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www.mtlaurelsun.com MAY 25–31, 2016 FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Classified . . . . . . . . . . . 20–23Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUEBlazing a path
Lenape’s Jasmine Statenshines in track. PAGE 3
O
u t d o
o r L i v i n
g i s
s u e !
By ZANE CLARK
The Sun
On Jan. 30, 1933, Adolf Hitlerwas elected chancellor of Ger-many, and for the Jewish familyof Alice Kraus, life as they knewit in Germany was coming to anend.
Kraus, who was born two yearslater in 1935, would eventuallysurvive the Holocaust by escap-ing Germany with her parentsaround the start of World War II,and it was that story of survivalshe shared with students at Mt.Laurel’s Hartford School on May19.
“We were the lucky ones,”Kraus said. “My grandparents,uncles, aunts and cousins werenot lucky. They perished in thegas ovens of Europe.”
Kraus began her story with theelection of Hitler as Germanchancellor and the enactment of the Nuremberg Laws of 1935where German Jews were
stripped of their citizenship andbasic rights.
Kraus went on to describe the“Night of Broken Glass” attackagainst Jews on Nov. 9 and Nov. 10in 1938 where tens of thousandsof German Jews and Jewish busi-nessmen were arrested and incar-cerated in Nazi concentrationcamps, including Kraus’ fatherwho owned a men’s clothingstore.
“I remember how he describedthe brutality of his captors,”Kraus said “In one specific inci-dent, they beat an old man with arifle butt until he fell to the floorunconscious. They never stoppeduntil they beat him to death.”
Kraus said her father and some
of his fellow inmates eventuallydecided to attempt an escape fromthe camp, and so one day whileonly two guards escorted themout of the camp for work detail,the men ran from their captors,including Kraus’ father who hidin a ditch until nightfall.
Once Kraus’ father returned tohis family, he was urged to leaveGermany by his brother who hadbeen living in the United Statessince 1927, and so Kraus’ fathertraveled to Cuba and waited foreight months until immigrationquotas had opened to where he
could enter the USA.
Kraus said she and her motherwaited in Germany, as the Ger-mans weren’t harming womenand children at the time, until herfather settled in the United States.
It was the spring of 1940 whenKraus and her mother traveled tothe United States, from Germanyto Moscow, to Siberia, toManchuria, China, back to Rus-sia, to Japan, then leaving Japanon a freighter that stopped inHawaii before finally reachingthe Angel Island ImmigrationStation in California.
When a student asked why therest of Kraus’ family chose to stayin Germany, Kraus told the stu-dents that many had businessesand homes like she and her par-ents, and the other members of her family thought they were“crazy” to leave.
“They thought … why were wegoing, it was going to blow over,there wasn’t going to be anythingworse happening, we just had to
lay low for awhile, and that’s notwhat happened,” Kraus said.
Kraus said Jews in Germany atthe time were secure in their Ger-man citizenship and referencedthe philosophy of 19th centuryJewish poet Judah Leib Gordonwho wrote “Be a man in thestreets and a Jew at home.”
“In other words, don’t flaunt
ZANE CLARK/The Sun
Holocaust survivor Alice Kraus visited Hartford School on May 19 to share with students the story of howshe and her parents escaped Nazi Germany. Kraus was able to show students historical pieces, includingthe Star of David badge worn by her grandmother who was murdered in a Nazi concentration camp.
Holocaust survivor shares story at Hartford School Alice Kraus, born in 1935, escaped Germany with her parents around the start of World War II
please see KRAUS, page 10
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MAY 25–31, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 3
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By MIKE MONOSTRAThe Sun
If you were to shadow LenapeHigh School junior track and field
athlete Jasmine Staten at the May11 Lenape Regional High SchoolDistrict Cup, you may get tired
just following her around.Staten started the day compet-
ing in 100-meter hurdles. She thencompeted less than an hour laterin the 400-meter dash. Next, sheleft the Seneca High School stadi-um and headed to the jumpingrunway behind the bleachers tocompete in the long jump. Finally,
she returned to the track andcompeted in the 200-meter dash.
Few athletes can compete in allof those events in one day. ButStaten didn’t just compete in all of
them; she won all of them.Staten was a quad winner at
the LRHSD Cup, setting a seasonbest mark in three of the fourevents. Even more impressive,she set meet records in both the100-meter hurdles and long jump.
Staten is used to running inmultiple events. She’s participat-ed in as many as four events
Jasmine Staten’sathleticism blazing
path for Lenape trackStaten won four events at Lenape RegionalHigh School District Cup, plans to contend
in four events at the state level in a few weeks
please see STATEN, page 18
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4 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MAY 25–31, 2016
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By ZANE CLARKThe Sun
At the beginning of the 2015-2016 school year, the Lenape Re-gional High School District imple-mented what SuperintendentCarol Birnbohm described as one
of the biggest changes the districthad ever seen outside of new con-struction – a new bell schedule.
The former 42-minute-longclass periods grew to 57 minutes.Days once broken into 13 periodswere reduced to six, and lunchwas drastically redesigned tocombine what was five lunch pe-riods into one common “commu-nity lunch and learn” period inthe middle of the day.
Students now only attend eachof their classes three times with-in a four-day rotation, meetingwith different classes at differenttimes depending on what day it iswithin the rotation.
At the most recent meeting of LRHSD Board of Education,
Birnbohm updated the board andparents on how the district’snearly 7,000 students and 1,100staff members were handling thechange.
According to Birnbohm, theproposed benefits of the schedulehave been playing out very closeto the district’s projections, withincreases and improvements to
LRHSD reaps benefitsof new bell scheduleSuperintendent Carol Birnbohm says
new schedule is increasing instructional time, decreasing lateness and absences
please see NUMBER, page 16
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6 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MAY 25–31, 2016
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
The Sun is published weekly by ElauwitMedia LLC, 108 Kings Highway East, 3rdFloor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. It is mailed weekly to select addresses in the 08054 ZIPcode. 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 emailnews@mtlaurelsun.com.
For advertising information, call 856-427-0933 or email advertising@mtlaurel-sun.com.
The Sun welcomes suggestions and com-ments from readers – including any infor-mation about errors that may call for a cor-rection to be printed.
SPEAK UPThe Sun welcomes letters from readers.Brief and to the point is best, so we look forletters that are 300 words or fewer. Include your name, address and phone number. Wedo not print anonymous letters. Send lettersto news@mtlaurelsun.com, via fax at 856-427-0934, or via the mail. You can dropthem off at our office, too.
The Mt. Laurel Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium – includ-ing electronically.
Dan McDonough Jr.chairman of elauwit media
manaGinG editor Kristen Dowd
senior associate editor Mike Monostra
mt. laurel editor Zane Clark
art director Stephanie Lippincott
advertisinG director Arlene Reyes
elauwit media Group
publisher emeritus Steve Miller
editor emeritus Alan Bauer
Tim Ronaldsonexecutive editor
Joe EiselepublisherW
e’ re all familiar with Me-
morial Day. We know that it
is a day set aside to honor
the brave men and women who made
the ultimate sacrifice to protect our
country and the freedom we have.
And we know that it is celebrated on
the last Monday in May, thereby creat-ing a three-day weekend for most.
Maybe it shouldn’t be that way.
Back when Memorial Day was first
established during the Civil War era, it
was observed on May 30. It had its own
special day, which, many will argue,
kept the focus on the meaning of the
day.
They have a point.
When one thinks of Memorial Day
these days, it’s easy to lose focus.
There are Memorial Day sales at
stores and the “kick-off to summer”sentiment. That people have three
days off often overshadows what the
spirit of Memorial Day is all about.
We don’t want to sound completely
negative. Many communities still take
pride in holding a thoughtful, mean-
ingful Memorial Day ceremony
and/or parade. We still see flags dis-
played. We still see a lot of people taketime to honor those who died serving
our country.
But we also can’t help but think that
lumping Memorial Day into a three-
day weekend has diminished the
meaning of the day – at least some-
what. There are too many distractions.
How many of us have made Memorial
Day weekend plans that have absolute-
ly nothing to do with honoring the
meaning of the day?Memorial Day should be special. It
should be a time when every Ameri-
can reflects on the sacrifices made on
his or her behalf and takes the time to
pay proper respect. Nothing should
distract from those sentiments.
Will the three-day weekend be re-
placed with a move back to May 30?
Doubtful. It’s going to be up to each in-
dividual to cut through the clutter and
honor those who made the ultimate
sacrifice.
in our opinion
Memorial DayThree-day weekend or a return to a traditional day of remembrance?
Holiday weekend distractions
Memorial Day shouldn’t be about salesor heading to the beach. It should beabout honoring those who died servingthis country. How do you reflect onMemorial Day?
The Sun is proud to announce SPJ award winnersBy TIM RONALDSON Executive Editor
In my 11 years with Elauwit Media,never have I been prouder of the workwe’ve done than last week, when we re-ceived word that we had won six awards inthe New Jersey chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists’ annual awards.
The tireless work we put in to betteringourselves as professionals and providingyou with the most local news you can find – at the highest quality – is all worth it whenwe receive praise like we did last week.
Our team consisting of Kristen Dowd,our managing editor, along with our asso-
ciate editors Erica Chayes Wida, BrigitBauma, Zane Clark and Mike Monostra areall to be commended – whether they werenamed as award winners or not – for it isthe teamwork they display that allows us tocover your town as we do.
Erica won first place in the SPJ’s “Wil-son Barto Rookie of the Year” category.
This marks the second year in a row thatone of our employees has received thishonor, after Zane won the title last year.Sean Lajoie, who has moved on to a new po-sition with a different company, won sec-ond place behind Erica for Rookie of theYear.
Mike captured our other first-place title,in the Sports Reporting category for astory on the Moorestown High School girls’lacrosse team.
Mike also took home a second-place fin-ish in the Photojournalism Sports catego-ry for a set of photos he took of the
Shawnee High School girls soccer teamwinning South Jersey Group IV, and athird-place finish in the Feature Reportingcategory for a story on Mt. Laurel’s Eric“Ebo” Eberling, who passed away in 2013at the age of 17 from cancer.
Our final award this year went to Ericaagain. She won second place in the Photo-
journalism Feature category for shots shetook at the Princeton Rec Department’s an-nual Cardboard Canoe Race.
To view the full stories and photos thatwon the awards, please visit our website,www.elauwitmedia.com/news.
Every day, I am proud of the work ouremployees do to help further our missionof providing the best local news to the resi-dents of every town we cover.
But I would be remiss if I didn’t give aheartfelt “thank you” to everyone in thecommunity who helps us reach that goalby being our partners – by answering the
phone when we have questions, by reach-ing out to us when you have a news tip.Without that cooperation and interest inyour “town newspaper,” The Sun wouldn’tbe what it is today! Congratulations againto all our award winners!
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WE NES Y MAY 25
Info Table: US Family Health Plan:Adult. 10 a.m. at the Mt. LaurelLibrary. Health benefits consult-
ant Josephine Grey will be in thelobby to answer questions aboutUS Family Health Plan for quali-fied military personnel.
Crochet Anyone?: Adult. 1 p.m. atthe Mt. Laurel Library. Learn tocrochet or crochet with newfriends. Join craft enthusiasts forcrocheting and conversation.Novices and experts welcome.Instruction available if needed.No registration necessary. Pleasebring personal knitting materials.
Tween Meet and Make - Nail Art:
Grades five to seven. 6:30 p.m. atthe Mt. Laurel Library. Bring yourideas. This month, share ideasand experiment with favorite naildesigns. Supplies will be provid-
ed. Registration required.
Rotary Club of Mt. Laurel meeting:Noon at Laurel Creek CountryClub, 655 Old Centerton Road.
For more information, visitwww.mountlaurelrotary.org orcall (856) 234-7663.
Storytime: 11 a.m. every Wednesdayat Kids Play Lounge in Mt. Laurel.
Come hear a new story everyweek and then stay and play therest of the day! Call (856) 273-9500 or visit www.kidsplay-lounge.com for more information.
New Covenant PresbyterianChurch Adult Bible Study: 2 to 3p.m. Church is at 240 Creek Road,Rancocas Woods, Mount Laurel.
THURS Y MAY 26
Pajama Pals: Ages 3-6. 7 p.m. at theMt. Laurel Library. Shake out thesillies and get ready for bed with
friends. Join the library for sto-ries, songs and fun in this specialevening story time. Siblings arewelcome. Kids (and parents!) areinvited to wear their pajamas tothe event. No registrationrequired.
SUN Y MAY 29
Deconstructing Cosplay: Gradesseven to 12. 12:30 p.m. at the Mt.Laurel Library. Got an awesomecosplay idea but don't know how
to get started? Come out andmeet with a local cosplayer whowill talk about how to evaluate acharacter and break the costumedown into manageable parts. Allthat is required is ideas, however,for those who have a work inprogress, bring it for assistanceand advice. The library will havesewing machines available foruse. Registration is requested,and program materials may only
be available for those who regis-ter by the deadline.
New Covenant PresbyterianChurch: Sunday worship 11 a.m. tonoon. Adult Bible study 9:30 to
10:30 a.m. Coffee and fellowshipafter the church service eachthird Sunday. Church is at 240Creek Road, Rancocas Woods,Mount Laurel.
MON Y MAY 30
Memorial Day: Most offices,libraries and schools closed inobservance of the holiday.
TUES Y MAY 31
Teen Open Game Night: Grades sev-en to 12. 5:30 p.m. at the Mt. Lau-rel Library. Come out and play.Board games or video games,choose one of the library's orbring your own. No experiencenecessary, just a desire to get inthe game and have a good time.
Mt. Laurel I BNI Chapter meeting:7:30 to 9 a.m. at Marco’s Restau-rant at Indian Spring C.C., 115 S.Elmwood Drive.
CALENDARPAGE 8 MAY 25–31, 2016
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 thedate of the event.
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Sun, 108 Kings HighwayEast, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email:news@mtlaurelsun.com . Or you can submit a calendar listingthrough our website (www.mtlaurelsun.com).
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10 — MAY 25–31, 2016
Gary F. Woodend, MBA, JD5-C N. Main Street• Medford, NJ 08055
609-654-5489 or v isitwww.WoodendLaw.com
your Jewishness, you are Ger-mans, you are totally assimilated,you have been Germans forever,”Kraus said. “I can’t get over whathappened to them … they were so
secure in their country and theirleaders and everything blew up.”Once Kraus and her mother
made it to America, the familyeventually settled in Indianapoliswhere she grew up and where herfather opened a jewelry store.
Kraus told the students herpeople were “guilty of no crimeexcept that they existed,” and shesaid she wanted to impart to themand others the simple lesson thatthey should treat others the waythey want to be treated.
To truly drive home the realityof the Holocaust, Kraus was alsoable to show students the actualStar of David badge worn by hergrandmother who was murderedin a Nazi concentration camp.
“I kept it as a reminder, not forme, because I will never forget,but for my children and grand-children so they would knowwhat happened to their people,”Kraus said.
KRAUSContinued from page 1
Kraus: Treatothers how you wish
to be treated
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MAY 25–31, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 11
"(& &#" !#' *%&&+&& "'%+ " FREE "'%"' '*+
"'%"' '*+ $%#) + !"('(%% + !" %' '%#( + '
& ***'!&'%#!$%#!##' ) *' #'% #%& #% $%#% $(%&
The following Lenape HighSchool softball scores were sub-mitted by varsity head coach EricKrastek.
Lenape defeated Cherry HillWest, 7-5, on May 16
Kendra Mahon led the Indianswith two doubles in the win. JuliaRosenblatt also doubled forLenape. Morgan Macrae earnedthe save, pitching two solid in-
nings in relief of starter EmmaBrennan.
Eastern defeated Lenape, 2-0,
on May 18Two runs from the Vikings in
the first inning was all of thescoring in the game. Bria Scheetspitched well for the Indians, al-lowing just four hits and one walkin seven innings. Lenape man-aged just three hits in the game.
The following Lenape HighSchool golf score was submittedby varsity head coach Chris Foley.
Lenape defeated Cherokee, 158-173, on May 12 at Ramblewood
Country ClubLenape: Leo Christou, 37;Adam Hoversen, 39; Erica Han,41; Joe Nuneviller, 41; Doug Er-good, 41
softball scores
golf score
Email us at news@mtlaurelsun.com
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12 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MAY 25–31, 2016
Joshua Smith of Mt. Laurelgraduated with 1,046 otherMillersville University of Penn-sylvania students during the un-
dergraduate commencement cer-emony held on Saturday, May 7.Smith graduated with a bache-lor’s of science in education intechnology education.
Alicia Day of Mt. Laurel hasbeen named to the Elmira Collegedean's list for Term II, Winter2016.
Students who earn a 3.6 orgreater grade point average on a4.0 scale for the academic termare recognized on the Elmira Col-
lege dean's list for academic excel-lence.
Undergraduate and graduatestudents from Saint Joseph's Uni-versity in Philadelphia were in-ducted into the national Jesuithonor society, Alpha Sigma Nu,for the 2015-2016 academic year.Mt. Laurel native Alyssa Duffnerwas among those inducted.
Mt. Laurel resident Emily
Check was among nearly 700 stu-dents who graduated from BobJones University Friday, May 6.Check graduated with an AS inearly childcare and development.
on campus
COLLEGE NEWS
Email your announcementsto news@mtlaurelsun.com.
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MAY 25–31, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 13
The following Lenape HighSchool boys’ tennis scores weresubmitted by varsity head coachTony Guerrera.
Lenape defeated Cherry HillWest, 5-0, on May 16
Singles:First singles: Jack Lavin,
Lenape, defeated Eric Nguyen 6-06-0
Second singles: Marc Ignarri,Lenape, defeated Joseph Poole 6-26-1
Third singles: Jimmy Li,Lenape defeated Greg Salzberg 6-26-4
Doubles:
First doubles: Kavi Munjal andJeremy Shpigel, Lenape, defeatedKhoa Ly and Stanley Fung 6-4 6-1
Second doubles: Brett Chowand Allen Sha, Lenape defeatedDean Bongiovanni and Phuoc Ho6-3 6-0
Lenape defeated Millville, 4-1, inthe quarterfinals of the South Jer-sey Group IV tournament on May17
Singles:First singles: Jack Lavin,
Lenape, defeated Manuel Melen-
dez 6-1 6-1Second singles: Joseph Iacono,
Millville, defeated Marc Ignarri 6-
3 6-1Third singles: Jimmy Li,
Lenape defeated Jose Reyes 6-1 7-6(7-4)
Doubles:First doubles: Kavi Munjal and
Jeremy Shpigel, Lenape, defeatedAlex Bruman and Adam Grennan6-0 6-0
Second doubles: Brett Chowand Allen Sha, Lenape defeatedDustin Chiarello and David Crain6-0 6-2
Lenape defeated Seneca, 3-2, onMay 18
Singles:First singles: Cody Cassise,
Seneca, defeated Jack Lavin 6-1 7-6 (7-4)Second singles: Ryan Groves,
Seneca, defeated Marc Ignarri 5-76-0 10-4
Third sinlges: Jimmy Li,Lenape, defeated Pedram Hare-sign 6-0 6-0
Doubles:First doubles: Kavi Munjal and
Jeremy Shpigel, Lenape, defeatedMichael Miller and Kevin Sulews-ki 6-0 6-1
Second doubles: Brett Chow
and Allen Sha, Lenape, defeatedMark Pogozelski and ThomasJeanson 6-4 6-1
tennis scores
New Jersey DisasterMental Health Helpline
(877) 294-4357
PSA
Poison Control Center
(800) 222-1222
PSA
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Burlington County ProsecutorRobert D. Bernardi has an-nounced that a 23-year-old Mt.Laurel man was arrested on May
12 and charged with possessionand distribution of child pornog-raphy.
The male, of the 100 block of
Carleton Lane in Mt. Laurel, wascharged with three counts of en-dangering the welfare of chil-dren. The charge covering distri-bution of the pornographicmaterial is a second-degreecrime.
The other two charges that dealwith possession of the porno-graphic material are third-degreecrimes.
The male was lodged inBurlington County Jail on$250,000 full bail.
If he posts bail, the male is for-bidden from using the Internet orhaving contact with minors.
He was scheduled to have hisfirst appearance in SuperiorCourt in Mt. Holly on the after-noon on May 13. The case will besent to a grand jury to be consid-ered for indictment.
The investigation began afterthe Burlington County Prosecu-tor’s Office High-Tech CrimesUnit received a cyber tip from the
National Center for Missing & Ex-ploited Children.
The cyber tip revealed that anindividual later revealed to themale suspect was sharing a videoof child pornography with anoth-er individual through the useof a web camera-streaming pro-gram.
A search warrant was executedon May 12 at the male’s residence,where a laptop computer wasseized that contained numerousvideos and images of childpornography.
The male was taken into cus-tody at his residence.
The Burlington County Prose-cutor’s Office High-Tech CrimesUnit conducted the investigation.The warrant was served with theassistance of the Mt. Laurel Po-lice Department and the New Jer-sey State Police.
The Burlington County Prose-cutor’s Office High-Tech CrimesUnit is a member of the New Jer-sey State Police Internet CrimesAgainst Children Task Force and
the New Jersey State PoliceCyber Terrorism Task Force.
14 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — DATE, YEAR
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MAY 25–31, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 15PROFESSIONAL WEBSITES.
PEASANT PRICES.
According to the Centers forDisease Control and Prevention,about 10 people die from uninten-tional drowning every day. Of
those 10, two are children aged 14or younger. In an effort keep chil-dren safe in and around the water,the YMCA of Burlington andCamden Counties offers impor-tant safety tips for all ages:
• Never swim alone. Only swimwhere there is a lifeguard on duty.It only takes one inch of water tocover a child’s mouth andnose, potentially causing drown-ing.
• Only swim in supervised, des-ignated areas. In the little time ittakes to cross a room or pool deckto grab a towel, a child can slipsilently under the surface of thewater, even while wearing a float-
ing device.• Safeguard pool area for chil-
dren. Keep pool gates locked andfurniture away from fences to en-
sure a child can’t climb over.Make sure to use gates that areself-closing and self-latching.When inside the pool area, keeptoys at a safe distance from theedge of the pool.
• Be prepared in case of emer-gency. Accidents can happen inthe blink of an eye. It’s importantto take the time to learn life-sav-ing skills like CPR and have aphone handy in the pool area. TheY offers first aid, CPR and AEDtraining, as well as lifeguard cer-tification courses.
• Maintain appropriate lifesavingequipment. Keep a life preserverand rope in the pool area, hang-
ing from the fence so they are ac-cessible but not in the way.
“Learning to swim is not onlya great way to stay healthy – it’s
also a critical life safety skill,”said Tim Kerrihard, presidentand CEO of the YMCA of Burlington and Camden Coun-ties. “Kids drown because of alack of understanding aboutwater safety or a place to practiceit. Our goal at the Y is to helpchange that.”
This summer, the Y will behosting Swim Safe, a programwhich allows local children tolearn life-saving swimming andwater safety skills.
For more information on theY’s swim lessons and summerspecial, call (856) 231-9622 or visitwww.ymca-bc.org.
YMCA shares swimming safety tips
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16 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MAY 25–31, 2016
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instructional time, staff collabo-ration and overall efficiency.Birnbohm said the district hasobserved a reduction in latenessand an improvement to overalldaily attendance.
Birnbohm said those trendsmight be attributable to the elimi-nation of homeroom at the begin-ning of the day, meaning studentsare in their first class as soon asthe school day begins, and withstudents not meeting for each of their classes every day of theweek, Birnbohm said there mightbe more of a drive to attendschool regularly.
Birnbohm said overall disrup-tions to classes have also de-creased – a trend she saidstemmed from the longer periodfor community lunch and learnin the middle of the school day.
“Kids have that time in themiddle of the day to go on the er-
rands they need or maybe sched-ule meetings with their coun-selors or so forth and theyweren’t getting out of class to dothat,” Birnbohm said.
With the community lunch andlearn period, Birnbohm said stu-dents also have more time tospend with friends, study andmake up work for classes.
Birnbohm said students werealso taking fewer study halls andinstead using their extra time totake more lab sciences, and withthe longer community lunch andlearn period, there has been agreater interaction among staff members, students and adminis-trators as more people are free atthe same time.
“It shows a big community incommunity lunch and learn, andI don’t want to lose that word … Idon’t like when people just call it‘lunch and learn’ and I keep oncorrecting them and say ‘no, it’scommunity lunch and learn.’ It’simportant to remember that,”Birnbohm said.
According to Birnbohm, teach-
ers have also been reporting moreefficient prep time that has beenused to re-craft former lessons, aswith the longer class periods,teachers can no longer simply lec-
ture for the entire session.Birnbohm said those lessons
have included more student activ-ity, increased discussion andmore group work.
Birnbohm said teachers havealso praised the schedule, as it al-lows teachers of different depart-ments to meet with their depart-ment colleagues during a periodfor two days out of every four-dayrotation. During those periods,Birnbohm said teachers also havemore time to collaborate and dis-cuss lessons.
“They’re all great professionaltasks that we never really madetime for our teachers to do duringthe instructional day, and it’s real-ly nice to see our teachers usingthis time for collaboration,” Birn-bohm said.
Birnbohm said the number of disciplinary infractions has alsobeen greatly reduced.
NUMBERContinued from page 4
Number of disciplinary infractions has been reduced
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MAY 25–31, 2016 –THE MT. LAUREL SUN 17
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Special to The Sun
Capehart Scatchard employees and their family members participated in the CASA (Court AppointedSpecial Advocates) Kids Superhero 5K Run on April 23. The firm, located in Mt. Laurel, raised more than$1,200 for CASA and was commended for giving the most for the past two years in a row for the CASArun. The event was held to raise money for the Mercer and Burlington counties affiliate board of CASAfor children. CASA is an independent, non-profit organization committed to speaking up for the best in-terests of abused and neglected children. From left: Kelly Adler, Daniel Abelson, Leslie Henderson, GrantHenderson, Karen Gibson, Daniel Robinson, Christopher Emrich, Kathleen Robinson, Ashley MollenthielFiore, John Geaney, Christy Geaney, Theresa Lyons and Steve Lyons.
Capehart Scatchard employees take part in CASA run
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18 THE MT. LAUREL SUN — MAY 25–31, 2016
Be social.Like us onFacebook!
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going back to her freshman sea-son in 2014. In the last three sea-sons, Staten has learned how tokeep up her stamina throughoutmeets.
“It’s mostly mental,” she said.“I just have to trust my trainingand give my all in each event.”
Staten is motivated to make thespring season one to rememberafter her 2015-16 winter seasonended in anticlimactic fashion.Staten was unable to compete inthe season’s final events due to anillness. Missing a chance to makea return trip to the NJSIAA Meetof Champions after qualifying inthe 2014-15 season was frustrat-ing.
“I was really sad,” she said.“This year, I’m coming for it.”
The last two seasons, Statenhas added new events to her arse-nal. She began competing in the
100-meter hurdles during hersophomore season. This year, shehas competed in the 400-meterhurdles during some meets.
“I always wanted to do hurdles,but I got hurt freshman year atthe beginning of the winter sea-son,” Staten said. “I kept on beg-ging my coach ‘I want to do hur-dles, I want to do hurdles.’”
Some of the skills Staten usesin the long jump come into playduring the hurdle events. This al-lows Staten to train for multipleevents easily, as all of her eventsare short distance races (400 me-ters or shorter) or jumpingevents.
Staten practices running and jumping on different days. Dur-ing hard practices, she does mul-tiple running stints with a tinybit of time to rest in between. Shecredits this to building her stami-na. Staten uses pre-meet prep ses-sions to practice jumping.
Even though she looks fresh be-tween events, Staten admits par-ticipating in four events per meetis not easy. Sometimes, she has to
stop for a moment and re-focus inbetween events.
“I remember the hard practiceswhen I’m dying and I only havethe 40 seconds rest where I haveto run again,” Staten said. “Whenthe gun goes off, I just run. I can’tstop now.”
Staten is hitting her stride asthe season enters the final weeks.At the LRHSD Cup, Staten set sea-son-best marks in the 200-meters,100-meter hurdles and long jump.She wants to continue improving
her results as she prepares for theNJSIAA South Jersey Group IVsectional meet on May 27 and 28.
“There’s always room for im-provement,” Staten said. “I don’twant to settle for what I havenow.”
MIKE MONOSTRA/The Sun
Lenape junior Jasmine Staten leaves her competitors behind as shesprints to victory in the 200-meter dash at the Lenape RegionalHigh School District Cup on May 11. Staten won four events at themeet and is poised to be a contender at the state level in June.
STATENContinued from page 3
Staten wants to improve results
The following Lenape High
School girls’ lacrosse score wassubmitted by Shawnee HighSchool varsity head coach JulieMcGrory.
Shawnee defeated Lenape, 16-7,
on May 16.
Kasey Donoghue led the Indi-ans with four goals in the loss.Carlee Faraghan-Bravermanscored twice. Shawnee got fourgoals and five assists from LizaBarr.
lacrosse score
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# ! % !! !$ ! % "
Power Glass Moonroof, Leather Seating Surfaces, Sensus
NAVIGATION w/ Mapcare, 17'' SADIA alloy wheels, Heated
Front Seats, SIPS airbags.
Volvo InnovationsEverything we do is designed around people, so every innovation we make is designed to
simplify and improve your life. We're especially proud of our advances in efficient power,
connectivity and safety. We call our thinking in these areas: Drive-E, Sensus and IntelliSafe.
Sign & Drive$34987
x36*
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