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Romano and Burmedez to Square Off on December 4, Dems Sweep Freeholder Race A record 19,000-plus Vineland residents went to the polls and voted in the mayoral elec- tion last Tuesday. The results left the two top vote-getters still campaigning ahead of a runoff election to be held December 4. Robert Romano, the incumbent, garnered 7,749 votes (40.47 per- cent), and challenger Ruben Bermudez finished the night with 4,899 votes (25.59 percent), according to unofficial results available at press time. Since none of the five candidates received more than 50 percent of the votes, the Faulkner Act requires that the voters now select from the top two vote-getters. This was the first time the Vineland mayoral election has been held in November. That, plus the fact that the election included a presidential race, as well as county freeholder and school board candidate races, may have helped to bring voter totals up from a record 15,839 in a June 1976 runoff between Pat Fiorilli and Frank Scarpa (see chart on page 10). The top 10 council candidates with the most votes will also be on the ballot for the runoff election. As of press time, it was still unclear A s American families prepare for Thanksgiving, the mid-Atlantic region recognizes that these sad post-Hurricane Sandy days will require communities to step up and help their neighbors. With thousands struggling across New Jersey, the local region must reach out to their needy fellow citizens. For the fourth year, Project Thanksgiving will join the Salvation Army to provide turkeys throughout Cumberland County and to parts of Gloucester County. Organizers and longtime friends Alex Kaganzev and Steve Plevins are veterans at working with disadvan- taged populations for the New Jersey state govern- ment. Replicating a Philadelphia-based program, Kaganzev and Plevins launched this campaign in 2009. Plevins states, “After creating the program’s blue- print, we requested sponsorship for the collection drive from Maria Bottino, owner of three local ShopRite supermarkets. In 2009, we distributed 330 turkeys; the number increased to 550 in 2010 and 728 in 2011. Our 2012 goal is 800 across both counties.” The Bottino family will again provide turkey col- lection centers in Cumberland County, at the Vineland, Millville and Upper Deerfield stores, plus their Sewell ShopRite in Gloucester County. New this year as a Gloucester County collection venue is the Mullica Hill ShopRite, owned by the Ammons family. Plevins will oversee Cumberland County’s cam- paign; Kaganzev will supervise the Gloucester County program. Kaganzev praises the Bottinos’ generosity. “The family is spectacular to work with,” he says. A fourth Vineland Shop-Rite, at Lincoln and Landis avenues, is also inviting donations. 175 S. Main Road & 1234 W. Landis Avenue, Vineland, NJ • 856.690.1234 Se Habla Español CapitalBankNJ.com Our Focus Is You. Member FDIC We’ve Got Star Power. Capital Bank has been awarded a 5-star rating by Bauer Financial. BauerFinancial.com VOLUME 5 | ISSUE 40 | NOVEMBER 14, 2012 INSIDE: PRIZEWEEK PUZZLE: PG. 11 • PET CARE GUIDE • SANDY BENEFIT CONCERTS • LAST WALTZ A TO Z Pages 18-19 CONNECTING YOU TO CONNECTING YOU TO SOUTH JERSEY. WEEKLY. SOUTH JERSEY. WEEKLY. ECRWSS Local Residential Customer Wanted: Turkeys, Donations The annual Project Thanksgiving turkey drive is slated for Saturday, November 17. Donations will be accepted at area ShopRites and Vineland’s Cosmopolitan restaurant. { BY SHARON HARRIS-ZLOTNICK } Continued on page 34 Continued on page 2 Project Thanksgiving co-founders, Alex Kaganzev and Steve Plevins, delivering donated food to Captain Borrero (center) at the Vineland Salvation Army office. The Project Thanksgiving goal for this year is to help 1,000 families in Cumberland and Gloucester counties.

description

Our November 14 issue.

Transcript of 11-14-12

Page 1: 11-14-12

Romano and Burmedez toSquare Off on December 4,Dems Sweep Freeholder RaceA record 19,000-plus Vineland residents

went to the polls and voted in the mayoral elec-tion last Tuesday. The results left the two topvote-getters still campaigning ahead of a runoffelection to be held December 4. Robert Romano,the incumbent, garnered 7,749 votes (40.47 per-cent), and challenger Ruben Bermudez finishedthe night with 4,899 votes (25.59 percent),according to unofficial results available at presstime. Since none of the five candidates receivedmore than 50 percent of the votes, the FaulknerAct requires that the voters now select from thetop two vote-getters.This was the first time the Vineland mayoral

election has been held in November. That, plusthe fact that the election included a presidentialrace, as well as county freeholder and schoolboard candidate races, may have helped to bringvoter totals up from a record 15,839 in a June1976 runoff between Pat Fiorilli and FrankScarpa (see chart on page 10).The top 10 council candidates with the most

votes will also be on the ballot for the runoffelection. As of press time, it was still unclear

As American families prepare for Thanksgiving,the mid-Atlantic region recognizes that thesesad post-Hurricane Sandy days will require

communities to step up and help their neighbors. Withthousands struggling across New Jersey, the localregion must reach out to their needy fellow citizens.For the fourth year, Project Thanksgiving will join

the Salvation Army to provide turkeys throughoutCumberland County and to parts of Gloucester County.Organizers and longtime friends Alex Kaganzev andSteve Plevins are veterans at working with disadvan-taged populations for the New Jersey state govern-ment. Replicating a Philadelphia-based program,Kaganzev and Plevins launched this campaign in 2009.Plevins states, “After creating the program’s blue-

print, we requested sponsorship for the collectiondrive from Maria Bottino, owner of three localShopRite supermarkets. In 2009, we distributed 330turkeys; the number increased to 550 in 2010 and 728in 2011. Our 2012 goal is 800 across both counties.”The Bottino family will again provide turkey col-

lection centers in Cumberland County, at theVineland, Millville and Upper Deerfield stores, plustheir Sewell ShopRite in Gloucester County. New thisyear as a Gloucester County collection venue is theMullica Hill ShopRite, owned by the Ammons family.Plevins will oversee Cumberland County’s cam-

paign; Kaganzev will supervise the Gloucester Countyprogram. Kaganzev praises the Bottinos’ generosity.“The family is spectacular to work with,” he says.A fourth Vineland Shop-Rite, at Lincoln and

Landis avenues, is also inviting donations.

175 S. Main Road & 1234 W. Landis Avenue, Vineland, NJ • 856.690.1234 Se Habla Español CapitalBankNJ.com

Our Focus IsYou.Member FDIC

We’ve Got Star Power.Capital Bank has been awardeda 5-star rating by Bauer Financial.

BauerFinancial.com

VOLUME 5 | ISSUE 40 | NOVEMBER 14, 2012

I N S I D E : PRIZEWEEK PUZZLE: PG. 11 • PET CARE GUIDE • SANDY BENEFIT CONCERTS • LAST WALTZ

A TO ZPages 18-19CONNECTING YOU TO CONNECTING YOU TO SOUTH JERSEY. WEEKLY.SOUTH JERSEY. WEEKLY.

ECRWSSLocalResidentialCustomer

Wanted: Turkeys, DonationsThe annual Project Thanksgiving turkey drive is slated for Saturday, November 17. Donations willbe accepted at area ShopRites and Vineland’s Cosmopolitan restaurant. { BY SHARON HARRIS-ZLOTNICK }

Continued on page 34Continued on page 2

Project Thanksgiving co-founders, Alex Kaganzev and Steve Plevins,delivering donated food to Captain Borrero (center) at the VinelandSalvation Army office. The Project Thanksgiving goal for this year isto help 1,000 families in Cumberland and Gloucester counties.

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{ STAFF }

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MIKE EPIFANIO Editor & Publisher

DEBORAH A. EIN Managing Editor

GAIL EPIFANIO Controller

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LORI GOUDIE Graphic Designer

RYAN DINGER Editorial/Sales Assistant

The Grapevine907 N. Main Rd., Ste. 205, Vineland, NJ 08360PHONE: 856-457-7815 • FAX: 856-457-7816EMAIL: [email protected]: www.grapevinenewspaper.com

The Grapevine is published on Wednesdays byGrapevine News Corp. Copyright © 2012. Allrights reserved.

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whether Carlos E. Villar with an unoffi-cial 3,637 votes or his running mateAngela Calakos with an unofficial 3,627votes would proceed to the runoff. (Seechart below for unofficial results avail-able as of press time.) Voters will beasked to select five council members inthe December 4 runoff election.

CITY COUNCIL OF VINELANDCandidate ...............Vote Count....PercentMayra Arroyo ...................6,780.........................9.43%Maria Laboy.....................6,560.........................9.12%Peter F. Coccaro III ..........6,423.........................8.93%Nelson Thompson...........5,685 .........................7.90%Antonio F. Romero...........5,638 .........................7.84%Anthony R. Fanucci .........4,395..........................6.11%John A. Procopio.............4,123..........................5.73%Paul F. Spinelli..................4,001.........................5.56%Maritza Gonzalez.............3,713 ..........................5.16%Carlos E. Villar .................3,637.........................5.06%Angela Calakos................3,627.........................5.04%Edwin Cintron ..................3,357.........................4.67%Diamaris Rios ..................3,344 ........................4.65%Terra L. Dower..................3,077.........................4.28%Louis F. Cresci Jr. .............2,191..........................3.05%Gina Randazzo-Thompson........................1,914..........................2.66%Stephen I. Plevins............1,754..........................2.44%Delfin Cuevas Jr...............1,698.........................2.36%Personal Choice ..............3................................0.00%Total ..........................71,920 .........100.00%

In Vineland’s mayoral race, incumbentmayor Robert Romano was challenged byformer two-term mayor Perry Barse, cur-rent city council member DouglasAlbrecht, former city council presidentRuben Bermudez, and labor activistDavid W. Mazur. Romano defeated Barseby a substantial margin four years ago,and Bermudez was beaten by Barse whenthe latter won his second term in 2004.(See chart of Mayoral ElectionAnalysis on page 10). Neither Albrechtnor Mazur had run for the top officebefore.Read all runoff candidate profiles at

www.grapevinenewspaper.com/archives.

MAYOR OF VINELANDCandidate...............Vote Count....PercentRobert Romano .............7,749..........................40.47%Ruben Bermudez ..........4,899........................25.59%Perry D. Barse................4,101..........................21.42%Douglas A. Albrecht ......2,146...........................11.21%David W. Mazur..............246 ..............................1.28%Personal Choice.............6 ..................................0.03%Total.........................19,147............100.00%

The county freeholder race lastTuesday was more definitive. Democratic

freeholder candidates Joseph Derella andDouglas Long defeated the two Republicanincumbents.Democrats will have a 5-2 majority on

the board after a year of a 4-3 Republicanmajority. In last November’s elections,Republicans took control of the freeholderboard for the first time in decades.Running as the incumbents, Republican

Freeholder Mary Gruccio and DeputyFreeholder Director Thomas Sheppardeach got approximately 5,000 fewer votesthan their Democratic challengers.

BOARD OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERSCandidate...............Vote Count....PercentJoseph Derella Jr...........24,564....................29.43%Douglas Long.................24,127 .....................28.91%Mary L. Gruccio.............17,414 .....................20.86%Thomas L. Sheppard.....17,342 .....................20.78%Personal Choice ............15..............................0.02%Total........................83,462.........100.00%

At the end of last week, more than4,200 mail-in ballots remained uncountedin the county, and more ballots wereexpected to arrive through 5 p.m. Friday.According to a statement issued last

week by New Jersey’s LieutenantGovernor Kim Guadagno, “In my capacityas the State’s Chief Election Official, I amworking with State, county, and local offi-cials to address election-day polling issuesthat have arisen as a result of HurricaneSandy. As part of those efforts, and inorder to facilitate voter participation, wehave expanded the ability of displacedvoters to vote by email, facsimile, andmail-in ballots while fully protecting theintegrity of the election.” As a result,Guadagno issued an executive orderrequiring county clerks to accept such bal-lots until 12 p.m. on Friday, November 9.According to county officials

Wednesday, there were 4,231 vote-by-mailballots county-wide to be tabulated and anunknown number of provisional ballots.Officials said it may take several daysbefore all of those votes are tabulated.More than 27,000 votes were cast for

City of Vineland Board of Education candi-dates. The top three vote-getters won theavailable seats: Frank DiGiorgio, SusanneMorello, and Christopher E. Jennings.

CITY OF VINELAND BOARD OFEDUCATIONCandidate ...............Vote Count....PercentFrank DiGiorgio................8,598.......................31.33%Susanne Morello .............5,703 .......................20.78%Christopher E. Jennings...5,082.......................18.52%Rigo Onofre ......................4,065 .......................14.81%Frank J. Bongiovanni.......3,974........................14.48%Personal Choice ..............19...............................0.07%Total ..........................27,441..........100.00%

ELECTIONContinued from cover

1 Wanted: Turkeys,DonationsProject Thanksgiving is asking forhelp in caring for those in need.SHARON HARRIS-ZLOTNICK

1 Election Results

3,4,6,8 Faces in the News

11 Prizeweek Puzzle

12 News in Brief

16 Food for ThoughtPumpkin stars in a rice puddingrecipe. JEAN HECKER

17 Food News

18-19 A TO Z

20 Entertainment

22 DINING

25 Classic RockThe “rockumentary” playing at theLandis Theater will take you back.VINCE FARINACCIO

26 Letters, Poetry Corner

28 Community Calendar

30 In Our Schools

32 REAL ESTATE

35 CLASSIFIEDS

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Happy 7th Birthday, Gavin!

Happy Birthdayto our lil’ Eagles fan,Gavin Gallo.Celebrating his 7th birthdayon November 16th.

Love Mom, Dad,Gage, Andrea,Danna, and Suz.

Happy 7th Birthday to Gavin Gallo fromGrandmom and Grandpop Gallo, Mom Mom

and Pop Pop Chamberlin, andMom Mom and Pop Pop Ashmen

Local Youth Stars In MusicalSeven-year-old Cumberland

County resident, VincentCrocilla, is starring as WinthropParoo in Walnut StreetTheater’s, Grammy AwardWinning Musical, The MusicMan.

Although Crocilla is veryyoung, he is no stranger to thetheater. Since the age of five, hehas been in several local com-munity productions, includingSeussical the Musical, TheAdventures of Tom Sawyer, AChristmas Carol, Dear EdwinaJr., and The Music Man, whichmostly were through the OffBroad Street Players TheaterGroup. Crocilla has also per-formed in various Italian festi-vals in NY, NJ and PA and wasinvited to sing the ItalianNational Anthem for theCamden River Sharks. Vincentauditioned at the Walnut StreetTheater, amongst over 200other talented young children.He was thrilled to get the leadrole at such a well-renownedtheater on his first attempt.

The musical is sure to be ashow stopper and is speculatedto sell out. He will be acting in the Tuesday through Thursday scheduled showsstarting November 14, and hopes all his friends, family and fans can come sup-port him in such a great production. Tickets can be purchased on the WalnutStreet Theater’s website at www.walnutstreettheatre.org.

“I can afford dentures??”

YES YOU CAN!When they’re just

$499NoGimmicks, No Fineprint, No Problem!

• Full or Partial Denture (exam & radiograph included)• You always get our custom dentures at a "sale price"-Never a lesser quality "economy" denture.

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Dr. Frank PettisaniGeneral & Family Dentists

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Denture SpecialHOLIDAY

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Faces in the NewsI

SEND US YOUR FACES. IT’S FREE!Get your photos published in The Grapevine... birthdays, engagements, weddings,anniversaries, births, graduations, awards. Send them to the address listed on p. 2.

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Faces in the NewsI

SEND US YOUR FACES. IT’S FREE!Get your photos published in The Grapevine... birthdays, engagements, weddings,anniversaries, births, graduations, awards. Send them to the address listed on p. 2.

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SJH Auxiliary Holds Yard Sale

For the second year the South Jersey Healthcare Auxiliary hosted a yard sale,and raised more than $2,600 for South Jersey HealthCare. Items for sale includ-ed furniture, clothing, collectables and all sorts of children's items and clothing.Pictured here is SJH Auxiliary staff members in front of a table with items forthe yard sale. Watch for this sale again next year.

Winning Ticket Drawn in Car Raffle

The cold rain did not dampen the enthusiasm of the Big Brothers Big Sistersof Cumberland & Salem Counties as they drew ticket number 630 as the winnerof the Great All American Car Raffle. Ticket sales started in June with the winnerselected at the Deerfield Harvest Festival on October 7.

Raffle Winner, Patrick Hughes of High Bridge, NJ selected the ChevroletCamaro Convertible prize option. He ordered additional upgrades making hisnew car a 2012 2 SS Camaro Convertible with the 45th Anniversary Package in aCarbon Metalic. Prize options included: Cadillac SRX, Cadillac CTS Sedan,Chevrolet Silverado, a pair of Jeep Patriots, a pair of Harley Davidson Road KingClassic Motorcycles, or a pair of Chevrolet Cruzes. Additional options were: JeepPatriot and Chevrolet Cruze, Jeep Patriot and Harley Davidson Road KingClassic, or Chevrolet Cruze and Harley Davidson Road King Classic.

The Great American Car Raffle is an Annual fundraiser for Big Brothers BigSisters of Cumberland & Salem Counties. Raffle tickets cost $100 each with amaximum of 999 tickets available for sale.

Patrick Hughes shows off his new Camaro.

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BRODY’S FURNITURE

ALL TRULYREASONABLE OFFERS WILL BECONSIDERED FOR APPROVAL BY

SALES MANAGER ONLY 19 DAYS LEFT!

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Faces in the NewsIRobin Hope Designs Celebrates Grand Opening

Pictured here, at the official Robin Hope Designs ribbon cutting, from left are:Todd Noon, Main Street Vineland Executive Director; Gary Holloway, LandisMarketPlace Manager; Robin Hope, Robin Hope Designs owner; Marlene Dixon ofMillville, crochet artist; Robert Hickox of Vineland, artist; and the HonorableRobert Romano, Mayor of the City of Vineland. Dixon and Hickox are two of theartists whose works are for sale at Robin Hope Designs.

Millville Woman’s Club Holds FundraiserThe Millville Woman’s

Club’s rummage sale andmeatball sandwich saleserved as great fundrais-ers. The funds raised bythe club will help themcontinue their communitywork for the coming year.

Pictured here are some of themembers that worked in thekitchen for the meatballsandwich sale. From left, theyare: Lois Bennet, Irene Birdand Donna Simpkins.

Concussion Specialist JoinsPremier Orthopaedic Associates

On November 1, Dr. Disabella, Double BoardCertified and Fellowship Trained Physician, signedon as the newest physician to join PremierOrthopaedic Associates. Dr. Disabella has been prac-ticing non-operative sports medicine in the DelawareValley for the past 14 years. He graduated from thePhiladelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine in1992 and completed his internship, residency andfellowship training at the same institution.

Dr. Disabella has worked with athletes as theTeam Physician at The University of Delaware,walked the side lines of many high schools in theDelaware Valley and trained Olympic level figure skaters. He has publishednumerous articles covering sports related topics such as Sports Nutrition,Sports Induced Asthma and management of diabetic athletes.

When asked about why he came to South Jersey, Dr. Disabella said, “I’m veryexcited to join such a great group of dedicated physicians here at PremierOrthopaedic Associates. After having been on my own for most of my career, it’srefreshing to work side by side with like-minded professionals. Southern NewJersey offers a tremendous opportunity for me to work within the growing com-munities in which we serve. I look forward to working with local doctors, athletictrainers and the community at large.”

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Proudly commemorating our

Providing professional, compassionate, and affordable services to the bereaved in Vineland and surrounding communities since 1932

Lori Rone & James C. Geraci2012

Faustina Rone-GeraciJames A. Geraci

1992

Mary B. RoneC. Calvin Rone

1932

Since the day C. Calvin and Mary B. Rone founded their family funeral businessin 1932, the Rone-Geraci family has worked every day to bring compassionand caring service to families throughout the community.

And the tradition continues…Always mindful of the timeless words of their founder and grandfather:“We realize that the confidence of a community is a sacred trust, and creates a solemn responsibility. Throughout our years of service, the Rone Funeral Service has earned a reputation for sincerity, understanding and dignity of purpose with thousands of families.”

- C. Calvin Rone, 1957

Original Rone Funeral Service8th and Montrose Sts., Vineland, NJ

RRoonnee FFuunneerraall SSeerrvviicceeRRoonnee FFuunneerraall SSeerrvviicceeFaustina Rone-Geraci, Owner-Manager, NJ LIC. #1726James C. Geraci, Owner-Manager, NJ LIC. #3736Nicholas Chamenko, NJ LIC. #3510Michael R. DeStefano, NJ LIC. #4978

1110 E. Chestnut Avenue, Vineland • 856-691-4222Visit online at www.ronefuneralservice.com

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Faces in the NewsIPalmer Recognized for Innovative Ideas

One of WaterEnvironment Federation’s(WEF) strategic goals is todrive innovation. However,not all innovations comefrom years of in-depthresearch. Some come fromthe need to tackle a per-sistent problem with noth-ing more than the materi-als at hand and a heartydose of originality.Sometimes the big solu-tions come from a tweakhere or a little fix there. Inan effort to find new waysto improve, WEF recentlyheld an Operator IngenuityContest, which was open toall clever ideas related towastewater treatment

processes, collection systems, laboratory practices, stormwater management,and utility management.

Several dozen entries were entered from all around the country. They werejudged on the following criteria: Relevance/usefulness (Is it transferable to simi-lar plants and situations?); Originality/creativity, yet is still safe; andResourcefulness (Were materials easily accessible versus going to the originalmanufacturer for parts?).

Finalists were honored and recognized at WEF’s Innovation Pavilion onWednesday, October 3. Finalists had the opportunity to showcase their entries.Awards were presented for six categories—safety, process control, maintenance,work environment, resourcefulness, and “walking the talk.”

Executive Director Dennis W. Palmer, of the Landis Sewage Authority, receivedthe award in the Resourcefulness category. He has been an environmental profes-sional for over 35 years and a licensed professional engineer for over 20 years.

Dennis W. Palmer, the executive director of the Landis Sewerage Authority (left) is pic-tured with Water Environment Federation (WEF) President Cordell Samuels with theOperator Ingenuity Award present by WEF.

Halloweenat Millville

Public Library

The Millville PublicLibrary had a Halloweenstory and craft program,and costume parade for

children on Saturdaymorning, October 27. The

participating children(and moms) are pictured

here enjoying a story.

D'onofrio Honored asKnight of the PapalOrder of St. Gregory

Local businessman Mark D'Onofriohas been awarded the Papal Order ofSaint Gregory the Great, a distinctionpresented by the Holy See in recogni-tion of outstanding service to theChurch. The Order was established in1831 by Pope Gregory XV and is thehighest honor a layman can receivefrom the Catholic Church.

D’Onofrio, a member of St. PadrePio Parish in Vineland, received theConferral of Pontifical Honor as aKnight of the Papal Order of St.Gregory the Great from Bishop JosephGalante of the Camden Diocese at aVespers Prayer Service at St. AgnesChurch in Blackwood.

D’Onofrio is a long-time benefactorof St. Mary’s Regional School, St.Padre Pio Parish, St. AugustinePreparatory School and Our Lady ofMercy Academy. He is known for hiscommitment to ecumenical activitiesand is held in high regard for his com-mitment to his Catholic faith and edu-cation. D’Onofrio is Chair of St. Mary’sSchool Board, Chair of theCumberland County CollegeFoundation and Executive BoardMember of St. Augustine PreparatorySchool. He is also a member of theDiocese of Camden Society ofStewards and has served on numerousdiocesan advisory committees. He hasbeen a recipient of the Gregor MendelAward, which is bestowed annually bySt. Augustine Prep to honor selectedSouth Jersey residents for outstandingcontributions to the community.

D’Onofrio and his wife, Sandy, havebeen married for 36 years and havethree children and two grandchildren.He is the Secretary/Treasurer ofStanker & Galetto, Inc. Along with hisbrother-in-law, Peter Galetto Jr., hemanages the company as well as sev-eral investment and real estate compa-nies. The business supports many localorganizations and is proud to be a cor-porate citizen of southern New Jersey.

�Love The Grapevine?Why not “like” us

on Facebook?facebook.com/grapevinenewspaper

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The Amish Market has Farm Fresh Turkeys, Fresh Baked Pies & Everything You Need to Make the Best Thanksgiving Feast!

At Vineland, NJ

Amish Market

LandisMarketPlace.com for Coupons & Specials

Downtown Vineland • 631 E Landis Ave • 856-213-6002

Open Tues & Wed

Thanksgiving Week

Upper level stores open Nov 24-Dec 22 ‘til 9 pm Thurs thru Sat.

Full Market open Christmas Eve.

Thanksgiving Week HoursTuesday 9–6pmWednesday 9–5pm

Closed Thanksgiving DayFriday 9–5pm (Upper Market open until 7pm)Saturday 9-4pm (Upper Market open until 9pm)

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Personalize Your Holiday Gifts!

For The Hard-to-Buy Loved One On Your List!

856-691-3637

Carmie’s Pottery Paint Worksat La Torre Hardware

1607 S. Delsea Drive, VinelandHours: Tues. & Wed. 10am-6pm Thurs. Noon-8pm

Fri. Noon-6pm Sat. 10am-4pm Walk-Ins Welcome

Like Us On Facebook

City of Vineland, NJ Analysis of Mayoral Elections 1952-2008

Total Number Number Vote Share Number Vote ShareYear ..........Month........of Votes Cast ........Winner Name ................of Votes ...... % ..............2nd Place Name ........................of Votes ...................%

2008 ........May ..........9,248 ....................Robert Romano ............4,730 ............51.2 ............Perry D. Barse ............................2,971 .....................32.12004 ........May ..........11,826 ....................Perry D. Barse ..............7,190 ............60.7 ............Ruben Bermudez ........................4,828 ...................40.82000 ........June ..........9,748......................Perry D. Barse ..............5,917 ............60.6 ............Anthony Campanella ..................3,429 ....................35.11996 ........June ..........9,946 ....................Anthony Campanella ....5,531 ............55.6 ............Marianne Kornbluh-Lods ............4,279....................43.01992..........June ..........10,527....................Joseph E. Romano ........5,414 ............51.4 ............Harry Curley ................................4,901 ....................46.51988 ........June ..........11,735 ....................Harry Curley ..................6,211 ............52.9 ............Joseph E. Romano ......................5,307....................45.21984 ........June ..........10,815 ....................Joseph E. Romano ........5,713 ............52.8 ............Patrick R. Fiorilli..........................5,111 ......................47.21980 ........June ..........11,294 ....................Patrick R. Fiorilli ..........6,375 ............56.4 ............Carl Asselta ................................4,677 ....................41.41976..........June ..........15,839....................Patrick R. Fiorilli ..........10,177 ..........64.2 ............Frank S. Scarpa ..........................5,577 ....................35.21972..........June ..........14,529....................Joseph H. D’Ippolito ....9,464............65.1 ............Charles L. Scarani ......................4,874 ....................33.51968 ........May ..........13,464....................Henry A. Garton, Jr. ......9,113 ............67.6 ............Joseph H. D’Ippolito ..................4,228 ....................31.41964 ........May ..........12,552....................Henry A. Garton, Jr. ......8,534............67.9 ............Bruce H. Garlock ........................3,861 ....................30.71960 ........May ..........13,645....................Albert V. Giampietro ....8,275 ............60.6 ............Frank J. Testa ..............................5,166.....................37.81956..........May ..........13,251 ....................Frank J. Testa ................7,770 ............58.6 ............Charles Cunningham, Jr. ............5,255 ....................39.61952..........May ..........12,993....................John C. Gittone ............6,579............50.6 ............Hugo Fenili ..................................6,115 .....................47.0

Nominate Your Hometown Hero Today!www.grapevinenewspaper.com/hometownheroes

Is it someone who gives of their time and energy to make our community a betterplace to live and work? Perhaps they’re a policeman, fireman, teacher, coach,

volunteer, serviceman or woman, public servant, or an everyday herowho makes personal sacrifices so that others can live better lives.

They don’t do it for the recognition, but we think they should be recognized anyway.

The number of voters (more than19,000) who took part in last Tuesday’selection far surpassed the previous recordfor ballots cast in a mayoral election. The

municipal and school board elections, nor-mally held in the spring, were both movedto November to coincide with the generalelection in a move aimed at both increasingvoter turnout and saving tens of thousandsof tax dollars. The runoff provision inVineland election law was left intact, call-ing for a runoff election between the top

two vote getters on December 4 if no may-oral candidate garnered 50 percent of thevote plus one in Tuesday’s election. Thetwo top vote getters, based on the turnoutat the polls (official election results won’tbe available until all mail-in and provisionalballots are counted and certified) areRobert Romano, the incumbent, who gar-

nered 7,749 votes (40.47 percent), and chal-lenger Ruben Bermudez, who finished thenight with 4,899 votes (25.59 percent).

Since no two Vineland City Council can-didates earned 50 percent of the vote plusone, the top 10 vote getters for five openCity Council seats will also be voted uponin the runoff election on December 4. �

ELECTIONContinued from page 2

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HOW TO ENTER:

$ PRIZEWEEK PUZZLE $

ACROSS:1. No one can argue thatbeing _ is definitelyunpleasant.5. Worried that world isrunning out of resources,child is reassured that scien-tists are trying every _ toincrease humans’ resources.6. Thorny flowers.8. Couple longing for apuppy will not take any timewhatsoever to _ their newone.9. _ may help to increasethe output of a mine.11. When _ houses are tobe had in a community, theprices of existing propertieswill likely be affected.13. Scorch.14. Youngsters beginsquabbling when one girlpushes another as she’strying carefully to _ on acard for her mother.16. Teacher knows that to_ a scene can sometimes bea major challenge.19. Dealing with _ is amatter of considerableurgency.20. Loose _ are liable toget damaged.

DOWN:1. While trying to sneakinto country via river cross-ing, upon reaching shore,foreigner _ forward in adash for freedom.2. Side away from thewind.3. The fact that owner of _is a man of some substanceis probably no surprise.4. “You could recognizethe _ of one of my peacheseven with your eyes shut,”declares proud vendor.7. Famous _ is successfulin getting prominent cover-age on news websites.10. If they’re in amenagerie, wild animalsneed not fear _.12. Long-time fugitive isfinally captured when tattooon her _ is exposed in a pic-ture and witness to her crimerecognizes it.15. Old _ may be of muchinterest to an antiquarian.17. Periphery.18. You’ll find a _ is quitehandy to have around, attimes.

THIS LIST INCLUDES, AMONG OTHERS,THE CORRECT WORDS FOR THIS PUZZLE.

CASTLECATTLECRIMESCRISESDAYEDGEFEELFEWERHUNGERHUNTER

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SPYTOILTOMBSTOMESTOOLWAISTWAYWRIST

PRIZEWEEK 111012

Jackpot increases by $25 each week ifno winning entry is received!

$650 1. Solve the puzzle just as you would inany crossword puzzle. Choose from eachprinted clue the word that best fits thedefinition. Write the answers in the blankspace provided in each puzzle until allspaces have been filled in.2. There is no limit to the number of timesyou may enter, however no facsimiles orreproductions will be accepted. Only originalnewspaper entry forms will be accepted.3. Anyone is eligible to enter exceptemployees/directors of South JerseyFederal Credit Union (SJFCU) and theGrapevine and their immediate families.4. A basic prize of $50.00 will be awardedto the winner(s) of each weekly PrizeweekPuzzle. In the case of multiple winners, theprize money will be shared. If no correctpuzzle entries are received, $25.00 willbe added the following week. Winnersagree to permit use of their names andphotos by SJFCU and/or the Grapevine.

5. Entries can be mailed to South JerseyFederal Credit Union, Attn: PrizeweekPuzzle, PO Box 5429, Deptford, NJ08096, or dropped off 24 hours a day, 7days a week in the vestibule of SJFCU,106 W. Landis Avenue, Vineland. Mailedentries must be received by SJFCU no laterthan 10 am on the Monday following theWednesday publication of the PrizeweekPuzzle. Entries dropped off at the SJFCUVineland branch must be received nolater than 8:30 am on the Monday fol-lowing the Wednesday publication of thePrizeweek Puzzle. SJFCU assumes noresponsibility for late or lost entries.6. South Jersey Federal Credit Unionreserves the right to issue additionalinstructions in connection with thePrizeweek Puzzle. All such instructionsare to become part of the official rules.Visit www.SouthJerseyFCU.com for listof additional rules.

This week’s jackpot

Note contest rules at the top of this page.

Readers can deposit their puzzles 24/7in the drop-slot located in the vestibule ofSouth Jersey Federal Credit Union,106 West Landis Ave., Vineland, NJ 08360.Note: Use a debit card from any financial institutionto gain access to the vestibule drop box after hours.Entries must be deposited by 8:30 am on Monday.

Or, completed puzzles can mailed to:South Jersey Federal Credit UnionPrizeweek PuzzlePO Box 5429Deptford, NJ 08096-0429

Mailed entries must be received by 10 am on Monday.

SOLUTION TO LAST WEEK’SPRIZEWEEK PUZZLE

The answers to last week’s puzzleare below. For a detailed explanationof the answers to last week’s puzzleand additional rules, visitwww.SouthJerseyFCU.com

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Federal Disaster DeclarationIssued for CumberlandFreeholder Director Carl Kirstein

reports that the Federal Government hasissued a major disaster declaration for theState of New Jersey, includingCumberland County. “I’m very proud ofall our County Officials, and especially theOffice of Emergency Management, fortheir professionalism and hard work.They coordinated efforts to protect ourresidents and were there through thestorm and continued to work after thestorm. They assessed damage caused byHurricane Sandy and prepared the docu-mentation that helped us to qualify,” saidFreeholder Director Kirstein.The FEMAMajor Disaster Declaration

triggers the release of Federal funds tohelp individuals and communities torecover from Hurricane Sandy.If you have been affected by Hurricane

Sandy, and you need assistance in recover-ing, Cumberland County residents shouldregister with FEMA as soon as possible.You can register with FEMA one of thefollowing three ways:Apply Online at http://www.disasteras-

sistance.gov/daip_en.portalApply via a smartphone at

http://m.fema.gov/Apply by Phone:Call: (800) 621-3362.Call: TTY (800) 462-7585 for people

with speech or hearing disabilities.

Rescue Remodel ContestOpen to Community GroupsHurricane Sandy’s trail of destruction

ravaged the East Coast, not even sparingthe homes and headquarters of the fire-fighters, emergency response teams andshelters that tirelessly risked their lives tohelp their communities.Now, The Family Handyman Rescue

Remodel Contest gives communities thechance to show their gratitude by enteringand voting for their local organization atwww.rescueremodel.com from now untilDecember 15.The winning group will receive a fabu-

lous IKEA kitchen makeover valued at$25,000. Entries must explain in 500words or less how the renovation willbenefit both the the community and thelocal organizaton, as well as describe whatmakes the group truly deserving of themakeover. Nominees must be active com-munity organizations and part of a not forprofit group.From new cabinets and appliances, to

cookware and food storage, winners willreceive a fully customized kitchen featur-ing signature and smart designs fromIKEA. In addition, the group will be fea-tured across The Family Handyman’sprint and digital networks.A panel from The Family Handyman

will select the five top community organi-zations from those nominated. The votewill then be open to the public fromFebruary 1 until March 30, 2013. A winnerwill be selected on April 12, 2013, and thecompleted kitchen will be unveiled in TheFamily Handyman’s September issue andon its website, as well as onwww.RescueRemodel.com.There is no purchase necessary to

enter the Rescue Remodel Contest. Entryis open only to legal U.S. residents age 18or older at time of entry. For official rulesor to submit a nomination, visitwww.RescueRemodel.com.

Atlantic City Electric StillOffering Free TreesAtlantic City Electric continues to offer

free trees to customers through Energy-Saving Trees, an Arbor Day Foundationprogram that helps conserve energy andreduce energy bills through strategic treeplanting.Safety and property remain the priority

for those affected by Hurricane Sandy. Ascommunities move from emergencyresponse to long-term recovery, the 3,000-tree program gives Atlantic City Electriccustomers a chance to plant new trees andreplace those that were lost or broken.The program launched October 9 and willrun through November 21.Atlantic City Electric customers can

reserve their free trees atarborday.org/atlantictrees. An online toolhelps customers estimate the annual ener-gy savings that will result from plantingtrees in the most strategic location neartheir homes or businesses. Customers canreserve up to two trees and are expectedto care for and plant them in the locationprovided by the online tool.The types of trees offered include the

following: Washington hawthorn, whitedogwood, bald cypress, American beech,hackberry, river birch and sugar maple.The two-to-four foot tall trees will bedelivered directly to customers at an idealtime for planting.The “Energy-Saving Trees” online tool

was created by the Arbor Day Foundationand the Davey Institute, a division ofDavey Tree Expert Co., and uses peer-reviewed scientific research from theUSDA Forest Service’s i-Tree software tocalculate estimated benefits. In addition toproviding approximate energy savings, thetool also estimates the trees’ other bene-fits, including cleaner air, reduced carbondioxide emissions and improved stormwater management.The 3,000 trees are estimated to pro-

duce more than $500,000 in energy sav-ings within 20 years.

Cassi's Glory Couture OpensJoin the Greater Millville Chamber of

Commerce, Mayor Tim Shannon, CityOfficials, friends and family of CassandraTindal at the Grand Opening her new storeon Friday, November 16. The celebration{

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News in BriefI

At AMI-AtlantiCare, you will receive high quality,state-of-the-art diagnostic imaging performed byboard-certified, sub-specialty trained radiologistsin a comfortable and relaxing environment.

We provide a full array of imaging services includingCT, MRI, Digital Mammography, Ultrasound, DEXA Scan, Vein Services, Thyroid Biopsies and Digital X-ray.

Local residents and physicians alike will enjoy the convenience and peace of mind from our localradiologists and staff that they know and trust.

219 North White Horse Pike, Hammonton, NJwww.amiatlanticare.com

To schedule an appointment, please call

(609) 878-XRAY (9729).

HOURS OF OPERATIONMonday - 8:00am - 6:00pmTuesday - 8:00am - 8:00pm

Wednesday - Friday - 8:00am - 5:00pmSaturday - 8:00am -12:00 noon

Amerigo Falciani, DOMedical Director

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(EFRP). The application signup periodstarted October 22 and goes throughNovember 30.EFRP provides cost-share assistance to

nonindustrial private forest (NIPF) landowners who have experienced damagefrom the southern pine beetle. EFRP pro-gram participants may receive financialassistance of up to 75 percent of the costto implement approved emergency forestrestoration practices, as determined bycounty FSA committees.County FSA committees determine

land eligibility using on-site damageinspections that assess the type andextent of damage. To be eligible forEFRP, NIPF land must:

• Have existing tree cover (or had treecover immediately before the natural dis-aster occurred and is suitable for growingtrees); and,• Be owned by any nonindustrial pri-

vate individual, group, association, corpo-ration, or other private legal entity, thathas definitive decision-making authorityover the land.In addition, the natural disaster must

have resulted in damage that if untreatedwould:• Impair or endanger the natural

resources on the land; and,• Materially affect future use of the

land.Contact the Vineland Service Center at

856-205-1225, ext. 2 for additional infor-mation on EFRP.

Vineland Department ofHealth Partners to CelebrateNational Rural Health DayAmazing things are happening in rural

America. These small towns, farming vil-lages and frontier areas are fueled by thecreative energy of ordinary citizens whohistorically have been willing to step for-ward and take risks in order to provide awealth of products and resources for therest of the country. They also continue tobe places where everyone knows each

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Continued on next page

begins with a Ribbon Cutting at 5 p.m.Cassi's Glory Couture Boutique

Collections, is located in the Village onHigh, 501 N. High Street, Cottage H, inMillville. The shop is the natural exten-sion of the home business started inJanuary, 2002 when Cassandra Tindalrelocated from New York to New Jersey.She began as a home base business, regis-tered as, Cassi Couture Enterprises Llc,and Trading as “Glory Couture,” which isthe brand name for her collection.According to Cassadra : “My company

designs a couture line of millinery andaccessories designs, and showcases aunique collection of couture appareldesigns in our annual productions andfund raising. We support our very ownnonprofit organization, “Little BruisedBuds Bloom” Inc; our philanthropic inter-est focuses on the prevention of childabuse and neglect.Cassi’s Glory Couture’s hours of opera-

tions are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday -through Sunday, and until 7 p.m. on ThirdFridays of each month.

College Athletes AcceptingProm Dress DonationsMembers of Cumberland County

College’s female athletic teams will onceagain host a “Belle of the Ball” prom dressdrive to help high school girls inCumberland County enjoy the spring 2013prom season.The Dukes seek donations of new and

gently used prom gowns, semi-formal andfancy event dresses, shoes and accessoriessuch as purses, fancy jewelry, wraps andshawls. Donations are being accepted nowthrough February 28, 2013, in the college’sAthletic Department or Training officelocated in the Cunningham Gymnasium,Sherman Avenue and College Drive.Donation guidelines:• Dresses from 2000 to new in excel-

lent condition and in all sizes, colors andlengths.• Garments must be cleaned and on

hangers or neatly folded.• Dresses must be formal gowns or

fancy party dresses.• Accessories should be stylish, clean

and in excellent condition.• Used make-up, casual clothing, wed-

ding dresses, tuxedos, and/or unclean gar-ments cannot be accepted.For more information, contact Kaitlin

Caviston, Athletic Trainer at 856-691-8600ext. 446 or email: [email protected]“Like” them on Facebook for updates

and other information by logging onto:www.facebook.com/cccbelleoftheball

Help in Combatting SouthernPine BeetleThe Farm Service Agency’s Vineland

Service Center, serving Atlantic, CapeMay and Cumberland counties, hasannounced the availability of theEmergency Forest Restoration Program

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other, listens to/respects each other andworks together for the greater good.Unfortunately, these communities

face unique healthcare concerns—a lackof healthcare providers; accessibilityissues, particularly in terms of trans-portation and technology; and afford-ability issues as the result of larger per-centages of un-/underinsured citizensand greater out-of-pocket health costs.Meanwhile, rural hospitals and healthsystems face declining reimbursementrates and disproportionate funding lev-els that make it challenging to meet thephysical, social and economic needs oftheir communities.These are just a few of the issues that

the Vineland Health Department, theNational Organization of State Offices ofRural Health (NOSORH), and otherlocal, state and national rural stakehold-ers hope to bring to light during the sec-ond annual National Rural Health Dayon Thursday, November 15.The Vineland Health Department

supports rural citizens through pro-grams such as the Champions for HealthProject helping Hispanic DiabeticPatients self-manage their disease; atobacco control program that helpssmokers to quit using tobacco products;the Vineland Muncipal Alliance AgainstSubstance Abuse and the VinelandPaceSetters, an adult walking program.The health department’s Health and

Wellness Day at the Landis Marketplaceon November 15, will be held from 2 to 6p.m. Partner organizations signed up toparticipate are Lead PoisoningPrevention Program, Smoking CessationCounseling, Ledden Family ChiropracticCenter, Higher Path Healing(Acupuncture &Nutrition), FamCare,Foot Care Centers, SJH Oncology andGenitourinary Departments and more.Additional National Rural Health Day

information is available at cele-bratepowerofrural.org. To learn moreabout NOSORH, visit www.nosorh.org.

Farmers Urged to Vote inCounty Committee ElectionsFarm Service Agency (FSA)

Administrator Juan M. Garcia hasannounced that the 2012 FSA countycommittee elections ballots have beenmailed to eligible voters. The deadline toreturn the ballots to local FSA offices isDecember 3, 2012.“The role and input of our county

committee members is more vital thanever,” said Garcia. “New county commit-tee members provide input and makeimportant decisions on the local admin-istration of disaster and conservationprograms. With better participation inrecent years, we also have seen promis-{

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Has Expandedour Business to

MalagaIn Matthew’s Plaza and is

NOW OPEN334 N. Delsea Dr. 856-422-0081

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MON. - FRI. 7:30AM TO 6PM • SAT. 8AM TO 3PM

News in BriefIContinued from previous page

For a no-obligationadvertising consultation,

call 856-457-7815 or e-mail:[email protected] today.

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SHOP RITE LIQUORS OF VINELAND

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ing increases in the number of womenand minority candidates.”Eligible voters who have not received

ballots can obtain one from their localUSDA Service Center. Newly electedcommittee members and their alternateswill take office January 1, 2013.To be an eligible voter, farmers must

participate or cooperate in an FSA pro-gram. A person who is not of legal votingage, but supervises and conducts thefarming operations of an entire farm alsomay be eligible to vote. Agricultural pro-ducers in each county submitted candi-date nominations during the nominationperiod, which ended August 1.While FSA county committees do not

approve or deny farm operating loans,they make decisions on disaster and con-servation programs, emergency pro-grams, commodity price support loanprograms and other agricultural issues.Members serve three-year terms.Nationwide, there are about 7,700 farm-ers and ranchers serving on FSA countycommittees. Committees consist of threeto 11 members that are elected by eligi-ble producers.More information on county commit-

tees, such as the new 2012 fact sheet andbrochures, can be found on the FSAwebsite at www.fsa.usda.gov/elections orat a local USDA Service Center.

AWE Tuning is Tuner at NewJersey Motorsports ParkNew Jersey Motorsports Park and

AWE Tuning have entered into an agree-ment that will make the Pennsylvania-based performance engineering firm theofficial tuning partner of the Millvillefacility. AWE Tuning develops andretails performance components forGerman automobiles, focusing on Audi,Porsche, and Volkswagen, and is knownfor such notable developments as thequickest VW MK6 K04 on the planet,international stardom in Microsoft’sForza video game, and their 750HPpackages for daily-driven Porsches.“New Jersey Motorsports Park has

served AWE tuning well as our home-town track, not only for research anddevelopment of our breed of perform-ance products, but also as a fantasticdestination for AWE Tuning customerentertainment,” stated AWE TuningPartner and VP of Marketing JesseKramer.The relationship will cover cross-pro-

motional content, designed to createawareness of AWE Tuning’s productsand services offered to German automo-bile drivers and enthusiasts alike.“New Jersey Motorsports Park is

proud to work with AWE Tuning,” saidpark general manager Brad Scott. “Wehave had a great corporate partnershipwith AWE, and naming them our “offi-cial tuner” will lead us into a terrific,extended relationship that we expect tobenefit both parties.” I

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606 E. Landis Ave., Vineland • 856-692-2060www.musiccentralonline.com

2-for-1 Sale! Buy any instrument at list price and receivea 2nd instrument of equal or lesser value FREE! Call for details!

Visit us onstores.ebay.com/Music-Central-Online

Choose from hundreds of new and used Acoustic & ElectricGuitars and Basses from big names such as Fender, Ibanez,

Takamine, ESP, Yamaha, Wechter, Hagstrom, Schechter and more!

BLACK FRIDAY 2-FOR-1 SALEAT MUSIC CENTRAL

ONE DAY ONLY!Friday, November 23, 2012 from 10am - 8pm

• All Drum sets 40% off list price plus receive $50 Music Central store credit• Take an extra 10% off all guitar or bass combo packages

• Extra 10% off ANY used product in the store• Spend more than $100 on accessories & books,

and receive a $20 store credit!• Layaway available!

ONE DAY ONLY!

Sale also at our second store:6690 Black Horse Pike, Egg Harbor Twp.

David C. Watts, M.D., F.A.C.S.Cumberland Professional Campus1051 West Sherman AvenueBuilding 2, Suite A, Vineland, NJ

(856)691-0200www.complexionsbydrwattsplasticsurgery.com

RID YOURSELF OF: • Intrusive fat or • Hanging skin or • Sagging muscles or • Ugly scars

EXPERIENCE THESATISFACTION OFKNOWING THAT YOU LOOK YOUR

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We know how to transform and reinvent appearance.

Quality care is our standard,Your satisfaction is our pride.

wattsplasticsudrynsbmplexio.cowwww.co(856)691-0200

NJineland,Vuite A,SBuilding 2,enuevman AAvherest SWWest S1051nal Campessiooffessiorland PCumber

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Lately, I've developed a greater under-standing of nostalgia and why it capti-vates us: It is like restarting your

crashed computer to a time when all workedwell, so that you can go on with your work, oryour life. That is why we watch all of those re-runs on TV, all of those shows from our dis-tant and even nearby pasts. It’s why we re-read the same books every year, and frequentthe same restaurants on holidays, or travel tothe same vacation spots every year. It justresets our emotional computer to a time whenour lives seemed to work and jump-starts ourwell-being. I’ve done a lot of this lately, and,with all of the weather-related peril going onaround us, I found myself watchingWho's theBoss? re-runs and really liking them. I neverwatched them when they were first aired, butsomehow the big hair and the shoulder padsnow just make me feel good. Egad, I even gotan Andy Williams Christmas SpecialsDVDfrom Amazon and it’s just incredible.My feel-good search every fall is for the

best pumpkin pie. Every year I am amazedthat there is still something out there that Ihave not yet tried! I like all things pumpkin.This year at Bagel University onMain Road inVineland, I found pumpkin cream cheese thatis just superb on a multi-grain bagel. Carlos,the owner, also has a cranberry-walnut chick-en salad that is absolutely fabulous. I just lovea scoop with crackers for lunch.Here is a little recipe for Pumpkin Rice

Pudding, using Aborio rice. It is a nice littletreat to serve up after the Thanksgiving meal.I knowmy dad would have loved it!

PUMPKIN RICE PUDDING2 cups water1 cup Arborio rice

3 cups reduced-fat (2%) milk1 cup solid-pack pure pumpkin (not

pumpkin pie filling)3/4 cup honey1 teaspoon vanilla extract3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon, plus

more for garnish1/4 teaspoon ground ginger1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg1/4 teaspoon salt1/3 cup heavy whipping cream,

whippedPreheat the oven to 375ºF. Bring the

water to a boil in an ovenproof four-quartsaucepan. Stir in the rice and cover. Reducethe heat to low and simmer until the rice isnearly cooked, about 20 minutes.In a large bowl, whisk together the milk,

pumpkin, honey, vanilla, cinnamon, ginger,nutmeg, and salt.While the rice is still hot, add the pump-

kin mixture to the saucepan and stir well tocombine. Cover and transfer to the oven.Bake until the liquid has reduced by about athird and the mixture is foamy and bubbling,45 to 50 minutes. Remove from the oven andstir well to combine all the ingredients.Transfer to a large bowl, then cover andchill in the refrigerator for at least eighthours or overnight.The pudding will keep for up to four days

in an airtight container in the refrigerator.Serve with a dollop of whipped cream and asprinkling of cinnamon. I

Jean Hecker is a full-time travel agent at MagicCarpet Travels and a part-time foodie. She hasa BA in Home Economics Education fromRowan University and enjoys exploring allfacets of the food and restaurant industry.

Classic DessertsOur columnist adds a seasonal twist to adessert that’s been a holiday staple for decades.

Food for Thought { BY JEAN HECKER }I

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UPPER DEERFIELD1119 Hwy 77, Carlls Corner

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Most insurances acceptedSame day, evening and Saturday

appointments availableTransportation available if you need a ride

Did you know that patient out-of-pocket costs for radiology tests can di�er by more than 100% between providers? With so much on the line, demand that your radiologist tell you how much the test will cost and compare the results between quali�ed practices to ensure that you get the best care at the best price.

Know your

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Trust CDI to cut through theinsurance red tape to �nd your out-of-pocket cost. Simply visit our o�ce for more information.

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Call (856) 696-3924or sign up at the front deskwww.SJHealthcare.net/FitnessConnection

Monday, Nov., 19, 6 pm • SJH Fitness Connection 1430 W. Sherman Ave.

Jump start this Holiday Season and New Year with a Mindful Eating Approach

with Megan Bosacco, RD

A New Year, a New You

Topics of discussion include:~ Mindful Munching and

Nutritious Noshing ~ ~ The Mighty Metabolism~ ~ The Moderation Miracle ~

~ Realistic steps to achieve your goals ~ There will be a time for

Q & A after the discussion

Megan wants to share her secrets to success!

IFood NewsSenior Citizen Holiday MealProgram Needs Your HelpThe Senior Citizen Holiday Meal

Program was founded in 1981 and sincethen, it has served over 127,000 meals. It isan all volunteer program that provides hotnutritious meals to senior citizens and dis-abled individuals who are alone on theholidays.The Holiday Meal Program is the only

free service that provides home-deliveredmeals for the holidays. The recipients ofthese meals are very appreciative seniorand disabled residents of Atlantic,Burlington, Camden, Cumberland andGloucester counties.On Thanksgiving Day, the Program will

prepare and deliver over 3,000 meals;that’s why they are asking for your assis-tance. They rely completely on the kind-ness and generosity of businesses and pri-vate donors. We can all agree that times aretough; you can imagine how hard it mustbe for those on fixed incomes.So that this worthwhile program may

continue, your financial assistance wouldbe greatly appreciated.Here’s how YOU can help:• Donate a turkey or food stuff• Volunteer to deliver meals on

Thanksgiving morning• Make a financial donationFor more information, please call Steven

B. DiOrio at 609-781-6637 or go to golde-nagecommunityservices.org or [email protected] send your donation payable to:

Senior Citizen Holiday Meal Program, 416Cedarcroft Ave., Audubon, NJ 08106.

“Breaking Bread” Event inHammonton on November 20Just in time for Thanksgiving, the

Stockton College community seminar series“Foodie Tuesdays” continues this monthwith “Breaking Bread: Breads, History andWorld Culture.” The Tuesday, November20 seminar starts at 6 p.m. and will takeplace at the Hammonton Art Center, 219

Bellevue Avenue in Hammonton.The event will explore the history, cul-

tural, religious, and health aspects of manydifferent kinds of breads. Anthony Dissen,a registered dietician, will lead seminarparticipants in the exploration of this sub-ject, after which all participants will enjoylight dining at Annata Wine Bar, directlyacross the street from the Arts Center.Registration for the seminar, discussion

and dining is $35 per person. If partici-pants register with a friend, the cost is only$30 a person.Registration is limited and the October

seminar sold out early. Reservations arestrongly recommended. Call StocktonCollege’s Continuing Studies office toreserve a seat, 609-652-4227, or registeronline at www.stockton.edu/cs, then go to“Browse All Courses.”

Appreciation Dinner Set forHurricane Sandy First RespondersJoin Hurricane Sandy’s first responders

including police officers, fireman, and pub-lic workers for an afternoon of food andgratitude.Chef Terry French, winner of The Food

Network's Extreme Chef and founder ofChefs for Life, will host a special apprecia-tion dinner on Wednesday, November 21from 3 to 5 p.m., along with The Explorer'sClub, Water Watch International, andSomers Point Diner for the brave men andwomen in the New Jersey area and beyondwho risked their lives during this paststorm of the century.The appreciation dinner will take place

in the banquet room of Somers Point Dinerwhere attendees will be served a speciallyprepared meal while having the opportuni-ty to give their thanks to those who helpedprotect Hurricane Sandy victims.Chef Terry French will be there to greet

guests along with co-host Joel S. Fogel,President of Water Watch International andMember Emeritus of The Explorers Club.This dinner is free for first responders

and their families. All inquiries should beaddressed to Captain Fogel at 609-214-3967.

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12 DAILY SPECIALSMONDAY

Half Tray & 15 Wings $15.99

TUESDAY2 Medium Pizzas $10.99

WEDNESDAY25 Wet Wings $10.99

THURSDAYLarge Stromboli $8.25

FRIDAY25 Wing Zings $12.25

Call 856-205-0012

It’s A

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Everyday Specials

$1.992 Eggs, Toast & Potatoes

Buy One Bacon Egg CheeseSunny Side Muffin

GET ONE FREE

2 Southwest Blvd. Newfield

856-697-4000HOURSClosed MondayTues. - Sat. 6am-2pmSunday 7am - 1pm

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2012 Specials

$50 DEALSColor, Cut & Style

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For Every $30 Gift Certificate Puchased Get

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Holiday

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EXCLUDING ANIMAL FOOD & YARD ITEMS.Must Present Coupon To Receive Discount. Not to be Combined wtih Any Other Offer. Expires 12/31/12

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Deserve 'eVery Best'is HolidaySeason

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15% OFFANY RETAIL ITEM

Christmas Packages excluded

Give 'e Gi) 'at EveryoneLoves To Open...

A Salon Fabrojae Gi) Certi(cate! Gi� Certi�cates available in any amount!

Available online at: www.salonfabrojae.comor call ahead and we will have it

ready for you!

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L$7

Exp. 11/30/12. One per customer. Not to be combinedwith any other offer. Must present coupon.

ook at

Holiday Specials

HOURS: Monday 10:30am-6:30pmTues-Sat 10:30am-4:00pm • Sunday Closed

100 N. Brewster Rd. (Corner of Tuckahoe Rd.)

856-697-9300

All Hair CutsWash, Cut & Style

Exp. 11/30/12. One per customer. Not to be combinedwith any other offer. Must present coupon.

COLOR, TRIM & BLOW OUT

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www.villafazzolari.com821 Harding Highway, Buena NJ

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Specializing in Color Correction

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www.strawberrynj.com2185 E. Wheat Road(Between Main & Brewster)

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License #25M000016700

Walk-InsWelcome

It's time to be ThankfulBe thankful for color.

10% OFFany color or highlight service any weekday

in November with mention of this ad.

Black Friday Deals$10.00 haircuts from 12-6 ONLY.

Also 20% off retail products all day! Appointments available.

TODAYZTRENDZ

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OFF ANY $20.00OR MORE PURCHASEwith this Coupon Expires 12-31-12

Open Year Round

Holiday Catering AvailableAll OccasionIce Cream Cakes

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Main & Magnolia Rds. Vineland, NJ

856-691-5438

P

ZOOMonin to

Tri CityFor all your Holiday Entertaining Needs.

Plates, Napkins, Cups, Decorations,Cookie Tins, All color Tablecovers,

Cooking, Catering, and Baking Supplies.

ORANGE DOT SALE50% OFF clearance on all partyitems marked with orange dot,

and many other items.

• ALL PINATAS $5.•HOURS: 8:00 am - 5:30 pm Mon-Fri.

Sat. 8:30am - 2pm.

2192 S. Delsea Dr. Vineland, NJ856-692-6050

Santa’s made his list,and checked it twice,

arranged it from

A to Z so your

holiday shopping will be very nice.

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Are you afraid to get your injections due to the meningitis cases causedby contaminated medications?

THERE IS NO NEED TO FEAR. The office of Dr. Stephen Soloway has never received medications fromthe Massachusetts compounding center that has caused this epidemic. Our injection medications were purchased prior toJune 2012 from a pharmaceutical company in Texas that wehave done business with for years. To be safe we have evencompared our lots to those reported by the CDC and confirmedthat our medications are safe and free of any contaminants.

There is no reason to not get the treatments you need. Pleasecall our office, conveniently located in Vineland NJ, and sched-ule your injection today. If you have any concerns or would likefurther information please call our office at 855-SOLOWAY (765-6929).

Stephen Soloway, M.D., FACP, FACR, CCDArthritis & Rheumatology Associates of S. Jersey, P.C.2848 S. Delsea Drive, Ste 2C, Vineland, NJ 08360Phone: (856) 794-9090 Fax: (856) 794-3058

Toll Free: (855) SOLOWAY www.DrSoloway.com

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT�

NOVEMBER 13 THROUGH 17Nightlife at Bennigan’s. 2196 W.Landis Ave., Vineland, 205-0010. KaraokeThursdays with Bob Morgan, 9 p.m.-close, $3 Heinekens, DJ/Dance PartyFridays 9 p.m.-Close, $3 Coronas. AllSports Packages: MLB Extra Innings, NBALeague Pass, NHL Center Ice, and NFLSunday Ticket. $3 12-oz. Coors Light &$5 23-oz. Call for RSVP and details.

EVERY TUESDAYKaraoke. The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S.Delsea Dr., Vineland. Sing your heart out.765-5977.

EVERY WEDNESDAYSalsa Night. The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S.Delsea Dr., Vineland. Latin-inspired danceparty. 765-5977.

Country Dancing. The Centerton CountryClub & Event Center, 1022 Almond Rd.,Pittsgrove. 7–11 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14Cumberlads. Maurice House, 1719 W.Main St., Millville. 7 p.m. Men’s a capellachorus under the direction of GeneTubertini, sings a blend of popular oldersongs and show tunes. 825-0511.

Bayshore Benefit Concert:SnakeBrothers Band. Union Hall, 904 Main St.,Dividing Creek. 7 p.m. All proceeds willhelp post-Sandy relief work in the area.Tickets $10 at the door. warm, down-home appeal that makes it perfect for anintimate concert. www.SnakeBrothers.com

EVERY THURSDAYJazz Duos. Annata Wine Bar, BellevueAve., Hammonton, 609-704-9797. Live Jazzfeaturing area's best jazz duos. 6:30 - 9:30p.m. No cover. RSVP recommended.

Magician Kevin Bethea. CentertonCountry Club & Event Center, Ten22 Bar &

Grill, 1022 Almond Rd., Pittsgrove, 358-3325. 6–8 p.m. Magician and slight-of-hand illusionist.

Jeff Giuliani of Eleven Eleven. DoubleEagle Saloon, 1477 Panther Rd.,Vineland. Live acoustic 7–10 p.m..

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15The Last Waltz. Landis Theater, E.Landis Ave., Vineland. 7:30 p.m. MartinScorsese's documentary of the 1976 finalperformance of the legendary Sixtiesrock group The Band features some ofthe greatest rock performers of their gen-eration, and is a bittersweet look back atan era. Tickets: $5.www.landistheater.com or 691-1121.

NOVEMBER 14 THROUGH 17Nightlife at Ten22. Centerton CountryClub & Event Center, The Patio Bar atTen22, 1022 Almond Rd., Pittsgrove, 358-3325. Wed.: Country Night with DJ BobMorgan, 7-11 p.m. Lessons and non-stopdancing (song requests all night) on one ofthe largest dance floors in region. $5admission. Thurs: DJ Tommy B 8 p.m.,Fri: TBA 9 p.m., Sat: DJ Tommy B 9 p.m.

Nightlife at Mori’s. Lou Ferretti's Mori'son Landis, 830 E. Landis Ave., Vineland,690-0300. DJ Alvin (Latin Night) 8 p.m.,Sun.: Bobby & Kit 8 p.m.

Nightlife at Ramada. Harry's Pub atRamada, W. Landis Ave. and Rt. 55,Vineland, 696-3800. Wed.: Ladies Night,1/2 price appetizers all night. HappyHour Mon.-Sat, 4-6 p.m. $1 off alcoholicdrinks. Wed.–Sat., live entertainment.

Nightlife at Double Eagle. Double EagleSaloon, 1477 Panther Rd., Vineland. Livemusic every Friday night. NFL SundayTicket Package Turtlestone Brewing Co.on draft, along with 16 other importedand domestic beers. Happy Hour daily3–6 p.m.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17Love Thy Neighbor BenefitConcert: One of Six. Safe HavenCafé, 701 New Hampshire Ave.,Somers Point 5:30 p.m. ChristianContemporary rock band fromVineland will be headlining the con-cert to help victims of HurricaneSandy. One of Six performs a varietyof modern popular praise and worshipsongs along with their original material.Members are: Jim and Lois Dallett, Denise Jubb, Cassie Satterfield, Andrew Acevedo,Carlos Figueroa, Bob Burgess, Gary Bailey and Sam Santos.Redefine and the Glenn Taylor band are supporting acts helping the effort, along

the Red Cross & Salvation Army which are working together to help those familiesaffected by Hurricane Sandy. Bedding, toiletries, clothing, coats, money donationswill be accepted to help the Southern Shore Chapter oft the American Red Cross inPleasantville, NJ. Donation: $5. For more information, visit www.oneofsixmusic.comor www.facebook.com/oneofsixmusic.

ht ea rF R A N K G UA R AC I N I J R . F PACGEORGE P. LUCIANO SR. THEATRE

AT CUMBERLANDCOUNTY COLLEGE

3322 College Drive Vineland, NJ 08360 T i c k e t s

$12 for Adults $8 for 55 and up $8 for under 18

Thursday, November 15th at 8:00PM Friday, November 16th at 8:00PM

Saturday, November 17th at 8:00PM Sunday, November 18th at 3:00PM

This hilarious comedy follows the on and off stage antics of a mediocre theatre company from dress rehearsal to disastrous final night of their play, “Nothing On,” as anything that can go wrong - does. A Cumberland County College Theatre Arts production directed by Broadway veteran Deborah Bradshaw.

Mozart, Little Engine that Could, Celtic Celebration, Footloose, Swan LakeCOMING SOON

CCCNJ.EDU/FPAC

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NOVEMBER 16, 17, AND 18Nightlife at The Rail. The Rail, 1252Harding Hwy, Richland. 697-7245. Fri.: TBA.Sat. TBA.

Nightlife at Bojo’s. 222 N. High St.,Millville, 327-8011. Tues.: Bike Nite withlive entertainment. Thurs.: Karaoke. Fri.:Mike Bryan Band. Sat.: DJ/band. Daily drinkand food specials.

Nightlife at Old Oar House. Old OarHouse Irish Pub. 123 N. High St., Millville,293-1200. Wed.: Karaoke 9 p.m., Thurs.:Scott Seabock 8 p.m., Fri.: Uncercover 9p.m., Sat.: DJ 9 p.m.

EVERY FRIDAYGene Cortopassi. Merighi's Savoy Inn, E.Landis Ave. and Union Rd., Vineland, 691-8051. 6 p.m. Dinner music.www.savoyinn.com.

EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAYTop 40 Dance Party w/ DJ Tony Morris.The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S. Delsea Dr,,Vineland. All of the most popular main-stream dance music. 765-5977.

NOVEMBER 15 THROUGH 18Noises Off. Cumberland County College,Guaracini Fine and Performing Arts Center,Vineland. 8 p.m. except 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov.18. Cumberland County College Departmentof Theatre takes the play by Michael Fraynto the stage, directed by Broadway veteranDeborah Bradshaw.In this play-within-a-play, absolutelyeverything that cango wrong does.Tickets $12, $8 forage 55 and older,and those under18. Tickets can bepurchased over thephone with a creditcard by calling856-692-8499, orin person duringbusiness hours: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesday,Thursday and Friday; and 10 a.m.-7 p.m.Wednesday.

Annie. Levoy Theatre, 126-130 N. HighSt., Millville. 8 p.m. The Off Broad StreetPlayers perform the heartwarming familymusical based on the Little Orphan Anniecomic strip. Tickets $20 adult/ $14 seniorsage 62+ and students. http://www.levoy.net

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16Adelante. The Riverfront RenaissanceCenter For The Arts, 22 N. High St., Millville,327-4500. J. Jody Janetta on drums, JackJez on guitar and Stephen Testa on bass.7–8:15 p.m.

An Evening To Remember: The BronxWanderers. Centerton Country Club &Event Center, 1022 Almond Rd., Pittsgrove,358-3325.6–10 p.m. Presented by Christ theGood Shepherd Parish. Dinner buffet, desserts,wine and spirits tasting. $40. 297-2889.

Third Friday: Book Signing/CDSigning/Hofenakus. Bogart’s Bookstore.210 N. High St., Millville. Free. Live music7–10 p.m. Book digning with author WilliamH. Palmer Jr. (We Call OurselvesRocketboatmen, $16) 6–8 p.m. CD signingwith Walt Meremianin (Winter NoiseMachine, $13.99) 6–8 p.m. Previews con-cert at The Levoy Theatre on December 1.

NOVEMBER 16 AND 17The Dining Room. Vineland High SchoolSouth Auditorium, W. Chestnut Ave.,Vineland. 7 p.m. both days plus 2 p.m.matinee on 11/17. Polaris Players' presenta-tion of A.R. Gurney’s in-depth portrait of avanishing species—the upper-middle-classwhite Anglo Saxon Protestant (WASP).Tickets are $10 and available from any castmember, or by contacting Noelle Panichellaat VHS South, Patti Nelson at VHS North,or by callingHank Ehrlich at 856-498-5420.

NOVEMBER 16, 17, AND 18The Importance of Being Earnest. LittleTheater, 66 E. Sherman Ave., Vineland. 8p.m. Cumberland Players will be presentingthe play, directed by Pab Sungenis, assis-tant directed by Amber Thomas, producedby Michelle Andrews, and stage managedby Caitlin Dubois. More information is avail-able at http://www.cumberlandplayers.com

The Legends of Sleepy Hollow. St. MarySchool, 735 Union Rd., Vineland. 7 p.m.Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. matinee onSunday. $10, $5 children 13 and under.Tickets on sale at St. Mary's School or St.Padre Pio Parish office, 4680 Dante Avenue.Play is under the direction of Grace Hoffner.856-691-7526.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 171/2 Way to St. Paddy’s Day.Bennigan’s, 2196 W. Landis Ave.,Vineland, 205-001 Celebration on the17th every month until February. Featuredspecials include $2 Guinness Drafts, $4Irish Car Bombs, $8 BIG Irish Burgers,Sheppard’s Pie, Irish Potatoes & CornBeef & Cabbage.

Al Griggs & Flying Dogs of Jupiter.Bogart’s Bookstore. 210 N. High St.,Millville. Free. Live acoustic. 7–9 p.m.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18Poetry on High. Bogart’s Bookstore. 210N. High St., Millville. Free. Original poetryand music. Featured poets: g emil andDiane Sahms Guarnieri. 1:30-4:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21Eleven Eleven/Fish in a Cup. Merighi'sSavoy Inn, E. Landis Ave. and Union Rd.,Vineland, 691-8051. 8 p.m. Free dinner buf-fet 8–9 p.m. Drink specials. 691-0030, ext.307 or www.savoyinn.com.

Secret Sauce. Centerton Country Club &Event Center, Ten22 Ballroom, 1022Almond Rd., Pittsgrove, 358-3325.Thanksgiving Eve party. 9 p.m.–2 a.m. $5cover. Drink specials all night.

EXPERIENCE GREAT PERFORMANCES IN A GRAND THEATER

Doktor Kaboom!The Interactive Science Comedy Show

Sunday December 2 • 2:00 pm Tickets: $14

Beauty and the BeastProduced by American Family Theater

Sunday December 16 • 2:00 pm Tickets: $12

These programs are made possible in part by funds from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts and by funds from the National Endowment for the Arts. Major funding provided by the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, PNC Foundation/PNC Arts Alive, and The Horizon Foundation for New Jersey. Supported in part by a grant from the New Jersey Department of State, Division of Travel and Tourism. Additional funding sources include corporations, foundations and individual contributions by friends, Trustees and alumni of Appel Farm.

To purchase tickets visit the Box Office today, call (856) 691-1121 or visit www.LandisTheater.com.

830 E. Landis Ave., Vineland NJ 08318

AND

presents

Subscription Rates Available.Call the Box Office for Details!

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Andrea Trattoria, 16 N. High St., Millville,697-8400. Chef/owner Andrea Covinoserves up Italian specialties in atmosphereof fine dining.

Annata Wine Bar, 216 Bellevue Ave,Hammonton, 609-704-9797. Food servedtapas style, catering, private parties.Extensive wine list. Live music Thurs. night.

Babe's Village Inn, Martinelli Avenue,Minotola, NJ 856-697-1727. Famous crabs,seafood, Italian cuisine. Eat in or Take out.

Bagel University, 1406 S. Main Rd.,Vineland, 691-0909. Breakfast and lunchspot offering sandwiches named for col-leges near and far.

Barbera’s Chocolates on Occasion, 782 S.Brewster Rd., Vineland, 690-9998.Homemade chocolates and candies, customgift baskets.

Bennigan’s Restaurant, 2196 W. LandisAve., Vineland, 205-0010. Entrees,desserts, drink specials. Take-out. HappyHour Mon-Fri 3pm-7pm, Sun-Thu 10pm-cl.All Sports packages available. NBA LeaguePass, NHL Center Ice, & MLB Extra Innings.

Big Apple, 528 N. Harding Hwy., Vineland,697-5500. Steaks, veal, chicken dishes.Meet friends at bar. Daily lunch and dinner.

Big John’s Pizza Queen, 1383 S. Main Rd.,Vineland, 205-0012. Featuring “Gutbuster”a 21-oz. burger, pizza, wings, subs, dinners.

Black Olive Restaurant. 782 S. BrewsterRd, Vineland. 457-7624. 7 a.m. - 10 p.mdaily. Entrees, desserts. Take out available.

Bombay Bites, 112 W. Chestnut Ave.,Vineland, 696-0036. Indian cuisine. $8.95lunch buffet ($5.99 on Mondays).

Bruni's Pizzeria. 2184 N. 2nd St., Millville(856) 825-2200. Award-winning pizza since1956. Open Mon-Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun.11 a.m.-9 p.m.

Bruno's Family Restaurant, Cape May Ave.and Tuckahoe Rd., Dorothy, 609-476-4739.Breakfast, lunch, dinner, pizza. Open Mon-Sat. 7 a.m.-8:30 p.m.

Chow’s Garden 1101 N. 2nd St., Millville,327-3259. Sushi Bar, All-you-can-eat buffet.

Cosmopolitan Restaurant Lounge, Bakery,3513 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland, 765-5977. Happyhour everyday 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. half-pricedappetizers, and reduced drink specials.

Crust N Krumbs Bakery, Main/Magnoliards., 690-1200. Cakes, pies, cookies,breads, doughnuts, custom wedding cakes.

Dakota Steakhouse & Sushi Bar atRamada, W. Landis Ave. and Rt. 55,Vineland, 692-8600. Stylish atmosphereperfect for an upscale lunch or dinner.Delicious steaks, seafood and sushi. ClosedMonday for dinner.

Deeks Deli & Kustard Kitchen, 1370 S.Main Rd., Vineland, 691-5438. Call for lunch

and dinner specials. Soft ice cream andcakes year-round. Mon.-Sat 9 a.m.–8 p.m.

Denny’s, 1001 W. Landis Ave., Vineland,696-1900. Breakfast, lunch, dinner. Take-out, too. Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 3-7 p.m.Open 24 hours. Kids eat free Tues. & Sat.

Dominick’s Pizza, 1768 S. Lincoln Ave.,Vineland, 691-5511. Family time-honoredrecipes, fresh ingredients.

Double Eagle Saloon, 1477 Panther Rd.,Vineland, 213-6176. Open for lunch anddinner. Traditional tavern fair.

Elmer Diner, 41 Chestnut St., Elmer. 358-3600. Diverse menu of large portions atreasonable prices.

Esposito's Maplewood III, 200 N. DelseaDr., Vineland, 692-2011. Steaks, seafoodand pasta dishes at this Italian restaurant.

Eric’s, 98 S. West Ave., Vineland, 205-9800. Greek and American cuisine, pizza.

Fat Jack's BBQ. Cumberland Mall, next toStarbucks, 825-0014. Open 7 days a week,11 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Eat in or take out.Serving ribs, wings, sandwiches, saladsand sides.

Five Points Inn, E. Landis Ave. andTuckahoe Rd., Vineland, 691-6080. Italiancuisine and dinner buffets to savor. Family-owned.

Gardella’s Ravioli Co. & Italian Deli,527 S. Brewster Rd., 697-3509. Name saysit all. Daily specials, catering. Closed Sun.

Golden Corral Buffet & Grill, 3624 S.Delsea Dr., 856-362-5508. All you can eat,

{22}thegrapevine

|NOVEMBER14,2012

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3624 South Delsea Drive, Vineland NJ856-362-5508Breakfast 7:30am to 11am Sat. & Sun.Lunch 11am to 4pm Mon. thru Fri.Dinner 4 pm to 9 pm Mon. thru Thurs. • 4 pm to 10 pm FridayDinner 11 am to 10 pm Sat. • 11 am to 9 pm SundaySenior Early Bird 1 pm to 3 pm Mon. thru Fri.Take Out Available

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serving Breakfast Sat & Sun, 7:30 - 11 a.m.,Lunch Mon thru Fri 11 - 4 p.m., Dinner 7days a week. Senior early bird specials,Mon thru Fri, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Take outsavailable.

Gina’s Ristorante, Landis and LincolnAves. in ShopRite Plaza, Vineland. 205-0049. Serving dinner Tues.-Thurs., 4–9p.m.; Friday & Sat., 4-10 p.m.; Now serv-ing lunch: Tues.-Fri. 11 a.m.–3 p.m.Reservations recommended. Takeoutavailable.

Golden Palace Diner Restaurant 2623 SDelsea Dr, Vineland, 692-5424. Servingbreakfast, lunch and dinner daily.

The Greenview Inn at Eastlyn Golf Course,4049 Italia Avenue, Vineland, 691-5558.The golfers’ lounge and bar serves lunchand snacks daily from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.The Greenview Inn is a fine dining restau-rant open for dinner Wed.-Sun. at 5 p.m.

Guiseppe's Italian Market, 528B N.Harding Hwy, Buena. 856-213-6391. Hot &

Cold Take outs. Crabs Friday & Saturdays.

Harry’s Pub at Ramada, W. Landis Ave.and Rt. 55, Vineland, 696-8600. Lunch &dinner 7 days a week. Happy hour daily 4-6pm with half price appetizers. LiveEntertainment Wednesday thru Saturday.

High Street Chinese Buffet, High St.,Millville, 825-2288. All-you-can-eat buffet.

Howie’s Dugout All Star Cafe, 3569 E.Landis Ave. (Across from Shoprite at Lincolnand Landis). $3 lunches from 12–4 p.m.

Jersey Jerry's. 1362 S. Delsea Dr.,Vineland, 362-5978. Serving subs, sand-wiches, and take-out platters.

Joe's Poultry. 440 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland,692-8860. Barbecue and Kosher chickens,homemade sides, catering.

Kawa Thai & Sushi, 2196 N. Second St.(Rt.47), Millville, 825-9939. Thai andJapanese cuisine. BYOB.

Larry's II Restaurant, 907 N. Main Rd.,Vineland, 692-9001. Three meals daily.Sunday breakfast buffet, early-bird dinners.

La Locanda Pizzeria & Ristorante, 1406 S.Main Rd., Vineland, 794-3332. Pasta, veal,chicken. Lunch and dinner. Closed Sun.

Marciano’s Restaurant, 947 N. Delsea Dr.,Vineland, 563-0030. Italian-American cui-sine, seafood and veal. Open daily forlunch and dinner, $6.49 lunch buffetMonday - Saturday.

Manny & Vic’s, 1687 N. Delsea Dr., Vineland,696-3100. Daily pizza specials, delivery.

3rd Annual Gingerbread House ContestWarm-up your oven because it’s time to participate in the Gingerbread

House Contest. It’s set for Saturday, December 8, and is sponsored by theCumberland County Historical Society.Your creations will be displayed at the Old Stone Schoolhouse, located on

Ye Greate Street in Greenwich, during “Christmas in Greenwich.”Entries will be judged on overall appear-

ance, originality/creativity, difficulty anddetail. Except for the base, the entry mustbe made completely of edible products.Note: Edible materials are not limited tosweets!To be eligible for the competition, regis-

tration is required and your “structure” mustbe delivered to the Old Stone Schoolhouseon Saturday, December 8, between 10 a.m.and 12 noon. Judging for the gingerbreadhouses will take place at 2 p.m.Call the Cumberland County Historical

Society at 856-455-8580 or 609-774-9039to register.

Continued on next page

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|NOVEMBER14,2012

Wednesday,November 21stSpecials all day and

night, open until 2am, tryone of our 16 draft beers,infused vodkas, and BBQfare, live music and dj on

the turntables.

1477 Panther RoadVineland, NJ 08361

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HAVE A SAFE & HAPPYTHANKSGIVING!HOLIDAY HOURS:NOV. 21 TIL 2PM

CLOSING - NOV 22 - NOV 23REOPEN

SATURDAY, NOV 24, 8 - 4:30CLOSED: SUNDAY

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856.205.0049

NOW SERVING

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Full Lunch & DinnerMenu On Facebook

Manny’s Pizza, 426 N. High St., Millville,327-5081. Daily pizza specials, delivery.

Martino’s Trattoria & Pizzeria, 2614 E.Chestnut Ave., Vineland, 692-4448. Brickoven pizza, risotto, polenta. Three mealsdaily.

Merighi's Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave. andUnion Rd., Vineland, 691-8051.Banquet/wedding facility and intimaterestaurant. Dungeness Crabs Night onTuesdays in the Bistro. Gourmet Pizza Niteon Wed. Outdoor dining in the adjacentLuna’s Outdoor Bar & Grille.

Millville Queen Diner, 109 E. Broad Street,Millville. 327-0900. Open 7 Days a Week 24Hours.

Milmay Tavern, Tuckahoe and Bear’s Headrds., Milmay, 476-3611. Gourmet lunchesand dinners, casual setting.

Moe’s Southwest Grill, 2188 N. 2nd St.,Millville, 825-3525. Tex-Mex, burritos, catering.

Mori’s, E. Landis Ave., Vineland. 690-0300.Adjacent to the Landis Theater PerformingArts Center. Includes a “casual, upscale”restaurant with a banquet facility andlounge on site. Lunch and dinner.

MVP Bar, 408 Wheat Road, Vineland, 697-9825. Full bar menu, drink specials.

Old Oar House Irish Pub, 123 N. High

Street Millville, 293-1200. Year round Freshseafood daily, slow roasted prime rib spe-cials, delicious summer Salads, everydaylunch & dinner specials, homemade cornbeef, kitchen open until 1 a.m., outdoorbeer garden.

Olympia Restaurant, 739 S. Delsea Dr.,Vineland, 691-6095. Authentic Greek cui-sine—lamb dishes and salads.

Pegasus, Rts. 40 and 47, Vineland, 694-0500. Breakfast, lunch, dinner specials;convenient drive-thru, mini-meal specials.

Peking Gourmet, 907 N. Main Rd., (Larry’sII Plaza), Vineland, 691-0088. Chinese.Takeout only. All major credit cards accept-ed.

The Rail, 1252 Harding Hwy., Richland,697-1440. Bar and restaurant with dailydrink specials and lunch specials.

Saigon, 2180 N. Second St., Millville, 327-8878. Authentic Vietnamese—noodlesoups, curry, hotpot, Buddhist vegetarian.

South Vineland Tavern, 2350 S. Main Rd.,Vineland, 692-7888. Breakfast, lunch, din-ner daily. Seafood and prime rib.

Speedway Cafe at Ramada, W. Landis Ave.and Rt. 55, Vineland, 696-8600. OpenDaily, 6 a.m.-11 p.m. Breakfast served allday. Daily specials Monday thru Friday.Over 30 dinner selections at 2 for $19.99and also 7 for $7.00 available 7 days aweek starting at 3 pm.

Sweet Life Bakery, 601 E. Landis Ave.,Vineland, 692-5353. Neighborhood bakery.Homemade pastries, cakes, coffee.

A Taste of the Islands, 731 Landis Ave.,Vineland, 691-9555. First prize winningBBQ Ribs, Jamaican Jerk chicken, Currychicken, seafood, rice and beans and muchmore. Closed Sunday only.

Ten22 Bar & Grill at Centerton CountryClub, 1022 Almond Rd., Pittsgrove, 358-3325. Lunch and dinner. New tavern menufeatures soups, salads, burgers, sandwich-es, wraps and entree selections. SundayBrunch extravaganza.

Tre Belleze, 363 E. Wheat Rd., Buena, 697-8500. Serving lunch and dinner daily withcomplimentary buffet on Fri. from 3-6 p.m.Serving gluten-free pizza, pasta and beer.Home of the Screamer Wings.

Uncle Ricky’s Outdoor Bar, 470 E. WheatRd., Vineland, 691-4454. Ribs, chicken, fish,steaks. Always clams, eat in or take out.Live music Saturday & Sunday night.Dungeness Crab All You Can Eat.

Villa Fazzolari, 821 Harding Hwy., BuenaVista, 697-7107. Dinner combos, grilledmeats, fish. Lunch and dinner daily.

Wheat Road Cold Cuts, 302 Wheat Rd.,Vineland, 697-0320. Deli and catering.

Wild Wings, 1843 E. Wheat Rd., Vineland,691-8899. Dinners, grilled sandwiches,wings.

Winfield’s. 106 N. High St., Millville, 327-0909. Continental cuisine and spiritsserved in a casually upscale setting.

Ye Olde Centerton Inn, 1136 Almond Rd.,Pittsgrove, 358-3201. American classicsserved in a picturesque setting.

DINING OUTContinued from previous page

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I Vintage Vineland { VINCE FARINACCIO }

Classic Rock EraThe Scorsese-directed “rockumentary” at the LandisTheater this Thursday evening will take you back tothe days of The Band and Bob Dylan.

OnThanksgiving Day 1976, anelaborate turkey dinner wasserved at San Francisco’s fabledWinterland concert venue. Once

the settings were cleared and the renownedfacility restored to its proper context, the5,000 diners enjoyed the evening’s dessertin the form of the farewell performance byThe Band who brought along some big-name friends to close out a 16-year careeron the road. And Thursday night at 7:30,the Landis Theater will celebrateThanksgiving early with a 7:30 screening ofthe 1978 documentary film of this concertevent, The Last Waltz.

Directed by Martin Scorsese, The LastWaltz is one of the most acclaimed “rocku-mentaries” of the past 50 years. Its direc-tor’s meticulous preparation, including sto-ryboarded shots from a 200-page “script,”and its wide-ranging guest list of that era’srock elite, guaranteed the movie a presti-gious position among similar films. ButThe Band’s performances, along with inter-views with all five members conducted in1977, are what serve as the true heart of thismotion picture.

As Stephen E. Severn notes in his astuteappraisal of the film in a 2002 FilmQuarterly article, the interviews are tell-tale about the group’s sudden retirement,the decision of guitarist/tunesmith RobbieRobertson who used the documentary tolaunch a short-lived Hollywood career.Forthright commentary by drummerLevon Helm, who sadly passed away thisyear, and keyboardist Garth Hudson vivid-ly contrast with the banter of Robertson,who discusses the group’s history with theprepared precision of an actor. Butmoments with bassist Rick Danko andpianist Richard Manuel convey the lossand isolation that also resulted from thesplintering.

Thankfully, the focus of the film is onthe songs this group produced in a scant 10years. While amateur video and sound-board recordings of the show reveal thatthe film soundtrack was significantlytouched up in the studio as was the prac-tice of live releases in the late 1970s, tuneslike “TheWeight,” “Up on Cripple Creek”and “Stage Fright” still exemplify why somany musicians revered The Band’srefreshing and inspirational sound, a fore-

runner to today’s Americana classification.And those players pay their respectsthroughout the film.

VanMorrison, who sang on the group’sCahoots album, turns in a riveting perform-ance of his song “Caravan” with The Bandas backup. Eric Clapton, whose power-triodays with Cream were numbered afterhearing The Band’s debut,Music from BigPink, delivers a blistering “Further On Upthe Road” (watch for the moment whenRobertson seamlessly substitutes as soloistwhen Clapton is forced to deal with a sud-den guitar-strap malfunction). RonnieHawkins, who employed the group as hisbackup band in the early 1960s, churns hisway through the sinuous syncopation of“Who Do You Love.” And the list continueswith fellow Canadians Neil Young and JoniMitchell, Dr. John, MuddyWaters and NeilDiamond.

But one guest is clearly the most note-worthy of The Band’s career, and his placein the final segment seems as much a trib-ute to him as his presence is to the group.Bob Dylan had hired this collection ofmusicians as his backing band in 1965,pulling them from a summer residency atnearby TonyMarts in Somers Point, NewJersey, into concert halls and theatersthroughout the world for the next year.And when a motorcycle mishap in the sum-mer of 1966 forced a period of retirementfrom the road, Dylan once again gatheredthese players to produce the monumentalhome recordings that have become knownas the Basement Tapes.

The Band continued to perform withDylan periodically, most notably at the 1969Isle of Wight Festival. In 1973, Dylanrecorded Planet Waveswith them and thefollowing year used them as his band for aU.S. tour. The 1976 Last Waltz reunion ofDylan and The Band nearly missed beingfilmed. At the last moment, Dylan sentword that he didn’t want his segment shot,apparently worried that it would competewith his own film Renaldo and Clara, whichwould be released the same year as TheLast Waltz. Ultimately, two songs werefilmed by the seven-man camera crew, cap-turing the final time these six musicianswould appear together on stage. Thatmoment alone is worth a trip to the LandisTheater Thursday evening. I

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Vineland Holiday Parade

Sounds of the HolidaysSat, Nov 24

Parade begins at 5 pmRain Date Sun, Nov 25 at 5 pm

FeaturingVineland Regional Dance Company

Floats · Marching BandsPhiladelphia String Bands

Santa & Mrs. Claus...and much more!!

856-794-8653MainStreetVineland.org

Supported in part by a grant from the New Jersey Department of State, Division of Travel & Tourism. This grant is administered by the Cumberland County Cultural and Heritage Commission and the Tourism Advisory Council. Paid for, in part, by UEZ.

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Red Cross RecognizedAs Board Chair of the New Jersey

Southern Shore Chapter of the AmericanRed Cross, I would like to recognize thetremendous effort that our local volun-teers have provided to the people of ourcommunities in response to HurricaneSandy.This unprecedented disaster has

stretched our resources. The dedicatedRed Cross volunteers who have trainedand prepared to help relieve suffering andoffer comfort and hope, have been work-ing tirelessly during the past 10 days. Weare very proud that when the need wasmost urgent, the Red Cross was there,serving the people of the south shore.Our local volunteers have been assist-

ed by hundreds of volunteers fromaround the United States, Canada andMexico. Through Monday, the Red Crosshas helped people in 10 states, theDistrict of Columbia, and Puerto Ricoaffected by Sandy. We have served over1.6 million meals and snacks, providednearly 24,000 health services and emo-tional support contacts while handingout nearly 100,000 relief items. The RedCross has hosted more than 57,000overnight shelter stays.The response to Sandy is likely to be

the largest Red Cross relief operation inthe past five years. If you would like todonate, visit www.redcross.org, call 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767), ortext the word REDCROSS to 90999 tomake a $10 donation. Your gift to the RedCross enables us to provide shelter, food,emotional support and other assistanceto those affected by Sandy. If you wouldlike to volunteer, call our chapter at 609-646-8330.

—Ron Franceschini Jr., Boardof Directors Chairman/American RedCross Disaster Government Liaison,Southern Shore Chapter, AmericanRed Cross

Steelman Wins Poetry AwardNancy G. Steelman, of Vineland, has

been awarded New Jersey’s Senior PoetLaureate Award by Amy KitchenersAngels without Wings Foundation ofMonterey, California. The national literaryorganization selected Kitchener’s poem,“Country Friend” to represent the best inAmerican verse for poets 50 and older.Steelman, active in poetry events in the

area, has frequently visited local schoolsas America’s legendary poet, EmilyDickinson. A panel of seven judges select-ed “Country Friend” as the award-win-ning poem from the Garden State.

Country Friend

The big house on the riseTowers white on a small country roadJust to the east light brown soilIs turned to rich chocolateThe smell rich and moist

The neighboring farmer quietly plowsStalwart and dark as the earthHis daughter, my only friendBends, thrusts hard yellow kernelsDeep into cool rows

I watch across our weed-covered acresLand untilled for decadesSoft slope dipping to the streamThe toiler will come when the sun sinksBelow the distant tree line

I wait and wait in the chill airThen the bottled words will tumble,Pour from mePatient as the cool landShe will sit and listen

Ms. Steelman’s poem has reminded us of asection we used to print in The Grapevinetitled “Poetry Corner.” We would like toencourage the poets among us to share theirverse with the readers.

I Letters to the Editor

TELL ‘EM YOU SAW IT IN THE GRAPEVINE!

We have a distribution of 25,000in the greater Vineland market.

(Including Millville, Bridgeton, Upper Deerfield,Newfield, Franklinville, Richland, Buena, etc.)

We’re Counting On You!We bring you The Grapevine for free every week and weonly ask one thing in return ... Please let our advertisers

know that you saw their ads in The Grapevine.

Our loyal readers should be your customers.For advertising info, call 856-457-7815

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PETA MailTwo paws up to New York City for

allowing people seeking refuge fromHurricane Sandy to take their animalcompanions with them on subways, taxis,and trains, as well as in all of the city’semergency shelters.All cities should follow New York City’s

compassionate lead. Our animal compan-ions are even less equipped to survive adisaster than we are. Left behind in anemergency, cats, dogs, and other animalsmay be stranded in dangerous situationsfor days or weeks without food or water ifconditions prevent their guardians fromreturning.

What’s more, as we’ve learned fromHurricane Katrina and other emergencies,many people would rather risk their livesthan leave their companions behind toface uncertain fates in a disaster zone.I urge everyone to ensure that they

have an emergency plan in place for theiranimal family members, and to never leaveanimals behind when evacuating a disas-ter. Material possessions can be replaced,but best friends can’t. For disaster-pre-paredness tips, visit www.PETA.org

—Lindsay Pollard-PostThe PETA Foundation

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HAPPENINGS

EVERY THURSDAYDivorceCare Series. Vineland FirstChurch of the Nazarene, N. Delsea Dr. andForest Grove Rd., Vineland. 6:30-8 p.m.Open to all men and women experiencingdivorce or separation. No church affilia-tion necessary. Seminar Sessions Include:"Facing Your Anger"; "Facing YourLoneliness"; "Depression"; "Forgiveness"and more. On-going series. Free, child careprovided. 697-4945.

FIRST AND THIRD THURSDAYSGrupo de Autismo. Convent, 23 W.Chestnut Ave., Vineland. 10 a.m.–12 noon.Group of families with children diagnosedwith autism. Share information, ideas,experiences, and suppport. Addressed tothe Hispanic community and people withspecial needs. 882-8929,https://www.facebook.com/gdautismo.com

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14Greater Millville Chamber ofCommerce Luncheon. NJ MotorsportsPark, 1000 Dividing Creek Rd., Millville.11:30 a.m. Larry Merighi of Manders,Merighi, Portadin, Farrell Architects, LLC inVineland, N.J. and Don Ayres of theMillville Urban Redevelopment Corp.(MURC), present plans for the CumberlandCounty College Arts and BusinessInnovation Center proposed for downtownMillville. $22. 856-825-2600.

Surviving the Holidays. Millville Churchof the Nazarene, 2201 E. Main St., Millville.7 p.m. Practical suggestions and reassur-ance through video interviews. Sometopicsare “Why the holidays are tough”, “What toexpect”, “How to prepare”, & “Using theholidays to help you heal”. 856-825-7544for more information.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15New Jersey Writer’s Society Meeting.Vineland Public Library, 1058 E. Landis Ave.,Vineland. 5–7:30 p.m. If you are interestedin writing, join this group for in-depth dis-cussion and writing critiques. Registrationnot necessary. 794-4244 ext. 4243.

Scrabble. Vineland Public Library, 1058E. Landis Ave., Vineland. 6–7:30 p.m.Game boards, dictionaries and scoringpaper provided (but if you have a board,feel free to bring it). Free, sponsored byThe Friends of Vineland Library.

Open House. Model Cottage, 946Woodbury Ct. on Friends Village campus,One Friends Drive, Woodstown. 4–7 p.m.Seniors interested in learning more aboutthe retirement options available are invit-ed. Stop by and chat with current resi-dents to learn why they enjoy living at

Friends Village. RSVP at 856-823-0733.For more information about Friends Villageat Woodstown, visit www.friendsvillage.org.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16Holiday Tree of RemembrancePresentation. Glasstown Arts Plaza,High and Sassafras sts., Millville. 6 p.m.Please make a donation of $10 a nameto honor or memorialize a loved one. Acandle will be lit for each name read thatnight. Money raised will support thescholarship fund and community projectsof the Millville Woman's Club. CallBarbara Westog at 327-2790.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17Yard and Craft Sale. Monroeville FireHall, 414 Monroeville Rd., Monroeville. 8a.m.–2 p.m. Table rental $12. 358-2004.

Project Thanksgiving's FourthAnnual Turkey Drive. ShopRite loca-tions in Cumberland County and at theCosmopolitan Restaurant on DelseaDrive in Vineland. 9 a.m.–5 p.m.The group will accept frozen turkeys,certificates for turkeys/hams, cash andchecks payable to “Salvation Army.”Donations will be distributed to quali-fied families by the Salvation Army.

eBay for $$” Workshop. CumberlandCounty College, 3322 College Dr., Vineland.9 a.m.–1 p.m. Participants will learn about

buying, selling and bidding on eBay, aswell as how to manage a PayPal account.Students should bring an item or col-lectible that they would like to post oneBay. Cost is $39. Call CCC’s ContinuingEducation Registrar at 856-691-8600ext. 345 for more details and to register.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18Hanukkah/Holiday Bazaar. Beth IsraelCongregation, 1015 E. Park Ave., Vineland.11:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Sponsored byJewish Federation of Cumberland,Gloucester & Salem Counties, it features awide variety of gifts for the holiday sea-son—including Tupperware, books, per-sonal gifts, candles, make-up, music—andchair messages and free flu shots. You willalso be able to get your purchases gift-wrapped. 856-696-4445.

OLMA Varsity Basketball Team PastaDinner and Prize Auction. North ItalyHall, 414 Virano Ln., Vineland. 12 noon–3p.m. Proceeds from the event will helpsupport the squad’s activities for the2012-2013 season. Dinner prepared byLarry Hurst Catering. Take-outs availablethroughout the day. Tickets $10, $7 forchildren, and can be purchased at thedoor. [email protected].

2012 Trees of Light Ceremony. SJHBridgeton Health Center, 333 Irving Ave.,Bridgeton. 5 p.m. Area residents are

invited to donate $10 to place a light onthe tree in commemoration of a lovedone. The donations are used to supportSJH HospiceCare’s bereavement pro-grams. The names of those beingremembered will be read by staff andvolunteers of HospiceCare. Another cere-mony will be held in Elmer on Sunday,December 2.

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19Free Music Lecture. Vineland PublicLibrary, 1058 E. Landis Ave., Vineland.6–7:30 p.m. Learn about the influencesin music after the American Revolution,lectures by Paul M. Somers, sponsoredby the Bay-Atlantic Symphony.

NAMI Meeting. Chestnut Assembly ofGod, 2554 E. Chestnut Ave., Vineland. TheCumberland County Chapter of theNational Alliance on Mental Illness holdsits business/support group meeting. 7–9p.m. 691-9234 or 794-9987.

Free Nutrition Information Session.SJH Fitness Connection, 1430 W.Sherman Ave., Vineland, 6 p.m. A 30-minute program to educate participantsabout the many benefits of healthy eat-

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5Wreath Making Workshop.Rutgers Cooperative ExtensionEducation Center, 291 Morton Ave.,Rosenhayn. 1–3 p.m. Learn how tomake and decorate a wreath withnatural materials just in time for theholidays. Cumberland CountyMaster Gardener’s Organization.Participants are asked to bring anarmful of evergreens, a wire cutter,gloves, and clippers to use in thepreparation of their wreath. A beau-tifully completed wreath will betaken home by each participant.$20. Preregister at 856-452-2800,ext. 4.

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COMMUNITY CALENDAR�SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9Cut-A-Thon. MiMi and Kelsey’s HairSalon, 825 S. Delsea Dr., Suite 7,Vineland. 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Raisingmoney to help rebuild the JerseyShore; all proceeds will be donatedto hurricane victimsHaircuts.………...…….. $20Blow out/style……..... $20Mini-Manicure……....… $10Food...Beverages...Raffles...LiveEntertainmentFor more information: 856-691-8978 or [email protected] them on Facebook: Mimi andKelsey’s Hair Salon

Bus Trips• Ramoth Church (Vineland Nazarene)

is sponsoring a bus trip to Rockvale andTanger Outlets in Lancaster, PA, onSaturday, November 17. Bus leaveschurch parking lot at 8 a.m. and returnsat 7 p.m. $40 per person includes trans-portation, driver gratuity, coffee/water/doughnuts. Call 358-9124.

• St. Padre Pio Parish is sponsoring atrip to Radio City Music Hall to see “TheChristmas Spectacular with the Rocketts”on Sunday, December 2. Tickets are $120pp. Cost includes show, bus, tip and timein city. Call 856-691-7526 for more infor-mation and flyer.

• Sabater Elementary's StudentActivity is sponsoring a theater/bus trip toNew York City on Sunday, December 2.The trip will include tickets to Broadwayshows as follows:

"Radio City Christmas Spectacular" -11:30 a.m. show. $125 per person (secondmezzanine seating): $160 per person(orchestra seating)

Spiderman - 3 p.m. $150 per person;Elf - 2 p.m. $150 per person; andChrismas Story - 2 p.m. $175 per per-

son.All show tickets include orchestra seat-

ing and bus transportation fee. Bus trans-portation only is $40 per person. Bus

departs Vineland at 8 a.m. and leavesManhattan at approximately 7 p.m. Arrivalback in Vineland at about 9:30 p.m.Payment is due by November 17. Paymentmust be received to reserve your seat. Forfurther information and reservations,Valerie Carbonara at 609-432-8542.

• The Millville Senior Center is spon-soring a trip to theAmerican MusicTheatre Christmas Show in Lancaster, PA,on December 4. Dinner atHuckleberryRestaurant at the FultonSteamboat Inn. Tickets are $100. Forinformation and to make a reservation call856-207-4802.

• Petway Elementary School will spon-sor a show trip to Resorts Casino, onSunday, December 9. Show includes"Christmas from the White Mountains."There will be two pickups for this trip.Bus leaves Petway School at 9:45 a.m.(1115 S. Lincoln Ave.) and 10 a.m. fromBuena Gardens. (114 W. Arctic Ave,Minotola) Bus leaves casino at 5:00 p.m.

Cost is $39 a person. You will receive$10 in slot credit, show ticket and a buffetcoupon at Resorts.

Motor Coach Transportation will beprovided: Call 856-362-8855 to reserveyour seat. Payment must be made at thetime of the reservation. Checks payableto: VHS Activities Fund.

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ing habits and how to make smart foodchoices throughout the holiday season.Guest speaker is Megan Bosacco, regis-tered dietician at SJH. Free but RSVP at856-696-3924.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27City Council Meeting. CouncilChambers, City Hall, Vineland. 7:30 p.m.Formal official action may be taken atsuch meetings on any and all businessinvolving The City of Vineland. Pre-meet-ing conferences at 7 p.m., at the CouncilCaucus Room, City Hall. No formal officialaction shall be taken at any such pre-meeting conference.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29Antique, Arts and Cultural Society ofSouth Jersey. Riverfront RenaissanceCenter for the Arts, 22 N. High St. Millville.7 p.m. The speaker will be Dr. HellenGreenblatt, scientist, international speakerand columnist, speaking on the topic ofInflammation and Aging. Light refresh-ments will be served. 856-825-7787

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30Wine-ing Against Cancer. BellviewWinery, 150 Atlantic St., Landisville. 7–10p.m. Wine tasting fundraiser for TheChicks Committed to a Cure benefitingthe Susan G. Komen 3 Day. All are wel-come to attend, but you must be 21years old to participate in the tasting,and have a designated driver. Raffles,door prizes, food, desserts, and more.$25 in advance or $35 at the door.Limited space available so pre-purchaseyour ticket to guarantee your [email protected] or 856-655-3160

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1Vendormania. Edgarton ChristianAcademy, 212 Catawba Ave., Newfield. 10a.m.–2 p.m. Sponsored by theGrandparents Association. Saturday,December 1, Over 25 vendors to date.Proceeds to benefit new technology forour grandchildren. 856-697-3231.

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RECYCLING ISTHE LAW

MORE PLASTICS(YOGURT, MARGARINE TUBS, TAKEOUT CONTAINERS)

LOOK FOR THESE NUMBERS ON CONTAINERS

TO RECYCLE ALL THE ABOVE AS WELL AS COMMINGLED:• METAL • GLASS • PLASTIC • ALUMINUM CANS• GLASS BOTTLES • AEROSOL CANS • TIN & STEEL CANS(REMOVE AND DISPOSE OF ALL LIDS IN YOUR REGULAR TRASH)

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THE SOUP KITCHEN OFVINELAND AUXILIARY

The Soup Kitchen of Vineland Auxiliary is a non-pro�t 501 (c) (3): contributions: tax deductible 170 (b) (1) (A) (vi).

COMING TO VINELANDApril 7, 2013 • 3 p.m.

(856) 690-5509 • [email protected] Kitchen of Vineland Auxiliary, PO Box 636, Vineland, NJ 08362-0636

An Afternoon to Remember of Spirituals and Folk MusicAt 1st Methodist Church,

700 E. Landis Ave.Light refreshments will be served.

Free Will Offering.

SCOTT BREINERRenowned Director, Organist and Pianist

And the 50-member Cape Shore Chorale

Originally scheduled for early July, this concert was postponed due to the severe storm that devastated

our region. We are excited to announced the resched-uled concert date and look forward to presenting it

on April 7. Since its inception the Cape Shore Chorale has been under the direction of Scott J. Breiner, one

of the most respected musicians in South Jersey.

Save the date and don’t miss this musical event!

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Senior Care of Vineland’sAnnual ThanksgivingFood Drive

Donations of food items will beaccepted through November 21 atSenior Care of Vineland (2695 S.Lincoln Ave.). Drop Off Times areMonday-Friday 8-4:30, Sat. 9-1:30

This year, non-perishable donationswill be divided into baskets for needyseniors within the community.

If you have any questions, contactKatie Smith at 856-691-3756 [email protected].

For every bag of food donated,receive a raffle ticket for a holidaygift basket.

High School Reunions

• Did you miss your Buena RegionalHigh School graduating classreunion? Did you graduate betweenthe years 1990-2000? Then thisparty is for you! BRHS’s graduatingclasses of 1990-2000 are invited tocelebrate at the “Big Ass ReunionParty” hosted at Merighi’s Savoy Innin Vineland. On Saturday, November17, from 7 to 11 p.m., there will be alocal DJ and dancing, hot and coldhors d’oeuvres stations, desserts andcoffee, plus lots of reminiscing withold friends. In addition, you can lookforward to a cash bar for all of yourbeverage needs.Gather all of your closest friends

from high school and treat your-selves to a night filled with food, fun,and reminiscing! The attire is casu-al: just be yourself and be ready torekindle old friendships. Tickets are$30 per person and are availableonline at www.savoyinn.com or canbe purchased in person at The SavoyInn on the corner of Landis andUnion. For more information, call856-691-8051 or find us on Facebookat the “BRHS Big Ass Reunion”group page.

• Vineland High School Class of1992 is holding its 20th classreunion on Saturday, Nov. 24, start-ing at 7 p.m., at Merighi’s Savoy Inn.Tickets are $35 per person (includesfood stations, DJ, photobooth, danc-ing, and more Cash bar available.Check or money order payable toLori Bertacchi, 2260 PennsylvaniaAve., Millville, NJ 08332. If yourname has changed, please includeyour maiden name on check. Theywill be creating a slideshow of highschool days, so scan your favoritephotos and email them to KevinDunn at [email protected].

• Vineland High School Class of1982 is holding its 30th classreunion on Saturday, Nov. 24, from 7p.m. until midnight, at the newlyremodeled Greenview Inn at theEastlyn Golf Course. The GreenviewInn is located at 4049 Italia Avenue.Tickets are $75 per person andinclude a full course meal, beveragesand entertainment by a disk jock-ey.For more information, including areservation form: http://www.vineland.org/pr/public/vhs82_reunion.pdf The class officers are alsoattempting to reach all classmates.Please contact them through theirFacebook page - VHS Class of 82, orcontact Lisa (Rosi) Arena at [email protected].

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MAKE YOUR OWN In Our SchoolsI

Ocean City PopsOrchestra EntertainsCCS Students

Whale songs, eagle cries, Ratty,Mole, Toad, and Turkey in the Straw.These are some of the sounds andnames that Cumberland ChristianSchool students have heard recentlyand they were not on a nature hike.The students have been hearing per-formances by members of the OceanCity Pops Orchestra. The middleschool traveled to Ocean City HighSchool and enjoyed a concert per-formed by the professional orchestra,led by Maestro William Scheible.Scheible integrated information fromsocial studies, science, and mathemat-ics to introduce several hundred south-ern New Jersey students to many stylesof music during the performance.

The full orchestra performance wasonly part of the outreach done, thisfall, by the Pops. Additionally, the Popssend small groups to area schools toteach and perform. CumberlandChristian School invited two groups totheir Vineland location.

First, the elementary students heardpianist Jeff Uhlig and violinist LuigiMazzocchi. Mr. Uhlig has performedwith Philadelphia, New York, andWashington area orchestras as well asregionally, at Carnegie Hall and inter-nationally. Mr. Uhlig also has recordedwith Pops percussionist Mark O’Kain.Mr. Mazzocchi, born in Venezuela, haswon numerous competitions in LatinAmerica and the United States. Mr.Mazzocchi also has extensive regionalperformance credits. Although primari-ly a performer of the violin he alsoperformed the viola for the students.The duo shared information abouttheir instruments demonstrating howthey made different sounds. The piecesthey played were both modern andclassical.

The following week the CCS second-ary music students were on the receiv-ing end of the final Pops program.Their woodwind quartet presented aflute, oboe, clarinet, and bassoon pro-gram that included a musical interpre-tation of “The Wind and the Willows.”

The quartet included PamelaWhitman, nationally known performer,

Delsea Staff Members Wear Jeans For A CauseThe Delsea Regional

High School staff dresscode does not permit thewearing of jeans. However,Principal Paul Berardellirecently relaxed the dresscode for charity events andhas instituted “Jeans for aCause Days.” The staff pays$5 for the luxury of wearingjeans on designated Fridaysof which typically, there isonly one staff jean day amonth. During the schoolyear, 2011-12, the DelseaHS staff collected over$3,000 for charities such as the Jason Flood Foundation, Susan G. KomenFoundation for Breast Cancer, Project Graduation, The Gabriel Project, an autismorganization, a local food pantry, and a student’s medical expenses. In addition, thestudents collected an additional $1,400 in donations for these charities.

From left: (Row 1) Christine Dougherty, Eileen Campanella, Jamie Bonnano, Michele Hill,Patti Gaetano, Kim Kelly; (Row 2) Cathy Hertens, HS Principal, Paul Berardelli, HS VicePrincipal, George Passante, Kim Collins, Tanya Mastrokyriakos, Paula Melnyk, JaneFiducioso, Barbara Sullivan, Kathie Wright, Jane Santos, and John Schott.

Sacred Heart Students Join NHSRecently, 27 Sacred

Heart High School studentswere inducted into theNational Honor Society(NHS). Father Edward Friel,School Chaplain, lead theopening convocation. Rulesfor membership are basedupon a student’s outstand-ing performance in theareas of: Scholarship,Service, Leadership, and

Character. These criteria for selection form the foundation upon which the organ-ization and its activities are built. To meet the requirements for membership,students must have a cumulative grade point average of 85%, B, 3.0 (on a 4.0scale) or an equivalent standard of excellence set by the school’s Faculty. Thesestudents are then eligible for consideration on the basis of service, leadershipand character.

New NHS members for 2012-2013 are: Kevin Allen, Matthew Anderson,Christopher Andrews, Tyler Aulffo, Abigail Bencie, Drew Bencie, Jan Bernal, MiaDones, Elaine Esteron, Joshua Fabrizio, Gina Giannone, Matthew Gladfelter,Kennedy Johnson, Nathaniel Jones, Rosalie LaGrotta, Katelin Letizia, DanielleLugo, Themba Lungu, Julia Martini, Marialena Melillo, Colette Orlandini, JessicaPanno, Christopher Repice, Taylor Santangelo, Ernest Scoma, Zachary Steelmanand Ryan Veltman.

Following the NHS induction ceremony School Student GovernmentAssociation (SGA) officers were installed as follows: Senior class officers:Nathaniel Jones, President; Gabriella Sorantino, Vice President; Alyssa Ferrucci,Secretary; Matt Anderson, Treasurer and Senators, Mia Klekos, SamanthaGaudio, Katie O’Rourke and Lindsay Dwyer. Junior class officers: Joshua Fabrizio,President; Morgan Smith, Vice President and Senators, Mia Dones and MarialenaMelillo. Student School Officers for 2012-2013 are Tyler Aulffo, Student BodyPresident and Ayla Gentiletti, Student Body Vice President.

In closing, Dr. Albert Monillas, Head of School, congratulated all students ontheir outstanding accomplishments.

Student Government Association Officers (senior class) from left: Katie O’Rourke,Samantha Gaudio, Mia Klekos, Matt Anderson, Alyssa Ferrucci, Gabriella Sorantino andNathaniel Jones. Missing from photo is Lindsay Dwyer.

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on flute, college professor DaveSchneider, playing oboe, Arne Running,a composer, playing clarinet, andAndrea Herr, who recently played atthe premiere of Prima Dona by RufusWainwright and helped accompany theParis Opera Ballet was the leader andbassoonist.

Opposite page, from left:Pam Whitman, Steve Labiner, Andrea Herr,and Arne Running.

Olweus Comes ToReutter School

The Caroline L. Reutter School, withgrant support from the GloucesterCounty Youth Services, has implement-ed the Olweus Bullying PreventionProgram. The program, which supple-ments the school’s regionally-recog-nized character development program,provides a specific emphasis on reduc-ing the amount of bullying in the build-ing. Aligned nicely with the school’sexisting monthly character traits, stu-dents participate in bi-monthly classmeetings to discuss character develop-ment topics.

On September 20, the Caroline L.Reutter School in Franklinville held itsOlweus kick-off for the student body andstaff during a school-wide assembly.

During the student kick-off celebra-tion, students volunteered to performskits, songs, raps, a dance and a cheerto promote the message of the anti-bullying policy at the school. Teachersand staff made posters and a videothat was shown to the students. Thestudents showed a tremendousamount of enthusiasm in supportingtheir peers and the message.

The new Olweus anti-bullying pro-gram has been well received. Manystudents have reported that they liketheir school because bullying isn’t tol-erated.

Pictured are Mrs. Dawn Stefano, ReutterSchool counselor, and Mrs. Lora Perry, aReutter teacher, speaking about theschool’s character traits during the kick-offassembly at the Franklinville school.

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Relax – you have peace of mind because you had your fireplace cleaned & serviced by the best.

American Fireplace sells, installs and services wood & gas fireplaces,

stoves & inserts & gas logs. So relax and enjoy the warmth & cost savings of your fireplace or stove.

American FireplaceHearth Shop & Chimney Sweep

Member National Chimney Sweep Guild2535 South Delsea Drive • Vineland, NJ 08360

856.457.5689Certified Chimney Sweep #6775

Visa, Mastercard & Discover AcceptedNJ Licensed Contractor #13VH01293200

$100 OFFPurchase & Installation Of Any Wood,

Gas Or Pellet Burning Stove Or FireplaceNot to be combined with any other offer. Must present

coupon at time of purchase. Expires 12/31/12

Compa Crowned Miss Monogram 2012With a vocal and enthusiastic personal cheering section leading the chants for

each contestant, Alyssa Compa was crowned Miss Monogram at Vineland HighSchool’s Homecoming Day festivities at Gittone Stadium.

The pageant was held during halftime of the Fighting Clan's football gamewith Cedar Creek, won by Cedar Creek, 42-12. The festivities, presented to a largeand lively crowd at the historic stadium, also featured the VHS Marching Clanband, cheerleaders, and Rowdy Rooster, the school’s mascot. Compa, the daugh-ter of Karen Wiley and Oscar Compa, received her tiara, sash and trophy fromadvisors Madeline Mertis and Miriam Jamil, and Dr. Thomas McCann and MarioOlsen, VHS South and North principals, respectively.

After high school, Compa is considering a possible career as a radio or talkshow host. A member of Spirit Club, the school newspaper, and STAND, the newMiss Monogram also serves as cross country team manager, and participatesin winter cheerleading.

Compa was one of four seniors seeking the coveted title. First runner-upwas Salena Muzzarelli, the daughter of Larry and Karen Muzzarelli; second run-ner-up was Brianna Beyer, daughter of Raymond and Kristina Beyer; and thirdrunner-up was Wendy DeLouise, daughter of Tim and Donna DeLouise.

From left: Kyle Hubble, Salena Muzzarelli, Craig Gerson, Wendy DeLouise, Eduardo Tirado,Alyssa Compa, Charles Mistretta, and Brianna Beyer are pictured with Rowdy Rooster.

Delsea Crowns Homecoming QueenDelsea Regional High School

selected senior Asia Byrd astheir 2012-13 HomecomingQueen during Spirit Week activ-ities. The queen was announcedduring the football game onFriday, Octobeer 26.

Asia is the daughter ofAnnette Byrd and granddaugh-ter of Mattie Clements of ElkTownship. She is a member ofthe National Honor Society,YODA and captain of the varsitycheerleaders. Additionally, shereceived the 2009 PrudentialSpirit of Community Award andvolunteers for Habitat forHumanity. Her future plans areto attend a four-year collegemajoring in communicationswith a concentration in televi-sion production and radio.

From left: Annette Byrd, Asia’smother, Asia Byrd, and Rajah Byrd,Asia’s brother.

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BRIDGETON66 Edwards Ave., Theresa AWilliamson (Exec.) to FernandoConstantino Martinez on 9/11/12 for$70,000

DEERFIELD TWP838 Vineland Ave., Frank Sabota,Jr. to Raymond Clark on 9/17/12 for$150,500

DOWNE TWP85 Delaware Ave., Maria V Beck toJoseph Heaton on 9/13/12 for$25,000

HOPEWELL TWP31 Forest Ave., Leslie R Knight toBahri Yilmaz on 9/17/12 for$29,000

MILLVILLE909 S 2nd St., Robert Beare toDaniel Nieto on 9/17/12 for $15,000207 W Foundry & C., Charles Jostto Andrea Cimino on 9/17/12 for$75,000

STOW CREEK TWP757 Roadstown Rd., Ingrid M Holm(Exec.) to Fox & Fox Builders Llc on9/17/12 for $35,000

UPPER DEERFIELD6 Shadow Brooke Dr., Robert BWolak (Exec.) to Erin E Duffy on9/11/12 for $210,000

VINELAND3111 S East Blvd., C&P Bertoldi Incto Carl Tarabbio, Jr. on 9/11/12 for$25,0002209 Adler Ln., Carol Nicholson toJoyce A Conrow on 9/11/12 for$150,0001731 Tori Ln., Cumberland CountySheriff to Andrew Kousmine on9/11/12 for $159,6002102 E Oak Rd. L4, NVR Inc. (DBA)to Daneen L Winchester on 9/11/12for $179,6251028 E Landis Ave., LandmarkDevelopment No. 3 LLC to CushaneHoldings LLC on 9/11/12 for$685,000

415 Salem Ave., William C Gouse,Jr. to Tony Espino on 9/12/12 for$150,00049 S Orchard Rd., Lawrence RWilliams (by Atty.) to VinelandConstruction Co. on 9/14/12 for$50,0002102 E Oak Rd., NVR Inc. (DBA) toMilagros Velez on 9/14/12 for$63,8662139 E Chestnut Ave., FederalHome Loan Mortgage Corp. (byAtty.) to Thomas Venditti on 9/14/12for $87,5002102 E Oak Rd., NVR Inc. (DBA) toMary H Sauceda on 9/14/12 for$99,5243429 Venturi Ln., NVR Inc. (DBA)to Annie E Schavelin on 9/14/12 for$251,3451337 Venezia Ave., KrystynaMalinowski to Tajalaya PhillipsSpecial Needs Trust & C. on9/14/12 for $312,0001445 Linden Blvd., CumberlandCounty Sheriff to West CoastServicing Inc. on 9/17/12 for $17,3141944 Pheasant Run, Alfred WBodden, Jr. to Rebecca Bard on9/17/12 for $75,00083 Melrose St., Onesto Flores toOwen Flores on 9/17/12 for $75,000735 S Main Rd. #13, Robert Scarpato Steven Downey on 9/17/12 for$90,00025 S Valley Ave., Martha K Nolan(Est. by Exec.) to Sara L Williamson 9/17/12 for $118,500410 W Laurel St., Onesto Flores toChristina Gonzalez on 9/17/12 for$137,0001070 Chelseas Way, RPJ PropertiesLLC to Mayra Cruz-Ramirez on9/17/12 for $144,900709 S Myrtle St., Louis A Quiles toFrancisco Ledesma on 9/17/12 for$147,0003770 N W Blvd., R&B PropertiesLLC to Mak 2 LLC on 9/17/12 for$150,000305 N Mill Rd., Assured PropertySolutions LLC to Pink RabbitProperties LLC on 9/17/12 for$162,500

REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONSThe following transactions of $20,000 or more were filed with Cumberland County inthe month of September 2012 (transactions may have occurred in an earlier month).Names listed may, in some cases, be those of buyers’ or sellers’ representatives.

UNLIMITED POTENTIALFantastic Location In A Quiet Neighborhood

1258 Iris Avenue, VinelandFamily raised, now house is too big.

Large yard on a quiet street. Priced to sell.

Thomas Riggione, Broker-AssociateColdwell Banker Excel Realty (856) 696-11111100 E Landis Avenue Vineland, NJ 08360 E X C E L R E A L T Y

856-696-CALL (2255)1080 E. Landis Ave., Vineland, NJ 08360

www.MaturoRealty.com

5 Very Important Questions That You Should Ask A Real EstateAgent, Prior To Listing Your Property With That Office…

1 - How many full time agents does other office’s have? Maturo Realty Has 16 Active full timeagents with 44 agents total.

2 - How do other office’s split the commissions with other cooperating Real Estate office’s??Maturo Realty has the “SELLERS ADVANTAGE”, we split all of our commissions, with everyReal Estate Broker, in co-op sales, in a fair and equal manner: 50/50. Call us to find outwhy a 50/50 split is a SELLERS ADVANTAGE.

3 - How does other offices compare in Sold Units for the past few years? Maturo Realty Hasbeen #1 in Sales**, for at least the past 3 years, with MORE EXCITING NEWS: Maturo Realty

has double the sales for the first ½ of “2012”, with 50% more sales** than any other Office*.4 - How many years of sales experience does the other office have? Maturo Realty has over

623 years of combined sales experience.5 - How much inventory of available listings does the other office’s currently have listed???

Maturo Realty has over 160 active listings. That is 40% more** than any other Real Estate Office*.

WITH OVER 34 YEARS IN THE BUSINESSNobody in Cumberland County has sold more

Real Estate than: The Office of

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Best of the Best in VinelandBe Home For The Holidays

3129 Country LaneCountry living in a Development Setting

1.5 wooded acres on cul-de-sac. Manders andMerighi Design with every amenity. 3B/3B, 2 screened porches, office, Master suite with 3 walk-ins and vanity area. You must see this unique home to appreciate all it has to offer

Offered at $389,000

2220 Maple Avenue, VinelandTotally Renovated Cape Cod. 3B/2B, Finished Basement, Hardwood Floors,

Large Yard with Deck, Low Taxes, Detached garage with work shop, Immaculate

Offered at $209,000

Open House Saturday November 17th 1:00 to 4:00PMTour these Exceptional Homes and be Amazed at the Quality and ValueEnjoy a cup of coffee and picture where you will put the Christmas tree.

Retiring Is Easy. Affording it isn’t.

Increase your monthly income with a government insured Reverse Mortgage

• Homeowners must be 62 years or older and have equity in their home.

• You keep the title to your home, and must keep up insurance and tax payments.*

• There are NO credit, income, or health qualifications.

• Your proceeds may be used for any purpose—from everyday necessities to

setting aside a cash reserve.

• NO monthly mortgage payments as long as you occupy the home!

• A Reverse Mortgage will NOT impact your Social Security and Medicare benefits.

Angela GoldbergBranch Manager—NMLS #243545

Office: [email protected] E. Landis Ave, Suite C • Vineland, NJ 08360

*Consult your tax adviser

*Consult your tax adviser Gateway Funding Diversified Mortgage Services, L.P. #1071; Branch NMLS #241866; NJ Residential Mortgage Lender License (#9939819). This is not an offer to extend credit to any individual who may be entitled to a more complete disclosure per RESPA, TILA, HOEPA, or any other more applicable federal, state, or local law or regulation. Rates, Terms, Fees, Products, Programs and Equity requirements are subject to change

without notice. For qualified borrowers only. Copyright 2011 Gateway Funding Diversified Mortgage Services, L.P. Equal Housing Lender.

“Opening Doors to Home Ownership” • www.gatewayfunding.com

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After the initial shock of damage toshore homes and residential struc-tures has passed, owners will need

to concentrate on the process of rebuildingor renovation of their damaged homes.Beyond insurance coverage issues, this willinevitably lead to engaging and workingwith contractors. The following are stepsthat should be taken or considered byhomeowners to limit some of the problemsthat may arise in the re-building efforts.

In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, manyhomes in the North East will require majorbuilding repairs. According to disastermodeling company, Eqecat, the storm willhave caused an estimated $50 billion ineconomic damage including $20 billion ininsured losses.

As property owners begin to assessdamage to their homes and businesses, theAsphalt Roofing ManufacturersAssociation (ARMA) recommends con-ducting a safe and thorough review of thebuilding’s roof to ensure it has not beencompromised and that it will survive theperils of winter. ARMA offers the follow-ing tips for inspecting the condition of theroofing system:

• Make the initial inspections from theground or through upstairs windowswhere the roof surface can be observed.Binoculars are a good tool to use for theinspection.

• Clear all gutters and roof surfaces offallen leaves, pine needles, twigs and otherdebris to evaluate the entire roof and allowwater to drain freely. Be mindful of laddersafety.

• Inspect the underside of the roof deckfrom the attic to detect leaks. Flashings arethe most vulnerable points, therefore,inspect the underside carefully at all flash-ing points for evidence of leakage, such aswater stains.

Property owners should always takeprecaution when surveying the damage,particularly if trees have taken downpower lines or blocked access.

"We recommend making a visualinspection of your roof from the groundafter storm events, since you cannot becertain of the condition of your roofassembly,” said Reed Hitchcock, ARMA’sExecutive Vice President. “If you noticeany obvious signs of damage, includingmissing or loose roof shingles, impairedflashing, and obstructed gutters or roof

vents, contact a professional roofing con-tractor to perform a full assessment ofyour roof."

Furthermore, the National RoofingContractors Association (NRCA) warnsthat choosing the right contractor shouldbe a priority, especially after major stormswhere there could be an influx of roofingcontractors from other areas. While thisisn’t necessarily a bad thing, it also opensthe door for disreputable contractorsattempting to take advantage of the cir-cumstances. Homeowners should do theirresearch on the contractor – check forgood standing with the Better BusinessBureau or inquire about them via SocialMedia. Once roof damage has been identi-fied, the NRCA and ARMA recommendlooking for contractors who meet the fol-lowing criteria:

• Have a permanent place of business• Be able to speak about a variety of

roofing systems• Have manufacturer’s or other certifi-

cations• Be able to provide references from

recent clients• Show a license and/or are bonded• Have general liability insurance cover-

age although this is not required in all areas• Provide a written proposal; beware of

contractors who ask for money up front.

For more information from the NRCA, visit:www.nrca.net/consumer/about/press/2012/1012_hurricane_sandy.aspxWith winter just around the corner, it isalso important for homeowners to havetheir roofs assessed for damage and cor-rected before the weather changes—whenice and snow load could exacerbate anundetected problem. For more informationon roof maintenance and what homeown-ers can do to ensure roof stability, visitwww.asphaltroofing.org.

Real Estate MattersIAssessing Roof DamageAfter Super Storm Sandy

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Project Thanksgiving Needs Your Help in Collecting Turkeys for the Salvation Army!Due to high poverty and unemployment rates,

Many families in our area will not have a Thanksgiving.

Project Thanksgiving will be collecting frozen turkeys onNov. 17th from 9am–5pm.

Please stop by any of the 4 ShopRites in Cumberland County, the ShopRites in Sewell and Mullica Hill, or the

Cosmopolitan Restaurant in Vineland on Nov. 17th and donate a frozen

turkey or your monetary donation (checks payable to “Salvation Army”).

We’re also collecting store coupons for free turkeys or hams.

Annual Turkey Drive: November 17, 2012

For more information, Call Alex at 691-7672 or

Steve at 692-8305.

PROJECT THANKSGIVINGContinued from cover

Supervising that operation isAssemblyman and employee NelsonAlbano. The Cosmopolitan restaurant inVineland is another drop-off site forturkeys and donations through Saturday,November 17, when WVLT Cruisin’ 92.1FM will broadcast live from 2 to 4 p.m. A$20 donation pays for one turkey.

Plevins claims they have alreadysolicited 550 Vineland Chamber ofCommerce members for donations.“Fortunately, we are receiving generouscontributions every day. Our main spon-sors are Bottinos, PNC Bank, VinelandConstruction Co. and WVLT, which isproviding free advertising,” he says.

Three new twists this year include:• A partnership with the Venice Italian

Eatery in Pitman. The restaurant willprovide free Thanksgiving meals to veter-ans’ families by swapping boneless turkeyand pies from Project Thanksgiving forthe same value in whole turkeys.

• The Cosmopolitan will award a $50gift certificate to the person who guessesthe correct number of turkeys collected.

• Nigel, the new turkey mascot, willdebut in costume and travel from store tostore.

Project Thanksgiving will then turnthe turkeys over to the Salvation Army fordistribution. To qualify, prospective appli-cants should contact their local SalvationArmy chapter and complete an applica-tion. Captain Jose Borrero inVineland/Millville, Captain JamesStephenson of Bridgeton and MyrnaKeller, the Gloucester County representa-tive, lead the regional branches.

Kaganzev and Plevins trust theSalvation Army for distribution. “Theirlow overhead leaves more money for thecause,” says Plevins.

This year, the need is especially criti-cal. Hurricane Sandy has exhausted manyof the existing resources and provisions.As New Jersey’s poorest county,Cumberland County has a large numberof needy families.

“With diminished resources,Cumberland County lacks the funds toboth rebuild after these disasters and pro-vide charitable assistance. The SalvationArmy aims to bridge the gap with this

turkey drive,” Kaganzev says.Borrero confirms the community’s

urgency this year. “Conditions are theworst I have seen in my eight years withthe organization. It is incredible howmany people have already applied forturkeys this year. By early November, wehad 200 applications and another 400 areon a waiting list. People continuously calland stop by every day, so I expect thenumber to grow,” states Borrero.

He recognizes that multiple communi-ties will share in the total collection, butis aiming to distribute at least 500 turkeysin Vineland. “I do not want to reject anyeligible recipient. We wish to raise what-ever money is needed to buy the extraturkeys,” Borrero says.

To participate, bring a turkey, super-market certificate or donation to theseShop-Rite stores from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. onSaturday, November 17. Each location willhave a Salvation Army collection table.Label the turkeys as “ProjectThanksgiving” contributions. Nearby,their trademark red kettles will acceptindividual donations of cash or checks.

The Vineland/Millville Salvation Armycenter has freezers in its building, and isalso accepting donations from Mondaythrough Friday, 9 a.m.–3 p.m., at 733 E.Chestnut Ave. in Vineland. Vineland Iceand Storage will store extra turkeys attheir 6th and Pear Street location. Formore information, call Captain Borrero at856-696-5050.

Visit them on Facebook (search ProjectThanksgiving NJ). I

Nigel is the new mascot for ProjectThanksgiving. Look for him on November 17at a turkey drop-off location near you.

Nominate Your Hometown Hero Today!www.grapevinenewspaper.com/hometownheroes

Is it someone who gives of their time and energy to make our community a betterplace to live and work? Perhaps they’re a policeman, fireman, teacher, coach,

volunteer, serviceman or woman, public servant, or an everyday herowho makes personal sacrifices so that others can live better lives.

They don’t do it for the recognition, but we think they should be recognized anyway.

This tiger mascot who madean appearance at the turkeydrive at the Lincoln andLandis ShopRite will be joinedby “Nigel,” on November 17.

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Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m.To order your classified call, 856-457-7815 or visit

www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds

Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m. To order your classified, call 856-457-7815 orvisit www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds. See box below for additional ordering information.

Only $10 per ad, per week, up to 20 words; over 20 words,$0.50 per word. $0.30 for bold—per word/per issue, $3 for aBorder/per issue. Add a photo for $15. Mail Ad & payment or goonline to www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds.

Not responsible for typographical errors. • Once an ad is placed, it cannot be cancelled or changed. The Grapevine does not in any wayimply approval or endorsement. Those interested in goods or services always use good judgment and take appropriate precautions.

Acct. No. ___________________________________Exp. Date________ 3 Digit # on backof card__________

Signature:__________________________________________Printed Name:______________________________________

Name ___________________________________Address__________________________________City__________________________Zip_________Phone #: ________________________________email____________________________________

The Grapevine907 N. Main Rd., Suite 205

Vineland, NJ 08360www.grapevinenewspaper.com

Mail AdForm withPayment TO:

ClassifiedsCall for more information

856-457-7815

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25.____________24.____________23.____________22.____________21.____________

30.____________29.____________28.____________27.____________26.____________

35.____________34.____________33.____________32.____________31.____________

40.____________39.____________

42.____________41.____________ 44.____________43.____________ 45.____________

47.____________46.____________ 49.____________48.____________ 50.____________

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Check if needed.Refer to prices above.

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CLASSIFIEDS

Credit CardsAccepted:

Having a Yard Sale or Garage Sale?It’s time to make room in that attic, garage orbasement, and there’s no better way to get theword out than to advertise your yard sale in

The Grapevine’s Classifieds.Use the form below, or visit

www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifiedsDeadline is Friday for the following Wednesday’s paper.

Micro Electric LLC.Residential repair, addi-tions, and services.Bonded and insured.“no job is too small.”NJ LIC #14256.Call 609-501-7777.

Share a Nice Big ModernHouse in a GreatNeighborhood. $850. amonth. All utilities includ-ed. Call 609-213-0832

East Vineland two bedroom,one bathroom half house.All tile and hardwood, largecraft-made kitchen. Greatneighborhood. Very clean.Freshly painted. $1250/mo,includes all utilities. Call856-278-2834

House for rent: Vineland.Two bedrooms, one bath.Washer and dryer, partial-ly furnished, fenced-inyard. One month’s securi-ty. $950/mo. Call 856-498-0475

Experienced Stylist want-ed. Up to 60% commis-sion. Paid vacation andbonuses. Call Rose orKathy at 856-213-5316.

Protocall Staffing is seek-ing 100+ people forProduction, Packagingetc.: • Competitive pay• Must have 2 Valid formsof ID. Apply in Person M-TR, 9am-Noon, at 106Landis Ave, Vineland NJor call 856-848-2196

Christian Daycare seekingP/T caregivers. Locatedin Millvile, NJ. Exp.Preferred. Phone 856-825-8800.

Start your own businessfor only $10. Call: 856-332-6446 Jasmine Avon ISR856-391-5958.

Sale: Saturday, 11/17, 10a.m. to 3 p.m. 820 CherrySt., Vineland. Sofa,loveseat, two arm chairsand assorted items.

1974 Corvette Convertible.51,000 original miles, oneowner. Call 856-692-7454.Ask For Bob

Have a bike taking upspace in your home? Pleaseconsider donating it. TheVineland Rotary Club haspartnered with Pedals forProgress to export bikes tothird-world countries wherethey are needed for trans-portation. Also collectingtreadle and portable sewingmachines. Contact HenryHansen at 856-696-0643for drop-off or pick-up.

FLUTE, PICCOLO, PANFLUTE, RECORDER,FLUTE ENSEMBLE,Lessons by RenownedFlutist, BEVERLY PUGH,(Member, Bay-AtlanticSymphony). ALL AGES-ALL LEVELS, REASON-ABLE RATES & MUSICFOR ALL OCCASIONS.Phone: (Machine) 856-455-1098. Email:[email protected]

WANTED! Slightly used chil-drens books (donated) tothe Coats for Kids event atthe NJMP, Call Brian 856-364-6011 to arrange pick up.

Wanted Dead or alive.Junk or running cars.Quick removal. Cashpaid. 856-649-2732.

TOT LOT providing qualitychild care, ages 0-3,accepting NJCK & TANF.Mon-Fri 6:30 am.–7pm.$140 per week w/meals.856-641-7407.

All American Plumbingand Drain Cleaning.Specialing in all plumb-ing services and repairs,all at very reasonablerates. Serving Vinelandand Millville Just give usa call! 856-696-3052

REAL Painting:Reasonable Prices–HighQuality Residential &Commercial PaintingInterior/Exterior/CustonStaining–South JerseyAreas. (302) 444-2396

General House Cleaning.20 years experience.Reasonable, honest &reliable. Call 856-697-1338. Leave message.

Steelman's Drywall.Drywall installation andrepairing nailpops, cracks,water damage, unfinisheddrywall. Big or small! CallJoe for a free estimate at609-381-3814.

Turk's Pressure Clean.Property maintenance.Vinyl and aluminum sid-ing, concrete, brick, roofcleaning, gutter clean-out. Over 25 years inbusiness, fully insured.(856) 692-7470.

AJB III Construction.Licensed and fully insured.Windows, doors, remodel-ing, and more. Call ustoday at 856-332-7865.

Advanced Cabinetry &Storage Systems. Shop athome — over 30 yearsexperience: kitchens, vani-ties, closets, garage sys-tems. For all your storageneeds — factory directpurchase power. Call(609)805-6277 for an at-home consolation. Savethousands!

ElectricalContractor

Pete ConstructionSpecializing in decks,roofs and homeremodeling. Statelicensed and insured.Call for a free esti-mate. 856-507-1456.

Free rent in exchangefor Caretaker positionto qualified person.Disabled personneeds live-in caretak-er on duty in theevenings after 8:00p.m. Will have fullaccess to the house,including kitchen, liv-ing room, 2 bedroomsavailable, and bath-room, plus full backyard and small deck.Inquire regardingduties at 856-696-9491. Call after 5 p.m. Homecare Provider

available: Prefer tostay in CumberlandCounty. No live in, butdaily and/or overnightavailable. No driving.Call 856-691-1133 or856-581-5127

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HomeImprovement

Services

Garage/Yard Sale

Employment

For Rent

For Sale

Do you have a car or boat that istaking up space in your drive-way? Are you hoping to sell yourvehicle for some extra cash?

Publicize the sale of your vehicleby advertising in The Grapevine’sClassifieds section. Make yourjunk someone else’s treasures.

While you’re away or at work, leave yourhome & your pet in the capable care of

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Items Wanted

Flute Lessons

Need work? Have a business and need morecustomers? Why not get the word out throughThe Grapevine’s Classifieds?

Advertize your skills and business in the Classifiedsby calling 856-457-7815.

SEASONED FIRE-WOOD FOR SALE,CLEAN-UPS, BUSH &TREE TRIMMING,TREE & STUMPREMOVAL, GUTTERCLEANING,VINELAND & SUR-ROUNDING AREAS,856-691-2017

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Bikes Wanted

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