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Regarding your \”In Our View\” column on Nov. 8 – I thought I was reading a column about a team victory. I could understand it if the editorial was meant to congratulate the Gloucester Township Democrats on their victory, but this was like a victory party for the home team.
Your obvious exuberance dispelled any appearance of bipartisanship, even happily comparing it to the Red Sox World Series win.And to decry Republican tax procedure as the reason for their loss is to ignore the re-election of Democrats all over the state.
Almost every mayor, council member and, above all the governor and legislators in Trenton are Democrats who preside over the highest state taxes in the nation. The whole state is run by Democrats. My home-town, Pine Hill, doesn\’t even offer a Republican slate on the ballot.
Unfortunately, people are leaving the state in droves because they can\’t afford to live here.
Surf\’s up all right, but it\’s flooding the whole state, dudes!
Ernie Marsden
Pine Hill
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Pet Of Theweek
Fred is a calm and relaxed dog. He may make for a great family pet. He is good on a leash and eager to learn and love to be part of a family. He has been at the Camden County Animal Shelter in Gloucester Township for too long, according to officials.. Visit the Camden County Animal Shelter or call (856) 401-1300 for more information.
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ORONTO, Ontario – For the first time in school history, Rutgers will appear in a bowl game for the third consecutive season as the Scarlet Knights officially accepted a bid to the International Bowl Thursday. Rutgers will face a Mid-American Conference opponent, January 5, 2008 at Rogers Centre in Toronto with live television coverage on ESPN2.
\”Rutgers is a great addition to our game,\” International Bowl Executive Director Ken Hoffman remarked. \”We\’re proud to have such a celebrated school add to the history of the International Bowl. They have a large alumni following and will bring many fans into the city for bowl week.\”
The Scarlet Knights (7-4, 3-3 BIG EAST) close out the regular season tonight at Louisville. With a win over the Cardinals and a victory in the International Bowl, Rutgers could finish with 20 victories combined over the last two seasons. Two victories to close out the 2007 season would also give the Scarlet Knights an average of nine victories per season over the last three years.
\”We\’re thrilled to accept this invitation to play in the International Bowl and I know our team is excited about the opportunity to play in a bowl game for the third consecutive year,\” said Rutgers Athletic Director Robert E. Mulcahy III. \”Toronto is a wonderful city and our alumni and fans are sure to have a great time there.\”
The International Bowl is the only NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision game played outside of the United States. This year the game kicks off at noon on Saturday, January 5, 2008.
Tickets are available online (RutgersBowl.com), by phone (1-866-445-GORU) and in-person at the Rutgers Ticket Office. Tickets are priced at $40. Travel information will be available soon at RutgersBowl.com.
The International Bowl website is located at www.internationalbowl.org.
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The Brooklawn Fire Company Ladies Auxiliary is inviting all children young and old to have Supper with Santa, at the Brooklawn Fire House on Friday, December 7th from 7 to 9 PM.
All children will have a chance to visit with Santa. Plus for $5.00 receive a hot dog, chips, soda, cupcake and a craft.
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In this week\’s Gloucester City News there is a Memories from The Past Photo of the Mustangs Football team. The people I can identify include:
The year is 1953.
Top row from left to right; Jim Ashe, Bill Lane, Charlie Thompson, Henry Horn, Walt Dougherty, Herb Green Sr., Ted Aceto, Charlie Tourtual, Charlie Hughes, Gary Belfiglio, Wm. Lafferty, Al Higginbotham, Rick Gonzales (not suited up, broken jaw, bike accident).
Middle row; Greg Robinson, ???, Francis Murphy, ???, ???, Leroy Dunn, ???, Paul Chamberlin, ???
Front row; Ken Wood, Jim Tighe, Lanny Letzgus, Herb Green Jr., Paul Creamer, J. Benham, Jan Ferry, W. Carey, P. Burkhart.
Senior moments prevent me from coming up with all the names, sorry.
Rick Gonzales
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PARSELS, MARYAN
(nee Quenzel), age 92, on Wednesday November 28, 2007. Born in Westville, she was a resident for over 85 years before moving to Lake Bridge.
Maryan was the organist and choir leader at Victoria United Methodist Church in Westville.
Wife of Wilfred R. Parsels Sr., she is also survived by son Dr. Marshall T. Williams and his wife Eileen of Newark, DE, one daughter Linda Williams and her husband Henry Pinto of Westville, step daughter, Janice Bodine and her husband Charles; step son Wilfred R. Parsels Jr. and his wife Joanne, grandchildren, Katherine (Troy) Jones, Lindley (Michael) Thomas, Luke Williams, step grandchildren, Jill (Ed) Holmstrom, Jane (Greg) Ley, and five great grandchildren.
Relatives and friends may visit with the family 12 noon to 1 PM Friday, at SMITH FUNERAL HOME, 47 Main St., Mantua, NJ, where funeral services will be held at 1 PM. Interment will be in Eglington Cemetery. Memories & condolences may be shared at www. smithfhmantua.com
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source Media Release November 29, 2007……… 2:30 PM
Good afternoon. Last year I announced to the people of the Diocese the start of a comprehensive elementary school planning initiative to strengthen Catholic school education in the six southern counties of New Jersey. This process was given the name \”Faith in the Future\” in recognition of how important Catholic schools are to the total formation of our young people, the confidence we have in the long-term viability of Catholic schools, and our optimism in the future of our Church. As part of this initiative, a new funding model will be introduced in the years ahead to bring our schools greater fiscal health, while keeping tuition affordable for families who wish to choose Catholic schools for their children. Schools also will work to enhance curriculum and facilities, and faculty compensation will be improved. The initiative also will provide for increased levels of marketing and institutional advancement, as well as an increased role of the laity in decision-making for these schools. This planning initiative also has looked at the way our elementary schools are configured in order to address the realities that currently confront our schools. What are these realities? This diocese, like many in the Northeast, has schools that were established decades ago, often times in close proximity to each other, in areas where Catholic population has shifted or diminished. For some schools, this has resulted in declining enrollment, under-utilized facilities, fiscal deficits and an over-reliance on parish subsidies to the detriment of the pastoral services of the supporting parishes. Today there are nearly 11,000 K-8 students enrolled in 47 elementary schools, 30 of which (more than half) have enrollments less than 225 students, the number normally considered necessary to sustain a single-graded school. Many of the 47 schools finished fiscal year ended June 30, 2007 with deficits, even after parish subsidies, and had parish subsidies exceeding 30 percent of the schools\’ operating expenses. To address these realities, all schools in the diocese-which were grouped into 13 clusters by geographic region and other factors-were asked to engage in a process of planning. Decisions regarding the first four clusters were announced last February. Those reconfigurations resulted in a net reduction of five schools in those clusters, from 17 to 12. The 35 schools in the remaining nine clusters have now completed this process. Rather than planning in isolation, cluster steering committees were formed with representation from all schools in the respective clusters. They met from February to June to study demographic information, financial data, enrollment trends and facilities information in order to arrive at recommendations that will address the realities in each area of the diocese. Preliminary recommendations from the cluster steering committees were forwarded to the diocese in June and reviewed by the Diocesan School Planning Committee during the summer months. The Diocesan School Planning Committee in its review considered whether the preliminary recommendations adequately addressed the demographic, enrollment, financial and other realities in the cluster, whether the recommendations presented long-term solutions to the challenges facing Catholic school education in the cluster, and whether the recommendations were likely to meet the needs of school families in each cluster area. Based on this review, observations and questions were discussed with the cluster steering committees in October. Following this consultation, the cluster steering committees presented their final recommendations to the diocese. I thank the steering committee members for their hard work, insight and dedication during this important, collaborative process. I also commend these men and women for developing creative approaches that reach beyond the comfort of the status quo in order to strengthen Catholic schools. The task was not an easy one, for planners were asked not to plan in isolation, but together with other schools. They were asked not to save individual schools at all costs, but to do what is best for the common good and for the good of Catholic schools in each area of the diocese. Indeed, they took to heart the words of St. Paul to the Thessalonians: \”Always seek what is good both for each other and for all.\” (1 Thes. 5:15) Following a period of review with my advisors, and having considered carefully the final recommendations made by the cluster steering committees, I believe the following decisions will strengthen Catholic schools in our diocese: Cluster 2A, which consists of Holy Saviour, St. John-Collingswood, Christ the King-Haddonfield and St. Rose of Lima-Haddon Heights:
Cluster 2B, which consists of Queen of Heaven-Cherry Hill, St. Peter Celestine-Cherry Hill, St. Stephen-Pennsauken and St. Peter-Merchantville:
Cluster 3, which consists of Annunciation-Bellmawr, St. Francis de Sales-Barrington, St.Teresa-Runnemede and St. Mary-Gloucester:
Cluster 4, which consists of Our Lady of Grace/Holy Rosary-Somerdale, St. Lawrence-Lindenwold and St. Luke-Stratford:
Cluster 5, which consists of St. Mary-Williamstown, St. Agnes-Blackwood and St. Jude- Blackwood:
Cluster 6, which consists of Assumption-Atco, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel-Berlin and St. Joseph Regional School-Hammonton:
Cluster 8, which consists of Bishop Guilfoyle-Carney\’s Point, Guardian Angels-Gibbstown, St. Bridget-Glassboro, St. Catherine of Siena-Clayton:
Cluster 11, which consists of Blessed Sacrament-Margate, Our Lady Star of the Sea-Atlantic City, St. Augustine-Ocean City, St. James-Ventnor and St. Joseph, Somers Point:
To emphasize, all schools, whether they will remain as currently configured or whether they will be merged, will be expected to meet benchmarks set by the diocese in order to ensure that they will be strong well into the future. All will be expected to maintain or grow their enrollment; all will be asked to re-constitute their boards; all will be expected to employ advancement directors beginning with the 2008-09 school year, and all will be expected to operate with a balanced budget. The Office of Catholic Schools of the Diocese will monitor these schools for their efforts to meet these benchmarks. Cluster 1, which consists of five urban schools in and around Camden city, has formed a committee to develop a plan to create a consortium of schools to serve the needs of the people of Camden. The committee will explore a new governance structure for these schools, with a Board of Trustees, an executive director and a business manager to run these schools. A separate endowment will be established to support a significant portion of the operating costs of these schools, which serve a population which struggles to meet even basic costs of living. As such, St. Cecilia (Pennsauken) and Sacred Heart, St. Anthony of Padua, St. Joseph Pro-Cathedral and Holy Name Schools in Camden will remain open for the 2008-09 school year. *** |
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Donald L. Fager, Sr., of Gloucester City passed away after a long illness on November 26, 2007.
Don was a lifelong resident of Gloucester City. And he was a retired painter for the Painter and Allied Trades Union Local #711, Atlantic City, NJ.
Beloved husband of Anna M. ( nee Hamilton). Dear father of Chuck R. Fager (Betty), Ruth Fager both of Williamstown, Donald L. Fager, Jr. and Mike Fager (Dawn) both of Gloucester City. Loving Grandfather of five, loving Great-grandfather of two.
Services were private at the family\’s request. Arrangements were under the direction of the MAHAFFEY-MILANO FUNERAL HOME, 11 E. Kings Highway,Mt. Ephraim, NJ 08059
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Women’s College Basketball
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Despite a 16 point, nine rebound effort from junior Shaunice Parker (Waldorf, Md./West Lake), Rider (3-3) lost a non-conference game at the Palestra Wednesday night against Penn (3-3). \”It was a game of runs and we didn’t get that one big stop that we needed to regain the momentum at the end of the game,\” said head coach Lynn Milligan. \”We didn’t rise to the occasion on the defensive end and Penn was a little more physical on the offensive end and we didn’t respond very well.\”
With Rider leading 56-53 with 5:33 left in the game, the Quakers went on a 13-2 run to end the game.
On the 15th and final lead change of the game, Penn took the lead for good at 57-56 with 4:48 left on a Kimberly Franklin jumper. Franklin finished with 15 points.
Rider cut the lead to three at 61-58 on a layup by sophomore Tammy Meyers (Willingboro) with 40 seconds left but that was as close as the Broncs would get as Carrie Biemer hit a three-pointer with 19 seconds left to put the game away. Biemer led all scorers with 19 points. Meyers finished with seven points for the Broncs.
\”We didn’t get a lot of clean looks,\” Milligan said. \”We had 23 field goals and only eight assists. Some of our shots were a little rushed. Penn had a good defensive game plan, they were physical where they needed to be and sagged off when they needed to with a ‘man zone’. We just need to communicate better and do a better job of setting each other up.\”
Also for Rider, senior Janele Henderson (Brooklyn, N.Y./Bishop Loughlin) had 15 points and two steals with sophomore Amanda Sepulveda (Perth Amboy, N.J./Hun School) adding 11 points, four rebounds and two assists.
\”Our defensive effort was not where it needed to be to beat a disciplined offensive team like Penn,\” Milligan added.
Down 20-18 with 11 minutes remaining in the first half, Rider went on an 8-2 run, three points each by Parker and Sepulveda opening up a four point lead (26-22) with six minutes remaining in the opening period and the teams were tied 29-29 at the half.
The game saw Milligan return to the City of Philadelphia, where she coached for 12 seasons, first at Drexel and then for the last six years at Saint Joseph’s. \”The city is a great place for basketball,\” said Milligan. \”The Palestra is one of the most if not the most historical basketball arena in the country and to play there is special. We tried to educate the players on the significance of where they were playing. Anytime you get a chance to play in the city, especially the Palestra, it is special.\”
Penn leads the all-time series 6-1 against Rider and has won six in a row against the Broncs.
Undefeated at home, Rider hosts the Tigers of Towson on Sunday in a 2:00pm non-conference game at Alumni Gym on the Lawrenceville campus.
\”It was a game where our effort wasn’t what it needed to be and that was disappointing,\” Milligan said. \”We need to go back to the drawing board on some of our basic defensive fundamentals and concepts because we will be facing a strong Towson team on Sunday.\”
-RU-
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