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    By KATIE MORGANThe Robbinsville Sun

    Robbinsville organizationFriendship Circle hosted a com-munity exposition at Rob-binsville High School Oct. 28. Theorganization, which serves chil-dren with special needs and theirfamilies, hosted the event as acommunity outreach and educa-tion program.

    The expo served several pur-poses, according to FriendshipCircle Executive Director ShmuelWilhelm.

    The expo featured local organi-zations and 45 vendors that pro-vide services and advocacy tochildren, teens and adults withspecial needs.

    This is very different fromother special needs expos, saidWilhelm. Typically they areaimed strictly at autism or mobil-ity needs. Ours is all-encompass-ing. It covers autism, dyslexia,

    downs and mobility.The Friendship Circle expo

    was aimed not just at people withspecial needs and their families,but also at the general public andlocal residents.

    We also want to focus on thetypical community, Wilhelmsaid. Its a great community, buta lot of people disassociate them-selves with people with special

    needs because theyre uneducat-ed or unaware. We want to edu-cate the general public and en-courage them to be involved withhosting, donating or volunteer-ing. We want to provide peoplewith an opportunity to under-

    stand and be included in our com-munity.

    The expo, which attracted 200attendees, featured three work-shops for adults and a family funcenter to occupy children whileparents took advantage of the re-

    sources.One law firm presented a work-

    shop on transitioning teens withspecial needs into college, with afocus on what both students andparents need to be prepared for.The workshop also provided fi-

    nancial stability tips.The schedule was well-de-

    signed, said Wilhelm. Every-body could be everywhere at thesame time.

    www.robbinsvillesun.com NOV. 14-20, 2012 FREE

    Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-11Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

    INSIDE THIS ISSUEElection results

    Boyne elected to council, five

    to board of education. PAGE 3

    Special to The SunFamilies of children with special needs joined with the greater Robbinsville community Oct. 28 at the Friendship Circle Expo. The event fea-tured workshops, vendors and advocates for parents as well as fun family activities. From left: Steve and Laurie Kurs, and Irv Newman.

    Friendship Circle reaches out to communityExpo featured local groups that provide services and advocacy to those with special needs

    please see RESOURCES, page 4

  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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    2 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN NOV. 14-20, 2012

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    The Robbinsville Irish Her-itage Association (RIHA) wouldlike to announce that on Saturday,Nov. 17, they will be holding the2013 Grand Marshal and IrishPerson of the Year Announce-ment Party at Dubh Linn Squarein Bordentown. This year's partyfeatures live music from BillO'Neal, Andy Koontz and ChrisFinnegan, bagpipes, raffles andmore!

    This was a craicing (Irish forfun) good time last year, and weexpect this year to be no different!

    A portion of any food orderedwill go toward supporting the 4thAnnual Robbinsville St. PatricksDay Parade, and the food is fan-tastic!

    There will be a $10 admissioncharge for adults at the door. Chil-dren 12 and under are free. Addi-tional information and a flyer can

    be found at http://Rob-binsvilleIrish.org.

    The Robbinsville Irish Her-itage Association is a 501(c)4 non-profit dedicated to the promotionof Irish culture and history in theCentral NJ region. The RIHAsponsors and conducts the annu-al, family-friendly RobbinsvilleSt. Patricks Day Parade, the 4thAnnual of which will be onMarch 23.

    The County of Mercer, work-

    ing in coordination with the NewJersey Department of Communi-ty Affairs, will be accepting appli-cations for the Low-Income HomeEnergy Assistance Program (LI-HEAP) through April 30, 2013.Mercer County is also acceptingapplications for the UniversalService Fund (USF) Program.

    Families who pay their ownheating costs, and meet certain

    income guidelines, may be eligi-

    ble to receive financial assistancewith their winter heating bill.TANF and Food Stamp recipientsmust consult their caseworker re-garding the automatic benefit ap-plication.

    Clients who received assis-tance the previous year will re-ceive a re-certification applica-tion by mail to complete and re-turn to the County LIHEAP of-

    fice.

    To request an application ifyou did not receive a benefit theprevious year, please call the Mer-cer County Housing and Commu-nity Development Office at (609)989-6858 or (609) 989-6959. Applica-tions can also be obtained by vis-iting the Housing office at 640South Broad Street, 1st floor,Trenton, NJ.

    Irish Heritage Association to hold event

    County now accepting LIHEAP applications

  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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    NOV. 14-20, 2012 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 3

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    VOTED #1 JEWELER 2012

    By KATIE MORGANThe Robbinsville Sun

    Robbinsville residents voted onNov. 6, electing one council mem-ber and five Board of Educationmembers.

    Dave Boyne was elected to anunexpired four-year term on theCouncil. He received 2,676 votes toDennis Shennard IIs 1,866, ac-cording to the county.

    Matthew T. OGrady, who ran

    unopposed, was elected to an un-expired one-year term on theBoard of Education. Shaina RoseCiaccio was elected to an unex-pired two-year term, receiving2,322 votes to Keith Kochbergs2,083.

    Faith A. Silvestrov, FlorenceGange and Vincent Costanzawere elected to three-year terms.

    The newly elected members ofthe Board of Education will par-ticipate in a referendum on Dec.11 to expand overcrowded

    schools. There will be an informa-tion session about the referen-dum at 7 p.m. on Nov. 26 at SharonSchool.

    Boyne, who will not be swornin to his Council seat until afterNov. 29, has a background in fi-nance and manufacturing, andhas worked as an auditor for Pru-dential and as the Assistant VicePresident of Manufacturing andof Finance for Maidenform, andis presently the CFO of a medi-um-sized trucking company.

    I think the residents under-stood that I have a strong finan-cial background that will be a bigaid to the township, Boyne said.

    I deal with numbers all the timeand I understand budgets.

    Boyne said his largest primaryinterests concern building proj-ects currently proposed or under-way in the township.

    Some areas Im very interest-ed in are the Town Center Southproject and the proposed athleticfields, he said. I want to look atthe athletic complex project andget a better feel for it. I read thattheres parking for 2,000 cars.Thats a lot of traffic. Id like to

    know if theres a plan to mitigatethat traffic for the benefit of theresidents there and for theschools.

    Boyne said he wants to revisitthe Town Center South project.

    I think the corporation thatsgoing to build it is a good corpora-tion. Theyve been in town a longtime, he said. But it concernsme that there was only one bid-der. I just want to find outwhere we stand and what the dealis.

    The council will begin work onthe 2013 budget in January. Boynebelieves his strong financial back-ground will be useful in budget-

    ary proceedings.Its going to be an interesting

    budget year, he said. I thinkwere going into a recession. If so,the budget process gets more dif-ficult. But there were significantamounts in previous budgets thatshould be able to mitigate anyraise in taxes. We just want tomake sure were doing whatsbest for the residents.

    Boyne said he is looking for-ward to beginning his term.

    Ill respectfully disagree with

    people, he said. Im going tovote my conscience. I think they[the residents] like that aboutme.

    Dave Boyne elected to councilRobbinsville residents also elect five to board of education

  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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    Wilhelm said the resources andvendors were chosen to best rep-resent the myriad of needs facingthe families of children with spe-cial needs.

    The purpose of the expo wasto create a communal event sopeople can see what special needsreally are, and to see the manyvolunteering opportunities, hesaid. But more importantly, itsabout the parents. A bunch ofphone numbers on a piece ofpaper is great, but here you canmeet people face-to-face and put apersonal relationship on these re-sources.

    Larry Davidson, an autisticadult and musician who plays

    guitar and piano, entertained thecrowd.

    Wilhelm said he was thrilled bythe turnout at the expo. The or-ganizers originally expected

    twice the number of people, butmany were unable to attend dueto the beginnings of HurricaneSandy, which swept into the areabeginning on the evening of Oct.28.

    People were amazed that wewere still holding the expo, hesaid. But we got great feedback.It went so smoothly, and we cantwait for the next event. Werelooking to recruit people, and en-courage them to find a place tohelp and make a difference. Were

    going to partner with local busi-nesses and organizations to beable to do more communityevents. We are already planningthe next one.

    4 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN NOV. 14-20, 2012

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    Musicians entertain at the Friendship Circle Expo.

    Resources, vendors representedneeds for children with special needs

    RESOURCESContinued from page 1

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    Send us yourRobbinsville news

    Have a news tip? Want to sendus a press release or photos?Shoot an interesting video?Drop us an email [email protected] us at (856) 427-0934. Callthe editor at (609) 751-0245.

  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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    NOV. 14-20, 2012 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 5

    !!

    There will be an important in-formation session on Monday,Nov. 26, at Sharon School at 7 p.m.This town hall style meeting willinclude discussion about the fu-ture of the school district, specifi-cally regarding the need for a suc-cessful referendum on Dec. 11, ac-cording to a press release fromthe district.

    Robbinsville residents are veryaware of the impact a strongschool system has on our homevalues and the success of our

    children. Many of us chose tolive in Robbinsville because ofthe unique opportunity to raise

    our children in a safe and friendlycommunity where they will re-ceive a top-notch education. As aschool district, our mission is tocreate opportunities for everylearner by providing a strong aca-demic foundation in a safe andpersonal environment.

    This mission is threatened be-cause our K-8 facilities are nolonger appropriate for the num-ber of students that are enrolled.

    Investing in education is avalue that we share. Please plan

    to attend the session to learnabout how we can move forwardtogether.

    Town hall meeting set forNov. 26 at Sharon School

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    6 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN NOV. 14-20, 2012

    20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A

    Princeton, NJ 08542

    609-751-0245

    The Sun is published weekly by ElauwitMedia LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly toselect addresses in the 08691 ZIP code. Ifyou are not on the mailing list, six-monthsubscriptions are available for $39.99. PDFsof the publication are online, free of charge.For information, please call 609-751-0245.

    To submit a news release, please [email protected]. For advertis-ing information, call (609) 751-0245 or

    email [email protected] 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. Includeyour name, address and phone number. Wedo not print anonymous letters. Send lettersto [email protected], via fax at

    609-751-0245, or via the mail. Of course,you can drop them off at our office, too. THEROBBINSVILLE Sun reserves the right toreprint your letter in any medium includ-ing electronically.

    PUBLISHER Steve Miller

    GENERAL MANAGER & EDITOR Alan Bauer

    VICE PRESIDENT OF SALES Joe Eisele

    NEWS

    MANAGING EDITOR Mary L. Serkalow

    PRODUCTION EDITOR Kristen Dowd

    ROBBINSVILLE EDITOR Julie Stipe

    OPERATIONS

    DIGITAL MEDIA DIRECTOR Tim Ronaldson

    ART DIRECTOR Tom Engle

    CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Russell Cann

    CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Barry Rubens

    VICE CHAIRMAN Michael LaCount, Ph.D.

    ELAUWIT MEDIA GROUP

    CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Dan McDonough, Jr.

    VICE CHAIRMAN Alan Bauer

    ABC News last month reported

    that, since the Transportation

    Security Administration was

    formed 10 years ago, almost 400 em-

    ployees have been fired for allegedly

    stealing from passengers.

    ABC also talked to a former TSA

    worker who claims to have stolen

    $800,000 worth of cash and merchan-

    dise. He quoted TSA employees as say-

    ing: I dont care. They aint paying me.

    Theyre treating me wrong.

    So, some, by no means all or even

    close to a majority, of TSA workers

    cant be trusted to keep their hands off

    phones, tablets and cash.

    We dont want to use too wide of a

    brush to paint a picture that TSA em-

    ployees are thieves and cant be trust-

    ed. In the same ABC report, the TSA

    said the number fired represented less

    than one-half of 1 percent of those

    who have been employed.

    But the information leads to one

    question: If even only a few TSA em-

    ployees are stealing from passengers,

    how difficult would it be for a terrorist

    group to slip one or two of them a few

    bucks to allow who knows what to get

    through the security checkpoint?

    The nations airport security system

    should be changed. If were serious

    about deterring terror in the sky, we

    have to fix the system. It will cost

    money, but it also will give us a much

    better, and safer, flying experience.

    One only needs to look at Israel to

    get some ideas. Now, Israel is a much

    smaller country with only a couple of

    major airports, so perhaps not every

    security tactic it uses can be adapted to

    the United States.

    But the U.S. can incorporate some

    measures. There can be highly trained

    personnel on hand to interview pas-

    sengers, for example. Give a wrong or

    puzzling answer? Get pulled out of line

    for more questions.

    Lets keep our shoes on, hire the

    right people to do the job and finally

    get serious about protecting airplanes

    from terrorists.

    in our opinion

    TSA theftsReport shows why airline security system must be changed

    Airport security

    Let passengers keep their shoes on.Hire people who know what theyredoing. Incorporate ideas already inpractice elsewhere. Security answersare out there, if the nation wants them.

    Robbinsville-based TriCore has beenrecognized by Inc. 500/5000 as one of thefastest growing small companies in theUnited States. TriCore CEO and Rob-

    binsville Mayor Dave Fried representedthe company at the Inc. 500/5000 awardspresentation earlier this month inPhoenix, AZ.

    TriCore ranked 140 in 2012 amonghuman resource companies and is a lead-ing provider of affordable employment-re-lated administrative services and employ-ee benefit programs for small to medium-size businesses and non-profit organiza-tions. The TriCore program includes pay-roll administration, payroll cost informa-tion management, employee benefits,workers compensation insurance, regula-

    tory compliance and other human re-source services. For more than 30 years,Inc. has celebrated the fastest-growing pri-vate companies in America.

    We're really excited to be recognized byInc. 500/5000 and especially proud of our

    growth,'' said Fried, who runs the company

    with his wife and Chief Financial Officer,Kathryn Fried. "It's a tremendous honor.Kathryn and I are really proud of this busi-ness and we take a great deal of pride inthe employees we hire, the services weoffer and our role in the community, which

    we take very seriously.''

    This is the second time Fried has placedone of his companies in the Inc. 500/5000.In 1998, Human Resource Alternatives(HRA) was ranked 20th before being ac-quired by HR Logic with backing from Fi-delity Capital Investments.

    Special to The Sun

    TriCore CEO and RobbinsvilleMayor Dave Fried receives his

    Inc. 500/5000 recognitionaward earlier this month fromInc. President Robert LaPointe.

    Robbinsville-based TriCore recognized by Inc. 500/5000

  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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    NOV. 14Toddler Story Time: Ages 2 to 3,

    accompanied by an adult. 10 and11 a.m. at Robbinsville Branch

    Library. Registration required.Call (609) 259-2150.

    Preschool Story Time: Ages 4 to 5.2 p.m. at Robbinsville BranchLibrary. Registration required.Call (609) 259-2150.NOV. 15

    Conscious Eating: 7 p.m. at Rob-binsville Branch Library. Are youstruggling with your weight? Doyou find it difficult to makehealthy food choices? Skip the

    diet and learn how to reach yourweight loss goal with smallchanges and by being consciousof what you eat. Presented byCapital Healths registered dieti-

    tian, nutritionist, and certifieddiabetes instructor, MindyKomosinsky. Online registrationrequired.

    Toddler Story Time: Ages 2 to 3,

    accompanied by an adult. 10 a.m.at Robbinsville Branch Library.Registration required. Call (609)259-2150.

    Preschool Story Time: Ages 4 to 5.11 a.m. at Robbinsville BranchLibrary. Registration required.Call (609) 259-2150.NOV. 16

    Sing Along with Miss Amy: 10:30a.m. at Robbinsville BranchLibrary. Join Miss Amy for a rock-

    ing sing along. For children of allages accompanied by an adult.Online registration required.NOV. 17

    Puzzle Exchange: 10 a.m. to noon atRobbinsville Branch Library.Bring gently used puzzles to thelibrary and exchange them. Toparticipate, please: ensure allpieces are in original box; bringpuzzles with 500 pieces or more;bring puzzles that are in good

    taste. Childrens puzzles may alsobe exchanged (any piece count).No registration needed.

    Game Day: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Rob-binsville Branch Library. Cele-brate National Game and PuzzleWeek! Drop in and play a varietyof games, including board games,Wii games and card games. Forchildren of all ages. Registrationnot required.

    NOV. 18Calvary Chapel Mercer County

    worship service: 11 a.m. everySunday at Robbinsville Pond

    Road Middle School. Contempo-rary and non-denominationalChristian service. Visit www.wel-cometocalvary.org for moreinformation.

    Lifetree Community Church: 10a.m. every Sunday at Sharon Ele-mentary School, Robbinsville.Visit www.lifetreecc.com.

    Robbinsville Seventh-day Adven-tist Church: Sabbath school at9:30 a.m. Worship service at 11a.m. 2314 Route 33, Robbinsville.NOV. 19

    Passport to Fun II: 3:30 p.m. atRobbinsville Branch Library. Five-week program where participants

    will explore a different countryeach week, either through writ-ing, art or cooking. Grades four tosix. Registration required.

    Robbinsville Township LibraryAdvisory Committee meeting:7:30 p.m. at the RobbinsvilleBranch Library, municipal com-plex, 1117 U.S. Route 130. For moreinformation visit www.rob-binsville-twp.org.

    Robbinsville Township Open SpaceCommittee meeting: At thecourt facility, 1117 U.S. Route 130.

    For more information visitwww.robbinsville-twp.org.NOV. 20

    Robbinsville Township ZoningBoard meeting: 7:30 p.m. at Sen-ior Center in the Municipal Com-plex, 1117 Route 130, Robbinsville.To confirm meeting time and formore information, visit www.rob-binsville-twp.org.

    Turkey Creation Station: All ages.

    10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at RobbinsvilleBranch Library. Drop in and cre-ate a special turkey. Registrationnot required.

    CALENDARPAGE 8 NOV. 14-20, 2012

    WANT TO BE LISTED?To have your meeting or affair listed in the Calendar or Meetings,information must be received, in writing, two weeks prior to thedate of the event.

    Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Sun, 108 Kings HighwayEast, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email: [email protected]. Or you can submit a calendar listing through our website(www.robbinsvillesun.com).

    We will run photos if space is available and the quality of the photois sufficient. Every attempt is made to provide coverage to allorganizations.

    20 Nassau Street | Princeton, NJ 08542609-751-0245 | [email protected]

    HopewellLawrence

    Montgomery

    PrincetonRobbinsville

    West Windsor

    Send us your Robbinsville news

    Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shootan interesting video? Drop us an email at [email protected].

    Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (609) 751-0245.

  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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  • 7/30/2019 Robbinsville 1114

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