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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 39

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
39
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MID(lHllfei The Record SUNDAY. JANUARY 11, 1967 A3d -Sit ft. i -v, A Around Town i. i If Second prize Peter Nassar, Tenafly High School Third prize Kirs ten Groseclose and Douglas Yasso, Ridgewood High School Honorable mention Damion Adams, Dwight Morrow High School; Cara Cherry and Jon Freiberger, Tenafly High School; and David Rapuano, Ridgewood High School. In drama: First prize Paul Sapp, Pascack Valley High School Second prize Erica Fox, Northern Valley Regional High School, Demarest Third prize Jeff Janisheski, Don Bosco High SchooL "Who is a Jew Patrilineal or Matrilineal Descent" win be the topic of a dialogue at 8 p.m.

Tuesday at Temple Sholom, 385 Howland River Edge. The program, sponsored by the temple Brotherhood, will feature Rabbi Martin Freedman, spiritual leader of Barnert Memorial Temple in Paterson, and Rabbi David Feldman, spiritual leader of the Teaneck Jewish Center. Rabbi Freedman holds bachelor's and master's de-trees from New York University and Columbia University, respectively. Be was ordained a rabbi and awarded a doctor of divinity degree by Hebrew Union College. Rabbi Feldman holds a bachelor's degree from Ye-" shiva University and a rabbinic degree from the Jewish -Theological Seminary, where he has been a visiting professor.

He also holds a doctorate in Jewish law from Yeshiva University. For information about the program, call 489-2463. (Ml Basheva Goldberg will lead a Jewish study group at the Jewish Community Center on the Palisades, 411 E. Clinton Tenafly. The 10-session program will focus on Jewish holidays and home practices, the Jewish approach to love and marriage, and how to help children and adolescents develop a strong Jewish identity.

Round-table discussions will be supplemented by slide shows, hands-on demonstrations of traditional recipes and crafts, handouts, and field trips. The series, which will meet 1:30 to 3 p.m. Wednesdays beginning this week, is made possible by the Henry and Beate Voremberg Institute of Jewish Studies at JCC on the Palisades. Cost is $35 for center members and $45 for others. Those interested may call 569-7900.

Staff photos by Ed Hifl Signs of peace. Sections of the Peace Ribbon, which were tied together to form a continuous circle around the Pentagon in August 1985, are on display through Jan. 25 at the Cottage Place Gallery of the Ridgewood Unitarian Society, 122 Cottage Place. A special opening reception from 2 to 4 this afternoon will honor the peace cause and Sister Marie Varley, state coordinator of the project Cosponsoring the exhibit is the society's art committee, chaired by Ethel Toan of Saddle River, and the social responsibilities committee, headed by Barbara Goldberg of Glen Rock. The ribbon idea was born when a former Chicago schoolteacher, while on a silent retreat, envisioned a ribbon around the Pentagon as a "gentle reminder that we love the earth and its people." Composed of handmade needlework panes 18 by 36 inches each, the ribbon was created by individuals and groups from across the United States and foreign countries.

Sister Marie, a member of the Dominican sisters at St Catherine's Convent in Caldwell, also is assistant director for Church World Service of New Jersey, which sponsors CROP walks to fight hunger. The display can be viewed weekday mornings and by appointment. Those interested are asked to call the church at 444-6225. The Friends of the Tenafly Public Library annual meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Sandlot showdown Leonard Hansen will take armchair travelers on a glide tour of Norway and Sweden Tuesday at the Englewood Library.

The following Tuesday, Gordon Rapp will present a slide lecture on Japan. Both shows begin at 8 p.m. A certified financial manager from the Wayne office of Merrill Lynch will discuss "Financial Survival for Women: The Basics," when the Sisterhood of the Bergenfield-Dumont Jewish Center meets at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in the temple annex at 165 N. Washington Ave.

in Bergenfield. Guests are welcome. Major league baseball may come to Lyndhurst, so why shouldn't a Connecticut sandlot football team come to Lodi's Memorial Park to play That's where the South Main Street STAR, a four-man team from Wallingford, faced off with the Passaic Avenue Panthers. At top, Panthers David Montalvo, Bert Nance, Jesus Martinez, and Berto Rivera in the huddle. They all work at the Lodi Boys and Girls Club.

At left, QB John Bozzi of the STAR is pursued by Martinez. Three Bozzi brothers and their father make up Hie team, which has been playing together since 1969. The Camera Club of Fair Lawn will present "Winter As I See It," a slide show by Dr. Aubrey Crich, at its 8 p.m. meeting Tuesday in Room B-122 of Fair Lawn High School on Berdan Avenue.

Admission is free and open to all. For information, call Ray Grauer at 791-9021. The literature department of the Woman's Club of Tenafly will meet at the home of Mary Wade at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. Anyone interested in joining the club may call membership chairwoman Estelle Katzel at Twenty-seven high school students have been named winners of the 1986 Bergen County Writing-Contest, sponsored by Bergen Community College.

More than 300 entries in the categories of poetry, essay, short story, and drama were judged by Drs. Geoffrey Sadock and Alfred McDowell, humanities professors at the college. The winners were honored at a luncheon on the Paramus campus. Those who took honors for poetry are: First prize Edward Zdanek, Dumont High School. Second prize Jeff Janisheski, Don Bosco High School, Ramsey, Sam Lipsyte, Northern Valley Regional High School, Demarest; and Halice Ruppi, Dwight Morrow High School, Englewood.

Third prize Katie Johnson, Waldwick High School; and Millys Lee, Pascack Hills High School, Mont-vale. Honorable mention Andrea Bottigliero, Tena-fly High School; Jessica Henry, Dumont High School; and Heather Wood, Dwight-Englewood School Honors in the essay division went to: First prize Vicki Messineo, Ridgewood High School. Second prize Michael Dellamico, Ridgewood High School; and Jason Lewis, Pascack Valley High School, Hillsdale. Third prize William Yeh, Ridgewood High School. Honorable mention John Aronsohn, Michelle LeRoy, and William McCarthy, Ramapo High School, Franklin Lakes.

Winners in the short story category are: First prize Sam Lipsyte, Northern Valley Regional High School, Demarest New Milford parents are invited to attend Tuesday's PTO meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the middle school library. Mary Lou Hamill assistant director of education for school services, will discuss the education program available on the New Jersey Network. VIM. The JCC Playreading Group will present one or two short plays as staged readings at 8 p.m.

Wednesday in the library of the Jewish Community Center on the Palisades, 411 E. Clinton Tenafly. Coffee will be served for those who would like to stay for discussion with the actors. There is no charge. For information, call Lowell Zimmer at 569-7900.

EVELYN LAUER j( Time Out 1 I deal with functions of the brain and touch on stress, aging, memory, and reaction to drugs. In addition to viewing the programs, students will be required to complete reading assignments, take tests, and attend five on-campus seminars. Tuition for each three-credit course is $117.30. Those interested may call the college's Office of Public Media Programming at 447-7145. LORRAINE MATYS casts will begin the week of Jan.

26. Business, marketing, computers, sociology, history, psychology, and anthropology are just some of the fields covered by the courses, which include "Planet Earth," a study of the state of our planet; "Economics USA," a series designed to explain different microeconomic theories; "The Growing Years," covering child development, from fetus through adolescent; and "Brain, Mind, and Behavior," which will Here's an opportunity to earn college credit while learning at home. Working adults, parents with young children, and others unable to attend regular classes at Bergen Community College may view courses on public television, selected cable systems, or tapes that will be available in the library on the Paramus campus. The TV broad People In addition to the center's programs for children, a craft unit in Hackensack is available for disabled adults. Contributions may be sent to The Cerebral Palsy Center Bergen County, 241 N.

Dien Ridgewood, N.J. 07450. districts. At stake are scholarships and a chance to compete in the national contest Miss Calhoun is president of her school's National Honor Society chapter. A National Merit Scholarship commended student she participates in her student council and on the school newspaper staff.

Frank L. Raimondo of Tenafly has been elected chairman of the Bergen Community College board of trustees, heading a slate of officers including Gertrude D. Schwimmer of Teaneck, vice-chairwoman; Violet Etler of Fair Lawn, treasurer, and Charles E. Reid of Paramus, secretary. William Davenport of Leonia will represent the student body on the board for a one-year term.

Executive vice-president of C. Raimondo and Sons Construction Company, Raimondo. previously was an administrator in the Fort Lee public school system. A high school teacher, then assistant superintendent of schools, Raimondo is ccfounder and a member of the board of the Fort Lee Council for Youth and Community. Both the Fort Lee chapter of UNICO National and the Eorgn County Catholic Youth Organization have named him Man of the Year.

Raimondo has a maker's degree from Teachers College of Columbia University. LORRAINE MATYS Dara Feiler of Montvale and Nicholas Cirillo of Lodi have been chosen "1987 Campaign Children of The Cerebral Palsy Center Bergen County Inc." Six-year-old Dara and 9-year-old Nicholas, both in treatment at the Ridgewood-based center, will help promote the annual fund drive, which makes services to more than 100 youngsters possible. Through photographs and al appearances, they'll represent the progress that youngsters with cerebral palsy can make with the center's help. Dara began therapy at the center when she was 1V4 years old. She no longer uses a walker and is able to participate in a public-school main-streaming program.

Nicholas is able to attend public school thanks to the progress he has made. It may seem like yesterday, but Rosalyn and Morris Koval of Teaneck were married 45 years ago. Rabbi Jacob Danishefsky conducted their wedding ceremony at Huppert House in Jersey City. In celebration of the anniversary, the Kovals' three sons and their wives treated the couple to a Broadway show, then surprised them with a dinner at a New York City restaurant The Kovals have four grandchildren. LORRAINE MATYS Rutherford High School senior Beth Calhoun has won first place in the annual District Two "Voice of Democracy," taking top honors among secondary-school students sponsored by 23 VFW posts in Bergen County.

Miss Calhoun will go on to represent Rutherford Post 227 and the district in the state competition, which will be held at McGuire Air Force Base. The winner will be announced at a Jan. 17 dinner honoring students who placed first in the 21 i Frati L. Raimondo Chairman of BCC trustees.

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Pages Available:
3,310,431
Years Available:
1898-2024