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This eleventh-hour effort to push back Trump's April 15 trial date is the latest of a half-dozen such requests since August. Bad polls, bad pressManhattan is not Trump country, the defense delay motion notes. AdvertisementPollsters surveyed a sample of 400 Manhattan residents, the delay motion says. Trump's motion implies that those sources were, or involved, Bragg, ignoring that the stories could have been sourced through multiple other individuals, including court staff, witnesses, and attorneys for witnesses. Advertisement"President Trump cannot get a fair trial in Manhattan County right now," the delay motion concludes, asking for unspecified adjournment "until prejudicial press coverage abates."
Persons: , Donald, Trump's, Juan Merchan, It's, Trump, They've, pollsters, Michael Cohen, Cohen, Donald von shitsinpants, Donald Van, Donald Trump's, Says, Donald Trump, Eduardo Munoz, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, Stephanie Clifford, She's, Peacock, Norm, DONALD J, Matthew Colangelo, Colangelo, Juan Merchan AP, Seth Wenig, Merchan, Bob Moore, Jeb Bush's, Alvin Bragg Craig Ruttle, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Allen Weisselberg, Bragg Organizations: Service, New, Business, GOP, Defense, Moore Information Group, York County Clerk's, Trump fixer, Twitter, New York County Clerk's, FBI, REUTERS, Trump, Prosecutors, Moore, National Republican Senatorial Committee, Manhattan, Attorney, Trump Organization Locations: Manhattan, York County, New York County, New York City, U.S, Trump, Manhattan County
Bob’s Red Mill Natural Foods was founded in 1978, but it wasn’t until several years later that the company hit upon the thing that made its oats, groats and other natural food products so immediately recognizable on supermarket shelves. That was when the likeness of Bob Moore, the company’s eponymous founder, began appearing on the packaging. With his white beard, wire-rim eyeglasses, newsie cap and bolo tie, Mr. Moore, who died last week at age 94, was an unlikely style icon whose folksiness seemed to personify the wholesome artisanal grains produced by his company at an old mill in Milwaukie, Ore.Mr. Moore may not have been a movie star like Paul Newman, whose face similarly adorns Newman’s Own foods, but he became just as recognizable to anyone who has pushed a shopping cart down a grains and nuts aisle. An illustration of Mr. Moore appears on the packaging for each of his brand’s more than 400 products, from hulled millet to yellow popcorn, next to the tagline, “To Your Good Health.” The text on the Bob’s Red Mill bags and boxes, rendered in homey fonts that might have been used to sell tinctures in the Old West, includes bits of found poetry (“golden spurtle”) and understated hucksterism (“good source of fiber”). The distinctive but unflashy branding, a piece of modern Americana that falls somewhere between hippie and Norman Rockwell, makes for an oasis of calm in crowded supermarkets.
Persons: Bob Moore, Moore, Paul Newman, Norman Rockwell Organizations: Foods Locations: Milwaukie, Old, Americana
Bob Moore, founder of Bob's Red Mill, died at age 94 on Saturday. Bob's Red Mill, founded in 1978, does over $100 million annually and sells in over 70 countries. AdvertisementBob Moore, the founder of Bob's Red Mill, who died on Saturday, set up a unique ownership model for his natural food company. Rather than sell out to a food giant, he transferred full ownership to his employees — more than 700 of them. He said employees at Bob's Red Mill feel valued and informed, an approach other companies could learn from.
Persons: Bob Moore, Moore, , Charlee, Bob, would've Organizations: Service, National Center for Employee, Portland Locations: Oregon
Bob Moore, Who Founded Bob’s Red Mill, Is Dead at 94
  + stars: | 2024-02-13 | by ( Alex Williams | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Bob Moore, the grandfatherly entrepreneur who, with his wife, Charlee, leveraged an image of organic heartiness and wholesome Americana to turn the artisanal grain company Bob’s Red Mill into a $100 million dollar-a-year business, died on Saturday at his home in Milwaukie, Ore. His death was announced by the company, which did not cite a cause. Founded in Milwaukie in 1978, Bob’s Red Mill grew from serving the Portland area to become a global natural-foods behemoth, marketing more than 200 products in more than 70 countries. Over the years, the company profited handsomely from the nutrition-minded shift away from processed foods and grains. “I think our diets, nationally, and international probably, show the fact that we just have allowed ourselves to be sold a bill of goods.”
Persons: Bob Moore, Mr, Moore Organizations: Oregon State University Locations: Milwaukie, Portland
Bob Moore, founder of Bob’s Red Mill, has died
  + stars: | 2024-02-12 | by ( Jordan Valinsky | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
New York CNN —Bob Moore, the founder of Bob’s Red Mill whole-grains company, has died. Moore “peacefully passed away” at his home on Saturday, at the age of 94. “Bob’s legacy will live on forever in all of us who had the opportunity to work with him and is infused into the Bob’s Red Mill brand,” said Bob’s Red Mill CEO Trey Winthrop. Moore’s passion for healthy foods helped lead him to start Bob’s Red Mill in 1978 in Portland, Oregon, as a local company before gradually expanding its sales into more than 70 countries and employing about 700 people. Moore is survived by his three sons (Ken, Bob, Jr. and David), plus his four daughters-in-law, nine grandchildren and six great grandchildren.
Persons: Bob Moore, Moore “, , Red, Trey Winthrop, Moore, Leah Nash, ” Winthrop, Ken, Bob, Jr, David Organizations: New, New York CNN, Shoppers, Washington Post, Oregon State University Locations: New York, Portland , Oregon, Oregon
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