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$48 million dollar Referendum, BOE: "We are a community and must share the burden of improvements in our collective community"

>Comrade:

“You have a distorted sense of perspective. The fields represent approximately 2.5% of the total budget ($1.2mm). Installing turf at RHS and Stevens will have a dramatic positive impact on the RHS wellness programs and will, once and for all, solve the over-crowding issues that exist on our fields all over town. Furthermore, the full cost is paid for through debt service provided by the state. PLUS, the state is committing an additional $1mm of debt service to offset other areas of the referendum.

Yet, you would urge voters to vote the entire referendum down, unless the field portion is separated from the rest of the referendum, because you don’t like the idea! How selfish and narrow-minded can a person be?

Should we also separate the portions allocated to each school district, so that a person who lives in Willard (and does not benefit from or care about improvements in Hawes or Somerville) can vote against the portions in those districts? Of course not. But, that is precisely what you propose.

We are a community and must share the burden of improvements in our collective community, whether they be to our classrooms or to our athletic facilities, which improve their functionality and accessability, regardless of whether you benefit directly or have a personal interest.

Unfortunately, as our needs expanded, we failed to address small problems for years and now face a larger price tag than had we been more diligent. This is like a homeowner, who neglects a leaking roof for too long that would have cost a few thousand dollars to fix, only to find that the structure of the house has been damaged and now faces a serious repair that costs tens of thousands of dollars. When that time arrives, the homeowner doesn’t have the luxury of putting it off anymore. This is the circumstance, in which, we now find ourselves. Just as our classrooms are over-crowded and in disrepair, so are our athletic facilities. Both are important and must be addressed now. Some might say that it is a poor time in the economy to be considering such expensive projects. Others might say that, with historically low borrowing costs, this is the ideal time to consider such projects. Fiscal responsibility and the facts about our shared facilities favor the latter. But, regardless, of your perspective, we don’t have the luxury of putting this off for another 5-10 years, only for you to object again, then.

You may have no interest in the physical well being of thousands of Ridgewood children or their opportunity/need to participate in sports. But, frankly, your selfish apathy does not supercede the need that exists for those children and hundreds of Ridgewood families.

The referendum should not be split up and should be passed, in its entirety, for the benefit of our collective community.

If you choose to vote against the referendum, that is your choice. If you do so, you will have to look yourself in the mirror every day and look your fellow residents’ children in the eyes, knowing that you are the reason that the referendum failed. Perhaps you are willing to live with that shame. I am not. “

VOTE on Our Poll : Can Ridgewood Really afford a $48 million School Referendum?

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December $48 Million School Referendum

>Dear Parents,
On December 8, 2009 Ridgewood voters will be asked to vote on a bond referendum. Before going to the polls we want voters to have the facts in order to make an informed decision. Our school buildings, built between 1919 and 1966, are in need of capital improvements. We also need additional instructional space to keep pace with enrollment increases for our general education and special education programs.

The cost of the bond referendum is $48 million and will allow us to complete needed repairs and capital projects at all of our schools and to add classrooms to GW Middle School, Hawes, Ridge, and Willard. It also includes building a 400-meter track at BF Middle School and installing synthetic turf on Stevens and the RHS Stadium fields.

New Jersey approves our construction needs & offers money to help offset costs.

For over a year, the Board of Education’s Facilities Committee performed an in-depth review of every building. The committee consulted principals, reviewed the District’s five-year facilities plan and RHS engineering study, studied energy conservation opportunities and worked with our architects to prioritize needs. Last winter, we applied to the state for construction grant money, and the state approved our request, validating our needs assessment and awarding Ridgewood $9.8 million in direct grant aid towards the building projects and $2.1 million in debt service aid for the track at BF and for improvements on Stevens and RHS stadium fields. This state aid will lessen the burden on taxpayers and reduce the amount the district will have to borrow. With this state aid commitment, the total bond amount will be $38 million, and the tax impact on the average Ridgewood home valued at $802,107 would be $300.55 a year on a 25-year bond assuming a 4.75% borrowing rate.

Our continued growth: 50 new students every year…for 10 years.

The enclosed Fact Sheet outlines the carefully considered repair/capital improvement and energy conservation projects included in the bond referendum. In addition, proposed additions at GW, Hawes, Ridge and Willard address our need for more instructional space. With enrollment having grown by 500 students over the last 10 years, space limitations have resulted in instruction currently happening in school hallways, in subdivided classrooms and in principals’ offices.

It’s imperative that our facilities meet the educational needs of our students.

In recent years, our number of special education students has increased to 14.3% or a little over 800 students. Our special education students who require individualized programs have moved from school to school, as space is available. As we build new classrooms at Ridge, Willard, and Hawes, we will be able to minimize the moving of our special education classes and allow these students to remain in the same school for all of their elementary years. At the same time, classroom space will be freed-up at Somerville, Travell, and Orchard, eliminating the need to redistrict. New instructional space will also include new library/media centers at Willard and GW and a new full-size gymnasium at GW with enough bleacher seating for the entire student body.

Improving our wellness & athletic facilities.

Currently the Ridgewood High School fields are not appropriately sized nor resilient enough to allow use by multiple athletic teams. In addition, the RHS track is too small for our track team to hold competitive meets. For these reasons, the Stadium field often sits empty, contributing to the District-wide and Village-wide field shortage as identified in the Village’s Recreation Master Plan. It is time to address these deficiencies.

Our plan allows for construction of a regulation 400-meter natural grass-center track at BF and installation of a synthetic surface on the RHS Stadium and Stevens fields. At the Stadium, a smaller track will remain for PE classes and community use. These improved fields will enable girls and boys to play soccer and lacrosse, in addition to football, on site at the high school, and will add needed outside teaching stations for physical education and Project Adventure. Detailed plans for these synthetic fields have been submitted to the NJ DEP for review and approval.

As the community has seen the merits of the synthetic field at Maple Park, the addition of synthetic fields at RHS will further reduce the wear and tear on our grass fields, will bring high school sports back to the high school campus, and will provide our student athletes and youth rec sports players with additional quality playing surfaces.

Know the facts. Get your questions answered.

Please familiarize yourself with information about our proposed projects. All of the school and field plans are posted on the district web site at www.ridgewood.k12.nj.us under the Board of Education link. Soon, information sessions will be held at each school and in homes throughout the Village, providing opportunities to hear more and ask questions. Guided tours of our schools will be scheduled and open to the public.

On December 8th make an informed decision about the Ridgewood Public Schools’ bond referendum.

Sincerely,

Joseph Vallerini
Robert Hutton
Sheila Brogan
Michele Lenhard
Laurie Goodman

P.S. Questions are welcome! We want you to have the facts in order to make an informed decision on Election Day. Please email [email protected] or call 201-670-2700 ext. 10530 with any questions.

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Mr. William J. Walsh, Jr., Director State Public Affairs, PSEG Co.,will speak on the New State Energy Master Plan

>
Mr. William J. Walsh, Jr., Director State Public Affairs, PSEG Co., will speak at Ridgewood Village Hall Senior Lounge, Maple Ave., on Thursday, October 8, 10AM.

He will explain the new State Energy Master Plan and efforts to help homeowners save money by reducing their energy costs. Rebate programs for home/office energy audits and rebates for purchase of energy saving appliances and improvements will be explained and your questions answered.

The public is invited, and municipal officials and employees are encouraged to attend. There is no fee, and coffee and muffins will be served.

The meeting is cosponsored by the League of Women Voters of Ridgewood and the Ridgewood Environmental Advisory Committee.

(contact: [email protected])

Hot Offers

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Maple Park: (((AIR HORN))) Discussion

>maple+field
Maple Park/Air Horn Discussion…

The surface at Maple Park is NOT Astro-Turf, which has been linked to a number of safety issues. It is FieldTurf, which is a very different design. After extensive testing in NY & NJ, the FieldTurf design has been found to pose no meaningful safety risk to the environment or participants using the field. Although you may incorrectly think of Astro-Turf as a harmless generic term for “synthetic turf”, those who are knowledgeable about the facts in the debate over synthetic turf for the past decade, understand the important differences between the two. No doubt that is why the previous poster pointed out the distinction. The safety, drainage and maintenance BENEFITS, as well as improved appearance of the park, over the previous (largely dirt) surface infested with goose droppings, mosquitos, exposed sprinkler heads and unkept weeds around the field is considered by the majority of people, who use the park regularly, to be a tremendous improvement. It has also allowed the Village to limit use of grass fields after heavy rains, which has resulted in improved overall condition of our grass fields in the past 2 years.

As far at the air horns go, air horns and lights have been used at Vets, Citizens and Maple Park for more than 12 years. When, where or whether they are used did not change with the new surface at Maple several years ago. Although no lights are used, air horns have been used at RHS, Brookside, BF, Somerville and other fields for just as long. So, while you may not “live for the game”, you are a member of a larger community that, by law, must provide active recreational space for ALL residents, based on the Village population. The truth is that the overwhelming majority of the approximately 25,000 households in Ridgewood have, at some point, had at least one child participating in youth and/or RHS athletics. Sports involve rules, which means occasional whistles and horns. This is nothing new.

BTW, except on rare occasions, sports events are generally not scheduled on ANY Ridgewood fields on Sunday mornings. So, your claim of listening to air horns at 8AM on Sunday morning is untrue. The ONLY day of the week that sports events are regularly scheduled in the morning is Saturday.

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Two Centuries On, a Cryptologist Cracks a Presidential Code

>HC BE245 Jeffer BV 20090701173440

Unlocking This Cipher Wasn’t Self-Evident; Algorithms and Educated Guesses

By RACHEL EMMA SILVERMAN
https://online.wsj.com/article/SB124648494429082661.html?mod=yhoofront

For more than 200 years, buried deep within Thomas Jefferson’s correspondence and papers, there lay a mysterious cipher — a coded message that appears to have remained unsolved. Until now.

The cryptic message was sent to President Jefferson in December 1801 by his friend and frequent correspondent, Robert Patterson, a mathematics professor at the University of Pennsylvania. President Jefferson and Mr. Patterson were both officials at the American Philosophical Society — a group that promoted scholarly research in the sciences and humanities — and were enthusiasts of ciphers and other codes, regularly exchanging letters about them.

University of Pennsylvania Archives

Robert Patterson
In this message, Mr. Patterson set out to show the president and primary author of the Declaration of Independence what he deemed to be a nearly flawless cipher. “The art of secret writing,” or writing in cipher, has “engaged the attention both of the states-man & philosopher for many ages,” Mr. Patterson wrote. But, he added, most ciphers fall “far short of perfection.”

To Mr. Patterson’s view, a perfect code had four properties: It should be adaptable to all languages; it should be simple to learn and memorize; it should be easy to write and to read; and most important of all, “it should be absolutely inscrutable to all unacquainted with the particular key or secret for decyphering.”

Mr. Patterson then included in the letter an example of a message in his cipher, one that would be so difficult to decode that it would “defy the united ingenuity of the whole human race,” he wrote.

There is no evidence that Jefferson, or anyone else for that matter, ever solved the code. But Jefferson did believe the cipher was so inscrutable that he considered having the State Department use it, and passed it on to the ambassador to France, Robert Livingston.

The cipher finally met its match in Lawren Smithline, a 36-year-old mathematician. Dr. Smithline has a Ph.D. in mathematics and now works professionally with cryptology, or code-breaking, at the Center for Communications Research in Princeton, N.J., a division of the Institute for Defense Analyses.

A couple of years ago, Dr. Smithline’s neighbor, who was working on a Jefferson project at Princeton University, told Dr. Smithline of Mr. Patterson’s mysterious cipher.

Dr. Smithline, intrigued, decided to take a look. “A problem like this cipher can keep me up at night,” he says. After unlocking its hidden message in 2007, Dr. Smithline articulated his puzzle-solving techniques in a recent paper in the magazine American Scientist and also in a profile in Harvard Magazine, his alma mater’s alumni journal.

The “Perfect” Cipher?

The 1801 letter from Robert Patterson to Thomas Jefferson The code, Mr. Patterson made clear in his letter, was not a simple substitution cipher. That’s when you replace one letter of the alphabet with another. The problem with substitution ciphers is that they can be cracked by using what’s termed frequency analysis, or studying the number of times that a particular letter occurs in a message. For instance, the letter “e” is the most common letter in English, so if a code is sufficiently long, whatever letter appears most often is likely a substitute for “e.”

Because frequency analysis was already well known in the 19th century, cryptographers of the time turned to other techniques. One was called the nomenclator: a catalog of numbers, each standing for a word, syllable, phrase or letter. Mr. Jefferson’s correspondence shows that he used several code books of nomenclators. An issue with these tools, according to Mr. Patterson’s criteria, is that a nomenclator is too tough to memorize.

Jefferson even wrote about his own ingenious code, a model of which is at his home, Monticello, in Charlottesville, Va. Called the wheel cipher, the device consisted of cylindrical pieces, threaded onto an iron spindle, with letters inscribed on the edge of each wheel in a random order. Users could scramble and unscramble words simply by turning the wheels.

But Mr. Patterson had a few more tricks up his sleeve. He wrote the message text vertically, in columns from left to right, using no capital letters or spaces. The writing formed a grid, in this case of about 40 lines of some 60 letters each.

Then, Mr. Patterson broke the grid into sections of up to nine lines, numbering each line in the section from one to nine. In the next step, Mr. Patterson transcribed each numbered line to form a new grid, scrambling the order of the numbered lines within each section. Every section, however, repeated the same jumbled order of lines.

The trick to solving the puzzle, as Mr. Patterson explained in his letter, meant knowing the following: the number of lines in each section, the order in which those lines were transcribed and the number of random letters added to each line.

The key to the code consisted of a series of two-digit pairs. The first digit indicated the line number within a section, while the second was the number of letters added to the beginning of that row. For instance, if the key was 58, 71, 33, that meant that Mr. Patterson moved row five to the first line of a section and added eight random letters; then moved row seven to the second line and added one letter, and then moved row three to the third line and added three random letters. Mr. Patterson estimated that the potential combinations to solve the puzzle was “upwards of ninety millions of millions.”

Thomas Jefferson
After explaining this in his letter, Mr. Patterson wrote, “I presume the utter impossibility of decyphering will be readily acknowledged.”

Undaunted, Dr. Smithline decided to tackle the cipher by analyzing the probability of digraphs, or pairs of letters. Certain pairs of letters, such as “dx,” don’t exist in English, while some letters almost always appear next to a certain other letter, such as “u” after “q”.

To get a sense of language patterns of the era, Dr. Smithline studied the 80,000 letter-characters contained in Jefferson’s State of the Union addresses, and counted the frequency of occurrences of “aa,” “ab,” “ac,” through “zz.”

Dr. Smithline then made a series of educated guesses, such as the number of rows per section, which two rows belong next to each other, and the number of random letters inserted into a line.
To help vet his guesses, he turned to a tool not available during the 19th century: a computer algorithm. He used what’s called “dynamic programming,” which solves large problems by breaking puzzles down into smaller pieces and linking together the solutions.

The overall calculations necessary to solve the puzzle were fewer than 100,000, which Dr. Smithline says would be “tedious in the 19th century, but doable.”

After about a week of working on the puzzle, the numerical key to Mr. Patterson’s cipher emerged — 13, 34, 57, 65, 22, 78, 49. Using that digital key, he was able to unfurl the cipher’s text:

“In Congress, July Fourth, one thousand seven hundred and seventy six. A declaration by the Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled. When in the course of human events…”

That, of course, is the beginning — with a few liberties taken — to the Declaration of Independence, written at least in part by Jefferson himself. “Patterson played this little joke on Thomas Jefferson,” says Dr. Smithline. “And nobody knew until now.”

Write to Rachel Emma Silverman at [email protected]

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A Mano Offers Neapolitan Fare Steeped in Rich Italian Tradition

>image004
mail
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Old World Customs and Imported Ingredients Set A Mano Apart

(Ridgewood, NJ: June 25, 2009) A Mano (meaning by hand), a Neapolitan trattoria in Ridgewood serving authentic Italian dishes, is one of the forerunners in a pizza craze spreading across the country. This expanding movement in the pizza trade is the return to the traditional roots of pizza, roots that lie deep in the heart of Naples, Italy. A Mano is part of an elite group leading the pack in Neapolitan pizza and tradition, from cities such as Seattle, Los Angeles, and Chicago, to Phoenix, New York, Miami, and now Ridgewood NJ.

A Mano prides itself on authenticity, importing everything, from the furnishings to the ingredients, such as San Marzano tomatoes and Caputo flour, from Naples, Italy. In addition, A Mano is one of only three restaurants in the U.S. to receive prestigious certifications from both the Verace Pizza Napoletana and Associazone Pizzaiuoli Napoletani, the recognized authorities of Naples, Italy on traditional Neapolitan Pizza. “We do things differently at A Mano,” said owner Fred Mortati. “Pizza has been interpreted many different ways since becoming a popular dish in the U.S., but we create our pizza in the original, traditional Neapolitan style. From our ingredients imported from Naples, to our 1000 degree wood-burning ovens, which were built “A Mano,” on site by Neapolitan artisans using stones and volcanic soil from Italy, we stay true to the technique of the classic Pizzaiuolis (pizza chefs) and train each of our pizza chefs to create artisanal pizzas in this time-honored fashion,” he continued. “A Mano is Naples, Italy from the ground up and we invite all to come for a real Naples experience.”

The traditional Neapolitan pizzas at A Mano are baked in 1000 degree ovens and range from the conventional Marinara pie, made with tomatoes, oregano, garlic, and extra virgin olive oil ($9.99), to the elaborate Vesuvio, a stuffed pizza with ricotta, fresh mozzarella, and Neapolitan salami on the inside, and fresh mozzarella, tomatoes, Italian ham, mushrooms, extra virgin olive oil, and basil on the top ($19.99). A Mano’s menu boasts a vast array of mouth-watering pizza along with traditional Neapolitan entrées such as baked thin layers of eggplant and pecorino, delicate meat and vegetable lasagnas (starting at $12.99) and cool, refreshing, flavor-intense salads (starting at $7.99).

Among the specials, which vary daily, is the Mezzaluna pizza, or “half moon,” that starts as a full size, hand-stretched pie, which is half Margherita pizza (fresh mozzarella, fresh tomato sauce, Parmiggiano-Reggiano, extra virgin olive oil, and basil) strewn with Calamata olives. The other half is a calzone, oozing with a julienne of salami folded into creamy ricotta, mozzarella, and olive oil. Another special created for the A Mano summer menu is “Salad Pizza.” This dish combines any of the A Mano appetizer salads in an entree size, served atop Parmigiano Reggiano-flavored focaccia, baked daily on premises. At a $4.99 supplement to the regular salad price, this is a delicious way to enjoy a large portion of A Mano’s salads married with intensely flavored focaccia, providing a hearty, yet not overbearing meal option on warm summer days. Specials frequently incorporate A Mano’s outstanding fresh-made mozzarella, created each day on-premises by a Neapolitan-trained mozzarella puller, schooled in the art of creating perfectly-textured and flavored cheese.

A buy one get one free entrée and pizza summer special will be available to A Mano patrons through the summer months, Monday through Thursday.

The restaurant is open Monday to Thursday from 11:30 a.m. until 10 p.m., Friday and Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., and Sunday, from 12 p.m. until 10 p.m.

A Mano is located at 24 Franklin Avenue (at the corner of Chestnut Street), Ridgewood, NJ 07450. For more information, please call 201-493-2000 or visit www.amanopizza.com.

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Is the Conversion of Graydon A “Priority Project”?

>On Wednesday, July 1st, a village Council meeting will take place in which a final decision will be made whether or not to proceed with plans to convert Graydon to a cement swimming pool. The RPP has sent out emails urging supporters of the project to email council members and the Ridgewood News that this conversion should be a “priority project”.

According to the RPP, the majority of residents surveyed wanted Graydon to maintain its spacious, sandy, natural, lake like appearance, yet they felt the current facility is unclean and unsafe. Despite the RPP efforts to recommend a facility that would provide the sandy spacious environment that most residents wanted, their research indicated that the only feasible solution was to convert Graydon to a much smaller concrete facility. Unfortunately, this design can not provide residents with the sandy spaciousness of Graydon, but it can allow for the perceived feeling of a “cleaner” and “safer” swimming environment. Ironically, all public swimming facilities pose both health and safety risks, concrete or otherwise.

For example, public cement bottom pools in Arizona, Texas and Upstate New York (to name a few) had to be shut down last summer because patrons were getting ill from a parasite found in human/mammal fecal matter called cryptosporidium, that was discovered in the water. This is just one of many clorine resistant parasites and bacteria that plague public swimming pools (MedicineNet.com). In addition, public pools that exceed their swim load capacity are much more likely to experience transmission of water borne illnesses.

Concrete pools also have inherit safety risks. Head and spinal injuries from hard pool bottoms and slippery surfaces are common. Drownings also occur in crowded public swimming pools, while lifeguards are on duty, everyday in the US (National Center for Disease Control).

My question is this. Since the proposed concrete facility can not provide the same natural appearance and spaciousness of Graydon and it can not eliminate the health and safety risks of a public swimming facility, then why take on the enormous financial burdan of converting it?

The RPP often compares Graydon to the public pool in Westfield, because of the similarity in demographics. I urge our Council before making any decisions about Graydon’s conversion to take the 30 minute ride down the Garden Stare Parkway and observe this hidden from public view pool on a sunny Sunday afternoon. The noise level is deafening and the pool is overwhelmingly crowded. Not to mention the fact that Westfield’s facility does not have to share parking with those using two athletic fields. Remember, in order to make this new facility self-funding, it has an 8,000 member quota to fill. Even in Graydon’s hayday it didn’t have 8,000 members. If I lived on one of the streets near Graydon, Vets or the Maple Ave field, I’d be concerned.

Speaking of similar demographics. Allendale has a sand bottom pool and residents there don’t feel a need to covert it to a cement bottom pool. Why? Is their membership declining? Is their pool operating at a loss? Is Graydon supposed to be a business or is it an amenity like a public library, community center, park or athletic field? I am always hearing how Graydon is operating at a loss. With a $14 million dollar bond to pay off, in addition to annual operating costs, how many years will it be before the “new Graydon” turns a profit?

Although I do not support the RPP iniative to convert Graydon to a concrete facility, I do feel that their efforts have been a catalyst for the many improvements that have been made over the past 3 years. Since many of the RPP supporters have stopped using Graydon, they have not experienced the changes that have been made like I have. The aeration system installed last year made a tremendous difference in water quality. A second aerator was installed this year. I was swimming in Graydon on opening day. Standing in chest high water, I could see my feet. That’s clearer than the ocean at the Jersey shore! The sand bottom, is now thoroughly dredged and cleaned before Graydon is filled for the new season. The goose population has also improved dramatically, thanks to the deligent, daily efforts of animal control. These changes have certainly helped to keep both the grounds and water cleaner.

So let’s not stop there. First off, lifeguards could routinely skim the water at the end of their rotations. Additional safety measures can be taken. A fence separating the 4 ft section of Graydon from the 12 ft section can be installed to better monitor those entering the deeper water. A lifeguard station should also be installed in the center of Graydon to better observe those swimming there.

I realize that Graydon’s membership has been declining over the past several years, with this year’s membership being at an all time low. I fear that many who normally would have joined Graydon have deliberatly boycotted this year in order to benefit their cause. Still and all, if all of these cost effective steps and improvements do not increase membership at Graydon, than raising membership fees from $77.00 per person to $100-$125.00 per person is still a bargain. The proposed fee for the “new Graydon” is $150.00 per person, which, I fear, will increase annually in order to offset the enourmos debt this reconstuction will incur.

I have emailed our Council members, [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]; as well as the Ridgewood News as a Letter to the Editor, [email protected]; including an email to Mike Sedon, who has been covering this topic for the paper at [email protected] and urge others to do the same.

With so many priority issues facing our community during these difficult economic times, it seems to me that the conversion of Graydon is not one of them.

Suzanne Kelly
Ridgewood

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the Ridgewood Blog wishes all the Fathers a Very Happy Fathers Day

father son stock gty jef

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, The United States is one of the few countries in the world that has an official day on which fathers are honored by their children. On the third Sunday in June, fathers all across the United States are given presents, treated to dinner or otherwise made to feel special. .

The origin of Father’s Day is not clear. Some say that it began with a church service in West Virginia in 1908. Others say the first Father’s Day ceremony was held in Vancouver, Washington.

The president of the Chicago branch of the Lions’ Club, Harry Meek, is said to have celebrated the first Father’s Day with his organization in 1915; and the day that they chose was the third Sunday in June, the closest date to Meek’s own birthday!

Regardless of when the first true Father’s Day occurred, the strongest promoter of the holiday was Mrs. Bruce John Dodd of Spokane, Washington. Mrs. Dodd felt that she had an outstanding father. He was a veteran of the Civil War. His wife had died young, and he had raised six children without their mother.

In 1909, Mrs. Dodd approached her own minister and others in Spokane about having a church service dedicated to fathers on June 5, her father’s birthday. That date was too soon for her minister to prepare the service, so he spoke a few weeks later on June 19th. From then on, the state of Washington celebrated the third Sunday in June as Father’s Day. Children made special desserts, or visited their fathers if they lived apart.

States and organizations began lobbying Congress to declare an annual Father’s Day. In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson approved of this idea, but it was not until 1924 when President Calvin Coolidge made it a national event to “establish more intimate relations between fathers and their children and to impress upon fathers the full measure of their obligations.” Since then, fathers had been honored and recognized by their families throughout the country on the third Sunday in June.

When children can’t visit their fathers or take them out to dinner, they send a greeting card. Traditionally, fathers prefer greeting cards that are not too sentimental. Most greeting cards are whimsical so fathers laugh when they open them. Some give heartfelt thanks for being there whenever the child needed Dad.

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Embassy of the United States of America
Dag Hammarskjölds Väg 31, SE-115 89 Stockholm

https://stockholm.usembassy.gov/Holidays/celebrate/fathers.html

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Reader asks ,"Whats the Impact of all these projects?"

>village of ridgewood

Save Our Village …..

“Is there any real planning going on in town? The HS turf – BF Track, Valley Expansion,Train Station, Water Park, Parking garage,condos and COAH obligations are making my head spin.

What is the impact of these projects and how do they affect each other? How built out should the town become? What is the difference between a village and a city? Is there really is a Master Plan, and just what is the plan?”

1-800-FLOWERS.COMshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=100462

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the Best of Bergen from 201 Magazine

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https://www.201.net/resources/Best+of+Bergen+2009

Best of Bergen 2009

Best Downtown Shopping
Ridgewood

Many of Bergen’s 70 communities have bustling downtown shopping districts, but Ridgewood, with its long avenue of boutiques, restaurants and parks, was chosen the favorite. The downtown, notes Tara Diamond-Kule of Glen Rock, “mixes ‘mom-and-pop’ with nationwide-chain shopping in a great balance.” Diamond-Kule also praises the diversity of food offerings to suit every palate. “Every age group can find something to do, eat or buy in downtown Ridgewood, from going to the movies, getting their hunger sated, or buying a new outfit for a night out.”

Runners-Up: Englewood, Westwood

Best Fireworks
Ridgewood Fourth of July
Whether viewed from Vets Field, Van Neste Square Park or the west side of the railroad tracks, Ridgewood’s fireworks continue to delight for this annual Independence Day tradition. “When our children were young,” recalls Barbara Baum of Montvale, “our family’s 4th of July celebration included a drive into Ridgewood to watch the town’s spectacular fireworks.” Way to light up the faces of young and old!

Best Homemade Ice Cream
Van Dyk’s Ice Cream, Ridgewood
Tucked away in a residential neighborhood of Ridgewood, Van Dyk’s continues to draw ice cream lovers throughout the seasons. Sensational scoopers pile cones and cups high with favorite flavors of choice. Village resident Randy Carson screams for his Van Dyk’s ice cream, which he calls “an outstanding product.” And, like many in this age of the franchise, Carson says he prefers to support family businesses like this one, whose roots on Ackerman Avenue date back more than a century.

Best Chinese Food
Baumgart’s, Edgewater, Englewood and Ridgewood locations
A surprise win this year for Best Chinese Food is Baumgart’s. A three-time winner for Best Kid-Friendly Restaurant, Baumgart’s has, increasingly, captivated the attention of Chinese-food lovers across Bergen. Renee Missbach of Ridgewood waxes eloquent about the homemade noodles (not to mention the homemade ice cream). “Baumgart’s has the most fresh and delicious Chinese food around. Whether it be a quick dinner or a special occasion celebration, it’s our family’s favorite place to eat!”

Best Coffeehouse
Ridgewood Coffee Company, Ridgewood

While ownership of this popular coffee house has changed over the years, there’s certainly no discontent brewing about the quality and popularity of the offerings. Java junkies still flock to the downtown Ridgewood gathering spot for a consistently good cup of joe and some lively conversation. “What it lacks in room or atmosphere, it makes up for in its great coffee,” says Caryn Starr-Gates of Fair Lawn. “The beans are roasted to perfection,” adds Starr-Gates, who also likes the dessert selections. And village resident Jeanette LaRocco applauds the “wonderful small-town feel of a place where they get to know their customers personally and make you feel like they do – even if you’re not a regular.”

Best Gift Shop
Happy Tuesday, Ridgewood
The owners of this eclectic gift shop will be mighty happy to learn that they have reclaimed the top spot in this competitive category. Andrea Glanz of Ho-Ho-Kus calls Happy Tuesday “the kind of store that you can always find something in – I never leave empty handed. Whether it’s holiday decorations, a hostess gift, new baby, teacher, wedding or birthday, they have the perfect thing for every occasion,” she says. “I love shopping there!”

https://www.201.net/resources/Best+of+Bergen+2009

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>Tenure has the potential to benefit students

>Tenure has the potential to benefit students, but only if the broader community of tenured teachers and tenured school principals is willing to use the relative independence tenure affords to shield their students from the ill-effects of poor administration of schools by outsiders. By ‘outsiders’, I simply mean, individuals who are neither working in, nor directly responsible for what happens in, the classroom.

The question then becomes, are the tenured teachers and tenured principals in Ridgewood using the relative independence tenure affords to shield their students from the ill-effects of poor administration of schools by Cottage Place.

If it can be demonstrated that they are making the proper use of their powers as tenured individuals, and **each** of our students is being given a fighting chance to succeed, regardless of which RHS feeder school serve his or her neighborhood, the taxpayers and voters in Ridgewood should be satisfied. What more can you ask?

On the other hand, if it can be shown that more than a few our tenured teachers or tenured principals are failing to keep up their end of the bargain, and are allowing rotten ideas from Cottage Place to permeate their classrooms, why should dissatisfaction with the tenure system in Ridgewood be looked upon as some sort of aberration, or strange affliction?

I would think the opposite should be the case. Based on recent events, those who blindly support every unwise act and foolish utterance of Cottage Place should be the ones under regular and recurring inspection by the ‘jaundiced eye’.

I would be interested to know the opinions of TRB readers in the Travell district–does the record and recent performance of Travell’s acting principal indicate that an early award of tenure for her will be put to its proper use? If so, why? If not, why not?

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BOE supporter says , if don’t like the high taxes move to Texas

Ridgewood_BOE_theridgewoodblog

if you can’t handle Ridgewood’s tax burden, then i suggest you MOVE. nobody is holding a gun to your head to live here. if you don’t want to pay state income taxes or don’t want to deal with high property taxes go to Texas!

if you can’t pay our taxes then you’re clearly too poor to be living in ridgewood.

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Happy Easter

>https://wilstar.com/holidays/easter.htm

The Traditions of Easter

As with almost all “Christian” holidays, Easter has been secularized and commercialized. The dichotomous nature of Easter and its symbols, however, is not necessarily a modern fabrication.

Since its conception as a holy celebration in the second century, Easter has had its non-religious side. In fact, Easter was originally a pagan festival.

The ancient Saxons celebrated the return of spring with an uproarious festival commemorating their goddess of offspring and of springtime, Eastre. When the second-century Christian missionaries encountered the tribes of the north with their pagan celebrations, they attempted to convert them to Christianity. They did so, however, in a clandestine manner.

It would have been suicide for the very early Christian converts to celebrate their holy days with observances that did not coincide with celebrations that already existed. To save lives, the missionaries cleverly decided to spread their religious message slowly throughout the populations by allowing them to continue to celebrate pagan feasts, but to do so in a Christian manner.

As it happened, the pagan festival of Eastre occurred at the same time of year as the Christian observance of the Resurrection of Christ. It made sense, therefore, to alter the festival itself, to make it a Christian celebration as converts were slowly won over. The early name, Eastre, was eventually changed to its modern spelling, Easter.

The Date of Easter

Prior to A.D. 325, Easter was variously celebrated on different days of the week, including Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. In that year, the Council of Nicaea was convened by emperor Constantine. It issued the Easter Rule which states that Easter shall be celebrated on the first Sunday that occurs after the first full moon on or after the vernal equinox. However, a caveat must be introduced here. The “full moon” in the rule is the ecclesiastical full moon, which is defined as the fourteenth day of a tabular lunation, where day 1 corresponds to the ecclesiastical New Moon. It does not always occur on the same date as the astronomical full moon. The ecclesiastical “vernal equinox” is always on March 21. Therefore, Easter must be celebrated on a Sunday between the dates of March 22 and April 25.

The Lenten Season

Lent is the forty-six day period just prior to Easter Sunday. It begins on Ash Wednesday. Mardi Gras (French for “Fat Tuesday”) is a celebration, sometimes called “Carnival,” practiced around the world, on the Tuesday prior to Ash Wednesday. It was designed as a way to “get it all out” before the sacrifices of Lent began. New Orleans is the focal point of Mardi Gras celebrations in the U.S. Read about the religious meanings of the Lenten Season.

The Easter Bunny Bunny

The Easter Bunny is not a modern invention. The symbol originated with the pagan festival of Eastre. The goddess, Eastre, was worshipped by the Anglo-Saxons through her earthly symbol, the rabbit.

The Germans brought the symbol of the Easter rabbit to America. It was widely ignored by other Christians until shortly after the Civil War. In fact, Easter itself was not widely celebrated in America until after that time.

The Easter Egg

As with the Easter Bunny and the holiday itself, the Easter Egg predates the Christian holiday of Easter. The exchange of eggs in the springtime is a custom that was centuries old when Easter was first celebrated by Christians.

From the earliest times, the egg was a symbol of rebirth in most cultures. Eggs were often wrapped in gold leaf or, if you were a peasant, colored brightly by boiling them with the leaves or petals of certain flowers.

Today, children hunt colored eggs and place them in Easter baskets along with the modern version of real Easter eggs — those made of plastic or chocolate candy.

https://wilstar.com/holidays/easter.htm