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AUGUST 7-13, 2013
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Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-19
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Police Reports . . . . . . . . . . . 13
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Past hurricanes
Teach residents how to be
prepared. PAGE 3
Department graduates Junior Police Academy cadets
By SHANNON CAULFIELD
The Marlton Sun
The Evesham Township Police
Department graduated its first-
ever Junior Police Academy
cadets on July 26.
The idea for the academy
began a year ago based on the
success of the Citizens Police
Academy, according to police Lt.
Thomas Reinholt, one of the
academy instructors.
Approximately two months
ago, the department notified resi-
dents of the availability of the
unheard of free junior pro-
gram.
We were hopeful for success
without expectations, Reinholt
said.
According to Reinholt, 35 chil-
dren applied and 20 were accept-
ed.
Children ages 10-14 from a va-
riety of schools in the township,
excluding Cherokee High School,
were accepted. The academy
began July 22, and cadets gradu-
ated on July 26.
Through the parks and rec de-
partment, we were able to come
under their liability, helping
make it free of charge, Reinholt
said.
Each cadet was provided with
free lunches, reusable water bot-
tles and uniforms to wear each
day through a number of spon-
sors. Cadets were challenged
SHANNON CAULFIELD/The Marlton Sun
Officer Tom Campbell salutes cadet Michael Richter during the graduation on July 26 at the Gibson House. Richter is one of 20 graduates in
the first-ever Junior Police Academy. The week included physical training and an active shooter lesson. Each junior cadet received a certifi-
cate for accomplishments of the week. For more photos please see page 14.
please see CHILDREN, page 4
2 THE MARLTON SUN AUGUST 7-13, 2013
205 Elbo Lane, Mt. Laurel (856) 608-1200
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to OYR for every ticket sold
Please join Operation Yellow
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Camden Riversharks on Sunday,
Aug. 18 at 1:35 p.m.
The Camden Riversharks will
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Sunday, Aug. 18.
By SHANNON CAULFIELD
The Marlton Sun
Hurricanes Sandy and Irene
taught Burlington County how to
prepare for the unexpected when
it comes to serious weather.
The Atlantic hurricane season
lasts from June 1 to Nov. 30, and
New Jerseys tropical storm activ-
ity runs typically from August
through late October, according
to the New Jersey Hurricane Sur-
vival Guide.
Hurricane Irene hit the state in
August 2011, and Sandy was a
late-season storm, making land-
fall at the end of October.
According to Kevin Tuno,
Burlington County Office of
Emergency Management coordi-
nator, Hurricane Irene had a larg-
er impact on the county com-
pared to Sandy, which affected
communities closer to the bay, in-
cluding Bass River and Washing-
ton Township.
The biggest thing is promot-
ing more of an awareness to resi-
dents, Tuno said, adding resi-
dents need to heed warnings and
properly prepare for a serious
weather event.
Make a plan, prepare a kit
When the Weather Channel
and local news stations begin
broadcasting the possibility of a
hurricane, go over your emer-
gency plan.
According to the hurricane
survival guide, get together with
your family and create a commu-
nications plan ahead of time.
Keep a written record of all im-
portant phone numbers and des-
ignate an individual outside the
state to serve as a family point of
contact. Make sure family mem-
bers know who this person is and
how to contact them. After a dis-
aster or evacuation, all family
members should make contact
with the designated individual.
Try choosing a certain time for
everyone to check in.
Additionally, a family should
have a kit prepared. Build it up
over a period of time, Tuno rec-
ommends.
You can go online to a number
of different locations and find
kits already made, Tuno said.
By the time youre done, youll
be well prepared, especially if
you need to stay in your home a
number of days.
Visit Ready.gov and search dis-
aster kit for checklists to help pre-
pare.
Preparing your home
Tuno suggests residents have
AUGUST 7-13, 2013 THE MARLTON SUN 3
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Past hurricanes teach county
residents how to be prepared
please see RESIDENTS, page 5
4 THE MARLTON SUN AUGUST 7-13, 2013
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Children ages 10-14
were part of the
junior cadet program
with a mini basic training camp.
The idea was to give them an
idea of what police officers go
through, Reinholt said. We
wanted this to be a more hands-
on learning experience for
them.
Fourteen Evesham Township
officers, Evesham Fire-Rescue
and Burlington County central
staff contributed time to teach-
ing cadets about SWAT, emer-
gency response, DUI stops, ar-
resting suspects, fingerprinting,
active shooter and fire arms safe-
ty.
The experience also provided
cadets a social aspect.
It was a great experience,
said Officer Tom Campbell, the
drill instructor for the week. It
was a feeling out period, where
they felt comfortable enough to
open up to us and us to them. I
think they were receptive.
The class wasnt rewarding
just for the cadets, but for the in-
structors as well.
The kids were very willing to
learn, said Christine Schmidt,
an academy instructor. It was
most rewarding to see the accom-
plishments they made from be-
ginning to end. I could see a lot of
them felt achievement.
Campbell is confident the
process will open the cadets to
CHILDREN
Continued from page 1
please see TOWNSHIP, page 7
AUGUST 7-13, 2013 5
Residents
should put
together
disaster kit
supplies on hand for a minimum
of 72 hours.
At this point, I suggest dou-
bling that, Tuno said. You
should have nonperishable food,
food that you may not have to
cook if you lose electricity and
have an electric stove.
Additionally, there needs to be
enough water, one gallon per per-
son per day, in the event water
supply becomes unavailable, es-
pecially in rural areas.
Most of the time, water con-
tamination happens because
theres failure to water treatment
plants or in a rural area when
wells in the yard get flooded out,
Tuno said. You have a possibility
of your well being contaminated
by the septic tank.
He advises residents to boil
water and be aware of water advi-
sories. If residents are forced to
boil water, be sure to do it for 10
minutes.
Fresh batteries, portable radios
and flashlights should also be
available.
You should also have extra
batteries on hand for any items
other than flashlights or radio if
the kids have something that
needs to be charged, Tuno said.
According to Tuno, various
stores sell items to keep phones
and other electronics charged
through a hand crank.
Keep extra medications on
hand or get some immediately
through a doctor or pharmacist if
you have the ability to, Tuno
said.
Shelter preparation
Burlington County shelters
hosted approximately 400 people
from Ocean County, most of
RESIDENTS
Continued from page 3
please see FOOD, page 11
in our opinion
6 THE MARLTON SUN AUGUST 7-13, 2013
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
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PUBLISHER Steve Miller
EXECUTIVE EDITOR Tim Ronaldson
VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele
MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow
PRODUCTION EDITOR Patricia Dove
MARLTON EDITOR Shannon Caulfield
ART DIRECTOR Tom Engle
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann
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VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.
ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Dan McDonough, Jr.
EDITOR EMERITUS Alan Bauer
T
he Second Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution states: A well
regulated militia, being neces-
sary to the security of a free state, the
right of the people to keep and bear
arms shall not be infringed.
Its only 27 words, but it is perhaps
the Amendment thats most open to in-
terpretation.
Gun advocates focus on the phrase
the right of the people when making
their case for why citizens should be
allowed to own, and carry, guns. The
opposing side focuses on the word
militia, saying that the Amendment
in no way meant to reward free rights
for any citizen to own and carry a gun,
whenever and wherever they want.
Last week, local anti-gun groups
won a victory in court, when a federal
appeals court in Philadelphia upheld
New Jerseys law that states residents
need to show a justifiable need to
carry a handgun in public.
The decision means that, even if
you can legally own a gun, you cant
carry it wherever you please, whenev-
er you please.
In a state with 8.87 million people
and high violence areas such as Cam-
den this law is a good one, and this
court decision was the appropriate
one.
Were all for equal rights for bearing
arms, within reason but thats a sub-
ject for another day.
What were not for is wielding these
arms in public, with no legitimate pur-
pose. Police officers, security officers
and other officials are appropriate car-
riers of weapons in public. Everyone
else?
Kinda hard to justify, in our opinion,
so were glad the court agrees with
New Jerseys law that forces people
who want to carry arms in public to
really prove that he or she needs it.
If they can prove a justifiable
need for doing so, then fine. Other-
wise, get real.
There isnt much good that can
come of carrying a gun in public, so
we applaud the state for creating this
stringent law, and also applaud the
U.S. Court of Appeals in Philadelphia
for upholding it.
The law does not infringe upon citi-
zens right to bear arms, and there is
no solid argument against it.
Is there a justifiable need?
Federal appeals court upholds law banning public gun carrying
Your thoughts
What are your thoughts on New
Jerseys justifiable need law, or the
Court of Appeals decision?
Students share what they learned over the summer
Pre-kindergarteners in Evesham Town-
ship School Districts Coordinated Arts
Program for Primary Students have been
wearing their thinking caps this summer
and shared what they learned at an open
house at Frances DeMasi Elementary
School on Thursday, July 25.
Parents, members of the Evesham
Township Education Foundation and the
Board of Education watched as the 45 chil-
dren ages 4 and 5 sang, read, drew pic-
tures, played musical instruments and
practiced movement, as they have done for
the past few weeks.
After a morning meeting, flag salute
and singing, the students divided into
groups that rotated among classrooms, fo-
cusing on five different areas: art, music,
literacy, math and movement.
This is the best part of my job, said
Colleen Schroeder, assistant principal of
DeMasi Elementary and director of
C.A.P.P.S.
Its so much fun to see the growth of
the students from the first day, when they
were timid and shy, to now, when they are
participating in front of strangers. Every-
body did great its the best!
The C.A.P.P.S. program, funded in part
by the Evesham Township Education
Foundation for the past several years, is
for selected pre-kindergarten students
who may benefit from some additional
support in preparing for kindergarten in
the fall. Some children may need more so-
cial development in a group setting, while
others may need to increase their experi-
ences with basic academic concepts, such
as counting, recognizing numerals from
one through 10, recognizing letters and
shapes, and writing his or her own name.
The children met four mornings a week
for five weeks; the program ended Aug. 1.
We admit students based on district-
wide screenings and recommendations
from principals and counselors, Schroed-
er said. C.A.P.P.S. helps them develop
school readiness and get into the school
routine. In the end, the feedback from the
students, parents and teachers has been
very positive.
The C.A.P.P.S. staff takes the time to get
to know the students interests, strengths
and areas of need.
Most of the students of the 15-year-old
program are able to move on to a success-
ful year in kindergarten.
AUGUST 7-13, 2013 THE MARLTON SUN 7
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Township to also conduct a
Citizens Police Academy
being the departments eyes and
ears.
When we ask them who was
interested in a career in law en-
forcement and 100 percent of
their hands go up, it was great to
see, Campbell said. We were
able to help instill an interest in
law enforcement.
The department has consid-
ered a winter class, however
planning the inaugural class was
a task. According to Reinholt, or-
ganizers and instructors had to
take into consideration sports,
camps and other activities. Addi-
tionally, officers were teaching
the academy on top of their offi-
cial duties. The idea, however,
has not been completely ruled
out. Reinholt is optimistic about
next years class.
We had a large response this
year. I expect it to be ten-fold for
next year, he said. Friends and
family of kids saw our updates
daily on our Facebook page with
photos, which helps with inter-
est, too.
Evesham Township residents
18 and older and business owners
will have their chance to have a
similar experience with the re-
turn of the Citizens Police Acad-
emy. The department is currently
accepting applications.
Both programs serve to main-
tain a good connection with resi-
dents of all ages.
It was a great opportunity to
reach out to the younger commu-
nity, Schmidt said. Hopefully,
we were able to get them to go
along a good path and teach them
what it is to be a good citizen.
They can take what theyve
learned and take it with them in
their future endeavors.
To learn more about the up-
coming academy, visit www.eve-
shampd.org.
TOWNSHIP
Continued from page 4
Send us your Marlton news
Have a news tip? Drop us an email at news@marltonsun.com.
WEDNESDAY AUG. 7
MOMS club: For at-home mothers.
Email momsclubmarltons@
gmail.com for information.
Preschool storytime: Barnes and
Noble, 200 West Rt. 70. 11 a.m.
Call 596-7058 for information.
Overeaters Anonymous: 4:15 p.m.
at Prince of Peace Church. 10 a.m.
Call (609) 239-0022 or visit
www.oa.org for information.
SJ Mothers of Multiples: Lions
Lake Banquet facility. 7:30 p.m.
Visit www.SJMOMS.com for more
information.
Community Stroke Support Group:
Marlton Rehabilitation Hospital,
92 Brick Road. 7 to 8:30 p.m. Call
988-8778 for more information.
THURSDAY AUG. 8
Mat Pilates: Gibson House. Targets
abs, back, posture, balance and
flexibility. Call 985-9792 for infor-
mation.
Piloxing: Gibson House. Non-con-
tact, explosive boxing drills using
1-pound piloxing gloves. Call 985-
9792 for information.
Recovering Couples Anonymous: 7
p.m. at Prince of Peace Church, 61
E. Route 70. Call 596-4815 or
email kp5308@comcast.net for
information.
Adult knitting club: 11 a.m., Eve-
sham Branch Library, 984 Tuck-
erton Road. Beginners as well as
more advanced adult knitters are
welcome to join this four-week
knitting class series. By the end
of the series, students will leave
with a completed project. Please
bring size 10 knitting needles.
Yarn will be provided! Call (856)
983-1444 to register.
FRIDAY AUG. 9
Overeaters Anonymous: 10 a.m. at
Prince of Peace Church. 10 a.m.
Call (609) 239-0022 or visit
www.oa.org for information.
SATURDAY AUG. 10
Overeaters Anonymous: 10 a.m. at
Prince of Peace Church. 10 a.m.
Call (609) 239-0022 or visit
www.oa.org for information
about the meeting.
MONDAY AUG. 12
Overeaters Anonymous: 1:30 p.m.
at Prince of Peace Church. 10 a.m.
Call (609) 239-0022 or visit
www.oa.org for information
about the meeting.
TUESDAY AUG. 13
Overeaters Anonymous: 10 a.m. at
Prince of Peace Church. 10 a.m.
Call (609) 239-0022 or visit
www.oa.org for information
about the meeting.
Questions of Faith support group:
3 p.m. at Samaritan Center for
Grief Support, 5 Eves Drive, Suite
180. Call (800) 596-8550 to reg-
ister.
Marlton Central Networkers Chap-
ter: 11:30 a.m. at Marcos at Indian
Springs 115 S Elmwood Road. BNI
meets Tuesdays for lunch, please
come and visit us. Feel free to
bring plenty of business cards,
and a guest or two to find out
how a trade exclusive business
networking group can help you
increase your qualified referrals.
Call (856) 304 9320 for more
info.
Horticultural Society of South
Jersey meeting: Cherry Hill
Community Center, 820 Mercer
St. Call Rita at 428-5975 for more
information.
Toastmasters: Noon. Contact Dave
Balinski at dlbalinski@yahoo.com
or 380-4701.
CALENDAR PAGE 8 AUGUST 7-13, 2013
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www.mrhandyman.com Lic. # NJ-HIC13VH03642600
EIectricaI Services
CLASSIFIED 16 THE MARLTON SUN AUGUST 7-13 , 2013
Concrete Masonry cont'd GeneraI Contracting Home Improvement
Pat|os Poo|s Poods
00tdoor k|tcheos 0r|veways
wa|kways Steps wa||s
F|re P|ts F|rep|aces Fo0odat|oos
Facades 8r|ck 8|ock Stooe
St0cco Aggregate
Stamped 0oocrete h|gh||ght & 8esea|s
STAMPED CONCRETE
& MASONRY
FREE ESTIMATES
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5
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WRIGHT MASONRY.COM
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Pa|d For Unwanted
COSTUME JEWELRY
O|d - V|ntage or Ant|que
Watches - Furs - Co|ns
CHINA DINNERWARE
SETS OR PARTS
Crysta| - Stemware
O|d G|ass - O|d L|nens
Ster||ng - S||verp|ate
FURNITURE
Pa|nt|ngs - Pr|nts
COLLECTIBLES
1 Pc to Contents
Gar - Bsmt - |tems
CALL GINA"
856-795-9175
609-471-8391
CLASSIFIED 18 THE MARLTON SUN AUGUST 7-13 , 2013
Tutoring
READING ASSISTANCE
AVAILABLE
heed a pat|eot, mot|vat|og t0tor?
Certified Reading Specialist for
K-12, College Students, and Adults
Assessments, Phonics,
Comprehension, Writing, Study
and Organizational Skills.
Specializing in Hands-On,
Multi-Sensory Tutoring for ADHD,
Language-Based/Auditory/
VisualProcessing Disorders.
Facilitate and personalize
home and school goals and
accommodations.
Customized one-to-one tutoring
in your home or my office.
Ellen Topiel HIT The Books Reading
and Student Services
Holistic Innovative Tutoring
(609) 410-2674
30 Years Experience Family Owned and Operated High Quality Products Senior Citizen Discount
No High Pressure Sales Tactics Professional Installation
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 8/31/13.
$1,000 BFF
UP TO
Any new
complete roofing
or siding job
10 BFF
UP TO
Any
roofing
or siding job
FREE
ROOF AND
GUTTER
INSPECTION
FREE
GUTTERS
With any new roof
and siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 8/31/13.
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 8/31/13.
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 8/31/13.
$50 OFF
Expires 8/31/13.
NEW CUSTOMER SPECIAL!
Lic.# 13VH01302800
FREE ESTIMATES!
LANDSCAPING
CONCRETE PAVERS
(609} 8S9-8488
(8S6} 422-0088
Wanted to Buy Tank RemovaI
Roofing
$ CASH NEEDED $
WANTED TO BUY
Watches (working or not)
Collectibles
Gold & Silver
Paintings
Coins
Sterling Silver
All Unusual Items
Free Appraisals
CALL 856-904-9685
National/American Waterproofing
French/Trench Drains Sump pumps
Back up systems WaII repair
856-767-4443
www.americanwatermanagement.com.
Lic # 13VH06045200
Waterproofing
GLASS REPAIR
Fogged Units Insulating Glass Window/Patio Door Repairs
Table Tops Mirrors Shower Doors
Windows
BA8EMENT WATERPROOFNG
& FRENCH DRAN8
French drain instaIIation & repair
Sump pumps instaIIed & repIaced
Best Price Best Work Guaranteed!
609-346-5541
Lic. #13VH07331700
PNE GROVE
MA8ONRY & CONCRETE
Local Company Based in Marlton for 35 years.
CLASSIFIED AUGUST 7-13 , 2013 THE MARLTON SUN 19
BEST CLEANING
IN TOWN
I will clean your house with
attention to every detail!
Responsible
Honest
Reliable
Do It By Hand
Windows Cleaned In & Out
CALL FOR PROFESSIONAL CLEANING
ZORAIDA:
267-701-4058
CIeaning Cont'd