Vol. 16 - No. 23
In This Week’s Edition
THE BRICK
TIMES
JERSEYSHOREONLINE.COM
Your FREE Weekly Hometown Newspaper For Brick and Lakewood Townships
Dog Fest Fetches A Big Crowd Community News! Don’t miss what’s happening in your town. Pages 12-17.
Letters Page 8.
Dr. Izzy’s Sound News Possible Prevention Of Hearing Loss Through Better Nutrition
Page 7.
Dear Pharmacist Reality Check Do B Vitamins Cause Cancer?
By Judy Smestad-Nunn BRICK – It was a dog day afternoon when an estimated 2,500 people and their canines attended the eighth annual Dog Fest, hosted by the Brick Township Rotary Club. There was no entry fee for dogs or children, but adults paid a $5 admission fee for the event. There were also 43 vendor booths that paid $100, –Photos by Judy Smestad-Nunn although non-profit vendors Mack, a 10-year-old shih tzu, poses with, from left: were charged $50 for space. Izzy Fakhreddine, 14, Ella Osmers, 14, and Maggie Twenty percent of the money (Dog Fest - See Page 5) Osmers, 15.
Stafford Center Expanding
Will Host Entire County’s Meals On Wheels
Page 19.
Dear Joel Thanks, For Nothing!
Page 20.
Business Directory Page 24.
Classifieds Page 25.
Fun Page Page 29.
Wolfgang Puck Fall Into Apple Season
Page 31.
Horoscope Page 31.
–Photos by Chris Lundy County employees prepare meals for delivery and for those who came out to the Southern Service Center.
By Chris Lundy STAFFORD – The county’s Meals on Wheels location in Lakewood will be moved to Stafford after the Southern Service Center will be renovated to accommodate the entire program. Already, the southern center, located on Route 9 just south of Route 72, holds a lot of other services. Adult day care, senior services, for example. There are offices for the county clerk, surrogate, and Veterans Service Bureau, and the State Housing and Rental Assistance Program (SHRAP). The St. Francis Center on Long Beach Island also operates a satellite out of the building. Despite all this going on, there will be more. The county is investing into the center to expand the (Meals - See Page 6)
| September 30, 2017
Donations Sent To Hurricane Affected States By Judy SmestadNunn BRICK – In just the span of a week, the district’s eight elementary schools collected hundreds of boxes of supplies to help the victims of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma in the Gulf Coast region of the United States. “We were notified the day after school opened,” said Director of Cur riculum and I n st r uct ion Su sa n McNamara. “We un–Photos by Judy Smestad-Nunn derstand the urgency Lanes Mill Principal Jeffrey since we went through Luchenbach, left, and acting Su- Sandy.” Elementary school perintendent Dennis Filippone, students, staff and adright, help load the bus. ministrators partnered with OnCourse Systems for Education for the “Fill the Bus” initiative, when donation boxes at the schools were filled with items such as cleaning supplies, nonperishable food, school supplies, health supplies and much more. OnCourse Systems is a company that supplies online formats for lesson planning and curriculum building that the Brick School District has been working with for a number of years, McNamara said. “They called and said they were putting this initiative together, (Donation - See Page 4)
The Beauty Of This Pageant: It’s A Scholarship Program By Sara Grillo Maybe you remember the scene from the movie Miss Congeniality where Candice Bergen, who plays the Miss United States pageant director, tells the cop that it’s not a beauty pageant, –Photo courtesy Olivia Suarez “It’s a scholarship program.” Well, it is. Olivia Suarez in her gown at Until two years ago, Ocean County the Miss New Jersey pageant. was not represented in either the Miss
New Jersey pageant held in Ocean City for nearly three decades, or the Miss New Jersey’s Outstanding Teen pageant, which started up about 10 years ago. Directors Geralyn and Chuck Watson have the sinking feeling that people don’t know the pageant has come back to the county, and that young women
and teens have no idea how much money could be up for grabs to help finance their college education or pay off their student loans. For the past two years, the competition has been an open one, meaning girls from anywhere in the state were allowed to compete. This year, the (Pageant - See Page 9)
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