Point Pleasant Beach

Transcript

Point Pleasant Beach
People
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Editorial
Sports Front
St. Peter’s Collecting
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Classified
Page 15
®
Friday, February 25, 2011
50 cents
Point Boro
burglar
busted
Scientologists
get OK for
renovation
See HUBBARD HOUSE, PAGE 26
Judge: Beach
must pay
ACLU fees
By Lauren Herstik
POINT PLEASANT BEACH — The
borough council received an order last week
that Point Pleasant Beach must foot the bill
for part of the
starnewsgroup.com
legal expenses
Log on to comment
the American
Civil Liberties Union [ACLU] incurred
when it sued the borough in the fall over the
constitutionality of reciting The Lord’s
Prayer at municipal meetings.
Ocean County Superior Court Judge
Vincent J. Grasso issued an order on Feb. 15
ordering the borough to pay the ACLU
$11,200 in legal fees accrued after the civil
liberties organization filed a lawsuit against
the borough on behalf of borough resident
Sharon Cadalzo on Sept. 16.
Mrs. Cadalzo could not be reached for
comment this week.
That number is a substantial reduction of
the $37,989 the ACLU had asked the borough to cover.
See LEGAL FEES, PAGE 6
Indoor Herb Gardens
Barlows,
Sat.
2/26
1pm.
732-449-9189.
Register:
Storm Damage?
Roofing/siding/gutter repairs. Prompt & affordable. Roof Mechanics, 908-489-9660.
Barlows Kids Club
Winter snowglobe fun, 2/27 11am. Register:
732-449-9189.
Postcard Show Saturday 2/26
9am-4pm, Ocean/5th Ave., Belmar. $2 admission/donation. See our ad inside.
Obituaries
Junior Garden Club
In Full Bloom
Page 4
By Nick Malfitano
BAY HEAD — At last week’s meeting of
the planning board, here, board members unanimously approved an application seeking to
restore a home at 666
Bay Head
East Ave.
The project will
Planning Board
return the home to its
approves
condition in the time
when the late author
restoration of
L. Ron Hubbard lived
residence
there, circa 1949 to
1950 — though the
formerly
group that owns the
occupied by
property said the
house will not be
author and
turned into a museum.
Church of
Mr.
Hubbard
founded the Church
Scientology
of Scientology.
founder
The property is
L. Ron Hubbard. now owned by
Heritage Properties
Owners say
International, a Los
house will not Angeles-based holding corporation.
be turned into
Heritage Properties
International
has
a museum.
often partnered with
the Church of Scientology to maintain Mr.
Hubbard’s former residences around the
School News
Photo Courtesy of NEW JERSEY GOVERNOR’S OFFICE
Gov. Chris Christie introduced the state’s 2012 fiscal year budget in Trenton
on Tuesday, which calls for reduced government spending.
State aid increases for
schools, flat for towns
past year under his
By Nick Malfitano &
Gov. Chris Christie the
administration, the
Katie Lobosco
announces
governor said he will
TRENTON — Gov.
cutting govChris Christie proposed a
$250-million increase continue
ernment
spending,
$29.4-billion budget on
in school aid, holds and will support susTuesday, which he said
tainable budgets going
would push the state
municipal aid at
forward.
toward a new financial
current levels
The
proposed
paradigm — a “new norspending plan reduces
mal.”
starnewsgroup.com
Log on to comment
government spending
The proposed spending
below last year’s level.
plan increases aid to all
local school districts for the upcoming Total spending would be down 2.6 per2011-2012 school year, though munici- cent, but New Jersey could also expect to
pal aid is set to remain at fiscal year 2011 see an increase in state aid to schools,
levels.
Touting spending cuts initiated over
See STATE AID, PAGE 7
By Eric Colvin
POINT PLEASANT — Seven months
after allegedly going on a burglary spree along
Route 88 and Bridge Avenue, here — and six
months after being arrested in Point Pleasant
Beach for a similar crime
— Point Pleasant resident
William Richards, 28,
was formally charged this
week for several crimes
committed last summer.
According to Point
Pleasant
Police
Department
Capt.
Richard Larsen, Mr.
Richards has been incarcerated in Middlesex
WILLIAM
County on unrelated
RICHARDS
charges since December.
August, a collaboraDeclared a tiveIneffort
between Point
prime suspect Pleasant and Point
Pleasant Beach police led
early on,
to Mr. Richards’ arrest for
police charge burglarizing Latitude 40,
seafood restaurant on
Point man, 28, aArnold
Avenue in Point
with four
Pleasant Beach, after
counts of police caught him exiting
the restaurant after hours.
theft in
This week, Point
Pleasant
Police officially
connection
charged Mr. Richards
to summer with burglaries of four
commercial Point Pleasant businesses.
Police charged Mr.
burglaries Richards with four counts
of third-degree burglary,
four counts of criminal mischief and two counts
of theft of cash.
In the fall, Point Pleasant Detective Lt.
Adam Picca reported that seven commercial
See BURGLARY CHARGE, PAGE 11
Fishing
boat fire
‘suspicious’
Taking A Bite Out Of Life
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
“Sharkman” Gus Schipani, of Point Pleasant, had his face painted by Point
Pleasant Elk Nancy DeVito — then he took a big bite of the savory fare prepared for the Point Pleasant Elks Lodge’s Parrothead Beach Party on Saturday.
For full coverage of the annual event, see page 5.
Simko’s Grill, Brielle & Brick
Sunday
Brunch,
10:30am-2pm.
732-528-9989, 732-920-5050.
Call
Need Birthday Gift Ideas?
Gift certificates for expert car detailing...they're
perfect! Greg's Auto Care, Washington Blvd., Sea
Girt. 732-449-0931. www.gregsautocare.com.
D’Arcy’s Tavern, Bradley Beach
Live Soccer Daily! Champions League Heineken Special every Tues.-Thurs. 2/26 10pm
Blue Highways; 2/27 8:30am West Ham vs
Liverpool, 11am Carling Cup Final!
www.darcystavern.com.
Manasquan Beach House
Thurs. Harry, Billy & Joel 6pm; Fri.
Pat Roddy 6pm, Jamie Brown 10pm; Sat.
E-Street Shuffle 10pm; Sun. Squan
Football
Gift
Auction
3-6pm.
www.manasquanbeachhouse.com.
Brielle Fire Company
5K Run 3/12 11am-3pm. Applications on-line
@ Jerseyrunner.com. Buffet, drink specials,
entertainment by Babino’s Bros.
Holme Rocks Bar A!
Fri. 2/25 6pm show. Free buffet/happy hour @
5pm. 16th Ave., Lake Como.
Eloise’s Cafe
Best Breakfast/Lunch Quesadillas around!
Brielle, 732-223-6363. www.eloisescafe.com.
Harpoon Willy’s Live Music
Thursday, Friday, Saturday nights. Full menu
at bar ‘til midnight.
Your Mortgage Source
Manasquan Savings Bank.
Your Local
Lender! Competitive rates and fees- Choice of
loans/terms- Visit www.manasquanbank.com
for current rates & loan details. Apply on-line
or call 732-223-4450. Equal Housing Lender.
Member FDIC.
By Lauren Herstik
POINT PLEASANT BEACH — Last
Thursday’s early-morning fire on board the
fishing trawler Atlantic Queen, docked here,
remains under investigation as “suspicious,’
according to Detective Patrick Petruzziello of
the Point Pleasant Beach Police Department.
The Atlantic Queen’s owner and its captain —
Alda Gentile, 53, of Speonk, N.Y., and William
Jeffery Stanley, 44, of Brick — were issued a
See BOAT FIRE, PAGE 21
Spirit of ‘76 Wines & Liquors
Free Sampling Events: 2/25 Yards Brewery
5-7pm; 2/26 Trio of Malbec 4-6pm. Must be
21. Manasquan.
Harrigan’s Pub
Thurs. Craft Beer Night; Sun. 2 for 1 Breakfast at bar, 10am-12pm; 3/7 The Wolfe
Tones, for tickets call 732-449-5922.
www.harriganspub.com, 732-449-8228.
Got Trash? Junk? Clutter?
Clean-ups, clean-outs. Single items/large
quantities. Above ground pools/hot tub removals.
Shore
Removal
Service.
732-295-JUNK(5865).
The Breakers Coffee Lounge
Cocktails, coffee, dessert & live music. Small
plates also available. Friday and Saturday
evenings.
732-449-7700,
www.breakershotel.com.
PAGE 2
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant Beach
[USPS 016866]
Published every Friday at
421 River Avenue, Point
Pleasant Beach, N.J. 08742
by Coast Star, Inc. $25 per
year within Ocean County.
$37 per year outside Ocean
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County.
Periodicals postage paid at
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Index
Church. . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Crossword . . . . . . . . . . 21
Letters . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
People . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
School News . . . . . . . . 22
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Street Beat . . . . . . . . . . 25
State press association honors
Star News Group with 12 awards
By Kelly Rizzetta
Star News Group, publisher
of The Ocean Star, Point
Pleasant Beach, and The Coast
Star, Manasquan, has been
honored by its peers with a
company-record one dozen
awards in the New Jersey Press
Association’s [NJPA] 2010
Better Newspaper Contest.
Each year, newspapers across
the state submit entries in several dozen categories to the
NJPA’s Better Newspaper
Contest, to be evaluated by
members of another state’s
press association.
The Ocean Star garnered a
total of seven awards in the
categories for smaller weekly
newspapers, with three firstplace awards — two for reporting, and one in the Packaging
the News Product division.
The newspaper received
first-place recognition in the
Environmental/Health
&
Science Writing category for
reporter Chris Sheldon’s story
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on the dredging of Point
Pleasant Beach’s Lake Louise,
which examined over the
course of nearly one full year
the financial and environmental impacts of the oft-delayed
dredging project.
The newspaper was also
honored with a first-place
award in the Interpretive
Writing category for reporter
Erica Florentine’s analysis of
Point Pleasant’s controversial
move to open borough employee contract negotiations to the
public early last year — a policy that was adopted by council,
but never successfully put into
practice.
The Ocean Star’s final firstplace award came in the
Special Issue category, for the
staff ’s coverage of the Blizzard
of 2010 in its Dec. 31 issue.
The Ocean Star also took second place in this category with
its Nov. 5 Election Results
issue, which detailed the local
mayoral and council races.
Sports
reporter
Greg
Domorski was recognized with
a second-place award in the
Sports Writing Portfolio category, in which sports writers’
work is judged on significance,
clarity, originality and writing
style.
Mr. Sheldon also received a
second-place award in the
Coverage of Government category — also known as the Art
Weissman Memorial Award,
which recognizes excellence in
reporting on local government
— for his series on the Point
Pleasant Beach Council’s
deliberation over the possible
hiring of a civilian public safety director to replace the chief
of police last spring.
Finally, The Ocean Star
received one third-place award
in the Feature Section Layout
& Content category for the
Sept. 24 People page spread on
Point Pleasant Beach’s 33rd
annual Festival of the Sea,
written by reporter Molly
Mulshine and photographed
by Sueanne Goss.
The Ocean Star’s sister paper
in Monmouth County, The
Coast Star, was honored with
five Better Newspaper Contest
Awards in the categories for
larger weekly newspapers,
including a first-place award
recognizing the company’s
website — www.starnewsgroup.com — as the best in the
state.
The Coast Star received firstplace recognition in the Sports
Section Layout & Content category, one of numerous awards
The Coast Star has received in
that category over the past
decade.
Sports
reporters
Len
Bardsley and Sam Costantino
are responsible for the section’s
content, while production
manager Joyce Manser is
responsible for the layout of
the section.
The Coast Star also received a
second-place award in the
Front Page Layout category.
The Coast Star earned thirdplace honors in two categories.
Sports
reporter
Sam
Costantino was honored with a
third-place win for the Robert
P. Kelly Award, which recognizes excellence in news, interpretive, feature or sports writing by a full-time staffer with
fewer than 12 months of professional experience, and is
intended to encourage capable
and talented young reporters to
continue their careers in print
journalism.
Newsroom Supervisor Jamie
Biesiada, who also covers Wall
Township for The Coast Star,
received third-place honors in
the Environmental/Health &
Science Writing category for
her Sept. 30 story, “Wall man
seeks to share knowledge of
prosthetics
with
another
amputee,” which detailed the
life of a Wall Navy veteran and
amputee who makes his own
prosthetic legs.
Finally, Star News Group’s
website, which serves as a combined online news platform for
both The Ocean Star and The
Coast Star, took first place in
the Best Overall Website category of the Better Newspaper
Contest’s online division.
Entries in this category are
judged on the usefulness of the
website, the quality and quantity of community content, and
ease of navigation and design.
Ms. Biesiada is Star News
Group’s webmaster.
Star News Group owner and
publisher James M. Manser
congratulated both newspapers
on the one dozen awards
received this year.
“We have never received this
many awards in one year from
the NJPA, and it clearly shows
the commitment and dedication our newsroom staff has to
providing a top-notch news
product for our readers every
week,” Mr. Manser said. “I
congratulate them all on their
well-deserved recognition.”
Mr. Manser added, “All of
our employees should be proud
of these honors, as it is truly a
team effort that allows us to
put out quality newspapers
every week.”
Photo Courtesy of KAREN WHILLE
Owner Robert Whille [from left], Julie Whille and Parker
Howe welcomed guests to the recent Saturday-morning
“Bagel Jam” at The Corner Bagelry, which was damaged in a
fire approximately 18 months ago. The re-opened restaurant
hosts an open jam session and invites musicians to bring their
instruments and enjoy music and breakfast.
Disrupted by fire, Beach
shop open for business
By Lauren Herstik
Kathleen
and
Robert
Whille, owners of The Corner
Bagelry on the corner of Route
35 South and Arnold Avenue
in Point Pleasant Beach, are
happy to be back in business.
The restaurant, which boasts
homemade bagels, pizza, an
exclusive Boar’s Head Deli,
and a coffee shop, was one of
several businesses devastated
by a fire that destroyed the
building that housed the businesses and a handful of residential units in August 2009.
The restaurant reopened on
Aug. 14, 2010, and business
has been rising steadily ever
since.
“We’re thankful for all out
loyal customers. The high
school kids are back, the regulars are back,” Mrs. Whille said
recently.
The bagelry serves customers until 4 p.m. for the
moment, but the Whilles plan
to keep it open later as the
summer season approaches.
In the meantime, The
Corner Bagelry has started
hosting Saturday morning
“Bagel Jams,” an open jam session for local musicians.
“Anyone’s invited to bring
their instruments and play, or
just come visit and enjoy breakfast,” Mrs. Whille said. The
jam sessions are held from 8
a.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturdays.
The Whilles have owned
The Corner Bagelry in Point
Pleasant Beach for eight years.
On Aug. 28, 2009 the couple
opened
another
Corner
Bagelry & Delicatessen on
Route 35 North in Wall, at the
Sea Girt Crossroads Mall.
They also own a Corner
Bagelry & Delicatessen at 233
East Main St., in Manasquan.
The Whilles are thrilled to
be back in their Point Beach
location.
“It’s the main corner in town
— it’s like the hub,” Mrs.
Whille said.
An investigation into the
Aug. 26, 2009 fire concluded
that improperly discarded
smoking material was the
cause. The fire left 11 people
who lived in apartments on the
second floor of the building
without a home, and four business owners on the first floor
cleaning up the smoke and
water damage that ruined their
stores.
Nobody was injured in the
blaze.
The other apartments and
first-floor
businesses
—
including Tattoo City, the
Corner
Bagelry
and
Delicatessen, All
Family
Barber Shop, and The Swim
Gallery — sustained heavy
smoke and water damage from
the firefighting efforts.
The Corner Bagelry and The
Swim Gallery are the first
businesses to reopen, and all of
the apartments are currently
occupied. There are still two
vacancies in the building.
“We’re just happy to be welcomed back,” Mrs. Whille said.
Jersey Mike’s making a
difference for FoodBank
The
FoodBank
of
Monmouth
and
Ocean
Counties is joining forces with
Jersey Mike’s Subs restaurants
throughout
Ocean
and
Monmouth counties in a March
“Month of Giving” fundraising
campaign to help fight hunger
in area communities.
The “Month of Giving” will
culminate on March 28 with
Jersey Mike’s nationwide “Make
a Difference Day.”
During the month of March,
customers can make a donation
to the FoodBank at any area
Jersey Mike’s store, such as the
Mike’s at 901 Richmond Ave.
[Route 35 South] in Point
Pleasant Beach or on Bridge
Avenue in Point Pleasant.
Customers making a $5
donation to the FoodBank will
receive six specially branded
Jersey Mike’s Silly Bandz and a
coupon for free chips and a
drink, while supplies last. One
hundred percent of Silly Bandz
sales will be contributed to the
FoodBank.
“Early on, I learned from my
mentors — local businesspeople
— the importance of giving
back to the community,” said
Peter Cancro, Jersey Mike’s
founder and CEO. “That is the
model I chose for Jersey Mike’s,
and we have been doing it since
the beginning.
“The philosophy of giving
back is important to us,” Mr.
Cancro said. “That’s why we
chose to celebrate the milestone
marking our 55th year with our
first-ever ‘Make a Difference
Day,’ a national effort to ensure
deserving charities get the funding they need.”
Susan
Kelly, Executive
Director of the FoodBank, said,
“Jersey Mike’s has been a friend
of the FoodBank for many years,
and we are proud to be part of
this generous effort to make a
difference in the lives of those
who suffer from the effects of
hunger.”
The
FoodBank
of
Monmouth
and
Ocean
Counties, a member of Feeding
America, secures and distributes
6.7 million pounds of donated
food annually to a network of
approximately 260 hunger relief
organizations in Monmouth
and Ocean counties.
The FoodBank is a 501[c]3
nonprofit whose mission is to
distribute food to as many needy
people as possible through this
network of area charities. Those
needing emergency food or
shelter are encouraged to contact the emergency food
pantries, soup kitchens and
shelters in their communities.
For this information and
more,
see
www.foodbankmoc.org or call
732-918-2600.
PAGE 3
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant Beach
Inside the Artist’s Studio: Steve Coleman, filmmaker
By Lauren Herstik
Art and surfing are lonely
pursuits at the Jersey Shore in
the winter and Steve Coleman, a
filmmaker from Point Pleasant
Beach, works tirelessly at both.
A lifelong shore resident and
a surfer, Mr. Coleman documents life in the New Jersey surf
community. His first documentary short, “Born to the Sea” follows two local surfers — Ryan
and Chelsea — in a conversation about what it is to be a
Jersey Shore Surfer.
Ryan talks about the state of
nirvana induced by “getting barreled in a green room of water.”
He muses on winter surfing,
when the water temperature
hovers near freezing. “You go
down for two waves, tops, and
you come up crying like a little
girl,” he said.
Chelsea, who works at the
Beach House Classic Board
shop in Bay Head, describes her
favorite wave. It’s a small wave
on a light day.
“There are only two other
guys out, and it’s just so rare that
you get that day in New Jersey
where you can still get a good
ride,” she said.
Then there are the days
when, “it’s 30 degrees out and
there’s snow on the ground, but
I’m just going to go and paddle
out even if there’s no waves and
just sit out there, because I love
the ocean,” she said.
Mr. Coleman’s subjects articulate a love for the ocean in their
dialogue. He expands upon it by
saying, “There’s a feeling of
complete solitude when you
watch the waves rise off a placid
dark blue ocean silhouetted by
light blue skies. It’s truly a thing
of beauty.” “Born to the Sea”
won for Best Surf Video at the
Jersey Shore Film Festival in
Deal in 2010.
“I talked to a lot of people to
St. Peter’s
sponsors
group trip
to Italy
St. Peter’s Parish is sponsoring a group trip to Italy,
“Shrines of Italy: A Franciscan
Voyage,” from April 16 through
26, 2012.
Highlights of the trip will
include: Rome, Vatican City, a
Papal Audience, St. Peter’s
Basilica, the Papal Basilica of
St. Paul Outside the Walls, a
Christian Rome city tour, the
Papal Basilica of St. Mary
Major, the Papal Archbasilica
of St. John in Lateran,
Madonna del Rosario, Abbey
of Santissima Trinita, Assisi,
Loreto,
San
Giovanni
Rotondo, and the Tomb of
Padre Pio.
The double trip rate is
$2,799. Included in that price
is round-trip airfare from
Newark International Airport,
air taxes and fees/surcharges of
$150 [subject to increase until
paid in full], hotel transfers,
and busing to and from the airport, as well as 15 meals —
nine breakfasts and six dinners.
Not included in the price are
cancellation waivers and trip
insurance of $200 per person.
According to trip organizers,
“Shrines of Italy: A Franciscan
Voyage” is a great opportunity
to learn more about the early
Christians and walk in the
footsteps of the Franciscan
saints, like St. Francis, St. Clare
and St. Padre Pio. See where
the saints received the stigmata,
preached to the birds and
tamed the wolf.
For further information,
please contact Dawn Rusinko
at 732-892-0049, extension 23
or
e-mail
[email protected].
get interviews. Then I started
compiling the clips. In the end I
decided to focus on these two
friends,” Mr. Coleman said of
the
filmmaking
process.
Shooting the film was “just like
talking to friends,” he said. He’d
just have conversations and let
the camera roll in the background.
Watching the film is like flipping through a photo album
that talks. It’s no surprise that
Mr. Coleman seamlessly flows
back and forth from photography to videography in his work.
“Still photography and film
feels the same to me,” he said. “I
point a camera at the people and
places I enjoy getting lost in,
searching for peace and solitude.
Being a surfer and growing up
on the Jersey Shore I’ve grown
fond of the beauty, scenery and
the people who inhabit the
area.”
Much of his work focuses on
these themes and Mr. Coleman
plans to expand his exploration
of the New Jersey surf community in another documentary
film to be submitted to the 2011
New York Surf Film Festival.
“By capturing these people
and places I can share the small
moments with others, from
when a wave breaks and a surfer
rides it to the shoreline. I focus
on showing people a surfer’s love
for mother earth and the sea
they call home. How they
respect, love and cherish it.
Educating each other about the
ocean so we can keep it alive for
years to come. Keeping the
fountain of youth just like we
found it. Having fun and enjoying the waves,” he said.
This second film will look at
people in local shore towns who
have made surf culture a part of
their lives, while they themselves become integral to the
fabric of the community. Mr.
Coleman plans to interview Jay
Alders, a world famous surfboard artist based in Belmar;
Bill LaFleur who owns Cosmic
Bull, a custom board shop in
Long Branch; and Brian Wynn
who finishes Mr. LaFleur’s
boards out of a workshop in
South Jersey.
Fostering an understanding of
“It’ll be kind of a ‘day in the
life’ look at these people,” Mr. the local surf scene is a common
Coleman said. “I’m trying to
show how surfing plays into the
community here.”
See COLEMAN, page 24
Photo Courtesy of STEVE COLEMAN
Point Pleasant Beach resident Steve Coleman often takes photos of surfers and the ocean
at Jenkinson’s in Point Pleasant Beach.
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and
immaculate Beach cottage. Quiet horseshoe
street, attached garage,
fireplace, large fenced
yard. Walk to beach or bay.
Best price in this market.
NOT LEASED LAND. Sold
furnished. $475,000.
Lee Reilly 732-793-2751
$475,000
MANTOLOKING SHORES
A premier waterfront
estate on two lots featuring a magnificent home
with separate pool house
and pool overlooking
sparkling Barnegat Bay.
Main house has 5
bedrms, 7 zone heat, 5
zone A/C. $3,950,000.
Michael Van Sciver
732-899-6460 or
Marie Koblinyk
732-604-3680
TOMS RIVER- NORTH DOVER
Spectacular home 2x6 outer
wall construction, 2-car
garage, 4 large bedrooms,
3.5 baths, granite eat-in kit,
ss appliances, a cozy family
rm, full finished bsmt! Wrap
around porch and fenced-in
heated pool, tiered decking,
gas grill/kit area and a
24x32 pole barn. $549,000.
Marie Kobilnyk
$549,000
732-604-3680
NORMANDY BEACH
Shore Estate by Harden
featuring189' on Bay.
Professionally
landscaped, pool, decks.
Open main level LR &
great room, large family
kitchen, den, master bedroom suite, large second
floor home office with a
panoramic view.
Tom Villano 732-742-0195
or Bob Schwartz
732-295-4757
SILVER BEACH
Silver Beach classic
waterfront, beautifully
modernized. Gourmet
kitchen with granite,
cherry cabinets and
Viking
appliances.
Waterside deck, several
living areas, large master suite. $949,000.
Rory Joyce 732-580-7101
CURTIS POINT
Immaculate & well cared for
3 bed, 2 bath home built by
Strunk w/additional 2nd floor
unfinished
area
large
enough for 2 bedrooms &
bath. 2009 vinyl bulkhead,
granite kitchen, huge back
deck with Azek planking.
Private beach & tennis assn.
$1,699,000.
Betty Miller 732-996-5046
Rory Joyce 732-580-7101
CHADWICK BEACH
Beautiful 3 story beach blockhome completely redone in
2008. Open floor plan, tile and
hardwood floors, 2nd floor
laundry, granite kitchen, 2-zone
heat & air, cedar impressions
siding and new windows.
Ocean view from 3rd floor
deck. Perfect family neighborhood. $749,000.
Betty Miller 732-996-5046
TOMS RIVER
1st Level 2 bedroom, 2
full
bath
condo,
Driftwood Model with
open floor plan. Ceramic
floor in foyer. Newer
stainless steel appliances. Formal dining,
huge living room, private
patio. All neutral, custom
blinds! $192,000.
Marie Kobilnyk
732-604-3680
www.luxuryshorehomes.com
Van Sciver Realtors Awarded Christie's Great Estates
Affiliate of the Year Award Honors
PAGE 4
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant Beach
St. Peter’s collecting ‘quarters
for water’ to help African school
By Lauren Herstik
The members of St. Peter’s
Roman Catholic Church, on
Forman Avenue in Point
Pleasant Beach, is reaching
across borders to help a community in need.
St. Peter’s Parish has partnered with ChangeALife
Uganda, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving
the lives of orphaned and disadvantaged children and their
families in rural Migyera and
semi-urban
Nabbingo,
Uganda.
The organization was founded by Jean Semler, a parishioner
at St. Peter’s. The parish will
focus its efforts on the
ChangeALife Uganda program
called “Quarters for Water,”
which collects donations to
provide clean drinking water to
communities in Uganda.
During the six weeks of the
Lenten season — the Catholic
pre-Easter season starting
March 9 and ending April 23
— St. Peter’s is challenging its
“We have so much
that we take for
granted. We can
sacrifice that extra
coffee at Dunkin’
Donuts and put the
money towards getting clean drinking
water for someone
in need.”
— Dawn Rusinko
St. Peter’s Pastoral
Associate
members to replace anything
they would normally drink
with water.
Participants are then encouraged to collect their savings by
taking the money they would
have spent on coffee, soda,
juice and sports drinks and
putting it aside in a cup
wrapped with a “Quarters for
Photo Courtesy of JEAN SEMLER
Residents of Migyera, Uganda must collect 30 to 50 cans of
water per day to supply the 500 students and teachers of the
St. Lawrence School. ChangeALife Uganda seeks to install a
well and pipe system at the school to provide easy access to
clean water with funds collected by donors such as St. Peter’s
Parish in Point Pleasant Beach.
Water” label.
“If you are heading toward
the soda machine, head for the
water fountain instead,” church
spokesperson Michelle Ball
wrote in an e-mail this week. “
If your family goes out to dinner and you usually order iced
tea, ask for water — it’s free.
“You’ll be amazed at how the
savings add up,” Ms. Ball continued. “Encourage your whole
family to participate.”
Dawn Rusinko, a pastoral
associate at St. Peter’s,
explained
why
the Point
Pleasant Beach church was so
eager to get involved with
“Quarters for Water.”
“It’s a nice project involving
children and water, and with
the environment the way it is,
anything we can do to help is
important,” she said.
The concept of sacrifice
played into the decision to participate as well, especially so
close to Lent.
“We have so much that we
take for granted. We can sacrifice that extra coffee at
Dunkin’ Donuts and put the
money towards getting clean
drinking water for someone in
need,” Ms. Rusinko added.
A single quarter goes a long
way at St. Lawrence School in
Migyera.
The
donations
replace containers filled with
dirty water from a local pond
with clean water from a deep
well for St. Lawrence students.
In 2010, donations from
American schoolchildren provided five new water collection
tanks and purchased the land
for a new well. But, the situation is critical, since the village
is in a semi-arid area, and the
rainfall pattern has become
variable and sporadic.
In fact, this past rainy season
did not bring the expected
Point Pleasant
Beach
Community
Calendar
Photo Courtesy of JEAN SEMLER
Students at the St. Lawrence School in Migyera, Uganda
must help carry cans of water to school from the nearest
water source, in up to six trips per day. St. Peter’s Parish in
Point Pleasant Beach is collecting “Quarters for Water” to
help ease the burden on the students.
School.
The first phase of the project, which will help buy a well,
pump and pump house, will
cost $20,000, according to the
organization’s website.
Clean water access has been
a priority in Uganda for at least
the past 10 years. In 2004,
Uganda’s central government
set national targets to increase
access to clean water and sanitation to 100 percent in urban
areas and 77 percent in rural
districts by 2015, according to
a 2009 report released by the
World Resources Institute
[WRI], a global environmental
think
tank
based
in
Washington, D.C.
While that goal is well on its
way to being achieved, with
increases in water access in
rural sub-counties of the country reported five years after the
initiative was implemented,
other areas of the country still
lag behind.
As of 2009, more than 14
million people lived in 506 subcounties that were ahead of the
interim target set by Uganda’s
planners, while approximately
11 million people lived in 323
rural sub-counties that had not
kept pace with national
progress on safe drinking water
rates, according to “Mapping a
Healthier Future,” a 2009
report on clean water access
issued by the Ugandan
Government Ministries.
Those rural areas found to be
lagging require extra attention
so increased clean-water access
can keep pace with the rising
population and climate changefueled desertification in the
region, according to WRI.
The “Quarters for Water”
project serves to provide that
extra attention in Migera, in
the central region of the country, and Nabbingo, a suburb
just outside the capital city of
Kampala.
To donate funds collected
each week during Lent, contact
Dawn Rusinko, St. Peter’s
Pastoral Associate, at 732-8920049, extension 23, or e-mail
[email protected].
To learn more about St.
Peter’s partner organization,
v
i
s
i
t
G.
Harold
Antrim www.changealifeuganda.org.
Elementary School will distribute all-day kindergarten registration packets to all parents of
interested, incoming kindergarten students beginning
Monday, March 7, from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m., in the Antrim attendance office, on Niblick Street.
Children must be 5 years old
on or before Oct. 1, 2011 to be
eligible for enrollment in
The Point Beach Players, of
kindergarten for the 2011-2012 Point Pleasant Beach High
school year.
School, will present the musical
Documents required to regis- “Little Shop of Horrors” on
ter a student for kindergarten Friday, March 11 at 7 p.m.,
are: the original birth certificate Saturday, March 12 at 7 p.m.,
[hospital certificates are unac- and Sunday, March 13 at 2 p.m.
ceptable], a copy of immunizaPerformances will be held at
tion records, and proof of Point the F. Thomas Crawley
Pleasant Beach residency [for Auditorium, at G. Harold
example, a tax bill or lease].
Antrim School, 401 Niblick St.
The registration packet
Tickets are $8 for adults, and
should be returned on or before $6 for students and senior citiApril 4, with the required infor- zens when purchased ahead of
mation completed.
time, and $1 more at the door.
For more information, conFor more information, call
tact the school at 732-899- 732-899-1817
or
visit
3737.
www.ptbeach.com/musical.
rainfall total, so the cistern and
collecting
tanks
at
St.
Lawrence School are dry,
according to ChangeALife
Uganda’s
website,
www.changealifeuganda.org.
Ms. Semler and her husband, David Thelen, visited St.
Lawrence School for the first
time in 2006. They were so
affected by the people they met
there that they began brainstorming ways to help remedy
the poverty they saw.
ChangeALife
Uganda
attained 501[c]3 status in 2007
and has since operated out of
Brick, accepting donations and
working toward addressing
poverty in the regions the
founding couple visited.
The St. Peter’s couple chose
to focus on the need for clean
water, because “it was the one
thing that ties all our programs
together,” Ms. Semler said.
“The water table is so low,
and so, many of the other
[well] bore holes have dried
up,” Ms. Semler said, explaining the need for the sophisticated well the organization
hopes to deliver with the help
of St. Peter’s parishioners’
donations.
Ms. Semler returned to
Uganda again in July 2010 to
understand what it takes to
secure clean water for St.
Lawrence School.
According to ChangeALife
Uganda representatives, someone must fill 30 to 50 cans per
day with pond water. That person then transports five cans
per trip, making at least six
trips per day to supply water
for drinking and washing for
the 500 students and teachers
at the school.
ChangeALife Uganda plans
to use the donations from St.
Peter’s collection campaign
during Lent to add a pump,
pipes and a large holding tank
to provide a permanent, clean
water source at St. Lawrence
Kindergarten
registration
opens March 7
H.S. players
prep for spring
musical ‘Shop
of Horrors’
To submit a calendar listing
or Point Pleasant Beach
news story, e-mail
[email protected]
~
Point Pleasant
Beach Goose Force
Seeks Members
The Point Pleasant Beach
Goose Force, which allows registered, unleashed dogs, accompanied by their owners, to chase
geese at the borough lakes,
Little League Field and G.
Harold Antrim Elementary
School, is looking for members.
Dogs must reside in Point
Pleasant Beach, Bay Head,
Mantoloking or Point Pleasant,
and be licensed.
The fee to join the Goose
Force is $10, and proof of rabies
vaccine is required if the owner
is a non-resident.
Please contact Karen Mills,
Point Pleasant Beach Board of
Health Officer and Dog
Warden, with any questions.
~
Youth
Connection
Italian Dinner
Set For Tomorrow
The Annual Italian Dinner
will be held tomorrow,
Saturday, Feb. 26, from 4:30 to
7 p.m. at the Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church Annex, on
the corner of Bay and Forman
avenues.
The menu for the evening
includes meatballs, sausage, fettuccine alfredo, penne with
vodka sauce, spaghetti, garlic
bread, salad, dessert and beverages.
Take-out meals will be available.
The free-will donations of
visitors will be used to fund the
Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church Youth Connection’s
mission trips and programming.
A lift chair is available for
those who need it. Any questions, please call the church
office at 732-899-0587.
~
H.S. Sophomores’
Dodgeball Tourney
Tomorrow
The Point Pleasant Beach
High School Class of 2013 is
holding two dodgeball tournament fundraisers.
One will be held tomorrow,
Saturday, Feb. 26, and one on
Saturday, Mar. 26, both from 7
to 9 p.m.
The entry fee is $5 for each
team member, and teams are
composed of six players, each.
There will be four age divisions for each tournament: elementary, middle school, high
school and adult.
Spectator fees are $3 for
adults and $2 for students.
Forms and rules are available
online, on the Point Pleasant
Beach High School website.
For information, contact
class advisor Lisa Kitchenman
at 732-492-5599 or [email protected].
~
Progressive Bridge
Held At Clubhouse
On Tuesdays
Progressive bridge is held at
the Woman’s Club of Point
Pleasant Clubhouse, 513 St.
Louis Ave., every second and
fourth Tuesday, at 12:30 p.m.
No partner needed. Call
732-899-2731 for information.
PAGE 5
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant Beach
Point Elks beat winter blues at Parrothead Party
By Molly Mulshine
It might still be chilly outside,
but the Point Pleasant Elks did
not let the cold weather stop
them from donning Hawaiian
shirts and throwing a summerthemed bash in their lodge,
here, last weekend.
The
Elks
held
their
Parrothead Beach Party last
Saturday, Feb. 19, to benefit the
Elks National Foundation
[ENF].
“It’s the middle of winter,
there’s a lot of snow, but we just
want to have fun,” said Bob
Kierstead, of Point Pleasant, the
Arnold Avenue lodge’s house
chairman.
Mr. Kierstead has been a
member of the Point Pleasant
Elks for more than 30 years, and
is also a past exalted ruler of the
organization.
“I enjoy meeting people”
through the Elks,” Mr.
Kierstead said. “I enjoy the benefits of being an Elk and giving
back to the community.”
The beach party featured live
guitar music by Ed Austin, who
covered summery tunes by
musicians like Jimmy Buffett.
The Elks also provided a
summer-style barbecue buffet
including pulled pork, kielbasa,
corn on the cob, baked beans
and more.
“The beach party is a good
thing to have,” said Tim Brogan,
of Point Pleasant. “It really
brings the Elks community
together.”
Mr. Brogan is one of the
organization’s newest members,
having been sworn in just a few
months ago. He joined the Point
Pleasant Elks because he played
on the Elks-sponsored Pop
Warner football team in Point
Pleasant as a child.
Mr. Brogan also grew up
around the lodge, because his
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Point Pleasant Elks member Shirlene Taskowitz elk member came in from the cold to enjoy some island cooking and
music at the lodge’s Parrothead Beach Party last weekend.
table and comfather was a
munity develmember.
“I walked in here opment projJoining the
Elks “just felt tonight and saw all ects.
One way in
right,” he said.
of the decorations,
which
the
The atmosphere at the and it felt like there ENF benefits
P a r r o t h e a d was no more snow young people is
through
its
Beach Party
on the ground.”
scholarship
boosted Mr.
Brogan’s spirits
— Tim Brogan p r o g r a m ,
despite
the
Point Pleasant Elks Lodge which benefits
than
cold weather.
member more
2,500 students
“I walked in
every year.
here tonight
“It’s a national organization,
and saw all of the decorations,
and it felt like there was no more and [the Elks] are the secondsnow on the ground,” Mr. largest giver of scholarships” in
the country, Mr. Kierstead said.
Brogan said.
In addition to having a good “The federal government is
time, the local Elks helped ben- first.”
The ENF also funds the Elks
efit the ENF through the beach
National Drug Awareness
party.
Established in 1928, the ENF Program, which seeks to educate
sponsors a wide range of chari- young people about the dangers
Beach Library posts March schedule
The Point Pleasant Beach
Branch of the Ocean County
Library recently released its
schedule of events for March.
The library is located at 710
McLean Ave. in Point Pleasant
Beach.
To register for library programs, or for more information,
please call the Point Pleasant
Beach Library at 732-892-4575.
Interested parties can also register for programs online, at
www.theoceancountylibrary.org.
Displays
• The meeting room art display for the remainder of
February features the work of
Sheila Soyster and Joanne
Zezula.
• Jack Loder and Lynne
Mitchell will be displaying their
art in the meeting room during
the month of March. The Point
Pleasant Beach Friends will host
a reception for them on
Saturday, March 26, from 10:30
a.m. to noon.
• The curio cabinet will feature a display called “Boy
Scouting” for the rest of this
month, courtesy of Scott
Thompson.
• The curio cabinet will feature a display called “Irish
Memorabilia” in March, courtesy of Karen Monahan.
Adult Programs
• Personalized Computer
Instruction, every Wednesday,
10:30 a.m.
Got technology questions?
Rosellen, one of the library’s
friendly volunteers, will be at the
library on Wednesdays at 10:30
a.m. Call the branch to schedule
a one-on-one appointment with
Rosellen.
• English Conversation
Group, every Tuesday, 6 p.m.
New to English as a language? Please join Judy Sette,
the library’s new group leader,
and practice conversation skills
in a relaxed and informal setting. Please register.
• Puzzled Fridays, March 4,
11, 18 and 25, 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
Join the Point Beach Library
Friends to complete puzzles.
Develop new neural networks,
from floor puzzles to 1,50piecers.
Light refreshments will be
served. All age groups arae welcome. Please register.
• Point Pleasant Beach
Library Friends Meeting,
Tuesday, March 8, 7 p.m.
The Friends of the Point
Pleasant Beach Library are an
essential link between the
library and the public. The
members of the Friends group
plan programs and fundraisers
for specific library needs. New
members are always welcome.
• Stitch at the Beach, Tuesday,
March 8, 7 p.m.
Bring along needles and yarn,
and join the library’s monthly
knitting group. Knitters of all
skill levels are welcome. Please
register.
• Adult Book Discussion,
Tuesday, March 22, at 7 p.m.
Annie Freeman’s Fabulous
Traveling Funeral, by Kris
Radish, is this month’s selection.
The discussion is led by Marian
Latendorf. Books may be picked
up at the library’s circulation
desk.
• Introduction to the
Enneagram, Tuesday, March 29,
7 p.m.
Presenter Eleanor Clarke will
acquaint guests with a new and
powerful system of personality
types. Guests will be able to
of drug abuse.
The ENF benefits veterans,
as well, with its Elks National
Veterans Service Program.
Supporting veterans is especially important to the Point
Pleasant Elks.
“We take the veterans on
fishing trips,” Mr. Kierstead
said. “In Point, we’re very into
veterans and children.”
The ENF also distributes
grants to local Elks lodges for
improvements and other projects.
Supporting the ENF is just
one of the charitable ventures in
which the Point Elks take part.
The Elks sponsor the Point
Pleasant Elks Pop Warner football teams and cheerleading
squads, as well as Girl and Boy
Scout Troops in the surrounding
towns, Mr. Kierstead said.
The Elks’ dedication to children with special needs is also a
cornerstone of their organization.
The group contributes funds
to Camp Moore, a North Jersey
summer camp for children with
special needs funded by New
Jersey Elks lodges through several fundraisers throughout the
year.
“We have a special-needs picnic every July,” Mr. Kierstead
said. “We’ve had upwards of 150
children [attend the picnic] ...
It’s a moving experience, and it
makes you want to give something back.”
The Elks also held a
Snowflake Charity Ball recently
to raise awareness of their work
for children with special needs.
“The main idea of running
this charity ball was to bring
awareness of what our committee does for the children,” said
Eileen Miller, of Point Pleasant.
The Elks also held a charity
Christmas party in December to
benefit children with special
needs.
The Point Elks hope to continue to “make people aware that
we are here to provide assistance
to special-needs children,” Ms.
Miller said.
www.patriciamccormackmd.com
A PEELING SOLUTION
Not only is a chemical
facial peel an effective
means of reducing/eliminating fine lines, wrinkles,
acne scarring and skin discoloration, it is one of the
oldest cosmetic procedures.
Cleopatra’s milk baths are
perhaps the most famous
example of utilizing the lactic acid in milk (which is an
alpha hydroxy acid still
used today) to exfoliate,
smooth and rejuvenate skin.
Today, the underlying technique is the same as it was
then. The dermatologist
applies an acid solution to
the face, which removes the
damaged outer layers of
skin. As the underlying layers of skin emerge, they
lend the face a rejuvenated,
silky, unblemished appearance. By varying the con-
centration of the acid solution, the dermatologist can
achieve a customized effect.
For further information
about anything discussed in
today’s column, call 732295-1331. The office is
conveniently located at 407
Richmond Ave., Route 35
South, Point Pleasant
Beach. New patients are
welcome. We have evening
and Saturday appointments.
P.S. While a light chemical peel may be fine for the
treatment of fine wrinkling,
areas of dryness, uneven
pigmentation, and acne, a
deep peel may be used to
treat coarse facial wrinkles,
blotches caused by aging or
sun exposure, and pre-cancerous growths. Ask about
our Vi Peel!
Hill and Dale
announces
KINDERGARTEN
OPEN HOUSE
Thursday, March 10, 2011
7:00pm
6 Osborn Avenue
Manasquan
• Individual Programs
• Differential Reading
• Small Class Sizes
Please Call:
732-223-0755
Now
Open
Noon to
10pm
REOPENS MARCH 2nd
Early Bird Sunset Dinners
Daily Noon-6pm • Saturday Noon-5pm • Sun. Noon-6pm
Includes: Salad or Soup, Entree,
Potato & Vegetable, Beverage & Dessert
Over 25 Selections
3/31/11
75 Inlet Drive, Pt. Pleasant, NJ
See LIBRARY, page 23
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PAGE 6
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant Beach
AQUASERVE PRESENTS
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732-746-3708
2911 Route 88 • Suite 4
Point Pleasant, NJ
Borough ordered to legal fees in prayer lawsuit
— FROM PAGE 1 —
The ACLU reported 126 billable hours working on the
September lawsuit against the
borough, at a rate of $400 per
hour. A sum of $4,650 was
removed from the total bill, as
that
money
represented
“duplicative” hours, such as travel time and initial consultations
with the plaintiff.
In contrast, the borough’s representation, Kevin Riordan,
billed for 28 hours, at $125 per
hour.
Judge Grasso ruled that the
ACLU’s $400-per-hour rate was
“not unreasonable,” and that,
while Mr. Riordan’s rate reflects
“effort by local governments to
tighten their fiscal belts in challenging economic times,” his 28
hours billed was “not unreasonable.”
He then ordered that the borough pay the $11,200, representing 28 billable hours at $400 per
hour, to be paid in the next 60
days.
In the lawsuit filed in
September, ACLU New Jersey
[ACLU-NJ] challenged the
council’s traditional practice of
reciting the Christian prayer at
public meetings under Article 1,
Paragraph 4 of the New Jersey
Constitution, which provides
that “there shall be no establishment of one religious sect in
preference to another.”
Mr. Riordan explained that
once the first lawsuit had been
filed, the borough had only two
options.
“They [the members of the
governing body] could change
[their practice], or they could
defend The Lord’s Prayer,” he
said.
The latter would have been
something of an uphill battle, as
The Lord’s Prayer — a canonical
Christian prayer often referred
to as The Our Father — likely
Judge Grasso,
would
have
who ruled in
been
ruled
u n c o n s t i t u - “I would hope the favor of the
tional, resulting ACLU backs down. ACLU after a
December
in even more
attorney hours They’ve made their hearing for the
point. Asking for second lawsuit
and legal fees,
Mr. Riordan further fees would on the issue.
In rendering
said.
“ T h e punish the taxpayers his decision on
moment the
for the actions of the second
ACLU filed just a few people.” lawsuit, which
deemed
the
the suit, they
were entitled to
— Vincent R. Barrella council’s new
legal fees under
Mayor, rotating prayer
the
catalyst
Point Pleasant Beach policy unconstitutional,
theory,” Mr.
Judge Grasso
R i o r d a n
cited the Lemon Test. The test
explained.
The New Jersey Appellate was instituted after a 1971
Division deemed the catalyst court case, and is used in anatheory sufficient grounds for the lyzing church-state interacaward of attorney’s fees in tions.
The test states that, “First,
December 2010. The legal theory stipulates that a party who the statute must have a secular
brings action that is a catalyst for legislative purpose; second, its
change qualifies for an award of principal or primary effect must
legal fees when the action in be one that neither advances
question is alleged to violate the nor inhibits religion; finally, the
statute must not foster an
Civil Rights Act.
In this case, because the bor- excessive government entangleough changed its policy once the ment with religion.”
Judge Grasso ruled that
ACLU filed the September lawsuit, the ACLU is entitled to fees Point Beach’s rotating prayer
for being the catalyst to that policy failed to meet these
requirements. As a result, it was
change.
In response to the initial law- deemed to be unconstitutional
the
Establishment
suit, the council instituted a under
of
the
First
moment of silence in place of the Clause
prayer as a stopgap measure Amendment to the United
while the lawsuit was being State Constitution, which
adjudicated, prompting the states that government “shall
ACLU to withdraw its lawsuit. make no law respecting an
The council then enacted a establishment of religion.”
On Dec. 17, Judge Grasso
new prayer policy in October.
The ACLU filed a second issued a preliminary injunction
lawsuit in November against the stopping the council from
new policy, which allowed coun- enacting the rotating prayer
cil members to step down off the policy, with the decision about
dais and give an invocation of whether or not to award legal
their choosing on a rotating fees to the ACLU for the second lawsuit still pending.
basis.
How the council will proceed
On Nov. 9, Councilman Jeff
Dyer recited a prayer invoking remains to be seen.
“We need to stop having
the name Jesus Christ.
The case is still a hot-button members of council mouthing
issue among residents in Point the words to the prayer and
Pleasant Beach. At the most exacerbating the possibility of a
recent council meeting, last second award of fees,” Mayor
Tuesday night, roughly 25 peo- Vincent R. Barrella said this
ple stood to recite The Lord’s week.
Joellen Arrabito, a Forman
Prayer during a moment of
silence that was held in honor of Avenue resident, has been
a resident who recently passed organizing a group of people to
show up at council meetings
away.
The moment of silence con- and recite The Lord’s Prayer in
tinued for a marked period of protest during the council’s
time after the residents complet- moment of silence.
She has circulated an e-mail
ed the prayer. Upon commencement of the meeting, nearly all throughout the community and
those who had recited the prayer among local members of the
filed out of the room and left Tea Party requesting support.
“We’re not ready to give up
borough hall.
The act drew the attention of on our rights,” she said yesternational news media. A camera- day. “Let’s understand the
man from Fox News caught the Constitution, which says we
have a right to pray.
act of protest on video.
“I don’t agree with the judge’s
The footage was filmed as
part of a story on the ongoing reasoning and logic in this
prayer lawsuit, in which case,” she said, of Judge
Councilman Jeff Dyer gave an Grasso’s order for Point
interview voicing his position in Pleasant Beach to pay part of
support of prayer at government the ACLU’s legal fees.
When asked whether a
meetings.
He mentioned the fact that council policy that uses courtthe nation’s forefathers came to approved, non-sectarian prayers
America in search of religious to open meetings —a category
freedom, and said his choosing from which The Lord’s Prayer
to pray at public meetings does would be excluded — would be
not represent a governmental acceptable, Ms. Arrabito said,
preference for one religion over “Personally, I wouldn’t be
happy.”
another.
That is the direction Mayor
That was not the opinion of
Barrella would like the council
to go in.
“I’d like to see something in
place using a non-sectarian
prayer, or possibly a Marsa
prayer,” the mayor said this
week.
The mayor was referring to
court-approved prayers recorded in a similar case, Marsa v.
Wernik, in which a private citizen, Paul Marsa, questioned the
legality of then-mayor Donald
J. Wernik opening Metuchen
municipal meetings with invocations.
The New Jersey Supreme
Court ruled in 1981 in favor of
the municipality in that case,
deeming the prayers in question sufficiently non-sectarian
so as not to violate the Lemon
Test.
Mayor
Barrella
said
Wednesday he hopes for a
“global settlement,” by which
he means the end to both the
first and second lawsuit, and to
the possibility that the borough
might be responsible for even
more fees.
“I would hope the ACLU
backs down,” the mayor said.
“They’ve made their point.
Asking for further fees would
punish the taxpayers for the
actions of just a few people.”
“Hopefully, we will reach a
decision at the next council
meeting,” regarding how to
proceed from this point forward, he said.
The next Point Pleasant
Beach Council meeting is
scheduled for Tuesday, March 8.
“There are important things
going on,” the mayor said.
“People are in danger of losing
their jobs. People are facing furlough days. Seniors and families
are having a hard time making
payments.
“There are so many things
that this is distracting us from,”
the mayor continued. “This is a
national debate that’s playing
out in tiny Point Pleasant
Beach. I wish we would get it
resolved.”
H.S. Key Club
to host Dessert
& Gift Auction
April 13
The Point Pleasant Beach
High School Key Club is sponsoring a Dessert & Gift Auction
on Wednesday, April 13.
Desserts and beverages will
be served.
The money raised during the
event will be used for the Key
Club’s Major Emphasis project,
to benefit children’s specialized
hospitals.
A portion of the proceeds will
be disbursed to Project
Graduation, scholarships and
other organizations that request
financial support throughout
the year.
The Key Club invites donations of gifts or gift certificates
for the event.
For further information, contact Patricia Knapp or Nancy
Scalabrini at 732-899-1817.
Gifts may be dropped off at the
High School office.
Making New Friends
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Mary Scheiderman [left] and Jeannie Tomlinson attended St. Peter’s Church Young
Adult Single night to meet new people, form new friendships, and have a generally good
time earlier this month.
PAGE 7
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant Beach
Governor announces state aid awards
— FROM PAGE 1 —
property tax relief, and $200 million in tax cuts and business incentives under the proposed budget,
the governor said.
Although state aid to schools
would increase over last year’s
amounts — by $250 million —
aid to municipalities would remain
flat. Both schools and municipalities took a hit in state aid reductions last year.
According to the state aid
awards
announced
late
Wednesday, the Point Pleasant
Beach School District saw the
greatest percentage-increase in its
aid award from the current, 20102011 award of $170,525 to
$300,192 next school year — an
increase of $129,667, or 76 percent.
Point
Pleasant
Beach
Superintendent of Schools John
Ravally, Ed.D., said yesterday, of
the state aid increase the district is
set to receive next year, $32,386
will go toward a debt assessment.
This assessment was put in
place by the state, since the Point
Pleasant Beach School District
received construction grants for
the recent additions at both G.
Harold Antrim Elementary
School and Point Pleasant Beach
High School.
“It’s basically us paying that
grant back,” Mr. Ravally said.
Of the remaining $97,281 in
state aid increases, Mr. Ravally
said yesterday it is too early to tell
what impact that will have on the
district’s 2011-2012 budget, since
the state has not yet provided the
district with Mantoloking’s share
figures of the school tax levy.
However, the superintendent
said yesterday he was expecting
those numbers to be released very
soon.
Mantoloking has been part of
the Point Pleasant Beach School
District since the 2009 dissolution
of
the
non-operating
Mantoloking School District.
“We are anticipating a decrease
in overall expenses [in the Point
Pleasant Beach School District”
for the 2011-2012 school year,
Mr. Ravally said yesterday.
The Point Pleasant School
District saw the biggest gross
increase in aid locally — a bump
of $356,074, which will bring the
district’s state aid award for 20112012 to $5,386,793, compared to
$5,030,719 for the current school
year.
“We just got the numbers yesterday,” Superintendent of Schools
Vincent S. Smith said Thursday
afternoon.
“Everyone was holding their
breath to see what was going to
happen,” the superintendent said.
“There was a sigh of relief that
we’re not going backwards.”
Last year, many local school
districts’ state aid awards were cut,
or eliminated.
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Gov. Chris Christie presented his proposed 2012 fiscal year budget to the legislature on
Tuesday in Trenton.
back on track,” Superintendent
Smith said yesterday. “We have to
move forward. ... Getting more aid
was certainly a plus.”
The Point Pleasant Board of
Education will host a budget presentation for the public on March
14 at Ocean Road Elementary
School, the superintendent said,
with the proposed budget’s final
hearing and adoption slated for
March 28.
Other local districts saw modest
aid increases as well.
In Bay Head, the 2011-2012
state aid award was increased to
$29,537 from nothing during the
current school year. All of the
2011-2012 award is designated for
special education assistance.
“It’s nice to know that we got
some of our special education aid
restored,” Mr. Ravally stated yesterday.
Mr. Ravally also serves as superintendent of the Bay Head School
District, a Point Pleasant Beach
sending district.
The superintendent clarified
that Bay Head’s special education
aid totaled $47,567 two years ago,
but was reduced to nothing last
year.
Mr. Ravally stated yesterday
that Bay Head was still waiting on
extraordinary aid figures from the
state that could also assist Bay
Head’s special education program.
According to the state aid
awards released Wednesday, the
Lavallette School District will
receive $133,044 in state aid during the next school year. The district was awarded $97,933 during
the current school year, for an
increase of $35,111.
“Here at the Lavallette School,
we have the lowest tax rate in the
county, and good community support,” Lavallette Superintendent
Peter Morris said yesterday. “Any
increase that we get in state aid is
certainly a very positive thing.”
Mr. Morris further stated that
Lavallette was looking forward to
finalizing the “leanest” proposed
2011-2012 school budget possible
in order to provide the best education for the district’s children.
Now that state aid numbers
have been released, local board of
education will get to work finalizing the drafts of their proposed
2011-2012 school budgets, which
are due to be introduced next
month.
Local school budgets will be
put up for a public vote on
Wednesday, April 20, when residents will also have the chance to
elect school board members.
Unlike local school districts,
most state departments will see a
cut, the governor said Tuesday —
funding for the Department of
Environmental Protection would
be down 10 percent and the
Department of Health and Senior
Services would see a 15-percent
cut.
Money alone is not the answer
to New Jersey’s financial problems, said the governor. He urged
for reform to the education system
and to the state’s pension and benefits system.
He called on the legislature to
finally pass pension and benefit
reform. He offered to make an
immediate $500-million payment
to the pension fund — the first
contribution made, he said, since
the 2009 fiscal year to the estimated $54-billion, deficit-ridden pension system — if “real reform” is
passed. The payment is statutorily
required to be made within fiscal
year 2012.
In a statement released Tuesday,
New Jersey Education Association
[NJEA] President Barbara
Keshishian claimed Gov. Christie
was pitting all of New Jersey
against public education employees.
“He promises to make a legally
required $500-million contribution to the pension system, but
only if teachers and school
employees pay thousands more
out of their salaries — on top of
their current contributions,” she
said.
New Jersey’s small businesses,
on the other hand, applauded
Gov. Christie’s push for reform.
“Without real reforms to the
legacy costs, taxes will explode,
and the state’s economy will be
dead in the water,” said Laurie
GOP club president responds to mayor’s
decision not to seek club endorsement
By Lauren Herstik
Republican Club President
Stephen Reid responded this
week to Mayor Vincent
Barrella’s announcement that he
would not seek the club’s
endorsement in this year’s election. He also responded to
Councilwoman Kris Tooker’s
comments regarding the mayor’s
decision and her own relationship with the club.
Even if the mayor had sought
the club’s endorsement, he
would be ineligible as a nondues paying former member.
According to Mr. Reid, Mayor
Barrella has not paid club dues
in three years.
Mayor Barrella explained,
“Why would I pay dues to a club
that did not support me in the
recall election, and that did not
offer to defray the thousands of
dollars in legal fees incurred
from that.”
Mayor Barrella successfully
ran for office on the Republican
ticket in November 2007, but
2401 Highway 35
Manasquan, NJ
Photo Courtesy of NEW JERSEY GOVERNOR’S OFFICE
since his installation, the mayor
has had several public clashes
with the leaders and members of
the Point Pleasant Beach
Regular
Republican
Organization. Last year, the club
decided to back a different candidate when Mayor Barrella
faced a recall election. As a
result, the mayor ran as an
Independent to maintain his
seat, and defeated Republican
candidate Stephen Reid and
Democrat John Dixon by a significant margin.
Mr. Reid addressed the claims
that certain officials’ breaks with
the club were founded on differences in philosophy.
“When they talk about the
Republican Party and differences of philosophy, I don’t
know what they’re talking about.
We’re a very inclusive party,” Mr.
Reid said.
“I called over 100 people to
serve on leadership committees
within the club. I’ve asked Kris
Tooker twice to serve on these
committees. When she says, ‘I
have a difference of opinion with
the philosophy of the club,’ she
must be talking about the past or
certain council members. I’m
talking about the future.”
Mr. Reid added that he had
invited new people to serve in
leadership positions since he
became president of the club in
December. He said the move
represented a look toward the
future and a new, refreshed perspective.
Mayor Barrella expanded on
the philosophical divides.
“Their leadership has never
embraced the concept of putting
taxpayers first. They always
come out in favor of the contributor. They are inclusive to those
who agree with them.”
Mayor Barrella noted that the
leadership of the club, including
President Stephen Reid, Vice
President John Jackson, Second
See GOP, page 17
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Ehlbeck, of the National
Federation of Independent
Business [NFIB], the country’s
largest small-business advocate.
“The governor is right to push
them to reform the system, and we
are very pleased that he did so
again,” she said.
On Tuesday, speaking in
Trenton, Gov. Christie implored
the legislature to pass the budget.
It requires adoption before the
2012 fiscal year begins on July 1,
2011.
All local borough governments
will incorporate the municipal aid
figures released this week into the
planning of their 2011 budgets,
which are set for introduction next
month.
Municipal aid awards remained
flat for the 2012 fiscal year, which
begins July 1 and lasts until June
30, 2012.
Bay Head received $169,935 in
state aid for the 2011 fiscal year,
which will remain the same in
2011-2012.
Lavallette is slated to receive
$168,609 in state aid, while
Mantoloking will be awarded
$147,440.
Point Pleasant Beach is due to
receive $571,362, and Point
Pleasant will receive $1,227,576.
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PAGE 8
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Lavallette
Council establishes fees for use of borough property
Lavallette
Community
Calendar
To submit a calendar listing or
Lavallette news story, e-mail
[email protected]
Lavallette
First Aid Squad
Seeks Members
The Lavallette First Aid
Squad is currently seeking new
members interested in becoming New Jersey State Certified
EMTs.
All training will be provided
at no cost. Please contact Capt.
Jim Borowski at 732-793-7390
for more information.
The squad asks that members
of the public please consider
joining this life-saving organization.
~
First Aid Aux. To
Hold Card Party
March 21
The Lavallette Women’s First
Aid Auxiliary will hold a card
party on Monday, March 21 at
12:30 p.m. at the First Aid
Building
on
Washington
Avenue and Bay Boulevard
A donation of $3 is requested,
and the public is invited to come
have some fun with friends.
There will be prizes, dessert
and coffee.
By Lauren Herstik
The Lavallette Council has
approved an ordinance governing permits for for-profit organizations seeking to utilize
municipal property for their
activities.
The ordinance passed Tuesday
night in a unanimous vote upon
second reading. It establishes
certain municipal property as a
“place of resort,” including the
municipal tennis court and the
municipal ice skating rink. Forprofit businesses that use the
municipality’s places of resort for
their activities must obtain a permit, and will be subject to a fee
to be paid to the municipality
amounting to 10 percent of gross
revenue derived from the activi-
ty.
The council had been discussing the possibility of such an
ordinance for some time, ever
since Council President Anita
Zalom mentioned in January
that she had been contacted by a
summer resident looking to provide private tennis clinics on the
municipal courts in the summertime. The resident offered the
town 10 percent of profits, as
that had been the standard in
other towns where she’d offered
the clinics, according to
Councilwoman Zalom.
Councilwoman
Joanne
Fillipone wondered whether the
town could levy a similar fee
from other for-profit organizations that utilize municipal
property. Borough Attorney
Phillip George noted the law
requires that an ordinance be
passed to levy such fees so that
the fees remain consistent across
all municipal places of resort and
for all for-profit businesses.
“A separate fee may be established for non-profits,” he said at
the meeting in January.
The council has since penned
this new ordinance, which standardizes the 10 percent fee for
for-profit businesses. In the
ordinance, the council recognized that these for-profit businesses have increasingly utilized
municipal property for activities
that encourage “physical wellbeing and healthy competition.”
However, the use of municipal
property for said activities has
increasingly put a strain on
municipal resources including
employee overtime, cleanup
expenses, and maintenance
expenses, according to the ordinance.
Commercial, for-profit businesses will now be required to
obtain a permit before engaging
in any kind of lessons, classes,
competitions, or events over the
course of a single day or multiple
days. The ordinance requires
that participants in activities on
the beach obtain a beach badge
in addition to the activity fees.
Permit applicants will also be
responsible for a security deposit
to cover cleanup or damages
resulting from the activity in
Volunteer firefighters sworn in at dinner
Before an audience made up
of Lavallette Volunteer Fire
Company members, the company’s Ladies Auxiliary, and special guests, Fire Chaplain Rev.
John Collins gave the invocation
for the 2011 installation on
Saturday, Feb. 19.
The evening’s festivities started with the swearing in of
administrative officers and fire
department members conducted
by Councilman Robert Lamb, a
Lavallette fireman.
“This is a very important
event for any fire company,” said
Lavallette
Fire
Company
President Art Reece.
“Each member swears an oath
to the Constitution and to the
local community,” Mr. Reece
said. “The activities afterwards
are a thank-you to the Ladies
Auxiliary for their valuable
assistance in fundraising during
the year.
“It is also a way to acknowledge the support of spouses who
have had meals or parties interrupted when there
is a fire alarm,”
the fire company
Photo Courtesy of ROSALIE DOLINAJ
Lavallette Volunteer Fire Company officers — including Second Lieutenant Don
Goldenbaum [from left], First Lieutenant Joe Lord, Capt. Mike Phillips, Assistant Chief Joe
Barraco, fireman and Lavallette Councilman Robert Lamb and President Art Reece, as well as
Chief Peter Scott [not pictured] — were sworn in at the company’s installation dinner on
Sunday, held at the firehouse on Washington Avenue.
president added. “Our thanks
also go out to various vendors,
community businesses, and
members who made this annual
event possible.”
The following are members
of the 2011 Lavallette Volunteer
Fire Company: Joe Barraco, Jim
Borowski, Wade Brackman,
Robert Bradley Sr., Brendon
Brice, Coleman Brice, Robert
Brice, John Dolinaj, Doug
Franzoso, Jake Franzoso, Mike
Franzoso, Nick Franzoso, John
Frayman,
Paul
Genovese,
Joe
Giampietro, Richard
Gilmour,
Don
Goldenbaum, Steve Grabowski,
Adam LaCicero, Christian
LaCicero, Walter LaCicero,
Justin Lamb, Robert Lamb,
Frederick Lord, Joseph Lord,
Scott Madden, Rich Molnar Sr.,
C.W. Paul, William E. Paul,
Mike Phillips, Michael Phillips
II, Arthur Reece, William Reed,
Carmen Russo, Peter Scott,
Peter Seggel, Tim Seggel, Jerry
Skinner, David Slowinski,
Dmitri Tourchiev, Kevin
Turner, Zach Lamb.
addition to the 10 percent of
gross revenues fee paid to the
town.
“This will be a great way for
the town to make some money
on all the great activities that go
on
here,”
Councilwoman
Fillipone said during the initial
discussion of the ordinance.
Lavallette skier
excels at
Special Olympics
The Special Olympics of
New Jersey recently held its culminating event of the winter
season, the 2011 Winter
Games.
More than 300 Special
Olympics athletes from across
New Jersey competed in the
games,
including
Kari
Kozlowski, 33, from Lavallette.
The games were held Feb. 7
through Feb. 9 at Mountain
Creek in Vernon and Skylands
Ice World in Stockholm.
Athletes competed in alpine
and cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, snowboarding, speed
skating and figure skating.
Ms. Kozlowski placed first in
the nordic 1-kilometer free
cross-country ski race and second in the nordic 500-meter
free cross-country ski race.
Winter Games is one of four
statewide competitions staged
by Special Olympics New
Jersey throughout the year.
Competition takes place at the
local level year-round in 24
sports.
For more information,
including results and photos
from the 2011 Winter Games,
visit www.sonj.org.
Special Olympics New Jersey
provides year-round sports
training and athletic competition in a variety of Olympictype sports for children and
adults with intellectual disabilities.
The games give the athletes
continuing opportunities to
develop
physical
fitness,
demonstrate courage, experience joy and participate in a
sharing of gifts, skills and
friendship with their families,
other Special Olympics athletes
and the community.
PAGE 9
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Mantoloking
Mantoloking council, mayor
pass February resolutions
By Eric Colvin
It was truly business as usual
in the borough this week, as
council members presented a
series of resolutions, which
received unanimous approval
without comment from the public during the Tuesday meeting.
Councilman
Stanley
Witkowski, chairman of the
finance committee, initiated the
action, calling upon the borough’s chief financial officer,
Michelle Swisher, to present a
report on the status of the 2010
municipal budget, as of Dec. 31.
Ms. Swisher reported the current year appropriation had a
balance of $329,163 and the
2009 appropriation reserves carried a $256,427 balance.
According to Ms. Swisher,
the capital account, which was
budgeted for $1,643,939 had a
balance of $1,302,666 as of Dec.
31.
After council approved the
resolution to accept Ms.
Swisher’s report, Councilman
Witkowski presented the second of his six resolutions for
council approval –— the payment of bills for February.
The bills for the month total
$339,301.
Next up, council quickly
approved other financial resolutions, including authorizing
professional contracts for physical and drug testing services and
the appropriation for a reserve
transfer.
According to state statute,
during the first three months of
a year, a governing body may, by
resolution, transfer “excess to an
appropriation reserve or an
appropriation in the prior budget.”
This week, council transferred $10,000 for sewers,
$5,000 for road repairs and $500
to the office of emergency management.
“We do [transfers] throughout the year to keep various
accounts
balanced,”
Councilman
Witkowski
explained this week.
Councilman Witkowski also
introduced an ordinance, which
council passed without discussion, to exceed the 2011 municipal budget appropriation limits
and to establish a cap bank.
“There is nothing unusual
about it,” the councilman said
this week of the resolution.
Council and Mayor George
Nebel then officially appointed
Irene Ryan as the qualified purchasing agent for the borough.
Ms. Ryan has acted in that
capacity in the past, but a recent
state mandate required specific
licensing. Ms. Ryan obtained
the official license recently, after
attending state-approved courses.
As a result of having a qualified purchasing agent, the borough is able to increase its bid
threshold to $36,000 from
$26,000. The borough now has
the maximum bid threshold
allowed in the state.
Under local public contracts
law, any project worth $36,000
or more is subject to solicitation
of sealed bids. Projects for less
than $36,000 are subject to a
less formal bidding process.
According to Councilman
Witkowski, the governing body
approved the resolution to
“expedite
the
purchasing
process.”
Councilman
Steve
Gillingham then introduced
Mantoloking
Police
Department
Chief
Mark
Wright, who provided his brief,
monthly report.
The chief reported 41 summonses, six arrests, 15 agency
assists and 16 burglar alarm activations have occurred since the
last council meeting.
Councilman
Gillingham,
chairman of the public safety
committee, also presented a resolution for the governing body
to approve the interlocal services agreement between the borough and Ocean County
regarding the driving while
intoxicated enforcement pro-
Mantoloking
Community
Calendar
To submit a calendar listing or
Mantoloking news story, e-mail
[email protected]
~
JOSEPH J. DELCONZO, The Ocean Star
Mayor George Nebel addressed the audience during
Tuesday afternoon’s regular business meeting in
Mantoloking. The mayor, along with a handful of council
members will meet with the Department of Environmental
Protection soon to discuss matters important to the borough.
gram this year.
Chief Wright endorsed the
participation, by which the
county will compensate the officer’s at the rate of $50 per hour
for participating in the program.
Resident Courtney Bixby
then addressed council. He said
he met with Jersey Central
Power & Light officials recently
to discuss how best to respond
to utility pole issues in the borough, such as a fire or downed
pole or wire.
Mr. Bixby also offered up
invaluable advice he received
from the company on how residents should respond during a
power outage.
He said residents should call
the company directly, in addition to the police department.
The greater the number of calls
the company receives, the high-
er the priority given to an incident.
Mr. Bixby explained that
multiple calls to the police
department will only register as
one call to the company, while
multiple calls to the company
will result in a greater sense of
urgency to fix the problem.
“And don’t assume your
neighbors have already called,”
Mr. Bixby added.
In other meeting news,
Council President Donald Ness,
chairman of the Mantoloking
committee, moved to appoint
Councilman Gillingham to the
position of Deputy Office of
Emergency
Management
[OEM]
Coordinator.
Councilman Gillingham’s term
with the OEM will conclude on
Dec. 31, 2013.
Residents Welcome To
Attend Philadelphia
Flower Show March 11
The Guild of Ocean Medical
Center in Brick will offer a trip
to the Philadelphia Flower
Show on March 11.
The bus will leave the hospital at 9:30 a.m. The trip will
include breakfast, the bus trip to
the flower show, and dinner.
The cost to attend is $110 per
person. For more information,
contact Susan Scherler at 732278-6444.
~
Next Regular Council
Meeting Slated
For March 21
The next regular meeting of
the Mantoloking Council will
take place on March 21 at 4:30
p.m.
Council meetings are held in
borough hall, which is located at
202 Downer Ave. For directions, visit the borough’s website, www.mantoloking.org.
★▲
★▲
Hobbie,
Corrigan &
Bertucio, P.C.
★▲
★▲
JOSEPH J. DELCONZO, The Ocean Star
Councilman Stanley Witkowski, chairman of the finance
committee, offered up a series of financial resolutions for
council’s consideration this week. Each of his resolutions
received unanimous support.
Seaweeders plan for
upcoming ‘OdysSea’
In honor of the 2011
Mantoloking
Centennial
Celebration, the Seaweeders
Garden Club of Bay Head and
Mantoloking will present
“Mantoloking
Centennial
OdysSea: A Standard Patriotic
Flower Show,” on Thursday,
June 30 at the Mantoloking
Yacht Club, from 1 to 6 p.m.
Members of the Flower
Show Committee, chaired by
Mary Anne Finch, met weekly
last summer and fall to develop
the standard flower show
schedule.
This week, the committee
began the arduous task of staging the flower show for presentation.
“The term ‘standard flower
show’ is the official title designating a flower show which
conforms to the standards
established by the National
Garden Club, Inc. [NGC] and
judged by NGC-accredited
flower show judges,” explained
Mrs. Finch.
“The primary purpose of the
Seaweeders Standard Patriotic
Flower Show is to honor
Mantoloking’s centennial celebration by sharing the beauty of
nature and floral artistic
endeavors,” Mrs. Finch said.
“The show will educate and
stimulate interest in horticulture and floral design.”
Members of the public are
welcome to enter horticulture
grown from their own gardens.
Some classes to enter are annu-
als and perennial cuttings, shrub
branches and herbs.
There will be combination
container plantings and window
boxes, as well as 36 creative floral interpretations featuring
patriotic Mantoloking themes.
The
Sea
Gulls,
the
Seaweeders’ junior garden club,
will also participate. The educational exhibits will vary from
flag etiquette to composting.
“The Seaweeders will not be
hosting its annual garden tour
this year,” noted Sherry Urner,
president of the Seaweeders
Garden Club. “Instead, we will
be focusing all of our energies
on this exciting flower show to
help Mantoloking celebrate this
momentous occasion.”
The show will be open to the
public for no charge, but donations will be gratefully accepted
to support the club’s community beautification projects.
For more information, e-mail
[email protected]
or
[email protected].
ST. JUDE
NOVENA
May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be
adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world, now
and forever. Sacred Heart of Jesus,
pray for us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, pray for us. St. Jude, help of the
hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer
9 times a day. Say it for 9 days. By
the eighth day, your prayer will be
answered. It has never been known to
fail. Publication must be promised.
Thank you, St. Jude. D.R.
●▲
●▲
The following is a sampling of some
$ 38,500,000.00
$ 24,000,000.00
$ 13,500,000.00
$ 10,000,000.00
$ 9,000,000.00
$ 4,500,000.00
$ 4,000,000.00
$ 3,900,000.00
$ 3,300,000.00
$ 2,800,000.00
$ 2,750,000.00
$ 2,500,000.00
$ 2,500,000.00
$ 2,320,000.00
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AGGRESSIVE
AND
of the verdicts and settlements achieved:
Chemical Exposure**
Chemical Exposure**
Chemical Exposure**
Auto Accident
Contaminated Water**
Train Negligence
Auto Accident
Premises Liability
Hunting Accident
Defective Product Malfunction
Employment Discrimination**
Medical Malpractice
Premises Liability
Struck Pedestrian
Negligent Maintenance
Defective Products
Construction Accident
Auto Accident
Auto Accident
ZEALOUS LEGAL REPRESENTATION
PERSONAL INJURY • WRONGFUL DEATH • AUTO NEGLIGENCE
CRIMINAL DEFENSE • MUNICIPAL COURT • WORKERS COMP
★
Certified by The Supreme Court of New Jersey as a Civil Trial Attorney
Certified by The Supreme Court of New Jersey as a Criminal Trial Attorney
▲
Named To SuperLawyer List 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 & 2010 by NJ Monthly Magazine
●
**Multiple Plaintiff Cases ~ Case Results Will Vary Depending Upon Particular Facts And The Law.
Norm Hobbie Was Lead Or Co-lead Counsel In The Above Cases.
732-380-1515
732-286-1515
Eatontown, New Jersey
Toms River, New Jersey
www.HCBlawyers.com
PAGE 10
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant
• PT PLEASANT BORO RESIDENTS •
DOG & CAT LICENSES ARE DUE
LICENSE FEE:
Cat = $5.00
Spayed/Neutered dog = $8.20
Non-spayed/Neutered dog = $11.20
RABIES VACCINATIONS MUST BE GOOD UNTIL
NOV. 1 TO RENEW YOUR LICENSE.
SEND TO: Pt. Pleasant Health Dept. - Dog Licensing
P.O. Box 25, Point Pleasant, NJ 08742
• FREE RABIES CLINIC •
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Pt. Pleasant First Aid Building • 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM
Kindly call 732-892-4183 for further info
IS YOUR
HAIRSTYLIST MISSING?
Christina Lane, formerly of a
Mantoloking Road Salon/Spa can
now be found at Salon Baraka!
Christina has been a Lead Stylist for 10
years, specializing in Expert Haircutting/
Design and Razor Cutting. She performs
beautiful formal styles as well as those more
casual and trend-setting. She is also
certified in Brazilian Smoothing Treatments
to tame your wild hair!
732-528-7400
for appointments & FREE Consultations
SALON BARAKA
304 Union Avenue/Rt. 71, Brielle
Yacht club to host
FoodBank fundraiser
The American Culinary
Federation, Jersey Shore Chefs
Association
will
present
Winterfest 2011 at the Crystal
Point Yacht Club, 2900 River
Road in Point Pleasant, this
Sunday, Feb. 27.
Proceeds from Winterfest
2011 will benefit the FoodBank
of Monmouth and Ocean
Counties, which supplies several local food pantries, and the
Victor Houston Scholarship
Fund.
Professional chefs and culinary students will present an
epicurean event at 3:30 p.m.,
with a cocktail and hors d’oeuvres hour. A seven-course,
gourmet meal will follow. The
meal will be complete with
wine stations.
As has been the case in previous years, the hors d’oeuvres
hour will be a competition that
attending guests will judge.
This year’s extravaganza will
again have a silent auction,
where attendees can vie for
prizes such as the chance to
have a professional chef prepare
a meal at their home, or other
gifts such as artwork, tickets to
sporting events and gift certificates to area restaurants.
There will be a cash bar and
music by Bruce Foster.
A $100 donation is required
for a one-person admission to
the event. Four event tickets
can be purchased for $350, or
eight tickets for $600.
For more information, or for
tickets, call Ray at 732-9182600, extension 229.
The
FoodBank
of
Monmouth
and
Ocean
Counties is a member of
Feeding America, which
secures and distributes 6.7 million pounds of donated food
annually to a network of
approximately 260 hunger
relief
organizations
in
Monmouth and Ocean counties.
The FoodBank is a 501[c]3
nonprofit organization whose
mission is to distribute food to
as many needy people as possible through the network of area
charities.
Those needing emergency
food or shelter are encouraged
to contact emergency food
pantries, soup kitchens and
shelters in their communities.
For more information about
the FoodBank, visit www.foodbankmoc.org, or call 732-9182600.
Relay For Life
seeking teams,
donations
Point Pleasant Borough High
School recently hosted the second
annual Relay For Life Kick-Off
Party, in preparation for the this
June’s Relay for Life in the borough.
Relay For Life is a nationwide,
community-based event that raises awareness and funds to assist in
the fight against cancer. Residents
come together at local relays to
celebrate cancer survivors and
remember people who have died
from cancer.
Local cancer survivors, caregivers, team captains, volunteers
and participants work hard to
make the borough’s annual relay a
success. Months of planning
meetings are held prior to the
event, which is slated for
Saturday, June 11 into Sunday,
June 12 at Community Park in
the borough.
Point Pleasant Borough High
School
Teacher
Katrina
Salvatoriello and Robin Quartaro
chair the borough’s Relay For Life.
Last year, teams of participants
walked the track at the high
school throughout the night,
making sure at least one member
was walking at any given time
throughout the evening, until 5:30
a.m. the following day.
As was the case last year, team
members will work to gather
donations in the time leading up
to the 2011 relay, and funds will go
directly to the American Cancer
Society.
Teams typically consist of students, faculty and community
members and include all ages.
The only requirement is that at
least one member is 25 or older.
For more information about
the 2011 Point Pleasant Relay
For Life, call 800-227-2345 or
e-mail [email protected].
Durrua makes
dean’s list at
Delaware
Point Pleasant resident
Arielle Durrua has achieved
dean’s list standing for the fall
semester
at
Delaware
University, located in Newark,
Del.
Ms. Durrua is the daughter
of Ken and Lisa Durrua, of
Barton Avenue in Point
Pleasant.
Ms. Durrua, who graduated
from Point Pleasant Borough
High School in 2008, is currently majoring in exercise
physiology, and strength and
conditioning. She is a student
at the College of Health
Sciences.
Ms. Durrua is also a member of the Omicron Delta
Kappa Honor Society, secretary of University of Delaware
Student Alumni Ambassadors,
and the treasurer of Students
for the Environment.
She also is involved in
undergraduate research in her
field of study, a university tour
guide and serves on the
Allocation Board.
Yoga A Big Draw For Library
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Walter Piasecki, of Point Pleasant, attended a yoga
class at the Point Pleasant Library recently. Calming,
ocean music played while Mr. Piasecki and others
enjoyed some morning yoga at the library.
Point Garden Club
heads to flower show
The Point Pleasant Garden
Club will again host a bus trip
to
the
Philadelphia
International Flower Show —
this year titled “Springtime in
Paris” — on March 11.
The 2011 Philadelphia
International Flower Show will
transport visitors to the beautiful City of Light, the capital of
art, fashion, food and love,
between March 6 and 13, at the
Pennsylvania
Convention
Center.
A blooming “Springtime in
Paris” show will greet guests
with a bucolic park scenes taken
from
along
the
Seine.
Flowering trees, lilacs, roses and
borders of lavender will lead
visitors
through
gardens
inspired by the Tuileries. In the
distance, a daring Moulin
Rouge atmosphere will pulse
with cabaret performances,
spectacular flower sculptures,
and carousel topiaries.
“Paris intrigues and entertains like no other city,” said
flower show designer Sam
Lemheney. “The horticulture
and culture will transport visitors to another place, all while
inspiring them to create wonderful gardens at home.”
Featured displays will include
“Opulent Paris,” a time of
Victorian glamour; “Romantic
Paris,” a tête-à-tête down the
Seine; “Gourmet Paris,” amid
rooftop and edible gardens;
“Artists’ Paris,” from canvas to
landscape;
“Underground
Soccer association
seeks scholarship
applicants
The Point Pleasant Soccer
Association [PPSA], a recreational soccer program serving
Point Pleasant and neighboring
towns, awards two to three
scholarships each year to college-bound students.
In addition to serving players
in Point Pleasant, the PPSA
also includes residents of Point
Pleasant Beach, Bay Head
Mantoloking and Lavallette.
Each scholarship that the
PPSA gives out each year is in
the amount of $1,000.
While many scholarship
applicants are former PPSA
players, applicants do not need
to be former players.
The association considers all
applicants based on a combination of academic achievement
and
community
service.
Furthermore,
the
PPSA
attempts to ensure a fair selection standard by utilizing a
blind process to evaluate all
scholarship applications.
For more information on the
scholarships, including an
application, visit the PPSA
website at www.pointsoccer.org.
All local high school seniors
are encouraged to apply. The
deadline for applications is
April 4.
Paris,” a catacomb of avantgarde art; and “Timeless Paris,”
courtyards and cafés form a
Parisian paradise.
“Springtime in Paris” will
capture the unforgettable fragrance of the French jardin, the
soulful song of the chanteuse,
the intimate ambiance of a Left
Bank café, and the grand beauty of a Parisian park.
The 2011 flower show is for
lovers and everyone else.
Proceeds
from
the
Philadelphia
International
Flower Show support the
Pennsylvania
Horticultural
Society’s
acclaimed
Philadelphia Green program,
which restores neighborhood
parks, creates community gardens, conducts large-scale tree
plantings, revitalizes vacant
land, engages thousands of citizens in community development activities, and maintains
treasured public landscapes.
As the nation’s largest comprehensive community greening
program, Philadelphia Green
serves as a model for cities
across the U.S.
The Point Pleasant Garden
Club bus will depart the Crystal
Point Yacht Club parking lot at
8:30 a.m. on March 11, and
tickets for the flower show trip
are $65, which includes transportation, a driver gratuity and
admission to the show.
The Point Pleasant Garden
Club meets on the second
Tuesday of each month, at 7:30
p.m. in the Durand Masonic
Lodge, in Point Pleasant Beach.
Activities include guest
speakers on horticultural topics;
participation in community
events, such as Earth Day and
Summerfest; Main Street barrel
plantings and others. New
members are always welcome.
The annual fundraising trip
supports the Point Pleasant
Garden Club’s scholarship fund
and neighborhood beautification projects. To reserve a seat,
call Heidi at 732-892-3870.
McDonald
makes dean’s
list at Montclair
Point Pleasant resident
Emily
McDonald
has
achieved dean’s list standing
for the fall
semester at
Montclair State University.
Ms. McDonald is the
daughter of James and Susan
McDonald, of Woodwild
Drive in Point Pleasant.
Ms. McDonald, , who graduated from Point Pleasant
Borough High School in
2006, is currently majoring in
music, with a concentration in
music education
She is also a recipient of the
John J. Cali School of Music
Excellence in Band Award.
PAGE 11
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant
Police charge burglary suspect
— FROM PAGE 1 —
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Robert and Elizabeth Stacy’s property at 214 Osborn Street in the borough will be subdivided,
after the couple received Point Pleasant Planning Board approval last week. The couple’s home
will remain, and a new, single-family residence is planned to be constructed on the new site.
T-Mobile application bumped,
board approves other matters
By Eric Colvin
About one dozen residents
attended the Point Pleasant
Planning Board meeting last
Thursday night at borough hall
with one topic in mind — TMobile Northeast’s latest proposal to add cellular communication antennas to the water
tower on Burnt Tavern Road.
Instead, the residents, along
with a team of lawyers and
experts who were on hand to
represent the telecommunication company, received word the
application would not be heard
due to a lack of a quorum.
“We don’t have a quorum,”
said board member Jack Vitale
at the beginning of the meeting.
Planning Board Attorney
Ben
Montenegro,
of
Montenegro,
Thompson,
Montenegro & Genz, in Brick,
explained the board would not
have enough members to hear
the application “due to a couple
of absences.”
Planning board members
Charles Wills, Mary Jane
Bavais, Frank Scarpello and
Mike Permuko were in attendance, along with Mr. Vitale,
Point Pleasant Councilman Jack
McHugh
and
Borough
Administrator Dave Maffei,
who each also sit on the planning board.
Chairman James Giordano,
Vice President Carl Feltz and
member Ron Venturi were not
present.
Councilman McHugh and
Mr. Maffei have to recuse themselves from participating in TMobile discussions because the
proposed site on Burnt Tavern
Road is municipal property.
Without Councilman McHugh
and Mr. Maffei, there would
have been no quorum.
The T-Mobile application
was rescheduled for March 17.
Frank Ferraro, of the firm
Ferraro & Stamos, based in
Northvale, confirmed he will
represent T-Mobile Northeast
in the application to set up
antennas at 1123 Burnt Tavern
Road, on the tower near the fire
department.
The company is seeking Point
Pleasant
Planning
Board
approval for conditional use of
the property, bulk variances, and
preliminary and final site plan
approval.
T-Mobile Northeast plans to
expand on the use of the existing, elevated water tank at the
property as an anchor for up to
nine, communications antennas
that are proposed to be attached
to the existing, 151-foot-tall
water tank on the property, at a
height of 124 feet.
The company’s Burnt Tavern
Road application comes on the
heels of the planning board’s
denial of T-Mobile Northeast’s
application to construct a new
cellular phone tower between
Edgar Road and Bridge
Avenue, near borough hall and
the police station.
T-Mobile had sought to
expand the location by removing
the existing 102-foot tower,
which holds antennas for the
Point
Pleasant
Police
Department and first aid squad,
and erecting a new, 120-foot,
lattice tower.
In December, planning board
members delivered a 3-3 vote,
which denied the application.
Mr. Giordano, former member Eugene DeJong and Ronald
Venturi voted in favor of the TMobile application at the meeting in December.
Mr. Feltz, along with Ms.
Bavais and Mr. Wills, voted
against the application.
Hiering,
Dupignac,
Stanzione, Dunn & Beck, in
Toms River, represented TMobile Northeast during that
application process, and would
represent the company during
appeal.
A representative for Ocean
County
Superior
Court
Assignment Judge Vincent
Grasso this week stated TMobile has not yet filed an
appeal.
Attorneys for the company
have successfully argued in various cases throughout the
country that a municipality
infringes on the company’s
right to compete when tower
construction is denied.
Lynne Dunn and Michael
Beck, the two attorneys from
Hiering, Dupignac, Stanzione,
Dunn & Beck who appeared
before the planning board on
behalf of T-Mobile in the
Edgar Road application, could
not be reached for comment
this week.
In one of the two applications the planning board did
have a quorum for last week,
Kenneth Deiner represented
himself, and sought exempt site
plan approval to open an
upscale Italian restaurant in the
borough.
The board approved Mr.
Deiner’s plan and the restaurant, Fresca Ristorante, is on
the way.
The unit is located at 632
Ocean Road in the borough,
next to a Chinese restaurant.
There are eight units in the
strip, two of which are vacant.
Mr. Deiner’s restaurant will
now occupy one of the vacant
slots.
In addition to the chinese
restaurant, which does take-out
and delivery, the location also
has a bagel shop, laundromat,
hair salon and dance studio.
According to Mr. Deiner, he
plans to have 40 seats and
approximately 10 tables in the
restaurant. His proposed hours
of operation are 5 to 10 p.m.,
every day except Monday, when
the restaurant will be closed.
He said he anticipates
employing two servers each
night, two kitchen workers, a
hostess and himself. Mr. Deiner
said he is a chef and will mainly work in the kitchen.
According to state statute, an
establishment with more than
15 seats must have two bathrooms, one for men and one for
women. Currently, the unit Mr.
Deiner will occupy has one
bathroom. He is in the process
of creating the second and
making the premises handicapped accessible.
After some questioning
about the dumpster, Mr. Deiner
assured board members the area
is “fenced in” and he plans to
take the garbage out every
night.
The board approved Mr.
Deiner’s application, 6-0.
The second of the two applications brought before the
planning board sought approval
for a minor subdivision.
Borough residents Robert
and Elizabeth Stacy, of Osborn
Avenue, petitioned the planning board for permission to
subdivide
their
property.
Attorney Kevin Kukfa represented Mr. and Mrs. Stacy.
Board members approved the
plan, 5-1, with Mr. Wills casting the only vote in opposition.
Mr. Wills did not provide a reason at the time of his vote, but
earlier in the discussion
expressed his desire to have
sidewalks installed as part of
the approval.
The Stacy’s proposed to subdivide their current, singlefamily residence at 214 Osborn
Ave. into two, single-family
residences. The couple have
See T-MOBILE, page 21
businesses along Route 88 and
Bridge Avenue in Point Pleasant
were burglarized between July 29
and Wednesday, Aug. 11.
Mr. Richards now stands formally charged with four of the
seven business burglaries.
Police have not charged Mr.
Richards for the remaining three
crimes.
According to Capt. Larsen,
Mr. Richards was charged with
one count of third-degree burglary and one count of criminal
mischief in excess of $500 this
week for the July 29 burglary of
the Riptide Grill, located at 3126
Bridge Ave. in the borough.
Police also charged Mr.
Richards this week with one
count of third-degree burglary,
one count of theft of cash, and
one count of criminal mischief
for the Aug. 7 burglary of the
Cookie Lady Cafe, located at
2501 Route 88 in the borough.
Also on Aug. 7, Mr. Richards
allegedly broke into the
Shorehouse Tavern, located at
2114 Route 88 in the borough.
For that alleged crime, Mr.
Richards stands charged with
one count of third-degree burglary, one count of theft of cash,
and one count of criminal mis-
chief.
The fourth incident for which
police charged Mr. Richards this
week was the Aug. 11 burglary of
New China, a restaurant located
at 2700 Route 88 in the borough.
For the New China incident,
police charged Mr. Richards with
one count of third-degree burglary, and one count of criminal
mischief.
In November, while Mr.
Richards was out on bail for the
August burglary of Latitude 40
in Point Beach, police again
arrested him, for allegedly burglarizing a St. Louis Avenue
home.
Following his arrest for the
Latitude 40 burglary, the Point
Pleasant
Beach
Police
Department, processed, and
transferred Mr. Richards to the
Ocean County Jail, in Toms
River. Bail was set at $10,000,
with no 10-percent option. He
posted bail and was released.
At the time, police stated they
believed Mr. Richards was
responsible for the commercial
burglaries in the borough, but
did not formally charge him until
this week.
According to Point Pleasant
Beach Detective Clint Daniel,
Mr. Richards allegedly entered
the St. Louis Avenue residence,
stole a laptop, car keys and other
items.
Mr. Richards then reportedly
used the car keys to steal the
family’s vehicle and flee the
scene. No one was home at the
time of the burglary.
The car, a 2006 Toyota
Corolla, was later discovered
abandoned, with the keys in car,
in Point Pleasant.
Detective Daniel said physical
evidence linked Mr. Richards to
the residential burglary, and officials charged him with the crime.
Mr. Richards was released
from custody after again posting
bail, this time in the amount of
$15,000. He was never indicted
for the St. Louis Avenue burglary.
Detective Daniel confirmed
recently that Mr. Richards has an
escape on his criminal record
from years ago, in addition to
prior burglary convictions. He
could not confirm whether Mr.
Richards escaped from prison or
a halfway house.
Mr. Richards remains incarcerated in Middlesex County.
Capt. Larsen said Mr.
Richards will be informed of the
new charges against him and the
case will now be handed over to
the Ocean County Prosecutor’s
Office for possible indictment.
Point Pleasant man surrenders
to state police after hit-and-run
By Eric Colvin
Two days after he struck a
pedestrian at the Forked River
Service area on the Garden State
Parkway, Point Pleasant resident
Justin J. Loverdy turned himself
in to New Jersey State Police.
Mr. Loverdy, 22, admitted to
state police last week that he left
the scene of the accident, heading
south on the Parkway, after hit-
ting Joseph Rizzo, 22, of Bayville.
The incident occurred at 5:25
p.m. Feb. 16 at the rest area. Mr.
Loverdy was flown to the Jersey
Shore Regional Trauma Center,
in Neptune, where he was in critical condition and suffering from
head injuries.
Mr. Rizzo was discharged days
after the accident.
Witnesses identified the vehi-
cle Mr. Loverdy was operating at
the time of the incident, reportedly a Jeep Liberty.
According to police, Mr.
Loverdy was charged with assault
by auto and leaving the scene of
an accident that caused serious
bodily injury.
Mr. Loverdy posted $20,000
bail and was released. A date to
appear has yet to be determined.
PLAYERS
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FROM AS
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YOUTH ROLLER HOCKEY DRAFT LEAGUE
LEAGUE FEE WAS $125
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PEE WEE 13-16 YEARS
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★ Skills competitions
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All registered players will be evaluated and broken up into balanced teams.
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2903 HIGHWAY 138 WALL TOWNSHIP, NJ 07719
732-681-8898 OR VISIT US ONLINE @ WWW.GOODSPORTSUSA.COM
PAGE 12
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant
H.S. continues to offer technology courses
ner
Desigses
Dres
The Point Pleasant Borough
students of today have a distinct advantage over their
predecessors when it comes to
technology-based
learning
opportunities.
A simple review of the high
school’s
Annual
Course
Selection Guides from the past
10 years shows a clear timeline
that attests to the rapid evolution of technology.
Before 2001, Point Pleasant
students interested in computer technology had the option
of taking a keyboarding class,
or perhaps a word processing
class — or, if they were very
dedicated to computer technology, the all-encompassing
Computer
Applications
Course.
In fact, it was not until the
2001-2002 school year that the
high school began to offer lessons on Web design as a part
of the course Computer
Applications III: Internet and
Web Page Design.
Only after they mastered
Computer Concepts I and II
could juniors and seniors then
elect to take part in what the
selection guide described as a
course to teach writing
Internet applications and
design, and construct Web
pages.
Topics included working
with graphic images, sound,
animation and interactivity.
The goal was to give the students a strong foundation in
HyperText Markup Language
[HTML], the coding language
of websites.
Web historians estimate
there were about 40 million
websites at the end of 2002,
today that number is more
than 180 million. And, as websites have grown exponentially,
their design and purpose have
been transforming almost as
rapidly. From static information sources to powerful interactive, communication tools,
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modern websites are essential
for the success of every business and organization.
The advancements in technology have also led the New
Jersey’s Core Curriculum
Consortium to alter all content
areas to include technological
interventions.
“Technology is not only
changing how our students
learn,” said Director of
Curriculum and Instruction
Robert Alfonse, “but it is also
altering what our students
learn.”
According to Mr. Alfonse, a
strong foundation in the fundamentals of technology is
necessary for students to succeed in the 21st century and
beyond.
Through such reasoning,
Point Pleasant now offers distinct courses in Introduction to
Web Design and Advanced
Web Design.
Introduction
to
Web
Design, taught by David
Fisher, provides students with
working knowledge of cascading style sheets [CSS],
HTML, JavaScript as well as
design programs like Adobe’s
Dreamweaver, Photoshop and
Flash.
“Web design can be an
extremely gratifying experience as students see their work
take shape,” Mr. Fisher said.
“Our students learn how to
transform seemingly meaningless strings of code into
dynamic, visually appealing
web pages.”
Mr. Fisher maintains an
online portfolio of his students’ web
projects
at
www.pantherpath.com.
“Having their work displayed on the Panther Path
website helps to legitimize
their work while giving friends
and family the opportunity to
review the work across any web
browser,” said Mr. Fisher.
Mr. Fisher said he also has
several students who will compete in the New Jersey
Institute of Technology’s Fifth
Annual
Web
Design
Competition next month.
“Internet
technology,
including mobile technology,
is still relatively new,” said Mr.
Fisher. “Any student looking to
establish a firm base of technological literacy is highly
encouraged to consider a
course like this. With a strong
base, the potential is limitless.”
Point Pleasant High School
Vice Principal and District
Technology
Coordinator
Kevin McDermitt could not
agree more.
“No organization can survive without an Internet presence,” said Mr. McDermitt.
“Whether for a school, a charitable organization, or a
Fortune 500 company, websites are absolutely necessary.
As we see more and more traditional corporations transitioning further to web-based
platforms, newspapers for
example, we can anticipate
that technology will continue
to grow in ways not yet imagined.”
Mr. McDermitt said that
emerging technologies like
mobile technology and apps
offer incomprehensible opportunities for students to excel in
the 21st century.
“Point Pleasant Borough
High School’s Technology
curriculum has changed significantly over the course of the
years,” said Point Pleasant
Borough
High
School
Principal Linda Rocco.
Ms. Rocco said the web
design courses are just a sample of the technology-based
courses available at Point
Pleasant
Borough
High
School.
“Technology
has
been
infused throughout the curriculum,” Ms. Rocco continued, noting courses are available in Computer Concepts &
Applications,
Digital
Photography,
Desktop
Publishing,
Computer
Programming and more.
“Our school and district
administration work together
to continually assess all our
course offerings to ensure that
our students have the opportunities required to achieve success in all areas,” she added.
To find out more about the
Point Pleasant School District,
visit the district website at
www.pointpleasant.k12.nj.us.
Gift of Life group
seeks support
for fundraiser
The Rotary District 7500
Gift of Life will host the 14th
Annual Heart & Snow Ball
Dinner Dance at the Crystal
Point Yacht Club, located at
3900 River Road in Point
Pleasant, on March 19.
The event is the main
fundraiser for the Gift of Life
Foundation, and all community
members are invited to attend.
Every year, hundreds of children are able to have life-saving
heart operations courtesy of
funding by Gift of Life. Local
members wish to continue their
important work of supporting
teams of surgeons and nurses
who travel the globe to perform
much-needed services for children who would otherwise not
survive.
Gift of Life members would
like businesses to place ads in
the charity dinner dance program book ad journal. Those
unable to participate this year
can also donate to the gift auction that will take place during
the evening.
Businesses wishing to place
an ad should contact Mike
Beyers at 732-929-8621, or email
him
at
[email protected]. Faxes
can also be sent to 732-2624821.
The Rotarians would like to
extend their deepest appreciation to all businesses and individuals who have supported the
event in past years, and encourage all others to become
involved in such a great cause.
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Point Police nab burglary
suspect on Catherine Street
By Eric Colvin
Point Pleasant Police Officer
Loren MacIver responded to a
Catherine Street home in the
borough Sunday, after the owner
reported his residence had been
burglarized that afternoon.
Following a brief investigation, police arrested Keith M.
O’Connell, 21, of Point
Pleasant, later on Sunday.
Officer MacIver charged Mr.
O’Connell with burglary and
theft from the dwelling.
According to Point Pleasant
Police Capt. Richard Larsen,
Mr. O’Connell was also found
to be in contempt of court, as a
result of violating a domestic
violence restraining order that
forbid Mr. O’Connell from
being on the Catherine Street
property.
According to Capt. Larsen,
the homeowner called police at
1:17 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 20.
The captain said the homeowner reported his home “was
entered through a back door.”
Capt. Larsen said the home was
“ransacked,” and a laptop, valued
at approximately $1,400, was
taken from the residence.
Detective Lt. Adam Picca
assisted
Officer
MacIver.
Members of the Ocean County
Sheriff ’s Department Criminal
Investigation Unit processed the
scene.
Capt. Larsen said Mr.
O’Connell was developed as a
suspect “through the investigation,” but could not comment
further.
He said Officer Christopher
Woit spotted Mr. O’Connell
driving on Bay Avenue Sunday
afternoon. Officer Woit then
arrested Mr. O’Connell, and
Officer MacIver later charged
him with the crimes.
Mr. O’Connell was processed
and transported to the Ocean
County Jail, where he remains
on $50,000 bail.
Capt. Larsen said police
recovered the laptop, which had
been pawned at a shop in Toms
River shortly after the incident.
PAGE 13
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Point Pleasant
Borough suspect steals van, shoplifts at two liquor stores
Point Pleasant
Community
Calendar
To submit a calendar listing or
Point Pleasant news story,
send an e-mail to
[email protected].
~
Library To
Celebrate Chinese
New Year Tomorrow
By Eric Colvin
After allegedly stealing a
vehicle in Atlantic City, alcohol
from a liquor store in Brick and
eluding police for hours, a Point
Pleasant man was arrested last
Tuesday in the borough.
Point Pleasant police charged
Gregory Alexander, 40, of
Herbertsville Road, with
shoplifting, possession of
stolen property, possession of a
controlled dangerous substance, possession of drug
paraphernalia and driving on a
revoked license.
Officer Loren MacIver was
the arresting officer.
According to Point Pleasant
Police Capt. Richard Larsen,
who serves as spokesman for
the department, Brick Police
Sgt. David Bedrosian and
Point Pleasant Sgt. Jeff Maves
were also present when Mr.
Alexander was located and
arrested at Spirits Unlimited,
located at the intersection of
Route 88 and Bridge Avenue
in the borough.
Sgt. Maves had been working traffic detail nearby when
the suspect entered Spirits
Unlimited.
According to Capt. Larsen,
Brick police responded to a
call from Wine World, located
at 2085 Route 88 in Brick, at
12:34 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb.
15.
After suspecting shoplifting
The Wang Da Chung Hand
Puppet Group will present “The
Monkey King: A Famous
Chinese Fable” at the Point
Pleasant Borough Branch of the
Ocean County Library, located
at 834 Beaver Dam Road, at 2:30
p.m. tomorrow, Saturday, Feb.
26.
The afternoon’s events will
include a puppet show, a Chinese
yo-yo demonstration, traditional
Chinese dance and a hand-puppet workshop. There will be
prizes and a raffle. The whole
family is welcome to attend.
Originally developed in the
Ming dynasty, this art form has
become one of the most popular
entertainments in Taiwan. The
performers are students who are
studying and preserving Chinese
traditional hand puppetry.
This program is sponsored in
part
by
an
OceanFirst
Foundation Arts and Cultural
Grant, and the Ocean County
Library Foundation.
This program is free and open
to the public. Please register in
By Eric Colvin
person by calling 732-295-1555,
A Point Pleasant woman,
or online at www.theoceancountylibrary.org.
who Point Pleasant police offi~
cers arrested in August after a
situation that occurred at the
Old Guard To
Quick Chek on Route 88 in the
Host Sweetheart borough, was indicted last week
for the aggravated assault of a
Dance Sunday
The Old Guard of the Point Point Pleasant police officer.
On Aug. 29, Point Pleasant
Pleasant-Brick Area will host
the February Sweetheart Dance Police Officer Brian Fennessy
Sunday, Feb. 27 from 1 to 4 p.m. arrested and charged Lindsay
at the Old Guard building, Barth, 19, with possession of
which is located at 170 Duchess marijuana, possession of drug
Lane, in Brick off Jordan Road. paraphernalia and aggravated
Everyone is welcome to assault.
attend. Doors will open at 12:30
According to Point Pleasant
p.m. Tickets will be sold at the Police Capt. Richard Larsen,
door for $8, which includes cof- the aggravated assault charge
fee, tea and cake. Hot dogs and came as a result of Ms. Barth
soda will be sold. Attendees may having allegedly “punched”
also bring refreshments.
Officer Fennessy during an
More more information, call
investigation.
732-899-2310.
“A simple assault against a
~
police officer is automatically
Library Knitting & elevated to aggravated assault,”
Crocheting On First, Capt. Larsen said this week.
The department received a
Third Wednesdays call from a Quick Chek
The Ocean County Library employee at 5:17 p.m. on Aug.
Point Pleasant Borough Branch
29, reporting Ms. Barth was in
is sponsoring a knitting and crothe store and attempting to
cheting group called the Close
inhale the fumes from a
Knit Crew.
whipped cream container.
The group meets the first and
According to Capt. Larsen,
third Wednesdays of each month
from 7 to 9 p.m. in the library, at when Officer Fennessy arrived
834 Beaver Dam Road in the at the scene, he spoke with Ms.
Barth, who then allegedly
borough.
The Close Knit Crew wel- assaulted the officer before
comes members of all skill levels attempting to flee on foot.
Officer Fennessy appreto meet for friendship and sharing of love for knitting or cro- hended Ms. Barth and arrested
cheting. New members are her. She posted $500 bail and
always welcome to drop into any was released, pending an
group meeting.
appearance in Ocean County
This program is free. No pre- Superior Court.
registration is required.
According to Capt. Larsen,
For more information, call the Ms. Barth faces a maximum of
library at 732-295-1555.
a $10,000 fine and up to 18
~
months imprisonment, if convicted of the aggravated
Jersey Mike’s
assault.
Fundraiser To
Capt. Larsen also recently
Support Band
reported the following police
The Jersey Mike’s located at activity occurred in the bor2600 Bridge Ave. in Point ough between Jan. 25 and Feb.
Pleasant will donate 15 percent 15:
of sales made between 5 and 9
• On Jan. 25, at 11:35 p.m.,
p.m. the first Wednesday of each Officer Joshua Gunnell arrestmonth, from now until April, to ed Robert Shea Hanley, 26, of
support the Point Pleasant Point Pleasant, on two outBorough High School Band.
standing warrants.
The band plans to travel to
Bail was set at $1,500 on the
Walt Disney World, in Orlando,
Point Pleasant warrant and
Fla., this spring to participate in
$1,000 on the Manasquan
a competition.
The donations will assist with warrant. Mr. Hanley remained
in Ocean County Jail.
fundraising efforts.
• On Jan. 25, at 2:45 p.m.,
~
Officer Loren MacIver arrest-
and confronting the subject,
who fled in a red, 2002 Ford
Ecoline van, the store clerk
called Brick police and reported the incident.
According to Capt. Larsen,
the clerk was able to ascertain
the license plate number and
also told police the words
“Harry Mason” were written
on the side of the suspected
shoplifter’s van.
The clerk recognized Mr.
Alexander from a previous
shoplifting incident.
“Brick searched their town,”
Capt. Larsen said this week, of
the actions of Brick Sgt.
Bedrosian and fellow Brick
officers.
He said Sgt. Bedrosian
eventually located the vehicle
in Point Pleasant, in the parking lot of Spirits Unlimited.
“[Sgt. Bedrosian] advised
us,” Capt. Larsen said. Officer
MacIver, along with Sgt.
Maves, responded to the liquor
store.
When apprehended, Mr.
Alexander allegedly had concealed merchandise on his person.
According to Capt. Larsen,
Mr. Alexander had concealed
“two bottles of vodka” while in
Spirits Unlimited. The two
bottles, each 1.5 liters, cost
approximately $150 combined.
Police also allegedly discovered a controlled dangerous
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Point Pleasant police arrested Gregory Alexander, 40, of Point Pleasant, at Spirits
Unlimited in the borough recently after Mr. Alexander allegedly stole a vehicle in
Atlantic City, shoplifted from a Brick liquor store and concealed vodka in Spirits.
substance, cocaine, and paraphernalia in Mr. Alexander’s
possession.
In addition, Mr. Alexander
was charged with being in possession of stolen property,
because the van was reported
as stolen from a flower business in Atlantic City.
When
asked
if
Mr.
Alexander would face a judge
in Ocean County or Atlantic
County, Capt. Larsen stated,
“He has to answer the charges
here.”
Police impounded the vehicle and transported Mr.
Alexander to Ocean County
Jail, where bail was set at
$25,000.
Mr.
Alexander
remains in jail, and the date of
his first borough court appearance has yet to be determined.
Capt. Larsen said the vehicle will be returned to the
flower business in Atlantic
City, after processing.
WORK SHOULDN’T HURT,
BUT WHEN IT DOES…
THE TASHJY LAW FIRM, L.L.C.
Attorney & Counselor at Law
M. SCOTT TASHJY, ESQ.
Point resident indicted
for police officer assault
ed Mary Ellen Bechard, 42, of
Toms River, and Bruce
Bechard, 47, of Point Pleasant,
on outstanding warrants.
Mr. Bechard had two warrants out of Toms River, with a
combined bail of $845. Mrs.
Bechard had one warrant, also
out of Toms River, in the
amount of $500.
Point
Pleasant
Police
released both individuals into
the custody of Toms River
Police.
• On Jan. 26, at 8:56 a.m.,
Officer Joseph Torre arrested
and charged Michael Palmieri,
35, of Toms River, with aggravated assault, threat to kill, and
possession of a weapon — a
knife — for unlawful purposes.
Mr. Palmieri was transferred
to the Ocean County Jail,
where bail was set at $5,000.
• On Jan. 28, at 1:13 p.m.,
Officer Joseph Torre arrested
Jessica Quintela, 31, of
Bayonne, on an outstanding
warrant. Ms. Quintela posted
$1,000 bail and was released.
• On Jan. 29, at 11:41 p.m.,
Officer
Christopher
Leonhardt
arrested
and
charged Michelle Brown, 36,
of Point Pleasant, with simple
assault. Ms. Brown posted
$500 bail and was released.
• On Jan. 30, at 7:27 p.m.,
Officer
Christopher
Leonhardt
arrested
and
charged James Abbott, 41, of
Brielle, with operating a motor
vehicle under the influence,
refusal to submit to a breath
test, and careless driving.
• On Feb. 4, at 6:13 p.m.,
Officer Christopher Woit
arrested Brian Burgess, 22, of
West Orange, on an outstanding warrant. Mr. Burgess was
transported to the Ocean
County Jail, where bail was set
at $500.
• On Feb. 5, at 1:18 a.m.,
Officer Kevin Aurin arrested
and charged Nicholas Ippolito,
18, of Point Pleasant, with
possession of a controlled dangerous substance and possession of a hypodermic needle.
Mr. Ippolito posted $500 bail
and was released.
• On Feb. 15, 3:21 p.m.,
Corporal
Steven
Savois
arrested Ryan Miles, 26, of
Point Pleasant, on an outstanding traffic warrant. Mr.
Miles posted $165 bail and
was released.
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PAGE 14
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
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PAGE 15
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Bay Head
Junior garden club’s
work in full bloom
Bay Head
Community
Calendar
To submit a calendar listing or
Bay Head news story, e-mail
[email protected]
~
Residents Advised
To Drive Cautiously
On Main Avenue
Residents are asked to
exercise caution when traveling southbound through town
on Main Avenue [Route 35].
In the middle of the month,
work began on that roadway
as the first step toward
installing new gas lines under
the street.
Construction will continue
for the foreseeable future, and
residents will be informed of
the project’s progress on the
borough’s website, www.bayheadnj.org/bhnj/.
~
By Nick Malfitano
Though it is not quite spring,
members of the Sea Gulls
Junior Garden Club, a youth
division of the Seaweeders
Garden Club of Bay Head &
Mantoloking, look to be all set
for planting when the warmer
weather rolls around.
National Garden Clubs
[NGC] Flower Show judge
Mary
Anne
Finch,
of
Mantoloking, recently instructed members of the junior garden club on how to create a
small design of fresh plant
material for a youth class design
category, titled “Gazillion
Bubble Show.”
The exhibit was on display at
the Garden Club of New
Jersey’s Standard Flower Show,
which took place last weekend
at the New Jersey Flower &
Garden Show. The event was
held in the New Jersey
Convention Center in Edison.
Six first-place prizes were
awarded at the flower show in
the youth design class category
for “Gazillion Bubble Show,” to
Sea Gulls Penny Demetriades,
Julia Beyer, Mary Finnerty,
Erica Cornell, Cameron Himes
and Courtney McGarry.
Six second-place prizes were
also awarded to Lily Akersten,
Maggie Beyer, Colin Jacobs,
Courtney Jacobs, Alyssa Juhasz
and Katherine Nicholas.
Two third-place prizes were
given to Olivia Frizzell and
Rylee Kalis, with an honorable
mention awarded to Gabriella
Raffetto.
In addition, four prizes were
awarded to Sea Gulls club
members in the youth horticulture class. Three first-place
prizes were awarded to Julia
Beyer, Mary Finnerty and
Courtney McGarry, with one
Photo Courtesy of CLAUDIA JACOBS
The Sea Gulls Junior Garden Club is made up of local children — including many Bay Head
School students — who belong to a youth division of the Seaweeders Garden Club of Bay
Head & Mantoloking.
other second-place prize going
to Mary Finnerty.
The young members of the
local junior garden club have
also begun an educational project about native plants. This
St. Paul’s To Host
Red Cross
Blood Drive Feb. 26
St.
Paul’s
United
Methodist Church, at the
corner of Bridge and West
Lake avenues in Bay Head,
will host a blood drive to benefit the Red Cross tomorrow,
Saturday, Feb. 26, from 9 a.m.
until 3 p.m.
The need is great. Potential
donors should call the church
office at 732-892-5926 to set
up an appointment to donate,
or sign up online at the Red
Cross website, www.pleasegiveblood.org.
~
Bay Head School
Enrolling
Kindergarten Students
Bay Head School will be
holding kindergarten registration on Wednesday, March
16 for the 2011-2012 school
year.
The registered child must
be 5 years old by Oct. 1.
Please call the school at
732-892-0668
for
an
appointment. Students wishing to be accepted on a
tuition basis will be tested
that day also.
~
Borough Asks For
Cooperation During
Snowstorms
Borough officials are asking
residents to please remove all
vehicles which are parked on
borough streets prior to
snowfall in order for the Bay
Head Public Works team to
effectively plow the roads.
Officials further asked that
residents please be patient
with snow removal — the
department will get to every
street as soon as possible.
Residents are cautioned to
drive carefully during snowfall. If an emergency arises,
please contact the Bay Head
Police Department at 9-1-1
or 732-892-0632.
native plant project will be displayed at the Seaweeders
Garden Club’s “Centennial
Standard Patriotic Flower
Show” in Mantoloking on June
30.
Ms. Finch stated recently
that she has been assisting the
Sea Gulls Junior Garden Club
for many years, and that she
enjoys preparing the children
for flower shows, and getting
them involved with both the
design and growth of plants.
Commenting on the students
involved in the club, Ms. Finch
called them “an enthusiastic
group” who were very engaged
in learning about horticulture.
“A lot of things these days are
geared toward computers and
hard objects, and here [in the
garden club], the students are
getting to enjoy the beauty of
nature. They’re very attentive,”
Ms. Finch said.
The flower judge said flower
show entries that demonstrate
the entrant learned how to grow
plants first, then put his or her
personal touch on the design of
the plant, are the ones for which
judges award first-place ribbons.
Ms. Finch said the flowers
will be displayed inside a tent at
the “Centennial Standard
Patriotic Flower Show” in
Mantoloking.
“Horticulture entries are
open to the public as well, if
anyone would like to participate,” Ms. Finch said.
Suzie & Ed, on the move...
The Ocean Star FILE PHOTO
The noise dispute over non-compliance issues relating to an outdoor walk-in refrigerator
box at Theresa’s South restaurant in Bay Head is over, after management moved the refrigerator inside the Main Avenue restaurant.
JUST LISTED
717 Main Avenue, Bay Head
Restaurant moves controversial refrigerator
indoors, ending disagreement with borough
By Nick Malfitano
The dispute over the outdoor
refrigerator at a Main Avenue
restaurant, here, which drew
much public attention over the
last few months, has reached a
conclusion, as the owners of
Theresa’s South agreed to move
the alleged source of noise disturbances inside the restaurant.
The members of the Bay
Head
Planning
Board
announced at last week’s meeting that Theresa’s South management withdrew its most
recent application to maintain
the outdoor, walk-in refrigerator
which drew criticism from
neighbors and the Borough of
Bay Head, who claimed the lack
of indoor access to the refrigerator created a noise problem, and
violated an earlier agreement
between the borough and the
restaurant.
The dispute between the
Borough of Bay Head and
Theresa’s South began in
August, when the owners of
Theresa’s South received correspondence from Bay Head
Borough
Attorney
Jean
Cipriani.
The correspondence stated
that the borough would file a
complaint seeking to shut down
the restaurant if owners did not
“demonstrate compliance” with
several alleged problems within
10 days of receiving the letter.
According to the letter,
Theresa’s South had not honored several conditions of a
planning board variance which
was granted to the restaurant in
2008, and the borough wanted
the non-compliance issues
addressed immediately.
These conditions included
the limiting of noise whenever
possible, and the provision of
indoor access to the restaurant’s
outdoor, walk-in refrigerator
box.
The matter was heard at several previous planning board
meetings, but a significant conclusion was not reached until
last week.
In November, Theresa’s South
owners Robert Scalera, Richard
O’Connor and Richard Bassi
submitted an application to the
planning board for relief from
See RESTAURANT, page 18
Close to the beach...
Asking $1,185,000
SUZANNE B. VAN SCHOICK & EDWIN C. O’MALLEY
BAY HEAD OFFICE ~ 88 BRIDGE AVENUE
732.295.9700 EXT. 207 • EVENINGS: 732.892.3461
www.suzieanded.com|www.dianeturton.com
Creating an environment for learning and growth takes
dedication. At Rumson Country Day School, the
environment is upbeat and supportive so that students,
teachers and parents all thrive.
The academic curriculum is rich and dynamic – the
core of an excellent education. Our 7:1 student/teacher
ratio promotes learning, character education,
self-expression, and mutual respect.
Students are empowered to take risks in a
nurturing atmosphere, becoming socially
aware, life-long learners with a curiosity for
life and the world around them.
KIND • HONEST • RESPONSIBLE • RESPECTFUL
35 BELLEVUE AVENUE, RUMSON, NJ 07760 • 732.842.0527
WWW.RCDS.ORG
Are you prepared for spring ALLERGY SEASON?
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fatigue and dry or itchy skin & many diseases. Clean your air ducts for a
healthier and happier family.
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Shore Endocrinology Associates, LLC
Dr. Fomin is delighted to welcome new patients for care related to:
Diabetes
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Glandular Conditions
Make sure your duct and air filtratrion systems are clean!!
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Inc.
Call today for your appointment
732-892-7300
RESIDENTIAL
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PAGE 16
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
RECAPPING
THE
RECORD
®
421 River Ave.
Point Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742
Phone: 732-899-7606 • Fax: 732-899-9778
E-Mail: [email protected]
www.theoceanstar.com
- Published Every Friday -
JAMES M. MANSER
Publisher
From The Files of
DOUGLAS M. PAVILUK
Editor
The Leader &
KELLY M. RIZZETTA
Managing Editor
Subscription Price: $23 per year within Ocean County
Mail Delivery in Monmouth County: $37 per year
Outside of Monmouth and Ocean Counties: $45 per year
Single Copy Price: 50 cents
(All mail subscriptions must be paid in advance
to comply with regulations of the U.S. Postal Service.)
Entered at the Point Pleasant Beach Post Office as
Periodicals Mail June 26, 1998, under the Act of March 3, 1879
_____ How To Reach Us _____
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
®
PUBLIC PRAYER NOT A PROBLEM EVERYWHERE
Editor, The Ocean Star:
Watching television the past few days, I’ve seen
pictures of thousands of men bowing down on
their knees praying in the streets of Middle
Eastern countries.
They had better not try that kind of public display of prayer in the Point Pleasant Beach town
council meetings. The ACLU would surely get
after them.
JIM LARKIN
Eastham Road, Point Pleasant
~
ANIMAL WELFARE GROUPS THANK FUNDRAISER
SUPPORTERS
Editor, The Ocean Star:
The members of Shore Area Volunteers 4
Animals and Point Paws, the Animal Welfare
Committee of Point Pleasant Borough, would like
to sincerely thank everyone who came out to support our “Heart To Heart” Dinner Gift Auction,
which was held Wednesday, Feb. 9, at Crystal Point
Yacht Club. It was a huge success! We raised just
about $6,000 for our trap, neuter and return program for the feral cats.
We would like to thank all our wonderful volunteers, friends and family that helped out in so many
ways, including Girl Scout Troop 71. We want to
thank Crystal Point Yacht Club for a job well done.
Their incredible service is above and beyond!
A special thanks goes to all the local businesses
who so generously donated to our fundraiser, and
we want to remind everyone to remember the local
businesses while shopping, as they are always so
willing to give to our community events, even
when the economy isn’t at its best. It is great to give
back, as that is what a caring community is all
about.
Many thanks to: Special T Graphics, Salon
Mulan, Bead Dazzle, The Scone Shop, Pedal
Street Florist, O’Brien Florist, Purple Iris Florist,
Point Pleasant Bicycles, Spano’s, OB Diner, Jersey
Mike’s Subs, Bubbakoo’s Burrito’s, The Point
Pleasant Moose, Ocean First Bank, Manasquan
Savings Bank and Minding The Body.
Thanks also to Messano Family Chiropractic,
Sunshine Day Dreams, Bark Lane, Great
PacificFrame Shop, Lola’s, Harpoon Willys, Coal
House Pizza, Lenny's Pizza, Grandma's Angel,
Idea’s Plus, Round Dough With A Hole Bagels
and Delicious Bagels.
Many thanks to Birds and Bees, Sabosik Floors,
DeFelice, JF Murray, Inc., Michelle Jegge of State
Farm Insurance Co., Feraldi Land Surveyors,
Country Bakery, Brendl’s Restaurant of Belmar,
Hungry Puppy, Harbor Pets, Point Pavilion
Antique Center, Planet Wolf Tattoos of Brick, Joe
Leone’s, Necessities from the Heart, Classic
Boutique, Alaina Maione of Mary Kay, Le
Crueset, Advanced Auto Parts, The Sand Box,
Taylor-Made, Waffles & More, Tenampa, Shore
Styles, Stella e Luna, Diane’s Pet Grooming, Best
Darn Foods, LLC, Carolyn Charpentier @
Fabulous Finds, Beaverdam Hardware, Carol
Prato, Sue’s Gift Box, Leta Design Group and
Matt Furnback Carpentry.
POINT PAWS COMMITTEE
PATTI ASCOLESE, TRICHE SHERMAN,
LISA TOGNERI, LISA GARBERINO,
MARGARET YEAW, VMD, &
DEVOTED VOLUNTEERS
Chicago Avenue, Point Pleasant Beach
~
---------- Publisher of ----------
Main Phone Number: 732-899-7606
• James Manser, Publisher
732-223-0076, Ext. 12 • [email protected]
• Douglas Paviluk, Editor
732-223-0076, Ext. 27 • [email protected]
• Kelly Rizzetta, Managing Editor
732-899-7606, Ext. 12 • [email protected]
• Alison Manser Ertl, General Manager
732-223-0076, Ext. 38 • [email protected]
Letters to the Editor
• Our e-mail address is: [email protected]
• Our fax number is: 732-899-9778
• Our address is: 421 River Ave.,
Point Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742
• Nicholas Malfitano, Editorial Assistant
732-899-7606 Ext. 10 • [email protected]
News
• Eric Colvin, Point Pleasant & Mantoloking
732-899-7606, Ext. 16 • [email protected]
• Lauren Herstik, Point Pleasant Beach & Lavallette
732-899-7606, Ext. 14 • [email protected]
• Nicholas Malfitano, Bay Head
732-899-7606, Ext. 10 • [email protected]
Sports
• Greg Domorski, 732-899-7606, Ext. 15
[email protected]
Photography
• Joseph J. Delconzo, 732-223-0076, Ext. 31
[email protected]
• Sueanne Goss, 732-223-0076, Ext. 31
[email protected]
Webmaster
• Jamie Biesiada, 732-223-0076, Ext. 20
[email protected]
Circulation
• Abby Schrader, 732-223-0076, Ext. 21
[email protected]
• Joan Cordes, 732-223-0076, Ext. 37
[email protected]
Classified
• Pat Berry, 732-223-0076, Ext. 13
[email protected]
• Classified fax: 732-528-1212
Customer Service
• Chris Kaczorowski, 732-223-0076, Ext. 10
• Cathy Wardell, 732-223-0076, Ext. 10
Legals
• Mary Farren-Boehmcke, 732-223-0076, Ext. 14
[email protected]
• Legals fax: 732-528-1212
Real Estate/Business & Service Advertising
• Linda Quigley, 732-223-0076, Ext. 39
[email protected]
Advertising
• Sue Charlton, 732-223-0076, Ext. 16
• Jeanne Petillo, 732-223-0076, Ext. 15
• Justin Bach, 732-223-0076, Ext. 24
• Erin Quinn, 732-223-0076, Ext. 35
• Sales Fax: 732-528-1212
Bookkeeping
• Kathy Comppen, 732-223-0076, Ext. 11
[email protected]
Production
• Joyce Manser, 732-223-0076, Ext. 18
[email protected]
• Pam Yoncak, 732-223-0076, Ext. 18
• Wally Bilotta, 732-223-0076, Ext. 18
Shown is Friday's
weather.
Temperatures are
Friday's highs and
Friday night's lows.
CARMIE BRADY FOUNDATION EXPRESSES
GRATITUDE FOR FUNDRAISER SUCCESS
Editor, The Ocean Star:
At the miracle in Cana, Jesus changed water into
wine. At the miracle at Crystal Point, Joe Stephens
Jr., of Gerard’s Wine & Liquors, changed wine into
money for seriously ill children.
We are happy to report that the fundraiser that
Joe ran for the Carmie Brady Foundation was a
great success. The event was attended by 400 jubilant people who had the opportunity to sample
over 300 types of wine, along with exotic beer and
spirits.
On behalf of all the members of the Carmie
Brady Foundation, and on behalf of the families of
seriously ill children, we express our sincere thanks
to Joe and his family and to Bob Trusdale, the
owner of Crystal Point, who did a great job in seeing to it that everything was perfect that night.
Thanks also to the men and women who donated
their time to present the wine and spirits to our
guests, and to the donors of the magnificent gifts
for the silent auction. Thanks also to the jazz band,
and to the dedicated volunteers who collected tickets at the door, and to those who sold raffle tickets.
Joe was elated to learn that the first $2,000 from
the wine tasting was donated to a graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, whose child is scheduled to
undergo open-heart surgery next month in
Philadelphia.
Finally, we would like to thank the editors and
writer of The Ocean Star for your comprehensive
coverage of the event. Thanks to you, the event was
sold out almost a month in advance.
Of course, we thank all of those wonderful people who attended the event in order to help families of seriously ill children. We hope that you will
come to our annual fundraiser, which has been
moved to Jenkinson’s Pavilion on April 10, from 2
to 6 p.m.
CHARLES A. BRADY
Osprey Court, Point Pleasant
~
LAVALLETTE GOVERNMENT SHOULD BE MORE
CONCERNED ABOUT BARNEGAT BAY
Editor, The Ocean Star:
I was disappointed, but not surprised, as in the
past, when the Lavallette mayor and the Lavallette
council president came out against the program to
contribute $1 of each beach badge sold in
Lavallette to help Barnegat Bay. They said, “We
don’t make money on our beaches.” That is a complete lie! Just the month previous, they were patting
themselves on the back for making the most
money ever in the history of Lavallette beach
badge sales in 2010.
Even though these two politicians and their
families have enjoyed the waters of Barnegat Bay,
they are not, at this point, interested in helping to
“save Barnegat Bay.” As bad as it is for the mayor
and council president to take this position, it bothers me more to note that the five other members of
the council did not question their position. I should
not be surprised. I have attended council meetings
for the past three years, and never once has anyone
on the council questioned the mayor’s decision.
[Not when he wanted to sell the beachfront to an
advertising agency, or when he did not oppose the
sale of a street to building developers. No one on
the council objected.] It seems they think the king
can do no wrong.
SATURDAY
Red Bank
42/25
Asbury Park
45/25
Freehold
45/24
Wall
48/26
Allentown
46/22
Lakewood
45/24
Lakehurst
46/23
Toms River
45/23
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011
Belmar
45/25
Manasquan
45/25
Spring Lake
45/25
Point Pleasant
Beach
45/26
Point
Pleasant
45/25
Mantoloking
44/24
Lavallette
45/26
Breezy with rain
Times of clouds and sun
Mostly cloudy, chance of
a little rain
Highs 42 - 45
Lows 25 - 25
Highs 45 - 45
Lows 23 - 25
Highs 45 - 48
Lows 25 - 26
Sun and Moon
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Sunrise
Sunset
6:37 a.m.
6:35 a.m.
6:34 a.m.
6:33 a.m.
5:44 p.m.
5:45 p.m.
5:46 p.m.
5:47 p.m.
Moonrise
Moonset
1:38 a.m.
2:34 a.m.
3:22 a.m.
4:03 a.m.
Upcoming
Municipal
Meetings
MONDAY, FEB. 28
• No meetings scheduled.
TUESDAY, MARCH 1
• Point Pleasant Council, 7 p.m., borough
hall, Bridge Avenue.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2
• No meetings scheduled.
THURSDAY, MARCH 3
• Point Pleasant Beach Board of
Adjustment special meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
borough hall, New Jersey Avenue.
• Mantoloking Planning Board, 7:30
p.m., borough hall, Downer Avenue.
FRIDAY, MARCH 4
• No meetings scheduled.
Observations of
SUNDAY
Middletown
43/25
Englishtown
45/23
Letters to the Editor Policy
Letters to the editor must be received by 4 p.m.
Wednesday for possible inclusion in that week’s issue.
Letters received prior to the deadline are not guaranteed to
be included in that week’s issue. Letter writers who have
already been published in a given month may be denied a
second publication in the same month, particularly from
Sept. 1 through Election Day. The Ocean Star reserves the
right to refuse any letter if author confirmation cannot be
obtained. The Ocean Star reserves the right to reject or edit
any content not deemed suitable for print. The Ocean Star
reserves the right to refuse letters that exceed 500 words in
length. Letters without a signature, name, address and
phone number clearly listed for each letter author will be
discarded immediately. Multiple letters from different
authors received from the same fax machine, e-mail or postal
address will be discarded immediately. Letters from several
members of the same family or organization, or political letters endorsing candidates written by someone who cannot
legally vote for that candidate, will be the first to be pulled
in the event of a space limitation. Groups or organizations
that send in a letter supporting a candidate must be officially recognized by the state of New Jersey as a nonprofit entity, and be able to prove same upon request. The views represented by the letter authors do not necessarily represent the
views of The Ocean Star, or its management. The publication of any letter is subject to the publisher’s discretion.
See LETTERS, PAGE 17
FRIDAY
Matawan
45/25
25 Years Ago
Plans to convert the Arnold Theater into
an office building were presented to the
Point Pleasant Beach Planning Board. The
building was planned to be divided into separate businesses and professional offices, but
would not be used for retail commercial
space.
~
10 Years Ago
The Lavallette Board of Education considered participating in the state’s School
Choice Program, which could have generated
additional revenue by bringing in students
from other districts.
~
Five Years Ago
The Point Pleasant Foundation for
Excellence in Education inducted Frank
Scarpone and Robert Wells into the Point
Pleasant High School Hall of Fame.
~
One Year Ago Today
Lt. Michael Colwell, of the Point Pleasant
Police Department, was named the D.A.R.E.
Officer of the Year for the entire state of New
Jersey. Lt. Colwell traveled to Atlantic City
to receive the honor in person.
11:03 a.m.
12:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
2:01 p.m.
Last
New
First
Full
Feb 24
Mar 4
Mar 12
Mar 19
Manasquan Inlet Tides
High
1:02 a.m.
1:30 p.m.
Saturday
2:02 a.m.
2:33 p.m.
Sunday
3:05 a.m.
3:38 p.m.
Monday
4:07 a.m.
4:39 p.m.
Tuesday
5:03 a.m.
5:31 p.m.
Wednesday 5:50 a.m.
6:15 p.m.
Thursday
6:32 a.m.
6:55 p.m.
Friday
Ht.(ft)
4.2
3.5
4.0
3.4
4.0
3.4
4.0
3.5
4.1
3.7
4.2
4.0
4.3
4.1
Low
7:29 a.m.
7:42 p.m.
8:37 a.m.
8:49 p.m.
9:37 a.m.
9:48 p.m.
10:29 a.m.
10:40 p.m.
11:16 a.m.
11:28 p.m.
11:58 a.m.
--12:13 a.m.
12:38 p.m.
Ht.(ft)
0.3
0.5
0.4
0.5
0.3
0.4
0.2
0.3
0.1
0.1
-0.1
--0.0
-0.2
ADAM
YANKEE
Middle age
is that
difficult time
between childhood
and retirement when
you have to take care
of yourself
PAGE 17
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
— LETTERS —
From Page 16
It took the taxpayers’ money in court to cancel
the beachfront problem and the large turnout of
citizens at several council meetings to pressure
the building developers into withdrawing their
offer to buy part of Lavallette Avenue.
The Lavallette Council is most concerned in
building a budget surplus for their election. In
2010, we had a budget surplus of almost $1 million — that helped their election.
But, back to the Barnegat Bay problem. The
county is no help — they still allow sewerage to
flow into the bay. The state, under Gov. Christie,
who vacations in Florida, is less than helpful. He
has already vetoed a bill that would have been
helpful. The only people that seems concerned
with the problem are the children in our
Lavallette school system. They are working to
inform the citizens of Lavallette and the politicians of the problem. Let’s hope they are successful, as no one else seems concerned.
What is going to happen? The properties
within smelling distance of the bay will continue
to lose value. Who wants to live by a body of
water you cannot swim in, water ski in, safely sail
or motor boat in, much less smell? Too bad we
can’t place the blame for this catastrophe on
someone else, but we are the ones that put the
politicians in place. When your property value
drops 20 to 30 percent in value, you will then
want to do something about it.
LACH CAMERON
President Avenue, Lavallette
~
PUBLIC PRAYER D OES NOT BELONG AT
COUNCIL MEETINGS
Editor, The Ocean Star:
I am a lifelong practicing Catholic who attends
Mass every week and says the Rosary every night.
That doesn’t mean I am better than anyone else
in this world. I think I am a person who can add
some perspective to the debate about the recitation of prayer before town council meetings.
I’ve always been surprised at the recitation of
the Our Father at the beginning of the meetings.
I believe it isn’t appropriate given my understanding of the Constitution. Just as importantly, it was not appropriate given how it made several non-Christian friends of mine feel uncomfortable.
People might be surprised about the actual
religious beliefs of the founding fathers, especially Thomas Jefferson. Although considered a
Christian and having been raised first in the
Church of England and then an Episcopalian,
Jefferson’s belief can most accurately be defined
as a deist philosophy. Although he believed in
one God and felt that Christianity was the highest expression of a natural religion, he did not
believe that Jesus was divine, did not believe in
the virgin birth, rejected the idea of the Trinity,
and did not believe in miracles. Jefferson felt the
Old Testament and much of the New Testament
was hogwash. During his Presidency Jefferson
refused to issue proclamations calling for days of
prayer and thanksgiving. John Adams and Ben
Franklin had similar beliefs. George Washington
was not as deeply religious as people would suspect.
Jefferson used the phrase “wall of separation
between Church and State” in his letter to the
Danbury Baptist church which has been used for
the basis of several Supreme Court decisions on
this issue. Jefferson and the other founding
fathers made it a point to establish a secular government. Any prayer that elevates one religion
above any other has no place at the beginning of
any government meeting. The Constitution, and
later, the Bill of Rights were adopted to protect
the rights of the minority from being overwhelmed by the majority based on how the
majority “feels”. The ACLU was disparaged
because they took up this cause. They provide a
needed counter measure to ensure that all of our
citizens are offered the protections afforded by
the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
A priest once told me we may not understand
how God manifests Himself to different people.
Could he present Himself to people in the middle-east as Allah, or to people in Asia as Buddha?
To say that there is one God may be accurate, but
who is to say it must be the one Christians refer
to.
Nobody is denying the right of people to pray,
only not out loud at government meetings. While
possibly laying off 3 police officers, paying to litigate this is unconscionable. For members of the
council to violate the court order is outrageous.
They should be held financially responsible for
the legal costs involved, not the citizens.
Remember, kindness is also a form of prayer.
DEIRDRE MCKENNA SCHLIEP
Forman Avenue, Point Pleasant Beach
~
MUNICIPALITIES SHOULD SHARE SCHOOL
COSTS EQUALLY
Editor, The Ocean Star:
The State of New Jersey has had a long-standing goal to incorporate a municipality’s “ability to
pay” as the primary factor in apportioning school
district costs. In 2007, the state passed the
Uniform Shared Services and Consolidation Act
to consolidate non-operating school districts
with actual school districts, to spread the education costs to a broader property-owner tax base.
Even before Mantoloking was compelled to
join the Beach district, it took discreet steps to
protect its low property taxes, while the Point
Pleasant Beach Board of Education and town
council apparently had no clue. Mantoloking’s
July 16, 2007 resolution to hire special counsel
Dr. Vito A. Gagliardi [the former New Jersey
State Commissioner of Education] stated, “the
legislation, when fully implemented, will have
unwanted and significant material impact upon
... property owners,” recognizing their obligation
to fund the district based on property valuation.
Dr. Gagliardi has strong ties with the
Department of Education, which granted
Mantoloking virtually no obligation to contribute
tax dollars based on property valuation [0.5 percent]. Other wealthy towns pay 67 to 95 based on
percent property valuation.
The Librera formula was recognized as the
appropriate cost allocation method upheld in
2007, named after former Department of
Education commissioner William Librera. It is
based on “the fact that under the laws of this
state, the local share a community is required to
contribute to the funding of public schools is
directly related to its ability to pay.”
It concluded that “any fair apportionment must
retain wealth as the dominant factor, with the
appropriate balance being two-thirds wealth to
one-third part pupil enrollment.” The recommended method specifies 67 percent of the tax
apportionment be derived through the equalized
valuation method and 33 percent based on the
proportion of student enrollment.
In my interview with former the assistant
county superintendent, Dr. Foster acknowledged
the Librera formula as standard, but indicated
that “no one from Point Pleasant Beach objected
to the apportionment proposed.”
Had the Librera formula been adopted, as
much as $4.5 million would have been contributed by Mantoloking property taxes to the
Beach School District. As it stands ,Mantoloking
pays only 0.5 percent by the equalized valuation
method in the first year, in which Mantoloking
reduced its school budget by close to 50 percent
because of administrative cost savings.
At the same time, Beach residents saw the
municipal portion of the school budget increase
by close to $1 million. Clearly not aware of the
damage done, Dr. Savage remarked to me, it “is
good money,” referring to Mantoloking’s perpupil contribution totaling less than $90,000.
However, when Mantoloking joined the Point
Pleasant Beach School district, the education
commissioner accepted Mantoloking’s apportionment cost “for the first year” [2009-2010].
Instead of schemes to bribe voters with free adult
classes and rumors of a referendum question to
waive the 2-percent cap, the Point Beach BOE
should decide to wake up and represent the taxpayers. The BOE is required to place a referendum ballot question to modify the apportionment formula for the upcoming school year that
can start to bring Mantoloking’s contribution in
line with the Beach taxpayer burden.
BRAD TOMBS
Laurel Court, Point Pleasant Beach
Dancing The Night Away For Good Cause
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Regina Foley [right], of the Ocean County Medical Center, Brick, who is also a member
of the Point Pleasant Board of Education, attended the recent Fred Astaire Dance Studio
Fundraiser, in Wall, to help raise money for the hospital. Dr. David Yazdan [left], of
Manasquan, and studio owner Brittany Matthews, of Spring Lake Heights, were also on
hand for the event.
Police investigate suspicious truck fire
The Point Pleasant Police
Department received a call on
Wednesday at approximately
4:55 a.m. reporting a vehicle
was on fire in the borough, and
after further investigation,
authorities deemed the incident
“suspicious.”
Police responded to the parking lot of Point Pleasant
Bicycle, located on the corner of
Sunset and Bridge avenues.
Upon arrival, police discovered a 2000 Dodge Dakota
pickup truck fully engulfed in
flames. The vehicle was not
occupied, and the vehicle owner
was inside his nearby residence
in the borough.
The Point Pleasant Fire
— GOP —
From Page 7
Vice
President
Carolyn
Slachetka,
Corresponding
Secretary
Frank
Carey,
Recording Secretary Diane
Wiesnewski and Treasurer Bill
Ammirata have long been
involved with the club. He does
not see this as a reinvigoration
of club leadership, and as a result
he does not believe the philosophy of the club will change any
time soon.
The mayor added that his
criticisms applied only to a small
cadre of people within the
Republican club, not the
Republican Party as a whole.
Of the mayor’s announcement not to seek the party
endorsement, Mr. Reid said, “If
the mayor doesn’t want to go
through the process of being
interviewed, that’s his choice.
He might have had issues with
people in the past.”
Mr. Reid ran against mayor
Barrella in last year’s recall election.
“I love this town, my daughter
is in school here, I was a coach
in the schools, it was a perfect
fit. I lost not because people
were against me, but because
Department responded and the Ocean County Prosecutor’s
extinguished the fire. The Point Office Major Crime Unit, at
Pleasant Police Department 732-929-2027, extension 3953.
and the Ocean County
Prosecutor’s Office Arson
Investigation Unit are investigating the fire.
The fire caused extensive
damage to the vehicle and some
minor damage to a nearby
structure.
No injuries were reported.
The Point Pleasant Branch
All names are being withheld of the Ocean County Library
at this time.
recently released the schedule of
Police are asking anyone with upcoming events for February.
information about the fire to
The library is located at 834
contact Detective Ed Miller of Beaver Dam Road, in Point
the Point Pleasant Police Pleasant.
Department at 732-892-0060
This month, the library disor Detective Thomas Haskell of play case will feature John
Chipak’s Lego collection.
Also in February, the meetthey were against the recall,”
ing
room will feature acrylic
Mr. Reid said.
Mr. Reid was endorsed in the paintings by Dawn DeFelice.
For more information on any
recall election by the local GOP.
of
the events listed below, or to
With regard to the possibility of
running for mayor in this year’s register, please call the library at
election, he said, “I’m still think- 732-295-1555.
Children
ing about it. Even if I had won
On Monday, Feb. 28, at 4
the recall, I’d have to run again.
I have a screening committee [at p.m., Black History Month
the Republican club], which is Craft Day will be held at the
interviewing new and old mem- library.
Celebrate African culture by
bers. At the March meeting, we
making
a traditional African
will announce our Republican
drum.
club nominee.”
Children in grades three and
Speculating on the mayor’s
up
are welcome. Please register
plans, Mr. Reid said, “I don’t
by
calling
732-295-1555.
believe he will run in the priFamily
mary. He calls himself a
Tomorrow, Saturday, Feb.
Republican but he’s really an
Independent. The real question 26, at 2:30 p.m., a Chinese
is whose going to be able to run Hand Puppet Show takes
place.
this town without dividing it.”
The Wang Da Chung Hand
Mayor Barrella has two
options if he seeks re-election. Puppet Group will present
He can run in the June GOP “The Monkey King: A Famous
Primary and seek the backing of Chinese Fable,” along with a
the Republican voters, and be Chinese yo-yo demonstration,
listed as the Republican candi- traditional Chinese dance and
date on the November ballot if a hand puppet workshop.
There will be prizes and a
he wins the primary, or he can
obtain the required amount of raffle. This will be a Chinese
signatures in order to be auto- New Year celebration that the
matically placed on the ballot as whole family will enjoy.
Please register by calling
an Independent.
732-295-1555.
Library finishes
month with
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PAGE 18
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Restaurant resolves refrigerator issue
— FROM PAGE 15 —
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the conditions outlined in Ms.
Cipriani’s letter.
That application was withdrawn in December and replaced
with a new, which sought to
maintain the status quo on the
property by keeping the walk-in
refrigerator box outside the
restaurant building.
Both the owners of Theresa’s
South and the restaurant’s neighbors were expected to be in attendance at last week’s planning
board meeting, accompanied by
both their respective attorneys
and expert witnesses providing
testimony — similar to a hearing
held for the previous application
in November.
The restaurant owners were
represented in their applications
by Roberta A. Burcz, a Point
Pleasant-based attorney who also
serves as defender in the Bay
Head Municipal Court, while
neighbors of the restaurant were
represented by Bay Head attorney William Gage.
However, the expected hearing
did not occur, and the board soon
revealed the reason for that. The
planning board received a letter
dated Jan. 30 from two of the
three owners of Theresa’s South
— Mr. O’Connor and Mr.
Scalera — stating they wished to
withdraw their most recent application.
Addressing the board in the
letter, Mr. O’Connor and Mr.
Scalera wrote, “As you are all
aware, over the course of the past
three years, we have appeared
before you asking for various zoning relief, and you have responded very favorably to these
requests. We have now come to a
point that we no longer wish to
pursue any further hearings, and
are officially withdrawing our
application scheduled for the
February meeting.”
The owners stated they did not
want to endure another long
hearing of back-and-forth testimony.
“We, and I am sure you all,
have listened to the monotonous
droning of all the testimony given
both for and against our various
applications, and have had
enough,” Mr. O’Connor and
Scalera wrote. “We do not want
to put ourselves through it all
over again, as well as the board.”
The Theresa’s South owners
went on to state that within a
month of the Jan. 30 letter, the
walk-in refrigerator box would be
moved back inside the restaurant
building,
thereby
placing
Theresa’s South in full compliance with the planning board’s
prior resolution.
“We know that the board was
in a difficult position, as
expressed at one of the hearings,
and we understand all of these
circumstances, and this is the
main reason for our decision. We
respect the board and say thank
you,” the owners stated.
Planning board member
David Kellogg stated that he
happened to drive past Theresa’s
South earlier in the day last
Wednesday and observed the
refrigerator was, in fact, moved
back inside the restaurant.
When contacted this week,
Mr. O’Connor stated that the
refrigerator’s presence inside the
restaurant leaves the management and staff with less available
space, and offers “absolutely” no
benefit to the restaurant itself.
However, the restaurant coowner said it was too early to tell
whether the refrigerator being
back indoors would affect business.
“We haven’t had a rush [of customers] yet, but the refrigerator is
back inside,” Mr. O’Connor said.
The restaurant co-owner stated that continuing to pursue the
matter with the planning board
was a great expense to Theresa’s
South, and said in today’s unfavorable economy, that expense
proved to be too much of a burden.
“It’s definitely an expense,”
Mr. O’Connor said, “We would
have needed six yes votes [a twothirds majority of planning board
members] to keep the refrigerator
outside, and we didn’t think that
we had the six. That’s why we
folded up our tent.”
When asked about Theresa’s
South’s relationship with the borough, Mr. O’Connor replied simply, “the same.
While the planning board was
hearing Theresa’s South’s case,
some residential supporters of the
restaurant characterized the borough’s handling of the matter as
“anti-business.”
When asked about that this
week, Mr. O’Connor said he feels
zoning laws in Bay Head are too
restrictive, but emphasized that
the restaurant will abide by the
planning board’s prior decision.
“It’s over and done — let’s get
on with it,” Mr. O’Connor said
Wednesday.
Bay Head Mayor William
Curtis said this week he felt the
anti-business criticisms voiced by
some Theresa’s South supporters
were “totally unfounded.”
“That is not true at all,” the
mayor said. “The current council
is not, and has never been, against
any businesses in Bay Head.”
Mayor Curtis stated that the
borough’s relationship with the
restaurant is “excellent” — and a
good one.
“This was just an unfortunate
thing that should have been acted
upon earlier,” Mayor Curtis said.
“I’m not pointing fingers at anyone, but [the dispute] should
have been resolved earlier if it was
a problem.”
Mayor Curtis said, now that
the refrigerator has been moved
indoors, he anticipated no further
“bones of contention” over the
matter, and stressed that Theresa’s
South is very good for Bay Head,
bringing much business and
many customers into town.
Councilman James Urner, a
neighbor of Theresa’s South who
testified against the restaurant
before the planning board, said
this week he was satisfied with
the decision Theresa’s South
announced last week.
The councilman wanted to
emphasize this week that the dispute in this matter was not so
much about noise, as it was “noncompliance with town resolutions,” to which the restaurant
ownership agreed prior to
Theresa’s South’s opening in
November 2008.
When asked this week if he
now heard less noise coming
from the restaurant property
since the refrigerator was moved
inside, the councilman responded
in the affirmative, simply, “Yes.”
However, Councilman Urner
said he could not necessarily
speak for other neighbors
involved in the matter.
Read Across
America comes
to Point H.S.
March 4
The 7th Annual Read Across
America Festival will take place
at Point Pleasant Borough High
School at 4 p.m. next Friday,
March 4 in the auditorium.
Showcase stories will include
Rooster if Off To See The World, Is
Your Mama a Llama?, Froggy, The
Giving Tree, Officer Buckle and
Gloria, Green Eggs and Ham, The
Cat & The Hat, and many more.
The event is free, and families
are encouraged to attend.
High School
PTO to hold
Snowflake
Auction March 4
Members of the Point Pleasant
Borough High School ParentTeacher Organization will host a
Snowflake Auction from 7 to 10
p.m. at the high school, located at
808 Laura Herbert Drive in the
borough, on Friday, March 4.
The event is the primary, biannual fundraiser for the PTO,
and all proceeds will fund scholarships for the next two years.
Tickets will cost $10 and
include admission, coffee, tea and
cake. Guests are invited to bring
additional food, but alcohol is not
permitted.
For more information, call
Cindy at 732-899-1097.
Page
19
Friday, February 25, 2011
PEOPLE
Photos Courtesy of KIM SUROWICZ
Filmmaker Kim Surowicz, of Point Pleasant Beach, developed advertisements for local businesses using a green
screen [left]. She also worked as a producer for the feature
film “The Interpreter,” starring Nicole Kidman and Sean Penn,
and was present for scenes being shot at the United Nations
in New York City [above]. Ms. Surowicz and her friend, Vasilia
Hughes, closed down Seventh Avenue in New York City
[right] to shoot for the film “Fighting,” a movie about underground street-fighting, on which Ms. Surowicz also worked as
a producer.
Point Beach’s Kim Surowicz gives local
film scene a boost, one indie at a time
‘I
’m trying to figure out
how to make movies and
have a life here,” said Kim
Surowicz, who only
recently settled into her little house
on Ocean Avenue in Point Pleasant
Beach, where she moved approximately 18 months ago.
This was Ms. Surowicz’s sum
reaction to 15 years in the movie
industry, with her time split
between jobs on studio lots in Los
Angeles and freelancing as a producer on film shoots all over the
country. Now, Ms. Surowicz is
looking to take on her own projects.
“I want to have more control,
and doing that means taking on
smaller, more independent projects,” Ms. Surowicz said.
She is doing just that, balancing
a steady life in Point Pleasant Beach
with a search for new and stimulating film projects.
One such film is “The Cohesion
Project,” a documentary about three
extraordinary men who also happen
to have cerebral palsy, a chronic
condition that affects body movement and muscle coordination. Ms.
Surowicz is collaborating on the
film with her longtime friend,
Doug Bollinger, who owns Strollo’s
Lighthouse Ices on Ocean Avenue
in Point Pleasant Beach.
“This is a project that I am so
behind, because it’s so good and
such a worthy cause,” Ms. Surowicz
said of the documentary, which she
said has been a challenging and
rewarding endeavor in independent
film production and financing.
The pair is funding the project
through donations from friends,
family and colleagues, as well as
with their own, out-of-pocket contributions.
After the documentary is completed, the pair plans to take it to
festivals, shop it around to cable
networks, and sell DVDs.
“We didn’t want someone else
backing the project so that we could
maintain control, so we could make
it the way we wanted to and distribute it how we wanted to,” she said,
of the decision to keep the project
independent.
Such projects warrant independent funding, and they have posted a
trailer at www.indiegogo.com/thecohesionproject, where backers can
pledge donations.
Ms. Surowicz and Mr. Bollinger
met a few years ago, when Ms.
Surowicz moved back to Point
Pleasant Beach.
“I would get my Tasti-D-Lite
there five times a week. No one has
Tasti-D-Lite, except in the city. I
don’t know how we got on the topic
of movies, but we became friends
instantly. It’s so ironic that after 15
years in the film business, the guy
who sells me ice cream in Point
Pleasant Beach is my most successful collaborator,” she said.
“She is like a Cirque du Soleil
performer when it comes to business,” Mr. Bollinger said. “She juggles a dozen projects. She makes
problems disappear. I don’t know
how she does it, I can barely cut
steak and talk.”
She and Mr. Bollinger toyed
with the idea of collaborating on a
project for years, never bringing
anything to fruition until the
opportunity to make “The
Cohesion Project” presented itself.
When they’re not shooting
footage, or reaching out to fund the
project, the pair works day jobs at
the William M. Ball Agency and
run Shore Riders, a bike rental business on Ocean Avenue. Ms.
Surowicz’s expertise has come in
handy in her jobs. She came up
with the idea of using a green screen
to create advertising materials for
both businesses.
“Green screen is used in movies
for visual effects,” she said. “You can
place anything or anybody in front
of it and then remove the green and
put them where ever you want. So
we used that concept in marketing
for the
real estate
agency
and the
bike rental
business.”
M s .
Surowicz
set up a
U n i v e r s i t y ’s
booth at the
STORY BY
Tisch School of
annual seafood
LAUREN HERSTIK
the Arts in 1995,
festival for Shore
where she earned
Riders, where visitors could have their picture taken a Bachelor’s of Fine Arts in Film &
on bikes with the green screen in Television Production and the
Award for Consistent Excellence in
the background.
“Then we e-mailed them back Producing, Ms. Surowicz went out
pictures of themselves superim- to Los Angeles.
“If you’re lucky to find one perposed somewhere in Point Pleasant
Beach. We took the same concept son who is willing to help you,
and used it for real estate postcards. you’re set,” she said.
That held true for Ms. Surowicz,
We've sent out the picture of the
three of us [Ms. Surowicz, Mr. who started out as an intern at
Bollinger, and Mike Corbally, also a Universal in New York City.
Ball Agency Employee and a Point Through her connections there, she
Pleasant Beach Councilman] in managed to have three interviews
several different locations on post- set up before she stepped off the
plane in Los Angeles for the first
cards to homeowners,” she said.
Mr. Corbally said he has enjoyed time in 1995. One of those interworking with Ms. Surowicz at the views yielded her first paying job, on
Ball Agency as well as at Shore the Universal lot.
In her first job at Universal, Ms.
Riders.
“Kim’s production background Surowicz served as the assistant to a
has been major plus in the market- producer. There, she learned the
ing of the businesses,” Mr. Corbally ropes of the industry and forged
said. “She thrives on overcoming lasting relationships that carried her
obstacles, and achieving success at through a career in movie making.
“That was like my second colwhatever she is working on. Kim
cares deeply about her friends and lege,” she said of her time on the
family, and even after a long, hard Universal lot.
Eventually, life on the lot felt
day, she always manages to smile.”
Ms. Surowicz was born and stagnant. Ms. Surowicz was itchraised in New Jersey. She grew up in ing to break out of the day-to-day
Clifton, where her parents Tom and grind and start digging in to difMary Surowicz still reside. She ferent projects.
“Working on the lot is steady
spent her summers at the Ocean
Avenue house where she now lives. work, as opposed to actually making
At Clifton High School, Ms. movies, which is on a project-toSurowicz discovered a passion and project basis. I wanted to be out
there making movies, so I left my
an aptitude for production.
“We had a TV station there. I job on the lot to do the freelancing
produced these projects for TV and thing,” she said. In 2002 Ms.
loved it. I thought then, ‘hey, this is Surowicz left Universal to freelance
a fun career.’ It’s not behind a desk, as a producer. She’s been out there
it’s not doing the same thing for any making movies ever since.
Her first freelance job was as an
length of time that I didn’t have
control over. It fit my personality.” assistant to the executive producer
After graduating from New York on “The Rundown,” starring
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and
Christopher Walken. The experience, which took her to shoots in
Honolulu, HI, taught her so much
about the process of filmmaking
that she was ready for more as soon
as the shoot wrapped.
This led to more freelance production jobs, including on Dean
Parisot’s “Me Again” [2004],
Sydney Pollack’s “The Interpreter”
[2005], Wong Kar Wai’s “My
Blueberry Nights” [2007], and a
number of Martin Scorcese’s projects including “The Departed”
[2006], “Shine a Light” [2008],
“Public Speaking” [2010], and “A
Letter to Elia” [2010]. She also
worked as an associate producer on
Dito Montiel’s “Fighting” [2009],
and as a production associate on
Michael Mann’s “Public Enemies”
[2009], starring Johnny Depp.
After all those major freelance
projects, Ms. Surowicz looks forward to getting back to smaller,
independent projects.
“I haven’t done the indie thing
for myself in a really long time,” she
said. “I do have connections to call
in favors with, and I’m just waiting
for the right project.”
For the moment, Ms. Surowicz
has stopped looking for paying
film work in order to focus her
attention entirely on the two
independent projects for which
she has to secure funding. One is
a scripted narrative, and the other
is “The Cohesion Project” documentary.
“I have to focus all my attention on these two projects before
I get out and find another,” she
said.
Ms. Surowicz calls Point
Pleasant Beach her home while
she focuses on those projects in
her parents’ old beach house.
“They
bought the
house as an
investment
property
and
I
would stay
t h e r e
whenever I
“
“
She thrives on
overcoming
obstacles, and
achieving success
at whatever she is
working on.
She is like a
Cirque du Soleil
performer when it
comes to business.
She juggles a
dozen projects.
— Doug Bollinger
Film collaborator
was home, even for a night,” Ms.
Surowicz said. “I never knew where
I was going to be next, and this was
always a good place to crash. Then
one day I thought, ‘you know what,
I think I live here.’”
Now that she’s starting to get
comfortable in her new life at the
Shore, and is settling into these two
independent projects, Ms. Surowicz
is enjoying finding local talent to
work with.
“I have a friend who is an assistant director in Manasquan. I met a
kid who ended up being a production assistant on “Fighting” at
Green Planet [on Arnold Avenue
in Point Pleasant Beach]. There are
people sprinkled around,” she said
of the local film scene.
“It’s great finding those people
who are really passionate but less
experienced, because they’re happy
to volunteer their time in exchange
for experience,” she said.
“I like the idea of finding talent
in a small community and collaborating with them. I like helping
young people. It’s amazing how
many people there are here who are
young, talented, smart and want to
get into the business.”
Getting into the business is
something Ms. Surowicz knows
plenty about.
“The movie business is such a
social business, especially in LA, so
I started a monthly gathering of
assistants,” she said. “These were
people that you’d talk to on the
phone constantly, but you’d never
actually meet. So I started faxing
out 300 invitations a week, and
that’s how everyone got ahead. The
more people you know, the better
off you are. The more people who
know you’re good at your job even
better.”
Ms. Surowicz is taking her
expertise to the team behind the
8th Annual Garden State Film
Festival in Asbury Park, for
which she plans to volunteer. It’s
an event that brings together
local filmmakers and film enthusiasts, a demographic of which
Ms. Surowicz is proud to be a
part.
Photo Courtesy of TIM KOLENUT
KIM SUROWICZ
— Mike Corbally
William Ball Agency,
Shore Riders
PAGE 20
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Houses of Worship
CENTRAL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
Point Pleasant Beach
729 Arnold Ave.
Open minds, open hearts,
open doors.
Our Sunday worship services
are led by Pastor Hannah Lee, at
8 and 10 a.m., in the sanctuary.
For more information, please
call the church office at 732-8923233.
We look forward to having
you join us for Sunday morning!
a.m., with Morning Prayer on
Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.
Holy Eucharist is offered at
8:30 a.m. on Wednesday.
As a beginning to the Lenten
season, All Saints will hold additional services.
The first of those services will
be a Choral Evensong on Feb. 27
at 4:30 p.m., at the church. This
Evensong will be in the Anglican
tradition, in the format followed
by many Oxbridge Chapels. This
will not only mark the end of the
pre-Lenten season, but will also
welcome back the church’s rector,
the Rev. Neil Turton, from his
sabbatical in England. Following
the Evensong, there will be a
small repast prepared by members of the congregation.
At 6 p.m. on March 8, Shrove
Tuesday, the church will have its
traditional pancake supper. There
is no charge, but there will be a
free-will offering. Anyone interested in attending this supper
should call the church office or
sign up at the church.
On the following day, Ash
Wednesday, March 9, there will
be two services of the Holy
Eucharist with the imposition of
ashes. One will take place at 8:30
a.m., and a Choral Eucharist will
be held at 7:30 p.m.
For more information, call the
church office at 732-892-7478,
log
on
to
www.allsaintsbayhead.org, or email [email protected].
held at 9 a.m., featuring relevant
Bible teaching and contemporary
music. Nursery, preschool and K5 are available.
For more information, call
732-892-1445 or log onto
www.fellowshipchapelnj.org.
FIRST BAPTIST
Point Pleasant Beach
River & McLean avenues
You are invited to attend our
weekly celebrations of worship,
Sunday mornings at 9 and 10:30
a.m.
The most important gathering
of the week is our Wednesday
prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m. to 8:30
p.m. Feel free to visit our prayer
meeting, or call the church office
with your prayer request.
Our youth group meets on
Friday nights at 7 p.m.
For more information, contact
Pastor Ray Tate and the office of
the church by calling 732-2959191.
Quartey, rector, and the Rev.
Maria B. Sanzo, assistant rector,
lead the Sunday services.
The solemn Eucharist Rite 1
begins at 8 a.m., and the choral
Eucharist Rite 2 begins at 10
a.m. Nursery care is available for
the 10 a.m. service.
Sunday school begins in
church at 10 a.m.
For more information, please
contact the church office at 732892-9254, e-mail [email protected],
or
visit
www.saintmarysbythesea.org.
Sunday morning worship
services are held at 9 a.m., with
Rev. John Helm preaching.
Bay Head
Bridge and Main avenues
Children’s Church will be held
The seasonal chapel is now downstairs during the worship
ALL SAINTS’ EPISCOPAL
closed. It will re-open on May service.
Welcome home!
ST. PAUL’S UNITED
CHURCH
22.
Sunday school classes for all
Bay Head
M
ETHODIST CHURCH
For additional information, ages are held at 10:30 a.m.
500 Lake Ave.
Bay Head
O
UR LADY OF PEACE
please
call
732-892-2317.
Prayer
hour
is
held
on
The Rev. Neil C. Turton welBridge and West Lake avenues
Normandy Beach
Wednesdays
at
6:30
p.m.,
at
the
comes everyone to All Saints
The Rev. Scott H. Bostwick is
Seventh Avenue and Highway 35
church parsonage.
church.
FAITH LUTHERAN
pastor.
For
more
information,
call
For information or prayer, call
Sunday services are Holy
The Sunday worship schedule
732-793-7803.
CHURCH
732-892-4648.
Eucharist, Rite I, at 8 a.m., and
is as follows: Prayer Meeting,
Lavallette
Choral Eucharist, Rite II, at
1801 Grand Central Ave.
PARISH OF ST. PIO AT 8:30 a.m.; Family/Contemporary
GOOD SHEPHERD
10:15 a.m., with nursery care
Join Faith Lutheran Church
Worship Service, 9 a.m.; Sunday
PIETRELCINA
available.
on Sunday mornings for worship
LUTHERAN CHURCH
school, 9 a.m.; Coffee Fellowship,
Lavallette
Church School classes are held
Point Pleasant
at 9:30 a.m.
10:15 a.m.; Traditional Worship
103
Washington
Ave.
708 Ocean Road [Route 88]
at 10:15 a.m.
Sunday school starts at 9:30
The Rev. Monsignor Leonard Service, 11 a.m.
All are welcome at Good
Weekday services are at 8:30
a.m.
Child care is available during
Troiano
is pastor.
For more information, call the Shepherd, which offers two difboth
services.
For more information, call
Call Carmine R. Villani and
church office at 732-793-8138, ferent styles of worship every
Weekly
Bible Study is held
732-793-7291, or log onto
Vincent C. DeLuca and let their team work
or log onto www.lutheranson- Sunday, each one focused on
Monday mornings at 11 a.m.,
for you.
padrepionj.com.
God’s mercy revealed in Jesus
line.com/faithlavallettenj.
and on Wednesday evenings at 7
Family Law/Divorce and Child Custody
Faith Lutheran also offers the Christ.
p.m., in Fellowship Hall.
POINT PLEASANT
Sunday morning begins with a
only state-licensed Christian
njfamilylawyersblog.com
Child care is available on
PRESBYTERIAN
preschool on the barrier island. Bible Breakfast at 8:30 a.m. in
Wednesday evenings.
Criminal Defense/Municipal Court
Point Pleasant Beach
The program, for children ages 2 the church library.
For additional information,
703 Richmond Ave. (Rt. 35 S)
Motor Vehicle Offenses
Bay and Forman avenues
“The
Gathering”
is
held
at
and
one-half
through
6,
focuses
contact the church office at 732Point Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742
All are welcome at the Point 892-5926. or log on to
newjerseycriminallawyersblog.com
on social development, academic 9:30 a.m. This service features
www.villanideluca.com
Pleasant
Presbyterian Church!
contemporary
Christian
music
readiness and physical and spiriPersonal Injury
www.stpaulsbayhead.org.
Call for a free consultation
Worship services, led by the
tual growth. The year-round pro- and YouTube videos. A staffed
with one of our attorneys.
www.villanilaw.com
gram features morning, after- nursery is available to watch Rev. Carlos E. Wilton, Ph.D.,
ST. PETER’S CHURCH
Zoning and Land Use
732-892-9050
small children, so bring the fam- and the Rev. Linda Chase,
noon and full-day sessions.
Point Pleasant Beach
M.Div.,
take
place
on
Sunday
ily.
406 Forman Ave.
For more information, or to
Sunday morning concludes mornings at 9 and 11 a.m.
Vigil Mass is held Saturday at
register, call preschool director
Infant and toddler care are 5:30 p.m., and Sunday Masses
with a traditional Service at 11
Nora Collins at 732-793-6972.
provided
during both services, in are at 6:30, 7:45, 9 and 10:30
a.m.,
which
follows
the
historic
As a reminder, Pastor John
will be leading a new Bible Study liturgy of the Church and fea- the Church Nursery. Fellowship a.m. and noon.
hour and refreshments follow
Daily Masses are at 6:30 and
every Tuesday night, from 7 to 8 tures traditional hymns.
For more information, please each service.
10 a.m.
p.m.
Communion is celebrated the
contact the church office at 732On the first Friday, Masses are
first Sunday of each month, with held at 6:30 and 10 a.m.
892-4492.
FELLOWSHIP CHAPEL
a full breakfast served afterward
Eucharist Adoration is followPoint Pleasant
in the Great Hall of the ing the 10 a.m. Mass.
H
ARVEY
M
EMORIAL
Ocean Road School, Route 88
Education Annex [free-will
The Holy Day Vigil is at 7:30
UNITED METHODIST
The Sunday service will be
offering]. On the second and p.m.
Point Pleasant
fourth Sundays of the month, a
1120 Arnold Ave.
The Holy Day services are at
Pastor Hyun-Bo Shim pre- brief service of healing prayer is 6:30 and 10 a.m., and 7:30 p.m.
sides over the Sunday morning offered at 12 noon in the
Confessions are on Saturday
Sanctuary.
worship service at 10:30 a.m.
from 4:30 to 5:15 p.m.
Church School for grades preThe Christian education proSt. Peter’s Church holds
gram, God’s Campus, is held on kindergarten through six is on monthly day-time Masses with
at Spring Lake
Sunday mornings, from 9 to Sundays from 9:20 to 10:30 a.m. healing prayers on the fourth
A Senior Residence By the Jersey Shore
10:15 a.m. for preschoolers in the Education Annex. Tuesday of the month, at 12 p.m.
Children typically attend the first
through adults.
For information or directions,
The thrift shop is open part of the 9 a.m. worship service please call St. Peter’s Church,
Wednesday through Saturday, with their families, then walk 406 Forman Ave., Point Pleasant
with their teachers across the Beach, at 732-892-0049, or visit
from 9 a.m. to noon.
Hispanic language services are street to Church School.
www.saintpetersonline.org.
Youth Connection for junior
held on Sundays at 4:30 p.m., led
and senior highs meets in the
by Pastor Allen Ruscito.
ST. SIMON-BY-THE-SEA
For more information, call the Annex on Sundays, from 6 to 8
• Situated close to the boardwalk, downtown Spring Lake and the park.
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
p.m.
Call
the
church
office
for
church office, at 732-892-1660
Mantoloking
• Private rooms with bath, starting at $2,820. No entrance fee.
the
schedule.
or log on to our Web page at
1332 Ocean Ave.
• 3 meals a day served in our dining room and prepared by a culinary trained chef.
“Souper Wednesday” soup
www.harveyumc.org.
St. Simon-by-the-Sea is a
• Monitoring of medication and laundry service and assistance with a.m. care optional.
suppers are served from 4:30 to 7
summer chapel, and is now
• Owned and operated by the Murray family since 1981.
p.m. [come any time during
LIFE CHAPEL ASSEMBLY those hours, free-will offering]. closed for the winter.
For further information,
St. Simon-by-the-Sea will
OF GOD
Most weeks, there is a Bible
550 Warren Avenue, Spring Lake Heights, NJ 07762
or to be our guest for lunch,
reopen in June 2011.
Point Pleasant
Study or other adult education
3118 Bridge Ave.
For more information, log
springlakearbors.com
class on Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m.
“Connecting People with
onto www.stsimonbythesea.org.
Call the church office for the
God”
schedule.
UNION CHURCH OF
Troop 6, Boy Scouts of
America, meets in the Annex on
LAVALLETTE
Lavallette
Wednesdays at 7:30 p.m.
25 Philadelphia Ave.
For more information, please
P.O. Box 317
call the church office at 732-899The
Union
Church of
0587, or visit www.pointpresbyLavallette is a non-denominaterian.org
For more information about tional Bible teaching church, and
Point Beach Prep weekday pre- has announced its schedule of
school, offering morning and services and events.
Sunday morning service, led
afternoon
sessions
from
September through May, call by Pastor Todd Condell, is held
732-701-990 or visit www.point- at 9:30 a.m.
The Women’s Aid Society and
beachprep.com
the Men’s Club meet at 9:30 a.m.
on the second Monday of each
SACRED HEART
month, except for July and
Bay Head
August.
751 Main Ave.
Audit must be performed during the month of March.
A prayer meeting is held
Weekday Masses are held at
Monday evening at 7 p.m., in
Must present/mention coupon. A $250 value.
8:30 a.m.
Saturday Masses are held at Fellowship Hall.
Bible studies are held on
5:15 p.m.
Sunday Masses are held at 8, Monday evenings at 7:30 p.m.,
and Thursday mornings at 9:30
9:15 and 11 a.m.
For more information, call a.m., in Fellowship Hall, led by
732-899-1398, or log on to Pastor Condell. All are welcome.
The Women’s Bible Study, led
sacredheartbayhead.com.
by Krista Condell, is held the
second and fourth Friday of the
ST. MARTHA ROMAN month, at 7 p.m., beginning Oct.
8. All women are welcome.
CATHOLIC
Point Pleasant
Contact the church for more
®
3800 Herbertsville Road
information.
Saturday evening Vigil Mass is
Youth Group is held the secheld at 5 p.m.
ond and fourth Sundays of the
Sunday Mass begins at 7:30, 9 month, from 6 to 8 p.m., in
Tom Rostron Jr. performs
and 10:30 a.m., noon and 4 p.m. Fellowship Hall.
Energy Audit
For more information, call
The church office is open from
732-295-3630.
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Monday,
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL
Tuesday and Thursday. The
ST. MARY’S BY-THE-SEA church and Fellowship Hall are
handicapped-accessible and airEPISCOPAL CHURCH
“Your Indoor Climate Specialist”
conditioned.
Point Pleasant Beach
Call the church office at 732Bay and Atlantic avenues
The Rev. C. John Thompson- 793-6028 for more information.
BAY HEAD CHAPEL
Call 732.449.4444
During the Month of March, receive a
FREE
Energy
Audit
WE WILL SHOW YOU HOW TO:
• Reduce your energy cost up to 30%
• Receive $500.00 Tax Credit
• Receive Home Performance with
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TOM ROSTRON CO.
732-223-8221 • www.tomrostron.com
PAGE 21
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
imagine
never running out
of hot water again...
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
The Atlantic Queen, a boat docked on Channel Drive in Point Pleasant Beach [above], suffered damage in what authorities described this week as a suspicious fire early last Thursday
morning. The fishing trawler’s captain and owner were charged this month with illegally harvesting flounder and black sea bass.
— FIRE —
From Page 1
summons for illegally harvesting
thousands of pounds of flounder
and black sea bass earlier this
month.
An employee at Point
Pleasant Packing, Channel
Drive, placed a 9-1-1 call at
12:37 a.m. Thursday morning,
reporting the fire on board the
boat.
When squads form the Point
Pleasant Beach Police and Fire
departments arrived, they found
the captain and another subject
attempting — unsuccessfully —
to put out the flames with fire
extinguishers, according to
Detective Petruzziello.
The fire was under control
within 30 minutes.
“The cause and origin of the
fire are under investigation.
There was no structural damage
to the vessel, and it was never in
danger of sinking,” Detective
Petruzziello said.
The investigation remains
open.
Detective
Petruzziello
acknowledged that the Atlantic
Queen was the same boat cited
earlier this month for overharvesting, but when asked this
week if the boat crew’s alleged
— T-MOBILE —
From Page 11
lived at the residence, Mr.
Stacy said, since 2001.
When asked the reason
behind their application, Mr.
Stacy provided a heartfelt
answer to the board.
“I’m in the boating business,”
Mr. Stacy explained. “The last
few years have been rough.”
As part of the subdivision,
the Stacy’s pool and garage will
be removed. The couple will
lose a significant portion of
their property, but gain the
needed finances through rent or
sale of the new home.
The property is currently 200
feet by 130 feet. The approved
subdivision will create a 135 by
130 foot property and a 65 by
130 foot property. The Stacy’s
current home will remain on
the larger of the two lots.
While there are no curbs or
sidewalks in the area, Mr. Wills
was determined to have this
subdivision begin the process of
creating curbs and sidewalks
throughout the neighborhood,
and Point Pleasant.
Fellow planning board members, particularly Chairman
Vitale
and
Councilman
McHugh, felt placing such a
condition on the Stacys was not
justified considering no other
property in the neighborhood
has curbs or sidewalks.
Chairman Vitale raised the
issue of drainage, especially
because of the removal of the
family’s pool, but recognized
the Stacy’s will have to submit
drainage patterns as part of the
permit process.
Drainage became a concern
regarding new construction in
the borough last year, after former mayor Martin Konkus,
who sat on the planning board,
said several residents contacted
him about flooding that
occurred as a result of construction at adjacent properties.
violation could be linked to the
suspicious fire, he said he could
not comment further on an
open investigation.
The New Jersey Department
of Environmental Protection
reported that the Atlantic Queen
harvested nearly 2,400 pounds
of summer flounder and more
than 1,200 pounds of black sea
bass in excess of state limits last
month.
“Our coastal waters support
rich and diverse commercial
fisheries, but it is imperative
that everyone — from captains
and owners of ocean-going
commercial vessels to the individual angler casting a line from
the beach or a pleasure boat —
obey the regulations that are in
place
to
protect
these
resources,” said New Jersey
Division of Fish and Wildlife
Capt. Mark Chicketano. “This
was a significant violation of
those regulations.”
Mr. Gentile and Mr. Stanley
were each charged with landing
summer flounder and sea bass
without valid permits, harvesting both species in excess of 10
percent of total weight of
species brought to the dock,
failing to notify the Division of
Fish and Wildlife that the
Atlantic Queen was fishing for
these species, and harvesting
summer flounder during a
closed season.
The owner and captain
could face penalties up to
$21,000, each.
Conservation officers boarded the Atlantic Queen shortly
after midnight on Jan. 25 after
noticing that it appeared to be
overloaded with summer
flounder and black sea bass.
The vessel had just docked in
Point Pleasant Beach after
returning from a 10-day fishing trip.
Under the direction of the
officers, the crew unloaded the
fish onto the dock, where they
were weighed. Although the
vessel did have appropriate
federal fisheries permits for
these species, it did not have
the appropriate state licenses
for either of the species landed.
The permits are necessary to
land the fish in New Jersey.
As a result, the vessel was
only legally permitted to land a
maximum of 200 pounds of
summer flounder. It had actually landed 2,397 pounds of
this fish.
The vessel was also only
legally permitted to harvest
100 pounds of black sea bass. It
had harvested 1,208 pounds of
this fish.
Regulations allow for a small
portion of these two fish species
to be brought to the dock. This
averts wasting of fish that are
incidentally caught in the harvesting of other species.
The Division of Fish and
Wildlife sold the fish to a
licensed dealer so they would
not go to waste, and is holding
the proceeds of the sale pending
adjudication of the case in Point
Pleasant Beach Municipal
Court, which convenes in Point
Pleasant Borough Hall.
Point Boosters plan
for a busy spring
In the upcoming weeks, the
Point
Pleasant
Borough
Athletic Boosters will be hosting new events, along with the
annual golf tournament in May
and the return of Track and
Field Day in June.
March will bring a new
event, as the first Dodgeball
Tournament is scheduled for
Saturday, March 19.
The event is open to the
entire community, including
students, parents and faculty.
Everyone is invited to create
teams of six to 10 people to
participate in a double-elimination tournament during the
day.
The tournament semifinals
and finals will take place at a
time to be determined, in the
evening.
April will also bring a new
event, as the Boosters will
sponsor a bowling night for
students and families. Teams
will compete for fun and prizes.
The cost, which is to be
determined, will include two
hours of bowling with pizza
and soda.
The Athletic Boosters’
Annual Golf Tournament is set
for May 1 at Cruz Farms,
Farmingdale. This year’s tournament will be different,
because students will be
allowed to play with the adults.
Middle school-aged children
to college students will play at a
special, discounted price.
The tournament is a shot-
gun start with a scramble format. The day will be filled with
food, including lunch before
the start, then burgers and hot
dogs on the turn, and a full
barbeque dinner at the end.
All beverages are included
— even the adult beverages.
There will be a gift auction
with many prizes available,
and a separate auction for golf
foursomes at private courses.
Point residents
make Rider
dean’s list
Point Pleasant residents
Christina Cartaino, Kathryn
Faugno, Michael Gynn, Justin
Kelly, Brian Long and John
Palsi achieved dean’s list standing for the fall semester at Rider
University,
located
in
Lawrenceville.
Ms. Cartaino is a sophomore,
who is currently majoring in
elementary education.
Ms. Faugno is a junior and is
majoring in biology.
Mr. Gynn, a junior, is currently majoring in accounting.
Mr. Kelly is a senior, and is
majoring in fine arts.
Mr. Long, also a senior, is
majoring in secondary education.
Mr. Palsi is a freshman who
is currently majoring in general
liberal arts.
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where space is an issue
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Across The Street From
732-528-9300
Monday to Friday 7:30am to 4:30pm
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SUPER CROSSWORD • Solution page 25
PAGE 22
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
SCHOOL NEWS
Health Matters
“Your LOCAL Health Food and Vitamin Shop”
A TRADITION
IN
POINT PLEASANT BEACH SINCE 1998
E S S E N T I A WAT E R 9 . 5 P H • C A R L S O N F I S H O I L
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519 ARNOLD AVE., POINT PLEASANT BEACH
Kindergarten
registration
approaches
Open M-F 10-7; Sat. 10-5; Closed Sun.
732-899-3353
TAX PREPARATION SERVICES
KATHY BARISCIANO, CPA
732-319-6061
Reasonable Fees • Personalized Service
Evening & Weekend
Appointments Available in your home
Now in FEBRUARY
POST CARD SHOW
Presented by Boy Scout Troop 441
Saturday, February 26th, 2011
9:00am to 4:00pm
The Jersey Shore Post Card Show
will be held at the John Taylor Pavilion
located on the beachfront
Ocean & 5th Ave., Belmar NJ
— Our 26th Year —
Admission - $2 Local Donation
Food Available by Boy Scouts Troop 441
For more information call
John McGrath: 732-363-3121
Veronica Busch: 732-657-3815
The Point Pleasant Borough
School District will hold
kindergarten registration for
the 2011-2012 school year
Monday, Feb. 28 through
Friday, March 4, from 9 a.m. to
12 p.m.
Registration will take place
in the main offices at the Ocean
Road and Nellie Bennett elementary schools.
Children must be 5 years old
on or before Oct. 1 to be eligible for kindergarten for the
2011-2012 school year.
Parents must bring the following documentation to
receive a registration packet:
• Copy of the child’s birth
certificate.
• Current deed or lease
showing
Point
Pleasant
address.
• Current utility bill or bank
statement showing Point
Pleasant address.
• Child’s immunization
record to date.
For further information,
please contact the Nellie
Bennett or Ocean Road main
offices, at 732-701-1900.
To find out more about the
Point Pleasant School District,
visit the district website at
www.pointpleasant.k12.nj.us.
Express your opinions in a
letter to the editor!
The Ocean Star
421 River Avenue
Point Pleasant Beach 08742
Photo Courtesy of the POINT PLEASANT SCHOOL DISTRICT
Nellie F. Bennett Elementary School third-grader Christopher Bono took a look at one of the
displays set up recently in the school as part of a self-esteem-boosting lesson students received.
Point students say thanks, help
build self-esteem in community
What two words have the
power to render a speech therapist speechless? Or cause a bus
driver to stop in his tracks? Or
even bring a tear to the eye of
the bravest police officer?
It’s as simple as “thank you.”
These two small words were
the focus of a unique selfesteem-building lesson in
Stephanie Smith’s third-grade
class at Nellie F. Bennett
Elementary School recently.
“The lesson included various
activities designed to help students recognize their unique
gifts,” said student teacher
Janet Magley, who developed
the lesson with Mrs. Smith.
“Beginning with an in-class
reading of Jamie Lee Curtis
and Laura Cornell’s I’m Gonna
Like Me, students explored the
idea of self-assuredness in any
circumstance,” continued Mrs.
Magley.
Mrs. Magley said the book
promotes a message of acceptance by approaching a boy’s and
a girl’s daily experiences as
opportunities to help build selfesteem.
“Whether they know all the
letters like the back of their
hand, or they think their ruler
is 10 inches long, the book
encourages the reader to accept
and love themselves,” continued Mrs. Magley, referring to
instances in the book. “By
embracing both their own and
their peers’ strengths, as well as
their foibles, the students learn
acceptance for themselves and
others.”
Following the reading of the
book, the students named some
of their own positive traits,
which were recorded on the
blackboard. Next, the students
wrote in their journals about
the topic of self-esteem, as well
as their perceived strengths.
“Because, sometimes, we
cannot recognize our own
strengths, the students shared
the assignment with their parents,” said Mrs. Smith. “The
parents also wrote something
special about their children.”
The
paying-it-forward
approach was sustained, as the
class went on to write something positive about up to four
of their classmates. These special qualities were then transcribed on colorful pictures of
sneakers, and hung on the bulletin board under the caption
“Put Spring in Someone’s
Step.”
Mrs. Smith said the students
then learned the correlation
between good feelings with
both giving and receiving compliments.
The final exercise asked the
students to write a letter to
share an expression of gratitude
for an unsung hero in their
lives.
Nine-year-old
Caitlyn
McGullam wrote a letter to her
bus driver.
“Thank you for taking me to
school and back home,” she
wrote.
Another student presented a
card to Nellie Bennett’s speech
teacher, Karen Ficarra.
“You are helpful because you
helped me with my speech,” the
student wrote. “I appreciate
what you do. Thank you for
helping me.”
Stunned by the kind gesture,
Ms. Ficarra expressed her gratitude, in turn, for the recognition.
“This makes me feel wonderful,” said
Ms. Ficarra.
“Moments like these are why I
do what I do.”
Aidan McLaughlin thanked
Point Pleasant Police Lt. Mike
Colwell for “keeping crime off
[his] street.”
Additional letters were presented to cafeteria workers and
crossing guards, as well as the
local police force and fire
department.
“These wonderful gestures
will go a long way in helping
our school community realize
how much they are appreciated
while our students benefit from
the good feelings generated by
sharing kindness with others,”
Mrs. Smith said.
Principal Jim Karaba also
expressed his thoughts on the
lesson.
“Positive self-esteem is an
important component of character education,” said Principal
Karaba. “When students show
respect for themselves and others, it helps to foster a positive
school climate, and because this
lesson extended beyond the
classroom, the entire community stands to benefit.
“I’d like to commend both
Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Magley
for helping instill a culture of
compassion in our students,”
Mr. Karaba concluded.
To find out more about the
the Point Pleasant School
District, visit the district website
at
www.pointpleasant.k12.nj.us.
Kindergarten
registration opens
March 7 in Beach
The G. Harold Antrim
Elementary School of Point
Pleasant Beach will distribute
all-day kindergarten registration packets to all parents of
interested, incoming kindergarten students beginning
Monday, March 7, from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m., in the Antrim attendance office, on Niblick Street.
Children must be 5 years old
on or before Oct. 1, 2011 to be
eligible for enrollment in
kindergarten for the 2011-2012
school year.
Documents required to register a student for kindergarten
are: the original birth certificate
[hospital certificates are unacceptable], a copy of immunization records, and proof of Point
Pleasant Beach residency [for
example, a tax bill or lease].
The registration packet
should be returned on or before
April 4, with the required information completed.
For more information, contact the school at 732-8993737.
Photo Courtesy of the POINT PLEASANT SCHOOL DISTRICT
A unique self-esteem building lesson took place in the borough recently. Stephanie Smith’s
third-grade class at Nellie F. Bennett Elementary School participated in various activities
designed to help students recognize their unique gifts. Christopher Bono [from left], Katie
Sutphen and Caitlyn McGullam were among the students who took part in the lesson.
PAGE 23
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Ready, Set, Fundraise!
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Point Pleasant Borough High School students and faculty members were present
for the Relay for Life Kick-off Party at the high school recently. The Point Pleasant
Relay for Life — which raises money for the American Cancer Society — will take
place at Community Park from Saturday, June 11 into Sunday, June 12.
Collecting For A Cause
Photo Courtesy of LORRAINE KNEPPLE
St. Peter School students Jessica Rowe, Owen Bros and Alexandra Popovitch, all of
Point Pleasant, held just a few of the backpacks collected recently for the Appalachian
Backpack Project. Students collected school supplies to donate to children in need in
western Kentucky, a poverty-stricken region of the Appalachian Mountains.
— LIBRARY —
From Page 5
learn their type, unconscious
motivations, and those of
friends and colleagues. Begin a
journey of self-development
and new relationships with
others.
Guests are asked to try to
come 10 minutes early to take a
brief sorting test to help identify their type. Please register.
Family Programs
• Breakfast & A Movie,
Saturday, March 12, 10:30 a.m.
Back by popular demand!
The Point Pleasant Beach
Library Friends invite the public to enjoy a family-friendly
movie while filling their tummies with something yummy.
All are welcome. Please register.
Childrens’ Programs
• Bouncing Babies, Tuesday,
March 3, 10:30 a.m.
Caregivers and their little
ones are invited to join the
library staff for stories, songs
and finger plays. For ages birth
to 18 months. Please register.
• Toddler Time, Thursday,
March 10, 10:30 a.m.
Come on in for lion and
lamb-themed stories and
songs. For ages 18 to 36
months. Please register.
• Music For Fun &
Learning, Monday, March 14,
10 a.m.
Learn about shapes, num-
Vendors
needed for
PTO Snowflake Beach church’s
Re-Gift Auction
flea market
set for March 4
The Point Pleasant High
School
Parent-Teacher
Organization’s
Snowflake
Auction Committee would like
to announce that plans for the
next Re-Gift Auction are under
way.
The auction itself will take
place Friday, March 4 from 7 to
10 p.m. in the cafeteria at Point
Pleasant Borough High School.
For $10 per ticket, the organization will provide coffee, tea
and cake. Attendees may also
bring any other food they
would like. No alcohol is permitted.
Everyone is encouraged to
start collecting gifts to re-gift
at the auction. All items, from
jewelry that is no longer worn
to a set of unmatched towels,
is welcome.
On Feb. 13, between 12 and
4 p.m., there will be a gift
drop, and tickets will be sold
at 2222 Rogers Road in Point
Pleasant. Collected items can
also be sent to Marcia Bradley
at Memorial Middle School.
The last day to purchase
tickets will be Feb. 25. All
checks should be made
payable to “PPBHS PTO.”
Seating is limited.
The members of the
Presbyterian Women group of
the Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church are planning an indoor
flea market for Saturday, March
12, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Spaces measure approximately 6 by 8 feet. The vendor fee of
$25 includes limited tables, and
assignments are made on a first
come, first served basis.
Setup for the flea market is
slated for Friday, March 11,
from 4 to 7 p.m., or at 7 a.m. on
the day of the event.
Reservations are required.
Call the church for further
information, at 732-899-0587.
Library Assoc.
fundraiser set
for March 19
The Point Pleasant Beach
Library Association is holding
its third annual fundraiser buffet
luncheon on Saturday, March
19, from 12 to 3 p.m. at the
Spring Lake Manor, Highway
71, Spring Lake Heights.
Tickets are $25. Ticket sales
are limited, and end March 9.
For more information, call
Donna Anderson-Landers at
732-899-8804 for tickets.
‘Fiddler on
the Roof’
comes to H.S.
HELP WANTED
Advertising Sales
The Point Pleasant Borough
High School Performing Arts
Department will present
“Fiddler on the Roof ” next
month.
Performances are slated for
7 p.m. on Wednesday, March
23 and Thursday, March 24.
Weekend performances will be
at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, March
25 and Saturday, March 26.
Tickets will cost $8 for all
seats. For more information, or
to purchase tickets, call the
high school box office at 732701-1900, extension 2218.
Performances will take place
in the Loren D. Donley
Center for the Performing
Arts at the high school.
More than 95 high school
students will bring the famous
residents of Anatevka alive.
The set design will transport
the audience to a small town in
the Ukraine in 1905, on the
eve of the Russian Revolution.
Tradition is a central theme
in “Fiddler on the Roof,” just
as musical performances have
been a tradition at Point
Pleasant
Borough
High
School.
In the play, all of the Jewish
villagers look to tradition as a
guide in their lives, to regulate
marriage, dancing, dress, food
consumption and who can
interact with whom — especially in regard to JewishRussian relations.
While the family patriarch,
Tevye, upholds these traditions
to the best of his ability, times
are changing.
For more information,
please
contact
Rebecca Muraglia at 732-7011900, extension 2238 or by email
at
[email protected].
nj.us.
Star News Group has an immediate
opening for a full time outside sales
person to sell advertising to area businesses. Sales experience is a plus, but
we will consider training the right person. Must be creative, energetic, willing to work hard under deadline pressure and not afraid to cold call. Salary,
commissions, benefits, simple IRA. To
apply: email cover letter and resume
to [email protected] or fax to
732-528-1212.
bers, sign language and more
with Miss Robin strumming
on guitar. For children ages 2
to 5. Please register.
• Library Leprechaun,
Thursday, March 17, all day.
See what mischief the library
leprechaun has been getting
into, and follow the clues to
lead to his treasure. Children of
all ages are welcome.
• Dale & Amy’s Silly Song
Sing-Along, Saturday, March
19, 11 a.m.
Shake, rattle and roll on in
for movement and music to
shake the sillies out. For ages 3
and up. Please register.
• Budding Chefs: Flower
Pots, Wednesday, March 23,
10:30 a.m.
The beginning of spring
means it’s planting time! The
library staff will be “planting”
flowers made of edible goodies.
For ages 3 to 5. Please register. This program is sponsored
by the Point Pleasant Beach
Library Friends.
Woman’s Club
plans Murder
Mystery Dinner
March 25
The Point Pleasant Woman’s
Club is holding a Murder
Mystery Dinner on March 25 at
6 p.m. at the clubhouse, 513 St.
Louis Ave.
Tickets are $20.
For reservations, call Ann at
732-899-2310.
Celebrating
31 YEARS IN BUSINESS
House of
Hearing Aids, Inc.
S Series. I.Q. The next generation of hearing aids.
Precisely engineered. Made for just your ears. S Series hearing aids from Starkey
offer the most powerful processor available.
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Woman’s Club
to host military
bridge March 30
The Point Pleasant Woman’s
Club is holding a military bridge
game on March 30 at the clubhouse, 513 St. Louis Ave.
At noon, a light lunch is
served. The cost to attend is
$15.
For reservations, call Barbara
at 732-840-7551.
Call for FREE Hearing Evaluation
Receive a FREE Package of Batteries
Two Convenient Locations!
LEISURE SQUARE MALL
1000 St. Hwy. 70,
Lakewood, NJ 08701
732-363-5991
2614 Bridge Ave.,
Corner of Curtis Ave.
Pt. Pleasant, NJ 08742
732-892-3882
500 OFF
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purchase of a set of new hearing aids
NJ Licensed Hearing Aid Dispenser
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ALL STYLES OF HEARING AIDS AVAILABLE
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OF HEARING AIDS
PAGE 24
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
SPRING HOME IMPROVEMENT
MARCH 17 & 18, 2011
Special
Advertising Supplement
March 17 & 18, 2011
Readying For The Relay
®
With the arrival of spring, now is the time when homeowners
are painting, decorating, cleaning, and remodeling—
indoors and out. Here is your opportunity to advertise in our
special Spring Home Improvement section, which will
include timely articles related to home improvement,
complete with a color cover.
Take Advantage of the Thursday-Friday One-Two Punch!
This Year’s Supplement will run in The Coast Star & The Ocean Star — a Combined Circulation of 19,000+
FULL PAGE
$770
Width: 10"
Depth: 10.875"
HALF
VERTICAL
$405
Width:
4.91"
Depth:
10.875"
AD SIZES
HALF HORIZONTAL
$405
Width: 10"
Depth: 5.35"
AND
RATES
QUARTER
$220
Width:
4.91"
Depth:
5.35"
EIGHTH
$135
Width:
4.91"
Depth:
2.5"
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
The Relay for Life Kick-Off Party took place at Point Pleasant Borough High School this
month, in anticipation of June’s Point Pleasant Relay for Life, which will benefit the
American Cancer Society [ACS]. American Cancer Society staff member Kathleen Daly
[from left], high schoolteacher Amy Wood, Survivor Chair Maralee Casey, of Point
Pleasant, and school paraprofessional Kim Welsh helped to make the party a success.
Spring Soccer
Registration
Set For March 5
Point Pleasant Soccer Spring
Recreation signups will be held
Saturday, March 5 from 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. at the Point Pleasant
Borough Library, located at 834
Beaver Dam Road in the borough.
For more information and
online registration, please visit
www.pointpleasantsoccer.com.
COLOR: SPOT $100 (ADDITIONAL) ~ PROCESS $250 (ADDITIONAL)
DEADLINES
WITH PROOF FEBRUARY 25
WITHOUT PROOF MARCH 2
CALL YOUR SALES REP ~ 732-223-0076
___________________________
LEGAL NOTICE
BAY HEAD PLANNING
BOARD
NOTICE OF DECISION of
the Bay Head Planning Board of
the Borough of Bay Head, New
Jersey.
Public Notice is hereby given
to all persons that a Public Hearing
was held on January 19, 2011 at
which time the following applications were heard and memorialized on February 16, 2011.
Mrs. Marjorie Maschler
623 East Avenue LLC
Bl 66 Lot 12
Application approved
LAURA TUZZOLINO
Planning Board Clerk
($6.60) (20) (2/25)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
COUNTY OF OCEAN
SALE AFTER
REPOSSESSION
Long Island Recovery, Inc., 73
Ireland Pt. PMB 273, Amityville,
NY 11701 will sell at public auction at 643 Herman Rd., Jackson,
NJ 08527 on 3/7/11 at 9 a.m.
2003 Mercedes-Benz Model E
Class
VIN#
WDBUF65J33A265173 repossessed from MAURICE TREADWELL due to breach of security
agreement.
The seller reserves the right to
bid.
($5.61) (17) (2/25)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
COUNTY OF OCEAN
SALE AFTER
REPOSSESSION
Pinnacle Federal Credit Union,
135 Raritan Center Parkway,
Edison, NJ 08837 will sell at public auction at 643 Herman Rd.,
Jackson, NJ, 08527 on 3/7/11 at 9
a.m..
2003 Chevrolet TrailBlazer
VIN.#
1GNET16S136240243
repossessed
from
TERESA
BILLINGS due to breach of security agreement.
The seller reserves the right to
bid.
($5.61) (17) (2/25)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
COUNTY OF OCEAN
SALE AFTER
REPOSSESSION
First Financial Federal Credit
Union, 1800 Rt. 34 N., Wall, NJ,
07719 will sell at public auction at
643 Herman Rd., Jackson, NJ,
08527 on 3/4/11 at 9am.
2004
Ford
Ranger
1FTZR15EX4PB60908 repossessed from KEVIN DIGANGI
for breach of security agreement.
The seller reserves the right to
bid.
($4.95) (15) (2/25)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
OCEAN COUNTY
SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of the above stated
writ, to me directed, issued out of
the SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW
JERSEY, CHANCERY DIVISION Docket F2632708, will be
exposed to sale at public venue on
TUESDAY the 1ST DAY OF
MARCH, A.D. 2011 between the
hours of 12 o’clock and 5 o’clock
(at 2 o’clock) Prevailing Time in
the afternoon of said day at the
Office of the Sheriff, Toms River,
Township of Toms River, County
of Ocean, New Jersey.
All that tract or parcel of land
and premises, situate, lying and
being in the TOWNSHIP OF
BRICK, County of Ocean and
State of New Jersey.
Street and Street No.:
960 LYNNWOOD AVENUE
Tax Lot and Block No.:
LOT: 28 AKA 28, 29, 30
BLOCK: 516
The Dimensions:
APPROXIMATELY:
100 FT X 60 FT
Nearest Cross Street:
CENTRAL AVENUE
The above description does not
constitute a full legal description,
said description is filed at the
Office of the Sheriff, 120 Hooper
Avenue, Toms River, NJ.
THE SHERIFF HEREBY
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
ADJOURN THIS SALE WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION.
PRIOR LIENS OF AFFIDAVIT:
SUBJECT TO ANY OPEN
TAXES,
WATER/SEWER,
MUNICIPAL LIENS, ETC.
PLUS ANY SUBSEQUENT
TAXES
AND
ACCRUED
INTEREST AS THEY MAY
BECOME DUE.
The amount of the judgement
to be satisfied by said sale is the
sum of $289,652.00 more or less,
plus interest.
Surplus Money: If after the
sale and satisfaction of the mortgage debt, including costs and
expenses, there remains any surplus money, the money will be
deposited into the Superior Court
Trust Fund and any person claiming the surplus, or any part thereof,
may file a motion pursuant to
Court Rules 4:64-3 and 4:57-2
stating the nature and extent of that
person’s claim and asking for an
order directing payment of the surplus money. The Sheriff or other
person conducting the sale will
have information regarding the
surplus, if any.
May be subject to an
Ordinance by the Ocean County
Board of Health: 87-01, Section
10. The Sheriff’s Department will
require notification of the certification of the wells where applicable.
The Sheriff shall deduct his
fees, costs and commissions of
sale from the total amount bid at
the sale.
A 20% deposit (cash or certified funds) is required from the
Successful Bidder at the time of
sale.
Seized as the property of
EMRE DEMIR ETC., ET ALS,
and taken in execution at the suit
of U.S. BANK NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION, AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO BANK OF
AMERICA NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS SUCCESSOR BY
MERGER TO LASALLE BANK,
N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR THE
MLMI TRUST SERIES 2006MLN1, to be sold by William L.
Polhemus, Sheriff.
This sale is subject to postponement without further notice.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Zucker, Goldberg &
Ackerman
200 Sheffield St.
Suite 301
Mountainside, NJ
07092-0024
1-908-233-8500
File#: FCZ-105842
Sheriff’s Docket:
CH 764631
(2/4, 2/11, 2/18, 2/25)
($150.48) (114)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
OCEAN COUNTY
SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of the above stated
writ, to me directed, issued out of
the SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW
JERSEY, CHANCERY DIVISION Docket F2285908, will be
exposed to sale at public venue on
TUESDAY the 22nd DAY OF
MARCH, A.D. 2010 between the
hours of 12 o’clock and 5 o’clock
(at 2 o’clock) Prevailing Time in
the afternoon of said day at the
Office of the Sheriff, Toms River,
Township of Toms River, County
of Ocean, New Jersey.
All that tract or parcel of land
and premises, situate, lying and
being in the BOROUGH OF PT.
PLEASANT BEACH, County of
Ocean and State of New Jersey.
Street and Street No.:
3724 RIVER ROAD
Tax Lot and Block No.:
LOT: 36
BLOCK: 2
The Dimensions:
APPROXIMATELY:
130 FT X 75 FT
Nearest Cross Street:
CHATHAM LANE
The above description does not
constitute a full legal description,
said description is filed at the
Office of the Sheriff, 120 Hooper
Avenue, Toms River, NJ.
THE SHERIFF HEREBY
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
ADJOURN THIS SALE WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION.
PRIOR LIENS OF AFFIDAVIT:
SUBJECT TO ANY OPEN
TAXES,
WATER/SEWER,
MUNICIPAL LIENS, ETC.
PLUS ANY SUBSEQUENT
TAXES
AND
ACCRUED
INTEREST AS THEY MAY
BECOME DUE.
The amount of the judgement
to be satisfied by said sale is the
sum of $461,320.13 more or less,
plus interest.
Surplus Money: If after the
sale and satisfaction of the mortgage debt, including costs and
expenses, there remains any surplus money, the money will be
deposited into the Superior Court
Trust Fund and any person claiming the surplus, or any part thereof,
may file a motion pursuant to
Court Rules 4:64-3 and 4:57-2
stating the nature and extent of that
person’s claim and asking for an
order directing payment of the surplus money. The Sheriff or other
person conducting the sale will
have information regarding the
surplus, if any.
May be subject to an
Ordinance by the Ocean County
Board of Health: 87-01, Section
10. The Sheriff’s Department will
require notification of the certification of the wells where applicable.
The Sheriff shall deduct his
fees, costs and commissions of
sale from the total amount bid at
the sale.
A 20% deposit (cash or certified funds) is required from the
Successful Bidder at the time of
sale.
Seized as the property of
MICHAEL C. LO BIANCO, ET
AL, and taken in execution at the
suit of ONEWEST BANK, FSB,
to be sold by William L.
Polhemus, Sheriff.
The sale is subject to postponement without further notice.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Zucker, Goldberg &
Ackerman
200 Sheffield St.
Suite 301
Mountainside, NJ
07092-0024
1-908-233-8500
File#: FCZ-97273
Sheriff’s Docket:
CH 764656
(2/25, 3/4, 3/11, 3/18)
($141.24) (107 )
The Ocean Star
___________________________
OCEAN COUNTY
SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of the above stated
writ, to me directed, issued out of
the SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW
JERSEY, CHANCERY DIVISION Docket F2285908, will be
exposed to sale at public venue on
TUESDAY the 22nd DAY OF
MARCH, A.D. 2010 between the
hours of 12 o’clock and 5 o’clock
(at 2 o’clock) Prevailing Time in
the afternoon of said day at the
Office of the Sheriff, Toms River,
Township of Toms River, County
of Ocean, New Jersey.
All that tract or parcel of land
and premises, situate, lying and
being in the BOROUGH OF SEASIDE HEIGHTS,
County of
Ocean and State of New Jersey.
Street and Street No.:
223 WEBSTER AVENUE
UNIT 3
Tax Lot and Block No.:
LOT: 23.03
BLOCK: 21
The Dimensions:
APPROXIMATELY:
Webster Seashell
Nearest Cross Street:
Barnegat Avenue
The above description does not
constitute a full legal description,
said description is filed at the
Office of the Sheriff, 120 Hooper
Avenue, Toms River, NJ.
THE SHERIFF HEREBY
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
ADJOURN THIS SALE WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION.
PRIOR LIENS OF AFFIDAVIT:
SUBJECT TO ANY OPEN
TAXES,
WATER/SEWER,
MUNICIPAL LIENS, ETC.
PLUS ANY SUBSEQUENT
TAXES
AND
ACCRUED
INTEREST AS THEY MAY
BECOME DUE.
The amount of the judgement
to be satisfied by said sale is the
sum of $216,587.54 more or less,
plus interest.
Surplus Money: If after the
sale and satisfaction of the mortgage debt, including costs and
expenses, there remains any surplus money, the money will be
deposited into the Superior Court
Trust Fund and any person claiming the surplus, or any part thereof,
may file a motion pursuant to
Court Rules 4:64-3 and 4:57-2
stating the nature and extent of that
person’s claim and asking for an
order directing payment of the surplus money. The Sheriff or other
person conducting the sale will
have information regarding the
surplus, if any.
May be subject to an
Ordinance by the Ocean County
Board of Health: 87-01, Section
10. The Sheriff’s Department will
require notification of the certification of the wells where applicable.
The Sheriff shall deduct his
fees, costs and commissions of
sale from the total amount bid at
the sale.
A 20% deposit (cash or certified funds) is required from the
Successful Bidder at the time of
sale.
This sale was previously
scheduled to be sold on JULY 14,
2009. On or about that day sale
was canceled per attorney for
Plaintiff. Sale is now being advertised for 4 consecutive weeks in
order to inform the public of the
rescheduled date of sale per the
attorney for the Plaintiff.
Seized as the property of
ANTHONY G. DECANZIO, and
taken in execution at the suit of
WAHSINGTON
MUTUAL
BANK, to be sold by William L.
Polhemus, Sheriff.
The sale is subject to postponement without further notice.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Zucker, Goldberg &
Ackerman
200 Sheffield St.
Suite 301
Mountainside, NJ
07092-0024
1-908-233-8500
File#: FCZ-83211
Sheriff’s Docket:
CH 763109
(2/25, 3/4, 3/11, 3/18)
($154.44) (117)
The Ocean Star
Point Garden
Club Heads To
Philly March 11
The Point Pleasant Garden
club will once again host a bus
trip to the 2011 Philadelphia
International Flower Show,
“Springtime in Paris,” presented
by PNC Bank, on March 11.
The bus will depart the Crystal
Point Yacht Club parking lot at
8:30 a.m.
Tickets are $65, which
includes transportation, driver
gratuity and admission to the
show. This annual fundraiser supports the club’s scholarship fund
and neighborhood beautification
projects.
To reserve a seat, call Heidi at
732-892-3870.
CHECK OUT
OUR WEB SITE!
www.starnewsgroup.com
___________________________
BOROUGH OF
POINT PLEASANT
BOARD OF EDUCATION
PUBLIC NOTICE
In accordance with the provisions of the Open Public Meetings
Law (N.J.S.A. 10:et seq), PUBLIC
NOTICE is hereby given that the
workshop meeting of the Point
Pleasant Board of Education originally scheduled for Monday, March
7, 2011 has been changed. The
meeting will be held on Thursday,
March 3, 2011 at 7:00 p.m. in the
Administrative Conference Room
of the Board of Education Office,
2100 Panther Path, Point Pleasant,
NJ. Please be advised that public
action may be taken at this meeting
and that the public may be excluded from any portion of same, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 10:4-12.
In addition, the Board of
Education will hold a Public
Budget Presentation on Monday,
March 14, 2011 at 7:00 p.m. in the
Cafetorium of Ocean Road
Elementary School. Please be
advised that no formal action will
be taken at this meeting.
VINCENT S. SMITH
Superintendent of Schools
($11.22) (34) (2/25)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
BOROUGH OF
POINT PLEASANT
PLANNING BOARD
TAKE NOTICE the Point
Pleasant Planning Board at their
regular meeting held February 17,
2011 memorialized the following
resolution:
Res.
2011-01
–
Preliminary/Final Site Plan &
Variance – Block 359 Lots 7 &
8;1615 & 1617 Beaver Dam Rd.,
Applicant:
HDBD,
LLC
(Approved)
The determination of the Board
is on file for public inspection,
2233 Bridge Ave., Point Pleasant
during normal business hours.
CATHERINE KELLY
Planning Board Secretary
($7.26) (22) (2/25)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
OCEAN COUNTY
SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of the above stated
writ, to me directed, issued out of
the SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW
JERSEY, CHANCERY DIVISION
Docket F1546409, will be exposed
to sale at public venue on TUESDAY the 22nd DAY OF MARCH,
— COLEMAN —
From Page 1
thread running throughout
conversations
with
Mr.
Coleman and in his films. In
“Born to the Sea,” Ryan and
Chelsea compare New Jersey
surf culture to the betterknown California scene,
where there are often better
waves with certain caveats.
“You can’t go in the water
the day after it rains, or else
you get sick,” Ryan says in the
film of the water in
California.
Though
he
describes the conditions in
New Jersey as “consistently
flat,” he also notes that the
shore sees all different types
of swell year-round, and that
it’s free of the environmental
limitations surfers face in
California.
Mr. Coleman described the
local surf scene.
“It’s a tight knit area but
people are pretty accepting of
everyone, as long as you’re
respectful,” he said. “In other
places there’s a lot of localism.
It does exist here, but not as
much if you respect people.”
That’s the message he looks
to convey in his films.
Coleman enjoys working
with the documentary format,
letting his subjects dictate the
content, though he would like
to work with the narrative
format at some point.
“I’m going into this next
one looking for vignettes
A.D. 2010 between the hours of 12
o’clock and 5 o’clock (at 2 o’clock)
Prevailing Time in the afternoon of
said day at the Office of the Sheriff,
Toms River, Township of Toms
River, County of Ocean, New
Jersey.
All that tract or parcel of land
and premises, situate, lying and
being in the TOWNSHIP OF
BRICK, County of Ocean and
State of New Jersey.
Street and Street No.:
45 BAY HARBOR BOULEVARD
Tax Lot and Block No.:
LOT: 2
BLOCK: 378.17
The Dimensions:
APPROXIMATELY:
50 FT X 100 FT
Nearest Cross Street:
ADMORE DRIVE
The above description does not
constitute a full legal description,
said description is filed at the
Office of the Sheriff, 120 Hooper
Avenue, Toms River, NJ.
THE SHERIFF HEREBY
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
ADJOURN THIS SALE WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION.
PRIOR LIENS OF AFFIDAVIT:
SUBJECT TO ANY OPEN
TAXES,
WATER/SEWER,
MUNICIPAL LIENS, ETC. PLUS
ANY SUBSEQUENT TAXES
AND ACCRUED INTEREST AS
THEY MAY BECOME DUE.
The amount of the judgement to
be satisfied by said sale is the sum
of $345,115.38 more or less, plus
interest.
Surplus Money: If after the
sale and satisfaction of the mortgage debt, including costs and
expenses, there remains any surplus money, the money will be
deposited into the Superior Court
Trust Fund and any person claiming the surplus, or any part thereof,
may file a motion pursuant to
Court Rules 4:64-3 and 4:57-2 stating the nature and extent of that
person’s claim and asking for an
order directing payment of the surplus money. The Sheriff or other
person conducting the sale will
have information regarding the surplus, if any.
May be subject to an Ordinance
by the Ocean County Board of
Health: 87-01, Section 10. The
Sheriff’s Department will require
notification of the certification of
the wells where applicable.
based on my subjects, but
we’ll see what happens,” he
said. “Like any filmmaker, you
try to guide the questions in a
certain direction, but it doesn’t always work that way. You
try to get as much as you can
out of your subjects and go
from there.”
“Born to the Sea” started
out with interviews of 10 people, but the final product
focused on just two. He was
able to pull out a story from
all the interviews in the editing process. Mr. Coleman
shoots, edits, and develops the
concept for his films.
“I mostly work alone,” he
said. “I learned editing in
school. They teach you everything there — shooting, editing, writing. There’s not really
much writing in these projects. It’s telling a story with
pictures.”
The solitude of filmmaking
is something Mr. Coleman
has gotten used to.
“It’s easy to get things done
when you’re doing it all yourself. Although it might be
nice to have someone else to
work with also,” he said.
Mr. Coleman even writes
and records original music for
his films. “Born to the Sea” is
available for viewing on Mr.
Coleman’s
website,
w w w. b o r n t o t h e s e a . w o r d press.com.
“I really enjoy documenting
surfers,” he said. “This is what
I really want to do.”
The Sheriff shall deduct his
fees, costs and commissions of sale
from the total amount bid at the
sale.
A 20% deposit (cash or certified funds) is required from the
Successful Bidder at the time of
sale.
Seized as the property of
MILKA PETROVIC, and taken in
execution at the suit of NATIONAL
CITY BANK, to be sold by
William L. Polhemus, Sheriff.
The sale is subject to postponement without further notice.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Zucker, Goldberg &
Ackerman
200 Sheffield St.
Suite 301
Mountainside, NJ
07092-0024
1-908-233-8500
File#: FCZ-119500
Sheriff’s Docket:
CH 764663
(2/25, 3/4, 3/11, 3/18)
($141.24) (107 )
The Ocean Star
___________________________
OCEAN COUNTY
SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of the above stated
writ, to me directed, issued out of
the SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW
JERSEY, CHANCERY DIVISION
Docket F2966809, will be exposed
to sale at public venue on TUESDAY the 22nd DAY OF MARCH,
A.D. 2010 between the hours of 12
o’clock and 5 o’clock (at 2 o’clock)
Prevailing Time in the afternoon of
said day at the Office of the Sheriff,
Toms River, Township of Toms
River, County of Ocean, New
Jersey.
All that tract or parcel of land
and premises, situate, lying and
being in the TOWNSHIP OF
BRICK, County of Ocean and
State of New Jersey.
Street and Street No.:
215 SANDRA PLACE UNIT
215B
Tax Lot and Block No.:
LOT: 1
BLOCK: 757
The Dimensions:
APPROXIMATELY:
CONDOMINIUM UNIT
Nearest Cross Street:
LANES MILL ROAD
The above description does not
constitute a full legal description,
said description is filed at the
Office of the Sheriff, 120 Hooper
Avenue, Toms River, NJ.
THE SHERIFF HEREBY
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
ADJOURN THIS SALE WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION.
PRIOR LIENS OF AFFIDAVIT:
SUBJECT TO ANY OPEN
TAXES,
WATER/SEWER,
MUNICIPAL LIENS, ETC. PLUS
ANY SUBSEQUENT TAXES
AND ACCRUED INTEREST AS
THEY MAY BECOME DUE.
The amount of the judgement to
be satisfied by said sale is the sum
of $254,422.62 more or less, plus
interest.
Surplus Money: If after the
sale and satisfaction of the mortgage debt, including costs and
expenses, there remains any surplus money, the money will be
deposited into the Superior Court
Trust Fund and any person claiming the surplus, or any part thereof,
may file a motion pursuant to
Court Rules 4:64-3 and 4:57-2 stating the nature and extent of that
person’s claim and asking for an
order directing payment of the surplus money. The Sheriff or other
person conducting the sale will
have information regarding the surplus, if any.
May be subject to an Ordinance
by the Ocean County Board of
Health: 87-01, Section 10. The
Sheriff’s Department will require
notification of the certification of
the wells where applicable.
The Sheriff shall deduct his
fees, costs and commissions of sale
from the total amount bid at the
sale.
A 20% deposit (cash or certified funds) is required from the
Successful Bidder at the time of
sale.
Seized as the property of
RYAN ONAGA, ET AL, and taken
in execution at the suit of NEW
JERSEY HOUSING MORTGAGE
FINANCE AGENCY, to be sold by
William L. Polhemus, Sheriff.
The sale is subject to postponement without further notice.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Pluese, Becker & Saltzman,
Esqs.
2000 Horizon Way Suite 900
Mt. Laurel, NJ 08054
File#: FCZ-119500
Sheriff’s Docket:
CH 764657
(2/25, 3/4, 3/11, 3/18)
($139.92) (106)
The Ocean Star
PAGE 25
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
This week’s question:
Street Beat
“I believe that teachers actually
receive too much as it is. I back
[Gov. Chris] Christie as far as
how he wants to handle tenure.
I prefer the annual merit system over lifetime tenure.”
GERRY MALARA
POINT PLEASANT BEACH
“Do you think the teacher tenure
policy needs to be overhauled?”
“Absolutely, because there are
too many deadbeats.”
“No. My daughter is a teacher,
and I’m behind her 100 percent.”
DAVID MITCHELL
POINT PLEASANT BEACH
JOHN SCHOTKA
POINT PLEASANT
“ Yes, it needs to be looked at.
There are good teachers, and
there are not-so-good teachers.”
“ Yes. Teachers should be [evaluated] by merit, not by years.”
MARY FORAN
POINT PLEASANT BEACH
ROGER STONE
POINT PLEASANT BEACH
Point Pleasant library announces March schedule
The Point Pleasant Branch of
the Ocean County Library
recently released the March
schedule of events.
The library is located at 834
Beaver Dam Road, in Point
Pleasant.
In March, the library display
case will feature Point Pleasant
Girl Scout Service Unit items.
The library’s meeting room
art display will contain color and
black-and-white photographs by
Stan Cgaiga.
For more information on any
of the events listed below, or to
register, please call the library at
732-295-1555.
Adult
• On Wednesdays, March 2
and 16, at 7 p.m., the Close Knit
Crew will be at the library. Make
friends and work on knitting and
crocheting projects. All skill levels and new members are welcome.
• On Thursdays, March 3, 17
and 31, at 7:30 p.m., the Adult
Writers Group will meet at the
library. Visit to explore writing
skills in a fun, informal setting.
• On Fridays, March 4, 11, 18
and 25, at 1 p.m., Games for
Adults will take place. Keep a
sharp mind while having fun by
playing a variety of games. Bring
a friend and have even more fun.
• On Wednesday, March 9, at
6:30 p.m., a play called “Lady
Bird, Pat & Betty: Tea for
Three” will be performed at the
library.
Three former First Ladies will
share secrets in this unforgettably vivid one-woman show.
Starring the Emmy Award-winning Elaine Bromka, the play is a
witty and intimate re-imagining
of three women who suddenly
found themselves celebrities.
The play offers a behind-thescenes look at Lady Bird
Johnson, Pat Nixon and Betty
Ford, revealing the personal cost
of what Mrs. Nixon called the
“hardest unpaid job in the
world.”
Please register by calling 732295-1555.
• On Monday, March 14, at
6:30 p.m., the library will present
Foreign Film Night. The film
will be “Treeless Mountain,”
which is not rated. Set in Korea,
this film is a portrait of a young
girl coming to terms with loss
and abandonment.
• On Monday, March 14, at 7
p.m., the Jersey Shore Science
Fiction Club will meet. Share
the love of this genre with others
who feel the same way.
• On Tuesday, March 15, at 3
p.m., a
program
called
“FRAUD: From Victim to
Victor” will be presented at the
library.
Do not become a victim of
fraud and scams. Stephen
Scaturro, Director of Ocean
County Consumer Affairs will
share information on consumer
fraud and scams launched on the
general public, and provide
information on how the
Department of Consumer
Affairs serves and protects the
needs of Ocean County residents.
Please register by calling 732295-1555.
• On Thursday, March 17, at
10 a.m., the Ocean County
Connections Van will make a
stop at the library. Visit the
library between 10 a.m. and 2
p.m. to explore the resources in
the Connections Van.
• On Tuesdays, March 22 and
29, “The Diaries of Adelia
Gobel” will be presented. The
event is a unique author study
and discussion group to celebrate
Women’s History Month.
Get a rare glimpse into the
early-20th-century history of
Point Pleasant and explore the
wonderful adventures in the
diaries of Adelia Gobel, a live-in
maid and Point Pleasant resident.
The group will continue to
meet in April and May. Books
will be distributed at the first
meeting.
The author study is sponsored
by the Friends of the Point
Pleasant Borough Library.
Register by calling 732-2951555.
• On Thursday, March 24, at
6:30 p.m., Dinner & A Movie
will take place. The movie will
be “Secretariat,” which is rated
PG.
Based on the remarkable true
story of the famous race horse,
this film chronicles the spectacular journey of the 1973 Triple
Crown winner.
Bring dinner and the library
will provide dessert.
Computer Classes
• On Monday, March 7, from
10 a.m. to 12 p.m., a Mouse
Skills Open Lab will be held.
Work on the library’s laptops
to practice computer mouse
skills. The library will supply a
couple of fun, online mouse
tutorial programs.
Please bring a pair of headphones from home, and register
by calling 732-295-1555.
• On Thursday, March 10, at
10 a.m., e-mail basics will be
taught.
Attendees will learn what email is and how to open an email account using Yahoo. Must
have basic knowledge of mouse
and computer skills.
Please register by calling 732295-1555.
• On Monday, March 24, at
10 a.m., there will be an Internet
basics course.
Attendees will learn about the
Internet, search engines and tips
for searching the Web.
Must have basic knowledge of
mouse and computer skills.
Registration required by calling
732-295-1555.
Children
• On Wednesday, March 2, at
4 p.m., Read to the Dogs will
take place at the library. Novice
readers can tell stories to Bright
& Beautiful Therapy Dogs. This
is a great way for children to
practice reading — and the dogs
love it.
• On Tuesday, March 8, at 4
p.m., a Mardi Gras Stories &
Craft will take place. Visit the
library to learn about the customs of Mardi Gras with stories
and a craft. For children in
grades kindergarten through
five.
• On Thursday, March 10, at 3
p.m., Club DS will meet. Finally,
a chance to challenge friends or
show off some mad DS skills.
Gather Nintendo DS games and
gear, head down to the library
and have fun. For ages 7 to 13.
• On Tuesday, March 15, at 11
a.m., St. Patrick’s Day Stories &
Craft will be at the library. Visit
to listen to stories and make a
craft with Miss Robin. For ages
3 to 5.
• On Thursday, March 17, at 4
p.m., St. Patrick’s Day Stories &
Crossword Solution • Puzzle see page 21
Craft will be presented for children in grades kindergarten
through five.
• On Tuesday, March 29, at 11
a.m., Preschool Storytime will
take place at the library. Visit to
listen to stories and make a craft
with Miss Robin. For ages 3 to
5.
• On Wednesday, March 30,
at 11 a.m., Toddler Time will be
held at the library. Enjoy stories,
rhymes and music. For ages 12
to 36 months, with caregiver.
Teens
• On Wednesday, March 2, at
3 p.m., a Mardi Gras Craft will
be held at the library. Celebrate
Mardi Gras early by making a
carnival mask. For students in
grades
six
through
12.
Registration is required by calling 732-295-1555.
• On Thursday, March 3, at 3
p.m., the Teen Advisory Board
[TAB] will meet at the library.
Join TAB to get involved with
the library. Plan programs, decorate the Teen Zone and suggest
items for the library collection.
TAB is a great way to have fun
and earn volunteer hours.
For students in grades six
through 12. Please register by
calling 732-295-1555.
• On Wednesday, March 16,
at 3 p.m., the Teen Sewing Club
B
th W
Sou t Fa all
e
ci lit
u
anq
ies
will meet. Join the Teen Sewing
Club, a monthly program to create a one-of-a-kind, simple
sewing project. All materials will
be supplied, and the club is open
to all skill levels. For students in
grades six through 12.
• Monday, March 21, at 6:30
p.m., the library will celebrate
Jell-O Jiggler Movie Monday.
What could be better than an
evening of Jell-O Jigglers and a
movie? The movie will be chosen
at the program, and will be rated
G, PG or PG-13.
For teens ages 13 to 18.
Register by calling 732-2951555.
Family
• On Thursday, March 10 and
24, the Chess Club will meet.
Drop by the library to play chess
and have fun. All ages and skill
levels are welcome.
• On Saturday, March 12, at
10 a.m., Family Morning will be
held at the library. Visit for stories, crafts, games and much
more. All ages with adult caregivers are welcome.
• On Saturday, March 19, at 2
p.m., Family Movie Afternoon
will feature “Despicable Me,”
which is rated PG.
Gru delights in all things
wicked. Armed with his arsenal
of shrink rays, freeze rays and
battle-ready vehicles for land
and air, he vanquishes all who
stand in his way — until the day
he encounters the immense will
of three orphaned girls who look
at him and see something that
no one else has ever seen: a
potential Dad.
Book Discussions
• On Thursday, March 10, at 7
p.m., Secret Scripture will be
discussed.
Join members of JSQspot’s
book club as they discuss the
Sebastian Barry novel. New
members are welcome.
• On Monday, March 21, at
10:30 a.m., Heir to the
Glimmering World will be discussed.
Explore this Cynthia Ozick
novel with the members of the
Point Pleasant Friends Book
Discussion Group. Everyone is
welcome.
• On Wednesday, March 23,
at 7:30 p.m., The Black Tower
will be discussed.
Join the Point Pleasant Good
Readers group and discuss this
novel by Louis Bayard. Visit the
library now to pick up a copy of
the book.
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PAGE 26
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Hubbard house renovation approved
— FROM PAGE 1 —
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globe, including those found in
the United States, England and
South Africa.
The East Avenue home is
located one block in from the Bay
Head beachfront, between
Johnson and Chadwick streets,
with a view of the Atlantic
Ocean.
According to Bill Runyon,
curator of the L. Ron Hubbard
House in Washington D.C., Mr.
Hubbard resided at 666 East Ave.
from 1949 through 1950. He
wrote and published Dianetics:
The Modern Science of Mental
Health while living in Bay Head.
The book deals with psychology
and techniques of self-improvement.
According to the official
Church of Scientology website,
www.scientology.org, the religion
is described as the study of the
spirit, and how individuals use
their spirit to relate to themselves,
each other, and all life forms. A
main tenet of the faith is to
become certain of one’s relationship to God, or a “supreme
being.”
The Church of Scientology has
been reported to have between 8
and 15 million members, with
some of its more famous adherents including celebrity couples
Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, as
well as John Travolta and Kelly
Preston.
L. Ron Hubbard incorporated
the first Church of Scientology in
1953 in Camden, along with his
wife, Mary Sue Hubbard, and
John Galusha.
The Church’s headquarters is
now located in the Gold Base, an
unincorporated area of Riverside
County, Calif.
“The home will be accurately
restored inside and out, to its
1950 appearance, as a fine example of turn-of-the-century Bay
Head architecture, and accurate
to the time L. Ron Hubbard
wrote his watershed book here,”
Mr. Runyon said.
Daniel Bevere, an attorney
based in Nutley, and William
Craig, a licensed architect from
San Francisco, Calif., both
appeared at the planning board
meeting last week on behalf of
Heritage Properties International.
“The applicant wants to do
some minor deletions to the
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
A residence at 666 East Ave. in Bay Head, a home formerly occupied by author L. Ron
Hubbard, founder of the Church of Scientology, has been given the green light for a restoration project that would return the home to the way it appeared when Mr. Hubbard lived
there, from 1949 to 1950.
structure,” Mr. Bevere explained,
adding that when any change is
proposed for a non-conforming
structure — even a small one —
the property owners must appear
before the planning board to seek
approval for the proposed
changes.
The attorney then clarified that
the property is considered nonconforming because it was constructed before property setbacks
were required by borough code.
Currently, the front-yard setback of the property is 15.6 feet,
whereas a standard measurement
of 20 feet for a front-yard setback
is now required in Bay Head.
“Essentially, we’re not making
any major changes to the structure — certainly no additions,”
Mr. Bevere said. “All that’s being
done is we’re deleting an overhang and deleting a balcony.”
Mr. Bevere said the overhang
in question would be removed,
and the balcony would be
replaced by roof shingles, which
would be in line with how the
home looked in the late 1940s to
early 1950s.
Mr. Craig then stepped forward to describe his involvement
in the restoration project at 666
East Ave. He explained that the
architect of record on this project
is Gensler Architects, based in
Morristown, but that he was
hired as a consultant to Gensler
Architects for the project.
Mr. Craig said Gensler
Architects’ reputation with handling buildings of this nature
spans worldwide, and that
Gensler Architects were retained
by
Heritage
Properties
International for work on the Bay
Head home.
“I visited the house several
times, and have been intimately
involved with preparing the
[restoration] drawings,” Mr.
Craig stated.
Mr. Craig explained that 666
East Ave. is a three-story, singlefamily residence with seven bedrooms that was built at the turn of
the 20th century.
“We are going to do rather
extensive interior work, mainly
with finishes,” Mr. Craig said. “In
terms of the exterior, we are going
to be removing a one-story addition on the back corner of the
house, and we’re going to be
removing a lot of the items built
in the backyard over time.”
Mr. Craig repeated that some
work would also be done to the
front of the house, removing a
third-floor balcony and replacing
a small portion of the roof with
shingles.
Furthermore, windows from
the first-floor porch would be
replaced with screens, and an eave
overhang above the first floor
would be removed as well.
Board member Verity Frizzell
asked Mr. Craig if there were any
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historical reasons for restoring the
home to its late 1940s-early 1950s
look, when it was actually built at
the turn of the century.
Mr. Craig cited the fact that
Mr. Hubbard lived and worked in
the house during the late ’40s and
early ’50s.
When Ms. Frizzell asked
whether the home would ever be
made into a museum for Mr.
Hubbard, the architect was specific in his reply that it would not.
“A family will live there, and it
will retain its residential status,”
Mr. Craig said. “There will be no
advertising, and it’s not open to
the public.”
Board member William Furze
asked what the plan was for brick
pavers found in a yard to the
south side of the property, and
grass beyond that, facing west.
“The brick pavers will remain
in front of the fence [on the property], and grass will be placed in
the space where the family room
exists now,” Mr. Craig stated.
Resident Stan Niedzwiecki, of
Johnson Street, asked if the
height of the home would
change, but was told that the current height of 33.5 feet would
remain intact.
Currently, the height limit on
homes in the borough stands at
35 feet.
Mr. Niedzwiecki also inquired
about parking at the residence,
and Mr. Craig replied that a twocar garage on the property will
remain intact.
Mr. Craig clarified that the
impervious coverage onsite will
include the pavers and the structure itself.
Mr. Kellogg asked if pavers
were used in 1950, but Mr. Craig
stated that cobblestones have
been used since the days of
Ancient Rome to pave streets,
even though cobblestones were
obviously not found at 666 East
ave.
During their caucus on the
application, members of the planning board gave their opinions on
the proposed restoration work at
666 East Ave.
Ms. Frizzell said she was “generally in favor” of the application,
but would like to see more of the
impervious coverage, such as
pavers, on the property removed.
Mr. Kellogg stated that he
wanted to be certain that the
house will remain a single-family
dwelling, which he was then told
would be the case by planning
board attorney Steve Zabarsky,
who referred to Mr. Craig’s testimony.
“I think the proposed changes
improve the streetscape,” Mr.
Kellogg said.
Board
member
Peter
Harrington encouraged another
look at the paving materials on
the property, for aesthetic purposes, but was in favor of the application as well.
Mayor William Curtis commented that if the house were to
be restored to 1950s standards,
placing some grass at the property behind the fence would be
appropriate.
Board members Kathleen
Wintersteen, Mr. Furze, Patricia
Wojcik, Fred Applegate and
Councilwoman Jennifer BarnesGambert were all in favor of the
work to be done, as well.
When the vote was taken, the
application was unanimously
approved by all board members.
Page
27
SPORTS
Friday, February 25, 2011
Ryan & Matt
Harter Win
Districts For Boro
Page 28
Gulls make history in SCT
Gritty Gull
team topples
top-ranked CBA
Point Beach loses
heartbreaker to
Rumson Bulldogs
By Greg Domorski
LINCROFT — Who knew hope came in garnet
and white — or that it boasted a roster of 15 players?
Last Saturday, the eighth-seeded Point Pleasant
Beach Garnet Gulls boys basketball team clearly
demonstrated that on any given Saturday, the sweat
of hard work pays off on the scoreboard.
In a true thriller, Point Beach knocked off the
number-one Christian Brothers Academy [CBA] in
the
Shore
Conference
SHORE CONFERENCE Tournament, 56-55, at the
Point Beach 56 Robert J. Collins Arena at
Brookdale
Community
CBA
55 College, here.
Prior to the game, Gulls
QUARTERFINALS
head coach Nick Catania
closely studied CBA game tapes. The result? Catania
got to know the Colts better than they know themselves.
The work ethic of the Gulls’ coaching staff, combined with the devotion of the players, was on display Saturday afternoon.
CBA came into the game as the two-time defending Shore Conference champions, but this season, it
was time for another team to make history.
Point Beach’s victory over CBA sends the boys
basketball program to the Shore Conference
Tournament semifinals for the first time since 1968.
Saturday’s game, however, was no cake walk for
the Garnet Gulls.
In a staggering moment of déjà vu, Point Beach
gave up the lead to CBA in the fourth quarter — the
second time the Gulls have suffered a late-game
scare against CBA.
The two teams met last season in the Shore
Conference Tournament, and Point Beach lost, 5552, after being up by four points with just over two
minutes remaining in the game.
With 2:07 left in Saturday’s game, Point Beach
forward Jordan Kaufman was called for an offensive
foul and the official added a technical on forward
Riley Calzonetti, swinging the momentum of the
game.
By Greg Domorski
LINCROFT — After completing a stunning
upset of top-ranked Christian Brothers Academy in
the Shore Conference Tournament quarterfinals [see
story, left] and defeating conference powerhouse
Lakewood earlier in the season, the members of the
Point Pleasant Beach boys basketball team got a
taste of their own medicine, and fell victim to the
upset bug.
On Wednesday night, at
SHORE CONFERENCE Brookdale
Community
Point Beach 47 College, here, the Gulls fell
short, 52-47, against the
Rumson
52 Rumson-Fair Haven Bulldogs
in the Shore Conference semiSEMIFINALS
finals.
Jarelle Reischel led the Gulls with 25 points and
19 rebounds, but the Gulls remained cold from the
floor.
Outside Point Beach threats Kevin Donahue,
Mike Rotando and Jordan Kaufman combined for
just 12 points, allowing Rumson to collapse on
Reischel in the paint. With shots not falling from the
perimeter, Point Beach had no answer for the
Bulldogs’ defense.
The Gulls also allowed 22 turnovers in a tough
night at the Robert J. Collins Center.
Both the Gulls and Bulldogs started off in a
slump, and it was not until the third minute of the
game that Reischel hit the first basket.
This unleashed a torrent of scoring for Point
Beach early on.
Guard Riley Calzonetti had a putback underneath
the basket, and Jordan Kaufman scored in transition
for the 6-0 lead.
The Bulldogs were able to close in on Point
Beach, but the Gulls held on to the 11-7 lead at the
end of the first.
In the second quarter, the two teams remained
tight, with the Gulls holding on to a slim, 21-18 lead
heading into the locker room.
Calzonetti had a promising start to the game,
scoring 10 of his points in the first half, but could not
find the basket in the second.
STEVE WEXLER, The Ocean Star
See BEACH, page 31
Point Beach small forward Jarelle Reischel scored 25 points and grabbed 19
rebounds, but it was not enough to get past Rumson Wednesday night at the Robert J.
Collins Center in Lincroft.
See GULLS, page 32
Feerst is Group I
champ in 1,600
By Greg Domorski
TOMS RIVER —
Whether it is running cross
country in sticky mud or
keeping pace on the soft
track surface, Point Beach
junior Brianna Feerst just
keeps on winning.
Last Friday, at the John
Bennett Indoor Complex,
here, Feerst won her first
Group I title, placing first in
the 1,600 meters while taking fourth in the 800.
Feerst placed first in both
at the NJSIAA sectional
championships on Feb. 4.
In the 1,600, the secondplace finisher — Rachel
Quinn, of Haddon Heights
— was nipping at Feerst’s
heels early in the race.
It was not until after the
fourth lap — when the two
almost tripped — that
Feerst realized her top
opponent was closing in on
the lead.
“I didn’t know she was
behind me,” said Feerst. “I
realized she was right there
in the fourth lap, and I knew
In her first season
running indoor
track for
Point Beach,
Feerst tops
the competition
in the final two laps I had to
run faster or she was going
to catch me.”
But Quinn did not have a
chance in the final stretch.
Feerst bolted ahead with
150 meters left in the race,
finishing with an indoor
personal-best of 5:09.66.
Quinn
finished
at
5:10.32,
while
Haddonfield’s Shelby Cain
trailed in third, crossing the
finish line 13 seconds
behind Quinn.
Feerst, the Ocean County
cross country champion, was
pleased to see her training
efforts translate into becoming a track star.
“It is really exciting,
because this was my first
year participating in winter
track,” she said.
“In winter track, I really
did not have any expectations of how I was going to
do,” Feerst noted. “I was just
running to stay in shape for
spring track.
“I knew I was going to
run in [the championships],
but I didn’t know who was
going to be in it, or who I
was going to be running
against, or how fast it would
be,” she added.
It is no secret that winning a distance event tires
the body, and Feerst just
could not recover to perform
to her potential in the 800.
Feerst finished fourth
with a 2:25.12 time, behind
New Providence’s Caitlin
Toner, Shore Regional’s
Andrea
Adams
and
Westwood’s Dana Bianchi.
“There was only 45 minutes between the mile and
the 800, so my legs were still
recovering. I was just tired,”
said Feerst, of her performance in the 800.
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Point Beach’s Brianna Feerst ran indoor track for the first time this winter. Feerst earned an NJSIAA
Group I championship in the 1,600 meters on Saturday in Toms River.
PAGE 28
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
High School Wrestling 2011
Seven Panthers medal at District 23 Tournament
By Greg Domorski
If you do not believe the
Point Boro wrestling team has
primetime athletes, just take a
moment and talk to Ryan and
Matt Harter.
Ryan, in the 103-pound
w e i g h t
class, and
POINT BORO
Matt, 125
WRESTLING
pounds,
NOTEBOOK
both finished first
overall in district 23 championships.
The Panthers also had second
place finalists in Nick Onnembo
[112], Ryan Budzek [119],
David Halliday [215], and
Dane Bongiovi [HWT].
Andrew Matter [189] placed
third in districts.
The No. 4 seeded Ryan
Harter won the finals in a 7-6
decision over No. 2 seeded
Joseph Ghione.
Ryan advanced in semifinals
with a win over the No. 1 seeded Nick Melon of Brick
Township.
In the first round, Ryan
pinned Monmouth Regional’s
Joe Panchak in 3:19.
Matt Harter won a 19-4
technical fall against Wall’s
Donald Kessler. Matt advanced
to the finals with an 11-6 decision over Shore Regional’s Sam
Koenig.
In the finals, Harter won a 32 decision over Steven
Cimmino of Brick Township
High School.
Onnembo honored his second seed finishing second in
districts.
In the first match, Onnembo
defeated Shore Regional’s
Tommy Walsh by a 15-0 technical fall in 2:58.
Onnembo went on to defeat
Brick Township’s Connor
Mulligan in the semifinals with
an 11-0 decision to advance to
the finals.
Onnembo was pinned in the
finals by Brick Memorial’s Sean
Stephenson in 4:23.
Budzek lost a 4-3 decision in
the finals to Neptune’s Karl
Waldron.
Budzek won a 2-1 decision
over Brick Township’s Brian
Matthews in the semifinals and
won an 8-1 decision over St.
Rose’s James Szymanski in the
opening round.
Halliday placed second in districts after he fell short in a 126 decision to Neptune’s Philip
Seidle.
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finals, he pinned Monmouth
Regional’s Scott Satcher in the
semifinals and in his first match
pinned Point Beach’s CJ Brooks
in 42 seconds.
Matter pinned Asbury Park’s
Nicolas Famularo in 2:49 in his
first match but was pinned by
Brick Memorial’s Matt Moore
2:41 in the semifinals.
In the consolation bracket,
Matter pinned Brick Township’s
Jesse Lyon in 4:47 for a third
place finish.
Bongiovi won a 2-1 decision
over Asbury Park’s Marquis
Monfiston. In the semifinals,
Bongiovi
pinned
Brick
Memorial’s Will Wokayn in
5:46.
Bongiovi lost a 2-1 decision
to Point Beach’s Andrew Gross
in the finals.
Avery Brecka [130] won a 40
decision
over
Brick
Memorial’s Eric Wilson but was
pinned by Point Beach’s Robert
Finnerty in 3:31 in the following round.
Kevin Kelly [135] advanced
with a 4-1 decision over Brick
Township’s Trevor Mastria until
falling to AJ Romanelli in a 7-3
decision.
John Bruno [140] won a 9-4
decision over Asbury Park’s
Severe Fortune to advance to
the following round but fell to
Evan Berti in the following
round by a 15-0 technical fall in
5:08.
Matt Savage [145] was
pinned by Brick Memorial’s
Nicholas Costa in 1:19 in his
only match.
Brandon Cusack [152] placed
fourth in districts. He lost in
the semifinals by a 6-1 decision
to Brick Memorial’s Tyler
Richardson.
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Point Boro’s Matt Harter [left] won the 125-pound district 23 title this past Saturday.
In the semifinals, Cusack
pinned DeSean Brown in 5:39
and in the opening round
pinned Asbury Park’s Elizah
Scott in 1:40.
In the consolation bracket —
Cusack lost a 11-0 decision to
Wall’s Mark Vinges to take
fourth place.
Brandon Hoy [160] pinned
Asbury Park’s Devin Boyd in
4:12 in his first match, but lost a
8-5
decision
to
Brick
Memorial’s Fabian Jackson in
the following round.
Nicholas Dzuna [171] was
pinned in districts by Brick
Memorial’s Anthony Miller.
With the Harter brothers
winning districts, it upholds the
Panther’s long tradition of having at least two district winners
since
2003, when
Leif
Ruschmeyer [140] and Nick
Ciufo [189] won.
The year prior in 2002, the
Panthers head coach Pat Brady
won districts in the 140lb
weight class.
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
Ryan Harter proved he is high caliber wrestler after being
being named district 23’s 103lb champion
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Beach’s Kelly, Gross both win District 23 titles
By Greg Domorski
This Saturday at Brick
Memorial High School, Dylan
Kelly and Andrew Gross took
it to the mats and earned Point
Beach’s first District 23 championship titles since 2006.
In 2006, Matt Rega won the
119-pound title.
Kelly won a 3-2 decision
over Brick Memorial’s Anthony
Miller for the 171-pound district title, and Gross won a 2-1
decision over Point Boro’s
Dane Bongiovi for the heavyweight title.
Kelly was confident entering
the finals and taking on Miller.
“I wasn’t worried about losing,” said Kelly. “I knew if I
wrestled smart it would be no
problem. My best asset in
wrestling is my defense on my
feet. If I am winning by a point
with under two minutes left, I
feel comfortable. If I am not
trying to score, nobody is ever
going to score on me.”
In the second period, Kelly
took the 3-0 lead by a takedown and an escape, and never
gave up the lead. Kelly later
said he could have scored more
points, but it was not worth the
risk.
To reach the finals, Kelly
pinned Brick Township’s Dan
Watson
in
1:48
and
SUEANNE GOSS, The Ocean Star
The Beach’s Taylor Fioretti takes down Manasquan’s Conner Schobel on Saturday, which
led to an eventual pin 1:48 into the match.
Manasquan’s Anthony Desano
in 1:30.
“It was not really a goal for
me but a dream my freshman
year [to win districts],” said
Kelly. “I saw some of the great
guys on the board and never
thought I could level up to all
that.”
Gross, in the opening round,
pinned Shore Regional’s Mike
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flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of heaven. Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate
Virgin assist me in my necessity. Oh, Star of the
Sea, help me, show me herein, you are my mother.
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none that can withstand your power. Oh show me
herein you are my mother.Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee. Holy
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Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all roads so
that I can attain my goal. You who gave me the
divine gift to forgive and forget all evil against me;
that in all instances in my life you are with me.I want
this short prayer to thank you for all things and confirm once again that I never want to be separated
from you even in spite of material illusions.I wish to
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mercy toward me and mine.
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Macstudy. He reached the
finals by defeating Neptune’s
John Seidle in 1:34, before he
won a 2-1 decision over Point
Boro’s Bongiovi.
This was the second time
Gross and Seidle matched up
against each other this season.
The last time the two wrestled
was on Jan. 31, when Gross was
pinned in 2:10.
In the 130-pound weight
class, Robert Finnerty reached
the finals after winning a 7-3
decision over Brick Township’s
Joe Paton. On his road to the
finals, Finnerty pinned Point
Boro’s Avery Brecka in 3:31.
Taylor Fioretti, in the 135pound weight class, also
reached the finals, falling short
to Brick Memorial’s Dave
Santos.
Fioretti was pinned by
Santos in 4:25. Fioretti
knocked
off Wall’s
AJ
Romanelli in the semifinals and
pinned Manasquan’s Conner
Schobel in 1:48 during the
opening match.
In the 103-pound weight
class, Gustavo Garcia was eliminated in the first round,
pinned by Brick Memorial’s
Joseph Ghione in 4:13. In the
112-pound weight class, Tore
Capriglione was knocked out of
districts by a 5-2 decision to
Brick Township’s Connor
Mulligan.
In 119-pound weight class,
Trey Watkins pinned Connor
Feroce in 5:29. Watkins was
pinned in the following round
by the number one seed —
Neptune’s Karl Waldron.
In the 140-pound weight
class, by Wall’s Drew Donner
pinned Riley Kelly in 2:36.
In the 152-pound weight
class, Monmouth Regional’s
Alex Patriarca was pinned by
John Harrison in 47 seconds.
In the 160-pound weight
class, Jonathan Varga pinned
Manasquan’s Chris Weber in
59 seconds, but was knocked
out in the following round to
Brick
Township’s
Dan
Wojtaszek after being pinned
in 5:59.
In the 215-pound weight
class, CJ Brooks was pinned by
David Halliday in 42 seconds.
Kelly believes the Gulls posted impressive results this year
in districts.
“It was a new coach with the
same expectations,” said Kelly.
“You always want to win as
much as you can. [Point Beach
head] coach Jeff Bower knows
how good we can be. We got to
keep rolling.”
PAGE 29
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
High School Ice Hockey 2011
Warriors knock Panthers out of Dowd Cup playoffs
By Greg Domorski
This Sunday, the Panthers
were knocked out of the Dowd
Cup playoffs in a surprising
10-3 final result against
Manasquan at the Gold Coast
Arena in Wall.
Charlie Mills and Connor
Grogan
led
the
ICE HOCKEY
way for
Point Boro 3 t h e
Manasquan 10 Warriors,
each regDOWD CUP
istering
hat tricks.
Manasquan also received pro-
duction from Chris Miller’s
two goals. James Margetis and
Kyle Wainwright added one
goal each.
Point Boro’s Colin Freer had
two
goals
and
Steven
Kovaleski scored a third-period goal assisted by Carter
Klotz and Connor Bokop. The
Panthers had a respectable 26
shots on goal, but let up 43 to
the Warriors.
Although there was not any
visible snow blanketing the ice
at the Gold Coast Arena, the
snowball scoring effect was
apparent. Panthers head coach
Mike Ryan said this was a
game that did not go the
Panthers’ way from the start.
“We did not get the breaks.
We gave up goals right after
we got some momentum,” said
coach Ryan, after the game. “It
was a tough way to end the
season. I wish it was down to
the wire one way or the other,
but unfortunately that is the
way it goes sometimes.”
The loss was not the best
way to end the season, but it
should not reflect on the
Panthers’ successful season
end, which included the team’s
JOSEPH J. DELCONZO, The Ocean Star
Point Boro forward Colin Freer scored two goals, but it wasn’t enough to get past the
Warriors falling short 10-3.
desire to fight back and make
the Dowd Cup playoffs.
“They shed a four-game losing streak and fought their way
back into contention,” said
coach Ryan. “They had a real
tough game against St. Rose to
clinch a playoff spot. This was
not reflective of it, but a lot of
our tough games came right
down to the wire and some of
our wins were last-minute
wins.”
The loss to Manasquan
drops the Panthers’ final
record to 8 wins, 11 losses and
one tie. With under a .500
record, the Panthers will not
be eligible for the state playoffs, officially ending their season.
“Record-wise does not say
how good this team was even
though this is not a terrible
record. This is a team that
fought through a lot of adversity and Manasquan had our
number this year,” said coach
Ryan.
The Panthers will look to
replace their seniors, which
includes captain Gage Klotz
along with defensemen Jay
Myers, Pat Manfredi, Pat
Lewis and forwards Tom
Santos and Greg Bonte.
“We are losing a huge chunk
of our defense but we have
JOSEPH J. DELCONZO, The Ocean Star
Point Boro goalkeeper Nate Bissay tried to stop every puck,
but the shots just kept on coming Sunday evening, resulting
in the Panthers’ 10-3 loss to Manasquan.
been through that before,” said
coach Ryan. “Mike Corso is a
natural defenseman and he is
going to jump in and play a lot
of time next season. We still
have some offensive power and
can make some noise next season.”
High School Swimming 2011
Princeton passes Point Beach-Squan co-op swim team in rematch
By Sam Costantino
NORTH BRUNSWICK —
The Point Beach-Manasquan
girls swim team was very familiar with its opponent Friday
night, when the Warriors traveled to North Brunswick High
School for the NJSIAA Central
B final.
POINT BEACH
T h e
CO-OP SWIMMING team would
be facing
NOTEBOOK
off against
Princeton, the same opponent
who beat them, 90-80, for the
state sectional title last season.
“We wanted to swim the
same in this meet as we would
when we swim against any
other team,” said Point Beach
swimmer Kat Kazaba. “We
always have the mentality to go
out and swim hard.”
Despite carrying an undefeated record, a C Central
Division title and many premier
Shore Conference swimmers,
Manasquan was unable to top a
strong Princeton team, as the
Little Tigers swam away with
the sectional title and a 106-64
victory.
“In a meet like this it wasn’t a
matter of lack of preparation or
being
intimidated,”
said
Manasquan head coach Craig
Murin. “I planned out the race
with the thought that we could
win.
“I was hoping to find a way to
do it by getting a couple of victories that we didn’t get,” Murin
continued. “We got touched out
a couple of times and there were
a lot of close races. They
[Princeton] swam way faster
than I even anticipated.”
The Little Tigers showed off
their speed from the opening
race, taking the 200 medley
relay with a time of 1:56.08.
Manasquan earned second
place in the event, as Caroline
Petrone, Shea Heavey, Hannah
Briant and Erin Perna followed
less than a second behind at
1:57.03.
Princeton’s Gaby Shypula,
Emma Zuckerman, Nicole
Kratzer and June Zhang would
earn third place [2:05.78] for
the final two points and a 10-4
lead over Manasquan after one
event.
In the next event — the 200
freestyle — Briant earned a
High School
Indoor Track 2011
first-place finish [2:02.18], with
teammate Elisabeth Finkenauer
taking fourth place [2:12.13], to
give the Warriors eight points
in the race.
The Little Tigers countered
with eight points of their own,
however, to maintain a six-point
lead [18-12] by taking second
[2:03.88], third [2:08.62] and
fifth place [2:14.17].
Princeton extended its lead to
28-18, by swimming to first
[2:18.10], third [2:26.22] and
fifth place [2:31.09] in the 200
individual medley.
Perna and Little Tigers’
swimmer Meryl Stone followed
the 200 individual medley with
a great battle in the 50 freestyle,
as the two swam to a first-place
tie [26.41] to highlight an
eight-point split by the two
teams in the race.
Heading into the break,
Princeton held a 32-26 advantage over the Warriors.
A first place finish by
Princeton’s Serena Deardorff
[58.80] lead the Little Tigers to
an 11-5 win in the 100 butterfly, extending the team’s overall
lead over Manasquan to 47-31.
The teams would earn an
eight-point split in the next
event — the 100 freestyle —
with Manasquan swimmers
Kazaba [58.32] and Katie
McElduff [59.57] taking second and third place, respectively.
Although the Manasquan
relay
team
of
Briant,
Finkenauer, Kazaba and Caitlin
Burkhard earned first place in
the
200
freestyle
relay
[1:47.89], the Little Tigers used
the second half of the meet to
pull away from the Warriors.
A 12-4 victory in the 500
freestyle, an 11-5 victory in the
100 backstroke, a 12-4 victory
in the 100 breaststroke and a
10-4 victory in the 400 freestyle
relay gave Princeton its second
consecutive
win
over
Manasquan in the sectional
final.
For Coach Murin, it was
important to stress to his team
the importance of remembering
all their achievements in 20102011.
“When the meet was done, I
told the girls that this did not
take away from another tremendous season,” he said. “To only
lose one meet to a team like this
is something you cannot do too
much about.
“They had a great season
again,” Murin continued. “I am
excited for them and this did
not diminish what they accomplished this year.”
With a young group of tal-
ented swimmers returning to
the pool next year for
Manasquan, the Warriors are
already excited about what lies
ahead for the squad.
“We had a great season,” said
Kazaba. “We want to be a powerhouse next year. We have a lot
of great new swimmers and we
are going to work hard to get
back here next season.”
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Sneakers Plus Athlete of the Week
Frye places first in NJSIAA Basketball is a family affair for Rotando
Group II Championships
By Greg Domorski
For any high school track star,
there is not better present then
placing first in the NJSIAA
Group II Championships, on
his or her birthday.
Monmouth University bound
s e n i o r
Katie Frye,
POINT BORO
Point Boro,
INDOOR TRACK turned 18
NOTEBOOK
on Feb. 19
and placed
first in the 55-meter hurdles in
the NJSIAA Group II
Championships with an 8.50
time at the John Bennett Indoor
Sports Complex in Toms River.
“I was really happy,” said
Frye. “It was actually on my
birthday. There were a lot of
other good competitors I ran
against.”
The top competition behind
Frye
included
Central
Regional’s Samantha Jensen,
who was bumped into second by
just .04 of a second and
Summit’s Daria Chadwick, who
placed third with an 8.69 time.
Frye also placed eighth in the
400-meter dash at 1:01.47 and
seventh in the 55-meter dash
finish at 7.66.
Frye also ran with Chyenne
Brooman, Dana Petrillo and
Susan Walsh in the 4x400 meter
relay placing 18th with a 4:34.60
time.
The Panthers had an impressive day overall with Dakota
Karras placing seventh with an
8.74 time in the 55-meter hurdles and Carly Martz placing
11th in the 3200 meter run at
11:57.13.
Frye said that her and Karras
have a good relationship, both
being elite track runners for the
Point Boro team.
“We kind of work off each
other,” said Frye. “I try to teach
her in warm-ups and technique
and she pushes me in races.”
The Point Boro boy’s indoor
track team only had two competitors. In the 1600-meter run,
Tori Remondelli placed 10th at
4:34.97 and Kevin Bobertz
placed 24th in the shot put with
a distance of 38-11.
Point Beach’s Michael noise early in the Shore
Rotando drains clutch 3- Conference Tournament.
Rotando has developed his
pointers deep behind the arc
and plays his best in the formidable skills from when
fourth quarter, making him a he first started playing basvaluable asset to the boys ketball in kindergarten,
learning firsthand from his
basketball team.
Rotando, a senior guard, father, Ralph Rotando, a bask e t b a l l
has averaged
coach
at
9.7 points per
“Being a Group-I both the
game during
the
Shore
school, we aren’t high school
and college
Conference
really known for
level.
Tournament,
basketball, but we
Rotando
which began
l a s t are starting to turn said he came
from a basThursday.
the program
ketball famiSince then,
around.”
ly, and also
Rotando
has strong
helped the
— Mike Rotando
suppor t
Gulls defeat
Point Beach senior
from both
Colts Neck,
his mother,
51-50, and
pull off a stunning, 56-55 Geriann, and sister Marisa,
victory over first-ranked who is 15.
Rotando has continued
Christian Brothers Academy,
a
perennial
Shore developing his game, playing
for the Garnet Gulls, and for
Conference powerhouse.
The
Gulls
lost
to the AAU Central Jersey
Rumson-Fair Haven, 52-47, Hawks, alongside fellow
Jordan Kaufman,
in the tournament semifinals Gulls
Quinn Olsen and Kevin
on Wednesday.
“We want to win the state Donahue.
Rotando said, after this
championship,”
Rotando
said, after Point Beach made season with the Gulls, he
wants to play college basketball, but is undecided when it
comes to his school of
choice.
Rotando said he has the
opportunity to walk on at
Division-I schools such as
Seton Hall University in
South Orange and Iona
College in New York.
He also has received interest from Division-II and
Division-III
basketball
teams, but no matter what
school he ultimately attends,
he believes he will always
remember the highlights of
his time at Point Beach —
such as the time his Garnet
Gulls defeated CBA this
week.
“It is impossible to
describe the feeling we had
after the game ,” said
Rotando. “Being a Group-I
school, we aren’t really
known for basketball, but we
are starting to turn the program around.”
MICHAEL ROTANDO
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PAGE 30
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
High School Basketball 2011
Panthers annihilate Holmdel Hornets, 80-39, at home
By Greg Domorski
Many locals considered the
Holmdel girls basketball team
to be a sleeper team at the number 12 seed in the Shore
Conference tournament.
However, the Point Boro
Panthers hit the snooze button
on Holmdel’s alarm clock to
demolish the Hornets, 80-39, at
Point Pleasant Borough High
School Thursday evening.
In
a
SHORE CONFERENCE total team
effort, the
Point Boro 80 Panthers
Holmdel
39 had four
players in
QUARTERFINALS
double
figures
with Kelly Hughes finishing
with 24 points, Kelsey Haycook
with 18, Lauren Hughes with
16 and Kerry Malleck finishing
with 13. Jess Macchi finished
with just four points, but filled
out the statistics sheet with six
rebounds, five steals and three
assists.
Panthers head coach David
Drew was pleased to see production throughout the starting
five with scoring threats from
every angle on the court.
“We almost had five girls in
double figures and that is amazing,” said coach Drew. “That
proves we have weapons one
through five with a couple girls
off the bench. It was a total team
effort tonight and I am very
proud of the girls.”
In the first quarter, Point
Boro had complete control. The
Panthers pressed the Hornets on
the inbound and the Hornets
were unable to adapt. Holmdel
was unable to get past half court
and constantly turned the ball
over. Haycook led the Panthers’
press with seven steals throughout the game, and the Panthers
pulled ahead, 14-0, early on.
Ally
Mnich
plugged
Holmdel’s scoring drought
when she hit one of two foul
shots with 5:09 left in the first
to make the game 14-1.
After, the Panthers scored 15
straight points for the 29-1 lead,
until Mnich was fouled attacking the basket with 17 seconds
before the end of the first.
Mnich hit both foul shots to
make the game 29-3.
Coach Drew was surprised
the Panthers gained such a significant lead against the
Holmdel Hornets — a team
that went down to the wire with
one of the Shore Conference top
teams, St. John Vianney, earlier
in the season, falling just short
at 65-56.
“I was very surprised that we
had that advantage in the first
quarter. We did not take them
lightly at all,” said coach Drew.
“[Holmdel] did not have one
bad loss on their schedule. This
was a team that we knew could
play basketball.”
In the second quarter, it
looked like another team came
off the bench as the Hornets rallied together, breaking through
Point Boro’s pressure defense.
Holmdel started the second
with a 13-1 run. Shannon
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Point Boro center Kerry Malleck proved she can hit the
midrange jumper during Thursday’s matchup with Holmdel.
able to comfortably hold on, 8039, advancing to the quarterfinals of the Shore Conference
Tournament.
The Panthers will play Red
Bank Catholic [RBC] on
Saturday
at
Brookdale
Community
College’s
Recreation and Events Center
in Lincroft. The Panthers will
be the minor underdogs, with
RBC holding the fourth seed in
the Shore Conference tournament while the Panthers have
the fifth seed.
“If we can beat RBC, that will
be more of a statement game.
RBC is a very good team and it
will be a tough game for us,”
said Drew. “We are going to do
what we do and not try to
change our game plan but may
make adjustments while we are
playing.”
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Nelson scored four points,
Mnich scored four, Tara Inman
had three and Priscilla Wong
had a bucket to start the comeback. Holmdel cut the lead to
30-16, and Point Boro was in a
state of shock when coach Drew
called timeout with 2:51 left in
the second quarter to halt
Holmdel’s
second-quarter
surge.
Inman and Mnich were the
two most significant threats to
the Panthers, averaging 14.4 and
11.2 points per game, respectively, this season. Coach Drew
wanted to concentrate on the
two on defense, and force the
rest of the Hornets to make
shots.
“We were looking to take
them away from the get go. We
wanted anyone else to beat us
but them,” said coach Drew.
When the two teams resumed
play, neither was able to make a
run and the score stood at 35-18
at the end of the half. Point
Boro looked disappointed after
giving up the substantial lead,
but regrouped in the locker
room.
“We told them [at halftime]
that this is Holmdel. This is a
team with a very good record
and is not going to quit,” said
coach Drew. “We had to stick to
the game plan that obviously
worked the first half. If we had
to make an adjustment in the
second we would have, but we
just stuck to the game plan.”
The two teams exchanged
baskets throughout the start of
the third, but the Panthers were
able to put away the tiring
Hornets. The Panthers ended
on a 24-3 run, finishing the
third with a 63-28 Panther lead.
In the fourth, the Panthers were
JOSEPH J. DELCONZO, The Ocean Star
Kelsey Haycook [left], seen here with Kerry Malleck [right],
led the Panthers seven steals in Thursday’s match against
Holmdel.
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By Greg Domorski
When the Panthers played
Neptune
in
the
Shore
Conference Tournament semifinals at the Robert J. Collins
arena in Lincroft, it was a game
everyone knew was not going to
turn out well for Point Boro
almost from the very start.
After Neptune scored six
straight fast break points, the
Scarlet Fliers continued to roll
over the Panthers for an overall
64-39 performance, eliminating
Point Boro
from the
POINT BORO
S h o r e
GIRLS BASKETBALL Conference
SCT NOTEBOOK t o u r n a ment.
“We played the best team we
are going to face all year,” said
Panther head coach David
Drew. “Nobody likes to lose and
we did not come here for a
moral victory, but I thought we
did OK.”
Syessence Davis led Neptune
with 26 points followed by
Chyna Golden with 12. Point
Boro’s top scorer was sophomore
guard Kelly Hughes, who finished up with 14 points followed
by senior guard Kelsey Haycook
scoring 12.
The Panthers scored their
first basket with 6:18 left in the
first quarter after Haycook
attacked the right side of the
hoop, scooping the ball off the
glass to make the game 6-2.
Neptune, known for its full
court pressure defense throughout the game, was counteracted
by the Panther ball handlers in
Kelly and Lauren Hughes,
Haycook and Jessica Macchi.
As play progressed in the
first, the Panthers kept within
striking distance of the Scarlet
Fliers when Haycook hit two
foul shots to make the game 1612.
Neptune received a much
needed break when Morgan
Thompson banked a 3-pointer
off the glass. After the offensive
spark, Neptune’s Davis stepped
up defensively, stealing the ball
and scoring on the breakaway
layup for the 21-12 Neptune
lead with under 20 seconds
remaining in the first.
Kelly Hughes ended the
quarter by scoring two foul shots
from the line to cut Neptune’s
lead to 21-14.
The second quarter, the
Panthers started sluggish similar
to the first when Neptune broke
out on an 8-2 run. Thompson
opened the quarter rocketing a
3-pointer behind the arc and
Davis added five more points.
The Panthers continued to
fight, but could not recover from
Neptune’s scoring surge holding
on with a 33-23 deficit at the
half.
The Panthers were able to
keep with the Scarlet Fliers with
the score at 50-37 at the end of
the third, before the game started to turn ugly in the fourth
The Panthers only scored two
points in the fourth, while
Neptune unloaded 14.
Coach Drew called timeout
after Neptune scored eight
straight points to make the
game 58-37.
The game was now officially
out of reach and Neptune ended
the game on a 6-2 run for the
64-39 final result.
Coach Drew said it was difficult to stop the Scarlet Fliers,
due to the variety of weapons
Neptune had available on the
court.
“Neptune is very deep,” said
Drew after the game. “It is not
just five girls deep, they go to
their bench too.”
The Panthers will play
Bridgeton in the first round of
the NJSIAA State Tournament
on Feb. 28. If the Panthers can
top Bridgeton, they will go on to
play the winner of the
Manasquan
and
Haddon
Heights matchup.
With the Panthers and the
Warriors sharing the C Central
division title, it is not a game
one will want to miss, with both
teams trying to establish their
superiority.
Coach Drew said playing a
tough team like Neptune will
help prepare the Panthers
against elite teams in the state
tournament.
“A game like this prepares you
for the [state tournament],” said
coach Drew. “Neptune is a great
team and is a two time [Shore
Conference
Tournament]
defending winner.”
Neptune will defend its twotime
Shore
Conference
Tournament championship title
when traveling to Monmouth
University's
Multipurpose
Activity Center on Friday at 6
p.m. to take on third-seeded St.
John Vianney.
Shore Conference
Tournament Quarterfinals
Point Boro vs.
Red Bank Catholic
Kelsey Haycook scored 16 of
her game-high 26 points in the
first half, followed by Kelly
Hughes with 12 to lead the
Panthers past the Caseys, 56-40.
Forward Samantha Gustella
scored 18 points. Haycook says
stopping Gustella was a challenge.
“We played big girls like this
before [ Jackson Memorial’s]
Christa Evans and [Rumson
Fair-Haven’s] Victoria Lesko,”
said Haycook about containing
a top player like Gustella.
Point Boro had the slim, 2114 lead in the second quarter,
but the Panthers went on a 113 run for the 32-17 lead at half.
The Panthers extended their
lead in the second half with a
10-4 run to make the game 4223 Panthers, and the Casey’s
had no answer.
Haycook stressed the importance of keeping the lead against
a tough team like the Red Bank
Catholic Caseys.
“We knew what we had to do
to work hard in this game and
not give up,” said Haycook.
“We were the underdog today
and it was a big win for us.”
Coach Drew was pleased to
see Haycook pour in buckets at
will against one of the top teams
in the Shore Conference.
“Haycook is a phenomenal
player. We are not the same
team without her.”
PAGE 31
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
High School Basketball 2011
Gulls fly to SCT quarterfinals with win over Colts Neck
By Greg Domorski
It was the type of game you
thought would come down to the
final basket.
With 5 seconds remaining on
the clock, the Gulls passed the
ball to senior small forward
Jarelle Reischel in the post, who
was harassed by two defenders.
Coach
N i c k
BOYS BASKETBALL
Catania
Point Beach 51 had his
h a n d s
Colts Neck 50 c l o s e
TOURNAMENT GAME t o g e t h e r
ready to
call timeout, but opted to wait to
see if his star could finish the
game.
Reischel was hit on the arm
under the basket bringing him to
the foul line. The first shot was
nothing but net to tie the game
at 50, and the second rattled in
for the 51-50 final result at Point
Beach High School Thursday
evening.
“I wasn’t trying to put pressure
on myself,” said Reischel “I take
foul shots everyday in practice so
there was not going to be no difference — here or in practice.”
Coach Catania was clearly on
the same page as Reischel.
“I [was] confident he was
going to make it,” said coach
Catania. “He is the best player in
the shore and one of the best in
the state. You have to feel that
there is nobody else in the world
you would rather have at the line
than him.”
After sinking both foul shots,
on Colts Neck’s final possession
the ball was passed in to point
guard Brian Kenny, who was
forced to run up the left sideline
and shot a 3-point attempt at the
buzzer. Jordan Kaufman blocked
the shot attempt with time expir-
JOSEPH J. DELCONZO, The Ocean Star
Jarelle Reischel scored 17 points including two game winning free throws against Colts
Neck this past Thursday evening.
ing on the clock, and the Gulls
Nest rushed the court, celebrating the advancement to the quarterfinals of the Shore Conference
Tournament.
Kaufman stepped up his game
against Colts Neck on both
offense and defense. He spread
the floor, scoring four, 3-pointers
for a total of twelve points.
“That is the way we know
[Kaufman] is capable of playing,”
said Catania. “In the game
against St. Patrick’s [over the
summer] he had 15 points in two
quarters.”
Quinn Olsen also returned to
the Point Beach lineup, after
being ill in the Gulls’ previous
game against Montgomery. He
helped boost the Gulls to victory
against Colts Neck with three, 3pointers including a buzzer beat-
— BEACH —
From Page 27
The Beach had the 49-47
lead, but the double foul resulted in CBA getting four straight
foul shots and possession of the
ball.
CBA’s shooting guard, JP
Koury, made all four shots to
give CBA the 51-49 advantage.
On CBA’s next possession,
Colts center Matt McMullen
was fouled on his way to the
basket. McMullen made one of
two foul shots with 1:42 left in
the game for the 52-49 CBA
lead.
But Point Beach just would
not quit.
The Gulls’ senior small forward, Jarelle Reischel, hit a 3pointer with a hand in his face
to tie the game at 52.
After CBA missed a foul-line
jumper, Reischel hit two foul
shots on the Gulls’ next possession to give Point Beach the 5452 lead.
Koury hit a 3-pointer to put
CBA back up, 55-54, and on the
next possession, Reischel was
called for an offensive foul with
18.8 seconds remaining.
On the inbound play, Koury
“He made two
huge shots —maybe
the two biggest
shots in Point Beach
history.”
— Nick Catania
Point Beach boys
basketball coach, on
guard Kevin Donahue’s
game-winning foul shots
fouled Point Beach guard Kevin
Donahue, falling to the floor on
the inbound.
Donahue went to the charity
stripe, and his first foul shot was
nothing but net — tying the
game at 55.
CBA called timeout to try
and ice Donahue, but the strategy proved to be ineffective, as
Donahue nailed the second foul
shot for the 56-55 lead.
“He made two huge shots —
maybe the two biggest shots in
Point Beach history,” said
Catania, of Donahue stepping
up to the occasion. “He works
hard in practice and does the
dirty work for the team that is
sometimes not recognized.”
er to end the third, two feet
behind the arc to put the Gulls
ahead 38-37.
Catania said he was proud
with how the whole team
stepped up throughout the game.
Coach Catania adjusted his
game plan early, when the
Gulls were down 10-5 in the
first quarter, with Colts Neck
players hounding Reischel.
Point Beach scored three, 3pointers to propel a 9-2 run to
end the first quarter for a 14-12
lead.
Point Beach continued to
rally on the 3-point shot in the
first half. The first twenty
points consisted of six, 3-pointers and two foul shots by
Reischel.
Reischel did not score for the
remainder of the first half, but
the Gulls were ahead 25-24.
Catania said he made adjustments in the second half to help
get Reischel the ball. Reischel
scored 15 second-half points,
totaling to 17 overall.
“[Colt Neck’s] whole game
plan was to stop [Reischel]
from the very beginning,” said
coach Catania, about his top
player with limited production
in the first half. “You can’t force
[the ball] into him. He was
going to have two guys on him
the whole night. We know we
have other guys that can hit
shots. If teams do what they did
tonight, we can have other guys
that can step up and score.”
Reischel was pleased to credit the whole team effort in
coming up with the win.
“In the first half, if my team
Donahue said he kept his cool
on the free-throw line.
“I knew if I made those two
shots, we were going to win the
game,” said Donahue.
On CBA’s next possession,
the team rocketed multiple
rushed shots, but none fell
through the basket.
As time expired, the Garnet
Gulls coaching staff and players
ran to the center of the court to
celebrate.
“Nobody believes in the
unbelievable, but this year, we
showed that everything is possible, and there are no limits,” said
Reischel. “We [know] we can
win the Shore Conference
[Tournament].”
Point Beach had the largest
lead of the game in the third
quarter, when Point Beach
guard Michael Rotando hit a 3pointer 2 feet behind the arc for
the 33-23 lead.
It was not until the fourth
that CBA initiated their comeback, hitting three straight shots
to give CBA the 41-40 edge.
Afterward, Rotando was
fouled on a shot behind the arc
and hit all three free throws to
put the Gulls back on top, 4341.
Reischel led all scorers, fin-
ishing the game with 27 points,
including back-to-back 3pointers in the first.
Reischel was also a perfect
10-for-10 from the free throw
line.
“He set the tone tonight,”
said Catania. “The biggest thing
with [Reischel] is that if he hits
his shots from the perimeter, he
is unguardable — nobody in the
state can guard him.”
McMullen led CBA with 22
points, and Koury finished with
21.
McMullen spent a substantial
amount of time on the bench in
the first quarter after getting hit
in the mouth on a Reischel
drive.
The Gulls lost to RumsonFair
Haven, 52-47, on
Wednesday in the Shore
Conference Tournament semifinals [see related story].
If Point Pleasant Beach had
defeated the Bulldogs, the Gulls
would have had their first trip to
the
Shore
Conference
Tournament finals since 1963.
Sunnyside Manor
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after a broken foot, was the most
popular student in Colts Neck
High School for a minute with
the clock ticking away under 30
seconds. He made the basket and
foul to put the Cougars ahead
50-49, before Reischel closed the
game converting both foul shots.
“We are playing really well
together to close out games,” said
Reischel, about the Gulls pulling
out the victory with under one
minute remaining. “We want to
keep continuing to work hard
and keep playing the way we
have been playing.”
Point Beach played Christian
Brothers Academy [CBA] on
Saturday [see related story],
defeating the Colts 56-55 at the
Robert J. Collins Arena in
Lincroft.
Prior to the game, Point Beach
knew it had a chance to upset the
number one team in the Shore
Conference tournament.
“CBA is the best of the best
and we want to take our shot at
them like any good team would.
It will be fun and we will see
what happens,” said Catania,
before the game against CBA.
“They know us so there is not
going to be many secrets.”
“We are definitely going to
prepare and have the right mindset, and hopefully put out a win,”
said Reischel, before playing
CBA. “I think it is possible. In
basketball any team can beat
another on any given night. It
does not matter if it’s the [Los
Angeles] Lakers. If you have
the right mindset and attitude
you are on the track [to pull
out a win].”
wasn’t [hitting shots] we would
have been down by 20,” said
Reischel, about the importance
of his teammates stepping up.
“I have to credit my teammates
and the coaching staff in really
coming prepared in this game.”
In the second half Colts
Neck was kept in the game by
Hunter Wysocki, who finished
with 22 points, including an
eye-opening step-back 3pointer in Reischel’s face, to cut
the lead to 45-44, Point Beach.
“The thing [that] was special
about him is that he can create
his own shots — his step back
and his one dribble, pull hard to
stop. He was hitting unbelievably tough shots. I was
extremely impressed with
[Wysocki],” said coach Catania.
“He was a great player,” said
Reischel,
about
guarding
Wysocki. “He was red hot. I had
my hand in his face and tried to
contest all of his shots, but he
made them.”
Point Beach held on to the
lead in the fourth on its way to
victory, with a 49-47 lead with
under one minute remaining on
the clock. While Point Beach
was trying to play a game of keep
away from the Cougars,
Kaufman tried to split between
two defenders and fell to the
floor.
In a call that could have resulted in either team’s favor,
Kaufman was called for the traveling violation with 41 seconds
remaining, turning the ball over
to Colts Neck.
Colts
Neck’s
Brandon
Federici, in his first game back
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PAGE 32
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
FISHING TIPS
Greg over at Brielle Bait and
Tackle reported: “Cod and ling
are on the menu this week.
“The local party boats are fishing from 10 to 30 miles offshore,
and fishing is pretty darn good.
Average catches of cod are from
six to 15 fish per guy, with about
half being keepers. Some of the
pool-winning cod are 20- to 30pounders. Most of the action is
on clams. Ling fishing is pretty
good, too.
“Paul Sperco, of Dayton,
fished on one of the local head
boats, and he caught 10 nice ling
and a keeper cod.
“On the freshwater scene,
perch and pickerel are biting in
the local freshwater ponds. Many
ponds have some open water
where the ice has melted.
“Quinn Figueroa, of Point
Pleasant, and Patrick Murphy, of
Toms River, fished a few ponds in
Toms River, and they caught several nice pickerel on live killies.”
Capt. Howard Bogan of the
Big Jamaica out of Brielle reported: “Northeast wreck special trips
sail at 11 p.m. We will be sailing
to the northeast wrecks 60 to 100
miles from Brielle for cod and
pollock, leaving at 11 p.m. We
will return at approximately 6
p.m. Sunday. The fare is $155.
“Dates for this will be 11 p.m.
today, Feb. 25, and tomorrow,
Feb. 26, as well as March 4, 11
and 18.
“We also offer 20- to 40-mile
cod wreck specials sailing at 4
a.m. today, Feb. 25, as well as
March 4, 11, 18 and 25. We will
be fishing the 20- to 40-mile
wrecks from Brielle for cod, leaving at 4 a.m. We will return at
approximately 5 p.m. The fare is
$90. Call 732-528-5014 for further information.”
Only 15 seats remain for the
Jersey Shore Fishing Show that
will take place Saturday, March
12 at the Spring Lake Manor in
Spring Lake.
This is an all-day seminar presented by Shore Catch Guide
Service and Stripersurf.com.
This show will not only have
the Shore Catch Team presenting, but also will now bring
By
Jim Freda
together under one roof some of
the most respected professionals
in the industry to teach you
everything you want to know,
from catching striped bass, to
inshore bluefin tuna, out to the
canyons for yellowfin, mahi and
swords.
This year’s slate of speakers is
headed up by surf master “Crazy”
Alberto Knie, publisher Chris
Megan and managing editor
Jimmy Fee from On the Water
Magazine, and tuna specialist
John Flores.
Registration is in advance and
limited to the first 200 people. To
register today, go to jerseyshorefishingshow.com.
On Friday, April 1, the
International
Game
Fish
Association [IGFA]’s New Jersey
representatives, including Pete
Barrett, Bill Feinberg, Rich
Keller, Jeff Merrill and Gene
Nigro, will host the New Jersey
Representatives’ 14th Annual
Fund Raising Banquet &
Auction at 7 p.m. at Doolan’s in
Spring Lake Heights to benefit
IGFA’s Junior Angler and
Conservation Programs.
Last year’s event attracted 150
fishing enthusiasts and raised
over $17,000 for these IGFA programs. In 13 years, this event has
raised well over $170,000, making it one of IGFA’s most successful fundraising events.
A deluxe hot and cold buffet
dinner will be served, followed by
the ever-popular Fishing Tackle
Bonanza Auction, where thousands of dollars’ worth of fishing
tackle — including rods, reels,
line and lures donated by major
tackle manufacturers and local
tackle shops, jewelry, marine art-
work and other fishing-related
items and accessories — will be
given away.
Grand raffle prizes this year
include a Daiwa Saltist twospeed lever drag reel and Saltiga
rod combo, a hand-carved gamefish by John Fish, and limitededition artwork by legendary
marine artist Guy Harvey.
Numerous fishing trips have
also been donated by charter boat
captains from Sandy Hook to
Cape May.
A silent auction will also be
held, and will include a fishing
trip and several high-value items.
Every attendee will also receive a
commemorative, limited-edition
Guy Harvey print valued at $125.
Reservations are limited to the
first 225 people and can be made
by sending a check for $75 for
each person drawn to the IGFA
to: IGFA Banquet, care of Jeff
Merrill, 918 Houston St., South
Plainfield, 07080.
For further information, contact Jeff Merrill at 908-451-1110
or via e-mail at [email protected].
Announcements of interest:
• March 3 through 6, World
Fishing and Outdoor Expo,
Suffern, N.Y.
• March 12, Jersey Shore
Fishing Show, Spring Lake
Manor, Spring Lake, www.jerseyshorefishingshow.com.
• March 18 through 21,
Saltwater Fishing Expo, Garden
State Exhibit Center, Somerset,
sportshows.com/somerset/index.
html.
Tip of the week: If you are
going to be jigging for tuna this
upcoming season, look to buy colored, metered braid, such as the
Sufix Metered Performance Braid
or Daiwa Boat Braid for your
reels.
These lines are made with five
colors that change every 25 or 30
feet. Once you read on your fishfinder what depth the tuna are
holding at, you can then just tell
someone to drop down two,
three, or four colors to hit the
mark.
Send information or notable
catches to [email protected].
Beach Wrestling Remembers A Great Gull
Photo Courtesy of DEANNA FINNERTY
Point Beach wrestling alumnus Justin Barowski [center] was honored on Jan. 13 before
the Garnet Gulls’ match against Holmdel, which the Gulls won, 53-24. As a Gull, Barowski
was a district champion in 2003, 2004 and 2005, and a regional champion in 2005. Later, at
Delaware Valley College in Pennsylvania, he composed a 108-35 record and earned a
Midwest Region title. At Point Pleasant Beach High School last month, Barowski’s singlet
was framed and will be displayed in the high school’s wrestling room. Barowski was accompanied at last month’s ceremony by his mother Debbie [from left], his brother Jeff, his father
John, and Point Beach wrestling coaches Brian Spader, Bruce Fioretti and Mike Serchio.
— GULLS —
From Page 27
After Reischel hit one of two
free throws to start the third,
Rumson scored 14 straight
points for the 32-22 lead.
Donahue, who scored the
winning point for Point Beach
against CBA, hit a muchneeded 3-pointer with 39 seconds left, and the Gulls got
back into a bit of a flow.
Reischel hit two foul shots
to close the third quarter with
the score standing at 32-27 in
Rumson’s favor.
The Gulls capped off an 110 run at the start of the fourth
quarter and finally re-took the
lead when Reischel had an
offensive rebound, putting the
ball back in the net to put
Point Beach up 33-32 with
4:36 left in the game.
As play progressed, the
Bulldogs’ J.J. Conklin hit a 3pointer dagger to put Rumson
up, 38-37, but he was
answered by Reischel from the
foul line, who hit two shots for
the 39-38 Beach lead.
The
Bulldogs’
Jack
STEVE WEXLER, The Ocean Star
Point Beach guard Jordan Kaufman has been an outside
scoring threat for the Garnet Gulls this season.
1/2 PRICE
CLEARANCE SALE
SHOES AND BOOTS
NOW AS LOW AS
$
39.95/pair
Donnelly hit a mid-range
jumper between two Beach
defenders for the 40-39 lead,
prompting Point Beach to call
timeout.
On the Gulls’ next possession, Calzonetti was called for
traveling as he attacked the
basket, turning the ball back
over to the Bulldogs.
Rumson’s Kevin Alter hit a
heartbreaking 3-pointer, and
Beach called timeout with the
score at 43-39 with 55.1 seconds remaining.
Reischel attacked the basket
and was fouled, hitting his two
free throws to inch closer to
Rumson, 43-41.
The Gulls fouled Alter to
stop the clock, and he sank
two from the line.
On the Gulls’ next possession, Reischel pump-faked
and a Rumson defender
jumped off the floor. Reischel
took the shot into the defender, but no foul was called.
A Rumson player stripped
the ball away from Reischel
and jetted out on the breakaway.
Donahue grabbed Alter on
the layup and was called for an
intentional foul, resulting in
two free throws and possession.
Alter hit both free throws,
and Jack Curran hit two more
on Rumson’s next possession
to take a 49-41 lead and put
the game out of reach for the
Gulls.
Rumson will go on to play
Raritan
in
the
Shore
Conference Tournament finals
at Monmouth University’s
Multipurpose Activity Center
on Friday, while Point Beach
will look to add another game
to its schedule before the state
tournament begins next week.
Point Beach head coach Nick
Catania said the Garnet Gulls did
not play their best, as a unit, against
the Bulldogs.
“What got us here is that we
play together, and we kind of got
away from that tonight,” Catania
said. “We didn’t share the ball
enough. Rumson did a good job of
taking us out of that.”
The coach went on to say the
Gulls should be proud of how far
they made it in the Shore
Conference Tournament this year,
with no Point Beach team reaching the semifinal since 1968.
“It is a big step for our program,” said Catania. “[This loss] is
a learning experience. We still have
the state tournament, and that is
our goal. We are trying to go places
we haven’t gone before.”
ST. JUDE
NOVENA
All items will be clearly marked. Supplies limited.
Prior sales excluded. All sales final.
Mon-Thurs 10-6 • Fri. 10-4 • Sat. 10-5
424 Main Street • Avon-By-The-Sea
732-361-8250
www.ArtNsoleFootwear.com
May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be
adored, glorified, loved and preserved throughout the world, now
and forever. Sacred Heart of Jesus,
pray for us. St. Jude, worker of miracles, pray for us. St. Jude, help of the
hopeless, pray for us. Say this prayer
9 times a day. Say it for 9 days. By
the eighth day, your prayer will be
answered. It has never been known to
fail. Publication must be promised.
Thank you, St. Jude. WW
page
33
Friday, February 25, 2011
Key Circulation Areas
The Coast Star
The Ocean Star
Avon • Bradley Beach • Brielle • Lake Como
Manasquan • Sea Girt • Spring Lake
Spring Lake Heights • Wall Township
Bay Head • Lavallette
Mantoloking • Point Pleasant
Point Pleasant Beach
Monmouth
County
Bradley
Beach
Shark River
Avon
Belmar
E LL
TOAC CA
L
P AD
N
A
CLASSIFIED
Spring Lake
Heights
FAX US
Spring
Lake
Sea Girt
Brielle
Manasquan
Ocean County
Manasquan River
Point
Pleasant
Beach
Point
Pleasant
[email protected]
732-528-1212
732-223-0076
13 Broad Street
Manasquan, NJ 08736
Lavallette
A. Articles for Sale
STRAIGHT
CLASSIFIEDS
18.00 Week Up to 20 Words
90¢ for ea. add. word
$
H. Real Estate for Rent
22
DINING TABLE- 60"x48", plus 3
leaves, pads, 1 arm 5 side
chairs, buffet, walnut veneer,
solid walnut cariole legs, $650,
Call 848-469-0828.
AVON- YEARLY. 1BR garage
apartment, 7 houses from
beach,
newly
renovated,
$875/mo. + utils. No smoking.
Call 732-869-9192.
B. Garage & Yard Sales
BELMARYEARLY.
1BR,
$895/mo. all utilities included.
Efficiency $650/mo. all utilities
included. Call 732-280-8354 for
appointment.
LAVALLETTE, WEST Point Island- Demolition/Estate Sale.
107 Dickman Dr., Sat.-Sun.
2/26-2/27,
8:30AM-3:00PM.
Everything for sale!
PT. PLEASANT- Concepts 1
Auction, 1125 Arnold Ave., Sat.
2/26, 9:30am. Settling an old
Estate (don’t mind the dust) +
additions. Lots of old bibles,
books, magazines, hats/boxes,
movies on reels, cameras, bottles, country items, flatware,
mahogany dental cabinet, curve
glass china cabinet, Pennsylvania drysink, 9 piece DR set,
oak/walnut/mahogany
desks,
room dividers, easels, large
console table, many occasional
tables, 4 outside rockers,
enamel top tables, throw rugs,
decorated items, doll houses,
M/T dresser, bamboo cottage &
other
dressers,
bookcases,
coins (3pm), jewelry, artwork,
musical instruments, records,
DVD’s,
toy
cars + trucks,
sports cards, linens, pottery,
glassware, much more. Plan
to spend the day. Food. Preview
9am.
732-892-6040,
www.concepts1auction.com.
C. Antiques
GERMAN
WINDERHOFFEN
and
Hofmisner
grandfather
chime clock for sale, $3,000.
732-241-3649.
D. Articles Wanted
LOOKING TO buy costume/estate jewelry, gold & silver, religious items too! Same day house
calls. Immediate cash. Call
Peggy 732-581-5225.
BELMAR/WALLYEARLY.
Small cottage for professional,
$975/mo. utils. included, 1
month sec. No smokers/no
pets. 732-681-4266.
BRICK- ADULT Community
GNBRII, 2BR, 2BA, newer
kitchen, DR, garage, gas heat,
C/AC. Approx. 50’x100’ lot.
$1,700/mo. Call 732-280-1942.
FL., ANNA Maria- Tired of
snow? Relax in 3BR, 2BA home
w/dock. Walk to beaches. Reasonably priced. April still avail.
732-449-5255.
Ads run in both The Coast Star & The Ocean Star plus DEADLINE
TUES. @ 4PM
on our website. Ads are identified in 22 categories.
MANASQUANPROFESSIONAL office space, Hwy. 71,
800SF plus storage closet.
$1,200/mo. includes utils. Call
732-223-0390.
MANASQUAN- SUMMER. 3/5
bedrooms, A/C, W/D, DW,
parking,
nicely
decorated,
close to beach. For details,
call
732-995-1327
or
[email protected].
MANASQUAN- SUMMER. Reasonable. Immaculate waterfront
house 3 blocks to beach, 3BR,
W/D, DW, C/AC, ultra modern
furnished, backyard deck w/barbecue, enclosed H/C shower.
Pet okay. Boat slip available.
Wien R.E., 732-539-3800.
MANASQUANSUMMER/WEEKLY.
Clean
3BR house, W/D, A/C, cable,
quiet neighborhood between
beach and town, close to
train.
No
smoking/pets.
732-583-1589.
MANASQUAN- YEARLY. 1BR
apartment, two family home,
Parker Ave, W/D, yard, porch,
large storage area. No pets,
$1,075/mo. Call 732-528-7731.
MANASQUANYEARLY.
Oceanfront apartment, 2BR,
2BA, W/D, C/AC, no pets.
$1,700/mo. + security & utilities.
732-241-5019.
PT. PLEASANT Bch.- Yearly.
2BR w/ocean & inlet views,
C/AC. No pets. Avail. 4/20.
$1,500/mo.
+
utils.
Call
732-223-3612.
PT. PLEASANT- Yearly. East of
canal, 3BR, 2BA side-by-side
duplex
w/private
yard.
$1,600/mo.
+
utils.
No
smokers/pets. Refs., etc. req’d.
732-600-6013.
SEA GIRT1&2BR
apts.
$1,050-$1,200/mo. + security.
No pets. Gas, water, parking included. Upscale, quiet garden
complex. 732-325-7285 for application.
FLORIDA KEYS, Islamorada2BR, 2BA townhouse, pool, tennis, beach, gated community.
Call 732-223-1174.
MICHAEL BLAIR
MANASQUAN - YEARLY. Immaculate apartment, right in the
heart of town. 3BR, 1BA, LR,
EIK, W/D, C/AC. $1,800/mo +
utilities.
Avail.
immediately.
Please call 732-904-3882, or
[email protected].
HISTORICALLY LOW RATES!
MANASQUAN- 1BR apt. on 3rd
floor in 2 family home. C/AC,
new windows, parking avail.,
shared utils. $800/mo. monthly
or yearly. 732-223-0065.
MANASQUAN- PRIVATE, cozy
1BR cottage close to town.
Off-street parking, gas heat,
C/AC,
W/D,
storage.
$1,150/mo.
+
utils.
732-223-3360
or
[email protected].
SPRING LAKE- Office,
space
for
rent.
201-954-0226.
flex.
Call
20+ Years of Mortgage
Banking Experience
GET INTO A FIXED RATE NOW!
Cell (732) 245-9969
Real Estate display ads can run in both papers or just The Coast Star or The Ocean Star.
Combination $13.03 per inch
NE
OPEN Coast Only $9.08 per inch DEAESDLIDAY
RATE Ocean only $5.95 per inch TU1:00PM
For Contract Advertiser’s Discounts Call Linda Q. at Ext. 39
[email protected]
DISPLAYS
3 BUSINESS & SERVICE
Run in both papers or just
1 $
.
.10
The Coast Star or The Ocean Star.
T
Week Both Papers
$11.05 per col. in.
X
1x2"
Ad
Coast Star Only
$7.20 per col. in.
E
in both papers
Mantoloking
Bay
Head
REAL ESTATE DISPLAYS
732-223-0076
Lake Como
Wall Township
Straight Classified Ads
Real Estate Display
Business & Services
Legal Advertising
NE
DEADLIA
TU ES D Y
4:00PM
Ocean Star Only $5.00 per col. in.
To Place an Ad Call Chris at Ext. 10
CHARGE YOUR AD!
SEA GIRT- House to share
w/professional.
Big,
clean,
quiet, internet, bar, pool table,
C/AC, laundry. Too much to list!
$950/mo. includes everything.
732-449-4282.
SOUTH WALL- 4BR, 2.5BA,
2,500SF, formal DR, LR, family
room w/fireplace, finished basement, on 1 acre. Yearly lease.
$2,300/mo. 732-528-6840.
SPRING LAKE and surrounding
areas. Large selection starting
at $6,000. Marian J. Fallon Realty, Inc. Realtor, 732-449-2900,
732-233-5233 (evenings).
SPRING LAKE Hts.- Offices,
2022 Hwy. 71, 3 suites, 665+
SF each, parking. Excellent
cond. Minimum $995/mo. net,
security. 732-325-7285.
Michele Jasionowski
REALTOR/Sales Associate
RE/MAX Executive Club 2009
2009-2010 NJAR Circle of Excellence Sales Award
732-899-8202 x42
John (Jack) McHugh
Broker/Owner
732-899-8202 x23
www.JackMcHugh.com
www. M i c h e l e J a s i o n o w s k i . c o m
Point Pleasant
JUST LISTED
Impeccable home with 3 bedrooms, 2
updated full baths, large upgraded eat-in
kitchen, and gleaming hardwood floors.
Sun room overlooking 16x28' deck ~ great
for entertaining, plus shed & play set. Front
porch welcomes you to this beautiful, wellmaintained home on quiet street and close
to schools and shopping. $310,000 Call
Michele @ 732-581-8133 (cell)
NMLS#295555
Gentry Real Estate School, LLC
“A Tradition of Excellence”
Point Pleasant
Yearly Rental
23 Route 71, Manasquan NJ 08736
732-528-0597
Day, Evening & Saturday Classes
BROKERS CLASS FROM MARCH 21-APRIL 15 - ENROLL NOW!
E N R O “Mom
L L N OFriendly”
W F O R Schedule!
FA L L C L A S S E S !
9am - 2pm • 3-Week Course
Revolving Class Schedule - Start Anytime!
Call Denise at 732-528-0597 • www.gentryrealestateschool.com
E. Dogs, Cats, Pets
DOODLE DOG Daycare- Walking & sitting. Short or long term.
Your
house or mine. Refs.
upon
request.
Sandy
732-556-6292(h),
973-219-1295(c).
SPRING LAKE Hts.- Office for
rent. Perfect for a small business, art studio, accountant,
etc. Furnished, in great condition. Large private parking lot.
$750/mo. plus utilities. Please
call 732-539-3881.
(source: Monmouth/Ocean MLS)
KASTLE MORTGAGE
Salesperson and Broker Courses
SPRING LAKE Hts.- Homestead Gardens. Winter Special
1BR & 2BR avail. Newly renovated apts. w/luxury amenities.
Heat/water/cooking incl. Pet
friendly. 732-449-3270.
HomesteadGardensApts.com
#1 office in Pt. Pleasant/Pt. Pleasant Beach
combined sales 2008-2010
[email protected]
Licensed by the NJ Dept. of Banking & Insurance
SPRING LAKE Hts- Studio apt.
avail. immed. $700/mo. + utils.
Furnished or unfurnished. Refs.
& credit report req'd. Also avail.
Memorial Day thru Labor Day,
$6,000. Contact Henry Schwier
732-492-8655.
Completely renovated Ranch on great street.
Desirable east of canal neighborhood. New
kitchen, bath, heat, windows, refinished hardwood floors, 2 bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, bonus
family/playroom/laundry room/utility room. Car
port and nice shady backyard. All new appliances
included. Available immediately. $1,650/month
Call Michele @ 732-581-8133 (cell)
526 Bay Ave., Pt. Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742
Point Pleasant Beach Office
630 1/2 Arnold Avenue
732-295-0018
Point Pleasant Office
2204 Bridge Avenue
732-295-9600
[email protected]
[email protected]
www.dianeturton.com
PET WATCH Pet Sitting for
your pets’ needs. Vacations,
daily or occasional walks, medications given. Bonded, Insured.
Est. 1993, www.petwatchnj.com
Call Laura 732-899-8338.
POOPER
SCOOPERThe
Poop Police, LLC. “We walk the
beat for your clean feet.” Call
732-681-7500 or visit
www.thepoop-police.com.
THE PET Nanny while at work
or away. Daily walks. Will board
with conditions. Fully insured.
732-280-9452 or 732-233-4865.
F. Lost & Found
LOST - Large, black long-haired
Maine Coon cat w/long furry tail,
in Orchard Crest near bike path
and Atlantic Ave. Since Feb 17.
If
seen
please
call
732-528-8581.
MOVE-IN CONDITION
LAGUNA VILLAGE HOME WITH WATERVIEWS!
LOVINGLY MAINTAINED!
Point Pleasant. Updated 3 bedroom, 1 bath Ranch on a beautiful
corner! Professionally landscaped with sprinkler system and white
vinyl fence, hard lined gas grill and paver patio to entertain after a
long day at the beach or boardwalk... short distance to the park or
recreation center! $249,000. Call [732] 295-9600
Point Pleasant. Mint Laguna Village home is waiting for you! From
crown molding and hardwood floors on 1st floor, to updated kitchen
w/granite counters & ceramic tile floors - this home is perfection!
Spacious family room has fireplace & Pella sliders that open to large
deck, inground heated pol with wonderful water views. 55’ dock for
you boat or jet skis! Master bedroom has crown molding & new bath.
Walk-out attic offers storage or room for expansion. Bay Head Shores
Beach Club available to join w/clubhouse, tennis, etc. $465,000.
Call [732] 295-9600
Point Pleasant. Newer colonial boasts spacious rooms, eat-in
kitchen, gleaming hardwood floors throughout entire 1st floor, master bedroom with 2 walk-in closets & bath with whirlpool tub &
shower stall, finished basement w/built-in bar; great for entertaining! Family room features gas fireplace, sliders to deck with hot
tub, shed with electric & outdoor shower. Relax on "rocking chair"
front porch! Conveniently located near beaches, shopping &
schools! Move in & enjoy! $479,900. Call [732] 295-9600
G. Real Estate for Sale
SUMMER
RENTALS
BRIELLE- CHOICE wooded lots
in
Country
Club
section.
732-528-7708.
PT. PLEASANT- Office & garage/warehouse, Corner Rte. 88
& Arnold Ave. High visibility,
1,000SF. Reduced to $126,000
or best offer for quick sale.
732-245-9415.
MOVE RIGHT IN
GREAT OPPORTUNITY
PT. PLEASANT- Open House
Sun. 2/27, 1-4pm. 805 Dudley
Lane. $379,900 negotiable. Riverview w/riparian rights. 2BR,
1BA, newer kitchen, near
beach. 732-822-4529.
Point Pleasant. This is your Dream Home on the water with a new
roof on a dead end street, lovely treed lot, bulk-headed lagoon you
must come see for yourself. Get ready for the perfect day; breakfast
on the patio overlooking the lagoon; then coffee on the porch and a
chat with your neighbors; climb in the boat for a morning of fishing and crabbing on the bay or bike to the beach and take a nap.
Spend the evening on the boardwalk, and stay for the fireworks.
$415,000. Call [732] 295-0018
Brick. Large level prime corner property in desirable Sandy Point.
Location close to beach; is currently being operated as dog grooming business. Off-street parking for 10 cars. Heating and air conditioning system was redone in 2001. $379,000. Call [732] 295-0018
SPRING LAKE & Spring Lake
Hts. approved buildable lots.
$299,000-$725,000.
Call
732-890-2663.
WEEKLY, MONTHLY,
FULL SUMMERS
LARGE VARIETY OF HOMES
AVAILABLE
NO FEE TO TENANTS
CALL [732] 295-0018
[email protected]
PAGE 34
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
SPRING LAKE Hts.- Yearly.
1BR, W/D hookup, storage.
$1,025/mo., heat and cold water
included.
No
pets.
908-216-6537, 732-229-5212.
SPRING LAKE- Avail. beautifully furnished or unfurnished 4
offices, half bath, all utils. C/AC,
hwbb heat, 800SF. Avail. immed. Call for details Henry
Schwier cell 732-492-8655.
Henry S. Schwier, Inc. Realtor,
732-449-6200.
M. Help Wanted
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT- Excellent verbal & written comm. skills. Record keeping,
phone
responsibilities,
monthly reports & filing. Must be
proficient in Windows & Microsoft Office. Please fax resume
to 732-901-5595.
AIDE- 5 days, 2-6pm. Point
Pleasant Nursery School. Call
732-892-6940 in am.
SPRING LAKE- Beautiful 2BR
apt. in the heart of town. LR,
open kitchen/DR, HDWD flrs.,
porch, garage, C/AC. Truly a
“must see”. Avail. immediately,
$2,500/mo. includes heat. Bonnie
O’Malley
Realtor,
732-449-2424.
BEACH PATROL Supervisor
needed for Summer 2011 season in Ocean Beach. F/T position. Candidate will supervise &
schedule a staff of 6 badge
checkers & uphold the rules &
regulations of a private beach
club. Call 732-793-3798.
SPRING LAKE- Summer. 5BR,
3BA, 3 car attached garage,
off-street parking for 9, 900’
deck,
near
beach.
M-L.
$32,000. 732-604-3538.
CHHA/CNA/LPN- PER diem positions avail now. Excellent pay
& incentives. Monmouth &
Ocean counties. Call Shelley at
732-722-7800 x103.
SPRING LAKE- Summer. 6BR,
3BA, + den, on lake, very
nicely furnished, 2 car attached
garage, Avail. M-L. $42,000.
732-604-3538.
DRIVERS- CDL-A. Home every
weekend & more! Top paying
Burlington, NJ based regional
runs! FFE/Frozen Food Express. Please call Heath at
1-800-397-2508.
WALL- ATLANTIC Ave. Large 1
room
professional
office,
$600/mo. utils. included. Clayton
&
Clayton
Realtors
732-295-2222.
WALL- YEARLY. 4BR, 1BA
house. Recently renovated.
$1,800/mo.
includes
water,
landscaping and snow removal.
Call Sean 732-642-0900.
J. Real Estate Wanted
LOOKING TO rent 1 car (or
larger)
garage.
Call
908-413-1555.
K. Rooms & Board
ROOMS
AVAILABLE
from
$475-$600 per month in Ocean
Grove. Includes utils. and WiFi.
Call George 732-774-9444.
SPRING LAKE- Clean, quiet,
furnished
rooms,
shared
kitchen, some w/private bath. In
room: satellite TV, refrigerator,
microwave, A/C, WiFi; 3 blocks
from beach. Close to transportation. $165-$225/wk. year-round.
Call 732-974-2192.
F/T EXPERIENCED landscape
mason.
$16/hr.
Call
732-948-9971.
FULL
TIME
experienced
cleaner needed for Pt. Pleasant.
Must have vehicle to get around
to clean 3 locations. Excellent
starting wage. Contact Ray
Fecher at 609-655-5010.
IRRIGATION MANAGER - Responsible for repairing & maintaining all aspects of residential
& commercial irrigation systems
with minimum 5 yrs. experience.
Must have NJ driver’s license.
Irrigation License & bilingual
(Spanish) a plus. Fax resume to
732-901-5595.
LEGAL SECRETARY- Sea Girt.
Experience req’d. 9am-3pm,
M-F.
Fax
resume
732-974-1830, or
email
[email protected].
LIFEGUARD- POINT Pleasant
Beach. Assistant Manager position and lifeguard positions
available. Summer 2011. Call
732-295-2091.
MASSAGE THERAPIST- PT/FT
position
available,
flexible
hours. Hand and Stone Massage Spa, Brick. 732-714-6625,
e-mail
resume
to
[email protected].
NEW SALON/SPA, Pt. Pleasant. Talented, highly motivated,
experienced with following: Stylists, Estheticians, Manicurists,
Masseuse. 732-899-2202. Stylists needed for Sea Girt location, 732-282-1600.
OUTSIDE SALES RepresentativeStar
News
Group,
Manasquan and Point Pleasant
Beach, is currently accepting
applications for a full-time outside salesperson to sell advertising to area businesses. Sales
experience is a plus, but not required. Must be creative, energetic, willing to work hard under
deadline pressure and not
afraid
to cold call. Salary,
commissions, benefits, simple
IRA. Fax
resume
to
732-223-8212,
or
e-mail
[email protected].
P/T- MANASQUAN. Payroll
Processor. Must be experienced
& knowledgeable in all aspects.
Willing to work independently.
No benefits. Fax resume to
732-722-7716.
REAL ESTATE- Have you
dreamt of working at the beach?
Training + support. Call Frances
Graffeo, Mgr. Normandy Beach
office. 732-793-6484, Weichert
Realtors.
REAL ESTATE- Premier South
Monmouth Real Estate office
looking for self motivated people to join it's award winning
sales staff. Experienced or not,
we'll show you the path to success. Call for confidential interview 732-996-1506.
RECRUITING & Exec. Search
Professionals - We seek proven
track records & passion in
Tech/Telecom, IT, (Eng., SW,
Tech Mktg., Sales). Great support, systems, comp. & benefits.
Email:
[email protected]
www.commonagenda.com
SPRING LAKE Golf ClubFT/PT Line Cook, Server, Bartender. Excellent opportunity for
dynamic individuals to join prestigious golf club. 901 Warren
Ave., SLH. 732-449-8100.
SALES
ASSOCIATE/RECEPTIONIST- Hand & Stone Massage & Facial Spa, Brick Plaza
& Spring Lake is seeking right
person for P/T position. Candidate must have excellence in
Customer Service, strong selling & organizational skills. Millennium experience a plus.
Flexible nights & weekends
email
[email protected]
SEEKING INSIDE sales professional for engineering firm.
Great opportunity to represent
cutting edge engineering services and technology selling nationally. 732-232-2100,ext.2.
TWO F/T positions available in
a busy Optometry Practice: Optometric Assistant- Ideal candidate will have previous front
desk and vision screening experience. Must be self starter and
able to multitask; Optical SalesIdeal candidate will have optical
retail experience and product
knowledge
of
ophthalmic
frames and lenses. Both candidates must be able to work independently and as a team, and
interact positively with the public. Basic computer knowledge
and skills necessary.
Salary
commensurate with experience.
Benefits after 90 days.
No
phone calls. Please fax cover
letter indicating which position
you are applying for and resume to 732-974-6899 or email
to [email protected].
WE ARE seeking a motivated
and professional nail technician
for an upscale, trendy salon
in Brielle. Someone who is passionate about the industry!
We offer benefits.
E-mail
[email protected]
or fax resume to 732-223-5722.
P. Situations Wanted
CAREGIVER WILL take care of
you or your loved one.
Live-in/live-out, 6 yrs. experience, excellent refs. For more
details
please
call
732-232-2897 or 908-910-7752.
CAREGIVER/NURSE- 19 yrs.
experience. Honest, compassionate. Will provide excellent
care & all home needs. References
avail.
Call
Joan
732-770-5481.
EXPERIENCED MALE Caregiver looking for job taking care
of the elderly. Valid DL, references
avail.
Call
Giga
347-785-0554.
IRISH AMERICAN woman will
provide personal care & companionship in your home F/T or
P/T. 15yrs. experience, references,
reasonable
rates.
732-556-6276.
T. Instruction
CERTIFIED TEACHER- Avail.
to tutor Math/Language Arts,
grades 4-8. Call 732-974-8147
or visit colleenavery.com to view
professional experience & principals' letters of recommendation.
ENGLISH, SAT, ACT TutoringNeed help w/test prep., classroom work, college application
essays? Individualized instruction tailored for each student after personalized evaluation.
One to one feedback & teaching
that will interest & motivate each
pupil. Certified teacher, master’s
degree in English, doctorate in
jurisprudence. Over 25 yrs.
classroom & SAT experience.
Mensa
member,
published
author & journalist. Will travel to
your home. Edward Shakespeare. 732-757-6332.
GUITAR LESSONS- All levels,
reasonable, hours by appt.,
your home. 732-757-5072 Jared
M. Kimbrough.
Y. Services
ACCOMPLISHED
CARPENTER- All phases of construction.
Any interior/exterior repairs,
sheetrock, painting, trim. Excellent work, friendly. Very reasonable prices. 732-539-3626.
AFFORDABLE CLEAN-OUTS,
& Clean-ups! Single items/large
quantities. Friendly, reliable. 7
days/week. Best prices around.
Free estimates. Shore Removal
Service, 732-295-JUNK(5865).
AFFORDABLE,
RELIABLE
Handyman- 35yrs. experience.
Painting, carpentry, home repairs, renovations, etc. No job
too small! Dean 732-894-3356.
BEST GOLF- Individual or partner training for all ages and skill
levels; Titleist Performance Institute Trained Instructor; private local studio. Please call
David 732-841-8277 or email
[email protected].
CARPET REPAIR- Why replace
when I repair? Pet damage,
showing seams & carpet ripples. 732-920-3944. Please
leave name of town.
CLEAN-UP, DEMOLITION &
Hauling- Debris removal. Call
Randy Stoddard 732-751-9300
or 732-245-1474 (cell).
CLEANING SERVICE- Located
in Pt. Pleasant, serving Monmouth & Ocean County. Reliable, honest, excellent refs.
Call Margaret 908-910-5099
cell.
A SUMMER Wind Cleaning
Service- Home or office, 20 yrs.
exp. Owner supervised, fully insured, free estimates. Call Barbara, 732-458-2255.
DISCOUNT TELEPHONE Service, phone jacks, wiring, cable
TV outlets. Retired from N.J.
Bell 27 yrs. experience. Call
732-528-7535.
AB CLEANING Service- 1 time,
weekly,
biweekly,
monthly.
Residential/commercial,
windows. Tailored to meet your
needs.
Affordable/reliable.
Same maid each time. All supplies incl. Refs. avail. Serving
Monmouth & Ocean Counties.
Carmen 732-458-0104.
DON CARNEVALE PaintingSpecializing interiors. Very neat.
Prompt, courteous service. Reasonable/affordable. Quality always. Low winter rates. Area
since 1980. Licensed, insured.
Free Estimates. 732-899-4470.
HOME HEALTH Care- 11yrs.
experience. Caring worker, own
car. References avail. Call for
help.732-948-4665.
ABOVE & Beyond Cleaning
Pros- Home or office. Honest,
reliable, fully insured. All employees English speaking. Free
estimates. 732-547-7944.
DOORS/WINDOWS- PROFESSIONAL Home Services specializing in Andersen, all home
repairs,
remodels & water
leaks.
www.prohomeserviceinc.com.
Call Jerry 732-829-6109.
REGISTERED NURSE avail.
for home care. Excellent with
post-op care, aging adults or
care after hospital discharge.
Ostomy care also. Refs. avail.
upon request. Please call Pat
732-449-5665 or email at
[email protected].
AFFORDABLE + ProfessionalJeannette's Cleaning Services.
Free estimates. Fully insured.
Residential/commercial.
Reasonable rates. Cleaning weekly,
biweekly, monthly. Excellent
refs. Call 732-449-6882 or
732-223-6661.
PRICELESS FITNESS- Spring
into action with personalized fitness training. Private, state of
art local studio. Individual, partner group rates available. You
are worth it! Please call David
732-841-8277
or
email
[email protected].
MARY HOLDER
Owner/Broker
OWNED AND OPERATED BY MARY HOLDER
WALL
OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2/27 12-3PM
WALL
ADULT COMMUNITY
140 Clark Avenue
Ocean Grove
JAMES ZANOWICK
WILLIAM “BILL”
MCCABE
LINDA CURRY
Realtor Associate
Realtor Associate
DENISE OLIVER
Broker Associate
Realtor Associate
The Classics never go out of style! Colonial in the
Country Club section of Brielle features new custom
kitchen, 4-5 bedrooms, family room with fireplace,
walkout finished basement has built in entertainment
center, bar and “visitors suite”. Call for more information. Asking $595,000.
Call 732-223-4500
Mint condition 2-family, spacious Shore Colonial on
double corner lot. Upgraded kitchen/baths, windows
replaced. Parking no problem in this tranquil area of
town. Short distance to train & beach. Upstairs apartment
offers additional income. Asking $552,500.
DIR: Rt 71 to Stockton. Turn onto Stockton, go 2 blocks to L on
Benson, go 2 blocks to house on the corner of Clark & Benson.
Call 732-449-9590
Located in the highly sought after “Manasquan Park”
section of Wall. From the moment you step into the two
story foyer you will marvel at the welcoming feel of
this “Rocking Chair Front Porch” Colonial. Close to
the beach, neighborhood park and the river. $559,900
Call 732-223-4500
NEW PRICE!
STEPS TO THE OCEAN!
POINT PLEASANT WATERFRONT
HELEN COCUZZA
JOANNE BOSTON
JOYCE ISAZA
Realtor Associate
Realtor Associate
Realtor Associate
Brick. Two prices! Your choice - finish it
yourself or buy it finished! Custom builder can
completely remodel this 2BR/2BA Alpine
model in Greenbriar II to suit your needs. All BRETT CRANE
ideas negotiable! Great neighborhood and pri- Realtor Associate
vate location backing up to woods. $169,900.
Call 732-899-4224
NEW PRICE IN TOMS RIVER
JACQUELYN
DRAGOTTO
Realtor Associate
Brick. Fully updated 4BR home in Herbertsville w/new
2.5BA, windows, vinyl siding, roof, C/A and high effic.
gas heating system. Kitchen w/new floor, counter & appl.
Hdwd floors thru-out. 2 bonus rooms and media area in
basement. 2-car garage, 2-level deck and above-ground
pool in fenced yard! ACT NOW! $395,000.
Call 732-899-4224
4 bedroom, 2 bath home in Ortley Beach! Possible 2 family. On a 60 x 70 lot. Large deck and yard for entertaining.
Many updates. Near tennis, park, mini-golf, amusements
and water park. 10 miles from GSP. $529,900.
Call 732-295-9799
Waterfront! 4BR, 2BA home, on a cul-de-sac, in Laguna
Village. Limitless water views from almost every window.
Great room w/fireplace for chilly winter evenings, i-g
pool for summer fun! Kitchen made for entertaining w/15'
granite island, wet bar and Viking appliances. $889,000.
Call 732-295-9799
Live on one Level! Lovely & well maintained 3 BR, 2BA
Ranch home. Inside Enjoy a den, updated eat-in-kitchen
& family room, attic & 2 car garage. Outside enjoy
fenced rear yard with patio backing to County Park. A
great space for the family! Convenient to beaches, shopping and parkway. $264,999.
Call 732-449-3113
520 Main Avenue
Bay Head, NJ 08742
732-295-9799
620 Arnold Avenue
Pt. Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742
732-899-4224
530 Washington Boulevard
Sea Girt, NJ 08750
732-449-9590
1225 Third Avenue
Spring Lake, NJ 07762
732-449-3113
2441 Highway 34
Wall, NJ 08736
732-223-4500
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
www.maryholder.com
PAGE 35
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
Y. Services
GARY’S LAWN Care- Our 31st
year, family operated. Most
phases of landscape work, leaf
clean-ups. Call 732-899-5346.
GRACE SULLIVAN Professional
Cleaning Service. 38
years serving the shore. Owner
supervised. Honest, reliable,
reasonable. Fully insured, free
estimates/refs. 732-280-1087.
MAP TRUCKING LTD- Small
jobs welcome. Tri-State, Hamptons,
Jersey Shore. 28yrs.
experienced
&
insured.
www.maptruckingltd.com,
908-654-6940.
HOUSE CLEANING DONE by 2
reliable ladies. English & Polish
speaking, refs. provided. Satisfaction always guaranteed. Call
732-773-6749.
PERSONAL DRIVER- Need a
ride to local airport or for any
other reason? Dependable,
great
rates.
Call
Sandy
732-556-6292.
Less than
BOB FALANA
23
Days til Spring
www.
specialized-pools.com
R/HVAC
732-691-0218
Radiant Heat • Heating
Air Conditioning
Service • Repairs
Installation
Weichert
Congratulations to the Top
Weichert Realtors Agents for 2010
for the Point Pleasant Beach Office
[email protected]
Childers
JEFFREY CHILDERS
Sharon Madden
Reneé Henrich
Sales Representative
Sales Representative
Sales Representative
Top Listing & Sales Agent
2010
Top Producer for 2010
Rookie of the Year 210
Melanie Somonski
OPEN HOUSE SUN 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM
OPEN HOUSE SUN 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM
#2 Sotheby’s International Realty
Agent in Ocean County &
Southern Monmouth County
(SOURCE: MONMOUTH/OCEAN MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE STATISTICS 12/1/09 TO 12/31/10)
NJAR CIRCLE OF EXCELLENCE
SALES AWARD RECIPIENT
BRICK - Leave
your
stress
outside.
Immaculate, updated end unit Townhouse. 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, bright and airy, lakes for
fishing,pool for summer fun. Nothing to do but
unpack. $180,000 MLS#21105613. DIR: Route
70 to Van Zile to right on Central all the way
to left on Brandywine #119.
BRICK - Spacious unit well maintained. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Part finished basement.
Newer furnace, A/C unit, carpet & kitchen counters. Lots of storage. $179,900 MLS#21034698.
DIR: Herborn R On North Gate R. on North
Loop Ivanna to Linda #526.
OPEN HOUSE SUN 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM
BRICK - 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, fireplace, 2-car
garage. Extensive landscaping. Updated kitchen,
back pavor patio. Must see! $425,000. DIR: Route
70 to Van Zile to left on Lake Rd, left on Paula
Court #2.
2010
SILVER
To join our successful team of agents,
call Karen for a confidential interview 732.899.9700.
2009
BRONZE
Point Pleasant Beach Office
600 Richmond Avenue
Invite Us In - We’ll Bring Results
(732) 899-9700
Your Trusted, Local Realtor
Serving Monmouth & Ocean Counties
- Since 1980 Email: [email protected]
Phone: 732-793-5500 Ext. 13
OPEN HOUSE - 1-3PM - SUNDAY
604 WINDING RIVER ROAD - BRICK
www.ChildersSIR.com
___________________________
OCEAN COUNTY
SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of the above stated
writ, to me directed, issued out of
the SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW
JERSEY, CHANCERY DIVISION Docket No. F3877709 will
be exposed to sale at public venue
on TUESDAY the 15TH DAY OF
MARCH, A.D. 2011 between the
hours of 12 o’clock and 5 o’clock
(at 2 o’clock) Prevailing Time in
the afternoon of said day at the
Office of the Sheriff, Toms River,
Township of Toms River, County
of Ocean, New Jersey.
All that tract or parcel of land
and premises, situate, lying and
being in the TOWNSHIP OF
BRICK, County of Ocean and
State of New Jersey.
Street and Street No.:
224 SAWMILL ROAD
Tax Lot and Block No.:
LOT: 10, C-424
BLOCK: 1386
The Dimensions:
APPROXIMATELY:
NONE GIVEN (CONDO
UNIT)
Nearest Cross Street:
NONE GIVEN (CONDO
UNIT)
The above description does not
constitute a full legal description,
said description is filed at the
Office of the Sheriff, 120 Hooper
Avenue, Toms River, NJ.
THE SHERIFF HEREBY
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
ADJOURN THIS SALE WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION.
PRIOR LIENS OF AFFIDAVIT: NONE
*SUBJECT
TO
ANY
UNPAID TAXES, MUNICIPAL
LIENS, OR OTHER CHARGES,
AND
ANY SUCH TAXES,
CHARGES, LIENS, INSURANCE PREMIUMS OR OTHER
ADVANCES MADE BY PLAINTIFF PRIOR TO THIS SALE.
ALL INTERESTED PARTIES
ARE TO CONDUCT AND RELY
UPON THEIR OWN INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION TO
ASCERTAIN WHETHER OR
NOT ANY OUTSTANDING
INTEREST
REMAIN
OF
RECORD AND/OR HAVE PRIORITY OVER THE LIEN BEING
FORECLOSED AND IF SO THE
CURRENT AMOUNT DUE
THEREON.
**IF THE SALE IS SET
ASIDE FOR ANY REASON,
THE PURCHASER, AT THE
SALE SHALL BE ENTITLED
ONLY A RETURN OF THE
DEPOSIT PAID, THE PURCHASER SHALL HAVE NO
FURTHER
RECOURSE
AGAINST THE MORTGAGOR,
THE MORTGAGOR’S ATTORNEY.
***PURSUANT TO NJSA
46:8B-21 ET SEQ., THIS SALE
MAY BE SUBJECT TO A LIMITED LIEN PRIORITY OF THE
CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION AND ANY SUCCESSFUL
BIDDER AT SHERIFF’S SALE
MAY BE RESPONSIBLE FOR
PAYING UP TO 6 MONTHS
WORTH OF UNPAID CONDO-
MINIUM FEES.
The amount of the judgement
to be satisfied by said sale is the
sum of $133,995.98 more or less,
plus interest.
Surplus Money: If after the
sale and satisfaction of the mortgage debt, including costs and
expenses, there remains any surplus money, the money will be
deposited into the Superior Court
Trust Fund and any person claiming the surplus, or any part thereof,
may file a motion pursuant to
Court Rules 4:64-3 and 4:57-2
stating the nature and extent of that
person’s claim and asking for an
order directing payment of the surplus money. The Sheriff or other
person conducting the sale will
have information regarding the
surplus, if any.
May be subject to an
Ordinance by the Ocean County
Board of Health: 87-01, Section
10. The Sheriff’s Department will
require notification of the certification of the wells where applicable.
The Sheriff shall deduct his
fees, costs and commissions of
sale from the total amount bid at
the sale.
A 20% deposit (cash or certified funds) is required from the
Successful Bidder at the time of
sale.
Seized as the property of
STEPHEN J. PACZKOWSKI, and
taken in execution at the suit of
CITIMORTGAGE, INC., to be
sold by William L. Polhemus,
Sheriff.
This sale is subject to postponement without further notice.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Phelan Hallinan & Schmleg,
PC
400 Fellowship Rd.
Suite 100
Mt. Laurel, NJ
08054
Sheriff’s Docket:
CH 764655
(2/18, 2/25, 3/4, 3/11)
($187.44) (142)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
OCEAN COUNTY
SHERIFF’S SALE
By virtue of the above stated
writ, to me directed, issued out of
the SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW
JERSEY, CHANCERY DIVISION Docket No. F2128408, will
be exposed to sale at public venue
on TUESDAY the 15TH DAY OF
MARCH, A.D. 2011 between the
hours of 12 o’clock and 5 o’clock
(at 2 o’clock) Prevailing Time in
the afternoon of said day at the
Office of the Sheriff, Toms River,
Township of Toms River, County
of Ocean, New Jersey.
All that tract or parcel of land
and premises, situate, lying and
being in the BOROUGH OF SEASIDE PARK, County of Ocean
and State of New Jersey.
Street and Street No.:
106-108
STOCKTON
AVENUE
Tax Lot and Block No.:
LOT: 11
BLOCK: 82
The Dimensions:
APPROXIMATELY:
100.00 FT X 50.00 FT X
100.00 FT X 50.00 FT
Nearest Cross Street:
WEST CENTRAL AVENUE
The above description does not
constitute a full legal description,
said description is filed at the
Office of the Sheriff, 120 Hooper
Avenue, Toms River, NJ.
THE SHERIFF HEREBY
RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
ADJOURN THIS SALE WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION.
PRIOR LIENS OF AFFIDAVIT: NONE
*SUBJECT TO ANY OPEN
TAXES, MUNICIPAL LIENS,
OR OTHER CHARGES, AND
ANY SUCH TAXES, CHARGES,
LIENS, INSURANCE PREMIUMS OR OTHER ADVANCES
MADE BY PLAINTIFF PRIOR
TO THIS SALE. ALL INTERESTED PARTIES ARE TO CONDUCT AND RELY UPON
THEIR OWN INDEPENDENT
INVESTIGATIONS TO ASCERTAIN WHETHER OR NOT ANY
OUTSTANDING
INTEREST
REMAIN OF RECORD AND/OR
HAVE PRIORITY OVER THE
LIEN BEING FORECLOSED
AND IF SO THE CURRENT
AMOUNT DUE THEREON.
**IF THE SALE IS SET
ASIDE FOR ANY REASON,
THE PURCHASER, AT THE
SALE SHALL BE ENTITLED
ONLY A RETURN OF THE
DEPOSIT PAID, THE PURCHASER SHALL HAVE NO
FURTHER
RECOURSE
AGAINST THE MORTGAGOR,
THE MORTGAGOR’S ATTORNEY.
The amount of the judgement
to be satisfied by said sale is the
sum of $823,282.15 more or less,
plus interest.
Surplus Money: If after the
sale and satisfaction of the mortgage debt, including costs and
expenses, there remains any surplus money, the money will be
deposited into the Superior Court
Trust Fund and any person claiming the surplus, or any part thereof,
may file a motion pursuant to
Court Rules 4:64-3 and 4:57-2
stating the nature and extent of that
person’s claim and asking for an
order directing payment of the surplus money. The Sheriff or other
person conducting the sale will
have information regarding the
surplus, if any.
May be subject to an
Ordinance by the Ocean County
Board of Health: 87-01, Section
10. The Sheriff’s Department will
require notification of the certification of the wells where applicable.
The Sheriff shall deduct his
fees, costs and commissions of
sale from the total amount bid at
the sale.
A 20% deposit (cash or certified funds) is required from the
Successful Bidder at the time of
sale.
Seized as the property of
CARLOS HERRARA, and taken
in execution at the suit of BANK
UNITED, FSB, to be sold by
William L. Polhemus, Sheriff.
www.wardwight.com
This sale is subject to postponement without further notice.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Phelan Hallinan & Schmleg,
PC
400 Fellowship Rd.
Suite 100
Mt. Laurel, NJ
08054
Sheriff’s Docket:
CH 764652
(2/18, 2/25, 3/4, 3/11)
($170.28) (129)
The Ocean Star
___________________________
BOROUGH OF
LAVALLETTE
ORDINANCE NO. 2011-01
(1091)
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
BOROUGH OF LAVALLETTE,
IN THE COUNTY OF OCEAN,
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
AMENDING CHAPTER 7 OF
THE
CODE
ENTITLED
“BATHING AND BEACH
CONTROL” SO AS TO
ESTABLISH A PERMIT FOR
COMMERCIAL FOR-PROFIT
ACTIVITIES ON PLACES OF
PUBLIC RESORT.
BE IT ORDAINED by the
Mayor and Borough Council of
the Borough of Lavallette, in the
County of Ocean, State of New
Jersey, as follows:
Deletions are shown by
strikethrough; additions are shown
by underline.
SECTION 1. § 7-1 of the
Code of the Borough of Lavallette,
entitled “Places of resort established” is hereby amended and
supplemented to add the tennis
courts and ice skating rink to the
list of places of resort. Section § 71C and D shall read as follows:
§ 7-1. Places of resort established.
D. All municipal land commonly known and used as a
municipal tennis court.
E. All municipal facilities
located on municipal land and
commonly called the municipal
ice skating rink.
SECTION 2. § 7-9 of the
Code of the Borough of Lavallette,
entitled “Fees for use of beach and
facilities” is hereby amended and
supplemented to establish a permit
for commercial For-profit activities on places of public resort.
Section § 7-1F shall read as follows:
§ 7-1. Fees for use of beaches
and facilities.
F. The Borough of Lavallette
Borough Council recognizes that
commercial for-profit individuals
and business entities have increasingly sought to use such places of
resort for activities which encourage physical well-being and
healthy competition against oneself and other participants.
However, the use of such public
facilities and places of resort has
increasingly placed a strain on
municipal resources, including
employee overtime, cleanup
expenses and maintenance expenses. A permit shall be required to
be obtained by any commercial
for-profit organization or individual for the use of any of the places
Charles
Capone
CUSTOM RIVERFRONT COLONIAL
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Newer gourmet kitchen with custom cabinets,
granite countertops and top of the line appliances. Family room with custom built-ins, master suite with fireplace. Bonus 1670 sq ft of living space on lower level. Riparian rights with
permit. $1,695,000, Dir: Herbertsville Rd West
to R. on Winding River Road, 732-449-3322
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R. into Hidden Harbor (before bridge), 732449-5959
901 Main Street, Belmar
732-681-0027
Carol
Taylor Leon
Fred
Fialkowski
206 East Main St., Manasquan, NJ 522 Washington Blvd., Sea Girt, NJ
732-223-2266
732-449-5959
1117 Third Ave., Spring Lake, NJ
732-449-3322
EXCELLENCE IN REAL ESTATE SINCE 1972
of resort set forth in §7.1(A-E) for
any commercial for-profit activity
such as a lesson, class, school, race
or competition, time trial, triathlon
or biathlon, and regardless
whether such commercial or forprofit activity is offered on a regular or irregular schedule and
regardless whether such commercial or for-profit activity is conducted on a single day or on a
series of days.
(1) The commercial for-profit
applicant for a permit shall complete an application stating the
principal office of the application
and describing the activity(ies)
proposed to be conducted and the
date(s) and time(s) thereof, the
number of expected participants,
and the name, telephone number
and email if known of the person
or persons who will in charge of
conducting the activity(s) on the
date(s) and time(s) of the proposed
event. The Borough may impose
additional information requirements in the application from time
to time, including but not limited
to a waiver of insurance subrogation.
(2) The commercial for-profit
applicant for a permit shall provide a certificate of insurance for
the activity described in the application naming the Borough of
Lavallette as an additional insured,
or a confirmation that the commercial for-profit applicant has insurance for the activity(s) described
in the application which covers the
Borough of Lavallette for any general risk.
(3) The commercial for-profit
applicant shall require that all of
its participants shall obtain a minimum of daily use beach permits as
described in § 7.9(A) if the participant will be present on any place
of resort requiring a beach badge,
in addition to the application and
permit activity fees set forth herein.
(4) The commercial for-profit
applicant shall pay the fees for the
application as otherwise required,
including but not limited to any
deposit for cleanup and/or damages, and in addition shall pay a
permit activity fee of ten percent
(10%) of gross revenues collected
for the activity(s). Such additional
fee shall be paid by the commercial for profit applicant within ten
(10) days of the last date of the
event and shall be paid into the
General Revenue of the Borough
of Lavallette.
(5) The Borough Council, by
resolution in January of each year
subsequent to the year of adoption
of this Ordinance and its effective
date, may adjust the percentage of
gross revenue set forth in § 9.7(F)
without enacting a revised
Ordinance, but in no case shall the
percentage of gross revenue be
adjusted more than one percent
(1%) at any time.
SECTION 3. § 7-10 of the
Code of the Borough of Lavallette,
entitled “Right to use beach” is
hereby amended and supplemented to establish the exception for
commercial for-profit permits.
Section § 7-10A shall read as follows:
§ 7-1. Fees for use of beaches
and facilities.
A. With the exception of commercial for-profit permits issued
pursuant to § 7.9(F), Iit shall be a
violation of this section for any
person, firm, corporation or other
entity to sell, or otherwise
exchange for money or other valuable consideration, any privilege,
right, interest, badge, ticket,
license or other tangible evidence
issued by the Borough pursuant to
§ 7.9 authorizing the use of the
oceanfront and bayfront beaches,
bathing and recreational facilities.
SECTION 4. All ordinances
or parts of ordinances inconsistent
herewith are hereby repealed.
SECTION 5. If any section,
subsection, sentence, clause,
phrase or portion of this ordinance
is for any reason held to be invalid
or unconstitutional by a court of
competent jurisdiction, such portion shall be deemed a separate,
distinct and independent provision, and such holding shall not
affect the validity of the remaining
portion hereof.
SECTION 6. This ordinance
shall take immediately upon its
enactment after second reading
and publication as required by law.
NOTICE
ORDINANCE NO. 2011-01
(1091)
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
BOROUGH OF LAVALLETTE,
IN THE COUNTY OF OCEAN,
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
AMENDING CHAPTER 7 OF
THE
CODE
ENTITLED
“BATHING AND BEACH
CONTROL” SO AS TO
ESTABLISH A PERMIT FOR
COMMERCIAL FOR-PROFIT
ACTIVITIES ON PLACES OF
PUBLIC RESORT.
NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN that the foregoing ordinance was introduced and passed
by the Borough Council on first
reading at a meeting held on
February 7, 2011. It was further
considered for second reading and
final passage at a meeting of the
Borough Council held on the 22nd
day of February, 2011 at 7:00 pm
at the Council Chambers in the
Municipal Building Complex
located at 1306 Grand Central
Avenue, Lavallette, New Jersey at
which time and place persons
desiring to be heard upon the same
were given the opportunity to be
heard.
Said Ordinance was duly
adopted on the 22nd day of
February, 2011 and shall take
effect upon publication as required
by law.
CHRISTOPHER F. PARLOW
Municipal Clerk
($76.89) (233) (2/25)
The Ocean Star
PAGE 36
THE OCEAN STAR, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2011
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