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Vintage photos of music venues in N.J.

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The places, large and small, we went to hear great music.

I was on my way to Peddler's Village this past summer and passed the New Hope Winery on Route 202 ... and had a teenage flashback.

The roadside sign listed all the bands that were appearing that week. A different one each night.

FountainCasinoroute35northaberdeennj.jpgYou couldn't say "there's nothing to do" when signs like this were everywhere in New Jersey. 

MORE: Vintage photos around New Jersey

Whoa.

There certainly are places you can go nowadays to see live music. There are venues where bands that have achieved success perform along with groups and individuals trying to get their start. But there was a time when signs like the one I saw in Pennsylvania were everywhere.

It was truly a golden age for music in New Jersey. Most are familiar with the stories of the beginnings of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, but for every Bruce there were 200 bands playing just as hard and dreaming just as big.

And we had the opportunity to see them pretty much for free - many of these clubs didn't even have a cover charge. It was a special time for rock and roll in the Garden State.

Vintage photos of clubs and bands in N.J.

Vintage photos of clubs and music venues in N.J.

Vintage photos: Music with a N.J. connection

If you didn't see your favorite music place in this gallery, you'll likely find it by clicking the links above.

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


NJ.com boys soccer Top 20, Sept. 20: Reshuffle continues after more upsets

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There are five new teams in the boys soccer Top 20 this week.

N.J. football's 50 winningest active head coaches in 2018

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List includes 3 members of 300-win club, over 8,500 wins & 1,200 years of experience.

Ranking D1 women's soccer programs with the most N.J. alums on the roster

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Check out which colleges have the biggest Jersey connections

Everyone thinks N.J. is a dump. But see the beauty in the wasteland

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While New York City might be the heart of the metro area, New Jersey has the arteries that feed it with people, goods, gas and power.

HS football Week 3: Bold predictions as autumn takes the field

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Fall is here, but leaves still cling to limbs. So too does our crack with its latest bold predictions

Predators are using Fortnite to lure kids. Cops say parents need to worry

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Authorities said they've arrested men seeking sex with minors through social media and messaging platforms - and now gaming apps

First, parents worried about their children being approached by predators at grocery stores and on playgrounds. Then the threat moved online via shady profiles on social media.

Now, authorities say, some phone apps have opened even more channels of communication between adult predators and minors -- including some video games like Fortnite and Minecraft.

Earlier this week, in announcing the arrests of 24 alleged predators, state Attorney General Gurbir Grewal warned the public that people looking to take advantage of young teens and children have more options to do so than ever due to the ever-developing landscape of internet communication. 

"It is a frightening reality that sexual predators are lurking on social media, ready to strike if they find a child who is vulnerable," Grewal said in describing how the 24 suspects were attempting to lure and elicit sex with teenagers.

Operation Open House nets 24 alleged child predatorsSome of the apps N.J. Attorney General Gurbir Grewal warned parents about monitoring. (Michael Mancuso | For NJ.com) 

Some of them -- a police sergeant, included -- posed as teenagers, themselves.

The suspects, all men, varied in age and walks of life.

But Grewal said most were taking advantage of a multitude of apps allowing them to reach out to children, or in this case, undercover detectives.

The men thought they were chatting with 14- and 15-year-old boys and girls, but were instead talking with detectives with the New Jersey State Police's Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force.

The task force trains its detectives to maintain online profiles on apps known for hooking up like Tinder and Grindr.

But Grewal said their presence can reach far beyond that.

Arrests of alleged child predators have been made after communicating through apps like Kik, Wishbone, Tumblr and even video games like Fortnite, Minecraft and Discord. 

The similarities to the more social apps are that the gaming apps have a chat area.

"These arrests serve as a sobering reminder that parents should closely monitor their child's online activity," State Police Superintendent Col. Patrick Callahan said Tuesday.

Some of the apps, like Tinder, have an 18+ age requirement, but users are able to enter a birth date that's older or younger than they actually are. A person's age listed on Facebook sets their age on Tinder, as well, if the apps are synced.

But the app wasn't always adult-only.

Up until June 2016, a user only had to be 13 to sign up. The company changed its requirement after being heavily criticized by parents, parentinfo.com reported.

Many other social mediums and apps, like Tumblr, Instagram and Snapchat also have a minimum age requirement of 13. Tumblr says it's serious about its age requirement, writing:

"You have to be the Minimum Age to use Tumblr. We're serious: it's a hard rule. "But I'm, like, almost old enough!" you plead. Nope, sorry. If you're not old enough, don't use Tumblr. Ask your parents for a Playstation 4, or try books."

But Tumblr and other apps don't have a surefire way of keeping children off the app. If a kid can calculate a birthday that would make them older than the required age, they can access the app.

Making sure a child or teenager doesn't get wrapped up in a conversation with someone much older than they are pretending to be boils down to parents taking note of the apps their kids are using and talking through what is appropriate, authorities say.

"If children appear anxious of evasive when the topic is raised, it may be a red flag," Grewal said.

"It's critical that parents talk to their children about social media and chat apps to let them know that the people they encounter may not be who they initially seemed to be."

Paige Gross may be reached at pgross@njadvancemedia.comFollow her on Twitter @By_paigegross 

 

The 48 remaining unbeaten N.J. boys soccer teams

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Who still has an unbeaten streak alive in the state? NJ Advance Media takes a look.


Girls soccer freshmen of the Week in all 15 conferences, Sept. 13-19

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Find out which freshmen stood out in each conference this week.

HS football: Union's big upset plus more Week 3 hot takes & highlights

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Top-ranked public school in the NJ.com Top 20 got shocked at home.

The 9 most unbelievable reasons cops can stop you in N.J.

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A car mechanic's tag hanging from your rear-view mirror or the lack of equipment on your bike might get you a visit from a member of law enforcement.

WATCH: Kids, seniors form human peace symbol. We got the birds-eye view

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School kids and senior living residents come together. Watch video

The oldest was 96 and the youngest was 2. 

At YingHua International School in Kingston Friday, students joined residents of six different Brandywine Living facilities to form a human peace symbol marking the United Nations' International Day of Peace.

The effort was the brainchild of Brandywine's Stephanie Gaber, whose job title is escapades producer.

"We've done an Arbor Day program with this school before and it turned out really well and this program just strengthened our relationship even better," Gaber said.

The residents were bused in from six different Brandywine locations, including facilities in Ocean, Monmouth and Somerset counties.

Expo preview

After the peace symbol, the students and residents renewed their friendships, exchanging greetings and hugs and posed for pictures. Some of the students presented their older friends with artwork.

Franklin Park Fire District 2 supplied a ladder truck for an aerial view and the Kingston Fire Department closed the road for everyone's safety during the event.

Michael Mancuso may be reached at mmancuso@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @michaelmancuso

Amid scrutiny over dog deaths, PetSmart hosts tour of grooming salons at stores across the U.S.

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The event comes days after NJ Advance Media's report of 47 dogs dying during or shortly after groomings at PetSmart, and families struggling to understand why.

The nation's leading pet retailer is allowing customers to tour its grooming salons Sunday as part of a package of changes it's making to reassure customers that its dog groomings are safe.

PetSmart announced the open houses in February amid an NJ Advance Media investigation that documented dozens of cases of dogs dying during or shortly after groomings.

The investigation, published Thursday, found the company has offered owners payments, sometimes for as little as few hundred dollars, in exchange for non-disclosure agreements. It also detailed allegations of inadequate groomer training and intense pressure to grow profits.

Read the full investigation, "Groomed, then Gone"

PetSmart -- which operates more than 1,600 stores in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico -- fiercely defends its safety record and has not admitted wrongdoing in any of the cases.

"As a company of pet lovers who are dedicated to the health and happiness of all pets, we empathize with these grieving families," it said in a statement Thursday. "Nevertheless, we are not aware of any evidence suggesting that PetSmart services caused the deaths of these pets."

During the course of the investigation, the company announced it would improve dog screenings before groomings, install cameras in grooming areas and review its training procedures.

PetSmart also announced the tours, which it said would allow "pet parents to meet their local groomers, discuss their pet's specific needs, tour their local salon and have all their questions answer." The tours will run from 10 a.m. to noon in all of its stores.  

"We maintain the highest standards in the industry, but by no means are we perfect," the company said in its statement. "That's why we're always exploring enhancements to those standards."

Prompted by the December death of Scruffles, an English bulldog groomed at a PetSmart in Flemington, tens of thousands of people have taken to social media, and customers have shared stories of injuries or deaths.

The movement provided the impetus for the NJ Advance Media investigation, which documented 47 cases across 14 states since 2008 in which families claim they took their dog for a grooming only to have it die during or shortly afterwards.

That number, however, is hardly a definitive accounting of deaths.

No state currently requires all individual groomers to be licensed, so there's no enforced standard training, a lack of transparency of safety records and little public accounting when things go wrong. As a result, there's no way to know how many dogs die after any grooming.

Read the full investigation, "Groomed, then Gone"

When deaths do occur, it's rarely clear what happened.

Some pets could have unknown medical conditions that put them at risk, or they could die of natural causes, old age or other reasons out of the groomer's control. Though PetSmart did not address specific cases in its statement, it said it considered those issues to be important factors in many of the deaths identified in NJ Advance Media's investigation.

Even when a necropsy -- the animal equivalent of a human autopsy -- is conducted, it is often inconclusive and speculative. Cases are hard to prove and, since pets are usually legally considered property, there's little financial incentive for owners or lawyers.

When cases do go to court, they often settle and result in confidentiality agreements. In several instances, the company has offered out-of-court payments to pet owners -- especially those who have been outspoken on social media -- in return for signing non-disclosure agreements.

According to a copy of a three-page PetSmart non-disclosure agreement obtained by NJ Advance Media, signatories are forbidden from revealing anything about an incident, the payment received or even the existence of the agreement.

In addition, the agreement also says those who sign are prohibited from discussing their experiences on social media.

Sophie Nieto-Munoz may be reached at snietomunoz@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her at @snietomunoz. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Alex Napoliello may be reached at anapoliello@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @alexnapoNJ. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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The 50 N.J. school districts where teachers make the most money

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The median N.J. teacher salary in the top district is more than $100,000.

N.J. pets in need: Sept. 24, 2018

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Dogs and cats all over New Jersey await adoption.

Canines and their owners are invited to Roosevelt Park in Edison on Oct. 7 from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. for the fourth annual DogFest New Jersey benefiting Canine Companions for Independence.

dogfest.jpgDogFest New Jersey takes place on Oct. 7 at Roosevelt Park in Edison. 

DogsFest will include speakers, dog demonstrations, music, food and more. The annual event raises funds for Canine Companions for Independence, a nonprofit provider of trained assistance dogs with six regional training centers across the country.

Established in 1975, Canine Companions provides "highly trained assistance dogs to children and adults with disabilities and is recognized worldwide for the excellence of its dogs, and quality and longevity of the matches it makes between dogs and people." There is no charge for the dog, its training and on-going follow-up services. For more information, visit cci.org or call 1-800-572-2275.

Individuals who raise at least $250 will receive a special DogFest gift. Information on DogFest New Jersey and fundraising for Canine Companions is available by going to support.cci.org/site/TR?fr_id=1610&pg=entry.

Roosevelt Park is located on Roosevelt Drive.

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


NJ.com football Top 20, Week 4: Another loss in Top 5 shakes things up

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Another Top 5 teams falls. One team drops out of the rankings. Another makes its debut.

Driver killed after SUV hits concrete divider, guardrail on I-80

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Michael Flynn, 52, of Iselin, was driving an SUV that crashed Sunday on Interstate 80 in Lodi

A Woodbridge man died in a single-vehicle crash on Interstate 80 in Lodi, authorities said Monday.

Michael Flynn, 52, of the Iselin section of Woodbridge, was driving an SUV about 6:25 p.m. Sunday when he struck a concrete divider near milepost 64.3, according to State Police.

The SUV then traveled across the Route 80 lanes and struck a guardrail on the right side of the road, police said

Flynn was taken to nearby Hackensack University Medical Center, where he died at 7:14 p.m. Sunday.

No other vehicles were involved and the investigation continues, authorities said.

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

 
 

Boys Soccer: 32 must-see games for rivalry week, Sept. 24-30

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Here are the 32-best boys soccer games coming up this week.

Driver, 80, killed after car runs red light on Route 1, cops say

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The East Brunswick man was pulling out of Walmart onto Route 1 when his car was hit.

An 80-year-old man was killed Saturday after his car was hit by a vehicle that ran a red light on Route 1 in Middlesex County, authorities said. 

Wen-Fu Lin, of East Brunswick, was pronounced dead after a car driven by a 42-year-old Paterson woman disregarded a traffic signal at the intersection of Route 1 and Fashion Plaza Drive in North Brunswick, township police said.

As Lin was exiting the Walmart shopping center just after midnight, a 2007 BMW X3 slammed into his 2016 Chevrolet Malibu, according to Capt. Brian Hoiberg. Lin's 47-year-son, a passenger in the car, was treated for injuries not considered life-threatening.

Driver killed after SUV hits concrete divider, guardrail on I-80

The investigation is ongoing and charges may be filed against the driver of the the BMW, police said. She was treated for minor injuries.

There were no passengers in her vehicle.

Anyone with any information should is asked to call North Brunswick police  at 732-247-0922 x316.

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

 

 

ICE wanted to deport this N.J. man over an old conviction. He fought back -- and won

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The Highland Park resident was one of 91 immigrants arrested in an ICE sweep in New Jersey in June.

Cloyd Edralin isn't getting deported.

After months in a detention center, the green card holder and legal resident from Highland Park won his case in immigration court last week and was released, his family said.

"Today, is a great day. Today, Cloyd is home!" his family posted Friday on a GoFundMe page that had been raising money for his defense.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents had unexpectedly arrested Edralin, 47, in June as he left for his job as a machinist.

Is ICE targeting legal residents for deportation?

ICE said it wanted to deport Edralin, who immigrated legally to the U.S. from the Philippines 30 years ago, because he had been pulled over 11 years ago with an air rifle with plastic pellets in his car. He was sentenced to probation at the time.

Edralin's surprise arrest by ICE agents more than a decade later was one of several cases nationwide earlier this year where federal officials appeared to be targeting legal residents for deportation, citing minor criminal cases the immigrants thought were long forgotten.

edralinjpg-6e5bdd5d5f8e2c36.jpgloyd Edralin, of Highland Park, with his wife and their four children. Edralin, a legal resident who immigrated from the Philippines 30 years ago, was arrested by ICE agents. (Edralin family photo) 

He was one of 91 immigrants arrested in Operation Cross Check, a five-day ICE sweep in New Jersey. All of the immigrants arrested, including some legal residents, faced deportation.

"Any green card holder who has violated the terms of maintaining a green card, such as breaking the law, can be subject to arrest (and) removal," Emilio Dabul, a spokesman for ICE's Newark office, said at the time.

After several months in custody at the Elizabeth Contract Detention Center, Edralin appeared before a judge Thursday who granted the cancellation of the order to remove him from the country, the immigrant's family said.

"The judge even (asked), why are we even here . . . as he was thumbing thru the reams of paperwork," according to the update posted by Edralin's family on his GoFundMe page. "Case dropped."

Edralin's family and friends had raised $16,755 for his legal defense, according to the page. Friends and relatives had held several fundraisers and rallies to bring attention to his case.

Brandi Davison-Edralin, the immigrant's U.S.-born wife and mother of their four children, said immigration attorneys assured her that her husband would be able to fight the deportation order.

Ask Alexa

"All of them said they really don't believe he will be deported," Brandi Davison-Edralin, told NJ Advance Media in June after she consulted with several attorneys.

The Rev. Seth Kaper-Dale, an immigration activist and co-pastor of the Reformed Church of Highland Park, was among those who brought attention to Edralin's case.

"Say a prayer of thanksgiving that sometimes goodness triumphs over evil. Solidarity for our neighbors in immigration crises matter," Kaper-Dale said in a Facebook post to his followers that shared the news about Edralin's release.

Edralin next plans to apply for U.S. citizenship, his family said.

Kelly Heyboer may be reached at kheyboer@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter @KellyHeyboer. Find her at KellyHeyboerReporter on Facebook.

 
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