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AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012
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Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 14-15
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
School expansion?
Referendum vote will decide
issue in December. PAGE 2
Softball All-Star team goes to the top
By JULIE STIPE
The Robbinsville Sun
Robbinsville has a history of
great sports teams and great play-
ers, but in the midst of all that
greatness, sometimes a team still
manages to stand out.
Robbinsvilles 11/12-year-old
Little League All-Star softball
team certainly stands out. The
team won 18 out of 20 games
played, and made it all the way to
the finals in the East region tour-
nament.
Its a testament to their hard
work, mental toughness, athleti-
cism and continual improve-
ments, said Coach Steve Kiszely.
They have a great team work
ethic, and thats translated into
success on the field and in the
game.
The All-Star team, put together
after the regular season, started
off its winning streak by becom-
ing district 12 champions, win-
ning each of the five district-level
games, and advancing to section-
als.
At sectionals, a double elimina-
tion tournament, the girls played
three games and won every one of
them. Now section 3 champions
and undefeated, the team moved
on to the state tournament.
We were 8-0 at that point,
Kiszely said.
At the tournament, Rob-
binsville won its first game
please see TEAMS, page 9
Special to The Sun
Members of Robbinsville 11/12-year-old All-Star girls Little League Softball Team celebrate a win during their recent successful season. The
team won the state championship, and narrowly missed becoming region champions as well.
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Referendum set for December
Vote will decide $19.9 million school building project
By JULIE STIPE
The Robbinsville Sun
With the first day of school fast
approaching, parents may well
want to know what is new at the
schools.
In the Robbinsville school dis-
trict, the biggest topic for many
people, especially school officials,
is the upcoming referendum. On
Dec. 11, residents will vote on
whether or not to embark on a
building project that will cost
about $19.9 million.
Officials hope the referendum
will solve the problem of crowd-
ing in the schools at the elemen-
tary and middle school level.
We been crowded at the
kindergarten through eighth
grade level for a number of years
now, said Superintendent Steve
Mayer.
Just two years ago a referen-
dum asking taxpayers to fund a
$40 million project was voted
down by residents, but Mayer
said the new plan is much cheap-
er because it manages to add
space at both Sharon Elementary
School and Pond Road Middle
School without calling for an en-
tirely new building.
We really put a lot of thinking
and brainstorming into this,
Mayer said.
The project would add 24 class-
rooms and a new gymnasium at
Sharon School, and would also
update the multi-purpose room,
windows, ceilings, floors, and
HVAC system.
The whole building should be
brought to modern standards,
Mayer said.
The project will add five class-
rooms to Pond Road Middle, and
will expand the cafeteria area.
The referendum sparked a de-
bate at a recent board of educa-
tion meeting on whether to pres-
ent the plan on the ballot in two
questions one asking for the
first $15 million, and one asking
please see CLASS, page 4
AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 3
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Ariana Dolce from Troop 70288
in Robbinsville is a recent eighth
grade graduate who spent the last
year working on her Silver
Award. Silver Awards give girls
the chance to define whats im-
portant to them and make a dif-
ference in the lives of those
around them.
The main objective of Dolces
project, The Golden Age Gift Pro-
gram, was to bring the communi-
ty to those who might not get out
often. Her plan was to collect
Special to The Sun
Robbinsville Girl Scout Ariana Dolce collected treats and delivered
them to Meals on Wheels recipients for her Girl Scout Silver Award.
Dolce earns Silver Award
please see SCOUT, page 7
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for the total sum or to present
the project as only one question.
The board rejected the two-ques-
tion route on the grounds that it
would give the appearance that
the district does not need the
whole amount, Mayer said.
The board opted to do that be-
cause everything on the referen-
dum is essential, Mayer said.
Class sizes are already high
in the 24- to 25-student range in el-
ementary and middle school
and as the schools continue to add
children, even at a low rate, the
problem will only get worse,
Mayer said.
The district will hold two in-
formative meetings, Mayer said.
One, on Nov. 12 will be held at
Pond Road Middle, and the other,
on Nov. 26, will take place at
Sharon School. Times will be an-
nounced. For questions about the
meetings or referendum, contact
Mayer at (609) 632-0910.
The schools are also using a
new student information system
called Genesis, which allows par-
ents to view their childs school
records, including exam and final
grades, report cards, attendance
records, assignments, and disci-
pline records. Each parent will be
given a username and password
which will enable them to log in
to view their childs records. A
user guide for the new system is
available on the Robbinsville
school district website at
www.robbinsville.k12.nj.us.
New at the high school this
year is a world AP course, Mayer
said, which the district has not of-
fered before. The high school has
also added an additional coun-
selor, Mayer said, because of the
schools growth.
Were staffed and ready to go
for a good school year, Mayer
said.
CLASS
Continued from page 2
Class sizes are high
AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 5
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NorthStar VETS (Veterinary
Emergency Trauma and Special-
ty Center) along with the Ameri-
can Red Cross, will be hosting its
second Human and Companion
Animal Blood Drive on Tuesday,
Sept. 11.
This years theme, America
Depends On Many Types Of He-
roes, will be a tribute to the peo-
ple and service animals who have
made the ultimate sacrifice in
serving our community and our
country.
The blood drive will be held at
NorthStar VETS from 9 a.m. to 7
p.m., with a candlelight vigil to be
held at 8 p.m. on Sept. 11.
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donor list can be found at
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bank.
Human, pet blood
drive set for Sept. 11
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6 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012
20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A
Princeton, NJ 08542
609-751-0245
The Sun is published weekly by Elauwit
Media LLC, 20 Nassau Street, Suite 26A,
Princeton, NJ 08542. It is mailed weekly to
select addresses in the 08691 ZIP code. If
you are not on the mailing list, six-month
subscriptions are available for $39.99. PDFs
of the publication are online, free of charge.
For information, please call 609-751-0245.
To submit a news release, please email
news@robbinsvillesun.com. For advertis-
ing information, call (609) 751-0245 or
email advertising@robbinsvillesun.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 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@robbinsvillesun.com, via fax at
609-751-0245, or via the mail. Of course,
you can drop them off at our office, too. THE
ROBBINSVILLE Sun reserves the right to
reprint 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
W
ith schools preparing to
open their doors soon, now
is a good time to talk about
the upcoming academic year.
At The Sun, were all about commu-
nity news, which, of course, includes
covering the local school districts.
Well be at as many school board meet-
ings as possible and do our best to stay
on top of the hard news taxes,
budgets, elections and the like.
But we want to be able to bring our
readers so much more. To do that, we
need your help.
When students achieve in the class-
room, in the arts, in sports, etc., we
want to hear about it, so that we can
share that news with the entire com-
munity.
Making the honor roll to winning a
spelling bee, excelling in an extra-cur-
ricular activity, its all news to us.
Problem is, we dont always hear
about these accomplishments. Thats
where you come in.
If youre a parent, and your child
does something special, shoot us an
email. Include a photo, if possible.
If youre a teacher or principal, and
you have a special event coming up or
there is other news that your home-
town should know about, tell us about
it. If possible, well have a reporter
present to cover the event or write a
story and take photos. If not, well fig-
ure out a way to get your news into the
paper, one way or another.
Too often, the news is driven by
events that anger or sadden people.
Too often, the good work of young peo-
ple is ignored or, at the least, certainly
not celebrated the way it should be.
And there are a lot of young people
doing good these days.
We want to change that. We want to
let everyone in town know when
theres something positive going on,
when young people go beyond the ordi-
nary to help someone or have an out-
standing accomplishment.
Call, email or write. Just let us know
whats happening in your school so
that we can share it.
in our opinion
School bells to ring soon
Throughout the year, The Sun wants to be your source for school information
School news
With the start of a new school year
upon us, we want to invite everyone to
share their news with us. From the
classroom to extra-curricular activities,
let us know about what is happening in
your school, and well spread the word.
Kate, Ally and Brigette love washing,
combing and styling their hair every day.
They wear it pinned up, pulled back or ca-
sually down and usually dont think twice
about it not being there. But, for the mil-
lions of children in the United States that
suffer from the life-altering effects of med-
ical hair loss, they do think about losing
their hair.
That is why, over two years ago, Kate,
Ally and Brigette made the commitment to
donate their hair to a charitable hair dona-
Mother, daughters
donate hair
to Locks of Love
Special to The Sun
Kate, Ally, and their mother Brigette do-
nated hair to the Locks of Love founda-
tion, which creates hairpieces for children
with hair loss.
please see ORGANIZATION, page 10
AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 7
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treats and deliver them to Meals
on Wheels recipients.
Some of the projects included
baking cookies, muffins, and vari-
ous treats. She also conducted a
magazine drive and made book-
marks. In order to get the commu-
nity involved Dolce had different
businesses help her by donating
items. B&R Printing donated
pads, which she included with
her stationary project, and Timo-
thys Lawn and Garden Center do-
nated African Violets, which she
included with plant care instruc-
tions.
A major piece of the project is
called sustainability. Each girl
has to find an organization or
group who likes the project
enough to take it over. Dolce
chose her schools Early Act Club.
Early Act is a club for young stu-
dents to come together and make
crafts, set up drives, and do com-
munity work. Dolce, a former
Early Act participant, contacted
Early Acts advisor, Linda Biondi.
She made a presentation to the
students about Meals on Wheels
and asked for their help with the
duration of the project.
One of the projects Early Act
helped with was the letter writing
campaign. Dolce brought in a
how-to poster to demonstrate how
to put together the pieces to her
hand-made cards. The students
assembled the cards and wrote
generic messages.
Another project Early Act
helped with was the toiletry kits.
After Dolce collected more than
500 personal care items, Early Act
helped assemble the bags. Since
there was so many personal care
items, Dolce also donated to the
Robbinsville food pantry.
She received favorable replies
from the Meals on Wheels recipi-
ents who said the project made
them feel more a part of the Rob-
binsville community.
SCOUT
Continued from page 3
Scout helped Meals on Wheels
WEDNESDAY AUG. 29
Kids Music Round: 10:30 a.m. at
Robbinsville Branch Library. Sing
and dance with Miss Diance. Chil-
dren age 6 months and older,
accompanied by an adult. Online
registration required. Please reg-
ister each child separately.
THURSDAY AUG. 30
Kids Movie Matinee: All ages.
Watch The Lorax from 10:30
a.m. to noon at Robbinsville
Branch Library. Online registra-
tion required. Please register
each child separately.
SUNDAY SEPT. 2
Calvary Chapel Mercer County
worship service: 11 a.m. every
Sunday at Robbinsville Pond
Road Middle School. Contempo-
rary and non-denominational
Christian service. Visit www.wel-
cometocalvary.org for more
information.
Lifetree Community Church: 10
a.m. every Sunday at Sharon Ele-
mentary School, Robbinsville.
Visit www.lifetreecc.com.
Robbinsville Seventh-day Adven-
tist Church: Sabbath school at
9:30 a.m. Worship service at 11
a.m. 2314 Route 33, Robbinsville.
MONDAY SEPT. 3
Labor Day: All township offices will
be closed in observance of the
holiday.
TUESDAY SEPT. 4
Robbinsville Township Economic
Development Advisory Com-
mittee meeting: At the Senior
Citizens Center. For more infor-
mation visit www.robbinsville-
twp.org.
CALENDAR PAGE 8 AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 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 the
date of the event.
Send information by mail to: Calendar, The Sun, 108 Kings Highway
East, Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Or by email: news@robbinsvillesun.
com. 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 photo
is sufficient. Every attempt is made to provide coverage to all
organizations.
Send us your Robbinsville news
Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot an interesting video? Drop us an email
at news@robbinsvillesun.com. Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (609) 751-0245.
AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 9
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against Hammonton, but the next
night lost 5-2 in a game against
Pequannock.
That was the first loss we suf-
fered, Kiszely said.
After the loss, Robbinsville
needed to win the next three
games or they were out. The girls
next game, against Hammonton,
was tied before being called due
to rain. When the teams went
head to head again that Monday,
Robbinsville won.
With hardly a chance to
breathe after playing Hammon-
ton, Robbinsville immediately
moved on to play Pequannock.
Forty-five minutes later we
had to play Pequannock, and we
had to beat them, Kiszely said.
Robbinsville did beat them, 13-
0, triggering the if-necessary
game, which they won 9-0 against
Pequannock again the next day.
As with past successes, the wins
were largely due to the teams
strong pitching and defense,
which Kiszely said has always
been the teams forte.
Definitely our athleticism and
pitching are really our strongest
suit, Kiszely said.
The championship was also the
third state championship Rob-
binsvilles 11/12-year-olds have
won in the past five years, Kiszely
said. With a 12-1 record, the tri-
umphant team was ready for the
Eastern Regional Tournament,
although, Kiszely said, Rob-
binsville was happy just to get the
state title.
We had set a goal for ourselves
to win the state championship,
Kiszely said.
Representing New Jersey, Rob-
binsville was in the Mid-Atlantic
division along with New York,
Pennsylvania, Maryland and
Delaware. New England teams in-
cluded Connecticut, Rhode Is-
land, Massachusetts, Vermont,
and Maine.
Robbinsville started off region-
als by playing each Mid-Atlantic
team, winning every game. Next
the girls defeated Maine in the
quarterfinals, followed by Rhode
Island in the semifinals. In the re-
gional championship finals New
Jersey was again up against New
York, whom they had beaten 1-0
earlier in the tournament.
But the New York team from
New Hyde Park was on their
game, and led 1-0 after three in-
nings. After five innings the team
led 4-0. In the sixth inning Rob-
binsville scored a run, but could-
Special to The Sun
Members of Robbinsville 11/12-year-old All-Star girls Little League
Softball Team celebrate their district win. The team also won sec-
tionals, and went on to win the state tournament.
TEAMS
Continued from page 1
please see TEAM, page 11
Teams goal was to win championship
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tion organization called Locks of
Love.
Keeping their promise, on Aug.
15, the trio cut off their pony-
tails of hair, collectively measur-
ing over 34 inches. For Kate and
Brigette, this was their first time
donating for a charitable cause.
But for Ally, at only 10 years old,
this was already her third time.
Both children know, after visiting
the Florida-based organization
last year, just how important it is
to do something so simple for
someone else not as fortunate as
they.
Locks of Love is a not-for-profit
organization that provides hair-
pieces to financially disadvan-
taged children under the age of
21. They began in 1998 helping
children with medical hair loss
achieve crucial self-esteem and
confidence. Donors of all ages,
like Kate, Ally and Brigette, do-
nate ponytails of hair, of which 6
to 10 are needed for each hair-
piece. Individual hairpieces are
hand-assembled and generally
take up to six months to produce.
Unlike so many other charitable
organizations, children comprise
over 80 percent of the donors,
making this a charity where chil-
dren have the opportunity to help
other children.
The girls are committed to this
cause and feel very strongly about
their statement: For us, our hair
grows and grows, but for others it
just doesnt. We want children
with permanent hair loss to feel
great about themselves. Hopeful-
ly, this type of donation will help
achieve that.
To learn more, visit locks
oflove.org or call (561) 833-7332.
Organization provides
hairpieces to children
ORGANIZATION
Continued from page 6
AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 11
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Hopewell
Lawrence
Montgomery
Princeton
Robbinsville
West Windsor
nt catch up with New York, who
won 4-1.
It didnt help that Robbinsville
player Anne Brunner had hurt
her hand during the game against
Maine, and did not play in the
final.
One of our key players was in-
jured in the quarter finals,
Kiszely said. It didnt affect us
that adversely in (the game
against) Rhode Island but it af-
fected us in the game against New
York.
Still, the team came within one
game of going to the Little
League World Series in Portland,
Ore., and thats certainly some-
thing to be proud of.
Many of the girls on the team,
Kiszley said, have been playing
softball since they were 5 or 6, and
a number of them began playing
as All-Stars as 8-year-olds. Several
were in the 8- and 9-year-old
teams that won districts two
years in a row, and who as 10-
year-olds also won the state cham-
pionship.
Weve kept on getting better
and better and better, Kiszely
said.
Each member of the team puts
a lot of work into the sport, and
they expect, and get, results.
They expect to win, and they
work hard, said team manager
Keith Motusesky. Theyre not
cocky, theyre just confident.
The girls confidence is well-de-
served, and also stems from the
history of successful seasons for
Robbinsville softball teams at all
levels.
This year has been no differ-
ent, Kiszely said, with the 11/12-
year-old, the 11-year-old, and the
10-year-old softball teams all win-
ning the state tournament this
summer.
We swept every state champi-
onship, Kiszely said.
Robbinsville also has a history
with the World Series.
When the girls in 2008 made it
to the World Series, they made
everybody else believe they could
do it too, Kiszely said. In 2010, a
Robbinsville team again made it
to the World Series.
Past successes certainly gave
the team some of the drive that
took them all the way to the final
game of the regionals.
I was really excited (to go to
regionals), pitcher Sara Motus-
esky said. The teams before us
went to regionals and did really
well so we wanted to follow in
their footsteps.
Please recycle this newspaper.
TEAM
Continued from page 9
Team almost went to World Series
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AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 PAGE 14
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CLASSIFIED AUGUST 29-SEPTEMBER 4, 2012 - THE ROBBINSVILLE SUN 15
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