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AUGUST 8-14, 2012
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Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-11
Editorials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Baxter makes Big50
Remodeling Magazine honors
James Baxter. PAGE 3
Eat ice cream, give back to community
BY HEATHER FIORE
The Hopewell Sun
Did you know that every Mon-
day at Hopewells famous ice
cream spot, Cream King, donates
20 percent of its proceeds and all
tips to a local non-profit organiza-
tion?
Well, if you havent noticed,
Cream King Mondays is one of
the steps that owner of Cream
King Phil Volpe is taking to help
his employees who are mostly
high school students gain a
sense of giving back to their local
communities.
Its good to teach the kids who
work for you to give back to the
community, he said. After
spending time working for a non-
profit, youve seen the change,
and peoples donations have been
lower. Its gotten much more diffi-
cult to raise money as a result of
the whole economic meltdown, so
its good to teach these kids about
the entire economy and the non-
profit sector.
Volpe started Cream King Mon-
days four and a half years ago,
and hosts these charitable days
every Monday from Memorial
Day until Labor Day.
On July 23, Cream King Mon-
day helped assist the Trenton-
based non-profit organization
Catholic Charities, Diocese of
Trenton on its mission to help
families in Mercer, Monmouth,
HEATHER FIORE/The Hopewell Sun
Communications Assistant in the External Affairs Dept. at Catholic Charities Christa Marzan and Lisa Thibault, Communications Manager
for Catholic Charities, Diocese of Trenton support Cream Kings fundraiser on July 23 in Pennington for their organization.
please see CATHOLIC, page 7
2 THE HOPEWELL SUN AUGUST 8-14, 2012
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25 Route 31 South Pennington, NJ 08534
609-737-3775
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908-672-3320 cell 888-519-7677 ext 5850
reakins@1stconstitution.com
86 East Broad Street Hopewell, NJ 08525
(609) 466-2100 www.1stconstitution.com
Branch Hours:
Mon-Thu 8:30am-5pm
Fri 8:30am-6pm
Sat 9am-1pm
New Lower-Cost FHA
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Generation Connection
Would you like to learn how to
text? Use your new laptop? Attach
a photo to an email?
If you answered yes to any of
these questions or have other
technology questions, stop by the
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library located at 245
Pennington-Titusville Road in
Pennington on Tuesday, Aug. 14,
from 3 to 4 p.m. Tech savvy teens
will be on hand to answer your
questions and offer demonstra-
tions.
Are you a techie yourself ?
Come by and share your expert-
ise.
This is a program from Gener-
ation Connection, a project that
promotes connecting people
across generations. Registration
required by Aug. 10 by contacting
Hopewell Valley Senior Services
at (609) 737-0605, ext. 692, or
awaugh@hopewelltwp. org.
Birthday Breakfast
Hopewell Valley Senior Citi-
zens, ages 60 and over, whose
birthdays are in July, August, or
September, are invited to attend a
quarterly birthday breakfast at
the Hopewell Valley Golf Club lo-
cated at 114 Pennington-Hopewell
Road in Hopewell.
The breakfast will be on Friday,
Aug. 17, at 9 a.m.
RSVP to the Hopewell Valley
Senior Services no later than
Aug. 10 at (609) 737-3753. We wel-
come and encourage spouses and
guests, at a cost of $15, which may
be paid at the door. Please RSVP
your guests.
Senior events coming up
AUGUST 8-14, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 3
Coupon must be presented at time of
purchase. *Additional parts & labor in
excess of one hour will be billed at our
scheduled rates. One coupon per cus-
tomer / per household. Expires 8/31/12.
Coupon must be presented at time of
purchase. Not accepted at time of instal-
lation. Not valid with any other discounts,
repairs or prior purchases. One coupon
per customer / per household. Coupon
has no cash value. Expires 8/31/12.
Coupon must be presented at time of
purchase. Not accepted at time of instal-
lation. Not valid with any other discounts,
repairs or prior purchases. One coupon
per customer / per household. Coupon
has no cash value. Expires 8/31/12.
BY HEATHER FIORE
The Hopewell Sun
Hopewell native and owner of
Baxter Construction James Bax-
ter was recently selected by Re-
modeling Magazine as a member
of this years Big50, and was for-
mally recognized at a gala dinner
at the two-day Remodeling Lead-
ership Conference in Baltimore,
Md., back in May.
Remodeling Magazine has
been recognizing 50 of the lead-
ing contractors and remodelers
around the country for more than
25 years now. Baxter was one of
the six remodelers chosen from
New Jersey, and was selected out
of thousands of applicants.
There are only 2 or 3 percent
of all remodeling companies in
the country in the Big50, so its a
nice group to be in with, Baxter
said.
The Big50 awardees are placed
into seven categories according to
their expertise, including Market
Wise, Teamwork, Niches, Busi-
ness Savvy, Fine Design, Sales &
Marketing and Industry Impact.
Baxter received his award for
Market Wise, which is awarded to
remodelers who have built their
business around a keen under-
standing of their markets.
We are very honored to re-
ceive this award, Baxter said. It
recognizes our business as one
that works tirelessly to exceed the
expectations of our customers. I
direct a lot of credit to my teams
of talented craftsmen and admin-
istrators. They are just as respon-
sible for the experience our cus-
tomers receive and the success we
have realized as I am. We are
Baxter makes Big50
Hopewell native joins ranks of top
contractors in Remodeling Magazine
please see CUSTOMER, page 4
4 THE HOPEWELL SUN AUGUST 8-14, 2012
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lucky to live and operate in com-
munities that value quality and
integrity as much as the invest-
ment required to build their vi-
sion.
Remodeling Magazine also sep-
arated each of the winners by
their business specialty, includ-
ing full-service remodeling, in-
surance restoration, replace-
ment/ specialty contractor,
kitchen & bath remodeling and
design/build remodeling. Since
Baxters company focuses on per-
fecting each aspect of a persons
home that they wish to refurbish,
Baxter fell into the full-service re-
modeling category.
As a part of the interviewing
process, GuildQuality, a survey-
ing company for the construction
industry, interviewed 50 of Bax-
ters most recent customers to
conduct a customer service as-
sessment, which is something
that Baxter hopes to use in his
company in future years.
Thats something we want to
move forward with down the road
because we feel that the cus-
tomers opinion about our compa-
ny is very important, he said.
We want to make sure theyre
happy, weve responded to their
needs, and that weve called back
on time because thats a big
thing.
Baxter has been successfully
operating Baxter Construction
for 30 years now, and services the
greater Mercer County area, in-
cluding Princeton, Hopewell
Township and Borough and Pen-
nington.
Hes dedicated to truly listen-
ing to the customers wants and
needs, developing trust and mutu-
al respect, and demonstrating im-
peccable craftsmanship and qual-
ity, which is why he stood out to
Remodeling Magazine.
We didnt win by just volume
of dollars, Baxter said. It was
more customer satisfaction and
developing your company in a
tough economic time. Thats what
was really cool about it.
Baxter Construction also stuck
out as a rarity in this years list of
candidates because of Baxters
sudden switch in business. He ex-
plained how Baxter Construction
was just a referral business, but
transformed into a more full-serv-
ice company to service the pub-
lics growing needs.
Were sort of moving with the
trend and changing the way that
we do things, Baxter said. You
never know how the referral busi-
ness is going to be.
Baxter also works closely with
the communities within Mercer
County, since hes supported com-
munity organizations through
Baxter Constructions volunteer
efforts with the Historical Society
of Princeton, Morven Museum &
Garden, The Hopewell Board of
Education, Hopewell Borough
and The Sourland Mountain Pre-
serve.
After being located in down-
town Princeton on Nassau Street
for 15 years, Baxter Construction
relocated to Main Street on
Hopewell Borough, where they
have been for the last 15 years.
For more information about
Baxter Construction, visit
www.baxterconstruction.com.
CUSTOMER
Continued from page 2
Customer satisfaction
helped with the win,
says Baxter
Send us your Hopewell news
Have a news tip? Want to send us a press release or photos? Shoot
an interesting video? Drop us an email at news@hopewellsun.com.
Fax us at (856) 427-0934. Call the editor at (609) 751-0245.
AUGUST 8-14, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 5
2/1 SPECIAL
Bring in 2 Pieces Of Dry Cleaning,
Get 1 Shirt Laundered For FREE
With this coupon. Not valid with any other
offers or prior services. Exp. 8/31/12.
25% OFF
Household Items
With this coupon. Not valid with any other
offers or prior services. Exp. 8/31/12.
20% OFF
Repairs
With this coupon. Not valid with any other
offers or prior services. Exp. 8/31/12.
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The following Hopewell resi-
dents graduated from Rider Uni-
versity:
Andrea Driver received a
Master of Arts degree in Educa-
tional Leadership.
Nicole Meyer received a Bach-
elor of Arts degree in Elementary
Education.
Megan Wilson received a
Bachelor of Arts degree in Ele-
mentary Education.
The following Hopewell stu-
dents graduated from The College
of New Jersey on May 11:
Christopher Weidl earned a
Bachelor of Science in Criminol-
ogy.
Daniel DeStefano earned a
Master of Arts in School Counsel-
ing Option.
Cheryl Runk earned a College
Certification Program in Early
Child P-3 Certificate.
Gina Pagano, a resident of
Hopewell, graduated from Ran-
dolph College with a BA in Sociol-
ogy on May 13.
William J. Lenz, a resident of
Hopewell, has been placed on the
deans list at Bloomsburg Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania for the
spring semester while enrolled in
the schools Digital Forensics pro-
gram.
on campus
Visit us online at
www.hopewellsun.com
6 THE HOPEWELL SUN AUGUST 8-14, 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 08560, 08525 and
08534 ZIP codes. If you are not on the mail-
ing list, six-month subscriptions are avail-
able 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@hopewellsun.com. For advertising
information, call 609-751-0245 or email
advertising@hopewellsun.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@hopewellsun.com, via fax at 609-751-
0245, or via the mail. Of course, you can drop
them off at our office, too. The Hopewell Sun
reserves the right to reprint your letter in any
medium including 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
HOPEWELL EDITOR Heather Fiore
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
N
ew Jersey does solar power.
Does it well. Does it too well,
as it turns out.
According to the governors office,
the state installed more solar capacity
in the first quarter of 2012 than any
other state and led the nation in solar
installations on commercial and indus-
trial properties in 2011.
Now, thats a source of pride. Being a
national leader in something other
than reality television shows is a good
thing.
But, as it turns out, you can have too
much of a good thing.
The supply of solar power has now
surpassed the demand, bringing the
market crashing down. And when the
market crashes, solar projects in the
construction phase can stop. Jobs can
be lost. The momentum of the solar in-
dustry can come to a halt.
The measure signed by Gov.
Christie, which had bipartisan sup-
port, aims to boost the market by re-
quiring power companies to purchase
more solar power. In other words, the
state is trying to increase the demand,
hoping that, eventually, it catches up to
the supply, thereby giving those in the
business of building solar projects a
reason to keep doing what theyre
doing.
We think the bill certainly cant
hurt, given the current market situa-
tion, but we also agree with experts
who think more might need to be done.
In a statement, the Mid-Atlantic
Solar Energy Industries Association
points out that the measure doesnt do
enough to prevent a recurrence of the
over-supply situation. It proposes con-
trolling the pace of solar project pro-
duction.
It might be a bit premature to take
that step, but, as the state has seen, this
is a market that, left to its own, can run
itself into the ground fairly quickly.
Give the new measure time to work.
See if the demand can catch up to the
supply. But be ready to step in if it be-
comes clear that more steps are needed
to avoid another crash.
in our opinion
Solar solution
Recent action will help the market, at least in the short term
A super-solar state
New Jersey is a national leader when it
comes to producing solar power. Oddly,
that is now a bad thing. Supply exceeds
demand, and the market has crashed.
A measure signed last month will help
to correct that.
There will be a Benefits of Weight Train-
ing Flexibility Demonstration on Tuesday,
Aug. 14, from to 3 p.m. at the Novo Nordisk
Diabetes Family Resource Room at Capital
Health Medical Center in Pennington.
Learn about the benefits of weight train-
ing as well as safety considerations with
Jack Stolte, our exercise physiologist. We
will also perform flexibility exercises in
this session. Call (609) 537-7081 to register.
The New Hope Lambertville AIDS Walk
is Sunday, Sept. 23, at 9 a.m. Join a crowd of
hundreds from Bucks, Mercer and Hunter-
don counties for the largest HIV/AIDS
fundraiser. This eight-mile walk begins
and ends in quaint New Hope, Pa., and
travels through historic villages along the
picturesque Delaware River. Walk with
friend, family or coworkers to raise urgent-
ly needed funds and to honor those who
have struggled with HIV/AIDS.
Blood pressure and other screenings:
Tuesday, Aug. 14, from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
at the Pennington Market Caf. This popu-
lar monthly blood pressure site is made
possible through a continuing health part-
nership between the Pennington Quality
Market and the Hopewell Township Health
Department.
Tuesday, Aug. 21, from 10 a.m. to noon
at the Lower Level of the Hopewell Town-
ship Municipal Building in Hopewell
Township.
Tuesday, Aug. 28, from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
at the Stop & Shop located at 800 Denow
Road in Pennington.
Mondays and Wednesdays at 11 a.m.,
Healthy Bones, an ongoing classes to
build bone strength and prevent osteoporo-
sis held at the auditorium of the Hopewell
Township Municipal Building. Space is
limited.
Call (609) 737-0120 ext. 638 to sign up and
confirm enrollment in the class.
The Hopewell Township Health Depart-
ment is located at 201 Washington Crossing
Pennington Road in Titusville. For more
information, call (609) 737-0120.
Health happenings in Hopewell for August
Visit us online at www.hopewellsun.com
AUGUST 8-14, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 7
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Burlington and Ocean counties,
with all aspects of their lives, in-
cluding addiction, domestic vio-
lence and homelessness.
Catholic Charities does great
work all over New Jersey, so Im
very happy to have them on the
list, Volpe said.
Catholic Charities, Diocese of
Trenton is a private, non-profit
organization that deals with 54
different programs throughout
all of Central New Jersey and
Mercer County, and serves any-
one in need regardless of their re-
ligious background, according to
Communications Manager Lisa
Thibault.
We provide everything from
basic needs to very specialized be-
havioral counseling, addiction
treatment, domestic violence
treatment and prevention, shel-
tering for domestic violence vic-
tims and children, and things like
that, she said.
Although the charity is named
Catholic Charities, Thibault de-
scribed how its mission is merely
tied into the idea behind religion,
which is why they dont neglect
people of other religions who
need support.
She also explained how the or-
ganization has changed names
numerous times since its incep-
tion in 1872 as St. Michaels Or-
phanage, and how it reached its
name of Catholic Charities, Dio-
cese of Trenton.
The president of the board of
trustees is the Diocese of Tren-
ton, and our mission is tied to the
gospel mandate to help others,
Thibault said.
Since Volpe is well aware of
Catholic Charities, Diocese of
Trentons mission and services,
he used the organization as a ben-
eficiary last summer as well.
Less than 10 percent of
Catholic Charities income goes
to overhead, while 90 percent goes
right into the hands of the people
that need it, Thibault said. The
organization is very fiscally
lean.
Although nearly every pro-
gram that Catholic Charities, Dio-
cese of Trenton deals with is in
need of assistance, Thibault ex-
plained how the proceeds from
Cream King Monday fundraiser
are going to benefit the Emer-
gency & Community Services
program in Mercer County, since
it is in great need.
It serves everyone in Mercer
County, she said. This program
provides vulnerable families and
individuals with food, clothing,
assistance with back rent/utili-
ties, and linkage to other re-
sources for employment and
housing.
Since the summer is a particu-
larly tough time for families in
need because children arent in
school, Thibault explained how
Catholic Charities, Diocese of
Trenton is genuinely thankful for
the fundraiser at Cream King, as
well as Volpes creation of Cream
King Mondays.
Its really nice of them to do
this, and we really appreciate it,
she said.
CATHOLIC
Continued from page 1
Catholic Charities helps people
of varied religious backgrounds
WEDNESDAY AUG. 8
Constellation Craft: 3 p.m. at
Hopewell Public Library. Make a
craft with Melissa from Twine.
Sign-up required. Call (609) 466-
1625.
Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblings
welcome. 11 to 11:45 a.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Action
rhymes, songs and felt board
activities. Age-appropriate craft
follows story time. Parental
supervision required.
Action Book Club: Ages 12 and old-
er. 6 to 7 p.m. at Hopewell Branch
of the Mercer County Library Sys-
tem. For those who like a lot to
happen in their stories and want
an exciting book club. Registra-
tion required.
THURSDAY AUG. 9
Story Time: Ages 2 to 5; siblings
welcome. 11 to 11:45 a.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Action
rhymes, songs and felt board
activities. Age-appropriate craft
follows story time. Parental
supervision required.
Toddler Rock: Ages 18 months to 3.
10 to 10:30 a.m. at Hopewell
Branch of the Mercer County
Library System. Singing, dancing
ad rhymes. Play with musical
instruments, puppets, parachutes
and more.
Hopewell Township Planning Board
meeting: 7:30 p.m. the fourth
Thursday of the month in the
Municipal Auditorium. For more
information visit
hopewelltwp.org.
Hopewell Public Library Board of
Trustees meeting: 7 p.m. in the
library building, 13 East Broad St.,
Hopewell. All meetings open to
the public. For more information
call (609) 466-1625.
SUNDAY AUG. 12
Hopewell Presbyterian Church:
Worship service at 10:30 a.m.
Intergenerational Sunday School
from 9 to 10:15 a.m. Coffee fellow-
ship from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
80 West Broad St., Hopewell.
Hopewell United Methodist
Church: Worship service at 10
a.m. Teen/adult education from 9
to 9:45 a.m. Sunday school at 10
a.m. Youth group at 6:30 p.m. 20
Blackwell Ave., Hopewell.
St. Alphonsus Roman Catholic
Church: Mass at 7:30, 9 and 11:15
a.m. 54 East Prospect St.,
Hopewell.
Word Christian Fellowship Interna-
tional: Worship service at 10 a.m.
Sunday school at 10:30 a.m. 44
Van Dyke Road, Hopewell.
MONDAY AUG. 13
Yoga: 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Hopewell
Branch of the Mercer County
Library System. Bring yoga mat
or large towel. Registration
required; call (609) 737-2610.
Tai Chi: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Learn
this ancient art to promote good
health and relaxation. No regis-
tration required.
Getting Comfortable with Comput-
ers: 1 p.m. at the Hopewell Public
Library. Get comfortable with
computers, the Internet, the
World Wide Web and the digital
world. The librarys technologist
will answer questions, provide
demonstrations and guide partic-
ipants.
Story time: 10:30 a.m. at Hopewell
Public Library. For toddlers and
pre-schoolers. Stories, songs and
fingerplays. Registration is not
required.
TUESDAY AUG. 14
BIG Meeting: Believe. Inspire. Grow.
Womens professional support
group meets at 7 p.m. at
Hopewell Branch of the Mercer
County Library System. Barbara
Strange, founder of Simply Natu-
ral Living Wholistic Business Sup-
port, will speak on Business with
Balance. RSVP to Jodi at jodio-
dames@verizon.net.
Yoga: 5 to 6 p.m. at Hopewell Branch
of the Mercer County Library Sys-
tem. Bring yoga mat or large tow-
el. Registration required; call
(609) 737-2610.
Hopewell Township Affordable
Housing Committee meeting: 7
p.m. at the Township Municipal
Building, 201 Washington Cross-
ing-Pennington Road. Visit
www.hopewelltwp.org to confirm
time or for more information.
CALENDAR PAGE 8 AUGUST 8-14, 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@hopewellsun.com. Or you can submit a calendar listing
through our website (www.hopewellsun.com).
1666 Hamilton Ave.
Hamilton, NJ 08629
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AUGUST 8-14, 2012 THE HOPEWELL SUN 9
Special to The Sun
The Hopewell 12A district team recently captured the championship at the Burlington Falcon Fren-
zy tournament. The team went 5-0 against tough competition, including two teams from the south-
ern state tournament, Delran and Marlton. The championship game was a pressure cooker going
back and forth with Hopewell defeating Burlington 6-4. Pictured are: front row from left, Sean
OBrien, Adam Wijaya, Sam Margulis, Andy Blake and Max Brass; middle row from left, Nick Pso-
maras, Cole Hare, Dom Gambino, Robby Wiley, Michael Savas, Jake Tobia and Jack Kandell; back
row from left, Tom Hare, Joe Gambino, Chris Tobia, John Savas and Al Kandell.
Hopewell 12A district team captures championship
Construction on a new baseball
field at the Athletic Fields at Tim-
berlane complex began construc-
tion in July.
The Hopewell Valley Regional
Board of Education recently
awarded a contract for the field,
which is being funded mostly by a
grant from Hopewell Township,
to Land-Tech Enterprises, Inc., of
Warrington, Pa.
The $612,744 bid will pay for
field construction, the laying of
plastic pipe that will encase elec-
trical wiring, and sod.
The baseball field is being
funded by a $500,000 grant from
Hopewell Township, from its set-
tlement with Capital Health. The
school district is contributing
roughly $100,000 toward the proj-
ect. The new field will have natu-
ral sod turf, and is expected to be
complete by Oct. 31, and ready for
play in spring of 2013.
We are grateful to the Town-
ship Committee and the commu-
nity for their support of this proj-
ect, Superintendent Tom Smith
said. Their support allowed us to
place the new artificial turf field
in a location best suited for dis-
trict needs and future installation
of lights and bleachers. Just as
important, moving the baseball
field will enable us to provide the
baseball program with a perma-
nently fenced, self-contained fa-
cility at the Athletic Fields at
Timberlane (AFT) complex.
The former baseball field had
no permanent fence, and over-
lapped with the high schools soc-
cer field.
New baseball field
construction underway
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Pennington Dance is accepting
online registrations for its 33rd
season, which begins on Monday,
Sept. 10. Classes include full-year
programs in ballet and pointe,
tap, jazz, hip hop, pre-school
dance and pilates mat work.
Workshops include musical the-
ater production, original Broad-
way repertoire and contemporary
dance. Private pilates apparatus
classes are scheduled by appoint-
ment.
Open houses will be held from
10:30 a.m. until noon on Saturday,
Aug. 18, Aug. 25, and Sept. 8 at the
Cyrus Lodge studio location at
131 Burd Street in Pennington.
The open house is an opportunity
to meet staff, see the spacious
fully equipped studio space, and
watch a DVD of last Junes per-
formance.
To register call director Nancy
Warner at (609) 737-7596 or visit
www.penningtondance.com.
Register for
Pennington
Dance
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T HE HO P E WE L L S U N
AUGUST 8-14, 2012 PAGE 10
W H A T Y O U 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 10 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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CLASSIFIED AUGUST 8-14, 2012 - THE HOPEWELL SUN 11
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