Posted in September 2009

Holy Martyrs shows the neighborhood a good time

The paintball shed at the annual Holy Martyrs Church carnival looks different from the average game at the fair. It’s a wooden shed with no flashing lights, save a red emergency light steadily turning and flashing on the roof.

Observers hear only the “pows” and the “dings” of small, paint-filled balls smacking into targets, instead of the music and computer-generated sounds they would hear at the standard toss ’em, pop ’em and squirt ’em games at traveling carnivals. Those games are across the parking lot.

Rustic and original, the paintball game rounds out a hometown section of the fair, where church volunteers manage small carnival games and local restaurant workers serve festive cuisine like hamburgers and ice cream.

“We set up the garage and hang our beloved collection of targets, which we selected over the years,” volunteer John O’Brien said Tuesday, the carnival’s opening night. “And man, the kids love to shoot paint balls.”

“Yes they do!” said his co-volunteer Delores Serianni, who has been working at the paintball booth for about eight years.

Hanging from the wooden rafters and splattered with greenish-yellow paint are street signs — a stop sign, library sign, a no parking sign — a firefighter’s boot, a Direct TV satellite dish and a fire alarm bell.

Those who want to test their aim pay $1 for five shots and $5 for 30.

Nine-and-a-half-year-old Colin Quinn had already loaded and pumped his paintball gun. He was aiming for the perfect target.

“Hit one of those lights that’s hanging,” O’Brien said. “That will give you a good ding.”

Quinn aimed and fired, then turned around to share his content after hearing the gratifying ding.

“I wasn’t sure if I hit the target, but I was sure when I heard a bang and I saw it move,” Quinn said.

The carnival at Holy Martyrs Church in Oreland runs through Saturday evening. Hours are 6 to 10 p.m. until Friday night, and 3 to 10 p.m. on Saturday.

“We come every year. It seems like it gets bigger and bigger each year,” said Colin’s mother, Vickie Quinn, of Oreland.

In addition to the rides and games there is music, and dinners donated by a different restaurant each night.

Through Friday, visitors can pay $10 for a meal donated by a restaurant that is either local or has a relationship with the parish, said Donna DeMarco, a parishioner who has been managing the carnival’s food operations since 2004.

Tuesday night featured Halligan’s Pub. Other restaurants represented on the menu will be O’Towne Tavern on Wednesday, Winnie’s Le Bus on Thursday and Roberto’s Trattoria on Friday.

A filet mignon dinner courtesy of Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse and Wine Bar will cost $12 per meal on Saturday.

“It includes a nice meal, drink and desert. You can’t beat it,” DeMarco said.

One of the most popular attractions each year is a dunk tank on Friday and Saturday nights, Pastor Mike Ryan said.

“Our principal sat in it one year and drew a big crowd,” he said.

Over at a play-till-you-win Winnie the Pooh-themed game, Briana Vetter, 11, and Megan McGrath, 12, were compensating for a slightly smaller-than-usual turnout with their own energetic enthusiasm.

“We love the church and it’s for a good cause,” Vetter said. “And Father Ryan is a very nice person.”

Parents assess school realignment plan

Parents at a town hall meeting Monday said they value the caliber of faculty and staff in the Springfield Township School District, but they have questions and some reservations about the proposed plan that would restructure schools for the 2010-2011 school year.

The meeting, which that took place at Springfield Township High School, gave parents of elementary school students a chance to ask questions or raise concerns about the proposal. For administrators, it was an opportunity to consider parents’ ideas.

The plan was created to provide equal resources for all students and handle projected high enrollment numbers, according to school administrators. If the plan is implemented, all kindergarten and first-grade students in the school district will attend Enfield Elementary School next year, and second- to fifth-graders will attend the new Erdenheim Elementary on Haws Lane. Fifth-graders would move to Erdenheim from Springfield Township Middle School, and eighth-graders would move to the middle school from the high school.

Parents and administrators discussed how restructuring would affect the students’ academic, social and personal development. Some of the public comments referred to keeping class sizes small, maintaining close relationships with the schools and how physically changing buildings would affect the students.

Some parents said they worried young children would be overwhelmed by moving from Enfield to Erdenheim after only two years in school. They suggested that a school for kindergarten through third grade might be more suitable.

“I think K through second at least would be more developmentally appropriate with the needs maturity-wise, social and academic,” said Lisa Antinucci, a parent of a third-grader at Erdenheim. Antinucci works with school districts throughout Montgomery County on transition activities with kindergarten children.

According to state guidelines, kindergarten through third grade is referred to as early childhood and elementary education, she said after the meeting. “Kindergarten through first, it just seems like we’re narrowing down too much,” she said.

Kindergarten, first and second grades would not fit into Enfield unless the district sacrificed small class sizes, and fourth and fifth grades would not be an ideal fit for Enfield because there would be too much leftover space, Superintendent Wendy Royer said,

Developing the restructuring proposal has been a difficult process because the administration has to consider the option that is both best for the students and the most economical, Royer said, likening the process to piecing together a puzzle.

“We are not going to sacrifice instructional programs to do this,” she told parents.

For the fifth-graders, a benefit to moving to the elementary school is that test scores would increase because there would be more time for teachers to focus on language arts and math, said Carol Rohrbach, the school district’s director of curriculum and professional development. “We have an opportunity to tighten our focus.”

The instructional capacity will only be enhanced by the teachers working together in the same building, she said.

Some parents were also concerned about losing the small-school atmosphere at the elementary schools.

According to enrollment projections, there will be about 600 to 700 students in Erdenheim next year, should the district implement the proposal, Royer said.

“I love the fact that the principal knows my kid’s name,” said Noah Eisenman, a parent of a second-grade student at Erdenheim and a daughter who will enter kindergarten next year.

Under the proposal, Eisenman’s daughter would begin school at Enfield next year, but he would prefer that his two children be at the same school to ease the transition for his youngest.

“There’s got to be a better solution,” he said after the meeting. “I think it needs to be really carefully thought out. They could have done a better job planning for the future. Space is always an issue.”

Walter Lapidus, a candidate for school board, supported the measure.

“My opinion is that it’s a good solution given the constraints,” he said. “It would be nice for all of the kids to enjoy the brand new school.”

One of the benefits of the proposal is that it would do away with redistricting and give families a sense of certainty that they know where the student will attend school each year, according to administrators.

The proposed plan would also unite all students as a Springfield “cohort,” rather than keep students split between the two elementary schools until they reach middle school, they said.

“The relationships that students will be able to form in the community are a powerful part of going with this cohort model,” said Chris Bradley, principal of Erdenheim. “They would have developed these relationships from their early years. I know that we have a phenomenal staff, so I have no doubt that we will all come together.”

The downside of the cohort is that there would be no opportunity for students to break away from stereotypes and negative relationships, one woman said in the meeting.

Martin Ryan, an Erdenheim parent and a member of the PTO’s Erdenheim Elementary Playground Fund, said the merging of two school communities provides an opportunity to increase their fundraising efforts to build a playground for all students. “If there is a community equal to our size at Enfield, they don’t know we don’t have a playground. We’re ready to work with the other half of the future Erdenheim community.”

Administrators said they will create a document of frequently asked questions to keep parents informed as the process continues and address such related issues as the effect on bus schedules. The document will be on the school district Web page, www.sdst.org.

School officials will hold another meeting in the high school auditorium on Sept. 24 at 7 p.m. to discuss realignment at the middle school.

Suspect charged with felony terroristic threats waives preliminary hearing

James Gallagher of Wyndmoor will be arraigned in county court in November for posting threatening material on an online social network.

Gallagher, 22, is accused of posting death threats and hate messages on his Facebook profile. Acting from a tip, a detective with the Springfield Township Police Department created an undercover Facebook account and “friended” Gallagher for access to his Facebook profile.

The detective found Gallagher published statements such as “I will destroy Springfield no1 here got guns like me,” and “White Pride, World Wide,” and displayed pictures of himself holding an AR15 rifle and an AK47 bayonet, according to the affidavit.

Gallagher is charged with terroristic threats, a third-degree felony; possessing an instrument of crime, a first-degree misdemeanor; and disorderly conduct, a summary offense.

Defense Attorney Michael F. Dunn said Gallagher had no violent plans.

“When he put this on Facebook, he didn’t realize it would be accessible to others,” Dunn said Tuesday after Gallagher waved his preliminary hearing at Montgomery County District Court in Oreland, with District Judge Robert Saraceni presiding.

Gallagher is being held on $1 million cash bail, which reflects the seriousness of the offense, Assistant District Attorney Nathan J. Schadler said.

“We felt it had risen to the level of terroristic threat,” he said after the proceeding.

According to a receipt of seized inventory, police found the rifle and bayonet at Gallagher’s home in addition to other weapons including a crossbow, knives, a stun gun and ammunition. Police also found two Nazi flags, according to the inventory.

The district attorney’s office is continuing investigations into all aspects of the case, including whether the guns are registered in Gallagher’s name, Schadler said. In response to the case, the Springfield Township School District sent a letter to parents saying that there were no threats against the schools, but all principals reviewed safety procedures with students Tuesday afternoon.

At Springfield Township High School, which Gallagher formerly attended, faculty and staff reminded students to be diligent of their surroundings, and the administration urged staff members to stay abreast of activities going on in the building, Principal Otis Hackney said Tuesday.

“There have been no threats against the high school at all,” he said.

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