Author: andrewatwal

Atlantic City Zombie walk

Rising from the dead: Atlantic City Zombie Walk set for Oct. 19

 

Posted: Monday, August 19, 2013 8:15 am | Updated: 2:19 pm, Mon Aug 19, 2013.

By ANDREW ATWAL, Atlantic City Insiders

General public beware: zombies are set to invade Atlantic City.

More than 2,000 zombies are expected to take part in the Atlantic City Zombie Walk on the boardwalk Oct. 19.

Registration for the event begins at 2 p.m. Oct. 19 at the Harry’s Oyster Bar courtyard between Park Place and Michigan Ave. on the boardwalk. Tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for children and include discounts at participating businesses for the entire weekend.

There will also be a flash mob with the radio stations 95.1 WAYV and 99.3 The Buzz at 4 p.m., with the official walk to Steel Pier beginning at 5 p.m.

Diane Mitchell, co-host of the “Mike and Diane Morning Show” on WAYV will emcee the event and play music to get zombies pumped up for the walk.

A portion of the proceeds from the event will benefit the Humane Society of Atlantic City.

Prizes will be awarded to zombies with paid tickets and prize categories include best zombie baby, zombies who traveled the furthest, best zombie celebrity, best zombie bride and groom, best zombie Miss America, best zombie twins, best zombie tattoo, best zombie group and best overall zombie, among others.

For more information visit ACZombieWalk.com.

Culinary School Dining

First class dining offered at a substantial discount

 

Posted: Wednesday, August 14, 2013 12:01 am

By ANDREW ATWAL, At The Shore

Culinary students prepare a lunch buffet, under the instruction of chef Joseph Sheridan of Ocean City that costs patrons just $14.95, plus tax and gratuity. The restaurant also offers a dinner service during the week beginning at 6:30 p.m.

Lunch offerings typically include four entrees, a carved item and salads.

Culinary arts dean Kelly McClay says the restaurant has evolved with the changing nature of the dining business, as well as with new curriculum.

“The restaurant opened up in 1982 as a high-end dinner environment for guests,” she says. “We then built a new addition in 1991, with the restaurant moving into the new building. With the change in ambiance, we added a lunch service to our offerings.”

McClay says the restaurant is very important for students because it could be their first times waiting on guests.

“Our students need to learn the importance of service in the front of the house and how that functions,” she says. “They also need to know how to operate in a dining room environment, how to best serve guests so guests come back.”

Students also make some of the food in the back of the house, serve soup and even offer tableside service.

“Students have an opportunity to practice the things they learn so they can do more during the evening service,” McClay says. “They are able to learn how critical customer interaction is and, although most of our students don’t want to work in the front of the house, they must understand good service because no customers means no business.”

She added that a crucial element to restaurants is having the front and back of the house work well together.

With the restaurant opening Aug. 27, a special will be offered for an $8.95 lunch buffet. The special will run until Sept. 9.

For more information visit Atlantic.edu/aca/caremes.htm

Miss’d America Pageant

Miss’d America Pageant to bring laughs, awareness to Atlantic City Sept. 21

Posted: Wednesday, August 7, 2013 12:30 am | Updated: 5:06 pm, Wed Aug 7, 2013.

By ANDREW ATWAL, Atlantic City Insiders

A pageant is ready to take over Atlantic City, and it might not be the one you’re expecting.

The Greater Atlantic City Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender (GLBT) Alliance, Caesars Entertainment and the Schultz-Hill Scholarship Foundation are presenting the Miss’d America Pageant beginning 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21.

The pageant will take place less than a week after the new Miss America is crowed in Atlantic City Sept. 15. Drag queens will strut their stuff during the pageant and will be judged on their swimsuit, evening gown, interview and talent. One of the goals of the pageant is to raise awareness on GLBT issues and to introduce Atlantic City to the GLBT community.

All contestants in the competition are males, with the winner claiming $1,000 in cash and additional prizes.

An event surrounding the pageant will feature a sashay down the Boardwalk from Boardwalk Hall to the House of Blues, and tickets for the event can be purchased on PressOfAtlanticCity.com/tickets and Ticketmaster. Tickets, which are on sale now, include admission to the pre and post parties throughout the weekend. In addition, RuPaul’s Michelle Visage will host the event, which will also feature musical guest CeCe Peniston.

Visage was a judge on the LOGO Network hit series “Drag Race,” which featured RuPaul. Peniston is best known for her 1990s smash hit “Finally,” which quickly became known as the LGBT community’s anthem. Fans can catch her act 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 20, when she will host the official Miss’d America pre-party at Resort’s Casino Hotel’s Pro Bar.

The Miss’d America Pageant began in Atlantic City in 1994 and ran through 2005, but was absent for nearly five years before making its return in 2010. The event was first established as a spoof of the Miss America pageant to raise money for a local charity.

Proceeds from this year’s event will be equally divided between the Greater Atlantic City GLBT Alliance and the Schultz-Hill Scholarship Foundation, and then split among several other various charities. Since the pageant began, it has donated more than $250,000 to various charities.

A contestant search was conducted throughout the region and potential contestants had to complete a submission form and submit a video of their talent for consideration to be a part of the pageant.

Immediately following the crowning of the new Miss’d America, all ticket holders will receive complimentary entry into the after party at the Club Harlem Ballroom and Foundation Room, right nearby the House of Blues.

Mary Shrine Expansion

In The Garden

Posted: Monday, July 15, 2013 10:09 pm | Updated: 10:16 pm, Mon Jul 15, 2013.

By Andrew Atwal andrew.atwal@yankton.net

The House of Mary Shrine, located off Highway 52 across from Lewis and Clark Recreation Area, has expanded its offerings with several new additions which were completed earlier this year.

One of the major additions is a Holy Innocents Garden, which was completed this spring.

The Innocents Garden is dedicated to the memory of all children lost to miscarriage, abortion or other childhood death, and consists of a bronze statue of “Jesus and the Children” and a new “Rachel Weeping for Her Children” statue.

Another section of the garden has also been reserved for an addition in the future.

“We have this area so people can remember their lost children,” said Larry Hames, volunteer at the shrine. “Once a child dies, he or she goes to be with Jesus. On one of the statues, we have a symbol for an aborted or miscarried infant, as well.”

The “Rachel Weeping For Her Children” statue is a symbol of a Bible verse from Jeremiah 31:15.

“The statue is really a symbol for a mother who lost her children,” Hames said. “Rachel lost a child but realized God would be taking care of her child, so the symbol also represents life after death.”

In addition to the new statues, officials have also added a “Way of the Saints” area to the Shrine.

“The Saints area features 36 pillars, with a story of a saint on each,” Hames said. “About half of the pillars have been claimed so far, and people can make a donation if they want their favorite saint represented on a pillar.”

The shrine first began when a young Catholic couple bought property by the lake area in 1957. They showed the land to a chaplain from Mount Marty who told them not to sell any of the land for home sites; rather, they should save some of it to be “an edifice to God.”

In 1971, a dozen wooden crosses were carried up the hill by their donors, representing the Stations of the Cross. This was the beginning of the shrine as it is known today.

Now, masses are held at the shrine on Monday and Saturday evenings.

Hames said this has been the first major addition to the shrine since a new entrance was constructed a few years ago.

He added the shrine is all volunteer-based.

“Volunteers here talk to people coming through the shrine, and also do some of the landscaping,” he said.

Hames has been volunteering at the shrine since 1998 and said he has done “a little bit of everything” since he began volunteering there.

“I’ve helped to put together some of the new areas we have here and have helped to plan them out,” he said. “I wanted to do something to honor Mary, because I’ve had good experiences with her.”

Hames added that he hopes people that come to the shrine have a positive experience, too.

“For some people, this place can give them a sense of peace,” he said.

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For more information on the shrine, visit www.thehouseofmaryshrine.org.

You can follow Andrew Atwal on Twitter at twitter.com/andrewatwal