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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

10/24/08 Bernie Yudain Is Once Again Trying To Revise History


NATIONAL NEWS STORIES CONNECTED TO GREENWICH
HAPPEN EVERY OTHER MONTH
IT IS TIME TO BRING A PULITZER TO GREENWICH


Lacing into modern news commentators



Bernie Yudain


Back in my early days on Greenwich Time, the paper won quite a few awards from our peers. But there was one honor we cherished more than any certificate or dinky loving cup.

There was this gentleman named George Cornish, who was the esteemed city editor of the New York Herald-Tribune, a veritable lion in the world of journalism. It was the advice he regularly gave to young job-seekers we at Greenwich Time wore with pride.

Several of these aspirants who came to us to seek employment with us said they had been interviewed by Mr. Cornish, and his advice to them was to go up to Greenwich Time and try to get a reporting job there.

If they were fortunate enough to join the Greenwich Time staff, he told them, and if they worked hard and learned the craft at this suburban place for a few years, they should then come back to him and he would consider hiring them at the Trib.





COMMENT:




Apparently, Bernie Yudain Fails To Realize That George Cornish Was Joking When He Suggested That Wet Behind The Ear Cub Reporters Should Go Work For The Laughing Stock Of New York Metropolitan Journalism Also Know As The Greenwich Time.

Can Bernie Yudain Recall On Greenwich Time Reporter That Went To Work For The Great New York Herald-Tribune City Editor Mr. Cornish?

Can Bernie Yudain Recall One Greenwich Time Reporter That Became A Great Editor After Working For Joe Pisani Or Himself?

Can Bernie Yudain Recall One Greenwich Time Reporter That Worked For Him Or Joe Pisani That Won A Pulitzer?




Let's Take A Look At Great Reporting:




2007 Pulitzer Prizes:




Breaking News Reporting
Staff of The Oregonian, Portland




























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




Investigative Reporting
Brett Blackledge of The Birmingham (AL) News


























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


Local Reporting
Debbie Cenziper of The Miami Herald




July 23, 2006
House of Lie$ (1)



July 24, 2006
House of Lie$ (2)





July 25, 2006
House of Lie$ (3)



July 26, 2006
House of Lie$ (4)



August 26, 2006
House of Lie$ (5)












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


Commentary
Cynthia Tucker of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution











April 5, 2006
Cynthia McKinney









February 1, 2006
Coretta Scott King








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


Criticism
Jonathan Gold of LA Weekly







February 22, 2006
The Devil's Own Steak House



February 7, 2006
Out of the Flames



March 15, 2006
The Great White Duck





July 26, 2006
Cool Hunting



August 30, 2006
L.A. Simonized



September 6, 2006
Claws and Effect



September 27, 2006
Bring the Funk



December 6, 2006
Flesh and Bone




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


Feature Photography
Renée C. Byer of The Sacramento Bee




When In The Last Thirty Years Did Greenwich Residents Ever Get Reporting And Commentary That Even Came Close To This?

In fact, in the nearly 100 years that the Pulitzer Prize has been handed out the Greenwich Time has never even been considered.


And it is not like it would be hard for a Greenwich Time reporter or editor to get noticed by the Pulitzer Prize Committee.

The Prizes Are Administered By The Columbia University School Of Journalism In New York City.

Pulitzer prizes are decided by the Pulitzer board. As of May 1, 2008, the current board New York City based members are:

Amanda Bennett, Executive Editor/Enterprise, Bloomberg News
Lee Bollinger, President, Columbia University
Kathleen Carroll, Executive Editor, Associated Press
Thomas Friedman, Columnist, The New York Times
Paul Gigot, Editorial Page Editor, The Wall Street Journal
Sig Gissler, Administrator, School of Journalism, Columbia University
Nicholas Lemann, Dean, Columbia University School of Journalism


Even The Greenwich Times Former Corporate Parent


Is Represented On The Pulitzer Prize Board:



Ann Marie Lipinski, former Senior Vice President and Editor (2001-2008), Chicago Tribune



As Well As The Flagship Newspaper Of MediaOne


Which Was Managing The Greenwich Time For Hearst Newspapers
Up Until Six Months Ago:

Gregory Moore, Editor, The Denver Post

All Of These Pulitzer Prize Board Members Are All Very Aware Of The Greenwich Time.

In Fact, Many Past Pulitzer Prize Board Members Lived Right Here In Greenwich And Were More Than Aware Of The Reporting In The Greenwich Time.
The Point Is That It Would Not Be Very Hard For A Good Greenwich Time Reporter To Get Noticed By The Pulitzer Prize Committee.

It Sure Is A lot Easier For A Greenwich Time Reporter To Get Noticed, Than Say A Reporter From The Springfield Missouri News And Leader.

And We Are Not Saying That It Impossible To Move Up From The Greenwich Time .....

Michael Dinan a Greenwich Time writer who has found his tenure with the paper most rewarding. He now tends bar in Stamford.

Nor Are We Saying That A Pulitzer Prize For News Reporting
Will Never Ever Come To The Town Of Greenwich......



Editor And Publisher

Dec 8, 2008


NEW YORK For the first time, the Pulitzer Prizes will accept submissions from online-only news outlets, but require that they be "text-based" submissions from news organizations that are updated at least weekly and include original reporting.

Pulitzer Administrator Sig Gissler told E&P that "we are expanding the Pulitzers to include many text-based newspapers and news organizations that publish only on the Internet." At the same time, they are "stressing" that all entered material should come from news outlets that publish material at least weekly, "are primarily dedicated to original news reporting, are dedicated to coverage of ongoing stories and that adhere to the highest journalistic principles."

Gissler said the change, to take effect with the upcoming 2009 prizes, is occurring as part of the prizes' effort to "keep up with the changing media landscape."

Asked, for example, if a news outlet such as Huffington Post -- which is a mix of personal blogs, link aggregation and original reporting -- would be eligible, he declined to comment saying he did not want to discuss any individual outlet.

Gissler stressed that Web sites of magazines and broadcast and cable outlets will not be eligible because they are primarily part of news outlets that are not connected to newspapers. Also, sites that call themselves online "magazines" would be ineligible (this might pertain to Slate and Salon).

In a Q & A provided by Gissler, there is this exchange:

"Q: If one or two people call their Web site a “text-based newspaper” would it be eligible?

"A. Possibly, if all the other criteria are satisfied. But to competeeffectively, an entry would have to demonstrate a high level of originalnews reporting."

Also from the Q & A:

"Q: Can you give examples of online-only newspapers that would qualify?

"A. A growing number of sites, such as MinnPost, Voice of San Diego, St.Louis Beacon and Washington Independent, do original reporting. But it is premature to discuss eligibility before an entry has actually beensubmitted."

"Q: What should be in a cover letter?"

"A. The Pulitzer Board is looking for a description of the journalisticmission of an online-only organization and ample evidence of its primary devotion to original news reporting. The letter should also summarize theentry."

Maybe Chris Fountain or Rob Adams have a shot at bringing a Pulitzer Prize to Greenwich.
Or maybe, Bill Clarke, could bring us a Pulitzer if he starts writing his columns on a weekly basis. Mr. Clarke Could Display It In The Greenwich Library Lobby.
But, I would Personally Count Out Ex-Greenwich Time Editor Joe Pisani And His Crew Of Failed Heast Newspaper Reporters Who Hang Out At "Our Greenwich"


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Please send your comments to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

12/24/08 Greenwich Time News Links (Updated)


Liz Niehaus, 16, a junior assistant captain on the Greenwich High School girl's hockey team talks about the ice time given to her team at the Dorothy Hamill Skating Rink, Monday.

(Bob Luckey Jr./Greenwich Time photo)


Ice time restored for Greenwich High School hockey teams
She shoots, she scores. Liz Niehaus, the Greenwich High School girls varsity hockey assistant captain who appealed to local politicians to have the team's ice time restored at the town-owned Dorothy Hamill Skating Rink, was victorious Tuesday.


Capitulating to a barrage of verbal slap shots from parents, players and even First Selectman Peter Tesei, parks officials gave the girls team and their male counterparts from GHS back a coveted Tuesday afternoon time slot at the rink.


The boys and girls teams will have use of the rink, the only public one in Greenwich, from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Tuesdays, which parks officials said is long enough for the squads to schedule both a practice and a game.


"That's great. That's really good news," Liz, a 16-year-old junior, said when told of the change.
The town decided to break up the slot into smaller segments this winter and gave 45 minutes of time to a new skating clinic offered by the parks department.


That decision upset parents and players on the girls hockey team, who said it led to the hardship of having to schedule more night practices.


Tesei, who has been trying to referee the dispute since late October, when he met with hockey parents, expressed his regret that the situation escalated.


"It's too bad it took so much time and energy to resolve what to me shouldn't be an issue," Tesei said.

New director named for library
Greenwich Library has long touted the fact that among New England public libraries, it trails only Boston in circulation of materials.


Now Greenwich can say it has snagged a new director from that system.


The library announced Tuesday that Carol Mahoney, current neighborhood services manager for the Boston Public Library's 27 branches, will replace acting Director Barbara Ormerod-Glynn starting Feb. 17, 2009.


Mahoney, the library search committee's top pick of four finalists, has more than 40 years' experience in public library work. Before becoming a senior administrator at Boston in 2004, she served as the director of three Massachusetts public libraries, including the Cary Memorial Library in Lexington, Mass.


"Personally, this is a fabulous opportunity for me and I really look forward to working with everyone I've been fortunate enough to meet and the rest of the staff," said Mahoney from her office in Boston Tuesday.


Mahoney was offered the directorship two weeks ago and accepted last week, ending the library's six-month, nationwide search for someone to replace Mario Gonzalez, who resigned in August amid employee reports of his "controlling" managerial style.


Mahoney was offered $135,000 a year for the Greenwich Library position, the top end of the salary range in advertisements for the job, Baldock said.


Gonzalez, who had been the library's director since 1999, was replaced in the interim by Ormerod-Glynn, the deputy director. She did not apply for the position permanently and will return to her role as deputy director in February. .....


....Search committee Chairman Jenny Baldock, the board's first vice president, said Tuesday that while Mahoney's experience in Boston was impressive, Baldock was most attracted by her past directorship of the public library in Lexington, Mass., an "intellectual" community not unlike Greenwich.


The chairman added that Mahoney had not been looking for a new job but was contacted by the recruiting firm Gossage Sager Associates on behalf of Greenwich.


"She realized she missed that daily contact with patrons," said Baldock. "And this is a plum director job. It's a sophisticated community that values its library."


Amy E. Ryan, president of the Boston Public Library, said Tuesday that Mahoney will be sorely missed.


"She's both visionary and practical," said Ryan. "That's why Carol's so great."
Continuing she said, "She'll be great for Greenwich, and that's why I'm really mad at her!"


And Now Hearst Newspaper's Connecticut Postisation

Of Greenwich's Home Town Newspaper.


Here Is About 75 Cents Worth Of Regional News.....


WESTPORT - When the ski-mask-wearing teenage robber strode into the Robecks Juice Store in Westport demanding money last Thursday night, he pointed a Sharpie pen taped to a knife handle at the clerk and screamed at him to hand over all the cash in the registers, according his arrest warrant.


COMMENT:


Why Is This Article In A Greenwich Newspaper. What's Next Will We Be Getting New Rochelle Robbery Reports?


Lori to appear on 'GMA' on Christmas
The nation's continuing economic crisis means there will be fewer gifts under the Christmas tree this year for many Americans.


"Christmas isn't about having more," he said. "It's about being more."


Earlier this month, Lori spoke on that topic with a panel of other spiritual experts for a segment of the ABC show "Good Morning America." The discussion, taped about 10 days ago, will air in the show's 7 a.m. hour Christmas morning.


The other panelists were Ann Graham Lotz, preacher, author and daughter of Billy Graham, and Tony Evans, Dallas megachurch pastor and former chaplain to the Dallas Cowboys.


"GMA" news anchor Chris Cuomo led the discussion, which Lori said focused on how the state of the world will affect the way people honor the Christmas holiday. "I think what we really talked about was celebrating Christmas in economically challenging times," said Lori, head of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport.

Pedestrian struck and killed in Westport

WESTPORT - A pedestrian was struck and killed shortly after 6 p.m. Tuesday on Post Road East. William Ford, 49, of Westport was pronounced dead after being rushed to Norwalk Hospital with severe injuries, police said.


The Hyundai Accent that hit Ford was driven by Michael Parchment, 51, of Naugatuck.


Parchment was driving east on the Post Road when he struck Ford in the roadway, police said.
No charges have been filed against Parchment in the accident.


The Westport detective bureau and Crash Investigation Team are investigating the accident.


COMMENT:


Why is this a Greenwich Story. Did Westport Resident William Ford hit A Greenwich resident or is the very dangerous Mr. Ford flying down I-95 toward the Old Greenwich Boarder. Or was Mr. Ford's victim sent to Greenwich Hospital.


New Canaan mansion destroyed by fire
NEW CANAAN - A fire destroyed a multimillion-dollar home Tuesday despite five fire companies' efforts to cart water to the no-hydrant area.


COMMENT:


Why Is This Story In The Greenwich Time? I Could Understand If Greenwich Fire Fighters Had Been Dispatched To New Canaan To Put Out The Fire, But They Were Not. You Almost Feel That Local Greenwich Time Reporters Sat Around The Greenwich Time Newsroom Watching The Cablevision News !2 Connecticut Newscast


Movie Clock Thursday, Dec. 25
BEDFORD, N.Y. Clearview's Bedford Playhouse, Route 22, (914) 234-7300 The Curious Case of Benjamin Button: 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 The Tale of Despereaux: 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 BETHEL Bethel Cinema, 269 Greenwood Ave.



The credit industry may be reeling during the economic downturn, causing the loss of thousands of jobs, but a mortgage company in Stamford is taking advantage of the situation.


Stamford-based Luxury Mortgage Corp., is hiring 15 loan officers, most of them former employees of IndyMac Bank, which closed in July. The arrival of the new employees expands the Stamford staff to about 50, said David Adamo, founder and chief executive officer.


"Our growth is in stark contrast to the broader credit crisis and the shrinking residential finance sector," said Adamo, who founded the business 12 years ago. "With an expanded retail division of well-respected mortgage professionals, we're able to process more applications for more borrowers. These 15 people have an average of 12 years experience in dealing with attorneys, financial planners, Realtors and accountants."



It's a question parents dread. Little Johnny or Jenny get to that age when they're not really sure anymore. When they develop the most-unfortunate ability to reason and figure it's highly unlikely one man can visit every house in the world in one night, sliding up and down the chimney no less - regardless of how jolly he might be.


That's when they look up at you, and in a little voice, possibly shaking a bit, they ask, "Is Santa real?"


There's no good answer, of course. We always teach them honesty is the best policy. But is it in this case?......




To the editor:


Hamilton Avenue School once again is delayed? ("Ham Ave. move delayed again," Greenwich Time, Dec. 23.)


Issue No. 1: Improper material used in flue pipes.


Issue No. 2: Who supplied the improper material?


Issue No. 3: Why did our town fathers not discover that improper material was being used before it got this far?


Shame on the town of Greenwich. I think we need to clean house with building officials from the top right down. Obviously, they have no clue.


My heart goes out to all the parents whose children go to Hamilton Avenue School.


Dodi McCollem
Riverside


The writer is a Representative Town Meeting member from District 12.


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Plese send your comments to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

12/24/08 Greenwich Post News Links




Whitby School students Ashley and Michelle Nadler performed in traditional Santa Lucia attire and sang songs for Cultural Diversity Day at Whitby School. The day featured an ethnic feast and a performance by students.



Town offers guitar lessons in the new year

The Department of Parks and Recreation is offering guitar lessons at the Bendheim Western Greenwich Civic Center in Glenville for eight weeks beginning Monday Jan. 26 through March 30.....




Medical emergencies ranging from small cuts to choking, bleeding or shock can occur at any time and anywhere. The Red Cross offers people the opportunity to learn first aid and CPR through January classes. Learn how to prevent injuries and sudden illnesses and how to recognize emergencies and provide basic care until the arrival of advanced medical personnel.....




On Sunday, December 28, at 5:00 pm, Chabad of Greenwich will host the completion and dedication of a new Torah scroll for use in its Synagogue. Mr. Leon Gandelman, a Greenwich resident, in memory of his father Jacob, donated the Torah.


While publishers can knock out millions of copies with dozens of new titles a week, crafting a single torah scroll takes over a year to complete. What’s the holdup? Computerized printing presses make printing simple, although the results often have many errors. However, timeless dictums hold for a certified Torah scribe and everything from the character of the scribe to the quality of the parchment and type of ink are taken into account. Furthermore, each of the 304,808 letters and notation must be scripted to perfection. The slightest error voids the entire 54-portion parchment.


To celebrate the auspicious occasion of this completion, the community will celebrate with a ceremony where participants will have the opportunity to fill in the last letters of the Torah, alongside the scribe Rabbi Moshe Klein, at the Chabad Center. The Gandelman family will then host a festive dinner for family and friends at the Center.


For more information about the celebration and about Chabad of Greenwich, call Rabbi Yossi Deren at 536-8678 or e-mail rabbi@chabadgreenwich.org.




There will be no holiday miracle for Hamilton Avenue School parents after the district pulled the plug on last-ditch attempts to get the school ready by Jan. 5.


District officials have long said that a month would be needed to get everything ready for children when classes resume in the new year, but Superintendent of Schools Betty Sternberg had given the town until Monday to grant a temporary certificate of occupancy (TCO) for the building. An original deadline of Dec. 19 had been set, but Ms. Sternberg granted a weekend extension to try to make it work. But when questions surrounding pipes used in the boiler could not be settled by Monday afternoon, Ms. Sternberg announced the planned move was off.


At issue is flue piping used for the boiler system in the school. The wrong pipes were installed in the system, creating the possibility that over time, carbon monoxide could get into the building. The town’s building department said the TCO could still be granted if five conditions were met. The project’s building committee needed test results proving there was no danger, the town’s fire marshal had to grant approval, the project’s engineer had to sign a letter agreeing to the safety of the school and the manufacturer had to grant a letter saying it was safe, and carbon monoxide detectors had to be installed.


Four of the five conditions were met by Friday, and Fire Marshal Deputy Chief Joseph Benoit told parents last Thursday there was no risk and he wouldn’t let anyone into the building if there were. However, the boiler manufacturer would not sign off on the letter, and the building department, acting on the advice of the town attorney’s office, would not issue the TCO.


“Betty Sternberg needed this TCO by today and we couldn’t get that,” building committee chairman Frank Mazza told the Post on Monday. “We just ran out of time.”


The committee had spent the weekend and Monday trying to secure a temporary boiler that could be used until repairs were made to get the right pipes in. Mr. Mazza said one was located in Long Island, N.Y., but it wasn’t certified to be used in Connecticut and there wasn’t enough time to get it properly installed, certified and inspected to get the TCO when the district needed it.


The building is more than two years behind schedule. Parents begged the school board and the building committee to get it ready by the end of the holiday break so their children could finally move into the promised state-of-the-art school. Parents said Monday the decision to wait was just another blow to the community.


“Disappointed doesn’t even begin to explain how we feel right now,” Hamilton Avenue School PTA co-president Dawn Nethercott said. “It’s not fair to the children or the teachers or the administration. I don’t understand why this is so difficult. I don’t understand why it’s taken us so long to even get to this point. It’s just one more to the Hamilton Avenue community.”


Ms. Nethercott, who is also a prekindergarten teacher at Hamilton Avenue, said she didn’t know how parents were going to be able to tell their children they weren’t moving to the new building, since the expectation was they’d be able to during the break. She said the children were excited about being able to get into the new building, but they will have to be told “not yet” again.
Now the question is, When will children be able to move into the building?


A TCO is expected to be granted once the pipes are repaired, and the building committee’s expectation, as of last week, is that this will happen by the February break. While school board chairwoman Nancy Weissler and Ms. Sternberg had previously said they would want to wait until April to move the students so as not to disrupt classes close to the time of the Connecticut Mastery Test, parents are already calling for a move in February if the building is ready in time, and the April date no longer appears set in stone.


In a statement issued on Monday evening, after Ms. Sternberg reached her decision, she said district officials would review the situation in January regarding the TCO’s status and “reassess plans to move into the new building available at that time.”


Kim Eves, director of communications for the district, confirmed to the Post that February is not “off the table” and no decision has been made over any potential future move-in dates.


Ms. Sternberg could not be reached for comment, but Mr. Mazza said the committee would proceed with its work.


“We’re going to move forward as quickly as we can,” he said. “We will get the pipe flues fixed and we will get the TCO.”




In the battle of east side versus west side, it’s a polar bear on skis and a sleigh full of presents versus a Ferris wheel and blow-up Frosty and Snoopy. Who has the better decorations? Is it all about competition? For homeowners on both sides of Greenwich, setting up for Christmas isn’t about one-upping their neighbors, but about having fun and bringing joy during the holiday season.




After 25 years with the Greenwich Police Department, Capt. Michael Pacewicz has put in his papers, with his last day expected to be this week.....


......Capt. Pacewicz told the Post Monday he didn’t want to discuss the decision except to say it was not because of the ongoing lawsuit by Lt. Gary Honulik against the department. Lt. Honulik filed suit after he claimed he was bypassed for promotion by then Chief of Police James Walters, who gave a captain’s position to Capt. Pacewicz even though Lt. Honulik claimed he scored higher on the test than Capt. Pacewicz did.


In brief comments to the Post, Capt. Pacewicz expressed great disappointment that his 25-year career had been boiled down to the lawsuit.....


.....The lawsuit has left vacancies in all the top spots in the department now under the chief because the judge on the case issued a restraining order keeping any promotions from being made until the case is decided. Chief of Police David Ridberg was the lone promotion after Chief Walters left, but no other moves have been made. There are currently no deputy chiefs or captains in the department since no one has been allowed to move above the rank of lieutenant.


Mr. Tesei said he had talked with the town attorney’s office about the status of the case, which was expected to have been decided this past summer. He said he was eager for a resolution so the department can fill vital positions.


“It’s disappointing that this has dragged on so long,” Mr. Tesei said. “I know this has been a strain on Chief Ridberg because of all the work and for the whole department. I’d feel that way about any senior management official in the town without deputy staff under them, and it’s especially critical when you’re dealing with public safety.”


The case is now before the state Supreme Court after a 2007 Superior Court ruling was made in Lt. Honulik’s favor. The town appealed the decision, and it was heard before the state court in April.


Chief Ridberg could not be reached for comment




The budget ax did indeed fall on the magnet program for Hamilton Avenue School, but the cuts were not nearly as deep as some parents had feared.


In completing the 2009-10 school budget, the Board of Education cut the school’s ice skating program at Dorothy Hamill Rink, but did not touch the swimming program at the Boys and Girls Club or the Suzuki music instruction. It also added in money to restore part of the school’s foreign language instruction for kindergartners through second graders. Ultimately, the budget, which was approved by a 7-1 vote Dec. 18, was just under the Board of Estimate and Taxation’s (BET) recommended guideline.


The BET had called for a $127-million school budget, and after the board was finished with all cuts and additions, the budget stood at $126,999,931. The budget will now be sent to the BET for consideration, and if passed through its budget committee and the full finance board, it will go before the Representative Town Meeting in May. The economic downturn has caused the budget to be even tighter than usual.


School board Chairwoman Nancy Weissler said this year was “a very challenging budget environment” and “everyone is feeling some pain.”


The lone vote against the budget came from board member Marianna Ponns Cohen. Ms. Ponns Cohen, who also voted against last year’s budget, said it wasn’t clear to her there was any improvement from last year showing where the money is being spent per school in the district. Ms. Ponns Cohen also expressed concern that the budget wasn’t actually decreasing, but rather just reflecting a decline in enrollment, and this could create problems down the line because it is actually a 1.5% increase compared to last year.


In addition to the skating program, several internal cuts were made by eliminating some board reports. An additional $21,712 was cut by combining all summer school programs to one location instead of having them spread out throughout the district. A motion to add in $11,545 in performance bonuses for district cabinet officials was defeated. While the money was intended as the start of an overall incentive program to retain and keep district staff, the money was thought to be too little and the bonuses too limited to make much of a difference. It was also felt the money would be better spent on educational programs. .....




The men and women of Abilis’ Life Skills group have helped deck the halls at the Stamford Museum and Nature Center for two years now, creating ornaments and decorations to hang at the farm there. The fruits of their labor are on display at the center’s Holidays on Hecksher Farm event, during which guests may take a free stroll on a luminary path and see the stars from the observatory.




Increases in some parks fees and parking tickets have been approved for next year, but the possibility of raising parking permit prices will remain an open issue into the new year.


Fees are reviewed on a yearly basis, and the Board of Selectmen gave its unanimous approval last week to raising the parking ticket fee from $20 to $25. Whereas previously fines would double if not paid after 15 days, ticket fines will triple after 30 days of nonpayment. All other fines, including meter feeding, parking in a “no-parking zone” or using a handicapped space without a permit, will also increase by $5 and be subject to the same doubling and tripling schedule.


Town Parking Services Director Allen Corry unveiled the new fee schedule, which also includes a raise in booting fines and parking meter rentals, earlier this month, but the selectmen waited until Friday, Dec. 19, to vote so the public would first have a chance to comment.


While fees and tickets will go up next year, the selectmen decided against creating a $10 processing fee for those appealing parking tickets. The fee would have been applied regardless of whether the ticket was upheld, and board members questioned whether the strategy was fair.


“I think it’s safe to say this has no support,” First Selectman Peter Tesei said at Friday’s meeting.....


.....Board of Estimate and Taxation member Leslie Tarkington, who has a permit to park at Greenwich Plaza, urged the board not to raise the fees. She cited data showing a decline in permits sold in the past four or five years as the prices have gone up. She said the town, which owns the underlying land in the Greenwich Plaza building and leases the air rights to the developer for $127,000 a year, should review the lease to see if it is entitled to more money because of the increased value in the land.


The selectmen said Mr. Corry would review the lease before he returns with the proposal for a vote on Jan. 15.


Parks fees


Town Parks and Recreation Director Joseph Siciliano got selectmen approval for his department’s fee schedule as well. There will be no change in the beach fees for the 2009-10 season, maintaining the “status quo,” as Mr. Tesei put it. While the cost for riding the ferry to Island Beach will remain $3 for non-beach card holders and beach card holders 16 to 64 years old, Selectman Peter Crumbine wondered if that was enough, especially after a cost breakdown showed the average per person cost to the town of a ferry ride is $9.


“It’s something that costs us $9 and you’re selling it for $3,” Mr. Crumbine said to Mr. Siciliano. “I just can’t support that.”


Despite Mr. Crumbine’s dissension, the parks fees passed, 2 to 1. Nonresidents will have to pay increased parking costs and also get a $5 pass. In addition, nonresidents will need to buy their tickets at off-site locations. Previously non-beach card holders had to be in the presence of card holders when riding the ferry, but that was changed this year, and Mr. Siciliano said the fee structure was put together by his office working with the town attorney’s office......




Angelina (Chimblo) Russo, a lifelong Greenwich resident, died on Dec. 17 at Stamford Hospital. She was 92.




Riverside resident Charles D. Hanlon died on Wednesday, Dec. 17, after a brief illness.




Freddie Ann Bell of Wilton, a retired Greenwich High School art teacher, died suddenly Wednesday, Dec. 17, at her home. She was 71 years old.


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Please send your comments to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

12/23/08 FAIRFIELD GREENWICH INVESTORS: WHERE DID ALL THE MONEY GO? (Updated)


Fairfield Greenwich Investors Say:


Show Us The Money


It has become the biggest mystery to emerge from the $50 billion Bernard Madoff scandal:


Where did the money go?


Federal investigators are likely to take months trying to answer Fairfield Greenwich Investor's questions as they dig through the disgraced ponzie schemer's records and attempt to unravel what may be the biggest financial fraud in history.

But several theories are being discussed among financial experts and at Greenwich hedge fund watercoolers, the town's Country clubs and the offices of local accounting professionals.

Among the theories: Madoff lost a bundle in bad investments; paid some of the money out to investors; stashed cash in foreign banks; and spent some on his lavish lifestyle. There is also the possibility he inflated his claim of $50 billion in losses.

Fairfield Greenwich Investors, who lost money with Greenwich resident Walter Noel, say that Madoff has plenty of houses and yachts, but not certainly enough to account for all this money.

It is tough if not impossible to really lose 100 % of the $50 Billion.

Bernard Madoff, 70, a former Nasdaq stock market chairman, has become one of the most vilified people in America since news broke Dec. 11 that he allegedly had been running a giant Ponzi scheme, paying returns to certain investors out of the principal received from others.

So far, investors have said that they have lost more than $30 billion, according to an Associated Press calculations.

Here are some possible scenarios:

TRADED AWAY: What's unclear at this point of the investigation is when the scheme began, but reports have indicated that it had been going on for decades. In the criminal complaint against Madoff, he told investigators that he "had personally traded and lost money for institutional clients, and that it was all his fault."

That suggests he may have blown investors' money through a failed trading strategy, and at some point felt compelled to cover up the mistakes.

LOST IN THE FINANCIAL MELTDOWN: Madoff's scheme was partly undone by this year's crisis in the stock and credit markets. The Dow has lost nearly 36 percent since the start of this year, and the credit market has largely been frozen.

In the complaint, Madoff said that investors were seeking approximately $7 billion in redemptions. Madoff boasted of producing returns of about 10 percent for years, so individual investors who were getting battered in other parts of their portfolio might have taken some of those purported Madoff profits off the table.

At the same time, hedge funds were facing an unprecedented run on redemptions from their own investors. That meant the hedge funds may have had to quickly extract cash from their Madoff positions in order to pay their own investors back.
UPDATE:
New York Post, NY - Jan 10, 2009
By LUKAS I. ALPERT and BRUCE GOLDING
Of the $50 billion Bernard Madoff swindled, investigators have been able to uncover only about $1 billion in remaining assets.

If the number holds, that means the recovery of money from his massive Ponzi scheme may total only 2 percent of what his victims gave him.
So far, the trustee liquidating Madoff's firm has found $830 million in liquid assets. When the value of Madoff's real-estate holdings, boats, jewelry and other property is factored in, the figure rises to approximately $1 billion, according to Bloomberg News.
Madoff coughed up a list of his holdings when prosecutors demanded he be jailed without bail after he tried to send $1 million in jewelry to family and friends.
US Magistrate Judge Ronald Ellis yesterday considered arguments on whether Madoff, 70, should be allowed to remain under house arrest at his swanky East Side penthouse or be thrown in jail.

Ellis is set to deliver his ruling Monday at noon, officials said.
Prosecutors also received a 30-day extension yesterday to indict the alleged scammer after reaching a deal with the defense team.

The list of Madoff's alleged victims include some of the world's wealthiest people and the most sophisticated investment funds. One of his most high-profile victims, Hollywood mogul Jeffrey Katzenberg, called the swindle "extremely painful and humiliating for me."
"It has done extraordinary damage to my philanthropy," he told CNBC.

Katzenberg, who runs Dreamworks Animation, would not say how much money he lost, but the Los Angeles Times has reported it was at least $20 million.
Katzenberg, 58, had his funds invested with Madoff through his business manager, Gerald Breslauer, the LA Times reported.

"The first time I heard the name Bernie Madoff was about three weeks ago, when I found out that, you know, he had swindled all this money," Katzenberg said.
In other developments, a Massachusetts-based hedge fund, GMB Capital Management, said it was shutting down a fund that was bilked out of more than $50 million by Madoff.

Also, investigators in Britain were trying to determine whether Madoff embezzled $150 million from his company's operation there.

And Austria's Bank Medici, which may have invested as much as $3 billion with Madoff, announced it was restructuring its board of directors and business strategy following the massive swindle.
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12/23/08 Do You Want To Invest With A Big Loser From Greenwich?


Jeffrey Gendell Tries To Pull Greenwich Based
Tortine Associates From The Scrap Heap

Fool Me Once - Shame On Jeffery
Fool Me Twice - Shame On Me


Tontine Capital to Start New Hedge Fund After Losses Topped 60% This Year

By Saijel Kishan and Katherine Burton

Bloomberg

Jeffrey Gendell, whose investment firm Tontine Associates LLC is liquidating two hedge funds after losses of more than 60 percent this year, plans to start a new fund in February.
The Tontine Total Return Fund will invest in stocks believed to be undervalued and won’t use borrowed money, Gendell said in a letter to investors. Steve Bruce, a spokesman for Greenwich, Connecticut-based Tontine, declined to comment.

Tontine, started by Gendell 12 years ago, had been one of the industry’s best performers, with its four funds returning an average of 38 percent annually since inception through 2007. The firm last month said it was unwinding Tontine Capital Partners LP, a fund that plunged 77 percent this year through October, and Tontine Partners LP, which fell 67 percent through September.

I would be very surprised if people allocated new capital with him after such losses,” said Graziano Lusenti, founder of Nyon, Switzerland-based Lusenti Partners LLC, an investment adviser.

Gendell isn’t the first to seek investments for new funds after losing money for clients. Nicholas Maounis, whose hedge- fund firm Amaranth Advisors LLC collapsed under a record $6.6 billion loss in 2006, started a new fund in October.

Tontine said existing clients who choose to invest in the new fund will pay a management fee of 1 percent and won’t be charged an incentive fee until their losses are recouped.

New investors will be charged fees of 1 percent of assets and 20 percent of investment gains, compared with the industry- standard of 2 percent of assets and 20 percent of profits.
‘Old-Fashioned’ Investing

We believe old-fashioned stock picking will return to the forefront and the next several years will bring extraordinary investment opportunities,” Gendell said in the Dec. 9 letter, a copy of which was obtained by Bloomberg News.

Hedge funds are private, largely unregulated pools of capital. They are reeling from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, losing an average of 18 percent this year through November, according to data compiled by Hedge Fund Research Inc. Equity hedge funds have slumped 26 percent this year, the Chicago-based research firm said.

Gendell, a former sports reporter for the Associated Press, previously worked as head of stock investing at Odyssey Partners LP, an early hedge fund started by the late Jack Nash whose alumni include John Paulson of Paulson & Co.





PLEASE ALSO SEE:




Here is the hedge fund letters from Jeffrey Gendell of
Tontine Partners




ALSO PLEASE TAKE A LOOK AT:




#1062 Jeffrey Gendell - Forbes.com
Jeffrey Gendell ranks 1062 on The World's Billionaires 2008





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12/23/08 “You’d have to be a moron not to ask for a discount,” said Stephen Hoch, a retailing expert at the Wharton School Of Business

Associated Press Photo
How are your haggling skills?
Desperate retailers more open to haggling this year
Retailers giving added discounts, but you have to ask
Let Us Show You How To Haggle For A Better Holiday Price


StarNewsOnline.com
If you’re looking for an extra bargain before the holidays, you may only have to ask.
With holiday sales shaping up to be the lowest in years, possibly the worst since the industry began annual comparisons in 1969, retailers say they’re taking consumers’ demands for good deals seriously. Some are extending return policies, while others are matching competitors’ prices. Many are volunteering on-the-spot discounts and even letting customers haggle prices well down from what’s marked in a desperate bid to make the cash register ring.

... better deals. Jill duPont, the owner of a small women's clothing and accessories boutique called Out of the Box in Greenwich, Conn., said she's felt some pressure to mark her prices down to be competitive with others. 'Customers aren't shy about ...
....Jill duPont, the owner of a small women’s clothing and accessories boutique called Out of the Box in Greenwich, Conn., said she’s felt some pressure to mark her prices down to be competitive with others.
“Customers aren’t shy about telling us ’what a good price’ they found somewhere else,” she said.

For some retailers, desperation is setting in. The new year brings new inventory, so retailers typically try to clear out the old stock by year’s end. Stores are increasingly willing to do whatever they can to get rid of merchandise – even offering discounts on the spot.....
The art of the haggle
THE DEAL:
With only three more shopping days left before Christmas, retailers are becoming more willing to negotiate on prices or extend their return policies to offer consumers a better deal and boost their sales.
SHOPPER’S MARKET?
Retail analysts say shoppers have the upper hand this year due to sliding sales at retailers. Despite big discounts, sales are still projected to be the worst in years.
HOW TO GET THE BEST DEALS:
Experts say to research competitors’ prices, since many chains are willing to match the lowest price. Also, be willing to ask for a better price from a manager.
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12/23/08 Failed School Administrators And Officials At Work: "Since the TCO wasn't received, some questions".. Does Anyone Know Whats Going To Happen?


GIGO = Garbage In, Garbage Out


Betty Sternberg, BOE Members and Hamilton Avenue School Principal Rau demonstrate how important this famous slogan in computing sums up the importance of accurate data in email communications.


We got a series of edited emails about Hamilton Avenue School from a Board Of Education member or a staff member or a PTA member or a parent who are disgusted with the conflicting information that is coming from the failed school administrators and school officials.


PLEASE LOOK AT YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK


The single family home owners of Greenwich are paying big bucks for this failed leadership and confusion. Many taxpayer can't wait for the next school board election.





Subject: Since the TCO wasn't received, some questions...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 15:54:21 -0800

Dr. Sternberg, Members of the Board, Dr. Rau:

Since we did not receive the TCO today I would like to know the reasoning behind the decision as to why we must wait for April.

I would like to know how that date became the fall-back and what input was received and by whom to reach such a decision.

Please respond at your earliest convenience.

I wish you all a very happy holiday and a safe New Year.

Regards,

More Board Of Education Emails To Follow



Please send your comments, BOE public documents and emails to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com


Or you may click on the comments link at the end of this post.

12/23/08 Principal Damaris Rau Response Causes Confusion


Hamilton Avenue School Principal Damaris Rau
Apparently Is Not In The Loop

She Really Appears Not To Know What Is Going On.
No date for moving has been discussed as a fall back date.

At the last PTA meeting, Dr. Sternberg and I agreed to meet mid January
with parents to begin discussions re. the next move.

Dr. Damaris Rau
Principal
Hamilton Avenue School
1 Western Junior Highway
Greenwich, CT 06830

So Hamilton Avenue School Principal Damaris Rau
Is Clueless And Has No Idea What The Next Move Is


Please send your comments to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

12/23/08 A Hamilton Avenue School Parent Response To Principal Rau's Clueless Email

Hamilton Avenue School Parents Want To Be Informed

Why Aren't Hamilton Avenue Parents And The Single Family Home Owners Who Are Paying For This Fiasco Being Informed Of The Latest Board Of Education Plans ?????





Subject: RE: Since the TCO wasn't received, some questions...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 17:44:13 -0800

Damaris -

On a televised BOE meeting, Chairwoman Weissler stated that if the TCO was not received in time for a move over the holiday break, then the move would happen in April. She was also quoted in the Greenwich Time and the Greenwich Post saying the same thing.

You also stated at the November PTA Meeting that if the TCO wasn't received as noted above then the move wouldn't happen until April. As I was unable to attend the December meeting and have not seen any minutes from it, nor was there any mention of further discussions in our weekly Headlines, I am asking for clarification on the date last publicized.

If that changed since the last BOE meeting/PTA Meeting I would have liked to see a notice of such go out to the parents.


Please send your comments, BOE emails and public documents about Hamilton Avenue School to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

Or you can comment by clicking on the "Comments" link at the end of this post

12/23/08 BOE Chairwoman Nancy Weissler Response Is That I Just Told The Greenwich Time - Forget About April - We Have To Listen What Mazza Wants To Do

The Single Family Home Owners Are Begging Nancy To Stop Asking Frank Mazza For Advice.
They Want Frank Mazza To Resign !!!!!

Failed School Board Chairwoman Nancy Weissler Says.....
"Frank Please Help Me I Don't Know What To Tell The Greenwich Time."
Frank Mazza And His Band Of Idiots Say .....
"Nancy You Want A Date That Hamilton Avenue School Will Open - No Problem. Got A Million Dates August 25,2008, Columbus day, Tanksgiving, December 5, 2008, Christmas, January 5, 2009. How about next year's April Fools Day?"



To: damaris_rau@greenwich.k12.ct.us

Subject: Re: Since the TCO wasn't received, some questions...
Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008 21:21:03 -0500

From: nvoye@aol.com

CC: betty_sternberg@greenwich.k12.ct.us ; jcohen@ticc.com ; lesliemori@aol.com ; mpclake@optonline.net ; michaelbodson@yahoo.com ; nqueen124@aol.com ; andersonsb@optonline.net ; sellis6@optimum.net ; carol_desalvo@greenwich.k12.ct.us

I just received a call from the Greenwich Times today on this point. I told them that it would seem to make most sense to first get an update from the Building Committee at their meeting the week of Jan. 5th as to the timing of the replacement of the flue pipe. Once that information is available, we can then consider the various options as to the timing of the HAS move.

Nancy




Please send your comments, BOE emails and Hamilton Avenue School public documents to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com


Or you can comment by clicking on the "Comments" link at the end of this post


Or you can send emails to betty_sternberg@greenwich.k12.ct.us ; jcohen@ticc.com ; lesliemori@aol.com ; mpclake@optonline.net ; michaelbodson@yahoo.com ; nqueen124@aol.com ; andersonsb@optonline.net ; sellis6@optimum.net ; carol_desalvo@greenwich.k12.ct.us and nvoye@aol.com that say, "For the good of the town PLEASE RESIGN NOW !!!!! We can no longer afford failed school administrators and officials"

12/23/08 Failed School Superintendent Betty Sternberg's Response Is: Hey I Am Clueless Too. I Haven't A Clue When Hamilton Avenue School Will Open.


Betty Changes Her Tune:

I Don't Know What To Do
I'll Be Gone In June
HAS Will Have To Be Solved By You

Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2008

Subject: Re: Since the TCO wasn't received, some questions...

None of us are happy about this situation. It is difficult for us to make
a call until we have further information about the status of the open
items in the building. I know that Mrs. Weissler, the Board, Dr. Rau and
I are respectful of the parent's interest in moving into the building as
quickly as possible provided we can be sure of the safety of the students.

We are also concerned about the impact of the move on the student's
achievement. In short, the situation changes continually and none of us
are in the position at this moment to determine the next move date with
certainty.

As my comment says on the website, we will reassess in early
January. Please be assured that we all are trying to do the best that we
can under the circumstances.

Betty

Dr. Betty J. Sternberg
Superintendent of Schools
290 Greenwich Avenue
Greenwich, CT 06830
Tel: (203) 625-7425



Please send your comments, BOE emails and Hamilton Avenue School Public Documents to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

12/23/08 Greenwich Time News Links


(Helen Neafsey/Greenwich Time photo)


Federal environmental officials awaiting Greenwich sewer report
Federal officials are awaiting a report on the Dec. 12 sewer main break at Sound Shore Avenue, which sent still-untold millions of gallons of raw sewage into the Mianus River over the next four days.
A Jan. 16 probable cause hearing has been scheduled for a former Byram pharmacist arrested after his place of business was raided by the FBI in September.

Town gas finally falls below $2 a gallon
Long home to some of Connecticut's highest gas prices, Greenwich can celebrate the arrival of an important benchmark: under-$2 a gallon gas.
After a semester of highs and lows, buying and selling, four Greenwich High School teens outperformed the S&P 500 by 185 percent to take first place in the Stock Market Game.

Dems, Rell clash over special session
HARTFORD - Democratic leaders of the General Assembly don't seem to be on the same page when it comes to Gov.
U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Stamford is attempting to mend fences with the head of the state Democratic Party.
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