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FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 6, 2012
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Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-11
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Sports leagues forming
Join adult basketball, softball
teams. PAGE 2
P r e - s o r t e d
S t a n d a r d
U S P o s t a g e
P A I D
B e l l m a w r N J
P e r m i t 1 5 0 1
R e s i d e n t i a l C u s t o m e r
By SEAN PATRICK MURPHY
The Medford Sun
ver wanted to be a fly on the wall in a high school classroom to
see what teachers do on a daily basis?
Well, the next best thing might just be We Teach, a series of
videos of teachers working throughout a day at Lenape Regional
High School District (LRHSD).
There are so many things that happen within the walls of a school
and the walls of a classroom and even within a teachers mind that peo-
ple cant see from outside the building, Justin Smith, assistant princi-
pal and supervisor of science and world languages at Cherokee High
School, said.
We Teach is broadcast on LDTV, the districts local educational ac-
cess channel, which can be found on Comcast channel 19 and Verizon
Fios channel 21.
Photos Special to The Sun
Shown are various teachers featured in We Teach season one. From top left, clockwise: Shawnee High School physical education teacher Margaret Fanourgakis; Shawnee High
School communication technology teacher Brian Pistone; Lenape High School science teacher Bill Seng; Lenape math teacher Tom Tamburello; Seneca High School family and
consumer science teacher Lynne Ritter; Shawnee High School English teacher Tim Moran; and Cherokee High School music teacher Frank Guerrini.
TEACHING
MOMENTS
Series of videos filmed show scenes
of teachers within a single work day
E
please see VIDEO, page 6
2 THE MEDFORD SUN FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 6, 2012
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Chance to shoot hoops in adult mens league
Adult softball
league forming
The Medford Township Depart-
ment of Recreation is seeking
adult mens basketball teams,
consisting of players age 30 and
older, to form a league. A 10-week
schedule will be developed, with
games held on Tuesday evenings
beginning March 27 at the Kirbys
Mill School gymnasium in Med-
ford.
The fee is $750 per team, which
can include up to 12 players on
the roster. The fee includes team
shirts, all officials fees and
awards for the regular season and
playoffs. A minimum of six (6)
teams are needed for the league.
For more information and to
register, contact the Medford
Recreation Department, located at
Cranberry Hall, 17 N. Main St.,
call (609) 654-2512, e-mail recre-
ation@medfordtownship.com or
visit www.medfordrec.com.
The Medford Township Depart-
ment of Recreation is seeking
adult womens softball teams,
consisting of players age 18 and
older, to form a league.
A seven-week schedule will be
developed, with games held on
Monday to Thursday evenings be-
ginning April 16, at the Hartford
Crossing Park Athletic Complex
in Medford.
The fee is $480 per team, which
can include up to 15 players on a
roster. The fee includes team
shirts, all umpires fees and
awards for the regular season and
playoffs. A minimum of six teams
are needed for the league.
For more information and to
register, contact the Medford
Recreation Department, located
at Cranberry Hall, 17 N. Main St.,
call (609) 654-2512, email bporto
calis@medfordtownship.com or
visit www.medfordrec.com.
FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 6, 2012 THE MEDFORD SUN 3
When they fall,
were on the call!
letters to the editor
Writer would like to see
speeds re-evaluated
I have written twice over the
past three years to the Medford
Township Administration and
Council regarding the speed limit
of 45 MPH on the quarter-mile
stretch of Eayrestown Road, from
Branin Road, leading up to the
Branch Street Bridge. The speed
of traffic is especially dangerous
since Eayrestown Road meets the
Branch Street Bridge on a curve.
In addition, pedestrians use the
Branch Street Bridge every day
and there are no sidewalks on
this bridge. Branch Street has a
speed limit of 25 MPH.
A second road that should be
evaluated for an excessive speed
limit of 50 MPH is Branin Road.
The majority of this road has
no room for a vehicle to pull off
and much of this road is bordered
by a deep drainage ditch. In recent
years, a Medford fire truck
plunged into this drainage ditch
and in another accident, a young
female motorist was killed on a
dangerous curve on Branin Road.
I am requesting that Medford
Township re-evaluate the speed
limits of the quarter-mile stretch of
Eayrestown Road leading up to the
Branch Street Bridge and Branin
Road.
Thank you for your help in
making Medford a safe place to
walk and drive.
- Ray Carden
Writer: Do not eliminate
garbage pick up
I'm Bill Tanski and I've been a
Medford resident since 1997.
As many residents may (or
may not) know, theres a proposal
to eliminate the towns weekly
garbage pick up, in conjunction
with other service cuts.
This is incredible, considering
the following: In the 10 years be-
tween the last census, the town's
population increased a mere 3.5
percent. However, from 2001-2011,
the towns budget increased a
whopping 51 percent. This is not
only gross fiscal mismanage-
ment, but a betrayal of the faith
placed in our town officials.
We have begun circulating an
online petition to our mayor
protesting the proposal to elimi-
nate garbage pick up. Please voice
your protest by going to donote-
liminate garbage.weebly.com.
- Bill Tanski
Send us your Medford news
Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot
an interesting video? Drop us an email at news@medfordsun.com.
Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (856) 427-0933.
4 THE MEDFORD SUN FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 6, 2012
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We make it simple, thorough, and easy to understand!
Interested in hearing your fa-
vorite music arranged for saxo-
phones?
If so, then youll want to attend
the Y-Not Woodwinds in concert
at the Medford Arts Center on
Sunday, March 4, at 2 p.m.
The quartet, directed by Len
DeFrank, will perform a varied
program of music by Debussy,
MacDowell, Glazunov, Gershwin
and others, especially written or
arranged for saxophones.
For years, DeFrank has been
collecting music for saxophone
quartets and looking for like-
minded people to play with.
He said coordinating schedules
of all players is the hardest part.
Y-Not Woodwinds got together
last year, and now they jam once
or twice a month. They have
played at recitals, concerts and
parties.
DeFrank said people tend to
think of string quartets when
they think of classical music, not
saxophones.
All Y-Not Woodwinds members
play every woodwind, flute, clar-
inet, oboe and bassoon.
DeFrank has a bachelors de-
gree from Rowan University in
music education and a masters
degree in classical saxophone
from the College of New Jersey
Masters. He also has a profession-
al diploma from Berklee College
of Music in Boston.
Two of the most memorable
gigs for DeFrank were a Christ-
mas party they played for a com-
pany in northern New Jersey and
a surprise 80th-birthday party for
a former teacher of DeFranks
whom he hadnt seen in 30 years.
Your favorite tunes to the
sound of saxophones
please see WOODWINDS, page 5
By SEAN PATRICK MURPHY
The Medford Sun
609-654-2127
Open 7 days a week for your convenience
Ironstone Village
560 Stokes Rd.
Medford, NJ 08055
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He looks forward to the concert
at the Medford Arts Center, in
part, because he heard good
things from a friend who played
in a tuba quartet there.
Itll be great, DeFrank said.
It sounds like some people are
interested in keeping the arts
alive, and were actually excited
about coming to play.
He is retired from teaching
music and now offers private les-
sons from home and has started a
band program at a Catholic
school.
With three of the quartets
members living down the shore,
it makes for a long commute for
DeFrank, who lives in Glassboro.
The most challenging part of
this group is finding the time to
rehearse, he said.
DeFrank said he also enjoys
bringing music that is not popu-
lar to audiences to enjoy.
What Ive found is that people
if you mention a saxophone
quartet to somebody people
dont really know what youre
talking about. But once they hear
it, everyone seems to enjoy it, he
said.
This is the first time Y-Not
Woodwinds, which is well-known
throughout South Jersey and
Delaware, will perform in Med-
ford.
The other three musicians, all
professionals with many years of
experience, are Howard Isaacson,
who has performed at Lincoln
Center, the Cape May Jazz Festi-
val, and is presently a regular
performer at the Atlantic City
Casinos; Rob Portnoy, who has
worked with Ella Fitzgerald,
Wayne Newton and many others;
and Mary Lou Newman, who, in
addition to performing with a
long list of notables, has a mas-
ters degree in saxophone per-
formance from the Manhattan
School of Music.
For further information con-
tact Tony Femiano at (609) 654-1855
or email Jazzdoc733@aol.com, or
visit www.MedfordArtsCenter.org.
The Medford Arts Center is lo-
cated at 18 N. Main St. Admission
is $10 at the door.
FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 6, 2012 THE MEDFORD SUN 5
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WOODWINDS
Continued from page 4
NJ AIDS/STD Hotline
(800) 624-2377
PSA
The Medford Area Branch of
AAUW, the American Association
of University Women, is seeking
applications for a $1,000 college
scholarship.
An applicant should be a non-
traditional female and Burlington
County resident who is enrolled
in an undergraduate program or
about to return to college.
This person could be someone
whose family obligations re-
quired an interruption of several
years or someone who waited
until later in life to start or con-
tinue her education.
High school students who grad-
uate this year are ineligible.
The deadline for submission is
March 15. The award will be
made in May.
The application form and the
requirements are on the AAUW
website medford-nj.aauw.net.
Applicants sought for $1,000 scholarship
6 THE MEDFORD SUN FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 6, 2012
108 Kings Highway East
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
856-427-0933
DAN McDONOUGH, JR.
Publisher
ALAN BAUER
General Manager & Editor
STEVE MILLER
Executive Vice President
ED LYNES
Vice President of Sales
JOSEPH EISELE
Advertising Director
TIM RONALDSON
Director of Digital Media
TOM ENGLE
Art Director
SEAN PATRICK MURPHY
Medford Editor
DAN McDONOUGH, JR.
Chief Executive
RUSSELL CANN
Chairman of the Board
MICHAEL LaCOUNT, Ph.D.
Vice Chairman
BARRY RUBENS
Chief Financial Officer
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 08055 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
856-427-0933.
To submit a news release, please email
news@medfordsun.com. For advertising
information, call 856-427-0933 or email
advertising@medfordsun.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@medfordsun.com, via fax at 856-
427-0934, or via the mail. Of course, you can
drop them off at our office, too. The Medford
Sun reserves the right to reprint your letter
in any medium including electronically.
in our opinion
O
n the surface, two bills recent-
ly introduced in Congress
make sense. They would re-
strict the number of fees airlines
could charge. After all, who hasnt
been on a plane where everyone is
wrestling to get overhead storage
space for their 73 carry-on bags they
brought to avoid baggage fees?
Problem is, this is America, and
America has achieved economic great-
ness because it allows, for the most
part, businesses to compete without
many rules. Once government gets
into regulating things that dont relate
to, for example, safety, the whole sys-
tem gets messed up.
Naturally, the airlines arent in favor
of these bills. Some of them already
waive baggage fees for one or two
pieces.
Others correctly point out that,
charging fees, while keeping fares
lower, gives consumers a choice. In-
deed, if you travel without checked
bags, you probably would opt for the
airlines that offer lower fares, but
charge for checked baggage. Its less
money out of their pockets for the
same service they would receive on
any airline.
Congressional supporters of the
bills point out that consumers dont
like the fees. Well, of course, they
dont. No one likes fees.
If Congress would check, were sure
it would find that people dont like
high airline ticket prices, either. Or, in
keeping with the air travel theme,
parking rates that rise as you get clos-
er or more convenient parking spots at
an airport. Or high-priced food in air-
port restaurants.
Sure, some air travellers can feel
like they are being nickeled and dimed
to death. But its their choice to fly the
airlines that charge these fees. There
are any number of ways to avoid the
fees, they just choose not to do so.
This is a business model, pricing
choice. Its what keeps businesses
competitive. Congress should stay
away.
Keep air fee bills grounded
Congress should let the free enterprise system work
Hands off private business
Congress has better things to do with
its time than to get involved with air-
line fees. Let consumers make choic-
es and the airlines make business
decisions.
It is also available on iTunes.
Smith said he was invited to become
part of the district-wide committee to gen-
erate ideas and begin the process of trying
to show what a teachers day looks like
from different angles.
They decided to show teachers in a mon-
tage of scenes from different teachers
days within the chronology of a single day.
Each episode follows that chronology.
The committee wanted to get a cross-sec-
tion of teachers to bring voice to the inter-
nal thinking and reflection that goes on all
the time.
Five episodes have been aired since it
started in September. The final episode of
this season is currently being filmed.
We wanted to time it for the opening of
school when school and everything to do
with education is on peoples minds,
Smith said. One cool thing about the We
Teach series is that its almost collabora-
tive with the viewer.
The viewer at home gets to make their
own connections, come to their own conclu-
sions through what they see. Were opening
windows and letting people look inside.
Really, in the end, thats kind of what
great classroom experiences are all about
in the first place. I think you see when you
look at the videos that so much of the pow-
erful meaning of whats taking place in the
videos is that collaboration between
teacher and student.
Outgoing LRHSD Superintendent of
Schools Emily Capella said politically and
socially, teachers have often been disre-
spected.
Next to parenting, teaching is the most
important job in the world, she said.
Capella, who has been in education for
35 years, said she was tired of hearing how
teachers dont have enough work and how
their jobs are easy.
People didnt understand or didnt have
the willingness to understand the complex-
ity of teaching, Capella said, noting she
lets those critics know how they got to be
where they are because of nurturing
teachers. Nobody really understands all
that goes on behind the scenes.
Because of the prevailing opinion about
teaching, Capella said she took it upon her-
self to counter that thinking.
Im tired of allowing our profession to
be the subject of such ridicule, she said.
We needed to find a way to showcase our
profession to our community.
That was the genesis of the committee
tasked with educating the public.
My goal is for people to understand the
complexity of teaching, Capella said.
Teaching is a 24-hour profession.
She said teachers constantly consider
how to forge connections with disengaged
or disinterested students.
Marc Sonsini, broadcast technician with
LDTV, said the response to We Teach has
been largely positive.
Its been very eye-opening for me, Son-
sini said. Even working in the high school
for as long as I have, I really didnt under-
stand all that teachers do in a normal day.
John Donaldson, director of television
services for the district, said the show has
a five-star rating on iTunes.
Donaldson also said people in other
parts of the country have seen the series
and are surprised at the production values
because it is from a high school.
He said nothing shown is staged.
What you see is what really goes on,
Donaldson said.
More information about We Teach can
be found online at www.lrhsd.org/weteach.
VIDEO
Continued from page 1
Video series shows a day in the lives of teachers
Visit us online at www.medfordsun.com
FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 6, 2012 THE MEDFORD SUN 7
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With any new roof
and siding job
Virtual Home
Remodeler
1oo pooped 1o scoop?
We provide weekly scooper service s1or1ing o1
$
II/week
saving our planet, one pile at a time
856-665-6769
www.alldogspoop.com
GET $10.00 OFF YOUR FIRST SERVICE!
Locally owned and operated.
Pet Care
NO HEAT? OIL OR GAS
WE CAN HELP!
Plumbing Drain Cleaning
Quick Service
856-429-2494
NJRMP 9325
South Jersey Service