U.S. Naval Academy 65, Rider University 58

Women’s College Basketball

ANNAPOLIS, Md.—The Broncs lost a non-conference game at Navy Sunday afternoon. \”The first half we got out worked,\” said head coach Lynn Milligan. \”We played better in the second half, turned up the intensity and made some more shots but we got out-worked, especially in the first half. It’s really that simple.\”

Down by 18 points with seven minutes remaining in the game, Rider (2-2) used a full-court press and went on a 17-6 run, keyed by two straight three-pointers from sophomore Amanda Sepulveda (Perth Amboy/Hun School) and the Broncs got to within seven at 60-53 with two minutes remaining. Sepulveda finished with six points.

\”There’s no silver lining coming back,\” Milligan said. \”We didn’t compete for 40 minutes. Yes, we did a good job cutting the lead down to six and picked up the intensity but the bottom line is that we dug ourselves a hole early which is something we have to correct.\”

Sophomore Ashley Anderson’s (East Orange) driving lay up with 19 seconds left got Rider to within six before Navy sealed the game at the free throw line. Anderson had eight points, seven rebounds and four blocks in 26 minutes of action off the bench.

\”We have kids who will fight back and we know the effort we have the potential to get,\” Milligan added. \”We can’t keep digging holes and expect to get out of them.\”

Junior Shaunice Parker (Waldorf, Md./West Lake), playing in her home state, led Rider scoring 12 points with four rebounds and two steals with sophomore Tammy Meyers (Willingboro, N.J./Willingboro) adding 11 points on five for six shooting.

Meyers also added six rebounds.

In the opening period, Parker hit a jumper to bring Rider to within three at 15-12 before Navy (2-3) went on a 7-0 run over the next five minutes opening up a 22-12 lead. Parker had eight of Rider’s 20 points in the opening half.

The Midshipmen held Rider to five free throws the last five minutes of the half and led 32-20 at intermission.

\”Navy’s zone took us out of our flow,\” Milligan said. \”But it comes down to being out-worked and that’s not going to happen again.\”

Bronc leading scorer senior Janele Henderson (Brooklyn, N.Y./Bishop Loughlin) was held to six points, still suffering the after effects of an ankle injury against Hofstra November 15. Henderson, the conference player of the week last week entered the game averaging over 22 points per game.

Navy was led by Cassie Consedine with 15 points and 12 rebounds. K.C. Gordon and Morgan Hill also had 15 points each for the Midshipmen.

Navy, which had 16 assists on 19 made field goals, improved to 2-0 at home while the Broncs are now 0-2 on the road. \”You have to be prepared to play on the road,\” said Milligan. \”Your attention to the little things and the details has to be even more. You are in hostile territory and that’s something that we didn’t respond to today.\”

Rider hosts Central Florida on Friday at 7:00pm in Alumni Gym.

\”We have five days to correct some things,\” said Milligan. \”We are going to get back to practice and figure out what we need to tweak. Central Florida is young, athletic and big and we need to b e prepared to play.\”

-RU-

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

BROOKLAWN: UFO Sightings……\”It was so close we could see into the sides\”

By Steve Flowers

Related: My Encounter with A UFO

To my critics,

Basically there are two kinds of UFO sightings; the most common being a white disc or other shape either traveling at supersonic speeds, hovering, or moving in an unexplainable pattern, almost always at high altitudes. The second and very rare is where the person(s) sees the actual craft. Usually these are the guys my critics would call \”the real nut cases.\”

 

In our case, I and the Burkies saw a craft that was so close you could see into the sides. (Lights) Having flown on over 1,000 airplane flights and talked about this sighting to scientists, radio wave researchers, air traffic controllers and pilots, I thought I would share my theories with you.

 

First of all the craft was not a \”flying saucer\” but an oval aircraft with outside bands rotating at a high rate of speed. The center section did not spin. Airplanes have flaps – flaps down to go up, flaps up to go down. The Brooklawn UFO had what I have named V flaps. (side view) Open > to hover and move slowly and closed < to move at Mach plus thousands speed. Open flaps as we witnessed would simultaneously push air up and down at the same time, therefore it was able to move in a straight line, then change its independent V flaps to hover and move back towards us.

 

The questions that always come up are \”what kind of fuel do they use and how would they refuel?\” The lights we saw (green, red and white) inside the V flaps probably were not lights at all. More than likely we were witnessing some type of refueling process giving off these colors, perhaps absorbing some of the Earth\’s magnetic field, radio waves, or producing its own antimatter.

 

Who knows but one thing for sure they have to \”eat on the run.\” One problem I always have with this is you would think this would make the craft susceptible to radar.

 

Whatever they use for a propulsion system is unimaginable. But one thing distinguishes it from any of our aircraft and that is its noise level – there isn\’t any! To this day it would be unique to the aviation industry which rules out any movie inspired hallucination. With that said I have attached an aerial of the flight path in 1966. Things haven\’t changed that much but I have to ask, \”If 3 young kids saw this object, half the size of a 737, what was the whole town smoking?\” Or maybe they pushed the \”pause\” button on the rest of you.

 

Wouldn\’t it be interesting to talk to a Philadelphia International air traffic controller from that era?

 

Don\’t be naïve folks there\’s information in their archives and there are former pilots that want them opened. It\’s time and it doesn\’t matter that time has passed – then again maybe the Brooklawn UFO is parked at Maguire Air Force Base!

Note: Steve is a former resident of Brooklawn and a graduate of Gloucester City High School. He now lives in Texas.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Heather Panarello, age 26, of Bellmawr

PANARELLO, HEATHER L.
(Nee Coleman), on November 15, 2007, of Bellmawr. Age 26.
Beloved wife ofMatthew and survived by her loving companion, Kurt the dog, \”Mommy\’s Boy\”. Beloved daughter of George and Starr Coleman of Bellmawr. Granddaughter of Joseph Toomey and the late Ida Toomey and Jean VanAllen and great granddaughter of Rose Pino. Dear sister of Gina Coleman and her companion Denise Williams. Loving niece of BertDebus, Beverly Schotter and Ida Joyce McConnell. Daughter-in-law of Roseann Jester. Brother-in-law ofMichael Panarello and Jenna Jester.
Relatives and friends are invited to attend the viewing Monday evening from 7 to 9pm and Tuesday morning from 9 to 10am at GARDNER FUNERAL HOME, RUNNEMEDE. Funeral Service Tuesday 10am.
Interment is private at the convenience of the family. In lieu of flowers the family requests that donations be made to the family.
Expressions of sympathy may be e-mailed to Condolences@Gardner FuneralHome.com

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Kenneth Powell, of Lindenwold formerly of Bellmawr

POWELL, KENNETH
On November 16, 2007 of Lindenwold, formerly of
Bellmawr NJ. Age 46.
Beloved son of Grace (nee McDermott) and the late William. Loving brother of Sandra Powell and Clark Powell and his wife Pat. Also survived by aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews.
Relatives and friends are invited to attend the viewing Monday 9 am to 11 am at GARDNERFUNERAL HOME, RUNNEMEDE. Funeral Service, Monday 11 am at the Funeral Home. Interment New St. Mary\’s Cemetery, Bellmawr.
In lieu of flowers the family requests that donations be made in Kenneth\’s memory to the American Cancer Society, 1851 Old Cuthbert Rd, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034. Expressions of sympathy may be e-mailed to Condolences @GardnerFuneralHome. com

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Governor Corzine meets with Gloucester City Union Firemen Representatives

NJ Governor Jon Corzine, with Steve Quinn, President of the Gloucester City Fire Fighter\’s Union FMBA Local 51 and Tom Wiltsey, President of the Gloucester City Fire Officer\’s Union FMBA Local 251.

The two local firemen met with Governor Corzine during the League of Municipalities Convention held this past week in Atlantic City.

Related: Fire Category

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Rose Kenney age 84, of Bellmawr

KENNEY, ROSE
(Nee DiLeo), on November 16, 2007, of Bellmawr, NJ. Age 84.
Beloved wife of the late Robert Kenney. Dear mother of Marilyn DiCiano (Nick) and Geri Summerville (Allen) of Washington Township, NJ. Loving grandmother of Bob Porreca (Sarah), Renee Watson (Jeff), Marci DiCiano ofWashington Twp., NJ and Tom Porreca of Tacoma, WA. Great grandmother of Gianna, Nicky and Alicia. Dear sister of Angeline Wirt of Sicklerville, NJ, Frank DiLeo (Virginia) of Blackwood, NJ and Phyllis Simmons (Bob) of Rehoboth Beach, DE and the late Florence Paciocco, Joseph DiLeo, Fran Chew, Anna Graziani and Rocco DiLeo. Dear sister-in-law of Earl Kenney (Pearl) of Bellmawr. Loving aunt to many nieces and nephews.
Relatives and friends are invited to attend the viewing Monday morning 9 to 10:30am at GARDNER FUNERAL HOME, RUNNEMEDE. Funeral Service Monday 10:30am. Interment New St. Mary\’s Cemetery, Bellmawr. Expressions of sympathy maybe e-mailed to Condolences@ GardnerFuneralHome. com

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Mary Ann Alcorn, nee McCollum, of Cherry Hill, born in Gloucester City

GAGNON, MARY ANN ALCORN
(Nee McCollum), age 90, on November 13, 2007, of Cherry Hill, formerly of Riverton.
She was born in Gloucester City and a long time resident of Riverton. She was a member of Sacred Heart Church and the Porch Club of Riverton.
She was the wife of the late Arthur Gagnon. She is survived by her children, William Alcorn, Joseph Alcorn, Ruth Alcorn and seven grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
Relatives and Friends are invited to attend the Liturgy of Christian Burial Monday 10:00 AM at Sacred Heart Church, 4th Street & Linden Ave., Riverton, NJ. Interment Calvary Cemetery, Cherry Hill, NJ.
Arrangements by WEBER FUNERAL HOME, Riverton.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Tim Chase, 48, of Mt. Ephraim

CHASE, TIMOTHY W. \’TIM\’
Suddenly on November 13, 2007, age 48 of Mt. Ephraim, NJ. Beloved husband of Donna L. (nee Clyborne). Devoted stepfather of Regina C.,Teresa, and J.T. Chico.
Beloved son of Frank and Kate Chase of Kirkwood, NJ. Dear brother of Thomas, Gerald, Susan Chase, and the late Joyce; also several nieces, nephews, cousins, and many friends; and loving companions Tommy, George & Fred.
Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend his viewing Sunday evening 6-8 PM at the
MAHAFFEY-MILANO
FUNERAL HOME
11 E. Kings Hwy.
Mt. Ephraim, NJ
856-931-1628
Funeral Service Sunday evening 8 PM at the Funeral Home. Interment will be private.
Family requests in lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to any animal charity of your choice.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

TCNJ’s MEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM FALLS 79-55 IN SEASON OPENER

November 16

Williamsport, PA…The College of New Jersey men’s basketball team opened the new season on Friday night facing King’s College in the first round of Lycoming College’s Tip-Off Tournament. Unfortunately, the Lions were not able to deliver a win for interim Head Coach Matt Hunter in his coaching debut as the Lions fell 79-55 to the Monarchs. TCNJ trailed 40-20 at the half and dropped to the consolation game and will face the host Warriors of Lycoming College on Saturday at 2 p.m.

A year ago, the Lions went 12-14, while Kings finished the season with a 19-9 mark after earning a spot in the 2007 NCAA Division III Championships.

Senior forward Jeff Warner (Jackson, NJ/Jackson Memorial) added 14 for the Lions while junior guard Jeff Molinelli (Pennington, NJ/Hopewell Valley) chipped in 10 points.

King’s College’s senior guard Jamie Cousart (Holland, PA) and senior forward Ryan Nenstiel (Zion Grove, PA) both added 16 points in the win as they helped their team mount a 40-20 halftime lead and never look back.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Mens College Hoops: Lycoming 58 TCNJ 56

Williamsport, PA.Lycoming\’s men\’s basketball team defeated The College of
New Jersey by a score of 58-56 in the consolation game of the Lycoming
Tip-Off Tournament on Saturday.

Warrior point guard Eric Anthony (Wheeling, WV) led the team with 14
points, and shared the team lead of three assists with fellow guard
Jemayne Nowlin (Gaithersburg, MD).

Nowlin knocked in seven points on the
day, including Lycoming\’s only three-pointer of the first half.
Anthony had nine of his points in the first period, while sophomore Ricky
Varnell (Patterson, NY) claimed eight of his ten points before the break.
But TCNJ\’s Lions wouldn\’t go away and the score at halftime was knotted at
31.

The Warriors grew a lead in the second half, eventually holding a
ten-point differential of 57-47 with 6:58 remaining. But then Lycoming
went cold, and nearly scoreless, for the remainder of the contest. They
gradually allowed TCNJ back in the game, until Warrior Greg Sye
(Chantilly, VA) sank a key foul shot with five seconds left on the clock.
The shot followed a crucial blocked shot by sophomore James Oberlies
(Philadelphia, PA). TCNJ\’s sophomore Steve Feinberg (Middletown, NJ/Red
Bank Catholic) drove free to the basket looking to give his team the lead,
when out of nowhere, Oberlies leapt through the air and swept the ball off
the backboard.

The game-saving play, as well as Oberlies\’ eight points on
the day, earned him a spot on the All-Tournament team.
Fellow All-Tournament members were King\’s Vince Scalzo, who was also the

Tip-Off Tournament\’s Most Valuable Player, TCNJ\’s junior guard Jeff
Molinelli (Pennington, NJ/Hopewell Valley), PSU-Altoona\’s Quintin Dziabo
and King\’s Jamie Cousart.
Molinelli led the Lions on the day with 17 points, while senior Mark Aziz
(Hackettstown, NJ/West Morris Central) added 11 points with six rebounds.

In the tourney\’s championship game, a talented King\’s squad narrowly
defeated a scrappy, well-coached PSU-Altoona team by a score of 61-59.
Senior forward Jeff Warner (Jackson, NJ/Jackson Memorial) and senior Corey
Gilmore (South Plainfield, NJ/South Plainfield) both chipped in nine
points as well.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.