Credit: photo by Gary Ventura

THE IMPERIAL MARCH

Credit: photo by Gary Ventura

While you ring in the New Year, Darren Blum will be
prepping for his first Imperial March.

Blum, a Rochester native, will
be marching in the 118th Rose Bowl Parade in Pasadena, as one
of 200 Imperial Stormtroopers, the infamous
white-helmeted baddies from the “Star Wars” movies. Led by “Star Wars”creator and Grand Marshal George Lucas,
the parade group will consist of members from the 501st Legion, a fan club
dedicated to building accurate replicas of Imperial costumes.

The 501st Legion claims more than 3000 members from
22 countries. They often make appearances at conventions, town festivals, and
charity events. “It’s so much fun being in costume, especially when you see
kids’ expressions,” says Blum, the commanding officer of Garrison Excelsior,
the group’s local chapter. “With Imperial costumes, it’s easier to look like
you just walked off the movie set.”

In June, Lucasfilm asked
the 501st Legion for audition tapes of members marching in full Stormtrooper regalia. Blum sent in his tape, and in late
October, he was invited to show off his marching chops in the 2007 Rose Bowl
Parade. Blum was the sole member selected from Garrison Excelsior and one of
only two from New York.

For four days prior to the parade, seven hours a
day, Blum will practice his moves with Colonel Anthony Toledo, a former Army
drill instructor. “They’re going to whip us into shape,” Blum says. Toledo will
teach the 501st members how to march military-style in their homemade armor —
no easy task, considering that the costumes are heavy and inflexible, and the
helmets block most peripheral vision. For Blum, it will be even harder. This
will be his first parade as a Stormtrooper; around
the Rochester area,
he’s better known for his 7-foot Chewbacca costume.

You can catch Blum and the rest of the Stormtroopers when the Rose Bowl Parade airs Monday,
January 1, at 11 a.m. on ABC.

— Lara Crigger

NAMES SURFACE FOR CITY COUNCIL

Midterm elections may have just wrapped up, but the
next round of campaigns is already getting under way.

In November 2007, there’ll be elections for county
executive, CountyLegislature, and
Rochester City Council district seats, and the rumor mills are already
churning, particularly about the Council races.

All four district seats will be on the ballot.

Probably the most interesting race will be in the
city’s east district, which encompasses downtown east of the river, most of the
city’s southeast, and a portion of the northeast. That’s the district currently
represented by Council President Lois Giess. The
longest-serving member of City Council, Giess was
first elected in 1985. She hasn’t said publicly whether she’ll run for another
term, and rumors have been flying that she won’t. But when City Newspaper asked
if she’d made up her mind, she said simply: “Not yet.”

If Giess decides not to
run, her seat may be the most likely to generate a primary. Loretta Scott, who
was the city’s Commissioner of Parks, Recreation, and Human Services in the
Johnson administration, has been mentioned as a possible candidate. So has Saul
Maneiro, who was an aide to former State Senator Rick
Dollinger and is a Housing Council program manager. Maneiro ran unsuccessfully for an at-large City Council
seat two years ago.

Few other names for Giess’s
seat have been mentioned, but party observers say they’d be surprised if the
city’s whitest, most liberal quarter didn’t also field a white, liberal
candidate.

The next most senior Council member is Bob
Stevenson, who has represented the northwest district since 1988. If Stevenson
decides to run again, he’ll likely be unopposed, at least for the Democratic
designation. (His district includes areas that were the last Republican
strongholds in the city and would be the most likely to field a Republican
Council candidate next year). If Stevenson doesn’t run, there’s almost
universal agreement that there’ll be a Democratic primary, but no one’s
throwing out names.

The councilmember who may face the toughest
challenge, according to the rumors, is Ben Douglas in the northwest district. Douglas joined
City Council in 1991 and says he plans to run again in 2007. One potential
challenger frequently mentioned is Lovely Warren, who lost in the 2007
Democratic primary for City Council by only a handful of votes. Warren works as
counsel to State Assembly member David Gantt and is president of the Rochester
Black Bar Association.

Also mentioned as a possible challenger to Douglas is former
School Board member Jim Bowers. A political science professor at St. JohnFisherCollege, Bowers
served a term on the Rochester School Board. At times he’s been critical of
both Douglas and more
publicly, of Gantt, Warren’s boss
and mentor.

Southwest district councilmember Adam McFadden is
just finishing his first term, but he’s one of Council’s more visible members.
It’s McFadden, for instance, who first pushed for a curfew. And he’s built up a
base of support in his district. Political insiders we spoke with said he’s
likely to face a primary, but that he’ll probably weather it just fine. One of
the few names floated as a possible challenger: Tony Reed, a party activist who
has frequently run for public office. Most recently, he unsuccessfully challenged
Willie Joe Lightfoot Jr. for a CountyLegislature seat in
2005.

— Krestia DeGeorge

GRADES FOR SPORTS

Should students with low grades
be permitted to play football and take part in other after-school activities? The
Rochester School Board, which has been debating that issue for several months,
will likely vote on it in January. And its fate may hinge on incoming board
member Van White., who will
replace board member Jeff Henley in January.

Currently,
students must maintain a 2.0 grade point average to participate in activities
like sports. School Board member Tom Brennan and some community activists have
pushed for loosening that requirement. Sports and other activities keep poorly
performing students interested in school, they say, and deter dropouts. They
want to allow students to participate in extra-curricular activities even if
they have an F on their report card, as long as they can demonstrate that they
are improving the grade. Their proposal includes several measures to help
students improve, such as additional tutoring and daily progress reports from
teachers.

Superintendent Manuel Rivera opposes changing the change.

“The board certainly has the ability and the authority to make a change to this
policy,” he said at last week’s School Board meeting, “but it is possible for a
student to have a 2.0 GPA and still fail a core subject. That would mean the
student was allowed to play sports, but
may not graduate.”

Rivera has also noted that some of the requirements in the new policy would require a
buy-in by from the
district’s unions.

Joining him Rivera in opposition at last week’s meeting was board member Willa Powell, who said the
change was being proposed without confirmation that a single student has dropped
out after being denied participation in sports.

“This doesn’t show the numbers of students we are talking about,” she said. “There is
no quantification of the problem. We don’t know if this has impacted any
students at all beyond anecdotal information. And what this attempts to do is
legislate caring and concern, which is impossible.”

But iIf the School Board had voted last week, the proposal would have passed. Four board members
voiced support for the change: Tom Brennan, Jeff Henley, Malik
Evans, and Cynthia Elliott.

Brennan says the policy proposal will be revised before the board’s January meeting to
include a requirement that students have passing grades in core subjects: math,
science, and English.

“Our intent has never been to ignore the importance of passing the core subjects,”
says Brennan.

But Jeff Henley — who said that as a teacher, he has seen positive results from
similar policies — won’t be on the School Board when it votes next month. His
replacement, Van White, seems inclined to vote for it. “Conceptually,” he said
late last week, “I like to think the policy is consistent with trying to get
kids to stay in school, and this could be an opportunity to entice them into
graduating on time.”

— Tim Louis Macaluso

FERRY SAILS

City attorney Tom Richards, left, and Mayor Bob Duffy, announcing the send-off. Credit: photo by Krestia DeGeorge

The ferry is officially gone. Kind of.

The city hasn’t closed on the sale, but at least
the boat has left Rochester.

The ferry departed abruptly for Shelburne, Nova Scotia, on Thursday. The city will
pay about $300 a day to dock it there; that’s cheaper, according to city
officials, than it has cost to dock it here.

On Saturday, after clearing the St. Lawrence Seaway locks in Massena (getting
scraped up a bit in the process) the boat made an unexpected stop in Matane, Quebec, to ride out rough weather.
Early this week, it headed to Halifax,
where it’ll undergo repairs and an inspection before heading to its winter
berth in Shelburne.

The decision to move the ship
was made after Bay Ferries, which has been running the vessel for the city,
advised that if it didn’t sail on Thursday, there might not be another chance
before the Seaway closed for the winter at the end of December.

City officials had hoped that a deal with
Euroferries, the primary prospective buyer, would be completed before the boat
left. A last-minute request from one of the company’s two financing partners
quashed that, according to Mayor Bob Duffy.

Regardless of whether Euroferries consummates the
deal, city officials were upbeat last week about getting the boat out of the
Seaway system. If another prospective buyer comes along, the city can sell the
boat without waiting for the Seaway to reopen (which usually doesn’t happen
until around the first of April). The Great Lakes, said Corporation Counsel
Tom Richards, are “the worst place in the world to sell a boat” for that
reason. “No one can buy it if it’s locked this side of the Seaway.”

If Euroferries fails to put together its financing,
it’s agreed to pay for the cost of moving the ferry to Nova Scotia, city officials said.

— Krestia DeGeorge