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www.cherryhillsun.com DEC. 23–29, 2015 FREE
Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . 17–19Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUEPSE&G warns of scam
Customers should stayon guard. PAGE 3
By MIKE MONOSTRAThe Sun
Eleven years ago, Susan ShinAngulo was sitting at home tak-ing care of her newborn daugh-
ter, Sophie. Outside, a trashtruck was collecting garbage
just as it did every week in An-gulo’s Charleston Riding neigh-borhood.
“The trash truck goes by, col-
lects our trash and moves on,”Angulo said. “Call it sleep depri-vation or call it newborn momsyndrome, I just had to think:
MIKE MONOSTRA/The Sun
Mayor Chuck Cahn (far left) presents a proclamation to Councilwoman Susan Shin Angulo (third from left)as other council members look on during last week’s township council meeting. Angulo was honored for hersix years of service on council. She will step down at the end of the year and take over a seat on the CamdenCounty Board of Chosen Freeholders in January. Angulo was elected to the freeholder board in November.
MIKE MONOSTRA/The Sun
Cherry Hill West students and Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno show off theirsocks at Cherry Hill West last Wednesday. Guadagno visited the schoolas part of her office’s ‘Rock Your Socks’ campaign. Cherry Hill West isone of three New Jersey high schools participating.
Cherry Hill Councilwoman Susan Shin Angulo will step down at end of yearand take over a seat on the Camden County Board of Chosen Freeholders
Bringing enthusiasm, love for public
service to county freeholders
Cherry Hill West has collected hundreds of socks to donate to Covenant House New Jersey as part
of Lt. Gov. Guadagno’s statewide campaign
‘Rock Your Socks’
please see ANGULO, page 10
By MIKE MONOSTRAThe Sun
With one hashtag, the commu-nity of Cherry Hill High SchoolWest turned a school donationdrive into a community happen-ing.
Over the past few weeks, every-one from Cherry Hill PublicSchools Superintendent Joe Me-loche to Mayor Chuck Cahn havebeen posting and tweeting videoswearing socks with crazy colorsand designs. Using the hashtag
#RockYourSocks, their videoshave raised awareness for a localnonprofit.
Cherry Hill West is one of three schools in New Jersey par-ticipating in Lt. Gov. KimGuadagno’s “Rock Your SocksCampaign,” a donation drivewhere socks are collected forCovenant House New Jersey.
Covenant House is a nonprofitproviding shelter and services tohomeless young adults between
please see WEST, page 14
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Residents from across theSouth Jersey region are invited toget to know local Com-munity Supported Agri-culture and local foodbuying clubs as Sustain-able Cherry Hill’s Gar-den Task Force hosts its third an-nual Food for Thought, Saturday,Jan. 10 from 1 to 3 p.m. at theCamden County Environmental
Center.Let Master Gardeners give you
tips about planting yourown veggie garden.There will also be fun ac-tivities for the kids.
This event is free.Please bring a canned food dona-tion for the local food pantry. Reg-ister at www.sustainablecherry-hill.org.
Cherry Hill Volvo hostsToys for Tots drive
Cherry Hill Volvo is having itsannual Toys for Tots donationdrive at its story at 1810 Route 70West in Cherry Hill.
Donations are being acceptedfrom 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., Mondaythrough Thursday and until 5p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Cherry Hill Volvo is also col-
lecting any food items to be dis-tributed to the Katz JCC as well asthe Food Pantry of Cherry Hill.Food, bedding, toys and house-cleaning items are also being col-lected for the animal shelter.
Temple Beth SholomOscars talk Jan. 21
Temple Beth Sholom Hazakpresents Dr. Moylan Mills, A Spot-light on the Oscars, on Thursday,Jan. 21 at 1 p.m. at Temple BethSholom in Cherry Hill.
Mills is professor emeritus of integrative arts at Penn StateAbington and is widely respectedfor his knowledge of film and theentertainment industry. Theevent will include a lively discus-sion of who may win and whomay be snubbed at this glamor-filled evening.
Refreshments will be served.The community is invited to at-tend. The event is free for Hazak
members and $5 for the generalpublic. For more information,visit www.tbsonline.org/moylan-mills.
2 THE CHERRY HILL SUN — DEC. 23–29, 2015
Have a safe and greenholiday season
Now that the hol-
iday season isupon us, I wanted
to share with yousome of the best
ways to dispose of cards, wrapping
paper, trees andold products re-
placed by newpresents. This
time of year, the best gift youcan give is a clean and green en-
vironment for future genera-tions.
Did you know that fromThanksgiving to New Year’s Day,
household waste increases bymore than 25 percent? That adds
up to an additional 1 milliontons of waste a week in our na-
tion’s landfills. That is why it isimportant not to forget about the
environment as we celebratewith family and friends.
We know that there will be acritical mass of new electronics
purchased this year. As a re-
minder, state law prohibits mu-nicipalities from picking upthese items in the curbside
trash. To make recycling moreconvenient, Camden County res-
idents can drop off their un-wanted televisions, computer
equipment and electronics at thePCFA in Pennsauken every busi-
ness day. If you are replacingold electronics with new ones
this season, drop off your itemsto be recycled at 9600 River Road
in Pennsauken, during thePCFA’s normal business hours
Monday through Friday from7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Recycling
these items will prevent harmfulmaterials such as lead, mercury,
cadmium and chromium frombeing released into the environ-
ment.Half of the paper America
consumes each year is used towrap and decorate consumer
products. The 2.65
billion cards soldeach year in this
country could fill afootball field 10 sto-
ries high. Thesecards and wrap-
ping paper can beplaced with your
paper recycling un-less they are wax-
coated or made of foil. Otherpaper goods accumulated
around the house during the hol-idays can be recycled using the
same guidelines. Why not savethe larger pieces of wrapping
paper to reuse the next time youneed to wrap a present? This
method of recycling is not onlybetter on the environment, but
on your wallet as well.Each year, 50 million Christ-
mas trees are purchased in theUnited States. Of those, about 30
million wind up in a landfill. Todetermine the proper way to dis-
pose of your Christmas tree this
year, please contact your munic-ipality. If you compost, reduceyour tree into smaller sections
before adding it to the pile. As analternative, consider purchasing
a live tree with a root ball so thatit can be planted in your yard
and enjoyed by your family foryears to come.
We can all do our part to keepthe environment healthy and
green this holiday season.If you have any items that are
in question, please call the Divi-sion of Environmental Affairs
at (856) 858-5241 or visitwww.camdencounty.com. If you
have any other questions aboutCounty services, please call me
at (856) 225-5466, or email me at jn as h@ ca md en co un ty.c om .
Also, you can like us on Face-book at www.Facebook.com/
camdencountynj and follow uson Twitter @camdencountynj.
By Freeholder Jeffr ey Nash
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20 Warwick Road • Haddonfield, NJ856-834-2843
www.peakwellnessandnutrition.com
Sustainable Cherry Hill’s third annualFood for Thought set for Jan. 10
briefs
Alcoholics Anonymousof South Jersey
(856) 486-4444
PSA
Narcotics Anonymousof New Jersey
(800) 992-0401
PSA
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DEC. 23–29, 2015 –THE CHERRY HILL SUN 3
BEAUTIFUL SIDING, ROOFING AND WINDOWS
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NEW VINYL SIDINGWith coupon.May not be combined with others offers.
Not valid on prior sales or estimates.
Must present coupon at time of sale
The following information wasprovided by the Cherry Hill Po-lice Department:
PSE&G is urging customers tobe alert to scams this season. Cus-tomers should be cautious of callers who demand immediatepayment via a pre-paid card, andwary of phony utility workersshowing up at their door to“check a problem.”
Phone scammers use scare tac-tics, such as threatening service
termination if they do not receiveimmediate payment with a pre-paid credit card. PSE&G offers anumber of payment options, andwould never require a customer
to use one specific type of pay-ment.
Door-to-door scammers usetrickery, such as showing up atsomeone’s house dressed like autility worker and say they needto “check a problem.” Often, afterthey gain access, they burglarizethe home. Residents should al-ways ask for identification.
When in doubt or if suspiciousin any way, PSE&G urges cus-tomers to call the number listedon their bill and report scamming
activity to their local police de-partment. You can contact theCherry Hill Police Department’snon-emergency line at (856) 665-1200.
PSE&G warns customersof phone, door scammers
Send us your Cherry Hill news
Drop us an email at [email protected] . Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (856) 427-0933.
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The entire community is wel-come to attend Katz JCC’s OpenHouse on Sunday, Jan. 10 from 10a.m. to 1 p.m.
Visitors can take advantage of facility tours, fitness demos, ac-tivities for children, snacks andthe opportunity to speak withrepresentatives from various de-partments at the JCC.
The open house will take placeat the JCC’s beautiful and mod-ern facility, which houses a na-tionally recognized early child-
hood center, a state-of-the-art fit-ness complex with indoor pools,full-size basketball gym, fitnesscenter and small group training,yoga, spin and Pilates studios.Each week, more than 100 freegroup wellness classes are offeredfor members including yoga, Pi-lates, Bodypump, Tabata Boot-camp, Spin, Groovics and Ugi Fit.The JCC’s health and wellness de-partment also offers personaltraining, nutrition counseling,basketball leagues for children
and adults, swim lessons andswim team and a beautiful spa fa-cility for adults.
The JCC offers diverse pro-gramming and services for theentire community, includingadult learning opportunities, cul-tural experiences and trips, Jew-ish programming and after-school child care for children inkindergarten to eighth grades.
The Sari Isdaner Early Child-hood Center offers parent andchild classes as well as earlychildhood education programsfor infants starting at 6 weeksuntil an accredited kindergarten
program. The JCC is also home totwo award-winning summer daycamps – Early Childhood Campsat the Katz JCC for ages 2 to 5, andthe JCC Camps at Medford forages 3 to 14.
Prospective members who reg-ister at the JCC Open House willreceive a $400 value in savings.To learn more about member-ship, please call (856) 424-4444 ext.1200 or visit www.katzjcc.org/oh.
4 THE CHERRY HILL SUN — DEC. 23–29, 2015
OPEN HOUSE
Tue., Jan. 5, 2016 9:30 am – 11:00 am Katz JCC, 1301 Springdale Road
To learn more, call 856-673-2502 or visit NJCareerStrategies.com
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Now accepting reservations for Christmas
Eve & New Years! Call for details
about our seating!
Bruno’s Restaurant & Pizza
856-428-9505509 Hopkins Rd., Haddonfield
Catering Availablefor the Holidays!
Katz JCC hosts open house Jan. 10
National business developmentand marketing expert KimberlyRice recentlypresented “Es-tablish a Per-sonal Brandwithout run-ning afoul of
PA’s RPCS” atthe annualPennsylvaniaBar Associa-tion’s annualWomen in Lawretreat. Theevent was held at The Hotel Her-shey, in Hershey, Pa.
Rice, a Cherry Hill resident, isan award-winning keynote speak-er, trainer and coach who hasnearly 25 years of experience of helping law firms and lawyers
generate increased revenue viaattracting new business as well asexpanding current client rela-tionships with proven methodolo-gies of professional sales skillstraining and coaching.
RICE
Rice makespresentation
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ALL NEW 2016 VOLVO S60
2016 S60, stock#16-6030, vin#yv126mfk7g2393219 MSRP : $39,465, 4cyl, e-drive,$0.00 downpayment,$0.00 security deposit, total of lease payments $10692.00Option to purchase at lease end $22100.40 based on 39 months. close end lease. 10,000 mi/yr,excess mi $0.25/mile thereafter. Offer can not be combined. Prices include all costs to be paidby a consumer expert lic. taxes, reg & doc fees. Added options additional. NOT responsible forerrors or omissions. CH volvo Photos are for illustrative purposes only. Cherry hill volvo re-serves the right to amend or revoke any program without notice. Prior sales excluded. Offer inc
$2000 conquest Loyalty. Customer must provide proof of Conquest Loyalty. Conquest makes:Acura, Audi, BMW, Cadillac, Ford, Honda, Infinity, Lexus, Lincoln, MB, Mercury, Nissan, Subaru,Toyota, or VW. Offers expire and customer must take delivery by 1/4/2016.
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Volvo InnovationsEverything we do is designed around people, so every innovation we make is designed tosimplify and improve your life. We're especially proud of our advances in efficient power,
connectivity and safety. We call our thinking in these areas: Drive-E, Sensus and IntelliSafe.
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6 THE CHERRY HILL SUN — DEC. 23–29, 2015
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 08003 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, 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 Cherry Hill 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
cherry hill editor Mike Monostra
art director Stephanie Lippincott
advertisinG director Arlene Reyes
elauwit media Group
publisher emeritus Steve Miller
editor emeritus Alan Bauer
Tim Ronaldsonexecutive editor
Joe Eiselepublisher
The March of Dimes New Jersey chap-ter has announced that Rancocas residentGina Ray from Kennedy Health in CherryHill received the 2015 March of DimesNurse of the Year Award in the behavioralhealth category.
Through Nurse of the Year Awards, theMarch of Dimes recognizes nurses whodemonstrate exceptional patient care, com-passion, and service. Whether serving as a
health-care provider, educator, researcher,or chapter volunteer and advisor, thesenurses have played a critical role in im-proving the health of New Jersey’s moth-ers and babies.
Nurse of the Year Awards celebrate the
nursing profession and create awarenessof the recent strides made in this growingfield.
Ray is a nurse at Kennedy Health. Aschair of a council whose goal is to increasethe number of certified nurses, she solicit-ed names of nurses interested in board cer-tification and found the No. 1 barrier topursuing board certification was cost.
She discussed the possibility of a no-
cost, two-attempt program with ANCC thatMed-Surg nurses utilized to increase theirnumber of certified nurses. With the assis-tance of her nurse educator and adminis-tration, the program was implementedhospital-wide.
Ray is also an advocate for the benefits of board certification.
She seeks out and shares information re-garding free prep resources and displaysand shares when her peers have achievedthis milestone accomplishment.
The unit’s number of board certifiednurses has increased by five in the pasteight months.
“We could not do the work of the March
of Dimes without the passion and commit-ment of our nurses. This is our opportuni-ty to show them how special they trulyare,” said Allie Hall, Central Division exec-utive director, New Jersey Chapter of theMarch of Dimes.
Ray receives March of Dimes Nurse of Year award
Since September, Evesham Town-
ship has been helping to save
lives – quite literally, in its
words. That month, the township
launched a pilot program funded en-
tirely through private donations from
businesses, groups and even citizens
that provided residents of the town
with a free ride home from a township-
based bar or restaurant if they had too
much to drink.
The program, called Evesham Sav-
ing Lives, partnered with popular DD
services such as Uber and BeMyDD to
keep potential drunk drivers off the
streets.
The program worked well in the ini-
tial pilot stage, and so, it was expanded
another month. And then another. And
another. In the program’s first 100
days, officials said 800 residents used
the service. Only two of the Evesham
residents arrested for DWI during that
time came from any of the 19 locations
in town where the program is avail-
able. Before the program started, near-
ly 60 percent of those arrested for DWI
in Evesham were residents of the
town. During the program, that num-
ber dropped all the way to 5 percent.
Last week, Voorhees Township, Eve-
sham’s next-door neighbor but across
county lines, partnered with Evesham
to jump on board the program. Now,
residents of either township can get a
free ride home from any establishment
in either town to keep them from mak-
ing the dumb decision of getting be-
hind the wheel while they are im-
paired.
This new partnership is set to run
through Jan. 15, with donations fund-
ing it through that time. Evesham
Mayor Randy Brown, a Republican,
has said he’ll make sure it continues in
his town indefinitely, and Voorhees
Mayor Michael Mignogna, a Democrat,
is happy to offer the program as well.
The Saving Lives program is a won-
derful example of bipartisan politics:
A Republican-controlled town govern-
ment in one county partners with a De-
mocrat-controlled town government in
the next county over to do what gov-
ernment is intended to do – help keep
its constituents safe.
This is a highly commendable pro-
gram – one that works, both in theory
and in practice. The two town govern-
ments should be thanked, but so, too,
should the generous unnamed busi-
nesses, groups and residents who have
provided the donations to run it.
Now, the next step should be expan-
sion again – maybe with the help of
more towns, counties or even the state,
who could provide funding so private
donations weren’t needed.
Let’s make this happen.
in our opinion
DD program should expandTowns, counties, maybe even state should look at Evesham, Voorhees initiative
Your thoughts
What do you think of the “Saving Lives”program? Share your thoughts on this,and other topics, through a letter to theeditor.
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WE NES Y DEC. 23
National Association of Activeand Retired Federal Employees:1 to 3 p.m. at Carman Tilelli Com-
munity Center, 820 Mercer St.Call 667-2516 for information.
Super Seniors: Noon to 4 p.m. atCarman Tilelli Community Center,820 Mercer St. Business meetingis first Wednesday of month. Cov-ered dish luncheon is fifthWednesday of month. Call 667-2516 for information.
Balance Your Life with Tai Chi: 7 to8 p.m. at St. Andrew’s UnitedMethodist Church, 327 MarltonPike West. Call (856) 795-3427 oremail cherryhilltaichigroup@
gmail.com or visithttp://www.meetup.com/cherry-hill-taichi-group/.
THURS Y DEC. 24
JCC Laughter and Lo Mein Christ-mas Eve Comedy Night: 6:30p.m. at Katz JCC. Enjoy a yummykosher Chinese food dinner andlaughs provided by famed come-
dians Dan Wilson and Robin Fox.The cost is $25 for JCC membersand $35 for non-members.Babysitting is available at thecost of $5 per child. For moreinformation, visit
www.katzjcc.org.
St. Andrew’s UMC Christmas EveServices: Celebrating Songs ofthe Season String Quartet andvoices of St. Andrew’s at 6:30 and10:30 p.m. Candlelight services at7 and 11 p.m. 327 Marlton PikeWest, Cherry Hill.
Kingsway Church Christmas EveServices: 3, 4:30 and 6 p.m. 2701Chapel Ave., Cherry Hill.
St. Michael’s Lutheran ChurchChristmas Eve Services: 4:30
p.m. Family Friendly Worship. 10p.m. Festival Worship. Both litur-gies include carol singing, HolyCommunion and candle lighting.601 Kings Highway North, CherryHill.
Unitarian Universalist ChurchChristmas Eve Services: Familyservice from 4:30 to 5:45 p.m.,including short “no rehearsal”pageant. Christmas Communion
Service from 6 to 7 p.m. Lessonsand Carols Service from 7:30 to 9p.m. 401 North Kings Highway,Cherry Hill.
FRI Y
DEC. 25JCC Family Character Breakfast:
10 a.m. at Katz JCC. Enjoy a fullbreakfast as children get to meettheir favorite movie and TV char-acters. The event is free for JCCearly childhood families, $5 forJCC members and $10 for non-members. For more informationand to RSVP, email Susie Shavel-son at [email protected].
Christmas Day: Most offices andlibraries closed in observance of
the holiday.St. Michael’s Lutheran Church
Christmas Day Service: 10 a.m.Reflective Communion.
SUN Y
DEC. 27
St. Michael’s Lutheran Church: 11a.m. Christmas Cantata and Holy
CALENDARPAGE 8 DEC. 23–29, 2015
Heating System Repair or ReplaceAny Type
Read their ads, cut their coupons, but before you sign call
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eca
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e T
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KeroseneHeaters
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Chain SawsBlowers
Snow Blowers
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* Chains Sharpened *
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without burning your cash
Seasoned Fire Wood for
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Sales, Services and Warranty work
ARE YOU PREPARED FOR SNOW?Have you checked to see if your snow
blower will start and run before you
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Please do so now!!!
We perform the tune up it needs to have
it running, for when the Snow Comes!!
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20% OffAll Statuary, Glazed Pottery, Fountains,
Benches, & BirdbathsValid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
40% OffAll Undecorated Artificial Wreaths,
Garlands, & TreesValid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
40% OffAll Holiday Gift & Ribbon
Excludes Alice Kelly, SnoFaces, Luminaire, Bows and Candles
Valid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
40% OffAll Lights, Flags, Hardware, &
Lawn OrnamentsValid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
www.flaggsgardencenter.com www.flaggsgardencenter.com www.flaggsgardencenter.com
www.flaggsgardencenter.com www.flaggsgardencenter.com www.flaggsgardencenter.com
www.flaggsgardencenter.com www.flaggsgardencenter.com www.flaggsgardencenter.com
50% OffAll Houseplants & Poinsettias
Valid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
50% OffAll Decorated Live & Artificial Design
Pieces, & Handmade BowsValid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
60% OffAll Ornaments, Silk Flowers
& Gift BagsValid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
60% OffAll Live Cut Greens &
Live GarlandsValid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
70% OffSelected Holiday Items
Ornaments, Tableware, Gifts & more
Valid 12/26/15-1/12/16 Only.
please see CALENDAR, page 12
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Preparing kids for the path to innovation
We are at a unique place in time whereSTEM initiatives are influencing the fu-ture economy. Unfortunately, these initia-tives are widening the gap between whatstudents are learning in school and theskills they will need to thrive in a new dig-ital and hyper-connected world. In a recentstudy, the Association of American Col-leges and Universities highlighted that 93
percent of the employers (non-profit andfor-profit) surveyed felt that thinking,
complex problem solving and communi-cation skills were more important than acandidate’s undergraduate major. Smartcities, life sciences, nanoscale technology,cross-border collaborations, space explo-ration, power and green propulsion, ad-vancements in chemistry and materialsscience, cybersecurity, mobility, energyand renewables, robotics cinematography,
and data driven applications are creatingunprecedented opportunities for our futureworkforce. They will be challenged to usetheir creativity (imagination and designthinking) and teamwork skills to becomethe next generation of innovators and lead-ers.
Creativity is def ined as the interactionamong imagination, cognitive presence,
ego-strength, conation, aptitude, process,domain engagement, and environment bywhich an individual or group follows thecreative process to produce an accepted
product that is both novel and useful as de-fined within a personal or social context.It is critical to our society’s advancement,which is why we need to provide students
with opportunities that foster their curios-ity and creativity. At Destination Imagina-tion, we’ve been helping students learn thecreative process from imagination to inno-
vation for more than 30 years. Our chal-lenge-based afterschool program comple-ments in school curriculum and teachesstudents the skills needed to bring a novelidea to fruition, including risk taking, self-assessment, learning from failure, projectmanagement, and collaborative problemsolving. By giving kids this opportunity,they will learn how to face future challenges
and opportunities with confidence.More than 150,000 students worldwide
participate in Destination Imagination each
year.Parents, teachers and administrators who
are interested in learning more about Desti-nation Imagination may contact them [email protected] or by phone at 1-888-321-1503.
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10 THE CHERRY HILL SUN — DEC. 23–29, 2015
1415 Route 70 East • Cherry Hill, NJ 08034 • 856-795-6966 • www.longandfoster.com
LONG & FOSTER
Cheryl Lamantia
Cell 856-357-4145
Deborah Sabel
Cell 609-220-4967
Brian Mulvenna
Cell 609-760-4126
Carmela Pirolli
Cell 609-792-3880
Janet Cantwell Papale
Cell 609-760-0776
121 Duncan Avenue, Westville
$152,000
1119 Cooper St, Deptford
$120,000
12 Fawn Dr, Cherry Hill$199,999
28 Greenwood Rd, Cherry Hill
$219,500
7 E Upland Way, Haddonf ield
$729,000
40 Retreat Road, Southamption
$2,400,000
512 4th Ave, Haddon Heights
$265,000
2 Wilderness Dr, Medford
$699,000
Cheryl Lamantia
Cell 856-357-4145
Susan AzarReal Estate Agent
Direct: [email protected]
Wishing all of our
customers a wonderful holiday season.Brian Mulvenna
Cell 609-760-4126
What if the trash collector didn’tpick up my trash? Who am I goingto call?”
“At that point I thought, I’m notgoing anywhere,” she added. “Iwant to get involved. It was aboutcollecting information. I wantedto know about my town.”
Five years later, Angulo waselected to Cherry Hill Council, be-coming the first Korean-Ameri-can woman in New Jersey to be
elected to public office.Now, Angulo is preparing toembark on a new journey. Aftersix years of serving on Cherry
Hill Township Council, Angulowill step down at the end of theyear as she prepares to be swornin to her new seat on the Camden
County Board of Chosen Free-holders.
Angulo was elected as a free-holder in November. She will takeover the seat previously held byMichelle Gentek-Mayer, who waselected Camden County surro-gate in November.
Angulo, a mother of two and a17-year resident of Cherry Hill, isknown for her bright smile andinfectious enthusiasm duringcouncil meetings. During a cere-
mony honoring her at council’sDec. 14 meeting, council memberstalked of how Angulo’s positiveenergy and enthusiasm made her
the perfect person to representCherry Hill.
“Throughout her term as acouncilwoman, Susan has been a
dedicated public servant and anadvocate of Cherry Hill residentsof all ages and all walks of life,”said council president DavidFleisher, who ran alongside An-gulo in the 2009 and 2013 town-ship council elections.
Angulo attributed her enthusi-asm to the amount of pride resi-dents have in Cherry Hill.
“It is a reflection of how proudpeople are of this town,” she said.“Every time I campaign and go to
different events, people come upto me and say, ‘I grew up in this
ANGULOContinued from page 1
please see LEAVING, page 13
Angulo elected freeholder in November
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DEC. 23–29, 2015 –THE CHERRY HILL SUN 11
Executive Mews; Bldg. Q1930 E. Marlton Pike; Cherry Hill, NJ 08003
Call now for free phone consultation!
856-994-3343• Animal-Assisted Therapy(certified therapy dog often on site)
• Art Therapy• Family Counseling
• ADHD Therapy
• Anxiety• Autism Spectrum Disorders
www.therapistcherryhill.com
Justin Major of Cherry Hill
was inducted into a 10-monthterm of service in the NationalCivilian Community Corps, anAmeriCorps program.
He recently completed the firstof four long-term service proj-ects.
Founded in 1994, AmeriCorpsNCCC is a residential nationalservice program that supportsdisaster relief, the environment,infrastructure improvement, en-ergy conservation, and urban and
rural development.Since 1994, more than 900,000Americans have served morethan 1.2 billion hours across thefamily of AmeriCorps programs.Currently, about 75,000 peopleserve in AmeriCorps programsnationwide each year, about 1,200of whom serve with AmeriCorpsNCCC.
Major arrived at AmeriCorps
NCCC’s Pacific Region Campus
in Sacramento, Calif., on Oct. 14to receive training for 10 monthsof full-time service with the pro-gram. This training emphasizedteamwork, leadership develop-ment, communication,service learning and specializedskills.
As a corps member, Major willbe responsible for completing aseries of six- to eight-week-longservice projects as part of a 10- to12-person team. The first service
project ended Dec. 18. His teamwill begin a new project in a newlocation in January.
Twenty-eight teams composedof more than 300 Sacramento-based Corps members and teamleaders are serving on their firstprojects. Seventeen of the 28teams deploy from Sacramentoon Nov. 7 to projects throughoutCalifornia, including helping
with improvements at national,
state, and county parks, assistingwith food bank donations and vol-unteer management, and mentor-ing children. The 11 remainingteams are working on projectsthroughout the Pacific region inUtah, Oregon, Washington andMontana.
There are four other NCCCcampuses located in Baltimore,Md., Vinton, Iowa, Vicksburg,Miss., and Denver, Colo., each of which is a hub for its respective
area of the country, though teamswill travel to other regions for dis-aster relief projects.
Before joining NCCC, Major at-tended Cherry Hill High SchoolWest.
“I choose to serve with Americ-Corps because I want to helpmake my community better andthis something I like doing,”Major said.
Major inducted into 10-month termwith National Civilian Community Corps
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Communion. Cantata presentedby St. Michael's Festival Choir. 601Kings Highway North, Cherry Hill.
Unitarian Universalist Church: Lib-eral-religious service at 10:15 a.m.401 North Kings Highway, CherryHill.
Overeaters Anonymous openmeeting: 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. atKennedy Hospital, Cooper Land-ing Road and Chapel Avenue. Call(609) 239-0022 or visit www.oa-
southjersey.org for information.
MON Y DEC. 28Balance Your Life with Tai Chi: 7 to
8 p.m. at St. Andrew’s UnitedMethodist Church, 327 MarltonPike West. Call (856) 795-3427 oremail cherryhilltaichigroup@
gmail.com or visithttp://www.meetup.com/cherry-hill-taichi-group/.
Nicotine Anonymous meeting: 7p.m. at Kennedy Hospital, CooperLanding Road and ChapelAvenue, fifth floor. For questions,call Ellie at (856) 354-0887.
Cherry Hill Rotary meeting: 6:15p.m. at Ponzio’s Diner andRestaurant, Route 70. Visitorswelcome. For more information,visit www.cherryhillrotary.com,email [email protected] orcall (856) 424-3456.
Cherry Hill Maturity Club: Noon to4 p.m. at Carman Tilelli Commu-nity Center, 820 Mercer St. Duesare $5 a year. For more informa-tion, contact President ConnieCramer at (856) 414-0778.
Maturity Club: Noon to 4 p.m. Bin-go, cards, shuffleboard, refresh-ments, trips at Cherry Hill Com-
munity Center, 820 Mercer St.Business meeting second Mon-day of month. Call (856) 661-4800 for information.
TUES Y DEC. 29Must watch documentary: Noon at
Cherry Hill Public Library. Bring alunch and enjoy a free film at thelibrary. This week’s documentaryis “Batkid Begins.”
Pokemon open play: 4 p.m. at Cher-ry Hill Public Library. Bring adeck, trade cards and battle withother Pokemon enthusiasts. Theevent is open to all ages. Foodmay be served.
Retired Men’s Club: Noon to 4 p.m.at Cherry Hill Community Center,820 Mercer St. Enjoy bridge,pinochle, shuffle board. Call(856) 795-3720.
Golden Seniors Racquetball Club: 9a.m. at Cherry Hill Health andRacquet Club, Old Cuthbert Road.All levels of play, picnics and par-ties.
12 THE CHERRY HILL SUN — DEC. 23–29, 2015
ONE BIG HAPPY FAMILY
Residents and families love the warmth &hospitality of Voorhees Senior Living:“ Mom absolutely loves life at Voorhees Senior Living! With wonderful new friends,
and caring staff who go above and beyond
for residents, she quickly decided to turn
her 30-day respite stay into her permanent
new home. That was six months ago, and
now we are all one big happy family!”
– DAUGHTER OF A RESIDENT
Mon.-Sat. 11am to 8pm • Sun. 11am to 5pm
CALENDAR
CALENDARContinued from page 8
CALENDAR EVENTS
Send your events to The Sunat [email protected].
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town and I just bought thishouse.’”
“It’s amazing where peoplecome back,” she added. “To seethat, you can’t help but be proud.”
When Angulo first ran forcouncil in 2009, she talked aboutcountless numbers of people whohelped her during the campaign.She couldn’t single out just oneperson who helped her the most.
“There were so many peoplewho reached out and tried to
help,” she said. “It takes a villageto make it successful. I had somany people who were extremelyhelpful and told me to be myself.”
Collecting information issomething Angulo has donethroughout her tenure on coun-cil. She especially enjoyed meet-ing residents at events and hear-ing about their ideas on makingthe township a better place to live.
Her enthusiasm for meetingresidents spread to a wider audi-ence when she campaigned for
her freeholder seat this summerand fall. Angulo enjoyed meetingresidents in many of the othertowns in Camden County.
“Every town in Camden Coun-ty is unique,” Angulo said. “Youhave to respect that and learnfrom that experience. It’s aboutcollecting information and learn-ing about each town.”
For Angulo, the time sincebeing elected freeholder has been
bittersweet. She is excited for hernew position as a county free-holder, but sad she will be leavingCherry Hill Council.
“We work together and we’re
so supportive of each other,” shesaid. “That’s what I’m going tomiss the most.”
Fleisher said he is confidentAngulo will bring her enthusi-asm for service to the freeholderboard in 2016.
“We know she will representthe people of Cherry Hill verywell,” he said.
Angulo said she will continueto be a presence around CherryHill and is looking forward toworking with township officialsin the future.
DEC. 23–29, 2015 –THE CHERRY HILL SUN 13
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MiaJon Salon
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856-429-5070
LEAVINGContinued from page 10
Leaving council is bittersweet, Angulo says
National SuicidePrevention Lifeline
(800) 273-8255
PSA
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14 THE CHERRY HILL SUN — DEC. 23–29, 2015
20% OFFany purchase
Not to be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. Valid at participating locations only. Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Cash redemp-tion value 1/20 of one cent. Applicable taxes paid by bearer. No reproduction is allowed. Expires 12/31/15. ©2013 Einstein Noah Restaurant Group Inc.
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$3 OFFAny Dozen Value Pack
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the ages of 18 and 21. The sockdrive is to provide those youngadults with fresh pairs of socks.
Jen Williams, a representativefrom Covenant House, talked tothe students at an event lastWednesday and explained manyof those who see CovenantHouse’s help do not have socks foreveryday wear.
“We’re going to be able to pro-vide comfort to those kids’ feet,”she said.
Cherry Hill West ended up par-ticipating after senior and boardof education representative TimIntelisano heard from Guadagnoabout another project where hehelped create a Twitter accountfor Cherry Hill West’s board rep-resentatives.
“She reached out to me,” In-telisano said. “When I made the
board of education Twitter ac-count, she thought it was goodthat we were connecting studentswith the board of education and
what they did. I wrote back to herand said ‘Thank you for that. I ap-preciate that. If you’re ever inSouth Jersey, come our way.’”
Intelisano’s letter to Guadagnohelped Cherry Hill West becomethe South Jersey school selectedfor the campaign. The otherschools participating are Ridge-wood and Ocean Township highschools.
What has made Cherry HillWest stand out above the othertwo schools was the way it be-came a community project. In-stead of just collecting donations,the school decided to make it aviral social media campaign simi-lar to the ALS Ice Bucket Chal-lenge from 2014. Communitymembers were encouraged topost a video in crazy and decora-tive socks on social media, pledgeto donate a certain number of
socks and then challenge some-one else to do it.
Intelisano helped spread theword around the school commu-
nity, asking administrators, staff and students to create a video andtweet it using #RockYourSocks.
“I had to create our socialmedia campaign with it,” In-telisano said. “So I used the hash-tag and taught our administra-tors how we were going to playit.”
The social media blitz allowedthe campaign to grow from aschool project to a communityhappening. Community leaderssuch as Cherry Hill West Princi-pal Kwame Morton and PoliceChief William Monaghan got in-volved, posting videos and en-couraging others to do the same.
Intelisano gave a lot of credit toCherry Hill West student activi-ties coordinator and Cherry HillTownship Councilwoman Carole
WESTContinued from page 1
please see COMMUNITY, page 16
West makes campaign a community project
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WishingYou
a Healthy&
Happy Holiday
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classifiedT H E C H E R R Y H I L L S U N
DECEMBER 23-29, 2015 PAGE 17
W H A T Y O U N E E D T O K N O WAll 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.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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LET THE SUNSWORK FORYOU!
Call 856-427-0933for Advertising Info.
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