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LAS VEGAS (CN) - For his role in a "pump-and-dump" scheme involving former Notre Dame football player Daniel "Rudy" Ruet...
16/01/2023

LAS VEGAS (CN) - For his role in a "pump-and-dump" scheme involving former Notre Dame football player Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger, a stock promoter will pay $4.4 million.

U.S. District Judge Jennifer Dorsey ordered Pawel Dynkowski on Wednesday to disgorge more than $2 million in profits obtained from the stock fraud, plus that amount in penalties, and more than $467,000 in interest, as requested by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

SEC officials say the stock scheme arose from the sale of shares in Rudy Nutrition, a now-closed sports-drink company that traded under the RUDN symbol.

Federal investigators say Ruettiger, Dynkowski and others bilked investors of $11 million when they made false statements in their promotional materials, news releases and SEC filings, to boost share prices so they could sell them at a profit. Among falsehoods used to boost stock prices was a claim that the Rudy sports drink beat Gatorade by a 2-to-1 margin in taste tests, the SEC alleged.

The fraudsters succeeded in inflating Rudy Nutrition's stock price from 25 cents to $1.05 and increasing demand over about a month before they sold their shares, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Ruettiger settled with the SEC for $382,866, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Portrayed as an undersized and overachieving member of the Notre Dame football team, the 1993 film "Rudy" made Ruettiger an icon.

Dynkowski is a stock promoter from Poland.

Dunkin' Donuts experiments with 'smell-vertising' in South KoreaCommuters in Seoul, South Korea may have started experie...
14/01/2023

Dunkin' Donuts experiments with 'smell-vertising' in South Korea
Commuters in Seoul, South Korea may have started experiencing some mysterious coffee cravings.Today's consumers have become particularly adept at tuning out advertisements. We hit fast-forward when its time for commercial breaks, avert our eyes away from gigantic billboards and flip right past glossy spreads in magazines.

Advertisers for Dunkin' Donuts, however, may have figured out a way to make sure their messages are being heard--or at least smelled--loud and clear.

Earlier this year in Seoul, South Korea, the donut chain embarked on an ad campaign in which unsuspecting commuters were hit with a whiff of Dunkin' Donuts coffee while riding the bus to work. After stepping off the bus, the riders were met a large poster for the shop and a conveniently located store only a few steps away.

To deliver the aroma, engineers for the store's marketing agency, Cheil Worldwide, created a machine that would instantly serve up a spritz of coffee aroma upon hearing the chain's jingle. The spray, known as "Flavor Radio," was dispensed through devices that look much like at-home air-fresheners.

For Dunkin' Donuts, olfactory advertising seems to have been quite the success in South Korea, where people often equate the brand with donuts rather than coffee. According to the company, the coffee fumes reached the noses of about 350,000 commuters over the course of the months-long campaign. After the testing, Dunkin' Donuts reported a 16 percent increase in visitors to stores near bus stops and a 29 percent increase in coffee sales.

Gay men have always been part of the American military. In an era before gay marriage or open pride, military men fell i...
12/01/2023

Gay men have always been part of the American military. In an era before gay marriage or open pride, military men fell in love, formed passionate friendships and had same-s*x encounters. Due to social and official discrimination, though, most of their stories have gone untold. But in the case of one of the military’s founding heroes, homos*xuality was always part of the story.

Baron Friedrich von Steuben, a Prussian military man hired by George Washington to whip the Continental Army into shape during the darkest days of the Revolutionary War, is known for his bravery and the discipline and grit he brought to the American troops. Historians also think he was homos*xual—and served as an openly gay man in the military at a time when s*x between men was punished as a crime.

“Though his name is little known among Americans today,” writes Erick Trickey for Smithsonian, “every U.S. soldier is indebted to von Steuben—he created America’s professional army.”

It wasn’t easy: Three years into the Revolutionary War, the army was low on discipline, morale and even food. With his strict drills, showy presence and shrewd eye for military strategy, he helped turn them into a military powerhouse.

Benjamin Franklin, who recommended von Steuben to Washington, played up his qualifications. He also downplayed rumors that the baron had been dismissed from the Prussian military for homos*xuality. Von Steuben joined the military when he was 17 and had become Frederick the Great’s personal aide, but despite a seemingly promising career he was abruptly dismissed in 1763. Later in life, he wrote about an “implacable enemy” who had apparently led to his firing, but historians are unsure of the exact circumstances of the dismissal.

After being fired, von Steuben bounced from job to job. He was unimpressed by Franklin’s suggestion that he volunteer to help the American army, and tried instead to get another military job in the court at Baden. But his application was tanked when an anonymous letter accused him of having “taken familiarities” with young boys.

As historian William E. Benemann notes, there’s no historical evidence that von Steuben was a pe*****le. But he was gay, and homos*xuality was viewed as a criminal aberration by many of his peers. “Rather than stay and provide a defense, rather than call upon his friends…to vouch for his reputation, von Steuben chose to flee his homeland,” writes Benemann.

MAXCY D. FILER. Next to the definition of the word, “persistent,” there should be a picture of Maxcy D. Filer, for he ha...
12/01/2023

MAXCY D. FILER. Next to the definition of the word, “persistent,” there should be a picture of Maxcy D. Filer, for he has probably sat on the California State Bar examination more times than any other living lawyer–past and/or present. But he has also been a diligent advocate for civil rights, and well known for his service to the Compton Community. Born in Mariana, Arkansas, Filer served in the US Navy from 1946 to 1949 before attending AM & N College in Pine Bluff, Arkansas before moving to Indiana where he married Blondell Burson of Elkhart, Indiana.

There Filer attended Elkhart Business University while working the night shift at Whitehall Pharmaceuticals; he graduated as a dental technician in 1952, the same year he moved to Compton. Having a new bride and a young family, as soon as he arrived in the Southland, Filer began working at Hearns Repair Service where he assembled aquatic equipment including swim fins, diving masks, snorkels and goggles. After a couple of years, he returned to the pharmaceutical industry at Diketan Pharmaceuticals in Culver City. In addition to working the day shift at Diketan, he worked the night shift at North American Aviation, working a 16-hour day.

In 1959, Filer continued his education at Compton College majoring in Public Speaking and then went on to Los Angeles Metropolitan Junior College where he earned an Associate of Arts degree. About the same time Filer began to ease into legal work doing legal research at the L.A. City Attorney’s office, and then as an agent settling disputes, and handling negotiations and arbitration for the U.S. Department of Labor. During the 1970s, Filer did legal research and interviewed clients for Compton’s Neighborhood Legal Services, and was a senior analyst for the Community Redevelopment Agency.

As a part of his community service, Filer initiated voter registration drives and represented the California delegation at the 1963 March on Washington. He was the president of the Compton NAACP during the 1965 Watts Rebellion and testified before the McCone Commission as to the cause of the unrest. Filer described the following as some of the root causes: the lack of affordable housing; the high rate of unemployment; and the lack of facilities for good medical care.

Being a witness to some of the inequities in the community made Filer more resilient in his efforts to raise and protect his family, and to contribute his time and energy towards community service. He was appointed to the Compton Personnel Board in 1971 where he served for six years and then was elected to the Compton City Council as the first district council member. There he had a lasting effect on the quality of life issues of the city.

In 1989, Filer authorized a controversial city ordinance banning semi-automatic rifles, which brought the city onto the NRA radar. But as controversial as it was, the ordinance was a step in the direction to curtail the violence that the city was notoriously known for, in addition to being the right thing to do.

Eventually Filer passed the State Bar Exam in 1991 and the entire city celebrated. He went from being his son’s law clerk, to his son’s law partner, and he has continued to practice law until he retired. After retirement, Filer spent his time enjoying his children and grandchildren. He received numerous honors for his life’s work including one from the Compton Fire Department for his outstanding and devoted service to the Compton community.

Maxcy Filer is the father of Maxine, Duane, Stephanie, Anthony Dennis, Tracy and Kelvin D. Filer.

KELVIN D. FILER: Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court

Judge Filer recently penned a book of poems, which he dedicated to his parents, Attorney Maxcy D. Filer and Blondell Burson Filer. He said, “I can never remember my father calling me by any other name other than ‘Scooter.’ He would even introduce me to others as “My son, ‘Scooter.'” Judge Filer went on to add in the book, “I want to say ‘thank you’ Daddy for instilling in us a commitment to always try to do what is right and to fight for justice.” And further on in the book, Judge Filer devoted an entire poem to his father, “THANX, DADDY,” which he ended with, ” … I only hope I can be half of the man I see.”

DANNY J. BAKEWELL SR.: Executive publisher of the Los Angeles Sentinel newspaper, chairman of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA)

“Maxcy Filer was first and foremost: a family man. He was a tireless and uncompromising advocate for the welfare of Compton and its citizens. He was truly a fighter for the rights of others, and Maxcy would confront injustice wherever it reared its ugly head. It was no wonder that he persisted beyond human endurance to become an attorney at law. That was the Maxcy Filer, who as a city councilman, who delivered for his constituents and fought for a bitter quality of life for all of Compton. He epitomized all that was good in Compton; he came STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON.”

MERVYN M. DYMALLY, MA., PhD.: Director of Urban Health Institute, Charles Drew University, U.S. Congressman (Ret.)

“I became a member of congress because of Compton Councilman Maxcy Filer. He is the first one who urged me to run for Congress; no one else. As I pondered his suggestion on my way to Trinidad to visit my family, I felt a challenge and support from someone who I met in 1962 during my run for the California Assembly. Interestingly, he was on the other side when he knocked on my door to ask for support for my opposition. Out of the humorous encounter, we became best of friends. He will be missed as one of the truly committed members of the Compton City Council, and the community at large.”

CONGRESSWOMAN LAURA RICHARDSON: Democrat from California’s 37th Congressional District that includes Compton.
“Today, the City of Compton, the Civil Rights community and the nation as a whole lost a friend, activist and a true champion for justice who fought with dignity to make the City of Compton a better place to live and work, but he also taught us the value of perseverance when he passed the California Bar exam on his 48th attempt at the age of 60. His iconic legacy inspired a television sitcom “Sparks” that honored the passion that he had for the legal profession which ultimately became the career paths for both his sons Kelvin, who is a Compton Superior Court Judge, and Anthony, who is a supervising attorney for the Norwalk office of the Legal Aid Society.

I have had the privilege of knowing Kelvin for quite some time and my immediate thoughts and prayers are with him, his sibling and other family members. This is a tremendous loss for all of us, but Maxcy Filer left us with a vivid legacy to cherish and carry on.”

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