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Seaview Hotel And Golf Club’s Bay Course Reopens Following $700,000 Enhancement Project By Brian Weis

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Seaview Hotel and Golf Club in Galloway, New Jersey recently completed an enhancement project on the club’s Hugh Wilson and Donald Ross-designed Bay Course. The near $700,000 project, which began in October 2021, focused on enhancing the overall aesthetics of the golf course and improving playability. Turco Golf, a New Jersey-based golf course construction company, performed the construction work. The Bay Course is now open for play, with an official grand opening ceremony scheduled for May 12.

Home of the LPGA Tour’s ShopRite LPGA Classic presented by ACER, Seaview’s Bay Course originally opened in 1914. The 6,300-yard layout is less a test of length, and more a test of imagination, accuracy and short game. The Bay Course presents a Scottish-links feel, dramatic seaside views, deep pot bunkers and small undulating greens. The recently completed enhancement project included bunker renovations and cart path upgrades. All greenside bunkers were modified and rebuilt incorporating a technically advanced drainage and liner system featuring Capillary Concrete. This new generation lining method increases the speed at which water flows through the bunker; minimizing washouts, reducing maintenance and producing superior playability. In addition, nearly 15,000 square feet of cart paths were replaced across the Bay Course.

“Turco Golf did an excellent job enhancing the Bay Course greenside bunkers,” said Dr. Kiran Patel, principal of the resort’s ownership group. “We’re excited to reopen and show off the new bunkers to our members and golfers. We look forward to welcoming back the best LPGA players in the world to Seaview for the 2022 ShopRite LPGA Classic in June so they can experience this Bay Course enhancement.”

The ShopRite LPGA Classic presented by ACER is set to return Seaview’s Bay Course June 10-12 with final round coverage airing on CBS. Recent winners include Mel Reid, Lexi Thompson, Anna Nordqvist, Stacy Lewis and defending champion, Celine Boutier. ShopRite’s charitable contributions since 1992 are over $38 million dollars with more than $1.5 million donated to local charities following the 2021 tournament.

Set on 670 acres of Galloway, NJ, coast and woodlands, Seaview is home to two world-class golf courses and a 296-room hotel. The Pines Course opened in 1929 and was designed by William Flynn and Howard Toomey. Unlike the Bay Course, the Pines winds its way through New Jersey woodlands, presenting elevation changes and bountiful doglegs. The course measures 6,800 yards, and it features large bunkers and expansive, sloping greens. The 16th hole was the site of Sam Snead’s miraculous 60-foot chip-in to win the 1942 PGA Championship – his first major.

For more information on Seaview Hotel and Golf Club, visit www.seaviewgolf.com. Troon Golf, the resort and daily-fee division of Troon, manages the golf operations at Seaview Hotel and Golf Club.


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Asbury Book Cooperative presents Local Author Panel Discussion on December 7th

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originally published: 11/23/2024

(ASBURY PARK, NJ) — All are welcome to join a Local Author Panel Discussion with Tim DeMarco (Release Me), Anthony Ausiello (Brooklyn ’76), and Luigina Vecchione (Italian American) on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at Asbury Book Cooperative. This discussion will be mediated by local author and Asbury Park High School Alumnus, Paul Bomba.

Bomba is the author of No Lifeguard on Dutyan important story that takes place in Asbury Park during the 1970s. New Jersey Stage interviewed him about this book in May, you can read the piece here.

All books will be available for purchase at the event but if you wish to purchase them in advance CLICK HERE.


About Release Me – Dreading the career laid out for him by his father, recent college grad Jacob Constantine accepts an offer to work in Germany for a year. When his ex-girlfriend Deirdre suddenly attempts to rekindle their relationship, the unexpected presence of the past casts a cloud over the future. With the help of a new environment and some new friends, Jake tries to navigate his emotions in Germany, but it seems that nothing can keep the dark secrets from the past from being stirred up in Deirdre’s wake.

Author Tim DeMarco is a teacher, translator, writer, and wannabe musician. Release Me is his first novel. He currently lives at the Jersey Shore, where—despite having such a big mouth— he constantly bites off more than he can chew. Visit him at timdemarco.com



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About Brooklyn ’76 – In the heart of Bensonhurst, an Italian American family struggles to survive one explosive day—the nation’s Bicentennial.

The Agnello family wakes Bicentennial morning to the sound of fireworks. Outside their apartment, block party preparations are already underway. Paulie, husband and father, has been out on strike with his union and is desperate to make ends meet. Dee, wife and mother, is overprotective of her children and a stern judge of character, particularly when it comes to Paulie. Tony, the dutiful elder son who is fast coming of age, now obsesses over his first girlfriend and stands ready to defy his parents to spend the Fourth with her. Alex, the younger son, still sees the world through innocent eyes, a perspective unlikely to survive the day.

As the neighborhood celebrates, a string of public missteps drives the family apart, forcing each Agnello to face their own insecurities and regrets. At nightfall, the fireworks extravaganza draws the scattered family back together—but celebration soon turns into tragedy, and one life is left hanging in the balance.

Funny, dark, and unsentimental, Brooklyn ’76 is an urgent family drama set against the backdrop of a working-class neighborhood—and a country—on the brink of transformation.

Author Anthony Ausiello earned a BA in English from the Pennsylvania State University and an MFA in creative writing from Fairleigh Dickinson University. Between degrees, he spent two decades in corporate America. Brooklyn ’76 is his debut novel. Brooklyn born and bred, Anthony now lives in Westfield, New Jersey, with his wonderful wife, Talia, and his amazing children, Anya and Eli.


About Italian American – Following the heartwarming tale of love and resilience in Greetings from Asbury Park, Luigina Vecchione returns with the highly anticipated second installment of the duology Italian American.

In the captivating novel, readers pick back up with Jack and Mariella after they’ve finally tied the knot and are ready to begin their new life together. Mariella’s dreams of a life with her love lead her to leave behind her family and the haunting memories of war-torn Rome as she embarks on a journey to America. Yet, the land of opportunity presents its own set of hurdles for Mariella, from cultural barriers to the disapproval of Jack’s mother to paralyzing loneliness as she longs for all she left behind.


Author Luigina Vecchione is a trained actor who discovered a passion for writing when she put performing on the back burner to raise a family. Luigina draws inspiration from her own experiences growing up with an Italian mother. Her passion for storytelling and crafting engaging narratives will resonate with readers worldwide.

Asbury Book Cooperative is located at 644A Cookman Avenue in Asbury Park, New Jersey. It is a vibrant, volunteer-driven nonprofit serving as a literary hub and community space in the diverse and lively shore town of Asbury Park, New Jersey. Theirmission is simple yet powerful: to promote literacy, provide access to books for all, and create a welcoming gathering space for the arts.

They sustain their efforts through the sale of new and used books, and more importantly, through the generous support of their members and donors who share their passion for independent bookstores and believe in the strength of community.


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Theatre

Theatre Fest Fall 2024 – Alpha Psi Omega Presents: To Be or Not to Be: Hamlet, an Abridged Staging

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 8:00pm
Monmouth University – Lauren K. Woods Theatre
370 Cedar Avenue, West Long Branch, NJ 07764
category: theatre

View event page for full information


Harry

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (HS Edition)

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:00pm
Grunin Center
1 College Drive, Toms River, NJ 08754
category: theatre

View event page for full information


Harry

Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (HS Edition)

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 1:00pm
Grunin Center
1 College Drive, Toms River, NJ 08754
category: theatre

View event page for full information


2024

2024 Princeton Dance Festival

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 8:00pm
McCarter Theatre Center (Berlind Theatre)
91 University Place, Princeton, NJ 08540
category: dance

View event page for full information


2024

2024 Princeton Dance Festival

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 2:00pm
McCarter Theatre Center (Berlind Theatre)
91 University Place, Princeton, NJ 08540
category: dance

View event page for full information


Fall

Fall Dance Plus

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:30pm
New Brunswick Performing Arts Center (NBPAC)
11 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: dance

View event page for full information


Axelrod

Axelrod Performing Arts Academy presents Disney’s “Alice in Wonderland, Jr.”

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:00pm
Bell Theater
101 Crawfords Corner Road, Holmdel, NJ 07733
category: theatre

View event page for full information


Axelrod

Axelrod Performing Arts Academy presents Disney’s “Alice in Wonderland, Jr.”

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 3:00pm
Bell Theater
101 Crawfords Corner Road, Holmdel, NJ 07733
category: theatre

View event page for full information


HAPPY

HAPPY FRANKS-GIVING! – Swingtime Big Band Celebrates Sinatra

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 8:00pm
Bergen Performing Arts Center (bergenPAC)
30 North Van Brunt Street, Englewood, NJ 07631
category: music

View event page for full information


Elf

Elf The Musical

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:00pm
Count Basie Center for the Arts
99 Monmouth Street, Red Bank, NJ 07701
category: theatre

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Elf

Elf The Musical

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 1:00pm
Count Basie Center for the Arts
99 Monmouth Street, Red Bank, NJ 07701
category: theatre

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The

The Metropolitan Opera: Live in HD – Tosca

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 1:00pm
Monmouth University – Pollak Theatre
400 Cedar Avenue, West Long Branch, NJ 07764
category: theatre

View event page for full information


StevieMac:

StevieMac: A Fleetwood Mac & Stevie Nicks Experience

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 8:00pm
William Paterson University – Shea Center for Performing Arts
300 Pompton Rd, Wayne, NJ 07470
category: music

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The

The Moth

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:30pm
McCarter Theatre Center (Matthews Theater)
91 University Place, Princeton, NJ 08540
category: community

View event page for full information


Dr.

Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:30pm
State Theatre New Jersey
15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: theatre

View event page for full information


Dr.

Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 3:00pm
State Theatre New Jersey
15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: theatre

View event page for full information


Dr.

Dr. Seuss’ How The Grinch Stole Christmas! The Musical

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 10:30am
State Theatre New Jersey
15 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
category: theatre

View event page for full information


Wooden

Wooden Ships Band

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:30pm
Lizzie Rose Music Room
217 E. Main Street, Tuckerton, NJ 08087
category: music

View event page for full information


Fiddler

Fiddler On The Roof

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 7:30pm
Axelrod Performing Arts Center
100 Grant Avenue, Deal Park, NJ 07723
category: theatre

View event page for full information


Fiddler

Fiddler On The Roof

Saturday, November 23, 2024 @ 1:30pm
Axelrod Performing Arts Center
100 Grant Avenue, Deal Park, NJ 07723
category: theatre

View event page for full information


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Devils Thwart Hurricanes 4-2 in Key Divisional Matchup – The Hockey Writers – New Jersey Devils

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The New Jersey Devils and Carolina Hurricanes clashed on Thursday night for a key intra-divisional matchup at the Prudential Center. Outside the arena, it looked like a real hurricane was passing through, which was likely the reason for a scarce crowd. Regardless, the crowd had plenty to cheer for as the Devils took down the Hurricanes by a score of 4-2. Jacob Markstrom stopped 20-of-22 (.909 save percentage) for a victory in his 500th career game.

The first period started with consistent heavy pressure from Carolina. The Devils got their first solid chance and Nico Hischier rang iron. The Hurricanes came the other way and scored 22 seconds later as Jack Roslovic put a rebound past Markstrom. Six minutes later, Jack Hughes made an impressive deflection pass to Jesper Bratt for a goal. 

The Devils had a 5-on-3 man advantage to start the second frame and Stefan Noesen cashed in as it was expiring: J. Hughes with the primary tally again. The rest of the second was a bit of a snoozefest with a great defensive effort from both sides.

Just like the Devils did to start the second, Carolina almost immediately struck with a power play goal of their own. Andrei Svechnikov made a perfect snipe past Markstrom to knot it at two. But Dougie Hamilton joined Noesen as the second former Hurricane to score against his old squad, as he rocketed one past Spencer Martin.

Then, Jesper Bratt added a huge insurance goal on the power play to make it 4-2. The score stood there as the Hurricanes couldn’t get anything going with the extra attacker.

This Devils victory was their first in the regular season against Carolina in 620 days. The Devils will be back in action on Saturday in Washington to take on the Capitals. The Hurricanes will also play on Saturday, in Columbus against the Blue Jackets.

Substack Subscribe to the THW Daily and never miss the best of The Hockey Writers Banner




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New Jersey League of Municipalities

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Records and Information Management for Municipal Clerks


This webinar will review Basic Records management that all New Jersey Clerks should know. The webinar will cover; Destruction of Public Records Act, PL 1953, c. 410/NJSA 47,Public Records Defined, OPRA & Records Management, Litigation Holds ,Audits, Records Retention Schedules, Records Disposal ,Artemis – Basic Walk Through, Imaging Certification, Email, Internet & Social Media, Vital Records, Disaster Prevention and Recovery ,Damaged Public Records Report Forms.
CEUs; CMFO/CCFO-2.0 Off Mgmt; CTC-2.0 Gen/Sec; CPWM-2.0 Mgmt; RMC-2.0 Rec; QPA- 2.0 Off Admin; CPA-2.0PD; RPPO/RPPS- 2.0 M/S; CRP-2.0 classroom; NJCLE-2.4; PACLE 2.0*; Planning Officials-2.0 Technical; Land Use-2.0 Technical; Zoning Officials-2.0 Technical

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County Clerk | Burlington County, NJ

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  • Joanne Schwartz
    Joanne Schwartz
    County Clerk

    County Clerk Email

    Mount Holly Location

    The main office for all County Clerk services, including elections and recording.

    50 Rancocas Road, 3rd Floor

    PO Box 6000

    Mount Holly, NJ 08060

    Hours: Monday – Friday, 8 AM – 4 PM

    Phone: 609-265-5122

    Fax: 609-265-0696

    Election Services:

    Hours: Monday – Friday, 8 AM – 4 PM.

    Phone: 609-265-5229

    Election Information

    Vote-by-Mail Information 

    Vote-by-Mail Email

    The County Store at the Moorestown Mall

    Walk-in Service for Passport Applications, Business Trade/Firm Names, and Notary Oath of Offices

    400 Route 38

    Moorestown, NJ 08057

    Hours:  Monday – Friday, 10:30 AM – 7:00 PM and Saturday, 10:30 AM – 5 PM

    Phone: 856-642-3833 

    Within the Moorestown Mall by the northern/Rt. 38-facing corner entrance between Cooper University Health Care and Joe Italiano’s Maplewood Restaurant.

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    New Jersey Golf School – Step One to Step Two By Brian Weis

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    Major swing changes do not work, at least overnight. Improving your golf scores, swing, and approach all take time. And much like the rest of your life, taking shortcuts will have you paying the price down the road.

    In golf, there’s a method to the madness. The smallest tweaks can have the biggest effects, and from one day to the next your problems might change. Being good at golf means minimizing fluctuation and approaching each shot consistently. For a new golfer, this is difficult. For an experienced golfer…yep, still difficult.

    We can’t always do it on our own. Scratch that, no one can do it on their own. After all, there’s a reason professional golfers have a team of instructors that help them through every tournament. They have caddies, swing coaches, sports psychologists, and more. Golf is far from simple, but making things simpler is what makes a normal golfer succeed.

    So, What’s an Average Golfer to do?
    A normal (non-professional) golfer doesn’t need a full inner circle of professionals to assist in their golf game. I mean, it would be nice, but no, you don’t need it-mostly because it’s not your career and the game is meant for relaxation.

    However, working with a golf professional is an affordable and realistic way of taking the small steps needed to become a better golfer. Golf instructors at a place like a New Jersey Golf School have been around the game and understand what it’s like for golfers at every level.

    If you want to improve your golf game, YouTube videos and self-guided range sessions won’t cut it. You need more. You need professional instruction that will help you understand your own game and the logical areas you can focus on to improve.

    But What do I do with a Golf Pro?
    You talk, you listen, you work together. A golf pro will bring you to the range or out on the course to work on what you collectively decide are your greatest areas of need. You’ll attack these problems in methodical way, one that keeps progress going, but never overwhelms you.

    When you go all in at a golf school, you immerse yourself in the game. As such, your instructor can engage with you in a way they couldn’t with a one-hour lesson. You don’t need to do things on your own this way. Instead, you lay a foundation for sustained improvement.

    Having someone by your side as you try to work in new movements and an adjusted approach hammers in the details. When you have an expert in the field right next to you, there’s no guessing. Instead, you have instant feedback and won’t stray too far from where you should be.

    Off the Course
    At a New Jersey Golf School, you even eat lunch with your instructor. You can talk golf; you can talk life. These programs put you in (heavily guided) control. Ask any golfer and they’ll tell you they’ve had more than one major breakthrough in the 19th hole following a round. It’s this type of detail and full access that you take small steps to advance your game without realizing it.

    Just like there’s a reason professional athletes watch film and analyze their game, there’s a reason you recount every shot in the grille after a round. Details matter, and a good instructor helps you realize them.

    https://www.birdgolf.com

    The Bird Golf Academy
    PO Box 2158
    Litchfield Park, AZ 85340

    Toll Free: 877-424-7346 (877 4-BIRDGO)
    Email: [email protected]


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    Medical School Receives $3M Gift for Social Determinants of Health Program

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    gift

    Philanthropy

    Hackensack Meridian Health Foundation has received a $3 million leadership gift from Carin and Roger Ehrenberg to support the Human Dimension program at the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine. The program connects students with people in the community to understand the social determinants of health (SDOH) that greatly impact health outcomes.

    “The Human Dimension program is the cornerstone of the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine’s innovative curriculum and prepares the next generation of physicians to excel in a new state of healthcare,’’ said Robert C. Garrett, FACHE, CEO of Hackensack Meridian Health. “We are deeply grateful for the continued support of Roger and Carin Ehrenberg which helps us reach our goals to expand access to care and build healthier communities.

    By interacting with underserved people throughout the entirety of their education, medical students gain a greater understanding of financial and housing instability and other socio-economic challenges that greatly impact health.

    Since the launch of the school in 2018, 590 students have cared for nearly 600 families in nine communities across five counties. Students have partnered with more than 200 community organizations, have nearly 100 community health projects and have completed 278 individual capstone projects focused on creating health care solutions.

    “The Human Dimension program is the heart of the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine’s mission and ensures that our students embody humanism, cultural humility, leadership and a strong commitment to equity in their patient care,” said Jeffrey Boscamp, M.D., president and dean, Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine. “This program significantly impacts patient outcomes, and we thank the Ehrenbergs for their generous commitment. It will be instrumental in advancing our efforts to shape the next generation of esteemed physicians who bring excellence, empathy and advocacy into their practice while expanding access to care to those who need it most.

    In 2022, the Ehrenbergs donated $1 million as seed capital to support the Human Dimension program at the School of Medicine. With their support, the Human Dimension program has advanced to include new initiatives, including:

    • the continued development of the program and its impact by working to support the continuously-evolving curriculum to meet the needs of surrounding communities;
    • the expansion of the program into Hackensack Meridian Health’s network programs including graduate medical training programs;
    • representation in medical literature regarding community engaged medical education;
    • the development of a new initiative entitled Support our Schools Mental Health Collaboratory in which public school leads from across the state work together to address the emotional health challenges facing our youth; and
    • increased support for families and communities in need, including the provision of transportation for individuals to participate in the Human Dimension program or attend other important appointments through a partnership with Lyft, emergency assistance, community engagement on campus and in the community, and lastly, community education events.

    Graduates of the Human Dimension program bring a profound commitment to humanism and a deep understanding of the social determinants of health to the care of their patients. However, as they transition to residency, and as other residents from other medical schools join Hackensack Meridian Health, there can sometimes be a gap between the foundational values and priorities found in the clinical learning environment.

    With this remarkable $3 million gift from the Ehrenbergs, the School of Medicine will build upon its established foundation, expanding the Human Dimension program across all graduate medical education programs within the Hackensack Meridian Health network, strengthen foundational programs through ongoing improvements and innovation, enhance assessment methods with robust qualitative and quantitative data collection and continue to advance academic scholarship through academic papers and publications.

    “True medical care must consider the whole individual, not just their symptoms, and recognize that there are many factors that significantly influence patient behaviors and outcomes,” said Roger and Carin Ehrenberg. “We have unwavering faith in the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine’s Human Dimension program, its dedicated leadership and its students, who integrate empathy and awareness of these determinants into daily patient care. The progress made so far demonstrates the incredible impact of this approach, and we are proud to support the expansion of the Human Dimension program into graduate medical education, ensuring its vital principles reach every level of training.”

    To access more business news, visit NJB News Now.

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    Free Access to Consumer Reports from the Sussex County Library System

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    Contact: Julie Knapp

    Sussex County Main Library

    973 948-3660 ext. 3409

    jknapp@sussexcountylibrary.org

    Newton, NJ – Stay informed on top-rated products and make smart, informed purchasing decisions with the Sussex County Library System (SCLS). Free access to all of Consumer Reports’ valuable reviews and expert advice is available to all SCLS cardholders both digitally and in print.

    Library cardholders can easily log in from home through the SCLS website to access the full Consumer Reports digital database to find information on the latest tech gadgets, cars, home appliances, health products, and more. Library visitors can also access this premium Consumer Reports content online using library computers. For those who prefer print, the library’s collection includes current and past issues of Consumer Reports magazines and special buying guides.

    SCLS is committed to empowering its patrons with reliable information and trusted resources to support informed decision-making for every purchase. Visit our website to access Consumer Reports content from home, or browse our catalog to find copies of the magazines and buying guides.

    For more information on Consumer Reports and all the resources SCLS has to offer, visit a branch near you or browse the library’s online resources at Sussexcountylibrary.org/databases. Library cards are available to anyone living, working or going to school in Sussex County (except Sparta). Apply in person at any SCLS location or online.

    Consumer Reports Graphic. We subscribe so you don't have to. Make better purchasing decisions with consumer reports. In print and online, free with your library card @ sussexcountylibrary.org

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    White Coat Ceremony marks the start of clinical training for TCNJ nursing students

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    TCNJ nursing white coat ceremony

    Close to 100 nursing students, most in their sophomore year, filed into Kendall Hall on November 14, each wearing a white scrub shirt and blue scrub pants and with a white lab coat draped across their forearm. They were there to celebrate a rite of passage, the White Coat Ceremony, which marks their transition into clinical rotations, which will start in the spring semester.

    One by one, the students stepped onto the stage, and as their name was called, they handed their coat to a faculty member who, in turn, cloaked them.

    “It is a special moment because it is their first professional passage to being a nurse,” says Carole Kenner, dean of the School of Nursing and Health Sciences. “It is when students feel they are really nursing students and will be providing clinical care.”

    For Mia Conners ’27, the importance of it all hit her when she was on stage. “This was the next step in my journey. I am about to deal with real patients and not just mannequins,” she says. “I’m here, and ready.”

    A tradition established in 1993 by The Arnold P. Gold Foundation, the White Coat Ceremony is meant to initiate healthcare students into a community of caring and to emphasize humanism in the field.

    “Putting on the white coat, I realized, this is who I want to be,” says Jedd Mercado ’27. “This is what I am going to do. It was surreal.”

    Donned in their new white coats, the 93 students stood and took an oath together. Among other things, the group pledged to approach the profession with integrity and humility and to always place patients as their foremost consideration.

    “Taking this oath will make me a better nurse because it holds me to high standards and reminds me who I am doing this all for — my patients,” says Laura Young ’27.

    Suzanne McCotter, interim provost and vice president for Academic Affairs, thanked the students for entering the field. “We are at a time when we need you desperately. The state of New Jersey needs you, our families need you, our community needs you,” she said. “We can’t wait to see the next stage of your success.”


    Kara Pothier MAT ’08

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    Appreciating Peggy Brennan-Tonetta’s 28-year Career at Rutgers : Newsroom

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    Peggy Brennan-Tonetta. Photo credit: Office of Public Outreach and Communication.

    Announcement by SEBS Executive Dean Laura Lawson

    Dear SEBS & NJAES Community,

    After a rich and rewarding career of 28 years with Rutgers, Margaret (Peggy) Brennan-Tonetta has announced her intention to retire at the beginning of the new year. Please join me in congratulating Peggy and celebrating her many accomplishments.

    Peggy first came to Rutgers as a student, receiving her B.A. in Economics and then continuing to complete a master’s in Agricultural Economics and a Ph.D. in Urban Planning and Public Policy.  Concurrent with her graduate studies, she began working at then-Cook College and NJAES in a range of roles. Notably, in 2000, she helped establish the Food Innovation Center and was its inaugural Director/Executive Director. She has served in multiple leadership roles to support research at SEBS/NJAES. She also established the first NJAES Office of Economic Development and expanded grant support, government engagement, and tech transfer efforts.

    In 2010, she became the first Associate Vice President (AVP) for Economic Development at Rutgers. Given the capacity of universities to serve as critical economic drivers, she utilized this role to advance a range of opportunities, from a supercomputer center to a proposed research park.

    In 2020, Peggy returned to SEBS/NJAES to serve as Senior Associate Director of NJAES/Director of Resource and Economic Development. In this role, she provided vision and leadership for our 16 NJAES research stations, farms, incubators, and service centers. Working with stakeholders and colleagues, she developed the comprehensive plan, Vision 2025, to guide strategic investment to modernize our farms and field stations, which were struggling from years of deferred maintenance. 

    Throughout her career, Peggy has been instrumental in bringing faculty, staff, and stakeholders together to address an opportunity or challenge. She played a pivotal part in the development of the Rutgers Offshore Wind Energy Collaborative, which has now brought over 70 Rutgers faculty and researchers from across New Brunswick, Camden, and Newark together, along with other academics and industry representatives to advance sustainable wind energy development that minimizes harm to ecosystems and brings economic opportunities to New Jersey residents.

    She co-led efforts to put together the self-study and submission of Rutgers New Brunswick’s application to the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) Innovative and Economic Prosperity (IEP) designation. This effort involved soliciting Information from every school and developing a cohesive narrative that conveys Rutgers New Brunswick’s commitment and impact in community and economic development.

    I asked Peggy what accomplishments she is most proud of in her career. She wrote, “My proudest accomplishments at Rutgers would be developing the Food Innovation Center and building it into a unique and internationally recognized food incubator, being appointed the first AVP for Economic Development for Rutgers and establishing successful collaborative programs such as the NJ Big Data Alliance and the Offshore Wind Collaborative.” Each one of these is a career onto itself, and we are grateful for Peggy’s success in so many areas.

    Her career illustrates the vital role of higher education to address critical issues facing New Jersey communities. It is a delight to share all the wonderful work Peggy has accomplished. Please join me in congratulating her and wishing her well in this next phase of her life.



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    Fall Photography Show | Cherry Hill Township, NJ

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    Fall Into the Arts Juried Photography Show November 4-15, 2024

    Juried Photography Show

    The Fall Into the Arts juried photography show will be on display from November 4 – 15, 2024 inside the Croft Farm Arts Center, 100 Bortons Mill Road. Click here for gallery hours.

    Eligibility

    Entry Fees

    • $10 non-refundable jury fee, per piece**.  Maximum of three (3) pieces/submissions per photographer.  Click here to pre-register and pay online with Visa or Mastercard.
    • If registering in-person, cash or check (made payable to “Cherry Hill Township”) will be accepted.  Paper forms will be available on site when registering in-person, however they are also available here. You may print, complete and bring with you when dropping off your artwork.

      ** Money collected from entries into Fall Into the Arts and Art Blooms is used to provide The Gaye Pino Memorial Scholarship to a Cherry Hill High School East and West student in the art, music or theater fields.  Occasionally the Board will purchase a piece of work for their permanent collection, displayed in the Cherry Hill Municipal Building.

    Awards

    Cash prizes will be awarded to three place winners (1st: $250; 2nd: $150; 3rd: $75) during an evening reception on Monday, November 4, from 6 – 7:30 p.m. at the Croft Farm Arts Center.  Winners will be notified ahead of time.  Artwork will remain on display and for sale through November 15, 2024.

     Requirements

    • All entries must be original photographs that have never been exhibited before at Croft Farm. Images may be film or digital capture and must have been made within the last 3 years.
    • All prints (framed, canvas, metal, glass, etc.) must be wired for hanging.  Prints can be conventionally framed with glass or acrylic equivalent.  No shadow box or clip frames. Canvas, metal and glass prints may also be submitted as long as they are properly wired.  Improperly framed pieces will be rejected.  For more information on wiring, click here.
    • Images may contain elements that were not in the scene when the shutter was snapped.  All such elements, however, must be the original work of the submitting photographer (e.g. not taken from stock photos). 
    • Plain white, unsigned, untitled mats and plain black frames are recommended but not required.  No decorative accessories on or within the frames. 
    • Maximum framed size is 38″ x 38.”  Weight not to exceed 30 lbs.  Pieces that are larger and heavier than these dimensions/weight will be rejected with no refund.
    • Identification cards must be affixed to the back of each piece at top left or right corner. For more information, click here
    • This is a juried exhibit, NOT all work submitted will be hung.  No refunds will be given for unselected pieces, failure to drop off artwork during receiving times or artwork that is incorrectly framed or sized.
    • You may list your photographs for sale; no commission applies.  The Arts Board/Recreation Department will place potential buyers in contact with photographers or direct them to the online gallery.

    Receiving

    Monday, October 28: 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.
    Tuesday, October 29: 4 p.m. – 7 p.m.

    Online pre-registration payment recommended.

    Location

    Croft Farm Arts Center, 100 Bortons Mill Road, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034

    Notification

    Photographers will be notified of results by email along with days and times to pick-up selected/unselected art.

    Other

    • Artwork accepted into the show MUST be on display for the full duration of the show. 
    • Artwork left more than 14 working days after the show closes, will be considered a donation to the Cherry Hill Arts Board/Cherry Hill Township.  

    Questions?

    856-488-7868
    Arts@chnj.gov

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    St. Nicholas Bazaar provides hometown holiday shopping – Star News Group

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    BAY HEAD — An early hint of yuletide spirit could be detected on Lake Avenue on Saturday, when the women’s guild of the All Saints Episcopal Church congregation held its annual St. Nicholas Bazaar.

    All proceeds from the bazaar go to the women’s guild, which supports local charities and organizations like St. Gregory’s Pantry, Dottie’s House, the Bay Head Fire Department, Point Pleasant Beach First Aid and Emergency Squad, Birthright of Ocean County, the Episcopal Relief and Development Fund and others. The Rev. Kathryn King, rector of All Saints Church, explained the event’s significance in the parish.

    “The bazaar is one of two primary fundraisers of the women’s guild of the congregation,” said the Rev. King. “All the money goes to outreach. They support local services; they give money to the fire company, to first responders, to homeless shelters — all that kind of stuff. All the money gets given out.”

    “There are a couple really big things; the food table is piled high, and it’s actually one of the highest money makers,” she said. “And so people make everything from cookies and breads to buffalo chicken dip and soup. People do jams and jellies, chili, soup; a woman even makes humongous apple pies.”

    Other wares available included crystal and glassware, toys and games, decorations and a ticket raffle to win more than a dozen gift baskets and prize packages. The Rev. King said that the St. Nicholas Bazaar is a prime opportunity for local parishioners and non-parishioners alike to stock up for Thanksgiving and Christmas.

    “It’s a good opportunity because people are looking for Christmas ornaments and baked goods for Thanksgiving, and to freeze them for Christmas,” she said. “It’s a traditional time of year to do it.”

    This is an excerpt of the print article. For more on this story, read The Ocean Star—on newsstands Friday or online in our e-Edition.

    Check out our other Bay Head stories, updated daily. And remember to pick up a copy of The Ocean Star—on newsstands Friday or online in our e-Edition.

    Subscribe today! If you’re not already an annual subscriber to The Ocean Star, get your subscription today! For just $38 per year, you will receive local mail delivery weekly, with pages and pages of local news and online access to our e-edition on Starnewsgroup.com.

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    Arrawanna Allen – Obituary – Route 40Route 40

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    Arrawanna Allen, 85, of La Quinta, CA, passed away peacefully and gracefully on October 15, 2022, after a lengthy illness, surrounded by her loving family.

    Arrawanna Allen

    Arrawanna was born in Rochester, NY, to Charles A. & Eunice (nee Simpson) Lawson, on August 16, 1937. Arrawanna was raised, along with her two siblings by her beloved paternal aunt (adoptive mother) Sarah Gohagen (nee Lawson) in Chicago, IL, Pittsburgh, PA, and Louisville, KY. Arrawanna relocated to Atlantic City, NJ, with her children in 1974, and retired to sunny La Quinta, CA in 2016. While residing in Louisville, Arrawanna worked for the Louisville Defender newspaper and was an active member in civil rights and desegregation in that city. She worked with Rev. Ralph Abernathy in organizing the 1967 Louisville Civil Rights March, led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

    Arrawanna graduated from Rutgers University, and was a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA) sorority, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), Congress for Racial Equality (CORE), the NAACP, American Civil Liberties Union, League of Women Voters, The National Urban League, American Business Women’s Association, and a host of others.

    After settling in Atlantic City, Arrawanna worked for the city in City Hall for over 30 years, in both affirmative action and contract compliance. A respected, active figure in state and local politics, she served the local community with organizing, advising, and assisting many civic organizations and was the recipient of many distinguished honors and awards throughout her life. Arrawanna was known for her brilliant mind, charisma, activism, humility and sense of humor. She had a love for people, traveling the world and word games. Many called her “mom” and she never met a stranger.

    Arrawanna is predeceased by her parents, and brother, Charles jr. She is survived by her loving family, daughter Eunice (Kurt), daughter Sarah, and son, Robert (Tracy), grandchildren Lauren, Donald, Kurt II, Julian, Shannon, Jordyn and Jaden and five great-grandchildren. The family humbly requests for friends of Arrawanna Allen’s to make donations in her name to The American Cancer Society, The American Heart Association and The COPD Foundation.



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    MCI Cleaning Services takes 5,250 square feet of flex/light industrial space in Pennsauken

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    MCI Cleaning Services successfully leased 5,250 square feet of flex/light industrial space in Pennsauken, according to a Thursday announcement from WCRE.

    Located at 725 Hylton Road, Unit 102, the tenant selected this location for its convenient access to Routes 73 and 130 and proximity to the Tacony-Palmyra Bridge. The property is also surrounded by various national tenants like ShopRite, Chipotle, and McDonald’s.

    This transaction adds to WCRE’s growing portfolio of successful flex/light industrial transactions in the South Jersey region.

    Corey Hassman, senior advisor, represented the tenant in this transaction.



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    Roy Rogers Restaurant to Make NJ Comeback; More Foods News

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    Openings

    Roy Rogers, Cherry Hill

    The iconic Roy Rogers restaurant, beloved for its Western-themed quick-service dining experience, is making a return to the southern New Jersey region for the first time since the 1980s. The new location is expected to open in spring 2025. Longtime Roy’s fans can expect the signature roast beef, fried chicken, and burgers, along with the famous Fixin’s Bar. 

    Bucky’s Pizza, Chatham

    Previously a popular mobile food truck, Bucky’s now has a brick-and-mortar location. Founder Dom Calise spent a year perfecting his naturally leavened dough, which forms the base for Detroit-style pizza and round sourdough pies. Try the hot honey pepperoni pizza!

    Blue Ridge Cafe, Ridgewood

    This family-owned coffee shop serves boutique roasted coffee from Brooklyn and freshly made desserts inspired by family recipes. The menu also includes salads, sandwiches and juices. Brunch is coming, too.

    Black Cuppy Cafe, Fort Lee

    Located in downtown Fort Lee, this cafe features coffee, tea, smoothies and various food selections.

    Closings

    TGI Friday’s recently closed four New Jersey restaurants, in Bridgewater, North Brunswick, Piscataway and Watchung. Published reports say the company is preparing for a bankruptcy filing, according to Bloomberg.


    No one knows New Jersey like we do. Sign up for one of our free newsletters here. Want a print magazine mailed to you? Purchase an issue from our online store.



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    Logging On: Examining the Influence of NUMTOTs on Urbanism Discourse

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    September 19th, 2024 by Sneha Patel

    “Whatever your niche interests are, there’s already a conversation happening online about it,” Michael Atkins, Communications Director at New Jersey Future, opened astutely when moderating the session “Logging On: Examining the Influence of NUMTOTs on Urbanism Discourse” at the 2024 New Jersey Planning and Redevelopment Conference hosted by the New Jersey Chapter of the American Planning Association and New Jersey Future. 

    From navigating confusing metro maps to voicing frustrations with the lack of bike lanes, younger generations are using their lived experiences to engage with peers through the online ecosystem. By creating and sharing memes, young people have found a collective vehicle to insert themselves into the planning and transportation conversation. Millennials and Gen Z’s in the urbanism space, who hold similar values such as being pro-transit and pro-housing and believe better urbanism is crucial to meeting environmental goals, are called NUMTOTs, otherwise known as New Urbanists Memes for Transit-Oriented Teens. 

    The session featured a selection of online creators with different insights, from the birth of “NUMTOTs” to creators of longer-form and short-form content. The panelists included Alan Fisher, Social Creator and Media Advisor; Alex Ambrose, Policy Analyst, New Jersey Policy Perspective; and Juliet Eldred, Co-Founder of the NUMTOT Facebook group and Project Manager at Trillium, an Optibus Company. 

    The NUMTOTs Facebook group, created in March 2017 by Juliet Eldred and her co-founder Emily Orenstein—initially created as a joke—has flourished into a well-established discussion forum with over 225,000 members worldwide. Facebook served as the primordial soup for the emergence of transit-related memes, where many groups based on niche topics were common. Memes are images or short videos that are usually funny or relatable and are easily circulated. They are a way of tapping into feelings that everyone shares, from missing the bus to seeing something as bizarre as a bull on the tracks of NJ Transit. The shareable, simple nature of memes makes them a driving force to connect multiple generations to rally behind issues areas (even going as far as winning presidential endorsement from the entire group). The NUMTOT Facebook group was where many young professionals fostered their interest in the transit and planning field.

    Alan Fisher, a fellow NUMTOT himself, explains how everyone engages in meme culture in some form: “The learning experience or the way that you teach the public has changed, but the concepts and the ways that we talk about it have not.” He compares a 1930’s advertisement from the Chicago Shore Line, which states, “The Steel Highways are always open!” to a current ad from the Chicago RTA, “Spoiler Alert: There’s Traffic.” Close to 90 years later, the same message remains: take the train, and you won’t be stuck in traffic. Fisher, the creator of the YouTube series Armchair Urbanist, on a YouTube channel with 225K subscribers and 24.5M views, makes content focused on urban planning, transportation, and North American history. He comments, “There’s always something to teach about urban planning to the general public. You have to shape and create a message in a way people will understand.” His YouTube community has been a place to get people engaged in otherwise “dull” topics and for professionals to get excited to talk about their niche interests in a captivating way. Being relatable, clear, and oftentimes funny can be the key to crafting content that resonates with people. Organizations frequently struggle with being too business-focused and using “LinkedIn fluff.” as Alan puts it. He remarks, “Being too nice at approaching concepts or too scared at making fun of the industry can keep you from connecting with anyone, leaving you with too muddy of a message because you aren’t taking a stand on anything.”

    Alex Ambrose, Policy Analyst at New Jersey Policy Perspective, isn’t afraid of voicing their opinions. “You never know what will resonate with people,” Ambrose comments. Taking on the persona of a “Professional Nerd” she engages audiences on New Jersey policy primarily on Twitter and TikTok. Ambrose creates short-form content such as one-minute videos or shareable memes where she explains the legislative budget process while getting ready or inserting her policy opinions into trending topics like Barbie or Taylor Swift. She explains, “Humor creates a low barrier for people to understand new concepts.” Social media is unserious in nature but can have a tangible impact. She says, “You should treat social media like it is real life to reach your goals.” Social media content can reach influential audiences, including policymakers, senators, and even Governors. Ambrose aims to create content that reaches a specific audience to advocate for change. She advises, “Don’t go viral, go local.”

    Social media may seem silly, but it is an effective means of intergenerational communication. Connecting our everyday occurrences and getting younger people interested, engaged, and informed is a way of leveling the playing field for those who want change but are unsure how to advocate for it. For many organizations, it can be a direct way to tailor your message to your audience. Access to affordable housing, multiple modes of transit, and clean drinking water are human issues. Everyone can relate and memes can be a way to mobilize the public. A little bit of “unprofessionalism” can make significant changes.

    Tags: 2024 NJ Planning and Redevelopment Conference, changemakers, communication, engaging audiences, influencing, issue awareness, New Jersey planning and redevelopment conference, NUMTOT, social media, Transportation, urbanism




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    Eight New Jersey Businesses and a Business Leader Are Recognized for ‘Challenging the Status Quo’ in the Garden State

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    Trailblazer Awards Reception Was Hosted by the African American Chamber of N.J. and the N.J. Chamber of Commerce

    Eight New Jersey businesses and a business leader that are leading the way in demonstrating tangible and measurable progress in diversity, equity and inclusion (DE&I) were recognized Nov. 14 at the third annual DE&I Trailblazer Awards reception, co-hosted by the African American Chamber Commerce of New Jersey and the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce.

    “These are the companies and organizations that don’t just support DE&I, they are setting measurable equity and inclusion goals and meeting them,” said John E. Harmon Sr., IOM, founder, president & CEO of the African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey. “They are making a difference. We applaud these trailblazers and encourage their counterparts in the business community to work toward similar measurable goals.”

    “We are honoring the companies that are walking the walk,” added Tom Bracken, president and CEO of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce. “We are recognizing and celebrating the DE&I champions who are meeting the challenge and challenging the status quo.”

    The DE&I Trailblazer Awards at Pines Manor in Edison revealed honorees that have excelled in these key areas: access to capital; board diversity; corporate citizenship; supplier diversity; and workforce diversity. Also presented was a ‘Statewide DE&I Champion’ award that went to a company that has excelled in nearly every category of DE&I; and a ‘DE&I Influencer’ award that went to an outstanding business leader.

    The Awardees

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Board Diversity’ category went to Virtua Health. Virtua’s board of trustees boasts a diverse composition – 41% people of color and 35% women. The awardee’s DE&I success is striking in another way. Their senior leadership team is 55% women and 22% people of color. Since diversity doesn’t just happen by chance — it takes hard work — every team member at Virtua (more than 10,000 people) completes an intensive 26-week course on human understanding and experience aimed at fostering self-awareness and building stronger relationships.

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Access to Capital’ category went to New Jersey Community Capital. The nonprofit has made it its mission to inject vital capital into communities that need it most, while directly confronting racial and ethnic wealth disparities. In 2022, it closed $47 million in financing, only to surpass that in fiscal 2023 with an impressive $58 million in new loans. These loans have helped create or preserve 1,400 housing units, 2,000 jobs, and 330,000 square feet of real estate. But beyond the numbers, what truly stands out is the institution’s commitment to equity: 55% of its loan portfolio supports minority borrowers from underrepresented communities.

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Supplier Diversity’ category went to American Water. Over the past three years, it has achieved a 25% increase in spending on diverse suppliers across New Jersey. This fall, it launched its Supplier Development Program, a six-month cohort designed to mentor diverse suppliers and enhance their chances of securing contracts with the company. The company, meanwhile, has dedicated an entire section of their website to clearly report their metrics on inclusion, diversity, and equity. It also adopted a strategic plan to build an inclusive, diverse, and equitable workplace where employees feel they belong and can bring their whole selves to work.

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Corporate Citizenship’ category went to Comcast. Comcast is leading the charge against digital inequity through its $1 billion initiative aimed at connecting people to the internet. Since 2011, the company has connected over 496,000 low-income New Jersey residents to the internet at home. It has also established more than 1,250 Wi-Fi zones in community centers nationwide — including over 30 in New Jersey — providing free, high-speed Wi-Fi and digital skills training for students and families of all backgrounds. In the past three years, this corporation has contributed $17.1 million in cash and in-kind donations to New Jersey nonprofits that focus on skill building, job training, and career development.

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Corporate Citizenship – Small Business’ category went to Huntler Management. This minority-owned firm’s mission goes beyond being an industry leader in infrastructure and construction—it’s about making a meaningful difference in the communities it serves. One of its standout efforts is an annual partnership with the African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey, where the company provides Thanksgiving dinners — complete with turkeys and all the sides — to families in need in Trenton. In addition, the company regularly supports Elijah’s Promise in New Brunswick by collecting and distributing snack bags, and it proudly partners with Touch Link, which aids survivors of domestic violence, and MyGoal, which supports families affected by autism and other intellectual disabilities.

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Workforce Diversity’ category went to CGI. CGI supports an inclusive culture committed to the wellbeing and growth of its team. Their success in this endeavor led to being named to TIME Magazine’s list of ‘World’s Best Companies’; and to Forbes magazine’s list of ‘Best Employers for Women,’ as well as being on lists recognizing DE&I practices and LGBTQ+ workplace inclusion. Here in New Jersey, the company is a partner with the New Brunswick P-Tech School District, which helps students from underserved communities pursue careers in STEM fields. A team of professionals from CGI mentors P-Tech students for the four to six years they spend in the program. Students can shadow the company’s consultants during the summer, attend internal meetings and sign up for a paid internship when they turn 18. These activities enable the students to get real-world corporate experience. It also familiarizes the students with the company’s culture, should they choose to work there after graduation.

    The second DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Workforce Diversity’ category went to Langan. Langan’s workforce of 1,700 employees, is comprised of 38% women and 31% people of color – both surpassing industry averages. In 2023, 41% of its new hires identified as women, and 39% were people of color. To ensure continued progress, the firm requires all employees to undergo awareness training, while executives and senior leaders participate in more in-depth DEI training. Supplier diversity is another area where this firm excels. It has awarded over $10 million to minority- and women-owned businesses in the tri-state area, accounting for more than 33% of the total contract values.

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘DE&I Influencer, category goes to Leon Baptiste, president of LB Electric Company. In 1999 he founded a 100% minority-owned contracting and engineering firm that has worked with major clients like PSEG, ConEd, and the Port Authority. Driven by a deep sense of responsibility to give back, in 2005 he launched a training center, in partnership with NJIT and local community colleges, to train inner-city youth, minority students, and re-entries in solar technology, preparing them for careers in renewable energy. His dedication to his community extends beyond business. He serves as chairman of NJIT’s Electrical & Computer Engineering Industry Advisory Board, mentors with the Port Authority of NY & NJ, and co-chairs the construction group for the African American Chamber of Commerce.

    The DE&I Trailblazer Award in the ‘Statewide DE&I Champion’ category went to Hackensack Meridian Health. HMH has embedded diversity, equity, and inclusion at the heart of its mission. It even earned recognition as the No. 1 hospital system in the U.S. on Diversity Inc.’s “Top Hospitals & Health Systems” list for 2023. HMH established a Supplier Diversity Council that regularly meets to advance diversity initiatives. As for accountability, it developed software to track and measure its diverse supply chain. This work resulted in a 32% increase in supplier diversity spending in 2023, totaling $75 million.

    Honoring Companies that are ‘Walking the Walk’

    For the past two months, the two chambers have accrued an impressive list of nominees that represent a wide range of business sizes and industries. All of them have inspiring and uplifting stories to demonstrate how they moved diversity, equity and inclusion to the forefront of their business strategies.

    The nominees considered were:

    • American Water
    • AmeriHealth
    • BND Consulting
    • Center for Family Services
    • CGI Technologies and Solutions Inc.
    • Comcast
    • Electra Lines LLC
    • Elevate 360 LLC
    • Emergency Pest Control
    • Empower Construction LLC
    • Hackensack Meridian Health
    • Huntler LLC
    • Langan
    • LB Electric Co., LLC
    • New Jersey Community Capital
    • New Jersey Department of State
    • Quality Dental School of Technology, Inc.
    • Qunnections Management Group, LLC
    • South Jersey Industries
    • Virtua Health
    • We Are Jersey

     ###

    About the African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey

    The African American Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey (AACCNJ) performs an essential role in the economic viability of New Jersey. While providing a platform for New Jersey’s African American business leaders to speak with a collective voice, the AACCNJ advocates and promotes economic diversity fostering a climate of business growth through major initiatives centering on education and public policy. The AACCNJ is a proactive advocacy group with a 501(c)(3) tax exemption, as is the National Black Chamber of Commerce, with which the AACCNJ is affiliated. For more information, visit aaccnj.com

    About the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce

    The New Jersey Chamber of Commerce is a business advocacy association based in Trenton that lobbies key stakeholders for legislation and policies designed to make New Jersey a desirable state to operate a business and establish good-paying jobs. Chamber member companies receive exclusive invitations to events that offer valuable networking and educational opportunities. Additionally, the Chamber regularly disseminates legislative updates, industry insights, and employer-related news critical to conducting business in New Jersey. The organization unites local and regional chambers of commerce across the state to address significant business issues. The New Jersey Chamber of Commerce Foundation is committed to equipping New Jersey’s future workforce with the essential skills required for success in both college and employment. For more information, visit njchamber.com

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    A Morris County Health Officer Now Leads State Association – Morris County, NJ

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    Published on November 20, 2024

    Named President of New Jersey Association of County and City Health Officials

    2024 Morris County health officer The Morris County Board of County Commissioners congratulates Stephanie Gorman, a health officer in Morris County’s Division of Public Health, on being sworn in as president of the New Jersey Association of County and City Health Officials (NJACCHO) today at the New Jersey League of Municipalities Conference in Atlantic City.

    The ceremony was held during the NJACCHO General Membership Meeting in the Atlantic City Convention Center, with the oath of office being administered by Morris County Commissioner Douglas Cabana, liaison to Morris County Department of Law and Public Safety.

    “It was an honor to swear in Stephanie Gorman as president of NJACCHO,” said Commissioner Cabana. “Her leadership at both the county and state levels exemplifies Morris County’s dedication to public health and advancing critical health initiatives statewide.”

    NJACCHO represents public health leaders from 104 local health departments across New Jersey’s 21 counties and 565 municipalities. For more than 113 years, the organization has worked to improve community health by promoting wellness, preventing disease, and protecting those who live, work, and visit New Jersey.

    “As president, I aim to strengthen NJACCHO’s leadership, engage our members more deeply, and ensure the long-term stability of our executive team. Together, we will continue to build on our achievements, including managing $163 million in federal grants to support local health departments and modernizing public health systems across New Jersey,” said Gorman, underscoring her commitment to NJACCHO’s mission.

    Gorman, who served as president-elect of the NJACCHO for the past year, has more than 17 years of public health experience. She started her career as a registered environmental health specialist in Pequannock Township before joining Morris County in 2014. In her role as a county health officer, she currently oversees the county environmental health program and local public health grant initiatives aimed at improving workforce professional development. She holds a Master of Public Health degree, along with certifications as a registered environmental health specialist and certified public manager.

    “Stephanie’s dedication and leadership have made a significant impact on our local and state health systems, and her appointment to the position of NJACCHO president is a testament to her ability to break barriers and a recognition of her achievements,” said Carlos Perez, chief Health Officer in Morris County Division of Public Health.

    Gorman has been a member of NJACCHO since 2014 and has served on its board of directors since 2018. As president, her focus will be on increasing member engagement and executive team stability in accordance with NJACCHO’s strategic plan. She is committed to modernizing the public health system and securing grant funding to support local health departments across New Jersey.

    “NJACCHO’s achievements are the result of collaboration and innovation,” said Gorman. “With a dedicated volunteer board and the support of our executive director, Linda Brown, we will continue to ensure projects and investments enhance public health operations for years to come.”

    For more information on NJACCHO’s initiatives, visit njaccho.org.

    ###

     

    Photo: (l-r) Commissioner Douglas Cabana, Stephanie Gorman, Carlos Perez, Commissioner John Krickus and Commissioner Deputy Director Stephen Shaw.

     

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    Booker Introduces Bill to Strengthen Ethics Oversight on the Supreme Court

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    Today, U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) introduced legislation aimed at promoting ethical conduct and accountability for ethics violations within the U.S. Supreme Court. U.S. Representative Daniel Goldman (D-NY-10) introduced companion legislation in the House earlier this year.

    Numerous allegations of ethical improprieties and undisclosed conflicts of interests and gifts, along with refusals to recuse by Supreme Court justices have eroded the public’s trust in the Court and increased demand for more transparency and accountability in the nation’s highest court.

    The Supreme Court Ethics and Investigations Act is a critical first step towards improving ethical standards among the justices and holding justices accountable when they commit ethics violations. Specifically, the bill would establish two new offices within the Supreme Court:
    1. An Office of Ethics Counsel that would provide regular ethics training and advise justices on ethics issues, including disclosing gifts and deciding when to recuse from cases.
    2. An Office of Investigative Counsel that would investigate potential instances of ethical impropriety by justices and report the findings to Congress.

    “There is no reason that the Justices who sit on the highest court in the country should be held to ethical standards that are lower than those of any employee in our federal government,” said Senator Booker. “There’s a crisis of confidence in the Supreme Court. Public trust in the institution is at its lowest point in decades as a result of alleged ethical lapses and conflicts of interest. By creating a mechanism to investigate and hold justices accountable for ethics violations and establishing an Ethics Counsel to provide consistent advice on issues like recusal, gifts, and disclosures, this bill is a critical step towards restoring the credibility of the Court in the eyes of the public.”

    “Our nation’s highest court continues to face an unprecedented crisis of legitimacy, in part because there is no enforceable code of ethics nor accountability as required of all other federal judges,” Congressman Dan Goldman said. “I am thrilled that Senator Booker is leading the charge in the Senate to pass my ‘Supreme Court Ethics and Investigations Act.’ This legislation is a sorely needed step to hold Supreme Court Justices accountable and restore Americans’ faith in the Court.”

    “Americans should be able to have faith in the integrity of the highest court in the land, but the justices rely on each other for ethical guidance, and have no one checking their work,” said Senator Hirono. “This legislation will help to address these issues by establishing offices to provide professional advice to justices on ethical matters and to investigate complaints made against them or their spouses. The American people should be able to trust that justices arrive at decisions fairly and objectively, and the Supreme Court Ethics and Investigations Act will help to hold the highest court in the land to the highest level of ethical accountability.”

    This legislation is endorsed by the following organizations: Fix the Court, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), Accountable.US, End Citizens United (ECU), Project on Government Oversight (POGO), P Street, Court Accountability, and Demand Justice.

    The Supreme Court Ethics and Investigations Act is cosponsored by U.S. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Laphonza Butler (D-CA), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Alex Padilla (D-CA), and Peter Welch (D-VT).

     

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    Lewis Center for the Arts presents “The Amish Project”

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    originally published: 11/21/2024

    Princeton senior Caitlin Durkin, who will portray six characters in Jessica Dickey’s compelling drama, “The Amish Project.” Photo by Jon Sweeney

    (PRINCETON, NJ) — The Lewis Center for the Arts’ Program in Theater and Music Theater at Princeton University presents The Amish Project, Jessica Dickey’s compelling drama that explores the aftermath of the 2006 shooting at an Amish schoolhouse in Nickel Mines, a small village in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Princeton senior Caitlin Durkin directs and portrays six characters forever transformed by the tragic event. Performances are on December 6-7, 2024 at 7:30pm in the Wallace Theater at the Lewis Arts complex on the Princeton campus.

    Free and open to the public, tickets can be reserved through University Ticketing. The Wallace Theater is fully accessible with an assistive listening system. The December 7 performance will be open captioned. Guests in need of other access accommodations are invited to contact the Lewis Center at LewisCenter@princeton.edu at least one week prior to the event date.

    Dickey’s play, which premiered at the New York International Fringe Festival on August 8, 2008, at the Players Loft, is a fictional exploration of the Nickel Mines schoolhouse shooting in an Amish community and the path of forgiveness and compassion forged in its wake.

    On October 2, 2006, gunman Charles Roberts, 32, a non-Amish local resident invaded the one-room schoolhouse deep in Pennsylvania Amish country and eventually tied up and shot 10 Amish girls, five of whom died. Within hours, the local Amish community announced they had forgiven him, the shooting and response sending shockwaves around the world.


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    The production includes references to gun violence and ideations of sexual assault.

    The six characters Durkin will portray are Anna, a 14-year-old victim of the shooting; Carol Stuckey, widow of the gunman; Velda, a 6-year-old victim; Bill North, scholar and professor on Amish culture and spokesperson for the Amish families; gunman Eddie Stuckey, who shot himself at the end of the attack; and non-Amish resident Sherry Local. A seventh character in the play, America, a 16-year-old, pregnant grocery clerk, is being portrayed by first-year student Sofia Clark.

    Durkin, a sociology major from Santa Monica, California, proposed the project as her independent work toward a minor in the Program in Theater and Music Theater, seeking a substantial acting and directing challenge. Students earning a minor take the course “Introduction to Theater Making,” four other theater, music theater, music, or dance courses, and provide non-performing support for one or two other program productions, with the option to propose a senior project in spring of their junior year. The program’s season is primarily shaped by the interests and proposals of the students pursuing the minor. Students’ senior projects are advised by the faculty with support from the professional staff in music, costumes, scenery, light, sound, stage management and producing. Any student can pursue the minor; no application or audition is required, and students with no prior experience are welcome.

    Durkin has been involved in other Program in Theater and Music Theater projects. She played Gertrude in Hamlet in 2022 and originated the role of Buddy in Not Your Buddy in 2023. She also served as an assistant stage manager for the program’s massive production last fall of The Winter’s Tale. Durkin also performed as Nora in Theater Intime’s production of A Doll’s House in 2022 and is a member of the student group Fuzzy Dice Improv. Acting since the age of five, Durkin grew up studying and performing Shakespeare at Will Geer’s Theatricum Botanicum in Los Angeles, where she was a mainstage repertory company member for five years.

    E. Keating Helfrich Debalak is the professional costume designer on the production. Students in production roles include Kat McLaughlin as lighting designer, John Wallar as sound designer, Avi Chesler as stage manager, and Roya Reese as assistant stage manager. The faculty producer is Tess James and faculty mentor on the project is Vivia Font.

    Visit the Lewis Center website to learn more about this event, the Program in Theater and Music Theater, and the more than 100 public performances, exhibitions, readings, screenings, concerts, lectures, and special events presented by the Lewis Center each year, most of them free.


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    Mayor Baraka Announces 2024 Creative Catalyst Fund Awardees

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    originally published: 11/21/2024

    Newark is for Artists mural by The Nork Project, photo by Chrystofer Davis.

    (NEWARK, NJ) — On November 21, 2024, Mayor Ras J. Baraka announced the recipients of the 2024 Creative Catalyst Fund awards to provide artists and cultural groups with flexible grant support in recognition of the immense social and economic value the creative sector brings to Newark. The list of the awardees can be viewed here.

    A selection committee composed of local artists, curators, community representatives, city staff and funders, recommended 168 applications for grants ranging from $1,000 to $20,000. 132 grants will be awarded to individual artists and artist collectives with an average award of $2,700; and 36 grants will be awarded to small and mid-sized arts organizations and creative businesses with an average award of $11,000.

    “When people interact with art, we see a direct positive impact on our quality of life, creative placemaking and community revitalization, as well as improvements to our physical and mental health,” Mayor Baraka said. “These results, combined with the benefits to job creation, tourism, and economic development, make arts funding critical for infusing cities with added value and vitality.”

    The Creative Catalyst Fund was created by Mayor Baraka and City of Newark Division of Arts and Cultural Affairs Director fayemi shakur in January 2020 as the City of Newark’s first-ever arts grant program. Since its launch at the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis, the fund awarded over 500 grants totaling $3.1 million to artists and organizations for programs serving hundreds of thousands of Newark residents and visitors, and hiring thousands of additional artists for their work supporting the projects. Grantees have used the funds to help pay for operating costs, space rentals, staff, programming costs, supplies and equipment, and COVID-related expenses.

    “Artists breathe new life into every community they touch-so much so that even local governments are going the extra mile to ensure that these creators have resources they need to pursue their craft,” said Newark Symphony Hall President and CEO Talia Young. “Collaborative initiatives such as these help to ensure that Newark will continue to have strong pipeline of talented artists for our city.”


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    Financial support from the fund has bolstered Newark’s creative community, which has vital contributions to civic economy, neighborhood revitalization, education, tourism, and an overall improvement in quality of life for city residents. The arts are estimated to contribute more than $178 million to Newark’s economy, support roughly 5,000 local jobs and generate $15.5 million in local and state taxes.

    There is also a growing practice of “social prescribing” as a way for healthcare providers to address patients’ health and wellbeing with cultural activities. Studies have also shown a variety of social benefits with the availability of arts activities in otherwise under-resourced neighborhoods.

    The Creative Catalyst Fund is administered by the city’s Division of Arts and Cultural Affairs and was designed and facilitated with the help of Bloomberg Associates, a philanthropic consultancy that advises cities around the world.

    “Artists are our healers, our connectors, our truth tellers, and this inspiring list of Creative Catalyst Fund grantees shows our city’s strength to carry forward in trying times,” said Director shakur. “In this time of heightened political tensions, it is more critical than ever to support creativity and free expression.”

    For more insight into Mayor Baraka’s arts initiatives spearheaded by the city’s Arts and Cultural Affairs, visit the city’s website.


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    Pioneering Feminist Helène Aylon Gets Her Due at Princeton University Art Museum

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    Pioneering Feminist Helène Aylon Gets Her Due at Princeton University Art Museum


    

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    By Ilene Dube, JerseyArts.com

    originally published: 11/21/2024

    It was in the late 1970s, during the anti-nuclear movement, that artist Helène Aylon noted how, in news photos of refugees, there are always images of women fleeing with a sack of precious belongings in one hand, a child clasping the other hand.

    “We, too, would take our most precious belonging – the Earth itself … in our ‘sac’ and carry it to safety,” she said of her project “Terrestri: Rescued Earth.”

    Elements from Aylon’s pioneering eco-feminist project are on view in Helène Aylon: Undercurrent, curated by Rachel Federman, at the Princeton University Art Museum’s Art@Bainbridge through February 2.

    Helène Aylon , Terrestri: “Rescued” Earth (Sunrise Departure), May 2, 1982. Chromogenic print. Courtesy of Helène Aylon Estate and Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York

    In 1982, Aylon organized a group of women artists to embark on a six-week journey for her “Earth Ambulance” – a re-outfitted truck – from California to a mass rally for disarmament at the United Nations. The “Women’s SAC Caravan” used the acronym to denote Strategic Air Command and the mantra “survive and continue.”


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    The “sacs” they carried – a deliberate misspelling of sack – were fashioned from pillowcases, a tool for survival and a symbol of a place to rest.

    At each site, members were joined by local participants to gather earth in sacks that women had inscribed with their dreams and nightmares for the planet. The sacks were emptied near the U.N., and Army stretchers on which they were transported were raised like funerary monuments.

    Aylon, who died in 2020 from complications of COVID-19, is now being recognized as a visionary. Women activists fighting for the future of our planet seems more timely than ever. The artist, who has been breaking ground in how we look at the environment, women’s bodies, and spiritual practice since the 1970s, considered her artwork to be “the handwriting of the universe.” In 2016, she was awarded the Women’s Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Award.

    “The Book that Will Not Close,” exhibited here, is a religious tome that fans open into a papery arc. Working by candlelight and using a pink highlighter, Aylon inserted a line wherever the feminine presence was absent, laying her marks on a translucent sheet placed over each page, obliterating all the phrases that convey misogyny or patriarchal attitudes. She is attempting to show that G-d, as Aylon spells the divine, has been hijacked by men.

    In 1985, for the 40th anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, she floated sacks of seed, grain, pods and bamboo on the rivers to those two cities. A video of the floating sacks was projected on the Sony Jumbotron in Times Square in 1995 and can be seen here as well.

    Born Helène Fischer in 1931 and raised in the Orthodox Jewish tradition in Brooklyn, N.Y., Aylon married a rabbi when she was 18. The couple moved to Montreal and had two children, but her husband died of cancer. Helène, 30, and the children returned to Brooklyn. She created a new surname for herself, Aylon, based on the Hebrew name for Helène, Aylonna. She studied art with Abstract Expressionist Ad Reinhardt at Brooklyn College, and her own abstract art was influenced by painters Grace Hartigan and Lee Krasner.

    She read the works of poets Adrienne Rich and Maya Angelou, and learned that she could be both a mother and an artist simultaneously. In 1965 she received a commission to create a 16-foot mural at a synagogue at JFK International Airport that portrayed Judaism through the eyes of women. Aylon took off for Berkeley, California, landing a job teaching drawing and painting at San Francisco State University.


    Helène Aylon, Terrestri: “Rescued” Earth (Earth ‘Paintings’) in front of the Isaiah Wall, Ralph Bunche Park, New York, June 12, 1982. Black and white print; 35.6 × 27.9 cm. Courtesy of Helène Aylon Estate and Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York

    She began creating a series of works that involved pouring linseed oil on paper or panel. It was all about relying on chance and the resultant transformation.

    The cover of her 2012 memoir, “Whatever is Contained Must Be Released: My Jewish Orthodox Girlhood, My Life as a Feminist Artist” (The Feminist Press, 2012) shows the artist coming into her own with a full mane of untamed curly hair, dressed in black trousers and a black blouse with a deep V-neck. In the book she recounts how, as her mother instructed her to be a good girl, she was fermenting ground-breaking work that would be exhibited at Betty Parson’s Gallery, the Whitney, MoMA, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Andy Warhol Museum and the Jewish Museum.

    “I was already developing an aesthetic during my preadolescence” and it didn’t include “schmaltz,” she writes. Along the way she met the likes of artist Mark Rothko (Reinhardt introduced her to Rothko, “who came from a similar background,” says Curator Federman. “She was inspired by the mystical underpinnings of his work, and the way it reveals itself over time”), critic Peter Schjeldahl, and playwright Edward Albee.

    Federman, who is at work on a biography of gallerist Betty Parsons, met Aylon in 2014 when, as a curator at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, she was facilitating a gift of Aylon’s work. “We met in a storage facility in San Francisco, where she kept work from the period when she lived in the Bay Area (1973-1982),” recounts Federman. “She had an aura about her; she often dressed in flowing robes and head wraps.”

    Subsequently, as curator in modern and contemporary drawings at the Morgan Library in New York, Federman included Aylon’s work in an exhibition. “Many of her works from throughout her career were created using unusual materials and techniques on paper.”

    In the mid-1960s, when her children were older, Aylon devoted herself to becoming an artist, taking a studio in the East Village and commuting from Brooklyn’s Borough Park. “She was living between worlds during this period. It was the feminist movement, however, that showed her a way forward and made her an activist as well as an artist.

    “Like many women in the 1970s,” continues Federman, “Aylon attended consciousness-raising groups, which was one of the ways she connected with fellow artists and writers. She became involved with institutions around the feminist movement in Berkeley, California, where she moved in 1973.”

    After teaching at San Francisco State and the Berkeley Feminist Institute, she earned a master’s degree in Women’s Studies/Art Education from Antioch College West in 1980. “Over the years, her collaborators included her students, as well as Mierles Laderman Ukeles, Howardena Pindell, Meredith Monk, and Susan Griffin. She was a loving and supportive friend, and many of her relationships stemmed from this fact.”

    Helène Aylon (1931 – 2020; born, Brooklyn, NY; died, New York, NY), I Will Wait for the Landing, from the series Turnings, 2014. Chromogenic print mounted on board; 45.7 × 76.2 cm. Collection of Helène Aylon Estate, Courtesy of Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York


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    In 1979, Betty Parsons Gallery gave Aylon a show. “Parsons was always open to new talent,” says Federman. “Aylon was beginning (a series of paintings that) encapsulated her desire to allow ‘the art to tell me something that I did not know.’ These were abstract works on paper that developed over time, like aging or scarring skin. Parsons… was spiritually inclined and often spoke of manifesting the ‘invisible presence’ in her own art. Aylon was very devoted to Parsons, who died in 1982.”

    After the show at Parsons, Aylon fell into obscurity for about 40 years. “Aylon did not have a dealer again until shortly before her death,” says Federman. “Part of this owes to the fact that throughout the ’80s, she was taking her work outside the studio to create performances and other time-based actions and installations, which are not easily marketed. In the 1990s and 2000s, Aylon undertook a huge project addressing her complex relationship with Judaism (‘The G-d Project: Nine Houses without Women’). Many people encountered her for the first time in this context — for example, in the show Too Jewish?, at the Jewish Museum in 1996. It may have been difficult for those encountering this body of work to understand how it connects to her earlier art, but it does!”

    In her memoir, Aylon writes “It was only at the age of 60 that I dared to ‘come out’ as a formerly Orthodox Jew.”

    “She shifted her attention away from Orthodox practice and textual interpretation to a more mystical strain of Judaism, Kabbalah, which means ‘receiving,’” notes Federman. In California in the ’70s, she attended the Aquarian Minyan, a radical egalitarian community where Kabbalism was taught. “This allowed her to retain a connection with Judaism, which was an undeniable part of her formation.

    “It was only later, after she had spent nearly a decade engaged in tikkun olam (repairing the world — a Kabbalistic idea) through her ecological activism, that she decided to go back to the source, and to take on the texts and practices that she found so problematic.”

    In her video “Written Behind my Back,” the artist, shrouded in a white garment, appears against a white wall, as Hebrew words float across her. In the voice-over narration we hear: “Locusts will demolish you, worms will consume you because you have not obeyed. You will eat the flesh of your sons and daughters. He will bring back the Egyptian illnesses and plagues for you have not obeyed your god… your corpse will be free for all the birds in the sky and the animals.”

    And, in English text across the screen: “When it became my turn to kiss you I turned my back on you. I could not see what was written behind my back. Once I was your Sabbath bride. Your words were strung like pearls. Now I carry your weight on my back.”

    “Anyone who takes the time to familiarize themselves with Aylon’s art will be convinced that she was a major artist, brilliant in many ways, and deserving of the attention that largely eluded her,” says Federman. “She used her talents as an artist and her conviction as a feminist to illuminate the beauty of creation, the necessity of human connection, and the need for healing on every level: human, environmental, and spiritual.”

    


    About the author: Driven by her love of the arts, and how it can make us better human beings, Ilene Dube has written for JerseyArts, Hyperallergic, WHYY Philadelphia, Sculpture Magazine, Princeton Magazine, U.S. 1, Huffington Post, the Princeton Packet, and many others. She has produced short documentaries on the arts of central New Jersey, as well as segments for State of the Arts, and has curated exhibitions at the Trenton City Museum at Ellarslie and Morven Museum in Princeton, among others. Her own artwork has garnered awards in regional exhibitions and her short stories have appeared in dozens of literary journals. A life-long practitioner of plant-based eating, she can be found stocking up on fresh veggies at the West Windsor Farmers Market.

    Content provided by Discover Jersey Arts, a project of the ArtPride New Jersey Foundation and New Jersey State Council on the Arts.

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    Theatre

    Theatre Fest Fall 2024 – Music and Theatre Collaboration: Celebrating Stephen Sondheim

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 8:00pm
    Monmouth University – Lauren K. Woods Theatre
    370 Cedar Avenue, West Long Branch, NJ 07764
    category: theatre

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    Harry

    Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (HS Edition)

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 7:00pm
    Grunin Center
    1 College Drive, Toms River, NJ 08754
    category: theatre

    View event page for full information


    2024

    2024 Princeton Dance Festival

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 8:00pm
    McCarter Theatre Center (Berlind Theatre)
    91 University Place, Princeton, NJ 08540
    category: dance

    View event page for full information


    Fall

    Fall Dance Plus

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 7:30pm
    New Brunswick Performing Arts Center (NBPAC)
    11 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
    category: dance

    View event page for full information


    An

    An Evening With Cher: The Memoir

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 7:00pm
    Bergen Performing Arts Center (bergenPAC)
    30 North Van Brunt Street, Englewood, NJ 07631
    category: music

    View event page for full information


    Lucinda

    Lucinda Williams and her band

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 7:30pm
    McCarter Theatre Center (Matthews Theatre)
    91 University Place, Princeton, NJ 08540
    category: music

    View event page for full information


    Axelrod

    Axelrod Performing Arts Academy presents Disney’s “Alice in Wonderland, Jr.”

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 7:00pm
    Bell Theater
    101 Crawfords Corner Road, Holmdel, NJ 07733
    category: theatre

    View event page for full information


    Elf

    Elf The Musical

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 7:00pm
    Count Basie Center for the Arts
    99 Monmouth Street, Red Bank, NJ 07701
    category: theatre

    View event page for full information


    Shemekia

    Shemekia Copeland

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 7:30pm
    Lizzie Rose Music Room
    217 E. Main Street, Tuckerton, NJ 08087
    category: music

    View event page for full information


    KC

    KC and The Sunshine Band

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 8:00pm
    Mayo Performing Arts Center (MPAC)
    100 South Street, Morristown, NJ 07960
    category: music

    View event page for full information


    Fiddler

    Fiddler On The Roof

    Friday, November 22, 2024 @ 11:00am
    Axelrod Performing Arts Center
    100 Grant Avenue, Deal Park, NJ 07723
    category: theatre

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    Villanova and Maryland to Face Off in the 2024 Saatva Empire Classic at the Pru on Sunday!

    Villanova and Maryland will meet in a thrilling matchup on Sunday, November 24, in the Showcase Game of the 2024 Saatva Empire Classic, benefiting the Wounded Warrior Project. The game will take place at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, offering basketball fans an exciting display of top-tier collegiate talent for a great cause.

    This will mark Villanova’s fourth appearance in the prestigious Empire Classic, where they hold a 5-2 all-time record. The Wildcats previously claimed the championship in 2020, showcasing their consistent excellence in the event. Meanwhile, Maryland also returns for their fourth appearance, boasting a 7-3 record in the history of the Empire Classic. The Terps captured the championship in 2006, further solidifying their legacy in the tournament.

    With both teams bringing impressive histories and a competitive edge, this highly anticipated game promises to be a thrilling contest between two powerhouse programs.

    Fans can look forward to high-level basketball action while supporting the Wounded Warrior Project, making it a meaningful event both on and off the court.

    Gov. Phil Murphy Updates on Rail Improvements, $300 Million Federal Grant Secured for Aging Infrastructure

    New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy provided an update on the ongoing efforts to address the issues commuters faced this summer with the state’s rail systems, particularly along the heavily traveled route from Trenton to New York City. Murphy, accompanied by officials from Amtrak and New Jersey Transit, discussed the progress made in addressing the rail disruptions, which plagued many riders in 2024.

    As part of a focused effort, over 200 miles of catenary overhead wire systems were inspected, with more than 2,000 hardware components either repaired or replaced, according to Murphy. These improvements aim to prevent incidents that had left many commuters stranded, particularly during the summer months. In addition to physical repairs, officials emphasized that no single, specific cause for the disruptions was found. NJ Transit President Kevin Corbett stated that the investigation did not uncover a “smoking gun” or any systemic failures related to the electricity-carrying devices on the tracks.

    Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner reassured riders that service has now returned to expected levels of on-time performance, addressing the frustrations many commuters faced when summer service was marred by delays and stranded trains. However, both Murphy and Corbett acknowledged that the infrastructure, much of which is aging, still requires significant replacement to ensure the reliability of the rail system. The federal government has awarded New Jersey $300 million for these upgrades, though the funds are not yet guaranteed, and additional funding will be necessary.

    Murphy highlighted that discussions with President-elect Trump had centered on the progress of the Portal North Bridge project, an important infrastructure initiative for the region. While optimistic about its completion next year, Murphy noted that there is still work to be done, with some of the money from the federal grant earmarked for the Sawtooth Bridges—an area that could cause further delays in the short term. However, it remains unclear how much additional funding will be needed to fully modernize the system, with detailed studies taking up to two years before a clearer estimate is available.

    On a separate note, Murphy also announced a toll increase for both the New Jersey Turnpike and Garden State Parkway. The average toll on the turnpike will rise by 16 cents, while tolls at most Garden State Parkway barrier plazas will go up by 8 cents, with a slight increase at entrance and exit ramps as well. These toll hikes are part of a broader effort to fund infrastructure improvements, including those on the rail network.

    The announcements signal that while progress is being made, there is still considerable work to be done to address the state’s aging transportation infrastructure and ensure that New Jersey’s commuters have a more reliable and efficient rail system.

    New Jersey Rare Bird Alert – Week of November 20, 2024

    This week’s birding scene in New Jersey has been particularly exciting, with a variety of rare and unusual species spotted across the state. Highlights include several goose species, numerous cranes, rare sandpipers, and notable raptors, along with a surprising number of hummingbirds.

    Geese and Ducks:

    • The Greater White-fronted Goose was spotted in Bergen and Hunterdon counties, with multiple sightings across the region.
    • Cackling Geese were reported in Mercer, Bergen, and Warren, a smaller species often mistaken for Canada Geese.
    • Eurasian Wigeons have been spotted in Atlantic and Monmouth counties, with additional sightings in Ocean this week. These Eurasian counterparts to the American Wigeon are always exciting for birders.
    • American Coot was reported in Mercer, a rare sight this time of year, and an American Golden-Plover was seen in Cape May and Atlantic counties.

    Sandhill Cranes:

    • Both Greater and Lesser Sandhill Cranes were spotted in Cape May, with reports from multiple locations including Mercer and Burlington. These cranes are a popular fall sight in New Jersey and add a dramatic presence to the landscape.

    Shorebirds:

    • Wilson’s Snipe was seen in Passaic, and Pectoral Sandpipers were reported in Sussex. A range of sandpipers, including White-rumped and Semipalmated Sandpipers, were spotted in Atlantic and Ocean counties. Notably, Red Knot sightings continue in Atlantic.

    Raptors and Owls:

    • American Goshawks were seen in Cape May and Monmouth, with multiple reports, suggesting a strong presence this week.
    • The Snowy Owl in Union County continues to draw attention, along with Barred Owls in Mercer and Monmouth counties.
    • The Golden Eagle was spotted in Passaic, making this a standout week for raptor enthusiasts.

    Hummingbirds:

    • The excitement for hummingbird watchers continues, with Ruby-throated Hummingbirds in Cape May and Ocean counties, along with Rufous Hummingbirds spotted in Somerset.

    Other Notables:

    • Black-headed Gull was seen in Cape May, and a Glaucous Gull was reported in Hunterdon. Both are rare but occasional winter visitors to New Jersey.
    • Red-billed Tropicbird was seen off the coast of Cape May, a particularly rare bird for New Jersey, especially this time of year.
    • Baltimore Orioles were reported in Mercer, Monmouth, and Somerset, reminding us that some migrants are lingering longer than expected.

    Warblers and Other Passerines:

    • Several warbler species have been making their presence felt, including a Black-and-white Warbler in Cape May and an Orange-crowned Warbler in both Essex and Union counties. Pine Warblers have been spotted in Mercer and Essex, and a Tennessee Warbler was seen in Camden.

    Sparrows and Finches:

    • Lark Sparrows in Monmouth and White-crowned Sparrows (Gambel’s) in Somerset are always exciting. Additionally, Purple Finch sightings have been consistent in Burlington and surrounding counties, while Red Crossbill was reported in Burlington.

    This week’s Rare Bird Alert reflects a diverse range of species, from waterfowl to shorebirds and songbirds, as well as a number of owls and raptors. The influx of hummingbirds, cranes, and warblers makes it an exceptional week for birdwatching in New Jersey!

    Mystery Drones Spotted Over New Jersey

    Authorities in Morris County, New Jersey, are investigating reports of unauthorized drone activity after multiple large drones were spotted flying erratically for over two hours on the evening of Monday night. The mysterious sightings have sparked concerns among local residents and law enforcement about the potential risks and the purpose of these unusual flights.

    The Drone Sightings

    Witnesses reported seeing at least five drones, with some estimates suggesting as many as a dozen, moving across several towns including Morristown, Madison, and Mendham. Described as significantly larger than typical commercial drones, the devices were seen moving in a coordinated, erratic manner, which has raised alarms about their origin and potential intent.

    Law enforcement and New Jersey State Police aviation units tracked the drones as they moved across the area, but details regarding the operators or the purpose of the flights remain unclear. Newsweek has reached out to the New Jersey Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness for comment, though no official statement has been issued as of now.

    Concerns and Speculations

    The N. Jerzy Fire Alert, a local community monitoring group, kept residents updated on the sightings through social media, urging local authorities to remain vigilant. They posted on X (formerly Twitter), “Unusual activity reported over Morris County, NJ: multiple large drones spotted flying from the Somerset County border northward and back. Law enforcement has been advised to notify their communications centers of any sightings.”

    Some residents expressed concern about the drones’ advanced capabilities, with one Facebook user on the Live Storm Chasers page commenting, “How does a battery last that long with those drones?” This indicates that the drones may have had an unusually long flight time, further fueling speculation about their technology.

    Federal Aviation Oversight

    The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has been notified, as federal regulations mandate that drones above a certain size be registered and flown only in approved areas. Unauthorized drone flights, especially near residential neighborhoods or highways like Interstate 80, pose significant safety risks, making the mystery of these drones all the more concerning.

    The FAA and local law enforcement are expected to collaborate in investigating the matter further to determine whether any laws were violated. Unauthorized flights, particularly those involving larger drones, can be especially problematic for air traffic safety, particularly near civilian airspaces.

    Theories and Clarifications

    Early social media posts suggested that a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter might have been involved in the drone sightings, but this theory was later clarified by the OSINTdefender, an open-source intelligence account, which debunked the claim. Still, the presence of military-grade equipment in the region remains an area of interest for investigators.

    What’s Next?

    At this stage, law enforcement has not released any further details about the drones’ operators or their possible purpose. However, the investigation into the mystery drones continues, with authorities urging residents to stay alert and report any further sightings. Given the potential risks associated with unauthorized drone flights in populated areas, the investigation is expected to remain a top priority for local and federal agencies.

    As more information becomes available, the public will likely learn whether these drones were part of a larger coordinated operation, a misdirected hobbyist activity, or something more nefarious. Until then, Morris County residents are advised to remain vigilant and report any further unusual aerial activity.

    New Jersey’s Internet Gambling Hits Another Record with $213 Million in October

    New Jersey’s online gambling market continues to surge, setting another revenue record with $213.6 million in October, according to figures released by the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement. This marks a new milestone for the state, surpassing the previous month’s record of $208 million.

    The latest numbers highlight a clear trend: more people are turning to internet gambling rather than visiting Atlantic City casinos in person. As the world adapts to digital platforms, New Jersey is reaping the benefits of its growing online gaming industry, which now stands as a major revenue driver.

    When factoring in total revenue, including both in-person casino winnings and sports betting, the state’s gambling market reached nearly $500 million in October. This figure represents a 2.6% increase compared to the same month last year, underscoring the continued growth of New Jersey’s gaming sector.

    However, it’s important to note that the $213.6 million in internet and sports betting revenue isn’t entirely pocketed by the casinos themselves. Much of that money is shared with third-party partners such as sports books, tech platforms, and online operators, which means that the casinos only retain a portion of the earnings. In contrast, in-person casino winnings are considered the core business for most operators, as this money remains largely within the casinos’ control.

    Despite the booming online market, in-person gambling at Atlantic City’s casinos is still lagging behind pre-pandemic levels. In fact, two-thirds of the casinos are still struggling to recapture the revenue levels they saw before COVID-19. Only three casinos — Borgata, Hard Rock, and Ocean Casino — posted higher in-person gambling revenue in October than they did in October 2019. This suggests that while online gambling is thriving, the in-person casino experience has not fully rebounded for the majority of operators.

    As internet gambling continues to grow, it’s clear that New Jersey’s online platforms are becoming a more dominant force in the state’s overall gambling market. With new records being set, the shift toward digital betting is likely to keep reshaping the industry, potentially signaling the beginning of a new era for Atlantic City’s casino landscape.

    NJ Spotlight News: Your Source for News, Issues, and Insight on Explore New Jersey

    NJ Spotlight News is a trusted name in local journalism, delivering essential news, insightful analysis, and in-depth reporting on the critical issues shaping New Jersey. Now, airing on Explore New Jersey, the program reaches an even broader audience, bringing timely, relevant stories to viewers throughout the state. Whether you’re a long-time resident or new to the area, Explore New Jersey provides an essential platform for understanding the state’s diverse communities, its challenges, and the opportunities ahead.

    A Trusted Source of Local News and Information

    Explore New Jersey offers a curated broadcast of NJ Spotlight News, featuring top stories about the Garden State’s most pressing issues. With its focus on local journalism, the program gives viewers an insider’s look into New Jersey’s politics, economy, environment, healthcare, education, and more. By airing NJ Spotlight’s detailed reporting, Explore New Jersey helps ensure that everyone in the state has access to fact-based, unbiased news.

    What to Expect from Explore New Jersey’s NJ Spotlight News

    Every episode of NJ Spotlight News on Explore New Jersey brings viewers a mix of timely updates and deep dives into the key issues affecting New Jersey. Here are just a few of the topics you can expect to see on this informative broadcast:

    • Politics and Government: Explore New Jersey covers the state’s political landscape, offering updates on elections, legislation, and government policies. From local government races to state-level decisions, viewers get the inside scoop on what’s happening in New Jersey’s capital and beyond.
    • Education: With a focus on New Jersey’s public schools, colleges, and universities, Explore New Jersey covers everything from changes in education policy to school funding and student achievements. The program brings to light the state’s educational challenges and the innovative solutions driving progress in the classroom.
    • Healthcare and Public Health: The state’s healthcare system, its challenges, and the policies affecting everything from access to care to insurance reform are covered in-depth. Explore New Jersey helps viewers understand the latest developments in healthcare and how they impact the everyday lives of New Jersey residents.
    • Economy and Business: New Jersey’s economy is diverse and dynamic, with thriving industries from pharmaceuticals to technology. Explore New Jersey tracks the economic trends shaping the state’s growth, including job creation, small business support, and key corporate developments.
    • Environment and Sustainability: With rising concerns about climate change, environmental protection, and green energy, Explore New Jersey takes viewers on a journey into the state’s efforts to protect its natural resources. Reporting on everything from environmental legislation to local conservation projects, NJ Spotlight News informs viewers about how New Jersey is addressing its environmental future.
    • Transportation and Infrastructure: As one of the most densely populated states in the U.S., transportation in New Jersey is a major concern. Whether it’s upgrades to mass transit, new infrastructure projects, or innovative solutions to traffic congestion, Explore New Jersey keeps viewers up-to-date with developments in the state’s transportation network.

    Expert Analysis and Commentary

    One of the highlights of Explore New Jersey is its blend of breaking news and expert commentary. The program regularly features interviews with state officials, business leaders, advocates, and industry experts. These discussions provide in-depth analysis on how state policies and national trends impact New Jersey residents. By airing NJ Spotlight News, Explore New Jersey offers not just news, but the context and insights needed to fully understand these important issues.

    Local Stories with a Statewide Impact

    What makes Explore New Jersey so special is its commitment to local news that resonates with viewers across the state. Whether it’s a feature on community leaders in small towns or coverage of large-scale initiatives in urban centers like Newark or Jersey City, the show captures the heartbeat of New Jersey. The combination of statewide issues with hyper-local stories ensures that all New Jerseyans feel represented and informed.

    A Platform for Solutions and Action

    Explore New Jersey is not only a space for reporting problems—it’s also a platform for solutions. NJ Spotlight News often highlights the work of community groups, non-profit organizations, and public leaders who are making a difference in the state. The program invites viewers to think about how they can get involved, whether through voting, supporting local initiatives, or advocating for policy change.

    Why You Should Tune In

    If you want to stay on top of New Jersey’s evolving landscape, Explore New Jersey’s airing of NJ Spotlight News is your go-to destination. Whether it’s through TV, online streaming, or community events, this program gives you the facts, the issues, and the insights that matter. As New Jersey faces an ever-changing political, economic, and environmental landscape, staying informed has never been more important.

    Tune in to Explore New Jersey to catch NJ Spotlight News and ensure you’re up to date with everything happening in the state. From local governance to statewide policy shifts, this broadcast is your trusted resource for understanding New Jersey’s most important issues and how they impact you.

    Stay connected with Explore New Jersey for ongoing coverage of NJ Spotlight News, and join the conversation about the future of the Garden State.

    New Jersey Attraction: ‘Ghost Bridge’ Reappears as Oak Ridge Reservoir Drains in Northern NJ

    In Old Bridge, New Jersey, residents are flocking to the drained Oak Ridge Reservoir to catch a rare and haunting sight: a “ghost bridge” that has reappeared after the water level dropped. The three-arched stone bridge, which has remained submerged for years, is now visible again, offering a glimpse into the past and sparking curiosity among locals and history enthusiasts alike.

    The bridge is located in the northern part of New Jersey, in the Oak Ridge Reservoir, one of several bodies of water that provide drinking water to the city of Newark. The structure, which dates back to the 19th century, was part of a once-thriving village that was submerged when the reservoir was created in the early 1900s. As the water levels recede—whether due to drought or planned draining—the “ghost bridge” emerges from its watery grave, revealing the remnants of a long-lost settlement that had been forgotten by most of the modern world.

    The bridge’s appearance has become a local phenomenon, drawing crowds of people eager to see the unusual sight. The stone structure, which features three distinct arches, is a striking reminder of the village that once stood in the area. For many, it’s a symbolic return of a piece of history that had been hidden beneath the water for generations.

    The story behind the ghost bridge is tied to the history of the reservoir itself. In the early 1900s, the Oak Ridge Reservoir was created as part of a project to expand Newark’s water supply. As the reservoir was built, several nearby communities—including the village of Oak Ridge—were displaced, and their homes, roads, and infrastructure were flooded. Over time, much of this history faded into obscurity, with the submerged remnants of the village remaining hidden from view.

    Now, with the water levels low enough to reveal the ghost bridge, the past has resurfaced, sparking renewed interest in the area’s history. While it’s unclear whether the village and its structures will ever be fully excavated or preserved, the bridge offers a rare and fleeting opportunity to connect with the region’s forgotten past. For those who are lucky enough to witness its appearance, the ghost bridge is a powerful reminder of how the landscape—and the stories it holds—can be shaped by human progress and the passage of time.

    The mysterious and fascinating historical attraction has emerged as the water levels of the Oak Ridge Reservoir recede. Dubbed the “Ghost Bridge,” the three-arched stone structure is capturing the attention of residents and visitors alike as it reappears after being submerged for decades. This rare sight has become a local sensation, drawing people from all around to glimpse what is being called a “ghostly” remnant of the past.

    The bridge, which is located in the Oak Ridge Reservoir in the town of Old Bridge, is visible only when the water level in the reservoir drops significantly. The structure, dating back to the late 1800s, was part of a village that once thrived in the area but was lost to history when the reservoir was created in the early 1900s. The reservoir, a key water supply for the city of Newark, was constructed by flooding the surrounding land, including the village of Oak Ridge. As a result, many of the area’s buildings, streets, and infrastructure were submerged—until now.

    The “Ghost Bridge” appears as a haunting, yet strikingly beautiful, three-arched stone structure rising from the shallow waters of the reservoir. The bridge itself is a testament to the forgotten village that once existed there, and its sudden reappearance has captured the imaginations of New Jersey residents, who are now visiting the site to catch a glimpse of this rare historical landmark.

    For those who visit, the bridge offers a unique opportunity to connect with the past and explore the lost history of the area. The “ghostly” nature of the bridge is what makes it so captivating—appearing only when the water levels drop due to drought or scheduled draining. Its reemergence invites reflection on the changes in the landscape caused by human progress, while also sparking curiosity about the village that was once home to families and community life.

    While the bridge is an intriguing attraction, it’s also a poignant reminder of how history can be hidden beneath the surface. As the water level rises again, the bridge will likely disappear from view, becoming a submerged relic once more—until the next time it reappears.

    For now, the “Ghost Bridge” in the Oak Ridge Reservoir offers a fleeting, yet fascinating, window into the past, attracting those who are eager to witness a moment of New Jersey history brought back to life.

    Dozens of Animals Saved from Jennings Creek Fire: How You Can Help Wildlife Rescuers

    As the Jennings Creek Fire continues to rage through parts of New Jersey and New York, its devastating impact has been felt not only by residents but also by the region’s wildlife. The fire, which has consumed thousands of acres of forest, has left many animals in dire need of rescue and rehabilitation. The Last Resort Wildlife Refuge in West Milford, NJ, a dedicated facility that rehabilitates injured animals, has been working around the clock to save and care for those affected by the flames.

    A Triage Effort to Save Burned and Injured Animals

    Since the fire began, veterinary technicians and wildlife rescuers from the Last Resort Wildlife Refuge have been responding to an overwhelming number of calls for help. The team has been rescuing animals that have suffered from severe burns, smoke inhalation, and other injuries as they attempt to escape the fire.

    One of the most common injuries the team has been treating is burned paws. Animals like foxes, opossums, and even a beaver named Theodore have been treated for burn wounds sustained as they fled from the fire. Nancy Warner, a veterinary technician at the refuge, explained that these injuries are often caused by animals running through hot, scorched earth in an attempt to escape the flames. “Probably ran to get away from the fire, and the paws got burnt in the process,” she said. Fortunately, Warner reports that the fox and many other animals have been recovering quickly and are expected to return to the wild soon.

    But not all animals are so fortunate. Warner shared that over two dozen animals have been rescued so far, with many suffering from smoke inhalation and dehydration, both from the fire and from the drought that preceded it. Seven animals remain in the ICU at the refuge, receiving critical care. Sadly, some animals have not survived the ordeal, a stark reminder of the harsh realities faced by wildlife in the wake of such destructive events.

    A Positively Resilient Bear

    One of the most heartwarming stories from the fire is that of a black bear that was found injured in the forest. In a video shared by the Last Resort Wildlife Refuge, the bear was seen being helped to safety by wildlife veterinarians and fire officials. Fortunately, the bear’s injuries were minor, and it was able to recover without needing extensive medical treatment.

    Warner emphasized the importance of giving wildlife space and being aware of animals that may be forced to seek shelter in urban areas as they flee the fire. “If you see them coming into your neighborhoods, take your kids inside, take your pets inside and give them some space,” she advised. “Let them rest, put out some water, and just be kind.”

    The Devastating Aftermath: A Charred Forest

    As the fire continues to burn, the immediate danger to wildlife is evident, but the long-term effects are just as concerning. Once the fire is fully extinguished, the charred landscape will pose significant challenges for wildlife as they return to their habitats. “It’s going to be hard for these animals to find food and shelter in an ashy, burned forest,” Warner said. Many animals will face further displacement and dehydration, as their natural food sources may have been destroyed in the flames.

    How You Can Help: Support for the Last Resort Wildlife Refuge

    With over two dozen animals rescued and many still in need of urgent care, the Last Resort Wildlife Refuge is in critical need of support to continue its life-saving work. Donations are desperately needed to fund ongoing treatment, rescue efforts, and the purchase of much-needed medical equipment, such as oxygen concentrators and nebulizers to treat animals suffering from smoke inhalation.

    If you’d like to help, here are a few ways you can make a difference:

    • Monetary Donations: Cash donations allow the refuge to purchase medical supplies, pay for veterinary care, and support rescue operations. Visit their donation page for more details.
    • Amazon Wish List: The Last Resort Wildlife Refuge has created an Amazon wish list with specific items needed to treat the animals, including oxygen concentrators, bandages, medications, and hydration supplies. You can view and purchase items from their list to have them delivered directly to the refuge.
    • Spread the Word: Share the story of these incredible rescue efforts on social media to raise awareness of the wildfire’s impact on wildlife and encourage others to donate or volunteer.
    • Volunteer: While monetary donations and supplies are crucial, wildlife rescues also depend on the efforts of dedicated volunteers. If you’re in the area and have the skills or time to assist with wildlife rehabilitation or care, consider reaching out to the Last Resort Wildlife Refuge to see how you can help.

    Final Thoughts: A Community Effort to Save Lives

    The devastating Jennings Creek Fire has highlighted the importance of community support in times of crisis. While firefighters and emergency responders continue to battle the flames, wildlife rescuers like those at the Last Resort Wildlife Refuge are working tirelessly to save the animals who are often the most vulnerable during such disasters.

    By donating to the refuge or supporting their efforts in any way you can, you’re helping to ensure that these animals have a chance to heal and eventually return to the wild. Every contribution, no matter how big or small, is a step toward recovery for the many animals whose lives have been impacted by the fire.

    Bear Survives New Jersey Wildfire: A Story of Resilience Amidst the Flames

    November 15, 2024 – As the Jennings Creek Fire continues to rage across parts of New Jersey and New York, threatening homes, businesses, and the environment, new footage has emerged that underscores the devastating impact these fires are having on local wildlife. While much of the media focus has understandably been on the homes and communities in danger, dramatic video of a black bear surviving the fire has captured hearts and highlighted the resilience of nature in the face of catastrophe.

    A Dramatic Survival Story

    The Jennings Creek Fire, which has been burning in western New Jersey and spreading into parts of New York, has quickly become one of the most destructive wildfires in the region in recent memory. In addition to its threat to human populations, the fire has also put immense pressure on local wildlife, disrupting ecosystems and leaving animals with few places to shelter from the flames.

    Amidst the smoke and devastation, a black bear—a species native to the region—was spotted in an astonishing display of survival. New video footage, taken by a local wildlife photographer, shows the bear emerging from the dense, burning forest, seemingly unharmed but visibly shaken by the surrounding chaos. The bear, caught in a perilous situation, was seen moving quickly through the charred landscape, perhaps in search of a safer area away from the advancing fire.

    This particular bear’s story is a reminder of the fragility and resilience of wildlife that often finds itself caught in the path of natural disasters like wildfires. The video has garnered widespread attention, evoking empathy for animals that may not have the resources to escape these fast-moving blazes.

    The Impact of the Jennings Creek Fire on Wildlife

    The Jennings Creek Fire has burned thousands of acres across New Jersey and New York, forcing thousands of people to evacuate their homes and creating a significant environmental impact. While firefighters and emergency personnel have focused on protecting human life and property, there is also growing concern about the wildlife in these affected areas.

    Wildfires like the one at Jennings Creek can lead to the destruction of natural habitats, forcing animals to flee for their lives or face dangerous conditions with limited access to food and water. In the case of larger mammals like black bears, deer, and wild boar, fires can create barriers that limit their ability to escape, especially if the fire spreads rapidly across the landscape. Smaller animals, including rodents and birds, can be similarly affected by the loss of food sources and the danger of the flames themselves.

    In response to the fire, local wildlife conservation groups have been working to rescue and rehabilitate displaced animals, while also assessing the long-term environmental damage caused by the blaze. Experts have warned that wildfires are becoming more frequent and intense in many parts of the country, including the Northeast, which could have lasting effects on regional wildlife populations.

    The Resilience of the Black Bear

    Black bears are known for their adaptability, and the footage of this particular bear surviving the wildfire is a testament to their resilience. Native to much of North America, including the forests of New Jersey and New York, black bears are opportunistic feeders, able to survive in a variety of habitats, from woodlands to suburban areas. However, wildfires present an extreme challenge to even the hardiest of creatures.

    In the video, the bear appears to have navigated the fire’s edge, possibly using its keen sense of smell and natural instincts to find a path to safety. Experts suggest that while the fire poses a major threat to wildlife, many animals are able to instinctively find shelter in safer, cooler areas, such as streams, riverbeds, or parts of the forest that haven’t yet been impacted by the flames.

    However, these animals often face significant risks even after escaping the fire, as they may encounter destruction to their food sources, fragmented habitats, and environmental changes that affect their ability to survive in the long term.

    A Call for Action: Protecting Wildlife from Wildfires

    The incredible survival story of the bear highlights a broader concern: the increasing frequency of wildfires and their impact on local wildlife. As climate change continues to contribute to more severe fire seasons, protecting wildlife habitats has never been more important. Efforts to manage and prevent wildfires, as well as creating wildlife corridors and safe zones for animals to escape during fires, are critical to ensuring that nature can thrive even in the face of these disasters.

    Organizations like the National Wildlife Federation (NWF) and local wildlife rescue groups are working hard to raise awareness about the need for better fire management practices and greater focus on protecting the animals that are often caught in the crossfire. In addition to providing immediate relief during fires, long-term efforts must focus on habitat restoration and wildlife conservation in fire-prone regions.

    Conclusion: A Reminder of Nature’s Resilience

    The footage of the bear surviving the Jennings Creek Fire serves as both a powerful reminder of the incredible resilience of wildlife and the urgent need to address the environmental challenges posed by wildfires. While the human cost of these fires is immeasurable, the survival of animals like this bear offers a glimmer of hope amid the devastation.

    As recovery efforts continue, it’s important for communities, conservation groups, and governments to come together to protect not only human life and property but also the wildlife that calls these regions home. By doing so, we can help ensure that animals like this brave black bear—and many others—will continue to survive and thrive in the years to come.

    For more information on how you can help, visit the Last Resort Wildlife Refuge website and follow them on social media for updates on their ongoing efforts to care for the wildlife affected by the Jennings Creek Fire.