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Monday, November 26, 2012

Parkchester Chorus Presents Their 73rd Annual Christmas Concert



BRONX, NEW YORK, November 26- Parkchester Chorus, under the direction of Lorraine C. Nanko, with Thomas Cuffari, Accompanist, will present their 73rd Annual Christmas Concert, “Glad Tidings of Great Joy”, on Sunday, December 9th at 3 p.m. The program will also include selections from George Frideric Handel’s “Messiah”. The show will feature the talent of renowned local artists, Christian Aquino, Elizabeth Figols-Galagarza, Vivian Rose, and Joseph Zamplione in traditional solo selections as well as collaborative numbers. 

Bearing the distinct honor as Artists In Residence, the Chorus is proud to present this most festive performance at The First Presbyterian Church at Throggs Neck, located at 3051 East Tremont Avenue, with access for the disabled as well as a parking lot conveniently available at the entrance on Dudley Avenue. Free-Will Offering  graciously accepted.

Established in 1939, Parkchester Chorus is the longest-running community chorus in the Bronx, which is celebrated for singing a wide range of musical styles from classical to popular, from opera to musical theatre, as well as the great choral classics. Founded by a local group, Parkchester Chorus has grown to proudly boast members hailing from other boroughs in the City of New York, as well as Westchester County.

Parkchester Chorus is proud to be a member of the Bronx Council on The Arts. 

For further information regarding Parkchester Chorus, please visit the website at www.parkchesterchorus.org, or call 718-409-1051 and leave a message.






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Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Hector Camacho Remembered

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Hector Camacho Remembered: By Rich Mancuso BRONX, NEW YORK, November 26- For three decades Hector Camacho made us talk when he laced up the gloves and went into the...

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Cab muggers sought

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Cab muggers sought: BRONX, NEW YORK, November 26- Police are asking for the public’s help in trying to catch a pair of thieves who mugged a driver inside his ...

Cab muggers sought



BRONX, NEW YORK, November 26- Police are asking for the public’s help in trying to catch a pair of thieves who mugged a driver inside his livery car in Bedford Park.

At around 11 p.m. on November 24, the pair were inside a cab in the area of East 198th Street and Briggs Avenue. One of the men pulled out a knife and demanded cash. The driver forked over the cash and the pair fled from the cab.

Investigators from the 52nd Precinct released surveillance video from inside the cab showing the thieves in action. The first suspect is described as a black male, 5 foot 8 tall and weighing 180 pounds. He was last seen wearing a light-colored hooded sweatshirt and black hat. This is the man suspected of using the knife. 

The second suspect is a black male, 5 foot 11 and 220 pounds. He has a mustache and was last seen wearing a light-colored sweat shirt and a light colored scarf around his head.

Anyone with information is urged to call CRIMESTOPPERS at (800) 577-TIPS. The public can also submit their tips by logging onto the Crime Stoppers Website at WWW.NYPDCRIMESTOPPERS.COM or texting their tips to 274637(CRIMES) then enter TIP577. All calls are confidential.



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Friday, November 23, 2012

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Holiday Magic

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Holiday Magic: --> (Photos by Dan Gesslein) The holidays kicked off with floats, family and fun at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade....

Holiday Magic



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(Photos by Dan Gesslein)

The holidays kicked off with floats, family and fun at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Kids of all ages watched balloons such as SpongeBob, Kung Fu Panda and Buzz Lightyear make their way down Central Park West. Celebrities from Whoppi Goldberg to Flo Rida joined in the festivities. 

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Ministers teaming up for storm-relief effort

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Ministers teaming up for storm-relief effort: --> By Michael Horowitz BRONX, NEW YORK, November 21- Rev. Robert Smith Jr., of the Church of the Savior said, this week, that he...

Ministers teaming up for storm-relief effort

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By Michael Horowitz

BRONX, NEW YORK, November 21- Rev. Robert Smith Jr., of the Church of the Savior said, this week, that he and Rev. Okleif Erundu, of the Co-op City Seventh Day Adventist Church, are teaming up to aid victims of Hurricane Sandy, some of whom live near the local community.
The ministers are spearheading a collection drive focusing on the collection of clothing and non-perishable food to be given to the storm's victims.

City Councilman James Vacca, who represents a district in the northeast Bronx that encompasses City Island, Locust Point, Throggs Neck, and Pelham Bay, has said that 60 percent of those living in his district were affected by the hurricane.

Vacca is among the elected officials who have been especially active in spearheading efforts aimed at aiding the storm victims.
“The images of the victims of Hurricane Sandy are the kind of thing that keeps me up at night,” Rev. Smith stressed, in a telephone interview this week.  “It is the kind of thing that I feel compelled to respond to. When I see human suffering, I feel compelled to do whatever I can to ease the suffering.”

To contact Rev. Smith, call him at the Church of the Savior at (718 320-0002, or on his cellphone, at (917) 734-4058.



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Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Poor finances seen costing Riverbay $3.2M per year...

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Poor finances seen costing Riverbay $3.2M per year...: --> By Michael Horowitz BRONX, NEW YORK, November 21- Co-op City, under the terms of its projected mortgage through HUD and Wells Far...

Poor finances seen costing Riverbay $3.2M per year

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By Michael Horowitz

BRONX, NEW YORK, November 21- Co-op City, under the terms of its projected mortgage through HUD and Wells Fargo Bank, is being required to pay $2.8 million per year for mortgage insurance to satisfy the federal agency and $350,000 for insurance to satisfy the city and state agencies that are guaranteeing a portion of the loan.

This seems to mean that if Co-op City were a better fiscal risk, Riverbay could save $3.15 million per year, or the equivalent of 26 percent per year, on its projected mortgage refinancing.

The reality is that Co-op City, unlike most private homeowners, has failed to decrease its debt since its inception in 1968.

With the mortgage refinancing that is anticipated, Co-op City will have more than doubled its debt since the day it opened.

As a result, one could reasonably assume that moneylenders would be reluctant to loan the Riverbay Corporation a large sum of money.

In 1968, Co-op City was financed with a mortgage of an estimated $292 million, which was insured by the state's Housing Finance Agency (HFA).

In 2004, Co-op City and New York Community Bank (NYCB) agreed to $480 million in refinancing. Last year, NYCB agreed to refinance Co-op City to the tune of $555 million.

Now, a little more than a year later, Co-op City is poised to agree to a mortgage of $621.5 million.

Riverbay board member Daryl Johnson has stressed that Co-op City won't be able to survive as a community for people of limited means unless management officials are forced to abandon their wasteful spending.


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Bronx News (Bxnews.net): To Give Thanks

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): To Give Thanks: --> COMMUNITY BOARD NEWS N’ VIEWS By Father Richard F. Gorman Chairman Community Board #12 (The Bronx) BRONX, NEW YORK, November 21- I s...

To Give Thanks

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COMMUNITY BOARD
NEWS N’ VIEWS

By
Father Richard F. Gorman
Chairman
Community Board #12 (The Bronx)

BRONX, NEW YORK, November 21- I suspect that by the time you have the opportunity to see this column, you might well be feeling a bit tired, a touch full in the stomach, and, perhaps, a tad out of sorts.  

This is quite understandable, as you will be reading my words subsequent to our annual “GOBBLEFEST.” Of course, I am making light of our beloved national holiday, Thanksgiving Day.  However, I refer to it as “GOBBLEFEST” not only because of this holiday’s signature tradition of enjoying a turkey dinner, but likewise because Thanksgiving is all too frequently a busy and bustling day upon which one contends with “I,” “C,” “I”  --  i.e., “Irritation” with preparing for visiting relatives and guests, “Congestion” on the highways, and “Indigestion” after eating and drinking too much! Too many of us, “Yours Truly” included, “gobble” down a little more than we should in the course of commemorating this yearly event.

Nonetheless, in spite of the aforementioned, Thanksgiving is a day to take stock of life and to take the time to be grateful for whatever blessings with which we have been gifted. As we sit round and about our Thanksgiving dinner tables, we can plainly and immediately see right in front of our nose the most significant and precious of these graces and good fortunes  --  viz., family, friends, health, happiness, and the means with which to provide for ourselves. In these gifts, hopefully, we are prompted and prodded to celebrate those two fundamental realities that underlie and underwrite them  --  first of all, the God who gives us life and who redeems it and, secondly, a free country with its open, democratic society that affords us the opportunity to enjoy and to exercise our God-given human rights and dignity. For God and for nation, and for all those blessings that issue forth from them, we need to be humbly appreciative for who we are and for all that we have.

On this Thanksgiving week in the Year of Our Lord 2012, I write to give public thanks for, ironically enough, for that what was recently not given to us  --  i.e., the same magnitude of devastation that Hurricane Sandy inflicted on our less fortunate fellow New Yorkers in other parts of our City and our State.  True, there were many residents of our own neighborhood that were adversely impacted by the recent extreme weather.  Nonetheless, Bronx Community District #12 was spared the horror of what happened in areas such as Staten Island, Brooklyn, Queens, and Long Island, a grace for which I am deeply grateful. 

I am equally as thankful for the privilege of serving as the Chairman of Community Board #12 (The Bronx). It has been, and remains, an awesome honor that I neither take for granted nor fail to be grateful for each and every day of my tenure and my service as Chairman. Notice here that I utilize the expression “to give thanks” for, to my mind, there is a big distinction between merely “SAYING THANKS” and really and actually “GIVING THANKS.” The distinction between them is neither superficial nor simply stylistic or terminological. There is a bona fide dichotomy that is best defined and highlighted by the wisdom contained in the familiar, old adage “ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS.” I am further reminded of the insightful admonition that words are oftentimes cheap. The values that we truly cherish and that form the basis for how we think and live are best manifested by our actions, not by our words. More importantly than maintaining that I am a grateful person is the upholding and the daily observance of a way of life that exhibits thankfulness and gratitude. The undertaking of such a lifestyle, in my humble estimation, is the genuine test of Thanksgiving and all for which it stands. Thanksgiving is not just a day. Thanksgiving should be, and MUST be, a way of life! 

This avowal naturally should lead a thoughtful individual to inquire what a “Thanksgiving” way of living entails. For what it is worth, I believe it requires one to live in peaceful, respectful, and civil concord with others. Scripture instructs us that gratefulness to God is best demonstrated by esteem and regard without distinction for all of God’s children, icons of the Divine Image and Presence in whose Holy Image we have been created.  Appreciation for the blessings of our magnificent land is preeminently displayed in facilitating and protecting the exercise of those God-given and constitutional liberties that we claim for our loved ones and ourselves. A most excellent fashion in which to proclaim our appreciation of family, friends, home, and the ability to support them is to enable others to realize and to have the benefit of these blessings as well. Such is the challenge of a genuinely thankful person, not only on the Thursday that is called “Thanksgiving Day,” but on each and every day in each and every year.  May it be an endeavor that we all accept with relish and in which we succeed beyond all expectations.

On behalf of myself, my District Manager, Miss Carmen L. Rosa; our staff members, Mrs. Ursula D. Cruz-Greene, Ms. LaShieka Williams and Ms. Jakira Torres; our Associates, Mrs. Joyce Anthony and Mrs. Verna Smith; and all of my colleagues on Community Board #12 (The Bronx), I convey best wishes for this holiday and for the others soon to follow, along with the hope that our gracious and grateful way of living will redound to the benefit of our neighborhood, our Borough, our City, our, State, and our Nation, and, indeed, all the world.

Happy Thanksgiving!

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Maritime Drops Non-Conference Game

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BRONX, NEW YORK, November 21- The Maritime basketball team lost to local CUNYAC-rival The City College of New York, 65-36, at the Beavers’ Nat Holman Gymnasium. The Privateers fall to 0-3 on the season, while CCNY improves to 3-0.

Senior Ron Bethea (Harlem, N.Y./Humanities Prep.) recorded a team-high 10 points, while freshman Tim McNamara (Somerville, N.J./Somerville) added eight to go along with four rebounds. The Privateers struggled in the first half, turning the ball over 17 times, which led to 27 points for City College. CCNY had a 40-13 lead going into the locker room at halftime.

Maritime played much stronger in the second half, being outscored only 25-23, but the first-half deficit was too large to overcome.

Junior Brandon Reeves led all players with 18 points for the Beavers and matched the game-high with five rebounds. Two other players scored in double-digits for CCNY: freshman Zachary Heiss (15) and sophomore Anthony Lewis (11).

The Privateers will be back in action, when they will play host to arch-rival Kings Point.

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Feds say Seabrook should be jailed for 7 to 9 year...

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Feds say Seabrook should be jailed for 7 to 9 year...: By Michael Horowitz BRONX, NEW YORK, November 20- Federal prosecutors have reportedly asked Federal District Court Judge Deborah Batts t...

Feds say Seabrook should be jailed for 7 to 9 years




By Michael Horowitz

BRONX, NEW YORK, November 20- Federal prosecutors have reportedly asked Federal District Court Judge Deborah Batts to jail former City Councilman Larry Seabrook for 7 to 9 years for the crimes for which he was convicted in July.

Seabrook's attorneys, who are reportedly considered among the city's top defense lawyers, are reportedly pursuing avenues of appeal of the July conviction on federal corruption charges.

Sources close to Seabrook told the News, several weeks ago, that the former Councilman is confident that he will ultimately be vindicated.

Seabrook, a fixture in Co-op City's politics for more than three decades, had faced a jail sentence of up to 180 years when a federal jury in Manhattan convicted him on nine felony counts in a July 26 verdict.

Prosecutors have reportedly argued that the 7- to 9-year jail sentence for Seabrook that they are seeking falls within sentencing guide lines.

A previous jury deadlocked, in December 2011, leading to a second trial on the federal corruption charges that prosecutors brought against Seabrook in the Southern District of New York. A federal jury, in July, found Seabrook guilty of three counts of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, three counts of mail fraud, and three counts of wire fraud.

The former Councilman was acquitted in July, on three counts charging an illegal kickback scheme involving the bidding of a boiler contract at the new Yankee Stadium.

The government proved, to the satisfaction of the July jury, that Seabrook diverted more than $1 million in taxpayer funds to relatives and friends through non-profit organizations that the former Councilman controlled.

In their sentencing memorandum that they prepared for Judge Batts, prosecutors stated: “Councilman Seabrook engaged, for a period of years, in a fraudulent scheme that undermined critical programs of the City of New York. Because of his activities, hundreds of thousands of dollars that should have been directed to desperately needed worker training recruitment was wasted.”

Saying that Seabrook's actions promoted a sense of cynicism about the political process, prosecutors added, “The damage done by Mr. Seabrook's actions thus significantly exceeded the dollar amounts of the fraud. Moreover, when officials in city agencies and at legitimate non-profit organizations questioned Mr. Seabrook about his activities, he responded with verbal attacks and attempts to hid and continue the fraud.”

The prosecutors concluded that it was important for Judge Batts to send a clear message that corruption on the part of elected officials won't be tolerated.


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Bronx News (Bxnews.net): City Politics

Bronx News (Bxnews.net): City Politics: 100PERCENT By Robert Press No More Twinkies for Bloomberg to Kick Around Anymore BRONX, NEW YORK, November 20- It appears that Mayor Blo...

City Politics





100PERCENT
By Robert Press

No More Twinkies for Bloomberg to Kick Around Anymore


BRONX, NEW YORK, November 20- It appears that Mayor Bloomberg will have one less junk food company to kick around these days with the closing of Hostess Inc. Hostess CEO Greg Rayburn announced the closing after striking workers refused his last and final offer. It seems that we saw this happen in the Bronx not to long ago when the Bronx Stella Doro Bakery workers went on strike, and the owner of Stella Doro closed their Bronx factory. Unlike the complete closure of the Hostess company, Stella Doro products were and are baked at other plants that stayed open. While you may experience Twinkie, Ho Ho, Ding Dong, and Wonder Bread withdrawal symptoms, we expect that some if not all the product names will be sold to other companies. The next question will be, how do the new products compare to the originals?

Speaking of originals, Senator Ruben Diaz Sr. wants to remind us that in this time of Democrats in the State Senate joining Republicans (as new Brooklyn State Senator Simca Felder has announced) he (Senator Diaz) has always been a Democrat. “I am a Democrat, and I will be a Democrat, but the only difference is that I am a Conservative Democrat” said Senator Ruben Diaz Sr. in one of his What you Should Know letters. Senator Diaz ends his letter titled “To Set the Record Straight” with I am a Democrat and I will be voting with my Conference, and I will be voting for a Democrat as the Leader. You can seethe entire “What You Should Know” by Senator Diaz on my blog, by going to the archive section on the left and looking for “To Set the Record Straight”.

As we continue in the State Senate, but move to Independent Democratic State Senator Jeff Kline last Thursday he was in the Riverdale section of his district. Klein was with the North Riverdale Merchants Association and the local assemblyman to announce over 200 pounds of canned food were collected. in their drive for the local food pantry, and hurricane victims. On Sunday Senator Klein hosted his annual “Veterans Day Breakfast” which takes place before the “Annual Veterans Day Parade” in the Throggs Neck Section of his district. The Honorees (all women this year) were Ms. Holly Campbell, Ms. Wendi Carpenter, Ms. Isolina Espinosa, Ms. Hattie Harris (a WWII Vet), Ms. Rosa Kellogg, Ms. Jeanette Martin, Ms. Colleen McCarthy, Ms. Juliana Oliver, and Ms. Patrice Sweeting. You can go to my blog to see photos of the event, and the two other WWII Veterans (Mr. Joe Garofalo and Mr. Albert Mazzit) that I found who were in attendance.

While we are on the subject of the State Senate, don't expect to find out what party and just who is the new Senate Majority Leader is until perhaps sometime early next year. Our guess is if the Democrats hold on to the majority, State Senator Adriano Espiallat could be become the new Majority Leader. That is of course if the Senate Democrats, who are their own worse enemy can get and hold on to the majority.

If you have any comments about this column or would like to have an event listed or covered in this column or on my blog you can e-mail us at 100percentbronxnews@gmail.com or call 718-644-4199 Mr. Robert Press.