the city is in compliance with open government laws. Freeman also said that the charge of $25 for a copy of the actual budget book was in compliance with state laws (25 cents copying charge per page is the state limit).  Mr. Freeman told WPCNR he thought I had said the city had not made it available, when WPCNR had explained to Mr. Freeman that the budget book was not pickupable for two weeks, and was the public entitled to a copy.


Earlier, Robert Freeman, Executive Director of the Committee on Open Government, had told WPCNR  “If the city shares information with a reporter, that is the same as any member of the public, and it should be available to anyone at the same,” Mr. Freeman speaking from his Albany office,  told WPCNR today.


Last week, the city suppressed names of the winning bidders on the Railside Avenue properties, but were persuaded to give them up when they were informed they were violating open government laws. The City Clerk’s office has published the dates for  the series of meetings on the 2006-2007 City of White Plains Budget. The meetings will go over in detail the budget expenditures and decisions detailed in The Journal News in two articles over the last five days which quote extensively from the 2006-2007 Budget book, including Mayor Delfino’s budget statement.  


WPCNR has been told by the Budget Department they will not have copies available for distribution to other media and citizens until next week. Common Council Glen Hockley and Tom Roach have told WPCNR  they did not have any discussions with the Mayor on the city budget preparation or the scope of it before they received the book. No explanation is forthcoming from City Hall as to why the books are not available for pickup by interested parties.


The Budget meeting dates are as follows:


Monday, April 10, 2006, 6 PM — Review of 2006-2007 Proposed Tax Budget with Common Council.


Monday, April 17, 2006, 6 PM — Budget Review Session with the Budget & Management Advisory Committee


Tuesday, April 18, 2006, 6 PM –Public Safety & Parking Department discussion.


Monday, April 24, 2006, 6 PM — Recreation and Parks discussion.


Wednesday, April 26, 2006, 6 PM — Public Works  and Youth Bureau Discussion


Monday, May 1, 2006, 7:30 PM — Public Hearing in the Common Council Chamber.

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Common Council Dumps Railside, Votes 5-2 to Sell the 8 Properties.

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. April 3, 2006 UPDATED 2:00 A.M. E.D.T. April 4, 2006, UPDATED April 5, 2006: The Common Council after listening to two hours of protest and pleadings from supporters of preserving the properties on Railside Avenue as open space and rejecting sale of the eight lots, ignored them and voted 5-2 to approve the sale of the Railside 8  for $2,912,000.



Council Chambers swelled by Supporters of Keeping Railside Properties Forever Woods. Hopes were dashed by the Common Council Monday evening. Photo, Courtesy Don Hughes.



Asleep at the Wheel: The Common Council was dragging along about midnight last night at city hall, in the longest meeting since 11:30 P.M. was set as the council curfew three years ago, and moved off the Comprehensive Plan Review hearing until May 1, after condemning Railside Avenue to development.  Photo, WPCNR News.


 



The new, improved Avalon Bay Apart-O-Plex was presented. Hearing was held open until May 1. Photo, WPCNR News.


Benjamin Boykin, Glen Hockley, Robert Greer, Arnold Bernstein and Mayor Delfino voted for, and Rita Malmud and Thomas Roach voted against to carry through the sale.


Councilman Benjamin Boykin said the proposal to put an easement on Lot 1 and resell it has been modified to withdraw Lot 1 (the property withdrawn from the sale sometime prior to the opening of the bids on the properties last Wednesday), saying it will not be reoffered for sale,and will be kept as a buffer on Ridgeway Avenue. Boykin also noted the 20 foot conservation easement on the sold lots 2 through 9 preserved 46% of the 8 remaining properties.


Glen  Hockley said he had to think of all the residents of the city when he cast his vote in favor of selling Railside Avenue lots. Arnold Bernstein said he could not condemn the city to a 20 to 25% tax increase, and therefore he was voting for the Railside sale, too. Robert Greer through his daughter reading his position speech, said the properties had always been thought of by the city as eventually to be returned to the tax roll and he was sticking to his guns.


Benjamin Boykin said he hoped that the new owner of five of the properties, (Joseph S. Petrillo, an attorney and President of All New York Title Agency in White Plains, www.allnewyorktitle.com)  would get together with the neighbors to discuss his plans for the five properties he was successful bidder (Lots 2,3,6,7,8). Boykin said he hoped the other three winning bidders for  Lot 9 (HCG Drywall of Scarsdale), Lot 4 (S & J & J Holding of White Plains), and Lot 5 (Ricardo Tedesco and Frank D’Ambrosio) would also interact with the neighbors and discuss their intentions  for their lots. No winning bidder appeared to be present at the public speakout on Railside Avenue.


In other matters,


The 5 foot setback proposed for The Pinnacle project from Ginsburg Development could not be voted upon because Robert Greer the Council left the council meeting at approximately 10:15 P.M. after the Railside vote took place.


The council then took up the 25,000 square foot air rights transfer matter from 221 Main to The Pinnacle (in order that Mr. Ginsburg could build developer Louis Cappelli’s affordable units he owes the city on the 221 Main project). The council at first thought they could not vote on the transfer, but Corporation Counsel, Edward Dunphy dashed to the rescue striding up the aisle saying the 25,000 square foot is a minor amendment to the ordinance, so the Council could vote on it without Mr. Greer’s presence, which they proceeded to execute unanimously. The 5 foot setback benefit, according Corporation Counsel Dunphy was also passed Monday night. It was simply not clear at the time.


The Avalon Bay public hearing convened and the changes in the 13-14 story rental project were presented in an exhaustive slide show that rivaled Louis Cappelli in its slickness. Residents following the presentation called for the site to be turned into a park. Tim Sheehan, a resident of Park Circle suggested the town houses on the north end of the site should be lowered from their 6 story height to present a better site line. Thomas Whayatt an attorney for the holdout home owner owning a home on Barker that occupies a niche on the Avalon Bay site, said he would push for his client to have special permits for the swimming pool which is adjacent the home with possibly more setbacks from the pool to the homeowner’s property.


With the Common Council falling asleep in their chairs at 12:15 A.M., and the Comprehensive Plan Review Hearing the last item on the agenda, Mayor Delfino asked Robert Levine, representing the Citizens Plan Commitee, there to speak,  what he(Levine) wanted to do at such a late hour, and Levine said he would prefer in view of the hour to postpone to May 1 if the hearing could be first on the agenda. The Mayor agreed. Neither Mary Cavellero, nor John Martin, Co-Chairs of the Comprehensive Plan Review Committee were present for the hearing.


 


 

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Back In Order Before the Bell Would Ring. WPHS Chides The Tardy

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. April 2, 2006: White Plains High School Students are sooooooo social! So social they are not making it to classes on time according to a letter sent to high schoolers’ parents.


 


According to the communication from Principal Ivan Toper distributed Friday, parents have been advised that students at the 2,200 student low-rise complex that sprawls in an endless maze of hallways on the former JC Penney estate in White Plains, just are not making it into classes before the bell rings. Being late to class has become routine and the Principal has had enough.


Toper’s letter  states that “teachers have volunteered to be a presence in the hallways between classes to encourage students to move to their next class.” The letter reports House administrators recently met with each of the four grades to emphasize the importance of arriving to class on time as well as consequences for being tardy that will now be in effect.


 


The D-word.


 


Mr. Toper’s communication to parents advise that punishments for being late to class could include “afternoon detentions, Saturday detentions and in-school suspensions for students with multiple infractions.”


 


Principal Toper reports a committee has been formed “to review our (attendance) policies and procedures in an effort to ensure they are reasonable, fair, effective and consistent. I ask that you (parents) do whatever you can do at home to encourage your child to not only arrive at school on time in the morning, but to arrive on time to each and every class throughout the day.”


 


Hall Jams


 


From WPCNR observation, routine daily drop-off stop and go traffic of parents delivering their teens off to start the day and at the south and north entrances of the school contribute to tardiness in the mornings.


 


In-between classes, the five-minute break is barely enough time when you have to go from the south end to the north end of the building for your next class. The small halls and  sadistic scheduling that has you go from one end of the building to the other on the short break in-between classes keeps White Plains teens in shape, but not fleet of foot enough to avoid the distractions in the halls: cellphone conversations, the heavy crush of bodies in narrow hallways, sort of like Main Street on rush hour mornings in White Plains.

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Highest Bidder on Railside Lots Not Told Lot 1 Was Withdrawn.

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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. By John F. Bailey. April 2, 2006: The highest bidder for the eight Railside Avenue properties on the consent agenda as part of this evening’s Common Council meeting said today he was never notified by the City of White Plains prior to bid opening that one of the properties, 90 Ridgeway, was withdrawn from the sale.  He did not have the opportunity to revise or restructure his bid.


 



The City of White Plains plans to officially approve the other eight properties on Railside for sale, five of them (Lots 2,3,6,7, and 8) to Joseph S. Petrillo, the President of All New York Title Agency, Inc.; Lot 5  to Ricardo Tedesco and Frank D’Ambrosio,  Lot 9 to HCG Drywall of Scarsdale, and Lot 4 to S & J & J Holding of White Plains as part of the consent agenda at this evening’s Common Council meeting. The total of all winning bids comes to $2,912,183, according to the finance department,


 


Jacob Selechnik, Principal of Rental Masters, 2855 Grand Concourse, The Bronx, placed a $3,000,000 bid for all nine properties as part of the sealed bid auction last week.  Mr. Selechnik’s bid was rejected by the city as “nonconforming,”


 


 However, prior to the bid openings, 90 Ridgeway was withdrawn from the sale, according to Councilman Benjamin Boykin last week, in order to place a conservation easement on the property and offer it for resale with the easement.


 


According to Mr.Selechnik, he was never notified by the city that one of the properties was withdrawn, and given a chance to revise his bid downward or upward.


 


Selechnik this morning told WPCNR he had never been notified of the results of the opening of the bids. He said he had never been told by the city that Lot 1 had been withdrawn from the sale. He said he had never been given a chance to revise his bid, because only eight lots were for sale instead of 9. And, he has not received his deposit check back. Asked if he had been given a chance to reconfigure his bid, since the city rejected it as “nonconforming,” Mr. Selechnik said he had not.  


 


According to city officials, Mr. Selechnik’s bid was non-conforming because he had bid a total price for all nine properties.  However, one winning bidder had bid the same price for Lots 3 through 9 with only a price for Lot 2 different from their other 7 bids. 

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Opening Day

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OPENING DAY  


By BASEBALL BAILEY


 



WRIGLEY fIELD CHICAGO 1975 PHOTO WPCNR SPORTS




OPENING DAY is better than Christmas Day,
When you look out the window and you know they’ll play,
Whether dreary gray or billiant spring sun’s ray
Opening Day means the Big Show is back today.



In decades past, Opening Day was for the fanatics starved
Eager for the sharp crack of ash on horsehide carved
The flutter of pennants snapping in northwest winds
Atop ramparts of inviting arches of walls and freizes wistfully escarped
.


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Fans lucky to get away with a pair of ducats
Marveled at those grown men in boys flannels and sharp whites pristeen
Back to play in April’s warm zhyphers in NY blazened caps,
Dashing specks of white warming up on the sprawl of the greenest green.

Motor cars panting in good-natured traffic jams on Major Deegan,
Or down
Yawkey Way, on 35th and Shields or  Waveland’s Jam.
Through your windows you see the first glimpse of the imposing Park,
The place where ball is played, where spirits of Ted, Babe, Duke
Mel, Spahnie, Whitey, Mickey, Willie, Yaz, Minnie and Sandy lark.

Paying a White Plains fine to park to stogie smoking old men
Who ‘VE BEEN at the same GATES for a hundred years


out into the street
You go eager, the smell of roasting chestnuts, pungent cigars sweet,
Cries of “scorecard heah” “programs,  heah” neath light towers to heaven.

Fans in cap and uniform, little boys and girls gawk in awe
Never seeing SUCH sheer walls so topped with the legend “GameToday 1:30 PM”
Clutching slim cardboard tix to Section 14 Upper Deck up to the turnstiles
Festooned with souvenirs more dear as diamonds, beyond, THE lure OF ENDLESS aisles.

Into the press of crowd, the grizzled usher, RIPS YOUR TICKET.
Turnstile turns and into the castle of ball you go
Into the rotunda greeted with magic signs dazzlING
UPPER LEVELS SECTIONS 1 to 39, 2 to 40

Hawkers shout –Voices of The Bronx — colorful books in hand


“Yearbook heah,” “Dodger Yearbook here,” “Hot dog, heah,” 
Assail your ears up the ramps you walk to the sign “NEXT HOMESTAND”
Out the suspended catwalk where sliver of blue is first glimpse of the magic sphere
Into the sunlight splaying the vast rake down  of the mighty grand stand.

Spread out below are knights of the diamond in white hues
Cavorting, snapping throws across immaculate red clay
As majestic fungoes CRACK! soar towards filling bleachers a mile away,
Bunting flutters from the deck’s rails red, white and true blues.

Old glory unfurls on the highest pole in center field
Colorful signs deliver the manly flavor of the only real game,
GILLETTE To Look Sharp, The Red Sox use Lifeboy, Schaefer It’s A Hit
Hey, Neighbor Have a Gansett, White Owl Cigars, Hit Sign Win Suit

From old familiar walls, to Gladys Gooding on the organ
friendly old green scoreboard displaying
Today’s games around the big leagues BETTER THAN CNN
CHI CLE BOS DET, CHI STL, NY WAS make you king for a day.
Two Bits for a scorecard, usher wipes your seat, ballpark fills your heart.

Penciling in the lineup 42 2B, 1 SS, 14 1B, 4 CF, 39 C, 6 RF, 23 LF 19 3B 36 P
Smell of beer, peanuts and warm salty pretzels entice
The air is nippy, warm rays sink into your face feels nice,
starting pitchers wheel and deal on sidelines  fueling expectancy

Men in blue, arms folded solemnly conduct the home plate regimen
CaseY, Ralph , Walter AND SPARKY exchange lineup cards and knowing
ground rules by heart they go over them for ritual’s sake.
announcer entones “Good afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen.”

“Please rise for the playing of our national anthem,”
the stadium organ note by note  peels  baseball’s theme
Rising on the breeze, uniting do-rag and ball cap,
fedora and Tie PONYTAIL AND BOUFFANT  in the spirit of the great game.

Grass is never greener than on opening days
 strikes are louder, the long drives electrify in the alleys
The beer withtHICK hing cream head,  tastecrisp cold and mellow the best all year
 Smashes laser through short and in the gap in raucous rallies


 


Magicians without wands start 6-4-3s, backhand sure hit losing their caps


“Oh what a play’s” crackle on WGN with  “CUBS WIN’S”


Jack and Mel, Vince, Curt and Murph are back at the mike to turn mundane days into joy with a ninth inning elixir and “happy recaps”


THUNDROUS ROAR accolades the 2-out winner again CREATING Big KIDS’ GRINS


 


 


 


 

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White Plains Hosts Town Hall Meeting on Teen Drinking.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. April 2, 2006: Steve Rabinowitz sends along the following reminder : The White Plains Communities That Care Coalition invites you to an White Plains Town Hall Meeting on Preventing Underage Drinking Tuesday, April 4, 2006 7 – 9 p.m.Rochambeau Community School 228 Fisher Avenue

 A panel of speakers will share information about legal consequences of underage drinking, the impact on a young person’s brain and physical development, and the extent of the problem in our community.  Additionally, you will also get a chance to hear from some of our youth who witness the impact of underage drinking everyday and what they think may be effective ways that the adults in the community can help address this issue.


 



In response to a national call by the federal government to address the serious problem of underage drinking, the White Plains Community That Cares Coalition, Honorable Mayor Joseph Delfino, Superintendent of White Plains Schools Timothy Connors invite you to attend this Town Hall Meeting.  
Speakers will include Justice JoAnn Friia. Dr. Harris Stratyner of Mount Sinai Medical Center,
Associate Commissioner Frances Harding of the NY State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services,  Evelyn-Gonzalez Smith of Church Street School and Arturo Bravo and Mellisa Williams from the Mayor’s Youth Board

Come, ask questions, get the straight facts!

For more information please contact Laura Montoya at 422-1378

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Locals Dance to Raise Money for AIDS

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. From City Center Dance. April 2, 2006: On Sunday April 23, at the Students from City Center Dance in White Plains along with over 100 other young dancers from all over Westchester County will dance their toes off to raise money for Dancers Responding to AIDS (DRA), a program of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS (BC/EFA) in an event aptly titled “STARS OF TOMORROW, givine back today”   


 


Money raised by these young dancers ages 7 years to 18 years will not only support performing artists nationwide but will bring continued support to the BC/EFA National Grants Program – In 2005 $55,000 was awarded to 9 AIDS & Family service organizations in Westchester & Rockland.

This year, STARS OF TOMORROW … giving back today, will feature a special performance by Tony Award™ nominee, New Rochelle resident ANDREA MCARDLE who will perform with the Purchase Dance Corps.  ANDREA McARDLE  is best known as the original Annie (both on Broadway and in London), a performance which earned her a Tony Award™  nomination for Best Actress in a Musical, in addition to a Theatre World and Outer Critics Circle Award.  She has recently appeared at Joe’s Pub downtown and at Birdland with her one-woman show, “Andrea McArdle, NYC.”  She starred as “Mama Rose” in Gypsy for the Bay Area Houston Ballet & Theatre and was in Japan where she reprised the role of “Sally Bowles” in Cabaret.   The first time she played “Sally” in Japan was as a limited engagement following her starring in the U.S. National Tour.   Before Cabaret she was playing another type of girl altogether, becoming Broadway’s longest running “Belle” in Disney’s Beauty and the Beast.   She was featured as “The Star to Be” in the new Emmy Award-winning TV movie version of Annie, on ABC TV.   She has also starred on Broadway in Les Misérables, Starlight Express, and State Fair.   In 1996 her television special “Andrea McArdle on Broadway” (also the title of her CD) aired on PBS. Ms. McArdle has toured with the late Liberace and the great Bob Hope and has had the privilege of singing for every U.S. president from Ford to Clinton. She is married to composer/producer Edd Kalehoff and their daughter, Alexis, is one of her frequent costars.

Tickets for “STARS OF TOMORROW .. givingn back today” can be purchased for $25 by contacting Center Dance in White Plains, The Westchester Dance Academy in Portchester, or any one of the other participating dance schools who are performing for this event.

For more information on this and other events sponsored by Dancers Responding to AIDS, visit the web at http:www.dradance.org

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First Lady of White Plains Theater Opens Downtown White Plains Westco Offices

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. April 1, 2006: Today at the Westchester Arts Council Building, the producer’s dream came true: Westco Productions, the White Plains non-profit theatre company that is self-sustaining and has never had an operating deficit, in a 26 year run without interruption, opened its first executive office and box office in the downtown at 31 Mamaroneck Avenue. It’s in Suite 508, on the fifth floor.



“Look, Ma! I’ve finally got an office like a real Broadway Producer!” Susan Katz outside the Westchester Arts Council Building — New home to her company,  Westco Productions, Westchester’s most consistently entertaining not for profit theatre company that packs them in year-after-year with “Katz Magic”. Photo, Courtesy Westco.


 



“Hey, I know what we’ll do, let’s put on a show!” Ms. Katz welcomes the media hordes to the new epicenter of her thespian empire with as always, just the right touch on the door of her 5th floor office. Peter Katz Photo, Courtesy Westco Productions.


A luncheon get-together  featured The First Lady of White Plains Theatre, that local girl made good,  Susan Katz –Ms. Westco herself, theatrical producer, Creator of “Living Walls” that turn hospital wards into healing environments, believer in theatre for the disabled, indefatigable, seen-everywhere, known-everywhere, community-involved, children-committed, production-obsessed, bottomline watching, creative dynamo right out of the movies — you know, the kind of kid you could expect to see in any Judy Garland/Mickey Rooney movie saying, “Hey, I know what we’ll do, let’s put on a show,” hostessing the historic opening of her first office on the brightly painted white walls on the 5th floor overlooking the Great White Way of Mamaroneck Avenue.



Angels, well-wishers and members of the Westco Board of Directors who never have to worry about deficits, wish the Wizardess of Westco in Red well at the Executive Office and Box Office Opening. Rosemary Williams, to the right of Ms. Katz,  her Yoga Teacher explained Ms. Katz’s quarter century of showbiz hits, by comparing Ms. Katz’s personality to Yoga: “Yoga is about moving energy, how to identify it, how we can hold it, identify how we can access what’s out there and how we can move it. I thought Sue has been doing this way before she started Yoga. She’s built this incredible organization, which mind boggles me, how she gets all these people involved and creates this space and this joy and this love that she sends to the world.” Peter Katz Photo, Courtesy Westco Productions



Freeloading Broadway Flacks,  White Plains Week news anchors, Jim Benerofe, left,  The Dean of the White Plains Journalism, Editor of Suburbanstreet.com, and yours truly, John Bailey, The CitizeNetReporter mingled in the showbiz glamour and celebrity mix. Peter Katz Photo, Courtesy Westco Productions.


While the 5th floor event was underway, a cast of 40 was upstairs on the 9th floor rehearsing for Westco’s children’s workshop production of  Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat which takes place next Saturday at the Rochambeau School Theater, “The Roch” in White Plains,  Ms. Katz schmoozed with members of her Board of Directors and distinguished members of the press representing The White Plains Times, Suburbanstreet.com, and yours truly.


“The new office will serve as both box office point and a distribution center for information, ” Ms. Katz told the CitizeNetReporter. “People can come here to the 5th floor and buy tickets to our shows as well as stop in and pick up our literature. The presence in the downtown at 31 Mamaroneck Avenue, Office 508, (914-761-7463), makes it much easier for those who live in White Plains and working in White Plains during the day to buy tickets and pick up information.”


Katz said the office was needed because the company simply could not be run out of her home office any more because of the expansion in recent years. “It’s an administrative office that’s serving two functions. Our  Box Office Manager, from the New Orleans area after falling victim to Hurricane Katrina, will be here and our Production Manager will be here. So there will be a lot of stuff going on in the office concerning the productions, distribution of tickets and information. It’s a high energy building.”


She explained that for the past few weeks, Westco’s cast of 28 professional actors has been using the 9th floor space to rehearse for the upcoming production of the Broadway hit musical “Cats.” Ms. Katz emphasized that Westco shows performed for the public only use experienced actors, and differ from the workshops for children who aspire to become thespians, adding that many of Westco’s workshop graduates have gone on to professional careers at theatres around the country, such as Jason Summers who is directing “Cats.”



Joseph and the New Technicolor Dreamcoat, the production staging this weekend at Rochambeau School, “The Roch” is performed by Westco’s Creative Theatre Workshop and features 40 children ages 5 to 13. It’s a year-end workshop for “young thespians.”


Cats will be performed April 28, 29, and 30 at the Irvington Town Hall Theater. For more information, call Westco at (914) 761-7463 or visit their web site, www.westcoproductions.org.   

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Skyliners, NY’s 6th Ranked National Team Skates for the Cure in Shelton

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. By John F. Bailey.  April 1, 2006: While you were watching the Olympics,  in a posh rink on the other side of the world, figure skating’s greatest secret: the growth of synchronized team skating was being displayed for all to see at the US Figure Skating Synchronized Team Skating Championships in Grand Rapids, Michigan.


 



The Skyliners Skating their Long Program in spiral Block at the Synchro National Championships in Grand Rapids Michigan. Photo, WPCNR Sports


 


The Skyliners  Junior Team (25 girls, aged 12 to 18) of the Figure Skating Club of New York and Windy Hill Skating Club (CT)  finished sixth  of 13 teams,  skated their final synchronized skate of the season Saturday night in Shelton Connecticut at “the Skate for the Cure” Show as part of a program to raise funds for the Junior Diabetes Research Foundation International. 


 


The Skyliners shared the ice with World Bronze Medalist Caryn Kadavy, and US. Olympic Pair, 3-time US National Silver Medalists, Melissa Gregory and Denis Petukhov.


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Far from Torino in the “Valley of Synchro,” the Middle West, in Grand Rapids, Michigan,  the 2006 US Figure Skating Synchronized Team Skating Championships featuring 86 teams from coast-to-coast  showcased  2,500 fearless femmes and gents of the ice in competition that dazzled, amazed, and made you catch your breath.


 



Look Out! The Skyliners Execute the “Blades of Death,” otherwise known as the backward Splice Lunge in their Long Program in Grand Rapids. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


The Skyliners, the tri-state area skating team of skaters from Westchester, New Jersey and Connecticut;  Team Image from Yonkers, N.Y., Ice Magic from Katonah,  the Ice-Alantics of  New Jersey and Team Millennium of  Connecticut, competed and held their own against the elite middle west teams and up-and-coming teams from the South and West Coast.


 


The skating was inspired and inspiring.  The effort relentless and daring, the programs breathtaking and emotional, packed with high risk and  embellished with the grace and beauty of fearless accomplished skaters.


 


Skyliner Juniors hold on, rank 6th of 13 Nationally, 2nd among Eastern Teams.


 


Friday evening the suspense of the afternoon became downright tension as the Junior Division’s 13 teams from coast-to-coast skated their 4-minute Long Programs in order of the Short Program finish in three separate groups. As each team takes to the ice, they know what they need to improve their standing. Then after they skate they stand in the entryway and wait up to five minutes for their score under the new International Judging System.


 



Skyliner Juniors Skate Listen to Your Heart their Short Program in Grand Rapids, February 23 nailing it Thursday night. They skated it for the final time Saturday night in Shelton, Connecticut. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


The Skyliner Juniors who had not skated their Short Program to “Listen to Your Heart” to its fullest potential all season nailed it in Thursday’s skate. They skated second after the defending champions, The Hockettes from Ann Arbor, Michigan, and turned in a fourth place finish on the strength of their technical score (execution of footwork and formations), putting up a 33..07 compared with the Hockettes 39.82. The Skyliners Techinical was a mere 1 point off the Hockettes technical score. Eleven more teams skated and the Skyliner score held up, creating a proud moment for the team and saying the Skyliners had arrived as genuine contenders nationally.


 



The electrifying Splice Coming Together in the Short Program Thursday afternoon. Photo, WPCNR Sports


 


Juniors  Finish 6th Nationally.


 


The Friday night long program skate for all the ice chips, with the Skyliner Junior Team scheduled to skate next to last of 13 performances was high drama which intensified with each posted score as one great skate after another was turned in.


 


One by one teams from Illinois, Minnesota, California, Massachusetts, Michigan skated,  yet still the Junior team was not eclipsed out of Fourth Place until a flying, powerful, confident and elegant skate to “Man of La Mancha”  by Team Braemar of Minnesota skating 9th, turned in a 65.43 nosing the Skyliners out of 4th place by an ice flake. The Skyliners had to turn in a 66 when they skated.


 


The Hockettes and the Chicago Jazz went blade to blade in the 10th and 11th skating positions for the lead. The Hockettes, the 2005 National Junior Champions showed how demanding synchro is by experiencing two unfortunate falls in a formation and a line that cost them the championship. The Hockettes carded a 67.85 losing 4 points on mandatory deductions that dropped them to third with 107 points.


The Chicago Jazz took the ice next and flew into First Place for their third Championship of the 2006 Nationals with an unbelievable 79.85 score on their long program. The Jazz also one Novice and Intermediate Divisions.


 



Spinning Tops: Juniors Finish with a Flourish in their Long Skate Good enough for 6th in the Nation February 25. Photo, WPCNR Sports.


 


It is a pressure thing to follow the two best teams in Junior Division, but that was the Skyliners’ fate. They took to the ice, knowing they needed a 66 Score to capture the 4th place medal. 


 


They performed their program firmly with heart, a little tentative, but no falls, no mandatory deductions –  lines, blocks were strong, intersections and splices clean, no technical deductions. Team Braemar’s lead could not be overcome when the score went up the Skyliners carded a 58.86 for a total score of 91.93. Not enough for the pewter prize (4th Place). 


 


The Colonials from Massachussetts skated  last and turned in a total score of 111.31 for second place nosing out the Hockettes for second place.


 


The Skyliners Junior Team held up beautifully under the pressure of a medal skate, and all the girls are better for it. By finishing sixth nationwide they finished as the 2nd best team from the East  behind the fabulous Colonials The Skyliner Juniors showed they were competitive with the Midwest “Valley of Synchro” clubs, from Wisconsin and Minnesota, stepping up to another level in figure skating accomplishment.


 


Josh Babb and Jenny gibson, coaches of the Juniors said they had worked the girls on improving their footwork all season to bring technical scores up, and that next season they would be dealing with the posture and upper body attitudes required to score higher in the artistic element of the Free Skate.


 



The Skyliners Brain Trust: Larry Rosen, left owner of The Athlete’s Foot, White Plains, Club President. Josh Babb, Coach, second from left, Jenny Gibson third from left, Tina Staples, fourth from left and Ena Shae, line mothers. Photo, WPCNR Sports


 


In synchronized skating, every team member has to be good. One off performance wrecks the whole performance. It is the truest team sport.


 


They skated for the final time this season in Shelton Connecticut at a jam-packed Skate for the Cure Saturday night performing both the trademark Listen to Your Heart program and their long program at The Rinks  arena in Shelton, CT .


 

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