
DartmouthSports.com-Official Web Site of Dartmouth Varsity Athletics
Dartmouth Big Green
... mintues to play the Big Green scored back-to-back goals, taking a 5-1 lead into the break. At 1:48 Peter Boldt (Greenwich, Conn.) brought the puck down passing back to Adam Estoclet (Orono, Minn.) who passed back across the ice to Doug Jones ...
Free Republic
... - an interview that discredits the star prosecution witness and police reports suggesting that a 15-year-old Greenwich boy, later convicted of another murder, had information concerning Moxley's death. Skakel was 15 himself on Oct. 30, 1975, the ...
Jobless rate at 16-year high as payrolls plunge
Tuscola County Advertiser
... it's likely to be a long slog for the U.S. labor market," said Michael Darda, chief economist at MKM Partners in Greenwich, Connecticut. Further highlighting the grim economic picture, a separate government report showed U.S. wholesale inventories ...
Stockman cleared in failure of supplier
Yesterday Detroit Free Press
... Profits didn't keep up with C&A's debt payments. At first, Stockman monitored his C&A investment from his home in Greenwich, Conn., but as its losses piled up, he took over as CEO in 2003. He even buddied up to the UAW by signing a neutrality deal ...
The Cincinnati Enquirer
... their debt. 'There are only so many dollars to invest,' said David Ader, head of U.S. interest-rate strategy at Greenwich, Conn.-based RBS Greenwich Capital, one of the 17 primary dealers of U.S. government securities that are obligated to bid at ...
Business in the Burbs: Chamber offers 2-for-1 memberships
Journal News
... TMK Sports & Entertainment LLC, a Greenwich, Conn.-based event marketing company, will co-produce three inaugural balls that celebrate the election of President-elect ...
Would-be public firms bide time as the market hibernates
Boston Business Journal
... one local company reversed course on a planned IPO in 2007 and two did so in 2006, according to research from Greenwich, Conn., IPO tracker Renaissance Capital LLC. In the wake of the 2001 dot-com bust, 12 local firms filed IPO withdrawal notices ...
Madoff Son Mark Had $8.3 Million Net Worth in 1999, Divorce Records Show
Bloomberg Business News
... data. Currently he has 15 properties, including a $6 million New York apartment and a $2.3 million home in Greenwich, Connecticut, according to public records. He divorced his wife, Suzanne, in Stamford, Connecticut, in 2000, when he was earning ...
MN candy maker signs big lease in Dallas
Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal
... Inc. , a Dallas third-party logistics provider, will operate the warehouse. Farley's and Sathers is owned by Greenwich, Conn.-based Catterton Partners . The company has sales of more than $600 million following a series of acquisitions in recent ...
2:46 PM
When Greenwich Roundup Types:
The Greenwich Time Web Master Listens:
At 7:08 AM This Morning Greenwich Roundup Complained That Hearst Newspaper's Web Master For The Greenwich Time Was Once Again Having Trouble Getting Things Up In The Morning.
First Selectman Peter Tesei is apparently trading in his pen and BlackBerry for a scalpel and meat clever.
With the town facing a projected $31 million budget gap, Tesei said decision-makers have little choice but to lop off a number of big-ticket projects from a capital spending program for the next fiscal year.
Among the projects that Tesei said will have to be delayed is the $23 million renovation of the Greenwich High School auditorium, which students and parents have been clamoring for several years because the current facility lacks size and has poor acoustics.
"While there are a lot of 'nice to haves,' residents want us to focus on critical infrastructure items," Tesei said. "They're hurting and want us to be smart and prudent on what we spend." The town's Capital Improvement Projects committee, which Tesei is a member of, is scheduled to have a public hearing at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Town Hall to discuss its funding priorities for next fiscal year.
"Then you're going to start hearing the screams," Selectman Peter Crumbine said of public reaction to the postponement of big-ticket projects.
According to the town's 15-year capital plan, $88 million had been projected to be spent during the 2009-10 fiscal year, which starts July 1.
Tesei emphasized that the total was a rough estimate at best, which he said had been pared back significantly. Overall, there are currently 74 projects listed on the CIP list totaling $34 million, only 26 of which the committee is recommending for funding, Tesei said. The town has earmarked $18 million overall for capital projects, according to Tesei. That's $20 million less than the $38.8 million in capital spending in the current budget.
A $34 million project to renovate the town-owned Nathaniel Witherell nursing home was also removed from the list and will be funded through a separate mechanism, with long-term bonds and resident fees paying for the undertaking, Tesei said.
Another project to go under the knife is a proposed community swimming pool at Byram Park, which backers are hoping to pay for almost entirely with private donations to avoid a large municipal expenditure .......
Students claim lack of sleep hurts performance
of sleep
By Colin Gustafson
Staff Writer
For Greenwich High School freshman Matt Stanton, an extra hour of sleep in the morning would make a world of difference at school.
By the time first period starts at 7:30 a.m., "I'm knocked out," said Stanton, 14, who must wake up around 6 a.m. to catch a bus to class. "I'm not sleeping, but I'm just really exhausted, like I can't pay any attention."
The school's early start time also creates an ordeal for Matt's mother, Theresa, who says she must rouse her two groggy-eyed sons out of bed every morning, often well before sunrise.
"It's like torture for these kids," said Stanton, co-chair of the PTA Council's Wellness Committee. "I'm tired of my children walking around like zombies."
With a two-year review of potential reforms to secondary schools under way, Stanton and several like-minded moms now say they're planning to lobby school officials and administrators to push back the high school's schedule by as much as an hour.
The regular school day at GHS runs from 7:30 a.m. to 2:15 p.m., and consists of six 55-minute periods, plus lunch break, with athletics and extracurricular activities scheduled for after dismissal and, in some cases, before the opening bell.
Advocates of changing this schedule point to research showing that teenagers' biological rhythms tend to clash with early-morning school schedules, leaving them chronically sleep-deprived and unfocused during the first classes of the day......
.....Kim Daine, a Riverside mother who also supports the schedule change, says that's unacceptable for a school system that expects a high level of performance from its students.
"In a community like this, we should be able to give our kids the optimal education experience, and I don't think waking them up from deep, deep sleep to work around this schedule is helping," Daine said.
She plans to join Stanton in lobbying the district's Secondary Schools Review Committee this year to consider a schedule change as a way to enhance students' attention and engagement in morning classes.
Greenwich High School Headmaster Al Capasso said that while the idea of a later school day has merit, it would become too much of a disruption to after-school sports and teachers' commutes.
"Theoretically, kids would benefit from a later start time," Capasso said. "But pragmatically, I don't think we can make it happen."
If classes started an hour later, he argued, the athletic schedule would have to be pushed back, making it harder for coaches to coordinate games with other schools and forcing students to miss their last classes of the day more often, he said.
It would also make the commute to work more difficult for teachers, who would be driving to the high school "at the height of the morning rush" around 8 a.m., the headmaster argued.....
.....Supporters of the schedule-change plan point to Wilton's school districts, which has successfully moved their school start times back from 7:15 a.m. to 8:20 a.m. without adding transportation costs or disrupting athletic schedules, parents said.
Posted: 01/11/2009 07:45:12 AM EST
Greenwich Arts Council
Greenwich YWCA
Posted: 01/10/2009 09:09:34 PM EST
It was a homecoming game for Montgomery, who grew up in St. Albans, W.Va.
The Huskies (15-0, 2-0 Big East) have won 20 straight games against West Virginia (10-5, 0-3). They have won 23 straight regular-season games and 101 straight against unranked opponents.....
Posted: 01/11/2009 09:25:21 AM EST
Altan The Irish folk band performs songs from its new album, "Local Ground." 3:30 and 7 p.m. $22-$27. Fairfield Theatre Company, 70 Sanford St. 259-1036 or www.fairfieldtheatre.org.
Gerald Clayton The jazz pianist performs as part of Hot & Cool: Jazz at the Brubeck Room. 4 p.m. Free. 137 Old Ridgefield Road, Wilton. 762-3950 or www.wiltonlibrary.org/events.
JEWS ROCK! A CELEBRATION OF ROCK AND ROLL'S JEWISH HERITAGE Rabbi Brian Leiken of Norwalk gives a multimedia presentation exploring Jewish contributions to rock and roll. 10 a.m. Free. Temple Shalom, 259 Richards Ave., Norwalk. 866-0148.
Sunday Afternoons Live Jazz vocalist Kelsey Jillette and pianist Brad Whiteley perform. 3:30 p.m. $15 donation requested. The First Congregational Church of Greenwich, 108 Sound Beach Ave., Old Greenwich. 637-1791.......
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:26:22 PM EST
"The only thing autobiographical about the play is the majorette fixation," Burns says. But as in the play, his humor belies a serious thought. "In real life, you look back at the past through rose-colored glasses -- but if you actually go back, you are almost certainly disappointed. I thought it would make a good play if the hero were not disappointed. What if the woman he has been dreaming about lives up to expectation?"
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:32:21 PM EST
Where does my money go? To Vegas. But in a good way, not a baby-needs-a-new-pair-of-Manolos way. For $484.17, I nab a nonstop, round-trip flight from Reagan National to Vegas, with two nights at the MGM Grand, the Old Hollywood-themed casino resort on the southern end of the Strip. I save at least $65 by booking this Orbitz package, which leaves me with more money to see Vegas my way (nature and shows before slots and debt).
Darn, I have to pay rush-hour Metro fare ($2.55) to National, but -- bonus -- the fare is reduced ($1.35) for the return. I keep this small victory to myself. $181.59 left.
Outside the Vegas airport, I stand wistfully next to a man with a limp pompadour who orders a limo for his group. I slink away like a street urchin and ask about the bus. At $1.25, public transportation is cheap, but I am warned about its frequent stops. Instead, I opt for a shared-ride shuttle, which costs $12 round trip and drops passengers off at their resorts' doorstep. $169.59 left.
After tossing my bags into my 18th-floor room (obstructed views of the casinos and snow-dusted mountains), I head to the bus stop. My destination is Springs Preserve, an environmental center a few miles northeast of the Strip. While standing around for the No. 203, I find a $4 coupon for the
Breaking News
Updated: January 11, 2009 2:25:13 PM EST
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:51:01 PM EST
The accident, which occurred at approximately 12 p.m. under the Indian Field Road bridge at Exit 4, resulted from one car sliding on the ice from last night's storm, and other vehicles subsequently colliding with it, said Sgt. Brent Reeves of the Greenwich Police Department.
Only minor injuries were reported and no extrication of individuals from vehicles was needed, he said......
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:53:41 PM EST
"Maybe I should have written this one first and `Reading Lolita' second," Azar Nafisi recalls thinking. "Because so many of the keys to that one are in this one." On its face, this does not seem like a good idea.
After all, if the first book you publish in English gets ecstatic reviews, sells a bajillion copies and makes you an international spokeswoman for the power of literature in the face of oppression, the more logical question would seem to be: Why not let well enough alone?
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:56:21 PM EST
Sunday, January 11, 2009 12:33
Breaking news Posted 12:47 p.m., Sunday, Jan. 11
First Selectman Peter Tesei will outline what the 15-year CIP proposal entails and detail what the upcoming fiscal year's 2009-10 CIP includes. Mr. Tesei met with department leaders last week and requested they scale back their budget requests according to Roland Gieger, budget and systems director.
