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AWWP Reading in Ridgewood, NJ on April 7th

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AWWP Reading in Ridgewood, NJ on April 7th

March 22, 2014 Leave a Comment

The Ridgewood Public Library and the Afghan Women’s Writing Project present:

Readings from the Afghan Women’s Writing Project
Featuring novelist and founder Masha Hamilton

Monday, April 7, 2014
7:00 p.m.
Ridgewood Library
125 N. Maple Avenue
Ridgewood, New Jersey
07450

A selection of poems, essays, and stories by participants of the Afghan Women’s Writing Project will be read by audience members, AWWP staff and volunteers, and special guests. AWWP believes that to tell one’s story is a human right, and this work testifies to the bravery of Afghan women and to the power of their words. Author and AWWP founder Masha Hamilton will also read from her latest novel What Changes Everything. Admission is free.

Masha Hamilton is the author of five acclaimed novels, most recently What Changes Everything, which the Washington Post praised for its “elegantly wrought prose [which] conveys terror as well as tenderness” and 31 Hours, which the Washington Post called one of the best novels of 2009. In October 2013, she finished sixteen months working in Afghanistan as Director of Communications and Public Diplomacy at the US Embassy. She is currently working as Communications Director for Concern Worldwide. She also founded two world literacy projects, the Camel Book Drive and the Afghan Women’s Writing Project.

Masha is the winner of the 2010 Women’s National Book Association award, presented “to a living American woman who derives part or all of her income from books and allied arts, and who has done meritorious work in the world of books beyond the duties or responsibilities of her profession or occupation.” She began her career as a fulltime journalist, working in Maine, Indiana, and New York City before being sent by the Associated Press to the Middle East, where she was news editor for five years, including the period of the first intifada, and then moving to Moscow, where she worked for five years during the collapse of communism, reporting for the Los Angeles Times and NBC-Mutual Radio and writing a monthly column, Postcards from Moscow. She also reported from Kenya in 2006, and from Afghanistan in 2004 and 2008.

Ridgewood Public Library
125 N. Maple Ave.
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
(201) 670-5600

For more information, please contact workshop director Stacy Le Melle at stacyawwp@gmail.com or 713.306.3786.

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Rep. Garrett: America’s Current Economic Path is Unfair to Future Generations

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Rep. Garrett with Julia Perry, Antonio Nadera, Erin Novak and Shannon Casey, all students from the Fifth District who are taking classes and interning at various organizations in Washington, D.C. this semester. We had a lively discussion about issues facing young people in the U.S. and the experiences they’ve had here in our nation’s capital.

Rep. Garrett: America’s Current Economic Path is Unfair to Future Generations
Apr 1, 2014

Ridgewood NJ,  Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ), senior member of the House Budget Committee and Chairman of the Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises, issued the following statement regarding the introduction of the House Budget Committee’s Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Resolution:

“Our fiscal situation is dire.  Each of our children and grandchildren are on the hook for nearly $56,000 of our $17.5 trillion dollar debt.  It’s time for us to put an end to the overspending and borrowing of more and more money each year.  Today, the House Budget Committee puts forth a budget that recognizes that the status quo is unacceptable and unsustainable.  Rather than continuing on the road to debt and decline, we instead offer a path forward that focuses on economic growth, expands opportunity, and restores fairness.  Years of foolish overspending have brought us to this point, but America’s current economic path is no laughing matter.”

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“WORK TO WOW” FASHION SHOW

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“WORK TO WOW” FASHION SHOW

UNITED WATER’S WOMEN’S LEADERSHIP NETWORK
“WORK TO WOW” FASHION SHOW EVENT FOR THE YWCA BERGEN COUNTY
United Water will be hosting a “Work to Wow” Fashion Show event on Thursday, April 10 from 6:30 – 8:30 pm at the Lord & Taylor store in the Fashion Center Mall, East Ridgewood Ave., Paramus. The evening will begin with networking and light fare/beverages as well as silent auction viewing. Following this, United Water and YWCA staff will be modeling new Spring fashions.
Terri Capparelli, fashion consultant from Lord & Taylor will be on hand to discuss the latest fashion trends and will show attendees how to shift from functional day wear to an after hour sensatiojn. Proceeds from the event will directly benefit the newly formed YWCA Bergen County Girl’s Leadership Academy, a 10-month long learning experience designed to educate and empower girls through experiential learning, site visits and leadership lessons. Program will be launching in September 2014. Tickets are $25 per person. For more information, please email Lori.Murray@unitedwater.com.

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Teen who sued parents lands $56K scholarship

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Teen who sued parents lands $56K scholarship
By Joe Tacopino
April 2, 2014 | 5:36am

It turns out she didn’t need her parents’ money after all.

The bratty New Jersey teen who sued her mom and dad for child support and college money is bragging about the hefty scholarship she won from a Massachusetts school.

Rachel Canning, who dropped the ludicrous lawsuit against her folks last month, revealed the windfall on her Facebook page Sunday, The Star-Ledger reported Tuesday.

“Decision made,” Canning wrote on March 30. “WNE U class of 2018 BME Major w/ 56,000$ scholarship.”

Western New England University, the school Canning said she is attending, is located in Springfield, Mass.

The school’s tuition is about $46,000 per year, including room and board, the paper said.

This would leave the former Morris Catholic HS student with nearly $10,000 of spending money before she needs to hit up Mom and Pops.

https://nypost.com/2014/04/02/teen-who-sued-parents-lands-56k-scholarship/?utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_source=NYPFacebook&utm_medium=SocialFlow

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Bramnick: Putin ‘horrified’ that Menendez banned him from Hudson County

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Bramnick: Putin ‘horrified’ that Menendez banned him from Hudson County

NEWARK – Assembly Minority Leader Jon Bramnick (R-21) got in a dig on Hudson County tonight at Brendan Byrne’s birthday bash.

Russian leader Vladimir Putin banned Senate foreign Relations Committee Chairman U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) from Russia, Bramnick said.

Menendez retaliated by banning Putin from Hudson County.

“Putin was horrified because that’s where he learned how to run elections,” Bramnick cracked.

The minority leader later ragged on other high table dignitaries.

“McGreevy’s thinking ‘My scandal wasn’t that bad,’” Bramnick said. “Kean’s thinking, ‘I didn’t have a scandal, and I am still the most popular governor in New Jersey.’” (Pizarro/Politicker)

Bramnick: Putin ‘horrified’ that Menendez banned him from Hudson County | Politicker NJ

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Port Authority Business Model is Broken, Report Says

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Port Authority Business Model is Broken, Report Says

NEWARK — The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is broken, according to a report issued yesterday, and unless its mission is drastically reshaped, the bi-state agency’s fortunes are more dubious than a ride on the Pulaski Skyway.

The George Washington Bridge lane closing scandal has ignited a debate over the role and behavior of the 93-year-old authority. But the 28-page report by the Rudin Center for Transportation Policy and Management at New York University claims the agency’s business model — which includes $800 million in pet projects for the governors of New York and New Jersey — is inherently flawed and its financial woes have been decades in the making.

“The critical problem facing the Port Authority today is not mismanagement, political abuse or rivalry between New York and New Jersey,” Mitchell Moss and Hugh O’Neill, who authored the report, wrote. “The fundamental challenge is that the business model under which the Authority has operated for the past thirty years is no longer sustainable.”

When it was created in 1921, the authority had a simple enough business plan, the report states. Big money generators like the George Washington Bridge and Idlewild Airport — now John F. Kennedy International Airport — helped fund capital projects at other port facilities that did not generate much revenue. (Giambusso/Star-Ledger)

https://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/04/port_authority_business_model_is_broken_report_says.html#incart_river

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NJ State Board of Education considers motions on charter schools, teacher evaluations

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NJ State Board of Education considers motions on charter schools, teacher evaluations

TRENTON — The New Jersey State Board of Education will consider amendments to the teacher evaluation process and charter school regulations at its monthly meeting in Trenton this morning.

The board meeting, the first since acting education commissioner David Hespe took office last month, will also include a vote on the list of religious holidays for the 2014-15 school year. The list is issued annually by the department to serve as a guide for local school boards. Those boards can add holidays to the state issued list.

New Jersey law states students cannot be marked absent for missing school because they are observing a religious holiday.

Board members will hear a new proposal pertaining to the regulations for educating homeless students and those in state facilities, according to the agenda published by the Department of Education.

Public testimony in the afternoon focuses on charter schools. (McGlone/Star-Ledger)

https://www.nj.com/education/2014/04/nj_state_board_of_education_considers_amendments_to_charter_schools_teacher_evaluations.html#incart_river

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Downed trees kept millions without power in wake of Sandy, other extreme weather

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file photo Boyd Loving

Downed trees kept millions without power in wake of Sandy, other extreme weather.

The state is promising to get tougher with New Jersey’s four electric utilities over their tree-trimming practices, hoping to curtail the number of outages that occur in extreme storms when blown-down trees take out power lines.

After more than 100,000 trees fell on power lines during Hurricane Sandy, the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities is looking to adopt stricter standards on how utilities run what the agency calls vegetation management programs in their franchise territories. (Johnson/NJSpotlight)

https://www.njspotlight.com/stories/14/04/01/state-taking-tougher-stance-on-tree-trimming-by-utilities/

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Ridgewood Police Warn “UDrive. UText. UPay.”

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file photo Boyd Loving

Ridgewood Police Warn  “UDrive. UText. UPay.”

The Ridgewood Police Department will take part in a new program being initiated by the Division of Highway Traffic Safety. From April 1st through April 21st , we will participate in the Distracted Driving 2014 Statewide Crackdown “UDrive. UText. UPay.”

The purpose of the campaign is to undertake visible, targeted enforcement during the National Distracted Driving Month. Enforcement activities will focus on driver behaviors that distract from the task of driving. This will include the use of cell phones and texting.

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Readers questions “Valley is inherently beneficial because they are a hospital ” mantra

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Readers questions “Valley is inherently beneficial because they are a hospital ” mantra

During last night’s meeting, it was certainly drilled into anyone sitting there that we must remember that according to the law that Valley is inherently beneficial because they are a hospital. The board must consider the good for the overall population. Mr. Brancheau told the chairman when asked, that the board had to not only consider the good for their own municipality, but also of the region. I have an issue with this. I can see if they were the only hospital around for miles, you wouldn’t want to deny anyone decent care. But everywhere you look there is another hospital in this region. Even Valley tried to argue a few years back that there was an overabundance of beds. The greater good of the region will not be compromised if Valley isn’t allowed this over-expansion, the board must consider the greater good of Ridgewood for this decision.

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Rep. Paul Ryan unveils a budget that proposes to cut $5.1 trillion

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Rep. Paul Ryan unveils a budget that proposes to cut $5.1 trillion
April 01, 2014, 10:30 am
By Russell Berman and Bernie Becker

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) on Tuesday unveiled a budget that proposes to cut $5.1 trillion over a decade in a bid to erase the federal deficit, while calling once again for dramatic changes to Medicare, Medicaid and the tax code. [READ RYAN’S BUDGET PROPOSAL.]

The nearly 100-page blueprint is likely be the last formal budget proposal from Ryan, the Republican chairman of the House Budget Committee, who wants to move to the more powerful Ways and Means Committee next year.

While Ryan adheres to a bipartisan budget agreement that set a $1.014 trillion spending cap for fiscal 2015, he proposes deeper cuts to discretionary accounts after that in order to keep the GOP’s promise to balance the budget within 10 years. In those out years, defense spending gets a boost by $273 billion over the level President Obama proposed in his budget last month.

“The Bipartisan Budget Act was a good first step. But we can and must do more,” Ryan said in a statement, referring to the two-year deal he struck in December with Democratic Sen. Patty Murray (Wash.). “As the House majority, we have a responsibility to lay out a long-term vision for the country, and this budget shows how we will solve our nation’s biggest challenges. By cutting wasteful spending, strengthening key priorities, and laying the foundation for a stronger economy, we have shown the American people there’s a better way forward.”

Read more: https://thehill.com/blogs/on-the-money/budget/202285-ryans-final-51t-cut#ixzz2xh0C6355

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Obama May Want to Put the Cork Back In The Champagne Bottle After He Sees These ObamaCare Numbers

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Obama May Want to Put the Cork Back In The Champagne Bottle After He Sees These ObamaCare Numbers

Now that Obama has taken a victory lap and popped the champagne cork over hitting the ObamaCare enrollment goal, it looks as if it might be time to put the cork back in the bottle.

Results of a RAND Corporation study suggest that barely 858,000previously uninsured Americans – nowhere near 7.1 million, as claimed by Obama – had paid for new policies and joined the ranks of the insured by the Monday night deadline. The study also indicates that only one-third of exchange sign-ups were previously uninsured.

Yes, millions of enrollees were previously insured, including those who lost coverage when their existing policies were cancelled because they didn’t meet ObamaCare’s minimum requirements.

Still, Obama claimed that “millions of people who have health insurance would not have it”‘ without ObamaCare. The numbers simply do not support that claim.

Moreover, he couldn’t pass up the opportunity to take a shot at Republicans “who have based their entire political agenda on repealing it.” Obama also thanked Democrats, who passed the “Affordable” Care Act without a single Republican vote.

https://www.ijreview.com/2014/04/125878-new-study-one-third-obamacare-enrollees-previously-uninsured/

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AVO 88 LE14 in stock now at the Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

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AVO 88 LE14 in stock now at the Tobacco Shop of Ridgewood

AVO 88 Limited Edition 2014

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: info@tobaccoshop.com
Hours: Monday – Saturday 10:00AM – 5:30PM and Thursday Night 6:30PM – 8:30PM

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Dishing with Saddle River author Mary Higgins Clark, who appears tonight in Ridgewood

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Dishing with Saddle River author Mary Higgins Clark, who appears tonight in Ridgewood

APRIL 1, 2014    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014, 1:21 AM
BY ELISA UNG
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

WHO: Mary Higgins Clark, the “Queen of Suspense” and longtime Saddle River resident.
WHAT: Signing her new novel, “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.”
WHEN: 7 tonight.
WHERE: Bookends, 211 E. Ridgewood Ave., Ridgewood, 201-445-0726, book-ends.com.
HOW MUCH: Free with purchase of the book ($26.99) at Bookends.
FOR MORE INFO: maryhigginsclark.com.

Once upon a time, I thought everything about food could be learned from a Mary Higgins Clark suspense novel.

It started with the lavish dinner of watercress salad, lamb loin chops and “piping hot” asparagus “under a delicate hollandaise” that Dr. Edgar Highley, the villain in Clark’s early novel “The Cradle Will Fall,” prepared for himself as he recalled all the women he had murdered.

Then there were the swanky Washington, D.C., parties in another early book, “Stillwatch,” with buffets of caviar and sturgeon, Virginia ham and “hot biscuits.” And the steak sandwiches that characters were always ordering from the Manhattan Irish pub Neary’s.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/books/the-delicious-side-of-mary-higgins-clark-s-suspense-novels-1.839022#sthash.ZlevjbIH.dpuf

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April is New Jersey Underground Damage Prevention Month

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file photo Ridgewood PD

April is New Jersey Underground Damage Prevention Month
April 1, 2014

PSE&G reminds everyone to Dial 811 to Call Before You Dig

(Newark, NJ – April 1, 2014) April is NJ Underground Damage Prevention Month, and Public Service Electric & Gas Company is reminding customers, contractors and excavators that they must call before digging to avoid hitting underground gas and electric lines. To make it easy to call, 811 has been designated as the national dialing code to have underground lines located and marked.

When you call 811, you are automatically connected to the New Jersey one-call center, which collects information about your digging project. The one-call center then provides the information to the utility companies, who will send representatives to mark the locations of underground lines in the immediate vicinity of the planned work location with flags, paint or both. Once lines have been properly marked and your locate request becomes valid, you are free to carefully dig around the marked areas.

Every digging project, even a small project like planting a tree or building a deck, requires a call to 811. The call must be made whether you are hiring a professional or planning to do the job yourself. Striking a single line can cause outages and result in repair costs and fines.

Here’s important information to consider:

Underground gas and electric lines are everywhere, even on private properties. You can easily damage them if you don’t know where they are, with the potential to seriously injure yourself or others. Digging into these lines also can disrupt the vital utility services and result in costly delays, expensive repairs and environmental or property damage.
Whether planning a major home improvement project or installing something as simple as a fence or mailbox post, a call must be placed beforehand to know where it’s safe to dig.
Call 811 or 1-800-272-1000 at least four business days before each job to have underground pipes, wires and equipment located. Utility workers will respond and place markers where utility lines are buried, free of charge.
Be sure to wait three full business days after calling before doing any digging. Don’t dig until lines have been marked.
Property owners must maintain and respect the marks. Always hand dig within two feet of marked lines.
If you accidentally damage gas piping or smell gas when excavating, please call 911 immediately from a safe area. Then call PSE&G at 1-800-436-PSEG (7734).
Call before you dig is more than a good idea — it’s the law.

Additional information, including a damage prevention booklet on safe excavating practices and the protection of underground facilities, can be found online at: https://www.pseg.com/call811.

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