>BARACK OBAMA / JOE BIDEN (D) 6,597 54.8%
JOHN McCAIN / SARAH PALIN (R ) 5,306 44.1%
>BARACK OBAMA / JOE BIDEN (D) 6,597 54.8%
JOHN McCAIN / SARAH PALIN (R ) 5,306 44.1%
>Checks on ‘Joe’ more extensive than first acknowledged
Tax, welfare info also sought on McCain ally
Wednesday, October 29, 2008 8:05 PM
By Randy Ludlow
https://www.dispatch.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2008/10/29/joe30.html?sid=101
A state agency has revealed that its checks of computer systems for potential information on “Joe the Plumber” were more extensive than it first acknowledged.
Helen Jones-Kelley, director of the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, disclosed today that computer inquiries on Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher were not restricted to a child-support system.
The agency also checked Wurzelbacher in its computer systems to determine whether he was receiving welfare assistance or owed unemployment compensation taxes, she wrote.
Jones-Kelley made the revelations in a letter to Ohio Senate President Bill M. Harris, R-Ashland, who demanded answers on why state officials checked out Wurzelbacher.
Harris called the multiple records checks “questionable” and said he awaits more answers. “It’s kind of like Big Brother is looking in your pocket,” he said.
If state employees run checks on every person listed in newspaper stories as buying a business, “it must take a lot of people a lot of time to run these checks,” he said. “Where do you draw the line?”
The checks were run after the news media reported that Wurzelbacher was considering buying a plumbing business with more than $250,000 in annual income, Jones-Kelley wrote.
“Given our understanding that Mr. Wurzelbacher had publicly indicated that he had the means to purchase a substantial business enterprise, ODJFS, consistent with past departmental practice, checked confidential databases ,” she wrote.
“Not surprisingly, when a person behind in child support payments or receiving public assistance is receiving significant media attention which suggests that the person appears to have available financial resources, the Department risks justifiable criticism if it fails to take note and respond,” Jones-Kelley wrote.
The results of the searches were not publicly released and remain confidential, she wrote. Wurzelbacher has said he is not involved in a child-support case and has not purchased any business.
Jones-Kelley wrote that the checks were “well-meaning,” but misinterpreted amid the heated final weeks of a presidential election.
Wurzelbacher became a household name when Republican presidential hopeful John McCain frequently referred to “Joe the Plumber” during his Oct. 15 debate with Democrat nominee Barack Obama. The checks began the next day.
Wurzelbacher, who has endorsed and campaigned for McCain, had been caught on videotape challenging Obama about his tax proposals during a campaign visit to “Joe’s” neighborhood in the Toledo suburb of Holland.
Republicans have painted the checks on Wurzelbacher as a politically motivated bid by Democrats to dig up dirt and discredit the McCain ally. The Obama campaign has said it has no ties to the checks and supports investigations.
The administration of Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland has said the information was not improperly shared and that there were no political motives behind the checks.
The Dispatch has uncovered four uses of state computer systems to access personal information on Wurzelbacher, including the child-support check authorized by Jones-Kelley.
She said on Monday that her department frequently runs checks for any unpaid child support obligations “when someone is thrust quickly into the public spotlight.”
Republican legislators have challenged Jones-Kelley’s reason for checking on Wurzelbacher as “frightening” and flimsy.
Jones-Kelly also has denied any connections between the computer checks on Wurzelbacher and her support for Obama. She donated the maximum $2,500 this year to the Obama campaign.
Ohio Inspector General Thomas P. Charles is investigating whether the child-support check on Wurzelbacher was legal.
>THE RECORD
Monday October 27, 2008
BY JOSEPH AX
STAFF WRITER
At least eight districts in Bergen County have made last-minute decisions to close their schools on Election Day in anticipation of a massive wave of voters.
County election officials have asked most districts to close, warning that a massive turnout for the presidential election could cause serious security and parking problems.
“You’d have hundreds and hundreds of people in the schools, potentially,” said Hackensack schools chief Edward Kliszus, who announced Oct. 15 that his schools would be closed. “On Election Day, the entire school ends up being open to adults that you don’t know. If it’s just a handful of people coming in, that’s one thing, but if you have hundreds.”
School officials in Bogota, Cliffside Park, Elmwood Park, Englewood, Hackensack, Palisades Park, Teaneck and Tenafly also will make Nov. 4 a day off for students and staff, joining dozens of other districts in the county that were already scheduled to be closed to teachers, students or both, election officials said.
Cliffside Park had scheduled a staff-only day but decided to close completely.
“The No. 1 issue is safety,” said John Czeterko, the superintendent of schools in Teaneck. “You get a lot of strangers in the building.”
A sampling of Passaic districts shows that Wayne and Pompton Lakes made decisions early in the school year to close on Election Day. Schools in West Milford, Ringwood, Wanaque, Butler, Pequannock, Lincoln Park and Kinnelon are expected to have classes.
Bergen districts that have decided to take the day off will use one of their allotted emergency days, usually employed for snow days.
Overall, 46 Bergen County districts will either be closed to students or have half days. About two dozen of those districts will ask teachers to stay for staff development, which could limit parking at some schools.
County Superintendent of Elections Patricia DiCostanzo said she and county Superintendent of Schools Aaron Graham hope to persuade as many districts as possible to shut down to avoid possible chaos inside the buildings. Half-days may not be enough of a solution, given the number of voters that could flood polling places early, she said.
“It’s the safest thing to do,” she said. “You can’t lock the doors. You can’t buzz them in. It’s going to be a free-for-all with people walking in.”
The county has seen a spike in registered voters to 544,000 from 483,000 since Election Day last year, an increase of more than 12 percent. The county processed 15,000 new registrations in the first two weeks of October alone.
Those numbers are testament to the level of excitement surrounding the contest between Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. The presidential primary earlier this year — particularly on the Democratic side, which pitted Obama against New York Sen. Hillary Clinton — saw a record number of voters statewide.
The Election Day school closings come at an inconvenient time for some districts. The annual teachers’ convention has already ensured that public schools statewide will be shuttered on Thursday and Friday following the election.
“The week is very short,” said Eugene Westlake, the interim superintendent in Tenafly.
Nevertheless, he said, security concerns and the potential disruption to classes convinced him that closing the schools was the proper move.
The last-minute closings could mean some working parents will now have to find child care. In Teaneck, the district is offering limited babysitting service through a youth agency headquartered at the high school.
Not all districts have accepted the county’s recommendations. In Leonia, where two of the three public schools serve as polling places, the board determined that school could remain open.
“We felt we could manage the concerns and keep school going,” Superintendent Bernard Josefsberg said. The district is adding security to prevent any problems, he said.
“Everyone in Leonia knows that parking, even on a normal school day is tight, and that’s not going to change on Election Day. You hope that people will recognize that and plan accordingly.”
Some districts that will remain open on Election Day are trying to accommodate voters. In Glen Rock, for example, teachers will be asked to park elsewhere to free space in school lots.
>IBD/TIPP Tracking Poll: Day Eleven
Posted: Thursday, October 23, 2008
McCain has cut into Obama’s lead for a second day and is now just 1.1 points behind. The spread was 3.7 Wednesday and 6.0 Tuesday. The Republican is making headway with middle- and working- class voters, and has surged 10 points in two days among those earning between $30,000 and $75,000. He has also gone from an 11-point deficit to a 9-point lead among Catholics.
https://www.ibdeditorials.com/Polls.aspx?id=309635713550536
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Maureen McCormick
Wednesday, October 15th – 7:00pm
Teen heartthrob from the 1970’s Hit TV Show, The Brady Bunch, Maureen McCormick (“Marcia Brady”) will sign her new book: Here’s The Story.
Rich “Goose” Gossage
Thursday, October 16th – 7:00pm
Former NY Yankee Star and 2008 Inductee into the Baseball Hall of Fame, Rich “Goose” Gossage will sign: Yankee Stadium: The Official Retrospective. Don’t miss this chance to meet a Yankee Legend and get the best Gift Book for the Yankee/Baseball fan… in the final year of Yankee Stadium!
George Hamilton
Friday, October 17th – 7:00pm
From Dancing With the Stars TV Show, the suave and debonair, George Hamilton will sign his book: Don’t Mind If I Do!
Marlo Thomas
Wednesday, October 29th – 4:00pm
Special Children’s Event!!
Actress Marlo Thomas welcomes children “young and old” to this special Event for the launch of : Free To Be …You and Me. This book inspires children that they can be whatever they want to be and also includes a CD with 4 free To Be Me Classic songs!
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By Jessica Cejnar | Peninsula Clarion
His king may be 27 pounds shy of the world record, but after 27 years fishing the Kenai River Martin Quinn is one fish closer to his goal.
Quinn, a resident of Ridgewood, N. J., dreams of taking Les Anderson’s place as the person who caught the biggest king salmon on the Kenai. Every summer, Quinn spends about eight hours a day on the river and has reeled in fish weighing 65 pounds. But on the last Sunday of the king salmon fishery, at 6:32 in the morning, he found himself, with both hands on his rod, struggling to land a 71-pounder.
“I caught the fish right off the boat ramp at River Bend and when the fish hit he started running upstream,” he said.
Quinn’s king took him about 600 yards upstream to Big Eddy before he got the upper hand and hauled him down to the Pillars boat launch. Quinn fought his fish for about 30 minutes with both hands on the rod before he landed it with the help of his daughter Blair Quinn and son-in-law Ben Wullschlager.
“I think if I had a 50-pounder on I could handle the rod and net myself,” he said. “It really took two hands to hold onto the rod and my daughter’s netted many fish and she was right there on the net and did an excellent job.”
Quinn began fishing for salmon and steelhead trout in Portland, Ore. where he was president of the Tom McCall Chapter of Northwest Steelheaders and a member of the Oregon State Marine Board. Quinn’s introduction to the Kenai River began in 1981 and he’s been back ever since.
“In the early days I used to go out with guides and I remember the big jet engines on their boats and of course those things are all outlawed these days,” he said. “For the first maybe five or six years we would go out fishing with guides and then we started going to River Bend in Soldotna.”
When his 71-pound king salmon hit on July 27, Quinn said he wasn’t aware how big his fish was until it started swimming upstream.
“I’ve caught 50-pounders and 65-pounders on the Kenai and you always know you have a big fish if he starts the run upstream,” he said, adding that the biggest fish he ever caught up until then was 68 pounds. “Just about every big fish I’ve ever had continues his journey upstream.”
For the last 10 years Quinn, his wife, Ellen, and his daughter and son-in-law have fished for eight hours a day, but back in his Steelheader days Quinn would fish 18 hours a day.
His friends would take turns running the boat and on down times, they would find the time to sleep.
“Now that the ladies in my life are coming along with me I have to do everything,” he said. “I have to run the boat, bait the lures and do all the riggings and what have you. They help out with snacks on the boat, that’s about it.”
Because his fish was about four pounds shy of trophy status, Quinn said he filleted it and froze it.
The 71-pound king yielded 40 pounds of meat, he said, and he plans on serving it up to family and friends at dinner parties.
“You should have seen the fillets in this thing,” he said, “they were almost five inches thick.”
Quinn also has a long way to go toward beating Les Anderson’s record, but he’s confident he will some day.
“You always hear tell that the commercial guys are getting 100-pound salmon every year,” he said.
“I think there’s a lot of truth to that. The fish is out there, you just have to be lucky enough to get it on your line.”
Jessica Cejnar can be reached at [email protected].
>Because some of you still(?) read the NY Times….
By Sarah Rabil
Aug. 12 (Bloomberg) — New York Times Co. faces increased financial pressure to cut its dividend as credit quality deteriorates amid record advertising declines.
Bondholders are paying for the Sulzberger family’s decision last year to raise the quarterly dividend 31 percent to 23 cents a share. The extra yield investors demand to own New York Times bonds instead of U.S. Treasuries has more than doubled in 2008. The cost to protect the debt against default has climbed 27 basis points since the newspaper publisher posted earnings July 23, meaning investors are betting that credit quality will weaken further.
Moody’s Investors Service says one way for New York Times to save its rating, a step above junk and in danger of being cut, would be to reduce the dividend costing $132 million a year.
“They’d have potentially more cash available to fund investments and debt reduction,” Moody’s analyst John Puchalla in New York said in an interview. “Depending on how they use that cash that’s freed up, that could be beneficial to the rating.”
Shareholders also are losing out with a 39 percent drop in the stock since March 2007, when the New York-based company’s controlling Ochs-Sulzberger family raised the dividend the most in a decade to appease investors. The payout, coupled with an accelerated 16 percent drop in June ad sales, has contributed to higher borrowing costs while failing to support the stock. The Class A shares rose 6 cents to $14.15 at 6.33 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.
Like Junk
Credit-default swaps used to speculate on New York Times’ creditworthiness or to hedge against losses are trading as if the company already was rated junk, according to data from Moody’s credit strategy group.
The contracts, costing $397,000 a year to protect $10 million in debt for five years, trade as if the company had a Ba3 rating from Moody’s, three levels below its actual Baa3 rating, the data show. Moody’s on July 29 changed its credit- rating outlook to negative on concern the advertising slump will worsen.
Standard & Poor’s BBB- rating, on watch for a downgrade, already reflects the dividend’s cost, analyst Emile Courtney said in an interview. Faster print-ad declines in the industry’s worst slump on record could trigger a junk rating, the New York- based analyst said.
A rating cut to junk may increase the spread, or extra yield, on 5 percent New York Times bonds maturing in 2015 by at least 73 basis points to 551 basis points, according to the Merrill Lynch BB Bond Index. That indicates the bond’s price may fall 3.1 cents on the dollar to 80.3 cents.
Those bonds have fallen to 83.4 cents on the dollar from 94.2 cents in late 2007, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The spread more than doubled to 478 basis points. The bondholders are primarily insurance companies, including State Farm Life Insurance Co. Bank lenders include Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Rivals Retreat
Competitors are abandoning the strategy of using the dividend to retain investors, said Ken Doctor, an analyst at Outsell Inc. in Burlingame, California.
In the past month, Miami Herald publisher McClatchy Co. put its dividend policy on review; GateHouse Media Inc., publisher of 97 dailies, suspended its payout; E.W. Scripps Co. declared a smaller dividend than it forecast before splitting off cable-TV channels; and Gannett Co., owner of USA Today, skipped its annual increase for the second time in 41 years.
Each saw a drop in newspaper advertising in the second quarter, following the industry’s 14 percent skid in the first.
New York Times’ dividend yields 6.5 percent, second-highest after Gannett among media companies in the S&P 500 Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The family’s 19 percent equity stake, according to filings, entitles members to about $25.1 million in payments this year. A family trust holds 89 percent of Class B shares that elect 70 percent of board members.
Newsroom Cuts
The family has historically sought to preserve New York Times’ access to cash and has limited its borrowing, said Fitch Ratings media analyst Mike Simonton in Chicago, who doesn’t rate the debt. “It’s possible that their risk-tolerance has increased,” which would lessen the chances of a dividend cut.
New York Times spokeswoman Catherine Mathis said the company and Chairman Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr. declined to comment. The company balances shareholder value with borrowing costs and expects to keep its investment-grade rating, Chief Financial Officer James Follo said on a July 23 conference call.
Chief Executive Officer Janet Robinson has accelerated cost cuts and projects annual savings will surpass a target of $230 million by the end of 2009. In May, the New York Times said it eliminated 100 newsroom jobs.
Reducing debt, stabilizing revenue and an improving advertising market could also help the company maintain its credit rating, Moody’s Puchalla said.
Cash Flow
The dividend this year will exceed New York Times’ cash flow from operations minus capital expenses, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst Peter Appert estimates. Next year it will eat up about 75 percent of estimated free cash flow as capital spending is reduced, he said.
“That’s probably too high,” said Appert, in San Francisco, who recommends selling the stock. “It doesn’t give them an awful lot of flexibility in terms of preserving cash for other uses.”
Chairman Sulzberger fended off shareholders last year who challenged the family’s voting control. The company’s largest investor is now Harbinger Capital Partners. The New York-based hedge fund placed two nominees on the board this year and raised its stake to almost 20 percent as of Aug. 1. Tripp Kyle, an outside spokesman for Harbinger, said the firm declined to comment.
The need to refinance a $400 million credit agreement, part of the company’s $1.1 billion in total debt, by May 2009 may force cash-freeing moves.
A downgrade “makes it potentially hard to refinance,” said Barclays Capital analyst Hale Holden in New York, who recommends a short credit position. “That’s complicated if you’re burning cash by paying the dividend.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Sarah Rabil in New York at [email protected]
Last Updated: August 12, 2008 09:38 EDT
>By Matt Friedman
RIDGEWOOD – Anne Zusy recently registered as a Democrat to vote for Barack Obama. Paul Aronsohn likes Hillary Clinton. And Keith Killion, who’s registered as a Republican, is a John McCain supporter.
But the three stood outside of a post office in Ridgewood today to run as a team for three council seats, saying that the village needs new blood in its government. The fact that the three of them could run together, they say, is evidence how seriously this traditionally Republican town takes its non-partisan elections.
Their opponents are incumbent council members Betty Wiest, the town’s Deputy Mayor, and Jacques Harlow. Wiest spent most of the day at home calling supporters to get them out to the polls, while Harlow competed in a senior citizens’ tennis tournament, which he said would help take his mind off of the election.
At least one of the challengers will get a spot on the council, and a voice to choose whether Mayor David Pfund will keep his post (if he wants to) or whether he’ll lose those stripes and become merely another councilman.
Zusy said that she’s only focusing on the council election and hasn’t thought about whether she’d be interested in becoming mayor herself. Killion and Aronsohn both say that they’d prefer one of the council members with more experience to take the reigns.
As they paused to shake hands with the occasional passer-by and ask whether they voted yet, the three challengers lamented what they said was the slow pace of the village government.
“I’ve watched the council for quite a while, and there’s a failure to get things done in a timely manner,” said Killion, who’s retiring as the village’s Captain of Detectives in July.
Killion was upset to learn that he was lumped with Wiest and Harlow in a robocall put out by the county’s Republican organization – which both Harlow and Wiest, who said they had nothing to do with, have condemned.
“I am suspect, not necessarily of Betty Wiest but I’m suspect of the whole incident,” he said.
Aronsohn, who worked in the Clinton State Department, served as former Gov. Jim McGreevey’s press secretary and ran for Congress before taking on this decidedly lower profile task, also condemned the call.
“It’s injecting partisan politics into a non-partisan election,” he said.
That robocall was the first flare-up in what has been, up to this point, a race with about as much conflict as the average meeting of the county’s notoriously lock-stepped Democratic organization.
But this is not a Bergen County battleground, and things are generally kept civil in this upper-middle-class village.
“I think that Ridgewood is a town known for its gentility. Everything is kind of handled with kid gloves,” said Zusy.
To Wiest, the complaints about the glacial pace of council business are founded in unrealistic expectations. Only when you’re in the position, she said, do you understand all the hoops you have to jump through to do something as simple as, say, put a fence around a pool.
“It’s not that we’re not responsive. If you don’t dot your i’s and cross your t’s in the end, if something goes wrong it’s very difficult to get back on track,” she said. “Having been there for four years, frankly, until you’re in the spot, you don’t realize what you have to go through. And I can certainly list a whole page of accomplishments that we’ve managed to take to fruition.”
And Wiest, whose husband was mayor from 1986 to 1990 and is considered a potential pick for the spot if she wins reelection, would prefer not to address that aspect of the race.
“I’m not going to go there…. I haven’t made any claim or innuendo,” she said. “I’m here to tackle issues and try to do something for the village in a positive way.”
>The New Jersey Department of Education provides a web page containing a list of links relating to “Language Arts Literacy”.
While the list is admittedly alphabetical, it is nonetheless at least a little funny (ha-ha, “isn’t that sweet justice” funny) to this observer that Chicago-based Mr. Bill Ayers’ AERA organization and Ridgewood-based Ms. Botsford’s ASCD organization are listed together at the top of the official links page (found at https://www.state.nj.us/education/aps/cccs/lal/assoc.htm).
Note the innocuous descriptions of the two organizations, each of which has its own rather aggressive public agenda not necessarily in line with the best interests of New Jersey’s school-age children, IMHO.
(Begin Quote)
American Educational Research Association (AERA)
AERA is concerned with improving the educational process by encouraging scholarly inquiry related to education and by promoting the dissemination and practical application of research results.
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD)
ASCD is an international, nonprofit, nonpartisan education association committed to the mission of forging covenants in teaching and learning for the success of all learners. ASCD provides professional development in curriculum and supervision; encourages research, evaluation, and theory development; and disseminates information on education issues.
It seems Mr. Obama’s friend Bill Ayers of Weather Underground fame is now seeking revolutionary change by another means.
Query whether people like Bill Ayers will expect the White House doors to be thrown open to them in the event Mr. Obama is elected.
Putting national implications to one side, though, the following information and related open-ended question also seems relevant to the Ridgewood district’s current struggles with a certain willful, inscrutable administrator currently populating Cottage Place. Enjoy!
(Found today, Monday, April 28, 2008, on https://kitchentablemath.blogspot.com/. For information about the AERA organization that recently elevated Mr. Ayers to the upper echelon of its leadership, see
https://kitchentablemath.blogspot.com/search/label/AERA.)
(Begin Quote)
Bill Ayers is not a “professor of English”
In fact, he is a tenured Distinguished Professor of Education at the University of Illinois, Chicago.
I haven’t heard if Obama has corrected himself on this. However, this is what I’m interested in:
The more pressing issue is not the damage done by the Weather Underground 40 years ago, but the far greater harm inflicted on the nation’s schoolchildren by the political and educational movement in which Ayers plays a leading role today.
[…]
Instead of planting bombs in public buildings, Ayers now works to indoctrinate America’s future teachers in the revolutionary cause, urging them to pass on the lessons to their public school students.
[…]
Ayers’s influence on what is taught in the nation’s public schools is likely to grow in the future. Last month, he was elected vice president for curriculum of the 25,000-member American Educational Research Association (AERA), the nation’s largest organization of education-school professors and researchers. Ayers won the election handily, and there is no doubt that his fellow education professors knew whom they were voting for. In the short biographical statement distributed to prospective voters beforehand, Ayers listed among his scholarly books Fugitive Days, an unapologetic memoir about his ten years in the Weather Underground. The book includes dramatic accounts of how he bombed the Pentagon and other public buildings.
(Sol Stern in the City Journal)
Maybe the media should be questioning Obama and McCain about their views on Ayers in this influential position. Some readers might believe doing so would be a demonstration of “gotcha” politics, but I really would like to hear their answers.
Posted by Tex at 7:23 AM 6 comments Links to this post
Labels: AERA, ed schools, education research

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I’m pleased to announce that “And Then Came Love” starring Vanessa Williams, Eartha Kitt, Kevin Daniels, Michael Boatman, Stephen Spinella & Ben Vereen will premiere JUNE 1 at the Ridgewood Warner Quad Theater in downtown Ridgewood.
We Expect To Sell Out Fast
It’s A Great Feel Good Film
See Ridgewood’s own Diane Sims, Rosie McCooe, Trish Manzo, Eileen Scheuch & The Regressions make their big screen debut
The appearance of over 150 local extras
7 local locations – Austin’s in Rochelle Park, The Ridgewood Women’s Club, Eastern Christian Elementary School, Floody’s Office, Dr. Hall’s Office, the VanSaun House & the DiCosta House
Support Independent Filmmaking
TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW
at https://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=o5soz5bab.0.qbaug4bab.ftururbab.53&ts=S0241&p=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.movietickets.com%2F (search Ridgewood)
or at the boxoffice
Early Bird Premiere – Friday 6/1 4:00pmBe the first to see the film, and get a free cone from Ben & Jerry’sCocktails with the Cast & Crew –
Saturday 6/2 9:00pmJoin the cast, crew and friends of the film @ BLEND on Chestnut Street to celebrate the openingFilmmaker Q&A Panel –
Monday 6/4 7:00pmFollowing the film, meet the filmmakers and learn what it takes to make an independent film. Ladies Nite Out/Date Nite –
Tuesday/Wednesay 6/5 & 6/6 7:00pm Grab your girlfriend, your mom or your honey, and make it a movie night. This smart, chick fick promises to be the “feel good” film of the summer. meet up after at Starbucks for lively discussion with the writer and members of the “Mommy Posse.”Last Chance –
Thursday 6/7 7:00pmSee it before it’s gone. All ticket holders receive a Clearview goody bag.