Maybe it was the cheerful classical music. Maybe it was the table filled with free, tasty goodies provided by Susan Olson.
Come April, drivers, runners, and cyclists along the historic Boston Post Road will see a sunny 1,000-foot ribbon of deer-proof daffodils thanks to three anonymous donor families.
The Committee to Save the Bird Homestead, the non-profit that operates the Meeting House on Milton Road, is pleased to report that they’ve checked the first phase of the window restoration off their list.

Among the great new shows on the local lineup is the LMC-TV series, “Value Education”, portraits of the educators behind the Rye Neck School District. Offering more in-depth conversation than sound bites, the show is produced by Rye Neck High School students and hosted by the District’s Enrichment Coordinator, Valerie Feit.

Rye Neck High School students just returned from Assisi, Italy, where they enjoyed the trip of a lifetime. They immersed themselves in Italian culture, living with host families and attending Liceo Classico Properzio School for ten days.

Members of the Rye Neck High School Key Club and Student Senate’s food drive pictured with donations to the pantry at the Larchmont-Mamaroneck Hunger Task Force earlier this month.
Seventy-one years after the 1941 surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, the Command Center for the Pacific fleet, two classes at Midland School learned a little bit about the meaning of sacrifice firsthand from U.S. Army Sgt. John Evans. Evans’ appearance was part of Midland’s Character Education Initiative.

Midland students took to the stage last week for a school tradition dating back more than 20 years: the autumn talent shows. Second and third graders performed the first night and fourth and fifth graders the next.

Registration for the second semester of KinderBlocks of Learning, Christ’s Church Nursery School’s afternoon kindergarten program, begins next week. The program offers literacy enrichment that is aligned to the Common Core Standards on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons.