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>N.J. lawmaker questions fees for motorists

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Route 17 Glen062 theridgewoodblog.net

Photo by Boyd Loving


N.J. lawmaker questions fees for motorists


A top state lawmaker is questioning whether the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission charges customers too much for services, and says officials should discuss lowering fees and returning money to taxpayers.
Assemblyman Gary Schaer (D., Passaic), vice chairman of the Budget Committee, said during a transportation budget hearing last week the proposed 2013 budget for the commission calls for collecting $1.1 billion from motor vehicle customers.  (Duffelmeyer, Associated Press)

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>An incident in Ridgewood on the corner of Monte Vista and Heights

>An incident in Ridgewood on the corner of Monte Vista and Heights

Last night, Mary was walking home from a friend’s house with two boys and another girl. She was supposed to get a ride from the other girl’s parents, but they decided to walk instead. On the corner of Monte Vista and Heights, a black four door car with jersey plates stopped and they asked for directions. While they were stopped, one of the boys (blonde, tall, 17-20 years old) got out and approached one of Mary’s friends. He asked where he was from and when he answered “Ridgewood,” the guy punched him and knocked him to the ground and started choking him. Somehow, he got away and they all ran to my house, then I called the police. The boy is fine, but they are all shaken up. One of the police officers said the exact same thing happened in Glen Rock the night before.

I’m writing to tell you all because you have middle schoolers, too. I hope you spread the word because obviously, the police don’t think it’s important to have information that there is a group of young men preying on innocent kids. Please spread the word and tell your kids not to talk to ANY stranger in a car.

Obviously, the list of people I’m sending this to is not comprehensive. We’re getting ready to leave on our trip, but I did think this was important enough to take a few minutes.

Have a wonderful Easter,

Kathy

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>Ridgewood High School Needs to Get Serious About Its Drug Problem

>

RHS Field theridgewoodblog.net

Ridgewood High School Needs to Get Serious About Its Drug Problem
Apr 7 ,2012
Peter Coti
RHS Student

(RIDGEWOOD-NJ) Seriously, how can an institution claim to have a zero tolerance policy on drugs despite not actively enforcing any type of drug testing on sports teams? From what I hear from a reliable source 1/2 of the girls soccer team is on some form of drug and has not been tested. What is more amazing is the school has the authority to test any athletic player throughout the school year. Why the hell are they not doing that?

Let us look at other schools in the area that had a drug problem that got severely out of control. At Ramsay High School you can go into the forest during lunch and see students possessing and using illegal substances. I can definitely see a similar scenario coming to RHS in the next five years if no action is taking.

Responsibility also does not just lie on the administration, but also the parents of this “fine” town. Where do most kids get their drug money? Their parents. Parents should only be giving limited amounts of money to their kids, by that I mean not a copious amount with no justification. Also, I would urge most parents to drug test their kids whether or not they are an honors student or an athletics.

Why should I care if my kids are on drugs or not? Here are some good reasons why. Let us start with a mild scenario. Your little girl has been a great student and is earning a 3.6 GPA. You are proud for her and you have high hopes for her in life, but after a few semesters you learn their grades are going down and she is more and more isolated from you. By the end of her senior year the only college she can get into is
Bergen Community. Not even liberal arts schools want her.

Ok, what can I say, I like to poke fun at liberal art colleges. Now here is a bit more of a serious scenario. It is dinner and you and your family are sitting down for a lovely dinner, you call down for your son but he does not respond. You go upstairs and find him lying on his bed lying face down, foam coming out of his mouth and he is blue around his lips. Congrad-u-fuckinglations, your kids dead because you did not care
enough to notice that he had been using cocaine and other controlled substances. Is this something you would like to witness?

In short Ridgewood High School and parents need to step up their enforcement regarding students using controlled substances because, a) it can allow students to keep in good academic standing, and b) prevent death. Seriously, if I were a parent I would totally be against anything that could cause death.

Microsoft Store

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>Government Surveillance Crackdown On Internet Goes Into Overdrive

>Government Surveillance Crackdown On Internet Goes Into Overdrive
 
Cyber bills legislate for mass surveillance; Former Cybersecurity Czar calls for Homeland Security data “customs inspections”
Steve Watson
 Infowars.com
April 5, 2012

In a New York Times editorial, former government cybersecurity czar Richard A. Clarke has called for the creation of customs checks on all data leaving and entering US cyberspace.

Clarke makes the call in relation to Chinese hackers stealing information and intellectual property from US firms.
“If given the proper authorization, the United States government could stop files in the process of being stolen from getting to the Chinese hackers.” Clarke writes.

https://www.infowars.com/government-sureillance-crackdown-on-internet-goes-into-overdrive/

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>Orlando’s Rep. Adams fears Obama power grab

>Orlando’s Rep. Adams fears Obama power grab
8:09 p.m. EST, April 7, 2012|By Mark K. Matthews, Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — A White House order updating federal emergency powers has raised alarm among some conservative commentators, and U.S. Rep. Sandy Adams, that President Barack Obama is attempting to grab unconstitutional powers.

A columnist with The Washington Times declared the mid-March order — an update of a 60-year-old document outlining the president’s authority in a national emergency — “stunning in its audacity and a flagrant violation of the Constitution.” The conservative Drudge Report website linked to it with the headline, “Martial Law?”

https://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2012-04-07/news/os-sandy-adams-obama-martial-law-20120407_1_order-powers-barack-obama

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>

Foreclosure theridgewoodblog.net

West Bergen Tea Part Presents Rob Eichman

NJ Residential Foreclosure Transformation Act Affordable Housing Next Door

Join us 7 pm, Tuesday April 10th At the Larkin House
380 Godwin Avenue, Wyckoff
(1/4 mile North of Stop & Shop on the right)
More Information: 201 891-5918
conservative_caucus@verizon.net
www.westbergenteaparty.com
Count Down to NOBAMA

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>History of Easter

>History of Easter 
https://www.religionfacts.com/christianity/holidays/easter.htm

Easter is a spring festival that celebrates the central event of the Christian faith: the resurrection of Christ three days after his death by crucifixion. {1} Easter is the oldest Christian holiday and the most important day of the church year. All the Christian movable feasts and the entire liturgical year of worship are arranged around Easter.

Easter Sunday is preceded by the season of Lent, a 40-day period of fasting and repentence culminating in Holy Week, and followed by a 50-day Easter Season that stretches from Easter to Pentecost.

Name of Easter

The origins of the word “Easter” are not certain, but probably derive from Estre, an Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring {2}. The German word Ostern has the same derivation, but most other languages follow the Greek term used by the early Christians: pascha, from the Hebrew pesach (Passover).

In Latin, Easter is Festa Paschalia (plural because it is a seven-day feast), which became the basis for the French Pâques, the Italian Pasqua, and the Spanish Pascua. Also related are the Scottish Pask, the Dutch Paschen, the Danish Paaske, and the Swedish Pask. {3}

Date of Easter

The method for determining the date of Easter is complex and has been a matter of controversy (see History of Easter, below). Put as simply as possible, the Western churches (Catholic and Protestant) celebrate Easter on the first Sunday following the first full moon after the spring equinox.

But it is actually a bit more complicated than this. The spring equinox is fixed for this purpose as March 21 (in 2004, it actually falls on March 20) and the “full moon” is actually the paschal moon, which is based on 84-year “paschal cycles” established in the sixth century, and rarely corresponds to the astronomical full moon. These complex calculations yield an Easter date of anywhere between March 22 and April 25.

The Eastern churches (Greek, Russian, and other forms of Orthodoxy) use the same calculation, but based on the Julian calendar (on which March 21 is April 3) and a 19-year paschal cycle.

Thus the Orthodox Easter sometimes falls on the same day as the western Easter (it does in 2010 and 2011), but the two celebrations can occur as much as five weeks apart.

In the 20th century, discussions began as to a possible worldwide agreement on a consistent date for the celebration of the central event of Christianity. No resolution has yet been reached. {4}

Recent and upcoming dates {5} for Passover (Judaism), Easter (Western Christianity), and Pascha (Eastern Orthodox Christianity) are:

  Passover Easter Pascha
2008 April 20 March 23 April 27
2009 April 9 April 12 April 19
2010 March 30 April 4 April 4
2011 April 19 April 24 April 24

History of Easter and the Easter Controversy

There is evidence that Christians originally celebrated the resurrection of Christ every Sunday, with observances such as Scripture readings, psalms, the Eucharist, and a prohibition against kneeling in prayer. {6} At some point in the first two centuries, however, it became customary to celebrate the resurrection specially on one day each year. Many of the religious observances of this celebration were taken from the Jewish Passover.

The specific day on which the resurrection should be celebrated became a major point of contention within the church. First, should it be on Jewish Passover no matter on what day that falls, or should it always fall on a Sunday? It seems Christians in Asia took the former position, while those everywhere else insisted on the latter. The eminent church fathers Irenaeus and Polycarp were among the Asiatic Christians, and they claimed the authority of St. John the Apostle for their position. Nevertheless, the church majority officially decided that Easter should always be celebrated on a Sunday. Eusebius of Caesarea, our only source on this topic, reports the affair as follows:

A question of no small importance arose at that time [c. 190 AD]. The dioceses of all Asia, as from an older tradition, held that the fourteenth day of the moon, on which day the Jews were commanded to sacrifice the lamb, should always be observed as the feast of the life-giving pasch, contending that the fast ought to end on that day, whatever day of the week it might happen to be. However it was not the custom of the churches in the rest of the world to end it at this point, as they observed the practice, which from Apostolic tradition has prevailed to the present time, of terminating the fast on no other day than on that of the Resurrection of our Saviour. Synods and assemblies of bishops were held on this account, and all with one consent through mutual correspondence drew up an ecclesiastical decree that the mystery of the Resurrection of the Lord should be celebrated on no other day but the Sunday and that we should observe the close of the paschal fast on that day only. {7}
With this issue resolved, the next problem was to determine which Sunday to celebrate the resurrection. The Christians in Syria and Mesopotamia held their festival on the Sunday after the Jewish Passover (which itself varied a great deal), but those in Alexandria and other regions held it on the first Sunday after the spring equinox, without regard to the Passover.

This second issue was decided at the Council of Nicea in 325, which decreed that Easter should be celebrated by all on the same Sunday, which Sunday shall be the first following the paschal moon (and the paschal moon must not precede the spring equinox), and that a particular church should determine the date of Easter and communicate it throughout the empire (probably Alexandria, with their skill in astronomical calculations).

The policy was adopted throughout the empire, but Rome adopted an 84-year lunar cycle for determining the date, whereas Alexandria used a 19-year cycle. {8} Use of these different “paschal cycles” persists to this day and contributes to the disparity between the eastern and western dates of Easter.

Religious Observances on Easter

Common elements found in most Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Protestant religious Easter celebrations include baptisms, the Eucharist, feasting, and greetings of “Christ is risen!” and “He is risen indeed!”

In Roman Catholicism, and some Lutheran and Anglican churches, Easter is celebrated with a vigil that consists of “the blessing of the new fire (a practice introduced during the early Middle Ages); the lighting of the paschal candle; a service of lessons, called the prophecies; followed by the blessing of the font and baptisms and then the mass of Easter.” {9} The traditional customs of the Catholic church are described in detail in the online Catholic Encyclopedia {10}.

In Orthodox churches, the vigil service is preceded by a procession outside the church. When the procession leaves the church, there are no lights on. The procession conducts a symbolic fruitless search for Christ’s body, then joyfully announces, “Christ is risen!” When the procession returns to the church, hundreds of candles and lamps are lit to symbolize the splendor of Christ’s resurrection, and the Easter Eucharist is taken. {11}

Protestant observances also include baptism and the Eucharist (or Lord’s Supper), and often a sunrise service (to commemorate Mary Magdalene’s arrival at the empty tomb “early, while it was still dark”) and special hymns and songs.

Easter eggs and Popular Easter Customs

Over the centuries, these religious observances have been supplemented by popular customs, many of were incorporated from springtime fertility celebrations of European and Middle Eastern pagan religion. Rabbits and eggs, for example, are widely-used pagan symbols for fertility. Christians view the Easter eggs as symbols of joy and celebration (as they were forbidden during the fast of Lent) and of new life and resurrection. A common custom is to hide brightly colored eggs for children to find.

https://www.religionfacts.com/christianity/holidays/easter.htm

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>Americans brace for next foreclosure wave

>Americans brace for next foreclosure wave
By Nick Carey
GARFIELD HEIGHTS, Ohio | Wed Apr 4, 2012 7:09pm EDT

(Reuters) – Half a decade into the deepest U.S. housing crisis since the 1930s, many Americans are hoping the crisis is finally nearing its end. House sales are picking up across most of the country, the plunge in prices is slowing and attempts by lenders to claim back properties from struggling borrowers dropped by more than a third in 2011, hitting a four-year low.

But a painful part two of the slump looks set to unfold: Many more U.S. homeowners face the prospect of losing their homes this year as banks pick up the pace of foreclosures.

“We are right back where we were two years ago. I would put money on 2012 being a bigger year for foreclosures than 2010,” said Mark Seifert, executive director of Empowering & Strengthening Ohio’s People (ESOP), a counseling group with 10 offices in Ohio.

https://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/04/us-foreclosure-idUSBRE83319E20120404

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>Smaller deals having outsized impact on N.J. office market, report finds

>Smaller deals having outsized impact on N.J. office market, report finds


Driven by a series of small and midsized transactions, first-quarter leasing velocity in the northern and central New Jersey office market reached its highest mark in five quarters, according to a new report by Colliers International.

The brokerage firm’s New Jersey office found that leasing velocity — the total number of leases completed — grew about 20 percent from last quarter, said Matt Dolly, senior managing director at the Parsippany-based branch. The number of first-quarter deals also grew nearly 50 percent from the first quarter of 2011.  (Burd, NJBIZ)

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>Emmanuel Vukovich and John McDowell in Concert at Rose Hall in Chestnut Ridge, NY

>

JMcDowell theridgewoodblog.net

EVukovickSmall theridgewoodblog.net



Emmanuel Vukovich and John McDowell in Concert at Rose Hall in Chestnut Ridge, NY: May 4, 2012

A portion of proceeds to benefit the Green Meadow Waldorf School,Rockland Farm Alliance and the Pfeiffer Center.

Chestnut Ridge, NY — Founders of “Music for Farms” Emmanuel Vukovich (violin) and John McDowell (piano, percussion, composition), as well as special guest, young violinist Nicholas Frei, will bring music to the greater community at Green Meadow Waldorf School’s new Auditorium, Rose Hall. The program for this concert, to be held May 4th at 8pm, will include Johann Sebastian Bach’s Concerto for 2 Violins in D featuring Nicholas Frei, and the Solo violin Partita No. 1 in b, BWV 1002; Sonata No. 3, Op. 27 – Ballade, by Eugene Ysaye; Chant by Ana Sokolovic; Carmen Fantasy, Op. 25, by Pablo de Sarasate; and an original work by John McDowell.

Rose Hall is located at 307 Hungry Hollow Rd., Chestnut Ridge, NY. Advance tickets are $20 for general admission; $15 for college Students & Seniors; and $10 for students Grade 1-12 Tickets will be available for purchase online at www.threefold.org/events or in person at the Hungry Hollow Co-op, 841 Chestnut Ridge Rd, Chestnut Ridge. Day of show tickets at the door will be $5 extra per ticket. This event is sponsored by Threefold Educational Foundation. Refreshments from Hungry Hollow Co-op will be available at intermission.

The Green Meadow Waldorf School (www.gmws.org) is an independent day school, nursery through grade 12, located 30 miles from New York City in Chestnut Ridge, NY. Founded in 1950, Green Meadow is one of America’s oldest and largest Waldorf schools.  From the young child’s imaginative experiences of discovery and play in their Early Childhood program to the intellectual challenges presented in their High School, Green Meadow students approach their education with interest and joy. The school also opened an Early Childhood Center in Tarrytown, NY in July 2011.

Rockland Farm Alliance (www.rocklandfarm.org) is a community coalition that was founded to facilitate local sustainable agriculture in Rockland County, NY, and to provide educational resources to the community to promote awareness of the need for local food resources. RFA has been called “cutting edge” by state farming authorities in its innovative approach to preserve and revive farming in the lower Hudson Valley and greater NY metro area. Through hands-on learning programs and new community-supported small farms, RFA is striving to raise awareness around local food issues while increasing access to organic, locally grown produce.

The mission of the Pfeiffer Center (www.pfeiffercenter.org), located in Chestnut Ridge, NY, is to practice, teach and spread awareness of the biodynamic method of agriculture and land care. This work takes the form of educational programs for adults and children, agricultural production, work with draft horses, beekeeping, and research.

Canadian Violinist Emmanuel Vukovich has played for audiences around the globe with artists such as Ida Haendel, Anton Kuerti, and Matt Haimowitz. Recipient of McGill University’s Schulich School of Music Golden Violin Award and The Canada Council for the Arts Orford String Quartet Scholarship, he was a member of the Lloyd Carr-Harris String Quartet, winner at the Fischoff International Chamber Music Competition. Emmanuel began playing the violin with Danuta Ciring and left his native Calgary at sixteen to pursue studies with Masao Kawasaki and Dorothy Delay at the Juilliard School in New York City. He completed his undergraduate degree with Denise Lupien and André Roy at McGill University. During this time he also pursued studies in Environment, subsequently devoting four years to work in organic agriculture. Having returned to music in 2011, Emmanuel is currently completing a graduate performance degree and teaching at McGill University, and has founded an international chamber music collective called The Parcival Project (www.parcival.ca). He plays a violin made in Montreal by Denis Cormier.

Musician and film composer John McDowell (www.johnmcdowell.net) achieved worldwide recognition with his soundtrack to the Academy Award winning documentary Born Into Brothels. Winner of Best Musical Score at the Bend Film Festival, the score blends Western and Indian music in a mesmerizing mix. Known for much more than just his film scores, McDowell is also a highly gifted pianist, percussionist, producer, commissioned composer and conductor. His work over the past 25 years draws on classical, jazz, pop, and world music. McDowell served as founder, artistic director and leader of several musical projects including The Born Into Brothels Ensemble and the world music band Mamma Tongue. He has toured and recorded with Rusted Root and Krishna Das and has produced several albums including his solo CD Speaking the Mamma Tongue. McDowell’s formal education and subsequent informal global training has made him a largely self-taught ethnomusicologist of widely-ranging scale. John is co-founder of Music for Farms (www.musicforfarms.com).

Nicholas Frei, a 2011 graduate of Green Meadow Waldorf School in Chestnut Ridge, NY, began his violin studies with Anna Teigen, then continued with Bernard Zeller and Laura Seaton. During high school, Nicholas played with the New York Youth Symphony, several string quartets and chamber groups, and studied with Ann Setzer of Mannes and Juilliard.  His senior year, he attended Mannes-Prep and was a Rockland County Morning Music Club Scholarship Finalist.  Nicholas has spent his last three summers at the Meadowmount School of Music, founded by Ivan Galamian and has played in chamber master classes for musicians such as: Joel Krosnick, Paul Neubauer and Kazuhido Isomura. He is currently in a string quartet coached by Matt Haimovitz and studies with Emmanuel Vukovich at the Schulich School of Music of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec.

Public: for further information contact Katie Ketchum at kketchum@gmws.org

Media: for further information contact Peter McDowell at peter@petermcdowell.com

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>Garrett Announces 2012 Service Academy Nominees

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service nominess2012 scott garrett theridgewoodblog.net



Garrett Announces 2012 Service Academy Nominees
Apr 5, 2012

MAHWAH, NJ – Rep. Scott Garrett (NJ-05) is proud to announce the nomination of 39 5th District high school students to United States service academies, including the Military Academy at West Point, the Naval Academy at Annapolis, the Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point and the Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs. This year’s nominees were honored by the Congressman at a ceremony at Ramapo College in Mahwah on Saturday, April 1st.

“I want to congratulate this year’s nominees and commend them for their hard work, perseverance and dedication during this year’s nominating process,” said Garrett after honoring the nominees. “If admitted, our prestigious service academies will develop these young men and women into some of our country’s greatest leaders.  No matter what the future holds, I am proud of their selfless dedication to serving our great country.  I wish the applicants all the best as they continue with the application process.”

Applications to the Military Academy, the Naval Academy, the Air Force Academy and the Merchant Marine Academy require a nomination by a Congressman or a Senator, however, the Congressional nomination does not guarantee acceptance.  To assist with the nomination process, Congressman Garrett established an esteemed committee of military and civic leaders that interviewed potential nominees, reviewed their applications and made recommendations.  Click here for more information about Congressman Garrett’s nomination process.

Below is a complete list of the nominees by academy:

United States Military Academy at West Point      
Brian Bandstra – Midland Park, Midland Park High School
Christopher Bascomb – Oradell, River Dell Regional High School
Kaitlin Gaffney – Oakland, Indian Hills High School
Kristen Gray – Park Ridge, Park Ridge High School    
Michael Killian – Hillsdale, Pascack Valley High School
Insoo Kim – Demarest, Northern Valley Regional High School
James M.  Lee – Ridgewood, Ridgewood High School                        
Grant Mallalieu – Midland Park, Academy for Business and Finance
Tara Mastriano – Saddle River, Northern Highlands Regional High School
Hope Yi – Allendale, Academy for Business and Finance

United States Naval Academy at Annapolis                              
Zachary Hirsch – Wyckoff, Ramapo High School            
Jody Lamb – New Milford, Hawthorne Christian Academy                          
James D. Lee – Franklin Lakes, Indian Hills High School    
Elizabeth McCarty – Ringwood, Immaculate Heart Academy                                  
Francis Paleno – Ridgewood, Ridgewood High School      
Samuel Redwood – Hamburg, Pope John XIII High School    
Jack Smith – Phillipsburg, Phillipsburg High School              
Rebecca Skovira – Park Ridge, Park Ridge High School                
Dong Jin “David” Suh – Ridgewood, Ridgewood High School
William Zoeller – Allendale, Northern Highlands Regional High School          

United States Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs                        
Eric Almberg – River Edge, River Dell Regional High School          
Andrew Bell – Wyckoff, Ramapo High School
Andrew Boman – Montvale, Don Bosco Prep      
Kevin Chmiolek – Wyckoff, Don Bosco Prep
Thomas Darragh – Hamburg, Wallkill Valley Regional High School                      
Gregory Geuecke – Columbia, North Warren Regional High School  
Ryan Kowal – Waldwick, Waldwick High School
Sean Lindenau – Dumont, Dumont High School            
Grant Van Orden – Wyckoff, Don Bosco Prep      
Mark Vaccarro – Allendale, Northern Highlands Regional High School

United States Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point                      
Jake Aronson – Upper Saddle River, Pascack Hills High School                      
Andrew Boman – Montvale, Don Bosco Prep                      
Christopher Dykes – Wyckoff, Don Bosco Prep
Joseph Galica – Sussex, Pope John XIII High School
Glenn Gavan – Newton, Pope John XIII High School
Hanna Jansson – Haworth, Academy of the Holy Angels
Nichlas Picache – Upper Saddle River, Northern Highlands Regional High School
Gordon Pisani – Phillipsburg, Belvidere High School
Christopher Sarao – Sandyston, Pope John XIII High School
Tyler Symons – Harrington Park, Northern Valley Regional High School

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>MAY 8 – RIDGEWOOD MUNICIPAL ELECTION

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theVillagehall theridgewoodblog.net

photo by Boyd Loving 

MAY 8 – RIDGEWOOD MUNICIPAL ELECTION

The Municipal Election, to be held on May 8, 2012, will elect three Councilmembers to the Village Council. There are six candidates running for the three open seats. The polling hours are 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Any questions concerning the Municipal Election should be directed to the Village Clerk’s Office at 201-670-5500 ext. 201 or by email to: hmailander@ridgewoodnj.net

April 17th is the final Voter Registration (Municipal Election) 4:30pm – 9:00pm in Village Hall Lobby

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>Ridgewood BOE awards bid for footbridge repairs

>Ridgewood BOE awards bid for footbridge repairs

THURSDAY APRIL 5, 2012, 2:58 PM
BY DARIUS AMOS
STAFF WRITER
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

The Board of Education (BOE) reached another landmark on the road to reopening the Ridgewood High School (RHS) footbridge, but there are still numerous milestones yet to pass.

The pedestrian footbridge connecting Ridgewood High School’s Stadium and Stevens fields.
School board trustees on Monday unanimously awarded the bid for bridge repairs to Orange-based Zenith Construction. The company’s bid for $83,000 received the thumbs up after the BOE reviewed three bids as well as the project options outlined by architecture and engineering firm LAN Associates.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/146315995_Ridgewood_school_board_awards_bid_for_footbridge_repairs.html

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>EASTER IN RIDGEWOOD

>

Easter in+Ridgewood theridgewoodblog.net



photo from the Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce 

EASTER IN RIDGEWOOD Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce

Saturday, April 7th – At 11am join the Easter Bunny in Memorial Park at Van Neste Square for some FREE – family friendly fun…visit the Easter Bunny and take your family photos, walk in the Bonnet Parade, enjoy the arts/crafts/music! SPECIAL SURPRISE- Ben & Jerry’s will be having an Easter Egg Hunt in the Park – Weather Permitting. RIDE the BUNNY TROLLY EXPRESS .

All activities are free! Maps will be available at the Bunny Tent to show all the locations to visit and/or ride the Bunny Trolley Express around town and visit the locations for the in-store fun! Special THANK YOU to Ridgewood News, North Jersey Community Bank, Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream, Feeney Funeral Home for sponsoring this year’s event.

Questions: www.experienceridgewood.com or 201/445-2600 “Easter in the Park” has become a “tradition” in Ridgewood – lets keep is going! Please email – info@ridgewoodchamber.com – call the Chamber 201-445-2600 or mail back the form that you would like to participate in this event – that will bring many families to the Village. RSVP’s should be at the Chamber office by 3/23/12. Thank you!