Page 4 THE VILLADOM TIMES II • July 18, 2012 Glen Rock The Glen Rock Borough Council has voted to eliminate all-day parking on portions of Hillman Avenue to curtail use of the Ackerman Avenue feeder street as a fee-free commuter parking lot. The ordinance provides that parking on both sides of Hillman Avenue be limited to four hours at a time Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. for the 200 feet of Hillman Avenue nearest to Ackerman Avenue. This update will effectively eliminate commuter parking while allowing friends to park and visit people in the neighborhood for reasonable amounts of time without interfering with the right of residents to enjoy their own properties. At the same time, the streets will be kept accessible to emergency vehicles. The ordinance, which was approved late last month, was one of several ordinances in recent months designed to protect neighborhoods from all-day parking by motorists who have been dropping off their cars and taking the bus to New York City. Some members of the Glen Rock Borough Council said they hope that the closing of residential streets to all-day Council curtails commuter parking on Hillman parking will encourage commuters to make more frequent use of the fee-paid lots located near both of the Glen Rock railroad stations, and the bus stop near borough hall on Rock Road at Harding Plaza and adjacent to Maple Avenue. In other business, the council adopted a fee change augmenting the fee scale for the copying of official police records by residents. The new ordinance sets the fee for the copying of an analog audio tape or video tape at $35 per tape. J. KOSTER Temple Israel and JCC of Ridgewood will continue its third season of Summer Music Fridays on Aug. 3. Performing at this concert will be synagogue member Adam Harzvi, who will play various solo pieces from the concert bass repertoire and traditional Jewish music. The evening will also include an Open House for prospective temple members. Meet Rabbi David J. Fine, Ph.D. and members of the congregation, and learn about the religious school’s two-day-per-week schedule with enhanced activities and instruction. Har-zvi recently graduated from Glen Rock High School with an academic achievement award in music. His primary instrument is the double bass, which he has played in the North Jersey Regional Symphonic Orchestra, the Glen Rock Pops, and the Glen Rock High School Chamber Music Orchestra. Along with the double bass, he enjoys singing, playing the bass guitar, and playing the baritone horn. Har-zvi has been the vice president of his school choir, and has been a Bass II in Bergen County Choir for the last two years. He was also selected to be a guest singer with the Naval Academy Men’s Glee Club. In school, he was a member of the concert band, jazz band, madrigal choir, and Har-zvi to perform at Temple Israel’s Summer Music Fridays marching band. In his free time, he plays in various rock and indie groups on the bass guitar. He also composes for various instruments, and received the grand prize in the NJ Arts Collective Pictures 2012 Music Composition Contest for a piano composition based on Philip Guston’s Untitled #142. He will be studying the double bass next year as a music major at UMass Amherst. The Open House will begin at 6:30 p.m., and Har-zvi’s concert will begin at 7 p.m. in the sanctuary, followed by a festive oneg (gathering with refreshments). Kabbalat Shabbat services will begin at 8:30. The suggested donation for the concert is $10. Temple Israel and JCC, located at 475 Grove Street in Ridgewood, is an egalitarian Conservative synagogue with members from over a dozen Bergen County communities. Weekly Shabbat services are held on Fridays at 8:30 p.m. (replaced by a 7 p.m. Family Service on the second Friday of each month) and Saturdays at 9 a.m. During the week, minyan takes place on Sunday mornings at 9:30 a.m. and Tuesday nights at 7:45 p.m. For information, call (201) 444-9320 or e-mail office@synagogue.org.