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APRIL 18-24, 2012
Grant provides plate readers By KATHLEEN DUFFY The Mt. Laurel Sun
pond. Armed with their hooks and bait, the schoolchildren set to work to snatch fish. Resident Lauren Greenberg’s sons, Hillside School kindergartener Andrew and third-grader Aidan, were newcomers to the derby this year. “Let’s see how patient they are,” she said. “See if they can catch something.”
The Mt. Laurel Police Department has two extra helpers on the roads with them as they keep the township safe – and neither is a human. The Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) units, which have been in use for more than a month, were purchased through grants, Lt. Dan Howard, of the Mt. Laurel Police Department, said. “It’s one more tool the police can use to provide an increased level of safety to vehicles and pedestrians throughout the town,” he said. “It’s a force multiplier for us.” He said the units make the police respond more efficiently and effectively. According to Officer Michael Cresong, the units have three cameras – two in the front of a cruiser and one on the right-hand side. As the cameras detect license plates, a beeping noise occurs and a photograph is taken. “I had like 4,000 reads one day,” he said. When a car with an issue comes into focus, whether it’s being stolen, unregistered or other legal factors, such as
please see STUDENTS, page 6
please see UNITS, page 11
Derby
fishing
KATHLEEN DUFFY/The Mt. Laurel Sun
Lawrence Harmon helps his grandson, 7-year-old Avery Lloyd, during the annual fishing derby.
Mt. Laurel bus driver teaches love of nature at annual event By KATHLEEN DUFFY The Mt. Laurel Sun More than a decade after he took his first group of 12 students out fishing, the Mt. Laurel Schools bus driver known as Mr. Gary reeled in a much larger portion of the school community at his annual fishing derby on April 11. The day was mostly sunny and breezy,, but temperatures breezy t emperatures were on the chilly side, and the fish in the
pond at Laurel Acres Park on South Church Street in the township swam for deeper water, said Mr. Gary, who prefers to go by Mr. Gary because that is how he has always been addressed. “It turns the fish off,” he said. Even so, some fish took the bait. Hartford school student Devon Kowan caught a big fish. The trout weighed in at two pounds, 14 ounces. Unfortunately, upon release,
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the fish was too shocked to reenter the pond and succumbed at the scene. That particular fish, Mr. Gary said, was one of the trout stocked a couple of hours earlier by by the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife. When the truck arrived shortly after the beginning of the derby, some of the children assembled into a line and each took one turn placing a scoop scoop of about half half a dozen wiggling trout into the
r e m o t s u C l a i t n e d i s e R
Summer job fair Students can find jobs, volunteer work. PAGE 3
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-19 Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — APRIL 18-24, 2012
BRIEFS Scuderi honored at Widener University
o n s s v i i l l l l i i o pa v r pa u r o u y o r y e r rdd e O r ! w o w o n n s s a n a ca b a nd ca
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Students from the area were recognized during Widener University’s 2012 Honors Week. Stephen Scuderi, of Mount Laurel, was recognized as a member of the Pi Gamma Mu Mu International Honor Society in Social Sciences. Pi Gamma Mu members are upperclassmen who rank in the upper 35 percent of their class, with at least 20 semester hours completed in social sciences and an average grade of a B or better.
Help spruce up Paulsdale on April 28 Help spruce up the grounds at Paulsdale, the birthplace and family home of New Jersey’s most famous suffragist, Alice Stokes Paul. The Alice Paul Institute needs volunteers 12 and older to help pick up branches and clear the property of debris at Paulsdale, Paulsdale,
128 Hooton Road, Mt. Laurel, on cleanup day, on Saturday Saturday,, April 28, from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m., weather permitting. Bring gloves, rakes, hedge clippers and other gardening tools and dress for the weather. To sign up for cleanup day or for information, call (856) 231-1885 or email
[email protected]
The registration fee is $200 plus a $25 fundraiser fee. There will be discounts for families with multiple children. For additional information, email
[email protected] [email protected] et.
Cheer and football registration coming up
The MOMS Club of Mt. Laurel West is hosting its annual open house on Tuesday, April 24 from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., at the Mount Laurel Evangelical Free Church at 515 Mt. Laurel Road in Mt. Laurel. The theme this year is a “Birthday Party Expo.” Local children’s birthday party vendors from Mt. Laurel and the surrounding area (including play places, private party planning, party rentals and more) have been invited to attend the exposition and share information on their birthday party packages, summer camp information and general children’ children’ss programs. For more information, email:
[email protected]
Mount Laurel’s Fleetwood Cheer and Football Registration will be held Friday, April 27 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., and Saturday, April 28 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Hartford School’s cafeteria. There are five cheer age groups: 5 and 6, 7 and 8, 9 and 10, 11 and 12, and 13 and 14. There are six age/weight groups for football. Age 5/6 maximum of 65 pounds, age 7/8 maximum of 80 pounds, age 9/10 maximum of 95 pounds, age 11/12 maximum of 110 pounds, and age 12/14 maximum of 125 pounds or junior jun ior high high unli unlimited mited weig weight. ht.
MOMS Club open house on April 24
Save $500
APRIL 1818-24 24,, 2012 – THE MT. LAUREL SUN 3
Students can track down jobs, volunteer opportunities at fair By KATHLEEN DUFFY Lenape Regional High School District students 16 and older who are searching for summer
viewing and hiring on the spot. “They’re all looking for summer workers,” she said. Students should dress professionally and bring resumes to distribute if they have have them, she
pointers on how to present yourself in the most professional professional manner,” she said. “There’s an art to interviewing. There’s an art to presenting yourself.” Interested girls will receive
jobs and volunteer volunteer opportunitie opportunities s are invited to the district’s first summer job fair on April 23 from 4 to 7 p.m. The fair will be held in the Lenape High School cafeteria, but students from all four schools and the Sequoia Alternative Program are welcome, said district job developer Kim Mileszko. Mileszko said 24 local employers had signed up to attend as of press time. “We want as many district students that are looking for jobs to come to this,” she said. “It’s a onestop deal.” All students have to do, she said, is walk around and apply to the places that interest them. Some businesses will be inter-
said. “There’s a wide wide variety of jobs that are available for the kids,” she said, from retail to food and beverage, to camp counselors and more. The fair will be split into three sections. For those students looking to gain volunteer hours, a section for volunteering will greet them. Students 18 and older will have a section catered solely to them as well, and a general section will focus on jobs for 16-year-olds and older. There will also be support staff on hand to help students with appearance techniques and resume tips, she said. “They’re going to give the kids
mini-makeovers from Nadine Jannett Salon and Rizzeri Salon. Men’s Warehouse is coming to give the boys grooming suggestions, as well, she said. Stop and see Diane Blez, president of Career Quest Coaching Coaching for resume skills tips, Mileszko said. “In addition to that, we went around to the community commu nity,” and got about 35 donations for a raffle to give to the kids just for attending, she said. “There was tremendous support in the community,” she said. “The most important thing is that the kids come. This is all brand new. This is a complete district-
The Mt. Laurel Sun
please see MORE, page 5
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4 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — APRIL 18-24, 2012
POLICE REPORT
The following items were taken from reports on file with the Mt. Laurel Police Department: The owner of a vacant property on the 3000 block of Springdale Road reported $200 worth of scrap metal was stolen from his property sometime between April 6 and April 9. The metal was stored in an unsecured area.
lyle
A resident of the unit block of Holly Cove reported that his iPad, valued at $499, was stolen from his apartment on March 29. The victim told police a moving company was in his apartment that morning packing his belongings. There were no signs of forced entry to the residence. A real estate agent for a residence on the 500 block block of Cam-
bridge Drive reported a burglary and criminal mischief. An investigation revealed on April 5, someone forced entry into the residence and turned on several faucets throughout the house, causing water to overflow. Damage is estimated at $50,000. Mount Laurel police arrested a 75-year-old local man and charged 75-year-old him with drunken driving. He was arrested during an investi investigagation into a motor vehicle crash that occurred on Route 38 at Larchmont Boulevard at 11 p.m. on April 6. He was served with complaints and released, pending a hearing. Mount Laurel police arrested a 28-year-old man and charged him with drunken driving, police said. He was arrested after being
stopped for a motor vehicle violation on Larchmont Place at 1:57 a.m. on April 6. He was served with complaints and released, pending a hearing. A resident of the 200 block of Meadow Drive reported that his residence was burglarized on April 4 between 8 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. Someone entered the residence through an unlocked door and stole jewelry valued at approximately $4,000. A resident of the 300 block of St. Clair Court reported that his residence was burglarized between 8:30 p.m. on April 7 and 12:20 a.m. on April 8. The burglar gained entry by breaking a window. Jewelry valued at approximately $3,400 was taken.
Send us your Mt. Laurel news Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot an interesting video? Drop us an email at
[email protected] Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (856) 427-0933.
APRIL 18-24 18-24,, 2012 – THE MT. LAUREL SUN 5
More than 20 employers will attend student job fair Continued from page 3
clude the YMCA of Burlington County, Adventure Aquarium, Six Flags, Medford Leas, Wawa in the Medford and Mt. Laurel areas
wide incentive.” A committee presented the idea to school administration in January, she said. “They embraced it,” she said. “Once the employers started to buy into it, it continued to generate momentum.” The district has already passed the original goal of 20 employers in attendance. Employers attending, according to the district’s website, in-
and Pump It Up. View a complete list on the website at www.lrhsd.org. “Holding a job helps you become more responsible. It makes you committed, and it makes you dedicated to something other than just school,” Mileszko said. “And it looks great on a resume when you’re going going off to college.” For more details about the summer job fair, contact Mileszko at
[email protected] or call (609) 654-5111, ext. 3515.
MORE
OBITUARY Lillian Baldwin Aprill 5, 201 Apri 2012 2 Lillian (nee Chester) Baldwin died Thursday, April 5, 2012, at SunRise of Galloway, in Galloway Township. Mrs. Baldwin was born in Dorset, Ohio, and lived in Somerdale, and sixteen years in Mount Laurel before moving to Galloway in July of 2010. She worked as a receiving clerk for 21 years at Strawbridge & Clothier in Echelon, N.J. retiring in 1991. After her retirement she was a volunteer for eight years at Virtua Memorial Hospital’s gift shop. Mrs. Baldwin was preceded in death by her husband James in
1987. She is survived by three daughters: Lois F. Toryk, Donna J. McCormick (husband John) and Linda S. Baldwin; sister Barbara Ashfield; four grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Also surviving are two nieces and one nephew ne phew.. The viewing was held on Wednesday, April 11, from 10 to 11 a.m., followed by the funeral service at 11 a.m., all at the Mount Laurel Home for Funerals, 212 Ark Rd., Mount Laurel. Interment will be at Woodbury Memorial Park Cemetery Ce metery in Woodbury Woodbur y. In lieu of flowers memorial donations in the name of Lillian Baldwin may be made to a charity of your choice.
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THE MT. LAUREL SUN — APRIL 18-24, 2012
in our opinion
Seven months of this? Ugh
108 Kings Highway East Haddonfield, NJ 08033 856-427-0933
Petty shots between the president and his GOP challenger have begun oments after Rick Santorum threw in the towel in his bid
M
to win the GOP presidential nomination, the back and forth between President Obama and Mitt Romney began.
were bandied about.
Go negative? It works For all of the complaining about the negativity and personal attacks in political ads, the bottom line is that they work. Voters respond to them. Until that changes, expect more of the same again this year.
The Associated Press said the Obama camp already is referring to
The problem is that negative politi-
For whatever reason, voters respond to personal attacks against candidates.
Maybe, this year, there will be a seri-
paign. The Romney folks say the presi-
ous and thoughtful debate of the is-
dent is trying to divide the country.
sues, with both candidates presenting
this election year: If If we want the can-
Obviously, these are critical issues
their vision and ideas for the nation in
didates to act responsibly, responsibly, discuss the
that are on the mind of every voter voter
a respectful tone.
issues and generally treat voters with
The bad news: We still have about
Or, maybe we get the 2012 versions
stop doing it. So that’s the challenge for voters
seven more months before Election
troversy or a nuclear war scare (see
just contin continue ue to respo respond nd to the neganega-
Day.
the aforementioned Johnson-Goldwa-
tive campaign ads.
Olympics this summer to distract us for a couple of weeks.
go all the way w ay back to, say, say, 1828, when allegations of murder and kidnapping kidnapping
We’d We’ d like to think that the candidates will take the high road this year. But we’re not holding our breath.
Students catch fish, clean shoreline at derby Andrew helped to pile the trout into the pond, Aidan learned how to cast and Greenberg laughed that she found out she is terrible at putting worms on a hook. A few feet down the shoreline, Lawrence Harmon helped his grandson, second-grader Avery Lloyd, cast his line. “It ran away with the worm,” Avery exclaimed. “I think you held it too long,” Harmon responded. Harmon said he has been out deep-sea fishing twice before. Once, he reeled in nine fish. The other time, no bites. Mr.. Gary, Mr Gary, the fisherman fisher man himself and bus driver of 21 years, bobbed all over the park, eager to help each student and parents,
said, and he mostly throws his catch back. He works part-time at Mamco Property Management when he’s not instilling fish knowledge on his school bus. “It pays for my fishing trips, you might say,” he said. Mr.. Gary also finds himself eating tuna Mr for lunch at his Kings Grant residence in Evesham Township, as people give him plenty plen ty of fish. “I eat that a lot,” he said. When a student nabbed a 10-ounce trout, Mr. Gary was all smiles. Through his derby each year, he hopes the kids will learn respect and love for nature, he said. According to Alana Lum, Mr. Gary’s transportation supervisor, about 100 children of all ages come out for the derby, derby, and “the more, the merrier.” “Unfortunately, they don’t have the patience at this age,” she said. “They expect to throw it out and get that fish.” The children have found sunnies, crap-
minnows bait. As the students trickled out after learning valuable fishing techniques and life lessons, they received a prize and others received a trophy in the end, given by Mr. Gary himself. At the end of the derby, the kids helped clean along the shoreline. “It’s a way for us to give back,” Mr. Gary said. Lum said that when Mr. Gary catches a fish, he kisses it before throwing it back into the pond. “I kissed a worm for them today,” he said. That was a first for him. The kids asked, and he obliged with a nightcrawler. After all, lip smacking with a fish is appropriate, as Mr. Gary sees fishing as a top love in his life. Ever since the humble beginnings 15 years ago, he said, when he taught his kindergarteners on the bus about fishing
most of whom he knew by name. name. He goes bass fishing between 60 and 70 times a year with a couple of his friends. The fishermen seek lakes in Florida, New Hampshire and Canada, to name a few. “I’m strictly freshwater fishing,” he
pies, bass and bullhead catfish, she said, and they always attempt to throw them back in. Woodrow Wilson High School in Camden teacher Steve Hershkowitz provided his own plastic teacha worms, now available in seven countries, Hershkowitz added, in addition to the nightcrawlers and
and arranged a trip with their parents, “it just becam became e a love love affair,” he he said. said. There were plenty of first-time fishers on hand for the day this year, according to Lum. “It gets the kids into something they’ll do for a lifetime,” said Lum of the day on the shoreline.
STUDENTS Continued from page 1
Kevin Canessa Jr. Mary L. Serkalow Kathleen Duffy
MOUNT LAUREL EDITOR
OPERATIONS
Joe Eisele Tim Ronaldson Tom Engle
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR ART DIRECTOR
Russell Cann Barry Rubens Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
mand it. If we want more of the same,
ter campaign). Hopefully, they won’t
Ed Lynes
MANAGING EDITOR, PRODUCTION
the respect we deserve, we have to de-
of Willie Horton, the Swift Swift boat con-
The good news: We have the
Alan Bau Bauer er
NEWS MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS
If it didn’t work, the candidates would would
another Johnson-Goldwater cam-
(note sarcasm).
Steve Miller
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES
cal advertising works. It works well. Ask Santorum and Newt Gingrich.
The more vicious, the better, it seems. Maybe we’re being too pessimistic.
PUBLISHER
GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER VICE CHAIRMAN
ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD VICE CHAIRMAN
Dan McDonough, Jr. Alan Baue Bauerr
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit Media LLC, 108 Kings Highway East, 3rd Floor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. It is mailed weekly to select addresses in the 08054 ZIP code. If you are not on the mailing list, sixmonth subscriptions are available for $39.99. PDFs of the publication are online, free of charge. For information, please call 856-427-0933. To submit a news release, please email
[email protected] For advertising information, call 856-427-0933 or email
[email protected] The Sun welcomes suggestions and comments from readers – including any information about errors that may call for a correction to be printed. SPEAK UP The Sun welcomes letters from readers. Brief and to the point is best, so we look for letters that are 300 words or fewer. Include your name, address and phone number. We do not print anonymous letters. Send letters to
[email protected], fax at 427-0934, or via the mail. Ofvia course, you856can drop them off at our office, too. The Mt. Laurel Sun reserves the right to reprint your letter in any medium – including electronically.
APRIL 18-24 18-24,, 2012 – THE MT. LAUREL SUN 7
YMCA invites all to Healthy Kids Day YMCA of Burlington and Camden counties encourages children and families of all ages to play and learn at Healthy Kids Day on April 28 from 1 p.m. p.m. to 4 p.m. The event for children and families of all ages will be held at the Mt. Laurel YMCA, located at 59 Centerton Road. More than 1,900 Ys across the country are taking
mer months. “At the YMCA of Burlington and Camden counties, we know that when the school year ends, many kids lose exposure to activities that keep them moving and learning. Healthy Kids Day will help parents begin thinking early about what their kids need to stay physically and intellectually ac-
part in the celebration, meant to kick start physical activity and learning throughout the summer – a critical out-of-scho out-of-school ol time for kids. Healthy Kids Day, a national initiative of the Y to improve the health and well being of kids, is filled with fun, active play and educational activities that will help parents improve their kids’ lifestyles for the long term. Research shows that without access to activities that stimulate the mind and body, kids are more prone to gain weight and fall behind academically over the sum-
tive in the summer,” said Tim tween now and April 29 can take Kerrihard, president and CEO of advantage of the Y’s waive waive the the YMCA of Burlington and joiner fee special and sav save e up to Camden counties. “Summer is $150. Those who register and pay just around around the corner, corner, and is an in full for three weeks or more of ideal time for kids to get out and day camp will receive either a grow so they are healthier and free Y program membership or sharper when the next school $50 off camp for current memyear begins.” bers. The spring festival highlights The event will take place rain the wide array of wellness activi- or shine. ties and youth sports available to For more information, contact children and families at the Y and Pam Hall at (856) 234-6200, ext. 232, features interactive games, class or
[email protected], or visit demonstrations, live entertain- www.ymca-bc.org.
Garden plant saleclub set for April 28 Mount Laurel Garden Club will hold a plant sale on Saturday, April 28 from 9 a.m. to noon, rain or shine, at the Mount Laurel Library, 100 Walt Whitman Ave. This is a great way to add to your collection of bulbs, perenniperennials, herbs, shrubs and native plants.
Send us your Mt. Laurel news Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot an interesting video? Drop us an email at
[email protected] Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (856) 427-0933.
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ment by DJ Lilly along with healthy food and refreshments. Additional attractions include arts and crafts, family swim, a Zumba-thon, a New Jersey National Guard Helicopter Landing, exhibits from local police, EMS and fire departments. In conjunction with Healthy Kids Day, those who join the Y be-
CALENDAR
PAGE 8
WE NES
Y APRIL 18
Mount Laurel Library Board of Trustees meeting: 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. All are welcome. Storytime: 11 a.m. at Kids Play Lounge in Mount Laurel. Come hear a new story every week and then stay and play the rest of the day! Call (856) 273-9500 273-9500 or visit www.kidsplaylounge.com more information.
for
Crochet Anyone: 1 to 3 p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. Learn to crochet or crochet with new friends. Join craft enthusiast Audrey Pache for crocheting and conversation. Novices and experts welcome. Instruction available if needed. No registration necessary. Bring own knitting materials. Intro to Yoga: 7 to 8 p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. Introduction to yoga with Debbie Bedi, a certified
yoga instructor. Prepare to leave class feeling uplifted and centered. Bring a mat, blanket or large towel and wear comfortable clothing. No registration needed.
Rotary Club of Mount Laurel meeting: 12 p.m. at Laurel Creek Country Club, 655 Old Centerton Rd. For more information visit www.mountlaurelrotary.org or call (856) 234-7663. Toastmasters Unity of Mount Laurel meeting: 7 p.m. on first and third Wednesdays at Unity Church of Christ, 629 S. Church St. For anyone interested in developing community and leadership skills. For more information contact Gregory J. Bartz at
[email protected] [email protected] omcast.net or (609) 953-1603.
THURS
Y APRIL 19
Afternoon Yoga: 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. Join Dan Cantor for basic yoga that
APRIL 18-24 18-24,, 2012
WANT TO BE LISTED? To have your Mt. Laurel meeting or affair listed in the Calendar or Meetings, information must be received, in writing, two weeks prior to the date of the event. event . Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Mt. Laurel Sun, 108 Kings Highway East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email:
[email protected] Or you can submit a calendar listing
[email protected] through our Web site (www.mtlaurelsun.com (www.mtlaurelsun.com). ). We will run photos if space is available and the quality of the photo is sufficient. sufficien t. Every attempt is made to to provide coverage to to all organizations.
requires no prior experience. Class is a Vinyasa Flow style designed to strengthen and stretch muscles and rejuvenate and energize body. Wear loose, comfortable clothing and bring yoga mat, blanket or large towel. No registration required.
Fan Fiction Club: 5:30 p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. Learn about the best places to find new fan fiction and write your own stories with your favorite characters. For grades seven to 12.
Line Dancing for Beginners: 7 to 8 p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. Library. Lisa from Dances by Diane will teach line dancing to beginners. Includes cupid shuffle, electric slide, cha cha slide, wanderer, south street shuffle, soul city walk, continental and the bop. No partner,, experience, registration partner or coordination needed.
FRI
Y APRIL 20
p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. Get creative. Library provides supply and teens create the art. A few pieces will be selected to go on display.
MON
Y APRIL 23
50 Awesome Things: 6 to 7:30 p.m. at Mount Laurel Library. Grades seven through 12. What do you love? What makes your life awesome? Join the Awesome Things team to help meet the goal of getting 50 different videos of 50 different people talking about 50 awesome things by the end of the year.
Friends of the Mount Laurel Library meeting: 7 p.m. on the second Monday of the month at the library. For more information visit www.mtlaurel.lib.nj.us or call (856) 234-7319.
TUES
Y APRIL 24
Mount Laurel I BNI Chapter meeting: 7:30 to 9 a.m. Marco’s Marco’s Restaurant Restaur ant at Indian Spring C.C., 115 South Elmwood Dr. Dr.
Teen Lockdown – Art Fair: 7 to 9
Send us your Mt. Laurel news Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot an interesting video? Drop us an email at
[email protected] [email protected] Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (856) 427-0933.
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18-24,, 2012 – THE MT. LAUREL SUN 9 APRIL 18-24
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Mt. Laurel bus driver Mr. Gary brought students onwhile his annual fishing trip on April 11. Above, kindergartener Andrew Greenberg was extremely patient waiting for a bite.
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10 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — APRIL 18-24, 2012
Special to The Sun
Mount Laurel Library Director Kathy Schalk-Greene is pictured adding to an existing creation.
Community poetry exhibit at library In honor of National Poetry Month, the Mount Laurel Library has created a community poetry exhibit. Large white boards featuring oversized words provide the materials needed for customers to add a word or a line to create a collective poem. Is it poetry or just play? Who’s to say, but it has been a
lot of fun. The exhibit will be up throughout April. All are welcome to stop by and see the latest community creations. Mount Laurel Library is located at 100 Walt Whitman Ave. For more information, call the Library at (856) 234-7319, ext. 333, or visit www.mtlaurel.lib.nj.us.
PSA
Sign up for free line dancing
Poison Control Center (800) 222-1222
East Gate Square (Near ShopRite) - (856) 222-0377 Seven Eleven Shopping Center (Corner of Marne Hwy & Larchmont)
- (856) 235-0734
Centerton Square (Near Panera) - (856) 235-2208 Village at the Greens (Corner of Evesboro-Medford Rd & N Elmwood) - (856) 985-1900
Free line dancing classes will be offered at the Mount Laurel Library on Thursday nights from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. on April 19, May 3, 10 and 17. Lisa from Dances By Diane will be instructing beginners in the basic techniques of several line dances including cupid shuffle, electric slide, the cha cha slide, wanderer, wanderer, south street shuffle, soul city walk, continental and the bop. bop. No partner or experience needed. Open to the public. No registration required. The Mount Laurel Library is located at 100 Walt Whitman Ave. For more information, call the library at (856) 234-7319, ext. 333 or log on to www.mtlaurel.lib.nj.us.
PSA
NJ AIDS/STD Hotline (800) 624624-2377 2377
APRIL 18-24 18-24,, 2012 – THE MT. LAUREL SUN 11
Units have three cameras cameras to t o det etec ectt licen ensse plates UNITS
Jersey plates, he said. Before the units were installed, police had to manually check each car. “It saves us a lot of time,” he said. They can read plates from cars driving by at a total of 140 miles per hour. “It’s fast,” Howard said. The department received a $27,000 grant from the Office of Homeland Security and Protection through the Burlington County office of Emergenc Emergency y Management. A Division Division of Traffic Highway Safety federal and state level grant of $49,139 was also acquired. That number went toward the units, radars, in-car cameras and laptops, said Howard. In Mt. Laurel, he said, there are issues in town and potential threats to residents that the department is trying to quell. “If you’re a criminal, if you’re
• Exterior Wood Restoration • Decks, Fences, Log Cabins • All Wood Siding and more • Repairs
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Continued from page 1 warrants, it is known as a “hit.” According to a report released on March 12, “An ALPR can be likened to the town watch concept, adding extra eyes in the community to assist law enforcement, which have a responsibility to enforce laws and apprehend criminals.” “These units can, in a matter of seconds, scan every license plate it passes and check the license plate against numerou numerous s databases and determine if the vehicle is properly registered, registered, if the vehicle or owner is wanted or on the terrorist watch list, if the vehicle is stolen or if the vehicle owner owner is an at-risk or missing person needing assistance.” The officer operating the in-car laptop where the results are displayed will then confirm the plates were read correctly before making the next move. The units are especially effective in parking lots, said Cresong, as police drive up and down the rows of cars looking for issues. issues. “It’ll tell us what the alert’s for,” he said. Misreads do occur, he said, depending on the angle. Sometimes “5s” and “Ss” can be tricky. “That’s why we confirm it before acting on it,” he said. The units only recognize New
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KATHLEEN DUFFY/The DUFFY/The Mt. L aurel Sun
Mt. Laurel Police have invested in two new license plate readers, which have helped the force immensely in nabbing stolen cars, expired registrations, and other legal concerns.
going to break criminal laws, you’re probably not going to drive by traffic laws either,” he said The units will help in identifying and removing aggressive drivers, he said. “It’s also tied together with our ongoing data approach to traffic and safety,” Howard said. It is too soon to tell what longterm effects the readers are making on the community through the data approach, he said, but there have been reductions in crime. There have not been any reports of complaints from area area residents, he said.
Howard said that the attorney general has strict guidelines for the use of the readers. There There are “substantial checks and balances” in place, he said. “It won’t give give out all of the information,” he said. “It’s very stringent.” Only public records information is shown, he said. Seven towns in Burlington County already have the readers, and another three have them coming in soon, he said. “We’re the only town who has two,” he said, both of which were obtained through grants, which “didn’t cost the taxpayers a dime.”
*Board Certification in Pediatric Dentistry
12 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — APRIL 18-24, 2012
Jeanna M. Perhacs Formerly of Meeting House Barber Shop
Is now with the
Brass Eagle Barber Shop Ramblewood Shopping Center 1155 Rt. 73 • Mt. Laurel, NJ 08054
Call for an appointmen appointment! t! 856-235-1586 Saturdays 9-3 Walk-ins are always welcome. HOPE TO SEE YOU SOON!
6 weeks - 12 years old. Full of exciting activities, field trips and special visitors, the themes let imaginations run wild while still focusing on the i ndividual interests of each child. Lunch and snacks are always included. 6:30 am-6:00 pm
Alice Paul sends members to Equal Rights press conference Three members of the Alice Paul Institute’s Girls Advisory Council and a former institute intern participated in a press conference honoring the 40th anniversary of congressional pas-
mer intern Sarah Bear of Moorestown, who graduated from Moorestown High School and Albright College. To prepare for their trip to Washington, the girls hosted an
Following the press conference, the girls met with their congressman, Rep. Jon Runyan. R-N.J., to thank him for sponsoring the Congressional Gold Medal Act for Alice Paul and to discuss the im-
sage of the still-unratified Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), authored by Alice Paul in 1923. The conference took place at Capitol Triangle in front of Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. Participating in the conference were Devon Hartsough and Kiersten Campbell, both of Mt. Laurel and both students at Lenape Regional High School; Keyanna Wigglesworth of Burlington TownTownship, a student at Burlington Township High School; and for-
advocacy and lobby training workshop with Lisa Kaado, executive director of the NJ Women’s Women’s Political Caucus, and vice-president of education for the National National Women's Political Caucus, where they learned how to craft a statement to legislators. U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, DN.Y., hosted the press conference. In attendance was U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-Hoboken, who stopped to talk with the council members.
portance of the ERA. Members of the Girls Advisory Advisory Council are girls ages 13 to 17 who help plan Alice Paul Institute events, attend area conferences for girls, advise on new programs and issues facing girls and receive updates about other opportunities in their area. For information about the council, contact Dana Dabek, the Alice Paul Institute’s director of leadership programs, at (856) 2311885 or
[email protected]
PSA
Send us your Mt. Laurel news Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot an interesting video? Drop us an email at
[email protected] Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (856) 427-0933.
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (800) 273-8255
Jewish women’s group to meet The National Council of Jewish Women, South Jersey section, will be meeting me eting on Tuesday Tu esday,, May 22 at 12:30 p.m. at Temple Adath Emanu-el at 205 Elbo Lane in Mt. Laurel. Please join us for an entertaining afternoon with our guest Morris Zupan who will present a program about the outstanding Jew-
ish opera singer Jan Peerce, whose singing was enjoyed by millions of Americans for generations. Everyone is welcome. Refreshments Refreshm ents will be provided. For further information contact Florence Fisch at (856) 7270625 or email
[email protected]
CHARLES A. McCULLOUGH CPA LLC
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H O W
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16
CLASSIFIED
THE MT. LAUREL SUN — APRIL 18-24, 2012
BOARD YOUR DOG IN A LOVING HOME! NOT A KENNEL!
PETE’S
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POWER WASHING ) 6 5 8 (
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[email protected] [email protected] ettipools.com om or (609) 654-1830 TIME TO SCHEDULE YOUR POOL OPENING!
Refer a friend and you’ll each receive a
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LOOKING FOR A REWARDING CAREER?
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THE MT. LAUREL SUN — APRIL 18-24, 2012
EXPERT TREE SERVICE
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17
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18
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