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>BF Middle School Staffer Rumored to Have Violated Protocol by Not Calling 911 to Report Intruder

>The Fly has learned that a BF Middle School staff member called School Resource Officer Chris McDowell’s cell phone to report Monday’s intruder instead of dialing 911.

Police dispatchers and other police officers learned of the call only when McDowell entered his patrol vehicle and announced via 2-way radio that he was responding to BF for a report of an “emotionally disturbed person” in the building.

The Fly wonders what person decided to bypass 911, and what would have happened if McDowell was unable to answer his cell phone.

3balls Golfshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=149749

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>New research further debunks any link between measles vaccine and autism

>LAURAN NEERGAARD

AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) _ New research further debunks any link between measles vaccine and autism, work that comes as the nation is experiencing a surge in measles cases fueled by children left unvaccinated.

Years of research with the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, better known as MMR, have concluded that it doesn’t cause autism. Still, some parents’ fears persist, in part because of one 1998 British study that linked the vaccine with a subgroup of autistic children who also have serious gastrointestinal problems. That study reported that measles virus was lingering in the children’s bowels.

Only now have researchers rigorously retested that finding, taking samples of youngsters’ intestines to hunt for signs of virus with the most modern genetic technology. There is no evidence that MMR plays any role, the international team _ which included researchers who first raised the issue _ reported Wednesday.

“Although in fact there was evidence that this vaccine was safe in the bulk of the population, it had not been previously assessed with respect to kids with autism and GI complaints,” said Dr. W. Ian Lipkin of Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, who led the work published in PLoS One, the online journal of the Public Library of Science.

“We are confident there is no link between MMR and autism,” Lipkin said.

Added co-author Dr. Larry Pickering of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: “I feel very certain that it is a safe vaccine.”

Measles, a highly infectious virus best known for its red skin rash, once routinely sickened thousands of children a year and killed hundreds, until childhood vaccinations made it a rarity in this country. But so far this year, the U.S. has counted 131 measles cases, the most in a decade. Most patients were unvaccinated. Some were infants too young for their first MMR shot, but nearly half involved children whose parents rejected vaccination, the CDC reported last month.

No one knows just how many autism patients also suffer gastrointestinal disorders, pain that they may not be able to communicate. But Lipkin said that by some estimates, up to a quarter may be affected.

The MMR fear was that the vaccine’s weakened measles virus somehow lodged in and inflamed intestines, allowing waste products to escape and reach the central nervous system, Lipkin said. So his team had two questions: Does measles virus really persist in children with both disorders and not other youngsters? And did vaccination precede the GI complaints which in turn preceded autism?

Researchers studied 25 children with both autism and GI disorders, and another 13 children with the same GI disorders but no neurologic problems. The youngsters _ the average age was 5 _ all were undergoing colonoscopies for their GI conditions anyway, allowing tissue samples to be tested for genetic traces of measles virus. All had been vaccinated at younger ages.

The tests uncovered traces of measles genetic material in the bowels of one boy with autism _ and one boy without autism. That doesn’t prove virus never temporarily lodged in more children, but it contradicts the earlier study that raised concern.

Nor was there a relationship with vaccine timing: Just five of the 25 autistic children had MMR precede GI complaints that in turn preceded autism symptoms.

Researchers consulted some prominent vaccine critics in designing the study. California advocate Rick Rollens praised the work but said it didn’t eliminate other vaccine concerns that deserve similar study. Meanwhile, he said it should draw much-needed attention to the suffering of patients like his son, who has both autism and GI disorders.

“No longer can mainstream medicine ignore the parents’ claims of significant GI distress,” he said.

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>Man enters school threatening to kill children

>From The Record…


Monday, September 8, 2008

Last updated: Monday September 8, 2008, EDT 4:20 PM

BY EVONNE COUTROS
STAFF WRITER

An 23-year-old unemployed man was arrested after carrying a pointed stick into a Ridgewood school this morning and threatening to kill children, police said.

A female staffer stopped Joseph Piepul as he walked through Benjamin Franklin Middle School wielding the stick around 8:30 a.m., said Ridgewood Detective William Hemmer. He apparently had entered through the front door, the detective said.

Principal Anthony Orsini and two male staffers “quickly isolated” Piepul while police were called, school officials said.

“He had no contact with children. He was in the hallway when classes had begun,” Hemmer said. “The staffer noticed him walking through, that he didn’t belong.”

When she asked what he was doing there, Piepul replied in passing that he was there to kill children, the detective said.

Piepul, who once attended the school and is known to staffers there, was taken to Bergen Regional Medical Center for evaluation. He is charged with making terroristic threats, criminal trespass, possession of a weapon for unlawful purpose, and resisting arrest. His bail is $50,000.

Schools Superintendent Daniel Fischbein sent a letter to parents today explaining the circumstances.

“The intruder was quickly isolated by the principal and two staff members while police were called,” Fishbein wrote. “Police responded immediately, restrained the intruder, took him into custody and removed him from the property.

“Although some students may have witnessed police activity, no children came in contact with the intruder….[The] safety of our students and staff is our primary concern,” the superintendent added.

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>N.J. gives traffic camera program a test drive

>

Monday, September 08, 2008

BY SAMANTHA HENRY

Associated Press

A controversial pilot program that uses red light cameras to catch traffic violators is about to get under way in New Jersey.

Twenty-one municipalities from around the state have applied to the five-year program so far, but only 12 will be accepted for the first year, according to NJDOT spokesman Timothy Greeley. Towns will be notified if they are accepted into the program beginning this month.

Lawrence is one of the towns that have applied to join the pilot program, and officials there hope cameras can be installed at the intersection of Route 1 and Franklin Corner Road, which they consider one of the most dangerous crossroads in the township.

The devices take digital photographs of vehicles that run red lights or otherwise disregard traffic signals. A color copy of the photo, along with a ticket, is mailed to the vehicle’s registered owner.

Towns must first pass local ordinances approving the use of the cameras before applying to the state program. State officials review each application to see that it meets criteria, including whether other accident-reducing methods have been explored and whether a town has accurately timed street lights.

Municipalities selected for the program will be allowed to install traffic cameras at high-volume intersections.

The Route 1/Franklin Corner Road intersection in Lawrence sees more than 6,000 cars during evening rush hour. More than 5 percent of all traffic accidents in Lawrence occurred at that intersection last year according to police information. Most of the 88 accidents were rear-end crashes that Daniel Posluszny, chief of police, said were caused by driver inattention.

The New Jersey towns will join more than 300 U.S. communities in 25 states that use the cameras, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. They are used in major cities such as New York, Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington.

Opponents of the cameras criticize the practice as a clandestine surveillance method that infringes on civil liberties and denies drivers the right to contest a traffic ticket issued by an unseen accuser.

“Our point of view is that red light cameras are a scam, not just a money making venture,” said Steve Carrellas, coordinator of the New Jersey chapter of the National Motorists Association. “If there’s a real red light running problem at an intersection, putting a red light camera there doesn’t fix the underlying problems of an intersection.”

Supporters of the idea, such as Assemblyman John Wisniewski, D-Middlesex, who sponsored New Jersey’s legislation approved in January, says such initiatives cut down on speeding and dramatically reduce the number of accidents.

“It makes intersections safer, people safer and cuts down on injuries,” Wisniewski said. “I’ve heard all types of opposition to it, about ‘big brother’ getting involved, but there’s no difference if a police officer is preventing them for running a red light.”

Critics also say that red light camera programs can be abused by cash-strapped municipalities trying to generate revenues.

“These days, with towns hurting, they can claim it’s for safety but they certainly love the revenues,” Carrellas said. “If they claim safety, then use the money to fix the intersection, not to reap money from it.”

Wisniewski acknowledges the program is cost-effective way to help police departments augment their manpower, but dismisses critics who say it’s strictly a revenue generator.

“It’s not a line to money-grab,” Wisniewski said. “The way to enforce motor vehicle regulations is through fines. We have fines for reckless driving — not because we’re going to fine people and make money — but because it’s a deterrent.”

Motorists who fail to obey traffic signals in New Jersey get two points on their license and face fines ranging from $85 to $140. Those caught by a camera would get similar fines but no license points.

A survey earlier this year by the AAA Clubs of New Jersey found that about 3 of every 4 Garden State drivers supported the use of cameras to catch drivers who run red lights. AAA polled 1,000 drivers.

David Weinstein, a spokesman for AAA, said red light camera programs have had mixed success around the country.

“It’s something that needs to be talked about publicly, because red light cameras, there’s two sides of it,” Weinstein said. “The opportunity is there to increase safety at intersections, but the opportunity is also there to increase revenues without any safety side effects.”

The National Campaign to Stop Red Light Running, a group supported by the red light camera industry, says an analysis of 150 traffic studies shows by an 11-to-1 margin that cameras reduce fatalities, crashes and traffic violations.

The campaign’s executive director, Leslie Blakey, says the cameras are meant as a deterrent, not as punishment.

“Driving goes up in the U.S. about 40 percent every 10 years,” Blakey said. “Law enforcement personnel, the number of cops available to issue tickets has remained static, and in some cases has decreased, and in the same time frame we keep adding more responsibilities to law enforcement and do not give those departments anywhere near enough modern tools.”

Blakey said the cameras average about $50,000 to $75,000 each, and more complicated intersections can require up to $150,000 in equipment. She said it’s still a cost effective solution for many towns.

Critics and proponents alike say they’ll be watching New Jersey’s pilot program closely to see how effective it is.

“They’ve worked in some places, and in some places they’ve been abused,” Weinstein said. “So it remains to be seen how it’ll work out for New Jersey. Traffic safety should be the only goal, and if that’s the only goal, it should work out well.”

https://www.nj.com/news/times/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-14/122084671177330.xml&coll=5

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>Study Finds MMR Vaccine Doesn’t Cause Autism

>By MARY JO LAYTON, STAFF WRITER

A study by Columbia University is the latest to find no link between autism and a common childhood vaccine, news that should reassure concerned parents, experts said Wednesday.

The research, which involved the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, concluded that the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine does not cause the neurological disorder that affects one in every 150 children in the nation.

“We are confident there’s no link between MMR and autism,” said Dr. W. Ian Lipkin, director of the Mailman School of Public Health Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University.

In New Jersey, which has the highest rate of autism in the nation one in every 94 children the study should help parents rule out concerns that the vaccine can cause the disorder, said Dr. Irwin Berkowitz, director of pediatrics at The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood.

“There’s harm in not vaccinating and that’s the message that’s got to get across,” he said.

In fact, as of July, the CDC reported 131 cases of measles the highest number since 1996. Ninety-one percent of the cases occurred in people who were not immunized.

The study again rebuts the findings of research completed in 1998 that linked the vaccine to autism after the presence of the measles virus was detected in tissue from children diagnosed with autism and gastrointestinal (GI) disorders.

Experts on Wednesday said their research of 25 children with autism and a control group of 13 with normal neurological development found no link between the presence of the measles virus in tissue and autism.

Those in the study, most of whom were between ages 3 and 5, had GI disorders, which are common in autistic children. Biopsies of bowel tissue were examined for traces of the vaccine. Two biopsy samples with the measles virus were found: one from an autistic child and one from the control group, experts said.

“We found no relationship between the timing of the MMR vaccine and the onset of either GI complaints or autism,” said Dr. Mady Hornig, associate professor of epidemiology at the Mailman School of Public Health.

More than 20 studies have reported no relationship between MMR vaccine and autism, Lipkin said.

Lipkin stressed that the study did not address any other vaccine or potential causes, including mercury or underlying disorders.

Some parents blame vaccines and a mercury-based preservative, thimerosal, for causing autism or other developmental disabilities. It was once commonly used to prevent bacterial contamination but, since 2001, has been used only in certain flu shots.

***

E-mail: [email protected]

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>This golf nut is hooked on helping

>Madison man’s nonprofit to hold fundraiser for injured veterans

Friday, September 05, 2008
BY LESLIE KWOH
Star-Ledger Staff

Madison resident Brian Coleman is a self-proclaimed “golf nut.”

The 62-year-old has played at more than 300 golf courses around the world in places like Ireland, Mexico, Spain and Bermuda.

On his trips, he’s collected hundreds of thousands of ball markers, pin flags and playing card sets — from which he has made a small profit selling online.

“Golf nuts are incredible collec tors of junk,” he said.

But what started as a golf collectibles business several years ago has now turned into a nonprofit that supports wounded U.S. troops. Last year, Coleman decided to use his profits to donate golf therapy equipment to Veterans Af fairs hospitals and military medical centers across the country.

On Monday, Coleman will be holding the first Golf Supports Our Troops tournament at the Ridgewood Country Club, 96 W. Midland Ave. in Paramus. The daylong event starts at 11 a.m. and Coleman hopes to raise $25,000 from the $750-per-player event.

“I had all this inventory and I didn’t know what to do with it,” said Coleman, a retired financial printing salesman. “And I thought, ‘Maybe for once in your life, you could do something good.'”

Since he started Golf Supports Our Troops last spring, Coleman has raised about $90,000. On his website at golfsupportsourtroop s.org, he sells a range of collectibles from $7.99 military pins to $2,000 ballmarker collections.

Initially, Coleman donated to other veteran-focused charities. But he wanted to be directly involved in his donations, and he wanted to share his passion for golf.

So last year, he donated a pair of golf swing trainers — a hula hoop-like device that allows users to practice the arc of their swing — to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., and the Center for the Intrepid in San Antonio, Texas. Then, in June, he contacted the Department of Veterans Affairs — and things really took off.

So far, about 20 VA hospitals have agreed to install the Explanar swing trainers, though none of them are in New Jersey, according to Laura Balun, director of the Department of Veterans Affairs Voluntary Service Office in Washington, D.C. Coleman hopes to increase that number to 100 in the next 18 months.

Madison resident Kieron Farrelly, who has signed up for Monday’s tournament, said he felt especially compelled after discovering his 24-year-old nephew, Brian, is scheduled to be deployed with the New Jersey National Guard next month.

“I feel really good about doing it,” said Farrelly, 54.

Coleman says he can’t pinpoint one reason for deciding to support disabled veterans. Perhaps it was because he did not serve in Vietnam after doctors discovered that one of his legs was a fraction of an inch shorter than the other. Perhaps it was the images he saw in the media.

“We’ve lived a very comfortable life, and I’ve never had to serve. I’ve got two homes, belong to two golf clubs, I’ve got more cars than I need,” he said. “I’m small, I can’t give to a million things. But if I concentrate my resources on one thing, maybe I can make some type of impact.”

To register for Monday’s golf event, call Coleman at (201) 672-0600.

Leslie Kwoh may be reached at [email protected] or (973) 539-7910.

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>CBS 2 Investigation: Expired Food On Store Shelves

>
Giant N.J. Food Chains Caught On Camera With Violations; Garden State A.G. Poised To Lower The Boom

Reporting
Kirstin Cole

RIDGEWOOD, N.J. (CBS) ― A typical basket of 100 grocery items costs nearly 6 percent more than it did in January.

Paying such a premium you’d expect to get the very best, but routinely stores are cited for selling expired goods.

In a hidden camera report, CBS 2 HD investigated who’s minding the stores where you go to shop.

Parents are trying to buy only the best for their baby, trusting it’s fresh and safe.

CBS 2 HD found anything but lining the shelves of this Ridgewood, N.J. King’s supermarket last week as we pulled jar after jar of expired Gerber’s baby food for purchase. One applesauce was 15 months past is expiration date. We notified the store and checked at another King’s store in Midland Park, only to find managers directing a hasty operation to yank more expired baby food.

CBS 2 HD: “You’re pulling a lot?” (store manager)

Store manager: “All that.”

But Kings is not the only culprit. New Jersey Attorney General Anne Milgram is coming down hard on retailers she says are ripping off customers — with three lawsuits filed. Target, Wal-Mart and Drug Fair are each accused of being a repeat offender, selling expired products or overcharging at the register.

“There’s no question that they know what the law is in the state and that they promised to uphold the law,” said a spokesperson with the state Department of Consumer Affairs.

But Milgram charges they broke the law thousands of times by selling everything from expired baby formula to medicine and overcharging for other items.

CBS 2 HD: “We also did an investigation of our own. We found expired baby food at some New Jersey supermarkets. How would you categorize that?”

A.G. Milgram: “I think it’s unconscionable.”

While not the focus of this investigation, supermarkets are also inspected by the Department of Consumer Affairs. In 2007, Kings Supermarkets, which has 26 New Jersey locations, received a total of 275 violations.

“It’s just unacceptable to our company,” Kings spokesperson Cheryl Good said.

Good said they are now working hard to uphold the law.

“This is certainly a wake-up call and we’re going to take a look at these procedures,” Good said.

Each of the three chains is facing hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines, but that may be a drop in the bucket for these billion dollar corporations. If you find a price discrepancy or buy an expired product, file a complaint to have it investigated.
(© MMVIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

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Turf war: California sues artificial-grass makers over lead content

>California Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown and other law enforcement officials allege that three makers of artificial turf deliberately failed to disclose that their products contain lead.

By Marc Lifsher
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

September 4, 2008

SACRAMENTO — California’s attorney general wants to put a new spin on the old admonition “Don’t step on the grass!”

The warning could read “Don’t roll on the artificial turf” if Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown and local law enforcement officials prevail in a lawsuit filed late Tuesday against three top makers of the green plastic playing fields and grasslike indoor-outdoor carpeting.

The complaint filed in Alameda County Superior Court alleges that the three manufacturers violated California’s Proposition 65 environmental law by knowingly failing to disclose that their products contain lead.

The lawsuit, which has been joined by Los Angeles City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo and Solano County Dist. Atty. David W. Paulson, names Beaulieu Group of Georgia, AstroTurf of Georgia and FieldTurf USA Inc. of Florida.

All three companies said they were working with California officials to settle the lawsuit and stressed that their products were safe.

AstroTurf, an artificial-turf pioneer, said in a statement that it “has demonstrated its industry leadership by proactively developing new products that are below the most stringent standards for lead in consumer products.”

Joe Fields, chief executive of FieldTurf’s Canadian parent company, said that his artificial turf recently got a clean bill of health from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

Lead, which is used to give a natural green hue to the artificial turf, has been identified by state agencies as an ingredient that can cause cancer, damage to male and female reproductive systems, and birth defects in developing fetuses.

Children and other individuals can ingest harmful levels of lead by absorbing it through the skin or by rubbing the ersatz grass and then touching food or their mouths, the suit contends.

The state attorney general’s office said it found excessive lead levels in some of the artificial-turf samples tested from the three companies.

Although artificial turf presents little or no danger when it is new, lead levels rise to potentially harmful levels as it gets older, said Deputy Atty. Gen. Dennis A. Ragen, the state’s lead attorney on the lawsuit.

“As it ages, it forms more dust,” he said, and could contain levels of lead that are more than 20 times what’s allowed by Proposition 65.

The state, Ragen said, is negotiating with the three companies and is optimistic that a legal settlement can be reached that requires the products to be reformulated so that no lead is used in the manufacturing.

Most companies targeted by Proposition 65, known as the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986, are eager to change their products rather than be forced to sell them with a warning that they contain chemicals “known to the state of California” to cause cancer or birth defects.

“The bottom line is this is 2008. Why are you making something with lead deliberately put into it?” Ragen said. “You need to find some substitute to make the color stable.”

Beaulieu attorney Peter Farley says he hopes to reach a friendly settlement with California. He stressed, however, that his company makes only an indoor-outdoor type of product and does not sell artificial turf used on athletic fields and stadiums.

The state decided to take action against the three companies after it received a legal notice from an advocacy group, the Oakland-based Center for Environmental Health, that it intended to file a private lawsuit on the lead warning issue against Beaulieu and other artificial-turf manufacturers.

“Our testing on products from dozens of companies shows that artificial turf can contain high amounts of lead that can easily come off onto children’s hands when they play on turf fields,” said Michael Green, the center’s executive director.

[email protected]

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>Village Council Considers Portion of Ridge/GW School District as Location for Affordable Housing

>It was revealed during yesterday’s Village Council meeting that Ridgewood officials have identified at least two areas within the Ridge/GW school district as being potentially suited for placement of affordable housing units to meet the Village’s current & expected COAH obligation.

The locations identified are North Walnut Street, between Ridgewood Avenue and Franklin Avenue, and Chestnut Street, between Franklin Avenue and the northern dead end.

It is not known whether enrollment capacity data at either Ridge or GW were reviewed as part of the decision making process.

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>Former SEC Head Levitt Urges Greater Muni Disclosure

>Because I know so many of you buy Tax Free Bonds and our “Leafy” Village issues them from time to time …..

Former SEC Head Levitt Urges Greater Muni Disclosure (Update1)

By Jeremy R. Cooke

Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. municipal bond market needs greater Securities and Exchange Commission oversight to address a “pretty outrageous” lack of disclosure, according to Arthur Levitt Jr., a former head of the SEC.

More than half of long-term municipal bonds issued between 1996 and 2005 were delinquent in filing continuing financial disclosure documents for at least one year, based on a study released yesterday by Fort Lee, New Jersey-based DPC Data. The company is one of four repositories for such filings.

“We have a real breakdown in the system of overseeing a vital market for America’s investors,” Levitt, senior adviser to the Carlyle Group, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview today. “There are absolutely no consequences for not filing.”

Current SEC Chairman Christopher Cox has said improving municipal market disclosure is a priority. The so-called Tower Amendment limits the commission’s ability to regulate a market where tens of thousands of U.S. state and local government borrowers have $2.66 trillion in debt outstanding. The 1975 federal law prohibits the SEC and the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, created that year, from requiring issuers to file with them before selling bonds.

U.S. Representative Barney Frank also said the House Financial Services Committee that he chairs would hold hearings on disclosure this month.

Introducing Emma

The MSRB is developing a single centralized repository, called Electronic Municipal Market Access, or Emma, to accept regular filings from issuers by early next year.

“The current method for collection and dissemination of continuing disclosure documents depends on issuer submissions to multiple entities, which the SEC has noted is not the best means of meeting the market’s need for a comprehensive database of disclosure documents,” Frank Chin, MSRB chairman, said in an e- mailed statement.

The single system “will improve disclosure performance by issuers by reducing the administrative burden they face with multiple entities,” said Chin, who also directs the public finance group at New York-based Citigroup Inc.

Levitt also called for boosting states’ and municipalities’ disclosure of derivative bets with banks and other financial institutions, often used as part of a financing strategy to protect against interest-rate movement. Derivatives are contracts whose value is derived from tradeable securities, or linked to future changes in lending costs.

`What Can Be Lost’

“Municipalities are using derivatives and not disclosing to investors exactly what can be made or what can be lost from the use of those derivatives,” said Levitt, who led a 2006 investigation that found the city of San Diego failed to disclose a $1.4 billion pension fund shortfall to investors.

“The two obvious fixes have got to be to put the municipal bond market under SEC jurisdiction, taking it away from the prohibitions of the Tower Amendment, and giving greater disclosure of these derivatives,” Levitt said.

Levitt, who was SEC chairman from July 1993 to February 2001, sits on the board of Bloomberg LP, parent company of Bloomberg News.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jeremy R. Cooke in New York at [email protected].

Last Updated: September 3, 2008 15:12 EDT

James J Foytlin
Horwitz & Associates
54 Washington Place
Ridgewood NJ 07450
toll free 1(866)492-3959
phone 1(201)301-2780
cell 1(201)966-7788

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>Company Profile: Yummyearth Llc

>profile robwunder 1

Yummyearth Llc
38 E Ridgewood Ave # 385, Ridgewood, NJ 07450-3808, United States
Phone: (201) 857-8489


Rob Wunder and Sergio Bicas are the two daddies that invented YummyEarth organic lollipops and organic candy drops almost two years ago. As big-time lollipop fans, who met through our college roommate wives, Rob and Sergio wanted to share treats with their children, Jonah and Rose, that have no chemical colors, artificial flavors, corn syrup or other chemicals. YummyEarth now has and astounding 21 delicious flavors that taste so much better than candy you’ve had before because they handcraft their flavors with real fruit extracts. They even use organic black carrots, organic wheat grass juice, and organic pumpkin to achieve their brilliant colors. YummyEarth is gluten-free, nut-free, and has no corn syrup for those with allergies or food sensitivities.

Today YummyEarth is the #1 organic candy company in the US. You can find YummyEarth at Whole Foods, Toys R Us, Linens N Things, Babies R Us, Vitamin Shoppe, Party City, Amazon.com, Marriott hotels and Vail Resorts, Harry and David gift baskets, Smoothie King, health food stores, gourmet stores and supermarkets. Don’t live in the US? YummyEarth is now available in more than 25 other countries around the world.

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>August New Home Sales in Ridgewood Jump !

>ridgewood homes sold july vs august 08

ridgewood homes days on market july vs august

july vs august list price to sale price

According to Al Donohue of Marron Gildea & Donohue the Ridgewood Real estate market showed improvement in 3 key benchmarks in August
.
1. The average sale price of a Ridgewood Home increased by roughly 10% from July to August
2. The number of homes sold in Ridgewood increased from 26 in July to 36 in August.
3. The average number of days it took a home to sell in Ridgewood decreased from a July average of 54 days to an August average of 48 days.

See Al’s blog

https://activerain.com/blogsview/673545/Ridgewood-Home-Sales-August

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>A brief history of the celebration of Labor Day

>HOW LABOR DAY CAME ABOUT; WHAT IT MEANS

“Labor Day differs in every essential from the other holidays of the year in any country,” said Samuel Gompers, founder and longtime president of the American Federation of Labor. “All other holidays are in a more or less degree connected with conflicts and battles of man’s prowess over man, of strife and discord for greed and power, of glories achieved by one nation over another. Labor Day…is devoted to no man, living or dead, to no sect, race, or nation.”

Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity and well-being of our country.

Founder of Labor Day

More than 100 years after the first Labor Day observance, there is still some doubt as to who first proposed the holiday for workers.

Some records show that Peter J. McGuire, general secretary of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners and a co-founder of the American Federation of Labor, was first in suggesting a day to honor those “who from rude nature have delved and carved all the grandeur we behold.”

But Peter McGuire’s place in Labor Day history has not gone unchallenged. Many believe that Matthew Maguire, a machinist, not Peter McGuire, founded the holiday. Recent research seems to support the contention that Matthew Maguire, later the secretary of Local 344 of the International Association of Machinists in Paterson, N.J., proposed the holiday in 1882 while serving as secretary of the Central Labor Union in New York. What is clear is that the Central Labor Union adopted a Labor Day proposal and appointed a committee to plan a demonstration and picnic.

The First Labor Day

The first Labor Day holiday was celebrated on Tuesday, September 5, 1882, in New York City, in accordance with the plans of the Central Labor Union. The Central Labor Union held its second Labor Day holiday just a year later, on September 5, l883.

In l884 the first Monday in September was selected as the holiday, as originally proposed, and the Central Labor Union urged similar organizations in other cities to follow the example of New York and celebrate a “workingmen’s holiday” on that date. The idea spread with the growth of labor organizations, and in l885 Labor Day was celebrated in many industrial centers of the country.

Labor Day Legislation

Through the years the nation gave increasing emphasis to Labor Day. The first governmental recognition came through municipal ordinances passed during 1885 and 1886. From them developed the movement to secure state legislation. The first state bill was introduced into the New York legislature, but the first to become law was passed by Oregon on February 2l, l887. During the year four more states — Colorado, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York — created the Labor Day holiday by legislative enactment. By the end of the decade Connecticut, Nebraska, and Pennsylvania had followed suit. By 1894, 23 other states had adopted the holiday in honor of workers, and on June 28 of that year, Congress passed an act making the first Monday in September of each year a legal holiday in the District of Columbia and the territories.

A Nationwide Holiday

The form that the observance and celebration of Labor Day should take were outlined in the first proposal of the holiday — a street parade to exhibit to the public “the strength and esprit de corps of the trade and labor organizations” of the community, followed by a festival for the recreation and amusement of the workers and their families. This became the pattern for the celebrations of Labor Day. Speeches by prominent men and women were introduced later, as more emphasis was placed upon the economic and civic significance of the holiday. Still later, by a resolution of the American Federation of Labor convention of 1909, the Sunday preceding Labor Day was adopted as Labor Sunday and dedicated to the spiritual and educational aspects of the labor movement.

The character of the Labor Day celebration has undergone a change in recent years, especially in large industrial centers where mass displays and huge parades have proved a problem. This change, however, is more a shift in emphasis and medium of expression. Labor Day addresses by leading union officials, industrialists, educators, clerics and government officials are given wide coverage in newspapers, radio and television.

The vital force of labor added materially to the highest standard of living and the greatest production the world has ever known and has brought us closer to the realization of our traditional ideals of economic and political democracy. It is appropriate, therefore, that the nation pay tribute on Labor Day to the creator of so much of the nation’s strength, freedom, and leadership — the American worker.

[Source: United States Department of Labor]

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>How many admin. does it take…?

>The Ridgewood Public School system employs at least 3 people, that the Fly can ascertain, who oversee the implementation of our math curriculum. This does take into account the Superintendent of schools. They are the Asst. Superintendent for Curriculum, Instruction & Assessment, the Supervisor of Curriculum, and the District Mathematics Supervisor.

There may be more like a Director of Mathematics, but since the district does not provide this information on its web site, and short of filing a request for it under the Freedom of Information Act, this is what we could gleam from the district’s own Newsline publication.

So, for approximately $400,000.00 a year (including benefits) there are at least 3 people in charge of our district’s math program and on top of this we’re paying outside consultants to help us determine the future of our math curriculum?

This should raise doubts about the competency of the people employed to serve our community, that it costs so much and takes so many to get it wrong.

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