Helen Hunt, of Haddon Twp., formerly of Audubon

HUNT, HELEN O.
(nee Ivins) On September 7, 2007 of Haddon Twp. formerly of Audubon, NJ, age 93 yrs.
Beloved wife of the late David B. Hunt. Survived by a daughter Jayne Heckers and her husband Al of Westmont; 2 grandchildren Albert of Haddon Heights and James of Westmont; 1 great grandson and a brother Raymond Ivins of Blenheim.
Mrs. Hunt was a homemaker and seamstress. She was also a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Audubon.
Relatives and friends are invited to attend her viewing on Tuesday morning from 10AM to 11AM at the HENRY FUNERAL HOME, 152 W. Atlantic Ave., Audubon. Funeral service will follow at 11AM. Interment Locustwood Memorial Park, Cherry Hill.
Contributions in Mrs. Hunt\’s memory may be made to: Alzheimer\’s Assoc., S.J. Regional Office, 3 Eves Drive, Suite 310, Marlton, NJ 08053.

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Alvin Stainker, formerly of Gloucester City; WW II Vet

STAINKER, ALVIN A.
Of Spring Hill, Fl, formerly of Gloucester City, peacefully passed away with his family by his side on September 7, 2007. Aged 87 years.
Al was born and raised in Gloucester City and remained there until 23 years ago, when he and his wife relocated to Spring Hill, Fl. Al proudly served his country during World War II as a member of the Flying Tigers of the 14th Air Force Division. During his service, Al was awarded a Purple Heart and he is a life member of V.F.W. Townsend Post 3620 of Gloucester. In his spare time, Al enjoyed spend-ing time trying to lure the catch of the day, working in his vegetable garden, feeding the birds and rooting on his beloved Phillies. Most of all, Al enjoyed the time spent with his family, especially his grandchildren and great grandchildren. Al\’s sweet nature and strong will is going to be missed by all who loved him.
Beloved husband of the late Doris. Loving father of Sandy (Al) Banks, Tiny, Brian (Liz) and Bruce (Dayna) Stainker. Caring brother of Viola Foster, Anna Rettew, Jennette Mitten and Bert Toal. Dear grandfather of Albert, Colleen, Danny, Aren, Brian John, Tina, Luke and Paulie. Also survived by 4 great grandchildren.
Viewing Tuesday evening 5 to 7 PM in the McGUINNESS FUNERAL HOME, 34 Hunter Street, Woodbury. Funeral Service 7 PM in the Funeral Home. Cremation and interment will take place at the convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Tranquility Hospice, 204 Creek Crossing Blvd., Hainesport, NJ 08036. Tributes and memories may be shared at
www.mcgfuneral.com
\’The Lifetime Tribute Funeral Home\’

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Leroy Schanz, Purple Heart Recipient, age 87 of Haddon Heights

  SCHANZ, LEROY C.
On September 7, 2007, Leroy C., age 87, passed away at his home in Haddon Heights where he was a longtime resident. Mr. Schanz was an army veteran of World War II serving overseas and a three time recipient of the Purple Heart for his efforts. He retired from the US Naval Shipyard in Philadelphia as the Director of the Meter Department for Submarines. In addition, he was a member of the American Legion and the V.F.W.
Leroy is lovingly survived by his wife Marie; his two children Sandra Schanz of Haddon Township and Keith Schanz of North Carolina; his three grandchildren Scott Schanz, Dr. Anthony and Mrs. Cynthia Mazzarulli and Meredith Scharnagl; and his great grandchild Julien Jacob Mazzarulli.
Funeral services will be held privately at the convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in his name to the Cathedral Kitchen, 642 Market St., Camden, NJ 08102. HEALEY FUNERAL HOME, Haddon Heights.
ovingly survived by his wife Marie; his two children Sandra Schanz of Haddon Township and Keith Schanz of North Carolina; his three grandchildren Scott Schanz, Dr. Anthony and Mrs. Cynthia Mazzarulli and Meredith Scharnagl; and his great grandchild Julien Jacob Mazzarulli.
Funeral services will be held privately at the convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in his name to the Cathedral Kitchen, 642 Market St., Camden, NJ 08102. HEALEY FUNERAL HOME, Haddon Heights.

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Pet Tips: Warning about Raisins and Grapes

Written by:

Laurinda Morris, DVM
Danville Veterinary Clinic
Danville , Ohio

This week I had the first case in history of raisin toxicity ever seen at MedVet. My patient was a 56-pound, 5 yr old male neutered lab mix that ate half a canister of raisins sometime between 7:30 AM and 4:30 PM on Tuesday. He started with vomiting, diarrhea and shaking about 1AM on Wednesday but the owner didn\’t call my emergency service until 7AM.

I had heard somewhere about raisins AND grapes causing acute Renal failure but hadn\’t seen any formal paper on the subject. We had her bring the dog in immediately. In the meantime, I called the ER service at MedVet, and the doctor there was like me – had heard something about it, but…. Anyway, we contacted the ASPCA National Animal Poison Control Center and they said to give IV fluids at 1 1/2 times maintenance and watch the kidney values for the next 48-72 hours.

The dog\’s BUN (blood urea nitrogen level) was already at 32 (normal less than 27) and creatinine over 5 (1.9 is the high end of normal). Both are monitors of kidney function in the bloodstream.

We placed an IV catheter and started the fluids. Rechecked the renal values at 5 PM and the BUN was over 40 and creatinine over 7 with no urine production after a liter of fluids. At the point I felt the dog was in acute renal failure and sent him on to MedVet for a urinary catheter to monitor urine output overnight as well as overnight care.

He started vomiting again overnight at MedVet and his renal values have continued to increase daily. He produced urine when given lasix as a diuretic. He was on 3 different anti-vomiting medications and they still couldn\’t control his vomiting. Today his urine output decreased again, his BUN was over 120, his creatinine was at 10, his phosphorus was very elevated and his blood pressure, which had been staying around 150, skyrocketed to 220.. He continued to vomit and the owners elected to euthanize.

This is a very sad case – great dog, great owners who had no idea raisins could be a toxin. Please alert everyone you know who has a dog of this very serious risk. Poison control said as few a s 7 raisins or grapes could be toxic.

Many people I know give their dogs grapes or raisins as treats including our ex-handler\’s. Any exposure should give rise to immediate concern.

Even if you don\’t have a dog, you might have friends who do. This is worth passing on to them.

Confirmation from Snopes about the above..

http://www.snopes.com/critters/crusader/raisins.asp 

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Coast Guard Feature Story

Cape May New Jersey September 4th, 2007

He was six feet tall and weighed more than 200 pounds when he punched his commanding officer.

And it wasn\’t the first time.

Phillip Miller, a second-class Coast Guard Storekeeper, had sparred with his commander many times on the deck of the Coast Guard Cutter Vigorous, based in Cape May, N.J. Both men shared a passion for boxing and at the time neither expected to become a professional fighter – but one of them would.

Miller happened upon the sport with no intention of fighting. In May, 2004, he wandered into a boxing gym in Wildwood, N.J., to shed some weight. At nearly 250 pounds, he was outside of the Coast Guard\’s standard.

\”When I put on the weight, I found a boxing gym and started training there just to lose the weight,\” he recalled.

As it turned out, the term \”heavy weight\” took on an entirely new meaning for him. \”One day I ended up sparring and found out I just really wanted to fight.\”

Miller said his first introduction to the sport was one that most amateurs don\’t get.

\”It was a Friday I\’ll never forget,\” he said, speaking of sparring for the first time. \”He beat me up!\”

Surprisingly, he had been paired that day with a professional fighter.

\”He beat me up, but the whole weekend I thought about it, and I said, \’this is what I want to do,\’ so I was back there on Monday.\”

He\’s been at it ever since.

Miller has fought 10 amateur fights including the 2007 Golden Gloves Tournament and in 2006, he won the highly esteemed Rocky Marciano Tournament, named after the 1952 to 1956 heavyweight champion of the world.

But Miller\’s greatest victory was on Wednesday, July 18, 2007, when he made the leap from amateur to pro.

It was a muggy night in Boston when he ducked under the ropes and into the ring at the Park Plaza Castle.

His opponent was just yards away. Both men paced and circled in their corners looking back and forth at their trainers and down at the bright blue mat. While avoiding eye contact, they shot looks toward each other taking in as much as they could in a short amount of time.

\”It\’s like a blind date. You\’ve never seen this guy before,\” he said. \”You\’re going to spend the next 12 minutes with him, so you\’re just trying to size him up.\”

Miller said he immediately knew he had an advantage because of each man\’s reach.

\”My arms are very, very long, and I looked at him and just said, \’He\’s not going to be able to hit me.\’\”

Further, Miller was fully confident in his secret weapon: his jab.

Miller likens his fighting skills to those he\’s absorbed from being in the Coast Guard. \”I\’ve been on ships and when you look at evolutions, whether it\’s picking up migrants or doing a boarding, they don\’t just go right in and do it – they sit back and brief.\”

Just like his days at sea, Miller said when he\’s in the ring, he sets a plan and sticks to it.

\”Even if I see an opening I\’m not going to rush right in. I don\’t go out there like a mad man. We have a plan and we have to go out there and execute the plan.\”

After four rounds, each lasting three minutes, Miller\’s fierce fighting and relentless jab had gained the judges favor and in a unanimous decision he stood for the first time as a victorious professional fighter.

Although it was a great personal victory, he wasn\’t the only one celebrating the win. Miller, now assigned to the Coast Guard Naval Engineering Support Unit in Boston, had gained the support of more than 100 fellow Coast Guardsmen and women.

In a twist of irony, many of the units and members that Miller has supported in service had come to cheer him on in the ring.

When the referee clutched Miller\’s wrist and raised it high into the air, the crowd\’s approval was evident by its burst of applause.

\”It felt good,\” Miller reminisced. \”To look out there to see how many people came out to support me was one of the best feelings.\”

Moreover, citing personal victory, Miller looks back and relishes his success along the path he\’s traveled.

\”When I walked into that boxing gym, my initial goal was just to lose weight and feel good about myself,\” he said. \”But it was the best feeling [to win] because only a few people get to fight a professional fight. To come in the ring and do that – and actually win – it was really fulfilling.\”

Above all, Miller says he gleaned much of his fighting skill and determination from his former commander and fellow boxer aboard the Vigorous, Capt. Glenn Grahl.

\”He helped me more than anything,\” he said. \”To have someone of his rank, busy on patrol, to take a few hours out of his night every night to come down to the flight deck to help me – that really boosted my career.\”

It is challenging for a young boxer to be underway, he said. When he was in port he had the convenience of the gym and his trainers. But at sea, he said he wouldn\’t have had anyone to guide him as a boxer in training.

That all changed the day Grahl took command of the Vigorous.

\”When he became CO (commanding officer) on the ship, it was awesome,\” he said.

Grahl is also an avid amateur boxer and during their last patrol together, Miller and he worked the jab nearly ever night on the flight deck.

\”He showed me how to jab correctly,\” Miller said.

It was a technique that won him his professional championship.

Miller said he hopes to add to his list of pro victories. He estimates he has about eight to 10 years left and has set his ultimate sights on boxing in a world title fight.

But that, he admits, is a long way off.

Until then, he said he\’s going to keep training hard and soak in the encouragement from some of his strongest supporters: his coworkers.

\”One of the toughest parts of being a boxer is – and this has happened at every unit I\’ve been at since I started boxing – people constantly throw punches at you,\” he said.

\”They think because you\’re a boxer you\’re supposed to take punches. So it happens all the time on base. They put their hands up and start throwing punches at me.\”

They won\’t let him put his guard down.

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Elizabeth Berrigan-Blaetz, of Haddon Twp., age 99

BERRIGAN-BLAETZ, ELIZABETH \’BETTY\’
(nee Essick) On Sept. 7, 2007, age 99, of Haddon Twp., formerly of Haddonfield and beloved wife for 28 years of the late Arthur Berrigan. Survived by her son, Jack Berrigan (Dorothy) of Voorhees and her daughter, Lorraine Leary (Jim) of Haddonfield, 16 grandchildren, Kristen, Daniel, David, Maureen, Judy, Nora, Amy, Lori, Fran, Michael, Mathew, Leslie, Tricia, Lisa, Mary and Jimmy, 18 great grandchildren and 1 brother, Morrison Essick of Venice, FL.
Mrs. Berrigan began teaching in Newtown, PA. After 3 years, she joined the Haddonfield Elementary School system; where she taught for 35 years.
Mrs. Berrigan\’s family will receive friends on Monday, after 10 AM, at the Lutheran Church of Our Savior, Wood La. & Wayne Ave., Haddonfield, NJ 08033; where her Service will follow at 11 AM. Interment, Harleigh Cem., Camden, NJ.
Memorial donations may be made in Mrs. Berrigan Blaetz\’s name to the church at the above address; where she had been a member since 1932 and was the church\’s oldest living member. Arrangements by Kain-Murphy Funeral Services of Haddonfield, NJ.

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Eleanor Buono, 80, of Bellmawr

BUONO, ELEANOR E.
On September 8, 2007, Eleanor E., age 80, passed away.
A resident of Bellmawr since 1971, Eleanor graduated from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. She then had a distinguished career as the head pharmacist with Sun Ray Drugs in Woodbury which later became Rite Aid Pharmacy where she worked for over 30 years.
Eleanor was the daughter of the late David and Elisa Buono (nee DiIelsi). She is lovingly survived by her Aunt Clara Donisi as well as many cousins and extended family.
Funeral services and entombment will be held privately at the convenience of the family.
Arrangements HEALEY FUNERAL HOME, Haddon Heights.

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Rider University 3, Longwood University 2


Navy Invitational

ANNAPOLIS, Md.–Sophomore Alison Brody (Alexandria, Va./West Potomac) scored two goals and freshman Kara Perkoski (Whitehall, Pa./Whitehall) had three assists to lead Rider to victory over Longwood in the second round of the Navy Soccer Invitational, held at the United States Naval Academy. Rider (2-0-2) went 1-0-1 in the tournament for the second time in two tournaments this season. \”It’s exciting,\” said Rider head coach Kevin Long. \”We’re in a very good position and the team has played well over the last four games.\”

Brody gave Rider a 1-0 lead 10:10 into the game from just eight yards out after a crossing pass from Perkoski. \”Her first goal came on a one-time shot from Kara,\” Long said. \”A great set up. One of our best goals, by design, this season. Kara had her best game as a Bronc so far today. She was around the ball a lot and ended up setting up three of our goals.\”

\”Kara had the ball on the end line at the end of the 18 (yard mark) and split it about eight yards away and I just hit it right below the cross bar above the keeper,\” Brody said, describing the first goal of the game.

\”Someone played me a great ball down the sideline and Ali was calling for it at the top of the box and I just played it to her,\” Perkoski said. \”She made a great run.\”

Freshman Lauren Musumeci (Annandale, N.J./North Hunterdon), the MAAC Rookie of the Week last week, scored her third goal of the season to give the Broncs a 2-0 lead in the 15th minute of play. \”I passed it back to Lauren (junior Lauren Mahar of Barnegat, N.J./Colonia),\” said Perkoski, \”who one-timed it in to Moose (Musumeci) and Moose played it into the goal. It was a nice cross by Lauren (Mahar).\”

Brody scored again, her fifth career goal, on a breakaway after a pass from Perkoski to take a 3-0 lead mid-way through the first half. \”I was about 25 yards away, I passed out wide to Kara, and when two defenders went to her she split them again and I just put it in the far corner,\” Brody said. \”I wanted to score more. It was still the first half and I didn’t want us to get comfortable with the lead.\”

Unfortunately, that is exactly what happened.

Longwood (1-3) scored with three minutes left in the first period to cut the lead to 3-1 and got within one goal just six minutes into the second half. \”We out-played them so much I think we got comfortable with the lead, and that wasn’t good,\” Brody said.

Rider out-shot Longwood 14-7, including 7-3 in the second half.

Bronc freshman goalkeeper Alex Post (Chalfont, Pa./Central Bucks West) made three saves.

The Broncs extended their unbeaten streak to seven games. Rider was 2-0-1 over the final three games of last season.

Rider hosts Drexel Friday in the 2007 home opener beginning at 4:00 pm. \”This will be my first home match,\” Perkoski said, \”and I’m pretty excited about that.\”

\”I’m tired of the bus rides,\” Brody said. \”That will be fun to be home. Maybe a lot of fans will come to the game since we’re doing so well.\”

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