Senate Democrats warn reported NSA privacy violations only ‘the tip of a larger iceberg’
By Blake Neff – 08/16/13 05:35 PM ET
Sens. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) warned Friday that recent revelations of privacy violations by the National Security Agency (NSA) were “just the tip of a larger iceberg.”
On Thursday, The Washington Post published an internal NSA audit and other documents leaked by Edward Snowden that showed the NSA had broken its own privacy rules thousands of times since 2008.
Udall and Wyden, who both sit on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in a joint statement that the new leak vindicated past claims that “violations of [privacy] laws and rules were more serious than had been acknowledged.”
Newly declassified documents, obtained by George Washington University’s National Security Archive, appear to for the first time acknowledge the existence of Area 51. Hundreds of pages describe the genesis of the Nevada site that was home to the government’s spy plane program for decades. The documents do not, however, mention aliens.
The project started humbly. In the pre-drone era about a decade after the end of World War II, President Eisenhower signed off on a project aimed at building a high-altitude, long-range, manned aircraft that could photograph remote targets. Working together, the Air Force and Lockheed developed a craft that could hold the high-resolution cameras required for the images, a craft that became the U-2. Why “U-2”?
They decided that they could not call the project aircraft a bomber, fighter, or transport plane, and they did not want anyone to know that the new plane was for reconnaissance, so [Air Force officers] Geary and Culbertson decided that it should come under the utility aircraft category. At the time, there were only two utility aircraft on the books, a U-1 and a U-3. told Culbertson that the Lockheed CL-282 was going to be known officially as the U-2.
MetLife Stadium Fans told to leave their bags at home
August 17, 2013
NFL TEAMS TO ENHANCE PUBLIC SAFETY AND
IMPROVE STADIUM ACCESS FOR FANS
To provide a safer environment for the public and significantly expedite fan entry into stadiums, NFL teams have implemented an NFL policy this year that limits the size and type of bags that may be brought into stadiums.
The NFL Committee on Stadium Security in May unanimously recommended the implementation of this measure that will enhance public safety and make it easier for fans to gain access to all stadiums.
The NFL strongly encourages fans to not bring any type of bags, but outlined today what is permissible. Beginning with preseason games, fans will be able to carry the following style and size bag, package, or container at stadium plaza areas, stadium gates, or when approaching queue lines of fans awaiting entry into the stadium:
Bags that are clear plastic, vinyl or PVC and do not exceed 12” x 6” x 12.” (Official NFL team logo clear plastic tote bags will be available through club merchandise outlets or at nflshop.com/allclear), or
One-gallon clear plastic freezer bag (Ziploc bag or similar).
Small clutch bags, approximately the size of a hand, with or without a handle or strap can be taken into the stadium with one of the clear plastic bags.
An exception will be made for medically necessary items after proper inspection at a gate designated for this purpose.
Prohibited items include, but are not limited to: purses larger than a clutch bag, coolers, briefcases, backpacks, fanny packs, cinch bags, seat cushions, luggage of any kind, computer bags and camera bags or any bag larger than the permissible size.
Fans will continue to be able to enjoy their tailgate activities in the parking lots and to do so with greater safety and the knowledge that their entry into the stadium will be smoother and faster. They also will continue to be able to carry items allowed into the stadium, such as binoculars, cameras, and smart phones.
As the 2013 season approaches, we encourage fans to visit individual NFL team websites for specific stadium information
Why Capitalism Is Awesome
July/August 2013
By Chris Berg
Each year the glossy business magazine FastCompany releases a list of what it considers to be the “World’s 50 Most Innovative Companies.” This list is populated much as you would expect. In 2012 the leader was Apple, followed by Facebook, Google, and Amazon.com. Spot a theme? In the top 10, there are only two companies that are not primarily digital companies. One, Life Technologies, works in genetic engineering. (The other — try not to laugh — is the Occupy Movement. FastCompany describes them as “Transparent. Tech savvy. Design savvy. Local and global. Nimble.”) Not only are most of them digital firms, but they’re all flashy and unique, and they’re almost all household names.
Everybody from Forbes to BusinessWeek hands out most innovative company awards. They’re all pretty similar and predictable. But these lists have a perverse effect. They suggest that the great success of capitalism and the market economy is inventing cutting edge technology and that if we want to observe capitalist progress, we should be looking for sleek design and popular fashion. Innovation, the media tells us, is inventing cures for cancer, solar panels, and social networking.
But the true genius of the market economy isn’t that it produces prominent, highly publicized goods to inspire retail queues, or the medical breakthroughs that make the nightly news. No, the genius of capitalism is found in the tiny things — the things that nobody notices.
A market economy is characterized by an infinite succession of imperceptible, iterative changes and adjustments. Free market economists have long talked about the unplanned and uncoordinated nature of capitalist innovation. They’ve neglected to emphasize just how invisible it is. One exception is the great Adam Smith.
In his Wealth of Nations, the example he used to illustrate the division of labor was a pin factory. He described carefully the complex process by which a pin is made. Producing the head of the pin “requires two to three distinct operations.” To place the head on the wire is a “peculiar business.” Then the pins have to be whitened. The production of a pin, Smith concluded, is an 18-step task.
Smith was making an argument about specialization, but just as important was his choice of example. It would be hard to think of something less impressive, less consequential than a pin. Smith wanted his contemporaries to think about the economy not by observing it from the lofty heights of the palace or the lecture hall, but by seeing it from the bottom up — to recognise how a market economy is the aggregate of millions of little tasks. It’s a lesson many have not yet learned. We should try to recognise the subtleties of the apparently mundane.
CAPITALISM MEANS EFFICIENCY
Ikea’s Billy bookshelf is a common, almost disposable, piece of household furniture that has been produced continuously since 1979. It looks exactly the same as it did more than three decades ago. But it’s much cheaper. The standard model — more than six feet tall — costs $59.99. And from an engineering perspective the Billy bookshelf is hugely different from its ancestors.
In those 30 years the Billy has changed minutely but importantly. The structure of the back wall has changed over and over, as the company has tried to reduce the weight of the back (weight costs money) but increase its strength. Even the studs that hold up the removable book shelves have undergone dramatic changes. The studs were until recently simple metal cylinders. Now they are sophisticated shapes, tapering into a cup at one end on which the shelf rests. The brackets that hold the frame together are also complex pieces of engineering.
Ikea is a massive company. Tiny changes — even to metal studs — are magnified when those products are produced in bulk. There is no doubt somebody, somewhere in the Ikea product design hierarchy whose singular focus has been reducing the weight and increasing the strength of those studs. They went to sleep thinking about studs and metals and the trade-offs between strength and weight. Their seemingly inconsequential work helps keep Ikea’s prices down and its profits high. With each minute change to the shape of the Billy’s metal studs they earn their salary many times over.
Being massive, however, Ikea has an advantage: it is able to hire specialists whose job is solely to obsess about simple things like studs. Ikea is well-known for its more prominent innovations — for instance, flat-packing, which can reduce to one-sixth the cost of shipping — and the extremely low staffing of its retail stores.
For big-box retailers, innovation is about efficiency, not invention. Extremely resilient supply chains may not win glossy innovation awards but they are the source of much of our modern prosperity. But Ikea is big and famous. So let me suggest another icon of capitalist innovation and dynamism: pizza.
CAPITALISM TASTES BETTER, CHEAPER
Pizza is one of our most mundane and simple foods. It would be the last place most people would look for innovation and engineering. It is, at its most basic, a thin bread topped by tomatoes and cheese — a food of the poor of Naples exported, which is endlessly interpreted by the rest of the world.
Forty-one percent of Americans eat pizza at least once a week, whether purchased frozen and reheated in home ovens, delivered, taken away, or cooked from scratch at home. All of these choices are more complicated than they seem. Keeping a pizza crisp long out of the oven so that it can be delivered, or making sure it will crisp up in a variable home oven after having been frozen for weeks is anything but simple.
Moisture is the enemy. For frozen pizzas, this means that toppings have to be precooked precisely to avoid some ingredients being burned while others are still heating through. Frozen pizza takes a lot of abuse — it is partially thawed each time it is transferred from manufacturer to supermarket to home freezer. So the dough has to be precisely regulated to manage its water content.
Cheese freezes poorly, and consumers expect it to melt evenly across the base, so manufacturers obsess about cheese’s pH range and its water and salt content. And of course all these decisions are made with an eye on the customer’s budget and the manufacturer’s profitability. The consumers of familysized frozen pizzas tend to be extremely price sensitive. The opportunities for innovation in processes, equipment, automation, and chemistry are virtually endless.
It gets even more complicated when we factor in changing consumer tastes. The modern pizza customer doesn’t just want cheese, tomato, and pepperoni. As food tastes grow more sophisticated they look for more sophisticated flavors, even in frozen pizza. It’s one thing to master how cheddar or mozzarella melts. Dealing with more flavorful brie or smoked Gouda is another thing entirely. Like Ikea’s stud specialist, there are hundreds of people across the world obsessed with how frozen cheese melts in a home oven. These sorts of complications are replicated across every ingredient in this simple product. (How does one adapt an automated pepperoni dispenser to dispense feta instead?)
Customers demand aesthetic qualities too. Frozen products have to look authentic. Customers like their pizza crusts to have slight burn marks, even if home ovens won’t naturally produce them. So manufacturers experiment with all sorts of heating techniques to replicate the visual result of a woodfired oven.
Takeout pizza seems easier but has almost as many complexities. Some large pizza chains are slowly integrating the sort of sauce and topping applicators used by frozen goods manufacturers. Cheese is costly and hard to spread evenly. The pizza chain Dominos uses a proprietary “auto-cheese,” which takes standardized blocks of cheese and, with a push of a button, shreds them evenly across a base.
Moisture problems are even more endemic in takeout pizza. The cooked pizza has to survive, hot and crispy and undamaged, for some time before it is consumed. If the box is closed, the steam from the hot pizza seeps through the bread, making it soft and unappealing. But an open box will lose heat too quickly. Engineers have struck a balance. Vents in the box and plastic tripods in the centre of the pizza encourage airflow. Deliverers carry the pizzas in large insulated sleeves to keep the heat in but reduce risk of steam damage.
We could easily replicate this analysis for almost every processed or manufactured food in the typical supermarket. Then we could reflect on the complexity of serving food, not in a home kitchen, but on an airplane flying more than 600 miles per hour and 37,000 feet in the air, cooked in a tiny galley for hundreds of people at a time.
Some of the most extraordinary logistical accomplishments of the modern world are entirely unnoticed. Some — like airline food — we actively disparage, without recognizing the true effort behind them.
CAPITALISM IS ABOUT INNOVATION, AS WELL AS INVENTION
One of the great essays in the free market tradition is Leonard Read’s “I, Pencil.” Read was the founder of the influential American think tank the Foundation for Economic Education. In his essay, he adopts the perspective of an ordinary wooden lead pencil and purports to write his genealogy. He began as a cedar tree from North California or Oregon, was chopped down and harvested and shipped on a train to a mill in San Leandro, California, and there cut down into “small, pencil-length slats less than onefourth of an inch in thickness.”
Read’s point: “Not a single person on the face of this earth” knows how to make a pencil on their own. The construction of a pencil is entirely dispersed among “millions of human beings,” from the Italians who mine pumice for the eraser to the coffee manufacturers who supply their drinks to the cedar loggers in Oregon.
Read was vividly illustrating a famous point of Friedrich Hayek’s — these separate people manage, through nothing but the price system, to make something extraordinarily complex. None of the pumice miners intend to make a pencil. They simply want to trade their labor for wages. Adam Smith’s invisible hand does the rest. Read published his essay in 1958. The chemical formula for the eraser, known as the “plug,” has changed repeatedly over the half century since. The production is highly automated, and the supply lines are tighter.
Chemicals are added to keep the eraser from splitting. Synthetic rubber production in 2012 is much different than it was in 1958. These tiny plugs look pretty much the same but have evolved in a dozen different ways. “I, Pencil” magnificently captures the complexity of markets, but it doesn’t quite capture their dynamism. The millions of people involved in pencil production aren’t merely performing their market-allocated tasks but are trying to find new ways to make their tiny segment easier, cheaper, and more profitable. The pencil market — as far from a cutting-edge firm like Facebook as you could imagine — is still full of entrepreneurs trying to break apart established business models to shave costs and rationalize supply chains. In 1991 a gross of 144 simple, Chinese-made wood pencils sold on the wholesale market for $6.91. In 2004 that price had dropped to $4.48.
And this is before we consider the variety of pencils available to consumers — not just wooden ones of different shapes, sizes, colors, and densities, but mechanical pencils, jumbo sized children’s pencils, rectangular carpenters’ pencils (rectangular pencils can’t roll away) and on, and on, and on. It is to capitalism’s great disadvantage that there’s nothing inherently exciting about pencils. Humans like novelty. We like invention. We like high-technology breakthroughs that will change the world.
I, PORK
The most insightful book about capitalism published in the last decade isn’t a treatise on economics or philosophy but an art project. In Pig 05049, the Dutch artist Christien Meindertsma starkly shows photographs of the 185 separate products that are made from a single pig.
Every part of a slaughtered pig is sold and repurposed. Obviously, we’re familiar with pork and ham but how many people realise that pig bones are converted into a glue that holds sandpaper together? Or that pig fat is a constituent part of paint, helping its spread and giving it a glossy sheen? Pig parts are found in everything from yogurt to train brakes to photography paper to matches — even in bullets.
One response to Meindertsma’s book is to see it as simply a modern-day reworking of Leonard Read’s pencil. But it’s more than that. Pig 05049 reveals what a market economy tries to obscure: the deep complexities of individual products.
That single pig was stripped down and shipped to factories and markets across the world. It went into matches and copper and crayons and floor wax. These products are as mundane as can be imagined — what consumer spends more than a moment’s thought on which crayon to purchase, let alone how those crayons are produced? But as Meindertsma points out, the distinctive smell of many crayons comes from fatty acids, which in turn come from pig bone fat, used as a hardening agent.
Pig 05049 was published in 2007. The oleochemical industry — that is, the industry that derives chemicals from natural oils and fats — is one of the most innovative in the world. Like any industry experiencing rapid technological and scientific change, it is restructuring as well, moving production from Western Europe and the United States to China, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
Six years is a long time in a competitive marketplace. As simple as they seem, those crayons are changing: costs of production have been shaved down, raw materials are being utilized more efficiently, and supply lines are being tightened. Amazon now lists 2,259 separate products in the children’s drawing crayon category alone.
GOVERNMENT DOESN’T UNDERSTAND INNOVATION
If FastCompany has a warped view about the nature of innovation in a market economy, it is not alone. Governments do, too. The Australian federal government has its very own minister for innovation, and his Department of Industry, Innovation, Science, Research and Tertiary Education doles out grants for inventions and startups. Its Commercialisation Australia program sponsors inventors who “have transformed an innovative idea into reality.”
Innovation Australia funds grant-seekers to turn their “ground-breaking ideas into commercial products.” This is the invention fetish — the idea that technological progress occurs when dreamers have great ideas. All society needs to do is subsidize dreams into reality.
But ideas are the easy part. Getting things done is hard. Setting up a business, paring down costs, acquiring and retaining market share: those are the fields in a market economy where firms win or lose. The brilliance of the market economy is found in small innovations made to polish and enhance existing products and services. Invention is a wonderful thing. But we should not pretend that it is invention that has made us rich.
We have higher living standards than our ancestors because of the little things. We ought to be more aware of the continuous, slow, and imperceptible creative destruction of the market economy, the refiners who are always imperceptibly bettering our frozen pizzas, our bookshelves, our pencils, and our crayons.
County champion Ridgewood hurdler McPadden Rhode Island-bound
Friday, August 16, 2013
BY RON FOX
CORRESPONDENT
The Ridgewood News
RIDGEWOOD — Micaela McPadden was willing to enter just about any event for the Ridgewood High School girls track team when asked, but she didn’t necessarily have to like it.
“She didn’t like the 800 [meters race], but she was so good at it,” head coach Jacob Brown said Tuesday by phone, huffing and puffing during a break from clearing property he owns in northwestern Pennsylvania.
The University of Rhode Island-bound McPadden, one of Bergen County’s all-time fastest hurdlers, seemed to wince when the 800 was mentioned after our conversation with Brown. “I wasn’t a big fan of it,” she said with a laugh. “He forced me to do it.”
Brown understood McPadden’s reluctance. “It was so out of her range because she always ran the 100, 200 and 400,” he said, “but she did it, and she did it well. She became one of our best kids in the 800.”
– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/sports/219879331_County_champion_Ridgewood_hurdler_McPadden_Rhode_Island-bound_hurdler_McPadden__Rhode_Island-bound_.html#sthash.7MQcCmeo.dpuf
Friends’ Neighborhood Nursery School and Director Madeleine Beresford
August 17,2013
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
The First in a new series of articles about local businesses
About Friends and Madeleine Beresford:
Ridgewood NJ, Madeleine Beresford has been the Director of Friends’ Neighborhood Nursery School since May 2012. The school was established in 1959 as a nonsectarian nursery school sponsored by the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). It is a member of the Friends Council on Education.
The school is based on the principle that each child is unique and will flourish in an atmosphere that promotes acceptance and respect for all children. We also believe that children learn through imaginative play and focus on social development as well as academic inquiry. Children learn through hands-on experiences and through their senses.
Friends’ Neighborhood Nursery School is an multi-age school. Children ages 2½ to 5 socialize together and separate for projects, stories and work with numbers and letters. The school is influenced by the Reggio Emilia approach, which fosters a sense that children have an active role in their learning.
Madeleine has a Masters in Early Childhood Education from Montclair State University and am certified in teaching children with disabilities and a Bachelor of Arts from Oberlin College.
In December 2012, an article that she also co-wrote, Community and Connection in Inclusive Early –Childhood Education: A Participatory Action Research Investigation, was published in Young Exceptional Children.
Madeleine has worked with children for many years both in and out of the classroom. As a New Jersey Council-on-the-Arts teaching artist and through programs run by Young Audiences and Arts Horizons, She has taught in classrooms throughout New Jersey and New York City.
As director/cofounder of Galapagos Puppet Theater, she received a Henson Foundation Grant and a Puffin Foundation Grant for puppet productions. She performed in Taipei, Taiwan as well as at venues such as American Museum of Natural History, Boston Children’s Museum, and Peabody Museum in Salem, Mass.
With my puppet partner, she produced Theater of the Palms: The World of Puppet Master Lee Tien-Lu, a documentary on Chinese hand puppetry that has been presented at the Margaret Mead and Bombay Film Festivals and shown nationally on public television.
Funds to fix broken meters budgeted in Ridgewood
Friday August 16, 2013, 1:52 PM
BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER
The Ridgewood News
It didn’t matter to Sarah Fortune that Ridgewood is scheduled to purchase nearly $30,000 worth of new electronic parking meter equipment. Her concern Monday morning was that the meter fronting her car’s parking space in the North Walnut Street municipal lot had gone kaput.
The recent retiree from Midland Park deposited three quarters and a nickel into the meter before realizing the device was a malfunctioning unit. The particular meter, in fact, had been out of order for more than one week.
The Ridgewood News office abuts the North Walnut lot, and several of the newspaper’s employees have witnessed an increasing number of driver complaints on non-working meters in recent weeks. Fortune’s bad luck wasn’t the first witnessed at the spot, and that parking stall wasn’t the only one with a broken meter – about an hour earlier, a village employee removed a handwritten “Meter Broken” note from a different machine in the same lot.
Ridgewood residents question prior notice by PSE&G
Friday August 16, 2013, 1:52 PM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER
The Ridgewood News
Residents have voiced anger at PSE&G in recent weeks over installation of taller, higher-voltage utility poles, and a few have also expressed concern with the village and the extent of its prior knowledge of the project.
Residents of Hope Street and Spring Avenue say they were blindsided by the work that began outside their homes last month, but PSE&G has noted several times that it gave the village prior notice at a March 5 meeting.
A series of emails, starting March 5, were sent to various individuals at village hall and recently provided to The Ridgewood News. Based on the initial email, the village engineer, village manager, village council and other officials were given notice that taller poles would be installed with 69-kilovolt lines in the residential neighborhoods.
Ridgewood-Glen Rock Patch Editor laid off as part of a large-scale companyrestructuring
August 17,2013
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood , NJ, capping months of speculation , yesterday it became official , James Kleimann the Editor of the Glen Rock Patch was laid off. While the fate of the digital news service is not know AOL the corporate owner of the “Patch” has been struggle financially with the “hyper local” news service for some time .
In the last couple of years The Glen Rock Patch had come under heavy local criticism for being a bit to cozy with the current Mayor of the Village ,and sources inside AOL told us that this over ‘cozy” relationship made the corporate owners “uncomfortable” .
In the defense of James the Ridgewood blog staff does think its a bit tacky for the Patch to have a poll :
Changes at Patch? Posted by Simon Templar , August 16, 2013 at 09:19 PMIt would appear as though long time Ridgewood Patch editor James Kleimann is no longer with Patch; is this ture?
On that note the staff of the Ridgewood blog would like to wish James all the best and will refrain from piling on at this moment.
THIS IS ON PATCH!
Before you read about it elsewhere, I want to be the one to tell you that I will not longer be running Ridgewood-Glen Rock Patch. I was laid off today as part of a large-scale company restructuring. I do not know what that means for the site going forward. Hopefully it can continue to serve as a tremendous resource for the community.It’s been an honor covering Ridgewood – a community I call home – and Glen Rock. I’m proud of the work I produced over the last three years. More importantly, I feel very fortunate to have met so many great people.
Was 42% in June; decline mirrors drop in overall approval
by Lydia Saad
PRINCETON, NJ — Despite President Barack Obama’s renewed focus on the nation’s economy this summer, he scores worse with Americans on the economy than he did in June. His approval rating on the issue, now 35%, is down seven percentage points, and his ratings on taxes and the federal budget deficit are each down five points. During the same period, his overall approval rating is down three points.
Obamacare is coming, and so are the con artists
CNBC Published: Thursday, 15 Aug 2013 | 7:08 AM ET
As the debate rages over who benefits from the Affordable Care Act, one thing is becoming clear: The controversial program is a dream come true for rip-off artists.
Consumer experts warn that the program has created a huge opportunity for swindling people by stealing their money and their sensitive personal information.
“Any time you roll out a big government program like this, confusion is inevitable,” said Lois Greisman, an associate director in the Bureau of Consumer Protection at the Federal Trade Commission. “This confusion creates a tremendous opportunity for the fraudster.”
Scammers have been at it for more than a year now, but consumer advocates and security experts warn that the problem will worsen as we get closer to Oct. 1. That’s when the millions of uninsured Americans can use a health insurance exchange, set-up by their state or by the federal government, to shop for coverage.
NSA broke privacy rules thousands of times per year, audit finds
By Barton Gellman, Published: August 15 E-mail the writer
The National Security Agency has broken privacy rules or overstepped its legal authority thousands of times each year since Congress granted the agency broad new powers in 2008, according to an internal audit and other top-secret documents.
Most of the infractions involve unauthorized surveillance of Americans or foreign intelligence targets in the United States, both of which are restricted by statute and executive order. They range from significant violations of law to typographical errors that resulted in unintended interception of U.S. e-mails and telephone calls.
The Ridgewood Guild “Music in the Night” evening performance series will be in its 4th Season this summer. Every Friday night from 7:00 – 9:00p.m. during the summer months, musicians will be performing in several locations throughout downtown. These talented performers have created quite a buzz, so come join the fun!
If you can strum a guitar, blow a horn or croon a tune, email us for an audition or call 201-493-9911
YWCA Bergen County will be holding two outdoor yoga classes for all ages and levels. Yoga and Hula Hooping, a light-hearted class taught by Himalayan Institute certified yoga instructor Elena Sheehy, will be held on Tuesday, August 27 from 10 – 11 a.m. and 6:30 – 7:30 p.m. Hoops will be provided and no experience is necessary.
On Wednesday, August 28, from 10 – 11 a.m. and 6:30 – 7:30 p.m., Yoga on the Grass will be taught by Colleen Fontes, a certified instructor of over 20 years. All levels are welcome. All participants must bring a yoga mat.
Classes will be held at the YWCA, 112 Oak Street, Ridgewood. Movement@YW members can participate for free; for non-members there is a suggested donation of $5 per person per class. Participants should be in general good health and able to sit, stand and lie on the grass. Classes will be held indoors in the event of rain or extreme heat. For more information and to register, call Colleen Fontes at 201-444-5600 x351.
Vacation Musical Theatre Camp:Sing, Dance and be Creative!
August – Vacation Musical Theatre Camp Arkeology, the musical will be the theme for this year’s Vacation Musical Theatre Camp held at Christ Episcopal Church from August 19 through 23.
This camp is especially geared for children ages 4 – 12 and tells the familiar Noah story creatively from the animals’ perspective. Each day will begin at 9 a.m. and end at 12 noon. Children will have the opportunity to sing, dance, act, create set designs and work on related crafts.
Registration deadline is August 1. Camp cost is $50 for the week. You may register on line at www.christchurchridgewood.org or call 201.652.2350 for a form. For more information ask to speak with Ms. Marlene Pillow or Ms. Kristen Lee. This camp is open to the community. All are welcome. Tell a friend. Bring a friend. Christ Episcopal Church is located at 105 Cottage Place, Ridgewood