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com/mypaperonline Tell Them You Saw It In The Randolph News, May 2014, Page 1
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Proverbs 3:5
Vol. 7 No. 2
www.therandolphnews.com
February 2015
By Cheryl Conway
t was Fri., Feb. 6, deadline day.my first real
deadline day as the new
editor of MJ Media, and as I
was getting my kids ready
for school I turn my computer on early so Im ready to
finalize all of the press
releases for eight monthly
newspapers and write my
stories. And there it
was.blue screen of death!
For those who do not
know what the blue screen
of death is, Google it cause
Im not exactly sure, but I do
know I could not start my
computer nor get to any of
my files. Lucky me, my husband-Todd- a brilliant computer software field engineer-who was busying himself downstairs making
breakfasts and lunches,
jumped right on my laptop
and cured my unwelcoming
surprise to the point of full
restore.
As stressful as the situation was, my little mishap
gave me my lead for this
piece which is my introduction of myself as the Editor
of MJ Media LLC. Its not
easy to write about oneself
especially after writing
Cheryl Conway
******ECRWSS******
Local
Postal Customer
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We are a Debt Relief Agency and can help you file for Bankruptcy Relief under the Federal Bankruptcy Act
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By Cara Connelly
ultiple Sclerosis (MS) is an
autoimmune disease that affects
the central nervous system- the
brain and spinal cord. MS affects twice as
many women than men and is most commonly diagnosed between ages 20 and 50,
but it can be seen at any age.
Approximately 400,000 Americans have
MS and, every week, about 200 people are
diagnosed. There is no cure for this often
debilitating disease.
Although outside the coverage area of
MJ Media, an excellent facility- The
Multiple Sclerosis Comprehensive Care
Center in Livingston- is situated close
enough for people who are diagnosed with
MS to receive quality comprehensive care.
MS is caused by damage that happens to
the myelin sheath. This sheath is the protective covering that surrounds nerve cells.
The damage that happens to the myelin
sheath causes nerve signals to slow down or
even stop. Think of a lead pencil. The wood
covering is the myelin sheath and the lead is
the spinal cord. If the wood covering is
chipped and the lead is exposed, the communication between the brain and the central nervous system is disrupted.
Symptoms vary from patient to patient.
The location and severity of each attack can
be different and often these attacks are followed by periods of reduced or, in some
cases, no symptoms. Sometimes, this disease may continue to get worse without
periods of remission. Because nerves in any
part of the brain or spinal cord may be damaged, MS symptoms can appear in many
parts of the body. It is important to treat the
whole patient and help family and caregivers do the same.
It is important not just to find a good
neurologist that specializes in MS but, its a
good idea to align yourself with a facility
that treats the entire patient and all aspects
of the disease.
The Multiple Sclerosis Comprehensive
Care Center in Livingston is the only facility in the region that offers a full service
approach to MS under one roof. The MS
Center provides comprehensive evaluations, diagnosis, treatment, medication education and follow up under the direction of
board certified neurologists that are multiple sclerosis specialists as well as nurse
coordinators.
Patients have access to other needed
services in the same building such as infusion capabilities, physical and occupational
therapies, psychological support, pain management and the highest quality imaging
device, the 3.OT MRI machine.
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By Cara Connelly
o sooner are the kiddos back to
school after the holiday break and it
is quickly followed by Presidents
Day break and cold weekends. For those
lucky families that are heading to a tropical
climate or perhaps a ski vacation, it is a welcomed break. For those families that arent
going away, this looming winter can be met
with some anxiety and a huge dose of dread.
There are plenty of weekends between now
and the spring. What to do with the kids so as
parents we dont have to hear, theres nothing to do!!- Im bored!!
Planning is the key. Make a list of things
to do considering the age and interests of all
the participants and let them help with the
planning. Try to plan a nice mix of outdoor
and indoor activities. Try exploring regions
that you dont often get to visit. Take along or
meet another family.
Mountain Creek is the New York/New
Jersey Metro area's closest ski resort.
Located just 47 miles from NYC, Mountain
Creek offers 167 skiable acres on four mountain peaks. They offer 100 percent night skiing and boasts the region's most extensive
snowmaking system. Mountain Creek is also
home to the region's only true All-Mountain
Terrain Park at South and Bear Peaks. The 65
acre Terrain Park is nationally renowned.
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mation about their temperature, blood pressure and hematocrit level. Eligible donors
include those people at least age 16 (with
parental permission or consent), who weigh a
minimum of 110 pounds, are in good health
and meet all Food & Drug Administration
and NY or NJ State Department of Health
donor criteria. People over 75 may donate
with a doctor's note.
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Randolph Girl Scout Troop 81665 are pictured after painting pigs for the Fighting Children's Cancer
Foundation. The painted pigs will be used as centerpieces for the FCCF's gala fundraiser on March
28, in Whippany. The troop has a GS member that has battled lymphoma for more than two years.
The FCCF has helped her family during some difficult times, the girls wanted to give back!
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discharged veterans.
The brave men and women who serve
our country are proud of their contributions, said McHose, These exclusive
plates will give them a well-earned opportunity to display their patriotism and pride. We
have more than 400,000 veterans in New
Jersey, including more than 30,000 women.
Im hopeful that soon we will see many of
these plates on our roads and highways.
According to veterans organizations, NJ
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By Ashley Levinstone
limbing the ladder in quintessential
fireman-like fashion, Steven B.
Cohrs, a 21-year active volunteer,
has officially been sworn in as the Township
of Randolphs new Fire Chief.
Chief Cohrs, following in the footsteps
of three generations of men before him-- his
great-grandfather, grandfather, and uncle-all career firefighters, began his firefighting
experience first with The Livingston Fire
Department. Here, he served as an active
member for 11 years, eventually moving to
Randolph and serving as a member of
Station 5: Shongum Mountain for the past
10 years.
In deciding to run for the Fire Chief position, the decision actually came quite easily
to Cohrs, as it was a seemingly natural progression from everything he had worked
towards thus far. Of his decision to run for
the elected position, he states, It was something that Ive aspired to and worked
through a series of other roles in order to
reach, says Cohrs. Ive been an officer of
one form or another in Randolph for about
eight years so it was a progressive experience. Ive served a lot of different roles,
some operational, some planning. I come
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By Cheryl Conway
oxbury High School alumnus
Daniel Exter was working full time,
healthy, active and even training for
5K marathons 18 months ago when he was
diagnosed with leukemia.
At the age of 27, Exters world stopped
as he found himself in a hospital bed undergoing all kinds of tests, followed by
chemotherapy to kill the Acute
Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL), and then
later a bone marrow transplant- with his
brother as the donor- to correct the genetic
mutation which would have prolonged his
chances of being cured from the Cancer.
Like a time out during a basketball game
when the players regroup to think about
their next play, Exter was in his timeout- in
his hospital bed when he decided he
wanted to give back and help in the cure
for cancer. Why not combine his passion for
basketball and sponsor a fundraiser to collect funds for the cause?
Exter, now 29 and living in Jersey City,
is hosting Layups 4 Life, a three on three
basketball tournament at Roxbury High
School in Succasunna on Sun., April 19.
Proceeds will go to Memorial SloanKettering Cancer Center in New York City
to raise money for cancer research and
awareness.
We are playing to hopefully save lives,
says Exter, a 2004 graduate of RHS who
played on the boys Varsity Basketball team
his senior year as a power-forward center.
We are raising for Sloan Kettering; whatever I raise will hopefully change someones outcome if they get diagnosed with
cancer.
Exters idea for the fundraiser stems
from his passion for the game of basketball,
a sport he has played since he was 10-years
old, and a motivating charity event he
attended with his girlfriend this past summer. The pair participated in a national
indoor cycling event, Cycle For Survival,
which also raises money for SloanKettering.
That motivating event made us want to
get involved, says Exter, who approached
the athletic director at RHS with his
fundraising idea. David Linn, founder of the
national cycling event who lost his wife to a
rare form of cancer, plans to register a team
for Exters basketball tournament.
In remission since Aug. of 2013 and continuing to not show any signs of disease,
Exter still has difficulty talking about his
experience as a victim of cancer.
A producer with Cablevisions MSG
recalls, when all the tests came back negative so the specialist sent him to a lab for
blood work. The next day, Saturday morning, when Exter got home from playing basketball in the morning followed by training
for his 5K, he realized he had three missed
phone calls from the doctor with an urgent
message that his results showed he was not
continued on next page
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Exter remains Cancer free with his last test in Dec. 2014
and the next one not until the summer.
I am lucky enough to say that I am now cancer free and
I have Sloan-Kettering to thank for that, says Exter.
Putting this event together is my way of giving back to
those who helped me and joining them in their fight against
cancer.
Exter continues, Sloan Kettering, with their doctors and
medical procedures and what they did for me was clinical
trial based on money raised to find a cure for what I have.
Exter now wants to help contribute to others who may
someday need that trial.
I want to help someone like me who needs a clinical
trial, concludes Exter, to continue the fight and continue
to help in the battle against cancer, to do my part, to give
back and help these doctors that are much smarter than me
to help find a cure.
Registration is open for teams with a maximum of four
players
per
team.
Register
at
www.eventbrite.com/search:layups4life; through social
media sites, or at 10:30 a.m., the day of the event. Players
must be 15 years and older. Cost is $20 per person and
includes an event tshirt. A raffle and silent auction is set for
11 a.m., with games to begin at 11:15 a.m. and will continue until there is a winner, says Exter.
Prizes include raffles, contests, three-point shooting contest, knock out game. In addition to the basketball tournament, a DJ will provide entertainment as well as concessions in the effort to help raise money for cancer research.
With this event, Exter hopes that it is successful, that
people have fun and that he can continue Layups 4 Life as
an annual tournament at RHS.
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By Cheryl Conway
nyone who drives by cant miss it.
Theres this huge bubble right in
front of the Flanders Athletic Club
in Flanders, situated in the front, blocking
view of the pool area and tennis courts.
It may look a little out of character, but
its purpose, by all means, serves as the
hottest and prime spot in the area for
indoor training , sports games and birthday parties. Its the newest indoor sports
turf facility in Northern New Jersey.
Many refer to it as The Bubble but its
real name is Center Court Indoor Sports.
The temporary inflatable dome structure is
an extension of the Flanders Valley Tennis
and Swim Club. Sports teams, trainers,
coaches and players have been traveling
near and far to get out of the cold and keep
up their sports skills.
Its a great spectacle here for local
community and surrounding towns for
sports teams and individual training,
says Matt Blankley, facility manager of
indoor sports. The greatest benefit is you
can train all year round if you have this
facility close to you. Being a soccer coach,
its essential; you can get less behind if you
dont train as much.
While the foundation for the site started at the end of March 2014, the artificial
turf went down in June and then the bubble went up on Oct. 20. An air-filled system, it took two days to get the bubble and
ready to go, says Blankley, a native of
England living in the United States for the
past eight years.
The plan is for the bubble to come
down the last week in May, with the turf
field still in place to be used as an outdoor
space to be rented for various sports, and
then go back up again in the fall when the
colder temperatures return, explains
Blankley.
Its difficult to sell an indoor field in
the summer when you can go to a local
park to play for free, he says. So during
the warmer months, the turf field at Center
Court can be used for clinics and camps,
especially during the summer.
The bubble was erected as an opportunity to try to enhance sport development
in the local area, says Blankley. An
opportunity was brought to the tennis
club, and since the land in front had
already included a commercial license,
there was no obstacle to add on the turf
field with a bubble over it. So why not,
owners figured.
Inside is a giant turf field 100 yards by
50 yards, with nets that divide the area
into five separate fields that measure 20
yards by 50 yards. The state-of- the- art
high performance turf is 2.5 inches deep
manufactured by Shaw Sports Turf with
its proven technology known for its durability.
The bubble also features top quality
lighting for indoor sports, says Blankley.
Its the best illumination to play for
sports indoors. This is the highest quality
dome with lights; you can train until late
at night.
The main lobby contains a couch, bathrooms and huge television for those waiting for the players to finish their session.
Teams for - soccer, lacrosse, field hockey, football and rugby- have been using
the bubble for practice, supplemental
training, tournaments and leagues. The
facility can also be rented out for birthday
parties featuring multi-sports parties.
Soccer coaches from all over have
been using it, says Blankley, who also
works as a soccer coach in Chatham and
Center Court Soccer Club in Gillette. In
our lacrosse league, teams from West
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Chamber of Commerce.
Siegel is the Vice-Chairman
of the Richard J. Favreau,
O.D. Health Foundation and
also serves as Medical
Director for Vision Care
Plan, Humana Vision for NJ.
In 2011, his peers
acknowledged his accomplishments by awarding him
the NJ Society of Optometric
Physicians Optometrist of
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One year After Transplant, Brothers Complete Documentary To Enlist Organ Donors
By Cheryl Conway
ameron Wohl of Parsippany, a former student of County College of
Morris in Randolph, got a second
chance to life just one year ago when his
older brother, Jared, donated a portion of his
liver to him.
The brothers spent the past year documenting their familys journey through the
transplant experience and are almost ready
to share their documentary to encourage and
educate others about the indispensable need
for more donors. They are hoping to get
the documentary out for distribution to the
public later this year.
Cameron, 25, and Jared, 28, raised
money for the production of their documentary through the organization they established - The Wave Set- to create a movement and spread awareness and education
on the importance of organ donation. In
Dec. 2013, they had started a campaign to
raise money for their documentary. Through
social media and a line of apparel to serve
as visual awareness for their cause, the pair
raised almost $35,000 during their one
month campaign.
They are on a mission to share their story
and encourage others to become donors.
People should see this film because the
necessity of needing a life-saving organ
transplant can happen to anyone at any-
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18 months later.
I prolonged the transplant, says
Cameron, a business specialist for Apple.
Although he missed a lot of his senior year
from being exhausted, Cameron still
graduated high school and then attended
CCM where he earned his associates
degree in Exercise Science in 2010.
I was doing pretty well, until his routine checkup in Aug. 2013, when doctors
found a tumor on his liver.
After reviewing his medical options,
Cameron decided to get chemotherapy
treatment- Chemo-embolization- to target
and kill the tumor- on Oct. 31, 2013, and
then later go through with the liver transplant on Feb. 11, 2014 at New York
Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan.
Jared went into surgery first, a four hour
procedure to remove the entire right lobe of
his liver, or 65 percent, about the size of a
fist. His incision is from the bottom of his
sternum to the top of his belly button.
Doctors had to take Jareds liver out first
to make sure it was good, says Cameron,
conducting lots of microscopic surgery to
make sure it functions.
For Cameron, his entire liver and gall
bladder was removed, and then Jareds liver
portion was transplanted in. Dr. Jean
Edmond, who performed the first living
donor liver transplant in North America in
1989, performed the operation.
Wave Set. With Jared, as a singer/songwriter and Cameron who loves to draw and
paint, they decided to host a crowd funding
campaign to raise funds for their documentary titled 65 Percent.
Jared liked the word Wave, with its symbolism as a wave being one of the
strongest forces on earth. One of us can
only do so much but when you join forces
you can do more, Jared explains. WAVE
also stands for We Are Vital To Each Other,
thus their motto.
In their logo, the A has a triangle, with
the top triangle representing a deceased
donor and the other 8 triangles representing
how a person has eight organs to save eight
lives. Those organs include the heart, liver,
two lungs, pancreas, two kidneys and intestines.
One person can save eight lives, says
Cameron.
To raise the funds, they launched a
crowd funding campaign through indiegogo
with incentives to people who pledge.
Those who contributed got to choose from a
line of the Wave Set Apparel, from stickers,
to beanies, t-shirts and sweatshirts. Their
goal was to raise $30,000, enough money to
film their documentary from start to finish
showcasing what its like for a family who
needs a transplant.
Cameron says they reached six different
continued on page 26
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By Elsie Walker
any people have made valentines as children and
had the fun of exchanging them with friends and
family. Those simple handmade creations told
others that someone cared about them.
Recently, some members and friends of the Port Morris
United Methodist Church in Landing gathered in the
churchs fellowship hall to enjoy the fun of valentine making, with some very special recipients in mind. Those
recipients are the residents of several local nursing homes
Telling a friend how much he/ she means to you with these
mostly kid self-made cards means love in action, said the
churchs Pastor Nick Petrov.
To make things a little more interesting, the group was
divided into four teams. Each had the goal of making 100
valentines. On the tables were a variety of items from
which homemade valentines could be created. Ages toddler senior took part in taking glue, paper, stickers, and
markers to make some special cards. Some would be
going to soldiers that the church remembers with care
packages.
Enough would be sent so that recipients could share the
love with others in their platoon. The rest were being
taken to nursing homes.
Jennifer Kaslig of Hopatcong, co-youth group leader,
was there with her toddler and a young friend they brought
to join in the fun.
The kids love to be creative and think of how happy
the recipient will be, she shared.
When the cards were finished, divided up and ready to
go, they werent just dropped off, but hand-delivered.
The Port Morris UMC youth group is distributing the
cards to our local nursing homes. Often words fall short,
but personally giving such cards to our seniors always
makes them feel loved and appreciated," shared Petrov.
Kaslig shared that not only to the recipients get something, but so do those who deliver the cards and see what
their work means to others.
I love the smiles when we deliver the cards!! she
said.
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and flaked
1/2 cup finely chopped cucumber
1/2 cup finely chopped red bell pepper
1 (4.5-ounce) can chopped green chilies,
drained
1/4 cup Greek yogurt
2 tablespoons fresh chopped dill
2 whole wheat pitas
4 lettuce leaves
In large bowl combine chicken, cucumber,
red bell pepper, green chilies, yogurt and
dill; toss to mix well.
Cut each pita in half horizontally; carefully
open each pita half. Fill each with 2 lettuce
leaves and half of chicken mixture.
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Servings: 12
Cake:
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
5 large eggs
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
1 (14.5-ounce) can pitted cherries, thoroughly drained
Tres leches mixture:
1/4 cup heavy cream
1 (12-ounce) can evaporated milk
1 (14-ounce) can sweetened condensed
milk
Icing:
1 1/2 cups heavy cream, chilled
4 tablespoons powdered sugar
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
1/4 cup chopped almonds, toasted
For cake, preheat oven to 350F. Grease and
flour 9-by-13-inch cake pan.
Whisk together flour, baking powder and
salt into large mixing bowl.
Cream butter, sugar and eggs with electric
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