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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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>The History of Hanukkah

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Hanukkah is the annual Jewish festival celebrated on eight successive days beginning on the 25th day of Kislev, the third month of the Jewish calendar, corresponding, approximately, to December in the Gregorian calendar. It is also known as the Festival of Lights, Feast of Dedication, and Feast of the Maccabees, Hanukkah commemorates the rededication of the Temple of Jerusalem by Judas Maccabee in 165 BC after the Temple had been profaned by Antiochus IV Epiphanes, king of Syria and overlord of Palestine

The History of Hanukkah
Hanukkah is celebrated for eight days and nights, starting on the 25th of Kislev on the Hebrew calendar (which is November-December on the Gregorian calendar). In Hebrew, the word “Hanukkah” means “dedication.”

The holiday commemorates the rededication of the holy Temple in Jerusalem after the Jews’ 165 B.C.E. victory over the Hellenist Syrians. Antiochus, the Greek King of Syria, outlawed Jewish rituals and ordered the Jews to worship Greek gods.

In 168 B.C.E. the Jews’ holy Temple was seized and dedicated to the worship of Zeus.

Some Jews were afraid of the Greek soldiers and obeyed them, but most were angry and decided to fight back.

The fighting began in Modiin, a village not far from Jerusalem. A Greek officer and soldiers assembled the villagers, asking them to bow to an idol and eat the flesh of a pig, activities forbidden to Jews. The officer asked Mattathias, a Jewish High Priest, to take part in the ceremony. He refused, and another villager stepped forward and offered to do it instead. Mattathias became outraged, took out his sword and killed the man, then killed the officer. His five sons and the other villagers then attacked and killed the soldiers. Mattathias’ family went into hiding in the nearby mountains, where many other Jews who wanted to fight the Greeks joined them. They attacked the Greek soldiers whenever possible.

Judah Maccabee and his soldiers went to the holy Temple, and were saddened that many things were missing or broken, including the golden menorah. They cleaned and repaired the Temple, and when they were finished, they decided to have a big dedication ceremony. For the celebration, the Maccabees wanted to light the menorah. They looked everywhere for oil, and found a small flask that contained only enough oil to light the menorah for one day. Miraculously, the oil lasted for eight days. This gave them enough time to obtain new oil to keep the menorah lit. Today Jews celebrate Hanukkah for eight days by lighting candles in a menorah every night, thus commemorating the eight-day miracle.

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>Santa’s Helper wants to remind everyone ,It’s called a Christmas Tree

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Merry Christmas Everyone!

I was at the Ridgewood tree lighting on Saturday and had a wonderful time with family and friends.

However, it is a disgrace that Santa wished everyone a “Happy Holiday” when he lit the Ridgewood Christmas Tree (or is it the official Ridgewood “Holiday Shrub” or some other such nonsense).

It is a bit much when even SANTA can’t wish everyone a Merry Christmas!

Santa’s Helper
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>Hazardous weather condition(s):

>This Afternoon: Periods of snow and sleet. High near 30. East wind between 3 and 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. Total daytime snow and sleet accumulation of 1 to 2 inches possible.

Tonight: Periods of freezing rain and sleet before 10pm, then periods of rain and sleet. Temperature rising to around 36 by 1am. Calm wind becoming south around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New ice accumulation of around a 0.1 of an inch possible. New sleet accumulation of less than a half inch possible.

Monday: A chance of rain, mainly before noon. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 40. Breezy, with a west wind 8 to 11 mph increasing to between 19 and 22 mph. Winds could gust as high as 46 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

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>Dont Forget Santa is Coming 2nite

>santa+clause

Downtown for the Holidays!
Sponsored by Chamber of Commerce
All day events – 8:30 & 9:30AM – Breakfast with Santa – Winberies 10:30AM – Warner Theater – Free Holiday Movie for chldren. 10AM – 4PM – Trolley on E. Ridgewood Ave. 11AM – Art of Motion Show at North Fork Bank 1 – 4PM Sants’s Trackless Train at Van Neste sponsored by Ridgewood News 10AM – 9PM Whole Foods – free raffle for Holiday Food Basket Citizen’s Community Bank & Backyard Living – Moving Train Display Free Gift Wrapping Center at Bookends FREE PARKING on Satrudays 12/1, 8, 15, 22 5:30PM Tree Lighting and Music Information: 201/445-2600
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>The fly reminds everyone that this Monday’s up-coming BOE meeting agenda

>Dr. Brennen will discuss the progress report on math.

The Fly encourages any interested people to tune in and listen to what our illustrious administration has to say. Make sure to have an extra cup of coffee, this item is scheduled towards the very end of the meeting.

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>Three Village Council Seats Up for Grabs in Next Election – Several Rumored As Likely Candidates Updated List

>Rum+Truck
Frank DelVecchio – Deputy Police Chief, Fairview PD; Walthery Avenue resident
Frank Giordano – Maple Park Fundraising Chairman; Spring Avenue resident
Eleanor Gruber – Environmental Activist; South Irving Street resident
Jacques Harlow – Incumbent Councilman; Oak Street resident
Joseph Hovan – Retired Ridgewood School Teacher; Claremont Road resident
Keith Killion – Captain of Detectives, Ridgewood PD; Willow Court resident
Kim Ringler-Shagin – Incumbent Councilwoman; Walthery Avenue resident
Thomas Riche – Former Ridgewood Councilman, Sterling Place resident
Betty Wiest – Incumbent Deputy Mayor; North Walnut Street resident

and just added:

And Roy Simpadian – Computer Consultant, Amsterdam Avenue Resident 27 years old, lifetime Ridgewood Resident. Website to follow

The Ridgewood Blog would like to extend and invitation to anyone looking to run for the Village Council to send us a statement announcing your candidacy and a brief out line of your platform.

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>It is important to know when Bernardsville and Westfield switched over to reform math.

>Don’t you get it? If they switched after the 2003 S&P report, they achieved their high ranking without the ‘benefit’ of reform math, and were subsequently hoodwinked by slick publishing marketing techniques into making a change for change’s sake. This means that those districts are nothing but high-class suckers now, just like Ridgewood.

If you don’t like the word “disingenuous”, then how about “sociopathic”?

If you seek to defend reform math, then defend reform math! Don’t try to convince us that reform math is preferable simply by dropping the names of presumptively high achieving districts that foolishly bought into this social engineering experiment wrapped in the skin of a math curriculum.

Show us why reform math isn’t as pathetic as we all think it is compared to other math curriculums currently on the market. Show us why, despite what we have all seen with our respective two eyes, reform math isn’t devoid of critical math fact and math algorithm content.

Is it because we don’t live in Missouri that you don’t feel obligated to “show me”?

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>Today’s NY Post-Fuzzy Math isn’t cuddly by Michelle Malkin

>November 28, 2007 — DO you know what math curriculum your child is being taught? Are you worried that your third- grader hasn’t learned simple multiplication yet? Have you been befuddled by educational jargon such as “spiraling,” which is used to explain why your kid keeps bringing home the same insipid busywork of cutting, gluing and drawing? And are you alarmed by teachers who emphasize “self-confidence” over proficiency while their students fall further and further behind? Join the club.

From New York City to Seattle, parents are wising up to math fads like “Everyday Math.” Sounds harmless enough, right? It’s cleverly marketed as a “University of Chicago” program. Impressive, right? But then you start to sense something’s not adding up when your kid starts second grade and comes home with the same kindergarten-level addition and subtraction problems – for the second year in a row.

Then your child keeps telling you that the teacher isn’t really teaching anything, just handing out useless worksheets – some of which make no sense to parents with business degrees, medical degrees and PhDs in economics. Then you notice that it’s the University of Chicago education department, not the mathematics department, that’s behind this nonsense.

Then you Google “Everyday Math” and discover that countless moms and dads just like you – and a few brave teachers with their heads screwed on straight – have had similarly horrifying experiences.

Like the Illinois mom who found these “math” problems in the fifth-grade “Everyday Math” textbook:

A. If math were a color, it would be -, because -.

B. If it were a food, it would be -, because -.

C. If it were weather, it would be -, because -.

Then you realize your child has become a victim of “Fuzzy Math” – the “New New Math,” the dumbed-down, politically correct, euphemism-filled edu-folly corrupting schools nationwide. And then you feel like the subject of Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” as you take on the seemingly futile task of waking up other parents and fighting the edu-cracy to restore a rigorous curriculum in your child’s classroom.

New York City teacher Matthew Clavel described his frustration with “Everyday Math” in a 2003 City Journal article: “The curriculum’s failure was undeniable: Not one of my students knew his or her times tables, and few had mastered even the most basic operations; knowledge of multiplication and division was abysmal . . . what would you do, if you discovered that none of your fourth-graders could correctly tell you the answer to four times eight?”

But don’t give up and don’t give in. While New York City remains wedded to “Everyday Math” (which became the mandated standard in 2003), Texas just voted to drop the University of Chicago textbooks for third- graders. School-board members lambasted the math program for failing to prepare students for college. It’s an important salvo in the math wars because Texas is one of the biggest markets for school textbooks.

Meanwhile, grass-roots groups such as Mathematically Correct (mathematicallycorrect.com) and Where’s The Math? (wheresthemath.com) are alerting parents to how their children are being used as educational guinea pigs. And teachers and math professionals who haven’t drunk the Kool-Aid are exposing the ruse. Nick Diaz, a Maryland educator, wrote a letter to his local paper:

“The proponents of fuzzy math claim that the new approach provides a ‘deep conceptual understanding.’ Those words, however, hide the truth. Students today are not expected to master basic addition, subtraction and multiplication. These fundamental skills are necessary for a truly deep understanding of math, but fuzzy math advocates are masters at using vocabulary that sounds good to parents, but means something different to educators.”

If Fuzzy Math were a color, it would be neon green like those Mr. Yuk labels warning children not to ingest poison. Do not swallow

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>Architect Receives Award for “Flood-Proof” Village Hall Design

>village+hall+flood2
village+hall+flood
IMG 0006

Ridgewood-based Poskanzer Skott Architects received a 2007 New Jersey Golden Trowel award last week for its work on renovating Ridgewood’s Village Hall. The awards are given annually by the International Masonry Institute.

Firm principal Barry Poskanzer began working with Ridgewood officials to design a flood-proof renovation and building expansion shortly after Village Hall was damaged during 1999’s Tropical Storm Floyd.

“We’re pleased with the outcome of melding new architecture with the old building,” said Barry Poskanzer, principal of Poskanzer Skott. “We’ve heard nice things from the people in the community and the people who occupy it.”

The newly renovated and expanded Village Hall was officially opened in September of 2005, and then suffered damaging flooding less than one month later.

The Fly wonders if Mr. Poskanzer remembers 2005’s flood.

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>Reader wonders, "Why does the Ridgewood district fear success so thoroughly?"

>The Ridgewood district could literally flip a switch and begin providing a math curriculum of a quality comparable to that of the private and catholic schools mentioned above.

What are they so afraid of?

The Ridgewood district is blatantly giving the cold shoulder to math talented kids. But if the same child was as talented with the violin, we would see nothing but encouragement for the child to develop mastery at the earliest age possible. What gives? What’s so acceptable about bad math versus bad music?

With all due respect to the virtuoso instrumentalists among us, exactly who is landing high-paying jobs with great benefits and fat annual bonuses these days based on their musical talent?

Why does the Ridgewood district fear success so thoroughly? What motivates them to identify that which is the polar opposite of what is in its non-remedial math students’ best interests, implement that lousy option, and then stick with its crummy decision so assiduously, come hell or high water?

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