Saturday, October 19, 2024

Donald J. Trump - Issues

Source: https://www.donaldjtrump.com/issues/

BIG IDEAS, BOLD AMBITIONS AND DARING DREAMS FOR AMERICA'S FUTURE

Rebuild the Greatest Economy in History


President Donald J. Trump passed record-setting tax relief for the middle class, doubled the child tax credit, and slashed more job-killing regulations than any administration had ever done before. Real wages quickly increased as a result, and median household income reached the highest level in the history of our country, while poverty reached a record low. President Trump created nearly 9,000 Opportunity Zones to revitalize neglected communities. President Trump produced a booming economic recovery, and record low unemployment for African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, and women. The Harris-Biden Administration is the destroyer of America’s jobs and continues to fuel runaway inflation with reckless big government spending. President Trump’s vision for America’s economic revival is lower taxes, bigger paychecks, and more jobs for American workers.

Fair Trade for the American Worker


Donald Trump recognized long before he became president that we cannot have free and open trade if some countries exploit the system at the expense of others. President Trump replaced decades of calamitous multinational trade blunders with fair and reciprocal trade that returned jobs, wealth, and manufacturing to America. He cancelled the job-killing Trans-Pacific Partnership, replaced the NAFTA nightmare with the groundbreaking USMCA, and renegotiated the one-sided South Korea deal. President Trump confronted unfair trade practices, imposed tariffs on China that brought billions of dollars into the federal treasury, expanded American agriculture, and opened thousands of new factories. President Trump will implement a 4-year national reshoring plan so that the United States no longer needs to rely on China for essential medical and national security goods, and ban Chinese ownership of all critical infrastructure in the United States. We will bring back our supply chains, and build America into the manufacturing superpower of the world.

Unleash Energy Dominance


Under President Donald J. Trump’s leadership, the United States became the number one producer of oil and natural gas on earth, achieving American energy independence and delivering historically low costs for oil, gas, diesel, and electricity to consumers and businesses. President Trump unlocked our country’s God-given abundance of oil, natural gas, and clean coal. He approved the Keystone XL and Dakota Access, pipelines, opening federal lands and offshore areas for responsible oil and gas production, and ending the unfair and costly Paris Climate Accord. The Harris-Biden Administration reversed the Trump Energy Revolution and is now enriching foreign adversaries abroad. President Trump will unleash the production of domestic energy resources, reduce the soaring price of gasoline, diesel and natural gas, promote energy security for our friends around the world, eliminate the socialist Green New Deal and ensure the United States is never again at the mercy of a foreign supplier of energy.

Secure Borders and Reclaim National Sovereignty


President Donald J. Trump created the most secure border in U.S. history. He ended catch-and-release, took down human traffickers, deported record numbers of illegal alien gang members, and built 450 miles of powerful new wall. The Harris-Biden Administration turned our country into one giant sanctuary for dangerous criminal aliens when he suspended all immigration enforcement in the middle of a global pandemic and reversed landmark agreements that safely returned asylum-seekers to Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador. The onslaught of illegal aliens invading our wide-open borders threatens public safety, drains the treasury, undermines U.S. workers, and burdens schools and hospitals. President Trump will shut down the Harris-Biden Administration’s border disaster. He will again end catch-and-release, restore Remain in Mexico, and eliminate asylum fraud. In cooperative states, President Trump will deputize the National Guard and local law enforcement to assist with rapidly removing illegal alien gang members and criminals. He will also deliver a merit-based immigration system that protects American labor and promotes American values.

War on the Drug Cartels


President Donald J. Trump marshalled the full power of government to stop deadly drugs, opioids, and fentanyl from coming into our country. As a result, drug overdose deaths declined nationwide for the first time in nearly 30 years. The Harris-Biden Administration has allowed drug cartels to wage war on America, steal innocent lives, and ravage our communities. President Trump will take down the drug cartels just as he took down ISIS. He will impose a total naval embargo on cartels, order the Department of Defense to inflict maximum damage on cartel leadership and operations, designate cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, and choke off their access to the global financial system. President Trump will get the full cooperation of neighboring governments to dismantle the cartels, or else expose every bribe and kickback that allows these criminal networks to preserve their brutal reign. He will ask Congress to ensure that drug smugglers and traffickers can receive the Death Penalty. When President Trump is back in the White House, the drug kingpins and vicious traffickers will never sleep soundly again.

Stop Crime and Restore Safety


There is no higher priority than quickly restoring law and order and public safety in America. President Trump stands with the heroes of law enforcement. The Harris-Biden Administration and the radical left politicians have defunded, defamed, and dismantled police forces across America. Murders spiked to all-time highs in Democrat-run cities and radical prosecutors and District Attorneys have given free rein to violent criminals who threaten our citizens. The streets of our once-great cities are now controlled by gangs and cartels, and plagued with mentally ill and drug-addicted homeless. President Trump will revitalize police departments and reclaim safety, dignity, and peace for law-abiding Americans. He will deliver record funding to hire and retrain police officers, strengthen qualified immunity and other protections for police officers, increase penalties for assaults on law enforcement, put violent offenders and career criminals behind bars, and surge federal prosecutors and the National Guard into high-crime communities.

Renew American Strength and Leadership


President Donald J. Trump replaced the failed policy of never-ending war, regime change and nation-building with a bold vision to pursue peace through strength. He fully rebuilt American military might, modernized our nuclear arsenal, and launched the Space Force. He obliterated 100 percent of the ISIS caliphate, killed its founder and leader Abu-Bakar Al Baghdadi, and eliminated the world's number one terrorist, Qasem Soleimani. President Trump kept America out of new wars and brought thousands of brave troops home from Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, and many other countries. The Harris-Biden Administration has undermined our military readiness and surrendered our strength to the Taliban. President Trump will defend America against all threats, protect America against all dangers, and keep America out of unnecessary foreign wars. He will also get the Harris-Biden Administration’s radical left ideology out of our military and rehire every patriot who was unjustly fired. To protect our people from the threat of nuclear weapons and hypersonic missiles, President Trump will also build a state-of-the-art next-generation missile defense shield.

Reject Globalism and Embrace Patriotism


President Donald J. Trump forged international cooperation among strong, sovereign, and independent nations to create a future of peace, prosperity, and promise for the world. He combatted Radical Islamic terrorism, withdrew from the disastrous Iran Nuclear Deal, and suspended travel and refugee resettlement from the world’s most dangerous regions. He recognized Israel's true capital and moved the American Embassy to Jerusalem and acknowledged Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights. As a result of his bold diplomacy and principled realism, President Trump brokered four Middle East peace deals, collectively called the Abraham Accords, and our NATO allies agreed to pay $400 billion more in defense spending. The Harris-Biden Administration’s humiliating defeat in Afghanistan has emboldened rogue regimes, terrorist groups, and rivals like China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran that were in retreat. Under President Trump, we will restore our standing in the world and American leadership abroad.

Care For Our Veterans


While Washington politicians poured precious American blood and treasure into misguided military adventures overseas, those who proudly wore our nation’s uniform were dying waiting for medical care at home. President Donald J. Trump passed the largest reform of the Department of Veterans Affairs in a generation, including VA Accountability and VA Choice, and fired 11,500 federal workers who failed to give our wounded warriors the quality and timely care they so richly deserve. He secured record funding for mental health services, and expanded access to telehealth and suicide prevention resources. To secure the blessings of freedom for those who risked their lives to defend it, President Trump decreased veteran homelessness, increased educational benefits, and achieved record-low veteran unemployment.  We will fight to serve our veterans with better care and benefits than ever before.

Protect Parents’ Rights


President Donald J. Trump fought tirelessly to expand charter schools and school choice for America’s children. He secured permanent funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities and protected free speech on college campuses. Now, the Harris-Biden Administration and the radical left are using the public school system to push their perverse sexual, racial, and political material on our youth. President Trump will cut federal funding for any school or program pushing Critical Race Theory or gender ideology on our children. His administration will open Civil Rights investigations into any school district that has engaged in race-based discrimination. President Trump will veto the sinister effort to weaponize civics education, keep men out of women’s sports, and create a credentialing body to certify teachers who embrace patriotic values. President Trump will reward states and school districts that abolish teacher tenure for grades K-12 and adopt Merit Pay, cut the number of school administrators, adopt a Parental Bill of Rights, and implement the direct election of school principals by the parents.

Defend Law and Liberty


President Donald J. Trump appointed nearly 300 federal judges to interpret the Constitution as written and preserve the extraordinary vision of our founding fathers. He confirmed three strong Constitutionalists to the United States Supreme Court who will ensure the law is upheld equally, fairly and without political prejudice for all of our citizens. President Trump’s three appointees delivered the biggest win for life in a generation in overturning Roe v. Wade and expanded the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms. President Trump will continue to nominate highly qualified prosecutors, judges, and justices who believe in enforcing the law, not their own political agenda. He will also always defend your Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms, and uphold your religious liberty, including the Constitutional right to pray in public schools.

End Censorship and Reclaim Free Speech


President Trump is absolutely committed to dismantling and destroying the left-wing censorship regime. If we don’t have free speech in America, then we will no longer be a free country. President Trump’s plan includes firing any federal bureaucrat who has engaged in censoring the lawful speech of American citizens, banning taxpayer funds from being used to categorize lawful speech for purposes of illicit censorship, banning federal agencies from censoring speech, stopping federal funding for all non-profits and academic programs engaged in censorship, passing a digital bill of rights, and enacting landmark legislation to drastically limit the ability of big social media platforms to restrict free speech. By restoring free speech, we will begin to reclaim our democracy.

Free, Honest and Lawful Elections


President Donald J. Trump is committed to the honesty of our elections and the integrity of our Republic. We will reform our election laws to verify the identity and eligibility of all voters to ensure faith and confidence in all future elections. We will pass a bold range of critical election integrity measures that include banning unsecure drop boxes and ballot harvesting. State and local officials cannot be permitted to make illegal and unconstitutional changes to election procedures without the required approvals by the state legislatures. Very importantly, we must ban private money from pouring into local election offices.

Drain the Swamp of Washington Corruption


President Donald J. Trump is committed to dismantling the deep state and restoring government by the People, just as he did during his administration. President Trump will conduct a top-to-bottom overhaul of the federal bureaucracies to clean out the rot and corruption of Washington D.C. President Trump will push for a constitutional amendment to impose term limits on members of Congress, a permanent ban on taxpayer funding of campaigns, a lifetime ban on lobbying by former members of Congress and cabinet members, and a ban on members of Congress trading stocks with insider information.

Better Health Care Choices at Lower Costs


President Donald J. Trump empowered American patients by greatly expanding healthcare choice, transparency, and affordability. He increased competition in the health insurance market, eliminated the Obamacare individual mandate, and signed Right to Try that gives terminally ill patients access to lifesaving cures. President Trump lowered drug prices for the first time in over 50 years and finalized the Most Favored Nation Rule to ensure that pharmaceutical companies offer the same discounts to the United States as they do to other nations. To save lives from the China virus, President Trump organized the production of the world’s largest supply of ventilators and the development of treatments and vaccines. He will stop all COVID mandates and restore medical freedom, end surprise medical billing, increase fairness through price transparency, and further reduce the cost of prescription drugs and health insurance premiums. President Trump will always protect Medicare, Social Security, and patients with pre-existing conditions.


READ THE OFFICIAL 2024 Republican Party Platform HERE

Agenda 47

Source: https://www.donaldjtrump.com/platform

President Trump’s 20 CORE PROMISES
TO MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!


  • 1 Seal the border and stop the migrant invasion

  • 2 Carry out the largest deportation operation in american history

  • 3 End inflation, and make america affordable again

  • 4 Make america the dominant energy producer in the world, by far!

  • 5 STOP OUTSOURCING, AND TURN THE UNITED STATES INTO A MANUFACTURING SUPERPOWER

  • 6 large tax cuts for workers, and no tax on tips!

  • 7 Defend our constitution, our bill of rights, and our fundamental freedoms, including freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and the right to keep and bear arms

  • 8 Prevent world war three, restore peace in europe and in the middle east, and build a great iron dome missile defense shield over our entire country -- all made in america

  • 9 End the weaponization of government against the american people

  • 10 Stop the migrant crime epidemic, demolish the foreign drug cartels, crush gang violence, and lock up violent offenders

  • 11 Rebuild our cities, including washington dc, making them safe, clean, and beautiful again.

  • 12 Strengthen and modernize our military, making it, without question, the strongest and most powerful in the world

  • 13 Keep the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency

  • 14 Fight for and protect social security and medicare with no cuts, including no changes to the retirement age

  • 15 Cancel the electric vehicle mandate and cut costly and burdensome regulations

  • 16 Cut federal funding for any school pushing critical race theory, radical gender ideology, and other inappropriate racial, sexual, or political content on our children

  • 17 Keep men out of women's sports

  • 18 Deport pro-hamas radicals and make our college campuses safe and patriotic again

  • 19 Secure our elections, including same day voting, voter identification, paper ballots, and proof of citizenship

  • 20 Unite our country by bringing it to new and record levels of success

  • Monday, October 14, 2024

    Obituaries - Clynne & Wolf

    Harvey B. Clynne


    AGE: 95 • Vineland

    Harvey B. Clynne, 95, of Vineland, NJ, passed away peacefully Saturday, August 2, 2014, at Inspira Medical Center in Vineland with his son, Thomas Clynne and daughter-in-law, Rose, and step-daughter and devoted caregiver Ronnie Wolf by his side. Born in Atlantic City, he graduated from Atlantic City High School in 1936, and from University of Wisconsin in 1940. He served as a SeaBee in the US Navy in World War II. His varied career included a number of different jobs including the family owned Society Studio as well as his own commercial printing businesses such as Brigantine Press and Shore Studios. He produced greeting cards and invented and produced "Weather Cards". He built his own home in Brigantine and built a home with his sister, Faith, and brother-in-law, Herb Stern, in Longport, NJ.

    He is survived by his sister, Faith, 10 children and step-children, 27 grand-children and 11 great grand-children.

    He maintained a lifelong interest in building and construction, and enjoyed fishing, cooking, music and songwriting, studying the stock market, gardening, poker, scrabble, and using his computer. He had recently moved from Cherry Hill, NJ to the New Jersey State Veterans Memorial Home in Vineland.

    Services will be private. Donations may be made to the New Jersey State Veterans Memorial Home in Vineland, NJ (524 Northwest Blvd., Vineland, NJ 08360) or to the charity of your choice.



    Published by Courier Post on Aug. 8, 2014.
    Source: https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/courierpostonline/name/harvey-clynne-obituary?id=18900145



    Ronnie H. Wolf
    b. February 4, 1942 - d. September 14, 2024

    Ronnie H. Wolf (nee Fisher), age 82, passed away on September 14, 2024. She is survived by her sisters Nadine (Barry) Kavitsky, Sondra (Gary) Kaye, Step-Daughter Rachel (Jim) Franklin, Step-Son Alex Wolf, Step-Grandchildren Cody, Jimmy (Stephanie), Braden, Shenandoah "Doe", Kamin, Tiernan, and Gavril, and Step Great Grandchildren, Jacob and Teagen. She is also survived by her niece Dana (Roger) Smith, nephew Stuart (Melanie) Kavitsky. Additionally, she was the Great Aunt of Jared, Hugh, Amanda, and Sy.

    Ronnie enjoyed a long career as a beloved business teacher in the Philadelphia City School district until her retirement. She was a proud member of the Fantastic Single seniors group. She was also an award-winning amateur photographer, avid dancer, clarinetist, lover of all music, travel enthusiast, and general adventurist.

    Friends and family are invited to funeral services on Wednesday, September 18, 2024 at 10:00AM at Joseph Levine & Sons, 4737 E. Street Road in Trevose, PA. Interment to follow at Shalom Memorial Park in Huntingdon Valley. Those unable to attend services, the service will be webcasted at www.levinefuneral.com. In lieu of flowers, contributions in Ronnie’s memory may be made to American Cancer Society or a charity of the donor’s choice.



    Source: https://obits.levinefuneral.com/ronnie-wolf

    Obituary - Gibson

    Richard R. Gibson
    March 27, 1975 - August 13, 2024


    Richard R. Gibson, 49, of Philadelphia, PA, passed away suddenly on August 13, 2024. He was born in Riverside, NJ on March 27th, 1975, to Richard and Emma J. Gibson.

    Richard dedicated many years of his life to the Local Union 126 in Philadelphia, PA, where he served as a Lineman. His commitment and contributions to his profession were greatly valued by all who had the privilege of working alongside him.

    He is survived by his loving mother Emma J. Gibson and brother Randy Gibson. He was proceeded in death by his father Richard Gibson. His presence will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him.

    As we mourn the loss of Richard, let us also celebrate the life he lived and the love he shared. May his memory continue to inspire and uplift us all.

    Family and friends are invited to a visitation for Richard on Thursday August 22nd at Givnish funeral home located at 1200 Route 130 N Cinnaminson, NJ 08077 from 9am to 11am with the memorial service to begin at 11am. Following the service there will be a burial at Lakeview Memorial Park 1300 US-130 N Cinnaminson, NJ 08077.



    Source: https://www.givnish.com/obituaries/Richard-Gibson-19/#!/Obituary

    Obituaries - Johnson & Reeve

    Tristam Johnson Obituary

    PRINCETON -- Tristam B. Johnson, 84, a lifelong Princeton resident and retired investment advisor, died Saturday at Virtua Memorial Hospital in Mt. Holly.

    He had suffered a stroke in November 1999, and had been living at the home of his daughter, Katie Hill, and her late husband Terry in Columbus for the past two years. During this time, his life was enriched by his constant and devoted companion and care giver, Rayfield Meyers.

    Mr. Johnson was born in Princeton Aug. 17, 1919 and attended Princeton Country Day School and Lawrenceville School before graduating from Yale with the Class of 1941. He joined the U.S. Army immediately after graduation and served during World War II as an intelligence officer stationed in Australia where he intercepted and decoded Japanese communications. Upon his return to Princeton, he embarked on a long and successful career as a stockbroker and investment advisor.

    After learning the brokerage business in New York City, he established the Tristam B. Johnson Company in Princeton before being asked to help start the Princeton branch of Laidlaw & Co. in the 1950s. He later was associated with Kidder Peabody and with Hornblower Weeks & Co. in its Trenton office. Most recently he was with Paine Webber, now UBS Financial Services, on Route 1, where he continued to work long after normal retirement age. He took a great interest in his clients and was known for helping them solve a wide variety of problems as well as offering investment advice.

    Active in Republican politics in Princeton, he was elected to Borough Council in 1956 and served as Council President and then as acting mayor when Mayor Mac Sturges was stricken with a heart attack. In 1958 he ran unsuccessfully for mayor himself on the Republican ticket. He was the New Jersey chairman of the campaign to elect Nelson Rockefeller president.

    In the early 1970s, Mr. Johnson was named financial consultant in the formation of the Stony Brook Regional Sewerage Authority and assisted in securing the multi-million dollar bond issue for the construction of the new sewerage plant on River Road. He was also a member of a statewide transportation advisory council.

    Mr. Johnson had a passionate interest in American history, especially the American Revolution. He became engaged in the concept of "Living History" during the Bi-Centennial reenactments in the Princeton area. He took on the characters of several French and American Revolution figures as a part of reenactments of events and battles associated with the War to bring to life the importance of the events of that era. One of his most cherished involvements included crossing the Delaware during the annual reenactment of George Washington Crossing the Delaware and the battles of Trenton and Princeton. He also applied his passion for history and his financial skills to assisting in the creation of the Swan Foundation, an institution dedicated to preserving and displaying artifacts from the American Revolution.

    A loyal member and former president of the Princeton Rotary Club since '51, he was also a member of the Nassau Club. Mr. Johnson was a longtime member and former elder of First (now Nassau) Presbyterian Church and a former member of the Bay Head Yacht Club and Pretty Brook Tennis Club.

    Mr. Johnson was a loving and devoted father and grandfather, who took great pleasure in touching the lives of each of his children, grandchildren, and great-grandson, including irregular surprise visits at opportune moments anywhere, anytime.

    Mr. Johnson's wife, the former Eileen Douglas, died in January 2002. He is survived by four children from his first marriage to the late Helen Harris Johnson, Kate E. Hill of Columbus, Tristam B. Johnson Jr. of Newfane, VT, Thomas H. Johnson of Salt Lake City, UT and Elizabeth H. Johnson of Williamstown, MA; and two sons from his marriage to Barbara L. Johnson of Princeton, Jeffrey D. Johnson of Castleton, VT and Kevin P. Johnson of Newtown, MA. Also surviving are two stepsons, Christopher Reeve of Bedford, NY and Benjamin Reeve of Arlington, MA; 19 grandchildren; five step-grandchildren; and a great-grandson.

    A Memorial Service will be held 4 p.m. Friday at Nassau Presbyterian Church, 61 Nassau St., Princeton, with a reception following at The Nassau Club, 6 Mercer St., Princeton.

    Memorial contributions may be made to The Swan Foundation at The National Museum of the American Revolution, Washington Crossing State Park, 355 Washington Crossing-Pennington Road, Titusville, NJ 08560.

    Arrangements are under the direction of the Mather-Hodge Funeral Home, Princeton.



    Published by The Times, Trenton, on Aug. 3, 2004.

    Source: https://obits.nj.com/us/obituaries/trenton/name/tristam-johnson-obituary?id=15050288 and https://web.archive.org/web/20041224054516/https://towntopics.com/aug0404/obits.html#obit5


    Barbara Lamb Johnson
    March 8, 1932 - June 18, 2024

    Barbara Lamb Johnson Obituary

    Barbara Johnson, former Princeton resident and Town Topics Associate Editor

    Barbara Lamb Johnson died peacefully on June 18, 2024 in Concord, Massachusetts. She was 92.

    For Barbara, the features of a good life included a career as a newspaper reporter, a great love for the outdoors, rowing crew, leadership roles in community organizations, and importantly, raising her four boys.

    Born March 8, 1932 in New York City to Horace Lamb and Beatrice Pitney Lamb, Barbara grew up in New Canaan, CT. At age 10, with asthma, she was sent to school in the dry climate of Arizona. Later she credited the years in Arizona, and time at Westover School, back East, with building self-reliance and discipline so important to her life.

    In 1949 she enrolled in Vassar College. She married her first husband, Franklin Reeve, a year later, and soon they had two sons, Christopher in 1952 and Benjamin in 1953. The marriage ended in divorce. She moved to Princeton, NJ to begin a new life and married Tristam Johnson in 1959, gaining four beloved stepchildren from Tristam’s first marriage. Two more boys, Jeffrey and Kevin, arrived in the early 1960s.

    Barbara soon became actively engaged in the Princeton community. During her six decades there, she played important roles in many organizations, including Carnegie Lake Rowing Association, the Chapin School Parents Association, the Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament, Community without Walls, Friends of the Princeton Public Library, the Nassau Street School PTA, the Princeton Hospital Fete, Trinity Church of Princeton, and the Vassar Club of Central New Jersey.

    n 1975, Barbara joined the reporting staff of Town Topics, a weekly paper in Princeton. She wrote and edited the music, theater, religion, and obituary sections, while also covering Township Committee, planning and zoning boards, and events at Princeton University. She particularly enjoyed the chance to write longer profiles of notable Princeton residents, including Svetlana Alliluyeva (Joseph Stalin’s daughter) and John McPhee.

    She took pride in her accuracy in reporting. When she retired in 1997, the Township Committee and Planning Board both issued proclamations of appreciation for her work, and the Township Mayor held a retirement party in her honor.

    At age 57, Barbara took up rowing on Princeton’s Carnegie Lake. She started in eights and progressed to single scull, winning the event for her age group at the Head of the Charles Regatta in Cambridge, MA in 1999, as well as a fine collection of medals from other events. She was selected by Princeton residents to carry the Olympic torch on part of its journey past Princeton to the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

    In younger years, Barbara yearned “to hike every trail and read every book." She embraced an active retirement in the same spirit, traveling on Elderhostel trips, sometimes including grandchildren. She visited her children in Vermont, Martha’s Vineyard, and more far-flung locales including West Africa, Jerusalem, and Bali. She also continued to write in retirement, taking on several book-length projects. In 2016, she moved to Newbury Court retirement community, in Concord, MA. She spent her last years there, close by her sons and many of her grandchildren.

    Barbara was predeceased by her son Christopher Reeve and by daughter-in-law Dana Reeve. She is survived by three sons and their partners: Benjamin Reeve and Katharine Sterling, Jeffrey and Lynsie Johnson, and Kevin Johnson and Linda Lynch; by four stepchildren: Kate Johnson, Tristam Johnson Jr., Thomas Laabs-Johnson, and Elizabeth Johnson; by ten grandchildren: Matthew, Alexandra, Will, Sebastian, Julia, Trista, Conner, Theo, Lucy, and Annie; and by six great-grandchildren. She is also survived by her sister Dorothy Lamb Crawford, niece Susan Crawford and nephew Peter Crawford.

    A celebration of her life will be held in Duvall Chapel at Newbury Court, Concord, Massachusetts on Saturday, August 17, 2024 at 11:30 am, with a reception to follow at Newbury Court.

    In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to either of two organizations important to her: Friends of the Princeton Public Library, 65 Witherspoon, Princeton, NJ 08542 or Carnegie Lake Rowing Association, PO Box 330 Princeton, NJ 08542-0330.

    Arrangements are entrusted to Dee Funeral Home & Cremation Service of Concord.



    Source: https://www.deefuneralhome.com/obituaries/Barbara-Lamb-Johnson?obId=32116269 and https://www.towntopics.com/2024/06/26/obituaries-6-26-2024/



    Christopher Reeve, 52, Symbol of Courage, Dies By Douglas Martin

    Christopher Reeve, the cinematic Superman who became a real-life inspiration through his painstaking efforts to overcome total paralysis, while speaking out for stem-cell research and other potential treatments, died on Sunday at Northern Westchester Hospital in Mount Kisco, N.Y. He was 52 and lived in Pound Ridge, N.Y.

    Mr. Reeve was being treated for a pressure wound, a common complication for people in wheelchairs, said his publicity agent, Wesley Combs. These wounds result from constant pressure in one spot, reducing the blood to that area and finally killing the affected tissue.

    Mr. Combs said that Mr. Reeve fell into a coma on Saturday. The wound had become severely infected, and the infection spread through his body.

    A riding accident in 1995 left the actor paralyzed from the neck down. After briefly pondering suicide, Mr. Reeve had become a powerful proponent of causes ranging from insurance reform for catastrophic injuries to unleashing the possibilities some scientists believe lie in using embryonic stem cells for research.

    As recently as Friday, Mr. Reeve's name emerged, as it often has, in the national debate over stem cell use. In the presidential debate in St. Louis between President Bush and Senator John F. Kerry, the Democratic challenger, Mr. Kerry mentioned Mr. Reeve by name in arguing against the president's position that stem-cell research must be restricted to protect the lives of human embryos.

    Yesterday, the White House issued a statement on behalf of the president and Mrs. Bush, citing Mr. Reeve as "an example of personal courage, optimism and self-determination."

    As a young unknown actor Mr. Reeve propelled himself to the status of instant myth by starring in "Superman: The Movie," a hugely popular 1978 picture, then going on to do three successful sequels. Many critics said he exhibited humor and sensitivity, particularly in his portrayal of Clark Kent as the bespectacled bumbler. His own ironic detachment came out in a comment he made while filming the first movie.

    "I prevent an earthquake," he said. "I repair Golden Gate Bridge and Boulder Dam, and I prevent a nuclear explosion in Southern California."

    He certainly seemed able to. He was 6 feet 4 inches tall, with a strikingly handsome, square-jawed face and a strong athletic build. Even before "Superman," he looked like Superman. Enhancing the image, he performed his own stunts, and off-screen piloted his own plane.

    He was determined not to be typecast ("escape the cape," he vowed) and found numerous other roles, including leading substantial parts on Broadway. But it was Mr. Reeve's personal courage in dealing with his paralysis that transcended both his causes and profession, making him a real-life superhero in many minds. By using electrical shocks to stir his numb nervous system and tirelessly exercising, he twitch-by-tiny-twitch was beginning to recapture use of his body. In September 2000 he moved an index finger and the news startled scientists who had not expected to see such progress so long after so severe an accident. Mr. Reeve expected nothing less and continued to improve.

    "You have to take action and stand up for yourself -- even if you're sitting in a wheelchair," he said in an interview with Psychology Today in 2003.

    Such was his progress that Mr. Reeve in February 2003 decided to have surgery to free him from the respirator that had enabled his paralyzed lungs to breathe. Electrodes were implanted into his diaphragm so that breathing could be regulated electronically.

    But infections ultimately trumped technology, intensive exercise and even steely determination. The slim luck that had nurtured Mr. Reeve ran out.

    That luck apparently resulted from the fact that some of his nerves had not been destroyed, scientists suggested. Because they were not dead, they could be revived. Massive amounts of physical activity induced new connections to form and dormant pathways to revive.

    And with that recovery came a string of accomplishments since his accident that included writing two books and directing and acting in movies. His extensive lobbying for public health issues helped earn him an award for public service in 2003 from the Lasker Foundation, which gives awards for medical research.

    In a speech then, Mr. Reeve challenged the medical establishment to regain the sense of urgency shown by the emergency medical technicians who helped save his life.

    "I believe I speak on behalf of patients who are willing to accept failure as a necessary aspect of moving science forward," he said. "We want researchers to think less like academics and more like E.M.T.'s whose primary function is to save lives."

    Mr. Reeve led by example, as numerous other awards testified. "In the Gloaming," a movie he directed for HBO in 1997, was nominated for five Emmys. His performance in a remake of Hitchcock's classic "Rear Window" won the Screen Actors Guild Award for best actor in a television movie or miniseries.

    His autobiographies, both favorably reviewed, were "Still Me" (1998) and "Nothing Is Impossible: Reflections on a New Life" (2002), both published by Random House.

    Christopher Reeve was born in Manhattan on Sept. 25, 1952. His parents divorced when he was 4, and he moved with his younger brother and mother to Princeton, N.J. He began appearing in school plays around 8, and soon became involved in the McCarter Theater, Princeton's professional theater.

    He was 9 when the McCarter cast him in a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta. This July, Mr. Reeve said in an interview on CNN that the theater became "like a family to me," as he sought to escape his own family's disruption. By the time he was 15, he was a member of Actors Equity and had worked as an apprentice at the Williamstown Theater Festival.

    He graduated from Cornell University, then studied at Juilliard under John Houseman and roomed with Robin Williams. While at Juilliard he began his two-year run as Ben Harper in the soap opera "Love of Life." He acted onstage at night and made his Broadway debut as Katharine Hepburn's grandson in Enid Bagnold's play "A Matter of Gravity."

    In a generational switch, the following year he played the role of the grandfather in Corrine Jacker's memory play "My Life" at the Circle Repertory company. Then came Superman, a comic book hero who burst on the American scene in 1938. Producers and the director could not settle on a big-name actor who would take the part, so decided to find an unknown. Mr. Reeve at first thought the idea was downright silly and untheatrical, but read the script and loved it, according to "Contemporary Heroes and Heroines, Book III," published by Gale Research in 1998.

    After being invited back for a screen test, the actor prepared for two solid weeks, experimenting with complete makeup and costume changes for both Superman and Clark Kent. The young actor won the part, and found himself starring with Marlon Brando and Gene Hackman. "Superman" had what at the time was the most successful opening in history.

    By his fourth and last Superman, "Superman IV: The Quest for Peace" (1987), Mr. Reeve was helping write the original story for the film. He was also speaking out on many issues from campaign finance reform to recycling garbage in New York City. He went to Santiago, Chile, to demonstrate on behalf of 77 actors threatened with execution by the Pinochet regime.

    He was known for his often expert pursuit of vigorous sports, including sailing, skiing, scuba diving and competitive horseback riding. Following the first "Superman" film, Mr. Reeve celebrated by sailing from Connecticut to Bermuda. He also flew his plane solo across the Atlantic twice.

    On Saturday, May 27, 1995, he was engaging in a sport that increasingly captivated him, riding horses in competition. He owned a number of horses, including a chestnut thoroughbred named Eastern Express.

    The place was Culpeper, Va., where a three-day equestrian competition was taking place. Mr. Reeve was wearing blue and silver riding colors, knee-high boots, off-white breeches and a protective vest and helmet. He and Eastern Express, entry No. 103, were moving harmoniously as they approached a zigzagged, three-foot-high rail jump, the third of 15 jumps.

    Suddenly, Eastern Express backed off from the jump. Mr. Reeve kept moving, pitching forward over the horse's neck. His head hit the rail fence and he landed on the turf on his forehead. His head dangled, just barely connected to his spine.

    The fall caused multiple fractures of the first and second cervical vertebrae and left him unable to move his limbs or breathe without the use of a respirator.

    Mr. Reeve said that in the days after the accident he contemplated suicide, but seeing the faces of his wife and family dissuaded him. His wife, Dana Morosi, an actor and singer, yesterday released a statement thanking "the millions of fans" who supported her husband.

    In addition to his wife, Mr. Reeve is survived by his mother, Barbara L. Johnson; his father, Franklin Reeve; his brother, Benjamin; his sons Will and Matthew, and his daughter, Alexandra. Gae Exton, with whom Mr. Reeve lived for much of the 1980's but never wed, is the mother of Matthew and Alexandra.Mr. Reeve's progress after the accident ranged from very elementary things, like learning to operate his wheelchair by puffing into a tube, to very public triumphs like his tear-provoking appearance at the Academy Awards ceremony in 1996. He often testified before Congress.

    The Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation, which was founded by combining two older organizations in 1998, raised more than $46.5 million for spinal cord research.

    In his final years, after the electrodes were implanted on his diaphragm, he spoke of one day getting rid of his respirator altogether. His recovery was considered remarkable because most spinal-injury victims make progress only in the first two years after the accident.

    One of Mr. Reeve's last projects was directing "The Brooke Ellison Story," about a girl who became a quadriplegic at 11 but rose above her disability to graduate from Harvard. It will be broadcast on A&E in August.

    Last month Mr. Reeve said on the Oprah Winfrey show that he thought it "very possible" he would walk again. He was asked what would happen if he did not.

    "Then I won't walk again," he said.

    Correction: October 13, 2004, Wednesday The obituary of the actor Christopher Reeve yesterday misspelled his wife's surname and misstated the broadcast date of a movie he directed. His wife is Dana Morosini, not Morosi. The movie, "The Brooke Ellison Story," is to be shown on A&E on Oct. 25, not next August.

    Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/12/obituaries/christopher-reeve-52-symbol-of-courage-dies.html



    Dana Reeve, Devoted Caretaker and Advocate, Is Dead at 44 By Nadine Brozan

    Dana Reeve, who devoted herself to the care of her paralyzed husband, the actor Christopher Reeve, and became a forceful advocate for research into spinal cord injuries, died on Monday at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in Manhattan. She was 44 and lived in Pound Ridge, N.Y., in Westchester County.

    The hospital said Ms. Reeve died of lung cancer, which was discovered last year, 10 months after Christopher Reeve's death.

    Ms. Reeve, a singer and an actress, won international admiration for her devotion to Mr. Reeve's care and for her involvement in the Christopher Reeve Foundation, which seeks a cure for spinal cord paralysis. She succeeded her husband as chairman of the foundation and established the Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Resource Center, an information clearinghouse.

    Mr. Reeve, whose most celebrated role was as the title hero in the "Superman" movie franchise, was paralyzed after a 1995 horseback riding accident in Virginia. He died on Oct. 10, 2004, in New York at age 52.

    Ms. Reeve, who had never smoked, expressed optimism about overcoming her cancer. "I'm beating the odds and defying every statistic the doctors can throw at me," she said four months ago in one of her few public statements about her condition. "My prognosis looks better all the time."

    Ms. Reeve was born in 1961 in Teaneck, N.J., one of three daughters of Dr. Charles Morosini and Helen Morosini, who died of ovarian cancer early last year. She grew up in Scarsdale, N.Y., graduated cum laude from Middlebury College in Vermont in 1984 and studied at the California Institute of the Arts.

    The couple met in 1987 in Williamstown, Mass., where Christopher saw Dana performing in a cabaret act at the Williamstown Theater Festival. They were married on April 11, 1992, in an outdoor ceremony at a farm in South Williamstown. They had a son, Will, now 13.

    In addition to her son and her father, Ms. Reeve is survived by her sisters, Deborah Morosini and Adrienne Morosini Heilman, and two stepchildren, Matthew and Alexandra.

    She appeared both on Broadway and Off Broadway at the Public Theater, the Manhattan Theater Club and the Ensemble Studio Theater. She also acted at such regional theaters as the Yale Repertory Theater and the New Jersey Shakespeare Festival. On television she appeared in shows including "Law and Order," "Oz" and "All My Children," and was a co-host for "Lifetime Live," a program on the Lifetime network.

    Ms. Reeve essentially suspended her career after her husband's accident, choosing to oversee his care and campaign for spinal cord research, but she did make several appearances after his death. On Jan. 12, wearing what she described as her "Barbarella wig," she sang "Now and Forever" to a sold-out crowd at Madison Square Garden on behalf of a friend, the former Rangers hockey captain Mark Messier, who was honored in a retirement ceremony.

    Ms. Reeve will be seen on March 29 in a PBS program, "The New Medicine," which was taped in November. In its introduction, she says, "It has become clear to me that high-tech medicine, with all its wonders, often leaves out that all-important human touch."

    Her interest in preserving humane approaches to life in the face of disability was reflected in her work at the Christopher Reeve Foundation.

    "She navigated the difficulties in their lives, so she decided she wanted to do something to help people living with paralysis and established the Quality of Life grants program," said Maggie Goldberg, spokeswoman for the foundation. The program has awarded $8 million to nonprofit organizations that help people with disabilities, Ms. Goldberg said.

    "Chris was all about research, research, cure and treatment," Ms. Goldberg said. "Dana said, 'We need to worry about the here and now.' "



    Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/08/us/dana-reeve-devoted-caretaker-and-advocate-is-dead-at-44.html


    In Memoriam: Colleagues Remember Professor F.D. Reeve

    September 23, 2013, by Kirsten Rischert-Garcia, Contributing Writer


    At his memorial service, professors, friends, and family remembered Professor of Letters, Emeritus Franklin Reeve as a man with an excitement for learning, an ability to spur discussion, and a wit faster than a speeding bullet.

    “He had this impish and consistent desire to undermine whatever you thought you knew and to force you to think outside the box,” Professor of German and Letters, Emeritus Herbert Arnold said.

    Franklin D’Olier Reeve passed away on June 28 at the age of 84 after devoting nearly half of his life to teaching at the University, first as a professor and chair of the Russian Department from 1962 to 1966, and then as a professor in the College of Letters until 2002.

    Reeve’s former colleagues, as well as his friends and family, filled the seats at the reception, held at Russell House on Friday, Sept. 20. Several shared their memories of him, and others read aloud Reeve’s own words, including a passage he had written in Russian.

    Arnold, who taught a colloquium alongside Reeve, remembers the course as a new and exciting learning experience for both him and the students, especially since the two professors often “fundamentally disagreed” on their interpretations of the material.

    “It was a ping pong of ideas going back and forth, and students’ heads [would be] swiveling,” Arnold said. “That was quite deliberate, and Frank was smiling about it.”

    At the memorial, Professor of Letters Emeritus Paul Schwaber read aloud a tribute to his former colleague that also appeared on President Michael Roth’s blog.

    “I remember Frank Reeve as a tall, extremely handsome man,” Schwaber said. “He smiled ruefully and spoke very rapidly, as if barely able to control his rush of thought or questions.”

    Reeve’s notable features and charisma were passed on to his son, actor Christopher Reeve, famous for his role as Superman in the 1978 motion picture. The two so closely resembled one another that Professor of Physics, Emeritus Bill Trousdale recalls mistaking Christopher for his father at a book signing.

    “Gee, Franklin, you are looking young!” Trousdale recalled nearly saying to the movie star.

    Christopher Reeve may have also inherited his father’s talent for the arts: Franklin Reeve acted professionally shortly after graduating from Princeton and before pursing a master’s degree in Russian at Columbia.

    However, Frank ultimately decided to give up acting upon realizing that it would impede his ability to write poetry.

    “For the first time I discovered what happens when a person really acts: the self disappears; you entirely, inside and out, become the character,” he once wrote.

    Many would agree that this sacrifice was worthwhile: poetry was yet another area in which Franklin Reeve excelled. Reeve wrote 10 volumes of poetry, and he was the recipient of the New England Poetry Club’s Golden Rose Award and various other awards.

    Over his lifetime, Reeve wrote a total of six novels, five books of criticism, eight Russian translations, and five plays. Most famously, he acted as an interpreter for Robert Frost on a visit to Soviet leader Nikita S. Khrushchev in 1962, during which Frost served as a cultural ambassador on behalf of the United States.

    “Widely learned, he was polylingual, witty, keen with pun and irony,” Schwaber said. “There were few things he seemed not to know.”

    That which Reeve did not know, he tried earnestly to learn with great confidence. John Basinger, Professor Emeritus of Theater and Sign Language at Three Rivers Community College and husband of Professor of Film Studies Jeanine Basinger, recalls Reeve’s attempts to study sign language.

    “He was willing to just flub it up,” John Basinger said.

    Though Reeve may have given off the impression of being “all-knowing,” John Basinger noted that even he was sometimes prone to ad-libbing.

    “Anyone who yammers as much as me is going to do a bit of humbuggery,” he said.

    Reeve often liked to improvise his lectures and think on his feet, and he relished the opportunity for spur-of-the-moment remarks.

    “A certain amount of that was just keeping fingers crossed, but [Reeve] was unafraid of that,” John Basinger said.

    It is likely that Reeve’s talent with improvisation and knack for communicating as an actor and poet helped him develop into the skilled lecturer that captivated so many students and faculty.

    “I always admired him,” Trousdale said. “He was a combination of forceful and generous. If you kept talking to him about something, you never came away thinking, ‘Oh, that was a stupid idea.’ He wasn’t about putting someone down, but instead tried to engage them.”

    In an interview with the New York Quarterly, Reeve once credited poet and critic R. P. Blackmur for developing his passion for poetry after taking the professor’s creative writing class at Princeton.

    “My whole life changed when I went to college,” he said.

    As his son Brock Reeve suggested during the memorial service, Frank’s time at Wesleyan might have influenced his life just as dramatically as his time at Princeton initially did.

    “My father had several chapters of his life, but the theme that runs through these chapters is this place that is Wesleyan,” who is now Executive Director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. “Wesleyan provided a rich, flexible environment that allowed my father to explore his interests, passions, and abilities in multiple ways.”

    It is a huge loss for the Wesleyan community that Franklin Reeve is no longer with us, but he continues to live on through the words he has left behind. One poem in particular, entitled “Home in Wartime” and published in October 2002, may offer some advice for how we should cope with his passing:

     

    If I die first, gather the lost years

    with the late September apples. At sunset ghost me

    beside you on the steps to watch

    the tangerine-lavender clouds turn gray.



    Source: http://wesleyanargus.com/2013/09/23/remembering-professor-f-d-reeve/

    Obituary - Slater

    Gerald Slater Obituary

    Gerald Slater, a founder of PBS, died of coronavirus at Sibley Hospital in Washington, D.C., on April 24, 2020. He was 86. Multiple myeloma was an underlying condition. His wife, children and their spouses were with him by videoconference when he passed.

    Gerry started his career in broadcasting as head usher for The Jackie Gleason Show while majoring in business at NYU. Following a variety of production roles at CBS, he became Production Manager for CBS News (1960-1967), working with Walter Cronkite and Fred Friendly (President of CBS News). In 1967, he and Friendly left CBS to create The Public Broadcasting Laboratory (PBL), a weekly TV news and performing arts program funded by the Ford Foundation. From 1970-1975, Gerry worked with Friendly and Hartford Gunn to establish and build the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), the new national network of public television stations. Gerry was PBS's first General Manager and developed many of the network operations that define PBS today.

    In 1975, Gerry became Exec. VP of WETA TV/Radio in D.C., At WETA he stabilized the station's finances, managed operations, and began live coverage of the Watergate hearings, the Fourth of July concerts on the National Mall, and performances at Wolf Trap (1975-1989). He and Ward Chamberlain (then-President of WETA) were instrumental in producing Emmy award-winning programs including The NewsHour, Smithsonian World, In Performance at the White House, and documentaries by Ken Burns. According to Sharon Rockefeller, President of WETA, "Gerry guided WETA during its most formative years and much of WETA's success is due to his work."

    Gerry's WETA colleagues recall his negotiating skills and judgment, his reputation for fairness and street smarts, as well as his personal warmth and sense of humor. He was also known for promoting women into major leadership positions.

    After retiring from WETA, Gerry was a media consultant for the American Museum of Natural History, the NYC Board of Education, and the U.S. Institute of Peace. He also served on several non-profit boards, including the City Lights School, The Chesapeake Bay Foundation, and The Palisades Village.

    Gerry treasured his family life and close friendships. Gatherings at his home in Washington, D.C., and on Bustins Island, Maine, were annual highlights, as were international trips with his nine grandchildren. From his first marriage to Alice Slater, Gerry leaves his son David Slater (wife Patty Slater); his daughter Helen Slater (husband Rob Watzke); and his granddaughter, Hannah Watzke. Gerry is also survived by his wife Dr. Halcyone Bohen, three stepdaughters, Shawn Bohen (husband Alan Clarance), Kim Bohen (husband Doug James), and Courtney Bohen, plus eight step-grandchildren, Jack Bohen, Lily James, Spruce Bohen, Teale Bohen, Henry Morehouse, Imogen Morehouse, Grady Bohen and Silas Bohen. His siblings Lita Askanas and Dr. Barry Slater live in northern California.

    A memorial event will be held post-coronavirus. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to WETA.



    Published by New York Times from May 4 to May 5, 2020.
    Source: https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/nytimes/name/gerald-slater-obituary?id=52028856