Fair Lawn-Saddle Brook, NJ|News|
Berdan Grove Fight, Popular High School Coach Resigns In Top Local Headlines
Missed any of this week's top Fair Lawn-Saddle Brook news? It's all right here.

In late 2008, as Zak was winding down degrees in political science, biology and psychology at the University of Pittsburgh, he recognized that a career in any single one of those areas wouldn’t completely satisfy his curiosity.
Driven by an entrepreneurial spirit, a desire to continue learning new and different things every day, and a passion for providing a service to his community, Zak decided journalism might be the best way for him to square that circle.
After six months of freelancing for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and interning at the Pittsburgh Sports Report, Zak knew he’d found in journalism just what he was looking for.
At the Post-Gazette, Zak covered borough government and wrote weekly features for the neighborhood zone sections. For the Sports Report and its child-centric companion, KidSports, he developed feature stories on local high school, college and professional sports.
In January 2010, Zak enrolled in a yearlong journalism graduate program at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism.
At Medill, Zak covered education and diversity in the Chicago area, and later health, science and technology out of the school’s Washington, D.C. bureau.
Between Chicago and Washington, Zak produced a collection of print, audio and video stories for clients that included The Wall Street Journal’s MarketWatch, the McClatchy Newspaper chain, AOL Politics Daily and NPR’s WAMU radio.
Aside from journalism, Zak is a die-hard Pittsburgh Pirates fan (yes, we exist), an old-school rap karaoke legend and a craft beer lover.
He’s also working on a book about green burial that focuses on Pennsylvania’s first all-green cemetery — Penn Forest Natural Burial Park in Penn Hills.
Your Beliefs At Patch, we promise always to report the facts as objectively as possible and otherwise adhere to the principles of good journalism. However, we also acknowledge that true impartiality is impossible because human beings have beliefs. So in the spirit of simple honesty, our policy is to encourage our editors to reveal their beliefs to the extent they feel comfortable. This disclosure is not a license for you to inject your beliefs into stories or to dictate coverage according to them. In fact, the intent is the opposite: we hope that the knowledge that your beliefs are on the record will cause you to be ever mindful to write, report and edit in a fair, balanced way. And if you ever see evidence that we failed in this mission, please let us know. Politics My personal inclinations are liberal, but I don’t align myself with any political party. I enjoy hearing and considering all sides of an argument (especially opposing views) and remain a healthy skeptic of all politicians, absolutists and fundamentalists of any ilk.
Religion I was raised Catholic, but while the topic of religion is of great interest to me, I’m not personally religious.
Missed any of this week's top Fair Lawn-Saddle Brook news? It's all right here.

A juvenile was taken to the hospital with a head injury late Friday night after being assaulted at Berdan Grove, Fair Lawn police said.
A two-year collaborative process culminated Friday afternoon when Thomas Jefferson Middle School opened its outdoor classroom to students and teachers.
Other top stories this week include a former middle school vice principal who pleaded guilty to videotaping boys in the school showers and an Iraq War veteran re-invited to speak at a Teaneck Memorial Day event.
The Fair Lawn High School baseball team lost 5-3 to River Dell Friday in the first round of the Bergen County Tournament.
New Jersey Transit's Board of Directors have hired an engineering firm to study the environmental impact of a proposed Hudson-Bergen Light Rail line extension with three stops in Englewood.
Midday Gallery is sponsoring a fundraiser this Saturday that commissioned 10 artists to make individual works of art using violins as their canvas and will raffle them off to benefit community education.
Other top stories this week include the closing of a legendary New Jersey rock venue and a cop killer pleading guilty to another murder.
Other top stories this week include the closing of a legendary New Jersey rock venue and a cop killer pleading guilty to another murder.
Other top stories this week include the closing of a legendary New Jersey rock venue and a cop killer pleading guilty to another murder.
Other top stories this week include the closing of a legendary New Jersey rock venue and a cop killer pleading guilty to another murder.
Sen. Frank Lautenberg's body was placed aboard a Washington, D.C.-bound Amtrak train Wednesday at the Secaucus Junction rail station that was named in his honor.
The landmark rock venue will close at the end of July, The Star-Ledger reported.
Other top stories this week include first responders suing for injuries suffered while responding to a Paulsboro chemical spill and a middle school bullying case in Ridgewood.
Other top stories include a Newark High School student shot and killed on his way home from school and a man busted on pot-growing charges after he called police to report his wife's death.
Other top stories include a former middle school vice principal who pleaded guilty to videotaping boys in school showers and an Iraq War veteran re-invited to speak at a Teaneck Memorial Day event.
All Fair Lawn High School wrestling alumni from 1948 to the present are invited to attend a reunion this June at the Knights of Columbus in Fair Lawn.
Thomas Jefferson Middle School is dedicating its outdoor classroom Friday, a collaborative two-year effort that will give students a chance to learn outdoors.
New Jersey Transit's Board of Directors have hired an engineering firm to study the environmental impact of a proposed Hudson-Bergen Light Rail line extension with three stops in Englewood.
Stop by Liberty School Saturday, May 11, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and have your car washed for a good cause.