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Attentive stray needs a home

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WEST ORANGE -- Simone is a young adult pit bull terrier mix at the Alex Caprio Animal Control Facility. Rescued as a stray, shelter volunteers say she "is very friendly and outgoing." Simone has been spayed and is up-to-date on shots. To meet Simone and other adoptable pets, visit the Alex Caprio Animal Control Facility at 311 Watchung Ave. in...

ex0924pet.jpgSimone 

WEST ORANGE -- Simone is a young adult pit bull terrier mix at the Alex Caprio Animal Control Facility.

Rescued as a stray, shelter volunteers say she "is very friendly and outgoing." Simone has been spayed and is up-to-date on shots.

To meet Simone and other adoptable pets, visit the Alex Caprio Animal Control Facility at 311 Watchung Ave. in West Orange. Adoption hours are from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and the first and third Saturdays of each month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information, call 973-325-4128.

Shelters interested in placing a pet in the Paw Print adoption column or submitting news should call 973-836-4922 or email essex@starledger.com.

Greg Hatala may be reached at ghatala@starledger.com. Follow him on Twitter @GregHatala. Find Greg Hatala on Facebook.


Major delays on NJ Transit lines after person is struck by train

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The Montclair-Boonton and Morris & Essex lines are affected

NEWARK -- Service has resumed, but with heavy delays on two New Jersey Transit lines after a man was struck by a train Friday morning in Essex County.

Trains began running with 90 minute delays on the Morris & Essex, Montclair-Boonton and Gladstone lines at about 7:45 a.m., spokesman Jim Smith said. 

The man was pinned between a retaining wall and the train after being struck west of the Newark Broad Street station around 5:30 a.m., the spokesman said.

The man was freed and taken to University Hospital in Newark. Smith didn't have an update on his condition.

NJT workers abusing family leave time, agency audit says

Earlier trains were not running between East Orange and both New York Penn Station and Hoboken on the Morris & Essex line. Service was also halted on the Montclair-Boonton line from the Watessing Avenue station in Bloomfield to Hoboken and New York.

None of the 130 passengers or crew members aboard train No. 6202 were injured. The Montclair-Boonton line train left Montclair State University at 5:10 a.m. and was due in New York at 6:04 a.m.

Jeff Goldman may be reached at jeff_goldman@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @JeffSGoldman. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

 

Best of both worlds: N.J.'s top dual-threat QBs

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Check out the athletes who can beat a team with their arms and their legs

Congressman: Reinvent Newark with Amazon - and $5B investment | Opinion

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Rep. Donald Payne Jr., D-10th Dist.: Newark and New Jersey are uniquely situated to submit a competitive bid for the project.

By Donald M. Payne, Jr.

This summer marked the 50th anniversary of the Newark riots. To many, that's the beginning and end of our story. I know better.

Newark and Newarkers are tirelessly fighting to rejuvenate the city's economy, reinvest in our neighborhoods, and reinvent our city. Progress has been slower than hoped, but undeniably steady.

Newark is ready for its next big step.

On Sept. 7, Amazon launched a search for its second headquarters. The project is expected to come with $5 billion of investment into the selected city and bring up to 50,000 high-paying jobs. Newark and New Jersey are uniquely situated to submit a competitive bid for the project because of our robust transportation and freight infrastructure, world-class universities, and proximity to New York City (but with real estate at a fraction of the price). 

RELATED: Yahoo finance editor: Newark could be perfect for Amazon

In its Request for Proposal, Amazon articulates a number of priorities for its host city that Newark meets or exceeds. Let's go down the list:

* A metro area of one million or more people. Newark is the second largest city in a metro of over 23 million people, the largest metro area in the country.

* A business-friendly environment. Two Fortune 500 companies already call Newark home - Prudential Financial and PSEG. Prudential has been headquartered in Newark from its founding over 140 years ago to the present day. Audible, an Amazon subsidiary and the world's largest producer of downloadable audiobooks, is based here, along with Panasonic's American subsidiary.

* A place with an ability to attract strong technical talent. The city of Newark houses the state's paramount technical university, NJIT. Also within the city, we have Rutgers University's Newark campus. Within an hour of Newark are four of the country's oldest and most distinguished universities - Rutgers-New Brunswick, Princeton, Columbia, and NYU. Building relationships with these top universities will create a pipeline of strong talent. An investment in Newark is an investment in these students.

A site within 30 miles of the region's population center, 45 minutes of an international airport, 2 miles of major highways and arterial roads, and with direct access to mass transit.  Newark is less than ten miles from Manhattan. It houses one of the nation's busiest airports - Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR) - within the city proper. Newark is bisected by several major interstates, including: twelve lanes of I-95, the primary north-south corridor on the East Coast; I-280, a spur of I-80 that connects New Jersey to the San Francisco Bay Area; and I-78, which is a major trucking route. Finally, Newark is heavily integrated into the region's extensive mass transit network.

What truly sets Newark apart is its unique confluence of passenger and freight infrastructure that is critical to a company as concerned with supply chain efficiency as Amazon.

In addition to EWR, which saw over 40 million passengers and almost 750,000 tons of cargo last year, the city has the East Coast's busiest seaport. The dredging of the Newark Bay and the raising of the Bayonne Bridge are complete. New Panamax ships capable of carrying loads more than double the old standard can now call to Port Newark-Elizabeth.

Newark has a density of transit options downtown that should be the envy of cities of every size. Six of North Jersey's nine commuter rail lines stop at one of Newark's two downtown stations - Newark Broad Street Station and Newark Penn Station.

RELATED: Ex-N.J. treasurer: Amazon and Newark could be perfect together

Over one hundred Amtrak trains service Newark Penn Station daily, including Amtrak's premier Acela Express service, connecting Newark with Boston, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C. Newark Penn has 24/7 service to Manhattan on PATH rapid transit lines, and the Newark to World Trade Center line will be extended to EWR in the coming years, opening up the city's south ward to new transit-oriented development. Two light rail lines and over thirty bus lines service downtown.

Fifty years after the riots, Newark has come a long way. Businesses have returned to the city. Regardless of Amazon's choice, I am confident about Newark's future. Newark is the city I was born and raised in, and it is the city where I raised my family.

The factories and many of the industrial jobs that helped build Newark left and likely won't return. In their place, a new economy has developed making Newark one of the nation's premier centers for the transportation, logistics, and distribution industries.

Newark and New Jersey have a once in a generation opportunity to attract a company of Amazon's size and caliber, and we should seize it. We should let the last, sometimes halting, fifty years of progress serve as merely prelude to a bright new era for our city. This is the moment to culminate the reinvention of Newark.

Donald M. Payne Jr., a Democrat, represents New Jersey's 10th District in the House of Representatives, where he's a member of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

Bookmark NJ.com/Opinion. Follow on Twitter @NJ_Opinion and find NJ.com Opinion on Facebook.

 

 

 

Police chief suspended over cops' handling of teen melee likely to retire

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The Maplewood police department has been embroiled in controversy since video allegedly showing cops kicking teens was released over the summer. Watch video

MAPLEWOOD -- A New Jersey police chief suspended after a video was released of officers kicking and punching teens after a town-wide holiday celebration likely won't be reclaiming his job.

Maplewood Mayor Vic DeLuca said Police Chief Robert Cimino, who was suspended over the summer following the release of footage from the July 5, 2016 incident, is in talks with the town to retire from his position.

The agreement should be ready in time for the township committee to vote on it at its Oct. 3 meeting, DeLuca said.

"After the settlement is approved, the township committee will undertake a national search for a new police chief," DeLuca said.

Cimino, who came under fire for the police response to alleged fights and rowdy behavior that broke out among groups of teens, has not spoken publicly since his suspension over the summer.

Cimino's attorney Jeffrey Garrigan, said this week the "chief is actively attempting to resolve his employment situation."

He declined to comment further until after the agreement is finalized.

How 4 controversial arrests led to chief's suspension

The likely end of the chief's tenure is the latest development of a yearlong dispute over the incident. Community members have alleged police used excessive force, and racially profiled the black teens involved, moving them over the town's border into neighboring Irvington, even though many were from Maplewood.

An Essex County Prosecutor's Office investigation did not find evidence to charge the officers involved, but six officers have been disciplined during an ongoing Maplewood Police internal investigation.

The town committee in August suspended Cimino and a police captain over the incident. According to a TapInto.com report, the captain has since retired.

The committee is also awaiting the results of an independent report it commissioned on the culture and practices of the police department.

One of the teens allegedly involved has filed a federal lawsuit against the town, chief, and other officers.

Jessica Mazzola may be reached at jmazzola@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @JessMazzola. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Which D1 women's soccer program has the most N.J. alums on its roster?

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There are over 400 NJ girls playing D1 soccer. Check out which college has the most.

Theft ring forged Bergen County payroll checks, prosecutor says

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Seven were arrested after county financial officers discovered forged checks had been cashed, officials said.

PARAMUS - Seven people have been arrested in a scheme to produce and deposit phony checks made to appear as if they were issued from a Bergen County payroll account, authorities said.

The investigation began in August when county financial officers alerted the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office to forged checks deposited in various accounts, according to Prosecutor Gurbir S. Grewal.

"Along with the checks, it was determined that illicit wire activity had also occurred which brought the total theft amount to over $50,000," Grewal said in a statement.

Two of the suspects organized the ring, which specialized in forging and negotiating business checks, the prosecutor said.

Man charged in woman's fatal OD

"The checks were deposited in co-conspirators' accounts and then the illicitly obtained funds were withdrawn before the forgeries and deception were uncovered," Grewal said.

In addition to Bergen County government, other suspected victim business accounts have been identified, Grewal said without identifying the businesses.

The arrests occurred between Sept. 8 and Thursday, Grewal said.

Those charged include:

  • Anthony Peguero, 23, of Newark. Charged with trafficking in stolen identities, check fraud and theft by deception.
  • Daleska Dillerva, 22, of Newark. Charged with trafficking with trafficking in stolen identities, check fraud and theft by deception.
  • Lezlie Mercedes, 19, of Hackensack. Charged with check fraud and theft by deception.
  • Guillermo Lopez, 30, of Jersey City. Charged with check fraud and theft by deception.
  • Alysha Viera, 19, of Carlstadt. Charged with check fraud and theft by deception.
  • Francisco Troche, 25, of Harrison. Charged with check fraud and theft by deception.
  • Claudio Rodrigues, 25, of Kearny. Charged with check fraud and theft by deception.

Anthony G. Attrino may be reached at tattrino@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @TonyAttrino. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

 

N.J. football Week 3 mega-coverage guide: Everything you need for the games

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Your one-stop shop for Week 3.

Below is NJ.com's mega-coverage guide for Week 3. Keep track of schedules, predictions, previews, features and breaking news from around the state all the way up until kickoff.

ESSENTIALS 
LIVE updates, results & links for Week 3
Bold predictions for Week 3

30 must-see games for Week 3
Week 3 schedule/scoreboard
• Schedule/scoreboard by conference
• Statewide stat leaders through Week 2
 Power points updated through Week 2


FEATUED: Best of both worlds - N.J.'s top dual-threat QBs


RANKINGS 
Top 20
• Group and conference rankings

PICKS 
NJ.com predicts every winner in the state
•  Scores and predictions for Top 20 teams
Picks for each of N.J.'s six conferences

MUST-READ CONTENT  
Poaching players? Don Bosco accuses St. Joseph (Mont.)

Delsea, Freehold Borough forfeit games for using ineligible players
Streak busted: Newark East Side ends 5-year, 55-game skid
• Mailbag: NJ.com's reporters answer your N.J. football questions

Ahead of Week 3 game, Seton Hall views St. Peter's as mold for success

Brothers, DePaul grads are adversaries when RU plays Nebraska
Video replay for HS football? Refs, NJSIAA weigh options
Playing football before age 12 has harmful effects, new study says 
BC in Cali: Behind-the-scenes look at Bergen Catholic's trip
•  Previewing Hightstown vs. Lawrence
North Hunterdon, Voorhees making history  
Hun's Holly, Steinert's Ali named POTW by Trenton Times 
Which N.J. alums shined during Week 3 of college football?

A LOOK BACK AT WEEK 2 
Results and links for Week 2
36 standouts who shined during Week 2 
Hot takes from Week 2: Key results and performances

Week 2 stat leaders 
•  Best photos from Week 2

RECRUITING NEWS  
Exclusive: DePaul's Kris Banks decommits from Boston College
NJ.com Top 50 football roundup: In-season recruiting continues
In-depth with 4-star QB, N.J. native Artur Sitkowski after Rutgers visit 
Ranking Rutgers' top football recruiters: Who's No. 1 in Piscataway? 

Pat Lanni may be reached at planni@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @PatLanniHS. Like NJ.com High School Sports on Facebook.


Ex-Newark watershed director sentenced to 8 years for kickback scheme

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Linda Watkins Brashear, the former director of the Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corp. admitted to soliciting nearly $1 million in bribes

NEWARK -- The former director of the now-defunct Newark Watershed Conservation and Development Corp. was sentenced to more than eight years in federal prison Friday for her role in a $1 million kickback scheme in which she solicited bribes in exchange for no-work or over-inflated contracts. 

Linda Watkins Brashear, 57, of West Orange, oversaw the agency once tasked with treating and delivering water to northern New Jersey residents and admitted in court she struggled with a gambling addition during the last few years of her tenure. 

She previously pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy and filing a false income tax return and faced up to 14-17 years behind bars. 

But her attorney Michael Baldassare argued for leniency based on her substantial cooperation with authorities and her gambling addition. Without that illness, "there is no crime here," Baldassare said.

U.S. District Judge Jose L. Linares ordered Brashear to surrender on Nov. 27, pay $1.3 million in restitution fees and submit to three years of supervised release after her sentence. She will serve 102 months in prison.

"There was more here than just the gambling, there was also the taste for the high life," Linares said before issuing his sentence. "The gambling was a part of this and should be considered by the court but I do think there were additional components to this beyond that."

Wearing gold hoops and a blue blazer, Brashear spoke slowly before Linares, apologizing to her friends, family and the public. Some of her friends and family sat quietly in the courtroom.

"All of my actions are an aberration in my life," she said. "I wish I could undo what I've done ... I broke public trust. I broke people who I knew that believed in me, that trusted me to do a job. And instead of doing that job, I committed crimes."

Brashear's sentencing had been postponed at least four times as ex-contractors and managers for the agency were sentenced for their roles in the bribery scheme.

Donald Bernard Sr., special projects manager for the watershed, was sentenced to eight years in federal prison in July for working with Brashear from 2008 to 2013 to solicit bribes.

James Porter, 81, of East Orange, an ex-contractor for the watershed was also sentenced to two years in prison for giving kickback payments in return for work.

The U.S. Attorney's office said printing, marketing, cleaning contractors and a security and a political consultant also paid kickbacks.

The watershed corporation legally dissolved in 2013 and was the focus of a scathing 2014 report by the state Comptroller's Office that found the agency was siphoning millions of public dollars and making illegal payments and sweetheart deals.

Brashear worked at the watershed for 34 years and ran the agency from 2007 to 2013. She admitted taking kickbacks after handing out $1 million worth of contracts to her friends and ex-husband, prosecutors said. She also admitted she under-reported her income by $316,000. 

Baldassare said Brashear struggled with gambling addition during the last five years at the watershed and has attended hundreds of Gamblers Anonymous meetings. 

"This is a woman who has, over the last couple of years, who has rebuilt her life, knowing full well she's going in," he said. "That's why it's genuine."

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jacques Pierre said evidence showed watershed funds were used for significant gambling but he added Brashear wasn't just addicted to slot machines -- she was also drawn to the lifestyle that came with being a high roller. 

"There was an addition to the perks," Pierre said, citing personal car services, fancy dinners and cruises to the Bahamas. He said Brashear engaged in the watershed's "culture of corruption and culture of fraud where they all benefited financially" at the expense of taxpayers.

He said former watershed employees are still struggling to get their pension payments.

Pierre reiterated that Brashear offered the government substantial assistance and relevant documents and emails but "it took time to develop."

"She's provided substantial assistance and led to likely prosecution of individuals we're looking at this moment," he said, adding that the investigation into the watershed was ongoing. 

Linares acknowledged Brashear's remorse and her gambling addition but said she hurt the agency's mission. "This is in fact a very serious crime," he said. "The money ultimately was coming from the taxpayers of the city of Newark."

A federal judge last year dismissed a lawsuit by the watershed's trustees against U.S. Sen. Cory Booker, whom the trustees argued failed to properly oversee its administration while he served on the agency's board.

The Newark Water Group, a citizen group that led efforts to expose corruption at the agency, said it was "happy that some of those who broke the law so arrogantly and cheated the people of Newark out of their hard-earned money in a bribery and kickback scheme have finally been brought to justice."

But the group added: "These crimes were calculated and carried out in a bold and brazen manner, with some of the guilty parties also doing whatever they could to hide their tracks. However, we cannot but feel there could well be others who've gotten off the hook and will never be made to answer for their potential criminal behavior. So at the end of the day, the question continues to be: Has the full story of the NWCDC scandal seen the light of day?"

Karen Yi may be reached at kyi@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter at @karen_yi or on Facebook.

Major milestones, upsets continue plus more hot topics in N.J. boys soccer

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Breaking down some of the top teams and players around N.J. from the past week.

Power struggles, player surges and more hot topics in N.J. girls soccer

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A look at the top trends, players and teams through Sept. 21.

Driver indicted in fatal hit-and-run of recent Rutgers grad

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Eduardo Perez, 33, is accused of leaving the scene after his car struck a Newark man in Linden

ELIZABETH -- A grand jury has indicted an Elizabeth man accused of fatally striking a recent Rutgers University graduate with his car in Linden and fleeing the scene. 

Eduardo Perez, 33, was indicted on one count of vehicular homicide and one count of leaving the scene of a fatal accident in the crash that left Mujahid "Mu" Henry, 23, dead, acting Union County Prosecutor Thomas K. Isenhour said Friday. 

Perez was driving east on the 1200 block of East Linden Avenue at 12:30 a.m. on May 12 when his 2007 Ford Escape struck Henry, a pedestrian, authorities said. Henry, of Newark, was thrown into a parked car and pronounced dead at the scene, officials said. 

Perez then collided with several parked cars while he drove to the 700 block of Lidgerwood Avenue in Elizabeth, where he abandoned his Ford Escape. 

Elizabeth police officers patrolling on nearby Kenneth Avenue arrested him shortly afterward.

Perez has three previous criminal convictions and was on probation for the second of two assault convictions when he struck Henry, court records show. Perez also served prison time for robbery, the records show. 

Henry was set to walk at Rutgers-Newark's graduation five days after he was killed. He graduated with a degree in public affairs and administration in January. 

His father, Darryl Henry, accepted his son's posthumous degree at the May 17 commencement ceremony. 

Henry also worked as a legislative aide to Essex County Freeholder Leonard Luciano and campaigned for Phil Murphy in the Democratic gubernatorial primary race. 

Marisa Iati may be reached at miati@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @Marisa_Iati or on Facebook here. Find NJ.com on Facebook

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Hitler comments by alt-right N.J. professor draw scrutiny

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NJIT says it is reviewing the comments made by one of its university lecturers.

s200_jason.jorjani.jpgJorjani. (NJIT)
 

NEWARK -- A New Jersey university is reviewing a video interview in which one of its professors foresees a future where concentration camps will return to Europe, and Adolf Hitler will appear on the currency and be considered a "great European leader."

The video featuring New Jersey Institute of Technology lecturer Jason Reza Jorjani surfaced as part of a New York Times opinion piece about a Swedish graduate student who went undercover in the world of the alt-right on behalf of Hope Not Hate, a British anti-racism group.

"The statements made by Mr. Jorjani in a video recently published by 'The New York Times' are repugnant and antithetical to our institution's core values. We presently are conducting a review of this matter and will provide additional information as soon as that review is complete, the statement read.

"NJIT is a university that embraces diversity and sees it as a source of strength." 

Though Jorjani did not immediately reply Friday to request for comment on the video and his status at NJIT, he did post a statement to his website Wednesday condemning the article and video.

He slams the student for filming video without his knowledge, and says the video has been "deceptively edited to make it appear as if I am advocating genocidal extreme right-wing policies."

The student, Patrik Hermansson, said he secretly recorded his conversations with Jorjani and other alt-right leaders as part of the project, which culminated in a Hope Not Hate report on the alt-right and its expansion around the world.

Jorjani, an Iranian American, founded the AltRight Corporation, an entity aimed at connecting the American and European alt-right movements. He has since resigned from the organization. In the video, Jorjani also talks of his ties to the Trump administration -- claims he backed off of in an interview with the New York Times.

The White House denied any connection to Jorjani in the report.

"My nightmarish prediction of a future that would follow from western policymakers' failure to address the Muslim migrant crisis in the present has been taken out of context and made to appear as if it is advocacy for 'concentration camps and expulsions and war... at the cost of a few hundred million people,'" Jorjani wrote.

Jessica Mazzola may be reached at jmazzola@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @JessMazzola. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Football: LIVE UPDATES, results and links for Week 3

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NJ.com's one-stop shop for all New Jersey football coverage this week/

KEY LINKS
Week 2 mega-coverage guide
The NJ.com Top 20
Statewide picks and schedule

Week 3 schedule/scoreboard
30 must-see games for Week 3
22 bold predictions for Week 3

FRIDAY FEATURED GAMES

No. 3 Bergen Catholic 31, No. 5 Paramus Catholic 14 
Look back at live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

South Brunswick at Piscataway, 7
Live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

North Bergen 21, Bloomfield 0 
Look back at live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Union at Elizabeth, 7
Live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

No. 8 Millville 25, St. Augustine 23 
Look back at live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Mount Olive 61, High Point 27
Live updates
• Game story
• Box score

Triton 45, Cumberland 34 
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Montgomery at Hunterdon Central, 7
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Dickinson at Kearny, 7
• Recap
Photo gallery
• Box score

Cedar Grove 28, Verona 7
• Game story
• Box score

Notre Dame at Hopewell Valley, 7
• Game story
• Box score

No. 13 Rancocas Valley 38, Trenton 6
• Game story
• Box score

Allentown at Northern Burlington, 7
Northern Burlington knows Allentown will be difficult assignment
• Game story
• Box score

Hamilton West at West Windsor-Plainsboro South, 7
• Game story
• Box score

Palmyra at New Egypt, 7
• Game story
• Box score

Woodstown at Glassboro, 7
• Game story
• Box score

No. 16 Bridgewater-Raritan vs. Phillipsburg, 7
• Game story
• Box score

TOP 20 SCOREBOARD
Friday
• No. 3 Bergen Catholic at No. 5 Paramus Catholic, 7
• No. 4 DePaul 42, No. 10 Don Bosco Prep 17
 No. 6 Timber Creek 45, Clearview 7
• No. 8 Millville 25, St. Augustine 23
• No. 9 Irvington at Smyrna (Del.), 7:30
 No. 11 Lenape 47, Burlington Township 0
• No. 13 Rancocas Valley 38, Trenton 6
• No. 16 Bridgewater-Raritan vs. Phillipsburg, 7
• No. 19 Westfield at Franklin, 7

Saturday
• No. 2 St. Peter's Prep at Seton Hall Prep, 1
• No. 7 Pope John vs. Delbarton, 1
• No. 12 Vineland at Egg Harbor, 7
• No. 14 Manalapan vs. Old Bridge, 1                                       
• No. 17 Red Bank Catholic at Ocean Township, 1
• No. 18 River Dell at Westwood, 1
• No. 20 Howell vs. Middletown North, 6:30

SATURDAY LIVE COVERAGE
Delbarton at No. 7 Pope John, 1
No. 2 St. Peter’s Prep at Seton Hall Prep, 1
• Ocean City at Cedar Creek, 1
• No. 18 River Dell at Westwood, 2
• No. 12 Vineland at Egg Harbor, 7

No. 2 St. Peter’s Prep at Seton Hall Prep, 1
SHP views St. Peter's as a mold for football success
Live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

No. 7 Pope John vs. Delbarton, 1
Live updates
• Game story
• Box score

No. 18 River Dell at Westwood, 2
• Live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Ocean City at Cedar Creek, 1
• Live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

No. 12 Vineland at Egg Harbor, 7
• Live updates
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

West Essex at Orange, 1
• Recap
Photo gallery
• Box score

BC High (Mass.) at Hudson Catholic, 12
• Game story
• Box score

Ewing at Nottingham, 12
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Salem at Penns Grove, 12
Explosive Penns Grove ready to take on rival Salem
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Pemberton at Steinert, 12
• Game story
Photo gallery
• Box score

Pingry at Pennington, 1:30
• Game story
• Box score

St. Joseph (Ottawa) at Peddie, 2
• Game story
• Box score

Lawrence at Hightstown, 7
• Game story
• Box score

Gateway at Paulsboro, 11
• Game story
• Box score

Clayton at Gloucester Catholic, 11
• Game story
• Box score

COMPLETE STATEWIDE SCHEDULE/SCOREBOARD

Jeremy Schneider may be reached at jschneider@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @J_Schneider. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Newark woman with Alzheimer's reported missing

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NEWARK-- A 64-year-old woman who suffers from Alzheimer's and seizures requiring medication for treatment has been missing since early Friday, police said. Cynthia Grant left her home in the 200 block of Clinton Place around 5:30 a.m. She was wearing a black wig, white t-shirt, light blue jeans and a flower print shirt. She is 5'1" and about 110 lbs....

NEWARK-- A 64-year-old woman who suffers from Alzheimer's and seizures requiring medication for treatment has been missing since early Friday, police said.

Screenshot (218).pngCynthia Grant (Newark police)  

Cynthia Grant left her home in the 200 block of Clinton Place around 5:30 a.m. She was wearing a black wig, white t-shirt, light blue jeans and a flower print shirt. She is 5'1" and about 110 lbs.

Anyone with information about her can call the 24-hour Crime Stopper tip line at 1-877- NWK-TIPS (1-877- 695-8477) or 1-877- NWK-GUNS (1-877- 695-4867).

Paul Milo may be reached at pmilo@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter@PaulMilo2. Find NJ.com on Facebook.  

 


N.J. football hot takes: The biggest, best, brightest of Week 3

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A look at the statement wins and big individual performances from Week 3 in New Jersey high school football

This home cook transformed her kitchen into a dream workspace (PHOTOS)

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She spent $200K to create the kind of kitchen she dreamed of for decades.

N.J. home makeover is a regular feature on NJ.com. To submit your renovation for consideration, email home@starledger.com with your full name, email address, phone number and town/city. Attach "before" and "after" photos of what you renovated.


Where some might sink into a deep, water-filled bathtub, Nancy Garner immerses herself in the focused, repetitive actions that allow a person to find meditative calm through cooking.

She pampers herself and her guests with the gourmet meals, homemade breads, cakes and other culinary creations that result from chopping, trimming, seasoning and mixing. She unwinds over the steam of simmering pots and releases tension by kneading dough.

"I love to cook," says Garner says. "It just relaxes me." And so with the recent gut-renovation of her kitchen -- its second update in the 36 years since she moved into her North Caldwell split level -- she needed to create the equivalent of a spa retreat for cooking. 

For more spacious quarters, a wall would come down between the kitchen and the dining room. That would make way to more than double the kitchen's size from its original 270 square feet to 575 square feet. Since this was a load-bearing wall, important to the structural support of the four-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom house, a steel beam needed to be installed in the ceiling.

The serenity of the kitchen is enhanced by two new sliding glass doors, for a total of three. The kitchen's windows also were enlarged and upgraded to allow more natural light into the kitchen.

Most important, the expansion gave Garner a customized work space in its massive center island, nearly 14 feet long. At each end, the island's height was cut down about 6 inches. The lower surfaces give Garner, who is 4-foot-10, two areas to more comfortably roll out and cut cookies dough or knead dough for her breads.

This configuration also satisfied Garner's desire to have her new granite counters matched by a seamless granite slab topping the island.

"These [granite] stones only come 10 feet, and this island clearly is almost 14 feet," said Kate Distasio, a designer with Showcase Kitchen & Bath in Bloomfield, who worked with Garner on the project. "We came up with the idea for the drop downs, and we were able to make an island that was completely usable for her."

The island has seating for four, and a Pottery Barn table in the dining area has two large leaves that can enlarge it to seat up to 14 guests in the kitchen's woven seagrass chairs.

Garner selected a four-burner Wolf gas-powered range with a center griddle. There's a second Wolf oven built into the wall near the Sub-Zero stainless steel refrigerator. It's electric.

"I do all of my baking in that oven," Garner says. "I like the way electric bakes. I would never put a cake in my gas oven; the gas oven is for meats: prime rib, roast, turkey. I don't like the way a roast comes out in my electric oven."

Garner had very definite ideas about what she wanted in a kitchen now that she has the freedom to cook as a hobby. Recalling herself as a mother who made her own baby food for her three children, she nevertheless noted: "When you've got kids, you can't get too creative. You have to cook basic foods."

Now that her children are adults and she is a divorced grandmother, she frequently takes cooking classes and often cooks with her sister, who lives nearby. This while running A Rent All Center, a construction equipment rental company started by her parents in 1961.

The poorly designed kitchens of Garner's past also made cooking a challenge. "I moved into the house in 1981, and I lived with that kitchen 6 years. I redid that kitchen, and it was a nightmare from the day I started until the day I ripped it out," she said. "It wasn't a working kitchen at all." She explained that her first kitchen renovation was completed without care after the designer quit the company he worked for halfway through the project. She endured the result for nearly 30 years.

In the newly remodeled kitchen, all the appliances are now in close proximity to one end of the island. Her baking stove is right behind one lowered work area. It's on the same wall as the refrigerator, the microwave and a warming drawer. The range is nearby on an adjacent wall. The sink and dishwasher are built into the island.

Garner says she is completely pleased with the new design and her experience with Showcase Kitchen & Bath. "They gave me a date when they were going to start, and not even three months later, I was cooking," she said. "They met every need and every expectation that I had."

The kitchen was completed last December, but Garner didn't consider it finished until August when she called back electrician Rob Whitney. He installed custom Hubbardton Forge light fixtures.

Over the dining table, the rectangular "Autumn" pendant-style chandelier has metal leaves floating above LED lights. Over the island, glass pendants from the company's Exos collection add crimson color. "They are really magnificent," Garner says of the fixtures. "They pulled the kitchen together."

What she renovated

The kitchen and dining room of a 1957 split-level home in North Caldwell

Who did the work

Showcase Kitchen & Bath of Bloomfield, and Whitney Electric of West Caldwell

How long it took

From Sept. 12, 2016 to Dec. 19, 2016

How much it cost

About $190,000

Where she splurged

Everywhere

What she likes most

"I like where everything is placed," owner Nancy Garner says.

What she'd have done differently

Nothing

Kimberly L. Jackson may be reached at home@starledger.com. Find NJ.com Entertainment on Facebook.

Driver faces charges after pedestrian killed in Newark

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Authorities are investigating a fatal pedestrian crash that occurred Friday night on W. Market Street in Newark.

NEWARK - A 39-year-old man was struck and killed by a minivan Friday night along West Market and Hudson streets, the Essex County Prosecutor's Office said. 

Steven Dawkins, of Orange, was hit around the 200 block of West Market Street around 9:30 p.m. said Thomas Fennelly, Essex County's chief assistant prosecutor.

"It appears he was struck crossing the street," Fennelly said.

The driver of the Ford minivan, Garrett Carter, of Newark, has been charged with vehicular homicide and was taken to Essex County jail, authorities said. Carter, 50, remained at the scene after the crash. 

Fennelly said Dawkins was taken to University Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 10:50 p.m. The investigation remains active and ongoing. 

Karen Yi may be reached at kyi@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter at @karen_yi or on Facebook

 

Newark's building boom an echo of its history : Di Ionno

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One Theater Square is one of those construction projects that seemed to go up overnight. Actually, it was 347 nights - and days. The last beam of the concrete and iron shell of the coming 22-story luxury apartment building in downtown Newark was put in place Wednesday. During the topping-off ceremony, the construction crew, developer and politicians scrawled signatures...

One Theater Square is one of those construction projects that seemed to go up overnight.

Actually, it was 347 nights - and days.

The last beam of the concrete and iron shell of the coming 22-story luxury apartment building in downtown Newark was put in place Wednesday. During the topping-off ceremony, the construction crew, developer and politicians scrawled signatures and messages on the beam before it was hoisted into place. In that way, the beam is like a time capsule, to be discovered and wondered about at some distant point in time. 

In cynical press circles, such events are considered dog and pony shows.  People are trotted out to give practiced hyperbolic sound bites. And then lunch is served.

The adjectives swirling around the wind-blown 22nd floor of the new building's skeleton certainly could have been interpreted as "hype." Except for the fact that most were true.

One Theater Square does, in fact, begin a new chapter in the development of downtown Newark as a residential community.

"A new better Newark is evolving every day," developer Carl Dranoff told the crowd.

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka said the new building will make "a profound impact" on residential life downtown not seen in a "very, very long time."

John Schreiber, CEO of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, which owned the land and pushed the project, said One Theater Square is the largest step in creating "the cultural district of a first-class city" since NJPAC itself opened 20 years ago...It was always the vision. It was always what we aspired to," he said.

MORE: Recent Mark Di Ionno columns

One Theater Square is the first new high-rise luxury apartment building to go up in Newark in since 1960, so when the word "historic" was invoked at the event, it wasn't overly dramatic.

But since the word was used, a little history is in order - and most of it could be seen directly from One Theater Square's sweeping views. From eagle level, it is clear that Newark has a great-city inventory of astonishing architecture.

Newark's downtown was never residential, even in the boom years of the late 19th century and early 20th .

But the city's public and commercial architecture - hyperbole aside - was stunning.

Here is a partial list of the downtown buildings on the National Registry of Historic Places:

Newark City Hall (1902). One of the best examples of Beaux Arts public buildings in the country, it was designed by the father-son team of John and Wilson Ely, the architects of several other Newark buildings, including the American Insurance Building (1930), the now Rutgers-owned tower near the Newark Museum, and the neoclassical jewel called National Newark Building (1931), the city's tallest, at 744 Broad Street.

Essex County Historic Courthouse (1904), designed by Cass Gilbert, architect of New York's Woolworth Building and the U.S. Supreme Court. The Seated Lincoln sculpture out front is one of three works by Gutzon Borglum of Mount Rushmore fame in the city.

 Gilbert also designed the First National State Bank Building (1912) at 810 Broad Street, which is also on the National Registry and is today the Hotel Indigo.

The New Jersey Bell Headquarters Building (1929), later Verizon, at 545 Broad Street was designed by Ralph Thomas Walker, designer of several other landmark art deco commercial buildings in New York's financial district.

The Griffith Piano Building at 605 Broad Street, designed by local architect Elwood Jones.

This abridged list does not include Newark Symphony Hall, private historic residences (the Ballantine and Krueger mansions and others) or churches (multiple).

But the intersection of Broad and Market, is wholly on the registry for its varied architecture over the 50-year period from 1880 to 1930. Name an architectural movement -- Greek Revival, Romanesque, Italianate - and it is represented in the old commercial buildings and theaters around the heart of the downtown known as "Four Corners."  

In the words of early 20th century Newark librarian and historian John Cotton Dana, this building spree transformed the city from a "huge, uncouth and unthinking industrial Frankenstein monster into a place of refinement."

Nothing quite as archaically eloquent was said Wednesday, but the sentiment was the same.

Downtown Newark has been changing since the New Jersey Performing Arts Center opened in 1997 and with this building - changes will continue to come more rapidly.

The transformation of Newark's business skyscrapers to luxury residential buildings began in 1999, when Arthur Stern impeccably restored the downtown twin towers of 744 Broad Street and 1180 Raymond Boulevard at the cost of $250 million.

The recession slowed things down. One Theater Square took eight years to finally get going. The Hahne's Building opened in January after almost a decade as the lynchpin in the city's master plan to create a contiguous path between University Heights and the downtown.

And now we'll see a reverse domino effect: things going up instead of coming down.

The Griffith Building will be turned into luxury apartments in what developer Miles Berger called "a full historic restoration."

The New Jersey Bell Building is also being renovated for housing by L & M Development of New York.

NJPAC owns another six acres in its vicinity. A hotel-conference center, a restaurant row, and more luxury residences may rise. Sooner rather than later.

"Things are moving fast," Baraka said. "It's Newark's time."

Mark Di Ionno may be reached at mdiionno@starledger.com. Follow The Star-Ledger on Twitter @StarLedger and find us on Facebook.

'Real Talk Thursdays' returns, serves up dose of electoral politics in South Ward

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"Real Talk Thursdays," hosted by the Weequahic High School Black History Month Committee, a series of weekly conversations at the school, will turn to politics next month.

NEWARK -- With an approaching governor's race and local elections next year, a South Ward high school is trying to encourage civil discourse and voter engagement in the community.  

"Real Talk Thursdays," a series of weekly conversations at the school hosted by the Weequahic High School Black History Month Committee, will turn to politics next month. 

"The big message really is that we want a civil dialogue between our elected officials and the community so that our voters can make an intelligent decision when they go to the polls," said Bashlr Muhammad Akinyele, a history teacher at Weequahic and chair of the school's Black History Month Committee. 

Democratic nominee for governor Phil Murphy, Mayor Ras Baraka, U.S. Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., and City Council members running for re-election are all slated to speak. Dupre "DoItAll" Kelly, one of the members of Newark-based hip-hop trio Lords of the Underground, who is running for Councilman-At-Large will also be speaking. 

"'Real Talk' is a free and open forum, we want people to discuss the issues that are affecting every day citizens. That's what it's all about, Akinyele said. "That's why those programs at Weequahic High School are so important. We're not going downtown, we're not going someplace far away, we're doing it right in the community."

U.S. Congressman Donald Payne, Jr. will come Sept. 19 at 7 p.m. Councilwoman Mildred Crump and South Ward Councilman John Sharpe James will speak Oct. 5 at 7 p.m. DoitAll will speak Oct. 26.

"Let's have a civil civic discourse. so we can discuss and debate and we make our own decisions on whether or not we're going to support (you)," Akinyele said.

Akinyele said those running in local races interested in speaking to the community can reach out for information on how to participate. "Real Talk Thursdays," now in its second year, takes place every Thursday at Weequahic High School at 7 p.m. 

Karen Yi may be reached at kyi@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter at @karen_yi or on Facebook

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