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Barclays: Bergen County’s Hoffmann catapults up leaderboard with 66

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Barclays: Bergen County’s Hoffmann catapults up leaderboard with 66

AUGUST 23, 2014, 3:22 PM    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 2014, 11:48 PM
BY ANDY VASQUEZ
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

PARAMUS — They followed Morgan Hoffmann around by the hundreds Saturday at The Barclays.

There were fans, friends, former classmates and family — all of them here to watch the young pro from Bergen County. The crowd, and the support grew with every hole and every birdie, reaching its crescendo at the par-4 18th, where Hoffmann tipped his cap and waved.

“Guess I feel like Tiger around here,” Hoffmann said. “Which is a pretty cool experience.”

If he keeps playing this way, the experience could become downright magical.

Several familiar faces jockeyed for position atop the leaderboard at Ridgewood Country Club in the third round, but nobody made a bigger move than the 25-year-old from Wyckoff.

Hoffmann shot a 5-under-par 66, the low round of the day, to catapult himself up the leaderboard. He’s in a tie for fourth place at 7-under par, trailing leaders Jim Furyk and Jason Day by two shots.

Hoffmann earned himself a spot in today’s penultimate group with Hunter Mahan (8-under), and in the process set up a 

dream scenario: When he steps onto the first tee at 1:55 p.m. today, Hoffmann will be gunning for his first PGA Tour win in his own back yard, in front of the people who have watched him grow up as a person and a golfer.

“It’s actually been really hard to not look into the crowd, because I want to and go say hi to everybody,” said Hoffmann, who won two golf state titles at Ramapo High School, “but I need to stay focused, and hopefully catch up [with friends] after.”

He’ll need to be fully focused today, considering how tight the leaderboard is, what’s at stake and who he’s chasing. Eight players are within two shots of the leaders, and 15 are three shots back or less.

Furyk, the No. 6 golfer in the world, shot a 2-under 69, grabbing a share of the lead with two birdies on his final nine holes Saturday.

“It’s a stacked leaderboard,” Furyk said. “There are a ton of players within three shots of the lead, so my goal really is to go out there and kind of not look at the leaderboard, just play my own game.”

Day, No. 9 in the world, shot a 3-under 68, recovering from a double-bogey seven on the par 5 13th after losing his ball in the mounds and tall grass.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/sports/barclays-bergen-county-s-hoffmann-catapults-up-leaderboard-with-66-1.1072599#sthash.mPbY269j.dpuf

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Politico Reports MSNBC Host Al Sharpton Was Obama’s Eyes and Ears In Ferguson

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Politico Reports MSNBC Host Al Sharpton Was Obama’s Eyes and Ears In Ferguson
By Tim Graham | August 22, 2014 | 09:53

In yet more proof that MSNBC has absolutely no sense of journalistic detachment from the Obama White House or political activism in the streets, Politico’s Glenn Thrush is reporting that Team Obama was plumbing Sharpton for information he gleaned on the streets of Ferguson, Missouri.

“Sharpton—so often criticized for being a self-promoter—finds himself in the unusual position of being too close to a White House that seems to be losing power by the day, ” Thrush wrote. But Sharpton is still boasting that it was his sincerity that bonded him with the president: 

Over the years, the 59-year-old former Brooklyn protest leader turned MSNBC talk-show host has embraced a new identity, one that reflects his evolution from agitator to insider with all that implies. In Ferguson, Sharpton established himself as a de facto contact and conduit for a jittery White House seeking to negotiate a middle ground between meddling and disengagement.

“There’s a trust factor with The Rev from the Oval Office on down,” a White House official familiar with their dealings told me. “He gets it, and he’s got credibility in the community that nobody else has got. There’s really no one else out there who does what he does.”

And the White House, as the crisis following Brown’s death seemed to flare out of control, worked extensively behind the scenes to maximize The Rev’s doing what he does, using him as both a source of information and a go-between. After huddling with Brown’s family and local community leaders, Sharpton connected directly with White House adviser and First Friend Valerie Jarrett, vacationing in her condo in the exclusive Oak Bluffs section of Martha’s Vineyard, not far from where President Obama and his family were staying. Obama was “horrified” by the images he was seeing on TV, Jarrett told Sharpton, and proceeded to pepper him with questions as she collected information for the president: How bad was the violence? Was it being fueled by outside groups—and could Sharpton do anything to talk them down? What did the Brown family want the White House to do? [Italics in the original.]

If anything, the Ferguson crisis has underscored Sharpton’s role as the national black leader Obama leans on most, a remarkable personal and political transformation for a man once regarded with suspicion and disdain by many in his own party. It’s a status made all the more surprising given that Obama, America’s first black president, ran on a platform of moving beyond the country’s painful racial divisions while Sharpton is the man who once defined those divisions for many Americans.

What brought them together, according to numerous sources I’ve spoken with about this over the years, is a shared commitment to racial justice, and a hardheaded pragmatism that has fueled their success. “He realized I wasn’t as irrational or as crazy as people thought,” Sharpton told me in an interview this week, and indeed Sharpton not only visits the White House frequently, he often texts or emails with senior Obama officials such as Jarrett and Attorney General Eric Holder, the first African American to hold that job and who, like Sharpton, views the Ferguson crisis as a pivotal one in Obama’s presidency.

“I’ve known Al since he was 12 years old, and he’s arrived at the level he always wanted to arrive at, which is gratifying,” the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a colleague and sometimes rival, told me. “He’s the man who’s the liaison to the White House, he’s the one who’s talking to the Justice Department….”

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“He’s calculating … he gets the game,” Sharpton recently told an associate when asked about why he’s bonded with Obama.

“The relationship evolved over time,” Sharpton explained to me. “I realized he was just a different kind of guy. … He wasn’t going to be guided by emotions. He was not intimidated. There was no game you could play [with him]. The key for him was seeing that I wasn’t insincere, that I actually believed in the stuff I was talking about.”

Read more: https://newsbusters.org/blogs/tim-graham/2014/08/22/politico-reports-msnbc-host-al-sharpton-was-obama-s-eyes-and-ears-fergus#ixzz3BJWNaFqP

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Katie Couric Interviews Bionic Arm Inventor Dean Kamen

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Katie Couric Interviews Bionic Arm Inventor Dean Kamen

Back in 1980, when Luke Skywalker was fitted with a robotic limb after losing his hand in the film “Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back,” it was pure science fiction. But what was once fantasy is now a reality.

Inventor Dean Kamen and his team at DEKA Research and Development, based in New Hampshire, have developed “Luke,” a robotic prosthetic arm, aptly nicknamed after Luke Skywalker.  The arm is considered a game changer for amputees. “Instead of giving them a metal hook that they can’t do anything with, what if we can give them a bunch of grips to do the things you do in daily living? Pick up a spoon or pick up an electric drill or open a door,” says Kamen.  

The idea first came about when the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) approached Kamen about building a better prosthetic for soldiers who have lost an arm in combat. “They said, ‘Give us a real hand that works, that has all the fingers and the thumb that can move in every direction. Give us an arm that really functions,'” says Kamen.  

https://news.yahoo.com/katie-couric-interviews-bionic-arm-inventor-185134268.html?fbmark=katiec2014

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British Muslims blame jihadi subculture after beheading video

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British Muslims blame jihadi subculture after beheading video

BY KATE HOLTON AND RAHEEM SALMAN

LONDON/BAGHDAD Thu Aug 21, 2014 11:26pm BST

(Reuters) – A British Muslim leader called for action on Thursday to tackle a jihadi sub-culture after an Islamic State video showed a suspected Briton beheading U.S. journalist James Foley, held hostage in Syria.

In Washington, U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the threat from Islamic State was “beyond anything we’ve seen” and the U.S. Justice Department opened a criminal investigation into the death of Foley on the video, which featured a masked man speaking English with a British accent.

As Western officials tried to identify the man, the Muslim Council of Britain denounced Foley’s “abhorrent murder” and one of its advisers urged anyone who knows the killer’s identity to contact the police.

Horror at the video spanned from the West to Baghdad, where Iraqis asked why the United States and its allies had not cracked down on Islamic State fighters long before they captured large areas of Syria and Iraq.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/08/21/uk-iraq-security-idUKKBN0GL1M720140821

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As investors buy struggling hospitals, big change comes to New Jersey health care

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As investors buy struggling hospitals, big change comes to New Jersey health care

AUGUST 23, 2014, 8:38 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 2014, 7:05 AM
BY LINDY WASHBURN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Bayonne Medical Center wasn’t just bragging about efficiency when it posted a big digital clock on a highway billboard a few years ago to show the real-time waits in its emergency room. It wanted patients to come to its ER. Lots of patients.

Big change comes to New Jersey health care

It didn’t matter if the hospital was in the patient’s insurance network. On the contrary, to the businessmen who had recently purchased the medical center, those “out-of-network” patients held the key to reversing Bayonne’s fortunes.

These owners, who bought the hospital in bankruptcy, had found an unintended — and very profitable — consequence to a state regulation that was designed to protect patients with urgent medical needs. While the regulation required insurance companies to pay for emergency treatment at hospitals where their coverage wasn’t normally accepted, it did nothing to control the size of the bills the hospitals could submit to those insurers.

And that loophole enabled Bayonne, which had ended its contracts with some of the state’s largest insurers, to charge those higher out-of-network rates. The result was striking: The strategy contributed to a $17 million operational profit within two years of its 2008 takeover.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/as-investors-buy-struggling-hospitals-big-change-comes-to-new-jersey-health-care-1.1072639#sthash.PllalMQW.dpuf

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Ridgewood Open Houses for August 24th

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$1,125,000 – 197 Lincoln Ave, Ridgewood NJ

$439,900 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1427540
364 Westfield Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
3 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath, C/C
Barbara Nudelman, Broker Associate
Coldwell Banker, Ridgewood
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
17
 
$475,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1432012
620 Albert Pl, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
3 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath, C/C
Gina Fierro, Sales Associate
Susan Luciano, Broker Associate
Weichert Realtors Ridgewood
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
11
 
$529,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1425382
347 Franklin Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
3 Bedroom, 1 Full Bath,
1 Half Bath, COL
Karen Boyle, Sales Associate
Keller Williams Village Square Realty
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
24
 
$540,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1426440
630 Maxwell Pl, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
4 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath, C/C
Fern Chan, Sales Associate
Weichert Realtors Ridgewood
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
10
 
$579,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1425480
478 Hunter Rd, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
4 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath, C/C
Elizabeth Novak, Sales Associate
Weichert Realtors Ridgewood
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
24
 
$599,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1412136
209 Steilen Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
3 Bedroom, 1 Full Bath,
1 Half Bath, COL
Jane Vander Plaat, Sales Associate
Coldwell Banker, Wyckoff/Franklin Lakes
Open House: 2:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
25
 
$650,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1430875
495 E Saddle River Rd, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
4 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath,
1 Half Bath, COL
Michael Shetler, Sales Associate
Keller Williams Village Square Realty
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
25
 
$699,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1422343
698 Ellington Rd, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
3 Bedroom, 3 Full Bath,
1 Half Bath, COL
Lori Lettieri, Sales Associate
Margarita Amezquita Rivera, Broker Associate
Coldwell Banker, Ridgewood
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
25
 
$699,900 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1430650
320 S Pleasant Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
3 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath, COL
Kelly Cosenza, Sales Associate
Better Homes Realty-Hazlet
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
22
 
$849,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1426250
548 Stevens Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
4 Bedroom, 3 Full Bath,
1 Half Bath, COL
Qizhan Yao, Sales Associate
Realmart Realty, LLC
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
– See more at: https://www.njmls.com/NJ/BERGEN/RIDGEWOOD-open-houses#sthash.SyywpI7B.JBUUBAiP.dpuf


$1,125,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1400092
197 Lincoln Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
5 Bedroom, 3 Full Bath, 
1 Half Bath, COL
Mary E. Soriano, Sales Associate
Coldwell Banker, Saddle River
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
20
 
$1,259,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1431072
44 Fairmount Rd, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
6 Bedroom, 2 Full Bath, 
1 Half Bath, COL
Jennifer M. Parsekian, Broker
Keller Williams Village Square Realty
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
25
 
$1,749,000 in Ridgewood
MLS # 1428956
233 Highland Ave, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
6 Bedroom, 4 Full Bath, 
2 Half Bath, COL
Hedy N. Weiss, Sales Associate
Coldwell Banker, Wyckoff/Franklin Lakes
Open House: 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Sun. 8/24
– See more at: https://www.njmls.com/NJ/BERGEN/RIDGEWOOD-open-houses#sthash.SyywpI7B.JBUUBAiP.dpuf

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Islamic State threat ‘beyond anything we’ve seen’: Pentagon

Defense Secretary Hagel and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dempsey hold a press briefing at the Pentagon

Islamic State threat ‘beyond anything we’ve seen’: Pentagon

Lessons not learned from 9/11

Media and Politicians down played threat
By Missy Ryan
WASHINGTON Thu Aug 21, 2014 5:47pm EDT

(Reuters) – The sophistication, wealth and military might of Islamic State militants represent a major threat to the United States that may surpass that once posed by al Qaeda, U.S. military leaders said on Thursday.

“They are an imminent threat to every interest we have, whether it’s in Iraq or anywhere else,” Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told reporters at the Pentagon.

Hagel’s assessment of Islamic State, which gained strength during Syria’s civil war and swept into northern Iraq earlier this summer, sounded a note of alarm several days after the group posted a video on social media showing one of its fighters beheading an American hostage kidnapped in Syria.

Asked if the hardline Sunni Muslim organization posed a threat to the United States comparable to that of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Hagel said it was “as sophisticated and well-funded as any group we have seen.”

“They are beyond just a terrorist group. They marry ideology, a sophistication of … military prowess. They are tremendously well-funded. This is beyond anything we’ve seen.”

Hagel spoke as the United States continued attacking Islamic State targets in Iraq. In the past two weeks, U.S. drones and fighter jets have conducted 89 airstrikes against militant targets in northern Iraq.

https://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/21/us-usa-islamicstate-idUSKBN0GL24V20140821

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U.S. stance on Israeli-Palestinian conflict weakens Israel

Bob-Yudin

ROBERT B. YUDIN

Opinion: U.S. stance on Israeli-Palestinian conflict weakens Israel

August 21, 2014    Last updated: Thursday, August 21, 2014, 1:21 AM
By ROBERT B. YUDIN
The Record

SINCE THE founding of Israel in 1948, it has been the bedrock of U.S. foreign policy to support Israel politically, economically and militarily. The one inviolate rule was that Israel must always retain its qualitative military superiority. Until now, both political parties have in a very non-partisan manner adhered to this principal.

A recent Gallup poll shows a change in this thinking. When asked about the current conflict between Israel and Hamas and specifically “Americans’ Views of Israel’s Action in Current Middle East Conflict,” 31 percent of those identifying themselves as Democrats felt Israel was justified while 47 percent felt Israel was not justified. Among those identifying themselves as Republicans 65 percent felt Israel was justified and 21 percent felt unjustified.

When you couple this with President Obama’s freezing military shipments to Israel in the middle of a shooting war with a terrorist organization – Hamas – many people have a right to be concerned.

Hamas has stated in its charter that it is dedicated to the annihilation of Israel and to the death of world Jewry. To date, Hamas has fired over 3,000 missiles into Israel as well as using tunnels into Israel for the purpose of killing Israelis.

The freezing of military shipments indicates a basic change in Obama’s policy to Israel. Reuters is quoted as saying that State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf says it is not a diminution of U.S. support of Israel. Yet actions speak louder than words, and withholding delivery of munitions speaks volumes.

In addition, Obama says Israel has a right to defend itself but that he is concerned with civilian casualties. I hear that as code for saying Israel does not have a right to defend itself because if Hamas puts missiles in the basement and purposively places civilians on the first and second floor when Israel, in defending itself, sends a missile into that basement to take out Hamas missiles before they are fired into Israel, the civilians on the first and second floor will become casualties. That is what Israel means when it says Hamas uses civilians to shield its missiles.

Leading up to World War II, few people believed Hitler when it became clear what his intentions were toward the Jews – it was the Holocaust. How can anyone fault Israelis for believing Hamas when its own charter calls for the same Holocaust?

Whether it is Hamas, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, al-Qaeda or the Muslim Brotherhood, their goals are the same: the destruction of Judaic-Christian religions, the destruction of our way of life and the domination of the world through the establishment of a Worldwide Caliphate.

Israel’s fight against Hamas is also our fight. If Israel loses, we are next.

Robert B. Yudin, a resident of Wyckoff, is chairman of the Bergen County Republican Organization.

See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-guest-writers/u-s-stance-on-israeli-palestinian-conflict-weakens-israel-1.1070853#sthash.WqN9uoB2.dpuf

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Girls Soccer: Ridgewood does ALS Ice Bucket Challenge in memory of coach Jack Elwood

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COACH JACK ELWOOD JAN 6,1951 TO MAY 2, 2010. RHS GIRLS SOCCER

Girls Soccer: Ridgewood does ALS Ice Bucket Challenge in memory of coach Jack Elwood

High school athletes throughout New Jersey are taking the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge. But the cause has a special meaning for Ridgewood.

The Ridgewood High School girls soccer team took the challenge recently in memory of their former coach, Jack Elwood. Elwood, who coached the team for 15 years, died of ALS in 2010. He donated his body to science and took part in a longitudinal study at Columbia University to help find a curse for the disease.

The team challenged the rest of the Big North girls soccer teams to take the challenge, as well as the Ridgewood boys soccer team.

“Jack was one of the most courageous and inspirational people I have ever known. Jack chose to life his life fully,” Ridgewood coach Jeff Yearing said in the video. “Today we’re trying to live up to Jack’s standard and hopefully this helps. …Jack, we remember you. We do this for you, my friend.”

https://highschoolsports.nj.com/news/article/-6413850446166406816/girls-soccer-ridgewood-does-als-ice-bucket-challenge-in-memory-of-coach-jack-elwood/

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R.H.S. Boys Track & Field: Ridgewood’s Dublirer brothers

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R.H.S. Boys Track & Field: Ridgewood’s Dublirer brothers

AUGUST 22, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY RON FOX
CORRESPONDENT

There was a time when the Dublirer brothers were leaving for an important meet, and their dad sent them off by saying, “Have a nice run.”Storm and Luke recoiled and told dad with no uncertainty that they were out to win for Ridgewood High School, not just run.

“They owe that [attitude] to Mike Glynn, their coach,” the father, Rob Dublirer, said recently.

The family name, which has an Austrian derivation, stands out in track circles. The last few years, there has been a Dublirer or two running well for the Maroons in cross-country and/or track. The brothers ran together for a while as teammates with outstanding success and have done so individually as well.

With Storm having graduated RHS in 2013, Luke continued the family legacy this past school year before graduating in June.

“They are two of the best middle distance runners I’ve ever coached,” said Glynn, who is about to begin his 49th cross-country season (15th at Ridgewood). “They’re absolutely wonderful kids, and they’re more similar than not.”

Glynn wasn’t sure what he had each time a Dublirer arrived for freshman year.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/sports/high-school-sports/boys-track/catching-up-with-the-dublirer-bros-1.1071349#sthash.68uaRmUX.dpuf

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George Jacobus: Ridgewood Visionary Paved the Way For Barclays Event

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Phil Mickelson

George Jacobus: Ridgewood Visionary Paved the Way For Barclays Event
By M. James Ward | August 21, 2014
Last Updated: August 23, 2014 5:36 am

Paramus, NJ—Thursday marked the start of the FedEx playoffs for the top 125 players on the PGA Tour. For the third time the event is played at The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, NJ.

Lost in the shuffle on who will finish high enough to advance to the second stage of the playoffs is a name few know or will even appreciate.

Before there was a FedEx Cup, or even for that matter a PGA Tour, there was a time when a fledgling group of vagabond players conducted events that comprised the heart and soul of professional golf here in America.

Golf on the professional side was miles away from the glamorous image seen today through the PGA Tour with such heavyweight stars like Tiger Woods, Rory McIlory and Phil Mickelson. In the early days professional golf was part competition, part exhibition, and part vaudeville. In most cases the most successful of players were usually in the employ of well-to-do clubs—many in the northeast United States. These clubs would allow their professional to “tour” in hope of adding publicity to the sponsoring club but the “touring pro” would also be responsible for working at the club—giving lessons and assisting with the membership in all golf related ways.

The Depression that impacted not only America but throughout the globe had a seismic impact on the development of professional golf in the 1930s. The events that existed were low key tournaments and the purses were small—with only a few high finishers making whatever money was available.

From 1933 to 1939 George Jacobus, who headed the New Jersey PGA Section for many years, became the first American-born President of the Professional Golfer’s Association of America (PGA).

Jacobus served as the head professional at Ridgewood and in his time a number of top tier players would grace the grounds of the Paramus club—most notably the Hall-of-Famer Byron Nelson who Jacobus offered a job after seeing him finish tied for ninth at the 1935 Masters. Nelson was hired as the first assistant for the sum of $400 for an entire season—plus half of his lesson fees. The incomparable sweet-swinging 23-year-old Texan would remain for a short time after laying the seeds of his considerable talents—winning the N.J. Open and the more prestigious Met Open—before moving ahead with what became a stellar playing career.

In those lean years The Ryder Cup Matches were nowhere near the kind of galvanizing and world-renowned event one sees today. Raising the money to handle the expenses in order to conduct the fifth edition of the matches was no small feat—especially for the visiting Great Britain & Ireland team. What was not known at the time was that four years later, for what would be a planned return to the States, was cancelled because of the outbreak of World War II throughout the European continent.

Jacobus was a visionary in getting Ridgewood to host the matches and, at the same time, provide for the kind of respect often times lacking for the professional game. In those years amateur golf was looked upon by many as the “gentlemen’s” way to play the game. Professional golfers were viewed by many as raconteurs analogous to card players, horse bettors and other loose money profiteers.

https://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/903871-george-jacobus-ridgewood-visionary-paved-the-way-for-barclays-event/

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Local business score from the PGA Tour’s Barclays golf tournament at the Ridgewood Country Club

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Local business score from the PGA Tour’s Barclays golf tournament at the Ridgewood Country Club 

AUGUST 23, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY MELANIE ANZIDEI
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD
Print

* North Jersey hotels, stores, restaurants benefit from event

The PGA Tour’s Barclays golf tournament at the Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus this week is proving to be a sales sweet spot for some North Jersey businesses.

From high-end venues such as the Hilton Woodcliff Lake to food trucks, the tournament, which runs until Sunday, has led to an expected bump in business during a usually slow time of year for the hospitality industry.

The Hilton Woodcliff Lake was the chosen stop for at least four professional golfers, according to hotel general manager John Moorhead, although it is not on the official PGA list of recommended hotels.

“We gave them anonymity,” Moorhead said. To respect the players’ privacy, the hotel accommodated them by placing them in rooms where they could exit the luxury hotel without being noticed. The event has caused the hotel to be more busy than usual, with fans also staying on the 21-acre property. Exact numbers could not be provided at press time.

Other hotels, such as the Crowne Plaza in Paramus, also have seen activity from the tour. According to general manager Maureen Moran, the hotel has been “fortunate enough to have members of the PGA Tour and staff” filling its rooms, as well as golf fans. The Marriott in Saddle Brook has seen a 5 percent increase in occupancy rates with about 50 more guests staying at the hotel, according to front office supervisor Casey Dunbar. La Quinta Inn in Paramus saw as many as 20 percent more customers than usual as a result of the tour, according to hotel manager Pushpa Patel.

Though fans might not have encountered the pros at their hotels, some fans did run into them elsewhere.

The PGA Tour Superstore, a golf retailer in Paramus that has a licensing tie-in with the tour, has enjoyed a Barclays sales boost, not just from fans who’ve come to the store to buy tickets to the tournament, or to meet PGA pros at store events this week, but from tournament players in need of equipment or a club repair. “It’s been a great week,” said Randy Ramsey, general manager of the store. Barclays golfers Graeme McDowell and Brendon Todd appeared at the store this week, signed autographs and participated in putting contests on the store’s putting green.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/boost-from-the-barclays-1.1072400#sthash.TrLaKaOi.dpuf

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Bergen County to cover $615K legal bill, months of back pay in 2 cops’ acquittal

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Bergen County to cover $615K legal bill, months of back pay in 2 cops’ acquittal

A “win-win,” for everyone except taxpayers 

AUGUST 22, 2014, 11:59 PM    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 2014, 12:03 AM
BY JEAN RIMBACH
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Bergen County will be picking up $615,000 in legal fees and cutting a check for back pay to two county police officers found not guilty this year in a politically charged criminal case.The agreement with the pair signals an end to one chapter in a matter that began four years ago and took a turn in May when Officers Saheed Baksh and Jeffrey Roberts were acquitted of charges they lied to investigators and removed evidence from the scene of a police shooting following a high-speed chase. But controversy over their case is likely to continue.

County spokesman John Gil said Friday he could not answer several questions raised by The Record — including the payments due to the officers — until next week. The officers’ lawyers declined to reveal details about the agreement, citing confidentiality.

But Roberts’ attorney, Charles Sciarra, said it provides for back pay and calls for both officers to accept written reprimands. Bergen County Police Chief Brian Higgins confirmed that the settlement calls for reprimands in the officers’ files.

“Everything has been resolved,” Sciarra said. “There’s a back-pay amount, there’s a resolution of the disciplinary case.”

“I think it was fair to both sides and saves the county a lot of money and avoided litigation, so it’s a win-win,” said Louis DiLuzio, the lawyer for Baksh.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/bergen-county-to-cover-615k-legal-bill-months-of-back-pay-in-2-cops-acquittal-1.1072387#sthash.ABIGEVqp.dpuf

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Senator Inhofe warns of potential terrorist attacks on U.S. soil

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Senator Inhofe warns of potential terrorist attacks on U.S. soil

Posted: Aug 20, 2014 7:52 PM EDTUpdated: Aug 20, 2014 7:57 PM EDTBy: Phil Cross, Investigative Reporter

OKLAHOMA CITY -It is a serious warning coming from Oklahoma Senator Jim Inhofe as he warns of the potential of another attack on American soil. The senator sat down with Fox 25 to talk about a variety of topics, but as ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, the top issue was national security.“We’re in the most dangerous position we’ve ever been in as a nation,” Senator Inhofe told Fox 25’s Phil Cross.

“ISIS, they are really bad terrorists, they’re so bad even Al Qaida is afraid of them,” Inhofe said reflecting on the recent beheading of American journalist James Foley. Beyond the beheading, Inhofe said the current terror organizations are not going to stay contained to the Middle East. “They’re crazy out there and they’re rapidly developing a method of blowing up a major U.S. city and people just can’t believe that’s happening.”

Inhofe blames policy decisions from the Obama administration and cuts in defense spending for putting the country in what he calls a dangerous situation.

https://www.okcfox.com/story/26331734/senator-inhofe-warns-of-potential-terrorist-attacks-on-us-soil

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Luxury housing will keep people in village

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Ridgewood News letter: Luxury housing will keep people in village

AUGUST 22, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 2014, 12:31 AM
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Luxury housing will keep people in village
James D. Vaughan III

to the Editor:

Luxury apartments along the Ridgewood train tracks are good for Ridgewood.

Once the children grow and leave home, a luxury apartment in town is a very attractive alternative to Ridgewood residents. We raised our children here and our friends still live here. We would prefer to stay in Ridgewood rather than a neighboring town. However, we cannot justify the expense of the large home. Most of the readers of The Ridgewood News know a friend who moved to a townhome or apartment in a neighboring town.

The residents of the luxury apartments would be mostly Ridgewood residents who have sold their home, or young couples moving to Ridgewood. Many of the young couples would be our children.

Currently, the properties are industrial locations. A luxury apartment complex would bring new residents and pedestrian life to downtown. Adding ongoing Ridgewood residents to the sites along the train tracks would be tremendously beneficial to our town, our downtown and our property tax revenue.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-letters-to-the-editor/ridgewood-news-letter-luxury-housing-will-keep-people-in-village-1.1071382#sthash.U89qbBbd.dpuf