Sports & Entertainment ORCHARD PARK DEFEATS CLARENCE The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
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SECTION B
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 01, 2014
Blue Devils capture fourth-straight sectional crown in blowout fashion By Aaron Garland SPORTS REPORTER
It’s been in the moment quite regularly now, and the East Aurora boys soccer team showed that Wednesday night (Oct. 29). Since 2011, the Blue Devils have alternated between playing in the Class A2 and Class B1 postseason. The constant is winning. This year, it was B1s turn to crown EA. Junior Noah Thompson notched two goals and two assists as the top-seeded Blue Devils cruised to a 6-0 victory in the Section VI B1 finals over No. 10Albion at Howe Field for their fourth straight sectional title. EA (15-3-1, 10-1-1 ECIC III) plays for the overall B championship at 2:30 p.m. Saturday (Nov. 1) at Howe Field versus the B2 winner, Wilson (13-5-1, 9-3 Niagara-Orleans). And while that’s well and good, the Blue Devils are still concerned with making, then surpassing, Far West Regionals, which can be reached with a win Saturday. They have lost in the Section V-Section VI showdown that decides a states representative the last three years, coming frustratingly close in the process. The team hasn’t lost sight of that. “This game was just a team in our way,” EAcoach Kevin Beale said after the blowout finals win. “These guys have been in this game for a couple years. We want a redemption game against Rochester regional weekend. There have been a couple very close games this year and the kids didn’t get down. Their attitudes coming back from them
JEFFREY T. BARNES
Pete Morgan, left, Noah Thompson, 3, Bryce Schiltz, 29, and Harrison Fay, right, celebrate a goal in EA’s B1 finals win. have been great. They are a great bunch of kids.” But first come the Lakemen in the crossover contest, which EA has won three years running, whether it’s in theAs or Bs. Beale
talked up the backline play of Wilson. In the same breath, he acknowledged the capabilities of his squad, which put on an impressive offensive display Wednesday.
“Wilson defends well,” Beale said. “Obviously, we know how we can play, we are worried about how we can play. And when we play an attack like we did (Wednesday),
and hold the ball like we did, especially (senior midfielders) Peter Morgan and Harrison Fay, when they hold the ball for us we can just get everything started.”
See “Finals” on page B2
Myers, Janca lift Quakers over Niagara Falls in Section VI quarterfinals By Jonah Bronstein SPORTS REPORTER
COURTESY OF JULIE DAHL
Quakers’ senior Billy Myers ran for 115 yards and two scores in a playoff win over NF.
Orchard Park found its way back to the end zone in its playoff opener. Having gotten no closer than 19 yards away in last week’s shutout loss at Jamestown, the Quakers scored six touchdowns Friday night in a 40-13 victory over Niagara Falls in the Section VI Class AA quarterfinals. “We needed to get our offense going,” coach Gene Tundo said. Sophomore quarterback Dillon Janca threw three touchdown passes and senior running back Billy Myers ran for two scores as No. 3 seed Orchard Park (7-1) advances to play the winner of Saturday’s quarterfinal matchup between No. 2 Kenmore West and No. 7 Lancaster, both teams
it has already beaten this season. “Getting shut out against Jamestown, that wasn’t who we are,” Myers said. “We knew we needed to do better.” Myers finished the night with 115 yards on 19 carries while Janca completed 12 of his 30 throws for 182 yards. The Quakers opened a 14-0 lead before their defense even took the field. Janca connected with Kevin Goltz for a 43-yard touchdown on the opening drive to put Orchard Park ahead 7-0. Niagara Falls’ Jaquan Hudson returned the ensuing kickoff to the opposing 30 before fumbling the ball back to Orchard Park. Janca hit Liberatore on a 4-yard score that put the Quakers up 14-0 less than halfway into the first quarter. Niagara Falls (4-4) fum-
bled again on the kickoff return but prevented Orchard Park from scoring off the second turnover. The Wolverines didn’t run an offensive play until 4:44 remained in the first quarter. Myers scored on a 3-yard touchdown after a long gain on a halfback option pass from Goltz to Kevin Koziol to give Orchard Park a 21-0 lead three minutes into the second half. Niagara Falls threatened a comeback after Shaloin McCray’s 4-yard rushing touchdown made it 21-7 with 3:50 left in the third quarter. A fumbled snap gave the Wolverines the ball at their own 45 and a 27-yard touchdown pass from Lomax Barnes to Sharod Welch on the first play of the fourth quarter made it 21-13 after the extra point was blocked. The Wolverines then blocked a punt to take pos-
session at the Orchard Park 48, but the Quakers got the ball back on the very next play when Ronnie Shul recovered a fumble at midfield. Jack Crowley caught a 36-yard touchdown from Janca to make it 27-13 with 90:40 left to play. Myers ran in a 10-yard touchdown to give Orchard Park a 33-13 lead with less than six minutes remaining. Joseph Losardo set the final score with a 35-yard catch-and-run touchdown from Goltz at 3:28 of the fourth OP plays the No. 1 seed from Class AA North, Kenmore West (4-3), in the semifinals at 2 p.m. Saturday (Nov. 1) on the road. The Quakers beat the Blue Devils, 35-18, in Week Two.
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The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Maryvale’s opening kick return settles defensive battle against East Aurora/Holland By Mike Petro SPORTS REPORTER
In practice a day before the program’s first playoff appearance since 2009, Jeff Buccieri admitted that he saw his Maryvale football team struggle with its kick return group on special teams. Still, he challenged his team to make a play right out of the gate. The Flyers did just that. Surprisingly, that play was made while returning the opening kickoff. Brandon Bojanowski returned the opening kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown before either offense hit the field and Derrick Dirado added the pointafter-try to account for the only points of the Class B playoff opener Friday at East Aurora. Seventh-seed Maryvale held on for a 7-0 win over No. 2 East Aurora/Holland. “The way it looked, I thought we’d get a couple more points, but sometimes that happens in a playoff game when both teams are fighting for their lives,” Buccieri said. “We were very lucky to get those points early and then basically hang on.” Even as the opening kickoff was in the air, Bojanowski said there was some uncertainty for the return team. He and fellow deep man Marcus Ford both went to catch the kick, but it was Bojanowski who came down with it, then found a hole in the middle of the field and shot through the opening. “There was a little bad com-
munication back there,” said Bojanowski, a senior. “I called it but he didn’t hear me and it was on his side, but I found the hole and just took it as fast as I could. It just worked out for us…I can’t thank anyone else but my blockers out there.” East Aurora/Holland started three of its final four drives of the game in Maryvale territory but never got closer to the Flyers’ end zone than the 28-yard-line. The Blue Devils were set up at Maryvale’s 44 with under four minutes left in the game, after an AJ Perlino fumble recovery, but they turned the ball over on downs in four plays and the Flyers ran out the clock. Maryvale was held to just three second-half first downs. The final one came with under a minute to play on a 6-yard run by Ford, which clinched the victory. Ford finished with 50 yards on 10 carries, as well as recording a fourth-quarter interception on defense. “Both of our teams coming in here were known for our defenses and both of them came up strong,” East Aurora/ Holland head coach Tim Wade said. “Unfortunately, they get the opening kickoff and score and it holds up for the whole game. For the next 47-and-ahalf minutes, it was a battle. We felt confident enough that there was a lot of game left and it was only seven points. But it was just a defensive battle.” Both teams run the same offense and knew one another well coming into the game, Buccieri said. He added his team put an emphasis on not allowing East
Aurora/Holland to get to the outside. The Flyers allowed only two first downs in the first half and none in the second. The Flyers got to Blue Devils’ quarterback Connor Allan five times on the evening. Demante Chatmon led the Maryvale defense with two sacks, while recording one each were teammates Steve Schroeder, Mike Kelleher and Joey Cartonia. “The defense played great,” Bojanowski said. “We did a lot of homework and the coaches were doing a lot of looking at video. We couldn’t do it without the help of the coaches and all 11 players out there.” The win was also a bit of revenge for Maryvale, which lost to East Aurora/Holland on the same field the last time the Flyers made the playoffs. The teams were two of the brighter stories in Western New York football, having bounced back from a combined record of 5-13 in 2013. “We knew this was going to be a battle,” Buccieri said. “Not many teams can come in here and win. We were two evenly matched teams with the same offense and both with attacking defenses…We fought through against a stellar program in EA/ Holland to advance.” Also in the game, Clay Lewis EA/Holland’s top rusher with 31 yards on eight carries, while Mike Halferty recorded 50 yards on eight carries for Maryvale. Maryvale went from 2-7 last season to 7-1 as it heads into the next round of the Class B playoffs. The Flyers have stepped up
DAVE ECKHARDT
Maryvale’s Brandon Bojanowski, left, made the game-deciding play in a Class B quarterfinals tilt with EA, returning the opening kickoff to the house. and performed at a high level without much prodding from the coaching staff, Buccieri said. “It’s been the character of the guys and ownership they’ve taken, as far as being accountable and coming to practice ready every day,” Buccieri said. “They’re coach-able and hungry to take this program in a positive direction. It’s been the seniors, it’s been the leadership; and the younger kids have fallen in and bought into our plan.” EA/Holland was led by a group of three-year seniors
that went from a one-win team in 2012, to three victories last season, before putting up a 5-3 mark in 2014. Also, the Blue Devils junior varsity is undefeated this fall, according to Wade. “I think the sky is the limit and the program is on solid footing,” Wade said. “It’s been a great year and I’m proud of all of the kids. They worked hard.” In next week’s semifinal round, the Flyers are set for a rematch with Cheektowaga, after Maryvale beat its rival
soundly in the regular season finale. Cheektowaga defeated defending sectional champion Depew to advance. “We did beat Cheektowaga, but they’re just a stellar program,” Buccieri said. “We know it’s hard to beat a good team twice and they’ll be gunning for us. This is unchartered water for us. We’re usually in a bowl game or consolation game. We’re just happy to be here and move on and we’ll look to improve for next week.”
EA cross country keeps Hollins, four good times rolling others state-bound
DAVE ECKHARDT
EA senior Hannah Weppner became a first team ECIC III All-Star at ECICs Oct. 25. By Aaron Garland SPORTS REPORTER
Somehow, the East Aurora cross country program has elevated its controlling presence in Section VI this season. It doesn’t come from both the boys and girls teams winning ECIC III for a 14th consecutive regular season. Or from them cruising to overall team titles at ECIC Championships Saturday (Oct. 25) at East Aurora, as juniors Kenny Vasbinder (personal best 15:10.88) and Sophia Tasselmyer (17:51.83) gathered overall individual titles for the Blue Devils. The boys were victorious, 46-88, over runner-up Williamsville North while the girls won, 49-97, against secondplace Sweet Home. That’s all customary stuff at EA, a cross country empire, with the girls winning six state championships in 10 years while the boys have two since 2010. Both squads are ranked No. 1 in New York State among Class C schools heading into Section VI
Championships Friday (Oct. 31) at Sunshine Park in West Seneca. The true mark of EA’s reign came at the Alden Bulldog Stampede invitational Oct. 11. The varsity boys slid up a division to race with the large schools. To no surprise, they won. But their move up left an opening in the small schools varsity race. Who better to fill it than the Blue Devils’ JV? It was a seamless shift, as the JV grabbed first place. In other words, EA’s eighth- through 14th-fastest runners beat out similarly sized schools’ top racers. “For them to be able to step up was a great experience and a real confidence booster,” said Blue Devils coach Walt McLaughlin, who heads the program with his wife, Marty. “They’re realizing that ‘Just because I am not in the top seven at EastAurora, I am still a good runner.’ And truthfully, their days will come down the road. They will get their chance to represent our team that the highest level.” The boys and girls JV teams won overall team titles at ECICs, too.
The varsity boys and girls went undefeated in the league and invitational portions of their schedules. The boys won their own invite in addition to ones at Alden, McQuaid and West Seneca while the girls were triumphant in those four and a fifth they entered, the Knox Invitational. In short, the Blue Devils just win. There is a long history that says so, but this year’s team has the looks of something extra special, according to Walt McLaughlin. “This is one of my best teams that I have ever coached in my career,” said McLaughlin, who is in his 15th season at EA. Vasbinder is the top runner on the boys’ side. He became the second EA runner to break 15 minutes at the 3-mile McQuaid course — an impressive feat since EA has competed at the invitational since the 1970s. The junior also set the course record at Alden with a 15:32.91, breaking the previous mark set by Syracuse University runner T.J. Hornberger, a former Lake Shore standout. Vasbinder is joined by fellow juniors Matthew McLaughlin, T.J. Murray, Will Zink, Bryan Hensen and Kevin Murnock and sophomore Patrick Murray in the top seven, which designates the varsity runners. Freshman Ian Russ has performed well as a varsity alternate. By finishing with top-seven times in ECIC III Saturday, Vasbinder (first), Patrick Murray (third), McLaughlin (fourth), Murnock (sixth) and Russ (seventh) were named firstteam division All-Stars. Hensen (eighth), T.J. Murray (ninth), senior Kiernan Lauber (10th) and Zink (11th) further dressed the top of the leader board with navy and white as they grabbed second team honors. Tasselmyer, a 2014 outdoor track and field state champion in the 3,000-meter run, is the No. 1 competitor on the girls’ side. Seniors Elizabeth O’Brien and Hannah Weppner, a first-year
cross country runner, junior Fiona Danieu and sophomore Maisy Webster round out the top five. Sophomores Victoria Klimowicz and Erin Cocca and freshman Molly McLaughlin have made an impact on varsity, too. Tasselmyer (first), Webster (second), Danieu (third), O’Brien (fifth) and Weppner (sixth) became ECIC III first team All-Stars last weekend while McLaughlin (ninth) and Klimowicz were named second teamers. “We treat both programs the same; our goals and expectations are really the same,” McLaughlin said. “We want to win ECICs overall, we want to win the section team Class C title, and overall we want to be the No. 1 team out of Western New York. We have been on top for quite a few years now. We want to maintain that.” The Blue Devils enter sectionals as the team to beat in Class C. It’s the first time since 2010 EA is in the C field after racing with the Bs from 2011-13. Regardless of their placement, the Blue Devils almost always run at a championship pace. The boys have claimed a Section VI crown 11 of the last 13 years while the girls have won sectionals 13 years running. With that said, McLaughlin’s said the program’s main focus is capturing state titles for the boys and girls for the first time since 2011 and ’10, respectively. “As good as we have been doing, we have bigger goals in front of us,” McLaughlin said. “That’s really, at this point, what it’s all about. A state championship is really No. 1. We have the potential. These kids are very goal-orientated, hard-working kids. It really is about this year — about these kids making their mark and doing their best to become state champs.” New York State Public High School Athletic Association Cross Country Championships are Nov. 8 at SUNY Canton. Twitter: @Garland_SUN
The Orchard Park girls tennis team extended its fruitful year by qualifying five athletes for states, the most the program has sent in 11 years. Senior Haley Hollins, who is undefeated on the season, won the singles title at Section VI Championships Saturday (Oct. 25) at the Village Glen. Meanwhile, the ECIC-winning pair of sophomore Kristen Zablonski and freshman Lauren Karoglan placed second in the doubles tournament while seniors Shayleen Brennan and Rachel Johnson took third to snag the last states slot in doubles. The tournaments spanned Friday and Saturday. Hollins downed Fredonia’s Georgianna Gens in the finals, 6-2, 6-3 — a close match by the
senior’s lofty standards. The Quakers’team of Zablonski and Karoglan lost to Victoria VanEvery and Elizabeth Rowan of Southwestern in the goldmedal match. Brennan and Johnson, who finished second to teammates Zablonski and Karoglan at ECICs, were triumphant over a North Tonawanda duo in the third-place match. New York State Public High School Athletic Association Girls Tennis Championships run Saturday through Monday (Nov. 1-3) at Tri-City Fitness Tennis in Latham. East Aurora’s doubles team of senior Gabby Hoffman and junior Caroline Horvatits, who placed sixth in ECICs to advance to sectionals, lost a two-hour, 15-minute first-round match Friday, 7-5, 7-6, to an Olean pairing.
EA has Wilson next “Finals” from page B1 Things sure got started in a hurry against Albion (7-13, 4-8 N-O). The Blue Devils stomped their feet down from the get-go, scoring four times in the first 15 minutes. It left no doubt they would keep the sectional titles coming. Senior forward Jimmy Czora, in addition to Thompson, had a multi-point night with a goal and an assist. EA had five different goal scorers. Fay scored the first goal from close in off a Thompson feed. Thompson added a goal of his own in the eighth and senior Eric Roetzer got one in the 10th from Czora. Freshman Bryce Schiltz ended, for the moment, EA’s goal barrage with a successful strike in the 14th minute, as Thompson collected his second assist. Czora’s deep shot off a set piece found the back of the net in the 25th minute to conclude the first-half scoring. Max Kilijanski
recorded the helper. Thompson got his second of the night in the 55th minute for the lone goal of the final 40. “We played great,” Czora said. “I love when we come together and play as a team. It definitely came out (Wednesday), as we scored a lot of goals early on.” Czora, as a senior, is aware of what can be accomplished by EA. He has been in the program, has played in Far West Regionals. But, in his eyes, the collective talent is shaping splendidly in 2014. “Last year we had a lot of individual talent, and we played based on everyone’s talents,” Czora said. “This year we all have individual talents and we bring them together as a team. When we play together with all of those talents incorporated it’s great.” Twitter: @Garland_SUN
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The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Quakers rid selves of Clarence demons, advance to Class AA finals versus N-W By Aaron Garland SPORTS REPORTER
From Day One of the 2014 season, the goal has been simple for the Orchard Park boys soccer team — beat Clarence when it matters most. Simpler said than done, at least. The Red Devils, who, at the start of the year, won at least a share of the Section VI Class AA title six times running, have ruled the playoffs as of late. Almost annually, a victim during those runs has been the Quakers, including 2013, when Clarence defeated OP, 2-0, in the finals. But a seventh consecutive sectional championship won’t happen. Not this year, anyway. On Monday night (Oct. 27) at Howe Field, the Quakers conquered what they set out for when practice began in August. No. 2 seed OP met the third-seeded Red Devils in the Class AA semifinals and beat them thoroughly, 3-0, behind goals from a trio of seasoned seniors — Noah Kohl, Connor Saeli and Ryan McMaster. “That’s what we were shooting for all year,” senior defender Ati Mraz said. “We have been
waiting for this opportunity. And we showed them last year means nothing. We put in three goals and we dominated them the whole game. Last year means nothing because this year we brought it and we won.” During the regular season OP (13-2-3, 9-1-3 ECIC I) tied and defeated Clarence — the senior class’first victory over its league foe — in the two meetings between the teams en route to its first division title since 1997. Clarence (12-3-3, 8-3-2 ECIC I) wound up second. After getting over one longstanding hump, the Quakers shift the focus toward another — their first AA crown since at least 1997. They get the chance in the finals at 5 p.m. Saturday at Howe Field against top-seeded Niagara-Wheatfield (16-2, 13-1 Niagara Frontier League). “It’s been a long history of us losing to them,” said OP coach Josh Dannecker, who downed Clarence in the postseason for the first time in his decade with the program. “It’s either in the semifinals or finals and we seem them almost every single year. It’s very rare that we don’t see Clarence (in the playoffs). “We have had talented teams in the past. But I think this team,
JEFFREY T. BARNES
Senior Connor Saeli leads OP with 12 assists. kind of growing together and being a senior-heavy lineup, it makes sense that we are playing our best soccer now.” Truth be told, the Quakers and their 11 seniors put on a dominating performance from start to finish. Dannecker noted it was fitting much of the damage was done by long-tenured guys who have felt painful losses to the Red Devils. The
experience won out against a younger, yet skilled, Clarence team. Kohl scored the first goal in the 16th minute on a penalty kick made possible by McMaster. He was sprung with a breakaway pass and maneuvered by goalkeeper Kyle Cunningham, who tripped him in the box before a shot was taken to force the foul call.
McMaster added a goal right out of intermission, scoring in the 44th minute, and Saeli, who had four points in a quarterfinal win over Kenmore West, notched another four minutes later. Kohl and McMaster had an assist apiece. “Those kids have lost to Clarence,” Dannecker said. “They have been here before and they have seen this kind of game. You could just tell that they weren’t going to lose. They came out so aggressive. It’s definitely the best our team has played all year.” The Red Devils were stymied in everything they tried doing offensively. OP’s backline of Mraz, seniors Matt Reilly and Zack Alamari and junior Tommy Roder was stifling. The defenders cleared the ball at every chance and were sound in their positioning. Clarence really didn’t receive quality looks until the latter portions of the second half, when it was already 3-0. Sophomore Nick Lunetta and junior Andrew Peek had glorious, open looks from in tight within the final 20 minutes for the Red Devils. But senior Adam Hansgen made a couple brilliant saves on their shots to preserve the shutout and state-
ment game by the Quakers. “Prior to this year I had never beat Clarence on modified, JV or varsity,” said McMaster, a three-year varsity player. “It was just a complete team effort — we won balls in the air, we were making great runs. We really just controlled possession and we finished our opportunities. It really just came down to that.” The contest was well attended, with the OP faithful rooting energetically. Among those who witnessed the longawaited slaying of Clarence were graduated players from the Quakers’ 2013 runner-up squad. Monday was a win for them, too. “Our former teammates were out there cheering for us, and they wanted that game so bad last year and we couldn’t give it to them,” Mraz said. “This year I think we are giving them the best we have. “We needed to play Clarence in the semifinals. We wanted the hardest first. I’m glad we have Clarence under our belts. We have confidence for the finals.” Twitter: @Garland_SUN
EA, OP girls Team inches closer swimming teams to ‘Deep November’ dominate ECICs By Aaron Garland
By Aaron Garland SPORTS REPORTER
Art Aungst knew there was tradition in East Aurora girls swimming and diving. He just didn’t know what talent he had in the team to start the year. After all, Aungst was with a completely different program for the 32 seasons that preceded 2014. The longtime Orchard Park girls coach — and current OP boys headman — was wildly successful with the Quakers. That’s hasn’t changed with the Lady Blue Devils. EA went 7-0 in ECIC III meets to win the division, and last weekend (Oct. 24 and 25), it cleaned up at ECIC Championships at Clarence. Preliminaries of the small schools meet were held Friday and finals took place Saturday, when the Lady Blue Devils racked up a meet-high 406 team points. Eden was a distant second (310). “It was a little bit strange because I didn’t know any of them and they didn’t know me,” said Aungst, who swam at EAduring his days there. “We took a little time to get to know each other, but I have been so impressed with the work ethic and commitment of the kids.” EA won eight of the 12 events at ECICs and landed in the top three of all 11 swimming races — it didn’t qualify anyone for diving. “It was a wonderful performance by everybody because our top-level kids exceeded what we thought they would do,” Aungst said, “but also a lot of the kids who just barely qualified had great times and scored quite a few points for us.” Junior Sydney Atendido and freshman Shelby MacSwan led the way for the Blue Devils, winning two individual races apiece while being a part of two winning relay teams. Atendido took the top spot in the 200 IM and 100 breaststroke and MacSwan was a winner in the 100 fly and 100 backstroke. Atendido’s work in the breaststroke (1:06.92) earns her a trip to the New York Public High School Athletic Association Girls Swimming and Diving Championships Nov. 21 and 22 at Ithaca College. Meanwhile, with a finals time (59. 91 seconds) that was more than four
seconds faster than the secondplace finisher, MacSwan also got herself into the states field. Both were also both part of the 200 medley relay squad, which included freshmen Mary Zagrobelny and Emma Brinker, that placed first with a state-qualifying time (1:51.86). Aungst said he has yet to finalize who will race in the relay come late November. Atendido won the 200 free relay along with freshmen Mary Dunbar and Brinker and senior Molly Border (1:43.61). MacSwan was part of a victorious 400 free relay group that also featured Dunbar, Border and Zagrobelny (3:51.13). All three of EA’s relay teams are qualified for Section VI Championships Nov. 6 and 7 at the Flickinger Center, located on ECC’s City campus. Brinker also won the 50 free with a time of 25.71 seconds. She was slightly off a winning pace in the 100 free, finishing .40 seconds behind the leader to claim second (56.70 seconds). Dunbar had a pair of secondplace showings (200 free, 500 free) and Zagrobelny can say the same (200 IM, 100 breast). Border came in third in the 500 free, behind Dunbar at 5:51.99. Aungst walked into a goldmine at EA with the amount of talent in its pool. It’s going to continue, too. Border, who will swim in the 200 free and 500 free at sectionals and “worked incredibly hard all year,” Aungst said, was the lone senior among 17 participants, including five eighth graders, from the Blue Devils at ECICs. While Border is a great asset in the present — she is a candidate to be on the state-bound medley relay quartet, too — the Blue Devils are also set up in the long term. That’s evidenced by five underclassmen reaching the podium Saturday and, in general, the unmatched volume of swimmers EA qualified. “I really thought we had the potential to win it, but I honestly didn’t see the level of swimming that they did from top to bottom coming,” Aungst said. “It’s rare that you have everyone doing well at the same time. Usually there are a few people who aren’t quite there. It’s really nice to have the very best kids in the pool, and some of them were the newer kids.” At sectionals next week,Aten-
dido will swim the breaststroke and maybe the IM, according to Aungst, while Brinker (50 free), Dunbar (100 free, 200 free), freshman Hannah Gonsiorek (100 breast), MacSwan (100 fly), junior Molly Tent (100 breast) and Zagrobelny (200 IM) are also in the field.
Orchard Park had the most first-place finishers in the large schools portion of the ECIC Girls Swimming and Diving Championships over the two days with four. The Quakers ended up second (327 team points) to the host, Clarence (422). During the course of the weekend, OP qualified its 200 and 400 free relay teams for states. The Quakers’ 200 free relay squad, which consists of senior Hannah Rauch, junior Andrea Ernst and sophomores Katrina Wardner and Olivia Sapio, are heading to Ithaca after swimming to a top finish (1:40.86). The squad posted a 1:41.06 in prelims to originally meet the state standard. The same quartet registered a first-place worthy time of 3:39.32 in the 400 free relay. Ernst and Sapio also earned spots at states in individual events. Ernst won the 100 free, swimming it in 54 seconds, while Sapio took the top place in the 100 backstroke (59.45 seconds). On the diving side of things, senior Morgan Wellenzohn continued her season-long, or, more aptly, career-long, tear. She had an 11-dive score of 477.85, putting her first and ahead of the second-place girl, Iroquois’Julie Coomer, by more than 90 points. OP diving coach Tom Lengel said the number Wellenzohn posted has her ranked third in the state, as of Saturday. The senior is already qualified for states, where she finished third in 2013. The Quakers’ other diver, freshman Jolie Blodgett, took third with a 363.20, which Lengel said is 53 points higher than where she was at the start of the season. Twitter: @Garland_SUN
SPORTS REPORTER
The mantra is “Deep November.” The origins of it lie in state semifinals and finals are in the middle of the month. That’s where the East Aurora girls soccer team thinks it can get. The Lady Blue Devils took another step closer Tuesday night (Oct. 28), guaranteeing themselves a game in early November. Freshman Makenna Crosson scored in the 27th minute to lift sixth-seeded EAto a 1-0 victory over No. 2 seed Wilson at Dimp Wagner Field in the Section VI Class B semifinals. It places the Lady Blue Devils in the finals against No. 5 Falconer (15-4) at 7 p.m. Saturday (Nov. 1) right back at Amherst’s turf football field. Make it three straight shutouts for the Lady Blue Devils (12-6-1) in the postseason while netting five goals. The latest clean sheet was the most impressive. Wilson (16-3) hadn’t been held scoreless all year, and entered scoring at a 3.6 goals per game pace. “The girls have really taken the whole ‘Deep November’ mantra to a new level, and they just keep believing,” said EA coach David Downs, who added he thinks it’s the program’s first championship appearance since 2009. “They keep believing they are going to win every single game they play.” The “Deep November” chants are heard whenever the team breaks a huddle. It’s essentially been all around the whole season. “We have used that for every single practice, for every single game this year, for our game plan on our PowerPoint,” Downs said. “It’s just ‘Deep November’ — that’s our goal, that’s our main mission, that’s our main focus. We always keep our goal in mind. We always think big picture.” Sam Youngman made nine saves in net, further stretching what started as a unique situation into a real strength of the team. Youngman is far from a goalkeeper by trade. The junior is a forward, a goal scorer — and a good one at that. But when Gwen Haffenden was injured in the fifth game, Youngman selflessly shifted between the pipes, and has
JOE VALENTI
Senior co-captain Ellen Horbachewski is third on EA with 17 points (five goals, seven assists). taken off since. Haffenden hasn’t returned, as Youngman has matched the quality production EA was used to seeing pre-injury. Youngman is up to 77 saves on 82 shots for a scorching .939 save percentage that is more suitable for a Vezina Trophywinning NHL goaltender. “Every save, I can see the confidence growing with her,” Downs said. “She has just done a phenomenal job. “She has been working with a goalie coach at practice, and she has done a tremendous job communicating with the defense. She is playing aggressive and is working on good technique and form. Goalie isn’t, obviously, her No. 1 position, but she has come in and filled in so nicely.” Especially Tuesday, Youngman has had help from her friends. Quite literally, friends — “We’re not just a team that passes to each other on the field; we actually are a team outside the field,” said senior defender Erin Nason on what has helped make the sectional run possible. Nason spearheaded a suffocating defensive effort by the Lady Blue Devils. The Lakewomen came on strong after EA possessed the ball heavily early on. And while Wilson controlled the ball for much of the second half, open looks were at a premium. Sure, the Lakewomen got the ball into the EA end often, but when a leg wound up for a kick, a Lady Blue Devil
was usually there to boot it from danger. “We thought they were a comparable team to us, so we just wanted to make sure we stayed on our marks and kept our heads in the game,” Nason said. “We communicated well and stepped up our game. Now we get to go on to the sectional championship.” And then there was the freshman, Crosson, whose twin, Maggie, scored twice in a 3-0 quarterfinal win over Roy-Hart. Nerves are proving to be a mute issue with the varsity rookies, who start opposite each other on attack. Playing them together up top was a corresponding move to Youngman sliding back and transforming into a star goalkeeper. They are moves that were unforeseen, but have resulted in massive dividends. On Makenna Crosson’s game-deciding goal, she received a beautiful pass that split two defenders from senior co-captain Julia Prychodko. Crosson made one touch along the left side of the field and then tucked a 30-yard shot inside the right post. Wilson goalkeeper Katlynne Tubo had no chance on the perfectly placed rip. “It felt really good,” Crosson said. November could feel even better. Twitter: @Garland_SUN
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The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
THE COLLEGE UB women clinch regular season MAC championship ••• Russell Cicerone was named MAC men’s soccer player of the week after leading UB to two wins last week. Cicerone, a sophomore who starred for the local FC Buffalo squad last summer, had two goals and two assists in a 4-0 win over St. Bonaventure and netted both goals in a win over Northern Illinois. He currently ranks second in the MAC with 10 goals and 23 points. The Bulls (5-8-2, 1-02) play a non-conference
game at West Virginia this weekend. ••• The Buffalo State women’s soccer team picked up a win over New Paltz and a draw against defending SUNYAC champion Oneonta to claim the No. 6 seed in the conference tournament. Gabrianna Boldinski (Kenmore East) had an assist in the 2-1 win over New Paltz. The Bengals will play at Fredonia on Saturday in the quarterfinals. Fredonia won 1-0 at Buffalo State on Oct. 4.
UBBULLS.COM
The UB women’s soccer team celebrates a victory. The Bulls were 12-2-3 at press time. By Jonah Bronstein SPORTS REPORTER
Courtney Mann had a special feeling about the University at Buffalo women’s soccer team all the way back in preseason training. She turned out to be right. UB clinched the MidAmerican Conference regular season championship last weekend with a 2-0 victory over Miami (Ohio). Mann, a Frontier graduate and fourth-year starter in the midfield, was one of eight seniors honored on the field at UB Stadium prior to the game. “What a tremendous accomplishment for the girls,” UB coach Shawn Burke said. “I am so
proud of their effort and to clinch against one of the top teams in the MAC says a lot about our team.” The Bulls (12-2-3, 8-0-2 MAC) will look to finish unbeaten in conference play for the first time ever when they host Akron on Thursday (Oct. 30). UB will enter the MAC championship tournament as the No. 1 seed and host a quarterfinal game Sunday at UB Stadium. Riding a nine-game unbeaten streak, UB has also jumped up to 47th in the NCAA Ratings Percentage Index, a high watermark for the program. “Our current RPI ranking is recognition for all their hard work and dedication to attain our ultimate goal of an NCAA
Tournament appearance,” Burke said. UB last won a MAC regular season title in 2000 but has never won the MAC tournament or qualified for the NCAA Tournament. Burke is in his first season as UB’s head coach after five seasons as an assistant. When Burke first joined the UB program after two years on the men’s staff at Canisius, he made recruiting Mann one of his first priorities. Mann, one of the Bulls senior captains, has provided steady leadership throughout the season. “In eight years of coaching in college, she is one of the best athletes I’ve worked with,” Burke said. “She literally never takes a day off. Not in
training, or in games. For the past four years, one centerpiece has been her being in that lineup every day.” Other locals on the UB roster included sophomore defender Rachel Cook (Williamsville South) and senior goalkeeper Sarah Moore (Orchard Park). Freshman goalkeeper Laura Dougall has a goals-against average of 0.36, a .915 saver percentage and 11 shutouts, ranking first in the MAC and in the top five nationally in all three categories. Sophomore Katie Roberts leads the MAC with 10 goals and 22 points. Celina Carrero has six goals, including three game-winners, and 17 points.
UBBULLS.COM
Williamsville South grad Rachel Cook.
Bulls fall in Wood’s first game as head coach By Jonah Bronstein SPORTS REPORTER
Changing coaches couldn’t reverse the course of the University at Buffalo’s football season. And neither could a standout game from senior linebacker Adam Redden (St. Francis). After firing head coach
Jeff Quinn and promoting offensive coordinator Alex Wood, the Bulls had their worst offensive performance of the season Saturday in a 20-13 home loss to Central Michigan. UB (3-5, 1-3) has now lost three straight in the Mid-American Conference and must win its final four regular season games to become bowl eligible.
The Bulls gained just 38 yards rushing on the day. Running back Anthone Taylor had a season-low 25 yards after coming into the game ranked 10th in the country in rushing yards. “They rendered us to be one-dimensional offensively, and when that happens, it’s tough to win,” Woods said. Redden, who grew up in
Buffalo and Amherst, did his best to keep the Bulls in the game. The senior linebacker had 10 tackles (3.5 for loss), to sacks, a forced fumble and a fumble recovery to earn MAC East defensive player of the week honors. Redden created a turnover on his first sack that led to UB’s first touchdown after the Bulls had fallen be-
hind 14-0 in the early going. A third-team all-MAC pick as a junior, Redden is on his way to earning allconference honors again this season. He leads the MAC in tackles for loss with 12 and is second with three forced fumbles. He has 55 tackles this year and a team-high five sacks. Quarterback Joe Licata (Williamsville South)
threw for 233 yards and two touchdowns Saturday. He passed Joe Freedy to move into fourth in school history with 5,994 career passing yards. The Bulls play next Wednesday at Ohio. UB’s remaining home games at both weeknight matchups, Nov. 11 against Akron and Nov. 19 against Kent State.
Bengals lose to Utica, need win this week to regain first place By Jonah Bronstein SPORTS REPORTER
The Buffalo State football team’s NCAA Tournament aspirations took a major hit Saturday with a home loss to Utica. Off to their best start since 1999 and sitting atop the Empire 8 standings for the first time, the Bengals turned the
ball over three times in the 31-21 loss. Buffalo State (5-2, 3-2) now visits nationally-ranked St. John Fisher needing a win to regain first place in the Empire 8 standings. The conference champion automatically qualifies for the NCAA Tournament. Another loss would also likely take the Bengals out of consideration for an at-large
berth. Mike Doherty (Kenmore East) led the Buffalo State offense with five catches for 165 yards and a 40-yard touchdown that gave the Bengals an early 7-0 lead. Utica went up 24-7 by halftime before John Alessandra (Kenmore East) recovered a fumble that led to a Rich Pete touchdown, bringing the Bengals within
10 points. Quarterback Kyle Hoppy (Orchard Park) fumbled on Buffalo State’s next possession, however, and Utica would take advantage of the opportunity to push its lead up to 31-14. Dan Serignese relieved Hoppy at quarterback in the fourth quarter and connected with Doherty on a 50-yard gain before finding Ryan
Carney (Olean) for an 8-yard touchdown pass that brought the Bengals within 31-21 with 7:16 remaining. But Buffalo State couldn’t get any closer, and in the process, gave up pole position in the Empire 8 title race. St. John Fisher, coached by Lockport native Paul Vosburgh, is coming off a 61-0 win over Alfred State. James Chambers (Lockport) scored
his third touchdown of the season in the win, and Sammy Hasan (Williamsville South) recovered a fumble in the end zone for a score. The Cardinals are ranked 15th in the latest D3football. com poll. Buffalo State is no longer receiving any votes after getting top 25 consideration the past two weeks.
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The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Hubbard Film Society to Mixed breed pitbull terrier screen The Past on Nov. 9 Mina needs a forever home This month, The Hubbard Film Society presents the 2013 film The Past, written and directed by Asghar Farhadi, who also directed the Iranian winner of the 2012 Academy Award winning Best Foreign Language Film, A Separation. It stars Berenice Bejo, nominated for an Academy Award for her role in 2011’s The Artist.” Ahmad arrives from Iran to France ostensibly to sign divorce papers from Marie (Bejo). However, he walks into a complex domestic scene including his two stepdaughters, his wife’s new lover and the lover’s young son. Revelations occur one at a time, leading to a suspenseful narrative that engrosses the audience. As Jeff Simon wrote in his review, “It’s domestic melodrama with laceratingly believable naturalism replacing the melodrama.” “The Past” will be shown on Sunday, Nov. 9 at 4 p.m. at the Parkdale Auditorium, 141 Girard Ave., East Aurora. Please join us, and stay for the post-film discussion. Our restaurant partner this month will be The Iron Kettle. Coupons for a discount at the restaurant will be handed out at the film, with hopes you and your party can make it a “dinner and a movie” event. We thank Tara and her staff for supporting HFS! The Hubbard Film Society
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The Past is a drama film by Academy Award-winning Iranian director Asghar Farhadi. is a division of the Roycroft Campus Corporation. Tickets are $6 for members, and $8 for non-members. Discounted group rates of $6 per person are available in advance. Memberships can
be purchased the day of the event – please come early to enroll. See you at the movies! For more information on HFS, please go to: www. roycroftcampuscorporation. com/HFS.html.
Meet Mina, a pitbull terrier mix. She is about 1 year old and has probably seen more in that year than most of our dogs will ever see. Mina came from a very unfortunate situation. She was chained to a dog house where she was forced to live 24/7 and be a breeding dog. Fortunately, Mina and other dogs were seized by dog control and taken to safety. It was soon realized that Mina was pregnant. After spending some time at a shelter, it was very apparent that Mina needed out of the shelter before she gave birth. While a rescue group or foster home was being secured, Mina had her puppies at the shelter. She was very distraught about this! She was probably having a hard time grasping what was happening since she was so young. Mina also probably felt helpless and terrified in such a strange environment. Less than 12 hours after Mina gave birth, a foster home was found for her and her babies. Mina quickly became comfortable in her foster home and was a wonderful mother. She took exceptional care of her babies until they were moved into foster homes of their own at six weeks of age. Don’t feel bad for Mina that her babies moved on. Mina didn’t act upset by this. Being a puppy herself,
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Mina lived a hard life as a breed dog, but is fun, sweet and highly energetic. it took a lot for her to care for her own puppies. After the puppies were gone, Mina finally got to enjoy “the good life” that every dog should have. Her favorite activities are digging in the dirt, playing with a ball and running. Mina is a high energy, sweet and fun loving dog. She would do best in a home with an active owner and an owner who will work on basic obedience with her. Mina is available for
adoption through HEART Animal Rescue & Adoption Team. Mina is spayed, micro-chipped and current on vaccinations. She has also tested negative for heartworm disease and is kennel trained. If you are interested in learning more about Mina or meeting her, contact her foster Mom at peachyshell113@yahoo. com or a HEART representative at 821-1915.
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The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Entertainment & Community W W W. C P O W N Y . C O M
Ken-East band director in running for Grammy Award By: Lauren Kirchmyer It has been said that Kenmore East High School has one of the best music programs around, and the students and faculty of the school point to Phil Aguglia as the reason why. “I was one of those awkward kids who didn’t really fit into a lot of places,� Aguglia said. “I struggled a lot but it was through band that I found a place. It became part of who I was.� He started taking trumpet lessons, an instrument his dad played, in fifth grade at Southside Elementary School in Buffalo. During his sophomore year at Hutchinson Central Technical High School, his band director allowed him to work with and help other students. Seeing his peers succeed because of his help filled him with satisfaction. “No matter what my personal
successes were, I felt more accomplished when people I worked with did well. That’s why I wanted to be a teacher,� Aguglia said. He went on to receive a bachelor’s in music education from Ithaca College and a master’s in music with a focus in education from SUNY Fredonia. He taught in Massachusetts, followed by West Valley, before making his back to Western New York to teach middle and high school band for Cleveland Hill Union Free School District in Cheektowaga. “He took a program that was in its infancy with very basic skills and turned them into a very respected band and music program in Western New York, all on his own,� said Joseph Greco, who started with Aguglia at Cleveland Hill around 1997 and currently is the assistant principal at Kenmore East High School. “He put in hours
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after school, weekends, working with kids for extremely long hours.� And his ways haven’t changed. In 2002, Aguglia moved to Kenmore East. His workday starts at 7 a.m. and sometimes goes until 10 p.m. He is in charge of wind ensemble, concert band, three jazz bands, two jazz combos, several small chamber groups, individual lessons as well as pep band. He puts in around 70 hours each week. He will even work on weekends and during the summer to make sure his students are getting the best music education. “I run a different kind of program, it’s a little non-traditional,� he said. When students are not in class with Aguglia, they are allowed to go into his classroom and work on material including chords, scales and rhythms. “Great things happen when you allow this flexibility.� “The way he teaches things is indescribable,� said Isabelle Bertino, a senior at Kenmore West High School. “You’re not just learning something you have to memorize, he makes sure you can understand it, which is what a lot of teachers are not capable of doing.� Last year, the Recording Academy and the Grammy Foundation introduced the Grammy Music Educator Award. It only takes one nomination to apply for the award. Aguglia received about 60 nomination emails, but he didn’t pursue. When the competition opened for 2015, Aguglia’s email was flooded with nominations once again and he decided to give it a chance. This year about 30,000 people were nominated for the award. Approximately 7,000 people followed the link in the email to fill out the application. From there, 222 music educators from around the country were selected for the quarterfinals. Aguglia is now one of only 25 people who remain in the competition. “It’s humbling,� Aguglia said. “I’ve won a lot of awards, but it doesn’t mean anything to me unless what’s happening in here, in the classroom, is work-
ing.� “He’s a big part of why Kenmore East is successful,� Greco added. “I don’t know anyone who works any harder. He’s extremely well deserving, and I know I speak for the entire school.� Aguglia made sure to include the entire school in his nomination process in return. When he found out he was one of 25 who remained in the competition, he had to film videos answering questions about why he was deserving of the award. Besides showing video clips and pictures of his students past and present, Aguglia shared in his videos how he brings in guest artists, allows his students to perform throughout Western New York and travel to places like Las Vegas and Disney World, recruits students through unique programs, proposes ideas to the school district to receive new instruments, and is involved with charitable and educational organizations such as Music is Art. He even had busloads of students collect instruments and volunteer in New Orleans, La. after Hurricane Katrina hit. “One thing that is important to me is that my students understand there is a bigger world out there,� Aguglia said. “It’s not about what just happens in this room. I say to them, ‘Leave a footprint bigger than your own so when you graduate there’s something they remember you by,’ and I’m never disappointed.� Should he win the Grammy Award, he would receive a $10,000 honorarium. Kenmore East’s Music Department would receive $6,000 through the Ford Drive 4 UR School program and a $10,000 grant, allowing Aguglia to start an artist in residence program at the school and let the students work with a mentor, a professional from the music industry. “The help we would get from the Grammy Awards wouldn’t just be used towards anything it’s for us, for the students, and Mr. A always puts his students before himself or anything else,� Bertino said. “I truly believe he deserves this award.�
Community Events
New Alzheimer’s Support Group begins at 2 p.m. the last Tuesday of the month at Peregine’s Landing, 101 Sterling Dr., Orchard Park. Sponsored by the Alzheimer’s Association WNY chapter. Designed to provide emotional/social support for caregivers and help participants develop methods/skills to solve problems. Encourages caregivers to maintain their own personal, physical and emotional health, as well as optimally care for the person with dementia. New participants always welcome. Info: alz.org/ WNY or 1-800-272-3900. Book Sale will be held from 3-5 p.m. Fri., Oct. 31 and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sat, Nov. 1 at the Orchard Park Library, 4570 South Buffalo St., Orchard Park. Rare, out of print, collectible fiction and non-fiction books. Each volume is researched and priced at a fraction of dealer charges. Book lovers, collectors and dealers encouraged to attend. Something for everyone. Info: 662-9851, 662-5516 or www.friendsofoplibrary.org. Orchard Park Chorale will rehearse at 7:30 p.m. Mondays (Nov. 3 and 10) at the Orchard Park Presbyterian Church. Cold Blooded Critters begins at 6:30 p.m. Tues., Nov. 4 at the Aurora Town Public Library, 550 Main St., East Aurora. Using live reptiles, a naturalist from Beaver Meadow Audubon Center will illustrate what separates us from our coldblooded cousins. Free. Open. All ages. Funded by
the Friends of the Aurora Town Public Library. Orchard Park Rotary Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tues., Nov. 4 at The Byrd House, 4244 N. Buffalo St., Orchard Park. BPOvations: Music Travels Through Europe begins at 6:30 p.m. Wed., Nov. 5 at the Orchard Park Public Library, 4570 South Buffalo St., Orchard Park. Paul Ferington, long-time member of the BPO conducting staff, will present a free music appreciation talk. Discover the stories behind some of the season’s place-centric symphony nicknames. November Craft! Children ages 6-12 will make their own Turkey Time craft at 3:45 p.m. Wed., Nov. 5 at the Aurora Town Public Library, 550 Main St., East Aurora. Space is limited. Registration is required: stop by or call 652-4440. Funded by the Friends of the Aurora Town Public Library. Kidney Disease Education with expert educators begins at 6 p.m. Thurs., Nov. 6 at 3801 Taylor Rd., Orchard Park. Free to the community. Learn: How kidneys function and the causes of chronic kidney disease; how medications, diet and nutrition work together to help keep you healthy; how to manage other related health conditions including diabetes and hypertension; how to continue educating yourself and what treatment choices are available. Register: 209-7200 or kidneysmart.org/class.
To read event listings from all over Western New York or to submit your own event for consideration in this print listing, visit www.cpowny.com and click on “events� along the right-hand side of the screen.
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The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Orchard Park High School students raise awareness of breast cancer By Anna Cappello SUN INTERN
Breast Cancer Awareness Month was this October, and Orchard Park High School showed its support by making the school pink. Hosted by the Cancer Awareness Club, many students participated in the event by wearing different shades of pink on Oct. 24. The incentive was a free frosted cupcake. “We tried to get the whole entire school to wear pink,� CAC president Shayleen Brennan said. “It is important to get the word out of what is going on in the world and that people need help.� It is estimated that a woman born today has about a one in eight chance of being diagnosed with the condition in her lifetime. Throughout October, CAC contributed many hours to spread awareness on this issue. CAC not only raises awareness for different types of cancer. Members also volunteer their time to
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Pink cupcakes are passed out to Orchard Park High School students. Any student wearing pink received a free cupcake. help out cancer patients and their families. “ We w a n t t o m a k e kids with cancer forget about what they’re going
through,� Brennan said. CAC is responsible for a variety of fundraisers throughout the year at OPHS, including volun-
teering at the Tree of Hope event at Roswell Park as well as cooking and entertaining the families of cancer patients at the Kevin
How vaccines work: UB medical students to give presentation to OPHS science club With flu season around the corner and an ongoing Ebola outbreak, both vaccines and viruses have been in the news on a daily basis. While most people have a basic understanding of vaccines, members of the Orchard Park High School science club are going to become much more
familiar with the subject when they attend a special presentation on Oct. 30 at 2 p.m. That’s when two students from the University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences will give the science club a presentation about vaccines and immunity. The event takes place in the
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OPHS auditorium and is hosted by the science club, directed by Stephanie Collins, who teaches biology at OPHS. Topics to be covered include how your immune system works, the concept of “herd immunity,� the basics of vaccines, the human papilloma virus (HPV) and some myths about vaccines. Current issues like the flu vaccine and hopes for an Ebola vaccine also will be covered. The UB students will illustrate their talk with slides. There will be time for questions and answers. The presenters are second year medical students at UB, both of whom have backgrounds in conducting scientific research related to vaccines and the immune system. Gregory W. Roloff is a graduate of the State University College at Geneseo. He also is affiliated with the National Cancer Institute’s Vaccine Branch, which carries out clinical trials of therapeutic vaccines and other immunotherapies. Roloff
is currently studying the human papillomavirus (HPV). Niema Razavain graduated from the University of California, Berkeley with a degree in immunology. Before attending medical school, he worked at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, studying DNA damage repair.
Guest House. Dressed as elves, CAC members can be seen around Christmas time going from room to room during the Tree of Hope, bringing a smile to patients’ faces. “At Roswell we give the kids hot chocolate and cookies, talk to them, and get them in the Christmas spirit,� Brennan said. “We just want them to be happy for the day.� Cancer Awareness Club has also been involved in communal fundraisers for students at Orchard Park diagnosed with cancer in past years. The club raised money for Kaely Kwitek, a 2012 OPHS graduate, and worked very closely with other students with cancer as well. “CAC is a support system for people around the school,� Brennan said. “We’re all there for each other and get what each other is going through.�
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Mr. & Mrs. Frank L. Marks, Sr. of Orchard Park celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary with a family dinner given in their honor. Mr. Marks and the former Clare Szczepanik were married October 30, 1954, at Holy Apostles Peter and Paul RC Church in Buffalo. He is the owner/President of Mark’s Auto Parts in Cheektowaga. They have five children, fifteen grandchildren and eight great grandchildren with two more on the way!
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The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
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CRAFT FAIR: Friday, November 7th, 7:00pm to 9:00pm, Saturday, November 8th, 9:00am to 3:00pm. Armor Fire Hall, 4932 Clark Street, Hamburg. Sponsored by the Ladies Aux. of the Armor Vol. Fire Company. For more information: Call Karen 649-7272. GUN SHOW: Springville Fire Hall, 405 W. Main, Saturday, November 8th, 9am- 4pm; Sunday, November 9th, 9am3pm. www.Infgshows.com. PLAY WHERE THE WINNERS GO! LakeSide Entertainment, Route 90 Union Springs, 13160. The friendliest electronic gaming in the Finger Lakes. Not the biggest but the best! Open daily 10am. 1-315-889-5416. VENDORS WANTED- Hoffy’s Christmas Bazaar. Saturday December 6th at Delevan Training Center. 716-492-2674. MISCELLANEOUS
HOTELS FOR HEROES- to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org HOTELS FOR HEROES- to find out more about how you can help our service members, veterans and their families in their time of need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org SKI & SNOWBOARD Club Deals. Holiday Valley. Curtis Sports. 627-2247. VISIT WNY’S PREMIER HEALTH RESOURCE!
WNYhealthMag.com Published by CPOWNY
Financial FINANCIAL SERVICES
ARE YOU in big trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt fast. Call 1-800-647-3031 GET CASH NOW for your Annuity or Structured Settlement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Service! 877-6930934 (M-F 9:35am-7pm ET) GET CASH NOW for your Annuity or Lottery Payments or Structured Settlement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Service! Call 1-855-419-3824 GUARANTEED INCOME For Your Retirement Avoid market risk & get guaranteed income in retirement! Call for free copy of our Safe Money Guide Plus Annuity Quotes from A-Rated companies! 800-669-5471 INJURED? In a lawsuit? Need Cash Now? We Can Help! No Monthly Payments and No Credit Check. Fast Service. Low Rates. Not valid in TN. Call Now 1-888-8885152 www.lawcapital.com PROBLEMS with the IRS or State Taxes? Settle for a fraction of what you owe! Free face to face consultations with offices in your area. Call 855970-2032
Instruction CAREER / VOCATIONAL
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certified Technician fixing jets. Financial aid if qualified. Call for free information Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1-877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com
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AIRLINE MANUFACTURING CAREERS Start Here – Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 888-686-1704 FAA CERTIFICATION- Get approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 1-866-296-7093 PRIVATE INSTRUCTION
ART CLASSES in drawing and acrylic painting for adults and attentive children, ages 10 and up. MARGARET HIXSON, 648-5865. www.RedHouseArtStudio.com
Garage / Yard Sales ESTATE SALES
ESTATE SALE
Friday & Saturday November 7 & 8
9am-5pm 121 Meadowbrook Dr. Lackawanna $QWLTXHV ÀVKLQJ DQG WRROV 3ODFH ORDGHG
Edna Louise Liquidations www.ednalouise.com 208-5460 HUGE 9 DAY ANTIQUE/GIFT SHOP LIQUIDATION November 1st- November 9th Boston Place Gift Shoppe 7935 Boston State Rd, Hamburg/Boston (take 219 to 391) 20 min. From Buffalo Sat- Sun 9am- 7pm Mon- Fri 11am- 7pm Sat- Sun 9am- 7pm Shop has been closed for 10 yrs opening for liquidation. Great holiday shopping. C.1890 Murphy bed, Walnut library table, Pembrooke style table, Victor Victrola, Victorian organ, Empire chairs, Federal hutch, Chrome kitchen tables, China cabinets, Drop leaf tables, Porcelain cooktop stove, Lorain kerosene stove, Elgin coffee mill, Black buckboard seat, National brass cash register, Hand painted furniture and much more. All Display cabinets. Many collectibles including.: Boyd’s, Dept.56, Marie Osmond, Mudd pie, Coynes & Co., Williraye,Crazy mountain,Papel ,Mid-West, American Chestnut, Michal & Co.,and more. Note: Tens of thousands of items priced at or below wholesale cost from 2004. Please note extended days and hours. SALES BY GEORGE www.salesbygeorge.net See web for pics & map George Armbruster 716/882-2445
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GARAGE SALE: 22 Whitemore St., Amerk, NY. Saturday June 22. Xmas decorations, childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s toys, misc. furniture. Rain or shine!
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THE CATâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAJAMAS. Feline only boarding. Large enclosures, no cages. 983-0462. www.catspajamasboarding. com Email classads@cpowny.com to place your
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GARAGE SALE: 22 Whitemore St., Amerk, NY. Saturday June 22. Xmas decorations, childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s toys, misc. furniture. Rain or shine!
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ALCOHOLICS VICTORIOUS recovery meeting 10:30am Saturdays at Fellowship Church (Across from YMCA) 1645 Southwestern, West Seneca.
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CLOTHING
JACKET Mens, leather, dark brown. Large, never worn. $99. 662-0812. SPORT SHIRT U.B. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Bullsâ&#x20AC;? $10. 822-8736. COLLECTIBLES
T-SHIRT Buffalo Bills, 1992 Super Bowl, XXVIII, nice. $10. 822-8736. GROCERY/BEVERAGE/PHARMACY
FREEZER BEEF: Whole, Half or Quarter, Grass Fed Angus. Ready Mid-Winter, Machias 814-319-6486. HEALTH & FITNESS
CANADA DRUG CENTER is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 75 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-4131940 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. CANADA DRUG Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-4188975, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. VIAGRA 100mg and Cialis 20mg! 40 Pills + 10 free. Special $99.00 100% guaranteed. Free Shipping! 24/7 Call Now! 1-888-223-8818 VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 4/free for only $99! #1 Male Enhancement, Discreet Shipping. 1-888-796-8878 VIAGRA 100mg or CIALIS 20mg 40 tabs + 10 FREE! All for $99 including shipping! Discreet, fast shipping. 1-888836-0780 VIAGRA and CIALIS Users! 50 Pills Special - $99.00. Free Shipping! 100% guaranteed. Call Now! 855-409-4132 VIAGRA Pfizer brand! Lowest price from USA Pharmacies. No doctor visit needed! Discreet Home Delivery. Call 855-684-5241 VIAGRA USERS! Viagra 100mg/Cialis 20mg 44 pills only $99.00. No prescription needed! Discreet shipping. Call today! 1-800-213-6202. Save, Save, Save! LAWN AND GARDEN
TREE Blue Spruce, 2â&#x20AC;&#x2122; fall planting. $10. 822-8736 MACHINERY & TOOLS
2 large generators, one gas, one diesel. Great running condition. See them at 9105 Boston St. Rd. Boston. TOOL CHEST Husky 26â&#x20AC;?, 4-drawer. New! $60. 8706788 MISC. FOR SALE
ACORN STAIRLIFTS. The affordable solution to your stairs! **Limited time- $250 off your stairlift purchase!** Buy direct & save. Please call 1-800-618-2630 for free DVD and brochure BUNDLE & SAVE on your TV, Internet, Phone!!! Call Bundle Deals NOW Compare all Companies, Packages and Prices! Call 1-855-978-2608 Today! VISIT US ONLINE AT CommunityPapersofWNY.com
REDUCED
CLEAN!
Convertible!
HOPE
Excellent
In Memoriam like new
FIRST DAY
FOUNDATIONS
Merchandise
Ooh-La-La!
Low Mileage Luxurious
CLOCK SALE!!!! Up to 50% off! 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s available! BLYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S CLOCK SHOP, 453 North Street, Springville. 716-5923760. COAL IS HERE! Brand: Reading Anthracite, Also available: Wood Pellets at Dirienzoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s located in Centerville. No price increase! Delivery available, Call ahead, 716-380-2471. COMODE Portable, bedside, by Guardian with bucket and lid. $35. 662-5373. DIRECTTV - 2 Year Savings Event! Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Only DirecTV gives you 2 YEARS of savings and a FREE Genie upgrade! Call 1-800-2793018 DIRECTV starting at $24.95/ mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, starz, Showtime & Cinemax Free Receiver Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-897-4169 DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) Save! Ask About Same Day Installation! Call Now! 800-278-1401 DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available). Save! Ask about same day installation! Call now! 1-800-826-4464. FREE $50 WALMART Gift Card & 3 Free issues of Your Favorite Magazines! To claim this free offer, Call 855-9543224 FREE BAHAMA CRUISE. 3 days/2 nights from Ft. Lauderdale, FL. Pay only $59 port charge! Upgrades available! Call Now! 877-916-3235 FREE GOLD IRA kit. With the demise of the dollar now is the time to invest in gold. AAA Rated! For free consultation: 1-866-683-5664 GET a complete Satellite System installed at No Cost! FREE HD/DVR Upgrade. As low as $19.99/mo. Call for details 877-388-8575. GET LIGHTNING FAST High Speed Internet: AT&T U-VerseÂŽ plans starting at $14.95/mo. Bundle & Save more with AT&T Internet + Phone + TV. Call now. Offers end soon! 855-980-5126. GET THE BIG Deal from DirectTV! Act Now- $19.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX. Free Genie HD/DVR upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket included with select Packages. New customers only. IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV dealer. Some exclusions apply- Call for details 1-800-931-4807. JADE PLANT Beautiful, 8â&#x20AC;? pot, $8. 662-9061 after 6pm. KILL BED BUGS & their eggs! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs- Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot. LADDER Wooden, 6â&#x20AC;&#x2122;, old but sturdy. 652-9618. PROTECT YOUR HOME ADT Authorized Dealer: Burglary, Fire, and Emergency Alerts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week! CALL TODAY, Installed Tomorrow! 888-8589457 (M-F 9am-9pm ET)
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REDUCE YOUR CABLE Bill! Get a whole Satellite system installed at no cost and programming starting at $19.99/ mo. Free HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers, so call now 1-800-492-1952 RUBY CRUET Avon 1876, salt/pepper, wine decanter, 2 glasses. $30. 662-0812. VINE Virginia creeper, potted. $5. 822-8736. WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLES 1967-1982 only KAWASAKI Z1-900, KZ900, KZ1000, Z1R, KZ1000MKII, W1-650, H1-500, H2-750, S1250, S2-350, S3-400 Suzuki, GS400, GT380, Honda CB750 (1969-1976) cash. 1-800-772-1142, 1-310-7210726 usa@classicrunners. com WATERFORD CHAMPAGNE Glasses (6). Bought in 1976, never used, in original box. Lismore (600-318) $300. 649-3716. WOOD BURNING STOVE 2 burner box type. $99. 6629061 evenings. SPORTING GOODS
SET UP For hunting, entire re-loading, complete and ready. $95. 655-5828. WANTED TO BUY
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ Paid! Running or Not, All Makes!. Free Towing! Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Local! 7 Days/ Week. Call 1-800-905-8332 CASH FOR unexpired Diabetic Test Strips! Free shipping, best prices & 24 hr payment! Call 1-855-440-4001 www.TestStripSearch.com CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/ Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make /Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960 TOP CASH Paid For Old Guitars! 1920â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s thru 1980â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s. Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, Dâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Angelico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-401-0440 USED GUNS WANTED: Licensed FFL & state dealer. Rifles, shotguns, handguns. 716-941-3946. WATCHES & JEWELRY
JEWELRY 75+ pieces, handmade, vintage, beads, entire lot $65. before 5pm 984-6966.
Agriculture FIREWOOD
FIREWOOD FOR SALE, 3 Cord (4â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x8â&#x20AC;&#x2122;x16â&#x20AC;?) $300. plus Delivery, Tom 585-721-3728. FRUITS & VEGETABLES
GOT TURKEY? We have apples, cider, squash, potatoes, eggs, cheese, pears! Arcade Center Farm 98 North 585-492-3821.
Automotive MISCELLANEOUS
NEED CAR INSURANCE? Lowest down payment- Canceled? State Letter/SR71? Accidents? Tickets? DUI? Instant coverage! www.InsureACar.com Toll-Free 1-888358-0908. SELL IT
fast
WITH A CLASSIFIED AD!
B-9
The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Parting with your ride?
Pick up our bi-monthly editions at select Tops Markets and area medical offices!
Visit us online at WNYhealthMag.com
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Community Papers of Western New York, LLC
Real Estate W W W. C P O W N Y . C O M
STORAGE FOR RENT
Rental Real Estate
BOAT & AUTO STORAGE McKinley Parkway. Clean, dry areas. Reasonable seasonal rates. 445-9963/ 8826471.
HOUSES FOR RENT
FOR RENT: 3 Bedroom, 1-1/2 Bath Home (near Java Center) Pioneer School District, Non-smoking, No Pets, $950., 716-913-1678. SENIOR LIVING
RETIREMENT APARTMENTS, All Inclusive. Meals, transportation, activities daily. Short Leases. Monthly specials! Call (866) 338-2607
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS
CHAFEE, 2 bedroom Arcade Electric, Security, references required. No Pets, No smoking or appliances, Available Now, $485. 655-5300. DEPEW 1 bedroom upper, new appliances, recently remodeled, off street parking, water included $600+ deposit 481-3880
SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS â&#x20AC;˘Heat & Water Included â&#x20AC;˘Beautiful Inground Pool â&#x20AC;˘24 Hour Maintenance â&#x20AC;˘Laundry Facility â&#x20AC;˘Bus Route â&#x20AC;˘Cat Friendly
LINCOLN SQUARE Open 7 Days
648-1955 or 821-0876
DERBY 2 BDRM. LUXURY apt. 1050 sq. ft., Newly Renovated, AC, stainless appliances, in-unit laundry, covered patio & garage, $885/ month. (716)775-RENT(7368) HAMBURG FOR RENT: MAPLEWOOD ESTATES2 Bedrooms Starting at $835. with Heat & Water, PLUS $500. off FIRST MONTH with 12 Month Lease. Call for Details 649-3712 Open 7 Days a Week. E.H.O. LAKE VIEW: 2 bedroom, one bath. New carpet and paint, full basement. No smoking/ pets. $750 plus utilities/ security deposit. 813-431-2035. RENT, BLASDELL: 1 bedroom upper, $525. No dogs. No smoking. 822-0478. WEST SENECA Spacious 2 Bedroom lower, newly renovated, hardwood floors, Appliances, laundry hookups, garage parking $700. +utilities 775-RENT (7368)
Sale Real Estate HOUSES FOR SALE
Rachel Fox
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Cell: 585-781-8153 560 W. Main St. Arcade, NY Email: RachelFox@RealtyUSA.com 2IĂ&#x20AC;FH
HUNTERS PARADISE! STOP WANDERING
A R O U N D AIMLESSLY, JUST SIT AND WAIT... 5 5 2 8 P I G TA I L R D , FRIENDSHIP 80 acres, perfect for thriving wildlife - deer, bear, turkey and small game. Well established food plots. Quality deer managed. Equipped with hunting houses, a 30x27 lined and insulated building w/ amenities and is campsite ready. $126,000.
LOTS FOR SALE
ABANDONED FARMLAND! 5 acres- $12,900. Adj. to State Land! Southwest valley views, meadows, twn rd! E. Finger Lakes! Rare deal! EZ terms! 1-888-650-8166. NewYorkLandandLakes.com BANK REPOâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;D LAND! 5 acres- $10,900! Great view, woods, fields, utils.,yr round rd! Just off the NY State Thruway! Clear title, 100% guaranteed! Terms avail.! Call 1-888-701-1864 now! CATSKILLS FARM Short Sale! 58 acres- $95,000. Mtn views, woods, spring, twn rd., utilis., survey. Gâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;teed buildable! Priced 60% below market! Terms! Hurry! 1-888431-6404; www.NewYorkLandandLakes.com WESTERN COOPERSTOWN LAKE REGION! 6 acres- $24,900. Stream, spruce plantation, apple trees, hardwoods, beautiful views, gated driveway! Incredible bldg. site! Fin is avaialble! 1-888-775-8114; NewYorkLandandLakes.com DO YOU HAVE Vacation Property For Sale Or Rent? With promotion to nearly 3.4 million households and over 4.6 million potential buyers, a statewide classified ad canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t be beat! Promote your property for just $489 for a 25word ad. Place your ad online at AdNetworkNY.com or call 1-877-275-2726 Published by CPOWNY
FOR SALE- SPECTACULAR Year-round Lakefront Adirondack Home. 5 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths. Cranberry lake (315)848-2393 Visit www.cladkhome.com Email classads@cpowny.com to place your
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CLASSIFIED AD UNDER $100!
Ask Askyour yourCPOWNY CPWNY Sales Executive for Advertising Information or Contact WNY Health at 716/668-5223 or teastman@cpowny.com
Employment W W W. C P O W N Y . C O M
NEW LOCATION
2137 Transit Road, Elma, NY 14059 Now hiring energetic, motivated individuals to create a team for our new location!
ALL POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Please apply in person at our East Aurora Location at 44 Hamburg Street, East Aurora, NY 14052
Help Wanted School Bus Driver $500 SIGN ON BONUS FOR CLASS CDL-BPS LICENSE
Great Part-Time Job
â&#x20AC;˘ Homemakers â&#x20AC;˘ Retired Persons â&#x20AC;˘ College Students Fisher Bus provides training
Work 4 to 5 hours per day wages starting up to 14.36/hr. Apply in person at
Fisher Bus Service 5175 Southwestern Blvd., Hamburg
648-7766
B-10
The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Classifieds W W W. C P O W N Y . C O M
PARTS & ACCESSORIES
EXCAVATION
FLOOR MATS front & back for Hyundai Sonata, like new, $75. 662-3675.
PONDS (OUR SPECIALTY)! Build now to fill with Spring thaw! Drain tile, barn/ silo demolition, old stone foundation repair, land clearing, bulldozing, concrete breaking, demolition, dragline- 95â&#x20AC;&#x2122; of boom, site work, pole barns. Tree services. 25 ton root rake- low ground pressure. 54 years experience. SECORD & SECORD (Hen-Gar), 716-5379363.
SUVâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S FOR SALE
2006 PONTIAC TORRENT AWD, SUV. Good condition. 941-3475. $6,000/ best offer. VEHICLES WANTED
CARS/TRUCKS Wanted! Top $$$$$ Paid! Running or Not, All Makes!. Free Towing! Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Local! 7 Days/ Week. Call 1-800-959-8518 CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ Paid! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-416-2330 CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay More! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Truck Today. Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647 CASH FOR CARS and Trucks: Get A Top Dollar Instant Offer! Running or Not! 1-888-416-2208 *CASH TODAY* Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll buy any car (any condition) + Free same-day removal. Best cash offer guaranteed! Call for Free quote: 1-888-989-6212 GET CASH TODAY for any car/truck. I will buy your car today. Any Condition. Call 1-800-864-5796 or www.carbuyguy.com NOW BUYING Scrap Metal: The scales are open! Bring us your truckload of scrap metal and drive away with cash. Call 913-2265 for current price. Need a junk vehicle picked up? Call 628-2698. Nuwer Auto Parts, Inc., 7178 Vermont Hill Rd, Holland. DMV 5151616.
HOME IMPROVEMENT
ABOVE & BEYOND: Drywall, Painting, Windows, Doors, Floors, ALL REMODELING! 716-563-9206 Insured. ALL THINGS BASEMENTY! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing, Finishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1-800-998-5574
CHASE RENOVATIONS Interior/Exterior
Remodeling & Handyman Roofing â&#x20AC;˘ Gutters Siding â&#x20AC;˘ Shutters Electrical â&#x20AC;˘ Plumbing Full House Restoration Trash â&#x20AC;˘ Storm Damage Removal Free Estimates
Dan 812-5089
GUTTER CLEANING Cleaned, Bagged and Flushed. Debris Hauled Away. One Story Home- $45; Two Story Home- $50. Fully Insured. 25 Years Serving the Southtowns. JIM PANEK (716)674-4803; 361-5984 KITCHENS, BATHS, winSCRAP CARS & Late Mod- dows, doors, decks, porches, el Wrecks Wanted. Highest additions. Handyman service. price paid. Cash paid at time 25 years experience. Licnsed/ of pick up. Nuwer Auto Parts, insured. (716)684-5821 Holland 716/628-2698. Lic. ROOFING!!! STEEL, shingles & flat! No deposit for 5151616.Our Classifieds Get Results WANTED: ALL Motorcycles seniors! Employees passed before 1982, running or not! security screening. Roofing Japanese, British, European, since 1969. G.D. FULLER, American. Top $cash$ paid! INC., 716-498-2422; 585Free Appraisals! Call 1-315- 593-4985. 569-8094. 1stKickcycles70@ LANDSCAPING gmail.com
Services & Repairs BLACKTOP/SEALING
T.M.E. LANDSCAPING: LAWN CUTTING, fall cleanups, landscaping, retaining walls, top soil, seed, brush hog/ bobcat work. Todd, 8253140. LAWN CARE
BLACKTOP MILLINGS: FOR SALE: $300 tractor trailer load. 35 ton. Stone also available. 374-2005.
GUTTER CLEANING Starting at $40. Down spouts unplugged, yard clean-ups. Mike 715-3543 668-8258 LEGAL SERVICES
BUILDERS & REMODELERS
$150 OFF ANY STORAGE BUILDING. With coupon in this paper. Northwoods Structures 716-353-3470. CHIMNEY/FIREPLACE
JM MASONRY: Chimney repair, tuck pointing, brickwork, stonework, block work, glass block windows. Fully insured. Free estimates 997-9945. CONCRETE/MASONRY
ALL TYPES of Concrete Work! Driveways, floors, patios, etc. Dump truck, backhoe, Bobcat service. 337-0500. POURED WALLS: Full basements, garage foundations, additions, retaining walls & trench footers. 337-0500. DEBRIS REMOVAL/DUMPSTERS
DUMPSTER RENTAL: For remodeling, roof replacements, house clean-outs. ANB DISPOSAL, 648-2200. ELECTRICAL SERVICES
K&A ELECTRIC: Residential electric, service upgrades. Pools, hot tubs, generators. (716)713-8748; or visit www. kaelectric.net. RESIDENTIAL ELECTRICAL Large & small jobs. Insured. Free estimates. Accepting major credit cards. Iggy Zarcone. (716)5489605. Turn your unwanted items into cash with CPOWNY classifieds!
DIVORCE $350* No Fault or Regular Divorce. Covers children, etc. Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees. Local & In-State Phone No. 1-800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor & Associates, Inc. Est. 1977 MISCELLANEOUS
ADVERTISE your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North Americaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888486-2466 DO YOU HAVE products or services to promote? Reach as many as 3.3 million households and 4.5 million potential buyers quickly and inexpensively! Only $489 for a 25word ad. Place your ad online at AdNetworkNY.com or call 1-877-275-2726 REACH as many as 2 million potential buyers in central and western New York with your classified ad for just $349 for a 25-word ad. Call 1-877-2752726 for details or visit AdNetworkNY.com REPLACEMENT WARRANTY for all electronic products in the home for one monthly fee of $29.97 with astonishing income opportunity... MyWarrantyRewards.com/ MICHAELJAYCA. 1-760-8954747. lots of cool stuff online at CPOWNY.com
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ABOVE & BEYOND: Interior, Exterior, Residential / Commercial. Drywall. INSURED. 716-563-9206 ELITE CUSTOM PAINTING Co. Spring Savings. Int. Ext Painting. Certified lead paint removal. Drywall & Water damaged drywall repair, Textured Ceilings 716-5784538. 10% Senior Discount. Now accepting Visa/MC/Discover PAINTING, Color Consultation, Paper. Meticulous workmanship. Conservative pricing. Simply better. Jason Kruszka, (716)998-2731. PERFECTPAINTERS: Interior/ Exterior Painting, Papering/ Removal, Repairs. Free Consultation. Since 1993. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Perfectâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Time to Paint! 6487344; www.paintwny.com
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B-11
The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Employment W W W. C P O W N Y . C O M
BRICKLAYERS AND LABORERS NEEDED: local construction and masonary company seeking quality bricklayers and laborers for work in the WNY area. Call 585-535-7526 between 7:00-5:00 (M-F).
Employment BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
AVON- Earn extra income with a new career! Sell from home, work,, online. $15 startup. For information call: 888-423-1792 (M-F 9-7 & Sat 9-1 Central) FRAC SAND Owner Operators Needed Immediately in Texas! Requires tractor, blower, pneumatic trailer. Sting Services Pays 80%...Unlimited Work, 214-250-1985 GREAT MONEY From Home! With our Free Mailer Program. Live Operators On Duty Now 1-800-707-1810 ex 601 or visit www.pacificbrochures. com HELP WANTED!! Make up to $1000 A Week Mailing Brochures From Home! Helping Home Workers since 2001! Genuine Opportunity! No Experience Required! www.needmailers.com Void in WI PARTNERS NEEDED! Soon government law will mandate every bar provide a breathalyzer. Learn how to be the first in your area to cash in. Call 1-800-287-3157 breathalyzerineverybar.com HELP WANTED
$775.35/WEEKLY** Homemailers Needed! $570/ weekly** Assembling Christmas decorations. Online data entry for cash, PT/FT. No experience required. Start immediately. Genuine! www. LocalHomeWorkersNeeded. com
Caregivers Needed
Comfort Keepers needs caregivers to provide non medical in home care to the elderly. Flex work schedule including days, evenings, wknds & overnights.
call (716) 674-0061 DRIVERS NEEDED: AM PM TAXI. Serving the southtowns. 716-827-0200. DRIVERS: CDL-B: Great Pay, hometime! No-forced dispatch. New singles from Buffalo, NY to surrounding states. Apply: TruckMovers. com or: 1-866-224-8948. HELP WANTED Earn Extra Income Assembling CD cases from home. Call our live operators now! No experience necessary. 1-800-267-3944 Ext 2870 www.easyworkgreatpay.com HELP WANTED: CNC Setup Machinist. Due to continued growth Horschel Brothers Precision is looking for experienced CNC lathe/ mill set- up personnel. Lathe experience range could be from 2 axis to live tool (sub spindle) equipment. Familiarization with Mori Seiki machines, Fanuc controls helpful. Programming experience would be useful. Most competitive pay in the area. Please submit resume to Horschel Brothers Precision, Human Resource Department, 180 Zoar Valley Road, Springville, NY 14141 or email HR@HBPLLC.com HELP WANTED: Experienced framers. Lots of overtime. Pay $16.00- $24.00/ hour. 485-6054.
HELP WANTED: Child Care Aide, Part-Time, High School Diploma & Working With Children Required. Send Resume to: Box HB c/o Hamburg PennySaver, Hamburg Village Square Plaza, 141 Buffalo St., Hamburg 14075. NOW HIRING! Home Appliance Repair Techs in the Albany & Plattsburgh, NY areas. Competitive pay & benefits package. Call 1-631664-4794; email: maccime@ searshc.com. wwwsearsholdings.com/careers. ROUGH & FINISH Carpenters Needed: Experienced only. Pay commensurate with experience, benefits, yearround work. 716-646-0047. SKI & SNOWBOARD INSTRUCTORS- Part time. Kissing Bridge. Training begins November 5th. Call (716)592-4963 ext. 2231 for details.
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Part Time positions available on 1st and 2nd shifts (6a-2p and 2p-10p) We offer shift differential and weekend premium pay! Benefits available to Part Time associates including Medical, Dental and Paid Time Off C.N.A Requirements: High School Diploma or GED and current NY State Certification
Scheduling Interviews NOW for Qualified Candidates For consideration please apply on-line at: www.chsbuffalo.org (under Father Baker Manor) Catholic Health is an Equal Opportunity Employer
Administrative Sales Assistant Do you enjoy helping others reach their goals? Do you want to have fun on the job? Are you polished, productive and well skilled in administrative techniques and office procedures? If so, we have the opportunity youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been looking for! Community Papers of WNY, publisher of the largest group of community-based newspapers in WNY is looking for its next Administrative superstar... one who is energetic, friendly and organized enough to help the inside advertising sales group achieve its goals. The Right Stuff This position reports to and supports the efforts of the Classified Advertising Manager, in addition to providing telephone, presentation and paperwork support to a dozen or so advertising reps. Specifically, you will schedule and assist in the preparation of staff training sessions, develop and maintain data tracking tools, print communicate with satellite office personnel and manage a wide range of daily and weekly administrative functions that help this group work like a well-oiled machine. The person filling this role will wear many hats, have a terrific attitude and get great satisfaction out of being the most important go-to person in the office! Community Papers of WNY offers its employees a pleasant work environment with generous time off, in addition to benefit options including a 401(k) plan and medical and dental insurance at group rates. If you are computer savvy, have excelled in an office environment supporting a team of busy professionals and believe you have what it takes to provide the support this group so eagerly needs, email your resume to: klabella@cpowny.com Or mail to: Kelly LaBella, Community Papers of WNY, P.O. Box 790, Cheektowaga, NY 14225. An equal opportunity employer.
CLASSIFIEDS
work! Run your classified ad by calling 716/592-3932
BOSTON VALLEY TERRA COTTA We are a manufacturer of architectural terra cotta for buildings around the world.
We are currently looking for a second shift employee to work Monday - Friday 3:30pm - Midnight. Rate of pay is $10.00 per hour with reviews after 3 and 6 months and then annually in January of each year. We offer a complete benefit package including health and life insurance, 401K plan, and paid time off. Individual will be mixing raw ingredients to create the terra cotta clay. Full training is provided.
Please apply in person Monday - Friday at 6860 S. Abbott Road, Orchard Park, NY 14127
Arcade, NY 14009
COST ACCOUNTING/CONTROLLER QUALIFICATIONS:
Perform and coordinate monthly and annual closing activities Perform monthly bank and general ledger account reconciliations Process accounts payable, accounts receivable and payroll Coordinate information requirements and communications with shop floor management Assist in Development of Costing Procedures and Recording of Job Costs Human Resources (Workers Comp, Employee Benefit Administration, New Hires, Attendance) Inventory Control and Physical Inventory Reconciliations Assist in Development and Maintenance of Internal Controls Accounting for inventory, including job-order costs Travel Expense Reporting and Control Assist in the Budgeting Process
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Bachelorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Degree in Accounting Minimum of 7-10 yrs of accounting experience, 3-4 in a senior capacity Experience in the Manufacturing industry with Cost Accounting is a must Proficiency in Microsoft Excel Job-order cost accounting experience is preferred Working knowledge of QuickBooks Enterprise Manufacturing Possess strong organizational and communication skills CPA preferred
We look for professional, pleasant, hard-working individuals who will continue to promote the level of integrity we have established in this niche business.
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B-12
The Orchard Park & East Aurora Sun / Saturday, November 01, 2014
Orchard Park officials remind East Aurora Educational Foundation to present award residents to keep streets clear The East Aurora Educational Foundation will host its 2014 Celebration Event on Thursday, Oct. 30 from 6 p.m. – 8 p.m. at the Main House at Knox Farm, 437 Buffalo Road in East Aurora. At 7 p.m., foundation directors will present the annual James Ford Commitment to Education Award to community leader Alison Hyde. This prestigious award, established in memory of one the founding fathers of the foundation, is presented to the person who most exemplifies the qualities that Ford brought to the effort to support creative learning: commitment to the betterment of education in East Aurora, persistent dedication to the cause, creative and original thinking, and involvement in community life. Hyde is well deserving of this award, with a record of service to students in East Aurora and elsewhere for more 40 years. With a
master’s degree in education from Harvard, she and her husband taught children for seven years in Africa before returning to settle in East Aurora in 1970. She began volunteering countless hours in East Aurora Schools when her children were young, and went on to serve 12 years as a school board trustee. Hyde also was a member of the New York School Boards Association as the Area 1 Director, representing 50 schools in Western New York. Other contributions include her work with AFS, EPIC, Hopevale Union Free District, The James Ford Foundation, Vassar’s Alumni Association, and her current passion, Crossroads Springs Institute, an education and care center for children orphaned by AIDS in Hamisi, Kenya. One of only a few foundations supporting public education in WNY, the East Aurora Educational Foundation has provided
more than $600,000 in grant funding to East Aurora teachers in support of projects benefitting all students in the district. Each project funded by the foundation has been beyond the scope of the district’s operating budget, and has enriched the curriculum and significantly impacted the quality of education of our students. Proceeds from the event will enable the foundation to enhance its mission and provide even greater support for our students. A not-for-profit organization, the East Aurora Educational Foundation relies on donations and community support to fulfill its mission to enhance the educational experience of students in the East Aurora Union Free School District. For more information, contact Mary Ellen Bakowski at 982-6744 or visit www.eastauroraeducationalfoundation.org.
By Tim Fenster
ORCHARD PARK SUN EDITOR
Orchard Park officials are reminding village residents to keep streets clear of leaves for the safety of children and passing motorists. Department of Public Works Director Andy Slotman addressed the issue at the village board of trustees’ Monday, Oct. 27 board meeting, explaining that leaves left in the street create drainage and pollution issues once it rains. When fallen leaves accumulate over storm grates, Slotman explained, it can cause ponding along the sides of the road. And if those leaves fall through the storm grate and into the storm water system, the leads often break apart and create “organic pollution.” “The main source of that pollution is from the leaf itself,” Slotman explained. Slotman also raised concern that leaf piles in the street might attract children - a concern echoed the next day by Police Chief Mark Pacholec. “Kids sometimes play in those leaves or hide in those leaves,” he said.
Pacholec also pointed out that leaf piles narrow streets, as motorists may veer toward the center to avoid driving over them. And when it rains, leaves become very slipper for anyone trying to drive, decelerate or stop on them. “If somebody’s trying to break … and they end up on two different surfaces especially when leaves are wet - it tends to put a car in a spin, which is going to create an accident,” Pacholec said. “Then that homeowner is liable for that accident.” “And most importantly, it’s illegal,” he added. “You can’t leave refuse in the streets. You could be cited.” Pacholec noted that at a number of properties along South Buffalo Street, piles of leaves have spilled out into the road. In some instances, the leaves go beyond the shoulder and into the lane of traffic. Both Slotman and Pacholec urged residents to keep their leaves on their lawns or the road verge. DPW crews will be collecting leaves from every property about once a week
through the end of the season, Slotman said. Pacholec would also like to remind town and village residents of the street parking ban. From Nov. 1 to April 1, parking is banned on all village streets from midnight to 7 a.m. In the town outside the village, parking is banned on town streets from 1 a.m. to 7 a.m., Nov. 1 to April 1. In the Village of East Aurora, parking will be banned on all village streets and public lots from Nov. 15 to April 1, from the hours of 2 to 7 a.m. In the Town of Aurora outside the village, the parking ban will be in effect from Oct. 15 to April 15, from the hours of 3 to 7 a.m. As most residents probably already know, the streets need to be clear of vehicles to make way for snow plows. “The reason behind that is so our plows - whether it be village, town, county or state - can get the roads clear so people can go to work,” Pacholed said. “It’s that simple.”
New lifestyle website for men Steven Helmicki, an anti-concussion advocate and president of Primordial Strength Inc., a private gym located in Elma, announces the launch of his latest project, a lifestyle website for men — primordialman. com. Primordialman.com is an affiliate of Schott NYC, a premier USA-based manufacturer of leather goods. The website also features high-quality products such as Chanel Platinum, Omega Watches, Boston Whaler, Gustin Jeans and others. “The site offers a philo-
sophical approach to life as well as services and products that offer outstanding quality and craftsmanship,” said Helmicki, a resident of East Aurora. “In the last three-quarters of a century, a lot has changed – technology, governments, world economies, the materials we use in our daily lives. But, one thing remains unchanged – our dedication to seeking out the best products and services in the world. At Primordialman.com, we keep an old-fashioned attitude about quality and the fact that products need to
be built to last. More and more, that means relying on brilliantly creative minds and hardworking craftsmen working in tandem.” Helmicki has also started an open group page on Facebook — https://www. facebook.com/groups/primordialmen/ — which currently has more than 1,400 members. You can also follow Primordialman on Twitter (@primordialmanup). For more information, contact Helmicki at 2138895 or visit primordialman.com.
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