tabernacle - 0106.pdf

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www.tabernaclesun.com JAN. 6–12, 2016 FREE Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9–11 Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 INSIDE THIS ISSUE Upcoming events Check out things to do nearby. PAGE 8 SEAN LAJOIE/The Sun Big brother Tripp Taylor, left, helps little brother Hudson build a house out of the Playstix at the Mini-Maker Camp at the Pinelands Branch Library last week. ‘Mr. Rick’ Yankosky and ‘Ms. Danielle’ Haubrich led the kids in an afternoon of fun. There were a variety of stations that sparked the kids’ imaginations and fostered their interest in science, technology, engineering and math. For another photo, please see page 4. STEM fun at the library By SEAN LAJOIE The Sun As we turn the page on the year that was and prepare ourselves for a fresh calendar, we peak ahead at what there is to look for- ward to in the township of Taber- nacle. The 2015 holiday season was a festive one for Tabernacle. The town hosted its annual tree light- ing on Dec. 4 on the grounds of Town Hall and had a great turnout considering it was only the second time it has held this event. However, township committee is already looking at potential ad-  justments to make the 2016 tree lighting even better. It plans to hold a meeting this month to dissect the past event  please see COMMITTEE, page 3 Looking forward to 2016 T ownship, school officials discuss new year agenda  

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www.tabernaclesun.com JAN. 6–12, 2016 FREE

Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9–11Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

INSIDE THIS ISSUEUpcoming events

Check out thingsto do nearby. PAGE 8

SEAN LAJOIE/The Sun

Big brother Tripp Taylor, left, helps little brother Hudson build a house out of the Playstix at the Mini-Maker Camp at the PinelandsBranch Library last week. ‘Mr. Rick’ Yankosky and ‘Ms. Danielle’ Haubrich led the kids in an afternoon of fun. There were a variety ofstations that sparked the kids’ imaginations and fostered their interest in science, technology, engineering and math. For anotherphoto, please see page 4.

STEM fun at the library

By SEAN LAJOIE

The Sun

As we turn the page on the yearthat was and prepare ourselvesfor a fresh calendar, we peakahead at what there is to look for-ward to in the township of Taber-nacle.

The 2015 holiday season was afestive one for Tabernacle. Thetown hosted its annual tree light-ing on Dec. 4 on the grounds of Town Hall and had a great

turnout considering it was onlythe second time it has held thisevent.

However, township committeeis already looking at potential ad-

 justments to make the 2016 treelighting even better.

It plans to hold a meeting thismonth to dissect the past event

 please see COMMITTEE, page 3

Looking

forwardto 2016Township, schoolofficials discuss

new year agenda 

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JAN. 6–12, 2016 –THE TABERNACLE SUN 3

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and then again in August to beginto put new ideas into play.

“We’re happy with the turnout,but we’re looking forward todoing something a little better,”Deputy Mayor Richard Franzensaid.

The free event is jointly spon-sored by the Tabernacle Histori-cal Society, the Tabernacle

Woman’s Association and theTabernacle PTA.

There are also many specialguests who drop in such as Santa,Mrs. Claus, the Tabernacle CubScouts and numerous musicalgroups from within the township.

Franzen also expressed thecommittee’s excitement for thisyear’s Touch a Truck event atSeneca High School for the CubScouts and the annual Memorial

Day Parade that many residentscome out to each year.

The committee additionallyplans on moving forward thisyear with a project that has beenin the works for about two years.The possible redesign of the townhall area has been discussed dur-ing several meetings with com-munity leaders over the past cou-ple years.

“We’re looking at turning itinto a more park-like setting,”Franzen said.

This change may involve mov-

ing public works to a different lo-cation and possible alterations tothe landscape.

The potential creation of one joint emergency services organi-zation will also be a large topic of discussion moving into the newyear. There has been a subcom-mittee formed to handle matterspertaining to this topic that con-

COMMITTEEContinued from page 1

 please see TABERNACLE, page 5

Committee considering town hall area redesign

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4 THE TABERNACLE SUN — JAN. 6–12, 2016

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SEAN LAJOIE/The Sun

David Chew, right, built several impressive structures with help from his buddy Ryan Kaszur at the Mini-Maker Camp at the Pinelands Branch Library last week. There were a variety of stations that sparkedthe kids’ imaginations and fostered their interest in science, technology, engineering and math.

Learning at the library

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sists of Committeeman StephenLee and the man who proposedthe idea, Committeeman JosephYates.

“I’ve given this a lot of thought,and I do truly believe that this is away we can save the taxpayerssome money,” Yates said.

The sub-committee plans tomeet in February to create a re-port and again in March to dis-cuss what the report shows.

Tabernacle Townshipschool district

After Kenneth Olson MiddleSchool achieved certification as a“Sustainable School” from theSustainable Jersey for Schoolsprogram in October, TabernacleSchool District SuperintendentGeorge Rafferty wasted no timemaking his new year's resolutionto get Tabernacle ElementarySchool involved as well.

According to Rafferty, TESPrincipal Gerald Patterson hasbeen working diligently to havehis school meet the rigorous stan-dards the program provides.

Patterson and his green teamwill have an opportunity to sub-mit projects to earn points towardcertification during January’sopen enrollment period.

Rafferty wants to continue tobuild on what the middle schoolhas begun by enduring the re-

sponsibilities the program be-stowed upon the district.“We were accredited the

bronze award for the next threeyears, so we will be looking toshoot for silver,” Rafferty said.

Rafferty additionally refer-enced a project he was happy toannounce will be budgeted for inthe new year. The district plans toimplement an emergency genera-tor project in the elementaryschool. This has been a problemfor years, as the elementary

school has been without backuppower.

Forty percent of the projectwill be funded through a RODgrant, and the board of educationplans to go out to bid for the in-

stallation of the power source inthe summer.

The adoption of new technolo-gy throughout district will also beunderway in 2016. The board of education formulated a technolo-gy leadership committee com-posed of various stakeholders’such as teachers, tech personneland students. After examining aproposal implemented in Septem-ber, this new platform will focusspecifically on more technologyfor staff and students K-eightgeared toward developmental andlearning needs.

“The younger kids’ technology

will look different,” Rafferty said.“It’s not a one size fits all.”

The district is looking to gocompletely wireless with this newtechnology.

“That’s huge for us. We arelooking to wow the community byrefreshing our technology andmaking it more up to date,” hesaid.

The group also emphasized theutilization of Google applicationssuch as Google Classroom andGoogle Docs, as Rafferty believes

they are much more pervasiveplatforms for students.

Along with the new technology,there has been discussion of ex-ploring the potential integrationof a STEM center at the middleschool in 2016.

The board has met with themodern initiative learning de-partment and district architect togo over some possible blueprints.

Rafferty was particularly excit-ed about this idea because the

school has the space available,and it will create a setting for en-hanced science, technology, engi-neering and math educationlearning. The creation of theSTEM center would aid the focuson the expansion of the integrat-ed STEM curriculum in the dis-trict.

The district also plans to imple-ment the next generation sciencestandards and concentrate on lan-guage arts literacy.

In 2016, the school district will

be taking its second crack at thePARCC assessment for gradesthree through eight, so languagearts, literacy and math will be amain focus in all classrooms.

“Our challenge for next year

will not have to do with technolo-gy, so we can concentrate specifi-cally on matters dealing withmaking sure the children areready from a mental standpoint,”Rafferty said.

Rafferty also said the districtfollows state guidelines as muchas possible when it comes to statetesting, but it will look to make itmuch shorter than last year, as re-ducing the time was a commoncritique from parents.

The board is very fond of howthe district’s staff has been work-ing in the past year, so much so itwill be forming a committee in

January to select a teacher and aneducational professional of theyear.

For each school, there will beone teacher and one educationalservices professional recognizedfor the award.

While the girls and boys bas-ketball seasons are heating up,the teachers will also look to getin on the hoops. The staff willsquare off against the Harlem

Wizards at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Jan.24 to raise money for the PTA.

“The game will be at Seneca, sowe’re hoping to get as many peo-ple as we can to come out and see

our egos get handed back to us!”Rafferty said.

LRHSDAlthough it may be a new year,

Seneca High School will still befocusing on the same values in2016.

High school students alwayshave their typical ceremonialevents such as prom and gradua-tion to look forward to in the sec-ond half of the school year, but

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TABERNACLEContinued from page 3

 please see SENECA, page 6

Tabernacle School District adopting new technology 

Send us your news

Drop us an email [email protected] .

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6 THE TABERNACLE SUN — JAN. 6–12, 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 08088 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 [email protected].

For advertising information, call 856-427-0933 or email [email protected].

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 [email protected], via fax at 856-427-0934, or via the mail. You can dropthem off at our office, too.

The Tabernacle Sun reserves the right toreprint your letter in any medium – includ-ing electronically.

Dan McDonough Jr.chairman of elauwit media

manaGinG editor Kristen Dowd

senior associate editor Mike Monostra

tabernacle editor Sean Lajoie

art director Stephanie Lippincott

advertisinG director  Arlene Reyes

elauwit media Group

publisher emeritus Steve Miller

editor emeritus  Alan Bauer

Tim Ronaldsonexecutive editor

Joe Eiselepublisher

Seneca students also have their big

drug/alcohol-free events.The student council is already busy put-ting together its annual Prom House 110Carranza event, which will take place afterprom at the high school. All students ingood standing are invited to bring theirdates to take part in a laundry list of activi-ties that will run until 5 a.m.

It is all made possible through the teach-ers who donate their time and the localbusinesses who donate money and prizes.

“Medford Ford has been huge for us,”Principal Jeffrey Spector said. “They’vedonated a car the last two years.”

According to Spector, 80 percent of kidswho go to prom attend the event afterward,and it creates a much more safe environ-ment than other options students are oftenfaced with such as renting a house downthe Shore.

Seneca additionally puts together asendoff event at Camp Inawendiwin from10 p.m. to 2 a.m. This event also give stu-dents the option of a variety of activities,though playing laser tag in the Pinelandsseems to be the highlight of the night, asSpector pointed out.

This event is put together by the SenecaParents Group, which serves as a PTA forthe high school.

Spector also touched on a number of other events that will be taking place in2016 that he wanted to extend an invitationto the public and get the community in-volved with.

Along with a bevy of sports teams get-ting their seasons started, he also men-tioned the jazz band competition, thespring concert/musical and the annual ro-botics competition.

“The robotics competition usually turns

out to be a big one each year,” Spector said.“It’s spread out over an entire weekend,and we typically see about 35-40 teams getinvolved.”

As far as matters going on inside theschool, Spector didn’t mention any major

construction projects the students willhave to work around. The school will be en-hancing its security with some grant-fund-ed upgrades, but they will not be seen bythe public.

After receiving the results back fromPARCC testing and observing half a school

year of the district-wide Lunch N Learnschedule, the district plans to continue toevaluate progress and make changeswhere needed.

“Lunch N Learn has been an over-whelming success thus far,” Spector said.“We plan to continue to revise proceduresand monitor updates with that and ourPARCC testing as we look toward prepar-ing our students for next year’s test.”

Spector also wanted to recognize twostaff members moving forward into 2016 – Maj. Sean Hoggs for his legacy award fromthe NAACP he was given for his volunteer

commitment to help young people inBurlington County, and the school’s sub-stance abuse awareness coordinator, ErinLawler, for her Volunteer of the Year

Welcome to 2016! Another

year has come and gone, in

seemingly speed-of-light

fashion. Out with the old, in with the

new, as they say.

Last week, in our last issue of 2015,

we closed the door on the year with a

Year in Review.The end of a year is a chance for us

to reflect on all that has happened over

the last 12 months. It can be a sad time,

a happy time and a quizzical time all at

once.

But the end also brings a new begin-

ning. With 2016 officially here, let’s all

resolve to make our lives, to make the

lives of those around us, better. Let’s be

a little more caring, a little more un-

selfish, a little more polite.Let’s work harder and smarter, in-

stead of longer.

Let’s give a little more to those who

aren’t as fortunate as we are. Let’s

learn from the mistakes of our past,

and make our future bigger and

brighter.

Here at The Sun, we resolve to serve

the community even better than we

have.

We resolve to be a better community

business partner, be better reporters

and provide an even better product for

our clients. We resolve to improve the

quality and quantity of our content.

We resolve to listen with open ears to

your thoughts, ideas and concerns.To that end, we’d love to hear from

you on how we’re doing, and what you

think we could be doing better. Please

share your thoughts via e-mail to

[email protected].

Help make our New Year’s resolu-

tions a reality by playing a part in

your paper.

Here’s to a wonderful year ahead!

in our opinion

Happy New Year!Here’s to a safe, happy, healthy a nd wonderful 2016

Your thoughts

Do you have any New Year’s resolutions?Want to share them with the community?Send us a letter to the editor.

Seneca High School will upgrade school security 

SENECAContinued from page 5 

 please see SPECTOR, page 8

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WE NES Y JAN. 6

Tween Book Club: “Diary of aWimpy Kid”: Ages 7-12. 4 p.m. atPinelands Branch Library. Calling

all tween readers. Kids ages 7-12are invited to join us for a month-ly book club. This month's selec-tion is "Middle School: The WorstYears of My Life" by James Pat-terson." Participate in discussionand activities based on thismonth’s book. Snacks will be pro-vided. Registration is required.Visit www.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/tween-book-club-middle-school-worst-years-my-life.

THURS Y JAN. 7

Parachute Play: Ages 2-4. 10:30a.m. at Pinelands Branch Library.Join for a half hour of parachutegames and play time together.Must be accompanied by a care-giver. Registration requested. Vis-it www.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/parachute-play-0.

Yoga Pretzels: Ages 6-12. 4:30 p.m.at Pinelands Branch Library. YogaPretzels is a fun and vibrant way

to get kids bending, breathing,twisting and stretching. Please besure to have the children wearcomfortable, breathable clothesand bring a yoga mat or a largetowel to use as a mat. Registra-

tion required. Visitwww.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/yoga-pretzels-5.

Candlelight Yoga: 5:30 p.m. atPinelands Branch Library. Please

 join us with Babita Kapoor, a reg-istered Shakti Om Yoga instruc-tor, to learn yoga’s ancient sci-ence of breath control and re-energize your body and mind.Wear comfortable, breathableclothes and bring a yoga mat ifyou have one. Registrationrequired. Visit www.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/candlelight-yoga-4.

FRI Y JAN. 8

Paws to Read (Ocho): 3:30, 3:45, 4and 4:15 p.m. at Pinelands BranchLibrary. Children are welcome topractice their reading skills andmake a new friend by readingaloud to Ocho, a registered thera-py dog. Sign up for a 15-minuteslot and see what it's all about.Registration required. Visitwww.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/paws-read-ocho-9.

S TUR Y JAN. 9

Pokemon Battle Bash: Ages 7-17. 2p.m. at Pinelands Branch Library.Join Mr. Will for fun-filled Poke-mon battle with other Pokemontrainers. Bring your NintendoDS/DSi/3DS system and Poke-mon Black/White and/or X/Y toparticipate. Registrationrequired. Visit www.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/pokemon-battle-bash-1.

MON Y JAN. 11

Toddler Time: Ages 18-35 months.10:30 a.m. at Pinelands BranchLibrary. Join Ms. Danielle for sto-ries, songs and a craft or activity.

Registration requested. Visitwww.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/tod-dler-time-10.

Chess Club Tournament: Ages 7-16.4 p.m. at Pinelands BranchLibrary. Test your chess skillsagainst area players in our first-ever double-elimination tourna-ment. Registration required. Visitwww.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/chess-club-tournament.

Pinelands Garden Club of MedfordMeeting: 11 a.m. at the MedfordLeas Auditorium. The program

"creativity through the use ofrecycled and natural elements"will be presented by Jersey Madeproprietor Holly Doyle. There willbe some hands-on activity. ThePublic is invited. For informationcall (856) 988-9804.

TUES Y JAN. 12

Snack Attack: Ages 4-12. Noon and4 p.m. at Pinelands BranchLibrary. Join Miss Niki, DTR, fromthe Shop Rite of Medford for a

fun activity and a lesson on howto prepare a healthy snack. Reg-istration required. Visitwww.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/snack-attack-6.

Family Movie Night: “Minions”: 6p.m. at Pinelands Branch Library.Bring the whole family to thelibrary for this month's feature,"Minions" (91 min.). Snacks andbeverages may be served, butfeel free to bring your own good-ies and blanket to get comfy. Reg-istration required. Visit

www.bcls.lib.nj.us/calendar/fami-ly-movie-night-minions.

CALENDARPAGE 8 JAN. 6–12, 2016

RAY OF HOPE FUND

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award she was selected to receive

from the New Jersey governor'scouncil on alcoholism and drug

abuse.“They are both great examples

of civic responsibility and leader-ship in our school,” Spector said.

SPECTORContinued from page 6 

Spector recognizes staff members Hoggs, Lawler

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classifiedT H E T A B E R N A C L E S U N

JANUARY 6-12, 2016 PAGE 9

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All classified ads must be prepaid. • Your Classified ad will run in all 9 of The Sun newspapers each week! • Be sure to check your ad the first day it appears.We will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion, so call us immediately with any errors in your ad. • No refunds are given, only advertising credit.

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