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>Cupcakes by Carousel Opens in Ridgewood, N.J.

>cupcakes1

https://lizjohnson.lohudblogs.com/2009/07/08/cupcakes-by-carousel-opens-in-ridgewood-nj/

The new cupcake shop by Carousel Cakes of Nanuet opened on July 1 at 192 East Ridgewood Ave., Ridgewood, N.J. 201-389-3090. Hours: Open every day at 10AM, late nights Tuesday, Friday and Saturday.

Taking a chance on a new business in a recession takes a lot of confidence. But Carousel Cakes is sure that their new venture, Cupcakes by Carousel, will be a big success.

After selling 7” and 10” cakes wholesale for almost 30 years the owners of Carousel Cakes Nancy and David Finkelstein and Nancy’s brother Howy Lefkowitz never thought they’d become a retail enterprise. The family decided that it’s time to branch out from the family bakery business, founded by their father in 1965, and open a sister company, a cupcake shop in Ridgewood, New Jersey to sell mini-versions of their 7” and 10” cake creations.

Coming Soon to Ridgewood, NJ. Our new Cupcakes by Carousel store!
“Cupcakes are hot!” says Nancy Finkelstein, co-owner and director of sales and marketing for Carousel Cakes “There are no retailers in Bergen County that just sell cupcakes, and many of our cupcakes customers will be converted into cake customers. Cupcakes will provide customers an entrée into our cake business. Buying a cupcake is an easy and inexpensive way to sample a Carousel Cake, once they’ve tried our cupcakes they’re sure to come back to purchase one of our 7” or 10” cakes for those special occasions, weddings, birthdays and holidays. Cupcakes by Carousel is a natural extension of our wholesale cake business.”
Carousel Cakes has a long history of making fine desserts; they sell their cakes to more than 300 restaurants in the tri-state area. Local restaurants and gourmet grocers include Zeytinia Fine Food Marketplace in Oakland and Englewood, Aldo & Gianni Ristorante in Montvale, Valentino’s of Park Ridge, the Clinton Inn Hotel in Tenafly. Manhattan customers include Zabar’s, the private Friars Club, EJ’s Luncheonette and the American Museum of Natural History.

There will be a cupcake version of Carousel’s red velvet cake, one of Oprah’s “O” List favorites
Cupcakes by Carousel now offering a full range of cupcakes. We have mousse-filled cupcakes, mini-cupcakes sold by the dozen and jumbo cupcakes for two. Also traditional frosted cupcakes and those piled high with crumbled cookies or candy. We have cupcake versions of Carousel’s different lines of white, mousse and chocolate cakes and the red velvet cake that made it onto Oprah Winfrey’s “O” list of her favorite things in her magazine’s February 2007 issue. The company became famous after the Oprah Winfrey magazine placement, receiving 1,500 orders that month for its new red velvet cake, a mild chocolate cake with cream cheese frosting.
By sampling the mini-versions of Carousel Cakes’ 7” and 10” cakes, there’s no doubt that the cupcake customers will come back again for cakes.

Grand Opening Cupcakes by Carousel Ridgewood, NJ

Tell them you saw it on the Ridgewood Blog

https://lizjohnson.lohudblogs.com/2009/07/08/cupcakes-by-carousel-opens-in-ridgewood-nj/

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>Bloods street gang targets N.J. banks in high-tech $654K check scam

>by Susan K. Livio/The Star-Ledger
Tuesday July 07, 2009, 8:04 PM

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2009/07/bloods_street_gang_targets_nj.html

TRENTON — Using laptop computers and digital cameras, the Bloods street gang took its violent operation high-tech, faking nearly 200 payroll checks and attempting to cheat banks out of $654,000 over a two-year period, said Attorney General Anne Milgram, who today announced the involvement of 33 people in the conspiracy.

Milgram said her agents uncovered a scheme that struck eight banks in 13 counties across the state between June 2005 and March 2007, netting $341,000 in proceeds. The arrests were made after a three-year investigation dubbed “Operation Bloodbank.”

Some banks caught on to the deception and did not pay the remaining $313,000 the defendants sought, she said. According to investigators, the managers of the operation recruited people who worked at legitimate companies to turn over a copy of their payroll checks. The managers used them to forge copies and issue bad checks. If caught, the employees were told to claim they had been victims of identity theft, Milgram said.

“This investigation reveals the Bloods on new turf, defrauding banks of hundreds of thousands of dollars using counterfeit checks,” Milgram said. “We’ve taken the battle to a new front. If gangs are going into white collar crime, we will go there too and shut it down.”

The operation recruited accomplices such as college students and others whom they knew to have money troubles to cash the phony checks at banks from which the check appeared to have been drawn, investigators said. The cash would be split between the person cashing the check and the recruiter.

The affected institutions are branches of Bank of America, PNC Bank, Valley National Bank, JP Morgan Chase Bank, Commerce Bank, Wachovia Bank, Bank of New York and Sovereign Bank, according to the attorney general’s press release.

A spokesman for PNC Bank declined to comment last night, citing company policy that prohibits discussion of an ongoing criminal case.

Eight gang members led the scheme, recruiting people to cash fraudulent payroll checks valued between $400 and $9,000 from approximately 40 to 50 employers, Milgram said. Those employers include Cranford Township; the N.J. Democratic State Committee; the New Jersey Turnpike Authority; the Blood Center of New Jersey, East Orange; Valley Hospital Health System, Ridgewood; and the Ken Smith Lincoln Mercury dealership, Ridgewood, according to an indictment.

Under indictments handed up June 30 and unsealed today, six members of the Nine Trey Gangsters associated with the Bloods gang were named as the scheme managers and face charges of racketeering and theft by deception. They are Ernst Francois, 36, and Albens Victor, 27, both of Irvington; Kenneth Tione Roberts, 34, Woody Armand, 33, both of East Orange; Roosevelt Thelusma, 24, and Jeffery Dieurilus, 25, both of Newark.

Six so-called recruiters in the scheme also were indicted on charges of racketeering and theft by deception in connection with cashing counterfeit checks and allowing their bank accounts and ATM cards to be used.

The latest indictment, issued today, named 19 other accomplices who allegedly also allowed their ATM cards to be used or cashed the phony checks.

Additionally, two men authorities identified as members of the Nine Trey Gangsters set of the Bloods pleaded guilty to second-degree racketeering charges last year, while investigators continued to build a case against the 31 others. Milgram said some of the gang members have been arrested and are in jail, and others are fugitives.

The State Police Street Gang North Unit, which monitors New Jersey’s northern counties, led the investigation along with the Division of Criminal Justice’s Gangs & Organized Crime Bureau and the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office.

The case grew out of an indictment on murder, racketeering, money laundering and drug trafficking charges against 46 members of the Nine Trey Gangsters in 2007, authorities said.

https://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2009/07/bloods_street_gang_targets_nj.html

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>Global Warming Update : Coldest June since 1958 ?

>PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW YORK NY
455 PM EDT WED JUL 1 2009

…UNUSUALLY WET AND COOL JUNE FOR CENTRAL PARK…

FOR SOME PERSPECTIVE…HERE ARE THE TOP TEN COOLEST AND WETTEST
JUNES ON RECORD SINCE 1869 FOR CENTRAL PARK NY:

COOLEST WETTEST
AVG. TEMP. YEAR INCHES PRECIP. YEAR
64.2 1903 10.27 2003
65.2 1881 10.06 2009
65.7 1916 9.78 1903
66.8 1926/1902 9.30 1972
67.2 1958 8.79 1989
67.3 1927 8.55 2006
67.4 1928 7.76 1887
67.5 2009/1897 7.58 1975
67.7 1878 7.13 1938
67.8 1924 7.05 1871

DUE TO THE UNUSUALLY COOL AND WET CONDITIONS IN JUNE…HERE ARE SOME
INTERESTING FACTS TO NOTE:

THIS JUNE IS TIED FOR THE 8TH COOLEST ON RECORD. THE AVERAGE
TEMPERATURE WAS 67.5…3.7 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL…WHICH ALSO
OCCURRED IN 1897.

THIS WAS THE COOLEST JUNE SINCE 1958…WHEN THE AVERAGE TEMPERATURE
WAS 67.2 DEGREES.

BELOW AVERAGE TEMPERATURES OCCURRED ON 23 OUT OF 30 DAYS THIS
JUNE…OR 75 PERCENT OF THE MONTH.

CENTRAL PARK HAS NOT HIT 90 DEGREES IN THE MONTH OF JUNE THIS YEAR.
THE LAST TIME THIS OCCURRED WAS BACK IN 1996.

CENTRAL PARK HAS NOT HIT 85 DEGREES IN THE MONTH OF JUNE THIS YEAR.
THE LAST TIME THIS OCCURRED WAS BACK IN 1916. THIS HAS ONLY OCCURRED
2 OTHER TIMES…1903 AND 1886.

THE LAST TIME THAT CENTRAL PARK HIT 90 OR GREATER THIS YEAR WAS IN
APRIL. THE LAST TIME THAT CENTRAL PARK HIT 90 IN APRIL…BUT NOT IN
JUNE WAS BACK IN 1990.

THE LAST TIME THAT CENTRAL PARK HIT 85 OR GREATER THIS YEAR WAS IN
MAY. THE LAST TIME THAT CENTRAL PARK HIT 85 IN MAY…BUT NOT IN JUNE
WAS BACK IN 1903. THE LAST TIME THAT CENTRAL PARK HIT 85 IN
APRIL…BUT NOT IN JUNE WAS ALSO BACK IN 1903.

THE LOWEST TEMPERATURE REACHED IN CENTRAL PARK IN THE MONTH OF JUNE
WAS 50 DEGREES. THE LAST TIME THIS OCCURRED WAS BACK IN 2003.

THE LOW TEMPERATURE DIPPED BELOW 60 DEGREES 11 TIMES IN THE MONTH OF
JUNE. THE LAST TIME THIS OCCURRED WAS IN 2003 WHEN IT OCCURRED 17
TIMES.

IT WAS THE SECOND WETTEST JUNE ON RECORD WITH 10.06 INCHES OF RAIN.
THE WETTEST JUNE ON RECORD IS 2003 WITH 10.27 INCHES.

THERE WERE 19 DAYS THIS JUNE WHERE THERE WAS AT LEAST 0.01 INCHES OF
RAINFALL. THIS HAS NEVER OCCURRED IN CENTRAL PARK.

AT LEAST A TRACE OF RAINFALL WAS REPORTED ON 23 OUT OF 30 DAYS THIS
JUNE.

https://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=NWS&product=PNS&issuedby=OKX

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>The Women Gardeners of Ridgewood NJ

>Spitting frog
In 2005, The Women Gardeners of Ridgewood (also referred to as, “The Women Gardeners” or “the Club”) celebrated its 80th year of operation. The organization owes its name to the fact that a “Garden Club of Ridgewood” was organized in 1914, but its membership was restricted to men. Resentment at this exclusion motivated a group of dedicated women to form “The Women Gardeners of Ridgewood” under the leadership of Mrs. C.W. Stockton in 1925. The club had twenty members and was a charter member of The Garden Club of New Jersey when it was organized. No record of the men’s club remains.

During the Depression years of 1932-33, The Women Gardeners of Ridgewood was unable to pay dues to the state organization and instead became part of the Garden Department of the Women’s Club of Ridgewood. That relationship continued until 1945, when membership in The Garden Club of New Jersey was reinstated.

Some of the longest continuing members of The Women Gardeners of Ridgewood remember serving as joint Hospitality Chairmen. Since the club met in member’s homes, part of the position included hauling borrowed chairs from Van Emburgh’s Funeral Home to the home of the meeting hostess and back.

The Club has a long tradition of community service. For many years members would travel to the Veteran’s Hospital in East Orange, where they would decorate the day rooms and chapel and make tray arrangements.

That tradition continues on the local level today. The Women Gardeners designed and maintain the plantings at the Ridgewood Public Library and provides weekly flower arrangements for the library lobby. The Club designed the garden for the Share house for elderly residents on Prospect Street and supported the garden at the Children’s Services and Family Counseling building.

The Women Gardeners of Ridgewood also provides tray favors for Meals on Wheels during the holiday season and makes centerpieces for the fundraising activities of various local charities. The Club has participated in the showhouse at Skylands Manor, considered an exhibition opportunity for area garden clubs.

The Club is proud of its most recent addition, a Junior Program, “Green Kids” which was started September 2007. Designed for children Grades 3 through 6, this program meets monthly to explore and discover nature, science, gardening, art, birding, weather, recycling, environment and our senses.

As part of its public education efforts, The Women Gardeners present semi-annual Garden Education Day featuring major speakers, workshops and/or boutiques.

The activities of the club are supported by a semi-annual garden tour called “SECRET GARDENS OF RIDGEWOOD.” Begun as part of Ridgewood’s bicentennial celebration in 1994, Secret Gardens of Ridgewood has become one of New Jersey’s premier garden tours, with visitors coming from all over the metropolitan region. More than 800 visitors toured the gardens in 2008.

https://njclubs.esiteasp.com/womengardenersofridgewood/home.nxg

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>"The Pool folks are not building a community"

>
A large group of pool people have organized s boycot graydon. I have friends who joined the paramus pool because that is where all their other friends went for the summer. The Pool folks are not building a community, they are selfish people who are trying to destroy what is left so they can get what they want.

I agree that it is easy to plan to spend other people’s money. Pool your money and build a cement pond at the Cronk’s.

Oh sure – lets see the 8,000 members park on the first nice day.

GigaGolf, Inc.show?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=60066

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>ALL Ridgewood residents were invited via blast e-mails, Community Pass e-mails and the Ridgewood News to attend discussions about Graydon

>WallaConcept full

Melinda Cronk said…
Just a clarification, because there is definitely misinformation circulating. In 2007 and again this year, ALL Ridgewood residents were invited via blast e-mails, Community Pass e-mails and the Ridgewood News to attend discussions about Graydon. A survey instrument was used for quantitative data and focus groups of approximately 12 residents per group were used for qualitative data. We also conducted the same survey onsite with patrons of Graydon. The results can be read in the final report.

The ONLINE survey that people are confusing with us was done by the Village Council and it was not meant to solicit opinions (since that had already been done by our committee), rather it was a petition of interest to determine now that a concept was in place, would people still be interested in joining.

I would really encourage everyone to read the final report. Though we formed a seperate organization (Ridgewood Pool Project) for fundraising purposes, we are a committee under Village Parks & Recreation and have not proposed anything that they do not fully support (you can also read a letter from Nancy Bigos on our Web site).

As a lifelong resident of the area I empathize with wanting to keep Graydon the way it is, but standing where I have amid this project for nearly three years, I now realize that the only way to preserve Graydon is to adapt it for the changing needs of the community. The icon of Graydon is not just about the appearance, its about having the community together. We’re trying to find a solution that will preserve the unique, natural appearance while bringing the residents back.

All opinions/input have always been and continue to be welcome. Feel free to contact me anytime at [email protected].

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>Village Council agreed to move forward with writing a Request for Proposal for architectural services for a renovated Graydon facility.

>WallaConcept full

The Ridgewood Pool Project has updated its Web site to include a copy of the final report provided to Village Council on July 1. Also posted is a copy of the latest design concept created by Nicole Walla.

https://ridgewoodpoolproject.googlepages.com/

Village Council to Issue RFP for Architectural Services

July 1, 2009 — The Village Council agreed tonight to move forward with writing a Request for Proposal (RFP) for architectural services for a renovated Graydon facility. The goal in preparing this document is to solicit estimates from firms that can provide more accurate design plans and updated construction costs based on a new design concept. We expect this next phase to take several weeks, and following that we hope to help the Village develop a financial plan for how a new facility can be realized without impact to taxpayers.

Knetgolf.comshow?id=mjvuF8ceKoQ&bids=64642

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>July 4th Celebration Schedule!!!!!

>Wishing You a Happy and Safe 4th of July Weekend from the staff of the Ridgewood Blog

Support the Tradition!

“50 States – One Nation”

9:00AM – Flag Raising at Wilsey Square

10AM – Parade begins at North Monroe & Godwin (rain or shine)

6:30PM – Gates open for Vet’s Field for Entertainment and Fireworks (tickets required). ridgewoodjuly4th.org

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>Getting In touch with us…………

>chairs
If you looking to run ads or get in touch with the Ridgewood Blog please send all correspondence to [email protected]

thank you for your support!!!!

Special Events
Garage Sales
Open Houses
Birthday’s
Birth Announcements
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News
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ADVERTS

thanks again

PJ Blogger
the Ridgewood Blog

also now on twitter : www.titter.com/ridgewoodblog

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Two Centuries On, a Cryptologist Cracks a Presidential Code

>HC BE245 Jeffer BV 20090701173440

Unlocking This Cipher Wasn’t Self-Evident; Algorithms and Educated Guesses

By RACHEL EMMA SILVERMAN
https://online.wsj.com/article/SB124648494429082661.html?mod=yhoofront

For more than 200 years, buried deep within Thomas Jefferson’s correspondence and papers, there lay a mysterious cipher — a coded message that appears to have remained unsolved. Until now.

The cryptic message was sent to President Jefferson in December 1801 by his friend and frequent correspondent, Robert Patterson, a mathematics professor at the University of Pennsylvania. President Jefferson and Mr. Patterson were both officials at the American Philosophical Society — a group that promoted scholarly research in the sciences and humanities — and were enthusiasts of ciphers and other codes, regularly exchanging letters about them.

University of Pennsylvania Archives

Robert Patterson
In this message, Mr. Patterson set out to show the president and primary author of the Declaration of Independence what he deemed to be a nearly flawless cipher. “The art of secret writing,” or writing in cipher, has “engaged the attention both of the states-man & philosopher for many ages,” Mr. Patterson wrote. But, he added, most ciphers fall “far short of perfection.”

To Mr. Patterson’s view, a perfect code had four properties: It should be adaptable to all languages; it should be simple to learn and memorize; it should be easy to write and to read; and most important of all, “it should be absolutely inscrutable to all unacquainted with the particular key or secret for decyphering.”

Mr. Patterson then included in the letter an example of a message in his cipher, one that would be so difficult to decode that it would “defy the united ingenuity of the whole human race,” he wrote.

There is no evidence that Jefferson, or anyone else for that matter, ever solved the code. But Jefferson did believe the cipher was so inscrutable that he considered having the State Department use it, and passed it on to the ambassador to France, Robert Livingston.

The cipher finally met its match in Lawren Smithline, a 36-year-old mathematician. Dr. Smithline has a Ph.D. in mathematics and now works professionally with cryptology, or code-breaking, at the Center for Communications Research in Princeton, N.J., a division of the Institute for Defense Analyses.

A couple of years ago, Dr. Smithline’s neighbor, who was working on a Jefferson project at Princeton University, told Dr. Smithline of Mr. Patterson’s mysterious cipher.

Dr. Smithline, intrigued, decided to take a look. “A problem like this cipher can keep me up at night,” he says. After unlocking its hidden message in 2007, Dr. Smithline articulated his puzzle-solving techniques in a recent paper in the magazine American Scientist and also in a profile in Harvard Magazine, his alma mater’s alumni journal.

The “Perfect” Cipher?

The 1801 letter from Robert Patterson to Thomas Jefferson The code, Mr. Patterson made clear in his letter, was not a simple substitution cipher. That’s when you replace one letter of the alphabet with another. The problem with substitution ciphers is that they can be cracked by using what’s termed frequency analysis, or studying the number of times that a particular letter occurs in a message. For instance, the letter “e” is the most common letter in English, so if a code is sufficiently long, whatever letter appears most often is likely a substitute for “e.”

Because frequency analysis was already well known in the 19th century, cryptographers of the time turned to other techniques. One was called the nomenclator: a catalog of numbers, each standing for a word, syllable, phrase or letter. Mr. Jefferson’s correspondence shows that he used several code books of nomenclators. An issue with these tools, according to Mr. Patterson’s criteria, is that a nomenclator is too tough to memorize.

Jefferson even wrote about his own ingenious code, a model of which is at his home, Monticello, in Charlottesville, Va. Called the wheel cipher, the device consisted of cylindrical pieces, threaded onto an iron spindle, with letters inscribed on the edge of each wheel in a random order. Users could scramble and unscramble words simply by turning the wheels.

But Mr. Patterson had a few more tricks up his sleeve. He wrote the message text vertically, in columns from left to right, using no capital letters or spaces. The writing formed a grid, in this case of about 40 lines of some 60 letters each.

Then, Mr. Patterson broke the grid into sections of up to nine lines, numbering each line in the section from one to nine. In the next step, Mr. Patterson transcribed each numbered line to form a new grid, scrambling the order of the numbered lines within each section. Every section, however, repeated the same jumbled order of lines.

The trick to solving the puzzle, as Mr. Patterson explained in his letter, meant knowing the following: the number of lines in each section, the order in which those lines were transcribed and the number of random letters added to each line.

The key to the code consisted of a series of two-digit pairs. The first digit indicated the line number within a section, while the second was the number of letters added to the beginning of that row. For instance, if the key was 58, 71, 33, that meant that Mr. Patterson moved row five to the first line of a section and added eight random letters; then moved row seven to the second line and added one letter, and then moved row three to the third line and added three random letters. Mr. Patterson estimated that the potential combinations to solve the puzzle was “upwards of ninety millions of millions.”

Thomas Jefferson
After explaining this in his letter, Mr. Patterson wrote, “I presume the utter impossibility of decyphering will be readily acknowledged.”

Undaunted, Dr. Smithline decided to tackle the cipher by analyzing the probability of digraphs, or pairs of letters. Certain pairs of letters, such as “dx,” don’t exist in English, while some letters almost always appear next to a certain other letter, such as “u” after “q”.

To get a sense of language patterns of the era, Dr. Smithline studied the 80,000 letter-characters contained in Jefferson’s State of the Union addresses, and counted the frequency of occurrences of “aa,” “ab,” “ac,” through “zz.”

Dr. Smithline then made a series of educated guesses, such as the number of rows per section, which two rows belong next to each other, and the number of random letters inserted into a line.
To help vet his guesses, he turned to a tool not available during the 19th century: a computer algorithm. He used what’s called “dynamic programming,” which solves large problems by breaking puzzles down into smaller pieces and linking together the solutions.

The overall calculations necessary to solve the puzzle were fewer than 100,000, which Dr. Smithline says would be “tedious in the 19th century, but doable.”

After about a week of working on the puzzle, the numerical key to Mr. Patterson’s cipher emerged — 13, 34, 57, 65, 22, 78, 49. Using that digital key, he was able to unfurl the cipher’s text:

“In Congress, July Fourth, one thousand seven hundred and seventy six. A declaration by the Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled. When in the course of human events…”

That, of course, is the beginning — with a few liberties taken — to the Declaration of Independence, written at least in part by Jefferson himself. “Patterson played this little joke on Thomas Jefferson,” says Dr. Smithline. “And nobody knew until now.”

Write to Rachel Emma Silverman at [email protected]

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>Ridgewood Garage Sales This Week !

>RIDGEWOOD – 890 NORGATE DRIVE – FRI. 7/3 9AM TO 4PM AND SUN. 7/5 9AM TO 4PM – HUGE GARAGE SALE – CHRISTMAS IN JULY!!!! MANY NEW ITEMS, LITTLE TIKES, V-SMILE, RESCUE HEROES, TRAIN SETS, TONS OF TOYS, CLOTHES AND SHOES FOR BOYS, TONS OF WOMENS ITEMS, MENS CLOTHING, LIA SOPHIA – MANY HO– USEHOLD ITEMS STILL IN BOX, MANY $1 $3 $5 $10 ITEMS.

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>Kurt Warner @ BOOKENDS Tonight 7pm

>BOOKENDS
232 E. Ridgewood Ave.
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
Tel: 201/445-0726
Fax: 201/445-8301

Kurt Warner

Wednesday, July 1st – 7:00pm
Please welcome Super Bowl 34 MVP with the Rams and current Arizona Cardinals Quarterback, Kurt Warner and his wife, Brenda as they sign: First Things First.

warner1

Joe Gibbs

Tuesday, July 21st – 6:00pm
Pro Football Hall of Fame Coach with the Washington Redskins and former NASCAR Race Team Owner, Joe Gibbs will sign: Game Plan For Life.

gibbs1