Clearing Up E-Mail Confusion: Demasi Fights Hunger

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OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011
FREE
ROBERT LINNEHAN/The Sun
Mayor Randy Brown, left, presents a proclamation to Joe Fisicaro Sr. for his long-time service to
the Evesham Township Public School Board and the Lenape Regional High School Board. Gov.
Christie recently appointed Fisicaro Sr. to the state Board of Education.
Job well done
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Atlantic City
Series examines the rise and
fall of the shore town. PAGE 9
PRSRT STD
US POSTAGE
PAID
BELLMAWR, NJ
PERMIT NO. 1239
By ROBERT LINNEHAN
The Marlton Sun
An Evesham Township Middle
School has earned a national
honor for fighting to end hunger.
The Frances DeMasi Middle
School recently received Nation-
al School of Distinction status
from the Schools Fight Hunger
program. Fewer than 2,000
schools nationwide earned this
level of distinction in the 2010-
2011 school year.
The National School of Dis-
tinction status is awarded to
schools that demonstrate notable
enthusiasm, creativity or dedica-
tion in getting involved with the
hunger cause. Whether its in-
volving students around a
school-wide food drive, organiz-
ing volunteers for a local pantry
or food bank or cultivating a
school garden to provide fresh
produce for the cause, schools all
across the country have been
playing a larger and larger role
in helping to fight hunger na-
tionwide.
The students, staff and fami-
lies of our School of Distinction
schools should be very proud of
their efforts and the impact
theyre making on the hunger
cause, said Schools Fight
Hunger founder, Tim Sullivan.
Of course, the short-term results
are impressive, but we also love
to see how our next generation of
leaders are getting active in their
communities at such a young
age. In a day when so much news
about our kids and our schools
seems so negative, these schools
and these students are well
worth celebrating.
According to school represen-
tatives, as part of the Civic Re-
sponsibility Project at Frances
DeMasi, eighth-grade students
participated in one of four com-
DeMasi fights hunger
please see HUNGER, page 4
By ROBERT LINNEHAN
The Marlton Sun
The members of the township
council listened to a new email
policy put forth by Township So-
licitor John C. Gillespie last
week. Gillespie crafted the policy
in the wake of a Burlington Coun-
ty prosecutors ruling earlier this
year.
On Friday, Aug. 12, Burlington
County Prosecutor Robert D.
Bernardi said several members of
the Evesham Township Council
did unwittingly run afoul of the
prohibitions contained in the
OPMA (Open Public Meetings
Act), earlier this year when e-
mails were exchanged that dis-
cussed a possible planning board
ordinance that would allow Con-
ner, Strong and Buckelew to build
a helipad near Route 73. The
councilmembers came under in-
vestigation when the Burlington
County Prosecutors Office re-
ceived a formal complaint from
John Paff, who inquired as to
whether or not e-mails violated
the Open Public Meetings Act.
However, the prosecutor also
ruled that the members of coun-
cil would not be fined for their ac-
tions and he wrote of this in his
decision.
While I conclude that town-
ship officials inadvertently con-
vened a meeting for purposes of
the OPMA, I find insufficient evi-
dence of any specific intent to vi-
olate the statute warranting the
pursuit of sanctions by this of-
fice, he said.
Gillespie said that in his opin-
ion it is perfectly fine for the
township manager, engineer, so-
licitor, or other township employ-
ee distributing information to the
members of the governing body
via e-mail, and including each
other on that transmission. The
caution, however, is, Gillespie
wrote, that an effective majority
of the governing body should not
respond to the message, thereby
creating a discussion of the
public business of the Township
of Evesham. Gillespie said dis-
semination is fine, but discussion
is not.
It is also my opinion that an
email from one member of the
governing body to the township
clerk and/or manager, with a
copy to all other members of the
Clearing
up e-mail
confusion
Evesham Township council
to vote on new e-mail policy
after OPMA violation
please see E-MAIL, page 6
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munity service activities in-
cluding feeding the homeless in
Philadelphia. Civic Responsibili-
ty has been part of the schools
curriculum for 15 years. After
completing their service work
the students this year gave pre-
sentations to their peers on what
they had learned.
The school has developed the
program for its eighth-grade so-
cial-studies curriculum, Princi-
pal Irene Romanelli said. Now,
more than 150 kids in the middle
school participate in the commu-
nity service component of the
curriculum, she said, as they go
out into the community and give
back to the less fortunate.
The recognition weve re-
ceived is for a component where
we work with Feeding 5,000 in
Philadelphia. Our kids go out
and supply food, toiletries, and
things of that nature for home-
less people, she said. I think
what touches the kids the most is
when they look at another per-
son and they develop a sense of
empathy that you cant get from
a book or a film. Theres nothing
like looking someone else in the
eye and understanding their
struggle.
Its a community event and
one thats made possible through
the hard work of the teachers
and volunteers in the school, Ro-
manelli said. It would be impos-
sible to be able to organize and
pull off this community service
program without the dedication
of so many in the district.
The Schools Fight Hunger pro-
gram itself is a 2-year-old initia-
tive focused on connecting
schools nationwide with the
hunger cause, helping those
schools fight hunger most effec-
tively, celebrating the good work
of schools and students and in-
spiring our next generation of
leaders on the value of service.
4 THE MARLTON SUN OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011
Dance Time of New Jersey
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(New customers only)
HUNGER
Continued from page 1
National recognition for school
The Southern New Jersey
Council, Boy Scouts of America,
proudly serving more than 6,000
youth in Atlantic, Camden, Cape
May, Cumberland, Gloucester and
Salem counties, will be conduct-
ing its first BSA Sporting Clay
Tournament to benefit Scouting
programs in Southern New Jer-
sey.
The tournament will be held at
M and M Hunting Preserve, 2
Winslow Road Pennsville, on Fri-
day, Nov. 4, with a cannon start at
1 p.m.
This clay target shoot event
was created specifically to pro-
vide funding for disabled and un-
derprivileged Scouts so that they
may enjoy the many outdoor pro-
grams administered by the South-
ern New Jersey Council, Boy
Scouts of America.
Individual are encouraged to
participate in this event with the
sponsorship of a team of five
shooters for a gift of $750 or as an
individual shooter for a gift of
$150.
Your support will ultimately
benefit hundreds of Scouts
throughout South Jersey.
For additional information
please contact Mike Mahon at the
Scout Office by e-mail at
Michael.Mahon@Scouting.org or
by phone at 327-1700, ext. 25.
Scouts host tournament
Clarification: In the Oct. 12-18
issue of The Marlton Sun, an arti-
cle incorrectly labeled the Savitch
property in the township as the
Savage property. The Marlton
Sun was provided with the wrong
name of the property for the arti-
cle.
CLARIFICATION
governing body asking, e.g., that a
particular subject matter be in-
cluded on the next meetings
agenda, and suggesting that other
council members should begin
thinking about it so that an in-
formed discussion can be held at
that public meeting, is equally
permissible, he wrote.
He suggested taking the advice
of Bernardi that to any extent
possible, e-mail communications
regarding public business of the
council, when sent by council
members, should be sent to the
township manager or clerk to
then be sent to other members of
the governing body.
The manager and clerk can dis-
seminate information to council
members, but at no time can
there be a back and forth between
members of the governing body
between one another except in an
open public meeting, he wrote.
The members of council asked
that the policy be written as a res-
olution and the council will vote
on it at the next public meeting.
In other township news:
Members of council honored
resident and Evesham Township
School Board of Education mem-
ber Joe Fisicaro Sr. for being ap-
pointed to serve on the state
board of education by Gov.
Christie.
Mayor Randy Brown lauded
Fisicaro Sr. for his 18-years of
service as the Evesham Township
representative to the Lenape Re-
gional High School Board of Edu-
cation. He was also an Evesham
Township School Board member
for three years. He has also been a
member of the Evesham Town-
ship Historical Preservation
Commission and a member of the
township municipal utilities au-
thority since 2003
He is also a long-serving mem-
ber of the Marlton Recreation
Council and one of the founders
of the Evesham Celebrations
Committee, a group of dedicated
residents, devoted to the promo-
tion of local events and the spirit
of community within Evesham
Township, Brown said.
The council wished him well in
his new endeavors.
6 THE MARLTON SUN OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011
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E-MAIL
Continued from page 1
New e-mail policy proposed
The Marlton Womens Club
will be hosting its first Zumbat-
hon charity fund raiser on Satur-
day, Nov. 5 from noon to 2:30 p.m.
Doors open at 11:30 a.m. at
Frances S. Demasi Middle School
Gymnasium located at 199 Eves-
boro-Medford Road, Marlton.
The cost is only $10 to partici-
pate.
Even if you have never taken a
zumba fitness class, come out
and give it a try. All proceeds
from the event will benefit the
GFWC Marlton Womans Club.
For more information, contact
Kathy Ferre at 751-2403 or
kferre@verizon.net.
First ever Zumbathon
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
DAN McDONOUGH, JR.
Publisher
ALAN BAUER
General Manager & Editor
STEVE MILLER
Executive Vice President
ED LYNES
Vice President of Sales
JOSEPH EISELE
Advertising Director
TIM RONALDSON
Director of Digital Media
TOM ENGLE
Art Director
ROBERT LINNEHAN
Marlton Editor
DAN McDONOUGH, JR.
Chief Executive
RUSSELL CANN
Chairman of the Board
MICHAEL LaCOUNT, Ph.D.
Vice Chairman
BARRY RUBENS
Chief Financial Officer
The Marlton 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
08053 ZIP code. If you are not on the mailing
list, six-month subscriptions are available
for $39.99. PDFs of the print publication are
online, free of charge. For information,
please call 856-427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
news@marltonsun.com. For advertising
information, call 856-427-0933 or email
advertising@marltonsun.com. The Sun
welcomes suggestions and comments from
readers including any information about
errors that may call for a correction to be
printed. Send your comments to
news@marltonsun.com, or call the news-
room at 856-427-0933.
SPEAK UP
The Marlton Sun welcomes letters from
readers. Brief and to the point is best, so we
look for letters that are 300 words or fewer.
Be sure to include your name, address and
phone number with your letter, and know
that we will print your name and hometown
with the letter. We do not print anonymous
letters. Send letters via e-mail to
news@marltonsun.com, via fax at 856-427-
0934, or via the mail at 108 Kings Highway
East, 3rd Floor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Of
course, you can drop them off at our office,
too. The Marlton Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium includ-
ing electronically.
in our opinion
7 THE MARLTON SUN OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011
T
he Nov. 8 elections are almost
upon us. That means its time
to take a final look at the candi-
dates and issues on the ballot.
Its a busy year for elections with all
of the seats in the Legislature up for
grabs and a number of hotly contested
local races.
Its also a time when the national po-
litical scene is beginning to stir. Re-
publican presidential hopefuls have
been holding a series of debates as a
clear front-runner has yet to emerge.
Believe it or not, the first primaries
and caucuses are only a few months
away.
But, when it comes down to impact-
ing your daily life, your local officials
have a lot more influence than those in
Washington, D.C., which is why it is
important to get informed and then
show up on Election Day to cast your
vote.
At The Sun, we want to remind you
that this is the last week that election-
related letters will appear in print.
From this point forward, they will be
published online, so please visit your
local Sun website to read them.
We are doing this to allow the candi-
dates and their supporters an opportu-
nity to respond to any last-minute is-
sues that might arise. Next weeks edi-
tion is the last before the election,
which would not allow anyone a
chance to respond in the same format
to anything that appeared in print. We
will continue to publish reminders
that individuals interested in submit-
ting and reading letters to the editor
regarding the election should visit
their local website.
In the meantime, dont let Election
Day sneak up on you and find you un-
prepared. There are ample ways to
find out all you need to know about the
issues at hand. Get informed and then
vote.
Almost time
Election less than two weeks away
The final days
The November elections are less than
two weeks away. Get informed and
then make sure to vote.
Brightview Senior Living celebrated the
grand opening of its newest property
Brightview Greentree on Tuesday, Oct. 11
with over 250 guests in attendance. Resi-
dents, family members, local dignitaries,
healthcare professionals and members of
Brightviews main office staff from Balti-
more were on hand to enjoy the festivities.
After opening on July 8, over 100 residents
have already moved to Brightview Green-
tree, a 50 percent occupancy rate.
Brightview Greentree, located at 170
Greentree Road in Marlton, is the largest of
its organizations 22 senior communities
and offers a unique rental continuum in-
cluding independent living (91 apart-
ments), assisted living (64 apartments) and
a memory care neighborhood called Well-
spring Village (25 apartments for seniors
with Alzheimers and other more advanced
forms of dementia).
Marilynn Duker, President of The Shel-
ter Group (which owns Brightview Senior
Living), kicked off the dedication ceremo-
ny with words of recognition for the
Brightview staff, vendor partners and Eve-
sham Township Mayor Randy Brown for
their instrumental hard work to help get
Brightview Greentree up and running.
Brightview Greentree Executive Director
Mike Reed presented a plaque to the Resi-
dent Council featuring the names of the
first 30 Charter Member Residents who
moved into the community, including their
first resident Millie Gallaso.
Following the dedication ceremony and
ribbon-cutting on Oct. 11, all guests en-
joyed an exciting evening of hors doeu-
vres, beverages, live jazz music and tours
of the communitys amenities featuring a
caf, movie theatre, fitness center, library,
computer center, pub, game room, therapy
and massage rooms, salon, outdoor bar-
beque / fire pit area, model apartments
and much more.
Brightview Senior Living is excited to
be a part of the South Jersey healthcare
community, stated President Marilynn
Duker. Our reputation for providing qual-
ity personalized care and a vibrant social
atmosphere is already generating many
new public and professional word of
mouth referrals.
For more information on the Independ-
ent Living, Assisted Living and Wellspring
Village Memory Care Services at
Brightview Greentree, please call 810-0070
or visit our website at www.brightviewse-
niorliving.com.
Brightview opens newest location
Special to the Sun
Brightview executives (L to R) Maureen Schmidt, David Carliner, Mike Reed and David
Greydanus enjoy the festivities during the grand opening at Brightview Greentree in
Marlton on Oct. 11.
More than 250 guests attend propertys kickoff event
8 THE MARLTON SUN OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011

Irreverent, witty, outlandish and sometimes rational commentary


about important topics (or at least topics important to The Yak).
Visit http://sj.sunne.ws/author/the-yak
14th-annual Classic
Competition
The Cherokee High School
Marching Band will be holding
its 14th-annual Classic Competi-
tion on Saturday, Oct. 29. The
gates will open at 4:30 p.m.
This year there will be bands
from all around our area coming
to perform and compete.
Plan on attending this excel-
lent evening of entertainment.
Its a wonderful way to support
the marching band.
This is a rain or shine event.
Tickets, which will be available at
the door, cost $9 for general ad-
mission, $7 for students and sen-
ior citizens. Children under 10
are free.
Indian Culture Center
construction to begin
The construction of the new
18.8-acre Indian Cultural Center
(ICC) will begin with the founda-
tion-stone laying ceremony at
noon on Oct. 30. The event festivi-
ties will run from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
at the approved site of the facility,
820 Route 73 South, about one
mile North of Kresson Road in
Marlton. Special guests slated to
attend include, Evesham Mayor
Randy Brown, ICC President Dr.
Dhiraj Panda, ICC Vice President,
Dr. Prahlad Patel, ICC donors and
members of the board of
trustees.
The two-story, 20,577 square-
foot cultural center will be the
first of its kind in South Jersey
and will feature a large assembly
hall, stage, library, game room,
various classrooms, two kitchens
and two large expandable rooms
to accommodate up to 570 guests.
The ICC has been designed as a
multi-purpose facility to house
childrens education, youth and
senior citizen activities, religious
celebrations and other cultural
and social needs of the communi-
ty including various program-
ming by local Indian organiza-
tions. The cultural center is de-
signed as a social center for all
people of Indian origin living in
and around South Jersey, the ICC
will serve the needs of the more
than 3,500-plus families of Indian
origin in the area.
Initial planning began in 1987
as leaders of the India Temple As-
sociation sought a permanent
place to promote the understand-
ing of Indian Culture and to pro-
mote friendship and goodwill
among all people. Dr. Prahlad and
Kirti Patel generously donated
the land to the ICC, and in 2001,
the ICC received zoning approval
from the Evesham Township Zon-
ing Board. In January 2008 the
Planning Board granted final ap-
proval for the building. Ashvin
Patel, chair of the construction
committee, estimated the final
construction cost to reach $3.5
million. To date $2.4 million has
been pledged through the support
of the local community. The proj-
ect completion is anticipated to be
one year.
ICC Board of Trustees invites
community members to take part
as Yajman (Host) of this ceremo-
ny. This will be an opportunity to
lay a founding stone and partici-
pate in this historic event. Please
contact any of the board mem-
bers for details.
For additional information
about the Indian Cultural Center
and to learn how you can help,
contact President Dr. Dhiraj
Panda at 596-6100 or president@ic-
cofsj.org. For more information
about the groundbreaking cere-
mony, contact Dr. Manu Dadhania
at 751-8117 or Jay Parikh at 952-
3600. Additional details can also
be found at our website www.ic-
cofsj.org.
St. Joan of Arc Bazaar
Nov. 12
The 2011 St. Joan of Arc School
Christmas Bazaar will be held on
Saturday, Nov. 12 from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m.
The event will feature 70-plus
craft vendors, pictures with
Santa, childrens games, home-
made goodies and much, much,
more! There will also be a 50/50
raffle, which in the past has
climbed to over $4,000.
Santa himself will be arriving
on a fire engine at 10 a.m. and he
will be ready to greet the chil-
dren! St. Joan of Arc School is lo-
cated at 101 Evans Road in Marl-
ton. For more information, call
Regina Pharis at 983-1082.
BRIEFS
By MELISSA DIPENTO
The Marlton Sun
Editors Note: This is the first
story in a series about the rise and
fall of Atlantic Citys casinos. In
this first story, well take you
through the history of Atlantic
City and how it came to be.
Next, well focus on how the
economy has thwarted casino rev-
enues, who and where the competi-
tion is and what the destination
town is doing to reinvent itself.
Lastly, well explore what the vi-
sion is for Atlantic City and how it
plans to get there.
Forget the boardwalk. Forget
the lure of neon flashing lights.
And forget the now-engineered
sound of coins cascading out of
slot machines by the dozens.
None of that was there then.
In the 1800s, there were no
glitzy casinos, only vast stretches
of sand, dunes and uninhibited
views of the sparkling Atlantic
Ocean for miles.
In 1820, Dr. Jonathan Pitney ar-
rived in Absecon, said local histo-
rian Allen Boo Pergament, who
has amassed Atlantic City memo-
rabilia, souvenirs, 20,000 photo-
graphs, 10,000 postcards, newspa-
pers, magazines, booklets and so
on in his 20 or so years devoted to
studying Atlantic City.
Prior to Pitneys arrival, the
Leeds family became the first res-
idents on Absecon Island, which
now encompasses Atlantic City,
Ventnor, Margate and Longport.
Pitney would row a boat over
across the bay to treat Jeremiah
Leeds and other family members.
As he traveled from the main-
land to the island, Pitney quickly
realized what value the land had.
He was quick to recognize the
change in temperature and no-
ticed the breezes, Pergament
said. He realized that it would be
a good health resort, a place for
people to take a break from
Philadelphia.
Pitney came up with the idea to
start a railroad that would run
from Camden to Atlantic City.
Meanwhile, Pergament said,
Samuel Richards, who ran an
iron foundry near Mays Landing,
realized a train could greatly help
his business in transporting
goods. At the time, Richards
goods traveled by horse and
wagon from Weymouth to Cam-
den. He signed on as the first fi-
nancial supporter of the railroad
and was able to encourage friends
to support it, as well.
In 1852, the Camden & Atlantic
Company opened its railroad,
connecting Camden and Atlantic
counties. During the first few
years, only the wealthy used the
train, but word caught on about
the scenic ocean views and cool
breezes.
Pergament said Richards want-
ed to lower the fares so that more
people could enjoy the train. But
others were unwilling to lower
fares, so he started a second rail-
road line, which caused the two
competing railroad lines to lower
fares anyway.
Once the various train lines be-
came more affordable, Atlantic
City saw a boom in business, at-
tracting more visitors. With more
visitors came the need to create
more accommodations. Then, in
1854, Atlantic City officially be-
came incorporated as a munici-
pality.
Over the next two decades, ho-
tels sprung up along the shore
and businesses continued to expe-
rience growth. In 1870, the At-
lantic City Boardwalk was built
to keep sand from being tracked
into the railroad cars and hotels.
At the turn of the century and
for decades to follow, Atlantic
City embraced many additions
and changes to its once scenic
landscape. The Steel Pier Amuse-
ment Park opened, showcasing
some of the biggest acts of the
time.
No play would make it to
Broadway without showing in At-
lantic City first in the 20s and 30s,
Pergament added. Because of the
kinds of crowds Atlantic City
drew, Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy
and the like would perform in At-
lantic City before taking their
shows up north.
The 1920s also gave birth to the
Miss America Pageant and a
meeting of the biggest names in
organized crime.
Over the next few decades,
OCTOBER26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011 THE MARLTON SUN 9
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Hometown news.
When |t happens.
Or Shortly
Thereafter.
Fo||ow us at
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To find a unit in your
area please visit
BeAScount.org
The rise and fall of Atlantic
City and its casino industry
please see AC, page 10
10 THE MARLTON SUN OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011
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Pergament said, the city began to
see decline. Travel had greatly
improved, and by the 60s, airline
travel made it easier for families
to go anywhere across the coun-
try.
The suburbs were also develop-
ing at a much higher rate, as sol-
diers coming back from World
War II were getting married and
moving further away from urban
cities. With the rise of shopping
malls across the region, people
had little need to travel far to get
what they needed.
Officials knew they needed a
plan to revitalize Atlantic City.
Their response: casinos.
They thought gambling could
slow down the deterioration and
bring Atlantic City back to its for-
mer glory as Atlantic Citys play-
ground, Pergament said.
In 1974, Steven Perskie, then a
member of the General Assembly
representing Atlantic County,
wrote and sponsored an amend-
ment to allow casinos anywhere
in the state. The amendment, if
approved, would have allowed
casinos to be run by the state, Per-
skie said. He said the referendum
was overwhelmingly defeated.
So, it was back to the drawing
board.
By 1976, Perskie had intro-
duced a referendum to amend the
states constitution to allow pri-
vately run casinos in Atlantic
City.
The referendum passed and the
Casino Control Act was signed to
establish the Casino Control
Commission.
In 1976, casinos in Atlantic City
were a victory for the region, Per-
skie said.
We were acting on the behalf
of businesses in Atlantic City
that were dying. We were not
looking at that time to get philo-
sophical about casinos, we were
putting people from Atlantic City
to work, Perskie said.
In 1978, Resorts opened as the
first casino hotel in Atlantic City.
Today, Atlantic City has 11
more casinos than it did more
that 30 years ago. But in recent
history, the casino industry is
showing it doesnt always have
luck on its side.
The casino industry hit its
peak in July 2005, when casinos
grossed a $504.8 million win, ac-
cording to figures published by
the state Casino Control Commis-
sion.
Five years later, in July 2010,
casinos reported a $286.8 million
win, according to the NJCCC, a
decrease of 11.1 percent over the
same month in July 2009.
The same story has plagued At-
lantic City casinos over the past
few years.
And the economy isnt the only
thing casinos have to contend
with. This summer, casinos shut
down operations for three days in
the wake of Hurricane Irene, a
storm that slammed the East
Coast and caused the struggling
industry to lose millions.
The Division of Gaming En-
forcement reports casinos won
$2.6 billion during the first nine
months of 2011, which is down by
7.8 percent from the same period
in 2010.
Theres no doubt casinos have
changed Atlantic City. In part two
of this series, well take a more
in-depth look at how casinos have
fared through the challenging
economic climate and how they
plan to do something about it.
AC
Continued from page 9
The history of Atlantic City
OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011 THE MARLTON SUN 11
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See your home in a whole new light.
Garden Club of Marlton
will meet Nov. 10
The Garden Club of Marlton
will meet on Thursday, Nov. 10 at
11 a.m. at the Gibson House, 535
N. Main Street in Marlton.
The program will be Attract-
ing birds in the Winter, By
George of Wild Birds Unlimited.
Guests and visitors are wel-
come to attend. For more infor-
mation please call 767-9029.
CFA having open-juried contest
The Center for the Arts in
Southern New Jersey presents
the CFA Annual Open Juried
Photography Exhibition from
Nov. 7 to 28.
Contemporary and traditional
photography will be displayed by
artists from the Delaware Valley.
Prizes will be awarded at the
opening reception on Thursday,
Nov. 10 from 7 to 9 p.m.
The Center for the Arts in
Southern New Jersey is located at
123 S. Elmwood Road in Marlton.
For more information please
call the center at 985-1009 or visit
the website at www.cfasnj.com or
e-mail at cfasnj@yahoo.com.
Send us your Marlton news
Have a news tip? Drop us an e-mail at news@marltonsun.com.
WEDNESDAY
October 26
FOR ALL
MOMS club: For at-home mothers.
E-mail
momsclubmarltons@gmail.comfor
info.
FOR KIDS
Preschool storytime: Barnes and
Noble, 200 West Rt. 70. 11 a.m. Call
596-7058 for info.
THURSDAY
October 27
FOR ALL
Mat Pilates: Gibson House. Call
985-9792 for info.
FRIDAY
October 28
FOR ALL
Marlton Elks Costume Party: 7
p.m. at 426 Evesboro Medford Road.
$20 per person, proceeds benefit
the Elks Veterans, scholarship and
special children programs.
Overeaters Anonymous: Prince of
Peace Church. 10 a.m. Call (609)
239-0022 or visit www.southjer-
sey.org for information.
SATURDAY
October 29
FOR ALL
Relaxing Yoga with Robin Soll: 11
a.m. at the Evesham Library.
Cherokee High Marching Band
Classic Competition: 4:30 p.m.
Tickets are $9, $7 for students and
seniors. Children under 10 get in
free.
SUNDAY
October 30
FOR ALL
Foreign Film and Discussion
Series: The Girl on the Train 2 p.m.
at Evesham Library.
TUESDAY
November 1
FOR ALL
Parents Support Group: The RAP-
Room. 7 to 9 p.m. Call 983-3328 for
more information.
Questions of Faith support group:
Samaritan Center for Grief Support, 5
Eves Drive, Suite 180. 3 p.m. Call 800-
596-8550 to register.
Overeaters Anonymous: Prince of
Peace Church. 10 a.m. Call (609)
239-0022 or visit www.southjer-
sey.org for information.
Mat Pilates: Gibson House. Call
985-9792 for info.
Toastmasters: Noon. Contact Dave
Balinski at dlbalinski@yahoo.comor
380-4701.
calendar PAGE 12 OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011
COMPILED BY ALAN BAUER
WELCOME HOME
M
illie Gallaso, seated, the first resident to move to Brightview Greentree in July, is joined by
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ilynn Duker and Mari Roman during the grand opening festivities on Oct. 11.
Want to be listed?
To have your Marlton meet-
ing or affair listed in the
Calendar or Meetings, infor-
mation must be received, in
writing, two weeks prior to
the date of the event.
Send information by mail to:
Calendar, The Marlton Sun,
108 Kings Highway East,
Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or
by e-mail: news@marlton-
sun. Or you can submit a cal-
endar listing through our
Web site
(www.marltonsun.com).
We will run photos if space is
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T HE MA R L T O N S U N
OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011 PAGE 17
BOX A DS
W H A T Y O U N E E D T O K N O W
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(Fully Seasoned)
MIXED HARDWOODS
1 Cord - $180
OAK
1 Cord - $205
Call (856) 207-0501
ANNMARIE
HOUSE & OFFICE
CLEANING
18 yrs exp.
Reliable, exc. refs.,
Affordable rates
wkly/bi-wkly/monthly
Free Estimates
609-977-6547
1 STORY WHOLE HOUSE
WALL-TO-WALL CARPET
CLEANING
$
149
2 Story $209

3 Story $275
Every room, hall, closet
and stairs
ALLBRITE CARPET CLEANING (856) 764-7966

Carpet CIeaning
After SchooI Supervision
Needed
For 2 young teenagers
Must have driver's license
and be willing to transport
children to local activities
Pay negotiable, Hours typi-
cally 3-6PM, with some
occasional later nights
(856) 429-5478
856-719-8448
Chimney Cleaning
Air Duct Cleaning
Dryer Vent Cleaning
21 Point
Chimney Safety
Inspection Repairs
Quality Work at a Fair Price
CHEAP
8WEEP
Ccll Georic Todcl
6oq-q1o-1q6q
Georgiu's
Cleuning Service

Reliuble

ependuble

Honest
CIeaning
CIeaning
Concrete Masonry
WB
ABB GBOWIHGl
Join the Elauwit Team today!
.And so con you.
Email resume to tengle@elauwit.com or tronaldson@elauwit.com
The combination Front End Developer/Graphic Artist position will
work closely with the Digital Media Manager and Art Director.
The Front End Developer will be needed to enhance existing websites, build
new websites and any other work associated with the building of the Elauwit
brand. Tasks can be day to day or based solely upon projects, which will mainly
include the following:
WordPress Theming/Development
Deployment of new Wordpress sites
Improving existing Wordpress sites
Ability to create/implement design with/without direction
DESIRED SKILLS:
Front End Developer/Graphic Artist
HTML/CSS (by-hand, standards-
compliant, with strong under-
standing of cross-browser /
cross-platform issues)
Good knowledge of JavaScript,
PHP, MySQL
Experience with frameworks like
jQuery
Experience with Quark XPress,
Photoshop (Illustrator, a plus)
Good communication skills
Strong time management skills
able to meet deadlines
Works well together
The Graphic Artist will be needed to build and manipulate ads for the
newspapers, along with other small projects.
HeIp Wanted
Fulltime, part time stylist
wanted. Growing salon in
Haddonfield. Must be
licensed, personable, &
friendly. Please call
ndigo Salon for info.
856-354-8144
CLASSIFIED 18 THE MARLTON SUN OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011
Paperhanging,
Removal & Painting
By Randy Craig
(856) 981-1359
www.rcpaperhangings.com
Lic. # 13VH05945366

SERVICES, INC
Termite & Pest Control
(609) 953-5444
(609) 268-1002
DIAMOND
ROOFING
Shingle Cedar Shake Rubber
Hot Asphalt Skylites & Repairs
(609) 953-2335
(609) 268-9200

Professional Tree Care


Tree/Shrub Trimming and Removal
Stump Removal, Land Clearing
Property Maintenance
856-419-6999
treemenllc@hotmail.com
Fully Insured NJ Lic #0600356314
Pet Care
Tree Service
Paperhanging
Pest ControI
SoIar
SOLAR
INSTALLATION
and DESIGN
Residential Commercial
Ask how your roof can make
you 12-15% rate of return!
Pay back in as little as 3-5 years!
FREE ESTIMATES
609-698-4300
www.njsensiblesolar.com
Serving all
of south jersey
Big or Small We Grind Them ALL!
Fast Service Licensed and Insured
609-280-3352
ftstumpgrinding@gmail.com
Lic #13VH06293700
FT STUMP GRINDING
Call for a
free a no
obligation
Estimate
856-824-1360
ReaI Estate for Rent
PIumbing
SDK LAWN CARE
609-481-8886
Lic# NJ 13VH05972600
WeekIy or BiweekIy
Cutting or pick your
own program
FREE ESTIMATES
Fully Insured Licensed
Weeding/Trimming/
Prunning
Tree Service Sod
Pavers Retaining Walls
Plowing/Shoveling
Tank RemovaI
Landscaping
DAVNC PANTNG
Quality Work
Reasonable Price
Licenced & nsured
856-341-4861
HVAC
RAS BUILDERS
Custom Homes, Additions, Sun rooms, Siding, Baths,
Decks, Garages, Basements, Roof, Windows
Since 1974 FREE ESTIMATES
856-627-1974
www.RASBUILDERSNJ.com
Lic. 13VH00932400
DACONTIS HOME SERVICES, LLC
Lic.#
13VH06043200
Landscaping Fall Clean-Ups Mulching Fertilizing
Lawn Repair Gutter Cleaning Pavers
Deck Restoration Seeding Sodding and more
Free Estimates Fully Insured BBB Accredited Business
Call Dan DaConti (856) 222-1226
NO HEAT? OIL OR GAS
WE CAN HELP!
Plumbing Drain Cleaning
Quick Services
856-429-2494
NJRMP 9325
SDK HOME REPAIR
Any repair you can
think of, we can do.
Gutter Cleaning
& Repairs
Soffitt Fascia
Rotten Wood
Door Installation
Painting
Kitchens
Fully Insured Licensed
609-481-8886
24 hour
Emergency
Service
Lic# NJ 13VH05972600
ADVANCED EXTERIOR
S O L U T I O N S
ROOFING SIDING DECKS ADDITIONS WINDOWS
PATIOS KITCHENS BATHS FINISHED BASEMENTS
COUPON
10% OFF
Decks, Siding, Roofing
Limited to new installation only. Up to $1000. Exp. 10/31/11. 856-235-8080
Fully insured, References available Lic. #13VH01119700
856-429-8991
On time. Done Right.
For all your home repairs. Locally owned & operated.
www.mrhandyman.com Lic. # NJ-HIC13VH03642600
3 DS LAWN SERVICE (856) 979-1303
FALL SPECIALS
Thatch/Aerate/Seed (Up to 10,000 sq. ft.) ......$425
Fall Leaf Clean Ups.....................................Starting at $99
Gutter Cleaning...................1 story $75 .....2 Story $95
Pressure Washing...............1 story $145 ...2 Story $175
Pools Removed
Concrete Work
Free Estimates
856-228-7385
www.accentgardenmarket.net
Topsoil Mulch
Roofing
Home Care Services
ALWAYS THERE
SENIOR CARE
(856) 439-1300
Hourly & Live-in Care
Best PRICE, Best Care
Ask about VA Program
HeIp Wanted
Home Improvement
JAMCO Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc.
Celebrating our 25th year!
Replacements & Upgrades Additions & Renovations
New Home Construction Service & More
(856) 488-2299 Call for a FREE estimate!
SPECIALIZING IN HVAC
Painting
HADDONFIELD
3 BR, 1.5 BA, single family house,
wraparound porch, nice yard, C/A,
gas heat, completely updated,
washer/dryer, walk to train, schools,
shopping & recreation.
$1,950/month + utilities
856-216-8275
DON HAHN ELECTRIC
Since 1972
All Electrical Repairs
100-200 Amp Service
Ceiling

Attic

Bath Fans
Recess & Security Lighting
856-783-9128
800-427-2067
Insured &Bonded NJ LIC #4546
Garage SaIe EIectricaI Services
www.cmbcontracting.com
609-953-1798
www.jhstraincarpentry.com
Decorative Trims, Crown Moldings, Bookcases
Custom Mantles, built-ins, Kitchens and Baths
Professional Painting
Home project consulting
Design cost applied to your job!
FREE ESTIMATES - REFERENCES - LICENSED & INSURED
CALL TODAY! 609 - 561 - 7751
Over
30 yr. exp.
GeneraI Contracting
GeneraI Contracting
Cherry HiII Community
Wide Garage SaIe
10/29 8:30-1:30
Rain date: 10/30
Society Hill Condos,
Springdale Road
(+Alex's Lemonade Stand
to raise $$ for Pediatric
Cancer)
Cherry Hill-Point of Woods
Multi-Family Garage Sale
Sat. Oct 29 9am-1pm
Clothes, Household and
more
1913 N Birchwood Pk Dr
Laurel Creek in
MOORESTOWN
Moving/garage sale
Sat. Oct. 29 8am Noon
Rain Date Oct. 30
Furniture, electronics (incl
TVs), designer clothing,
household items, col-
lectibles and much more.
142 Country Club Drive
CHECK OUT THE SUN CLASSIFIEDS!
Drivers - Teams: $6,000
Team Sign-On Bonus
when you team drive for
Werner Enterprises!
Call Now for details!
1-866-823-0268
Home inspector/Consultant
for insurance damage
Part time/ Full time
24k to 75k potential
No experience necessary /
Will train
Transportation required
Must apply online at
metrotomd@yahoo.
CLASSIFIED THE MARLTON SUN OCTOBER 26-NOVEMBER 1, 2011 19
Call us at
(856) 427-0933 x 512.
Well shine light
on your business!
If youre reading your competitors ad?
Whos making money you or them?
Advertise with us!
Special Classified offers available.
Dont delay! Call today!
(856) 427-0933 x 512
INTO ACTION!
Let
The Sun
Shine
For You!
Call
856.427.0933
for Advertising
info.
Wanted to Buy
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 11/2/11.
$1,000 OFF
UP TO
Any new
complete roofing
or siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 11/2/11.
10% OFF
UP TO
Any
roofing
or siding job
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 11/2/11.
FREE
ROOF AND
GUTTER
INSPECTION
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not valid with other offers or prior services.
Offer expires 11/2/11.
FREE
GUT TERS
With any new roof
and siding job
Virtual Home
Remodeler
Roofing
Specializing in Math & Science
at the high school & college level
SAT & ACT Test Prep
Individualized to address the specific
needs of your student.
609-206-5364
BARBARA BOLAND
TUTORING
Tutoring
WB
ABB GBOWIHGl
Join the Elauwit Team today!
.And so con you.
Call Ed Lynes 856-528-4698 or
email resume to elynes@elauwit.com
Opens new business relationships
Must be outgoing, driven and confident
Full time
ACCOUNT MANAGER
2009/2010
Expires 11/30/11. Expires 11/30/11.

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