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Bill approved to remedy NJ Transit parking problems at train stations
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Bill approved to remedy NJ Transit parking problems at train stations
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Shop Ridgewood : The Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce is offering a Rewards Card for a 10% discount on all goods and services through December 31, 2011
Sat, November 05, 2011 – Sat, December 31, 2011
Time: 9:00 AM – 9:00 PM
Ridgewood, NJ
The Ridgewood Chamber of commerce is offering a Rewards Card for a 10% discount on all goods and services through December 31, 2011. Rewards Cards are available at the Chamber office and businesses throughout Ridgewood. Look for a placecard in participating store windows. Customers must present the card at the initial transaction; prior purchases are excluded from the discount.
Ridgewood participants:
Restaurants/Food
Ben & Jerry’s– 104 Franklin Ave.
Blend — 27 Chestnut St.
Chestnut Deli & Catering– 25 Chestnut St.
Gen Sushi & Hibachi Asian– 15-17 E. Ridgewood Ave.
LaPiazza Italian Bistro– 29 Chestnut St.
Latour, A French-American Grill– 6 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Lisa’s Turkish Kitchen– 54 Chestnut St.
Pearl Restaurant– 17 S. Broad St.
The Office Beer Bar & Grill– 32/34 Chestnut St.
Tre Voci– 16 Chestnut St.
Wide World of Bagels– 110 N. Maple Ave.
Retailers
Anais Boutique– 82 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Biltmore Tuxedos– 36 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Bookends– 211 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Framed– 88 Chestnut St.
Hillmann Electric & Lighting– 133 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Joaillier Fashion Jewelry– 196 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Just Our Shoes/Mephisto– 16 N. Walnut St.
Ken Smith Motors, Inc. labor/parts*– 15 Franklin Ave.
Leapin’ Lizards– 250 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Neil Diamonds (completed jewelry)– 38 Oak St. Lower Level
Secret Studio Store– 7 N. Broad Street Lower Level
Sensations Day Spa & Salon– 9 S. Broad St.
Suite 201– 11 S. Walnut St.
Village Eyewear– 80 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Village Tannery/Ecco– 125 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Warehouse Cheap & Chic– 70 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Yansi Fugel– 66 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Professionals / Services
Allergy Free & More– 555 Goffle Rd.
Art of Motion– 17 Chestnut St.
David Rutherford, Esq.– 141 Dayton St.
Dr. Michel Mouravieff — 525 N. Maple Ave.
Christopher G. Weigl, Attorney at Law– 123 Prospect St.
Law Office of Charles Kahwaty– 67 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Namaste Organic Spa– 30 Franklin Ave.
NYC Graphics– 201-446-4653
Parks Wealth Management– 216 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Pfund McDonnell, PC– 139 Prospect St.
Precision Orthodontics– 139 Prospect St.
Ridgewood Press Printing Copy Center– 609 Franklin Tpk.
Russell P. Trocano & Assoc. Esq.– 60 S. Maple Ave.
Wostbrock Home & Floors– 225 Goffle Rd.
>Navy Seals Project Package 2011 – Harley Davidson, Essex Street, Rochelle Park NJ
While we are all thankful tomorrow, don’t forget that Harley Davidson of Rochelle Park is spearheading Navy Seals Project Package 2011. Harley Davidson is demonstrating what patriotism is and how to show our appreciation for the Navy Seals. We support their efforts fully.
There is till time today, Friday and Saturday morning.
Please stop by Harley Davidson, 124 Essex Street, Rochelle Park, NJ and pick up your box with the list of articles needed and return the box to them by Saturday, November 26. There will be a packing party on Saturday, November 26, noon to 3pm.
If you would prefer to shop first and deliver the items to Harley Davidson on Friday or Saturday, you can shop for: warm gloves, hats, black socks, snacks, cookies, tuna in pouches, toothbrushes, talcum powder, handwarmers, protein powders, hot chocolate packages, dvd’s (men type movies), games (travel size), hand sanitizer, wipes, dried fruit, beef jerkey – you get the picture. And don’t forget to include a personal note and let them know you are a tea party member.
Bring it back unsealed and of course you can include a note that states how proud you are of them and that you are supporting them as a tea party activist at home. Harley Davidson will be taking care of the postage and shipping.
All details are on the flyer:
https://www.njteapartycoalition.org/ProjectPackageAd2011.pdf
If you would prefer to shop first and deliver the items to Harley Davidson on Friday or Saturday, you can shop for: warm gloves, hats, black socks, snacks, cookies, tuna in pouches, toothbrushes, talcum powder, handwarmers, protein powders, hot chocolate packages, dvd’s (men type movies), games (travel size), hand sanitizer, wipes, dried fruit, beef jerkey – you get the picture. And don’t forget to include a personal note and let them know you are a tea party member.
In Liberty,
NJ Tea Party Coalition
>Bridgewater crackdown on handicap parking cheats leads to hundreds of tickets worth $163,000
BRIDGEWATER — They thought they were smart, but the police got smarter.
Police in this Somerset County town, home to one of the state’s largest shopping malls, have issued a record number of parking tickets this year to drivers faking their way into handicap spaces by using state-issued hang tags that belonged to dead relatives.
The crime isn’t new, but this level of enforcement is — and the court expects to collect fines worth up to $163,000, and counting.
Police Chief Richard J. Borden described the crackdown as a community service and the policing has won the praise of a prominent Central Jersey disability advocate.
The ticket blitz also has become something of a cash cow for the municipality.
>Update: The Ridgewood 2011 Christmas Tree
>Ridgewood Planning Board studies The Dayton apartment complex proposal
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 22, 2011, 2:22 PM
BY JOSEPH CRAMER
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS
As hearings on The Dayton, the recently proposed apartment complex on South Broad Street, continued at the Ridgewood Planning Board, more specific questions have emerged concerning the extensive structure’s potential impact on the surrounding community.
In October, Garden Homes Development presented the board with requests for rezoning and an amendment to the village Master Plan to permit the construction of a 120-unit upscale apartment complex on the former Brogan Cadillac lot at the west end of the downtown area. It is one of two applications for multi-family housing complexes around the Central Business District currently at the planning board level of review, with the second proposed for Chestnut Street.
>Paul Aronsohn: Free Healthcare?
It is amazing that Paul Ahronson can raise a stink about Gabbert when Paul is the only councilman to receive over $30,000 in free health care benefits…
Why doesn’t someone ask Paul Ahronson at the next meeting why he doesn’t forego this tax payer draining perk like the rest of the Council who work for free.
>Holiday Travel: Airlines finally figure out TSA screening deters flying ...
Screening Still a Pain at Airports, Fliers Say
By SUSAN STELLIN
Published: November 21, 2011
The lines will still be long and the screening still invasive at airport checkpoints this Thanksgiving.
While the government has made some changes to security procedures, many passengers and travel executives contend that the moves do not go far enough.
Since last November, the Transportation Security Administration has adopted a policy to reduce pat-downs of children 12 and under, altered some body scanners to display a generic outline of a human figure and begun testing programs that offer expedited screening to pilots and select frequent fliers.
Still, some travelers are bothered by a screening process that has become increasingly time-consuming and intimate, and industry representatives say they are worried that these frustrations are contributing to a decline in air travel.
The Air Transport Association expects 2 percent fewer people will fly this Thanksgiving week compared with last year, while AAA projects a 4 percent increase in automobile travel.
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New leak of hacked global warming scientist emails: A ‘smoking gun’ proving a conspiracy – or just hot air?
By ROB WAUGH
Last updated at 5:10 PM on 22nd November 2011
‘We’re choosing periods to show warming’
‘Science is being manipulated – it might not be too clever in the long run’
‘Climate change is a “better label” than global warming’
‘Many thanks for your paper – and congratulations for reviving global warming’
A huge number of emails between the world’s leading climate scientists was dumped online today, in an apparent attempt to cause disruption in advance of next week’s climate change conference in Durban.
The leak echoes the ‘climategate’ leaks of hacked private emails three years ago which prompted government enquiries into the working practices of climate scientists
>Audrey Meyers drops a bombshell says Valley in now willing to compromise and make changes to meet objections to the Renewal
Meyers continues to claim Valleys long range plan would permit the hospital to service the community and is needed in order to maintain the standards that residents have become accustomed too . Meyers went on that the renewal is needed to move the Valley forward into the future . Meyers said that Valley is now looking to make further modification in its plan and compromise to meet public concerns and objections.
Meyers finished by reiterating that failure to pass the Valley renewal will doom Valley hospital like so many other New Jersey hospitals in the future
>I’d be delighted if fracking were safe – I want cheap energy and not be dependent on foreign sorces.
My concern is that it may be safe but there are serious concerns that it isn’t. For a reminder about what happens (and drags on forever) when groundwater gets polluted, read the following article about the Superfund sites 40 year later.
A Neighborhood in Peril: North Jersey riddled with failed cleanups
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2011
BY SCOTT FALLON
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD
Forty-one years ago, then-Gov. William T. Cahill pledged that a new agency — the Department of Environmental Protection — would aggressively identify and clean up toxic sites.
The industrial pollution and illegal dumping that had turned New Jersey into one of the most notoriously contaminated states in the nation was no longer going to be tolerated.
Ten years later, the federal Environmental Protection Agency embarked on a promising new program to rid the country of its most polluted sites.
Because of those programs, regulators and lawmakers insist the state is much cleaner now. But there are still enough stories of failed cleanups to raise the question: Does the system work?
https://www.northjersey.com/news/134303948_No_Title_-_garfielddaythree1122.html
>Egypt’s Secret Police Renames Itself “Homeland Security”
Notorious human rights abusers draw inspiration from US authorities
Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
Monday, November 21, 2011
Egypt’s infamous state security apparatus, notorious for spying on political activists and torturing dissidents, has renamed itself “homeland security,” presumably in homage to its American namesake, which has also been used as a tool of political repression.
As part of the re-branding of dictatorship in Egypt, the same security force implicated in the imprisonment and torture of anti-Mubarak activists is busy reorganizing itself while maintaining intimidation and spying campaigns targeted against parliamentary candidates by bugging phone calls and harassing prominent critics of the ruling military regime’s bloody crackdown on protesters.
“After some initial moves to purge the security forces, attempts at systemic reform were halted, say analysts and political observers. Under the auspices of the Ministry of Interior, the 100,000-strong state security service has been renamed homeland security and personnel moved around,” the Financial Times reports today (emphasis mine).
https://www.infowars.com/egypts-secret-police-renames-itself-homeland-security/
>Village Leaf and Brush Pick Up Schedule
Leaf and brush will continue to be picked up according to the schedule in the Village Calendar. Village crews will be performing this task throughout the day.
November 21 – 23 – Area D
November 28 – Dec 2 – Area A
December 5- 9 – Area B
December 12 – 14 – Area C
December 15 – 16 – Area D
>At Little Ivy Learning Center Preschoolers: Lessons in Caring: It’s “In the Bag”
At Little Ivy Learning Center Preschoolers, Kindergarteners Drive Thanksgiving Food Donations
Sometimes it’s the simplest thing that inspires acts of caring and sharing. . . even something as simple as an empty, brown paper shopping bag.
While meeting to discuss their Thanksgiving season lesson plans earlier this month, teachers at Ridgewood’s Little Ivy Learning Center began brainstorming how they could provide each of their students with a unique, personal experience in caring for others through sharing with others.
Amidst talk of Pilgrims and Native Americans, hands-on lessons about the fall harvest, plans for the annual, school-wide Thanksgiving feast and the parent-led food drive, Miss Dee, the Senior Nursery program head teacher had an idea.
“Instead of asking our parents to contribute to the annual food drive, what if we give each of our students an empty, brown paper shopping bag to decorate, bring home, and take responsibility for working with their parents to fill with food for neighbors in need,” Miss Dee said.
“It will be their (each student’s) bag, so they’ll have real ownership for it and getting it filled,” she said.
Miss Dee’s idea immediately sparked several other lesson possibilities. Junior Nursery II teacher Miss Heather thought the “Fill Your Bag” lesson could also provide her older two-year-old students with a lesson in the food groups and nutrition. She would have her students decorate their bags, donated by the Whole Foods supermarket in Ridgewood, with photo cutouts of various foods.
Miss Stephanie, one of Little Ivy’s AM & PM Kindergarten Enrichment teachers volunteered her students for sorting the contents of the food bags and making signs for the boxes used to transport the food to the Social Service Agency of Ridgewood & Vicinity (SSA).
“Not only is ‘Fill Your Bag’ a great lesson in caring through sharing, but the sorting will provide a hands-on opportunity for my students to practice pattern recognition, and a meaningful opportunity to practice spelling and penmanship by making the signs for the boxes,” Miss Stephanie said.
Miss Rachel & Miss Mary Kate, Pre-Kindergarten and PM Kindergarten Enrichment teacher at the school agreed, and their students joined in with sorting and sign-making.
The overwhelming success of the “Fill Your Bag” lesson quickly became obvious as overstuffed bags began filling the office and long, central hallway at Little Ivy, overflowing into several classrooms.
Several students in Miss Kristen and Miss Melissa’s Pre-Kindergarten class included their favorite cereals and snacks in their bags. Overfilled bags rolled in from Miss Laura’s Beginnings Toddler Nursery class and Miss Dawn’s Junior Nursery I class, as well.
In a typical story, often repeated, one mom told Little Ivy’s director, Stephanie Bassler, that after partially filling her daughter’s bag, her daughter dragged it to the pantry and insisted on filling it to the brim. It was simple, her daughter told her. . .this was her homework, people really needed the food, and her bag had to be filled to the top.
“We’ve always been thankful for the annual contributions our families make during the Thanksgiving Food Drive for SSA, but this year with our children driving the effort, they really put it over-the top” Ms. Bassler said. “More than 100 bags of food and related items were donated. Awesome.”
Additional Information:
The Social Service Association of Ridgewood & Vicinity, provides a full range of services throughout the year for local individuals and families in need, including its food pantry, clothing and food vouchers, housing assistance, various scholarships and senior citizen case management. To learn more, visit www.ssa6.org.
Little Ivy Learning Center and its experienced teachers provide thoughtfully crafted childcare, pre-school and kindergarten programs for children ages 12-months through 6 with an emphasis on personalized learning and small classes in bright, cozy classrooms. Little Ivy provides its students and their parents with a range of flexible, full-day, AM or PM programs, including PreschoolPlus and KindergartenPlus (12-month childcare, plus academic pre-school/kindergarten and summer camp); Preschool (toddler/junior/senior nursery school and academic pre-K); AM & PM Kindergarten Enrichment (with transportation from select local schools); Transitional Kindergarten; Kindergarten and Summer Camp.
Little Ivy Learning Center is an independent, private school located in the Education Building on the historic campus of the Old Paramus Reformed Church, 660 East Glen Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ. For more information contact us at info@mylittleivy.com, visit our website at www.mylittleivy.com, or our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/mylittleivy.