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Easter Services in the Village of Ridgewood

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Easter Services in the Village of Ridgewood 
(just a few)

Our Lady of Mt. Carmel

EASTER SUNDAY – APRIL 20
Mass Times:
8am
9:30am Church
9:30am Auditorium
11am Church
11am Auditorium
12:30pm Church
12:30pm Auditorium
3pm Spanish
NO 6:30PM MASS ON EASTER SUNDAY

West Side Presbyterian Church

SUNDAY,APRIL 20, 2014 EASTER SUNDAY

Schedule highlights for
Sunday, April 20 (Please note special schedule!):

8:45 AM     *Festival Easter Worship with Holy Communion
11:15 AM     *Festival Easter Worship with Holy Communion

Note there is NO Sunday School, Adult groups or Foundation on Easter Sunday.  The link to the full Holy Week schedule appears above.  There will still be Little Lambs Child Care for pre-school children in the West Side Nursery.

Emmanuel Baptist

Sunday, April 20, 2014
Easter Sunday
Sunday School for All Ages9:15 AM  
Youth Choir Rehearsal9:15 AM  
Adult Choir Rehearsal9:45 AM  
Worship followed by fellowship hour10:30 AM

Ridgewood Christian Reformed Church

Sunday morning worship – 10:30 am

Christ Church

Easter Day (April 20) @ 8 am, 9:15 am, and 10 am

Joyful and Christ-centered worship celebrates Jesus’ resurrection.

Bethlehem Lutheran Church

Easter Sunday, April 20th
7:30 am – Sunrise Communion Worship
9:00 am – Praise Communion Worship
11:00 am – Festival Communion Worship

 

please feel free to add info in the comment boxes for your house of worship

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Why is Passover the Most Celebrated Jewish holiday in America?

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Why is Passover the Most Celebrated Jewish holiday in America?

By Rabbi Brad Hirschfield Published April 14, 2014FoxNews.com

Simply put, like America itself, Passover is about freedom.  It celebrates the eternal quest for human dignity and the freedom which is perhaps the greatest expression of that dignity.

Nowhere, and at no time, in 3,000 years of Jewish history have Jews known the kind of centuries-long freedom and security which are the American Jewish experience. The Passover story of freedom — of the journey from oppression to opportunity — is also the American story at its best, not just for Jews but for all people, and it rings deeply true when it is told at Seder tables across this nation.

Passover and Our Founding Fathers

The Exodus from Egypt was central in the minds of the new United States’ Founding Fathers.  When Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin and John Adams gathered to create a seal for our nation, Franklin chose a design of Moses extending his hand over the Red Sea, thereby overwhelming Pharaoh who is sitting in an open chariot, a crown on his head and a sword in his hand.  Rays in the clouds were drawn as reaching out to Moses, expressing that he acted by command of God.

The motto included was: “Rebellion To Tyrants Is Obedience To God,” which was later adopted by Jefferson as his personal motto.

Moses Was A Hero to the Pilgrims

Moses was an American hero long before there was a United States of America. The Pilgrims described themselves as the chosen people fleeing their own pharaoh, King James. When they set sail on The Mayflower in 1620, they carried Bibles emblazoned with Moses leading the Israelites to freedom.  Then as now, they found themselves in the story of leaving Egypt.

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2014/04/14/fourteen-things-to-know-for-passover-2014/

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Christians are under attack not just abroad, but also here in the United States, Franklin Graham said on Good Friday.

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Christians are under attack not just abroad, but also here in the United States, Franklin Graham said on Good Friday.

“We are seeing it across the globe, no question about it, and it’s frightening,” Graham, the president and CEO of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association and son of Billy Graham, told John Bachman and J.D. Hayworth on “America’s Forum” on Newsmax TV.

“We see the anti-Christian position in this country. We see so much of it coming out of the entertainment industry, especially in certain segments of the news media.”

“Christians are being attacked and … we see it now in Europe. Anti-Semitism, no question, it’s there. We are living in a world that is changing, and it is frightening to see how quickly [it] is changing, and we’re going to see real persecution of Christians and Jews in the years to come,” said Graham, who followed his father into the ministry.

Franklin Graham said Christians should not suppress their spiritual beliefs even in the face of growing religious apathy.

“I would encourage Christians not to back down, to stand firm, to share your faith, to stand for your faith, not to be afraid of the secularists who will scoff at you. You know, we live in a world where we want to be politically correct, we live in a world where people want to be accepted and standing for Jesus Christ. You’re not going to be accepted in some circles and you just have to be willing to accept that,” he said.

“But don’t be afraid. I would encourage Christians to stand and be proud of your faith and not to be shy, to tell others about what God has done for you, what Christ did when he died on the cross and rose from the grave, let people know that. That’s extremely important.”

Now more than ever, Graham said Christians should embrace the concept of charity and love toward their fellow man.

“You follow the example of Jesus Christ. Jesus fed people, he healed people, he used his power as the Son of God to lift people up, but he didn’t do that just because he wanted to give people a better life, he did that so people would put their faith and trust in him as the living Son of God, but at the same time Jesus had compassion for suffering and he healed people, he cared for people. I just think we as Christians today, we should do the same,” Graham said.

“We should be concerned about our fellow man, we should give, we should give to charity, we should take care of those that are hungry. In this country, the churches used to do that and now we have given this over to the government.

“The government was not in the charity business 100 years ago, but now the churches are almost completely out of it and it’s the government trying to run healthcare when the churches used to … and the churches did a much better job of it than what the government can do.”

That notion of charity is something Franklin Graham tries to bring to the world through his organization, Samaritan’s Purse.

“We’re working right now in the Ukraine. We have teams of people in the southern Sudan where there has been civil war. There’s a lot of suffering around the world,” he said.

“We’re working in Liberia with Ebola; our planes are flying the World Health Organizations and different people to these affected areas and getting people out of these areas. But Samaritan’s Purse, we … do it in the name of Jesus Christ.

“We operate in over 100 countries and we do need people’s prayers, we need people’s financial health; we can’t do the work without that. But I always covet peoples’ prayers more than anything else.”

Graham also spoke about the health of his father, the evangelist Rev. Billy Graham,  spiritual adviser to a number of presidents. Franklin said his father is stable after being hospitalized late last year.

“My father is at home,” he said. “He’s doing just a little better. He was in the hospital back before Christmas, right after Thanksgiving, but he’s just a little bit better and the warm weather has been an encouragement to him. He’s been outside a little bit, so we’re grateful for that.”

https://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/Franklin-Graham-Christians-persecution-Billy-Graham/2014/04/18/id/566456#ixzz2zL2uEHBy

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Daniel Goldberg : Obamacare How Doctors Are Coping

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Daniel Goldberg : Obamacare How Doctors Are Coping

West Bergen Tea Party In cooperation with Americans For Prosperity
presents  Daniel Goldberg Obamacare How Doctors Are Coping

Join us 7 pm, Tuesday, April 22
At the Larkin House
380 Godwin Avenue, Wyckoff
(1/4 mile North of Stop & Shop on the right)

More Information: 201 8918 [email protected]
www.westbergenteaparty.com

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R.H.S. baseball: Veteran bats lead the way for Ridgewood

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R.H.S. baseball: Veteran bats lead the way for Ridgewood

APRIL 18, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY MATTHEW BIRCHENOUGH
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

ALLENDALE — The first week of the season went according to plan for the Ridgewood High School baseball team, the No. 6 squad in The Record preseason Top 25: three games, three wins by a combined score of 33-14 over Hackensack, Clifton and Ramapo.

Senior catcher Nick Coppola was involved in a pair of run-scoring rallies for Ridgewood in Monday’s Big North Freedom Division baseball game at Northern Highlands.

Since then, things haven’t been so easy for the Maroons, who dropped three of their next four and dipped to No. 14 in the rankings.

“We’ve been struggling, and the last couple games have been tough ones for us,” RHS head coach Kurt Hommen said following Monday’s 8-5 loss at Northern Highlands.

Making the recent troubles even tougher to swallow is that each of the three losses have come against Big North Freedom rivals — Indian Hills, Paramus and Northern Highlands — dropping Ridgewood’s record within the division to 2-3.

“We’re going through a bit of a rough stretch,” said senior shortstop Nico Symington, who is committed to play at Tulane. “We just have some things we need to clean up.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/sports/high-school-sports/boys-baseball/veteran-bats-lead-the-way-in-early-going-1.998788#sthash.tgn3m5ta.dpuf

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Why There Will Be A Robot Uprising

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Why There Will Be A Robot Uprising

In the movie Transcendence, which opens in theaters on Friday, a sentient computer program embarks on a relentless quest for power, nearly destroying humanity in the process.

The film is science fiction but a computer scientist and entrepreneur Steven Omohundro says that “anti-social” artificial intelligence in the future is not only possible, but probable, unless we start designing AI systems very differently today.

Omohundro’s most recent recent paper, published in the Journal of Experimental& Theoretical Artificial Intelligence, lays out the case.

We think of artificial intelligence programs as somewhat humanlike. In fact, computer systems perceive the world through a narrow lens, the job they were designed to perform.

Microsoft Excel understands the world in terms of numbers entered into cells and rows; autonomous drone pilot systems perceive reality as a bunch calculations and actions that must be performed for the machine to stay in the air and to keep on target. Computer programs think of every decision in terms of how the outcome will help them do more of whatever they are supposed to do. It’s a cost vs. benefit calculation that happens all the time. Economists call it a utility function, but Omohundro says it’s not that different from the sort of math problem going in the human brain whenever we think about how to get more of what we want at the least amount of cost and risk.

For the most part, we want machines to operate exactly this way.  The problem, by Omohundro’s logic, is that we can’t appreciate the obsessive devotion of a computer program to the thing it’s programed to do.

Put simply, robots are utility function junkies.

Even the smallest input that indicates that they’re performing their primary function better, faster, and at greater scale is enough to prompt them to keep doing more of that regardless of virtually every other consideration. That’s fine when you are talking about a simple program like Excel but becomes a problem when AI entities capable of rudimentary logic take over weapons, utilities or other dangerous or valuable assets.

In such situations, better performance will bring more resources and power to fulfill that primary function more fully, faster, and at greater scale. More importantly, these systems don’t worry about costs in terms of relationships, discomfort to others, etc., unless those costs present clear barriers to more primary function. This sort of computer behavior is anti-social, not fully logical, but not entirely illogical either.

Omohundro calls this approximate rationality and argues that it’s a faulty notion of design at the core of much contemporaryAI development.

“We show that these systems are likely to behave in anti-social and harmful ways unless they are very carefully designed. Designers will be motivated to create systems that act approximately rationally and rational systems exhibit universal drives towards self-protection, resource acquisition, replication and efficiency. The current computing infrastructure would be vulnerable to unconstrained systems with these drives,” he writes.

The math that explains why that is Omohundro calls the formula for optimal rational decision making. It speaks to the way that any rational being will make decisions in order to maximize rewards and lowest possible cost. It looks like this:

In the above model, A is an action and S is a stimulus that results from that action. In the case of utility function, action and stimulus form a sort of feedback loop. Actions that produce stimuli consistent with fulfilling the program’s primary goal will result in more of that sort of behavior. That will include gaining more resources to do it.

For a sufficiently complex or empowered system, that decision-making would include not allowing itself to be turned off, take, for example, a robot with the primary goal of playing chess.

“When roboticists are asked by nervous onlookers about safety, a common answer is ‘We can always unplug it!’ But imagine this outcome from the chess robot’s point of view,” writes Omohundro. “A future in which it is unplugged is a future in which it cannot play or win any games of chess. This has very low utility and so expected utility maximisation will cause the creation of the instrumental subgoal of preventing itself from being unplugged. If the system believes the roboticist will persist in trying to unplug it, it will be motivated to develop the subgoal of permanently stopping the roboticist,” he writes.

In other words, the more logical the robot, the more likely it is to fight you to the death.

https://www.defenseone.com/technology/2014/04/why-there-will-be-robot-uprising/82783/

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Bergen Community College students react to professor’s suspension

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Bergen Community College students react to professor’s suspension

APRIL 18, 2014, 4:44 PM    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2014, 10:54 PM
BY JOHN C. ENSSLIN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Students at Bergen Community College expressed surprise, puzzlement, dismay and astonishment on Friday to media reports that tenured Professor Francis Schmidt had been suspended for eight days after posting on social media sites a photograph of his 7-year-old daughter wearing a “Game of Thrones” T-shirt.His daughter had been wearing the yellow shirt that included a quote from one of the characters in the darkly violent but hugely popular fantasy television series on HBO that read: “I will take what is mine with fire & blood.”“It’s a book,” said Paul Mendoza, a 28-year-old computer science major from Nutley who described himself as a fan of both the show and the fantasy series of books by Bayonne-born author George R.R. Martin, upon which the hit TV series is based.

“I like the book. I like the series.” Mendoza said. “It’s fiction. I don’t understand why people were making a big deal about it.”

“It’s his personal life,” Mendoza said of Schmidt. “I don’t find that offensive. I’m sure there are many people who wear the same shirt or wear worse. It’s just a shirt.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/bergen-community-college-students-react-to-professor-s-suspension-1.999318#sthash.b6m0VM1l.dpuf

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R.H.S. Boys Track & Field: Ridgewood repeats at County Relays

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R.H.S. Boys Track & Field: Ridgewood repeats at County Relays

APRIL 18, 2014    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2014, 12:31 AM
BY MATTHEW BIRCHENOUGH
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR

RIDGEWOOD – In its first major test of the young season, the Ridgewood High School boys track and field team responded by taking home the Division A championship at last week’s Jack Yockers Bergen County Relays.

The Maroons matched the lofty expectations placed on them prior to the season by finishing in the top four in 15-of-16 events to score 112 out of a possible 160 points and edge second-place Old Tappan by 11 points for the title.

“What excited me about the team was that we rose to expectations,” said RHS head coach Josh Saladino. “We were the No. 1 team in North Jersey in The Record’s rankings going into it, so the pressure was on our guys and they responded.”

The victory marked the second straight year the Maroons won the meet.

“We were the defending champions, and the kids went into this meet with the expectation and the goal to defend their County Relays championship,” Saladino said. “The kids have been through it before. They knew what to expect.”

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/schools/rhs-repeats-in-division-a-1.998917#sthash.2TVejbqv.dpuf

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Alex and Ani April Store Spotlight: Ridgewood

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Alex and Ani April Store Spotlight: Ridgewood

We are delighted to shine the spotlight on our Ridgewood, New Jersey location as our April Store of the Month! Opening its doors in November of 2012, Ridgewood quickly became one of our more heavily trafficked locations and is now one of four store locations in the Garden State!

Situated in the bustling downtown area alongside the beautiful Van Neste Square Memorial Park, Alex and Ani Ridgewood is the perfect destination for any jewelry lover! Tucked among quaint little shops, restaurants and businesses, this busy location is a fan favorite. It is not uncommon to see a line out the door during the holidays!

Our amazing Ridgewood staff continues to impress with their excellence in client service even at the busiest of times. With their utmost knowledge and attention to each and every clients needs and they never fail to find the perfect #CharmedArms!

If you’re looking for a fun way to commemorate your trip to New Jersey or if you’re a resident of the Garden State, then you would love the New Jersey charm bangle from our Places We Love collection (featured below)! Don’t forget to follow AA Ridgewood on Facebook and Instagram for exclusive fan content! xo

Alex and Ani Ridgewood is located at 134 East Ridgewood Avenue
TEL: (201) 857-0911 | EMAIL: [email protected]

https://www.alexandani.com/blog/april-alex-and-ani-store-ridgewood-new-jersey/

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New Jersey start-up funding continues to drop

2010 Tesla Roadster Sport

New Jersey start-up funding continues to drop

APRIL 19, 2014    LAST UPDATED: SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY ANDREW WYRICH
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

* Nationwide flow of venture capital isn’t washing ashore here

A new report on Friday said funding for start-ups in New Jersey dropped sharply in the first quarter, falling 78 percent from the period a year ago and continuing a trend that began in the second quarter last year.

In contrast, funding for start-ups nationally reached levels not seen since 2001.

According to a MoneyTree Report by PricewaterhouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association, investors funneled $19.6 million in funding to five New Jersey companies in the first three months of this year, down from more than $80.2 million that went to eight companies in the 2013 quarter.

Two North Jersey companies were among the five that received funding. The Clifton-based software maker Caktus Inc., which designs software that tracks a person’s water intake, received seed funding. LiveU Ltd. of Hackensack, which develops technology for live broadcasting, received later-stage funding. The amount invested into both companies was not disclosed in the report.

“The $19.6 million invested is the lowest quarter in MoneyTree Report history, and the funding in New Jersey continues to trend downward in recent quarters,” Brett Harrington, a senior manager at PricewaterhouseCoopers Emerging Companies Services, said in a statement. “Hopefully, the overall increase that has been seen nationally will positively impact New Jersey in Q2.”

Yearlong slide

The money venture capitalists invested in New Jersey-based start-ups and the number of companies that got funding have declined steadily since the second quarter of 2013. In the third quarter last year, the roughly $20 million invested in 11 companies was the lowest amount invested in New Jersey in 15 years, according to the report.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/tight-state-for-start-ups-1.999421#sthash.pQvL7Ybe.dpuf

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7 dangerous Apps that kids are using and parents need to know about

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7 dangerous Apps that kids are using and parents need to know about

A look into the some of the scariest Apps for your kids

Yik Yak – This App is one of the newest and one of the most dangerous. It allows users to post text-only Yaks of up to 200 characters. The messages can be viewed by the 500 Yakkers who are closest to the person who wrote the Yak, as determined by GPS tracking. Users are exposed to – and contributing -sexually explicit content, abusive language and personal attacks so severe that schools are starting to block the App on their Wi-Fi. Although the posts are anonymous, kids start revealing personal information as they get more comfortable with other users.

SnapChat – This App allows users to send photos that will disappear after 10 seconds. Once the recipient opens the picture, the timer starts. Then it’s gone. From both the sender’s phone and the recipient’s phone. However, the recipient can take a screen shot of the photo and have it to share with others. This App enables kids to feel more comfortable “sexting” with peers.
 
KiK Messenger – This is a private messenger app and is coveted by those under 18 for a number of reasons. The App allows kids to send private messages that their parents can’t see. There is very little you can do to verify the identity of someone on Kik, which obviously poses the risk of sexual predators chatting with your child. And again, this is an easy tool for sexting.
 
Poof –The Poof App allows users to make Apps disappear on their phone with one touch. Kids can hide every app they don’t want you to see on their phone. All they have to do is open the App and select the ones they don’t want you to see. Very scary! The good news about this App is it is no longer available, which isn’t uncommon for these types of Apps. But, if it was downloaded before it was deleted from the App store, your child may still have it. Keep in mind that Apps like this are created and then terminated pretty quickly by Android and Apple stores, but there are similar ones being created constantly. Some other names include: Hidden Apps, App Lock and Hide It Pro.
 
Omegle – This App has been around since 2008, with video chat added in 2009.  When you use Omegle you do not identify yourself through the service – chat participants are only identified as “You” and “Stranger”. You don’t have to register for the App. However, you can connect Omegle to your Facebook account to find chat partners with similar interests.  When choosing this feature, an Omegle Facebook App will receive your Facebook “likes” and try to match you with a stranger with similar likes. This is not okay for children. There is a high risk of sexual predators and you don’t want your kids giving out their personal information, much less even talking to strangers.
 
Whisper – This is a meeting App that encourages users to post secrets. You post anonymously, but it displays the area you are posting from. You can search for users posting within a mile from you. A quick look at the App and you can see that online relationships are forming constantly on this App, but you never know the person behind the computer or phone. One man in Washington was convicted of raping a 12-year-old girl he met on this App just last year.
 
Down – This application, which used to be called “Bang with Friends,” is connected to Facebook. Users can categorize their Facebook friends in one of two ways: they can indicate whether or not a friend is someone they’d like to hang with or someone they are “down” to hook up with. The slogan for the App: “The anonymous, simple, fun way to find friends who are down for the night.” If that alone doesn’t scare you, I don’t know what will!

https://www.checkupnewsroom.com/7-dangerous-apps-that-parents-need-to-know-about/

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Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey: 37% of Voters Fear the Federal Government

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Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey: 37% of Voters Fear the Federal Government

Friday, April 18, 2014

Thirty-seven percent (37%) of Likely U.S. Voters now fear the federal government, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. Forty-seven percent (47%) do not, but another 17% are not sure.

Perhaps in part that’s because 54% consider the federal government today a threat to individual liberty rather than a protector. Just 22% see the government as a protector of individual rights, and that’s down from 30% last November. Slightly more (24%) are now undecided. (To see survey question wording, click here.)

As recently as December 2012, voters were evenly divided on this question: 45% said the federal government was a protector of individual rights, while 46% described it as a threat to those rights.

Two-out-of-three voters (67%) view the federal government today as a special interest group that looks out primarily for its own interests. Just 17% disagree, while 15% are undecided.

Only 19% now trust the federal government to do the right thing most or nearly all the time, down from 24% in June of last year. Eighty percent (80%) disagree, with 44% who trust the government to do the right thing only some of the time and 36% who say it rarely or never does the right thing.

Seventy-one percent (71%) of voters believe that if America’s Founding Fathers came back today, they would regard the federal government as too big. Just three percent (3%) think the nation’s founders would consider the government too small, while 21% say they would view the size of the federal government as about right.

The survey of 1,000 Likely Voters was conducted on April 15-16, 2014 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.

Just 19% of voters believe the federal government today has the consent of the governed.

Men and those 40 and over are more likely to fear the federal government than women and younger voters.

Democrats, as they do in most instances, have a less critical view of the federal government than Republicans and voters not affiliated with either of the major parties. Most GOP voters (53%) and 43% of unaffiliateds fear the federal government. Just 18% of voters in President Obama’s party agree.

Seventy-three percent (73%) of Republicans and 59% of unaffiliated voters view the government as a threat to individual liberty, a view shared by only 34% of Democrats. GOP and unaffiliated voters are twice as likely as Democrats to believe that the federal government rarely or never does the right thing.

Majorities of all three groups, however, agree that the government has become a special interest group that looks out primarily for its own interests.

Forty-two percent (42%) of voters with a gun in their household fear the federal government, compared to 30% of those who do not have a gun in their home. Fifty-two percent (52%) of union members share that fear versus 35% of those who are not unionized.

Sixty percent (60%) of all voters favor a smaller government with fewer services and lower taxes over a more active government with more services and higher taxes.

https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/general_politics/april_2014/37_of_voters_fear_the_federal_government

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‘Ridiculous’: Administration punts on Keystone, Obama faces Dem revolt

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‘Ridiculous’: Administration punts on Keystone, Obama faces Dem revolt

The Obama administration once again has punted on a final decision for the Keystone XL pipeline, announcing ahead of the holiday weekend it is extending a key review period indefinitely — a move that could push off a determination until after the midterm elections.

Republicans, as well as red-state Democrats who want the proposed Canada-to-Texas pipeline approved, slammed the administration for the delay. Democrats even threatened to find ways to go around the president to get the project approved.

“It’s absolutely ridiculous that this well over five year long process is continuing for an undetermined amount of time,” Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., said in a statement.

Republican Nebraska Rep. Lee Terry called the decision “shameful,” noting that another spring construction season will come and go without the project.

The administration had been in the middle of a 90-day review period for federal agencies assessing an environmental study from the State Department.

But the State Department said Friday it is giving agencies “additional time” to weigh in, in part because of ongoing litigation before the Nebraska Supreme Court which could affect the pipeline’s route. If the route changes, officials made clear the State Department reserves the right to conduct another environmental impact study to include more public comments, which could delay the process more.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/04/18/obama-administration-extends-review-period-for-keystone-xl-oil-pipeline/

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NJ lost 1,300 jobs in March; unemployment rate ticks up

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NJ lost 1,300 jobs in March; unemployment rate ticks up

The loss of 1,300 jobs in March puts New Jersey down 1,900 jobs for the year, as even traditionally strong sectors such as health and leisure lost ground.

The state lost 600 government jobs and 700 private jobs in March, the second monthly fall in a row for the private sector, according to the monthly employment report released Thursday by the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development.

Unemployment, which stood at 7.1 percent in January and February, rose to 7.2 percent in March – above the national rate of 6.7 percent, the department reported.

Adding to the bad news, revised numbers for February showed that employment in the state fell by 1,100 more jobs than first reported, losing 4,800 instead of the previously announced 3,700 jobs.

“I think we sum up the report by saying that New Jersey’s labor market is going nowhere slowly,” said Patrick O’Keefe, director of economic research at the accounting firm CohnReznick. “Nothing stands out as a reason to be optimistic about where we are going.”

The 1,900 jobs so far this year is particularly weak compared to the 18,800 jobs added in the same period in 2013. New Jersey has recovered just 93,000, or 36 percent, of the 258,000 jobs lost in the recession and its aftermath.

In comparison, New York has recovered all of the 330,000 jobs it lost in the period and added about 164,000. Connecticut has regained about half of the 119,100 jobs lost. As of March the U.S. had recovered all the private sector jobs it lost.  (Morley/The Record)

https://www.northjersey.com/news/nj-lost-1-300-jobs-in-march-unemployment-rate-ticks-up-1.998386#sthash.sGaXJkCr.dpuf

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Opus X and Anejo have arrived for Easter at Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

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Opus X and Anejo have arrived for Easter at Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

Opus X and Anejo have arrived just in time for Easter!
Certain limits may apply,in store purchase only.

Available now at
The Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

~Gary, Barbara and Collin
The Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

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