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JUNE 814, 2016

Turning lemons into lots of lemonade


In 10 years, Kilmer Elementarys Alexs Lemonade Stand has raised more than $30,000
By MIKE MONOSTRA
The Sun
The first time Joyce Kilmer Elementary School teacher Denise
Roskey did an Alexs Lemonade
Stand fundraiser with her students in 2007, she didnt think it
was going to be a huge deal.
It was just me and my fourthgrade class, Roskey said. I
wanted to do something where I
could show that kids can make a
difference. I took my whole class
out and I thought maybe well
raise $100 and itll be cute.
At the end of the day, the secretaries were counting the
money, Roskey said. They
asked How much do you think
you raised? I thought, there
were quite a few people here, I
thought maybe $300. They said
No, its like $2,500.
After the overwhelming performance the first year, Roskey
decided to make Alexs Lemonade Stand an annual fundraiser
at Kilmer. On May 27, the school
held the fundraiser for the 10th
time.
Alexs Lemonade Stand was
started in 2000. A 4-year-old cancer patient named Alex Scott decided to start a lemonade stand
where she would donate all of
the money she earned toward
finding a cure for childhood cancer. Today, Alexs Lemonade

West hosts
inaugural
Career Day
Cherry Hill natives,
grads and residents
share stories with high
school students
By MIKE MONOSTRA
The Sun

school has raised more than


$30,000 for ALSF.
Today, the stand is a school-

In 2015, Cherry Hill High


School West Principal Kwame
Morton and teachers Carole
Roskoph and Monica Ciechon decided they wanted students to experience a career day.
The idea just evolved from
sending our students to another
career day to just doing one at
West, Morton said.
Last Thursday, dozens of Cherry Hill residents, former graduates and people who work in the
township visited Cherry Hill
West for the schools first-ever career day. A variety of careers
were represented, with everyone
from lawyers and teachers to police officers and nurses present.
While the participants in career day all had different backgrounds, all were connected to
Cherry Hill in some way. Douglas
Gilman, a solar analyst for
PSE&G, is a 2010 graduate of

please see STUDENTS, page 13

please see DESIGNER, page 12

MIKE MONOSTRA/The Sun

Fifth grader Ava Hawk is ready to serve some lemonade during Joyce Kilmer Elementary Schools
Alexs Lemonade Stand on May 27. It is the 10th year the school has held the lemonade stand. In the
past 10 years, the school has raised more than $30,000 for Alexs Lemonade Stand Foundation.
Stand Foundation organizes
lemonade stands across the
country, will all of the funds
raised going toward childhood
cancer research.

Just as Alexs Lemonade


Stand became a huge deal after
the first event, Kilmer Elementarys stand has also grown each
year. In the first 10 years, the

INSIDE THIS ISSUE


Track stars
Five East athletes qualify
for state finals. PAGE 6

Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 1619
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

2 THE CHERRY HILL SUN JUNE 814, 2016

Horticultural Society Spring


Flower Show is June 14
The Horticultural Society of
South Jersey will present its annual members Spring Flower
Show on Tuesday, June 14 at the
Carmen Tilelli Community Center in Cherry Hill at 7 p.m.
During judging, Mike Haberland, associate professor and
county environmental agent for
Burlington and Camden counties
with Rutgers University Cooperative Extension will present a program Rain Gardens for Homeowners. Rain gardens are specif-

ically designed to soak up rain


water, mainly from roofs, but also
from driveways, patios, other impervious surfaces. Rain gardens
look like regular flower gardens
but when it rains, a rain garden
fills with a few inches of water
and allows the water to slowly filter into the ground rather than
running off into storm sewers.
The event is free and open to
the public. For more information,
visit www.HSSJ.org or call
Gwenne Baile at (856) 816-8508.

softball score
The following Cherry Hill High
School West softball score was
submitted by varsity head coach
Melissa Fransozi.
Delsea defeated Cherry Hill
West, 7-2, in the quarterfinals of

the South Jersey Group III tournament.


Rachel Kubrak was 2-for-3 with
two singles for the Lions. Jade
Stubblefield had a double and
scored a run. Amelia Sims and
Keriann Dignan each had RBIs.

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4 JUNE 814, 2016

on
campus
Sarah Fritz graduated from McDaniel College, magna cum laude,
with a bachelors degree in philosophy and social work.
Scott Dombro and Evan Lurie
were named to the deans list at
Kutztown University for the
spring semester.
Emily Johnston and Jack
Braunstein were named to deans
list at University of Vermont for
the spring semester. Johnston is a
communication science and disorders major, while Braunstein is
a natural resources major.
Kerri Lembo graduated magna
cum laude from Clemson University with a bachelors degree in
modern languages.
Emily
Lichtenstadter
was
named to the deans list at the College of William and Mary for the
spring semester.
Allison Carusi was named to the
presidents list at James Madison
University for the spring semester.
Joshua Warren was named to
the deans list at James Madison
University for the spring semester.
Emily Purcell and Jeong Seo
were named to the deans list at
Bucknell University for the
spring semester
Brian Regan graduated from
Bucknell University at the conclusion of the spring semester.

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JUNE 814, 2016 THE CHERRY HILL SUN 5

on campus
Melissa De Leon was named to
the deans list at Northeastern
University for the spring semester. De Leon is a psychology
major.
Natasha Mwape graduated from
Lasell College with a bachelors
degree in communication.
Melanie Cooper was named to
Lasell Colleges deans list for the
spring semester. Cooper is an IDS
early childhood education major.
The following Cherry Hill residents made the deans list at York
College of Pennsylvania for the
spring semester: Timothy DeCoursey, a senior finance major;
Emily Lisner, a first-year nursing
major; Megan Martin, a junior
criminal justice major; and Elizabeth Tilsner, a first-year early elementary education major.
The following Cherry Hill resi-

dents graduated from Lehigh University in May: Madelyn Schwartz


graduated with a bachelors degree in biology. Courtney Patterson graduated with a bachelors
degree in business economics.
Russell Beatty graduated with a
bachelors degree in industrial
and systems engineering. Beatty,
along with students Kyle Bordner;
Jared Dashevsky, Brian Dawson
and Courtney Patterson, was also
named to the deans list for the
spring semester.
Joshua Walton graduated from
Grove City College in May with a
bachelors degree in electrical engineering.
Katarina Konefsky was named
to the deans list and presidents
honor roll at the University of
Hartford for the spring semester.
She was also inducted into the
freshman national honor society
Alpha Lambda Delta.

THE CHERRY HILL SUN JUNE 814, 2016

in our opinion

Sun-splashed summer success?

108 Kings Highway East


Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933

Heres to hoping the Jersey Shore builds on last years success


Dan McDonough Jr.

he unofficial start of summer


has come and gone. With Memorial Day weekend in the
rearview mirror, the focus now is on
brighter days ahead the beach, the
sun, vacations and relaxation.
Many people throughout the region
took advantage of a hot and sunny Saturday to enjoy the beach that weekend,
and the Shore towns are hoping the
heat remains and the rain stays away
for the next three months.
And all New Jersey residents should
hope for the same, as the summer
Shore business is a huge part of the
states economy a $20 billion-plus industry, or half of the states total
tourism revenue, according to estimates.
In March, Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno reported the states tourism industry
generated $43.4 billion in 2015, an increase of more than 3 percent over the

Share your thoughts


What are your plans for visiting the New
Jersey Shore this summer? Share your
thoughts on this, and other topics,
through a letter to the editor.

year before, with almost half of that


happening at the Shore. Many Shore
towns reported record beach badge
sales last summer, in large part because of lower gas prices which, for
the most part, still remain and glorious weather, as Guadagno put it.
The state spends millions of dollars
every year on advertising campaigns
seeking to keep New Jersey residents
home for the summer, and to attract
other states residents to the Garden
State as well. The extra push started a
few years ago following Hurricane
Sandy, with the Stronger Than the
Storm campaign, and it continues

today in different forms.


The state has an official tourism
website, www.visitnj.org, with information on events and things to do
throughout the state for the entire
year, with a special focus on our coastline for summer.
The proof will be in the pudding,
though, once turnout can be assessed
later this year or early next.
So, as we said in this space a few
weeks ago, make sure you travel local
this summer and visit the states wonderful beaches.
Theyre cheap, theyre close, and
theyre a lot of fun.
And while youre doing it, dont forget about us, either. Send us your vacation photos, and well let all your
neighbors know just how much fun
youre having.
In the meantime, pray for sun, lots of
it, and enjoy your time in it!

Five East track athletes qualify for state finals


By JOHN HAPP
Special to The Sun
The South Jersey Group IV Sectionals
were recently held at Egg Harbor Township High School where the Cherry Hill
East girls track and field team had five
girls qualify for the state finals in three individual events and one relay. To advance
to the state finals a competitor must finish
in the top six of her event.
Sophomore Star Beasley finished tied
for sixth in the high jump when she cleared
four feet, 10 inches. In the long jump, senior Jessica Bryant jumped 17 feet 6.25 inches and finished fourth. And in the triple
jump, Bryant finished second when she
jumped 36 feet 8.5 inches and set a new
school record in this event. The previous

record of 36 feet 2.25 inches was set in 2006


by Ivy Abiona.
In the 4 x 100m relay, the Cherry Hill
East team of sophomore Danielle Allen,
Beasley, junior Chelsea James and sophomore Giavanna Roberson finished fifth in a
time of 50.77 seconds. Not only did they advance to the State Group IV Finals, but also
broke a school record that had stood for
more than 40 years. In 1976, the record of
51.1 seconds was set by Sue Farmer, Lori
Burns, Kathy Hershiser and Jan Noble.
Others who competed and had strong
showings included Allen who finished seventh and just missed qualifying in the
400m. In the 1600m race, freshmen Dani
Lazarus and Sarah Pierce finished one
one-hundredth of a second apart. They finished 15th and 16th respectively and were

second and third among freshmen. Seniors who qualified for sectionals and competed for the last time for East were Bianca
Christophe (400m and 400m hurdles), Jessica Smith and Grace Garemore (100m hurdles and 400m hurdles), Rachel Smith (pole
vault), Jessica Wrinn and Sydney Sheppard (discus).
The Cherry Hill East girls team is led by
head coach Lee Troutman, who handles
the runners and just completed his 38th
season coaching girls track, assistant
coach Mike Brown, who in his fourth year
with girls track handles the jumpers, and
assistant coach Jim DiCicco who handles
the throwers.
In the Olympic Conference American
please see EAST, page 14

chairman of elauwit media

Tim Ronaldson

Joe Eisele

executive editor

publisher

manaGinG editor

Kristen Dowd
Mike Monostra
cherry hill editor Mike Monostra
art director Stephanie Lippincott
advertisinG director Arlene Reyes

senior associate editor

elauwit media Group


publisher emeritus
editor emeritus

Steve Miller
Alan Bauer

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 08003 ZIP
code. If you are not on the mailing list, sixmonth subscriptions are available for
$39.99.
PDFs of the publication are online, free of
charge. For information, call 856-427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
news@cherryhillsun.com.
For advertising information, call 856427-0933 or email advertising@cherryhillsun.com.
The Sun welcomes 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@cherryhillsun.com, via fax at 856427-0934, or via the mail. You can drop
them off at our office, too.
The Cherry Hill Sun reserves the right to
reprint your letter in any medium including electronically.

JUNE 814, 2016 7

Springdale Road
improvements
underway
The Camden County Freeholder Boards Department of Public
Works began a roadway improvement project on Springdale Road
in Cherry Hill on June 2.
This is one of the most highly
traveled roads in the county, and
it is our responsibility to keep it
in the best condition possible,
said Freeholder Susan Shin Angulo, liaison to the CCDPW. We
ask that motorists report any
roadway concerns they encounter to us. We need the public
to be engaged in the effort to
make Camden County a better
place to live and drive throughout
our 1,400 lane miles of highway.
The $2.8 million project will include the alignment and paving of
the roadway from Evesham Road
to Wilderness Drive. The project
will also feature new traffic striping for left turn lanes and bike
lanes, traffic signal improvements with pedestrian crossings,
landscaped islands with irrigation, handicap accessibility and
drainage improvements.
The project is expected to be
completed in about seven months.
The exact timing of the project is
dependent upon the weather and
other factors. Motorists should be
cognizant of the project and expect some delays around the area
of construction during peak drive
times.
PSA

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PAGE 8

CALENDAR

THURSDAY JUNE 9

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Thursday Morning: 10:30 a.m. at


Cherry Hill Public Library. This
weeks Thursday Morning program is The Music of World War
II: War Songs and Their Stories.
Healthy Eats Cooking Demo: 7 p.m.
at Cherry Hill Public Library.
Enjoy this cooking demo using
seasonal vegetables and other
ingredients to make quick and
healthy meals for your family.
The health benefits for each dish
will be discussed.
Scleroderma Support Group meeting: Every other month. 1:30 p.m.
at Cherry Professional Building,
first floor conference room, 385
Kings Highway North. For additional information or to confirm
meeting, contact John Keegan at
767-4783 or johnkeegan@comcast.net.
Alzheimers Support Group:
Spouses Sharing Challenges:
Noon in the Witherspoon Building
behind the Trinity Presbyterian
Church, 499 Route 70 E. Support
group for spouses and/or partners of persons with Alzheimers

or related dementias. Sponsored


by the Delaware Valley Chapter
of The Alzheimers Association.
For more information, call Ruth
Bishoff at (609) 654-3112.

JUNE 814, 2016

Garden State Rotary Club of Cherry Hill meeting: 12:15 p.m. at Seasons 52, Cherry Hill Mall. For
more information, visit www.gardenstaterotarycherryhill.com.

FRIDAY JUNE 10

SATURDAY JUNE 11

Itsy-bitsy activities: Ages 2 and


under. 11 a.m. at Cherry Hill Public
Library. This is a play time for the
librarys littlest patrons. There
will be self-directed, developmentally appropriate activities.
Speaking of Poetry: 2 p.m. at Cherry Hill Public Library. Enjoy inspiring discussions about poetry,
poetic forms and styles. Provide
an opportunity to read aloud and
discuss poems. A new topic is
presented each month.
Come As Your Are Shabbat at
Temple Emanuel: 6 p.m. in the
chapel. Service is interactive and
held in the round. 1101 Springdale Road, Cherry Hill.
Speaking of Poetry: 2 p.m. at Cherry Hill Public Library. Inspiring
discussions, opportunity to read
aloud. New topics every month.
Listeners always welcome.

Once Upon a Saturday: Ages 2 to 5.


11 a.m. at Cherry Hill Public
Library. For those who cant make
it to story time during the week,
come enjoy some of the great
books librarians have shared
throughout the month.
Dungeons and Dragons: Noon at
Cherry Hill Public Library. The
librarys Dungeonmaster Matt
Brinn will lead a session of battling, puzzle-solving and monster-slaying. Newcomers are welcome.
Mini-Minyan Service and Kiddush
at Temple Emanuel: Service at
9:30 a.m. Kiddush at 10 a.m. 1101
Springdale Road, Cherry Hill.

SUNDAY JUNE 12
please see CALENDAR, page 15

JUNE 814, 2016 THE CHERRY HILL SUN 9

Three Cherry Hill schools celebrate


No Place for Hate designation
In three separate ceremonies
on Tuesday, May 31, the students
and faculty at Joyce Kilmer Elementary School, Cherry Hill High
School West and Cherry Hill Alternative High School celebrated
the schools designations as No
Place for Hate, having completed
a year of anti-bias and anti-bullying programs. Lisa Friedlander,
No Place for Hate Project director,
attended the ceremonies and presented each school with its official designation banner. To earn
this distinction, each school
formed a No Place for Hate committee, adopted a resolution
pledging to create a more inclusive school and implemented a
number of projects promoting respect for differences.
Joyce Kilmer Elementary
School began the year participating in the NJ Week of Respect,
where it focused activities on the
new school motto, B.R.A.V.E.: Be
kind and caring. Respect yourself,
others and the school environment. Accept and celebrate classmates differences. Value your education by making smart decisions. Expect and nurture a safe
environment that allows all students to do their best. For their
second project, students participated in an International Day,
where families and community
members set up stations to share
their culture with the school. Students had a chance to visit each
station and learn something from
each culture, while writing a few
interesting facts about each culture in their passports. For
their final project, the fifth-grade
students and classroom ambassadors created a video presentation
about what it means to be a No
Place for Hate community.
At Cherry Hill High School
West, each homeroom created a
Respect Creed, and the school
community voted on its favorite.
The top slogan from each grade
level was printed on a coat of
arms on a banner for display in
the school, and students were
given this opportunity to establish a document to live by at
school. For their second project,
Quotes of Pride, students on the

No Place for Hate committee created monthly themes related to


No Place for Hate topics, and selected relevant quotes to illustrate them. The chosen quotes
were read over the morning announcements and were printed
and distributed to each classroom
for posting. For their third project, No Name Calling: Microaggressions, students explored the
impact of name calling and
stereotyping on people and in establishing a culture. They
learned what microaggressions
are and reflected on ways that
they have experienced them in
their lives. These lessons continued the schools exploration of
how name calling is part of societal norms and is embedded in
much of what they are exposed
to, including media and socialization.
Projects completed this year at
Cherry Hill Alternative High

School include The Word


Around Town, where No Place
for Hate members facilitated lessons on respect for differences
with the first grades at Bret Harte
Elementary School. After the lessons, the students created a "Respect Quilt" by drawing their
ideas of showing respect. Once
back at the high school, the student leaders held similar discussions as those at the elementary
school. The high school students
also created a Respect Quilt and
sent pictures of it to the first
graders. For their second project,
Challenging Bias, students researched the demographics and
needs of people utilizing local
food pantries to challenge biases
they held. Students developed a
pre/post survey for their peers
about their feelings toward the
issue to measure a change in attiplease see MORE, page 14

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Haddon Ave transformation


promotes economic development
By Freeholder Susan Shin Angulo
One of the oldest
roadways in the
county is being
transformed to meet
the needs of motorists, bicyclists and
pedestrians well into
the future.
Haddon Avenue in
Camden City is
being reimagined
from Vesper Boulevard to the Old
White Horse Pike in Camden City. The
$4.4 million project includes $1.1 million in Federal Highway funding provided to Camden City. These
improvements and enhancements to
the infrastructure will update and revitalize one of the oldest roadways in
the county.
This stretch of Haddon Avenue is a
key gateway to Camden, and leads to
one of the citys most venerable institutions, Our Lady of Lourdes Medical
Center, and soon to be one of the
newest additions, Uncommon Schools:
Camden Prep. These improvements
will not only transform the roadway to
welcome residents, employees and visitors to the city, they literally pave the
way for future economic development
across Camden.
Many more will travel this route to
new jobs throughout Camden, as there
are an unprecedented number of construction cranes in the air and steel
being erected across the city.
With billions of dollars in investments in Camden by corporations like
Subaru, Holtec, Lockheed Martin and
the Liberty Property Trust development joining the citys anchor institutions, we wanted to improve this
roadway to accommodate employees
and customers to continue the momentum that is driving this economic engine.
When completed, the project will include the full reconstruction of the
roadway, improved drainage with separate stormwater management, new
traffic signals, ADA accessibility and

decorative lighting. This


is the continuation of a
multi-phase reconstruction of Haddon Avenue
designed to allow safe
and convenient travel for
users of all modes of
transportation including
bike lanes. Improvements have already
taken place on Haddon
Avenue from Vesper Boulevard to Euclid Avenue.
The county expects this phase of the
project to be completed in January
2017. The exact timeline may be altered
due to the weather and other factors.
Improving our roadway infrastructure while increasing highway safety is
one of the best investments we can
make in our county. Each year the
Freeholder Board identifies roadways
and bridges that are in need of improvement across our County.
The Camden County Department of
Public Works is responsible for maintaining 1,400 lane miles of county roadway and 50 bridges. They are dedicated
to making our area safer for motorists
and pedestrians through county highway construction projects and road
maintenance, including pothole repairs, street sweeping, grass cutting
and storm drainage upkeep. For more
information, visit www.camdencounty.com.
To help us identify areas in need of
improvement, the Freeholder Board
asks for your assistance in reporting
road hazards to the Camden County
Public Works Hotline (856) 566-2980.
The Department of Public Works Hotline is answered 24 hours a day, seven
days a week.
If you have any other questions about
County services, please call me at (856)
225-5305 or email me at susan.shinangulo@camdencounty.com. Also, you
can like us on Facebook/camdencountynj and follow us on Twitter at @camdencountynj.

FATHER'S DAY COLORING CONTEST


!
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Win

"

Tickets!!

HAPPY
FATHERS
FATHERS
FATHER
DAY
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Must be original form. Only one entry per person.
Coloring must be done by using colored pencils, watercolors and/or crayons. Entries must be received by 5 p.m. on June 29, 2016, and cannot be returned.
Ages 1-17 Entries will be judged by Sun Newspaper staff and will be based on overall coloring.
Three winners will be notified by phone/email and posted on Sun Newspapers' social media sites.
Winners will receive 4-pack to DIGGERLAND. Prizes will be mailed to the address listed on the entry form.
Mail to: Elauwit Media, 108 Kings Hwy. East, 3rd Floor, Haddonfield, NJ 08033

JUNE 814, 2016 THE CHERRY HILL SUN 11

Brownie Troop honored

Special to The Sun

On May 21, Girl Scout Brownie Troop No. 30064 (Cherry Hill / Haddonfield Service Unit) was honored by
Kennedy Memorial Hospital-Stratford for the girls' efforts to improve the lives of patients in Kennedy's
Acute Care for the Elderly Unit. The Brownies incorporated their A World of Girls Journey into their ACE
unit work throughout this Scouting year. The Brownies presented the unit with a bound collection of original stories they wrote, illustrated and read aloud. Pictured in the front row are Melissa Mordecai, APN
nurse practitioner ACE unit, Nora Sheppard, Parker Wilson, Rebecca Hughes and Jessica Scheiner. In
the back row are Marianne Kraemer, chief nurse officer, Stratford, and troop leaders Christine Sheppard
and Robyn Scheiner.

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Continued from page 1

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Cherry Hill West. He and other


students had spoken at the high
school about his experience in
college. Last week was his first
time participating in career day.
They were interested in what
their future is and what they
should major in, Gilman said following his presentation.
Brant Beaupre, a graphic and
web designer for B2 Design in Mt.
Laurel, had done work for vari-

ous companies in Cherry Hill. He


was pumped to be participating
in last weeks event and said the
students had a number of great
questions during his presentation.
I love to help inspire people if
at all possible, Beaupre said.
Michelle Falcone, a third-grade
teacher for the Evesham Township School District, spent her entire childhood in Cherry Hill and
graduated from Cherry Hill West
in 2010. She arrived at career day
with the goal of encouraging the
high school students to consider a
career in education.

I think kids have misconceptions of what teachers actually


do, Falcone said. I wanted to
give them a good portrayal of
what I did.
Matt Baer, the social media and
events coordinator for Cherry
Hill Township, participated in a
career day for the first time.
While he admitted he was a little
nervous prior to his presentation,
he was excited to speak with the
students.
They found it interesting,
Baer said. I havent been in front
of a group of people since college.
Each of the career day participants hoped to get something different out of their presentations.
Many gave detailed descriptions
of what a typical day was like at
their job.
Kristi Kline, a registered dietitian for Lourdes Specialty Hospital in Willingboro, hoped to paint
a clear picture of what her job is
for the students.
I feel like most people dont
know about my hospital and what
a dietitian is, she said.
Bridget Palmer, director of
communications for Cherry Hill
Township, also went into career
day hoping to give students a peek
into a career they may not have
known much about before the day
started. She said the students
were very responsive and asked a
number of good questions.
Once we got into a rhythm,
they got into a nice engagement,
Palmer said.
At the conclusion of the day,
many of the participants said
they enjoyed speaking with the
kids. Morton said Cherry Hill
West is hoping to make career day
an annual event. In response, a
number of people said they
would be happy to come back
again next year.
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JUNE 814, 2016 THE CHERRY HILL SUN 13

Students also host hair donation


event for pediatric cancer patients
STUDENTS
Continued from page 1
wide event with the fifth graders
taking the lead. Students in all of
the fifth-grade classes organize
and run the stand each year as a
service project. Students in
Kilmers lower grades visit the
stand throughout the day and donate money. In addition, vehicles
driving past Kilmer Elementary
on Chapel Avenue will stop
throughout the day to donate
money and get a cup of lemonade.
I like the part where you hold
up the signs and try to get peoples attention to raise money,
fifth grader Edon Atiya said. "I
think that the lemonade stand is
a good idea.
Fifth
grader
Angelina
Williams remembered donating
money at the stand when she was
younger. This year, she was excited to finally get a chance to help
run the stand.
I used to look up (to the fifth
grade), I thought I really would
like to do this, Angelina said.
Now, I am doing this.
In addition to the lemonade
stand, the school hosts a hair donation event where students can
get their hair cut and donated to
the Children with Hair Loss
Foundation. Roskey described it
as another way to help child cancer patients.
This year, students who visited
the stand went home with an
extra present in the form of a superhero cutout. The fifth-grade
students made these cutouts and
put the story of a childhood cancer patient on them.
I learned that these kids who
have cancer are really strong,
Edon said. Even though theyre
going through treatment, they
usually dont complain about
their pain.
A number of students from
Cherry Hill High School West volunteered their time on May 27 to
help the fifth grade run the
lemonade stand. One student,

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D o n t le t P a in te r s a n d C o n tr a c to r s p a in t o v e r
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r e s to r e a ll o f y o u r b e a u tifu l w o o d s u r fa c e s

###

MIKE MONOSTRA/The Sun

At top, Nicole S. and Norah G. hand out pretzels to customers at


Joyce Kilmer Elementary Schools Alexs Lemonade Stand on May
27. Above, Alexa Savage is pied in the face during a game.
junior Riley Goodwin, has done a
number of Alexs Lemonade
Stands throughout her childhood.
Riley was diagnosed with cancer
at the age of 3. She has been cancer-free since the sixth grade.
This ones huge, Riley said of
Kilmers stand. They have a
whole elementary school involved. The most Ive been to had
50 people. This has 500.
In 10 years, Alexs Lemonade
Stand has grown from a single
class event to a community hap-

pening. One of the most exciting


moments for Roskey this year
was seeing students who participated in the first lemonade stand
come back as college students
and donate or volunteer their
time.
Seeing the amount of work the
students put in each year makes
Roskey determined to keep the
lemonade stand going at Kilmer
for years to come.
The whole school has really
embraced it, she said.

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Email us at news@cherryhillsun.com

14 THE CHERRY HILL SUN JUNE 814, 2016

East finishes with 2-2 record


in Olympic Conference
American Division
EAST
Continued from page 6
Division, Cherry Hill East finished with a record of 2-2 after another close loss to Cherokee by
the score of 64-76. Their record
was the same as last year but
their two losses were very competitive. In the Olympic Conference Championship held at Wash-

ington Township High School, the


strength of this years team was
obvious as it placed several athletes on the All-Conference American teams. Achieving first team
all-conference
honors
were
Lazarus (1600m), junior Taegan
Field (3200m), Beasley (high
jump) and Bryant (long jump and
triple jump). Receiving second
team honors were Pierce (1600m),
James (high jump) and junior
Dahyo Coleman (shot put).

More than 230 schools


in region part of program
MORE
Continued from page 9
tudes after learning about the
population that the food bank
serves. They completed the project by visiting a local food pantry.
For their final project, Cherry
Hill Alternative High School researched and created a PowerPoint presentation on challenging
bias against people with disabilities.
This is the sixth year that

Joyce Kilmer will receive its designation, the third year that Cherry Hill High School West will receive it and the fourth year for
Cherry Hill Alternative High
School. The schools are part of
more than 230 schools across eastern Pennsylvania, southern New
Jersey and Delaware currently
participating in the No Place for
Hate program, following Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendells endorsement in 2006. Joyce Kilmer Elementary School was the first
school to be designated No Place
for Hate in New Jersey.

Email us at news@cherryhillsun.com

Stories
Stories transform
transform e
even
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the simplest
simplest fruit.
fruit.
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more than
than jjust
us t a d
elicious ssnack.
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apple, and
and an
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apple as
as a symbol
symbol for
for countless
countless entities?
entities?
Through
Through the
the power
power of
of storytelling.
storytelling.

Story
S
tory Architects:
Architects: Drafting
Drafting narratives
narratives that
that propel
propel organizations
organizations forward.
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Smart
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businesses
usinesses cconnect
onnect w
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ith ttheir
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tories. Learn
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how
ow yyou
ou ccan
an d
do
o the
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ame at:
at: woden.me
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JUNE 814, 2016 THE CHERRY HILL SUN 15

CALENDAR
CALENDAR
Continued from page 8
St. Andrews United Methodist
Church: Worship service from
10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Sunday school
from 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. Adult
Bible study from 9 to 10 a.m. United Methodist Youth Fellowship
from 6 to 8 p.m. 327 Marlton Pike
West, Cherry Hill.
Kingsway Church: Worship services
at 8:30, 10 and 11:30 a.m. 2701
Chapel Ave., Cherry Hill.
St. Michaels Lutheran Church:
Worship services at 8:15 and 11
a.m. with Holy Communion. Sunday school and adult form at 9:30
a.m. 601 Kings Highway North,
Cherry Hill.
Unitarian Universalist Church: Liberal-religious service at 10:15 a.m.
401 North Kings Highway, Cherry
Hill.
Overeaters Anonymous open
meeting: 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. at
Kennedy Hospital, Cooper Landing Road and Chapel Avenue. Call
(609) 239-0022 or visit www.oasouthjersey.org for information.

MONDAY JUNE 13
Cherry Hill Township Council
meeting: 7:30 p.m. generally the
second and fourth Monday of the
month in room 208, Municipal
Building. Agendas available prior
to meeting and online at
www.cherryhill-nj.com.
Balance Your Life with Tai Chi: 7 to
8 p.m. at St. Andrews United
Methodist Church, 327 Marlton
Pike West. Call (856) 795-3427 or
email
cherryhilltaichigroup@
gmail.com
or
visit
http://www.meetup.com/cherryhill-taichi-group/.
Nicotine Anonymous meeting: 7
p.m. at Kennedy Hospital, Cooper
Landing Road and Chapel
Avenue, fifth floor. For questions,
call Ellie at (856) 354-0887.
Cherry Hill Rotary meeting: 6:15
p.m. at Ponzios Diner and
Restaurant, Route 70. Visitors
welcome. For more information,
visit www.cherryhillrotary.com,
email chrc2015@yahoo.com or
call (856) 424-3456.
Cherry Hill Maturity Club: Noon to
4 p.m. at Carman Tilelli Commu-

nity Center, 820 Mercer St. Dues


are $5 a year. For more information, contact President Connie
Cramer at (856) 414-0778.

TUESDAY JUNE 14
Lunch and a Movie: Noon at Cherry
Hill Public Library. Bring a lunch
and enjoy a free film at the
library. This weeks film is Concussion.
Needlework Guild: 2 p.m. at Cherry
Hill Public Library. Bring needles
and other supplies to sit and work
on a project with other crafters.
This is not an instructional class.
Junior Chef: Ages 7 and up. 7 p.m.
at Cherry Hill Public Library. Anyone who is a budding chef interested in making something delicious and creative is invited to
this cooking program to put their
skills to the test. This months
challenge will be potstickers.
Spring Flower Show: 7 p.m. at Carmen Tilelli Community Center.
The Horticultural Society of
South Jersey is presenting its

annual members Spring Flower


Show. During judging, Mike
Haberland, associate professor
and county environmental agent
for Burlington and Camden counties with Rutgers University
Cooperative Extension will present a program Rain Gardens for
Homeowners. The event is free
and open to the public. For more
information, visit www.HSSJ.org
or call Gwenne Baile at (856) 8168508.
Horticultural Society of South
Jersey meeting: 7 p.m. at Carman Tilelli Community Center,
820 Mercer St., between September and June. Call Mary Metrione
at 428-6671 or visit www.hssj.org
for more information.
NAMI Family Support Group: To
provide mutual support, education and advocacy for individuals,
families and friends of persons
affected by severe and persistent
mental illness. 6 to 8 p.m. at Twin
Oaks Community Center, 499
Cooper Landing Road. Questions,
call Marge at (856) 607-9680.

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Y O U

PAGE 16

N E E D

T O

K N O W

All ads are based on a 5 line ad, 15-18 characters per line. Additional lines: $9, Bold/Reverse Type: $9 Add color to any box ad for $20. Deadline: Wednesday - 5pm for the following week.
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.
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$489,000

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