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  • 8/20/2019 221652_1439889196Chatham News - August 2015 - R.pdf

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    No.1 Vol. 1 mypaperonline.com August 2015

    Carly Booth, left, and Tess Higgins, right, at their lemonade and Girl Scout cookie stand. The girls

    were excited by the response they received from area residents. Their stand was located on

    Overlook Road in Chatham Township.

    By Cheryl Conway, Editor 

    Two new towns are

    being added to the

    circulation of NewView Media Group newspa-

    pers starting with thisAugust issue.

    Chatham News and

    Madison News join the

    group bringing the total of 

    monthly newspapers to 17,reaching a total circulation

    of more than 190,000 resi-

    dences and businesses.

    Readers will enjoy news

    that brightens, enlightens,

    entertains and inspires.Publishers Joe Nicastro

    and Mary Lalama of 

    Flanders have joined forces

    with Marketeer owner

    Darwin Oordt of Cherry

    Hill to establish New ViewMedia Group. The manag-

    ing partners officially

    merged April 1.

    Unlike other newspapers

    that incorporate both thegood and bad news, New

    View Media Group features

    only good news.

    “We will have a group of 

    community newspapers

    with good family friendly

    content,” says Nicastro.“There are other publica-

    tions as in any market we

    are in but we try to bring a

    Good News Travels To More Towns AsCommunity Newspaper Co. Expands

    different perspective with

    all good news.”

    The name, New View

    Media LLC, came from“The idea that we have anew view on media,” says

    Nicastro.

    All community news,

    from schools to govern-

    ment, people, organizations,places of worship, libraries,

    non-profit organizations,

    volunteer services, chil-

    dren’s groups, scouts,

    fundraisers and more willbe featured in the pages of 

    New View Media. The com-

    pany’s philosophy is to

    showcase and inform all

    readers about the good that

    surrounds them day to day,the positive, and the unique-

    ness of their community.

    “Free community papers

    are different than paid

    papers,” explains Nicastro.“People want local news

    and it is hard to find. The

    hyper local sites are good.

    There is something about

    having a paper to hold, peo-

    ple still call us for copieswhen their kids are in the

    paper so they can cut it out

    and hang it up- different

    than printing it off a print-

    er.”The additional papers

    include the LivingstonNews, Hanover News,

    Caldwell News,

    Verona/Cedar Grove News,Millburn/Short Hills News,

    East Hanover/Florham Park

    continued on page 4

    Chatham seniors are invited to the

    Bronx Zoo, on Tues., Sept. 17, from8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; rain date is

    Thurs., Sept. 17. Total Experience ticket

    includes admission and unlimited access to

    the Wild Asia Monorail and all attractions.

    Free shuttle throughout the park. Lunch on

    own at various on-site venues or brown bagit. Fee is $55, includes admission and bus).

    Senior Services Center of the Chathams

    is a not for profit corporation that supports

    the independence of our senior community

    and their families by providing an enrich-ment center, transportation, information and

    referral services.

    Thanks to the generosity of the munici-

    pality of Chatham Township, space was pro-

    vided for a senior center in the lower level of 

    the Township municipal building. Theorganization was an offspring of the

    Chatham Interfaith Council of Churches and

    was originally incorporated under the name

    Interfaith Homes and Services. In 1998 the

    agency name was changed to SeniorServices Center of the Chathams Inc. to bet-

    ter reflect the services offered.

    A not-for-profit, tax-exempt 501c3

    agency that has served senior citizens for

    nearly two decades, Senior Services hasoffered care and support to thousands of sen-

    iors and their families. Transportation, advo-

    cacy, information and referral, health servic-

    es and educational and recreational pro-

    grams are just a few of the services offered.For more information, call 973-635-

    4565.

    Chatham Seniors Going To Zoo

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    Page 2, August 2015, Tell Them You Saw It In The Chatham News • Like us on facebook www.facebook.com/mypaperonline

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    Gen Y Networking Group is a forum

    dedicated to Generation Y youngadults interested in job search, net-

    working, and career development. The

    meeting is set for Wed., Aug. 19, at 7 p.m.-8:45 p.m., a the Library of the Chathams.

    All are welcome to attend.A Documentary Film – August My

    Movie Night, is set for Thurs., Aug. 20, 7

    p.m. to 9 p.m., at the Library of The

    Chathams. For 12 years the Nazis looted

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    will be served.

     Adult Programs At Chatham Library 

    The Chatham Area Chamber of 

    Commerce is a united group of indi-

    vidual business people who workvoluntarily to develop and maintain a busi-

    ness environment of prosperity and growth

    for the business and residential communi-

    ty. Its mission is to motivate governments,

    businesses, residents, and civic groups toutilize and support the members and pro-

    grams of the Chatham Area Chamber of Commerce.

    The Chatham-Madison Networking

    Breakfast is set for Tues., Sept. 8, 8 a.m.

    until 9:30 a.m., at Charlie Brown's in

    Chatham.For more information, email chatham-

    [email protected]; or call 908-580-

    9644.

    Breakfast SetFor Chamber Of Commerce

     Attention Schools, Churches, Organizations Send

    Your Press Releases to [email protected]

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    Like us on facebook www.facebook.com/mypaperonline • Tell Them You Saw It In The Chatham News, August 2015, Page 3

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    Page 4, August 2015, Tell Them You Saw It In The Chatham News • Like us on facebook www.facebook.com/mypaperonline

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    Read Aloud to Therapy Dogs is set

    for Wed., Aug. 19, from 4 p.m. to5 p.m., at Library of The

    Chathams. Program is for kids in kinder-

    garten and older. Sit down and read a

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    its monthly group and value various per-

    spectives.The group meets on the last Wed. each

    month at 1 p.m., except during November

    to avoid conflicting with ThanksgivingDay celebrations, as well as August or

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    Books are provided by the library and

    are available one month prior to our meet-

    ing date. Readers are encouraged to sign

    up and provide an email address to stayupdated on future book selections.

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    Page 6, August 2015, Tell Them You Saw It In The Chatham News • Like us on facebook www.facebook.com/mypaperonline

    By Kerry Breen 

    The Colony Pool Club (CPC) in

    Chatham, formerly the Colony Pool

    and Recreation Center, was reno-vated and rebranded this summer, marking

    the first major renovations for the pool in

    nearly a decade.

    The CPC has previously been known as

    the Colony Pool Recreation Center. Itencompassed tennis courts, as well as pad-

    dle tennis courts, according to Chatham

    Mayor Kevin Sullivan. This year, the ten-

    nis courts, and the lessons and clinics that

    went along with them, were made separate

    from the pool membership, making thepool a ‘stand-alone entity’, according to

    Sullivan. This allowed them to re-brand

    the pool.

    The renovations were the first major

    renovations done in nearly ten years. Therehave been select improvements made dur-

    ing the past few years, such as bringing in

    new beach chairs, but the last major work

    was done when the bathrooms and shower

    areas were altered.

    “We have added different amenities andmade slight improvements as needed every

    year,” said Sullivan. “This year, we added

    new beach sand, and added the sand to thegrilling area. We’ve recently added two

    new grills for open grilling to the unre-

    served area. There was new PVC fencing,

    along with river stones around the main

    office, Colony Café, and bathroom area, aswell as new trash receptacles and an over-

    all increase in maintenance. We’ve added

    several new games, but by far the best new

    amenity has been the Log Roll. It has

    young and old on it all day long and has

    added a tremendous amount of fun to thepool.”

    The snack area in the pool was also

    altered, changed to the Colony Café,

    which helped bring in a successful local

    business, Fairmount County Store. Theyrun the café in partnership with Hickory

    Pizza, who offers pizza by the slice or for

    pie delivery. Colony Gear followed, offer-

    ing a selection hats and T-shirts. According

    to Sullivan, these have sold well all season,and are a source of pride for CPC mem-

    bers.

    The renovations done this year were

    done as part of an effort to make the

    Colony Pool Club Chatham Township. Photo by Tom Salvas

    Colony Pool Makes Big Splash This Summer 

    Colony Pool more known and recognized

    as a township facility among the residentsof Chatham.

    “Rebranding allowed us to do that,”

    said Sullivan. “The first step was simplify-

    ing the fee structure, and then we started

    rebranding with the remaking of the

    Colony Pool website, as well as a new

    logo, created by Calello Designs. A newFacebook page followed, along with car

    magnets in the shape of the logo, provided

    for each member. Our posters were hung in

    businesses around town, and we sent ban-

    continued on next page

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    Like us on facebook www.facebook.com/mypaperonline • Tell Them You Saw It In The Chatham News, August 2015, Page 7

    ners along with mailings.”

    This publicity clearly paid off, because according to

    Sullivan, there has been a tremendous amount of positive

    feedback concerning the pool.

    “The borough residents appreciated the fact that pricereductions were provided across the board, not just for

    township residents,” said Sullivan. Another change made

    this summer was that the pricing was brought to a very

    competitive level with other public pool clubs in the area,

    making it a great value for the price. “We have seen anuptick in both residential and non-residential family mem-

    berships, and we had an excellent attendance at our open

    house.”

    There have also been special events held at the pool.

    On select Sundays, live music is played, and is very pop-

    ular among residents. There are also Float Days and movienights.

    “We still have a fair amount of summer left,” said

    Sullivan. “We are looking forward to some more interest-

    ing and fun days at CPC. We still have a few unannounced

    events that we are still putting together. With the help of the Colony Pool Advisory Committee, we are already

    looking to build on what we’ve done this year, and make

    next year even better.”

    More information about the pool can be found at

    www.thecolonypoolclub.org.

    continued from previous page

    Big Splash...

    The Colony Pool Club in Chatham recently held a

    Family Float Day where the Rosewood Band per-

    formed for members.

    The Colony Pool Club, which earlier this year launched

    a new website www.thecolonypoolclub.org, features a

    reduced membership fee schedule, various new amenitiesand increased special events and social activities planned

    for members this summer.

    The new website highlights some of the new amenities

    offered at The Colony Pool Club including:Approximately 30,000 square feet, or 850,000 gallons, of 

    fresh water swimming; more than 8,300 square feet of soft

    beach sand; the new Colony Café – now operated by The

    Fairmount Country Store; free Wi-Fi; diving boards, water

    slides, the Log Roll, water basketball and volleyball; swim

    team; private/group swimming lessons; half-court basket-ball court; tether ball; table hockey; ping pong; ladder ball

    and more.

    Special events this summer include Sunday family

    night open grill, live music on select weekends, adult

    socials, ladies night, float days, sand castle contest, movienight on the beach, DJ parties, family fun day.

    The Colony Pool Club Swim Team is a member of the

    North Jersey Summer Swim League. Its competitive

    Swim Team is a great way to have fun, get exercise and

    meet new friends. The swim coaches this year include

    Head Swim Coach Kara Miller-Radest and Assistant

    Coaches Nicole Tingley and Kathryn Visco.

    Swim lessons are based on the Red Cross Water Safety

    Instructor Swim program and are taught by certified Club

    lifeguards. Group Swim Lessons are offered Tuesday,

    Wednesday and Thursday mornings to children who aremembers, at least four years of age.

    Club members can show their Colony pride this sum-

    mer with a selection of new apparel and summer items.

    The Colony Pool Club was established in 1928 as a

    local swim club and has grown to become a ChathamTownship landmark known for summer family fun.

    Learn more at chathamtownship-nj.gov.

    Photo by Glenn Clark.

    Family Float Day Held At Pool 

    Clean out the attic and basement for

    an indoor flea market set for Sat.,Oct. 10, at Our Lady of the Lake

    School in Mt. Arlington, from 8 a.m. - 1

    p.m. $15 per six to eight foot table with

    two chairs or an open space. Food counter

    will be available. Proceeds to benefit the

    Queen of the Lakes Columbiettes. Make

    checks payable to Columbiettes, Council

    #5114; send for an application or payment

    to Columbiettes, 1 Park Ave., Mt.

    Arlington, NJ, 07856. For info, call 973-770-0291 or email

    [email protected] for application.

    Vendors NeededFor Indoor Flea Market

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    DRIVEWAYS

    By Kerry Breen 

    Since its ribbon cutting, Giralda Farms

    Preserve at Loantaka Brook

    Reservation has been a popular place

    and more additions will be underway.More than 200 people, including four

    freeholders and a state congressman, attend-

    ed the June 6 ribbon cutting for the opening

    of the Giralda Farms Preserve. After the

    event, hundreds of cyclists rode their bikesthrough the newly-opened trails.

    The land, once a part of the historic

    Geraldine Rockefeller Dodge Estate,

    expanded the Loantaka Brook reservation

    from 744 acres to 880. The land consist of 

    footpaths that meander through maintainedfields and forested areas, and a series of 

    streams and wetlands. Presently, about eight

    miles of trails exist on the preserve; accord-

    ing to Chatham Mayor Kevin Sullivan, there

    are plans to add an additional 2.3 miles of trail.

    “We are going to add trails,” said Joe

    Basralian, the chair of the Chatham

    Township Open Space Committee. “We are

    going to add a small parking lot, we are

    going to add more signage; we are also

    going to add benches for people to rest and

    sit down – that is some of the basic stuff. We

    are going to do more, because people are sointerested in this property. They all want to

    use it and enjoy it.”

    According to Sullivan, the land will beused mainly for passive recreation. It will

    also host events like 5Ks. The well-loved NJSymphony Orchestra will continue to play

    there during the summer, creating something

    that everyone can enjoy.

    “It’s a beautiful piece of land,” said

    Sullivan. “It preserves important character-

    istics of the town, and I think preservingthose characteristics was important and crit-

    ical about the project.”

    Sullivan was one of the driving forces

    behind the project, according to Basralian.

    He credited Sullivan with having put in hun-dreds of hours of work, and having been

    extremely active throughout the process.

    “It is a beautiful outdoor resource for the

    people of Morris County to enjoy forever,”

    said Basralian. “It helps preserve the beauty,the clean water, and the beautiful land

    around here. It will also help conserve natu-

    ral resources.”

    Giralda Farms Preserve, Chatham Township. Credit Tom Salvas

    Preserve Maintains Beauty And Character of Town

    The land is within the watershed of the

    federally protected Great Swamp NationalWildlife Refuge. This means that the protec-

    tion of the land will benefit water quality in

    the area. It will also benefit the wildlife, suchcontinued on next page

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    as the 244 species of birds that call this area their home. Thehope is that this land will be enjoyed for generations to

    come.

    The preserve was made possible through money raised

    by various partners. Altogether, the project cost $14.1 mil-

    lion; the majority of those funds were donated by the MorrisCounty Open Space trust fund. They contributed a ten mil-

    lion dollar grant, the largest in the history of Morris County.

    According to Sullivan, the remaining $4.1 million was

    raised by both public and private entities.Other parties included the Geraldine R. Dodge

    Foundation, the F.M. Kirby Foundation, the Morris CountyMunicipal Utilities Authority, the Morris County Park

    Commission, the Morris County Board of Chosen

    Freeholders, the Morris County Preservation Trust, the New

    Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, the Green

    Acres Program, and the Normandy Real Estate Partners.For more information, visit http://morriscountynj.

    gov/pdfs/giraldabrochure.pdf or the Chatham Township

    website.

    continued from previous pageNew Reserve...

    On July 21, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts

    awarded more than $15.7 million in grant funding

    for more than 700 arts organizations, projects and

    artists throughout the state. The awards were announced at

    Morris Arts Receives State Arts Awards And Grantsthe NJ State Council on the Arts’ 49th annual meeting held

    at the Wyndham Garden Hotel in Trenton.Of those 700, only 42 organizations and projects received

    the highest evaluations from the panel reviewing the appli-

    cations and, for the 18th consecutive year, Morris Arts was

    among that highly select company, recognized with aCitation of Excellence and the designation as a MajorService Organization “for their history of excellence, the

    breadth of their impact and their longstanding leadership.”

    In addition, Morris Arts was awarded $103,080 for its local

    arts grant program and an additional $5,000 for its co-spon-

    sored project/artist career development workshop.

    “It is a thrill and a privilege to receive this recognition of our work from the NJ State Council on the Arts,” said Tom

    Werder, executive director of Morris Arts. “These two

    awards affirm the importance of our work in the communi-

    ty. Morris Arts was particularly pleased when NJSCA

    Executive Director, Nick Paleologos drew attention toMorristown's Percent for Art program as an a example of 

    how NJ continues to be a national leader in the arts."

    “The arts industry is critical to NJ’s economic growth and

    creative vitality,” said Acting Governor Kim Guadagno,

    who also serves as secretary of state. “The grants awardedthrough the State Arts Council support cultural assets in

    every region that help shape NJ communities as great places

    to live, visit, do business and raise a family.”

    Arts Council Chair Elizabeth Mattson stated, “Today’s

    actions reflect the Council’s commitment to excellence and

    to ensuring that the public funds entrusted to us are invested

    wisely in the people and organizations that make this stategreat.”

    The council receives funding from the State of NJ

    through the Hotel/Motel Occupancy Fee legislation passed

    in 2003, which established a dedicated revenue source tosupport arts, history and tourism. Additionally, the ArtsCouncil receives annual competitive grants from the

    National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).

    Funding decisions are made through a transparent, merit-

    based and rigorous grants process that assures access and

    equity. Independent peer panels evaluate grant applications

    to eliminate the possibility for conflict of interest.According to Arts Council records, state arts funding

    employs an estimated 17 thousand workers, supports 37

    thousand cultural events and attracts 5 million visitors who

    spend another $125 million. The bottom line: every nickel of 

    state spending on the arts yields a dollar of local economicimpact in towns and cities across the state.

    Located in Morristown, Morris Arts is a not-for-profit

    organization founded in 1973 dedicated to engaging and

    building community through the arts. Using the arts to

    inspire, connect and engage, Morris Arts serves as a resourcefor Morris County with a special focus on arts programming

    in the schools and in the community, arts advocacy, and sup-

    port of the Morris Area community of artists and arts organ-

    izations.

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    This year, Niche.com, a website that focuses on

    providing rankings and statistics for towns and

    cities in New Jersey, made a list of ‘the best sub-

    urbs in which to raise a family’. Chatham ranked thirdoverall on its list, and 35 other Morris County municipal-

    ities were listed as well.

    Niche keeps their full methodology printed on its

    website. The categories are all weighted individually,

    which helps make up the score for each town. At the time

    of analysis and ranking, the Niche databases contained

    records for 11,372 suburbs. Of the suburbs that met the

    required qualifications, those at the site were able to

    grade 11,196 and rank 3,250. More information about

    Niche and its qualifications can be found here:

    https://local.niche.com/rankings/methodology/#qualifi-cations.

    “We have a very attractive town,” said Kevin

    Sullivan, the mayor of Chatham Township. “We have a

    great school system and a very efficient municipal gov-

    ernment that has delivered essential services while main-

    taining a flat tax rate for nearly five years.

    “I think the town offers a community that has a real

    abundance of talent – we have talented people who are

    dedicated to serving in a variety of capacities from a vol-

    unteer standpoint, and they serve the community in dif-

    ferent ways, be it coaching, working in the library, help-

    ing in the schools, emergency services, etc.,” he contin-

    ues. “Chatham is a very attractive place to grow up and

    raise a family.”According to Niche, its grade “takes into account

    family-centered factors, such as public education, safety,

    community involvement, and access to family necessi-

    ties, in an attempt to holistically measure how good an

    area is for families.”

    The factors and the weights that are used to make up

    the rankings of those that are qualified for this survey are

    as follows. Many information and statistics are taken

    from the U.S. Census; others are based on a grade given

    by Niche. More information about Niche’s methodology

    can be found here: https://local.niche.com/rankings/sub-urbs/best-places-for-families/methodology/.

    The crime and safety grade is worth 20 percent of the

    ranking. Niche uses statistics to capture a location’s gen-

    eral safety. This information is provided by the Niche

    grade.

    Education is also worth 20 percent of the ranking. The

    site incorporates the average Niche K-12 overall grade

    for every public school serving the area. Each school is

    weighted by the number of students it serves.

    The community grade is also provided through the

    Niche grade ranking, and makes up 10 percent of the

    total. It incorporate statistics that capture an area’s

    involvement and investment in the community. The

    housing grade makes up another 10 percent of the rank-ing, and is again ranked by the Niche grade. It incorpo-

    rates statistics that capture how good an area is when it

    comes to purchasing a home.

    Niche also provides statistics based on the residential

    age in the area. They take the percentage of residents

    between the ages of 35 to 44 for one category, which

    makes up another 10 percent of the ranking. They also

    take the percentage of residents between the ages of zero

    and nine, which is another 10 percent of the ranking.

    This information is provided by the U.S. Census.

    The Niche rankings also include access to libraries,day cares and grocery stores. This is measured by the

    proximity and availability of the locations within each

    suburb. The information for the libraries is provided by

    the Institute of Museum and Library Services; the infor-

    mation about day cares and grocery stores is provided by

    the U.S. Census. The availability of libraries makes up

    10 percent of the ranking; the availability of the day

    cares and grocery stores are worth five percent each.

    Chatham Ranked Number Three As Best Town

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    T

    he 21st Century still carries the tradition of the sum-mer hit movies at local theaters. New Jersey can beproud of its renowned cinema heritage as the fore-

    most movie production location that created the first outdooraction adventure movies. The seeds of the movie industrywere planted in the last decades of the 19th Century with itsoriginal landmark footprints in New Jersey. It all started in1888 when Eadweard Muybridge, a world famous photog-rapher stopped by Edison’s lab in West Orange to meet withhim to show off his zoopraxiscope. It was a machine thatprojected images from rotating glass disks in rapid succes-sion to give the impression of motion. Muybridge wanted topartner Edison's phonograph invention with his"Zoopraxiscope" to combine sight with sound. Edison wasmore fascinated with Muybridge’s moving image concept

    than he was with his animation machine. Edison decided toventure into the moving picture business with his own inno-vations and gave the research and development project to hisemployee William K.L. Dickson. Dickson an English engi-neer often pleaded with Edison to approve experiments formoving pictures. Edison had little interest in these motionpictures ideas Dickson presented but, that soon changedafter his meeting with Muybridge. The result was theKinetograph camera and the Kinetoscope viewer bothpatented in 1891. By December 1892, the first motion pic-ture studio was erected in West Orange NJ. Movies were

    being produced in the Black Maria studio location up until1901. The Edison studio then moved their set production toNew York City with a new glass-topped studio building thatcould let the sunlight in and protect the movie work frominclement weather. The first movie cameras depended onvery bright natural sunlight to shoot a scene.

    The Kinetograph was a huge wooden camera the size of an average doghouse that Edison even called it “TheDoghouse.” The camera was so large it took two men tomove it. It was this doghouse camera that shot one of thefirst outdoor adventure films that movie historians claim isone of the greatest films in cinematic history. The GreatTrain Robbery was shot at various outdoor locations. It wasa one-reeler action flick, 10 minutes long, 14-scenes, direct-ed and photographed by Edwin S. Porter. The 1903 filmpulled all the stops on modern filming innovation. It used a

    number of cutting edge techniques for the first time whichincluded parallel editing, minor camera movement, locationshooting and camera placements that were not stage-bound.It included sophisticated jump-cuts or cross-cuts and provid-ed a refined editing technique that showed two separate linesof action events happening continuously at duplicate timesin different places. The Great Train Robbery was inspired bya real robbery that took place on August 29, 1900, when fourmembers of George Leroy Parker's (Butch Cassidy) 'Hole inthe Wall' gang seized the Union Pacific Railroad No. 3 trainin its tracks near Table Rock, Wyoming. Not one scene was

    filmed on the western expanse of Wyoming but places suchas Dover, West Orange, Essex County Park, OrangeMountains, and the Lackawanna Railroad of New Jersey. Itwas Thomas Edison’s film team of northern New Jersey thatstarted the magic of cinematography and ignited the extraor-dinary world of Hollywood that now has a legacy thatexpands three centuries.

    Visit the Thomas Alva Edison Museum in West Orange –NPS where cinematic history was made - Open Wed.through Sun., 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Admission fee is $10. Visitwebsite for more details http://www.nps.gov/edis/.

    In 1903 Thomas Edison’s Studio Created Cinematic History & NJ’s LackawannaRailroad Became The Union Pacific Railroad In The Great Train Robbery 

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    C

    entenary College’s School of 

    International Studies will beoffering English as a Second

    Language Program (ESL) to members of 

    the community. The classes will be held

    for 13 weeks on Thurs. nights from 5:30

    p.m. to 8 p.m. starting on Sept. 10.

    Classes will be taught by ProfessorLauren Lesce.

    This Adult English Language program

    is designed to help immigrants and other

    non-native English speakers who have

    not yet developed proficiency in Englishto acquire the basic knowledge and skills

    they need to function effectively as par-ents, workers and citizens. The program

    is designed for those whose native lan-

    guage is a language other than Englishand, as a result, have a limited ability in

    speaking, reading, writing or understand-

    ing the English language. It is also ideal

    for those who live in a family or commu-

    nity where a language other than English

    is the dominant language. Classes are

    open to persons 18 years or older.

    “I am pleased to be able to offer this

    resource to members of our community,”

    says Dr. Joseph Linskey, dean for the

    School of International Programs atCentenary College. “This comprehen-

    sive course will hopefully benefit many

    people to better equip them as they move

    forward in their personal and profession-

    al lives.”

    The cost for the course is $150. Forinformation or to register, contact Lesce

    at (908) 852-1400, ext. 2330 or at les-

    [email protected].

    Founded in 1867 by the Newark

    Conference of the United MethodistChurch, Centenary College in

    Hackettstown is an independent, coedu-

    cational liberal arts and career studies

    college distinguished by an accomplished

    faculty, small class size and diverse stu-

    dent body. Centenary is the only bac-calaureate and master’s degree granting

    institution in northwest New Jersey.

    C

    entenary Stage Company’s critical-

    ly acclaimed Young Performers

    Workshop will be holding FallSession interviews by appointment on Sat.,Aug. 15 and Sun., Aug. 17. Led by theatre,

    TV and film veteran Michael Blevins, the

    fall session will run 15 weeks from Sept.

    12 through Dec. 21 and culminates in a

    two-week Festival of Shows from Dec. 12-

    21. Classes meet Sat. by section betweenthe hours of 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Students will

    rehearse productions while also studying

    voice, dance, and acting. Registration is

    open to students eight through eighteen

    and no prior experience is required.The Centenary Stage Company Young

    Performers Workshop (YPW) is a musical

    theatre program under the auspices of the

    Centenary Stage Company, a not-for-prof-

    it professional Equity Theatre Company inresidence at Centenary College. YPW is

    dedicated to the enrichment of young lives

    through the use of theatre arts and serves

    as a greenhouse for cultivating young the-

    atre performers. The program is one of the

    few that offers both formal training and

    production experience while designed tomeet the needs of beginning, intermediate

    and advanced young performers. Career -

    minded individuals can prepare for the rig-

    ors of a professional career, yet students

    not aiming for a professional career bene-fit from the program with its emphasis on

    discipline, self -worth and development of 

    communication skills. The program

    includes the production of two major

    musicals.

    For more information, visit centenarys-tageco.org. To schedule an interview con-

    tact the Centenary Stage Company admin-istrative office at (908) 979-0900. All new

    applicants must schedule an interview for

    admittance into the program. Earlyappointments receive priority placement as

    enrollment is competitive and limited.

    Deadline for registration is Sept. 1.

    The Young Performers Workshop is

    part of the educational arm of the profes-

    sional Centenary Stage Company.

    Centenary Stage Company To Host Young Performers Workshop

    English As Second LanguageProgram At Centenary 

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