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lexis Acevedo-Ahls passion for dance has


gained her kudos from top choreographers
and recognition on a national stage. This
Vineland senior, taken in as a foster child when
she was two years old and subsequently adopted,
competed last week at the Miss Dance of America
competition in Florida.
Its fun, but its been stressful. I am new to it.
Some girls here do it all the time. These girls live
for the competition, says Alexis. An Arts of the
Dance Centre student since she was three, Alexis
made it to the competition by winning at the dis-
trict level. Her official title is Miss Dance of
Pennsylvania (by Association of Dance Teachers).
Alexis excelled at dance conventions run by
the choreographers of the hit TV show So You
Think You Can Dance in Atlantic City and New
York.
Chris Judd, Jennifer Lopezs ex, hes the hip
hop teacherhe picked her out to demonstrate
the steps for him. Every time she got a scholar-
ship, says her mom, Lisa Ahl. She is a standout.
She brings something different and unique. Lexii
is very fluid. The scholarships will enable Alexis
to go back for free to other So You Think You Can
Dance conventions.
Ahl says they throw choreography at the
dancers and give out scholarships. The elite stu-
dents can be selected to tour with the conventions.
That is different than auditioning for the
show. You have to be 18 to do that. At 17, Alexis
VOLUME 4 | ISSUE 22 | JULY 13, 2011
CONNECT I NG YOU TO VI NEL AND. WEEKLY.
INSIDE: MASTER GARDENER ON WEEDING OLD HOME WEEK LESLEY GORE AT LANDIS COOL SANDWICHES
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Continued on page 8
So She Can Dance
Enjoy sun, sand, seafood, and music right in down-
town Vineland at the Third Annual Vineland Seafood
Festival, organized by the Vineland Downtown
Improvement District/Main Street Vineland and spon-
sored by Capital Bank. The Festival is planned for
Saturday, July 16, from 3 to 8 p.m. (rain date July 17).
The 600 block of Landis Avenue will again become a
bash at the beach with plenty of seafood dishes
from Vinelands finest restaurants and fresh food
vendors, plus live music and more.
Admission is free, other than the price of the food
and merchandise. Take-outs will be available.
Seafood Fest Brings the Beach
Back to the Avenue on Saturday
Dancing since she was three, Alexis Acevedo-Ahl has used her art to
help cope with some difficult life circumstances.
{ BY STEPHANIE FARRELL }
Alexis won a modern dance scholarship at the Miss Dance of
America competition last week. Photo: T&F Camera
Grapevine 1-7 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:12 PM Page 1
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MIKE EPIFANIO Editor & Publisher
DEBORAH A. EIN Managing Editor
LORI GOUDIE Art Director
GAIL EPIFANIO Controller
SHERRY MUNYAN Advertising Executive
MARIE HALPIN-GALLO Advertising Executive
TRACY BUSCHAM Graphic Designer
RYAN DINGER Editorial/Sales Assistant
The Grapevine
3638 E. Landis Ave. Vineland, NJ 08361
PHONE: 856-457-7815 FAX: 856-457-7816
EMAIL: letters@grapevinenewspaper.com
WEB: www.grapevinenewspaper.com
The Grapevine is published on Wednesdays by
Grapevine News Corp. Copyright 2011. All
rights reserved.
I
Letters to the Editor
Farm Market Omission
We have been local farmers since the
1930s and have had a farm market on the
corner of Sherman Avenue and SE
Boulevard for nine years. A customer of
ours was shocked to see we were not listed
as one of the local markets and brought it
to my attention. It is bad enough the con-
struction on our road is curtailing our busi-
ness and this certainly didnt help us either.
Denise Malench,
Malench Farm Market
Lasting Legacy, Indeed
Thanks to Stephen Wilson for his col-
umn entitled A Lasting Legacy. in the
June 29th issue. It was a beautiful tribute,
not too sweet but clearly affectionate. The
idea of feeding Berkeleys first meat with
his great-grandmothers last meatballs was
a loving, honoring gesture that will contin-
ue to convey respect through the years,
each time the story is retold.
Sometimes, we ladies feel insignificant
making meal after meal, but that story
was a good reminder that we are doing
more than filling bellies. We are being
present, teaching, nurturing, and this col-
umn lovingly appreciated that intersec-
tion of food, love, and the rhythms of life.
It made my day.
Lisa Bonanno
In Support of Barbara Vanaman
In the local papers today, an article was
printed about Barbara Vanamans execu-
tioner being granted an appeal and being
resentenced with the possibility of a lesser
sentence. The defense does not feel it was
fair to sentence him under the pretense of
him being a cop though they made sure
that it was known he was on the force for
15 years, trying to make him look good. He
took an oath to serve, protect and uphold
the law. On May 11th, 2006, yes, he was off
duty, but his position was still a cop and he
used his service weapon to murder his wife.
That day, he chose to take the law into
his own hands. To serve as judge, jury and
executioner. He should have not been
allowed to take a plea and furthermore,
with a plea deal, he should not have been
allowed to file for an appeal. He received a
slap on the wrist for misusing his gun and
position. Nine years is nothing compared to
Barbara losing her life for eternity. For
causing so many people grief and pain. For
taking away a mother, daughter, niece,
aunt, friend, godmother, sister, upstanding
citizen who had not broken the law in any
way, shape, or form.
If anything should be left out of this
story, it should be her extramarital affairs.
People fall out of love. People choose to
handle situations differently. Who are we
to judge her when we did not live in her
house or walk in her shoes? Having an
affair is not a crime. Maybe he should
have treated her a whole lot better than
he had. Regardless, she did not deserve to
be murdered.
She always took care of her children.
She was not leaving her children. She left
them at the house as to not disturb their
schooling or lives until she found a local
place that she could move them to so they
could attend the same school. She was
trying to keep their lives as normal as pos-
sible in an ugly situation. Something a lot
of parents are too selfish to do. People are
just that. They are not God and have no
business to judge her in any way. No mat-
ter what you believe, she did not deserve
this. Barbara is the victim in this situation,
not the murderer who took her life.
Cynthia Locke
Letter to Legislators
The Greater Vineland Chamber of
Commerce, Greater Millville Chamber of
Commerce, and Greater Bridgeton Area
Chamber of Commerce represent business-
es based in Cumberland County. We are
united in our request to encourage you to
support Assembly Bill 4104, which
addresses UEZ funding to qualifying
municipalities.
Cumberland Countys economic status
is demonstrated by the need for two Urban
Enterprize Zones representing three cities
in its footprint. Over the years, UEZ funds
have successfully supported the challenge
the countys businesses have faced in this
mostly rural area with 13 percent unem-
ployment. Maintaining the distribution of
UEZ revenues to the municipalities where
the funds are collected will continue to
provide that much needed support.
Governor Christies plan to allocate
more than $90 million of UEZ funds to the
states General Fund starting with the 2011
budget strips badly needed funding from
businesses that are struggling to survive
and improve economic conditions in
Cumberland County. The program has
been successful in this part of southern
New Jersey for a number of years. The
money should continue to enhance eco-
nomic development and remain where it is
collected for the benefit of the business
community and the residents who call
Cumberland County home, not thrown into
a pot where it could be distributed any-
where in the state.
Reality is that we need all of the funds
to support economic development because
they are a lifeline of growth to our commu-
nities. We have many success stories to tell
resulting from the UEZ program, most
recently the opening of Landis
Marketplace in downtown Vineland. This
is an integral part of Vinelands multi-mil-
lion dollar redevelopment. It is a 30,000 sq.
ft. marketplace comprised of local inde-
pendently operated businesses. It is bring-
1 So She Can Dance
A young dancer from Vineland
tries her feet at competition.
STEPHANIE FARRELL
3, 6 Faces in the News
4 News in Brief
11 Old Home Week
Vinelands 50th anniversary of the
towns founding was hailed a
success. VINCE FARINACCIO
12 Recipe Corner
Two sandwiches that will keep you
cool and healthy.
LISA DINUNZIO
13 Success Stories
They are all around us, even on
Landis Avenue. TODD NOON
14 Golf/Sports
16 DINING: Fanciful Dining
Who says elegant dinner parties are
a thing of the past?
STEPHEN WILSON
20 Crossword
21-23 HOME AND GARDEN
24 Community Calendar
26 Entertainment
27 CLASSIFIEDS
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Continued on page 9
TELL EMYOU
SAWIT IN
THE GRAPEVINE!
We have a distribution of 25,000
in the greater Vineland market.
(Including Millville, Bridgeton,
Upper Deerfield, Newfield,
Franklinville, Richland, Buena, etc.)
Our loyal readers should be
your customers.
For advertising info,
call 856-457-7815
We Need You!
We send you The Grapevine for free
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thing in return ... Please let our
advertisers knowthat you sawtheir
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Grapevine 1-7 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:12 PM Page 2
Lauren Banko, daughter of Paul
and Mary Banko, recently graduat-
ed from Pforzheimer Honors
College at Pace University. The
2007 Vineland High School honors
graduate received a B.A. in both
Economics and Mathematics.
Among her honors, she was
named to the Society of Fellows,
received an Economics Award for
excellence in research, and gradu-
ated Magna Cum Laude. Banko
was accepted into the PhD pro-
gram at Temple University and will
be attending in the fall.
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Faces in the News I
SEND US YOUR FACES. ITS FREE!
Get your photos published in The Grapevine... birthdays, engagements, weddings,
anniversaries, births, graduations, awards. Send them to the address listed on p. 2.
Congratulations
Deme Giannakaris,
we are very proud of you.
We wish you all the best
in everything you do.
Love,
Dad, Danielle, Jackie, Alexis,
Grandpop and Grandmom Lodovico
and the pets too!
Birthday Wishes
Happy belated birthday,
Raymier and Niathas! Daddy and
Mommy are so proud of you guys.
We love you both.
With lots of love from all of us,
The Martinez Family
Congratulations
Antonio J. Vingi,
who recently graduated from Vo.Tec.
with a degree in welding.
The future is all yours.
With love and support,
Your sisters, Roe, brothers, uncles,
mom and dad
n
Love The Grapevine?
Why not like us
on Facebook?
Grapevine 1-7 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:12 PM Page 3
Kohls Recognizes 72 New
Jersey Students
The Kohls Department Stores Kohls
Cares Scholarship Program will recog-
nize nearly 2,200 young volunteers
nationwide who positively impacted
their communities through volunteerism.
Some 72 youth from New Jersey will
each receive a $50 gift card and recogni-
tion certificate to reward volunteeref-
forts that have made a difference in their
communities.
These winners qualify for the chance
to receive a $1,000 regional scholarship
for post-secondary education, which
Kohls will award in July. Of the more
than 200 regional winners, 10 national
winners will each receive a total of
$10,000 in scholarships and Kohls will
donate $1,000 to a nonprofit organization
on each national winners behalf. In total,
Kohls will recognize nearly 2,200 nomi-
nees with nearly $420,000 in scholarships
and prizes this year.
A list of all winners from New Jersey is
available at www.kohlskids.com.
Attention Veterans: Military
Memorabilia Wanted
Veterans Memorial School is creating
an exhibit of authentic military items to
display in the entrance of our school. The
exhibit honors our veterans and gives stu-
dents a firsthand look at military gear
used by soldiers throughout our countrys
history. We are looking for donated items
to make this display a reality. If anyone
has military items that they would like to
donate please contact Joe Morello at 794-
6918 or jmorello@vineland.org
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New Jersey law now states that the following can
For more information regarding site location and hours, contact the site directly.
For more information on other recycling programs in Cumberland County, please call the
Improvement Authority at 825-3700 or visit our Website at www.ccia-net.com.
ATTENTION
NO LONGER GO OUT WITH YOUR GARBAGE:
Personal Computers (laptop & desktop), Computer Monitors, and Televisions
Instead, you can use these...
Drop Off Centers
City of Bridgeton Maintenance Building
Public Works Complex, Florida Avenue
Telephone: 455-3230
Commercial Township Public Works Garage
2370 Memorial Avenue
Telephone: 785-3100
Cumberland County Solid Waste Complex
169 Jesse's Bridge Road, Rosenhayn
Telephone: 825-3700
Maurice River Twp., Behind the Municipal Garage
556 Main Street, Rt. 616, Leesburg
Telephone: 785-1120
City of Millville Public Works, Ware Avenue
Telephone: 825-7000
City of Vineland Public Works,
1086 E. Walnut Road
Telephone: 794-4250
The following locations are only open to residents
served by these Townships convenience centers:
Downe Township
Fairfield Township
Hopewell/Greenwich Townships
Lawrence Township
Stow Creek and Shiloh
Upper Deerfield Township
DO NOT PLACE COMPUTERS, MONITORS AND TVs AT YOUR CURB!
Please call the drop off center in advance
to confirm drop off days and times.
I
News in Brief
Salem County CERT Holding
Summer Basic Class
Freeholder Deputy Director David T.
Lindenmuth, Chair of the Public Safety
Committee, announced today that the
Salem County Department of Emergency
Services and Salem County Sheriffs
Office is again recruiting interested coun-
ty residents to join the Salem County
Community Emergency Response Team
(CERT).
The CERT program helps train citi-
zens to be better prepared to respond to
emergency situations in their communi-
ties. When emergencies happen, CERT
members can give critical support to first
responders, provide immediate assistance
to victims, and organize spontaneous vol-
unteers at a disaster site. CERT members
can also help with non-emergency proj-
ects that help improve the safety of the
community. CERT is a nationwide initia-
tive.
The CERT training consists of 20
hours of instruction over a six-week peri-
od. Classes are taught by emergency
responders, and topics include disaster
preparedness, disaster fire suppression,
disaster medical operations, light search
and rescue operations, disaster psycholo-
gy and team organization and terrorism.
The CERT program has a place for citi-
zens of various ages and abilities. There
are many jobs within a CERT for someone
who wants to be involved and help.
Participants in the Salem County CERT
program will complete the basic CERT
course scheduled to begin on Monday,
July 11. All student materials and equip-
ment will be provided free to the students.
Classes will be held on five Mondays at 9
a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Students will be able to
rotate participation in the day or evening
classes to accommodate their schedules.
Classes will be held each Monday at a dif-
ferent fire department throughout Salem
County.
For more information or to register for
the upcoming class please contact BJ
Smith at (856)769-2900 ext. 4118.
Group Overcomes Odds to
Replenish Oyster Reefs
Sea captains employed by the Delaware
Bay Oyster Restoration Task Force are
currently wrapping up efforts to replenish
oyster reefs off Delaware and New Jersey.
This comes after the task force successful-
ly raised $200,000 to continue its seven-
year-old program.
According to past experience, these
efforts will boost the economies of local
bayshore communities by approximately
$5 million over the coming years. Rutgers
University has estimated that past invest-
ments in shell planting have resulted in a
return of at least $25 for every $1 invested
Grapevine 1-7 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:12 PM Page 4
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in oyster restoration, and in some years
much higher. A report released by the
University of Delaware in May notes that
retailers and wholesalers paid almost $3.7
million for last years harvest alone.
In addition to stimulating the economy,
oyster restoration also results in cleaner
water and better fish habitat. But shell
planting needs to be done in June or July,
prior to spawning season, to be effective.
Oyster reef restoration is important to
Delawares economy, our commercial oys-
ter industry and the health of the
Delaware Bay, said Collin OMara, secre-
tary of Delawares DNREC. Shell plant-
ing is the most cost-effective way to
increase harvests in the long term and
support our watermen and women and
the many businesses that sell Delaware
Bay oysters.
Jersey Cape Shell Club
This year is the 37th anniversary of the
Jersey Cape Shell Club. The shell club
will host the annual Shell Show at the
Wetlands Institute in Stone Harbor on
August 19, 20, and 21.
The show will be open from 9:30 a.m.
until 4 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and
from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. on Sunday.
Jersey Cape Shell Club members will be
admitted for free with their membership
card. The cost for non members is only
$2 for adults; children 12 and under are
free.
The Shell Show features competitive
displays of scientific and artistic seashells
and sea life, which will be awarded with
trophies and ribbons.
The Shell Show has seashells from
around the world for sale as well as beau-
tifully crafted shell ornaments and shell
related gifts.
Children are invited to create some
really fun crafts in the Wetlands library
from 12 noon until 2 p.m. each day of the
show.
If anyone has questions about the
Jersey Cape Shell Club, or if anyone
would like to join the club, you can call or
e-mail Karen Lelli, President of the club,
at (856) 691-5831, or,
Kjlelli53@comcast.net.
Stockton Bid To Host 2012
Presidential Debate
Stockton College President Herman J.
Saatkamp, Jr., traveled to Washington
D.C. last week to meet with Janet H.
Brown, Executive Director of the
Commission on Presidential Debates,
concerning Stocktons bid to host a presi-
dential debate in 2012.
We had a very productive meeting
with Executive Director Brown, Dr.
Saatkamp said. She used this opportu-
nity to discuss aspects of the process
going forward and the logistics of host-
ing a debate.
In May, Brown and her delegation
toured the proposed Debate Hall, the
4,500-seat Stockton Sports Center, the
new Campus Center, envisioned as a stag-
ing area for the major television net-
works, and other College facilities.
Dr. Saatkamp said Stockton was a nat-
ural choice to host the debate with its
proximity to Atlantic City International
Airport and the secure federal facility, the
William J. Hughes Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) Technical Center,
as well as Stocktons recent purchase of
the historic Seaview Resort. Stocktons
location is within easy driving distance of
a third of the United States population,
just 60 miles from Philadelphia, and 125
from New York City and 175 miles from
Washington D.C.
We have the physical and human
resources, the ability, experience and
desire to make a debate happen here, Dr.
Saatkamp said. We look forward to the
opportunity to host one of these impor-
tant debates.
Web Portal Legislation Signed
Legislation that will make it easier for
nonprofits to locate state government fund-
ing opportunities, volunteer opportunities
and other items has been signed into law by
Governor Christie. A-2173 (Vainieri-
Huttle/Stender) / S-1371 (Buono/Greenstein)
will establish a Web portal through the
Department of State Web site through
which non-profits can access funding
opportunities and other information from
each department in state government. For
details, visit www.njnonprofits.org/non-
profit_web_legislation.html. I
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Grapevine 1-7 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:12 PM Page 5
YMCA Honors Two Members
YMCA Board Chair Tom Merighi, left, pre-
sented plaques to Brenda Ferren and Tony
Stanzione recently for their many years of
service. At right is Y Executive Director
George Steinbronn, Jr. Ferren is retiring
after 13 years of service; Stanzione was a
board member for 22 years and president
for three.
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Faces in the News
I
SEND US YOUR FACES. ITS FREE!
Get your photos published in The Grapevine... birthdays, engagements, weddings,
anniversaries, births, graduations, awards. Send them to the address listed on p. 2.
Colonial Bank FSB
Appoints Bailey to Board
Colonial Bank FSB recently
appointed John J. Bailey to its Board
of Directors. He is the owner of
Bailey Financial Consulting, LLC, in
Lincroft, NJ, Previously, Bailey held
management positions in several
banks and corporations in the finan-
cial services industry, including First
Fidelity Bancorporation, Crestmont
Federal Savings and Loan
Association, Liberty Transfer
Corporation and Warburton Group.
Bailey got his undergraduate
degree from Fordham University in
Bronx, NY, and is a graduate of
Stonier Graduate School of Banking
at Rutgers University.
Landis Theater Receives Faade Medallion
The Landis Theater Performing Arts Center received Main Street Vinelands Faade
Medallion during a recent ceremony at the theater. From left: Sandra Forosisky, City of
Vineland Director of Redevelopment; Robert Romano, Vineland Mayor; Hans Lampart,
Manager of Landis Theater Properties; Lori DiMatteo-Fiocchi, President of the Landis
Theater Foundation; Diane Sacco, Chairperson of the Main Street Vineland Board of
Directors; Joseph Marcello, Executive Artistic Director of the Landis Theater Performing
Arts Center; and Todd Noon, Executive Director of Main Street Vineland.
Kell Donates to Locks of
Love For Fourth Time
Jaclyn Kell, 13, recently donated an 11-
inch ponytail to Locks of Love, which pro-
vides wigs to children undergoing cancer
treatment. This is the fourth time Kell has
donated her hair to the cause.
Bacharach Names Parker
to Board of Governors
Bacharach Institute for Rehabilitation
has added two members to its Board of
Governors, one of them being Alyce
Parker of Pittsgrove.
Parker is the former Vice President of
Public Affairs for Harrahs Entertainment.
She received a B.A. from Rowan
University and an M.A. in administration
from Rider University. Parker is the prin-
cipal in Alyce Parker & Associates, a
public relations and governmental rela-
tions consulting firm in southern Jersey.
Grapevine 1-7 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:12 PM Page 6
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Specializing in spider and varicose vein treatment
2950 College Dr., Suite 2B, Vineland
www.VeinVascular.com
Veins?
Charles L. Dietzek, D.O., FACOS
Raymond S. Wojtalik, M.D., FACS
Alissa Brotman O'Neill, D.O., RPVI
Reach Out
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30 min. Office Treatment
Insurance covered
VOORHEES SEWELL VINELAND
(8346)
856.309.VEIN
District 3
Champs
Vineland 10U Allstar team
captured the District 3
Babe Ruth Championship
with an undefeated tour-
nament recently. The team
will represent Vineland in
the State Tournament this
month. From left: (back
row) Coach Steve Endres,
Meghan Finley, Shannon
Connolly, Morgan Hagerty,
Coach Leo Hagerty,
Aubrey Messore, Veronica
Fennimore, Nicole Martinez and Coach Bob Coia; (front row) Gabrielle Fanelli, Devin
Coia, Carly Endres, Isabel Burgos, Hazel Negron, Korie Hague and Gabby Lugo.
In Loving Memory
Of Eloisa Ramos: Mom, July 4th,
2011, would have been your 100th
birthday. The whole family would have
celebrated with you. As we remember
you on your special day, were sure the
angels are celebrating with you and
Dad in heaven. Rest in peace, our dear
angel.
Love,
Daughter America and all the family.
Birthday Wishes
Tammy,
on your 40th birthday,
please eat your hot
dog with a roll.
Love,
Your entire family
Hey Tammy,
on your 40th,
do have a happy
day.
Smiles always
count.
Love ya!
Mom
Happy 40th birthday
to my wife, Tammy.
I am certainly glad shes
grown up.
Love,
Your husband, Matt
Grapevine 1-7 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:12 PM Page 7
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Dancer
Continued from cover
has a year to go, but plans to try out.
However, dance is not about the com-
petition or potential fame for Alexis. It
releases everything, says Alexis. When I
dance, I forget about all my problems. Its
my relaxation. People turn to different
things, I turn to dance. If I amhappy, I can
dance. If I amangry, I can release it all on
the dance floor and I dont get in trouble.
Ahl, who took Alexis and her brother
in first as foster children and then adopt-
ed them, also adopted another foster child
and has one biological child. I have a love
for children. I wanted to help a child
thats how I got into it.
Ahl tells other foster parents to get
their kids involved in extra-curricular
activities, especially ones that have a
physical component. I amreal, real big
on that. The case workers use me as an
example. It is for their self-esteem, self-
confidence, self-worth.
Luckily at the studio they have a family
plan. Ahl has had all four of her kids
dance at some point, and she gets to as
well. I do jazz, modern and acrobatics.
Ahl appreciates the studios support of her
and her children. I have backup. There
are other people she has to look up to and
answer to. They are extra authority fig-
ures there to help your child when they
feel like they cant talk to you.
Helen Horsey, senior instructor at The
Arts of the Dance Centre, says that kids
can come in stressed about school, about
family things at home, about things they
see on TV, but there is no bad news in the
studio. We want it to be a safe haven for
the children.
Alexis path is not completely unusual
for them, as Horsey explains that many of
their 300 students come in at age three
and dance all the way through high school.
The studio, celebrating its 50th year, offers
a wide variety of dance formsballet, tap,
jazz, hula, ballroom, musical theater. As
dance grows and changes, we learn it and
offer it, says Horsey. My momhas been
over these 50 years trying to help the com-
munity see the value of an arts education
in a childs life. As a child progresses, they
are taking care of their bodies, learning
howto conduct themselves. We teach
some of the social graces. This builds self-
confidence. Most tend to be straight-A stu-
dents. They do better in front of an audi-
ence. We tell themto eat well, drink plenty
of water. We reinforce what kids hear
other places. For the more serious stu-
dents who are here several nights a week,
we become like a family.
Alexis is the Centres first student to
compete at this level. Everything we
teach, she has applied herself. Shes an
amazing kid, says Horsey. I told her
before she left for competition that it
doesnt matter how she does down there,
Imso proud of what shes accomplished
so far. This year Alexis taught for the first
time, instructing four- and five-year-olds
contemporary dance. She choreographed
a beautiful piece, says Horsey, who felt
Alexiss students had a fabulous recital
performance.
I really did like teaching, says
Alexis. I thought it was going to be
easy. It was a lot of work, just preparing
for every class, going slower for some
students to make sure they got it. I really
liked it, though.
Alexis also choreographed her contem-
porary piece for the competition. She
describes contemporary as a fusion of
modern, jazz and ballet. The dance was
the third and final part of the weeklong
competition. She also participated in bal-
let, acrobatics, jazz and tap classes in
which she was scored and had a personal
interview. Though Alexis did not place in
the competition, she was recognized with
awards in two of her classes. She also
won a modern dance scholarship.
Alexis, a good student, plans to attend
Rutgers and participate in the dance pro-
gramand study nursing. Dance can bring
you places, whether youre good or bad.
Her advice to other young dancers? Dont
let anybody influence you. If you love to
dance, keep dancing. I
When she
turns 18,
Alexis plans
to audition
for the TV
show, So You
Think You
Can Dance.
Grapevine 8-13 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:24 PM Page 8
July 19 | 6 p.m.
Alexander Onopchenko, MD, FACS
November 15 | 6 p.m.
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ing people into our area fromall over the
state and surrounding states. It would
never have happened without the assis-
tance fromthe UEZ orogram.
For now, we are supporting this bill with
expectations that positions will change in
the future. We thank you in advance for
your support of this bill.
Dawn S. Hunter, Executive Director,
Greater Vineland Chamber of Commerce
Teachers Plant the Seeds
I ammore than a bit overwhelmed by
what Jerry has written, and amaware that
much of the credit any former student
attributes to his teachers rightfully belongs
to the student himself, who chose freely to
think about and act upon annoying ques-
tions that were raised about life itself and
our individual role in it. Excellent teachers
have planted seeds for all of us, and through
our own actions and the influence of others,
some of those seeds germinate and develop
over a lifetime. This is the true and hard-to-
measure reward of the teaching profession.
In many cases, teachers are not certain of
the full impact they have had on their stu-
dents. Its the kind of thing that does not
showup in standardized test scores. I am
very honored by Jerrys article, for it serves
to validate the significance of the profession
I love, as well as my firmbelief in the ability
of young people to change themselves and
the world for the better.
Richard Flaim,
The Villages, FL
Sacred Heart High Alive and Well
To paraphrase Mark Twain, the report
of our death is greatly exaggerated. As
Sacred Heart High School begins to cele-
brate its 80th anniversary as a cornerstone
of education excellence in the region, we
are more committed than ever to continue
for many more years in the same successful
tradition those first graduates established
eight decades ago. Plans are in the making
to improve our science labs, renovate our
gymlobby, expand our technology
resources and increase our curriculumwith
more courses that earn college credits.
Despite misinformation, malicious
rumor, and perhaps some wishful thinking
by some of our sports rivals, Sacred Heart
is going nowhere but up. We are not wan-
ing on any front. Our academic strength is
clearly demonstrated in two-thirds of
graduates going on to competitive four-
year colleges and universities with the
majority receiving scholarship money to
their school of choice. The other third of
our graduates, many of whomare School
Counts Scholarship recipients, intention-
ally decided to use the excellent educa-
tional resources at Cumberland County
College to begin their college education
and received a full tuition scholarship to
do so. With over $7.1 million in scholarship
monies offered to this years graduating
class, well over 60 percent of our gradu-
ates recovered more than the total tuition
cost of attending Sacred Heart High
School. These statistics clearly demon-
strate that our students are leaving us with
a quality education that has gained the
academic respect of the colleges they
applied to and will attend next autumn.
A lions share of the credit for our stu-
dents success belongs to our dedicated,
highly qualified faculty that strives each day
to ignite an intellectual curiosity in each
student that lasts a lifetime. We pride our-
selves as being a school that you can believe
in; a school that a parent can trust to rein-
force the values and morals taught at home;
a school that seeks to maximize the poten-
tial of each child entrusted to our educa-
tional care, not just academically, but social-
ly and spiritually, too.
Our racial, ethnic, cultural and financial
diversity find common ground in our aca-
demically enriched, value-based, faith-
infused learning community as each stu-
dent discovers and develops his or her par-
ticular God-given talents and abilities. To
this end, recent Sacred Heart graduates
have graduatedoften with honorsfrom
prestigious institutions of higher education
such as Georgetown University, Columbia
University, The Naval Academy, Notre
Dame and Cornell. Sacred Heart alumni
that graduated in the last five years are cur-
rently attending lawschools, medical
schools, and graduate schools, while many
others nowwork as teachers, nurses, engi-
neers, performance artist, police and fire
fighters, and business executives. Despite
our small size, we stand in no schools
shadowwhen it comes to academic com-
petiveness as well as our Christian identity.
Certainly, we struggle financially to pro-
vide the high-quality education and co-cur-
ricular activities and sports for consider-
ably less than half the cost of our local pub-
lic school counterparts. We do so because
we knowand respect that most of our stu-
dents come fromworking middle class
families and tuition costs are not easily met.
We realize as a school, we need to develop
more and better financial resources to help
offset tuition costs for the families of stu-
dents who want to attend Sacred Heart but
cannot meet the full cost of tuition. We are
steadfastly working to develop those much
needed funds to keep Sacred Heart truly a
Catholic high school.
So despite the doom-and-gloomrumor
mongers, Sacred Heart High School is alive
and well and ready to greet our incoming
Class of 2015. Yes its a small class even by
Sacred Heart High School standards, but it
is growing everyday as the power of truth
triumphs over the pettiness of gossip.
Sacred Heart High stands ready to protect
its legacy as it provides for its continued
success and longevity.
Anne Hartman, Assistant Principal,
Sacred Heart High School
(on behalf of the Sacred Heart High
School administration, faculty,
staff, students and alumni)
Letters
Continued from page 2
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Aneurysm. Peripheral artery disease. And stroke.
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Vineland 150th
Anniversary Celebration
Festivities Announced
Last week, members of Mayor
Romanos Blue Ribbon Committee
met in the mayors office to
announce the planned activities for
Vinelands upcoming 150th year
anniversary celebration.
All planned events are to take
place at the Vineland High School
Complex. They include:
A carnival taking place from
August 4th-7th, with proceeds bene-
fitting the North Vineland Fire Co. #3.
A four-day event featuring rides, plus
a car show and a tractor show
planned for August 6th. Registration
for the car show is the day of the
event and costs $10. Registration for
the tractor show is free. Tickets for
rides have already gone on sale, and
can be purchased in the Mayors
office. Buy your tickets early for a $5
discount off the ticket price. The car-
nival will conclude with fireworks tak-
ing place on August 7th.
BBQ with entertainment taking
place on 8/6 and 8/7. $10.
Entertainment includes singers and
dancers, local bands, and even ice
skaters,
A parade for the citizens of
Vineland on 8/7 at 5:00 p.m.
Anyone can register, no matter what
you have planned for the parade.
Walkers in costumes, church groups,
school groups, scouts, clubs and
bands are all welcome. Citizens with
flags or banners made up are also
welcome to march.
Be a part of history and be proud
of Vineland! Include your name,
family name, or a memorial in
Vinelands 150th Birthday
Commemorative History Book. $25
for four lines. Deadline to submit an
ad is July 31st. All proceeds benefit
the 150th birthday celebration.
Sponsors are also needed for all
of these events and more!
For more information, contact Joe
Profetto at jprofetto@comcast.net
Historical Societys
Commemorative Jug
The Vineland Historical and
Antiquarian Society is offering local
residents the opportunity to pur-
chase ($36) Vintage Vineland, a
limited-edition miniature wine jug
created to commemorate
Vinelands 150th anniversary. Only
150 of the jugs will be produced by
Terry Plasket, a talented veteran
potter who works at Wheaton Arts
and Cultural Center in Millville.
Every piece is numbered and
signed by the artist.
To purchase a miniature wine
jug, call 856-691-1111.
Grapevine 8-13 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:24 PM Page 10
Massos Catering Spring Savings
Land & Sea Buffet & Tent Package
Buffet is brought to your location already cooked, hot and ready to serve!

200 Steamed Clams (choice of butter, red or white sauce)

5 lbs U-Peel Shrimp (prepared Maryland or Cajun Style,


complimented with cocktail sauce and lemon wedges)

20 lbs Snow Crabs (prepared Maryland or Cajun Style)

80 pcs BBQ Chicken (Assorted Pieces)

18 lbs New York Strip Steaks (individual Steaks cut into 1/3's)

1 1/2 Trays Red Bliss Potatoes

1 1/2 Trays Green Beans Marinara

20 lbs Potato Salad

1 Lg. Bowl Caesar Salad

3 Dozen Dinner Rolls

2 lbs. Butter Pats


Plus 7% Sales Tax & Vehicle Delivery Charge
Prices subject to change without notice
All of this
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00
Menu Feeds 50 People
20 x 30 Pole Tent with Light 40 Chairs
Paper Products, Silverware and Table covers, Chafers, Sternos, and Water Pans
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Call Massos For More Information: 856-881-6855
or visit us on the web at www.MassosCatering.com
$
1,495
00
I
Vintage Vineland { BY VINCE FARINACCIO }
Old Home Week
Vinelands 50th anniversary of the towns founding
was hailed a success.
I
t began without promise.
Newspaper reports revealed
how chairpersons failed to
attend their own meetings.
Scheduled evening gatherings would
last for hours into the night in the
hopes that quorum could be
achieved and business conducted.
Lack of enthusiasm and an abun-
dance of ambivalence were apparent
during the early planning stages, yet by the
time it was over, Vinelands Old Home
Week, the name given to its semi-centenni-
al celebration commemorating the 50th
Anniversary of the towns founding, was
hailed as the most successful event in the
citys history.
The week began on Sunday August 6,
1911, a warm, breezy day that began with
church services before giving way to an
afternoon parade and evening speeches.
The first of the weeks parades featured
Sunday School children from all but the
Episcopal Church. Fifteen hundred youth
marched down Landis Avenue and were
met at 6th Street by a group of Civil War
veterans who escorted them to Landis
Park. The group was joined by a band and a
group of girls dressed in red, white and
blue while also sporting the unofficial col-
ors of Vineland, white and green.
According to the Evening Journal, 6,000
people gathered at the park that afternoon.
The crowd listened to speeches that cen-
tered on the importance of youth and the
shaping of ideal citizenship.
That evening, according to newspaper
reports, the Auditorium presented a series
of speakers who addressed the importance
of temperance amid moments of song and
prayer. The overcapacity crowd that made
it necessary to set up additional seating
enjoyed a series of talks by local represen-
tatives as well as the Rev. John Royal
Harris of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania who
bemoaned the fact that over seven mil-
lions [sic] of people had died the last thirty
years from rum and condemned bar-
tenders for selling damnation over the
bar. The event concluded with a talk by
Rev. John W. Lissenden of Millville who
cautioned parents on making sure their
homes were so attractive that children
will prefer to stay there instead of traips-
ing off to area bars.
After a day dedicated mainly to the
youth of the town, it was the Fire
Departments turn on Monday, August 7.
An afternoon parade was well attended and
featured an array of southern Jersey fire
companies on hand to honor Vinelands 50
years. Led by W. V. Prince, the towns first
fire chief in 1864, and W.H. Nickerson and
Hugh Lyons, Princes successors, the
parade included music by the City Silver
Band, the Training School Band and the
Municipal Band as well as the Clayton
Band. Mayor W. F. Sawyer and the Borough
Council were also part of the procession as
was an old oxen-drawn fire wagon from
Vinelands early days. The parade was fol-
lowed by a dinner at the Fire Hall and then
a ball to wrap up the evening.
While the Fire Department was dancing
the night away, a reception was taking
place at the Baker House. Like the anti-
quated fire wagon used in the parade, the
reception was a means of honoring the
towns past by presenting several guest
speakers who recalled the development of
Vineland in the early years. Between 8 and
11 oclock, those in attendance were regaled
with stories from Charles K. Landis Jr. and
Henry W. Wilbur.
Landis acknowledged that his invitation
came in honor of his father, the towns
founder who had died 11 years earlier. The
Evening Journal reported that he shared
with the group some stories of his boyhood
and gave his heartfelt thanks to the pio-
neers who made Vineland as a result of
the faith they had in the good intentof his
father. Wilbur entertained the early set-
tlers in attendance by reminding them of
various events from the early days and con-
gratulated them on the splendid develop-
ment of the town
Perhaps one of the finest tributes to
Vineland during Old Home Week was the
return of a large number of individuals
who grew up here before making their way
in the world and settling in other parts of
the country. The Evening Journal identifies
more than a dozen people just at the recep-
tion who returned to celebrate Vinelands
50th Anniversary in an era when time and
travel were precious commodities. I
Next Week: August 8, 1911
This postcard of Vinelands Old Home
Week recently sold on eBay for $76.99.
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Heating & Cooling
Your Home
SINCE 1982
FUEL OIL &
KEROSENE
CALL FOR PRICES
PO Box 645 West Blvd. Newfield, NJ 08344
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jOSPH D ONILL
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G
reetings! These light and
healthy sandwich recipes are
perfect to make and serve on a
hot summer day. They can easily
be modified by adding your own favorite
veggies that are abundantly available at the
Amish Farmers Market in the lower level
of the Landis MarketPlace, or at local fruit
and vegetable stands found throughout our
city. Nothing screams summer quite like
fresh produce.
Turkey Bacon BLT Sandwich
1 tsp. extra virgin olive oil
4 strips all-natural, uncured nitrate-free
turkey bacon
2 slices whole grain bread, lightly toast-
ed
2 tsp. butter or mayonnaise with olive
oil, to taste
6 fresh spinach or romaine lettuce
leaves
2 slices of tomato
Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medi-
um-high heat. Add turkey bacon and cook
until crisp, turning once. Meanwhile, spread
butter or a thin layer of mayonnaise on both
slices of bread. Layer bacon, spinach, and
tomatoes onto one slice of the toasted
bread. Top with the remaining slice of
bread, slice sandwich diagonally into four
slices and serve.
Note: For added health benefits, add a few
slices of fresh avocado.
Greek Salad Pita Sandwiches
3 tbs. extra-virgin olive oil
1 1/2 tbs. apple cider or balsamic vine-
gar
Sea salt, to taste
Black pepper, to taste
1 cup tomatoes, diced
1 cup cucumber, peeled, seeded and
diced
1/4 cup pitted Kalamata olives,
chopped small
Romaine lettuce leaves, torn into bite-
size pieces
1 cup crumbled feta cheese
4 whole-wheat pita, halved
In a large bowl, whisk together olive oil,
vinegar, sea salt and pepper. Add tomatoes,
cucumber, olives and lettuce into the dress-
ing and mix well. Add the feta cheese to the
veggie mixture and give a quick toss. Using a
slotted spoon, transfer salad into pita bread
halves. Serve!
As always, fBon Appetit! I
Lisa Ann is author of Seasoned With Love,
Treasured Recipes and Lisa Anns Seasoned
With Love II. Send recipes for publication to
lapd1991@aol.com or The Grapevine, 3638 E.
Landis Ave., Vineland, NJ 08361.
Healthy and
Light
These two sandwiches are packed with healthy
ingredients and making them wont heat up the kitchen.
I
Recipe Corner { LISA ANN DiNUNZIO }
Grapevine 8-13 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:24 PM Page 12
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As a longtime resident of Hammonton, I have a strong sense
of community. I take pride in offering the best in diagnostic
imaging services, right here in my community.
At AMI-AtlantiCare, you will receive high quality, state-of-the-art
diagnostic imaging performed by board-certied, sub-specialty
trained radiologists. We provide a full array of imaging services
including CT, MRI, Digital Mammography, Ultrasound, DEXA
Scan, Vein Services, Thyroid Biopsies and Digital X-ray.
If you need a di agnosti c i magi ng test, you wi l l fi nd our
Hammonton l ocati on easy to access and our prompt
resul ts wi l l hel p your physi ci an make ti mel y deci si ons
about your care.
Local residents and physicians alike will enjoy
the convenience and peace of mind from local
radiologists that they know and trust.
Practicing In The
Community I Call Home.
Hammonton.
Dr. Amerigo Falciani
Medical Director, AMI-AtlantiCare
600 South White Horse Pike, Hammonton, NJ
www.amiatlanticare.com
To schedule an appointment, please call
(609) 567-XRAY (9729).
S
o, I have always been fascinated by
and had a deep respect for people
who make it despite the odds
against them. Maybe its because,
like so many others, I have that uniquely
American tendency to root for the under-
dog. Or maybe its because at their heart,
these kinds of stories reveal an inner
strength and determination that deserves a
tip of the hat. Or maybe its a bit of both.
I was recently reading a story of a man
named Walter (the last name isnt impor-
tant) who was working for a newspaper in
the Midwest until he was fired because
his boss believed that he lacked creativity.
Down but not out, the man formed his
own company, raised more than $150,000
in capital and made a deal with another
company that agreed to sell and distribute
his product. But this distributor went out
of business soon thereafter, killing
Walters business along with it. This was a
terrible financial blow to Walterso much
so that, according to reports, he could
hardly pay his rent and had to eat dog
food on occasion.
Still not broken, Walter scraped together
a few dollars and hopped a train to another
part of the country, determined to make
two thingsa fresh start and something of
himself. After arriving in his new home-
town, Walter created a product and was
having it distributed by another company,
only to later learn that the distributor
patented it from right underneath him.
Ultimately, the distributor continued to
create the product itself without paying
Walter a dime. He lost again.
Walter pressed on, but met with similar
defeats. He created other products, many of
which were rejected by distributors. In
fact, Walter was told that one of his prod-
ucts would fail because it would be terrify-
ing to women.
So how does Walters story end? Pretty
happily, Id say. The Walter who suffered
defeat after defeat, was on the brink of
bankruptcy, ate dog food and was told that
many of his products were doomed to fail-
ure is today known by all of us as Walt
Disney. And that product he created that
one distributor said would scare women?
Mickey Mouse.
There is no doubt that these continue to
be difficult economic times for many small
businesses, including those on Landis
Avenue, but the story of Walt Disney is just
one of a countless number that speaks to
the values of persistence and determina-
tion. Each day, Main Street Vineland works
to help our downtown business owners
weather the economic storm and see the
brighter days ahead.
According to the Sturgeon General,
seafood is healthy. So just for the halibut,
why not get off your perch and join us at
the downtown Vineland Seafood Festival,
sponsored by Century Savings Bank, this
Saturday, July 16 from 4 to 9 p.m.?
Kelp yourself to a whale-sized smorgas-
bord of seafood delights that are fit for a
King crab. It's no fluke that we'll have some
of Vineland's finest restaurants and fresh
food purveyors serving up shrimp, clams,
mussels, crab cakes and more.
While you're here, kick up your eels and
dance to great live music being played on
our incredible man-made beachright in
the middle of Landis Avenue!
Call me at 856-794-8653 with any
questions. I
For more information on Main Street Vineland,
visit the office at 603 E. Landis Ave., call
794-8653, visit www.mainstreetvineland.org,
or check them out on Facebook.
I
Downtown Vineland
{ TODD NOON, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, VDID / MAINSTREET VINELAND }
They are all around us, and if we look back, there
are some to inspire and keep us going.
Success
Stories
n
Love The Grapevine?
Why not like us
on Facebook?
facebook.com/grapevinenewspaper
Grapevine 8-13 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:24 PM Page 13
Downtown Vineland
631 E Landis Ave
8562136002
LandisMarketPlace.com
FREE PARKING
Landis Avenue
Two-hour On-Street
Elmer &Wood Streets
Free Lot Parking
This ad has been paid for with funds approved for such use by the New Jersey Urban Enterprise Zone Authority.
LANDIS MARKET HOURS
Thurs/Fri 9 am 7 pm
Saturday 8 am 5 pm
Individual Store Hours May Vary
Amish Market
Closes 6 pmon Thursday
and 4 pmSaturday
LandisMarketPlace.com
Featuring
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Live Music on Fridays 57 pm
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700 Block Landis Avenue
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o make a change in your golf swing,
you must have an awareness of how
your current swing move and your
new swing move are different.
Video cameras, shadows and mirrors can
help you get a picture of what youre doing.
Ultimately, awareness is your ability to feel
whats happening during your swing.
The best way to develop awareness is to
start with a short club (an 8 or 9 iron will
do), a short swing, go in slow motion, and
swing without a ball. As you gain awareness,
gradually increase the length and speed of
your swing, eventually hitting balls and using
longer clubs. Thats it. Its that simple.
These simple guidelines make sense
because:
If you cant feel a new move without a
ball, you wont feel it with a ball.
If you cant feel a new move in a slow
swing, you wont feel it with a fast swing.
If you cant feel a new move with a short
club, you wont feel it with a longer club.
If you cant feel a new move with a
short swing, you wont feel with a full swing.
Unfortunately, there are many golfers
who think they can make a swing change
more quickly by skipping the awareness
process and going straight to pounding full
swing shots with a driver. Shot after shot,
they do the same thing over and over, having
no conscious awareness of what is happen-
ing between takeaway and impact, hoping
somehow for a miracle.
In fact, you can see these golfers at every
driving range in America. Theyre the ones
who are visibly frustrated and muttering aloud:
I know what Im doing wrong, but I
just cant seem to stop it. (Truth they may
mentally understand what theyre doing, but
they dont feel what theyre doing.)
Ive been doing the same thing for 30
years. (Truth in 30 years of beating balls
and trying to change, they still havent taken
the time to actually feel what theyre doing.)
I dont think Im getting it. (Truth
they need to have a better feel of what it is.)
Why I cant I do it? (Truth they need
to become aware of how the desired swing
change feels, especially when hitting balls.)
This doesnt work, (Truth theyre
focused on the results of the shot instead of
focusing their awareness on the change they
want to make.)
In the future, if you hear yourself saying
anything similar to the statements above,
take it as a reminder to become crystal clear
about the difference between your current
swing habit and your desired swing habit.
In developing the awareness to change
your swing, the key to remember is, the
slower you go, the faster youll change. I
Sports
I
Before You Do It
Make Sure You Feel It
{ BY BILL MARSHALL, NIKE STAFF PRO, HEAD GOLF PROFESSIONAL AT WHEAT ROAD GOLF }
Bill Marshall Bill Marshall
Grapevine 14-19 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 5:53 PM Page 14
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SPORTS & FITNESS
JULY 22, 23 & 24
Junior Tennis Tournament. Vineland High
School Tennis Courts, E. Chestnut Ave. For
boys and girls ages 18 and under. Singles
and doubles categories in three age groups.
$22 singles, $35 per doubles team.
Deadline for entries July 20. For information,
call Harry Silverstein at 609-501-3340.
WEEKLY THROUGH OCTOBER 4
Senior Golf Association Rounds. 7/19
Westwood, 7/26Back Creek, 8/2White
Oaks, 8/9Chesapeake Bay-Rising Sun,
8/16Valleybrook, 8/30Bittersweet, 9/6
Indian Springs, 9/13Centerton, 9/20
Deerfield, 9/27Sand Barrens, 10/4Buena
Vista. For information or to join (annual fee
$20), call Paul J. Doerr at 691-4098.
EVERY WEDNESDAY
Hip Hop Dance Program. Carl Arthur
Recreation Center, 304 W. Plum Street,
Vineland. 5:30 p.m - 7 p.m. Hosted by
Boys and Girls Club of Vineland. $10 per
year, good for all club programs. 896-0244.
EVERY FRIDAY
Boot Camp Class. YMCA Vineland, 1159
E. Landis Ave., Vineland. 6 - 7 p.m. Free to
Y members, $25 for public. The class
begins with a warm up, progressing to
building muscular strength, and ends with
a cool down. 691-0030 ext. 325.
EVERY SATURDAY
Canoe & Kayak Trip. Parvin State Park,
701 Almond Rd, Pittsgrove. On Parvin Lake
and Muddy Run. Meet at 10 a.m. at Fire
Ring (between CS 13 and 15). Bring own
boat or rent one nearby. 358-8616.
The Boys & Girls Club of Vineland will
hold its 2nd Annual Golf Tournament
on Thursday, September 15, 2011 at
White Oaks Country Club in Newfield.
The cost is $125 per golfer (foursome
$500). Includes lunch, refreshments,
shotgun start, dinner, silent auction,
and prizes. Sponsorships available.
Proceeds benefit at-risk children in the
community. For more information, con-
tact Chris Volker at 856-896-0244.
Grapevine 14-19 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 5:53 PM Page 15
Specializing in spider and varicose vein treatment
Varicose Veins?
Leg Swelling? Painful Legs?
Charles L. Dietzek, D.O., FACOS
Raymond S. Wojtalik, M.D., FACS
Alissa Brotman ONeill, D.O., RPVI
www.VeinVascular.com
856-309-VEIN
(8346)
Monday, July 25th, 3-6pm
2950 College Drive, Suite 2B Vineland, NJ 08360
Wed., July 27th, 3-6pm
1000 White Horse Rd.,
Suite 703, Voorhees
Fri., July 29th, 3-6pm
RFB Surgical Plus, 556 Egg Harbor Rd.,
Suite A, Sewell
FREE VEIN SCREENING
Varicose veins can
progressively worsen to
leg swelling, permanent
skin changes and pain
30-minute treatments
done in the office
Requires no down-time
Covered by most insurances
Please Call for
appointment

WHATARE YOU
WAITING FOR?
Voorhees Sewell Vineland Swedesboro
Tues., Aug. 2nd, 9am-12pm
300 Lexington Rd., Building B,
Suite 230, Swedesboro
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Saturday, July 16 4-9 pm
Raindate Sunday, July 17
600 Block Landis Avenue
Join us for a Seafood Extravaganza!
Incredible Man-Made Beach
C
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Live Music C
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In High Gear Country and More
Double Helix Motown, Blues, Classic Rock
Featured Seafood Vendors:
4ASTE OF THE )SLANDS s ,UCIANOS &RESH -ARKET s 'REENVIEW)NN AT %ASTLYN 'OLF
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VINELANDTROLLEY VINELANDTROLLEY
FREE Trolley runs from
Walmart to Kidston Towers.
Pick up on Wood or Elmer in
Festival Area.
This event is sponsored in part by
VDID/Vineland Main Street. This ad has
been paid for with funds approved for
such use by the New Jersey Urban
Enterprise Zone Authority.
Event sponsored in part by
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DTRO A LLE LLEY E L EY O V LA Y Y E EY ANDTRO ANDTRO VINEL VINELLANDTRO A
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ust a few months ago, our good
friend Amanda pondered on
Facebook as to why no one has
fancy dinner parties any more. She
mentioned that she might like to host one.
After some encouraging comments from
her friends, she announced that she would
do ithost a fancy dinner party at her
house with men and women dressing up,
multiple courses of food served, no dogs
nor kids, and even mailed invitations! Her
mind raced at the prospects of hosting an
adult evening. Being a grown-up is hard
work and should be a little fun, too.
Well, I dont know how I scored an invi-
tation, but sure enough, a few weeks after,
a fancy invitation, cursive writing and all,
arrived in our mail-
box. Jill and I were
formally invited to
Dan and Amandas
house for an evening
of fancy dining. What would everyone
wear, I wondered? Would there be enlight-
ened conversation about art and politics?
Would the men retire to the study for bour-
bon and cigars? How fun!
Although I gave some thought to renting
a tux and going all out, I settled on a suit
and tie. Jill wore a wonderfully colorful
dress with a big broche shaped like a white
daisy on it, and my mother-in-lawcame to
our house to babysit her grandson.
We arrived at Dan and Amandas house
with homebrewed beer as our gift to the
hosts. Upon entering, we were greeted by
familiar faces and warm welcomes. As was
requested, everyone was dressed up and we
all looked so nice in our evening wear.
The house was fancified as well, and
candlelight flickered across the scene, cast-
ing dancing shadows on the walls. A thick
cutting board sat on a small table near the
kitchen, loaded with different cheeses and
homemade dried sausages. The cheeses
were labeled with little signstaleggio,
I
Culinary Adventures { BY STEPHEN WILSON / PHOTOS: JILL McCLENNEN }
Fanciful
Dining
At each place setting was a printed menu
of what was in store for us that evening.
Grapevine 14-19 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 5:53 PM Page 16
goat, Gouda, etc. A petite dish of salty
olives sat at the corner of the cutting board.
Before long, I would try each cheese, study-
ing the creaminess and sharpness before
moving onto the next. A brief, and grown
up, discussion with several of the other
attendees on the merits of each cheese
soon transpired.
The kitchen counter was stocked with
an impressive array of liquors and wines, so
I prepared myself a gin and tonic and
poured Jill a glass of crisp, white Riesling.
Amanda had some hors doeuvres out and
was encouraging their consumption.
Naturally I couldnt resist, and I was taken
aback by how smooth and intensely fla-
vored the asparagus soup was (and how
nice each looked in the tall, slender shot
glasses!). The soup was rich,
but not heavy, and was just
amazing. The fancy little glass-
es that held the refreshing
ceviche were tasty, too, and I
had a few of those while I con-
versed with the rest of the
attendees. Much of the talk
revolved around kids and par-
enthood, which has definitely
been a shift of gears for Jill and
me recently. We all talked and
the alcohol flowed and the
appetizers disappeared.
After a while, Amanda
began to herd us into the dining room,
which we could see was done up very nice-
ly. Her new wallpaper looked fabulous, and
the table was dolled up with fancy dishes
and a beautiful centerpiece of soft pink
flowers and contrasting yellow lemons. At
each place setting was a printed menu of
what was in store for us that evening.
First up was a mixed green salad with
basil vinaigrette, which was wonderful.
The lettuce was cold, fresh and crisp, while
the creamy basil dressing coated the greens
with a bold, but not overpowered herbal
flavor. A perfect start to the sit-down por-
tion of the meal.
The pasta course was composed of fluffy
homemade gnocchi in a light cream
sauce, and was exactly as advertised. The
gnocchi were soft and pillowy, and the per-
fectly seasoned sauce clung gracefully to
each little potato dumpling. I would have
been pleased if that was the main course,
but there was still more to come.
An intermezzo of blackberry sorbet was
a wonderful foil to the pasta course.
Although the cream sauce wasnt heavy by
any means, the tart sweetness of the icy
cold sorbet played against the heat and
richness of the previous course, cancelling
each other out and preparing our palates
for the main dish.
Lemon and prosciutto stuffed pork loin
with chive mashed potatoes and asparagus
was the piece de resistance, and it was as
good as it sounds. The pork was moist and
flavorful, and the potatoes and asparagus
were great. Everyone must have been as
pleased as I was, since there was just about
nothing left on anyones plates.
Sadly, Jill and I couldnt stay for the last
course of dark chocolate brownies, as I had
to head into the bakery very early to bake
the bread. I had eaten enough and drank
more than I should have (as I would find
out in a few hours when the alarm went
off ), but it was well worth it. Aside from
the food, this wonderful meal was made
complete with great conversation and com-
panionship. The fancy dinner party was a
smashing success. Kudos to Dan and
Amanda for pulling it off! I
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Andrea Trattoria, 1833 Harding Hwy.,
Newfield, 697-8400. Chef/owner Andrea
Covino serves up Italian specialties in
atmosphere of fine dining.
Annata Wine Bar, 216 Bellevue Ave,
Hammonton, 609-704-9797. Food served
tapas style, catering, private parties.
Extensive wine list. Live music Thurs. night.
Babe's Village Inn, Martinelli Avenue,
Minotola, NJ 856-697-1727. Famous crabs,
seafood, Italian cuisine. Eat in or Take out.
Bagel University, 1406 S. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 691-0909. Breakfast and lunch
spot offering sandwiches named for col-
leges near and far.
Bain's Deli, 636 E. Landis Ave., Vineland,
563-1400. Come in for breakfast, lunch, or
dinner. Daily specials, coffee of the day.
Barberas Chocolates on Occasion, 782 S.
Brewster Rd., Vineland, 690-9998.
Homemade chocolates and candies, custom
gift baskets.
Bennigans Restaurant, 2196 W. Landis
Ave., Vineland, 205-0010. Entrees,
desserts, drink specials. Take-out. Happy
Hour Mon-Fri 3pm-7pm, Sun-Thu 10pm-cl.
MLB Extra Innings.
Bernardis Restaurant & Lounge, 140 E.
Wheat Rd., Vineland, 696-1461. Lunch and
dinner specials. Open 10:30 a.m.-10 p.m.
(until 11 p.m. on Friday). Closed Sunday.
Big Apple, 528 N. Harding Hwy., Vineland,
697-5500. Steaks, veal, chicken dishes.
Meet friends at bar. Daily lunch and dinner.
Big Johns Pizza Queen, 1383 S. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 205-0012. Featuring Gutbuster
a 21-oz. burger, pizza, wings, subs, dinners.
Black Olive Restaurant. 782 S. Brewster
Rd, Vineland. 457-7624. 7 a.m. - 10 p.m
daily. Entrees, desserts. Take out available.
Bruno's Family Restaurant, Cape May Ave.
and Tuckahoe Rd., Dorothy, 609-476-4739.
Breakfast, lunch, dinner, pizza. Open Mon-
Sat. 7 a.m.-8:30 p.m.
Buena Tavern, 761 Harding Hwy. (Rts.
40/54), Buena, 697-9848. Seafood, home-
made Italian, Wednesday specials, half-
price meals to volunteers Thursday nights.
Chows Garden 1101 N. 2nd St., Millville,
327-3259. Sushi Bar, All-you-can-eat buffet.
Cosmopolitan Restaurant Lounge, Bakery,
3513 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland, 765-5977.
Happy hour Mon.-Fri. 3-7 p.m. free buffet,
reduced drinks.
Crust N Krumbs Bakery, Main/Magnolia
rds., 690-1200. Cakes, pies, cookies,
breads, doughnuts, custom wedding cakes.
EATING OUT
From fine dining to lunch spots to
bakeries, the area has choices to satisfy
any appetite. Call for hours.
Marcacci Meats Celebrates Customers
At a recent Marcacci Meats customer appreciation day, patrons were reward-
ed for their business with complimentary hamburgers, hot dogs and drinks.
Preparation for the day began at 5 a.m. when co-owners Mehmet and Halil
began making the fresh hamburgers.They anticipated feeding 2,000 people
that day, all in an effort to show how much they appreciate the business
theyve received in the past year.
ABOVE: Co-owner Halil
with his daughters,
Belgin and Nilgun.
RIGHT: Marcacci Meats
team of butchers, led by
co-owner Mehmet (sec-
ond from left).
Grapevine 14-19 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 5:53 PM Page 18
CrepeMaker Cafe, 607 E. Landis Ave.,
Vineland, 205-0027. Crepes any way you
like themveggie, chicken, steak, dessert.
Dakota Steakhouse & Sushi Bar at
Ramada, W. Landis Ave. and Rt. 55,
Vineland, 692-8600. Steaks, seafood, sushi.
Deeks Deli & Kustard Kitchen, 1370 S.
Main Rd., Vineland, 691-5438. Call for
lunch, dinner specials. Soft ice cream and
cakes year-round. Mon.-Sat 9 a.m.8 p.m.
Dennys, 1001 W. Landis Ave., Vineland,
696-1900. Breakfast, lunch, dinner. Take-
out, too. Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 3-7 p.m.
Open 24 hours. Kids eat free Tues. & Sat.
Dominicks Pizza, 1768 S. Lincoln Ave.,
Vineland, 691-5511. Family time-honored
recipes, fresh ingredients.
Doris Italian, 16 N. High St., Millville, 765-
9799. Open for lunch and dinner Mon.-Sat.
Elmer Diner, 41 Chestnut St., Elmer. 358-
3600. Diverse menu of large portions at
reasonable prices.
Esposito's Maplewood III, 200 N. Delsea
Dr., Vineland, 692-2011. Steaks, seafood
and pasta dishes at this Italian restaurant.
Erics, 98 S. West Ave., Vineland, 205-
9800. Greek and American cuisine, pizza.
Fat Jack's BBQ. Cumberland Mall, next to
Starbucks, 825-0014. Open 7 days a week,
11 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Eat in or take out.
Serving ribs, wings, sandwiches, salads
and sides.
Five Points Inn, E. Landis Ave. and Tuckahoe
Rd., Vineland, 691-6080. Italian cuisine and
dinner buffets to savor. Family-owned.
Gardellas Ravioli Co. & Italian Deli,
527 S. Brewster Rd., 697-3509. Name says
it all. Daily specials, catering. Closed Sun.
Giorgios Restaurant 363 E. Wheat Rd.,
Buena, 697-2900. Serving lunch and dinner
daily. Italian cuisine, pizza.
Golden Palace Diner Restaurant. 2623 S
Delsea Dr, Vineland, 692-5424. Serving
breakfast, lunch and dinner daily.
The Greenview Inn at Eastlyn Golf Course,
4049 Italia Rd., Vineland, 691-5558.
Restaurant and lounge open to the public
for lunch Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.3:30 p.m.
High Street Chinese Buffet, High St.,
Millville, 825-2288. All-you-can-eat buffet.
Jersey Jerry's. 1362 S. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland, 362-5978. Serving subs, sand-
wiches, and take-out platters.
Joe's Poultry. 440 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland,
692-8860. Barbecue and Kosher chickens,
homemade sides, catering.
Kawa Thai & Sushi, 2196 N. Second St.
(Rt.47), Millville, 825-9939. Thai and
Japanese cuisine. BYOB.
Larry's II Restaurant, 907 N. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 692-9001. Three meals daily.
Sunday breakfast buffet, early-bird dinners.
La Locanda Pizzeria & Ristorante, 1406 S.
Main Rd., Vineland, 794-3332. Pasta, veal,
chicken. Lunch and dinner. Closed Sun.
Marcianos Restaurant, 947 N. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland, 563-0030. Italian-American cui-
sine, seafood and veal. Open daily for
lunch and dinner, Sunday breakfast buffet.
Merighi's Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave. and
Union Rd., Vineland, 691-8051. Banquet/
wedding facility and intimate restaurant.
Dungeness Crabs every Tues. Gourmet
Pizza Nite on Wed.
Millville Queen Diner, 109 E. Broad Street,
Millville. 327-0900. Open 7 Days a Week
24 Hours.
Milmay Tavern, Tuckahoe and Bears Head
rds., Milmay, 476-3611. Gourmet lunches
and dinners, casual setting.
Moes Southwest Grill, 2188 N. 2nd St.,
Millville, 825-3525. Tex-Mex, burritos, catering.
Moris, E. Landis Ave., Vineland. 690-0300.
Adjacent to the Landis Theater Performing
Arts Center. Includes a casual, upscale
restaurant with a banquet facility and
lounge on site. Lunch and dinner.
MVP Bar, 408 Wheat Road, Vineland, 697-
9825. Full bar menu, drink specials.
Neptune Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge,
1554 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland, 692-2800.
Live lobsters, seafood, prime rib, steak,
cocktails.
Old Oar House Irish Pub, 123 N. High
Street Millville, 293-1200. New menu,
kitchen open until 1 a.m. Smoker friendly
outdoor beer garden.
Olympia Restaurant, 739 S. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland, 691-6095. Authentic Greek cui-
sinelamb dishes and salads.
Pegasus, Rts. 40 and 47, Vineland, 694-
0500. Breakfast, lunch, dinner specials;
convenient drive-thru, mini-meal specials.
Petes Pizza, 20 W. Park Ave., Vineland,
205-9998. Pizza (including whole wheat),
subs, wings. Open daily 11 a.m-10 p.m.
The Rail, 1252 Harding Hwy., Richland,
697-1440. Bar and restaurant with daily
drink specials and lunch specials.
Saigon, 2180 N. Second St., Millville, 327-
8878. Authentic Vietnamesenoodle
soups, curry, hotpot, Buddhist vegetarian.
Speedway Cafe at Ramada, W. Landis Ave.
and Rt. 55, Vineland, 692-8600. Open daily
6 a.m.-11 p.m. Dinner specials $7 and up.
Steakhouse at Centerton Country Club,
1022 Almond Rd., Pittsgrove, 358-3325.
Lunch and dinner. Steaks, reserve wines,
upscale casual.
Sweet Life Bakery, 601 E. Landis Ave.,
Vineland, 692-5353. Neighborhood bakery.
Homemade pastries, cakes, coffee.
Uncle Rickys Outdoor Bar, 470 E. Wheat
Rd., Vineland, 691-4454. Ribs, chicken,
fish, steaks. Always clams, eat in or take
out. Live music Saturday & Sunday night.
Dungeness Crab All You Can Eat.
Villa Fazzolari, 821 Harding Hwy., Buena
Vista, 697-7107. Dinner combos, grilled
meats, fish. Lunch and dinner daily.
Wild Wings, 1843 E. Wheat Rd., Vineland,
691-8899. Dinners, grilled sandwiches,
wings.
Wilmotts Pizza. 12 S. Seventh St., Vineland,
696-1525. Hand-tossed pizzas, stromboli,
breakfast pizza. Take-out or eat in.
Winfields. 106 N. High St., Millville, 327-
0909. Continental cuisine and spirits
served in a casually upscale setting.
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Grapevine 14-19 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 5:53 PM Page 19
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The Grapevines
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1. Plant louses
7. Breezed through
11. A native of Africa
12. Goidelic
13. External
14. __ Lilly, drug
company
15. Fence entrance
16. Enclosed yard
18. Drug company
20. Food consumers
21. Strongly disinclined
23. Small goose
24. Launched Apollo
25. Soft stem center
26. Longest river in
Ayrshire
27. Sodium
29. Lion sign
30. Southwest Airlines
(abbr.)
31. Kilometers per hour
33. Of, French
34. Atomic #50
35. Body of poetry
37. Spanish cubist
painter Juan
39. Grandmothers
41. City of The Un. of
the Punjab
43. A roll of
parchment
44. What a ghost does
46. Looked intently
47. Swedish rock group
48. Don't know
when yet
51. Hostelries
52. Golf ball holders
53. With a sincere
intent
55. Alicante's 7th
largest city
56. A disorderly crowd
DOWN
1. A later idea
2. Jabs
3. Hello
4. Frost a cake
5. Decaliter
6. Genus Gallinago
birds
7. Auspices
8. A short-lived
fashion
9. This (Spanish)
10. Bambi and her
mom
11. Emphasized a
syllable
13. Limit the inheri-
tance of a property
16. 2nd month (abbr.)
17. Wyatt __, OK Corral
19. Given with gold &
muhr
21. In any manner at
all
22. Large tropical car-
nivorous lizards
26. Up and out of bed
28. Readily seen or
understood
32. Respects
36. Clearance, fire or
garage
38. A list of names
40. Sealed (abbr.)
41. Lubricated
42. Squash bug genus
43. Sales line
44. Feel aversion
toward
45. Cain's brother
49. The cry made by
sheep
50. An arbitrageur
54. Atomic #41
Solution to last weeks puzzle
Grapevine 20-23 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:15 PM Page 20
Keep Weeding
By Ken Taft, Master Gardener
If you were to track every hour spent in
your garden, you would find that an inor-
dinate amount of time went toward weed-
ing. And while the first few weeks of tear-
ing up these intruders can prove mildly
satisfying, the work soon wears thin.
Weeds are natures healing remedy for
sites that are in a wounded, plantless
state, but weeds and gardeners have dif-
ferent ideas of what makes for a good
recovery. Armed with a better under-
standing of weeds, you can win every
future battle, giving you more time to
enjoy your well-groomed garden.
MULCH, MULCH,
MULCH
Mulch benefits
plants by keeping
the soil cool and
moist and depriving
weeds of light.
Organic mulches, in
particular, can actu-
ally host crickets
and carabid beetles,
which seek out and devour weed seeds.
Some light passes through chunky
mulches, and often you will discovertoo
latethat the mulch you used was laced
with weed seeds. Its important to replen-
ish the mulch as needed to keep it about
two inches deep (more than three inches
can deprive soil of oxygen). In any case,
you can set weeds way back by covering
the soils surface with a light-blocking
sheet of cardboard, or newspaper, or
biodegradable fabric and then spreading
prettier mulch over it.
WEED WHEN THE WEEDINGS GOOD
The old saying Pull when wet; hoe
when dry is wise when facing down
weeds. After a drenching rain, have a
rewarding weeding session by equipping
yourself with gloves, a kneeling pad, and a
basket for collecting the corpses. Slip an
old table fork into your back pocket
because there is nothing better for twist-
ing out tendrils of henbit or chickweed.
When going after bigger thugs, use a fish-
tail weeder to pry up taprooted weeds,
like dandelion or dock.
Under dry conditions, weeds sliced off
just below the soil line promptly shrivel
up and die, especially if your hoe has a
sharp edge. In mulched beds, use an old
steak knife to sever weeds from their
roots, then patch any open spaces left in
the mulch.
LOP OFF THEIR HEADS
When you cant remove weeds, the
next best thing is to chop off their heads.
With annual weeds, dead-heading buys a
you a few weeks time before the seed
rain begins. Cutting back the tops of
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Continued on next page
Home
Garden
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Grapevine 20-23 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:15 PM Page 21
FIRE
PITS
STARTING
AT $499
BISTRO
TABLE KIT $500
perennial weeds, like bindweed, reduces
reseeding and forces them to use up food
reserves and exhaust their supply of root
buds, thus limiting their spread.
WATCH FOR GAPS BETWEEN PLANTS
Close plant spacing chokes out emerg-
ing weeds by shading the soil between
plants. You can prevent weed-friendly
gaps from the get-go by designing with
mass plantings or in drifts of closely
spaced plants rather than with polka dots
of widely scattered ones. You can shave off
about 25 percent from the recommended
spacing.
Most spacing recommendations, how-
ever, are based on the assumption that
adjoining plants will barely touch when
they reach mature size, so stick to the
guidelines when working with plants that
are prone to foliar diseases, such as bee
balm and phloxes.
WATER THE PLANTS YOU WANT,
NOT THE WEEDS YOUVE GOT
Put drought on your side by depriving
weeds of water. Placing drip or soaker
hoses beneath mulch efficiently irrigates
plants while leaving nearby weeds thirsty.
In most climates, depriving weeds of
water reduces weed-seed germination by
50 percent to 70 percent. Watch out,
though, for the appearance of deeply root-
ed perennial weeds, such as bindweed and
nutsedge, in areas that are kept moist.
They can take off in a flash when given
the benefits of drip irrigation.
Enriching your soil with organic matter
every chance you get can move your gar-
den along down the weed-free path. Soil
scientists arent sure how it works, but
fewer weed seeds germinate in soil that
contains fresh infusions of good compost
or organic matter. One theory makes good
sense: When soil is healthy and well fed,
weed seeds sense that they are out of a job
and are less likely to appear.
You have been working hard to make
your garden beautiful, but all that hard
work is making you look beautiful, too!
Did you know that weeding burns approx-
imately 371 calories an hour? Mowing the
lawn with a power mower burns about
306 calories and digging, 340 calories. For
more activities and the calories they burn,
check out http://caloriecount.about.com.
Even though it might not look great, a
browning lawn is usually nothing to worry
about. According to Cornell University
horticulture professor Frank Rossi, most
lawn grasses can survive four to six weeks
without water. Frequent light watering in
hot weather actually encourages weeds
and disease.
What does need water are your trees
and shrubs. Be sure they get about an inch
of water per week whether its from your
hose or rain.
RememberGardening requires a lot of
water, most of it in the formof perspiration!
Let me know how I am doing by writing
The Grapevine or kmet823@comcast.net.
Ken Taft, Master Gardener
Contest Gives Dairy Fans
Firsthand Look at Farm Life
Ever wonder where the milk on your
breakfast cereal comes from or how it gets
from the farm to your refrigerator? The
Mid-Atlantic Dairy Association is answer-
ing those questions and offering dairy fans
a chance to experience the farming
lifestyle with a contest that will give six
winners a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
to be a V.I.P. guest on a working dairy
farm.
Aspiring farmers can enter the V.I.P.
Dairy Farm Experience contest by
describing, in 50 words or less, why they
should be chosen as a dairy farm V.I.P.
Entries can be submitted via Mid-Atlantic
Dairys Facebook page (facebook.com/
midatlanticdairyassociation). The dead-
line for applications is August 31. The con-
test is open to entrants 18 years and older.
Winners will be whisked away, with a
friend, to a local restaurant to be treated
to dinner, including an overnight stay. The
following morning, theyll be transported
to the farm, where theyll receive a
behind-the-scenes tour and have an
opportunity to help out with daily farm
chores.
After a leisurely lunch with the farm
family, winners will embark on an experi-
ence unique to each of the regional host
1969 South East Ave
(Between Grant & Elmer Rd.)
Vineland, NJ 08360
Call for Details: 856-692-8650
Mon.-Fri. 7-5 Sat. 7-12
3.5%
Sales
Tax
The stone makes all the difference
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Grapevine 20-23 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:15 PM Page 22
/DQGVFDSLQJ 6SULQNOHU 6\VWHPV
/DZQ 0RZLQJ )HUWLOL]DWLRQ DQG PRUH
856-692-8373
LEAFY GREEN COUPON
$
100
00
OFF
Any Sprinkler System
Valid for full yard, or $50 off for non full yard.
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not to be combined with any offer. Exp: 7/31/11
LEAFY GREEN COUPON
FREE
LAWN MOWING
With Full Year Contract
*New Customers Only
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not to be combined with any offer. Exp: 7/31/11
LEAFY GREEN COUPON
FREE
FERTILIZATION
APPLICATION
With Full Year Contract
*New Customers Only
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not to be combined with any offer. Exp: 7/31/11
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farms. Winners will be chosen in five dif-
ferent regions of the Mid-Atlantic Dairy
Associations territory, including these two:
New Jersey/Philadelphia RegionAt
Creamy Acres farm in Mullica Hill, N.J.,
that experience includes a tour of the
farms greenhouse (among the regions
largest), corn maze and pumpkin patch.
Delaware RegionAt the Hopkins
Farm Creamery in Lewes, Delaware, the
winner will experience a tour of the
largest dairy farm in Delaware and a
behind-the-scenes taste of farm-made ice
cream in the creamery.
A farmers job certainly isnt easy, but
its definitely rewarding, and it can also be
a lot of fun, which is a big part of why we
created this contest, said Mid-Atlantic
Dairy Association CEO Patricia Purcell.
We also hope people come away from
this with a new appreciation for what
dairy farmers do every day to create the
nutritious dairy foods we all enjoy.
SURE Disaster Program
Deadline
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has
reminded producers that they have until
Friday, July 29, 2011, to apply for assistance
for 2009 crop losses under the
Supplemental Revenue Assistance
Payments (SURE) Program. The program
provides crop disaster assistance payments
to eligible producers on farms that have
incurred crop production or quality losses.
The SURE program takes into consider-
ation losses on all crops grown by a pro-
ducer nationwide. To be eligible, producers
must have suffered at least a 10 percent
production loss on a crop of economic sig-
nificance and obtained a policy or plan of
insurance under the Federal Crop
Insurance Act or the Noninsured Crop
Disaster Assistance Program (NAP), for all
economically significant crops. A producer
must have a farming interest physically
located in a county that was declared a pri-
mary disaster county or contiguous county
by the Secretary of Agriculture under a
Secretarial Disaster Designation or have
actual production on the farm that was less
than 50 percent of the normal production
on the farm due to a natural disaster.
A limit of $100,000 per person and
legal entity collectively received, directly
and indirectly, applies to the combination
of payments from SURE and the livestock
disaster programs administered by FSA
Livestock Forage Program (LFP),
Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP) and
Emergency Assistance for Livestock,
Honeybees, and Farm-raised Fish (ELAP).
Persons or legal entities whose average
nonfarm income exceeds $500,000 are not
eligible for SURE payments.
A producer interested in signing up for
SURE for their 2009 crops must do so
before close of business July 29, 2011, at the
county FSA office servicing the producer.
The sign-up for the SURE programfor the
2010 crops will be announced at a later date.
For more information about USDA
Farm Service Agency disaster assistance
programs, visit a local FSA county office
or http://disaster.fsa.usda.gov. I
Scholarship for H.S. Seniors
Interested in Agriculture
New Jersey residents who are enter-
ing their senior year in high school
this fall and are planning a career in
agriculture or science may apply for
the New Jersey Agricultural
Achievement Award. One winner will
be selected and awarded a scholar-
ship to honor their achievements.
The New Jersey Agricultural
Achievement Award, sponsored by
Amy Butewicz, a former New Jersey
Equestrian of the Year, was started
because of her desire to give back
to the community. The $500 schol-
arship is meant to assist its recipi-
ent in beginning their future in agri-
culture.
Last years winner, Bria Cherelle
Barnes of Scotch Plains, was select-
ed based on her resume as well as
her essay on how her involvement
with Union County 4-H shaped her
future career choice.
The qualifications for receiving
this award include submitting a
resume along with an essay answer-
ing the question, How has your
involvement within your respective
nominating organization helped to
shape your future career choice?
In addition, a contestant is
required to be a current, active
member of an organization either on
the New Jersey Equine Advisory
Board and/or represented at the
Youth Reception portion of the New
Jersey State Agricultural Convention.
Each organization on the New Jersey
Equine Advisory Board and a partici-
pant of the State Agricultural
Convention is able to nominate a
maximum of two contestants.
The winner of the Agricultural
Achievement Award must attend the
55th Annual New Jersey Bred
Equine Breeders Award Luncheon to
be held on Sunday, January 15, 2012
at Charleys Other Brother
Restaurant and will read their essay
to the attendees.
Mail resume and essay by
December 15, 2011 to NJDA, Attn:
Debra Moscatiello, P.O. Box 330,
Trenton, New Jersey 08625.
If you have any questions contact
Debra Moscatiello at 609-984-4389
or debra.moscatiello@ag.state.nj.us.
n
Love The Grapevine?
Why not like us on Facebook?
facebook.com/grapevinenewspaper
Grapevine 20-23 071311-de:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:15 PM Page 23
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR

HAPPENINGS
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13
Free Patient Education Seminar.
Lecture Hall at CDI, 3322 College Dr.,
Vineland. 5:15 - 6:15 p.m. The topic is
Ultrasound and MRIs in Pelvic Diseases.
Free, space is limited. RSVP at 794-1700
or www.centerfordiagnosticimaging.com.
Presentation: Insects in Southern NJ:
Past, Present and Future. George
Luciano Center, Cumberland County
College, 1550 E. Chestnut Ave., Vineland.
6:30 p.m. Presentation with special guest
speaker, Jamie Cromartie, Ph.D., regarding
how insects have evolved with the environ-
ment of Cumberland County over the
years. Also offers tips on maintaining land-
scape in the face of many forces, both nat-
ural and human-caused. Free.
Auditions for A Few Good Men. The
Eagle Theater, 208 Vine St., Hammonton. 7
p.m. Talented actors needed for a produc-
tion of the broadway musical, A Few Good
Men, which will be presented in November.
Before it became a a screenplay, A Few
Good Men was a play on Broadway. Adults
only. Actors should prepare a short mono-
logue. For more info., call 609-561-1199.
THURSDAY, JULY 14
Bay Atlantic Symphanys Monthly
Summer Lecture Series. July 7: 6:30-8
p.m. Margate Public Library, Bloom
Pavilion 8100 Atlantic Ave., Margate.
Fun in the Sun. The Ramada Inn, 2216
West Landis Ave. & Route 55., Vineland. 12
p.m. Garden State Christian Womens
Connection meeting: C and Bea Travel
Tours & Cruises, Inc. will present a pro-
gram about their travel services.
Inspirational speaker will be Angela
Dittmar, speaking about Whats Your
Purpose? Why am I here Anyway? $15.00
For more info. call 856-690-9172
FRIDAY, JULY 15
Salute to Stockton Lecture Series.
Temple Emeth Shalom, 8501 Ventnor Ave.,
Margate. 7:30 p.m. For the 14th consecu-
tive year, Emeth Shalom hosts this annual
lecture series. In the second installment,
Alex Marino, Director of the Carnegie
Library Center, tells the Atlantic City Story.
Refreshments will be served. Free.
SATURDAY, JULY 16
Fourth Annual Vineland Seafood
Festival. 600 block of Landis Ave.,
Vineland. 4 - 9 p.m. Rain date 7/17, same
time. Seafood dishes from Vinelands
finest restaurants and fresh food vendors,
including Casazza Foods, Eastlyn Golf
Course, Lucianos FreshMaket, Marcianos,
North Italy Club, Tailgate Grill, Taste of the
Islands. Live music by In High Gear (coun-
try) and Double Helix (classic blues and
rock). Admission is free, other than the
price of the food and merchandise.
Takeouts available. Local youth-related
organizations may compete in a sandcas-
tle-building contest, and the winning group
will receive a donation to their agency.
794-8653 or www.mainstreetvineland.org.
Writers Workshop with Judi Brett.
Bogarts Bookstore. 210 North High St.,
Millville. 10:30 a.m. Come out and sharpen
your writing skills with this workshop fea-
turing Judi Brett, author of the Adventures
of Buck childrens series, as well as a
writer for Down Jersey and Serendipity,
magazines based in Cumberland County.
Brett also writes fiction for adults under
the pseudonym Reece Brett. Admission is
free.
Spring into Summer Wellness Festival.
2106 West Landis Ave., Vineland. 10 a.m. -
2 p.m. Hosted by Dr. Steven Rasner and
Greater Deliverance Church, and Learning
Center. Featuring live music and entertain-
ment, caricatures, moon bounces, BMX
bikers, contests and giveaways, eye and
dental screenings, a Red Cross Blood
Drive, fire safety training, personal safety
training, health screenings, pet care and
much more.
Annual Procession of Saints.
Downtown Hammonton. 4 p.m. Part of the
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Festival, the pro-
cession of saints will march through down-
town Hammonton. Get the best view on
Bellevue Avenue. Grab a lawn chair or take
a seat along the procession route as busi-
nesses, shops and restaurants will provide
outdoor seating. Free.
SUNDAY, JULY 17
Clothes Closet Special Day. Trinity
Episcopal Church, 8th and Wood Sts.,
Vineland. 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. Please enter at
the 8th St. door. Clothing for men, women
and children is given away free. Donations
of gently used spring and summer items
will also be accepted. Receipts given upon
request. For more info. call 691-1589.
Word of Life Food Pantry. 425 N. 6th
St., Vineland. 1:30 p.m. - 2 p.m. Word of
Life "Love Thy Neighbor" Food Pantry sup-
THURSDAY, JULY 28
United Way Presents Annual
Celebration for the Community.
Merighi's Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave.
and Union Rd., Vineland. 6 p.m. cock-
tail hour, 7 p.m. dinner. Celebrate 25
years with the United Way. $60 per
person, $100 per couple, $540 per
table of 10. For more details, call
United Way at 856-205-1800.
Grapevine 24-28 071311:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:07 PM Page 24
1117 E. Landis Ave Suite C Vineland, NJ 08360
Blaise Menzoni LOAN OFFICER
Gateway Funding DMS, LP
Office 856.692.9494 Fax 856.691.3687
Cell 856.297.7087
With rates at historic lows,
now is a great time to buy a new home or
consider refinancing your existing mortgage.
For unparalleled service, great rates and a variety
of financing options, call Blaise R. Menzoni.
FHA VA Conventional
Opening Doors to Home Ownership
Licensed by NJ department of Banking and Insurance
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items throughout the year. Open the third
and fourth Sunday of each month. Families
are allotted one food pick up per month.
For more info. call 507-0005
JULY 16 AND 17
Barrel and Vineyard Wine Trail
Weekend. Bellview Winery, 150 Atlantic
St., Landisville. Sponsored by Garden
State Winegrowers Association. Tour
Bellview's extensive vineyards on a trailer
ride (leaves winery hourly noon - 4 p.m.).
Listen and learn about vineyard manage-
ment. Then, back to the wine production
room for a special tasting, with straight-
from-the-barrel samples of the 2010
Chardonnay and the 2010 reds, and all of
Bellviews wines. Sangrias by carafe and
appetizer platters will be available for
indoor or outdoor picnicking. Or, pack a
lunch to enjoy with a glass of wine in vine-
yard picnic area. $5 per person.
Reservations not necessary.
MONDAY, JULY 18
Nami Monthly Support Group
Meeting. Chestnut Assembly of God 2554
E Chestnut Ave., Vineland. 7 - 9 p.m. NAMI
Cumberland County is a support, educa-
tion, and advocacy group serving con-
sumers of mental health services, as well
as the families and friends of persons
affected by a serious mental illness. Free.
TUESDAY, JULY 19
Tale Spin Stories: Melodrama Special.
Cumberland Mall, Center Court, Rts 47
and 55, Vineland. Miss Kathy creates a
story time experience that introduces chil-
dren to social, listening and interactive
skills. Snack Parade: Friendlys. 10:30
11:30 a.m. Free.
Family Fun Night. The Purple Penguin
Solar Ice Cream, 1008 Harding Hwy.,
Newfield. 7 - 10 p.m. Rain date: 7/27/11.
Hosted by the Landisville/Minotola
Volunteer Fire Co., featuring free pony
rides for one hour, a clown, face painting,
cartoon characters, music, good food and
fun for the whole family. Bring a chair/
blanket. A special showing at dusk. Please
Park in rear of property and see the new
solar array.
Author Visit. Millville Public Library.
Center Court, 210 Buck Street, Millville.
Craig D. Koehler, author of So Many
Secrets: the Promise of Zandra, will talk
about his book. This program is appro-
priate for teens, young adults, and
adults. 6 p.m. Free.
THURSDAY, JULY 21
Dinner and Diabetes Information
Workshop. Marcianos Restaurant, 947 N.
Delsea Dr., Vineland. 6:30. Free. Workshop
on How to Prevent, Control and Eliminate
Diabetes and Metabolic Syndrome.
Provides natural solutions to diabetes and
pre-diabetes. Dinner is no charge. You
must be over 18 years old and have a
health problem that concerns you. Seating
is limited to the first 20 callers. You must
RSVP to attend: 856-692-2521. Call to
reserve your seat today.
Spaghetti Dinner. Trinity Episcopal
Church, 8th and Wood St., Vineland. 4:30 -
7:30 p.m. Benefits neighborhood out reach
programs. $9 donation required. For more
info., call 691-1589.
SATURDAY, JULY 23
Camp Kaleidoscope. Camp Edge,
Alloway. 9 a.m.6 p.m. For children aged
9-16, to express feelings about loss and
connect with others experiencing similar
losses. Registration is required and must
be received by July 15th. To request a reg-
istration packet or for more information,
call Linda Kandle, SJH HospiceCare
Bereavement Coordinator, at 575-4277.
JULY 25 AND 26
Boating Safety Course. North Vineland
Fire Hall, 185 W. Forest Grove Rd.,
Vineland. State approved boating course.
Must attend both days for NJ State
Certificate. Sign-up is preferred. Bring a
pen or pencil; no felt tip pens. For more
info. call 696-0446 or 305-2595. 6-10 p.m.
$50 per person.
TUESDAY, JULY 26
Tale Spin Stories: All Things Mother
Goose. Cumberland Mall, Center Court,
Rts 47 and 55, Vineland. Miss Kathy cre-
ates a story time experience that intro-
duces children to social, listening and
interactive skills. Snack Parade: Boscovs.
10:30 11:30 a.m. Free.
Auditions for Oliver. St. Marys School
Gym. 735 Union Rd., Vineland. 7-9 p.m. A
musical adaptation of the classic Charles
Dickens tale of a young orphan boy finding
adventure and intrigue with Fagin, Bill
Sikes, the Artful Dodger, Nancy and all the
other young street urchins. Audition for
children and adults. Come prepared with a
music CD and a speaking part. Second
date scheduled for August 8th.
RED CROSS
BLOOD DRIVES
For more, call 1-800-RED
CROSS or visit
www.redcrossblood.org.
JULY 19: St. Padre Pio Parish, Our
Lady of Pompeli, 4680 Dante Ave.,
Vineland, 2 - 8 p.m.
JULY 22: HealthSouth Rehabilitation
Hospital of Vineland, 1237 W. Sherman
Ave., Vineland, 11:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Grapevine 24-28 071311:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:07 PM Page 25
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
JULY 13 THROUGH 20
Nightlife at Bennigans. 2196 W. Landis
Ave., Vineland, 205-0010. Karaoke
Thursdays with Bob Morgan, 9 p.m.-close,
$3 Heinekens, DJ/Dance Party Fridays 9
p.m.Close, $3 Coronas. All Sports
Packages: MLB Extra Innings, NBA League
Pass, NHL Center Ice, and NFL Sunday
Ticket. $3 23-oz. Coors Light & $5 23-oz.
Blue Moon during ALL Phillies games!
Comedy show every first Saturday of the
month! Call for reservations/infomation.
EVERY WEDNESDAY
Nightlife at Neptune Restaurant. 1554
S. Delsea Drive, Vineland. Live DJ and
Trivia. 692-2800.
Karaoke Night. Old Oar House Irish Pub.
123 N. High St., Millville, 293-1200. 8 p.m.
Juicy Wednesday Dance Party. The
Steakhouse at Centerton Country Club.
1022 Almond Road Pittsgrove Township,
358-3325. 8 p.m.
Salsa Night. The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S.
Delsea Dr,, Vineland. Free dance lesson
with DJ Slick Rick. $4 Sangria and Corona
and Corona light bottles. 9 p.m. 765-5977.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13
The 4 Js Band. Michael Debbi Park,
Cedar Ave., Richland. The Buena Vista
Concert Series continues with a taste of
the old and new, as The 4 Js Band per-
forms all of the standards, Sinatra tunes,
and a variety of songs from the 40s to the
70s, plus some contemporary hits. The
family-friendly event is free to the public.
Hot dogs, deserts, and beverages will be
sold. Seating is available, but bringing a
lawn chair is recommended. There will be
a dance floor if weather permits. Concert
scheduled, rain or shine. 7 p.m.
EVERY THURSDAY
Jazz Duos. Annata Wine Bar, Bellevue
Ave., Hammonton, 609-704-9797. Live Jazz
featuring area's best jazz duos. 6:30-9:30
pm. No cover. Reservations recommended.
THURSDAY, JULY 14
Harry Potter Midnight Showing. Delsea
Drive-In Theatre, 2203 S. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland. 12 a.m. (July 15) Harry Potter
and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2, playing
on screen one. Box office opens at 6:30
p.m. Movies are shown rain or shine.
JULY 15 THROUGH 17
Nightlife at Ramada. Harry's Pub at
Ramada, W. Landis Ave. and Rt. 55,
Vineland, 696-3800. Wed.: Ladies Night,
Half price appetizers all night. Happy Hour
Mon.-Sat, 4-6 p.m. $1 off alcoholic drinks.
Fri. and Sat., live entertainment.
Nightlife at Bojos. 222 N. High St.,
Millville, 327-8011. Thurs: Karaoke with
Patty and Rick. Fri.: Zach Reed, live music.
Sat: Karaoke. Sun.: Phillies/Nascar..
Nightlife at Villa Fazzolari. Villa
Fazzolari Ristorante & Lounge, 821 Harding
Hwy., Buena, 697-7107. Thurs.: Ladies
Night, Mike Yacovelli Project, 7 p.m. Fri.:
Jazz Night. Sat.: Italian accordian.
JULY 15, 16, 17, 22 AND 23
The 25th Annual Putnam County
Spelling Bee. Cumberland Players (pic-
tured right), Sherman Ave. and Blvd.,
Vineland. A hilarious Tony

Award winning
tale of overachievers angst, chronicling the
experience of six adolescent outsiders
vying for the spelling championship of a
lifetime. Performance will also require a bit
of audience participation. Those interested in
participating should get to the theater at
least 30 minutes before curtain the night
you see the show, and let ushers know that
you want to sign up to take part in the Bee.
Performances at 8 p.m.; July 10 and 17 at 2
p.m. All tickets are $15. Tickets may be pur-
chased online at cumberlandplayers.com.
Half-price Senior Citizen tickets for those 62
and over are available for the July 10 and
17 matinees only; call 692-5626 for details.
Tickets for The Best Little Whorehouse In
Texas will be honored for this production.
FRIDAY, JULY 15
Senses Fail. Hangar 84. 20 S. 6th St.,
Vineland. New Jerseys very own Senses Fail
playing their brand of energetic punk rock
and screamo. Performing hits like Rum is
For Drinking, Not For Burning, and Calling
All Cars. $15. 7 p.m. For more info, visit
hangar84music.com or call (609) 319-5423.
Robert White. Bogarts Bookstore. 210 N.
High St., Millville. The singer/songwriter
performs as part of Millvilles 3rd Friday
festivities. Free admission. 7 p.m.
Danny Eyer Band. Old Oar House Irish
Pub. 123 North High St., Millville, 293-
1200. 9 p.m.
Radio King. The Rail. 1252 Harding Hwy.,
Richland, 697-RAIL. 7 p.m.
SATURDAY, JULY 16
The Flying Dogs of Jupiter. Bogarts
Bookstore. 210 N. High St., Millville.
Admission is free. 7 p.m.
Ten Eddy Drive. The Rail. 1252 Harding
Hwy., Richland, 697-RAIL. 7 p.m.
Joe Kozak. Old Oar House Irish Pub. 123
North High St., Millville, 293-1200. 9 p.m.
Shutter Stone. The Watering Hole 6494
Weymouth Rd., Mays Landing. 7 p.m
Mike Mcloughlin and the
Jerseycropdusters. Fuel House Coffee Co.
6636 E. Landis Ave., Vineland. More bands
TBA. 7 p.m For more info., call 563-1400.
SUNDAY, JULY 17
Living Edge. The Watering Hole 6494
Weymouth Rd., Mays Landing. 3 p.m.
Poetry on High. 210 N. High St., Millville,
327-3714. Open Mic, poetry and music,
hosted by Rita Lynn Lyman. 2 - 4:30 p.m.
From The Embrace. Hangar 84. 20 S. 6th
St., Vineland. $10. 5 p.m. For more info, visit
hangar84music.com or call (609) 319-5423.
MONDAY, JULY 18
Frank Marone and The Italians.
Giampietro Park, Enrico Serra band shell.
East Landis Ave, Vineland. The sixth
installment of Vinelands 2011 park concert
series. A night of music and dancing. Free
admission. 7 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Top 40 Dance Party w/ DJ Tony
Morrison. The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S.
Delsea Dr,, Vineland. A dance party featur-
ing all of the most popular mainstream
dance music. 765-5977.
LOOKING AHEAD
THURSDAY, JULY 21
Third Thursday in Hammonton.
Hammonton Art District, Bellevue Ave.,
Hammonton. 69 p.m. Featuring evening
shopping hours, dining specials, entertain-
ment and arts. A cheese and wine recep-
tion from will be held to honor the artists
& founders of the HAC. Meet the artists
who had a vision to create an organization
to promote the arts.
SATURDAY, JULY 16
Lesley Gore and Friends. The Landis
Theater. 830 E. Landis Ave., Vineland, 691-
1121. In association with Diving Horse
Promotions, the former teen-pop icon is best
known for her Grammy nominated hit It's
My Party, which she recorded at the age of
16. After its release, success followed as
Gore became one of the most recognized
pop singers of the era on the strength of a
string of pop hits including Judys Turn to
Cry, The Look of Love, and the Grammy-
nominated Sunshine, Lollipops and
Rainbows. Also performing will be Philadelphia favorites Soul Survivors and
Jeremiah-Hunter Band. Event emceed by television personality Tom Lamaine.
Diving Horse Promotions is headed by Vinelander Glenn Lillie, local radio per-
sonality Don Hurley and longtime host of the Steel Pier Show, Ed Hurst. Event
will feature an 85th birthday tribute to Ed Hurst. $45-75. 8 p.m. Tickets are
available at the Landis Theater box office or www.landistheater.com.
SUNDAY, JULY 17
South Jersey Artist Tribute. Museum
Stores at WheatonArts. 1501 Glasstown
Rd., Millville. 1-800-998-4552. 1:00 p.m.
Through programs
specifically
designed for chil-
dren and South
Jerseys rich arts
culture, the muse-
um stores at
WheatonArts will
pay tribute to South
Jersey artists and
their work (On left,
Michelle Posts Wishing Well Bookcase;
on right, John Marselis Wildflower
Vase). At 1 p.m., a ribbon cutting cere-
mony in the Brownstone Emporium and
Boutique will be held to kick off a "Bead
Release." At 1:30 p.m., the Gallery of Fine
Craft will present a
"Children's Gallery
Walk" of the new
exhibit, "WheatonArts
and Southern New
Jersey Artists." The
tour will be specifi-
cally geared toward
children. It will be
followed by light
refreshments. The artists reception to
officially open the exhibit will take place
from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. For more
info. contact WheatonArts by phone or
visit www.wheatonvillage.com.

Lesley Gore at Landis, midnight showing at Drive-In, artist tribute, outdoor


summer concerts, and Third Thursday.
Grapevine 24-28 071311:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:07 PM Page 26
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Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m.
To order your classified call, 856-457-7815 or visit
www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds
Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m. To order your classified, call 856-457-7815 or
visit www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds. See box below for additional ordering information.
Only $10 per ad, per week, up to 20 words; over 20 words,
$0.50 per word. $0.30 for boldper word/per issue, $3 for a
Border/per issue. Add a photo for $15. Mail Ad & payment or go
online to www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds.
Not responsible for typographical errors. Once an ad is placed, it cannot be cancelled or charged. The Grapevine does not in any way
imply approval or endorsement. Those interested in goods or services always use good judgment and take appropriate precautions.
Acct. No. ___________________________________Exp. Date________ 3 Digit # on back
of card__________
Signature:__________________________________________
Printed Name:______________________________________
Name ___________________________________
Address__________________________________
City__________________________Zip_________
Phone #: ________________________________
email____________________________________
The Grapevine
3638 E. Landis Ave.
Vineland, NJ 08361
www.grapevinenewspaper.com
Mail Ad
Form with
Payment TO:
Classfieds
Call for more information
856-457-7815
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Refer to prices above.
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CLASSIFIEDS
Have a business and need more customers?
Need work? Why not get the word out through
The Grapevines Classified section?
Advertize your skills and business in the
Classifieds by calling 856-457-7815.
Caretaker Wanted
REDUCED RENT TO CARETAKER
Includes full use of House in Franklinville area. 1 Bdrm,
Lvrm, Dinrm, Kt, 1 Ba, Deck, Bkyd., Washer/Dryer,
Heat, Cable & elect incl. Duties are to be there in the
evening on a needs only basis for 53-year-old women
with MS Multiple Sclerosis. Must have referrals, qualifi-
cations and can lift 110-lb. women from bed to scooter.
Must have own vehicle and valid drivers license, and
work full time or part time. Duties include light shop-
ping, letting small dog in and out, light housekeeping
and other minimal household chores, No Smoking,
No Alcohol or Drugs permitted. Christian person or
couple preferred, Perfect for elderly couple or college
student, $100 per week. Send info to MS Caretaker,
430 E. Forest Grove Rd., Vineland, NJ 08360.
Having a Yard Sale or Garage Sale?
Its time for spring cleaning, and theres no better
way to get the word out than to advertise your
yard sale in The Grapevines Classifieds.
Use the form below, or visit
www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds
Deadline is Friday for the following Wednesdays paper.
Credit Cards
Accepted:
Micro Electric LLC.
Residential repair, addi-
tions, and services.
Bonded and insured. no
job is too small.
NJ LIC #14256.
Call 609-501-7777
Eugenes Lawn Service.
Perfecting lawns one at a
time. Mowing. Leaves.
Mulch. Shrubs. Pressure
Washing. Call for free esti-
mate. 856-305-1682
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE/
PAYROLL/BOOKKEEPER
NO experience necessary.
Salary commensurate and
takes little of your time.
Requirements: Should be a
computer literate, must be
efficient and dedicated.
Please send resume to dis-
tributionspcompa-
ny@gmail.com
BARBER/STYLIST
MALE/FEMALE. FOR
EAST VINELAND SHOP.
609-774-5359
Now accepting apps for
new 1 BR apts. Downtown
Vineland, excellent area.
$675.00 per month + utili-
ties + sec. 856-692-6849
2005 Suzuki 400 Quad
Sport 4 wheeler. $1,500
in accesory upgrades.
Excellent condition, low
mileage. Asking $3,800.
Call 856-503-9009. Ask
for Ron.
Need floral bouquets,
arrangements, gifts, or
home dcor, or a summer
wreath? I specialize in
weddings and parties.
Tiffany 609-364-6889.
Steelman's Drywall.
Hanging, finishing and
repairs. No job too big or
small. Free estimate. Call
Joe 609-381-3814.
Turk's Pressure Clean.
Property maintenance. Vinyl
and aluminum siding, con-
crete, brick, roof cleaning,
gutter clean-out. Over 25
years in business, fully
insured. (856) 692-7470.
CREDIT CARD RELIEF**
FREE CONSULTATION
**Save Thousands of
Dollars. Out Of Debt In
Months - NOT Years! Avoid
Bankruptcy. NOT A High
Priced Consolidation.
Company Or A Consumer
Credit. Counseling
Program. CALL CREDIT
CARD RELIEF 866-479-
5353. Not Available in All
States.
Electrical
Contractor
Health & Fitness
Body and Mind
Massage: profes-
sional therapeutic
massage. New
clients $45.00 for
50 minute massage.
Reg. $65.00 + tax.
856-205-2626.
Outcalls only.
For Sale: Brand new
wedding gown, blush-
er, vail, tiara, candle
set, cake set, and
photo album. Prices
negotiable. Call
Wendy 856-982-7079
Sales Position: We are
seeking an individual
that is highly motivat-
ed with a background
in sales to develop
and maintain a sales
territory for
Cumberland County.
We offer a competa-
tive salary & compen-
sation plans, as well
as great benefits. If
interested, please
send resume to
sp9011@comcast.net
1988 Mercedes 560
SL convertible. Two
tops, garage-kept.
Excellent condition.
$11,900. 856-691-7998
or 609-319-0779.
LIKE NEW!!! 20"
Electric Caloric
Range! Perfect for
efficiency apt., lake
house, or RV. ONLY
$185.00 OBO! Call
214-277-2450 or 972-
304-1861.
Help Wanted
WANTED: Dead or
Alive. Circa 1900-
1950 bicycles, motor-
cycles and literature.
Call 609-442-3343
For Sale
A CUT ABOVE LAWN
CARE. LAWN MAIN-
TANCE, LEAF CLEAN
UPS, PAVERS,
PATIOS, WALK WAYS,
POOLS & MORE.
FREE ESTIMATE.
ALEX 609-381-8586
Landscaping
RC HOME REMODEL-
ING. LLC floors, tiles,
roofing, painting, cab-
inets, and all types of
interior and exterior
work. Good, quality
work, free estimates.
856-982-0186
Home
Improvement
Miscellaneous
Do you have a car or boat that is
taking up space in your driveway?
Are you hoping to sell your
vehicle for some extra cash?
Publicize the sale of your vehicle
by advertising in The Grapevines
Classifieds section. Make your
junk someone elses treasures.
Selling your Car?
Filing Cabinets and
Desks For Sale!
All in very good
shape; letter and
legal size. Starting at
$70 for cabinets and
$125 for desks.
Call 856-297-0595
No Math Left
Behind! Tutoring in
math for all ages.
Tuesday and
Thursday currently
open. Call 691-5534
to get your child
ahead of the curve.
Services
Need Computer Help?
PC Troubleshooting,
Wireless Networking,
Email Setup, PC Tune
Up, Internet
Connection Help,
Virus Removal, New
PC Setup etc. Fast,
friendly service.
Reasonable rates.
Call 856-558-9812
Financial
Apartments
Grapevine 24-28 071311:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:08 PM Page 27
You May Never See
Home Mortgage Rates
This Low Again.
Ever.
Lobby Hours All Locations:
Monday - Wednesday: 8:30 AM 5:00 PM
Thursday & Friday: 8:30 AM 6:00 PM
Saturday: 9:00 AM 1:00 PM
Drive-Thru Hours All Locations:
Monday- Thursday: 8:00 AM 6:00 PM
Friday: 8:00 AM 7:00 PM
Saturday: 9:00 AM 1:00 PM
Or Anytime at CapitalBankNJ.com
Se Habla Espaol
175 S. Main Road & 1234 W. Landis Avenue, Vineland, NJ 856.690.1234
Our Focus Is You.
Member FDIC
What Are You Waiting For?
Capital Bank has some of the best rates available.
Call Chris Conlin at 856.690.1234.
Capital Bank is rated 5 Stars by Bauer Financial.
See your banks rating at BauerFinancial.com
Now Open in Hammonton at 245 Bellevue Avenue!
Grapevine 24-28 071311:Layout 1 7/11/11 6:08 PM Page 28

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