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Showing posts with label Collins And Aikman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collins And Aikman. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2009

1/11/08 It Is Past 7:00am Sun. Morning And The Greenwich Citizen, Greenwich Post And The Greenwich Time Have Not Put Any News Up On Thier Web Sites


But The Raw Greenwich News Feed Is Up And Running At Greenwich Roundup:


Once again Greenwich Roundup Is Spanning The Globe To Bring You The Latest Greenwich News......


The Market Oracle, UK
... in the labor market over a six-month period since 1975,” said Michael Darda , chief economist at MKM Partners LP in Greenwich, Connecticut. ...

7Online.com, NY
State Assemblyman George Latimer says Redd died Friday of heart failure at Greenwich Hospital in Connecticut. He was 80 and lived in Rye. ...

Dartmouth Skates Past Brown
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 ...

Kennedy cousin still fighting conviction
Michael Skakel's Lawyers File New Appeal
Skakel claims evidence withheld by Greenwich Police Department
Skakel Lawyers Say They've Uncovered Secret Evidence
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 ...

Charges dropped against Stockman in earnings case
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 ...

P&G seeks cash amid $2T U.S. borrowings
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 ...

Connecticut Post, CT
A few hours before his swearing-in, the 42-year-old Greenwich Democrat went for a half-hour run on the National Mall, absorbing the magnitude of the office ...

The Tennessean
He worked in sales of high-yield securities at Libertas Partners in Greenwich, Conn. The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta's Nashville Branch announced Dan ...

Hartford Courant
The radiation oncologist from Greenwich is one of a dozen Connecticut residents so far who have contributed $50000 to President-elect Barack Obama's ...

PRESS RELEASE:
PR-Inside.com
Students from the Stamford, Darien, Norwalk and Greenwich school systems will display art and read passages about their particular works during this ...

The Hour
... a combined 10 Golden Globes tonight, which were shot or edited in cities such as Darien, Fairfield, Greenwich, Norwalk and Stamford. for Best Actress. ...

Connecticut Post
"Inaugural," by Greenwich High School band director Carmen Signa for 2001, has elements of "Yankee Doodle" and "Fanfare for the Common Man" and was ...

New York Times,
Kate McClelland is a youth services librarian at Perrot Memorial Library in Old Greenwich, Conn.

Connecticut Post, CT
The bad news, in terms of leasing and subleasing is contained to Greenwich and Stamford because that's where financial services is concentrated. ...

Sunday Times.lk, Sri Lanka
Shot on location in Beacon Falls, Bethel, Darien, Fairfield, Greenwich, New Canaan, Norwalk, Redding, Shelton, Southport, Stamford, Thomaston and Trumbull, ...

Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
Termination letters have been sent to Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, Bernard L. Madoff and Fairfield Greenwich Group," the SEC stated. ...

Greenwich Roundup Now Has To Go To Harvest Time Church Up On King Street, Because He Is The Chief Beverage Officer At The Coffee Bar Until About 1:30 PM.

But Don't Worry The Hardest Reporter In Greenwich Will Soon Be Back With The Latest News About Your Town.....
UPDATE:

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.


Tesei preparing to make budget cuts

By Neil Vigdor
Staff Writer
Posted: 01/11/2009 07:34:23 AM EST

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
Posted: 01/11/2009 07:35:09 AM EST

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.
"Wilton managed to find a way to figure it out," Stanton said. "Why can't we?" ...
The Advocate Staff
Posted: 01/11/2009 07:45:12 AM EST
Openings

Greenwich Arts Council
Frank Smurlo: Landscapes The Greenwich artist displays his landscape paintings.
David Webber: Animals The Greenwich artist displays his photographs of animals in parks and wildlife sanctuaries.
Both exhibits run through Jan. 31. Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, noon-5 p.m.; Sunday, noon-4 p.m.; and by appointment. 299 Greenwich Ave. 862-6750 or www.greenwicharts.org.

Greenwich YWCA
Living and Dreaming: Original Art Work inspired by the Life and Times of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Works by local artists Kwame Henry Jones and Donna Hargrove. Opening reception: Thursday, 5:30 p.m; featuring live jazz by Richard
River road gallery
Christiane Pape The Swiss-born artist displays her abstract and floral paintings. Through Feb. 28. Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; or by appointment. 21 River Road, Wilton. 762-3887 or RiverRdGallery@optonline.net. .....
By Rich Elliott
STAFF WRITER
Posted: 01/10/2009 09:09:34 PM EST
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. -- UConn senior point guard Renee Montgomery scored 17 of her 28 game-high points in the first half and added five assists and two steals to lead the top-ranked Huskies to an 85-55 victory over West Virginia before a crowd of 3,167 on Saturday.

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.....
The Advocate Staff
Posted: 01/11/2009 09:25:21 AM EST
MUSIC

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.......
By Mary Lee Grisanti
Special Correspondent
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:26:22 PM EST
You may recognize Eric Burns as a correspondent for NBC and Fox News with more than 1,000 on-air reports to his name. But you might not put the polished 63-year-old Westport native together with Jack Allison, the hero of Burns' new play, "Mid-Strut," which opens Friday at the Darien Arts Center. Allison's life runs irrepressibly off the rails when he finds out he has six months to live and decides to realize a lifelong fantasy: winning the drum majorette he had a crush on in high school.

"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?"
By Andrea Sachs
The Washington Post
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:32:21 PM EST
WASHINGTON -- $669.66: My vacation budget. How far will it travel? With any luck, maybe more than 2,000 miles.

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).
My imaginary accountant gives me a proud pat on the back. $185.49 left.
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

I-95 reopens after 13-car pileup

Traffic still backed up in both directions
Staff Writer
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:51:01 PM EST
GREENWICH - Interstate 95 in Greenwich reopened to traffic after a 13-car pilup closed the northbound side for about two hours.

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......
By Bob Thompson
The Washington Post
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:53:41 PM EST
WASHINGTON -- As the author of "Reading Lolita in Tehran" was working on her new memoir, "Things I've Been Silent About," she found herself wondering whether she had written them in the wrong order.

"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?
By Jerome R. Sehulster
Special Correspondent
Posted: 01/11/2009 12:56:21 PM EST
The Italian Center of Stamford will continue its yearlong centennial celebration Saturday with "The Return of Love, Passion and Madness," arias, duets and ensembles from the most popular Italian operas performed by rising young artists of the Connecticut Grand Opera & Orchestra.
"Italian opera is a central part of Italian culture both in Europe and here in America," says Laurence Gilgore, CGO&O's artistic director, who spends many weeks each year conducting opera in Italy. "We performed 'Love, Passion and Madness' at the Italian Center some years ago to great success. All of the artists singing at the event this year are pursuing prominent international careers. Part of our mission at CGO&O is to introduce promising new singers to opera lovers in the area. We're very excited to be back to join in the celebration of the 100th anniversary of this important Stamford institution. That the Center is sponsoring an event like this is really a gift back to the community."......
AND.....
When Greenwich Roundup Types
The Greenwich Post Web Master Listens.....
At 7:08 AM This Morning Greenwich Roundup Complained That The Greenwich Post Web Master Was Once Again Having Trouble Getting Things Up In The Morning.
Well Folks The Greenwich Post Is Now Giving Us "Breaking News" On A Sunday About A "Capital Improvement Plan Hearing"......

Sunday, January 11, 2009 12:33

Breaking news Posted 12:47 p.m., Sunday, Jan. 11
A Capital Improvement Plan public hearing is scheduled for Wednesday Jan, 14 at 7 p.m. in the Town Hall Meeting Room.

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.
The CIP public hearing will be carried live by Greenwich Community Television on Cablevision Channel 79 and live on the Internet. GCTV Channel 79 can be viewed live by accessing Gctv.greenwich.org and clicking on the "Watch Now" link.
HOWEVER:
Don Harrison, Hearst Newspaper's Editor For The Greenwich Citizen Is Once Again A Sleep At The Switch.
PLEASE SEE:
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Please send your comments, news tips, press release, pictures or any reports that Greenwich Citizen Editor Don Harrison actually has a pulse and can fog a mirror to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

Saturday, January 10, 2009

1/10/09 MAYBE NEW MANAGING EDITOR BRUCE HUNTER IS MAKING A DIFFERENCE: Look At All Of The News That The Greenwich Time Has Up Online On A Saturday

Why Wasn't Ex-Greenwich Time Editor Jim Zebora Able To Get This Much News Up Online At The Local Hearst Newspaper?


TODAY'S GREENWICH TIME TOP STORY:


Ronald Reagan's budget director, David Stockton Is Off The Hook.


Even Though four other former Collins & Aikman executives, including then-Treasurer John Galante, have pleaded guilty to charges including conspiracy, admitting they falsely represented the company's health in reports.



QUOTE:


"David Stockman committed no crime," Stockman's Manhattan attorney, Elkan Abramowitz said. "The case against him and his co-defendants was dismissed and there was never any criminal conduct or fraud committed."


Stockman charges dropped: Prosecutor says evidence disproves accusations


By Martin B. Cassidy


Staff Writer


Federal prosecutors dropped a case against Greenwich resident David Stockman, a former budget director under President Ronald Reagan, that alleged he swindled investors while serving as chief executive of an auto parts company that later went bankrupt.


U.S. District Judge Barbara S. Jones in Manhattan dismissed charges against the 62-year-old Stockman and his three co-defendants after prosecutors filed a motion stating additional evidence disproved accusations Stockman dramatically overstated earnings of the now bankrupt Collins & Aikman, the auto parts company, to investors, according to court documents.

"The government has concluded that further prosecution of this case would not be in the best interests of justice," said Lev L. Dassin, acting United States Attorney for the U.S. Attorney's Office in a Friday statement.

Stockman and three fellow Collins & Aikman executives were indicted in March 2007 and pleaded not guilty to charges of fraud, conspiracy, securities fraud, and obstruction of justice, according to court documents.

Reached Friday, Stockman's wife, Jennifer Stockman, said her husband was relieved, but that the prolonged investigation and prosecution had tarnished the reputations of her husband and the company's workers.

"This is a huge vindication, especially for all those people who have been so unfairly prosecuted and unfairly treated by the law for 3 1/2 years," Jennifer Stockman said. "É Many lives have been destroyed in this process."


Authorities alleged Stockman and his three co-defendants conspired to file false financial accounts about Collins & Aikman's performance that were used to convince investors and banks that the ailing company was sound, according to the indictment.

The indictment alleged that Stockman and those executives, Paul Barnaba, a vice president at the company, J. Michael Stepp, a former chief financial officer, and David Cosgrove, a former controller, exaggerated the company's performance to attract capital and avoid defaulting on credit agreements.

The men were accused of using false documents that improperly showed rebates received from vendors as profits, according to the indictment.

Stockman was fired by the company in 2005 following an internal probe just before the company filed for bankruptcy......
Full Story

Town readies for first storm of 2009
The new year's first major snowstorm is on its way, with the National Weather Service predicting up to 8 inches by Sunday morning.
Full Story

Nurturing customer relationships key to business survival
In this challenging economy, the Greenwich Chamber of Commerce is helping local merchants get by with a little help from their friends - some old and many new.
Full Story


Parents Should Not Worry - Failed School Administrators Sue Wallerstein And Anthony Byrne Say Western Middle School Students Can Breathe Easy


Western Middle School Principal Stacey Gross Says That She Will Not Be Like Hamilton Avenue School Principal Rau And Endanger Her Students, Her Staff Or Herself


Sam Romeo, a former Representative Town Meeting Member Says The Greenwich Board Of Education Should Address Asbestos At All Schools, No Matter How Non-Threatening Failed School Administrators Say The Materials Are Said To Be.


QUOTE:

"If there's any doubt, take it out," Sam Romeo Says. "When it comes to children, asbestos and mold, it should all come out. It shouldn't even be a question."

Western officials: Asbestos on pipe not a health risk



By Colin Gustafson


Staff Writer


While public school officials take extra precautions to fix a leaky pipe at Western Middle School believed to contain asbestos, the school's principal says repairs won't create a health risk to students or staff.


With a specialist called in to ensure that the repairs proceed safely, WMS Principal Stacey Gross said Friday that parents, teachers and students should have no concerns about exposure to airborne asbestos particles.

"There are absolutely no issues with asbestos, and nothing that is airborne," she said. "Believe me, if there was an asbestos threat, we'd be out of here. I'm not going to endanger my students, my staff or myself."

The leak was discovered after a teacher reported a lack of heat in one of the classrooms after returning from holiday break, Gross said.

To fix it, district officials have hired a licensed environmental contractor to identify and repair a leak in the heating pipe in the service tunnels below the school's gymnasium, said Anthony Byrne, director of school facilities.

Under district policy, school maintenance staffers are not allowed to make the repairs because of concerns that their work could cause the toxic particles to become dislodged, creating a potential hazard in schools.

"This is routine maintenance that happens all over town," Sue Wallerstein, assistant superintendent for business services said Friday.

Asbestos fibers are not viewed as hazardous when encased in floor.....
Full Story

WWE to lay off 10 percent of workers
STAMFORD - Stamford-based World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. announced Friday it will lay off 10 percent of its staff - about 60 of its 600 total employees, according to the company.
Full Story

Police blotter
Jillian Schwabe, 18, of 4 Dempsey Lane, was arrested early Friday morning and charged with criminal trespassing, police said.


Schwabe admitted to police that she was in her grandparent's house at 39 Vista Drive without permission and that her guests were not aware she was there unlawfully, police said.

Police said Schwabe was initially unable to post the $500 bond and was later released. She is scheduled to appear Friday in state Superior Court in Stamford.

********************************************************************************

Jesus Fernandez, 37, of 229 Valley Place, Mamaroneck, N.Y., was arrested at 9:55 p.m. Thursday and charged with violation of a protective order after an incident at 34 Harold Ave., police said.

Fernandez was unable to post his $5,000 bond and was scheduled to appear Friday in state Superior Court in Stamford.

********************************************************************************


Brian Jendraszek, 44, of 7 Cypress Lane, Ridgefield, was arrested Sunday night and charged with third-degree assault, risk of injury to a minor, disorderly conduct and interfering with a 911 call, police said.

Jendraszek assaulted a victim at 400 Valley Road early Sunday and prevented them from calling 911, police said. Jendraszek was later found at his residence and taken into custody by Ridgefield police, according to the police report.

Jendraszek was charged by Greenwich police and released on a $10,000 bond. He was scheduled to appear Monday in state Superior Court in Stamford.

********************************************************************************


Billy Jo Johnson, 45, of 2-32 Armstrong Court, and a 17-year-old girl were arrested at 10:33 p.m. Wednesday and charged with disorderly conduct following an incident at the Armstrong Court address, police said.

Johnson and the girl were issued misdemeanor summonses and released on promises to appear Thursday in state Superior Court in Stamford.

Skakel files new appeal
HARTFORD - Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel's lawyers have filed a new appeal of his murder conviction, claiming police and prosecutors failed to provide them with evidence that pointed to another suspect and discredited a key state witness.
Full Story

PLEASE SEE:



New film industry to defend tax credits
HARTFORD - Former Speaker of the House James Amann, D-Milford, officially retired from the legislature to focus on a gubernatorial bid.
Full Story

Nephew accused of slaying uncle, Stamford and Danbury restaurateur, seeks lower bond
DANBURY
- Accused murderer Marash Gojcaj appeared briefly in state Superior Court on Friday wearing an orange prisoner's jumpsuit and shackled in chains.
Full Story

Mianus school head to retire


The principal of North Mianus School, whose 35-year education career began as a Greenwich public schools reading specialist, announced Friday that she plans to retire at the end of the school year.


Bonnie Butera, 58, a Greenwich resident, said she decided to close her service at the school in order to spend more time with her husband, Dominic, who retired seven years ago as head of Cos Cob School.

"I love the North Mianus community so much, but it's just a great time in life to do this," Butera said. "I've had a target retirement date of 2006, but have not wanted to let go. I kept saying 'one more year, one more year.' "

Her goal now as a soon-to-be-minted retiree, she said, is to beat her husband at golf.

Starting as a town schools reading specialist in 1975, Butera went on to become a teacher at Western Middle, Glenville and Julian Curtiss schools before being hired as an assistant principal at North Mianus in 1997. She became North Mianus' principal in 2005, following a one-year stint as interim principal at Parkway School.

"Ms. Butera has been a leader in our school-improvement efforts over the past two years," said Deputy Superintendent of Schools Kathy Greider. "While we will certainly miss Bonnie, we congratulate her, wish her all the best, and thank her for her incredible contributions to the district."

Butera has earned plaudits for helping boost student scores on the 2008 Connecticut Mastery Test, with her school emerging as the only elementary program in the district to post gains in proficiency in the math, reading and writing sections.

Those improvements come on the heels of lackluster results in some areas in 2007, when about half of her students performed at "satisfactory" levels on that test's reading comprehension and reader-response sections, she said......
Full Story


Train worker killed on track
RYE, N.Y
. - A train struck and killed a Metro-North employee Friday night just west of the Rye station, a railroad spokesman said.
Full Story

Greenwich High School boys swimming team shows depth
Until Danbury came to town Thursday the Greenwich High School boys swimming team hadn't competed in a meet since it opened its season against Trumbull and Fairfield on ....


MORE SPORTS REPORTS:


Movie Clock Monday, Jan. 12
BEDFORD, N.Y. Clearview's Bedford Playhouse, Route 22, (914) 234-7300 The Curious Case of Benjamin Button: 3:30, 7:15 Gran Torino: 3:15, 5:45, 8:15 BETHEL Bethel Cinema, 269 Greenwood Ave.
Full Story


Hedge fund gets its start at home
Two 25-year-old Harvard graduates from Greenwich are bucking the trend that has sent hundreds of hedge funds to their graves and have started their own fund, investing primarily in currencies, fixed incomes and commodities.
Full Story


TODAY'S "LOCAL" AND "HARD HITTING" GREENWICH TIME EDITORIAL: "Raise for Congress leaves bad taste

We should expect better, but Congress has let us down. By virtue of a long-standing backdoor move, the new Congress will receive a healthy raise this session without needing to vote for it.

If ever there was a period when Congress should take care to avoid even the appearance of excess, this is it. Spurred by the collapse of the housing market, the nationwide economy is staggering, and the worst likely hasn't arrived. Rates of foreclosures, unemployment and requests for assistance continue to rise.


It's not as though the extra $4,700 each member of Congress will receive could do much to change the economic picture. But in certain cases, public image matters as much as anything. And with the economy in trouble, accepting a pay raise does nothing to help lawmakers' standing.

With almost two years before any of them is up for re-election, legislators may be counting on voters forgetting about this slight when they go into the voting booth. And that's probably a safe bet, given how the world could change between now and November 2010. But it would be a good idea to change the law, regardless of the political outcome at that time. This simply isn't the right time for national politicians to accept a raise.

There is a chance for reform. A bipartisan group of 29 lawmakers is looking to the incoming freshman class to put a stop to the next automatic ..... BLAH ..... BLAH ..... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ....... BLAH ....... BLAH ........

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