White Plains Grade 3 to 8 2011 Test Scores Show 45% Not Proficient in Eng.

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PCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From the New York State Department of Education. August 9, 2011 (EDITED):


The State Education Department  released the results of the math and English Language Arts (ELA) exams taken by all New York students in grades 3-8 in May 2011 Monday.


In the White Plains City School District, slightly more than 50% of students in Grades 3-8 passed the English Language Arts Exams at the proficiency level, despite diligent efforts to prepare them for the new score levels.


(In 2010, 54% of all White Plains 3rd to 8th graders passed.)


In 2011, with higher passing grades to surpass, in Grade 8,52.7% passed the 2011 English Language Arts Exam; Grade 7, 52.5% passed; Grade 6, 59%.


At the Elementary level; 52.6% left 5th grade “proficient” in English; 4th grade, 56.3%; 3rd Grade, 57.2%.  


The White Plains students did considerably better on the Math Tests.


In 8th Grade,  71.5% passed;  69.9% of 7th Graders passed; 69.4% of 6th Graders passed. In the elementary grades,  60.1% of 5th graders scored in the “Proficient” range; 66.7% of 4th Graders passed and 58% of third Graders passed.


In 2010, 64.5% of White Plains 3rd to 8th graders passed the math test, and in 2011, 65% passed at the higher passing level.


The state data show that the average scale scores on this year’s English exams are slightly lower than last year’s at all grade levels; the average scale scores in math are about the same as last year’s. While the majority of students statewide met or exceeded the state’s proficiency standards in both math and ELA, overall performance remains low and the gaps in achievement persist.  Actions to implement the Regents education reform agenda are underway, with the related goals of closing the gap and preparing all students for college and careers.


Last year, the state raised the “proficiency” standard scores to better reflect the level of achievement needed to indicate that a student is on track to achieve college-ready scores on future state exams (80 or above on a Math Regents and a 75 or above on the ELA Regents exam). The Department also made changes to this year’s exams to make them more comprehensive and better measures of students’ skills.


Regents Chancellor Merryl H. Tisch said, “These results underscore the urgent need for New York to continue to aggressively move forward with the implementation of the Regents’ reform agenda.  Through aggressive implementation at the district and school level of higher standards, better and more accurate assessments, a more content rich curriculum and a teacher evaluation system aimed at supporting teaching excellence, we can make tremendous strides towards ensuring all of our children succeed.”


Education Commissioner John B. King, Jr. said, “Student outcomes have been stubbornly flat over time. The Regents reform agenda is designed to change that, by driving long-term gains in student performance. Better tests are only one part of the reform strategy. We’re also moving forward in our efforts to ensure better training and better support for the teachers and principals in our schools; to provide more transparent and useful data; and to help our lowest performing schools take the necessary steps to turn around their performance or replace them with innovative alternatives. Taken together, these efforts will dramatically improve the likelihood that New York’s students are well-prepared for college and careers.”


Summary of 3-8 Exam Results




  • 52.8% of grade 3-8 students across the state met or exceeded the ELA proficiency standard (a decrease from 53.2% last year); 63.3% met or exceeded the standard in math (up from 61% last year).


  • 12.6% of English Language Learners (ELLs) statewide met or exceeded the new ELA proficiency standard (down from 14.3% last year) across grades 3-8; 32.3% of ELLs met or exceeded the standard in math (up from 30.7% last year).


  • Statewide results for black students reveal the persistence of the achievement gap: 35% of black students across grades 3-8 met or exceeded the ELA proficiency standard (compared with 52.8% for all students and 64.2% for white students); 44% met or exceeded the standard in math (compared with 63.3% for all students and 73.3% for white students).


  • Statewide results for Hispanic students reveal the persistence of the achievement gap: 37.2% of Hispanic students across grades 3-8 met or exceeded the ELA proficiency standard (compared with 52.8% for all students and 64.2% for white students); 50.2% met or exceeded the standard in math (compared with 63.3% for all students and 73.3% for white students).


  • 14.5% of Students with Disabilities (SWDs) statewide met or exceeded the new ELA proficiency standard (down from 15.2% last year) across grades 3-8; 26.9% of SWDs met or exceeded the standard in math (up from 24.6% last year).


  • The percentage of students scoring at Level 4 in both ELA and math decreased statewide. On the ELA exam, 3.5% of students across grades 3-8 combined scored at Level 4 (down from 10.2% last year). In math, 23% scored at Level 4 (down from 24.7% last year).


  • Across the Big 5 city school districts, a smaller proportion of students met or exceeded the math and ELA proficiency standards than in the rest of the state:







 




    • In Buffalo, 26.9% of students in grades 3-8 met or exceeded the English proficiency standard (down from 27.7% last year); 31% met or exceeded the math standard (up from 29.8% last year).


    • In New York City, 43.9% of students in grades 3-8 met or exceeded the English proficiency standard (up from 42.4% last year); 57.3% met or exceeded the math standard (up from 54% last year).


    • In Rochester, 24.4% of students in grades 3-8 met or exceeded the English proficiency standard (down from 25.3% last year); 29.4% met or exceeded the math standard (up from 28% last year).


    • In Syracuse, 22.5 of students in grades 3-8 met or exceeded the English proficiency standard (down from 25.5% last year); 25.3% met or exceeded the math standard (down slightly from 25.7% last year).


    • In Yonkers, 37.8% of students in grades 3-8 met or exceeded the English proficiency standard (down from 39.2% last year); 40.4% met or exceeded the math standard (down from 41.5% last year).

 


A Powerpoint presentation summarizing the test results, as well as individual school and district results, is available at http://www.p12.nysed.gov/irs/ela-math/.


Background on Cut Scores and Changes to Exams


Recognizing that remediation rates in New York’s colleges are far too high, and that much more needs to be done to enhance the State’s economic competitiveness, the Board of Regents has begun an in depth discussion of the knowledge, skills, and abilities high school graduates must demonstrate in order to show they are prepared   for college and careers.


To inform that discussion, the Regents have been working to determine which data are good indicators of future post-secondary success. Last summer, for example, they reviewed research that analyzed how student performance on the state’s grade 3-8 math and English tests relates to performance on the NAEP exam and on Regents exams, and how performance on Regents exams relates to first year performance in college. The research indicated that some students who had scored “proficient” on state exams found themselves unprepared, without remediation, to do the work required of them when they reached college. Accordingly, the Regents and the Commissioner adjusted the cut scores on the grade 3-8 exams to more accurately indicate proficiency. 


The Department also made a number of significant changes to the math and English exams that students took this past May. These changes, which demonstrate the Department’s commitment to the continuous development of a more robust testing system, include the following:




  • The Department is no longer releasing test questions after they have been administered. Doing this helps to ensure that preparation for the tests goes much deeper than simply reviewing past exams.


  • Students now have to answer more multiple choice questions on both the math and English exams. Doing so enables the Department to test a greater range of performance indicators at varying degrees of difficulty. With a greater number of questions to answer, the length of time each test takes to complete has increased.


  • Students at every grade level must now write at least one full essay on the English exams (i.e., essays were added to the exams in grades 3, 5, and 7).


  • At the Department’s request, Daniel Koretz, Henry Lee Shattuck Professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, is conducting research to help identify the possibility of “score inflation” in the grade 3-8 test results and to propose actions to mitigate such inflation if it is found to exist.

Changes in the testing system have had several effects on the reported scores. Each year, scores are statistically linked to the scores from the year before, so that any given score, or any performance level, will have the same meaning from one year to the next. For example, a student at the cut score for Level 3 in grade 5 math in 2011 should ideally score 674, which was the cut score in 2010. However, the difficulty of individual test items can vary, in either direction, from one year to the next. Accordingly, the raw score needed to reach that scale score or performance level can change. This happens with all testing programs that change test forms from one year to the next.


The changes made in 2011 had an additional effect on reported scores.  In every grade, the percentage of students classified as Level 4 in ELA dropped in 2011, and in some grades, particularly 3, 5, and 7, this change was large. The reason for these changes is that before 2011, the tests had too few items to measure the Level 4 cut score as accurately as the Department would want. With the additional items included in 2011, the tests could more accurately place the Level 4 cut score. Measurement of the Level 3 cut score was more accurate in past years and, therefore, the percentages of students identified as proficient (Level 3 or 4) in 2011 were more consistent with past results.




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County Announces September 11 Observance Plans

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. August 8, 2011:


Westchester County will hold its ceremony to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the tragic events of Sept. 11 on Sunday, Sept. 11 beginning at 6 p.m. at The Rising, the county’s 9/11 memorial at Kensico Plaza in Valhalla.


            For the first time, the annual event will be held at twilight, to allow people to participate in events held elsewhere throughout the region.


            County Executive Robert P. Astorino, family of Westchester residents who died in the World Trade Center and other elected officials are expected to attend.


            The candlelight ceremony will be part of various remembrance activities in Westchester, which will begin Friday, Sept. 9 with a volunteer expo, sponsored by the county and The Volunteer Center of United Way at the County Center, White Plains, from 2-7 p.m.


            That event, dubbed “Serve and Learn: Westchester Remembers 9/11,” is part of a nationwide effort to encourage volunteering. The goal is to match volunteers with agencies that need their help. Approximately 100 nonprofit agencies from the county will participate. Residents will also have the chance to donate blood and participate in many other service projects.


            Both events are free.


            Residents are encouraged to check back at www.westchestergov.com for further details as they are announced.

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Public Access Channel Expands Reach Through the Internet

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WPCNR MEDIA FRONTIER. From White Plains Public Access Television. August 5, 2011:


 On Thursday, August 25, at 7:30 P.M., the White Plains public access channel will officially open its video website, www.WPcommunitymedia.org  allowing Internet users worldwide to view the channel streamed live or select White Plains-produced programs for video on demand.



Jim Kenny, Executive Director of White Plains Public Access Television, demonstrates the prototype of WP Community Media at White Plains Public Access Headquarters Friday. The leadership and vision of the White Plains Cable Commission  with the support and information-consciousness of the White Plains Common Council, has taken White Plains Public Access from video tape to digital, to streamed city meetings on the internet and now to all public access programming on the internet for the world to see in just three years. The official launch is August 25.



Pick your Program and Watch it with just a click — from Ann Arbor to Samarkand –on  the internet. Public Access TV will now reach White Plainsians wherever they may be in the world. Mr. Kenny cautions the website is in a testing and prototype soft opening stage now and not all kinks are worked out yet and viewers may experience inefficiencies. He promises the August 25 date will be the time to see it in action.


An informal ribbon-cutting will be held in the White Plains Cable Access TV studio in the Seasons Building at 4 Martine Avenue, White Plains.


On the evening of the event, the TV studio will be open for the public to tour, and access channel program producers who will be on hand to answer questions about their programs.


The White Plains Public Access channel has been in operation since 1982 but only viewable within the City of White Plains and in some surrounding communities on the Verizon cable system.


The WP Community Media service will allow anyone in the world with uncensored Internet access to see what is on the White Plains public access channel, and view the most recent programs of their choice appearing on the channel.


The launch, currently undergoing preliminary testing is a natural development.


Last summer, the White Plains government access channel began streaming on the White Plains City website and enabled Internet users to view any recorded meetings or events through a video archive.

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Governor Designates Part of Route 119, Detective Michael Perry Memorial Highway

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From the Office of Assemblyman Robert Castelli. August4, 2011:


            Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today signed a law that designates a portion of State Route 119 in White Plains as the Detective Michael Perry Memorial Highway.


 Assemblyman Robert J. Castelli, author of the measure, is a 22-year veteran of the New York State Police and served as one of the first Crime Prevention Specialists in the State. The measure takes effect immediately as Chapter 266 of 2011. “I thank both Governor Cuomo and Senator Ball, my Senate cosponsor of this legislation, for honoring Detective Michael Perry in this meaningful way,” he said.



Detective  Michael Perry


“Each day, brave men and women like Michael Perry go to work not knowing if they’ll return home,” said Senator Greg Ball, who is the Chairman of the Senate Standing Committee on Veterans, Homeland Security and Military Affairs. “Dedicating this highway to Michael is the least we can do to honor his memory and thank his family for their sacrifice,” added Chairman Ball.


“I am gratified that our Governor has seen fit to honor Detective Perry along with myself and all of those who respect both his service, and sacrifice,” Castelli said. “It is a small testament to a brave man’s actions, and is indicative of the kind of courage displayed by police officers every day in our society. Sadly, his courageous efforts on that day had a tragic ending, but do not diminish the legacy he left us, of a lifetime of dedication to public service.”


 A resident of Yorktown, Officer Perry had served with the White Plains Police Department for seven years and previously with the New York City Department of Environmental Protection Police. He is survived by his wife, twin sons, parents, sister, and brother. On June 14, 2010, Officer Perry was posthumously promoted to the rank of Police Detective.


Perry suffered a fatal heart attack shortly after chasing and arresting a man at a local mall near State Route 119. He had called for assistance and chased the larceny suspect a short distance before placing him into custody. The suspect, who was a career criminal with over 300 arrests, was charged with resisting arrest and larceny.


 The route, from the intersection of Route 119 and Route 100 by the Westchester County Center, continuing to the intersection of Route 119 and Main Street, will be dedicated during a ceremony some time later this year.

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French School Maintenance of Deserted Ridgeway Club Meets City Standards

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WPCNR SOUTH END TIMES.By John F. Bailey. August 4, 2011:


The rains this week may improve the browned-out former fairways and overgrown shrubs of the tennis courts and the general abandoned derelict of the defunct Ridgeway Country Club, now owned by the French American School of New York.



Ridgeway green last Friday. The sweltering summer of 2011 has turned fairways ugly and brown.



The Browning of Ridgeway.


Mother Nature’s nurturing rains this week and to come will be the only improvement Gedney Farms neighbors of the 120-acre property can expect in the appearance of the abandoned property.


The City of White Plains, after meeting with the French American School owners two weeks ago to discuss the property’s maintenance, determined the school present level of property maintenance: grass-cutting and no watering of the property as acceptable to the city.


The French American School of New York reported in a statement to WPCNR yesterday said that:


“We met with city officials and described our maintenance program. They were perfectly satisfied with the maintenance program involving the periodic mowing of the grass, enhanced security, and landscaping maintenance along Ridgeway road.


At no point during our discussion was the property referred to as being “in poor condition,” nor was FASNY asked to continue watering the property since it was understood by all that the site would no longer be operating as a traditional golf course.


In fact, some neighbors have actually noticed an improvement in flooding conditions since watering has stopped.”


The city had called the meeting because of complaints from neighbors of the club about the appearance.”


The consideration of the French American School of New York proposed transformation of the failed golf course into a new central campus for the school, has been delayed for four months during a moratorium imposed by the city to consider restrictive zoning for the club that as first presented by the city would sharply reduce the imprint of renovated and new structures proposed by the club.


The city in proposing the new recreation ordinance maintains that golf courses are environmental assets to the community.


However the sudden decrease in flooding in the neighborhood surrounding the club this year, coinciding with the suspension of irrigation of the club grounds,  could indicate that this golf course over the years precisely due to its irrigation practices may have caused preconditions of adding to the water table that resulted in flooding of residences adjacent to the course.


 

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They Came from Outer Space!

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WPCNR PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE DAY. By the WPCNR ROVING REPORTER. AUGUST 2, 2011: 


From 5 to  7 PM Monday evening, White Plains was pelted by a hail storm accompanied by roiling black clouds, downpours and dangerous lightning strikes and authorative growls of thunder as 80 degree, moist humid air collided with a cold front producing a shooting gallery of hail stones that hit houses cars and streets and could cause serious injury if you were hit by them.



Whiskers The Weather Cat taking his observations at 6:30 P.M. As a hail/rain mix turned White Plains rush hour into a bizarre event: a hailstorm.



A 1 inch by 1 inch hailstone sample collected by the WPCNR Weather Boys.


The hail lasted at least 30 minutes, collecting on rooftops and skylights. The hail bombardment sounded like your building was in a crossfire in a Grade B cowboy movie. The hail hurled from outer space sounded like gunshots complete with richocets when they hit skylights, car roofs and windshields.  WPCNR’s Weather Lab discovered some hail stones the size of a .45 calibre cartridge (32mm). While collecting samples, the WPCNR weather team experienced painful discomfort as we were literally hit with a “hail” of hailstones. It was unusual having a hailstorm of this duration and this size hail.



Hailstones, sounding like gunshots impacting collected on one of the many WPCNR Headquarters Observation Decks.


According to The Weather Tracker by Leslie Alan Horvitz (Barron’s), hail is formed by intense thunderstorms (last night’s was intense), when snow and rain are thrown together in the central updraft of the storm. As the snow falls from above, snowflakes merge with frozen water, resulting in ice pellets. As more supercooled droplets in the upper atmosphere stick to the ice pellets, the larger the pellets become as they fall through the towering thunderheads (up to 40,000 feet or more). Because these hailstones are not exposed to warmer temperatures in the atmosphere for long enough to melt as they descend, they read ground as hail.


Did you get nicked by hail? Suffer damage? Let WPCNR know.

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No Cause Yet in SewageTreatment Plant Fire Releasing Est. 250M Gal of Sewage

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WPCNR WATER WATCH. From the New York City Department of Environment Protection (Edited) August 2, 2011:


Investigation of the cause of the July 20 fire resulting in the discharge of an estimated 250 Million gallons of raw sewage into the Hudson River July 20-23 is currently under way by FDNY.



The Upper West Side Sewage Treatment Offender at 135th Street and 12 Avenue. On July 20, a fire broke out forcing shutdown of its pumps. Cause of the fire is still under investigation.


The DEP has commissioned an independent review of the incident to learn what went wrong, steps the agency can take to prevent similar incidents in the future, and to generate any other recommendations for operational or safety improvements at North River, or any one of the city’s 13 wastewater treatment plants.


As a backup in the event of further operational disruptions, and to increase treatment capacity during wet weather, DEP last week installed additional pumping system in case any further issues with the existing system arise. That installation is now fully online, providing an additional 24 million gallons a day of pumping capacity. With three engines online and the supplemental pumping capacity that has been installed, DEP has operated with nearly full wet-weather pumping capacity at North River since the end of last week.


DEP is still working around the clock to stabilize the operations that have been restored and put affected systems back in working order. Of the plant’s five engines used to pump wastewater into the facility, only two engines need to be operating during dry weather to handle the wastewater flow into the plant. On Wednesday, July 27, DEP successfully restarted a third engine at the plant, providing critical redundancy during dry weather and adding additional capacity during storms.  


Full secondary treatment is also now online. Early last week, two of the three critical systems necessary to achieve secondary treatment, aeration tanks and final settling tanks, come online and were in operation. The third system—aeration achieved by blowers that supply oxygen to the process—was partially operating, with two of the three blowers needed to achieve secondary treatment currently online. On Sunday, July 31, a third blower was restored to service—the final step to achieving full secondary treatment at North River. Though only two blowers were in operation until Sunday, DEP has been averaging federal wastewater treatment standards for Total Suspended Solid Removal and Carbonaceous Biochemical Oxygen Demand—a measure of how much dissolved oxygen in a waterway gets depleted by sewagesince Monday, July 25. 


Because the plant has enough pumping redundancy with the addition of the third engine and back-up pumping systems that were installed, DEP deactivated small “pump arounds” that were temporarily pumping wastewater flow out of an 84-inch sewer at West 117th St. in Manhattan to a 42-inch sewer at Frederick Douglass Boulevard and 117th, which flows to the Wards Island Wastewater Treatment Plant.


 


 

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Shollenberger, Dem Committee Drops Challenge to GOP’s Arndt Primary Petitions

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2011. Special to WPCNR. AUGUST 2, 2011: 


Brian Maloney of the White Plains City Republican Committee reports to WPCNR tonight that Elizabeth Shollenberger, head of the Democratic City Committee withdrew her challenge to Republican candidate for Common Council James Arndt’s petition to be in the September 13 Republican Primary Monday afternoon.


Maloney  prepared the brief contesting Shollenberger’s challenge and appeared with Schollenberger in Westchester County Supreme Court this morning. Mr. Maloney explains what transpired:


“She quit after reading the law, which expressly prohibited her from bringing the action;  she had to; else she would have the possibility of being sanctioned,” Maloney wrote in a statement to WPCNR. As Maloney’s brief presented before Judge Sam Walker noted quoting the law on contesting petitions:


” the nomination or designation of any candidate for any public office…may be contested in a proceeding instituted in the supreme court by any aggrieved candidate or by the chairman of any party committee or by a person who shall have filed objectins, as proved in this chapter except that the chairman of a party committee may not bring a proceeding with respect to a designation or the holding of an otherwise uncontested primary.”


Maloney told WPCNR in his statement that Shollenberger admitted to the court she was “unaware” of this caveat, and she asked the judge for an adjournment to study the law. Court reconvened at 4:30. Maloney said Schollenberger withdrew her challenge.


Arndt is unchallenged in the Republican Primary in his nomination to contest Democrat John Martin for the balance of Mayor Thomas Roach’s former council seat.


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Board of Elections Finds James Arndt petition to run in Republican Primary valid

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WPCNR CAMPAIGN 2011. August 1, 2011:


The Republican Party  of White Plains has notified WPCNR, that the Westchester County Board of Elections has certified James Arndt petitions as valid and will place him on the September 13 Primary Ballot to run against John Martin for the unexpired portion of Mayor Tom Roach’s common council seat.


Brian Maloney, Chair of the White Plains Republican Committee advised WPCNR that Mr. Arndt is not opposed in the primary by any candidate and said he is mystified by the Democratic City Committee show cause order to remove Mr.Arndt from the ballot that is scheduled to be hear in Westchester County Supreme Court before Judge Samual Walker this Monday morning.


The letter confirming Mr. Arndt has qualified with the correct number of signatures reads:


 



“This Board has ruled on the Specifications of Objections you filed against the Republican Designating Petition purporting to designate James Arndt as a candidate bfor the office of Councilman, Unexpired, City of Wnite Plains and has made the following determination:


The petition as filed contained five hundred fifty-five (555) signatures. This Board


sustained eighty-two (82) objections leaving a total of four hundredleventy-three (473) valid


signatures. lnasmuch as three hundred forty-five (345) signatures are required, the petition is


ruled valid and the above-mentioned name will appear onlhe Republican Party primary ballot


on September 13, 2011.


Sincerely,


REGINALD A. LAFAYETTE


Commissioner


JEANNIE L.PALAZOLA


Deputy Commissioner


Nancy E. Meehan


Deputy Commissioner


 

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Philadelphia Phillies All-time Losing Streak Preserved for Eternity.

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK By “Bull” Allen. July 31, 2011:


 


Now for something truly significant.



Connie Mack Stadium (Old Shibe Park) 1961. Scene of the Streak.


 


Thanks to Felix Hernandez, the Seattle Mariners stalwart big righthander, who snapped the Mariners 18-game losing streak Wednesday in Yankee Stadium, and crummy start by Phil Hughes, something truly meaningful has been preserved:


 


The all-time major league losing streak in the modern baseball era of 23 straight losses by the 1961 Philadelphia Phillies that has stood for 50 years, has been preserved for another generation and perhaps for eternity.


 


 





Only the Cleveland Spiders of the 1899 National League, hold the pre-modern era record when they finished  20-134 in 1899, with multiple losing streaks of many more games.


 


As I watched the Mariners from the upper deck last Monday night, boot away a game to the Yankees, 10-3, the losing streak signs were there: mental errors. Failure to hit in the clutch. Poor managing (leaving your starter in too long until the game is gone. Eric Wedge is horrible, sympathies, Seattlers). And in anxiety to make plays, pressing to make plays, poor defensive decisions in the field.


 


When you’re going bad in ball. It shows and you can see why. Everybody is screwing up at bad times to screw up. Managers, pitchers, hitters, fielders contribute. It is a team meltdown.


 


Yes, Philadelphia, the Futile Phils, who lost consecutive series to the Cincinnati Redlegs, St.Louis Cardinals, Pittsburgh Pirates (twice), and the equally futile Chicago Cubs  from July 29 through August 20 in 1961, still live in immortality, as Seattle missed their chance to overtake them. Since beating the Yankees in the Bronx, the Mariners won their next two.


 


Yes, fans who viewed this Phillie ball club of 50 years ago from the intimate upper decks of old Connie Mack Stadium (the Shibe Park of the famous Philadelphia Athletics), can sink back in their memory La-Z-Boyz chairs now, confident their suffering watching the futile Phils of that year will also always be remembered. All that is missing is the ka-pock of paper beer cups going off in the empty upper deck at old Connie Mack. Play got so bad that fans looked for cups to stomp to amuse themselves. (Another loss from yesterplay– you cannot stomp a plastic cup and make it pop, sorry kids of today.)


 


These were the Phils of  legend: the starting staff featured some good hurlers, Art Mahaffey, 11-19; Chris Short, 6-12, John Buzhardt, 6-12, then an assembly of pitchers in the Gene Brabender/Joe Nuxhal/ Warren Hacker vintage, pitchers who used to start only in nightcaps of natural double-headers, not the day night travesities of today.


 


Young men up for cups of coffee. Old castoffs hanging on in the show.  Jim Owens, 5-10, Frank Sullivan, 3-16, Don Ferrarese, 5-12.—pitchers who when appearing under the legend “Today’s Pitchers” in the old grid standings of the time –signaled fans their team was going to feast at the plate, and that Phils fans would shake their heads in dread with every pitch, every 3-2 count. It was excruciating. The team had 13 saves all year. As a fan in New York you watched the Phille box scores noting the mounting losses the pain, and feeling what Phil fans were feeling.


 


John Buzzhardt beat the San Francisco Giants 4-3 on July 28  50 years ago this week, and for almost a month to come, the Phils did not win. Listening to the Phils with Byrum Saam on I think WCAU Philly at the microphone was like listening to the baseball version of Inner Sanctum.


 


That day (July 28, 1961) as the Phils left the ballpark in San Francisco, I think,  they were a respectable 30-64. Then the Philadelphia horror began. They lost their next 23 in a row


 


They had fading stars and up-and-coming rookies: You had Pancho Herrera at first, the great Tony Taylor at second, Ruben Amaro at short and Charlie Smith at third. The outfield had a young Johnny Callison and Tony Gonzalez, Behind the plate, a young Clay Dalrymple.


 


23 games later, Buzzhardt stopped the 23-game losing streak beating Milwaukee in the second game of a double-header 7-4. The Phils were so bad in that stretch they lost double-headers, a hard thing to do. When the streak ended they were 31 and 87. A promising season when fans saw young players coming up promising a brighter future was wrenched away.


 


Losing streaks snowball, the rest of the way the Phillies went 16 and 20, finishing at 47 and 107, showing as all losing streaks tell you you are really not as bad as you’re playing.


 


It was ironic that three years later when the young players on this team matured and lead the National League all year and had a 6-game lead with 10 games to go they reverted to form and lost all 10 and the pennant. The most amazing collapse in the final two weeks in baseball history. This is a wound that will always be remembered in Philadelphia.


 


It is significant to note that when the Phillies snapped the 23-game losing streak in the nightcap of the Milwaukee twin bill on August 20, 1961, 2,000 Phillie fans met the team at the airport in support with a band.


 


Say what you will about the Philadelphia fans, they were true fans. They knew their players, they lived and died with them. And loved them no matter how bad they were. They booed but it was tough love. It was an era prior to free agency where fans believed their guys played for them, and lived and died with them. As Tony Taylor, getting off the plane was quoted as saying, “We were hesitant to get off the plane. But it was a good feeling. The band lifted Manager Gene Mauch on their shoulders.”


 


When baseball players struck the sport in 1994, they killed that belief in fans, at least this one.


 


No one would come out to meet the Mets after they lose 23 in a row today. In fact, the Mets are a 56-52 team and the fans are not coming out. Because the Mets have written the season off to save money.


 


We remember the 1961 Phils today with respect.



 


 


The U.S. is now safe from the Uganda Little League Baseball Team.


 


You have to hand it to the inept U.S. State Department. They operate a little like Major League Baseball, but are far more incompetent.


 


State Department — (there’s a department to cut folks. Let’s close a few embassies and fire some diplomats.)


 


 They decided this week not to allow the Uganda Little League team into the country to participate in the Little League World Series.


 


This is a disgrace. The reason: according to the State Department: some of the visa applications included birth records that “several parents admitted had been altered to make some players appear younger than they actually are.”


 


Hey, they pose a real threat to the country. But the law has been upheld.


 


I feel so safe now. And good as a American.


 


I happen to recall a certain team from the Bronx where birth certificates were altered  that reached the finals.


 


Come on.


 


We let Mexican teams in, Venezuelan teams in, Japanese teams in. And I suppose they are all clean and documentation impeccable.


 


This is very sad. The question is how much older were they? Was it flagrant by two or three years? What difference can it possibly make? The little league had to have approved the team being invited, didn’t it?


 


Is anything to be gained by keeping this team out, except pompous self congratulation by the state department?


 


It is sorry that Uganda officials chose to do this, if they did. Were they cleared by Little League? That should have been good enough for the State Department.


 


The State Department that let in the 9/11 terrorists to study how to fly airplanes, missed those hideous threats.


 


The Department could at least have provided security for the team to prevent any threat to the country.


 


I breathe so much easier knowing the State Department is on guard for thee.


 


But once again, Little League does what it does best: break hearts because adults want to win at all costs and will bend the rules. Ugandan officials have remarked this is a disgrace to Uganda.


 


Well the leaders erred on the side of trying to help kids. The idea of including kids with unclear birth records because it would have helped them should have been run by the Little League officials.


 


A little reason, please!


 


 

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