august 31st - september 18th, 2012 river view observer

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Volume 16, No. 8 August 31st - September 18th 2012 FREE PUBLICATION 201-349-4336 Pg. 2 On the Cover Pg. 21 Pgs. 24 - 28 lock problems? NEED A NEW LOCK? See Page 2 PERMIT NO. 955 see on pg. 8 Jewelry & Watch Repair Hoboken Gold & Diamonds 115 Washington St., Hoboken riverviewobserver.net Pg. 6 Hudson Then Again TURN YOUR UNWANTED JEWELRY INTO CASH Ten Ingredients Chef Giovany Flores Pg. 5 Interview with Jay Black Pg. 14 Smitten & Bitten Short Plays S aint Peter’s in Jersey City recently changed status from college to university and also took on a new identity as a performing arts center – the first in Hudson County. Saint Peter’s PAC is actually a cluster of performance spaces on campus and acquired spaces like St. Aedan’s church nearby on Bergen Avenue. By creating a PAC, Saint Peter’s adds a new distinction to its small urban campus – show biz – and to commemorate its foray into the glitz and glam of entertainment, Saint Peter’s PAC presents several shows this fall featuring music legends and an international superstar. By Sally Deering con’t pg. 2 Saint Peter’s Colleges Changes Status to University and Performing Arts Center Saint Peter’s debuts its new PAC on Sat, Sept 15th when Jay Black – formerly of Jay and The Americans – headlines with singer Darlene Love. Each performs their own show at St. Aedan’s: The Saint Peter’s University Church, a beautiful cathedral with incredible acoustics.

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Our cover story Saint Peter's Pacs Them In: Saint Peter's College Changes Status to University and Performing Arts Center by Sally Deering. Performers Bill Cosby, Jay Black, Darlene Love and others are scheduled to appear as part of the St. Peter's Pac. Read Sally Deering's interview with Jay Black on page 5. Page 6-Maureen Wlodarczyk takes a look at Phrenologist in the late 1800s in Hudson County with her Hudson Then Againcolumni. Page 21 restaurant VIEWS-Ten Ingredients Sally Deering introduces us to Chef Giovanny Flores of Rita and Joe's Restaurant in Jersey City. Happenings, Art, Theater, Home Decor, Dining out, Real Estate and more.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: August 31st - September 18th, 2012 River View Observer

Volume 16, No. 8August 31st - September 18th 2012FREE PUBLICATION

201-349-4336

Pg. 2 On the Cover

Pg. 21

Pgs. 24 - 28

lock problems?NEED A NEW

LOCK?See Page 2

PERMIT NO. 955

see on pg. 8Jewelry & Watch Repair

HobokenGold & Diamonds115 Washington St., Hoboken

riverviewobserver.net

Pg. 6 Hudson ThenAgain

TURN YOUR UNWANTEDJEWELRY INTO CASH

Ten IngredientsChef Giovany Flores

Pg. 5 Interview withJay Black

Pg. 14 Smitten & BittenShort Plays

Saint Peter’s in Jersey City recently changed status from college to university and also took on a new identity as a performing arts center – the first in Hudson County. Saint Peter’s PAC is actually a cluster of performance spaces on campus and acquired spaces like St. Aedan’s church nearby on Bergen Avenue. By creating a PAC, Saint Peter’s adds a new distinction to its small urban campus – show biz – and to commemorate its foray into the glitz and glam of entertainment, Saint Peter’s PAC presents several shows this fall featuring music legends and an international superstar.

By Sally Deering

con’t pg. 2

Saint Peter’s Colleges Changes Status to University and Performing Arts Center

Saint Peter’s debuts its new PAC on Sat, Sept 15th when Jay Black – formerly of Jay and The Americans – headlines with singer Darlene Love. Each performs their own show at St. Aedan’s: The Saint Peter’s University Church, a beautiful cathedral with incredible acoustics.

Page 2: August 31st - September 18th, 2012 River View Observer

River View Observer – Page 2

on the cover . . .By Sally Deering

Black will sing his hits including “Only in America” and “Cara Mia,” and Love, a Broadway performer and frequent singer with the Paul Schaffer Orchestra on “Late Night with David Letterman” will perform hit songs she recorded with producer Phil Spector. And that’s just for starters. On Fri, Nov. 3rd, Saint Peter’s PAC presents a legend in our time, actor, author and stand-up comedian Bill Cosby who is like a guru to other stand-up comics including Jerry Seinfeld. It doesn’t get any bigger than “The Cos” and thanks to Michael A. Fazio, vice president for advancement and external affairs at Saint Peter’s University, “The Cos” is coming to Jersey City.

“We reached out to Bill Cosby’s rep and we had a dialogue with him,” Fazio says. “There was some uncertainty because this is a new venue, it’s a church, and perhaps that’s not something he’s accustomed to, but he welcomed the opportunity. He’s familiar with Jersey City and we’re really excited to have him.” Fazio chose the perform-ers with the help of univer-sity staff and experienced performing arts consultants who helped Fazio and his team book the talent and work out the kinks. “We’ve got 60s rock ‘n’ roll and Motown, 50s Do-Wop and modern stuff,” Fazio says. “We wanted to mix up the genres to see what plays best.” Following “The Cos”

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Saint Peter’s PAC presents some real blasts from the past in an “Evening of Doo Wop”. The show will feature performances by Jay Siegel & the Tokens who will sing “The Lion Sleeps Tonight,” a tune that rocketed to No. 1 in 1961. Frankie Lymon’s Legendary Teenagers known for “Why Do Fools Fall in Love” and Shirley Alston Reeves, the original singer from The Shirelles will take to the stage. Linda Jansen, original lead singer of The Angels will perform her repertoire including the classic “My Boyfriend’s Back.” All shows will be held at St. Aedan’s Church. Saint Peter’s PAC is actually a consortium of performance spaces on campus that seat from 200 to 3,200. Small 200-seat ‘black

con’t pg. 3

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Centennial Celebration of Landmark Park Scheduled for September 15th Although the oAlthough the official dedication of Hudson County Park took place in 1916, it was a hundred years ago in 1912 that the park (now called the Stephen R. Gregg Hudson County Bayonne Park) first opened to the public. PealCollection partners, Pris-cilla Ege and Alice Lotosky invite the public to celebrate this centennial by taking a 90-minute “Park by Design” tour (free to the public) of the landmark on Saturday, September 15th at 10AM. 10AM. The guest tour guide will be Dr. Carmela A. Karnoutsos, Professor Emerita, New Jersey City University, who will discuss

the park’s history, design and architectural features. The group meets at the park entrance on 40th Street and Avenue C. Call 201-437-6069 and leave a call back number. (No rain date)

DeBaun Center hosts fourth annualStevens One Act FestivalDeBaun Center’s Theater Series begins with a theme of

“Couples Therapy”Hoboken, NJ: DeBaun Center for Performing Arts is proud to present the fourth annual Stevens One Act Festival as the opening its 2012–2013 Theater Series. The Festival will run for one weekend on September 14 & 15, 2012 at 8 p.m. in DeBaun Auditorium,

EdwinEdwin A. Stevens Hall, 24 5th Street (corner of Hudson Street), in Hoboken, NJ.

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Hudson Then...Again Hitting High Notes with Jay Black By Sally Deering

In the 1960s, Jay and the Americans’ hits “Only in America” “Come a Little Bit Closer” and “Cara Mia” topped the record charts and on Sat, Sept. 15, lead singer Jay Black will headline – along with Darlene Love – at the new Saint Peter’s PAC in Jersey City. Now in his 70s, Black works with a different set of

muscians (for legal reasons he can’t use the name ‘Jay and the Americans’ – sanctioned by the IRS over unpaid taxes) and he sings his hits at venues like The NYCB Theater at West-bury, formerly the Westbury Music Fair. Black still packs the house and even though the girls who saw him perform on The Ed Sullivan Show back in the day are now grandmothers

they still scream and shout when they hear him sing. With a career that spans more than 50 years, Black does it his way. He doesn’t rehearse or warm-up before a show, just hits the deck running when the curtain opens. On a recent Friday afternoon, Black gave an impromptu interview with Riverview Observer to talk about his show biz career and performing at the new Saint Peter’s PAC.RVO: Jay, can you tell our readers where you were born and raised?JB: I grew up in Bensonhurst. It was great. I thought I was a tough guy. The prestigious thing was to be the toughest. Then I started singing and I changed my whole persona. I had to. Now my definition of a tough guy is a guy who the doctor says you got six months to live, not a guy who fights. RVO: Your first hit was in 1963 with “Only in America”. How did that come about?JB: ‘Only in America’ was a protest song. I didn’t like it in the beginning. After I sang it they speeded it up to make it a faster song. My voice turned into a high-pitched sound but people don’t know the differ-ence. The Drifters originally recorded it, but they couldn’t release it. The Civil Rights Movement was going on and they thought it was hypocriti-cal for an African-American group to sing about “the land of opportunity’. I said I’d like to do it and here I am.RVO: What was it like hear-ing “Only in America” on the radio for the first time?JB: We were driving to Florida and I was doing all the driv-ing and I remember when we got to Florida and the DJ on the radio says “This week, this song is No. 1 in Miami.” It was thrilling.RVO: Your second hit was ‘Come a Little Bit Closer” in 1964 and in 1965, “Cara Mia”. What made you record that song?JB: I actually rewrote “Cara Mia.” It was a slow song that

Mantovani wrote. I redid it and made it into a rock n’ roll song. The record company didn’t want to do it. After I sang it on The Tonight Show thousands of letters came in, so the record company decided to put it on the “B” side. What happened? The whole coun-try turned the record over. It became a monster hit. They flew me to Amsterdam when it was No. 1 in the Netherlands. Those were thrilling days. RVO: Did you ever saunter over to Jersey City or Hobo-ken to perform or hang out? JB: I worked there probably in the course of the 52 years I’ve been doing this. To me New York and New Jersey are the same. I have friends in Jersey. I don’t consider us different; we’re attached at the hip. RVO: You are the first head-liner to appear at Saint Peter’s new Performing Arts Center.JB: I’m looking forward to it. RVO: How often do you per-form these days? JB: I recently did an outdoor show, 10,000 people at the PNC Arts Center on a Tues-day afternoon. Bill Medley is opening for me at Westbury on Nov. 3rd, the day after my birthday. RVO: To what do you attri-bute your career’s longevity? JB: I think the fact that I give people more than just singing. I give them a show. I interact with the audience. I do a lot of funny stuff and the fact that people are blown away that I can still hit the same notes I hit 50 years ago. My voice is the most powerful part of me. RVO: How do you keep your voice doing all these concerts? Is there a vocal exercise or something special you do? JB: Nothing. I don’t warm up. I don’t rehearse. I don’t sing in the shower. When the group goes to a sound check, I don’t go. RVO: Do you have any advice for up and coming singers?JB: Get a good lawyer.

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Page 6 River View Observer

HAPPENINGSHOBOKEN ITALIAN FESTIVALFeast of Madonna Dei Martiri September 6th -9thThe procession Saturday , September 8th runs through the streets of Hoboken. A part of Hoboken for over 80 years the HobokenItalian Festival is where you will find wonderful Italian food and a rich Italian heritage and plenty of fun and entertainment for the entire family to enjoy.Location: Sinatra Drive aka River StreetVisit hoboken italianfestival.com for more information

NO Gas Pipeline Fundraiser to Benefit Liberty Humane Society Sunday, September 16th , 2012 4:00 To help raise funds in response to the threat of Spectra Energy using eminent domain to seize a large portion of Liberty Humane Society’s land. LHS has been invited to participate in a joint fundraiser with the Jersey City based NO Gas Pipeline group on the Strange Attractors: Artists in Community fundraising event. If you are interested in joining LHS supporters, community members, and NO Gas Pipeline for an art opening featuring per-formances by: Reverend Billy and Stop Shopping Choir, Gully Hubbards, Paul Meyers Jazz, and Birnur Siren Belly Dance. The event will be held at Grace Church Van Vorst at 39 Erie Street in Jersey CityIf you go you can Purchase your $15 advanced admission at http://libertyhumane.org/Tickets at door will be $20 and seniors 65+ are offered dis-counted $10 tickets.

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Hudson Then...Againby Maureen Wlodarczyk

Peter Graham PhrenologistCity police officer husband in 1878, I read dozens and dozens of newspaper ar-ticles about the murder and multiple trials that followed. That 19th century press cov-erage made for fascinating reading and introduced me to a cast of characters whose real lives rivaled anything a fiction writer might dream up. Among them was one “Professor” Graham, a Hud-son County phrenologist, temperance activist, and something of a Victorian-era life coach. Phrenology, quite the thing in the late 1800s, has

While researching my newest book, Canary in a Cage: The Smith -Bennett

Murder Case, based on the true story of a young womanaccused of killing her Jersey

been described as a pseudo-science of the 18th and 19th centuries based on the belief that a determination of aperson’s mental capacityand character (or predispo-sition to criminality) could be made by examining the skull and interpreting its bumps and depressions. Talk about “getting your head examined!” Peter Graham was born in Scotland in 1833 and married his wife El-len in Edinburgh in 1851. In 1869, the Grahams and their 8 children, including 4-year-old Abraham Lincoln Graham, booked passage in steerage on the S. S. Helvetia out of Liverpool, England, and landed in New York City on October 1st.

1891 Phrenology Image Cont’d on page 9

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Art

“INSPIRED ART”SEPTEMBER 7TH Wood Carvings by

Geraldine Anderson Gaines Paintings by:Blair Urban

Opening Reception 7pmThere will also be music

later in the evening

PORTO LOUNGE 286 1st. Street,

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& Blair Urban: JC Fridays

Page 9: August 31st - September 18th, 2012 River View Observer

Page 9 River View Observer

SAINT PETER’S PAC PRESENTSJAY BLACK & DARLENE LOVE

SATURDAY, 9/15, 8PM

BILL COSBY

SATURDAY, 11/3, 8PM

AN EVENING OF DOO WOP KENNY VANCE & THE PLANOTONESFRANKIE LYMON’S LEGENDARY TEENAGERSJAY SIEGEL & THE TOKENS AND MORE!

SATURDAY, 11/17, 8PM

THE CHOIR OF THE POPE’S DIOCESEOF ROMEMUSICAL DIRECTOR: MONS. MARCO FRISINA

FRIDAY, 12/14, 7:30PM

SPECIAL PERFORMANCE BY THE ORIGINAL CAST OF A BROADWAY HIT!

SATURDAY, 12/8, 8PM

2641 JOHN F. KENNEDY BLVD., JERSEY CITY, NJ 07306888-943-4864

WWW.SAINTPETERSPAC.ORG

THE EVENTS ABOVE TAKE PLACE AT ST. AEDAN’S: THE SAINT PETER’S UNIVERSITY CHURCH - 800 BERGEN AVENUE, JERSEY CITY, NJ 07306

Hudson Then...AgainCont’d from page 7 Peter Graham Phrenologist

When the census-taker made his rounds ten months later, the Graham family was living in Jersey City and Peter gave his occupation as “temperance lecturer.” Quite a transformation from the occupation of “laborer” he gave when booking pas-sage on the Helvetia a year earlier.

Ship Helvetia In August 1870, Graham gave a spirited temperance speech attended by hundreds in Bayonne at the request of the Sons of Temperance organization and followed that with another at Currie’s Woods a week later. He was also engaged by the Gospel Temperance Union to lec-ture on the ills of alcohol at the local Republican Club’s Wigwam headquarters. It was reported that he gave a rousing cautionary talk about a devastated woman whose husband and son were in the grip of addiction to rum. Graham soon widened the array of topics for his lectures and often included phrenology concepts and examinations as well. He also offered phrenologi-cal classes in a variety of places in New Jersey and as far away as New England and Michigan. In 1876, his Paterson students arranged a phrenological tea party attended by over 100 people to honor Graham. Two years later, students in his Boston class, where the “Professor”had done over 80 lectures,

presented him with a set of silver phrenological tools (calipers, ruler and tape measure) in a Moroccan leather case in appreciation of his work. Graham reportedly once examined the skull of a woman who attended one of his talks with her husband andpronounced that she must have a “most violent tem-per.” The woman turned to her husband asking him to confirm that Graham’s as-sessment was wrong. The husband made no response but attendees said he told them she was subjectto tantrums and throwing

things. Graham frequently gave talks on marriage, contrast-ing potential husbands with flat heads versus those hav-ing “honest” heads with ap-propriate width and height. The flat-headed male, ac-cording to the Professor, has character flaws that show themselves in childhood and result in a suitor who has several ladies on a string at one time and, due to lack of moral “faculties,” is prone to excessive drinking and spousal abuse. He encour-aged ladies to feel the heads of their beaus before accept-ing a marriage proposal and demonstrated how to do so using life-size models of skulls, concluding by saying that a woman would be bet-ter off marrying a gorillathan a flat-headed man.

One of Graham’s lectures in 1878 included a phre-nological discussion of the young accused murderess, Jenny Smith, whose story I wrote about in Canary in a Cage. Just days after her arrest, Graham gave a talk in Jersey City titled “People Who Murder.” He discussed how the heads of some celebrated murderers conformed to each other and, turning his attention to the case of Jenny Smith, concluded that although she might be a “loose” woman, if her ears were placed high up on her head, she was not a murderer.

Peter Graham died in Jersey City in 1880, only ten years after immigrating to America. His obituary in a local news-paper described him as “a man of marked ability,” an “ardent advocate of temperance,” but “eccentric in his manners.”

Maureen Wlodarczyk is a fourth-generation-born Jersey City girl and the author of three books about life in Jersey City in the 1800s and early 1900s: Past-Forward: A Three-Decade and Three-Thousand-Mile Journey Home, Young & Wicked: The Death of a Wayward Girl and Canary in a Cage: The Smith-Bennett Murder Case. For info: www.past-forward.com. Meet Maureen at the Tale of Our City Book Festival on Sept. 22, 2012 at Van Vorst Park in Jersey City.

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All in the FamilyHudson County Employees present Art Exhibition in Brennan Gallery

Hudson County’s Office of Cultural & Heritage Af-fairs/Tourism steps out from behind-the-scenes to present the group art exhibit “All in the Family.” The show features photographs and other art works by Hudson County employees including the cultural office staff.Contributors include Dem-etrio Arencibia, Johnia Charles, Eileen Gaughan, Jacqueline Hartzog, Bill LaRosa (Director of Cul-tural Affairs and Tourism,) Meredith Lippman, Mark Morchel, Vanessa Reyes, Michelle Richardson, Radames Velazquez and Robert Yannazzo. Their art works can be seen in the Brennan Gallery of

the Justice William J.Brennan Court House583 Newark Ave.Jersey City. The show runs through Aug. 31, Mon-Fri, 9 am-6 pm. Admission is free. For more info, call (201) 459-2070

Bill La Rosa Digital image

Newly Formed Art Circle oF BayonneAnnounces First Members Show/Sale The newly formed Art Circle of Bayonne an-nounces its first Members Show/Sale with an Opening Reception open to the public on SATURDAY, September 22nd in the Bayonne Community Museum, 229 Broadway, from 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. The show will run from September 22nd through the 29th, Monday through Friday, 5:00 -7:00 p.m., and Saturday, Sept. 22 from 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. and Saturday, Sept 29 from 12 noon to 5:00 p.m. The show is not open on Sunday. Anyone interested in participating in the show is required to join the Art Cir-cle of Bayonne; residency in Bayonne is not a require-ment for membership.

Entry Forms with detailed guidelines and Membership Registration Forms are available at Ferdez Gallery, 237 Broad-way, Bayonne. Entry is limited to the first 60 applicants. All artists will be required to hang their own matted and framed 2D work on Saturday, September 15. Pick up of work will be Sunday, September 30th. Some of the artwork will be available for sale as well. Committee members will be available throughout the show to assist patrons with art work sales. All work must be on display for the duration of the show. All sold pieces will be ready for pick up on Sunday, Septem-ber 30th only.

Information about the show is available at Ferdez Gallery 201- 443 2681. Follow us on Facebook at Ferdez Art Gallery. Contact: Fernando Fer-nandez, [email protected], 201 443 2681Joan Hajducsek Rosen, [email protected]

Send us your Community Event listings for insertion

in up coming issues.The River View Observerpublishes biweekly please

email 2 weeks prior to event: www.

[email protected] mail to

River View ObserverNewport Financial Center

123 Town Square Place #321Jersey City, NJ 07310

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Page 11 River View Observer

Jersey City’s Hamilton Park BBQ FestivalSeptember 15th-12:00pm until 8:00pmGreat food and live music, Proceeds to the new Ham-ilton Park Conservancy, an organization created to as-sist Jersey City in the main-tenance and improvement of historic Hamilton Park.

HAPPENINGS: Bayonne Farmers’ MarketVisit for delicious fresh fruits and vegetables, every Tuesday 2pm to 7pm now through October 30th Municipal lot at 23rd and DelMonte Drive (next to mini-golf) www.facebook.com/BayonneFarmersMarket

Not Yo Mamma’s Parks & Crafts Saturday September 8th 11am -4pmOne of a kind handmade goodnessMusicians on a Mission -Free concert in the ParkLiberty Humane Society will be on hand with the North Shore Animal League Pet Adoption Van.For more information: Contact Megan Gulick or Michelle Munoli 862-414-0595 or 201-589-0588

Jersey City African American Festival Saturday September 15th, 2012 11am- 6:00 pmFood, Music and more Martin Luther King Hub, 360 Martin Luther King, Jr., Drive Jersey City.

Weehawken, NJ Concert Series The Hamilton Park Concert Series!!! Thursday Nights - 7- 9pm Thursday, September 6 -Matt Chertkoff on GuitarThe Hamilton Park concert series features Weehawken’s very own musicians. These concerts feature exciting and diverse musical styles including everything from Jazz to R&B, Folk to Classical and beyond! With it’s panoramic view of the NYC skyline, historic Hamilton Park provides the perfect back drop for these concerts.

Free Cholesterol ScreeningChirst HospitalSeptember 4th 10am-1pmBayonne Medical Center Sept.6th & 20th 10-11 amHoboken UMCSept.7th &21st. 10-11am

Page 12: August 31st - September 18th, 2012 River View Observer

Page 12 River View Observer

Home Furnishings that Will Stand the Test of Time

ARA) - Shopping for home furnishings and accessories can be a rewarding experience, but it can also drain your wal-let. So when it’s time to find just the right items to furnish or just brighten up your home, you want to get it right the first time, because most of us don’t have the luxury to toss out all our purchases in a couple of years and start from scratch. So how do you know if that couch or lamp is going to stand the test of time? “Look for something that is built well, like good quality tables that are a little bit older and not mass manufactured,” says Claren Pappo, an Inte-rior Design instructor at The Illinois Institute of Art - Tin-ley Park. Depending on your decor, antiques may be your best bet. You’ve probably looked at a few decorating magazines and seen your share of furniture showrooms. That may give you a starting point. “But you need to figure out what you like,” advises Heather Carter, academic director of Interior Design at The Art Institutes International - Kansas City. “

Think about the connection your home has to you, don’t just follow trends.” Color is also important when thinking about the longevity of your future. “Big furniture pieces like sofas and side chairs need to be in a neutral color scheme,” recom-mends Daniela Kohl, Interior Design program coordinator at The Art Institute of India-napolis. You don’t want bright colors that you tire of quickly or can fall out of fashion. Accessories, like throw pil-lows, can be trendier with the latest colors because they are much easier and less expensive to replace. But when it comes to lighting, you may want to splurge on something that is both functional and decorative. “Invest in great lamps; they can stand the test of time,” says Pappo. Artwork can re-ally make your home fit your personality, and if you buy something you really like,

you’ll only grow to appreciate it more over time. “Artwork has great bang for the buck,” says Carter. “Go to your local art district or art walk, find an artist you really like and buy their piece.” When picking out drapes or pillows, stick with good quality fabrics like silk or chenille, advises Kohl. Leather furniture will also stand the test of time. But don’t go for artificial leather. “It will look worse, year after year,” she says. Pappo recommends con-sidering how often you’ll be moving around. “Think about the flexibility of your furniture and whether the pieces will work in another home with a different floor plan.”

Page 13: August 31st - September 18th, 2012 River View Observer

Page 13 River View Observer

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Page 14: August 31st - September 18th, 2012 River View Observer

Page14 River View Observer

Evening of Short Plays features Riverview Observer’s Head Writer Sally Deering By Riverview Observer Staff

Love and relationships is the theme for “Smitten & Bitten” eight short plays by Metropoli-tan-area playwrights including Riverview Observer’s Sally Deering. The show runs Tues, Sept. 11 through Sun, Sept. 16 at the Gene Frankel Theatre in New York. Deering’s play, “Feeding the Kitty” is a piece about a couple who wakes up the morning after a one night stand. “It’s about trying to make a human connection,” Deering says. “It’s about the loneliness of one-night stands and the need to be loved. Did I men-tion it’s a comedy?”

If you go:Tues, Sept. 11-Sun, Sept. 16The Gene Frankel Theatre

24 Bond Street NYCPerformances:

Tues-Sat at 8 pm; Sat and Sun at 5 pm;

Sun at 1 pmTickets: $18 For more info, go to www.smittenandbitten.com

Like Us on Facebookwww.facebook.com/riverviewobserver

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Alternate Realities Exhibition On Saturday, September 15 Alternative Realities will open at the hob’art gallery, 720 Monroe Street, Hoboken, NJ and continue through October 7th. A reception to meet the artists will be held on Saturday, September 15, 5 - 8pm. Gallery hours are Saturday and Sunday, 12 to 5pm and by appointment. The “Alternative Realities” show brings together three of hob’art’s photographers in a way that contrasts their styles. The emphasis is to highlight how these artists approach a medium in very alternate ways to create a diversity of results.

Long time hob’art member Ann Kinney is searching for the elusive place between the photograph, which captures a moment in time, and the elements of line, form and color. She explores these prin-ciples in the places and people she encounters. Anne Kinney- Red Bank Boats

Tom Egan’s photography combines landscape, fashion and documentation following the local ‘Burning Man’ subculture. This visually explosive scene is thriving in the New York Metropolitan area but is largely unseen by people outside of those who participate. This set of photos will explore the local parties and events as well as the Burning Man festival itself.

Tom Egan -Jen In Fiber Optics

Don Sichler- Herbie the Car Don Sichler’s work focuses on finding wild and beautiful images where you least ex-pect it. Don calls the photos in this exhibit “Reflections on Autos.” The extreme dis-tortions of shapes and colors in the photos of automobile will amaze the viewer. This exhibit promises to have something for every art enthusiast with manysurprises thrown in.The artists thank the Mon-roe Art Center and the hob’art gallery for their support of this exhibition. Gallery information can be obtained on the website www.hob-art.org and from the Director, France Garrido, 201-319-1504 or [email protected].

Tom Egan 201-388-0216 [email protected] Don Sichler 201-798-1546 [email protected] Ann Taricone Kinney 201-303-1408 [email protected]

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restaurant VIEWS -Ten Ingredients

Chef Giovanny Flores - Rita & Joe’s of the family – he even calls Rita “Mom,” and he had a close bond with Michael, who was his best friend, he says. Running the kitchen at Rita & Joe’s, Chef Flores creates Rita’s Italian dishes and adds his own touch to the daily specials. He believes seasoning dishes is very important and only cooks with freshest ingredients.

Let’s meet Chef Flores!

RVO: Chef Flores, can you tell our readers where you were born and raised?CF: I was born and raised in Ecuador. I came to the states when I was 19 and stayed with a cousin.

RVO: How did you learn to cook?CF: I learned to cook out of necessity. I was living here all alone and I wanted ‘real’ food. I would call my mother and she would tell me how to cook dishes from my country. I realized

I liked cooking. I went back to Ecuador four years later, opened a pizzeria and started cooking professionally. I married and then came back to the states.

RVO: Rita & Joe’s menu is traditional Italian dishes. Do you get to create recipes?CF: Yes, I stick with the traditional menu and I create the specials.

RVO: How would you describe your cooking style?

CF: Everything has to be fresh. Nothing is frozen. And we prepare the dishes to order. .

RVO: What is your philosophy when creating dishes?CF: If you want to be a chef, you have to like to cook. Then your dishes are going to be great. And you have to taste everything you cook to see what it needs. I like to cook with salt and pepper to give the foodflavor. If I am the customer

and I have to add salt and pepper then I’m the one who’s cooking.

RVO: Can you share what you consider one of your favorite Rita & Joe’s dishes?CF: Grilled salmon and shrimp over sautéed broccoli rabe is very popular. We go through 2-3 salmons a week – whole salmons that I clean, filet and de-bone myself.

RO: Do you have a quick recipe for our busy readers?CF: Chicken breasts with mixed vegetables is a quick and easy dish. Steam cauliflower, carrots, broc-coli, string beans and zuc-chini and then sauté them in garlic, oil, salt and pepper. Marinade the chicken for five minutes in a mixture of garlic, scallions and oliveoil and cook the chicken on the grill or under the broiler.Place the chicken over the

Cont’d on page 22

By Sally DeeringPhoto by Sally Deering

Rita & Joe’s in Jersey City opened its doors in 1986 with Rita Pani making her home-made meatball and chicken parmesan sand-wiches and pasta dishes like manicotti and ravioli. Busi-ness grew and the restaurant became a neighborhood sensation with regulars trav-eling far and wide for Rita’s home-cooked dishes. When their son Michael Pani, who ran the restaurant with his parents, passed away four years ago, Joe passed away three months later and Rita and her daughter-in-law Isabel Pani teamed up to keep the restaurant open. With Rita and Isabel at the helm, and a loyal staff, Rita & Joe’s continues to give its customers the very best in Italian dining. Chef Giovanny Flores, 44, has been cooking at Rita & Joe’s for the past 15 years and is practically a member

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restaurant VIEWS- Ten Ingredients Cont’d from page 21 Chef Giovany from Rita & Joe’s

(L to R) Chef Giovany Flores and daughter, Rita Pani, Jersey ity Mayor Jerramiah Healy, and Jersey City Council President Peter Brennan at the “Made in Jersey City Day” on June 18th, 2012. The event, ‘The Delectable Dish’ featured signature dishes from thirty Jersey City restaurants.

vegetables and serve with a bottle of white wine. Simple and delicious.

RVO: You’ve been cooking at Rita & Joe’s for 15 years. What is it about the restaurant that inspired such a long commitment?CF: I love the people here. Rita is like my mother. I call her “mom”. This is like my family, especially Michael, he was my best friend. He was so kind, really special.

RVO: Can you tell our readers the secret to cooking Italian?CF: Here at Rita & Joe’s everything except for the Chicken Francese is cooked with garlic. That’s the main ingredient in Ital-ian food.

RVO: What is the most important thing you’ve learned about cooking during your career?CF: Cook with love, love, love.

Art House Productions Presents:

The Laugh Tour with Late Night

w/Conan O’Brien’s MARION GRODINSaturday, September 15

7pm doors open: drinks and snacks

available 8pm SHOWTICKETS:

$15 online $20 door [no drink min]

Brooke Van PoppelenMTV, VH1, TLC

Host Richard KiamcoThe Howard Stern Show

Sirus XM, Queer Eye WE-tv

If you go: Rita & Joe’s

Italian Restaurant142 Broadway

(Corner of Routes 1&9 and 440)Jersey City, NJ201-451-3606

www.rita-joes.comHours: Mon-Thurs: 11:30 am to 9:45 pm

Fri: 11:30 am to 10:45 pmSat: 1 pm to 10:45 pm

Sun: 1 pm to 9 pm

also appearingNeil Thornton

Steve LeventhalART HOUSE

Hamilton Park1Mc Williams Place

6th Floor Jersey City, NJ201-915-9911

http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/269903

ONLINE TICKETS AVAILABLE UNTIL NOON DAY OF SHOW [SEPT 15]

http://www.TheLaughTour.com/

Facebookhttp://www. facebook.com/

TheLaughTour

Twitterhttp://twitter.com/

TheLaughTour

www.arthouseproductions.org

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Chubb refers to the insurers of the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies. Chubb Personal Insurance (CPI) is thepersonal lines property and casualty strategic business unit of Chubb & Son, a division of Federal Insurance Company, as

manager and/or agent for the insurers of the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies. This literature is descriptive only.Not available in all states. Actual coverage is subject to the language of the policies as issued. Chubb, Box 1615, Warren,

NJ 07061-1615. ©2010 Chubb & Son, a division of Federal Insurance Company. www.chubb.com/personal

Muller Insurance930 Washington StreetHoboken, NJ 07030 • 201-659-2403www.mullerinsurance.com

Financial Strength and Exceptional Claim Service Homeowners | Auto | Yacht | Jewelry | Antiques | Collector Car

Don’t replace gingerbread with anything half-baked.Yours isn’t a cookie–cutter home. So if your house is damaged, you want repairsthat respect its unique, perhaps historic, design. As your insurance advisor, werecommend a Chubb Masterpiece® policy with Extended Replacement Costcoverage. While other insurance companies are eliminating this valuable coverage,we know that Chubb is committed to repairing your home to the original splendorthat’s been detailed in their complimentary appraisal. With Chubb’s practice ofhandling claims promptly and fairly, you’ll see why we consider Chubb the bestchoice for discriminating homeowners. To see how we can create a personalinsurance program with Chubb to meet your sophisticated needs, please call us.

Drive Top Food Truck Recipes Into Your Kitchen(Family Features) No other trend has parked itself at the forefront of the culinary world quite like food trucks, but these aren’t the stale doughnut and questionable hotdog stands of yore. From coast to coast, a new generation of chefs has been putting unique cuisines on four wheels. But if you’re not in an urban setting, that doesn’t mean you have to miss out on these delectable dishes.

To celebrate the phenomenon, CanolaInfo partnered with four food truck chefs/owners representing different U.S. regions to create the Street Eats Recipe Collection, allowing home cooks everywhere to recreatedelicious food truck fare. For the complete Street Eats Recipe collection and list of food truck chefs, visit www.CanolaInfo.org or www.Face-book.com/CanolaInfoRaspberry Cream Cupcakes with Cream Cheese Frosting

By Frankie FrancolloYield: 24 cupcakes Serving size: 1 cupcake with frosting Cupcakes 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 2 cups granulated sugar 4 eggs 1 cup milk 3/4 cup canola oil 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 2 cups raspberries, fresh or frozen Cream Cheese Frosting 2 packages of cream cheese (8 ounces) at room temperature 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar, sifted 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Preheat oven to 350°F. Line muf-fin tin with 24 cupcake liners.In small bowl, combine flour and baking powder. In medium bowl, combine sugar and eggs. Using electric mixer, combine until mixture thickens, about 1 minute. Add milk, canola oil and vanilla. Continue to mix. Slowly add flour mixture until fully combined, scraping sides of bowl with spatula to get out all lumps. Remove bowl from mixer. Add 1 cup raspberries. Gently mix in raspberries by hand. Spoon mixture into muffin cups until about two-thirds full.Bake for 20 minutes or until cupcakes spring back to touch. Remove from oven and cool cup-cakes completely. To prepare frosting: In medium bowl, mix cream cheese on medi-um speed until lump free. Slowly add powdered sugar and va-nilla extract until fully combined. Spoon cream cheese frosting into pastry bag with medium round tip and pipe on top of cooled cupcakes. Top each cupcake with a raspberry. Serve right away or refrigerate until serving.

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Elen Brazilian House Cleaning Available.

If you need a good cleaning in your homecontact 973 384 5261

or email at [email protected] or [email protected]

To place your Real Estate business on this page call the River View Team at 201-349-4336 Serving Hudson County Since 1998

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