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July 19, 2005
J W E R S E E N Election Y Law Enforcement Commission EL EC 1973 State of New Jersey ELECTION LAW ENFORCEMENT COMMISSION FREDERICK M. HERRMANN, Ph.D. JERRY FITZGERALD ENGLISH Executive Director Chair Respond to: P.O. Box 185 JEFFREY M. BRINDLE PETER J. TOBER Deputy Director Vice Chair Trenton, New Jersey 08625-0185 NEDDA G. MASSAR ALBERT BURSTEIN (609) 292-8700 or Toll Free Within NJ 1-888-313-ELEC (3532) Legal Director Commissioner EVELYN FORD THEODORE Z. DAVIS Website: http://www.elec.state.nj.us/ Compliance Director Commissioner JAMES P. WYSE Counsel PUBLIC SESSION MINUTES July 19, 2005 Chair English, Vice Chair Tober, Commissioner Burstein, and Senior Staff were present. Commissioner Davis and Counsel Wyse were absent. 1. Open Public Meetings Statement Chair English called the meeting to order and announced that pursuant to the “Open Public Meetings Act,” N.J.S.A. 10:4-6 et seq., adequate notice of the meeting of the Commission had been filed with the Secretary of State’s Office and distributed to the entire State House Press Corps. The meeting convened at 11:30 a.m. in Trenton. 2. Adoption of Proposed New Rules to Implement New Jersey Fair and Clean Elections Pilot Project At the April 5, 2005 meeting, the Commission approved the proposal of new rules to implement the New Jersey Fair and Clean Elections Pilot Project. The proposed new rules were published in the New Jersey Register on May 16, 2005, and were summarized in the minutes of the June 21, 2005 meeting. Staff recommended that the Commission approve adoption of the proposed Clean Elections rules without change and with the responses, circulated to the Commissioners, to the comments received at the June 21, 2005 public hearing and to the written comments received by the July 15, 2005 deadline. -
Universal Pre-K & Kindergarten Registration Packet
Universal Pre-K & Kindergarten Registration Packet Prior to July 1, parents registering their child for Kindergarten should contact their neighborhood school to schedule an appointment. Children must be 5 years old by December 1 in order to register. All other grades must contact Central Registration. If you are unsure of your neighborhood elementary school, click here to access our boundary maps or visit http://www.wappingersschools.org/domain/33 Brinckerhoff Elementary School: 897-6800 ext. 10001 James. S. Evans Elementary School: 298-5240 ext. 11001 Fishkill Elementary School: 897-6780 ext. 12001 Fishkill Plains Elementary School: 227-1770 ext. 13000 Gayhead Elementary School: 227-1756 ext.14005 Myers Corners Elementary School: 298-5260 16003 Oak Grove Elementary School: 298-5280 ext. 17000 Sheafe Road Elementary School: 298-5290 ext. 18000 Vassar Road Elementary School: 463-7860 ext. 19000 After July 1, parents/guardians wishing to register their child/children in the Wappingers Central School District should begin the process by calling the Central Registration Office at 25 Corporate Park Drive, PO Box 396, Hopewell Junction, NY 12533 (298-5000 x 40132) and scheduling an appointment. Hours of operation are Mondays – Fridays from 8:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. In the Event of Inclement Weather: If there is a school cancelation or delayed opening due to inclement weather, your appointment will automatically be canceled, and you will need to call to reschedule. Information on cancelations or delays will be announced on the following local radio stations beginning at 6:00 a.m. WBNR – 1260 AM WRWD – FM 107.3 WCZX – FM 97.7 WSPK – FM 104.7 WHUD – FM 100.7 WPDH – FM 101.5 WRNQ – FM 92.1 WEOK – 1390 AM WKIP – 1450 AM WGNY – 1200 AM You may also get school closing/delay information on our district website: www.wappingersschools.org or by downloading our mobile app by clicking on iTunes Store or Google Play. -
Federal Communications Commission Before the Federal
Federal Communications Commission Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of ) ) Existing Shareholders of Clear Channel ) BTCCT-20061212AVR Communications, Inc. ) BTCH-20061212CCF, et al. (Transferors) ) BTCH-20061212BYE, et al. and ) BTCH-20061212BZT, et al. Shareholders of Thomas H. Lee ) BTC-20061212BXW, et al. Equity Fund VI, L.P., ) BTCTVL-20061212CDD Bain Capital (CC) IX, L.P., ) BTCH-20061212AET, et al. and BT Triple Crown Capital ) BTC-20061212BNM, et al. Holdings III, Inc. ) BTCH-20061212CDE, et al. (Transferees) ) BTCCT-20061212CEI, et al. ) BTCCT-20061212CEO For Consent to Transfers of Control of ) BTCH-20061212AVS, et al. ) BTCCT-20061212BFW, et al. Ackerley Broadcasting – Fresno, LLC ) BTC-20061212CEP, et al. Ackerley Broadcasting Operations, LLC; ) BTCH-20061212CFF, et al. AMFM Broadcasting Licenses, LLC; ) BTCH-20070619AKF AMFM Radio Licenses, LLC; ) AMFM Texas Licenses Limited Partnership; ) Bel Meade Broadcasting Company, Inc. ) Capstar TX Limited Partnership; ) CC Licenses, LLC; CCB Texas Licenses, L.P.; ) Central NY News, Inc.; Citicasters Co.; ) Citicasters Licenses, L.P.; Clear Channel ) Broadcasting Licenses, Inc.; ) Jacor Broadcasting Corporation; and Jacor ) Broadcasting of Colorado, Inc. ) ) and ) ) Existing Shareholders of Clear Channel ) BAL-20070619ABU, et al. Communications, Inc. (Assignors) ) BALH-20070619AKA, et al. and ) BALH-20070619AEY, et al. Aloha Station Trust, LLC, as Trustee ) BAL-20070619AHH, et al. (Assignee) ) BALH-20070619ACB, et al. ) BALH-20070619AIT, et al. For Consent to Assignment of Licenses of ) BALH-20070627ACN ) BALH-20070627ACO, et al. Jacor Broadcasting Corporation; ) BAL-20070906ADP CC Licenses, LLC; AMFM Radio ) BALH-20070906ADQ Licenses, LLC; Citicasters Licenses, LP; ) Capstar TX Limited Partnership; and ) Clear Channel Broadcasting Licenses, Inc. ) Federal Communications Commission ERRATUM Released: January 30, 2008 By the Media Bureau: On January 24, 2008, the Commission released a Memorandum Opinion and Order(MO&O),FCC 08-3, in the above-captioned proceeding. -
FCC-06-11A1.Pdf
Federal Communications Commission FCC 06-11 Before the FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of ) ) Annual Assessment of the Status of Competition ) MB Docket No. 05-255 in the Market for the Delivery of Video ) Programming ) TWELFTH ANNUAL REPORT Adopted: February 10, 2006 Released: March 3, 2006 Comment Date: April 3, 2006 Reply Comment Date: April 18, 2006 By the Commission: Chairman Martin, Commissioners Copps, Adelstein, and Tate issuing separate statements. TABLE OF CONTENTS Heading Paragraph # I. INTRODUCTION.................................................................................................................................. 1 A. Scope of this Report......................................................................................................................... 2 B. Summary.......................................................................................................................................... 4 1. The Current State of Competition: 2005 ................................................................................... 4 2. General Findings ....................................................................................................................... 6 3. Specific Findings....................................................................................................................... 8 II. COMPETITORS IN THE MARKET FOR THE DELIVERY OF VIDEO PROGRAMMING ......... 27 A. Cable Television Service .............................................................................................................. -
Television Coverage of the 2005 New Jersey Election: an Analysis of the Nightly News Programs on Local New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia Stations
Television Coverage of the 2005 New Jersey Election: An Analysis of the Nightly News Programs on Local New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia Stations A Project of the Eagleton NJ Project, Eagleton Institute of Politics. Conducted by Dr. Matthew Hale, Seton Hall University. June, 2006 Ingrid Reed, Director Eagleton New Jersey Project Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University 191 Ryders Lane New Brunswick, NJ 08901 732-932-9384 www.eagleton.rutgers.edu Funded by the Henry and Marilyn Taub Foundation EAGLETON INSTITUTE OF POLITICS 191 RYDERS LANE, NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ 08901-8557 Tel: 732/932-9384 E-mail: [email protected] Fax: 732/932-6778 Web: www.eagleton.rutgers.edu Table of Contents Executive Summary ............................................................................ 3-4 Why Local TV News matters ............................................................. 5 Why Local TV News Matters More in New Jersey ........................... 6-7 Research methodology ........................................................................ 8 Results ................................................................................................. 9-21 Table One: Total Amount of Election Coverage ..................... 9 Table Two: Amount of Coverage about New Jersey .............. 11 Table Three: All Governor, All the Time ................................ 13 Table Four: When New Jersey Stories Aired........................... 15 Table Five: Average Story and Soundbite Length .................. 17 Table Six: Strategy/Horserace -
Richard-Hambleton-Catalog-1.Pdf
REFLECTIONS Now the sine qua non of mega-collectors and elite auction houses around the world, the once subversive “Street Art” that originated in New York City in the 1980s with such artists as Keith Haring and Jean Michel Basquiat has redefined where and how we look at art. Today, in the streets and in contemporary galleries, names such as Banksy, Stik and Shepard Fairey are familiar to hip, younger collectors. With fairs and festivals from New York to the Greek Islands and beyond, “Street Art” has become a global phenomenon. The wave of creativity that began to be noticed thirty-five years ago in New York’s East Village and brought renown to such ‘tags’ as “Samo,” “Crash,” “Daze” and “Lady Pink” was a fertile, drug fueled period of spray and splatter. Julian Schnabel had begun to make headlines for the upstart Mary Boone Gallery as Ronald Reagan became President and scientists raced to contain the spread of a mysterious and deadly new virus (HIV Aids). It was into this environment that Canadian artist Richard Hambleton arrived. Hambleton’s first stop in America was the west coast of the United States. He used funds from a grant to visit cities like Seattle and San Francisco, where he caused an uproar with his controversial “Mass Murder” series. The artist peppered the sidewalks with white chalk outlines of bodies – like those a police coroner sketches around the victim of a crime – the bloodier looking the better. The authorities were not amused. He was told also, that he was ineligible for future grant money by his donors. -
PUBLIC NOTICE News Media Information 202/418- Federal Communications Commission 0500 445 12Th St., S.W
PUBLIC NOTICE News media information 202/418- Federal Communications Commission 0500 445 12th St., S.W. Fax-On-Demand 202/418-2830 Washington, D.C. 20554 Internet: http://www.fcc.gov ftp.fcc.gov Report No. 541 Media Bureau Call Sign Actions 4/16/2012 During the period from 3/6/2012 to 4/10/2012 the Commission accepted applications to assign call signs to, or change the call signs of the following broadcast stations. Call Signs Reserved for Pending Sales Applicants Call Former Call Service Requested By City State File-Number Sign Sign FORKS BROADCASTING, BAL- KFKB AM FORKS WA KRKZ INC. 20120208ADH KJOZ AM DAIJ MEDIA, LLC CONROE TX 20120119ACT KJOJ LEE FAMILY KZNO FM JEROME ID 20120214AAR KMVX BROADCASTING, INC. LEHMAN BALH- WABT FM NEVERSINK RADIO, LLC PA WTSX TOWNSHIP 20120314ADJ LIBERTY UNIVERSITY, WVRA FM ENFIELD NC 20120106AAI WBOB-FM INC. New or Modified Call Signs Row Forme Effective Call Servic Stat Numbe Assigned To City File Number r Call Date Sign e e r Sign 03/06/201 LA PROMESA 20071022AS 1 KPDE FM EDEN TX New 2 FOUNDATION U POLLACK 03/06/201 2 KXIQ AM BROADCASTING TURRELL AR WPLX 2 CO. 03/09/201 WRW 3 WJIP AM CC LICENSES, LLC ELLENVILLE NY 2 D 03/09/201 WRWB WKIP- 4 FM CC LICENSES, LLC ELLENVILLE NY 2 -FM FM 03/12/201 PROPHECY MEDIA 5 KIXT FM HEWITT TX KDRW 2 GROUP, LLC 03/12/201 WLIG- PLAINVIEW, W17C 6 LP WLNY-TV INC. NY 2 LP ETC. R 03/12/201 WMUN LOCAL MEDIA TV WLNY 7 DC MINEOLA NY 2 -CD NEW YORK, LLC -CD 8 03/12/201 WNMF LD LOCAL MEDIA TV MORRISTOWN NJ WLIG- 2 -LD NEW YORK, LLC LD 03/12/201 WWW FLINN JR, GEORGE HOLLY 20070502AA 9 FM MS New 2 N S SPRINGS S BROOKE 03/13/201 20060310AB 10 KZZW FM WILLIAMS MOORELAND OK New 2 I TRISSEL 03/14/201 SATNAM MEDIA 11 KRPA AM OAK HARBOR WA KWDB 2 GROUP INC. -
LESS NEWS IS BAD NEWS the Media Crisis and New Jersey’S News Deficit
Advancing progressive policy change since 1997 October 2009 LESS NEWS IS BAD NEWS The Media Crisis and New Jersey’s News Deficit A Report from New Jersey Policy Perspective and the Sandra Starr Foundation By Scott Weingart INTRODUCTION an electorate that receives little local news coverage and has relatively little knowledge of local and state politics . To make On July 23, 2009, the Federal Bureau of Investigation matters worse, the number of professional reporters in the state announced the arrests of 44 people, including half a dozen has fallen in recent years . New Jersey public officeholders, on charges ranging from po - litical corruption to trafficking in human organs. The massive New Jersey has faced a chronic news deficit because of peculi - corruption sweep ran on network and cable news and grabbed arities of its geography and economic development. From the headlines in the next day’s papers across the country. If New time of the nation’s founding, the state has developed in the Jerseyans were surprised, it was only by the scale of the opera - shadow of the two great cities across its borders, NewYork and tion. In an October, 2007 poll, nearly two-thirds of those asked Philadelphia, and failed to develop a major urban center of its had agreed that New Jersey has “a lot” of political corruption. 1 own. Today, New Jersey’s largest city, Newark, is home to just 3.2 percent of the state’s population, and rather than serving as New Jersey has a notorious and well-deserved reputation for an independent media center, Newark falls within the larger corrupt government. -
Broadcast Actions 5/29/2014
Federal Communications Commission 445 Twelfth Street SW PUBLIC NOTICE Washington, D.C. 20554 News media information 202 / 418-0500 Recorded listing of releases and texts 202 / 418-2222 REPORT NO. 48249 Broadcast Actions 5/29/2014 STATE FILE NUMBER E/P CALL LETTERS APPLICANT AND LOCATION N A T U R E O F A P P L I C A T I O N AM STATION APPLICATIONS FOR RENEWAL GRANTED NY BR-20140131ABV WENY 71510 SOUND COMMUNICATIONS, LLC Renewal of License. E 1230 KHZ NY ,ELMIRA Actions of: 04/29/2014 FM STATION APPLICATIONS FOR MODIFICATION OF LICENSE GRANTED OH BMLH-20140415ABD WPOS-FM THE MAUMEE VALLEY License to modify. 65946 BROADCASTING ASSOCIATION E 102.3 MHZ OH , HOLLAND Actions of: 05/23/2014 AM STATION APPLICATIONS FOR RENEWAL DISMISSED NY BR-20071114ABF WRIV 14647 CRYSTAL COAST Renewal of License. COMMUNICATIONS, INC. Dismissed as moot, see letter dated 5/5/2008. E 1390 KHZ NY , RIVERHEAD Page 1 of 199 Federal Communications Commission 445 Twelfth Street SW PUBLIC NOTICE Washington, D.C. 20554 News media information 202 / 418-0500 Recorded listing of releases and texts 202 / 418-2222 REPORT NO. 48249 Broadcast Actions 5/29/2014 STATE FILE NUMBER E/P CALL LETTERS APPLICANT AND LOCATION N A T U R E O F A P P L I C A T I O N Actions of: 05/23/2014 AM STATION APPLICATIONS FOR ASSIGNMENT OF LICENSE GRANTED NY BAL-20140212AEC WGGO 9409 PEMBROOK PINES, INC. Voluntary Assignment of License From: PEMBROOK PINES, INC. E 1590 KHZ NY , SALAMANCA To: SOUND COMMUNICATIONS, LLC Form 314 NY BAL-20140212AEE WOEN 19708 PEMBROOK PINES, INC. -
Frameworks for the Downtown Arts Scene
ACADEMIC REGISTRAR ROOM 261 DIVERSITY OF LONDON 3Ei’ ATE HOUSE v'Al i STREET LONDON WC1E7HU Strategy in Context: The Work and Practice of New York’s Downtown Artists in the Late 1970s and Early 1980s By Sharon Patricia Harper Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of the History of Art at University College London 2003 1 UMI Number: U602573 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U602573 Published by ProQuest LLC 2014. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Abstract The rise of neo-conservatism defined the critical context of many appraisals of artistic work produced in downtown New York in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Although initial reviews of the scene were largely enthusiastic, subsequent assessments of artistic work from this period have been largely negative. Artists like Keith Haring, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Kenny Scharf have been assessed primarily in terms of gentrification, commodification, and political commitment relying upon various theoretical assumptions about social processes. The conclusions reached have primarily centred upon the lack of resistance by these artists to post industrial capitalism in its various manifestations. -
FY 2016 and FY 2018
Corporation for Public Broadcasting Appropriation Request and Justification FY2016 and FY2018 Submitted to the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee and the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee February 2, 2015 This document with links to relevant public broadcasting sites is available on our Web site at: www.cpb.org Table of Contents Financial Summary …………………………..........................................................1 Narrative Summary…………………………………………………………………2 Section I – CPB Fiscal Year 2018 Request .....……………………...……………. 4 Section II – Interconnection Fiscal Year 2016 Request.………...…...…..…..… . 24 Section III – CPB Fiscal Year 2016 Request for Ready To Learn ……...…...…..39 FY 2016 Proposed Appropriations Language……………………….. 42 Appendix A – Inspector General Budget………………………..……..…………43 Appendix B – CPB Appropriations History …………………...………………....44 Appendix C – Formula for Allocating CPB’s Federal Appropriation………….....46 Appendix D – CPB Support for Rural Stations …………………………………. 47 Appendix E – Legislative History of CPB’s Advance Appropriation ………..…. 49 Appendix F – Public Broadcasting’s Interconnection Funding History ….…..…. 51 Appendix G – Ready to Learn Research and Evaluation Studies ……………….. 53 Appendix H – Excerpt from the Report on Alternative Sources of Funding for Public Broadcasting Stations ……………………………………………….…… 58 Appendix I – State Profiles…...………………………………………….….…… 87 Appendix J – The President’s FY 2016 Budget Request...…...…………………131 0 FINANCIAL SUMMARY OF THE CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING’S (CPB) BUDGET REQUESTS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2016/2018 FY 2018 CPB Funding The Corporation for Public Broadcasting requests a $445 million advance appropriation for Fiscal Year (FY) 2018. This is level funding compared to the amount provided by Congress for both FY 2016 and FY 2017, and is the amount requested by the Administration for FY 2018. -
Lower Hudson Valley
NY STATE EAS MONITORING ASSIGNMENTS - REGION 14 - LOWER HUDSON VALLEY Region 14 - Lower Hudson Valley Counties of: Orange, Putnam, Lower Hudson Valley, Rockland, Westchester Callsign Frequency City of License Monitor 1 Monitor 2 SR/LP1 WHUD 100.7 mHz. Peekskill WABC WPDH SR/LP1 WLNA 1420 kHz. Peekskill WABC WPDH LP1 WFAS 1230 kHz. White Plains WHUD WABC LP1 WNBMFM 103.9 mHz. Bronxville WCBS WABC LP1 WJGK 103.1 mHz. Newburgh WHUD WFGB LP2 WOSR 91.7 mHz. Middletown WHUD WJGK LP2 WRPJ 88.9 MHz Port Jervis WPDH WAMCFM PN WALL 1340 kHz. Middletown WPDH WRPJ PN WANR 88.5 MHz Brewster WJGK WHUD PN WARY 88.1 mHz. Valhalla WHUD WNBMFM PN WDBY 105.5 mHz. Patterson WHUD WNBMFM PN WDLC 1490 kHz. Port Jervis WPDH WRPJ pPN WEPTCD 22 Newburgh WHUD WJGK PN WFME 106.3 mHz. Mount Kisco WHUD WKLVFM PN WGNY 1220 kHz. Newburgh WHUD WFGB PN WJZZ 90.1 mHz. Montgomery WPDH WRPJ PN WARW 96.7 MHz Port Chester WNBMFM WNYCFM PN WLJP 89.3 mHz. Monroe WPDH WAMCFM PN WMFU 90.1 mHz. Mount Hope WHUD WJGK PN WNYK 88.7 MHz Nyack WHUD WNBMFM PN WNYX 88.1 mHz. Montgomery WJGK WHUD PN WOSS 91.1 MHz Ossining WFASFM WHUD PN WPUT 1510 kHz. North Salem WHUD WNBMFM PN WQXW 90.3 mHz. Ossining WNYCFM WABC PN WRCR 1700 kHz Ramapo WHUD WOSS PN WRKL 910 kHz. New City WHUD WNBMFM PN WRRV 92.7 MHz Middletown WHUD WJGK PN WRVP 1310 kHz Mount Kisco WABC WNYCFM PN WSPK 104.7 MHz Poughkeepsie WPDH WFGB PN WTBQ 1110 kHz.