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>Not-So-Great Depression

>harding warren
by Jim Powell

https://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9880

Jim Powell, a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute, is the author of FDR’s Folly, Bully Boy, and Greatest Emancipations

Added to cato.org on January 7, 2009

This article appeared on National Review (Online) on January 7, 2009

Which U.S. president ranks as America’s greatest depression fighter?

Not the fabled Franklin Delano Roosevelt, since unemployment averaged 17 percent through the New Deal period (1933–1940). What banished high unemployment was the conscription of 12 million men into the armed forces during World War II. FDR actually prolonged high unemployment: he tripled taxes; he signed laws that made it more expensive for employers to hire people, made discounting illegal, and authorized the destruction of food; and he launched costly infrastructure projects like the Tennessee Valley Authority that became a drag on states receiving TVA-subsidized electricity.

America’s greatest depression fighter was Warren Gamaliel Harding. An Ohio senator when he was elected president in 1920, he followed the much praised Woodrow Wilson— who had brought America into World War I, built up huge federal bureaucracies, imprisoned dissenters, and incurred $25 billion of debt.

Harding inherited Wilson’s mess— in particular, a post–World War I depression that was almost as severe, from peak to trough, as the Great Contraction from 1929 to 1933that FDR would later inherit. The estimated gross national product plunged 24 percent from $91.5 billion in 1920 to $69.6 billion in 1921. The number of unemployed people jumped from 2.1 million to 4.9 million.

Harding had a much better understanding of how an economy works than FDR. As historian Robert K. Murray wrote in The Harding Era, the man who would become our 29th president “always decried high taxes, government waste, and excessive governmental interference in the private sector of the economy. In February 1920, shortly after announcing his candidacy, he advocated a cut in government expenditures and stated that government ought to ‘strike the shackles from industry. . . . We need vastly more freedom than we do regulation.’ “

One of Harding’s campaign slogans was “less government in business,” and it served him well. Harding embraced the advice of Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon and called for tax cuts in his first message to Congress on April 12, 1921. The highest taxes, on corporate revenues and “excess” profits, were to be cut. Personal income taxes were to be left as is, with a top rate of 8 percent of incomes above $4,000. Harding recognized the crucial importance of encouraging the investment that is essential for growth and jobs, something that FDR never did.

Powerful senators, however, favored giving bonuses to veterans, as 38 states had done. But such spending increases would have put upward pressure on taxes. On July 12, 1921, Harding went to the Senate and urged tax and spending cuts. He noted that a half-billion dollars in compensation and insurance claims were already being paid to 813,442 veterans, and 107,824 veterans were enrolled in government-sponsored vocational training programs.

In 1922, the House passed a veterans’ bonus bill 333-70, without saying how the bonuses would be funded. The senate passed it 35-17. Despite intense lobbying from the American Legion, Harding vetoed the bill on September 19— just six weeks before congressional elections, when presidents generally throw goodies at voters. Harding said it was unfair to add to the burdens of 110 million taxpayers.

Harding’s Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover wanted government intervention in the economy— which as president he was to pursue when he faced the Great Depression a decade later— but Harding would have none of it. He insisted that relief measures were a local responsibility.

Federal spending was cut from $6.3 billion in 1920 to $5 billion in 1921 and $3.2 billion in 1922. Federal taxes fell from $6.6 billion in 1920 to $5.5 billion in 1921 and $4 billion in 1922. Harding’s policies started a trend. The low point for federal taxes was reached in 1924; for federal spending, in1925. The federal government paid off debt, which had been $24.2 billion in 1920, and it continued to decline until 1930.

Conspicuously absent was the business-bashing that became a hallmark of FDR’s speeches. Absent, too, were New Deal-type big government programs to make it more expensive for employers to hire people, to force prices above market levels, or to promote cartels and monopolies.

With Harding’s tax and spending cuts and relatively non-interventionist economic policy, GNP rebounded to $74.1 billion in 1922. The number of unemployed fell to 2.8 million— a reported 6.7 percent of the labor force— in 1922. So, just a year and a half after Harding became president, the Roaring Twenties were underway. The unemployment rate continued to decline, reaching an extraordinary low of 1.8 percent in 1926. Since then, the unemployment rate has been lower only once in wartime (1944), and never in peacetime.

The Roaring Twenties were a time of unprecedented prosperity. GNP expanded year after year without inflation. Productivity improved, and real wages increased. The stock market tripled. There was a dramatic expansion of the middle class. The Great Migration occurred during the 1920s, with some 7 million African-Americans moving north for better schools and job opportunities. Women had the vote. Millions of Americans began to buy cars, originally a luxury of the rich. People bought radios that enabled ordinary people to hear the finest entertainers in their own homes. Movies became popular. Frozen food made possible a more varied diet year-round. Doctors developed new medicines to fight deadly diseases like diphtheria and tuberculosis.

While Harding can hardly be considered a champion of laissez-faire economics (he supported tariffs, after all), the pro-growth policies he implemented are directly responsible for the astonishingly rapid growth in prosperity— and widely shared prosperity— America enjoyed throughout the Roaring 20s.

Unfortunately, Harding’s stunning success as a depression fighter was overshadowed by the Teapot Dome scandal that engulfed his administration after his death in August 1923. This resulted from “progressive” era conservation policies in which the government owned land known to have petroleum reserves— at Teapot Dome, Wyoming, and Elk Hills, California. Since the beginnings of recorded history, government involvement in the economy has led to corruption, and Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall accepted bribes for leases enabling private companies to extract the oil. There wouldn’t have been a scandal if the reserves had been privatized, as more than 250 million acres of government land had been privatized during the previous century.

Rather than follow the model of FDR— whose policies raised only Americans’ spirits— President-Elect Obama ought to consider the model of Warren G. Harding, whose policies raised Americans’ standard of living, and lifted the nation itself out of a depression— before it had a chance to become Great.

https://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9880

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>U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg taken to area hospital

>U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg taken to area hospital after fall

U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg was taken by ambulance tonight from his Cliffside Park home after suffering a fall, his spokesman said. The 86-year-old Democrat was conscious when he was taken to the hospital “as a precautionary measure,” said the spokesman, Caley Grey. Grey said he did not know if Lautenberg had fallen inside the Bergen County condominium or whether he had suffered any injuries. Lautenberg was elected to his fifth term in the Senate in 2008, defeating former U.S. Rep. Richard Zimmer with roughly 55 percent of the vote.

He was thrust back into the political spotlight in recent months as his name became synonymous with two major political storylines in the state — the security breach at Newark Liberty International Airport and the Sean Goldman custody case. The Paterson-born Lautenberg was one of the most outspoken critics of the Transportation Security Administration after Haisong Jiang, a Rutgers graduate student, wandered beyond a security checkpoint last month to steal a kiss from his girlfriend, shutting down Terminal C for nearly six hours and accidentally exposing security flaws at one of the nation’s largest airports. Just a week before the airport incident, Lautenberg claimed he “used the hammer” of senatorial power to help Tinton Falls resident David Goldman regain custody of his son, Sean, ending an international custody dispute between the Monmouth County man and the Brazilian government which had dragged on for years.

Lautenberg returned Friday night from a whirlwind 11-hour trip to Haiti with a congressional delegation that included House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He was scheduled to have a news conference today in Newark to discuss the trip and state efforts providing relief. (Queally/Jackson, Star Ledger/The Record)

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/02/us_senator_frank_lautenberg_ta.html
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>Grover Cleveland : 22nd and the 24th President

>prh 01 img0048

The First Democrat elected after the Civil War, Grover Cleveland was the only President to leave the White House and return for a second term four years later.

One of nine children of a Presbyterian minister, Cleveland was born in New Jersey in 1837. He was raised in upstate New York. As a lawyer in Buffalo, he became notable for his single-minded concentration upon whatever task faced him.

At 44, he emerged into a political prominence that carried him to the White House in three years. Running as a reformer, he was elected Mayor of Buffalo in 1881, and later, Governor of New York.

Cleveland won the Presidency with the combined support of Democrats and reform Republicans, the “Mugwumps,” who disliked the record of his opponent James G. Blaine of Maine.

A bachelor, Cleveland was ill at ease at first with all the comforts of the White House. “I must go to dinner,” he wrote a friend, “but I wish it was to eat a pickled herring a Swiss cheese and a chop at Louis’ instead of the French stuff I shall find.” In June 1886 Cleveland married 21-year-old Frances Folsom; he was the only President married in the White House.

Cleveland vigorously pursued a policy barring special favors to any economic group. Vetoing a bill to appropriate $10,000 to distribute seed grain among drought-stricken farmers in Texas, he wrote: “Federal aid in such cases encourages the expectation of paternal care on the part of the Government and weakens the sturdiness of our national character. . . . “

He also vetoed many private pension bills to Civil War veterans whose claims were fraudulent. When Congress, pressured by the Grand Army of the Republic, passed a bill granting pensions for disabilities not caused by military service, Cleveland vetoed it, too.

He angered the railroads by ordering an investigation of western lands they held by Government grant. He forced them to return 81,000,000 acres. He also signed the Interstate Commerce Act, the first law attempting Federal regulation of the railroads.

In December 1887 he called on Congress to reduce high protective tariffs. Told that he had given Republicans an effective issue for the campaign of 1888, he retorted, “What is the use of being elected or re-elected unless you stand for something?” But Cleveland was defeated in 1888; although he won a larger popular majority than the Republican candidate Benjamin Harrison, he received fewer electoral votes.

Elected again in 1892, Cleveland faced an acute depression. He dealt directly with the Treasury crisis rather than with business failures, farm mortgage foreclosures, and unemployment. He obtained repeal of the mildly inflationary Sherman Silver Purchase Act and, with the aid of Wall Street, maintained the Treasury’s gold reserve.

When railroad strikers in Chicago violated an injunction, Cleveland sent Federal troops to enforce it. “If it takes the entire army and navy of the United States to deliver a post card in Chicago,” he thundered, “that card will be delivered.”

Cleveland’s blunt treatment of the railroad strikers stirred the pride of many Americans. So did the vigorous way in which he forced Great Britain to accept arbitration of a disputed boundary in Venezuela. But his policies during the depression were generally unpopular. His party deserted him and nominated William Jennings Bryan in 1896.

After leaving the White House, Cleveland lived in retirement in Princeton, New Jersey. He died in 1908.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/grovercleveland22

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>The New Math : Public Employee Pension Obligations Bankrupt States

>
How’s this for an investment?

https://directorblue.blogspot.com/2010/02/new-math-union-pensionomics.html

You pay a total of $124,000 into your pension plan and, upon retiring at age 49, you receive $3.3 million in pension payments and $500,000 in health care benefits. You receive $3.8 million in total on a $124,000 investment.

Or this:

You pay a total of $62,000 towards a pension plan and absolutely nothing for health care (medical, dental and vision coverage) over your working career. Upon retirement, you are paid $1.4 million in pension and $215,000 in health care benefits. You receive $1.6 million on a $62,000 investment.

These are real world examples from New Jersey’s crushing public sector union retirement plans paid for by the state’s taxpayers. Republican Governor Chris Christie is demanding drastic actions to prevent New Jersey from falling off the precipice and into full-fledged bankruptcy.

https://directorblue.blogspot.com/2010/02/new-math-union-pensionomics.html

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>‘Climategate’: Scientist admits there has been no global warming since 1995

>Scientist admits there has been no global warming since 1995

https://dailycaller.com/2010/02/14/scientist-admits-there-has-been-no-global-warming-since-1995/

The global warming movement is facing a one-two punch today, as a key figure of the Climategate scandal admitted that there is no evidence the earth has warmed recently and new research suggests existing records aren’t sufficient support for global warming claims.

Phil Jones, who stepped down from his position at the Climatic Research Unit after emails surfaced showing the unit apparently conspiring to manipulate climate data, also said global warming may not be unprecedented after all [1].

READ JONES’ FULL Q&A WITH THE BBC HERE [2]

From the Mail Online [3]:

The academic at the centre of the ‘Climategate’ affair, whose raw data is crucial to the theory of climate change, has admitted that he has trouble ‘keeping track’ of the information.

Colleagues say that the reason Professor Phil Jones has refused Freedom of Information requests is that he may have actually lost the relevant papers.

Professor Jones told the BBC yesterday there was truth in the observations of colleagues that he lacked organisational skills, that his office was swamped with piles of paper and that his record keeping is ‘not as good as it should be’.

The data is crucial to the famous ‘hockey stick graph’ used by climate change advocates to support the theory.

Professor Jones also conceded the possibility that the world was warmer in medieval times than now – suggesting global warming may not be a man-made phenomenon.

And he said that for the past 15 years there has been no ‘statistically significant’ warming.

The admissions will be seized on by sceptics as fresh evidence that there are serious flaws at the heart of the science of climate change and the orthodoxy that recent rises in temperature are largely man-made.

Professor Jones has been in the spotlight since he stepped down as director of the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit after the leaking of emails that sceptics claim show scientists were manipulating data.

The raw data, collected from hundreds of weather stations around the world and analysed by his unit, has been used for years to bolster efforts by the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to press governments to cut carbon dioxide emissions.

Meanwhile, The Times reports that scientists have found that temperature records are not a reliable indicator of warming. In many cases, they said, “apparent temperature rise was actually caused by local factors affecting the weather stations, such as land development.”

Reports the Times [4]:

In its last assessment the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said the evidence that the world was warming was “unequivocal”.

It warned that greenhouse gases had already heated the world by 0.7C and that there could be 5C-6C more warming by 2100, with devastating impacts on humanity and wildlife. However, new research, including work by British scientists, is casting doubt on such claims. Some even suggest the world may not be warming much at all.

“The temperature records cannot be relied on as indicators of global change,” said John Christy, professor of atmospheric science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, a former lead author on the IPCC.

The doubts of Christy and a number of other researchers focus on the thousands of weather stations around the world, which have been used to collect temperature data over the past 150 years.

These stations, they believe, have been seriously compromised by factors such as urbanisation, changes in land use and, in many cases, being moved from site to site.

https://dailycaller.com/2010/02/14/scientist-admits-there-has-been-no-global-warming-since-1995/

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Presidents Day : Calvin Coolidge

>1243221702 coolage
Calvin Coolidge: 30th President

“Champion of limited Government and Limited Government Ambition”

At 2:30 on the morning of August 3, 1923, while visiting in Vermont, Calvin Coolidge received word that he was President. By the light of a kerosene lamp, his father, who was a notary public, administered the oath of office as Coolidge placed his hand on the family Bible.

Coolidge was “distinguished for character more than for heroic achievement,” wrote a Democratic admirer, Alfred E. Smith. “His great task was to restore the dignity and prestige of the Presidency when it had reached the lowest ebb in our history … in a time of extravagance and waste….”

Born in Plymouth, Vermont, on July 4, 1872, Coolidge was the son of a village storekeeper. He was graduated from Amherst College with honors, and entered law and politics in Northampton, Massachusetts. Slowly, methodically, he went up the political ladder from councilman in Northampton to Governor of Massachusetts, as a Republican. En route he became thoroughly conservative.

As President, Coolidge demonstrated his determination to preserve the old moral and economic precepts amid the material prosperity which many Americans were enjoying. He refused to use Federal economic power to check the growing boom or to ameliorate the depressed condition of agriculture and certain industries. His first message to Congress in December 1923 called for isolation in foreign policy, and for tax cuts, economy, and limited aid to farmers.

He rapidly became popular. In 1924, as the beneficiary of what was becoming known as “Coolidge prosperity,” he polled more than 54 percent of the popular vote.

In his Inaugural he asserted that the country had achieved “a state of contentment seldom before seen,” and pledged himself to maintain the status quo. In subsequent years he twice vetoed farm relief bills, and killed a plan to produce cheap Federal electric power on the Tennessee River.

The political genius of President Coolidge, Walter Lippmann pointed out in 1926, was his talent for effectively doing nothing: “This active inactivity suits the mood and certain of the needs of the country admirably. It suits all the business interests which want to be let alone…. And it suits all those who have become convinced that government in this country has become dangerously complicated and top-heavy….”

Coolidge was both the most negative and remote of Presidents, and the most accessible. He once explained to Bernard Baruch why he often sat silently through interviews: “Well, Baruch, many times I say only ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to people. Even that is too much. It winds them up for twenty minutes more.”

But no President was kinder in permitting himself to be photographed in Indian war bonnets or cowboy dress, and in greeting a variety of delegations to the White House.

Both his dry Yankee wit and his frugality with words became legendary. His wife, Grace Goodhue Coolidge, recounted that a young woman sitting next to Coolidge at a dinner party confided to him she had bet she could get at least three words of conversation from him. Without looking at her he quietly retorted, “You lose.” And in 1928, while vacationing in the Black Hills of South Dakota, he issued the most famous of his laconic statements, “I do not choose to run for President in 1928.”

By the time the disaster of the Great Depression hit the country, Coolidge was in retirement. Before his death in January 1933, he confided to an old friend, “. . . I feel I no longer fit in with these times.”

https://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/calvincoolidge

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Presidents Day

>Presidents Day

Washington’s Birthday is the official name designated to what many of us know as President’s Day. During the month of February the birthday of two of our greatest President’s takes place. Both George Washington who was born on Feb. 22nd and Abraham Lincoln born on Feb. 12th.

However, Washington’s birthday has been publicly celebrated since he was in office, before Abraham Lincoln was even born. Much of the debate over the name of the holiday springs from the fact that state’s can follow their own holidays how they see fit and many of them chose to also honor Lincoln, calling the celebration President’s Day.

It was in 1968 that the term President’s Day came up for legal consideration in the Congress but was shot down, though the holiday was moved to fall between the two President’s birthdays. Again in the 1980’s there was a resurgence of the term with advertisers which solidfied the holiday name in American culture. Today, few Americans perfer to call the holiday Washington’s Birthday in lieu of President’s Day.

https://www.patriotism.org/presidents_day/

To Honor Presidents Day the Ridgewood blog will use this week to give a little back ground on a few of our late presidents , we started with Lincoln last week and we will end with Washington next Monday.

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>Chinese New Year : 2010 the Year of the Tiger

>tiger

Chinese New Year or Spring Festival is the most important of the traditional Chinese holidays. It is also called “Lunar New Year”, because it is based on the lunisolar Chinese calendar. The festival traditionally begins on the first day of the first month pinyin: pronounced zhēng yuè in the Chinese calendar and ends on the 15th; this day is called Lantern Festival. Chinese New Year’s Eve is known as chú xī. It literally means “Year-pass Eve”.

Chinese New Year By the Chinese Calendar 2010 is the Year of the Tiger,which is also known by its formal name of Geng Yin.2010 is also Year 4707 in the Chinese Calendar .The Chinese calendar has been in continuous use for centuries. It predates the International Calendar (based on the Gregorian Calendar) in use at the present, which goes back only some 430 years. Basically, a calendar is a system we use to measures the passage of time, from short durations of minutes and hours, to intervals of time measured in days, months, years and centuries. These are fundamentally based on the astronomical observations of the movement of the Sun, Moon and stars.

Each year is also designated by one of the 12 Animals For instance, 2005 is Year of Rooster; 2006 is Year of Dog; and 2007 is the Year of Pig. 2008 is the Year of the Rat and 2010 is the Year of the Tiger.

This system is extremely practical. A child does not have to learn a new answer to the question, “How old are you?” in each new year. Old people often lose track of their age, because they are rarely asked about their present age. Every one just have to remember that he or she was born in the “Year of the Dog” or whatever.

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>Graydon Pool : It was a Tragic Loss felt by the Whole Village

>This is truly a tragic situation on all counts. No matter what the Graydon Staff does have a level of liability. That liability is assumed in any business when you open the door and let the public in.

However, parents need to be responsible for their children. While I don’t know what the outcome of this will be, perhaps more defendants in civil actions should pursue this course.

No matter what there will be no winners here and my heart goes out to the family for the tragic loss. No amount of money can make up for the loss of a child.

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>Graydon Pool : Blame Game for Drowning that Shocked Village

>Village seeks to add names to Graydon lawsuit

Friday, February 12, 2010
BY MICHAEL SEDON
The Ridgewood News
STAFF WRITER

https://www.northjersey.com/news/84234917_Village_seeks_to_add_names_.html

A Bergen County judge may rule next week whether attorneys representing the Village of Ridgewood can file a third-party complaint against the parents of a 13-year-old Korean boy who drowned at Graydon Pool in 2008.

Soo Hyeon Park died July 15, 2008, when he drowned in the deep end of the municipal pool, according to a police report.

The boy’s family filed a complaint with Bergen County Superior Court on Feb. 19, 2009, claiming the village was negligent in the drowning and seeking “pecuniary damages and losses.”

On Feb. 3, Rivkin Radler LLC, the law firm representing the village in this matter, filed with the court a motion for leave to file a third-party complaint.

The village’s third-party complaint “alleges negligence” against the boy’s parents, Youn Wha Jung and Seong Wook Park.

The brief submitted in support of the motion by attorney Francis J. Leddy III, representing the village through the municipal Joint Insurance Fund (JIF), claims that the parents “failed to ensure that the decedent [Soo Hyeon Park] understood and complied with all Graydon Pool rules and regulations prior to entering the pool.”

Those rules included taking and passing the “deep water certification test” required for swimmers to be allowed in the 12-foot-deep section of the pool, according to the brief sent to the judge. The brief also alleges that the parents “were grossly negligent in the supervision of decedent and failed to adequately respond to him as he drowned.”

“Therefore, should liability attach to the village in this matter, Youn Wha Jung and Seong Wook Park will be, at least, partially liable for those damages awarded against the village as a result of the wrongful death of the decedent,” Leddy’s brief states.

Neil S. Weiner, the attorney representing the deceased boy’s family, further explained the implications of including Jung, the administrator of the boy’s estate, as a defendant.

“If the judge permits Ridgewood to essentially sue the mom, arguing that ‘it’s not our fault; it’s partially her fault, among others,’ … then if the mother served as both the administrator of her dead son’s estate, she would have a conflict of interest,” Weiner explained. “You can’t be both a defendant and a plaintiff at the same time.”

Weiner said the claim against Jung would require a new administrator of the estate to be appointed.

The village’s complaint also “alleges negligence” against the deceased’s two teenage friends and their parents, all of Ridgewood, as members of Graydon Pool. The complaint claims they should have been “aware that the decedent and his family did not speak fluent English. These parties breached their duty of care to the decedent by failing to ensure that the decedent understood and complied with all Graydon Pool rules and regulations.”

The deceased and his parents were visiting Ridgewood from South Korea and were at the pool as guests of the Ridgewood residents when the drowning occurred, according to a police report filed at the time.

Weiner described the village’s third-party complaint as being “very odd” in this specific case, and admitted that if it is granted by the judge in its entirety, it would complicate the proceedings by requiring the Ridgewood family and the deceased’s parents to obtain separate legal representation.

The third-party complaint also alleges that “Youn Wha Jung and Seong Wook Park, waited fifty (50) minutes before notifying the Graydon Pool lifeguards and staff that the decedent had drowned,” according to the document.

full story The Ridgewood News…

E-mail: [email protected]

https://www.northjersey.com/news/84234917_Village_seeks_to_add_names_.html

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>SECOND GROWTH CIGARS ARE HERE!

>secondgrowthe2

SECOND GROWTH CIGARS ARE HERE!

Only 1,000 boxes released worldwide.
The natural fruit essence from the fine wine mingled with the spice,leather and chocolate notes in the rare aged tobacco create a tastesynthesis befitting the most discerning connoisseur. Second Growthcigars are truly one-of-a-kind.

AVAILABLE NOW WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

The Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood 10 Chestnut Street Ridgewood, New Jersey 07450
Phone: 201-447-2204 Email: [email protected]
Hours: Monday – Saturday 10:00AM – 5:30PM and Thursday Night 6:30PM – 8:30PM

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>Bartels receives major gift from David Bolger, president of the Bolger Foundation

>WAVERLY (Iowa)- A sizable donation from a New Jersey philanthropist will fund an expansion at Bartels Lutheran Retirement Community.

David Bolger, president of the Bolger Foundation, pledged $1.2 million to improve the skilled nursing facility at Bartels in Waverly.

Over the years, Bolger, a well-known benefactor, has donated millions of dollars to projects in Northeast Iowa. He has made personal and professional connections in the state.

Deb Schroeder, president and chief executive officer at Bartels, is grateful to the Bolger Foundation for its high level of support. The Bolger donation is the largest gift toward the skilled nursing project, Schroeder said, and may be the largest, single charitable gift to the retirement community in its history.

“This is so significant,” Schroeder said. “That’s a really big gift.”

https://www.wcfcourier.com/news/local/article_64bee284-164c-11df-bd05-001cc4c002e0.html

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>Ridgewood Schools to lose $808,000 of State Aid

>
N.J. Gov. Christie announces state of fiscal emergency with $2.2B budget shortfall

Gov. Chris Christie seized extraordinary powers to shrink the current state budget today, infuriating Democratic lawmakers ahead of an even bigger fight over the next spending plan and laying the foundation for unprecedented changes in the way all New Jersey governing bodies operate. In an executive order and speech to both houses of the Legislature, Christie said he would close a $2.2 billion budget hole, saying New Jersey is on “the edge of bankruptcy.”

He revoked funds from local school districts, hospitals and NJ Transit and declared a “state of fiscal emergency,” forcing more than 500 school districts to spend their surpluses in place of state aid. The governor slashed programs labeled wasteful and worthwhile, cut aid to colleges and universities and killed the Department of the Public Advocate. He urged pension and benefit cuts for all public employees, and mocked their unions by comparing their objections to his 9-year-old son’s cry of “unfair.” He called opponents of his plans defenders of “the old ways.” “Now is the time when we all must resist the traditional, selfish call to protect your own turf at the cost of our state,” the Republican governor said. “We chose to confront the problem head on by reforming our spending habits, and laying the groundwork for reform. We have set out in a new direction, a direction dictated by the votes of the people of New Jersey, and I do not intend to turn back.” Christie pegs next year’s budget gap — which he will address March 16 — at $11 billion, but his dramatic rhetoric and draconian fixes for this year’s $2.2 billion hole drew sharp objections from Democrats who control both houses of the Legislature.

Top Democrats questioned whether it is legal for Christie to freeze already-budgeted funds, and said shifting the burden to school districts could drive up property taxes next year. “This is an easy thing to pick someone else’s pocket — you’re taking the money from local taxpayers to fill your budget,” said Senate President Stephen Sweeney (D-Gloucester). “It’s wrong.” Worse, he said, Christie abandoned bipartisan governing for a 30-minute televised drama where he could play the hero. “So much for a handshake,” Sweeney said, referring to Christie’s widely praised gesture to invite Sweeney and Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver (D-Essex) to the podium during his inaugural speech less than a month ago. (Heininger/Fleisher, Star Ledger)

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/02/nj_gov_christie_announces_stat_1.html

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>THE RIDGEWOOD PUBLIC SCHOOLS WILL HAVE A TWO-HOUR DELAYED OPENING ON THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11

>WEATHER ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11
UPDATE WEDNESDAY, 8:30 P.M.: AT THIS TIME, THE RIDGEWOOD PUBLIC SCHOOLS WILL HAVE A TWO-HOUR DELAYED OPENING ON THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11. ANY CHANGES TO THIS SCHEDULE WILL BE ANNOUNCED EARLY THURSDAY MORNING.

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