The Claremont Courier (United States Postal Service 115-180) is published once weekly by the Courier Graphics Corporation at 1420 N. Our website updates news from the Claremont area every day. Our community newspaper is one of the best in California. Office Manager/ Legal Notices Vickie Rosenbergīilling/Accounting Manager Dee Proffitt Distribution/Publications Tom Smith The Claremont COURIER office will be closed Monday, May 27 in observance of Memorial Day.Īd Design Jenelle Rensch Page Layout Kathryn Dunn, Jenelle RenschĬall us or visit our website to subscribe and find out how well the COURIER brings home Claremont news. Reporter At Large Pat Yarborough Calendar Editorĭear Editor: We Americans like to look down our noses at the “corruption” in other countries while, in fact, our political system is for sale to the corrupting influence of big Wednesday, May 29 CUSD Surplus Property Auction Kirkendall Center, 11 a.m. Tree Committee-Cancelled Tuesday, May 28 City Council Council Chamber, 6:30 p.m. Please email entries to Īgendas for city meetings are available at Monday, May 27 Memorial Day Service Oak Park Cemetery, 11 a.m. Haiku submissions should reflect upon life or events in Claremont. Mary Caenepeel, president Claremont Unified School Board San Jose Ave., and it makes me smile every time I see it. It now hangs on the wall of the lobby of the District Office at 170 W. I would like to invite and encourage the community to visit the district office and see this wonderful, 3-dimensional work of art. They are gifted young people who have found a voice in this art. Not only did he fund this project, he brought a sense of pride and accomplishment to a group of wonderful students. I would like to take this opportunity to publicly thank the generous and thoughtful donor. Believing it should be seen by a wider audience, he started the process to bring the art to the district office for permanent installation. Ken Johnson and executed by students with special needs in Molly Goodreau’s class at Claremont High School, the art was first seen by our donor at the Fairplex ArtReach show in March. The gift is a piece of art that is now hanging in the lobby of the district office. Photo Editor/Staff Photographer Steven Felschundneffĭear Editor: Recently, Claremont Unified School District received a remarkable gift from a generous anonymous donor. Our kids and grandkids will rightly ask, “Why did you pile up this debt to benefit the very rich while refusing to act on the issues that affect our futures?” Well, children, we allow corruption of our own.Īs a child I thought The electric sweeper was A back-room cleaner, And that the prayer Said, “Hollywood be thy name.” How did that make sense?Įducation Reporter/Obituaries Sarah Torribio Even modest proposals to regulate banking, educate more of our children, make the total tax rate for billionaires closer to yours, fix our roads, or do anything to avoid global warming are rejected as socialism or too radical. They support lower taxes for the rich and disinvestment in programs that grow the middle-class. What amazes me is how nearly half of the otherwise-smart Americans actively vote for this slide into mediocrity to continue. As a result of these policy choices, the middle-class, working and poor in America are losing the American Dream, while the very rich are doubling and redoubling their wealth. These huge favors for the investor class happened at the same time that preschooling, public education, transportation infrastructure, underwater mortgages, incarceration rates, climate change and veterans’ backlogs have gotten worse.
Just look at the favorable tax rates (15 percent) for venture capitalists and large investors, subsidies to big polluters and not one Wall Street executive jailed for nearly collapsing our economy in 2007 to 2009. Don’t think this affects you? Think again.
Owner Janis Weinberger Publisher and Owner Peter Weinbergerĭonors. More news and photo galleries every day at: ġ420 N. POLICE BLOTTER/ PAGE 4 SUMMER OPPS/ PAGE 12 Terri Kegans, CUSD’s Teacher of the Year/PAGE 5 Insights and ideas from Henry Rollins/ PAGE 24 All 8 Claremont colleges held commencement last week.Īrtist Nijiko Bergh adds some color to one of her rosemaling plates at Pilgrim Placeʼs arts and crafts building.
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Wright received a postdoctoral professional masterʼs degree during the ceremony. Sheldon Schuster, president of Keck Graduate Institute, during commencement at KGI in Claremont. CMC STUDENT DIES AFTER REPORTEDLY HUFFING/PAGE 4ĬOURIER photos/Steven Felschundneff Kierra Wright smiles as she receives her hood on Saturday from Dr.