Archive for April 4th, 2008

Amherst Museum Announces German Festival

Friday, April 4th, 2008

The Amherst Museum and the Shannon Pub are collaborating on the third annual German Festival to be held at the Amherst Museum from noon – 7 p.m. Sept. 8.

The event features German music by the Bergholz German Band and the German American Musicians Band German food, beer and a celebration of German-American culture.

Admission is $6 for Adults, children 12 and under are free; Museum Members $5. Parking is free. Admission includes all current Museum exhibits, grounds and historic buildings and German Festival events.

The Amherst Museum is located at 3755 Tonawanda Creek Road, Amherst.

Mesi To Announce Bid For Senate

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Tomorrow, April 5, 2008, “Baby” Joe Mesi will officially announce that he will be a candidate for the NY Senate.  He will make the announcement at noon at Marinaccio’s Steak and Seafood restaurant on Main Street in Williamsville. 

Martin Luther King: Assassination Remembered

Friday, April 4th, 2008

The Last Four Remember The Witnesses

By MADISON GRAY

The Lorraine Motel as it looks today. It is now a civil rights museum.

Brooks Kraft / Corbis for TIME

Memphis was a place none of them expected to be on April 4, 1968. A garbage strike diverted them to Tennessee, away from their planned trip to the nation’s capitol to lobby Congress for a poor people’s bill of rights.

They each spent their day on different tasks.

The Aides

Andrew Young, 36, had been in a Memphis court fighting an injunction so that the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) could help organize a second march of the garbage workers — the first had ended violently. When he joined King at the Lorraine Motel, he was playfully chastised for not calling to let King know his whereabouts.

Jesse Jackson , 27, had spent the day helping to plan the SCLC’s activities in Washington. He also brought down a band affiliated with Operation Breadbasket, a community organizing arm of SCLC that Jackson was running. He had rehearsed freedom songs with them in his room at the Lorraine Motel.

James Bevel, 31, had holed up at Clayburn Temple with Rev. James Orange. The two were training young people to ensure that the earlier violence, which had marred the garbage strike, would not repeat itself. He was excited to tell King about the progress he had made on his return to the motel.

Samuel “Billy” Kyles , 33, had come to the Lorraine to pick everyone up for a dinner scheduled before a rally that night. The meal was supposed to have been at five, but Kyles was used to King being tardy for social appointments.

Their Stories

TIME spoke to these four men — the last living aides of Martin Luther King, Jr., who were all within ten feet of him at 6:01 p.m. when a hard, deliberate shot changed the world. Jackson, Young and Bevel were in the parking lot of the Lorraine, Kyles on the balcony, starting toward the stairs. Any one of them could have been hit as well, but the shooter found his intended target with a single shot.

The assassination continues to bewilder the men. Young has only returned to Memphis once since the shooting. “One of the disturbing features about that day for us was that when we were pointing, we were pointing over across the street. There was a building there, but there was also a six-to-eight-foot pile of bushes and some people thought that the shot came from the bushes. The FBI said it came from a bathroom window. But when we got up the next morning, those bushes were gone.”

Young, Bevel, Jackson and Kyles told TIME that although they witnessed everything that happened, no authority from the Memphis Police, the Tennessee State Police or the FBI have ever asked them a single question.

Bevel says that he was never satisfied over how justice was pursued and believes a trial would have unearthed much-needed information. “‘Where did you come from? What were you doing before you got where you were? Did you know about the shootings were going to take place?’” (sic) says Bevel. “All these questions should have been answered in court, but there was no court so you couldn’t answer all these kinds of questions.” He maintains that the convicted shooter, James Earl Ray, should have been put on trial so that the details of the assassination could have come out.

The Aftereffects

Time stood still — and then time moved on.

Courageously, just days after she buried her husband, Coretta Scott King continued the campaign in Memphis to aide the garbage workers. AFSCME Local 1733 eventually won recognition from the city and the union became Memphis’ largest.

The site of the assassination became dilapidated and by 1982 was under foreclosure until a group of citizens organized themselves, purchased the property and re-opened it as a shrine to the nation’s civil rights movement in 1991.

King’s four helpers have gone in a variety of directions. Jackson returned to Chicago to expand his Operation Breadbasket into the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition; he also ran for president twice. Young became a U.S. Congressman, Mayor of Atlanta, and UN Ambassador, and now is co-chair of an international consulting firm. Kyles remained proudly moored to his Memphis ministry, Monumental Baptist Church, and speaks of his experiences worldwide. Bevel remained a grassroots activist, and even ran for vice-president with Lyndon LaRouche. Recently, however, he was charged with incest and is expected to stand trial April 7, although he maintains his innocence.

Jackson pondered what he would say to King if he had the chance to speak to him again. “I guess the first report I would give to him is: ‘Dr. King, I’ve not stopped working on the agenda since we last talked. I’ve not stopped,’” he says. “I think he would look at the accomplishments we’ve made and would probably say “Well done, but don’t give up the battle, it’s not over.’”

The Fairways Group Letter To The Public

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Friends,
 
Please be sure to stop by our home page and review the latest proposal from the developer.
 
We have entitled it “Amherst Town Center Plan 2 – A Newer Shade of Gray”
 
The next meeting is scheduled for April 7th, THIS MONDAY NIGHT. It is very important that we

are well represented. The scheduled vote has been delayed again from Monday’s meeting and
is now scheduled for April 21st.
This project can be voted down. It depends on YOU.

Contact the Town Board Members and plan on attending the next two Town Board Meetings.

LET THE BOARD KNOW YOU WANT TO PROTECT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

Town Board Members can be reached by calling 631-7013.
Town Supervisor Satish Mohan can be reached by calling 631-7032.
Or you can email them at the following addresses:
Dr. Satish Mohan: smohan@amherst.ny.us
Deborah Bucki: dbucki@amherst.ny.us
Mark Manna: mmanna@maherst.ny.us
Guy Marlette: gmarlette@amherst.ny.us
Shelly Schratz: sschratz@amherst.ny.us
Dan Ward: dward@amherst.ny.us
Barry Weinstein: bweinstein@amherst.ny.us

A letter can be faxed to the Town Board Members at (716) 631-7036 or mailed to:
Amherst Town Board
5583 Main Street
Williamsville, NY 14221
Attention: Amherst Town Board Members 

Please submit all letters As Soon As Possible.
We thank you for your support of this important project!
Sincerely,
 
TFG

Pope Adds Meetings With Jewish Leaders, Including Synagogue Visit, to U.S. Itinerary

Friday, April 4th, 2008

It’s kind of like running around wanting to shout, “The British are coming,!  The British are coming!” except it would have to be, “The Pope is coming!  The Pope is coming!”  In just a few short days the leader of millions of Roman Catholics will arrive in the United States.  Pope Benedict XVI has a very vigorous schedule but even so, he has added two brief meetings to his trip to the United States — both with Jewish leaders.

“One is a quick stopover at the Park East Synagogue in New York on April 18. It will be the first time a pope has ever visited a synagogue in the United States, and only the third visit by a pope to any synagogue.”“The other is scheduled for the previous day, immediately after Benedict holds a major meeting in the rotunda of the John Paul II Cultural Center in Washington with about 150 leaders representing a variety of faiths.”
[read whole story]

81% in Poll Say Nation Is Headed on Wrong Track

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Our country is headed for, if not already in, a recession.  Are you one of the more than 80% who think we are on a crash course for disaster?”Americans are more dissatisfied with the country’s direction than at any time since the New York Times/CBS News poll began asking about the subject in the early 1990s, according to the latest poll.”

“In the poll, 81 percent of respondents said they believed “things have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track,” up from 69 percent a year ago and 35 percent in early 2002.”
[read whole story]

U.S. Students Achieve Mixed Results on Writing Test

Friday, April 4th, 2008

How do American students fair with their writing skills?  Can they convey what they want to say effectively?  According to nationwide test results, only about a third of the nation’s eighth-grade students, and roughly a quarter of its high school seniors are proficient writers.  That’s not an overwhelming number.

“That proportion of students demonstrating writing proficiency is about the same as in 2002, when a similar exam was last given.”

“But the results of the latest test, administered last year, also found modest increases in the skills of lower-performing students. Nearly 9 students in 10 can now demonstrate at least a basic achievement in writing, defined as partial mastery of the skills needed for proficient work.”
[read whole story]

Inspectors Say F.A.A. Ignored Violations

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Have you been away recently?  Did you take a plane by chance?  Luckily you got where you were going and back again safely.  It turns out, many planes have been flying while suffering with maintenance issues.

“Three F.A.A. inspectors testified that their agency had allowed Southwest Airlines to fly uninspected planes, and that the airline had continued to fly the planes even after it later found cracks in some of them.”

“The inspectors said that when they complained, their bosses threatened their jobs and discouraged them from pursuing safety problems.”
[read whole story]

Little Pictures Present WNY Feature Film…..Release The Funny

Friday, April 4th, 2008
Littleflick Pictures presents WNY feature film…Release The Funny
Written by Jerry MacKay   
Friday, 04 April 2008
Active Image

Buffalo’s own Littleflick Pictures proudly announces that its first feature film, Release The Funny, will be screening this weekend in WNY theatres. On Friday April 4th at 7:30PM, head to the Market Arcade Film & Arts Centre in Downtown Buffalo. And on Saturday April 5th at 7:30PM, you can catch it at the Riviera Theatre & Performing Arts Center in North Tonawanda.

For more details and to check out the film’s trailer, visit www.releasethefunny.com

My Concern For a Countywide Assessment Model

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Written by Mark Poloncarz  

Active ImageLast week I released a report that showed that Erie County taxpayers could cut in half the cost to assess property in the county if the 30 current city, town and village assessment offices were unified into one county department.
 
Today, the Buffalo News issued an editorial highlighting the report and saying that my recomendations deserve legislative follow-up.  The News called on the legislature and county executive to further examine the concept and find ways to cut costs through a new system of assessment. To read the entire editorial just scroll further down this e-mail.
 
When I issued the report I said that there would be some who would not be happy with the report’s recommendations.  Except for a few whose jobs might be put at risk with my proposal, I am happy to report that the report has been positively received in the community.
 
Many of you took up my call to write your local representatives asking them to consider changing to a unified assessment system.  I hope others will do the same because while I can identify the cost savings that would materialize from going to a unified system, I can’t ensure that my recomendations take effect.  Only by working together can we reduce the cost of government in Erie County.
 
Once again, thanks for all your past support.