Yacktown Boys Club biography, Yacktown Boys Club discography
From tonight all our prices have been reduced by almost a HALF!That means more music for your money.From tonight all our prices have been reduced by almost a HALF!That means more music for your money.We can not send it as is.Pain exc access 4 the mobile club only.SAY to view new exclusive message.Text back what you think!Gone video on iTunes now!From tonight all our prices have been reduced by almost a HALF!Don't miss this chance to download your favourite tracks for the LOWEST prices!We hope you understand and we will notify all our members immediately Paypal is up and running again.Thank you for staying with us!We proudly announce that our site has launched.With 16 Terabytes of MP3 music and more than 2 000 000 tracks available online.Whether 90 days or 90 years old, Rockland residents can find suitable services and activities.Some are offered by government at various levels, others by private, nonprofit organizations.The simple truth is, there's a wide range of support services, fun activities for the body and mind and enrichment for all ages, from preschoolers to teens and from adults in their prime earning years to the oldest of senior citizens.Listen to parents at A Starting Place, a private preschool in Pearl River, and you come away believing it's a place where magic happens.Owen is the third Wholey child to attend the school.Murphy says Jack has overcome clumsiness and speech problems."You can't explain the progress he's made here.You just can't stop him."Cara Saunders of Palisades is the mother of a graduate, Stacy, 6, and a current student, Max, 5."The staff is marvelous," she says.My daughter is in kindergarten and has had a wonderful experience because of the work they've done," Cara Saunders says of Dorsey and her staff.Christie Faddah goes a step farther.The Breakfast Club serves Nyack school district youngsters, providing educational and recreation activities and a nutritious meal before class.In Center from 6 to 9 p.Ed Willock, 26, a musician and concert promoter, has been coming to the Nyack Center since he was 16 and a student at Tappan Zee High School.Willock sees a lot of students coming through the program who, like him, love music and love the idea of helping their community.""We always try to do diverse things to keep it different," he says.The center is also home to Yacktown Youth, a group working with adult advisers to thrash out teen issues in a safe and appropriate environment.The center's work, which includes many other programs and activities for all ages, is funded by the village, through grants (including a recent Community Development grant that will expand their computer lab) and contributions from individuals, business, churches and other organizations.Rockland resident realized that he needed to update his skills to make himself more marketable in a world that had shifted from reliance on the massive mainframes he'd worked on for so long.Although that often means dealing with adults in middle age, Tomorrow's Workplace also serves those 14 to 21 through youth programs that provide educational support and exposure to varied career possibilities, says Deputy Director Roger Williams, who has headed the agency since September.There's also help for youths who have graduated or dropped out, such as vocational training through BOCES, help with job placement or GED prep classes.These various partnerships allow Ross and others to access a variety of services all in one place.The support is what I need and they're amiable about finding me more training beyond what they can offer," Ross says.With the overall cost of living and the expense of paying for healthcare out of pocket, there's real pressure to find work."You can barely get by working with two incomes in a household," Ross says, "so survival on unemployment isn't an option."During his days at Tomorrow's Workplace, he also can get career counseling, help with resume writing, take part in practice job interviews and draw on a library of training and labor market information.Internet and, in his case, practicing his new computer skills.Clarkstown Senior Center in Nanuet, one of six operated around the county by Meals On Wheels Programs and Services of Rockland.In Maria Colon's case, "programs and services" meant helping her get an apartment of her own.Meals On Wheels bus driver Tony Valente, who transports many of the seniors between home and the center, would load the furniture on the rear of his bus.Men from the center would then meet at Colon's apartment to carry the pieces for her.Not every senior rides Valente's bus.Gold, a Rockland native, says she comes to the center because "I like to go and do.On other days, students from A.MacArthur Barr Middle School in Nanuet drop in to serve lunch, help seniors on the Internet and just chat, a tradition since 1995.Gold, vice president of the center, drives to the New City I senior group on Thursdays because she used to live in the hamlet."It's the social atmosphere I like," he says.He's our super volunteer," Wolfson says."He helps fix anything, he helps with lunch, does computer work and even delivers meals."When you ask Maxon his age, he smiles and says, "80."You must fill out the comment body in order to submit a comment.The comment you have entered is too long.Space Veil band members, from left, Alex Donofrio, Elizabeth Eliades, Scott Haley and Chris Castro perform at the Back Door Cafe in Nyack Center.Moise Bellisaire, left, of Hillcrest, a student in Rockland Community College's nursing program, and Helen Mulligan of Pearl River talk at Meals On Wheels' day program in Nanuet.Bellisaire and other nursing students have volunteered to help the seniors write their autobiographies.The Journal News, a Gannett Co.Westchester, Rockland and Putnam counties in New York."Westchester, Rockland and Putnam Counties:lohud"
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