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www.themontgomerysun.com
JULY 18-24, 2012
FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Kids giving back
Youngsters take part in
‘Donate Your Birthday.’ PAGE 2
Scouts assist
police in chase
BY HEATHER FIORE
The Montgomery Sun
On Sunday, June 24, 11 Boy
Scouts from Troop No. 850 in
Montgomery became local heroes
in Key West, Fla., on the streets of
Old Town after they successfully
corralled an alleged runaway thief
before police arrived.
The Scouts were initially in Key
West to sail on a high adventure
trip, which is planned instead of
attending a regular summer camp
after the Scouts reach a certain
level in Scouting. It took place
from June 23 through June 30 with
six adult leaders and Scoutmas-
ters. Instead of concentrating on
sailing down to Key West, they de-
cided to plan a more personalized
trip focusing on oceanic adven-
tures, including snorkeling and
swimming, according to one of the
Scoutmasters, Barry Weigmann.
“We stayed at the Navel Air Sta-
tion in Key West, where they train
the Navy Seals,” he said. “We
stayed on their campground for
Scouts.”
Weigmann explained how the
focus of their trip essentially
placed them at the scene of the
crime, and ultimately led them on
a multi-block bicycle chase with
the suspect.
“We had other activities
planned for Sunday,” he said. “We
were supposed to go sailing, but
the tropical storm Debbie was
hanging over Key West for eight
days, so the ocean was so rough we
couldn’t go. Instead, we decided to
rent bikes and head into Key West
and were going to tour most
Southern Point.”
The Scouts were bicycling down
Duval Street – one of the main
streets in Key West – after a satis-
fying lunch at Margaritaville. As
they were parked at one of the sig-
nal lights, they saw a man sudden-
ly burst through a crowd of people
at Caroline’s Café across the
street, knocking over a family and
followed by a man running after
him screaming, “Help! He stole
my wallet! Help!”
“The light turned green, and I
said, ‘Let’s go boys. Let’s get him,’”
Weigmann said. “He was wearing
a bathing suit, had his shirt in his
hand, and had bare feet with the
wallet in one hand and iPhone in
the other hand.”
The Scouts, who were ages 14 to
17, took off with the Scoutmasters
to chase the suspected culprit,
who was later identified by police
as 38-year-old Jason Norwood,
Special to The Sun
Scout leader Tim Spring and Boy Scouts Matt Spring, Rohan Dang and Kyle Coleman from Troop No. 850
watch a Key West police officer conduct the fingerprint test on the victim’s iPhone, seen below, at the
crime scene on June 24. BELOW: Two Key West police officers detain the suspect, 38 year-old Jason
Norwood, after he led Boy Scout Troop No. 850 on a multi-block bicycle chase throughout Old Town on
June 24.
please see SUSPECT, page 6
2 THE MONTGOMERY SUN — JULY 18-24, 2012
Programs for Infants - 6 years
Minutes from Princeton, South Brunswick and Hillsborough!
Established 1998
Member, American Montessori
Society
MONTGOMERY
609-252-9696 • www.NHMontessori.org
Coupon expires
August 1
Sisters celebrate birthdays
by donating to charities
It’s always good to instill self-
lessness in children, especially at
a young age, which is exactly
what Montgomery residents Ash
Bhatnagar and Nidhi Goel have
done and are continuing to do
with their two daughters, Priya
and Reva.
Thirteen-year-old Priya and 10-
year-old Reva have been giving
back to people who are less fortu-
nate than themselves by donating
to several charities for years.
Each year, Priya and Reva dedi-
cate two of every child’s most an-
ticipated and celebrated holidays
– their birthdays and Halloween –
to helping others.
They both participate in an ini-
tiative known as “Donate Your
Birthday,” where they ask their
friends and relatives to donate
money to a charity foundation of
their choice in place of giving
them presents. They both have
chosen to donate to the Diabetes
Association, which holds special
significance to both of them.
“I chose the Diabetes Associa-
tion because my mom has dia-
betes, as well as my friend,” Priya
said. “Last year, I donated to St.
Jude’s Hospital, but I pretty much
have done the Diabetes Founda-
tion every year, except last year.”
Priya also explained how she
and Reva began to donate to local
organizations for Halloween an-
nually about three years ago.
“At school, we put a bucket out,
and we ask people to donate some
of their Halloween candy,” she
said. “All of that candy goes to the
By HEATHER FIORE
The Montgomery Sun
please see LOCAL, page 7
JULY 18-24, 2012 –THE MONTGOMERY SUN 3
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BEST PRICES
AROUND!
During the months of July and
August, the public is invited to
the Princeton Airport for free
tours on Tuesday mornings.
Since 1985, the operators of the
airport have opened its doors so
visitors young and young-at-heart
can see the daily operations of
the airfield. Every Tuesday at
10:30 a.m., the public is invited to
the airport. The tours will ad-
dress the past 100 years of the air-
port, the present and the future.
As a privately owned, public
use facility, Princeton Airport
provides many services to the
Central Jersey area – whether for
business purposes or recreational
endeavors. Among the many serv-
ices that are provided by the air-
port are flight training for ca-
reers, business and/or pleasure
in airplanes and helicopters;
sales and services of airplanes;
helicopter charter; indoor and
outside parking of aircraft; and
an extensive pilot shop.
The public will view the air-
craft based at the field, including
homebuilts, experimentals, aero-
batic, and variety of others by
walking around the airport and
watching the arrivals from other
places. An explanation of the pro-
cedures employed by pilots and
the airport management will be
made to assure the safety record
of Princeton Airport. The tours
take approximately one hour, and
they are free and open to anyone,
including groups. Princeton Air-
port is open seven days a week, 24
hours a day for public to use. The
tours will not be conducted if it is
raining. The public may call the
airport to ascertain whether the
day’s activities will be conducted.
Princeton Airport is located at 41
Airpark Road in Montgomery.
For further information, call (609)
921-3100 or visit www.princeton-
airport.com.
Tour Princeton Airport
in July and August
Wendy Scloiland VMD · Debbie Ellioii, DVM
20 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245 | [email protected] | www.elauwit.com
Hopewell
Lawrence
Montgomery
Princeton
Robbinsville
West Windsor
6 THE MONTGOMERY SUN — JULY 18-24, 2012
20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A
Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,
Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly to
select addresses in the 08502 ZIP code. If
you are not on the mailing list, six-month
subscriptions are available for $39.99. PDFs
of the publication are online, free of charge.
For information, please call 609-751-0245.
To submit a news release, please email
[email protected]. For adver-
tising information, call 609-751-0245 or
send an email to
[email protected]. The
Sun welcomes comments from readers –
including any information about errors that
may call for a correction to be printed.
SPEAK UP
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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], via fax at
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you can drop them off at our office, too. The
Montgomery Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium – includ-
ing electronically.
PUBLISHER Steve Miller
GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR Alan Bauer
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele
NEWS
MANAGING EDITOR, NEWS Kevin Canessa Jr.
MANAGING EDITOR, PRODUCTION Mary L. Serkalow
MONTGOMERY EDITOR Heather Fiore
OPERATIONS
DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR Tim Ronaldson
ART DIRECTOR Tom Engle
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens
VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
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CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Dan McDonough, Jr.
VICE CHAIRMAN Alan Bauer
Y
ou’ve no doubt passed someone
texting while driving. The per-
son’s focus isn’t on the road. In-
stead, it’s on spelling a word correctly
or getting that last comment in.
But a bill in the state Senate – it
passed recently by a 38-0 margin –
would hike fines for texting-while-driv-
ing considerably. And repeat offenders
would face stiff fines and a possible
driver’s license suspension.
If the bill passes in the Assembly,
and Gov. Christie signs the bill into
law, a first-time offender would face a
fine of $200, up from the current $100
fine.
A second offense would run a mo-
torist a $400 fine, and a third offense,
$600.
A three-time offender would be
slapped with three driver’s-license
points.
And a fourth-time offender would be
subject to a license suspension of 90
days.
We applaud this bill and want to see
the Assembly pass it and the governor
sign it into law.
Though New Jersey already has
tough texting-while-driving laws on
the books, a short ride on any of the
state’s major roads would reveal the
penalties are not yet tough enough.
Far too often, people recklessly pay
more attention to their texting than
they do the road.
And quite frankly, the larger fines
and the prospect of losing a driver’s li-
cense for up to three months for repeat
offenders is the right penalty for this
kind of behavior.
It’s bad enough in 2012 when people
drive while speaking on the phone
(without the use of a headset or blue-
tooth device).
But texting is clearly worse. And
more distracting. And it’s time people
who gamble with the lives of others –
while driving and texting – pay a hefty
price for doing so.
This bill must pass in the Assembly,
and the governor must sign it into law.
Swiftly.
in our opinion
Texting bill is on the button
Fines for sending messages while driving would double under new law
Will you still text and drive?
Despite the prospect of a much
tougher state texting-and-driving law,
we wonder if it’ll matter to local drivers.
Will you still text and drive if the new
law passes?
while one of the Scout leaders, Tim Spring,
caught the whole incident – Norwood with
the wallet and iPhone in either hand – on
his iPhone simultaneously.
Weigmann explained how he and the
Scouts chased Norwood down one of the
streets off of Duval Street, Whitehead
Street, watching him toss the stolen wallet
into the bushes next to a bed and breakfast,
the Banyan House, while turning the cor-
ner to the next block of his attempted es-
cape route.
After Norwood realized that the Scouts
were vigorously chasing him, he hopped the
fence into the back yard of the Banyan
House to try and regain some energy, ac-
cording to Weigmann.
“I know he had nothing to do because he
was cornered, so we waited it out for about
four minutes and he came out with nothing
in his hands,” he said. “He started saying,
‘What are you guys doing? Why are you
chasing me? You’re trying to assault me.’”
And I said, ‘You know damn well why we’re
chasing you.’”
After Weigmann exchanged some words
with Norwood, the victim – a Brazilian
tourist, Adriano Carneiro Furlan, showed
up after apparently running after Norwood
himself, with his wallet in hand that he re-
ceived from a bystander who saw Norwood
toss his wallet into the bushes on the previ-
ous block.
Furlan confronted Norwood in front of
the Banyan House, asking where his iPhone
was, but Norwood kept denying that he had
anything to do with it and said he only had
$3 to his name, Weigmann explained.
“I said, ‘Don’t worry about it, when police
get here, we’ll figure it out,’” Weigmann
said. “And then, he took off running like
jackrabbit and took us on another four-
block chase.”
Fortunately, Weigmann already had 9-1-1
on the line as he and the Scouts were biking,
which allowed him to keep the police in-
formed of their exact locations, which is
what allowed police to catch up to the
Scouts when they finally stalled Norwood at
an intersection four blocks from the Banyan
House.
“All of the Scouts were dogging this guy,”
Weigmann said. “We got to the corner of
two streets, and he [Norwood] ran out of
gas, so one of our Scoutmasters, Chris, de-
tained him by keeping him talking and he
distracted him until the cops showed up and
detained him.”
After Furlan identified Norwood as the
thief, the police arrested him, but still didn’t
find the iPhone that was missing after Nor-
Suspect nabbed by quick-thinking Scouts
SUSPECT
Continued from page 1
please see POLICE, page 10
JULY 18-24, 2012 –THE MONTGOMERY SUN 7
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Local kids seek to help others
Trenton Soup Kitchen, so every-
one gets some candy. We started
that when I was in fifth grade, and
I did it this year with my Interact
Club. I introduced it to them, and
we’re going to do it again next
year.”
Since Priya and Reva were
looking for other outlets to donate
other than their birthdays and
Halloween, their dad suggested
that they start doing something at
Montgomery’s fireworks event,
which is when they chose to focus
on donating to a cause known as
Operation Homefront.
“I was looking into different
things to do, and he gave me the
idea of Operation Homefront,”
Priya said. “So, I looked into it,
and I thought it was a great idea.”
Reva also added how they want-
ed to focus their efforts on some-
thing related to Independence Day
since they were going to be setting
up a display at the fireworks,
which is essentially why they
chose a military organization.
“We wanted to do something for
the troops, so we looked online,
and we found a lot of things, but
Operation Homefront was one of
the best ones that we found, so we
chose it,” she said. “We looked at a
few other organizations, but we
also had to look up how much
they gave to the troops. Operation
Homefront only takes 10 to 15 per-
cent of proceeds, and 85 to 90 per-
cent goes to the troops.”
In short, Operation Homefront
is a non-profit organization that
provides food for soldiers and
their families that they leave be-
hind in the United States. It’s basi-
cally money to support soldiers’
families while they’re here, and to
pay for expensive necessities such
as diapers, and items of that na-
ture, hence the name “Home-
front.”
Priya and Reva started this ini-
tiative last year at Montgomery’s
fireworks event. They contacted
Operation Homefront Tri-State,
which sent them a bunch of
LOCAL
Continued from page 2
please see KIDS, page 12
Visit us online at www.themontgomerysun.com
WEDNESDAY JULY 18
Smoke and Bubbles: Ages 3 to 4.
10:30 to 11:15 a.m. at Mary Jacobs
Library. Little ones will be mes-
merized when Mad Science of
West New Jersey uses dry ice to
make bubbling potions, shivering
quarters, popping corks and a
thrilling carbon dioxide shower.
They’ll even learn that the
“smoke” from dry ice tastes just
like a soda burp. Registration
required. Call (609) 924-7073,
ext. 5.
Slime Time: Grades kindergarten
through second from 1 to 2 p.m.;
grades third through fifth from
2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Ooze into a
gooey hour of sliming around.
Explore, create and play with the
most entertaining and useful
molecule known to science and
discover its many shapes and
forms. Create slime using a Mad
Science of West New Jersey
recipe and then enter the Slime
Olympics! Make slime to take
home and keep. Registration
required. Call (609) 924-7073,
ext. 5.
THURSDAY JULY 19
Story Time: Ages 2 to 6. 10 to 10:30
a.m. at Mary Jacobs Library. Sto-
ries, songs and more. This week’s
theme is “Hoot.” No registration
needed.
Lego Club: 2:30 to 3:15 p.m. at Mary
Jacobs Library. Prizes awarded to
all. Registration required. Call
(609) 924-7073, ext. 5.
Cupcake Boss: Grades six and
above. 4 to 5:15 p.m. at Mary
Jacobs Library. Library provides
the cupcakes and everything
needed to decorate them. At the
end, participants can eat their
cupcakes. Registration required.
Call (609) 924-7073, ext. 5.
FRIDAY JULY 20
Baby Music with Miss Jenni: Ages
newborn to 36 months. 10 to
10:45 a.m. at Mary Jacobs
Library. Join Miss Jenni, a trained
CALENDAR PAGE 8 JULY 18-24, 2012
WANT TO BE LISTED?
To have your meeting or affair listed in the Calendar or Meetings,
information must be received, in writing, two weeks prior to the
date of the event.
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Sun, 108 Kings Highway
East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email: news@themontgomery-
sun.com. Or you can submit a calendar listing through our website
(www.themontgomerysun.com).
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ON campus
POLICE REPORT
The following report were on
file with the Montgomery Police
Department.
On July 5 at 9:18 a.m., the Mont-
gomery Police Department re-
sponded with Montgomery Fire
Company No. 1 and Hillsborough
EMS to a residence on Tall Cedar
Court for a natural gas leak and a
burn victim. A 24-year-old Plain-
field man had suffered minor
burns to his arm, according to re-
ports. The man, a contractor, was
working on a furnace with the
gas turned off when apparently,
some residual gas ignited, caus-
ing a small fire and his burns.
Fire damage was minimal and
contained to the furnace, police
said. The homeowners, who were
home at the time, were allowed to
return to their home after it was
ventilated by firefighters.
wood came out from hiding in the
back yard of the Banyan House.
This is when Weigmann realized
that Norwood threw the phone
somewhere around there, which is
when he sent the Scouts on a
search for it.
One of the Scouts found the
iPhone in one of the bushes be-
hind the Banyan House, but didn’t
touch it so that the police could lift
fingerprints from the phone.
“The cops took the prints, and
they were positive for Jason Nor-
wood because he was already in
the system,” Weigmann said.
Norwood was arrested only
three weeks prior to this incident
on June 2 for petty theft, however,
because the value of Furlan’s
items – the money and credit
cards in his wallet as well as the
iPhone – was greater than $500,
Norwood was charged with grand
theft, police said. After Norwood
was arrested, Weigmann asked
the Key West police to do the fin-
gerprinting at the scene instead of
at the police station so that the
Scouts could get a lesson on finger-
printing after their successful ven-
ture. Connor, Weigmann’s son and
one of the Scouts, thought the fin-
gerprinting part of the whole inci-
dent was really informative, and
that the overall trip was an experi-
ence that will never be forgotten.
“I’ve seen them do it (finger-
printing) in demonstrations, but
I’ve never seen it done when some-
thing actually happens, so it was
pretty cool,” he said. “So far, it was
the best. I hope we have more ex-
periences like this in the future.”
Connor also said that he, along
with the other Scouts, were confi-
dent throughout the entire chase,
and not scared or intimidated.
“It felt pretty normal,” he said.
“It never really felt like we should-
n’t be doing it. It was kind of a
good feeling inside and it just felt
good to help someone. This is what
we should do as Scouts.”
Furlan, the Brazilian victim, is
a commercial pilot who flies to
Key West once a month. After
everything happened, he sent a
personal letter to Boy Scout Troop
No. 850 graciously thanking them
for all of their help.
“I don't know how thank those
heroes,” Furlan said. “I just know
that I learned what it is to meet
friendly and honest people while
travelling abroad. The parents of
those Scouts’ should be very
proud! Thank you all so very
much! You helped turn what could
have been a ‘ruined vacation’ into
the opposite – a very positive and
inspiring experience.”
Another Scoutmaster who
helped lead the chase with
Weigmann, Dan Punzik, ex-
plained how it’s part of a Scout’s
duty to serve and protect, which is
why they took off after Norwood.
“Pretty much, you see a situa-
tion and instinctively you react
and that’s what happened,” he
said. “We saw a situation, and we
were right there, literally 25 to 30
feet away from it, and because we
were so close and because we had
so many people with us on bicy-
cles, you kind of instantly assess
the situation and knew you could
get this guy. So, we took off with-
out even thinking or saying a
thing.” Punzik continued to ex-
plain how he assessed the situa-
tion, and deemed it to be safe,
since it was apparent that Nor-
wood wasn’t carrying any
weapons and he was running
barefoot while the group of Scouts
was riding alongside on bikes.
“At a certain point, you realize
he’s not going to outrun you and
that he’s going to collapse or some-
thing,” Punzik said. “We assessed
it initially, and we said we have 17
people and this is the right thing
to do. I know I’ve seen situations
like that before where nobody has
done anything. It was really good
that we did it because, if not, no
one else there followed the guy or
took off or called police. No one
took any action except for us, and
I’m glad we did because we helped
a person out and that’s the impor-
tant thing.”
10 THE MONTGOMERY SUN — JULY 18-24, 2012
SAME DAY APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
609-683-1700
(Research Park ) 415 Wall Street, Princeton (Opposite Princeton Airport)
www.DrJaysChiro.com
Dr. Jay Scott Horow|tz
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Police assisted by Scouts in catching suspect
POLICE
Continued from page 6
music instructor, and bog and
groove to develop musical apti-
tude. Sing, play simple instru-
ments and use nursery rhymes to
help children build a strong foun-
dation of musical literacy. Regis-
tration required. Call (609) 924-
7073, ext. 5.
SATURDAY JULY 21
Free Document Shredding: 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m. at Montgomery Fire Co.
No. 1, 33 Belle Mead-Griggstown
Road. Rain or shine. Residents
from all 21 Somerset County
municipalities are invited to have
personal documents shredded at
as many free, on-site, mobile
paper-shredding events as they
wish to attend. Residents do not
have to reside in a town hosting
an event to participate. Docu-
ments will be commercially
shredded safely, privately and
properly by trained, licensed and
bonded document-destruction
specialists. Staples and paper-
clips do not have to be removed.
Residents may bring documents
in up to six boxes, containers and
bags per visit and will be asked to
take back their receptacles. Par-
ticipants may stay and watch as
their documents are shred, if
they wish. No recyclable junk
mail, magazines or newspapers
will be accepted. For more infor-
mation visit
www.montgomery.nj.us.
MONDAY JULY 23
Crafts for Little Hands: Ages 2 to 6.
10 and 11 a.m. at Mary Jacobs
Library. Crafting fun with a spe-
cial theme. Registration required.
Register online or call (609) 924-
7073, ext. 5.
TUESDAY JULY 24
Toddler Sing with Pat: Ages 1 to 3.
10:30 to 11 a.m. at Mary Jacobs
Library. Sing along fun with Pat
McKinley. No registration
required.
Mah Jongg Open Play: 1 to 4 p.m. at
Mary Jacobs Library. Come enjoy
a game or two. Everyone will get
a chance to play. Program is free
and open to the public. For infor-
mation call (609) 924-7073, ext.
4.
Knitting Basics: 7 to 8:30 p.m. at
Mary Jacobs library. Course is
designed to teach beginners
basics of knitting but is also use-
ful to those that might need a
refresher. Led by Jan Seketowski,
professional knitter and instruc-
tor from the Woolly Lamb in Pen-
nington, this class will teach: how
to cast on; the knit stitch; the purl
stitch; binding off. By second
class knitters will be able to knit a
scarf. One skein of yarn and nee-
dles will be provided. Registration
required. Register online or call
(609) 924-7073, ext. 4.
Bible Study of the Psalms: Weekly
Bible study group at the First
Reformed Church of Rocky Hill.
Open to all and led by Pastor
Emeritus Ruth Fries, long-time
minister at the church, and Debo-
rah Westbrook, a graduate of
Wesley and Princeton Seminar-
ies. The group is studying the
Psalms of the Old Testament and
meets at 10:30 a.m. at Pastor
Fries' house. Call (609) 921-6336
for directions or questions.
JULY 18-24, 2012 –THE MONTGOMERY SUN 11
Great Cars
From Good People
SERVICE SPECIALS
DETAILING SPECIAL
$
1ë9

• Hand Wash & Wax
• Vacuum & Shampoo Carpets
• Clean Windows, Door Jambs, etc.
• Complete Vehicle Detail - Inside & Out
Coupon must be presented when car is
dropped off for service. May not be com-
bined with other offers. Expires 7/31/12.
Reg $179.95
LUBE OIL & FILTER CHANGE
$
â
00
0ff
Coupon must be presented when car is
dropped off for service. May not be com-
bined with other offers. Expires 7/31/12.
TIRE SPECIAL
$
400ff
Set of 4 Tires
$10 Per Tire/Minimum of 2
Coupon must be presented when car is
dropped off for service. May not be com-
bined with other offers. Expires 7/31/12.
PRE-OWNED SPECIALS
WE BUY CARS
2004 Jeep Liberty Limited
4WD, V6 engine & auto trans, ABS, air bags, A/C, all power options
including sunroof, amfm cd radio, leather seating, roof rails, t/glass,
rear defroster & wiper, cast wheels, keyless entry and alarm system.
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more Nice SUV! Graphite Grey 5H550271 114298 miles $13,995
SEE ALL 60+ VEHICLES IN OUR CURRENT
INVENTORY AT: WWW.BELLEMEADGARAGE.COM
2454 Route 206 Belle Mead, NJ 08502 908-359-0017
www.bellemeadgarage.com
1666 Hamilton Ave.
Hamilton, NJ 08629
609-584-5252
www.priornami.com
It’s not too early for Back-To-School supplies!
15% OFF
CARRYING CASE
WITH PURCHASE OF ANY
LAPTOP OR TABLET
FREE
LAPTOP TUNE-UP
Tune-up Includes:
• Full Scan of Virus, Malware & Spyware
• Install all Microsoft updates & security patches
• Hard drive integrity scan
CALENDAR
CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
Visit us online at www.themontgomerysun.com
12 THE MONTGOMERY SUN — JULY 18-24, 2012
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things, including a nearly six-foot
long banner that people could sign
for the soldiers who are overseas.
“It’s sent to troops in
Afghanistan, and it kind of makes
their day,” Priya said. “People
could sign their names, and little
personalized statements.”
From this year and last year,
Priya and Reva obtained hun-
dreds of signatures and messages
from hundreds of people who at-
tended the fireworks display.
Operation Homefront also sup-
plied the girls with dog tags and
insulated cup holders, with a $1
suggested donation for each. Last
year, they raised $300, and this
year, they raised $149.
“This year, we only raised $149
because we weren’t really asking
or urging people to donate, it was
more about awareness,” Reva
said.
Along with Operation Home-
front, they also contacted the Na-
tional Guard, which supplied
them with t-shirts, hats, pens,
bumper stickers, and a variety of
little gadgets.
“If people donated some money,
they would get some things,”
Priya said. “We weren’t really sell-
ing them, but giving them away so
it could create awareness about
the National Guard.”
Since their efforts with Opera-
tion Homefront have been so suc-
cessful, they plan on doing it
every year from here on out.
In addition to all of the
fundraising events they do yearly,
they also have some new ideas
for this year and the years to
come.
“My dad also gave me this idea
about lunch at school,” Reva said.
“They make you get a fruit and a
vegetable, but people usually
don’t eat it and they just throw it
away. So, I was thinking I could
have a bucket, and then people
could put their fruits and vegeta-
bles in there. Then, every couple
of days, people could come and
take it to the Trenton Soup
Kitchen or the Montgomery Food
Pantry.”
Since Reva’s ambitiousness lies
during the school year, Priya
wants to focus more on holiday
donations.
“For Christmas, I had this idea
of getting a bunch of presents to-
gether and donating it to an adop-
tion home or something.”
Priya and Reva also created
their own website, kidsalso.org,
which details their entire dona-
tion enterprise, and informs peo-
ple everywhere of what they’re
trying to accomplish. If you
would like to learn more about
their causes, or learn how to do-
nate to different organizations,
visit kidsalso.org.
Kids find support from
Operation Homefront
KIDS
Continued from page 7
20 Nassau Street
Princeton, NJ 08542
609.751.0245
elauwit.com
R&V Hall Construction, Inc.
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www.RVHall.com • [email protected]
classified
T HE MO N T G O ME R Y S U N
JULY 18-24, 2012 PAGE 14
W H A T Y O U N E E D T O K N O W
All ads are based on a 5 line ad, 15-18 characters per line. • Additional lines: $9, Bold/Reverse Type: $9 • Add color to any box ad for $20. • Deadline: Wednesday - 5pm for the following week.
All classified ads must be prepaid. • Your Classified ad will run in all 10 of The Sun newspapers each week! • Be sure to check your ad the first day it appears.
We will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion, so call us immediately with any errors in your ad. • No refunds are given, only advertising credit.
L I NE
ADS
Only
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H O W T O C O N T A C T U S
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CHECK OUT THE SUN CLASSIFIEDS!
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ADS Only
$
25per week List a text-only ad for your yard
sale, job posting or merchandise.
Roofing
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 7/31/12.
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complete roofing
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Must present coupon at time of estimate.
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roofing
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Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 7/31/12.
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Must present coupon at time of estimate.
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Offer expires 7/31/12.
FREE
GUT TERS
With any new roof
and siding job
Virtual Home
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609-882-S800
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Call: 908-359-3000
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saving our planet, one pile at a time
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CLASSIFIED
JULY 18-24, 2012 - THE MONTGOMERY SUN 15
If you’re reading your competitor’s ad?
Who’s making money… you or them?
Advertise with us!
Special Classified offers available.
Don’t delay! Call today!
(856) 427-0933 x 512
INTO ACTION!
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