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>Village Council Conditionally Approves Beer Consumption At Employee Picnic

>The 2008 Village of Ridgewood Annual Employee Picnic will be held on Saturday, September 6 at Graydon Pool.

By an informal 4-1 vote taken during their Wednesday evening Public Work Session, Council members conditionally approved the consumption of beer during this year’s event. Mayor David T. Pfund was the only objector.

Beer will be available on the conditions that 1) the proper State of NJ license is obtained, and 2) if appropriate liability insurance is available at a reasonable price.

The fly is disappointed he didn’t get an invitation!

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>Sovereign Bank Hires Vincent A. Ricciardi to Lead Retail Banking for Metro New York/New Jersey Division

>NEW YORK, June 27 — Sovereign Bank announced today that it has hired Vincent A. Ricciardi as Senior Market Executive overseeing Sovereign’s retail banking activities in the Metro New York/New Jersey markets and districts.

Ricciardi, of Ridgewood, N.J., has more than 32 years of banking and retail experience. Prior to joining Sovereign, he was Senior Vice President and Region Executive for Premier Banking and Investments at Bank of America. In this position, he managed more than 400 employees in New York City, Long Island, Westchester, upstate New York, New Jersey and southwest Connecticut. Prior to that role, he was a Bank of America Market Executive in New Jersey, overseeing 11 districts and 152 branches.

“As a native of the Metro New York/New Jersey area, Vince truly understands the challenges and opportunities that we have in these valuable markets,” noted Roy Lever, Sovereign Executive Vice President and Managing Director of Retail Banking. “I am confident that under Vince’s leadership, the entire team in this division will achieve great success.”

Ricciardi earned a master’s degree from New York University and a bachelor’s degree from St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, N.J. He also pursued post graduate studies at New York University.

About Sovereign

Sovereign Bancorp, Inc., (“Sovereign”) , is the parent company of Sovereign Bank, a financial institution with principal markets in the Northeastern United States. Sovereign Bank has 750 community banking offices, over 2,300 ATMs and approximately 12,000 team members. Sovereign offers a broad array of financial services and products including retail banking, business and corporate banking, cash management, capital markets, wealth management and insurance. For more information on Sovereign Bank, visit https://www.sovereignbank.com or call 1-877-SOV-BANK.

Sovereign Bank is a registered trademark of Sovereign Bank or its affiliates or subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.

CONTACT: Ellen Molle, +1-617-757-5573, cell +1-617-548-9932,
[email protected]; or Mike Armstrong, +1-347-563-9251, or cell:
+1-917-279-8437, [email protected], both of Sovereign Bank

Web site: https://www.sovereignbank.com/

J&R Computer/Music World

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>Someone asked for the Ridgewood Public Schools Survival Guide –

>Someone asked for the Ridgewood Public Schools Survival Guide –

PRIVATE SCHOOLS

Saddle River Day (Saddle River, NJ)

Dwight Englewood(Englewood, NJ – Gifted Programs)

Elisabeth Morrow School(Englewood, NJ)

The Village School (Waldwick – Montessori)

Horace Mann(Riverdale, NY – Buses from Ridge Parking Lot)

Riverdale (Riverdale, NY)

Lawrenceville (Lawrenceville, NJ – Boarding School)

Peddie School((Hightstown, NJ – Boarding School)

RELIGIOUS SCHOOLS

Eastern Christian School(Midland Park, Gifted Program)

Academy of Our Lady(Glen Rock)

St. Elizabeth’s(Wyckoff)

Don Bosco Prep(Ramsey, NJ)

Bergen Catholic High School(Oradell, NJ)

Del Barton (Morristown, NJ – buses from Ridgewood?)

Academy of Holy Angels(Demarest, NJ)

Immaculate Heart Academy(Washington Township, NJ)

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>We Told You So. Given the poverty-stricken districts they have "signed up" so far, Ridgewood would be a feather in Montclair’s Cap.

>(Excerpts from MSU’s News Release, 5-15-07)

Montclair State University Receives $6.8 Million in Grants to Lead Cutting-edge Collaborations to Improve Science and Math Education in New Jersey Schools: The Prudential Foundation, National Science Foundation and New Jersey Department of Education to Provide Funding

“…”We’re absolutely thrilled to have Montclair State as a partner,” said East Rutherford Schools Superintendent Gayle Strauss, Ph.D. “Our schools have been struggling to raise test scores, as the number of students in ESL (English as a Second Language) and special education in a district our size has a large impact on our overall scores. This program will target those populations.”

Teacher preparation and recruitment will be a major part of the answer to this challenge, and Montclair State’s collaborations with the private sector, the state government, a federal agency and numerous local school districts illustrate that the challenge will require extensive resources and a broad array of partnerships.

Professor West said the participating districts were selected in part for the teaching challenge presented by the district’s fast-changing, multi-ethnic and multi-lingual student populations. All the communities have experienced an influx of immigrants from Eastern Europe, Asia, South Asia and Latin America. To meet the challenge, West predicted that the program fellows and middle school teachers would develop more hands-on classroom activities, workshops and field projects that transcend language barriers.”…”

Just what the doctor ordered for Ridgewood, right. Our teachers are so “ill-prepared” and our students so “challenged” that we have to run for help to a local university partner. Thanks Regina. This is a real stomach-churning moment for all of us.

Enterprise Rent-A-Car

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>April showers bring May flowers ?

>spring+time


So what to do when you dog has to go? If your down town be aware that many merchants in town maintain the flower beds around the trees in town and it makes there job of beautifying the town more difficult if you allow your dogs to relieve themselves in those beds, yes its not illegal but its just plain rude, so lets work together and keep the Village of Ridgewood a beautiful place.……

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>Campaign News

>Lois & Maskin Respond to Questions – Answers online

Both candidates answered a set of 13 questions forwarded by a group of concerned citizens. The responses of Ms. Maskin can be found here. Greg’s answers are here. The popular “Ridgewood Blog” has sent questions to Sarah-Kate and Greg – their responses will be published on the Ridgewood Blog.

Have a question for the candidates? Please come to the League of Women Voter’s forum scheduled for April 1st at the Ed Center (49 Cottage Place, 7PM). Questions from the floor will be answered. Or feel free to email the candidates: click here to email your questions.

This week’s “Sneak Peak” Press Release

Sheila Brogan has served on the Board’s ‘Legislative Committee’ since 2005. According to Board Candidate Greg Lois “Ms. Brogan has failed to bring the needs of Ridgewood to the attention of the Legislature and failed to obtain a fair return for our schools.”

According to Lois, “Ridgewood has an average per capita yearly income of $51,638 (pop. of 24,936) and the State is taxing that income (at a graduated rate) averaging 6.37% per earner – That is 6.37% on $1.3 Billion dollars or at least $82,054,765 in tax revenue that goes to the State of New Jersey.”

According to Lois, “The State returns approximately $3,146,911 (in 2007) in State aid to our school district – we are not getting our fair share” of State funds. Lois stated that it was Brogan’s responsibility to bring this shortage of State funding to the attention of our lawmakers and community. Lois said that Brogan had “failed to bring the funding disparity to the attention of our Assembly and Senate lawmakers and by that failing had cheated Ridgewood out of necessary funding. . . Brogan presented long ‘legislative recaps’ to the Board of Education but did nothing during her current tenure to advocate for the Village Schools or bring this matter to the forefront.”

Greg Lois is an attorney and candidate for the Board of Education. According to Lois, the Board member who serves as the Head of the Legislative committee should be expected to “do more than just report to the people of Ridgewood – he should be expected to advocate for the people of Ridgewood and bring more of our own tax dollars back to this District.”

Other Campaign News

Sarah-Kate and Greg met with Dr. Monica Brown, principal of Somerville Elementary School on Tuesday, March 11th. One of the issues discussed was the increase in the number of students at Somerville.

Sarah-Kate met with the Orchard Home School Association on March 12th, answering questions brought by attendees. Podcast available here: link.

Greg and Sarah-Kate met with Principal Margy Leninger of Travell School and Principal Anthony Orsini of Benjamin Franklin Middle School on Friday, March 14th.

Sarah-Kate and Greg will be meeting with Ridgewood High School Principal John Lorenz and Ridge Elementary Principal Jean S. Schoenlank on March 17th.

Next Actions
Lawn signs are available – please click here to request delivery (be sure to provide your address). Please contact us if you can volunteer – volunteers are needed for April 12th & 13th (Saturday & Sunday)(phone bank volunteers needed).

Thanks again for your support.

* * * *
This email sent by Maskin & Lois for School Board, P.O. Box 30, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. Paid for by Maskin & Lois for School Board, P.O. Box 30, Ridgewood, NJ 07450. To be removed from this email list, please click here.

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>If only Ridgewood Public School administrators and existing Board of Education members were so innovative and progressive …

>At L.A. school, Singapore math has added value By Mitchell Landsberg Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

March 9, 2008

Here’s a little math problem:

In 2005, just 45% of the fifth-graders at Ramona Elementary School in Hollywood scored at grade level on a standardized state test. In 2006, that figure rose to 76%. What was the difference?

If you answered 31 percentage points, you are correct. You could also express it as a 69% increase.

But there is another, more intriguing answer: The difference between the two years may have been Singapore math.

At the start of the 2005-06 school year, Ramona began using textbooks developed for use in Singapore, a Southeast Asian city-state whose pupils consistently rank No. 1 in international math comparisons. Ramona’s math scores soared.

“It’s wonderful,” said Principal Susan Arcaris. “Seven out of 10 of the students in our school are proficient or better in math, and that’s pretty startling when you consider that this is an inner-city, Title 1 school.”

Ramona easily qualifies for federal Title 1 funds, which are intended to alleviate the effects of poverty. Nine of every 10 students at the school are eligible for free or reduced-price lunches. For the most part, these are the children of immigrants, the majority from Central America, some from Armenia.
Nearly six in 10 students speak English as a second language.

Yet here they are, outpacing their counterparts in more affluent schools and succeeding in a math curriculum designed for students who are the very stereotype of Asian dominance in math and science.

How did that happen?

It’s a question with potentially big implications, because California recently became the first state to include the Singapore series on its list of state-approved elementary math texts. Public schools aren’t required to use the books — there are a number of other, more conventional texts on the state list — but the state will subsidize the purchase if they do. And being on the list puts an important imprimatur on the books, because California is by far the largest, most influential textbook buyer in the country.

The decision to approve the books could place California ahead of the national curve. The National Mathematics Advisory Panel, appointed by President Bush, will issue a report Thursday that is expected to endorse K-8 math reforms that, in many ways, mirror the Singapore curriculum.

The report could also signal a cease-fire in the state’s math wars, which raged between traditionalists and reformers throughout the 1990s and shook up math teachers nationwide. Fundamentalists called for a return to basics; reformers demanded a curriculum that would emphasize conceptual understanding.

Mathematicians on both sides of the divide say the Singapore curriculum teaches both. By hammering on the basics, it instills a deep understanding of key concepts, they say.

Kids — at least the kids at Ramona — seem to love it.

Ramona, which received a grant to introduce the Singapore curriculum, is one of a sprinkling of schools around the country to do so.

Not all teachers like it, and not all use it. The Singapore books aren’t easy for teachers to use without training, and some veterans are more comfortable with the curriculum they have always followed. But you can tell when you walk into a classroom using Singapore math.

“On your mark . . . get set . . . THINK!”

First-grade teacher Arpie Liparian stands in front of her class with a stopwatch. The only sound is of pencils scratching paper as the students race through the daily “sprint,” a 60-second drill that is a key part of the Singapore system. The problems at this age are simple: 2+3, 3+4, 8+2. The idea, once commonplace in math classrooms, is to practice them until they become second nature.

Critics call this “drill and kill,” but Ramona’s math coach, Robin Ramos, calls it “drill and thrill.” The children act as though it’s a game. Not everyone finishes all 30 problems in 60 seconds, and only one girl gets all the answers right, but the students are bubbling with excitement. And Liparian praises every effort.

“Give yourselves a hand, boys and girls,” she says when all the drills have been corrected. “You did a wonderful job.”

Reinforcing patterns

What isn’t obvious to a casual observer is that this drill is carefully thought out to reinforce patterns of mathematical thinking that carry through the curriculum. “These are ‘procedures with connections,What isn’t obvious to a casual observer is that this drill is carefully thought out to reinforce patterns of mathematical thinking that carry through the curriculum.

After 10 years of studying the Singapore curriculum, Yoram Sagher, a math professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said he still has “very pleasant surprises and realizations” while reading the books. Sagher, who helped train Ramos and the other teachers at Ramona, said he is constantly amazed by “the gentle, clever ways that the mathematics is brought to the intuition of the students.”

The books, with the no-nonsense title “Primary Mathematics,” are published for the U.S. market by a small company in Oregon, Marshall Cavendish I nternational. They are slim volumes, weighing a fraction of a conventional American text. They have a spare, stripped-down look, and a given page contains no material that isn’t directly related to the lesson at hand.

Standing in an empty classroom one recent morning, Ramos flipped through two sets of texts: the Singapore books and those of a conventional math series published by Harcourt. She began with the first lesson in the first chapter of first grade.

In Harcourt Math, there was a picture of eight trees. There were two circles in the sky. The instructions told the students: “There are 2 birds in all.”
There were no birds on the page.

The instructions directed the students to draw little yellow disks in the circles to represent the birds.

Ramos gave a look of exasperation. Without a visual representation of birds, she said, the math is confusing and overly abstract for a 5- or 6-year-old.
“The math doesn’t jump out of the page here,” she said.

The Singapore first-grade text, by contrast, could hardly have been clearer.
It began with a blank rectangle and the number and word for “zero.” Below that was a rectangle with a single robot in it, and the number and word for “one.” Then a rectangle with two dolls, and the number and word for “two,” and so on.

“This page is very pictorial, but it refers to something very concrete,”
Ramos said. “Something they can understand.”

Next to the pictures were dots. Beginning with the number six (represented by six pineapples), the dots were arranged in two rows, so that six was presented as one row of five dots and a second row with one dot.

Day one, first grade: the beginnings of set theory.

“This concept, right at the beginning, is the foundation for very important mathematics,” Ramos said. As it progresses, the Singapore math builds on this, often in ways that are invisible to the children.

Word problems in the early grades are always solved the same way: Draw a picture representing the problem and its solution. Then express it with numbers, and finally write it in words. “The whole concept,” Ramos says, “is concrete to pictorial to abstract.”

Another hallmark of the Singapore books is that there is little repetition.
Students are expected to attain mastery of a concept and move on. Each concept builds upon the next. As a result, the books cover far fewer topics in a given year than standard American texts.

Skilled at math

Singapore is a prosperous, multicultural, multilingual nation of 4.5 million people whose fourth- and eighth-grade students have never scored lower than No. 1 in a widely accepted comparison of global math skills, the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study. U.S. students score in the middle of the pack.

When the U.S. Department of Education commissioned a study in 2005 to find out why, it concluded, in part: “Singapore’s textbooks build deep understanding of mathematical concepts through multi-step problems and concrete illustrations that demonstrate how abstract mathematical concepts are used to solve problems from different perspectives.”

By contrast, the study said, “traditional U.S. textbooks rarely get beyond definitions and formulas, developing only students’ mechanical ability to apply mathematical concepts.”

Many eminent mathematicians agree. In fact, it is difficult to find a mathematician who likes the standard American texts or dislikes Singapore’s.

“The Singapore texts don’t make a huge deal about the concepts, but they present them in the correct and economical form,” said Roger Howe, a professor of mathematics at Yale University. “It provides the basis for a very orderly and systematic conceptual understanding of arithmetic and mathematics.”

The Singapore curriculum is not strikingly different from that used in many countries known for their math prowess, especially in Asia and Eastern Europe, math educators say. According to James Milgram, a math professor at Stanford who is one of the authors of California’s math standards, the Singapore system has its roots in math curricula developed in the former Soviet Union, whose success in math and science sent shivers through American policymakers during the Cold War.

The Soviets, Milgram said, brought together mathematicians and developmental psychologists to devise the best way to teach math to children. They did “exactly what I would have done had I been given free rein to design the math standards in California. They cut the thing down to its core.”

The Soviet curriculum was adopted by China in the mid-1950s, he said, and later made its way to Singapore, where it was rewritten and refined. The Singapore texts could easily be adapted for use in the United States because children there are taught in English.

“American textbooks are handicapped by many things,” said Hung-Hsi Wu, who has taught math at UC Berkeley for 42 years, “the most important of which is to regard mathematics as a collection of factoids to be memorized.”

One might think that school districts would be lining up to get their hands on the Singapore texts, but no one expects many to take the plunge this fall.

“Maybe in seven or eight years, but not yet,” said Wu. For now, he said he’d be surprised if the Singapore books claim 10% of the market.

In part, that may reflect the inherent conservatism of the education establishment, especially in large districts such as Los Angeles Unified, whose math curriculum specialists said in December, a month after the Singapore texts were adopted by the state, that they hadn’t even heard of them — or of the successful experiment taking place in one of their own schools.

But there is also an understandable reluctance to rush into a new curriculum before teachers are trained to use it. Complicating that, experts said, is that most American elementary school teachers — reflecting a generally math-phobic society — lack a strong foundation in the subject to begin with.

The Singapore curriculum “requires a considerable amount of math background on the part of the teachers who are teaching it,” said Milgram, “and in the elementary grades, most of our teachers aren’t capable of teaching it. . . .
It isn’t that they can’t learn it; it’s just that they’ve never seen it.”

Training is key

Adding to the difficulty is that the Singapore texts are not as teacher-friendly as most American texts. “They don’t come with teachers editions, or two-page fold-outs with comments, or step-by-step instructions about how to give the lessons,” said Yale’s Howe. “Most U.S. elementary teachers don’t currently have that kind of understanding, so successful use of the Singapore books would require substantial professional development.”

Although some U.S. schools have had spectacular results using Singapore texts, others have fared less well. A study found that success in Montgomery County, Md., schools using the Singapore books was directly related to teacher training. At schools where teachers weren’t trained as well, student achievement declined.

Sagher, the Illinois professor, said that he would love to see Ramona Elementary become a training ground for L.A. Unified teachers and that Singapore math could radiate out from its Hollywood beachhead. Districtwide, only 43% of fifth-graders last year scored at grade level or above in math, 33 points below Ramona students. “If LAUSD is smart enough to do it, it will be a revolution,” he said.

[email protected]

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>School aide charged with abuse of teen

>From The Record, Saturday, January 26, 2008

BY EVONNE COUTROS

RIDGEWOOD — A 29-year-old female instructional aide at the high school was charged with child abuse after she was found with beer and suspected marijuana while in a parked car with a 16-year-old boy.
A police officer on patrol about 10 p.m. Wednesday saw Lindsay M. Murphy of Mahwah and the boy, a student at the high school, sitting in the car in the eastern section of the duck pond parking lot on East Ridgewood Avenue.
When the officer asked why they were there, Murphy, in the driver’s seat, said the two were talking. Murphy told the officer she was 25, said Detective Capt. Keith Killion.

“The male passenger was asked the same question, to which he replied that he was 17,” Killion said. He is 16, police said.
Murphy told police she was at a basketball game at the high school and that the juvenile in the passenger’s seat had concerns about his midterm exams and wanted to talk.

Murphy, an instructional aide, was asked if she was a teacher and she replied, “Yes,” police said.
Further questioning revealed additional discrepancies in their stories, Killion said. Police found beer in the car and a substance believed to be marijuana.

Murphy was charged with child abuse and neglect because of her instructional-aide status and the teen’s juvenile status, Killion said.

The two were charged with possession of a controlled dangerous substance. Murphy received an additional charge of having an open or unsealed alcoholic beverage in the car.

Murphy was released pending a court appearance, and the juvenile was released to his sister, Killion said.

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>URGENT – WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE

>image
URGENT – WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE UPTON NY
1234 PM EST WED DEC 12 2007

PERIODS OF MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOWFALL LIKELY FROM THURSDAY MORNING INTO THURSDAY EVENING…

FOR THE FOLLOWING FAIRFIELD-NORTHERN NEW HAVEN-NORTHERN MIDDLESEX- NORTHERN NEW LONDON-SOUTHERN FAIRFIELD-SOUTHERN NEW HAVEN- SOUTHERN MIDDLESEX-SOUTHERN NEW LONDON-WESTERN PASSAIC-BERGEN- EASTERN PASSAIC-ORANGE-

SNOW IS EXPECTED TO DEVELOP FROM SOUTHWEST TO NORTHEAST ACROSS THE WATCH AREA THURSDAY MORNING. PERIODS OF MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW ARE THEN EXPECTED ACROSS THE ENTIRE WATCH AREA THURSDAY AFTERNOON.

TOTAL ACCUMULATIONS LIKELY WILL BE AT LEAST 6 INCHES ACROSS INTERIOR AREAS…WITH THE MIXING IN OF SLEET ACROSS AREAS NEARER NEW YORK CITY AND THE COAST LIMITING TOTAL ACCUMULATIONS TO AROUND 6 INCHES THERE.

A WINTER STORM WATCH MEANS THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR SIGNIFICANT SNOW…SLEET…OR ICE ACCUMULATIONS THAT MAY IMPACT TRAVEL.
CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE LATEST FORECASTS.

STAY TUNED TO NOAA ALL HAZARDS WEATHER RADIO OR VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT WEATHER.GOV/NYC FOR FURTHER DETAILS AND UPDATES.

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>3 Kings Day

>History of 3 Kings Day – Epiphany
Lovers of carols and Christmas parties know that this season has 12 days, packed with golden rings, calling birds and various kinds of gentry, musicians and domestic workers. December 25 is Christmas – and 25 minus 12 does equal 13. Do the math and you will see why shopping malls, newspapers, television networks, and other cultural fortresses annually deliver some kind of “Twelve Days of Christmas” blitz, beginning on December 13.

Problem is that for centuries church calendars in the East and the West have agreed that there are twelve days of Christmas and they begin on Christmas Day and end on January 6.
The twelve days of Christmas end with the Feast of Epiphany also called “The Adoration of the Magi” or “The Manifestation of God.” Celebrated on January 6, it is known as the day of the Three Kings (or wise men/magi): Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar. According to an old legend based on a Bible story, these three kings saw, on the night when Christ was born, a bright star, followed it to Bethlehem and found there the Christchild and presented it with gold, frankincense and myrrh.

January 6, the last day of Christmas, comes with its own traditions, rituals and symbols. Carolers are going from house to house; in many homes the Christmas tree is taken down and in some areas is burnt in a big bonfire. For the children this is an especially joyous occasion because, associated with taking down the tree goes the “plündern” (raiding) of the tree. The sweets, chocolate ornaments wrapped in foil or cookies, which have replaced the sugar plums, are the raiders’ rewards.

The history of Christmas, (the festival of the nativity of Jesus Christ,) is intertwined with that of the Epiphany. The commemoration of the Baptism (also called the Day of Lights, i.e. the Illumination of Jesus) was also known as the birthday of Jesus, because he was believed to have been born then of the Virgin or reborn in baptism. In some records Christmas and Epiphany were referred to as the first and second nativity; the second being Christ’s manifestation to the world.

In the fourth century, December 25 was finally adopted by the Western Christian Church as the date of the Feast of Christ’s birth. It is believed that this change in date gave rise to the tradition of the “12 Days of Christmas.” While the Western Christian Church celebrates December 25th, the Eastern Christian Church to this day recognizes January 6 as the celebration of the nativity. January 6 was also kept as the physical birthday in Bethlehem. In the Teutonic west, Epiphany became the Festival of the Three Kings (i.e. the Magi), or simply Twelfth day.

On the evening before Three Kings, traditionally there were prayers, blessed dried herbs would be burnt and their aromatic smell would fill the house. Doorways would be sprinkled with holy water and the master of the house would write with chalk C + M + B and the year above the house and barn door and say: “Caspar, Melchior, Balthasar, behütet uns auch für dieses Jahr, vor Feuer und vor Wassergefahr.” (“CMB, protect us again this year from the dangers of fire and water.”) C + M + B has traditionally been translated with Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar, however, according to the Church it stands for “Christus Mansionem Benedictat” (Christ bless this home).

The custom of the Star Singers, reminiscent of the travel of the Three Kings is still very much alive in Bavaria and Austria. Beginning with New Years and through January 6, children dressed as the kings, and holding up a large star, go from door to door, caroling and singing a Three Kings’ song. For this they receive money or sweets. Formerly the collected donations went to unemployed craftsmen and veterans, today they go to charities of the church or the Third World.

Oldtimers of Jasper in Indiana still remember the times when January 6 was celebrated. Lillian Doane and her family lived app. 4 miles out of town. Since it was a holy day they would go to church over the corduroy road. Claude and Martina Eckert also remember it as a special day. “People would put their trees out for the city to pick up and then all would be told that six o’clock this evening they would burn the Christmas trees. That was sometime ago; now the city will pick them up and chop them up as mulch. If you chipped in a tree you can get a bag of mulch.” For the Reichmanns in Brown County, “Dreikönigsabend” is always a special event. If there are any treats left on the tree (Ruth buys them at the Heidelberg Haus in Indianapolis), the grandchildren come to get them. In the evening there is a big gathering with Christmas foods, Glühwein and Stollen and Christmas carols with Eberhard at the piano.

© Copyright Ruth M. Reichmann
Max Kade German-American Center, IUPUI

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>I went through high school with straight A’s in everything, and C’s and D’s in algebra I and algebra II.

>You are forgetting the kids for whom the “reform” math actually helps make math accessible to them. My daughter (RHS grad) would have benefited greatly from this. In fact, I would have benefited from it! Instead, both she and I struggled continuously and eventually just gave up, with little opportunity for alternative ways to learn math concepts. I went through high school with straight A’s in everything, and C’s and D’s in algebra I and algebra II, and that’s it — no geometry, nothing else. Took a basic math class in college to fulfill the requirement. But never really learned. I tried, but teachers simply did not know how to explain it in a way I could actually learn. Now when I read some of the TERC or Everyday Math solutions, they make sense to me! They sound an awful lot like the methods I have figured out for myself! If I had this kind of teaching 30 years ago, I might not have been a “math-hater” all my life.

I know you all are the majority and you obviously have kids who can handle the structure of “old-school” math, but just don’t forget that there ARE kids out there who benefit from a more verbal and conceptual approach. That’s why this stuff was developed in the first place. I guess those kids, like my daughter and I, are expendable?

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>Ancient History of Halloween

>DSCN1940
Picture 0325

Halloween’s origins date back to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain (pronounced sow-in).
The Celts, who lived 2,000 years ago in the area that is now Ireland, the United Kingdom, and northern France, celebrated their new year on November 1. This day marked the end of summer and the harvest and the beginning of the dark, cold winter, a time of year that was often associated with human death. Celts believed that on the night before the new year, the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred. On the night of October 31, they celebrated Samhain, when it was believed that the ghosts of the dead returned to earth. In addition to causing trouble and damaging crops, Celts thought that the presence of the otherworldly spirits made it easier for the Druids, or Celtic priests, to make predictions about the future. For a people entirely dependent on the volatile natural world, these prophecies were an important source of comfort and direction during the long, dark winter.
To commemorate the event, Druids built huge sacred bonfires, where the people gathered to burn crops and animals as sacrifices to the Celtic deities.

During the celebration, the Celts wore costumes, typically consisting of animal heads and skins, and attempted to tell each other’s fortunes. When the celebration was over, they re-lit their hearth fires, which they had extinguished earlier that evening, from the sacred bonfire to help protect them during the coming winter.

By A.D. 43, Romans had conquered the majority of Celtic territory. In the course of the four hundred years that they ruled the Celtic lands, two festivals of Roman origin were combined with the traditional Celtic celebration of Samhain.

The first was Feralia, a day in late October when the Romans traditionally commemorated the passing of the dead. The second was a day to honor Pomona, the Roman goddess of fruit and trees. The symbol of Pomona is the apple and the incorporation of this celebration into Samhain probably explains the tradition of “bobbing” for apples that is practiced today on Halloween.
By the 800s, the influence of Christianity had spread into Celtic lands. In the seventh century, Pope Boniface IV designated November 1 All Saints’ Day, a time to honor saints and martyrs. It is widely believed today that the pope was attempting to replace the Celtic festival of the dead with a related, but church-sanctioned holiday. The celebration was also called All-hallows or All-hallowmas (from Middle English Alholowmesse meaning All Saints’ Day) and the night before it, the night of Samhain, began to be called All-hallows Eve and, eventually, Halloween. Even later, in A.D. 1000, the church would make November 2 All Souls’ Day, a day to honor the dead. It was celebrated similarly to Samhain, with big bonfires, parades, and dressing up in costumes as saints, angels, and devils. Together, the three celebrations, the eve of All Saints’, All Saints’, and All Souls’, were called Hallowmas.

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>Reader submits questions for the Ridgewood Blog Political Poll

>clown2
How many politicians from the state of New Jersey will be indicted in the next 90 days?

a) 1
b) 10
c) all of them
d) Its Bush’s fault

How many residents will move out of the state of New Jersey in the next 12 months?

a) 50,000
b) 1,000,000
c) all of them
d) No other state wants them

How long will it take to raise your state taxes after the November election?

a) 1 minute
b) 1 day
c) 30 days
d) Its Bush’s fault

How large will the state budget deficit be this year?

a) 1 billion
b) 3 billion
c) 10 billion
d) What deficit?

How many dead people will vote in the next election in New Jersey?

a) 10,000
b) 15,000
c) all of them
d) Even dead people won’t vote for these idiots

How much money will Jon Corzine pay off to his next Mistress?

a) $500,000
b) $1,000,000
c) $10,000,000
d) He wont he’ll cheat her out of it also

The next governor of New Jersey will be?

a) Hugo Chaves
b) Raul Castro
c) Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
d) A player to be named later