In Pursuit of Immortality In Virtual Silence

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. View from the Upper Deck. By John Baseball Bailey. September 27, 2004: Perhaps the worst sin of the media fascination with the second best (the wild card race) is that Seattle Mariner Ichiro Suzuki’s pursuit of the immortal George Sisler’s record for most hits in a season has been ignored until two days ago.


 


Sunday, the great Ichiro went 1 for 4 in Texas, with an intentional pass, to bring him to 251 hits for the season, 6 Hits to go to catch George Sisler’s record of 257 hits in a season, set 84 years ago in 1920. He needs a hit a game to break the record.


 



 


View From the Upper Deck: Sportsman’s Park, St. Louis. 1946 Where George Sisler played in the 20s. Photo of print, “Spendid Sportsman’s Park” by Bill Pudom , from the WPCNR Collection.




If Ichiro achieves those 7 hits, he will be the all-time season hit leader, ahead of names that glitter with the sparkle of excellence on the diamond. Writing their names gives a fan chills. He will be ahead of  Lefty O’doul (Phillies) and Bill Terry (Giants) at 254; Al Simmons of the A’s at 253.



ICHIRO SUZUKI about to Swing. A stance reminiscent of Mel Ott.


Photo of Seattle Mariner Team Store Brochure Cover, 2001 from the WPCNR Collection.


 



 


Ichiro has already surpassed  Rogers Hornsby of the Cards and Chuck Klein of the Phils at 250 hits , moving into All Time Hit List Position Number 5 on the single season hit parade. Ichiro did this when he surpassed Ty Cobb at Number 7. The Georgia Peach hit  248 hits in 1911 when The Cobb hit .420 for the “Tagahs,” as Ernie Harwell called them.


 


Do you know that Ichiro is hitting .373. No, you probably do not, because the media has just discovered this chase until now.


 


Gorgeous George


 


Who is George Sisler?  He played the game from 1915 to 1930, hit .340 lifetime with 102 homers and 1,275 Runs Batted In. He played first base for the St. Louis Browns (presently, the Baltimore Orioles). Sisler hit .400 twice. In 1920 he hit .407 pounding out 257 hits in 637 trips to the plate. He did it again in 1922, batting .420 on 246 baseknocks in 586 AB’s. The .420 average is the second highest  major league batting average recorded in a season. (Rogers Hornsby hit .424 in 1924).


 



The Immortal George Sisler.


Photo by Charles Conlon, The Sporting News Conlon Collection, from the WPCNR Archives.


 


  When Sisler hit .407 in 1920, his St. Louis Browns finished 4th, 22 games behind the Cleveland Indians. In 1922, when he recorded his .420 achievement, the Browns lost the pennant by one game to the Yankees. Of his 257 hits in 1920, he belted 48 doubles, 19 homers, scored 137 runs and drove in 122.  In 1922 when he hit .420, “Gorgeous George” as he was nicknamed he got  246 hits, including 18 triples, and also had a 41-game hitting streak, striking out only 14 times in 586 at-bats. Ichiro doesn’t strike out much either.


 


Bill James the baseball statistics expert quibbles that statistically Sisler had a lower on-base percentage  than first basemen such Fred McGriff, Alvin Davis, Earl Torgeson, Jack Clark, Mike Schmidt, Mark McGwire and Gene Tenace, James also asserts he was not as good a fielder as sports accounts give him credit as being.


 


Ty Cobb, on the other hand, who played with Sisler said Sisler was “the nearest thing to a perfect ballplayer.”


 


Sisler started as a pitcher in 1915 with the Browns, good enough to outduel Walter, The Big Train Johnson twice. Sisler ranks 31st in all-time hits (2,812). His lifetime B.A. of .340 ties him with The Iron Horse, Lou Gehrig.


 


Nevertheless as of today Suzuki needs six hits in his final seven games to become the all time single season hit leader.


 


 

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The Sewer Waits: Main Street Sewer Lining to Begin Monday Oct 4.

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS UNDERGROUND. September 28, 2004 UPDATED:  American Water Services’ lining of the Main Street sewer line will begin Monday, October 4, Commissioner of Public Works Joseph Nicoletti stated to WPCNR Tuesday. The process of lining the Main Street sewer line in White Plains from Mamaroneck and Main to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, WPCNR had been told by the Commissioner would start Monday, but Mr. Nicoletti said there had been some confusion on the date.


The lining and its process is a precautionary measure that both the City Center developer, Louis Cappelli, and the city administration have agreed to undertake at the strong urgings of Mr. Nicoletti to assure efficient, regular flow of effluent from the City Center. The cost is being covered by Mr. Cappelli’s  Cappelli Enterprises. The firm executing the procedure, American Water Services, has been selected by the city.



Commissioner to Supervise Precautionary Lining Process: Commissioner of Public Works, Joseph Nicoletti, shown at the recent Sculpture Garden opening in White Plains.  Mr. Nicoletti lobbied the Administration and the Cappelli organization to conduct  the procedure to give the 100 year old sewer line a “21st Century Makeover.”


Photo, WPCNR News Archive.


The 16-inch sewer pipe was prepped, cleaned and inspected two weeks ago in preparation for tonight’s surgical operation consisting of lining the pipe with a 1/2-inch epoxy liner on its interior surface to enhance the flow velocity. Nicoletti told WPCNR today the process is known as a “Cured In Place” lining and will “improve flow capacity inside the pipe.”


Asked how much it would improve the flow, Nicoletti said “It’s been my experience it will improve it significantly.”


 To learn about the procedure, visit www.americanwaterservices.com.

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Hold on, Ms. Habel. Conservation Board Nixes Extension of NYPH Site Plan

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WPCNR City Hall Insider. By John F. Bailey. September 26, 2004. Updated 10:45 P.M. E.D.T.: Contrary to what the Common Council was lead to believe at its Special Meeting last Thursday evening, by Commissioner of Planning Susan Habel, not all of the city review boards and commissioners are in favor of extending of the 2002-approved site plan authorizing the New York Presbyterian Hospital to build a proton accelerator/biomedical research complex in the middle of its property in White Plains.


 


The Conservation Board has sent a letter to the Planning Department strongly opposing the granting of the extension. Two councilpersons who have responded to WPCNR have said they have not yet received this letter, or any information as to its contents.


 


In the letter, the Board expresses fear the planned proton accelerator will not be funded, and approval of the extension may lead to developing the site for other uses. Developers in White Plains have shown they have tendencies to change the character, size and purposes of projects after they have been approved. The Conservation Board fears this may happen to the site in the site plan approval is extended. (No construction has begun on the project, according to Ms. Habel, because of the restrictions and conditions the Common Council has put on the project.)


 


Delivered Wednesday to Planning Department.


 


The Conservation Board position, expressed in a letter delivered to the Planning Board, Wednesday, September 22,  the day before the September 23 meeting, and  was not relayed to the Common Council in the Thursday evening meeting by the Commisioner of Planning. Documents such as this are routinely included in the “backup” material for the Common Council meeting when the Common Council votes on the matter before it. Councilpersons have complained bitterly in the past, (William King), that the material does not arrive in enough time before the Council has to vote on the matter.


 


No objections to extension Habel said.


 


Ms Habel lead the council to believe throughout the portion of the meeting devoted to the site plan extension discussion that all the commissioners and review boards and departments asked for comment felt conditions had not changed substantially from when the project was approved, and that the site plan should be extended.


 


Tom Roach, President of the Common Council, still had not received the Conservation Board letter as of Sunday at 1:00 P.M.


 


The Conservation Board says No Way.


 


The Conservation Board comments in the letter,  that development has changed the city substantially since the August ,2002, original approval. The letter, obtained by WPCNR, says that,


 


“Since the August 5, 2002 Resolution was adopted, the City has seen numerous areas of developments including City Center, Bank Street, Clayton Park, development at 221 Main Street and many others.


 


This Board has great concerns regarding the cumulative impact of these developments as well as the proposed Hospital Development.


 


These developments will impact the quality of life of White Plains residents, the quality of the air we breathe, noise, automobile emissions, pedestrian safety, and traffic.


 


The visual impact of this project alone would cause a disruptive and irreparable effect on the natural beauty of the site and  greatly reduce the amount of passive green space in the heart of this city.”


 


Questions Proton Accelerator As Presently Specked


 


The letter notes that constructing the proton accelerator facility would be “very expensive,” that “number of successful treatments as compared to patients treated is dismally small” and states the federal funding “for this type of project is virtually impossible to obtain.” 


 


 


(Editor’s Note: the comment about number of successful treatments is a matter of controversy, however. The Paul Scherrer Institute in Villigen, Switzerland,  system, a newly designed, compact, more accurate and powerful proton accelerator system, that has been selected by a clinic in Munich reports an 85% tumour-stop rate.  The PSI  compact proton accelerator is reporting treatment of 166 patients for tumours since 1996 at the basis of the skull, the pelvis and the prostate, and in 85% of the cases, the tumour growth was stopped.)


 


However, the concern about the treatment ratio is ancillary to the Conservation Board’s salient point which worries that the New York Presbyterian Hospital will change the project as approved: 


 


“we are concerned that this project, as proposed, may not be economicably feasible and continued approval may eventually result in significantly different structures and uses.”


 


The letter concludes with no equivocation on the matter that would lead any one to think that the Conservation Board had reservations, but was waiving them:


 


“On August 20, 2003, this Board recommended that a one-year extension for this project not be granted.


 


Again, this year White Plains has the opportunity to reject the application for a one-year extension of the August 2002 Resolution. This Board supports the rejection of this application.”


 


Why would Ms. Habel Not Mention the Conservation Board position.


 


Contacted by WPCNR, the Chairman of the Conservation Board, Bob Roston, said the Commissioner of Planning should have known the Conservation Board position before going into the meeting, because the Deputy Commissioner of Planning, Rod Johnson, is Secretary to the Conservation Board.


 


Roston said the letter was sent to the City Planning Department Wednesday, which types it up and sends it to the Legal Department, and then the letter is sent to the Mayor and Common Council.


 


As of Sunday at noon, Tom Roach, the President of the Common Council said he had not received the letter. Councilman Benjam Boykin and Councilwoman Rita Malmud were contacted and messages left to see whether the Common Council has been informed of the letter content, but it being Sunday, they were not available to take the call.


 


Malmud: No information on this subject as of Sunday Evening.


 


Councilwoman Malmud got back to WPCNR Sunday night and verified that she, too had not received the Conservation Board position letter, either. She wrote WPCNR:


 


“As of Sunday night, 10:30pm, Sept 26, I have not received any Conservation Board letter about NYH within the past several weeks.  Your phone call was the first info I had on this subject.”


 


 


 


 

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Playland Ice Casino Tradition Since 1929 Opens Wednesday

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WPCNR ICE CAPADES. From Westchester County Department of Recreation & Parks. (Edited) September 25, 2004: Playland Ice Casino — Westchester’s premier family ice skating facility all spruced up, repainted and bright as S. P. Teri skating blade  — will begin the 2004-2005 regular public skating schedule on Wednesday, September 29.



PLAYLAND ICE CASINO. Sketched by N. John LaGattuta of Harrison, NY.


 


            Playland’s Ice Casino’s facilities include three indoor rinks: main, children’s and studio, which can accommodate a total of 1,100 skaters. All are kept at a comfortable temperature for skaters throughout the fall, winter and spring seasons. The Ice Casino also features expanded holiday hours on the main and children’s rinks.


 


 Once again, this year the Ice Casino will host the popular Saturday Family Skating Nights from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Admission to Family Skating Night is only $20, which covers up to four family members and includes admission, skate rentals and one large pizza.


 



One of the pleasures of ice-skating at Playland Ice Casino, is the nostalgic Boardwalk and the art deco architecture of long ago. It took the fancy of amateur artist N. John LaGattuta of Harrison who has sketched it for his own pleasure. Sketch (c) 2003  by N. John LaGattuta. Used with permission.



Fridays are Party Nights with a D.J. from 8:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. Party Nights include special lighting effects, the best of today’s pop and hip-hop music plus prizes and giveaways.  Admission is $10 which includes skate rental.


            General admission to the Playland Ice Casino is $6 for adults, $5 with a Westchester County Park Pass, and $4 for children 12 and under, $3 if accompanied by a Park Pass holder. Students pay $4 on weekdays, (except Party Nights) and Seniors pay $4 with a Park Pass. Spectators pay $2.



The Dignified Bath House.


Sketch (c) 2003  by N. John LaGattuta. Used with Permission.


            Ice skating clinics and classes will be given by professional instructors through Playland’s Ice Skating School; lessons are available by group session or individually by advance reservation, with instruction geared to skaters of every level of ability. Children’s hockey clinics are also offered throughout the season.


            Families, schools, corporation and other organized groups can reserve the Ice Casino for birthday parties and other special events. Services and facilities at the casino include a video game room, snack bar and lounge.


 



A view of the Log Flume, Playland and the famous Playland Tower.


Sketch (c) 2004 by N. John LaGattuta. Used with permission


 


            The Playland Ice Casino is a facility of the Westchester County Parks Department. It is located in Rye and can be reached via I-95 (the New England Thruway) to Playland Parkway, exit 19. Follow the parkway directly into Playland Park. Parking for the Ice Casino is free.


            For more information about lessons, rental or facilities, call (914) 813-7059. Information about the Playland Ice Casino is also available by logging on to www.ryeplaylnd.org.


 



Sketch Artist, N. John LaGattuta.


WPCNR noticed the World War II Veteran from Harrison sketching the Casino last week at Playland. WPCNR thanks him for sharing his personal art with our viewers. Photo by WPCNR ArtsCam


 



 


Mr. LaGattuta’s PT Boat 683, on which he served in the Pacific Theater in World War II. The craft is sketched from memory . Sketch (c) 2003, by N. John LaGattuta. Used with Permission.



THE PLAYLAND ICE CASINO, September 16, 2004. Photo by WPCNR News.


 

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NYPH Research Facility Proton Accelerator Is Obsolete.

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WPCNR EAST END INSIDER. By John F. Bailey. September 24, 2004: WPCNR has received a communication from the developers of the compact proton accelerators being installed at the proton therapy center in Munich, Germany, as reported on the SwissInfo website Friday.


The Paul Scherrer Institute in Villigen, Switzerland has developed a compact proton accelerator that is more powerful, and more precise the Loma Linda, California, Proton Accelerator, which would appear to mean the New York Presbyterian Hospital accelerator planned for the former Driving Range on the NYPH property, that will not come on line on the White Plains NYPH, until 2007 (WPCNR estimate) or later,  is obsolete now.



SWISS SHOCKER Received Today at WPCNR. Head of Proton Therapy notes compact proton accelerators far less expensive to install, and are more powerful than Loma Linda model approved for New York Presbyterian Hospital Campus. New York Presbyterian Hospital could not be reached for comment. Photo by WPCNR News.


Swiss Info, “Switzerland’s News and Information Platform,” in an article published today in Europe on the worldwide web reports the new “compact proton accelerators” created and manufactured by the Paul Scherrer Institute are being looked at seriously by Britain, Italy and France to “target tumours.” The service reports the compact accelerators are being installed for use at a private proton therapy clinic in Munich, Germany, and will be treating patients with the “mini-proties” in 2006.



ACCELERATED AFFORDABLE PROTONS HOT IN MUNICH: The complete text of the article from Swiss Info published today  may be found at http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/swissinfo.html?siteSect=511&sid=4911065. the article notes the effectiveness of the new compact proton accelerators and their economical cost to install. Photo by WPCNR News.




WPCNR contacted the Paul Scherrer Institute in Villigen, Switzerland early Friday morning, asking if their compact accelerators were an improvement on the Loma Linda model NYPH is planning at the present time, which appears on route to an automatic extension by the White Plains Common Council. WPCNR also asked how they compared on a cost-to-construct basis.


 WPCNR received an answer from Martin Jermann, Head of the Proton Therapy Program at the Paul Scherrer Institute, in Villegen (PSI) he reported by e-mail to WPCNR today. Here is the text of the e-mail pictured above:


Dear John Bailey


Compared to the Loma Linda facility, our technology is much more advanced.


With the new cyclotron, we can do also intensity modulated proton therapy, with much higher precision of the tumour treatment, compared to the “conventional” proton therapy. This results in a further reduction of the damange to the surrounding healthy tissue. The new 2D scanning system with a fast repainting capacity of our gantry will be able to treat moving tumours (i.e., lung, liver, breast cancer), in the long-term, combined with on-line imaging capabilities.


The compact gantry developed and operated at PSI has a diameter of only 4 meters (12 feet), almost 3 times less than the large onethrough gantries at Loma Linda and Massachussetts General Hospital Boston.


Does More, Better.


Our compact superconductive medical cyclotron, which was developed by Michigan State University, Accel Instruments GmbH and PSI, has a diameter of only 3.2 meters, i.e., 2 to 3 times less than the Loma Linda synchrotron. The ultimate goal of tumour treatment with intensity modulation (IMPT) will be only possible with a cyclotron and not with synchrotrons (the Loma Linda model).


Costs Considerably Less.


We have no data about costs of the planned facility at the New York Presbyterian Hospital ($100 Million estimated), but a cost reduction is obvious, looking at the above smaller dimensions of the rooms needed by the smaller and very compact components of the PSI facility.


Best regards,


Martin Jermann


Head of Proton Therapy Program


Paul Scherrer Institute


5232 Villigen-PSI


Switzerland


WPCNR will continue its delving into the differences. New York Presbyterian Hospital could not be reached for comment.


 

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Five Key Westchester Hospitals Turn Away United Health Care Insurance.

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WPCNR VITAL SIGNS. From Dean Bender, Thompson & Bender. September 24, 2004:  Pinnacle Healthcare Inc., a consortium of five Westchester area hospitals, Hudson Valley Hospital Center (Cortlandt Manor), The Mount Vernon Hospital, St. John’s Riverside Hospital (Yonkers), Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester (New Rochelle) and Westchester Medical Center (Valhalla).announced today  its five hospitals  have terminated Pinnacle hospital contracts with United Healthcare effective September 25, 2004, tomorrow.


 


Thousands of members of United Healthcare who use a Pinnacle hospital would be affected by the move. 


 


  


Pinnacle said that it has been attempting to negotiate a new contract with United Healthcare for more than a year. However, the negotiations have proved unsuccessful.  


 


“This is a very unfortunate situation that will affect not only our hospitals, but our patients and our physicians,” said Helen Turchioe, Pinnacle’s Executive Director. 


 


“In order to maintain the high quality level of care that our patients deserve, we must be compensated fairly for the care that we provide.”


 


John Federspiel, President of Hudson Valley Hospital Center, noted that, “like many hospitals in the region we have faced significant increases in operating costs and inadequate rates from private insurers.” Contributing to the cost squeeze are factors  such as increases in malpractice insurance, staff salaries and benefits, drug and supply costs and the expense of adding new health-related technologies.


 


United Healthcare Doesn’t Cover Costs.


 


“United Healthcare’s payment rates are below Pinnacle’s costs of providing medical services. United Healthcare pays us less than comparable insurance companies and government programs although we provide the same services to everyone. We don’t think that’s fair,” said Jim Foy, President/CEO of St. John’s Riverside Hospital. “The financial health of our hospitals is dependent on adequate reimbursement and fair payment policies and we are simply asking United Healthcare to be a fair payer.”


 


John Spicer, President/CEO of Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester, noted that the rates United Healthcare pays to hospitals just a few miles away in neighboring Fairfield County, Connecticut are higher than the rates it pays for the same services provided by Pinnacle hospitals, even though hospitals in both counties face similar costs.


 


“We sincerely regret the inconvenience and disruption posed by ending our relationship with United Healthcare. However, we have concluded that we cannot continue to subsidize United Healthcare’s unrealistically low payments,” added Mary Brown, Interim CEO of Westchester Medical Center.


 


Ms. Turchioe said that Pinnacle would continue discussions with United Healthcare and make a good faith effort to reach agreement on a new contract as soon as possible. “In the meantime, we will work closely with United Healthcare and our medical staff to ensure that United Healthcare members receive the quality care that they need,” she said. 


 


A patient’s coverage and financial responsibility will vary depending on the terms of their individual subscriber contract.


 


Still Will Treat for 90 Days


 


The Pinnacle hospitals will continue to provide services to all patients seeking care. Patients undergoing a course of treatment will likely be able to continue the treatment without disruption for a period of at least 90 days. Patients who are in their second trimester of pregnancy will continue to be able to access services at Pinnacle hospitals (including delivery) through post-partum care. Treatment and evaluation for emergency conditions will continue to be covered. Other services at Pinnacle hospitals can be accessed if the member has an out-of-network benefit.


 


United Healthcare members can call 800-638-3323 for more information about how a contract termination with United Healthcare would affect their health care coverage or to 


tell United Healthcare that they care about their local hospitals.


 

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THE FORGOTTEN, SHAUN OF THE DEAD, THE LAST SHOT Open at CC

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WPCNR SCREEN GEMS. From National Amusements. September 24, 2004: City Center Cinema de Lux in White Plains showcases four new premiers this weekend: FIRST DAUGHTER, SHAUN OF THE DEAD, THE LAST SHOT, and THE FORGOTTEN. The weekend schedule, plus previews follow:

THE FORGOTTEN — Julianne Moore stars as a woman struggling with the loss of her eight-year old son. When her psychologist insists she never had a child, she embarks on a search to prove her son’s existence, and her sanity. PG-13

SHAUN OF THE DEAD — This quirky British hit has been described as “a romantic comedy — with zombies!” Rated R

FIRST DAUGHTER — Katie Holmes stars as a college freshman who wants some time and distance away from her home and parents. That’s not easy when home is the White House and her dad is the President of the U.S. Rated PG

THE LAST SHOT — In this comedy, an FBI agent (Alec Baldwin) cooks up an elaborate sting operation to bust a mafia kingpin by pretending to make a Hollywood movie, hiring unwitting director (Matthew Broderick) to helm the project. Rated R

Saturday, September 25, 2004  
Wimbledon (PG-13) –12:10;2:35;5:00;7:45;10:10 pm;12:25 am. ;
First Daughter (PG) –1:50;4:30;7:10;9:55 pm;12:25 am. ;
The Forgotten (PG-13) –12:15;2:30;4:45;7:15;9:45 pm;12:15 am. ;
The Bourne Supremacy (PG-13) –7:25 pm;12:15 am. ;
Cellular (PG-13) –1:40;4:05;6:35;9:00;11:30 pm. ;
Resident Evil: Apocalypse (R) –1:55;4:20;6:40;9:20;11:50 pm. ;
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement (G) –12:05;2:25 pm. ;
The Last Shot (R) –12:20;2:45;5:10;7:40;10:05 pm;12:30 am. ;
Mr. 3000 (PG-13) –12:30;2:50;5:20;7:50;10:20 pm;12:40 am. ;
Shaun of the Dead (R) –12:05;2:40;5:05;7:30;10:00 pm;12:25 am. ;
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (PG) –1:30;4:10;7:00;9:35 pm;

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Lane Sparks Tigers to Lead–Alert Jimison Breaks Open Game. Tigers Win, 34-18

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. By Rob Tamboia, Contributing Writer from championlife.com. September 23, 2004:  A warm  September afternoon with blue sky and a few distant clouds at  Abraham Lincoln High School in Yonkers was a great backdrop to a exciting, well-coached White Plains High School victory.  With penalties and water breaks this 48 minute game lasted almost 2 hours and 40 minutes… however the clock ran out, with the Tigers on top, 34-18. Their record is now 3-1. 

White Plains got focused and decided to put the awkward beginning (of the game) to rest and scored 5 touchdowns verses Lincolns field goal and 2 T.D.’s.


Weird Start.


Senior Mike Lane kicked-off 39 yards, with the ball bouncing out of bounds at the Lincoln  21 yards line.  This was the game’s first of many penalties…  Lincoln accepted the penalty, and White Plains returned to the free-kick formation at the 35 yard line.  The next Lane kick went high and deep and was caught and returned from the 16 yard line, Felix Johnson advanced the ball to the Lancer’s  39 yard line.

On Lincoln’s first play, a slant pass from Zach Thompson to Felix Johnson, Lincoln would have made a first down, except for a block-in-the-back penalty which set up a 1st and 25 on the 24 yard line with 11 minutes on the clock.  The next play was a long pass with Zach Thompson reaching the Lincoln receiver and a touchdown about 10 seconds later and some 75 yards downfield.  The try kick was good and with a 7-0 score with 10:41 left in the first quarter. 


The Night Train High Balls


Next Lincoln’s Zach Thompson kicks off a 50 yard boot, landing on the White Plains 10 yard line.  Captain Mike Lane, confident and full of juice, received the kick and ran full-blast 90 yards down to the South Side goal line for a T.D.  The next play failed as a fake kick play was thrown incomplete, leaving Lincoln ahead 7 to 6.

Mike Lane booted another kick deep into the red zone, and Rob Ostrander III tackled the receiver at the Lincoln 23 yard line.  Norcliff Harris ran 12 yards up for a quick Lincoln first down, getting tackled on the 35 yard line by Conner Lantier.  Felix Johnson had a big play running a slant pass 50 yards downfield.  This set up a first and goal on the W.P. 8 yard line where the Tiger defense took charge and settled in. 


The Tigers Claw Back. Hold ’em to a 3.


Conner Gilmartin Donohue made a big tackle in the backfield creating a 2nd and goal from the 10.  The 2nd and  goal play was fruitless as the pass intended for Chloe Vasquez wasn’t caught, setting up a big 3rd and goal play on the 10.  The next play Zach Thompson rolled out and attempted to pass to Darnel Jacobs on the right flat where it was deflected and downed by Conner Lantier.  This was a another play again by the Tiger Defense. 


Frustrated with White Plains’ goal line defense,  Nick Moralis booted a field goal 27 yards in with 7:47 left in the first quarter, White Plains trailed 10 to 6.


The Night Train Rolls Again to Set Up the Go-Ahead.

Mike Lane returned the kick ten yards with the ball spotted on the W.P. 17 yard line.  Ike Nduka advanced the ball 8 yards setting up a 2nd and 2. Ike Nduka  advanced the ball 3 big yards up to the 29 yard line with a 1st and 10.  Kevin Avery hands off to Ike for another 10 yard gain with a first down again on the W.P. 39 yard line.  In the next series, Mike Lane carried 10 yards up for another first down, then Lane ran 35 yards down to the Lincoln 14 to make a big first down in the red zone.

Jeff Torreda advanced the ball 6 yards creating a 2nd and 4 on the 6 yard line.  The next big play was a hand off from Avery to Torreda on the 3 yard line with Torreda bringing the football into the end zone.  Ajit Singh kicked the extra point and White Plains took the lead 13 to 10 with 3:15 left in the quarter.


FUMBOOL! Jimison Scoops it Up and Scores. He scores!



Still in the first quarter, Gerard Bryant makes a big sack, and the ball is fumbled.  Captain Shawn Jimison advanced the ball for a 19-yard touchdown.  Pablo Siaba booted the ball in on the conversion. White Plains now had the lead at  20 to 10 with 2:02 left still in the first quarter.



Both teams were on offense in the second quarter, and a few minutes before halftime White Plains was marching closer and closer to the goal line with Jeff Torreda running several 5 to 10 yard drives off tackle. White Plains failed to score in the red zone with a first and goal on the 9 yard line.  With 4th and goal on the 3 yard line, a touchdown came short with the referee spotting the ball on the one-half yard line.  Lincoln took over and ran a few plays before the clock wound down to leave the Tigers ahead 20-10 at the half.


Air Avery Overland for the Clincher.



Early in the second half, Mike Lane caught a 40 yard bullet touchdown pass (Lane’s second TD) from Kevin Avery and Pablo Siaba converted the extra point kick.  White Plains led 27 to 10 with 9:44 left in the 3rd quarter.  Later in the quarter Mike Lane found the end zone once again for his third T.D.  White Plains is ahead 34 to 10. 

The fourth quarter had a few holding penalties for the Tigers offsetting most of the rushing gains.  Nick Osher stepped up and made a big tackle on White Plains’ 29 yard line.  Soon after Lincoln’s Nick Mahabeer ran 25 yards downfield scoring Lincoln’s second touchdown with 1:10 left in the game, and the Tigers had pulled it out in the gathering dusk.

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City: “Nothing’s Changed:” Extend NYPH Pro/Bio Plan. Valet Pick.

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. September 24, 2004, UPDATED 3:00 A.M. E.D.T.: The Common Council Work Session called for Thursday evening found the council not objecting to Susan Habel’s report that city departments:  Planning Dept., Planning Board, Environmental Officer, Traffic Commissioner, Conservation Board and Public Works found that conditions in White Plains have not changed significantly to merit a full scale review of the New York Presbyterian Hospital proton accelerator/biomedical research project. She said those departments recommend that the New York Presbyterian Hospital site plan to build a proton accelerator/biomedical research facility be extended for another year at October’s Common Council meeting.


 



NOTHING’S CHANGED: Susan Habel,Commissioner of Planning advises Common Council that city departments find the city environment has not changed substantially. Photo by WPCNR News.







PARK YOUR CAR SIR?



DIRECTOR OF PARKING, AL MORONI, introduced Laz Parking as the designated Valet parking concern selected by the city. Photo by WPCNR News


The council also appeared to be in agreement with the Department of Parking selection of a firm named Laz Parking (not a misprint), to handle the valet parking concession at the City Center at no cost to the city. Albert Moroni, Director of Parking, said the valet parking would be available 7 days a week for both restaurant and general shoppers at the City Center at a cost of $5.



 


Mr. Moroni told WPCNR after the meeting that all cars would be parked by the valets and pay at the city going rate of 50 cents an hour. He said the valet firm makes its money on the convenience charge of $5 for 3 hours. Legal Seafood and Zanaro’s Restaurant elected to participate in the Valet Parking arrangement, and Applebee’s did not. Moroni said that the two participating restaurants would give back some of the valet fee for patrons dining at those establishments.


 


Valet Parking Hours


 


Valet Parking is available, according to Mr. Moroni, 7 days a week for all patrons of the City Center: On Monday through Thursday from 5 P.M. to 11 P.M.; Friday, 5 to midnight; Saturday, 12 Noon to Midnight, and on Sundays from 12 Noon to 9 P.M.  Moroni also told WPCNR that all meter sticker corrections had been executed throughout the city, and the city was now ticketing until 9 P.M.


 



VALET ALLEY ON MAMARONECK AVENUE AT CAPACITY AT 5 MINUTES TO 6 THURSDAY EVENING. Mr. Moroni said the Department of Parking and the Department of Public Safety was going to monitor the placement of the Valet Podium and the queing of the vehicles awaiting valet service at the City Center. Photo by WPCNR News


 


Rita Malmud raised the issue that the Valet Parking area seemed to be creeping up the block past the 140 feet from Martine Avenue where the ordinance says it should be. Mr. Moroni explained that the Zanaro’s manager had been demanding of the Valet men to move the Valet stand closer to his door than the door to Legal Seafood. Mr. Moroni vowed that his department was on it, and would enforce the exact position of the Valet Podium.


 


Cappelli Asks to Pay Taxes With the Rest of the Guys


 


A media horde (Suburban Street.com, WPCNR, The Journal News, Westchester County Business Journal) showed up for the Cappelli PILOT matter on the agenda, expecting something very exciting. However, when Louis Cappelli and his entourage of  efficient-looking men in suits only appeared to request a change in payment date on the City Center Payment In Lieu of Taxes which the council appears to be willing to approve.


 


Currently Mr. Cappelli has to pay his taxes 1-1/2 years in advance of Clayton Park, LCOR and JPI, which was requested of a previous Cappelli financial partner.


 


 Last night, Mr. Cappelli has asked for a relaxation of this timetable, because it has created a burden on his tenants at City Center.


 



 


Cappelli is asking that the 1-1/2 years in advance be trimmed to 30 days in advance of when the other three developers pay theirs. The Legal Department and the Finance Commissioner indicated no problem with that. Mr. Cappelli pointed out the city loses no money, because the $2.5 Million payment is held in escrow anyway. Photo by WPCNR News


 


Habel: Department Heads Say “No Significant Change” in Conditions


Warranting extensive review of NYPH Permit.


 


After the Valet Parking and Cappelli matters were dealt with, Susan Habel Commissioner of Planning, briefed the Council on the Administration’s analysis of the New York Presbyterian Hospital Site Plan Extension request.


 



SUSAN HABEL,  COMMISSIONER OF PLANNING, DISCUSSING THE TWO YEAR JOURNEY TO GROUNDBREAKING. Photo by WPCNR News


 


Habel said construction on the proposed proton accelerator/biomedical buildings on old driving range in the NYPH property at the East End of the City, could not have begun until the state had signed off on the storm water detention plan, the on-site pools, and until the landscaping plans for the access road along side the Bloomingdale’s driveway had been o.k.’d by city departments.


 


Council Caused the Delay by Imposing Environmental Conditions: Habel


 


She pointed out that the Common Council placement of extensive environmental conditions on the project had contributed to the length of time, (two years), it has taken to secure approvals from the state on the storm water retention plan, and the city requirements for entrance road tree removal and tree replacement after its construction.


 


 Ms. Habel gave no reason for why the state permit drag developed. She did not say whether it was caused by New York Presbyterian Hospital being slow to turn over plans to the city departments, or city department delays in reviewing the Hospital plans for the storm water, road beautification and erosion control plans.


 


No one on the Common Council asked for an explanation of why a project that was supposedly approved with all plans in place two years ago (the requirement of any site plan), had to be redrawn up with consultation with city department heads after it was approved.


 


No Accelerator Tech Update Asked for. Compact Version Available in Europe.


 


The Council also did not ask if the  NYPH-selected proton accelerator was still as viable a cancer treatment option in the view of NYPH doctors and the oncologist community today as it was two years ago. The original plans called for the Proton Accelerator/Biomedical facility to open in 2005.


 


Perhaps it should.


 


The Paul Scherrer Institute in Villigen, Switzerland, has developed a compact proton accelerator  a few metres long, (not needing a six story building to house it) for delivery to existing hospitals to establish their own gantry bays to treat patients in their existing buildings.


 


The Institute is reported by the SwissInfo information service, in a story datelined today as having developed “a new extremely compact proton accelerator, called a cyclotron, just to supply (to hospitals)  the protons for the proton therapy facilities.”


 


One of these compact accelerators is being installed at the new proton therapy clinic in Munich, Germany — the first commerical facility of its type in Europe. The clinic in Munich is reported by  SwissInfo as ordering four gantries enabling it to treat 3,000 to 4,000 patients a year.


 


The SwissInfo article can be read at http://www.swissinfo.org/sen/swissinfo.html?siteSect=511&sid=4911065.


 


WPCNR has an inquiry in to the Scherrer Institute for details, is following up on this development.


 


 


No Hospital Executives Show. No Explanation for Alleged Delay.


 


WPCNR queried Geoffrey Thompson, the lone representative from New York Presbyterian Hospital who was there, a media spokesperson for the hospital (no hospital executives or legal council were present),  for an explanation  whether it was NYPH delay or error in formulating the plans or demands of city departments or delays in improving them. He said he would ask the hospital what contributed to the delay.


 


Habel said the city had been working steadily with the NYPH on the plans since the site plan had been approved in the summer of 2002, permits had finally been received from the state in April and July of this year, and that Joseph Nicoletti, Commissioner of Public Works had approved water and sewer related matters at the end of August.


 


No Update on Technology


 


WPCNR also asked Mr. Thompson if the hospital could issue a statement on how the proton accelerator measures up as a cancer treatment option since completion now looked like it would not happen until 2007 (WPCNR estimate) two  years after approval (in August, 2002). He said he would ask.


 


Habel noted that the Planning Board, the Commissioner of  Public Works, the Traffic Commissioner, the Environmental Officer, had agreed that conditions in the eastern end of the city where project is to impact had not changed significantly and that all recommended the site plan be extended. Habel concluded by saying, “With respect to any changes (in the conditions), the Planning Department, Traffic Department, Conservation Board, Planning Board found no impacts and changes in circumstance that would affect this extension.”


 



COUNCILMAN TOM ROACH  asked if the extension was being asked for  “in spite of no substantial construction, or because of.” Councilman Benjamin Boykin, is at left.  Photo by WPCNR News


 


Habel  said, “because construction was not permitted until they had received these permits from the state,” as the reason for extending the permit.


 


Delgado: Three years the Max?


 


Mr. Delgado delving into the labyrinth of zoning zen on site plans quoted from the ordinance governing site plans noting that substantial construction had to be shown after three years.  He asked if the hospital had only one more year to get the project going: “Are we looking here at a life (of the site plan) of three years?”


 



WHEN LARRY DELGADO SPEAKS, PEOPLE LISTEN: Councilman Delgado reviewing the apparent three-year time limit on getting “significant construction” accomplished on approved projects. Photo by WPCNR News


 


  Ms. Habel said, “It (the site plan) could be renewed again. That position has not been held to the business community,” saying there have been other projects that have taken more than three years. Ms. Habel did not cite any such examples, though JPI is approaching three years.


 


It should be noted that Louis Cappelli built a 34-story building and the City Center complex in two years after site plan approval. Clayton Park built its apartments in approximately 18 months. Bank Street Commons was built in approximately two years. The two hospital buildings contemplated are six stories each.


 


Arnold Bernstein said the council should take a look at defining the words “substantial construction,” as a basis for renewing a site plan.


 


Other Business 


 


In other matters, the council was supportive of an expansion of a U.S.A. Storage facility on Kensico Avenue, and was advised that the developer selected by Westchester County to build the affordable housing complex, Horton’s Mill Village by Liberty Park, would build the utilities and infrastructure for the project at a capped cost of $800,000. City Corporation Counsel, Edward Dunphy said the county would pay that cost. The evening concluded with a report on Library Interior renovation.


 

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White Plains Softball Dad On Leading Edge of Internet Telephone Revolution

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WPCNR JUST BUSINESS. By John F. Bailey. September 23, 2004: Paul Riss is a softball dad in White Plains, whose daughter has played and participated in the White Plains Little League and the White Plains Explosion for a number of years, so when WPCNR got a news release from Paul about his company offering internet calling, which WPCNR simply does not understand, it was a natural to give Paul Riss, the CEO of eLEC Communications in White Plains a call and ask what is internet phone all about.


 



THE LITTLE BLACK BOX THAT WILL CHANGE THE WAY YOU PHONE: Reached at his office, Riss explained that eLEC Communications,  is offering a little black box that bypasses your local phone company and can chop the cost of local calls through Verizon in half. When WPCNR pointed out I paid Verizon $90 a month, ATT & T Wireless $125 a month (on a conservative month), and US Sprint a $100 a month for long distance, Ray Burke, his publicist said, “John, you should definitely get one.” Riss is so eager to get the Voice Adaptor Box out to the public, that he is making a special offer to readers of the White Plains CitizeNetReporter. If you call eLEC and order the Voice Box Adapter, and mention the White Plains CitizeNetReporter, Mr. Riss will give you the Voice Box Adaptor free. Photo, Courtesy, eLEC Communications


 



I asked Paul what makes his VOIP box different from your ttypical telemarketer slammer call.


 


Riss said it is a box available only to households and businesses equipped with DSL Broadband lines that allows you to use your home or business phone, keeping the same number or numbers, over the internet — bypassing Verizon equipment and line charges, turning long distance calls into pennies, not dollars — while providing answering service, call-waiting and a host of other features through the eLEC Communications package.


 


Riss’s company eLEC Communications Corporation, was formerly named Circo International, a luggage company, handling big name lines like Dunlop and Perry Ellis and Samsonite where he had to deal with inventory, styles, storage.


 


He got into the telephone business because, as he puts it “there’s no inventory. I’m just selling minutes.”  eLEC Communications is now profitable on an operations basis for the last six quarters and Riss sees VOIP ( for “Voice Over Internet Protocal”) as the future in telephone communications. 


 


Southwest Pacific Bell, “the last of the baby bells,” as Riss termed them, thinks so to. This week Southwest PacBell signed up Ford Motor Company for 50,000 lines to their VOIP network.


 



 


In response to my question of what is VOIP, Riss said, “It’s a product made by Grandstream. It allows you to take your regular analog phone and make it into a digital phone so you can make calls over your high speed internet connection. There’s a hookup so you can plug your computer in and your phone in so your computer can be on while you’re using your phone.” WPCNR PhotoCapture from Grandstream website.


 


Gentlemen, Jam in Your Jacks. No Technician Needed. Riss says.


 


“The box  (known as a VOX Adapter Box) plugs into your internet connection. Then it has three separate ports,  a LAN ( for Land Area Network) port, a WAN (for Wide Area Network) port, and a Phone port. You plug your broadband  connection into the WAN. You plug your computer into the LAN, and you plug your phone into the Phone Port. With those three connections, you’re basically up and running. It’s meant to be a plug-and-play device.”


 


At the present time, he’s shipping it to select cellphone stores in Manhattan, that are “selling it off the shelf.”  Riss says, the VOX Adapter Boxes come preprogrammed with a phone number and an IP address. “Right now they’re all 212 area codes. You go home and plug this in. Now you have another phoneline and it’s a 212 area code. Now, once you start doing that and you’re comfortable with it, we’d like to take your home number or your business phone number whichever it is and port that over, so your regular home number will ring on this internet phone also, and that way you can ditch your local phone carrier.”


 


Riss said he has 914 area code numbers available and shortly will be able to supply area codes nationwide.


 


Riss stressed you don’t need a technician to install it. He says it’s more “complicated” if you have SDSL at home. ADSL or cable (such as Optimum online), seems to work “within five minutes,” he reports, “and you’ll be calling over the internet.”  His company provides 24/7 technical support with very easy-to-understand instructions.


 


 



 


THE ONE COMPUTER SETUP for the Voice Adapter Box. Other Family computers and phones simply plug into your normal telephone jacks, and work like “extenstions,” only eLEC is routing the calls to the internet. Photo of Illustration from eLEC Communications Instructions.


 


Advantage: Price and the usual Features—Bundled.


 


For users, Riss reports, the Vox Adapter Box is  a lower cost product. His box which he buys wholesale from Grandstream (www.grandstream.com) also comes with bundled features. Those features Riss includes  are now “extras” that Verizon, the CitizeNetReporter’s telephone company charges for.


 


“We have free features with it, Riss explains, “meaning voicemail, callforwarding, callwaiting. If you buy this from Verizon or any phone company they’re charging a lot of money for the features.”


 


(Verizon charges me $11 a month for its custom calling package and Voice Mail Service.)


 


Penny a Minute vs. 2.4 Cents A Minute.


 


When told of the CitizeNetReporter phone bill levels, Riss pointed out “If you get this product, your usage drops dramatically. How about this: I have a friend who has a diner. Every morning his 200 faxes go out. Each fax takes about 25 seconds, say. Verizon charges him a 3-minute minimum for each fax. He’s paying $15 a day to send out his menu every morning of his specials to the 200 people on his fax list. At $15 a day, if he faxed over an IP connection, that 25 or 30 seconds, we’re only charging him half a penny, because we’re charging him a penny a minute. Half a penny times 200 faxes, that’s only a dollar, instead of $15.”


 


No Changing of Phone Number.


 


Riss says that everyday thousands of people are making the switch or “porting” their number  to “Voice Over IP,” as this connection is called. “There’s local number portability between phone companies. We would port over your number over to us so Verizon no longer has it. Verizon’s no longer billing you. We’re billing you. We offer an unlimited voice package for $29.95 a month, (by contrast, WPCNR paid $180 in August for one month of local and long distance plus service)  which includes unlimited dialing in the U.S. both for local and long distance, and for international rates we have more than twenty countries available at only 2 cents a minute.”


 


Custom Country Calling Envisioned.


 


Riss pointed out the advantage of the Internet  VOIP call: “As we start rolling it out more, we’re thinking of doing some ethnic marketing. If you have our product and we’re charging you 2 cents a minute to Germany, Italy, Israel, Hong Kong, parts of Russia, we can interest a bunch of ethnic groups who are calling home all the time.


 


“Even better,” Riss continued, warming to the possibilities his Voice Adaptor Box offers,
 “a distributor  who has a big business in Latin America, told me, if I ship our Vox Adapter Box (with a 212 number) to Venezuela then he has a lot of people in Queens or Brooklyn who (would send a eLEC Voice Box to relatives in South America)  and would call that number and it would be a local call for that person calling from Brooklyn, even though the phone is ringing in Venezuela.”


 


Take Your Voice Box With You. Keep Your Former Number.


 


In speaking with Ray Burke, of Beacon Rock Research, a consultant to Mr. Riss, Burke pointed out that a person who moves to say California or anywhere in the United States, could take their Vox Adapter Box with them, never have to change their phone number. While waiting for their   phone service and DSL line to be hooked up at their new residence, they could immediately begin making calls, using their former telephone number.


 


One customer of eLEC Communications did that when they moved to South Carolina rather than change their number with all their New York clients, Riss said. Vox Adapter Box allows their New York clients to contact them in South Carolina without long distance charges.


 


Monitored it for 5 years.


 


Riss said the progress in Voice Over Internet Protocol, over the last five years has been amazing. “We’ve been looking at it for over the last four or five years, and the technology equipment is really working now and the beauty of it is, it’s a computer. If someone calls us up and says I want my phone to do this, and eLEC does not have that feature, we can say to them call us back next week. It’s just a guy writing software to do it. We can do special software for ring tones for your children, your boss. It’s caller i.d.”


 


Selling the Razor to Make Money on the Blades


 


 


Riss reports the eLEC is selling the Voice Adapter Box for less than half what its manufacturer, Grandstream,  is selling it for on the internet.  “What we’re doing to encourage people to buy our product is, the cell phone stores selling it are charging $29.95, already programmed with an I.P. address and phone number. It’s yours to keep. Eventually we hope you just give up your Verizon line and move it over to our VOIP platform, but you may as well run them parallel for  3 or 4 months before you do it. A lot of consumers are already are paying for high speed access, why should they have to pay for a separate land line coming in. They can just use that high speed access connection to make their voice calls.”


 


Riss said that if persons or businesses wishing to try the Voice Adapter Box Service mentioned they read about it on the White Plains CitizeNetReporter, he would include the Voice Adaptor Box free, a $29.95 value, and start our readers on the $9.95 a month service.


 


Can Be Used with Cellphone.


 


Riss notes there is also a way to have the Voice Adapter Box ring your cellphone. “When someone calls you your cellphone can ring, your home phone can ring, and your vacation house can ring all at the same time. We can do call forwarding to each line. If someone calls your house. You’ll still have inbound calls, counting on your inbound minutes.”


 


A Raft of Services Verizon Charges For Bundled.


 


Burke said that after a consumer purchases the Voice Adapter Box for $29.95, a one time only fee, they can opt for two plans.


 


For $9.95 a month they get all local calls for 1 penny a minute, and can place all long distance calls through the United States for 1.9 cents a minute.  Riss said, for comparison, Verizon charges 2-1/2 cents per minute for local calls, and U.S. Sprint, WPCNR’s carrier for long distance, 3.4 to 3.9 cents per minute.


 


Savings Make Reporter’s Jaw Drop.


 


WPCNR notes this is a tremendous swing. In a call I made to Denver Colorado at 12:45 P.M. in August, WPCNR paid $5.20 cents for a 13 minute call. At the eLEC Communications Voice Adapter Box rate, that call would have cost me 13 cents.


 


Mr. Burke noted that for the $9.95, eLEC throws in the following goodies: “For $9.95, you get Free voice mail, free call waiting, free caller i.d., free caller forwarding, free three-way calling, free call transfer, free call return, repeat dialing, call hunt, call blocking, ring selection, anonymous call rejection, do not disturb, extension dialing, international call blocking, speed dialing. It’s amazing.”


 


3% Excise Tax Only.


 


Riss said that he passes along the charge Verizon charges him for patching through a call to a non internet user, and  terminating the call on the local phone wire. That charge is included in the $9.95 a month charge plus a 3% excise tax  for the data transfer on both the 9.95 charge and the local and long distance charges. On the $9.95 that amounts to 30 cents.


 


For  $20 more a month, eLEC offers  unlimited calling an international calling package including the U.S., Canada, and twenty overseas countries at 2 cents a minute.


 


Riss sees making some deals  with other small phone companies or VOIP carriers where they are terminating each other’s VOIP calls for free and bypassing companies like Verizon altogether.


 


Not a Telephone Slammer. Brazil a local call.


 


Riss went to great lengths to explain that Vox Adapter Box is not at all like the telemarketing calls WPCNR, and perhaps you, dear reader, receive frequently of an evening, suggesting you can save over Verizon or AT & T.


 


“It’s a lot different. You can only use it if you have broadband. It really is a lot less expensive. It’s feature-rich. You can have up to five numbers ringing at one time. You can take the Voxbox you buy off the shelf, take it to Brazil, and if anyone is calling you from White Plains, and you’re in Brazil, it’s still a local phone call for them because it’s ringing in Brazil. In that instance, it works somewhat like a cellphone.”


 


Could be the Start of Something Big.


 


Riss said he has no stores in White Plains selling the box yet, but does have a store in Connecticut. He has also had fifteen consumers in the testing of it:


 


“We’re just rolling it out. Before we sent it out to the stores we put fifteen people on it that we know and love to make sure everything works and that they were happy with it. And we have several people who are just loving it. We had one person who had Verizon DSL having problems with it because Verizon DSL blocked the VOIP calls, until we programmed in the user name and password for that person. We had to program that into the box. We’ve never had anyone with cable having a problem.”


 


Riss’s company is located in White Plains, and is traded over the counter, and is growing. It increased the number of lines it is serving by 59% at the end of its Third Quarter, and that 59% increase was achieved in three months.  The company billing is at $1 Million a month and growing almost doubling its business from last May, when its monthly billings stood at $587,000. Riss also reports the company has been making an operating profit the last six quarters. It operates eLEC Communications and New Rochelle Telephone.


 


Riss invites friends and neighbors to try his service, mention the CitizeNetReporter, and receive his Voice Adapter Box Free to try the service and the savings.


 


Riss notes that the Wall Street Journal quoted a research report predicting that the 100,000 persons who use VoIP presently will grow to 10 Million people in three years.


 


For more information, go to eLEC Communications website for its Voice Adaptor Box at www.myvox.net, or to order a box directly to hook up and try Voice Over Internet Protocol. The box, Riss says comes with an unconditional guarantee and will be replaced if ever defective, at no charge. The company can be reached at 1-800-VOX1699.

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