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‘Honoring a Commitment:’ Soldier’s Remains Found After 70 Years

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Kate Scanlon / @scanlon_kate / May 20, 2015

This week, The Heritage Foundation will host the debut of the film“Honoring a Commitment: The Story of PFC Gordon.”

“Honoring a Commitment” is a feature-length film about Pfc. Lawrence Gordon, who went missing in action during World War II.

Gordon, a Canadian citizen, enlisted in the United States Army not long after Pearl Harbor was bombed on Dec. 7, 1941.

Gordon served in the Reconnaissance Company, 32nd Armored Regiment, 3rd Armored Division. In August of 1944, he was listed as missing in action while in Normandy.

His family was given only his wallet. They would have to wait almost 70 years to discover what happened to his body.

“Honoring a Commitment” is the story of their search.

Jed Henry, the producer of the film, told The Daily Signal in an interview that the film “was never supposed to be a documentary.”

“It just sort of turned out that way,” he said.

During a trip to Europe to learn about his grandfather’s service in World War II, Henry discovered that Gordon was the only member of the unit who was still listed as missing.

Henry contacted Gordon’s family—including a nephew who had been named Lawrence in honor of his uncle—and they decided to see if they could determine what had happened to him.

“This is worth a look, to see if there’s anything we can do about this,” he said.

They initially started recording friends and family discussing Gordon and the search for them to show the “humanitarian” side of the story to the various U.S. agencies and foreign governments they asked for help.

“It started out as a small little video to explain why the family wants this,” said Henry. “After 70 years, there’s a lot of skepticism, and people asking ‘What are you hoping to accomplish?’”

After an extensive search by the team of “rank amateurs,” Gordon’s remains were finally found.

After he was killed, Gordon was misidentified as a German, and was laid to rest in a French cemetery for German soldiers.

French authorities performed a DNA test. Gordon had been found.

Henry said that Gordon’s story is “a case study,” showing that the process of finding the remains of those who are missing in action “hasn’t kept up with modern technology.”

He said that he hopes that the film “sheds light on the MIA community.”

“I hope it opens people’s eyes to the inefficiency,” said Henry. “I don’t think we’re fulfilling the promise to bring everyone home.”

Henry, who has years of experience in the television industry, has never distributed a film before.

“This is a new venture for me,” he said.

The film has been submitted in film festivals, but distribution “is still in the works.”

“We’re looking for places to spread the word,” said Henry. “The debut is exciting for us.”

The Heritage Foundation, in partnership with National Review, will screen “Honoring a Commitment: on Thursday, May 21 at 4:00 p.m. in Heritage’s Lehrman Auditorium.

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TOBACCO SHOP OF RIDGEWOOD 35TH ANNIVERSARY COMING NEXT MONTH

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By Charlie Minato @charlieminato · On May 22, 2015

Davidoff’s retailer anniversary series is back for 2015, but this time there is only a single edition.

The store is Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood, which celebrates its 35th anniversary this year. The Davidoff Tobacconist of Ridgewood 35th Anniversary is a 6 x 52 toro with a Dominican wrapper, Ecuadorian Connecticut binder and Dominican fillers including San Vicente visos and piloto seco from different regions.

The cigar is scheduled to be released on June 10. Pricing is set at $22 per cigar and the cigar will be limited to 300 boxes of 10.

Last year, Davidoff announced its Retailer Anniversary program, which saw the company offer its Davidoff appointed merchants a chance at having a special cigar made for major anniversaries. Each year, the company creates a variety of blends in a specific size and lets the interested retailers choose which blend they would like. Last year, four stores participated in the program.

The Ridgewood, N.J.-based store is also a Davidoff lounge. Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood is owned by Barbara and Gary Kolesaire. Last year, Gary received an industry service award at Davidoff’s Golden Band Awards.

https://halfwheel.com/davidoff-tobacconist-shop-ridgewood-35th-anniversary-coming-next-month

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40 percent of unemployed have quit looking for jobs

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At a time when 8.5 million Americans still don’t have jobs, some 40 percent have given up even looking.

The revelation, contained in a new survey Wednesday showing how much work needs to be done yet in the U.S. labor market, comes as the labor force participation rate remains mired near 37-year lows.

A tight jobs market, the skills gap between what employers want and what prospective employees have to offer, and a benefits program that, while curtailed from its recession level, still remains obliging have combined to keep workers on the sidelines, according to a Harris poll of 1,553 working-age Americans conducted for Express Employment Professionals.

On the bright side, the number is actually better than 2014, the survey’s inaugural year, when 47 percent of the jobless said they had given up.

“This survey shows that some of the troubling trends we observed last year are continuing,” Bob Funk, CEO of Express Employment Professionals and a former chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, said in a statement. “While the economy is indeed getting better for some, for others who have been unemployed long term, they are increasingly being left behind.”

https://www.cnbc.com/id/102694868

 

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Clinton Foundation reveals up to $26 million in additional payments

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By Rosalind S. Helderman and Tom Hamburger May 21 at 9:53 PM

The Clinton Foundation reported Thursday that it has received as much as $26.4 million in previously undisclosed payments from major corporations, universities, foreign sources and other groups.

The disclosure came as the foundation faced questions over whether it fully complied with a 2008 ethics agreement to reveal its donors and whether any of its funding sources present conflicts of interest for Hillary Rodham Clinton as she begins her presidential campaign.

The money was paid as fees for speeches by Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton. Foundation officials said the funds were tallied internally as “revenue” rather than donations, which is why they had not been included in the public listings of its contributors published as part of the 2008 agreement.

According to the new information, the Clintons have delivered 97 speeches to benefit the charity since 2002. Colleges and universities sponsored more than two dozen of these speeches, along with U.S. and overseas corporations and at least one foreign government, Thailand.

The payments were disclosed late Thursday on the organization’s Web site, with speech payments listed in ranges rather than specific amounts. In total, the payments ranged between $12 million and $26.4 million.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/clinton-foundation-reveals-up-to-26million-in-additional-payments/2015/05/21/e49da740-0009-11e5-833c-a2de05b6b2a4_story.html

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Health Insurers Seek Hefty Rate Boosts

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Proposals set the stage for debate over federal health law’s impact

By
LOUISE RADNOFSKY
May 21, 2015 5:34 p.m. ET

Major insurers in some states are proposing hefty rate boosts for plans sold under the federal health law, setting the stage for an intense debate this summer over the law’s impact.

In New Mexico, market leader Health Care Service Corp. is asking for an average jump of 51.6% in premiums for 2016. The biggest insurer in Tennessee, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, has requested an average 36.3% increase. In Maryland, market leader CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield wants to raise rates 30.4% across its products. Moda Health, the largest insurer on the Oregon health exchange, seeks an average boost of around 25%.

All of them cite high medical costs incurred by people newly enrolled under the Affordable Care Act.

Under that law, insurers file proposed rates to their local regulator and, in most cases, to the federal government. Some states have begun making the filings public, as they prepare to review the requests in coming weeks. The federal government is due to release its rate filings in early June.

Insurance regulators in many states can force carriers to scale back requests they can’t justify. The Obama administration can ask insurers seeking increases of 10% or more to explain themselves, but cannot force them to cut rates. Rates will become final by the fall.

“After state and consumer rate review, final rates often decrease significantly,” said Aaron Albright, a spokesman for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the federal agency overseeing the health law.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/health-insurers-seek-hefty-rate-boosts-1432244042

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Univision host: Hispanic vote to jump from 12 million to 16 million, will decide presidency

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BY PAUL BEDARD | MAY 20, 2015 | 2:36 PM

Jorge Ramos, the influential host of Univision’s Noticiero Univision, said the Latino vote will decide the 2016 presidential election and that Hispanics could see a reward for providing the margin of victory.

In an interview with Harvard University’s Institute of Politics following a speech to students, Ramos predicted that about 16 million Hispanics will go to the polls, likely to vote Democratic based on past trends.

He said that there is a “new rule” in politics — winning the White House can’t be done without Hispanics.”

And since he believes Latinos will supply the winner with a victory, “for the first time, we could get something in return for our vote,” said Ramos.

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/will-latinos-determine-the-next-president/article/2564781

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Martin O’Malley 2016 pitch: Youthfulness

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By Mark Preston, CNN

Updated 3:41 PM ET, Wed May 20, 2015

Washington (CNN)Martin O’Malley is expected to emphasize his “youthfulness,” and a less scripted, more accessible presidential campaign, as a way to help contrast his candidacy with Hillary Clinton in the race for the Democratic nomination, an O’Malley confidante tells CNN.

“We do think there is a real generational argument to make and that he can seize upon it,” said the source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

O’Malley, 52, announced Tuesday on two social media platforms, Snapchat and Twitter, that he would make a “special announcement” on May 30 in Baltimore — when he is widely believed to formally enter the 2016 contest. Clinton, the former Secretary of State and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders are already in the race for the Democratic nomination.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2015/05/20/politics/martin-omalley-2016-elections-campaign-launch-youth/index.html

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Clinton Friend’s Memos on Libya Draw Scrutiny to Politics and Business

White House Aide Sidney Blumenthal talks to report

By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDTMAY 18, 2015

When the Clintons last occupied the White House, Sidney Blumenthal cast himself in varied roles: speechwriter, in-house intellectual and press corps whisperer. Republicans added another, accusing Mr. Blumenthal of spreading gossip to discredit Republican investigators, and forced him to testify during President Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial.

Now, as Hillary Rodham Clinton embarks on her second presidential bid, Mr. Blumenthal’s service to the Clintons is again under the spotlight. Representative Trey Gowdy of South Carolina, a Republican who is leading the congressional committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, plans to subpoena Mr. Blumenthal, 66, for a private transcribed interview.

Mr. Gowdy’s chief interest, according to people briefed on the inquiry, is a series of memos that Mr. Blumenthal — who was not an employee of the State Department — wrote to Mrs. Clinton about events unfolding in Libya before and after the death of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi. According to emails obtained by The New York Times, Mrs. Clinton, who was secretary of state at the time, took Mr. Blumenthal’s advice seriously, forwarding his memos to senior diplomatic officials in Libya and Washington and at times asking them to respond. Mrs. Clinton continued to pass around his memos even after other senior diplomats concluded that Mr. Blumenthal’s assessments were often unreliable.

But an examination by The Times suggests that Mr. Blumenthal’s involvement was more wide-ranging and more complicated than previously known, embodying the blurry lines between business, politics and philanthropy that have enriched and vexed the Clintons and their inner circle for years.

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/19/us/politics/clinton-friends-libya-role-blurs-lines-of-politics-and-business.html

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Does America need Mitt Romney?

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By Bernie Quigley, contributor

It must be said that former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R) had a not-so-good week there toward the end, waffling on Iraq. “Jell-O,” said The Washington Post’s Dana Milbank (and “afraid of his shadow and nakedly calculating”). “GOP lawmakers flabbergasted,” said The Hill. “Does Jeb Bush even really want to be US president?” asked The Telegraph.

Possibly not. But coincidentally, 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney had a very good day on Friday, there in the ring bare-chested — his shirt ripped off him — going mano-a-mano, as Ernest Hemingway liked to say, against the great and good former undisputed world champion Evander Holyfield. And was there ever a better sport than Romney for accepting that challenge?

Holyfield and Romney’s Charity Vision fight may have suddenly jogged a collective shift away from a long, painful conservative brain freeze. Conservatives, said Utah Sen. Mike Lee (R), are experiencing Bush fatigue. But this is the question which will now be quietly, surreptitiously asked, and asked with increased anxiety: If we are finally tiring of Bushes and Clintons and the old irrelevant families, are we not still just getting used to Romney? Does America maybe just need Mitt Romney?

https://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/presidential-campaign/242400-does-america-need-mitt-romney

 

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Have we stopped investing in poor people?

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Angela Rachidi

Poverty Studies, Society and Culture

President Obama spoke last week as part of a panel about poverty and opportunity at the Catholic-Evangelical Leadership Summit on Overcoming Poverty. He was joined by Robert Putnam, author of “Our Kids,” and AEI President Arthur Brooks. The president spoke at length about his belief that, as a country, we need to invest in those who have not had opportunities. He said (emphasis mine):

A free market is perfectly compatible with us making investment in good public schools, public universities; investments in public parks; investments in a whole bunch — public infrastructure that grows our economy and spreads it around. But that’s, in part, what’s been under attack for the last 30 years. And so, in some ways, rather than soften the edges of the market, we’ve turbocharged it. And we have not been willing, I think, to make some of those common investments so that everybody can play a part in getting opportunity.

Later, the president went further in suggesting that our country’s investments in poor people have declined:

And right now, they [poor kids] don’t have those things [mentors, social networks, decent books and computers and so forth], and those things have been stripped away. You look at state budgets, you look at city budgets, and you look at federal budgets, and we don’t make those same common investments that we used to. And it’s had an impact. And we shouldn’t pretend that somehow we have been making those same investments. We haven’t been. And there’s been a very specific ideological push not to make those investments. That’s where the argument comes in.

It’s difficult to find the areas of disinvestment that the president is referring to. A 2014 report by the Cato Institute analyzed education spending trends by state and found that spending per student for K-12 education increased almost 200% from 1970-2010, in constant dollars.

Spending on poor families has also increased dramatically over the past few decades. The figure above shows spending in constant dollars on the four largest means-tested programs (excluding public health insurance programs). Food and nutrition assistance alone increased 78% since FY2005. And Medicaid spending far overshadows other means-tested programs at $276 billion in FY2014, an increase of 40% since FY2005. As a percent of GDP, federal spending on means-tested programs was 3.5% in FY 2014. It was 2.7% in FY2005 and 2.4% in FY2001, the last recession.

In response to President Obama’s comments, Arthur Brooks, President of AEI, talked about declaring peace on the social safety net and tackling middle-class entitlements, but appropriately argued for limits. He said:

So if you join me in believing the safety net is a fundamental, moral right, and it’s a privilege of our society to provide, you must avoid austerity and you must avoid insolvency. And the only way that you can do that is with smart policies.

And I’m 100 percent sure the president agrees with me about smart macro-economic public policies, so I’m not caricaturing his views either.

Since we believe that there should be public goods, then we’re really talking about the system that provides them and provides them efficiently.

Given what the data show on the substantial public investments that already exist, it seems appropriate to have a conversation on efficiently targeting them rather than discussing how to increase them even more.

 

https://www.aei.org/publication/have-we-stopped-investing-in-poor-people/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=rachidiinvesting

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Stephanopoulos, ABC have not fully disclosed Clinton ties

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Peter Schweizer10:36 a.m. EDT May 18, 2015

ABC’s anchor much closer to Hillary’s foundation than he told his viewers.

Fact-driven, fair, aggressive journalism animates American politics. As an investigative journalist, I am accustomed to asking tough questions. When I publish, I expect tough questions in turn,

That’s not what ABC News This Week host and chief anchor George Stephanopoulos delivered when he interviewed me about my new book on the Clinton Foundation last month. There’s a reason. Though Stephanopoulos belatedly disclosed$75,000 in donations to the foundation, he has yet to disclose his much deeper relationship with the Clinton Foundation.

When Stephanopoulos invited me on his Sunday program, I knew that he had worked as a top adviser and campaign manager to President Bill Clinton in the 1990s, but I didn’t know about his donations or his other ties to the foundation founded and overseen by the former president and his wife, potential future president Hillary Clinton

 

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2015/05/16/stephanopoulos-abc-clinton-schweizer-foundation-hillary-column/27436475/

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Altered acceptance rates: Ramapo among 3 N.J. colleges boosting prestige with inflated applicant pool

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MAY 16, 2015, 11:10 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015, 11:07 PM
BY PATRICIA ALEX
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

Some of New Jersey’s public colleges and universities are making themselves appear more selective — and more attractive to prospective students — by skirting national standards when reporting data to the federal government and ratings organizations, The Record has found.

Ramapo College and Kean and Rowan universities include both complete and incomplete applications in the numbers they report, bloating the stated applicant pool by hundreds. Inflating the numbers to include students who leave out essential items like test scores or grades allows these schools to appear to be rejecting a substantially higher percentage of students.

A lower acceptance rate provides a reputation boost in the prestige-fueled world of college admissions.

In New Jersey, officials from the three schools acknowledge that incomplete applications are included in the totals they report to the federal government, U.S. News and World Report and other rating organizations and publications. This practice violates state and federal requirements that only completed applications be included, and makes it difficult to compare schools where some play by the rules and others do not.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/altered-acceptance-rates-ramapo-among-3-n-j-colleges-boosting-prestige-with-inflated-applicant-pool-1.1336310

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New Jersey Teacher fired after she has students write get well cards to convicted cop killer

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Shari Puterman, Asbury Park (N.J.) Press11:12 a.m. EDT May 15, 2015

ORANGE, N.J. — A New Jersey teacher has been fired after having her students write “get well” cards to a man convicted of killing a Philadelphia police officer in 1981.

Marilyn Zuniga, a third-grade teacher at Forest Street Elementary School in Orange, was first suspended April 10, after her students wrote to former Black Panther Mumia Abu-Jamal. Orange School Superintendent Ronald Lee confirmed Zuniga was fired.

Abu-Jamal is serving a life sentence for the 1981 murder of Officer Daniel Faulkner. He was recently admitted to a Pennsylvania hospital after suffering complications from diabetes. He has since been released and remains incarcerated at State Correctional Institution – Mahanoy in Frackville, Pa.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/05/15/student-pen-pals-police-killer/27365079/

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Chorale and the NJ Festival Orchestra Friday May 29

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May 17,2015

Ridgewood NJ, “O Fortuna!” The Pro Arte Chorale’s 2014-2015 season culminates onFriday , May 29, with a performance of one of the best known and mostloved choral/orchestral works of the 20th century, Carmina Burana.

Join us on this fantastic musical journey celebrating the return of spring, the fickleness of fortune and wealth, and the pleasures of drinking and

The concert will be held at West Side Presbyterian Church located at 6 S. Monroe St., Ridgewood, NJ beginning at 8pm. The Pro Arte Chorale will be joined by Guest Conductor Maestro David Wroe and the NJ Festival Orchestra, as well as the Newark Arts High School Choir, in the performance of this perennial favorite amongst concert-goers!