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STAFF PHOTO

Victoria Doroshenko, 11, of Fair Lawn, holds the prehistoric


projectile point she found in the surf off Long Branch.
Apparently, the beaches of the Jersey Shore are
lousy with museum-worthy artifacts.
An 11-year-old Fair Lawn girl found a prehistoric
projectile point in Long Branch on Labor Day, less than
a month after a previous discovery on Long Beach Is-
land.
Victoria Doroshenko was collecting seashells at Sev-
en Presidents Park in Long Branch when she found
what looked like a spear point made of stone.
Prehistoric projectile
found in Long Branch
2nd summer discovery of ancient artifact
By Kelly-Jane Cotter @KellyJaneCotter
See POINT, Page A5
Gov. Chris Christies administration hasnt made
public the details of todays Atlantic City gaming sum-
mit, angering state lawmakers who want transparency
as policymakers decide how to deal with a rash of casi-
no closings and the loss of 7,600 jobs.
The meeting at the Casino Reinvestment Develop-
ment Authority offices in Atlantic City isnt open to the
public or media.
It should be open. Of course there should be as
much public input as possible, said state Sen. Ray-
mond Lesniak, D-Union. They should hear from the
Invitational
summit on
gambling
Critics say Atlantic City session
should be open to the public
By Bob Jordan @BobJordanAPP
ONLINE
Visit app.com/goingforbroke to
read the Press series on Atlantic City.
See SUMMIT, Page A5
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MONDAY 09.08.14
VOLUME 135
NUMBER 215
SINCE 1879
ADVICE C5
BUSINESS A8
CLASSIFIED C7
COMICS C6
LOCAL A3
LOTTERIES A2
OBITUARIES A9
OPINION A11
SPORTS D1
TV D12
HISTORIC SPAN FAILING
BRIDGE HAS FRACTURED TIMBERS
The Glimmer Glass Bridge in Manasquan likely will
have to be replaced after a truck weighing far
more than the bridges limit caused major
damage. TODAY, A3
THE FUN MOVES INDOORS
As summer ends, kids still have places to play @play, C1
YANKS
HONOR
JETER
Surrounded by
family and former
teammates at Yan-
kee Stadium, the
captain thanks the
fans for a 20-year
joy ride. SPORTS, D1
Cheatings nothing new. But students and educators heading
back to school this month say technology is helping take skirting
the rules to a new level.
Text messages have replaced note passing. Students can look
up exam answers on smartphones within seconds or take a quick
glimpse at a saved file of notes.
One YouTube video shows how to digitally scan the wrapper of
a soda bottle, and use photo editing software to replace nutrition
information with test answers.
Companies such as Spycheatstuff.com will mail overnight a kit
with tiny wireless earbuds to allow a test-taker to discreetly
BY THE NUMBERS
Cheating has risen from 20 percent of
students in the 1940s to between 75 per-
cent and 98 percent of students today.
By Amanda Oglesby @OglesbyAPP
See CHEATING, Page A5
ACADEMIC
CHEATING
ON THE RISE
Technology, pressure drive the surge
JAMES WARREN/GANNETT ILLUSTRATION
SCHOOL SCOOP
Whats going on in our
schools? Visit Home &
School, blogs.app.com/
learning for more.
NEW YORK CITY BRIDGES VIEWED AS TARGETS FOR TERRORISTS PAGE 1B

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