July 18, 2019

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July 18, 2019

VOL. 34, No. 28

OBAMA’S THE TRUTH WILL COME OUT!

CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY

By Francis Taylor, Asst. Publisher

A portion of Freeway 134 between the Glendale CA-2 and the 210 Freeway was named the President Barack H. Obama highway on Thursday. The highway will run through parts of Glendale, Pasadena and Eagle Rock, according to the station. The 44th president lived in Pasadena, California, and attended Occidental College in Los Angeles from 1979 to 1981. California State Senator Anthony Portantino announced he wanted to name the freeway after Obama in September 2017, KTLA reported. State lawmakers gave the final approval for the freeway renaming in September this year. “The President has often mentioned his fond memories of living in Pasadena and attending Occidental College, so it was very appropriate to name the portion of the freeway he traveled after him,” Portantino said in a statement on Thursday. “Our community came together to make this happen. It is an honor to be in a position to have helped facilitate this wonderful symbol of our collective respect for the grace and dignity embodied by our 44th President.” An official unveiling of the newly renamed freeway will take place sometime next year, KTLA reported. Portantino thanked residents for helping fund the signs.

JAMES DOLAN, MSG (THE FORUM) WAGING A WAR ON INGLEWOOD

ATTEMPTING TO DERAIL NEW CLIPPERS ARENA

By NYDN

Dolan testified in a deposition he knows little about the City of Inglewood that he’s suing, the contractual issues in dispute over a new Clippers arena, or the religious conservative candidate he backed with nearly $1 million to prevent the community from securing a new NBA arena.

Utilizing his bottomless wealth and familiar bully tactics, James Dolan has attempted to derail the development plans of a low-income city in California and influence its mayoral election from across the country. But as Dolan-led MSG has pumped money into lawsuits to protect its investment in The Forum, Dolan testi-

fied in a deposition he knows little about the City of Inglewood that he’s suing, the contractual issues in dispute over a new Clippers arena, or the religious conservative candidate he backed to prevent the community from securing a new NBA arena. More than anything, Dolan, from his deposition, seems comfortable with letting his attorneys, lieutenants and buddy Irving Azoff handle the carpet bomb that he’s bankrolling. Among the revelations from Dolan’s deposition in November, from a lawsuit MSG filed against the city of Inglewood, as reviewed by the Daily News, and according to sources close to the situation: · Dolan said he barely knew the Inglewood mayoral candidate he supported with nearly $1 million. · Dolan said he twice attempted to get Jeanie Buss to con7

CONFUSION, FEAR ON MEXICO BORDER WITH NEW US POLICY

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ON THE INSIDE •News •Community •Health / Fitness / Wellness sponsored by Centinela Hospital •Real Estate •Business •Sports/Entertainment

By Associated Press

Asylum-seekers gathered in Nuevo Laredo, across the border from Texas, are grappling to understand what a new U.S. policy that all but eliminates refugee claims by Central Americans and many others meant for their bids to find a better life in America amid a chaos of rumors, confusion and fear. The policy went into effect Tuesday and represents the most forceful attempt to date by Trump to slash the

Migrants wait at an immigration center on the International Bridge 1, in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, Tuesday, July 16, 2019. A U.S. policy to make asylum seekers wait in Mexico while their cases wind through clogged U.S. immigration courts has also expanded to the violent city of Nuevo Laredo. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

number of people seeking asylum in the United States. It denies asylum to anyone who shows up on the U.S. border after traveling through another country, something Central American migrants have to do. In some parts of Nuevo Laredo, migrants continued to trickle into shelters, including seven members of a family from the Mexican state of Michoacan, who fled the shootings and extortions in their violent region and were happy to find shelter even though some had to

sleep in the hallway. They hoped they could get asylum because they did not pass through another country to reach the border. But about 70 mostly Central American migrants, who had crossed Mexico to reach the border, were returned to Mexico with an appointment with a judge tucked in a transparent plastic bag — part of another recently imposed policy of requiring many asylum seekers to wait in Mexico rath5 er than the U.S.

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