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MAY 7-MAY 13, 2014
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Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-15
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Police Report. . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Contest
Mr. Delran 2014 has been
named. PAGE 6
District students play Brain Drain Games
By ZANE CLARK
The Sun
It was the Blue Braniacs
against the The Brown Brains
against the Burlington Brains
and more when more than 120
fourth-grade students from nine
school districts throughout
Burlington County put on their
thinking caps and participated in
the annual Brain Drain Games at
Cinnaminson Memorial School
on April 30.
Hosted by the Western Burling-
ton County Regional Consortium,
an association of educators who
teach gifted and talented students
throughout nine Burlington
County schools, the Brain Drain
Games gave students the chance
to test their knowledge through a
series of thought provoking puz-
zles and games.
This year, students from Cin-
naminson, Delran, Mt. Laurel,
Moorestown, Pennsauken, Maple
Shade, Riverton, Hainesport and
Palmyra competed.
With only one or two students
from the same town on any given
team, the students grew not only
their minds but their teamwork,
communication and friendship
making skills.
The activities involved puzzles
such as using the process of elim-
ination to pick a suspected crimi-
nal out of a line photos with only
ZANE CLARK/The Sun
Students from Cinnaminson, Delran, Mt. Laurel, Moorestown and more worked in teams to complete puzzling games during the annual Brain
Games event at Cinnaminson Memorial School. The inter-district event had students from gifted programs work together with students they
had never met before to promote teamwork and critical thinking. In the Strupports event, students used straws and straw wrappers to create
a bridge between two chairs that could hold the heaviest weight.
please see GAMES, page 5
Freeholder director Bruce Gar-
ganio announced that as part of
the freeholders 2014 Health
Starts Here initiative, the
Burlington County Health De-
partment and Prevention Plus
will be hosting a poster contest in
recognition of Asthma Aware-
ness Month.
All entries must be received by
Friday, May 16.
Prizes will be awarded to the
winners.
Please submit your posters
to John Sivon at the
Burlington County Health De-
partment, 15 Pioneer Blvd., West-
ampton.
They can also be e-mailed to
jsivon@co.burlington.nj.us. In-
clude your name, school, grade
and contact info.
For questions about the con-
test, call (609) 265-5467.
2 THE DELRAN SUN MAY 7-MAY 13, 2014
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The following reports are on
file with the Delran Police De-
partment:
The following incident
occurred on Saturday, April
23:
At 4:17 p.m., a motor vehicle ac-
cident was reported to police
from the 100 block of Green Briar
Road in the Tenby Chase neigh-
borhood of Delran. Upon arrival
of police, a victim was found in
the street suffering from head in-
juries. Preliminary investigation
suggests the victim was ejected
from a moving vehicle. The acci-
dent is under investigation and
no further information is avail-
able at this time. Anyone with in-
formation regarding this acci-
dent should contact the Delran
Police Department at (856) 461-
4444 or the confidential tip line at
(856) 461-9010.
The following incident
occurred on Monday, April
28:
At 5:33 a.m., Delran police re-
sponded to North Route 130 near
the Golden Corral Steak House
(just south of the Tenby Chase
Drive intersection) for an over-
turned vehicle that struck a utili-
ty pole. Upon arrival, police con-
firmed that the vehicle, a 1999
Chevy Cavalier driven by a 20-
year-old Delran resident, had
struck a utility pole causing it to
fall. The pole partially blocked
the travel lanes of Route 130
North. The driver suffered minor
injuries and was transported to
Lourdes Medical Center, Willing-
boro, by Delran EMS. The north-
bound right lane of travel will re-
main closed while PSE&G utility
crews make repairs to the pole.
The accident is under investiga-
tion.
police report
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vague witness descriptions, using
straws and straw wrappers to
construct a bridge between two
chairs that could support the
heaviest weight, and even getting
every student on a team to walk
through a giant spider web with-
out touching the web or using the
same opening more than once.
Students moved from room to
room to participate in each activi-
ty. Presenters graded the teams
on how well they accomplished
their given task, and chaperones
asked the students questions
about how they might have
worked better together or what
they might do differently at the
next activity.
Elaine Mendelow, a retired Cin-
naminson teacher and special ac-
tivities coordinator for the dis-
trict, said the games were meant
to promote skills beyond basic
learning that would help the kids
once they were older and in situa-
tions that take place outside
school.
It takes a lot of teamwork and
problem solving, Mendelow
said. Thats what were really
looking for now in education. Not
just great memory, and not just
regurgitating information and
facts, but getting people to work
in harmony and form cooperative
groups.
With the teams composed of
kids from different schools,
Mendelow said the kids gained
the skills to quickly work with
new and different people to ac-
complish a mutual goal.
Thats what business is all
about as well, working, communi-
cating, listening to other kids
ideas, Mendelow said. Those
are the people theyre finding the
most successful in the business
world because they know how to
negotiate with other people and
they know how to make eye con-
tact - all of those kinds of skills
that are so important here.
Cinnaminson School District
Superintendent Salvatore Illuzzi
was also at the event to watch the
students compete. He said Cin-
naminson was proud to host the
annual event.
Were very proud to host it ob-
viously, Illuzzi said. Its some-
thing that makes a good place just
a little bit more special.
Illuzzi also said the district was
lucky to have someone like
Mendelow, and the representa-
tives from the other districts have
always complimented Mendelow
for the work she does.
In each of the programs she
does for us, theres the motivation
of making the children more
aware of community and its re-
sources and working together for
good, Illuzzi said. I think in
many ways thats a very fortunate
thing for our school district.
One visitor from outside Cin-
naminson was chaperone and
parent Robin Eder of Delran. She
was at the event with her daugh-
ter and said it was great for kids
because it was exciting and chal-
lenging, and her daughter and the
other kids had been looking for-
ward to it for months.
I think its great, Eder said.
Id never heard of it before, but
every year they get to do it and all
the kids come together, meeting
new kids and seeing how they
work together. It gives them confi-
dence to be able to work with
other kids who are not their
friends, so they can walk into any
situation.
MAY 7-MAY 13, 2014 THE DELRAN SUN 5
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Games promote teamwork
GAMES
Continued from page 1
Please recycle this
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in our opinion
6 THE DELRAN SUN MAY 7-MAY 13, 2014
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
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 08075 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 856-
427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
news@delransun.com. For advertising
information, call 856-427-0933 or email
advertising@delransun.com. The Sun wel-
comes 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 news@delransun.com, via fax at 856-427-
0934, or via the mail.
You can drop them off at our office, too. The
Delran Sun reserves the right to reprint your
letter in any medium including electroni-
cally.
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CHAIRMAN OF ELAUWIT MEDIA
MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow
CONTENT EDITOR Kristen Dowd
DELRAN EDITOR Zane Clark
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INTERIMPUBLISHER
Mr. Delran crowned following contest
By ZANE CLARK
The Sun
Mr. Delran 2014 has been crowned.
On stage in front of a packed auditorium
at Delran High School on May 1, the 12 Del-
ran seniors competing for the title attempt-
ed to best each other with swimsuits, for-
malwear, talents and through question and
answer segments.
The contest was hosted by the Delran
Student Council to raise money for the var-
ious charities the organization supports
throughout the year, such as adopting fami-
lies around the holidays and veterans ef-
forts.
Student council treasurer Quinn
Reynolds, who was at the door selling tick-
ets, said the council puts on the show be-
cause its a guaranteed way to raise money.
We know it raises money because
everyone in Delran is always coming, espe-
cially the students because they know the
kids in the show, Reynolds said.
She said the show is also important to
the contestants themselves.
To them it means a lot because this has
been a tradition for the past few years for
us to do, Reynolds said. The guys hold it
very high.
Social studies teacher and co-coordina-
tor of the contest Caitlin MacFarland said
even though the contestants are busy sen-
iors, they still have enough school spirit to
find the time to rehearse and star in the
show.
Its a busy year, MacFarland said.
please see SHOW, page 7
C
hange can be hard to accept at
times, and so, too, can reality.
So its no surprise that the re-
sults of a recent poll show that more
residents in New Jersey oppose merg-
ing their town with another than sup-
port it.
Thats a change from four years ago,
when a Rutgers-Eagleton poll found
that more than half of the states resi-
dents favored mergers. Analysts say
the change in heart can be attributed
to Gov. Christies 2 percent cap on
property tax increases.
But while Christies cap has worked
for limiting tax increases, for now, we
dont know how long that will last.
Christie has been pushing for munici-
pal mergers for a few years now, and
he may turn up the heat on towns
soon.
You see, the state is in financial
trouble. Once again, revenues fell very
short of projections, this time by $800
million. Christie deflected blame, say-
ing many states overestimated tax rev-
enues, partly because wealthy people
began holding onto their money once
federal temporary tax cuts expired.
That may be true, but it doesnt
change the reality: New Jersey is in
the red, big time, and it may require
some serious budget cuts to get out.
Throw in the fact that were less than
two months from the end of the fiscal
year, and we could have a crisis on our
hands.
That brings us back to the issue of
consolidation. The state isnt getting
any better when it comes to taxes. So
while municipal tax increases have
stabilized over the last few years due
to the cap, the state as a whole collects
the most in property taxes on aver-
age a whopping $8,000 per home.
Taxes may have stabilized, but they
arent likely to go down any time
soon unless something is done on the
local level.
And that something could be con-
solidation.
Residents who are fearful of such a
move because of the lack of control,
lack of small-town identity, potential
compromise of services, safety and ed-
ucation among other issues can
look no further than Princeton as an
example. The municipality just ended
its first full year of consolidation be-
tween the former Princeton Borough
and Princeton Township, and by all ac-
counts, it was a success.
The consolidated municipality saw
a more than 4 percent reduction in the
budget because of the merger, while
not compromising on safety, security,
education and other services.
So why not follow Princetons lead?
Why not find a willing partner to
merge with, share services with and
save some money? Its an idea that
might become a requirement, instead
of an option, sometime soon.
Is it time for consolidation?
You may not like the idea, but it may be the best, and only, choice
Your thoughts
What do you think about consolidating
towns to save on taxes? Share your
thoughts on this in a letter to the editor.
These kids have great spirit, so
theyre involved in everything.
Were a busy group.
An hour before the show, those
contestants were eagerly await-
ing to show off what they had
spent about a month rehearsing
for.
One contestant was Dave
Busch. He said he was excited for
the opening group dance Boyz in
Jorts that all the contestants
would perform together.
I feel confident, Busch said.
Rehearsal went good, and we
practiced a lot. I know all my
dances. I know all my talent. I feel
good.
Another contestant waiting for
the show to start was Sean Hanni-
gan. Hannigan said he entered
the contest because it was a fun
way to give back to the school and
town.
Delran has done so much
for me over the years, its good to
give back, Hannigan said. Its
pretty cool. Its a good time.
Everyone gets together and has
fun.
Also entered in the show
was MaDarrell McCullough. He
said he was in the contest because
he thought he was the most like
Mr. Delran, but the show
was mostly about having fun with
the other talented kids at the
school.
I think its a fun way for the
Delran guys to express them-
selves, McCullough said. Its a
little bit of competition, but over-
all its just fun, showing a lot Del-
ran spirit tonight and what were
about.
As the 7 p.m. start time drew
closer, the auditorium began to
fill. Seated in the front row was
Celeste Taylor, mother of contest-
ant Tommy Taylor.
She said her son normally was-
nt involved in things like per-
forming, so she gave him credit
for getting on stage.
Im very proud of him that he
took the initiative to go ahead and
be on stage, Taylor said. Hes a
soccer play, always on the sports
end of it, so for him to single out
and do something like this is
great.
Once the show began, the audi-
ence always seemed to be laugh-
ing at comedy segments or
clapping and cheering along to
songs.
Yet after the dancing in jorts
was over, after the Jeopardy!
parody involving students pre-
tending to be their teachers had
finished, once the contestants
were done singing newer hits like
Pharrell Williams Happy and
classics like Tom Jones Its Not
Unusual, it was time to select a
winner.
Once the judges had finished
calculating the scores, it was con-
testant Will Goodwin who was
crowned Mr. Delran 2014.
Earlier, Goodwin had
impressed the crowd by
signing Part of Your World
from Disneys The Little Mer-
maid while wearing a long red
wig and a green mermaid tail
dress.
Going into the show, Goodwin
said he didnt know who was
going to win, but he did not ex-
pect it be him.
Its good to win, but everyone
did well, Goodwin said. It could
have been anyone honestly. I
think I got a little lucky. Theyre
amazing. Everyones act is really
hilarious.
Goodwin said he was just
happy to know he entertained
people and helped raise some
money for charity.
The whole town came togeth-
er, Goodwin said. The audience
was pretty filled. It was a good
competition.
MAY 7-MAY 13, 2014 THE DELRAN SUN 7
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Show opened with group
dance titled Boyz in Jorts
SHOW
Continued from page 6
WEDNESDAY May 7
Bilingual Story Time: Ages 3 to 6.
10:30 a.m. Hablas espanol? Lis-
ten to stories and learn some
Spanish together. Sing songs and
make a small craft too. Registra-
tion is required. Register online at
www.bcls.lib.nj.us, in person or
call the library at (856) 829-
9340.
Reading, Eating, Action, and Death
Magazine: Ages 12 to 18. 7 p.m.
Join the library as they celebrate
the second issue of their teen
magazine: The Steampunk Issue.
Want your work to be featured?
Contact Shannon at
sfagan@bcls.lib.nj.us for more
information or come to the meet-
ing. Snacks will be served. Regis-
tration not required. More infor-
mation online at
www.bcls.lib.nj.us, in person or
call the library at (856) 829-
9340.
THURSDAY May 8
Happy Mother's Day Craft: Ages 5
to 12. 4:15 p.m. Cinnaminson
Library at 1619 Riverton Road.
Join us for a fun keepsake craft
and card to make for mom or
grand mom. Please, Moms, no
peeking! Registration is required.
Register in person, online, or call
the library at (856) 829-9340.
Delran Township Recreation Advi-
sory meeting: 8 p.m. the second
Thursday of the month in the
community room at the municipal
building, 900 Chester Ave., Del-
ran. For more information and to
confirm meeting time, visit
www.delrantownship.org.
FRIDAY May 9
Cinnaminson Community Chorus
Spring Concert- Alive with
Music: All. 8 p.m. Cinnaminson
High School Auditorium, 1197
Riverton Road. Come join the Cin-
naminson Community Chorus in
celebrating the spring with their
annual spring concert. Alan
Blackford Accompanist and direc-
tor. Tickets are sold at the door
Adults $7.00, senior citizens and
students $5.00, children 12 and
younger free. For more informa-
tion contact Irene French at
(856) 428-6448.
SATURDAY May 10
Let's hear it for the Ladies: Adult. 2
p.m. Cinnaminson Library at 1619
Riverton Road. We've all heard of
Betsy, but what do we know
about Peggy, Deborah, Lydia, or
Oney Judge? What part did these
outstanding women play in the
struggle for American independ-
ence? Enjoy an entertaining talk
featuring these ladies and several
other women who played impor-
tant parts in creating a new
nation. Registration is required.
Please register in person, online,
or call the library at (856) 829-
9340.
MONDAY May 12
Affordable Health Care Act: Adult.
7 p.m. Become informed about
the Affordable Care Act. This pro-
gram provides information about
scams and unauthorized
resources to help protect person-
al information. Presented by the
Burlington County Bar Associa-
tion. Registration is required.
Please register in person, online,
or call the library at (856) 829-
9340.
TUESDAY May 13
Delran Board of Education meet-
ing: 7:30 p.m. the second Tuesday
of the month at the administra-
tion building, 52 Hartford Road,
Delran. For more information and
to confirm meeting time, visit
www.delranschools.org.
CALENDAR PAGE 8 MAY 7-MAY 13, 2014
WANT TO BE LISTED?
To have your Delran 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 Delran Sun, 108 Kings Highway East, Haddonfield, NJ
08033. Or by email: news@delransun.com. Or you can submit a
calendar listing through our website (www.delransun.com). We will
run photos if space is available and the quality of the photo is suffi-
cient. Every attempt is made to provide coverage to all organiza-
tions.
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