Happy Birthday, LIRR!


Long Island Rail Road Marks 175th Anniversary

NEW YORK (AP) -- The Long Island Rail Road is marking its 175th birthday by giving riders Broadway tickets and other prizes.

The railroad has announced monthly customer appreciation days with free prize drawings, starting Tuesday at Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan. Railroad officials say free tickets to several Broadway shows are this month's prize.

The LIRR was chartered on April 24, 1834. It has become North America's busiest commuter railroad, carrying more than 87 million riders last year.

The LIRR says it is also the oldest railroad still operating under its original name.


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Stacy Andrews addresses media at Philadelphia airport

Andrews, 27, the brother of Eagles right guard Shawn Andrews, said the prospect of playing alongside his brother was thrilling.

"That would be great. It'd be a great feeling. It'd be a boost for Shawn and me, (and) the organization. It's something I'm looking forward to .. It'd be great to be playing right beside my brother, dominatin' over there.

"It was something we've been talking about every since we first got to the league" in the 2004 draft, he said. Shawn went from Arkansas to the Eagles in the first round, Stacy went from Ole Miss to the Bengals in the fourth.
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AF heritage, history on display at BWI airport

2/6/2009 - BALTIMORE (AFPN) -- The rich diversity, heritage and history of the Air Force can be seen as part of an exhibit on display at the Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport through July 30.

Nearly 50 pieces from the Air Force art collection are part of a rotating exhibit in the airport's international terminal which sees thousands of travelers each month.

The exhibit features "an extraordinary assortment of really great art," said Timothy Campbell, executive director of the Maryland Aviation Administration, during the exhibit's official opening ceremony Feb. 5 at the airport.
AF heritage, history on display at BWI airport
Mr. Campbell said the airport is fortunate to have these pieces on display documenting the achievements and history of military aerospace and aviation.

"The location of this exhibit in the international terminal is wonderful," said William Davidson, administrative assistant to the secretary of the Air Force. "The venue is beautiful; the natural lighting is wonderful but more important is its close proximity to our Air Mobility Command's passenger terminal.

"It's from this terminal that a large majority of our Airmen, Soldiers, Sailors and Marines leave for overseas deployments and return home," Mr. Davidson said. "Having these pieces from our Air Force art collection on display here gives us the opportunity to tell the story of what our men and women in uniform are accomplishing."

Mr. Davidson said having this exhibit on display during the month of February is special.

"February is African American History Month and this exhibit gives us a forum to recognize the diversity of our Airmen, past and present, and their vital contributions," he said. "Many of the pieces here today feature the Tuskegee Airmen, the first African American pilots to serve in combat during World War II."

At that time, these Airmen not only were fighting the enemy abroad, but also discrimination at home and among their fellow soldiers, Mr. Davidson said. Despite these challenges, these Airmen served with distinction.

Even the red-painted tails of their aircraft, initially designed to warn other pilots that an African American was flying that plane, eventually became a point of pride, courage and determination of the Tuskegee Airmen to accomplish their mission despite racial barriers. This determination is something that those in the Air Force today are very proud of, Mr. Davidson said.

"We're also proud that our art collection does not focus solely on Airmen," he said. "We're members of a joint team and we've asked our artists to document not only our Airmen, but also the Soldiers, Sailors and Marines we work so closely with.

"Our artists aren't told what to paint, sketch or draw," Mr. Davidson said. "We just provide them the opportunity to accompany our Airmen on training, humanitarian and even combat operations to see for themselves what we're doing. They interact with our people accomplishing their missions and interpret what they see and experience firsthand to tell the true story of the Air Force and our people."

All of the artwork in the Air Force collection is donated by the artists, explained Russell Kirk, director of the Air Force Art Program.

"Our artists, a part of the larger Air Force family, sacrifice their time to travel the globe and cover our mission, produce beautiful pieces of art and then donate them to us," Mr. Kirk said. "Most say they do it because they want to give back something to the men and women who are defending our country and who sometimes make the ultimate sacrifice in service to the nation."
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NIH Awards $15.9 Million to CCNY and Memorial Sloan-Kettering to Create Partnership to Address Cancer Disparities

New York, NY - The National Institutes of Health's National Cancer Institute (NCI) has awarded The City College of New York (CCNY) and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) a $15.9 million grant to implement a unique partnership in cancer research, education, and outreach. The five-year, renewable award is funded by NCI's U54 program, an initiative created to develop partnerships between minority-serving institutions and NCI-designated cancer centers.

“We want to have these successful approaches to address cancer disparities serve as new models for other minority-serving institutions and NCI-designated cancer centers.”
-- Tim A. Ahles, Director of MSKCC's Neurocognitive Research Laboratory and U54 Co-Principal Investigator
The Partnership for Cancer Research, Training, and Community Outreach will build upon a previous collaboration between the institutions. The grant will help support key research activities that provide a multidisciplinary, but unified approach to several objectives set forth by MSKCC and CCNY.

"We are looking forward to partnering with CCNY to improve cancer research, training, education, and outreach for underserved communities in the New York area," said Dr. Tim A. Ahles, Director of MSKCC's Neurocognitive Research Laboratory, and U54 Co-Principal Investigator. "We also want to have these successful approaches to address cancer disparities serve as new models for other minority-serving institutions and NCI-designated cancer centers."

"By combining our talents and some of our resources, CCNY and Memorial Sloan-Kettering will be well equipped to build and nurture programs in areas such as cancer research and community outreach that will help address cancer disparities in underserved minority and economically disadvantaged communities," said Dr. Karen Hubbard, Professor of Biology at CCNY, and a U54 Co-Principal Investigator.

The Partnership for Cancer Research, Training, and Community Outreach includes four primary objectives:

Investigators will work to develop translational research programs in cell biology, immunology, and biomedical research. Translational research is a concept in which basic science discoveries are applied in clinical practice and clinical observations are studied in the laboratory.
MSKCC and CCNY will collaborate with diverse communities to help define and address cancer disparities. The proposed Partnership for Community Outreach Program (PCOP) will provide an infrastructure to work with members of the community to identify and prioritize specific areas for action. Other elements of this effort include at least two large-scale annual outreach events and several smaller, topical activities featuring experts on issues such as healthy eating, smoking cessation, and cancer screening.
A collaborative effort will be made to recruit and retain students from high school to the post-graduate level, in particular those of minority backgrounds, who are interested in pursuing careers in cancer research. Enhanced education and training opportunities, as well as increased mentorship and support, will be made available.
The partnership will recruit new faculty members at both institutions. U54 resources will help support appointments in key CCNY divisions. At MSKCC, faculty lines will add to the capacity to conduct community-based intervention research and to the development of the PCOP.
About The City College of New York
For more than 160 years, The City College of New York has provided low-cost, high-quality education for New Yorkers in a wide variety of disciplines. Over 15,000 students pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; The School of Architecture, Urban Design and Landscape Architecture (SAUDLA); The School of Education; The Grove School of Engineering; and The Sophie Davis School of Biomedical Education. For additional information, visit www.ccny.cuny.edu.
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NJ TRANSIT Cross-honoring Tickets on Monday

NEWARK, NJ — As winter weather moves into the region, NJ TRANSIT operations, customer service and police personnel across the state are preparing to keep the system running smoothly and minimize delays.

To give customers additional travel options during expected winter weather conditions, NJ TRANSIT will offer full systemwide cross-honoring on Monday, March 2, 2009. Customers holding any NJ TRANSIT ticket or pass will be able to use it on any mode—rail, bus or light rail. For example, customers who normally take the bus from Rutherford to the Port Authority Bus Terminal will be able to use their bus tickets on the train from Rutherford to New York Penn Station.

NJ TRANSIT asks its customers to follow these winter travel tips:

Before starting your trip, visit the Travel Alerts page at www.njtransit.com for up-to-the-minute service information. This information is also available by calling (973) 275-5555 or from broadcast traffic reports.
Allow extra time getting to and from your destination. Use extreme caution when walking on exposed sidewalks or station platforms and when boarding trains and buses.
Report slippery or unsafe conditions to bus operators, train crews or
NJ TRANSIT staff.
Listen closely to public address announcements at stations for late-breaking service information.

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The 2009 Best Translated Book Awards

In case you missed it there was a great article, Latin lit shines at first translation awards in the NY Daily News last week.

Two of the finalist were Chilean Roberto BolaƱo’s posthumous "2666" translated from Spanish byNatasha Wimmer, and "Senselessness" by Salvadoran Horacio Castellanos Moya and translated by Katherine Silver.

From the article: ""Translation of Spanish-language literature is leading the way of this whole translation boom we’re seeing right now.""

"...readers may find translations of contemporary works more appealing because the U.S. has been "overrun by writing programs and commercialism ... a similarity in writing."

Do you agree? What's you favorite translated work or author?

You can click here to download the official awards press release.


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NYC Dept. of Ed. To Use Online Voting for Positions

Elections for the 34 parent councils in NYC's public-school districts will be held online for the first time this year, a change the NYC Department of Education expects will cut costs by 60% and increase involvement.

In addition, the move will for the first time allow all parents of public-school kids to cast a vote, even though the bulk of those votes will be solely advisory. State law currently only allows Parent Teacher Association (PTA) officers the right to cast ballots for the board members.

The New York Post

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1010 Wins School Closings:1010wins.com

1010 Wins School Closings:1010wins.com - 1010 WINS is a website with a system that provides children and parents with an accurate list of schools that are closed during storms.Here is the list,take note that when “No notification” is written next to the name of the school that means the school is open.
A. HARRY MOORE SCHOOL New Jersey Closed
A.C.D.S. Long Island Closed
A.S.A. INSTITUTE OF BUSINESS AND COMPUTER TECH Brooklyn No Notification
ABILITIES INC. Bronx No Notification
ABRAHAM JOSHUA HESCHEL SCHOOL Manhattan No Notification
ACADEMY FOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT New Jersey No Notification
ACADEMY OF MOUNT SAINT URSULA Bronx Closed
ACADEMY OF OUR LADY New Jersey No Notification
ACADEMY OF SAINT ALOYSIUS New Jersey No Notification
ACADEMY OF THE HOLY ANGELS New Jersey Closed
ADELPHI ACADEMY OF BROOKLYN Brooklyn Closed
ADELPHI INSTITUTE Brooklyn No Notification
ADELPHI UNIVERSITY Long Island Closed
AHI EZER YESHIVA Brooklyn No Notification
AL-IMAN SCHOOL Queens No Notification
ALL HALLOWS HIGH Bronx No Notification
ALL QUAD New Jersey No Notification
ALLEN CHRISTIAN SCHOOL Queens Closed
ALLENDALE Public Schools K-8 New Jersey Closed
ALLEN-STEVENSON Manhattan No Notification
ALLEY POND ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER Queens No Notification
ALPHABETLAND PRESCHOOL IN WOODMERE Long Island No Notification
ALPINE PUBLIC SCHOOL New Jersey No Notification
AMERICAN BUSINESS SCHOOL Manhattan No Notification
AMITYVILLE UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT Long Island Closed
ANNA L. KLEIN SCHOOL IN GUTTENBERG New Jersey No Notification
AQUINAS HIGH SCHOOL Bronx No Notification
ARCHBISHOP STEPINAC HIGH Westchester No Notification
ARCHDIOCESE OF NEW YORK Manhattan No Notification
ARDSLEY UNION FREE

ASBURY PARK PUBLIC SCHOOLS New Jersey No Notification
ASSOCIATED BETH RIVKAH SCHOOLS Brooklyn No Notification
ASSOCIATED CRAFTSMEN New Jersey No Notification
ASSOCIATION FOR THE HELP OF RETARDED CHILDREN Manhattan No Notification
BABYLON UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT Long Island No Notification
BAIS YAAKOV ACADEMY Brooklyn No Notification
BAIS YAAKOV HIGH AND TEACHERS SEMINARY Brooklyn No Notification
BAIS YAAKOV OF EIGHTEENTH AVENUE Brooklyn No Notification
BAIS YAAKOV OF QUEENS Queens No Notification
BALDWIN UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT Long Island No Notification
BANK STREET GRADUATE SCHOOL Manhattan No Notification
BANK STREET SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN Manhattan No Notification
BARNARD COLLEGE Manhattan No Notification
BARNARD SCHOOL Manhattan No Notification
BARUCH COLLEGE Manhattan No Notification
BAY RIDGE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY Brooklyn No Notification
BAY RIDGE PREP Brooklyn Closed
BAYONNE PUBLIC SCHOOLS New Jersey Closed
BAYSIDE HIGH SCHOOL Queens No Notification
BAYSIDE Y.M.C.A Queens No Notification
BELLEVILLE SCHOOL DISTRICT New Jersey Closed
BELLMORE UNION FREE DISTRICT Long Island Closed
BELLMORE-MERRICK CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT Long Island Closed
BENEDICTINE ACADEMY IN ELIZABETH New Jersey No Notification
BENJAMIN CARDOZO HIGH SCHOOL Queens No Notification
BERGEN CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL New Jersey Closed
BERGEN COMMUNITY COLLEGE - IN PARAMUS New Jersey Closed
BERGEN COUNTY Y.J.C.C. NURSERY SCHOOL New Jersey No Notification
BERGEN COUNTY HIGH OF JEWISH STUDIES New Jersey No Notification
BERGEN COUNTY SPECIAL SERVICES

Go here http://1010wins.statusalert.net/viewschools.aspx for the rest of the list.
That’s all we have for now on 1010 Wins School Closings:1010wins.com.

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Foot of Snow Expected to Hit NYC Overnight

Before you get to uncork your first "Spring Breaaaaak!" scream, the arrival of March appears to be playing one its cruel (or delightful) tricks on us as it comes in like a snow leopard with a storm that looks like it may be the heaviest accumulation we've received all winter. The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning in effect for twenty-four hours beginning at 6 p.m. this evening. They are calling for six to ten inches of snow to have fallen by tomorrow, coming down heavy at times throughout the night. (Some reports are calling for as much as 13 inches to hit Manhattan by morning.) Temperatures are expected to be lower than normal for the next few days, so the white blanket might just stick around for a while.

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Herschel Walker

Football great Herschel Walker will appear on “Celebrity Apprentice” this season. Walker’s charity for the show is Alternative Community Development Services.

Walker was born on March 3, 1962 in Wrightsville, Georgia. He played high school football for the Johnson County Trojans from 1975 until he graduated in 1979. In his senior year, the Trojans won the state championship, with Walker rushing for 3,167 yards. He won the Dial Award that year, which is given to the national high school scholar athlete of the year.

Walker, a running back, played college football at the University of Georgia from 1980 to 1982. He was named to the All-American team and set the NCAA freshman rushing record. In his junior year, Walker won the Heisman Trophy.

Wanting to turn professional before his collegiate class graduated, Walker got an opportunity to go pro when the USFL was formed. He signed with the New Jersey Generals in 1983. At the time, the team was owned by J. Walker Duncan, but at the end of the 1983 season, Duncan sold the team to Donald Trump.

Walker would excel in the USFL, winning the rushing title in 1983 and 1985. In 1985, he broke the professional football single season rushing record with 2,411 yards. Over his USFL career, he would average 4.87 yards per carry.

In 1985, the Dallas Cowboys selected Walker in the fifth round of the NFL draft. The USFL folded and in 1986, Walker began to play for the Cowboys. He would earn Pro-Bowl invitations in 1987 and 1988, but in 1989, the Cowboys traded him to the Minnesota Vikings. Walker played for the Vikings for two and a half years, but he never regained the form he had with the Generals or Cowboys. He would bounce from the Vikings to the Philadelphia Eagles, then to the New York Giants and eventually, back to the Cowboys, where he finished out his NFL career in 1997.

Walker was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1999. That same year, he was named to Sports Illustrated’s NCAA Football All-Century Team. His #34 jersey has been retired by the University of Georgia.

Walker wrote his biography “Breaking Free” in 2009 in which he talked about suffering from associated identity disorder (multiple personalities). Because of this, he claims to not remember his Heisman Trophy win.

Walker competed in the 1992 Winter Olympics for the two man bobsled event, finishing in seventh place. He won the Superstars competition in 1987 and 1988. Walker is a sixth degree black belt in tae kwon do and said on “Inside MMA” that he would be open to appearing on a mixed martial arts reality show. A Christian, Walker has also appeared on “The Hour of Power” with Robert Schuller.

Walker married to his college sweetheart, Cindy, in 1983, but the two divorced in 2001.
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Union pickets outside Navy base over contractor study

Waving signs and chanting "We want to work," dozens of civilian Navy employees expressed fear Wednesday afternoon that they could lose their jobs to private contractors.

"We're blessed to have our jobs, but you can't help but worry about losing them to contractors," said Larry Dykes, a Virginia Beach resident who does construction and maintenance work on piers at Norfolk Naval Station and the Little Creek Naval Amphibious Base in Virginia Beach.

"You look around, and you wonder, 'Are you next?' "

More than 60 workers who handle maintenance, transportation and environmental services at Navy installations in Hampton Roads stood outside the Norfolk Naval Station's main gate waving as military personnel and civilians departed for the day.

Their worries sprang from studies by the Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Mid-Atlantic, on whether to turn these tasks over to private contractors, said Richard Burwell of the Tidewater Virginia Federal Employees Metal Trades Council, which coordinated the demonstration and represents many of the workers.

"What's unfair is that we're forced to compete for the jobs we've been holding for several years," Burwell said as workers wearing labor-union shirts and jackets lined up along

Admiral Taussig Boulevard near Hampton Boulevard.

The Navy's studies are part of a governmentwide program that seeks to cut costs and spur efficiency by allowing private contractors to compete for certain jobs.

As part of the decision-making process, an agency must weigh the efficiency of the civilian workers who already perform those tasks.

The Naval Facilities Engineering Command's regional office said it is studying 469 civilian maintenance jobs in Hampton Roads for possible outsourcing.

In a separate study, it is looking at 390 positions that involve truck-driving and other transportation needs. The third study involves 94 jobs in environmental services, such as cleaning up hazards.

The competition between the continued use of civilian employees and using contractors is "expected to produce efficiencies and savings for the Navy, enabling limited resources to be re-programmed for other war-fighting needs," said the Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Mid-Atlantic, in an e-mailed statement Wednesday. The savings won't be known, however, until the competitive process is complete, it said.

Deciding whether to use contractors is up to a senior acquisition official in the command's headquarters, the regional office said.

In past studies of whether its civilian jobs in Hampton Roads should be turned over to contractors, the Naval Facilities Engineering Command's civilian work force prevailed. Wilson Gilbert, an electrician who performs maintenance on the Naval Station piers, said he was more concerned this time around because "there seems to be a big government push to use contractors."

"I've been here for 27 years," said Gilbert, a 53-year-old Norfolk resident. "After 27 years, who wants to start over?"

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A NYC Teacher/Parent Asks: Closing Schools - WHY?

In my social circles, I speak with a number of people that have children in both private and public schools. Many of the parents are completely dumbfounded by the fact that a public school can just be closed down by the DOE WITHOUT any consultation with the parents or the community.

Closing the schools in a neighborhood completely changes everything for the people living there. Children must be registered with new schools, education is disrupted, bussing schedules changed, life must be completely reorganized. Parents and children must change everything to scramble to get their children into new schools and start over again.

NOT that these parents WANT ther children to be sent to a school where violence is strife, or the atmosphere does not contribute to learning. The BIG question is this: WHY can't the existing schools be made more productive, without closing them, and turning them into other schools?


It would seem to me with all of the geniuses that hold Harvard and Yale degrees in the offices of the DOE,that rather than blaming the teachers, there would be some studies made at the schools where there are problems to pinpoint precisely why schools fail. The simple fact is this- the school is an extension of the community- if the people that most have a vested interest in education of their children are kept out and excluded from the educational process (parents, teachers, school administrators), how could ANY school have the opportunity to turn itself around? Aren't those of us most directly involved more aware of what makes a school work than some bureaucrat sitting in Tweed?

Still, we let these bureaucrats close these schools, and we just let it happen. My opinion- it's time to put the word PUBLIC back in education and in service. Call me naive, but, aren't these PUBLIC servants like Bloomberg and Klein supposed to be answering to US?

It's time to grow a pair, people, and not only speak up, but GET the control back to where it belong- the people that pay the salaries of the Kleins and Cerfs- US!


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Citing downturn, WVEC-TV lays off employees

WVEC-TV, smarting from the recession, has laid off an unidentified number of employees, its general manager said today.

Jim Berman, the president and general manager of Channel 13, the local affiliate of ABC, declined to say how many were laid off. He said that was against the policy of WVEC’s owner, Belo Corp. A Web site devoted to media news in Virginia, www.vartv.com, listed at least seven positions eliminated by WVEC.

Berman said none of the laid-off employees was a full-time on-air personality. Most left the station Monday, he said.

“Obviously, the economic downturn has created some real challenges for us,” said Berman, citing, in particular, declines in automotive ad revenue. “We’ve had to make very difficult decisions as it pertains to how we will manage our expenses moving forward.”

He added: “This is affecting our business, the radio business, the newspaper business. We’re all in the same boat.”

Before the layoffs, WVEC employed 146 people, Berman said.

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'Liberal Leave' for D.C.-Area Federal Offices

Washington, D.C.-area federal offices will operate today under "liberal leave" or "unscheduled leave" and delayed arrival status, meaning employees who cannot make it to work can request off, or should otherwise arrive to work no more than two hours later than normal,according to the Office of Personnel Management.

The decision comes as school districts across the region have closed or delayed their openings due to the largest anticipated snowstorm of the season.

In the event of inclement conditions, the OPM director consults with local, state and federal agencies such as the National Weather Service before determining how weather conditions could impact commutes and transportation options. Federal workers in the nation's capital have not had a day off due to inclement weather conditions since Hurricane Isabel hit the region in September 2003. Employees may check the work status by calling 202-606-1900 or by visitingwww.opm.gov.



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Dr. Seuss Birthday

Dr. Seuss Birthday - For bookworms everywhere Monday March 2nd will be the 105th anniversary of the birth of Theodor Seuss Geisel aka Dr. Seuss.Dr. Seuss was a writer and cartoonist who published over 60 children’s books such as:
Dr. Seuss's Birthday
* And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street (1937)
* The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins (1938)
* The King’s Stilts (1939)
* The Seven Lady Godivas (1940)
* Horton Hatches the Egg (1940)
* McElligot’s Pool (Caldecott Honor Book, 1947)
* Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose (1948)
* Bartholomew and the Oobleck (Caldecott Honor Book, 1949)
* If I Ran the Zoo (Caldecott Honor Book, 1950)
* Scrambled Eggs Super! (1953)
* Horton Hears a Who! (1954)
* On Beyond Zebra! (1955)
* If I Ran the Circus (1956)
* How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (1957)
* The Cat in the Hat (1957)
* The Cat in the Hat Comes Back (1958)
* Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories (1958)
* Happy Birthday to You! (1959)
* Green Eggs and Ham (1960)
* One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish (1960)
* The Sneetches and Other Stories (1961)
* Dr. Seuss’s Sleep Book (1962)
* Dr. Seuss’s ABC (1963)
* Hop on Pop (1963)
* Fox in Socks (1965)
* I Had Trouble in Getting to Solla Sollew (1965)
* The Cat in the Hat Song Book (1967)
* The Foot Book (1968)

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Woman robbed of prescription drugs

POQUOSON, Va. - Poquoson Police arrested two men and charged them with robbing a 65-year-old woman of her prescription drugs.

The incident happened early Friday morning in the 1100 block of Poquoson Avenue. Police say the victim was getting ready to go to work when she was approached by two masked men. The men grabbed the victim, forced her to the ground and forcibly took pain medication for her pockets, according to police.

The women was taken to a nearby hospital to be treated for minor injuries to her face and arm. She has since been released.

Poquoson Police investigated the crime and detectives learned the identities of the two suspects. Police say the victim knew both suspects.

On Friday afternoon police located and arrested 20-year-old Cody Richard Hill and 21-year-old Allen Blake McNeely. Both were charged with Robbery, Unlawful Wounding, Wearing a Mask in Public and Grand Larceny.

They are currently being held at the Virginia Peninsula Regional Jail without bond.

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New York City Schools Closed / NYC DOE closes schools

Well this is the first time4 in years that the New York City Department of Education NYC DOE has closed schools. According to the reports blamed snow and wind for the decision. New York City wasn’t the only major city in the Northeast to close on Monday. Philadelphia and Boston also closed their public schools.Areas of the tri-state could see more than one foot of snow. Wind gusts could reach 35 miles per hour during the day. New York City Schools Closed
For all, be safe and secured wherever you are. Just continue to watch the NYC DOE advisory.


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Granville Waiters(Photo)

Who is Granville Stephen Waiters?
Granville Stephen Waiters is a retired American Professional Basketball Player. Born last January 8, 1961 in Columbus, Ohio, 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) and 225 lb (102 kg. Granville Waiters played center for Ohio State University's men's basketball team and was drafted by the Portland Trail Blazers in the second round of the 1983 NBA Draft. The Blazers sold their draft rights to the Indiana Pacers, and Waiters spent his first two seasons in Indiana. He then played for the Houston Rockets and Chicago Bulls until leaving the NBA for Europe in 1988. Waiters averaged 2.2 points and 2.4 rebounds over the course of his NBA career. All of this information is from

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