Gloucester City: RXD Pharmacy

By Sara Martino

\”I am happy to see the camaraderie in the RXD store. Seeing generations of customers, grandparents, parents and off-spring coming in to shop is a welcome rewarding occasion,\” said Kevin Milner, a Vice President of the family oriented retail pharmacy.

. Al, the pharmacist, is happy to professionally serve the residents and does accommodate the concerns of the customers regarding their medicine. The Pharmacy Department can call the Doctor\’s office if customers need assistance with their prescriptions. The wait time for the prescriptions is only a short period and free local delivery of the filled prescriptions is available. Kevin and his sister are also pharmacists and work in the store as needed. Several of the RXD employees are Gloucester City residents.

Due to the demographics of Gloucester City many residents can walk to the RXD and some customers can arrive in their wheelchairs, parking them safely outside. RXD accepts Medicaid, Medicare and about 99% of all insurance coverage. Diabetic supplies and an extensive vitamin section are always well stocked… RXD can supply wheelchairs, canes, walkers and other durable medical equipment. If the items are not in the store, they can be ordered for the customers.

The difference between RXD and the bigger drugstore chains is that the RXD is more like an extensive \”Mom and Pop\” store, having a good relationship with the community. In addition to the important medicinal services, the store is a \”Seasonal Superstore\”. There were many St. Patrick\’s Day decorations and novelties purchased by the residents. Easter baskets filled with goodies are lined up on a display table in the front of the store and are for sale. Customers can purchase and fill their own baskets for a special price. RXD is an authorized center for the sale of Webkinz, a shaggy plush adopt-a-pet collection that is a favorite of young and old. Other toys, stationary items, milk, ice cream and some clothing, including diabetic socks, and more are all for sale in the store. The Pepsi Company in Pennsauken sends plenty of three liter bottles of Pepsi to the store. Many customers take advantage of the sale of the favorite economical size.

Customers may pay their utility bills, purchase money orders, and send money-grams to recipients here and abroad. No need to go to Western Union. Lottery tickets and instant rub-offs can be purchased at the store. In-store sales and specials are promoted and RXD accepts manufacturer\’s coupons. Also, as a member of the UEZ program, the sales tax on purchases is only 3 1/2 %.

An UEZ application is in the process of being approved for an architectural grant allowing for the improvement of the store façade. Kevin said he is looking forward to the RXD being a recipient of the grant and is excited about Gloucester City\’s plans for the waterfront area .He feels that the idea of the King Street improvements and an Irish Village will bring in a lot of visitors to the city.

RXD is headquartered in Collingswood, NJ and has stores throughout Camden County and Pennsylvania. Gloucester City\’s store is located at 525 Monmouth Street and is open Monday through Friday from 9am to 8pm, Saturday from 9am to 4pm and closed on Sunday. For information, please call 856-456-2761.

Related: Buy Local/UEZ

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Mike Calzonetti, Not much Ram senior couldn\’t do

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Post-Gazette Archives: Gloucester City\’s Agnus McGlade Berenato stresses family values, discipline

Reprinted with permission of Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 

Sunday, May 04, 2003

By Paul Zeise, Post-Gazette Sports Writer

If the five youngest children of Theresa and Peter McGlade had their way, it is likely that new Pitt women\’s basketball coach Agnus Berenato would have been a world-class swimmer. Or, perhaps, one of the finest swimming coaches in the country.

Agnus Berenato was introduced as Pitt\’s new women\’s basketball coach Thursday. (John Heller, Post-Gazette)

\”All five of us voted for a swimming pool in our back yard, but dad cast the only vote that counted and he put in a basketball hoop instead,\” said Berenato\’s youngest sister, Theresa McGlade. \”So I guess that\’s how we got started playing basketball.

\”But I have no doubt that whatever career path Agnus chose, she\’d have become a rousing success at it. She\’s just a dynamic person and someone who I have always envied because of her energy and her ability to do such a fabulous job in all aspects of her life despite the fact that she has to juggle so many activities and wear so many hats.\”

Basketball may have become the family sport when Peter installed a basketball hoop next to the garage at their Gloucester City, N.J., home, but the most important lessons Berenato learned in ultra-competitive games on uneven concrete had little to do with the game itself.

It was there, with her family and friends, that she learned valuable lessons about family, love, commitment, competition and maximizing her potential. And those lessons have pushed her to the top of her profession.

\”I fell in love with basketball at an early age, and that has always been my passion,\” she said. \”But I\’m not defined by it. I\’ve always kept it in perspective and believed that, in order to be a success on the court, you have to first be a success off it as well. That\’s why family is so important to me, and that\’s why I work so hard to instill values like character, integrity and discipline into my players.

\”I\’ve never believed that you can\’t have it all; you just have to make the commitment to go get it.\”

The values that are dear to Berenato — family, community, charity, hard work, commitment, loyalty — are the ones Pitt officials looked for in their search for a new coach when they fired Traci Waites after five seasons.

And while Berenato\’s successful record as a coach vaulted her to the top of the list of candidates, it is her magnetic personality and seemingly boundless energy that made her a must-hire.

That\’s because what the university needed to find was a miracle-worker capable of breathing life into what recently has been one of the worst major Division I women\’s programs in the NCAA. Pitt is certain it found that person in Berenato and believes she\’ll build the Panthers into a national power within a few years.

\”We weren\’t just looking for a coach,\” said Carol Sprague, the senior associate athletic director at Pitt. \”We needed someone who was a coach, a recruiter, someone who could generate a lot of interest in the program, someone who values hard work, someone who wouldn\’t be intimidated by the size of the job or the level of competition in the conference and someone with the commitment level to get things done right.

\”That\’s what we found in Agnus. She is the complete and total package. A complete coach for all of our needs. Are there challenges here? Absolutely, but I believe she can overcome any of them and will do a great job for our program.\”

Bernadette McGlade, the associate commissioner of the Atlantic Coast Conference and Agnus\’ younger sister, has little doubt that Pitt made the right choice. Maybe she\’s biased, but her sentiments are echoed by most everyone who knows Berenato.

\”Agnus\’s enthusiasm is infectious,\” said McGlade, who hired Agnus as an assistant coach at Georgia Tech when she was the head coach.

\”She has very strong commitments and beliefs and she has succeeded at whatever she has put her mind to. She is one of those people who puts all of her energy into whatever it is she is going to do — whether it is going to McDonald\’s to eat or preparing to beat an opponent.\”

Berenato, who spent the past 15 seasons as head coach at Georgia Tech and led the Yellow Jackets to postseason berths in each of the past four seasons, has a huge task ahead of her, and she knows it.

But to fully appreciate and understand who she is, one must understand where she comes from and her values.

Loyalty and commitment

In 1985, Berenato had just finished her fourth season as women\’s basketball coach at Rider University when the family learned her mother had advanced breast cancer. She would no longer be able to take care of herself.

But her 10 children were raised with family values so strong that a nursing home was not an option. And since most of her brothers and sisters were not able to drop everything and take care of their mother, she knew there was only one thing to do.

The Berenato clan, from left: Sons Joey and Andrew, daughters Theresa and Clare, husband Jack and daughter Christina. (Lake Fong, Post-Gazette)

\”While we were all trying to figure out what we were going to do, Agnus resigned from her job,\” Bernadette said. \”Then she moved from Trenton back in with our mother and took care of her until she died later that year. She was trying to make a career, but didn\’t even think twice about dropping it to help out the family.\”

Berenato said she learned that value from her mother, which is why such a decision was a no-brainer.

\”My dad died when I was in seventh grade,\” said Berenato. \”There were still seven of us in school, and the three others were in college. But my mom, she rolled up her sleeves and kept us together. We didn\’t have much, we were poor. But we did have each other, and that\’s why I believe so strongly in family and commitment.

\”I learned to appreciate what we did have instead of complaining about what we didn\’t have because that\’s the approach my mother took despite the difficult circumstances. That\’s why I look at everything as an opportunity to succeed rather than a chance to fail.\”

Berenato has five children despite being in a profession not conducive to raising children. The job of a Division I head coach requires long hours, seven-day work weeks, few vacations and little free time.

But her children, Theresa (20), Andrew (18), Joey (14), Clare (13) and Christina (9) and her husband, Jack, all have worked together to overcome those obstacles.

\”My mother is amazing because she\’s done so many things, yet she\’s always made time for us,\” said Andrew, who will be a freshman at Georgia Tech next year. \”Like family dinner. She always makes sure to make it home for dinner. I have a lot of friends who can\’t say that about their parents, but mom always juggles things in order to be home with us for dinner.

\”That means a lot because it shows that we really are the most important thing to her and, in turn, we make the effort to help her any way we can.\”

Berenato believes her strong family values reach her players because, in her eyes, they are part of her extended family. That\’s why it is not uncommon for her to have players over for dinner and why she works so hard to build a family-like atmosphere in the locker room.

It also is why she is so involved in the community wherever she is and why getting her players involved in numerous community projects will be a high priority.

She credited her husband for allowing her to pursue her dreams.

\”He knew from day one that basketball was my passion,\” she said. \”But he has always gone with the flow. He\’s an incredible man in many ways and he\’s been a huge part of my success. I believe family is always right behind faith among priorities, but I don\’t believe you have to choose career or family.

\”To me, it is a matter of making time for all of those things that are your priorities.\”

\’E\’ for effort

When Pitt interim athletic director Marc Boehm introduced Berenato for the first time, he said \”nobody will outwork her.\”

Former Georgia \’Tech men\’s basketball coach Bobby Cremins, a close friend of Berenato\’s, agrees. He also said that along with work ethic, Berenato brings enthusiasm and energy to every task.

\”She is a live ball of action, a real go-getter,\” Cremins said. \”Nobody will ever know the things she had to fight through in order to have success at Georgia Tech, but she\’s worked so hard to get to where she is it is great to see her have success. Through good times and bad, she\’s always been supportive of me, and I\’ve always appreciated that.

\”But the thing about her beyond her genuineness and integrity that stands out is how hard she works and how competitive she is. She will win there, I know it.\”

It is not uncommon for Berenato to work long days, but with five children and a husband to attend to, that has caused her to be creative. At Georgia Tech, she held 5:45 a.m. practices so she could be home in the early evening with her kids. Then, she would break down film and do other tasks late at night when they were in bed.

She doesn\’t waste a minute and won\’t allow her kids or players to do so, either. There is no television from Sunday to Friday because she believes it fosters laziness. Without it, her children are forced to be creative and find other activities.

Despite the fact that all five of her kids were born during her coaching career, she never took a maternity leave. In fact, her oldest child, Theresa, was born on a Thursday, the day of a game. She missed that game because she was in the hospital, but was released on a Friday night and shocked her assistant coaches by showing up Saturday to coach an afternoon game.

\”I\’d use some vacation days to visit Agnus,\” Theresa said. \”But I\’d only be at her house for about half-hour and I\’d already be tired and stressed out just watching her. It is amazing. She\’d have a phone in one hand while she was cooking dinner, doing laundry, changing diapers, cleaning the house, visiting with me — there was never a moment to relax.

\”But that\’s who she is. She doesn\’t believe that there is ever too much for her to handle.\”

Hard work has always been a major part of Berenato\’s success and her greatest asset as a player. She was an excellent shooter, but more of a feisty player who scrapped for every inch. She played high school basketball for Gloucester Catholic and helped it win three consecutive state titles. At the time, there weren\’t many scholarships in women\’s basketball.

So she signed with a French professional team (Entente Senonaise) and played one year there.

Then, Title IX kicked in and women had the same opportunity to play college basketball as men.

Berenato, along with her two sisters, Mickey and Bernadette, accepted a scholarship to North Carolina and played one season for the Tar Heels. But the school was too big and too far from her Jersey roots, so she talked to her mother about possibly transferring to Mount St. Mary\’s College.

Her mother gave her the blessing, but said she would have to pay her way. That\’s probably the summer she developed her skills as a saleswoman because the only job she could find was as a traveling-bible saleswoman in Kentucky.

\”I think I made $8,500 that summer selling those bibles,\” she said. \”But I was fortunate enough to earn a scholarship, so I didn\’t have to go back the next summer. It was a great experience in learning how to meet and sell people.\”

Teacher and motivator

Clemson women\’s coach Jim Davis, who has coached against Berenato for a number of years and is one of her closest friends in the profession, also is sure that Berenato will be successful.

But unlike some, he thinks her impact will be immediate because he said she is a master motivator with a knack for getting players to achieve things they never thought possible.

\”She is one of the best at convincing kids that they can be better than they really are,\” Davis said. \”But don\’t get me wrong — she is not a con artist. She is genuine. She really believes in her players, and you can see it in the way they play. There is never any quit in her teams. They are a lot like her — they fight and scratch until the end. They will work hard, you can believe that.

\”And I\’ll say this — I don\’t know what the talent level is at Pitt because I\’m not familiar with the program, but, if there is any talent base at all there, she\’ll turn that thing around, and they\’ll be competitive next year.\”

It only took Pitt sophomore point guard Amy Kunich about five minutes of listening to Berenato address the media before she was convinced that great things are coming. And she already believes in Berenato despite the fact that the team is six months from its first official practice.

\”As far as first impressions go, that was amazing,\” said Kunich. \”I was sitting in my chair listening to her and getting restless because I wanted to get my shoes on and go play for her. I\’m excited already. She clearly is going to be a motivator and a welcome change for us. You can\’t help but get excited when you listen to her.\”

Program builder, recruiter

One of Berenato\’s highest priorities will be to reconnect the program to Western Pennsylvania\’s fertile recruiting base. Many top players in the area over the past decade have been stars elsewhere, but that\’s a trend that Sprague expects to end once people get a chance to meet Berenato.

Kunich agrees.

\”I\’ll tell you this, if she came to my house when I was being recruited, I\’d sign up that day,\” she said. \”I have no doubt she\’s a coach that kids will want to play for. No doubt at all. There is just something special that draws you to her.\”

At Georgia Tech, Berenato took an urban program that was second-fiddle to the University of Georgia and made it competitive. When she arrived in Atlanta, the best players who stayed home went to Georgia.

By the time she left, she had built a program that could attract top-caliber players from Georgia and elsewhere.

This past season, Georgia Tech went 20-13, made the NCAA tournament and featured seven players from Georgia. She has coached 11 all-ACC players and many others who have played in the WNBA or professionally in Europe.

That is the vision she has for Pitt, and she believes that her straightforward approach and commitment to excellence will help her fulfill that vision.

\”Like everything else, you don\’t have to choose academics or athletics or community service,\” she said. \”I learned that early in my career. You can have great players who are great students and great people. That\’s what we want here.

\”I know it will take time, but I am committed to going out into the community and working with high school coaches and AAU coaches, but I\’ll do what it takes. Pitt has given me a great opportunity, and I take it seriously. I want to succeed, but we will do the right thing and do things the right way.

\”That is the only promise I can make.\”

Related: Rams Alumni

Related: Pitt U Womens Basketball 

Related: Agnus Berenato Profile

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Letters: A Marine ask you to say a prayer for him and other soldiers

I have lost too many friends in Iraq to keep quiet. My stepbrother and my best friend were both killed on their first tour. We are over there fighting for freedom and the right to call ourselves, U.S. citizens. We fought since the Revolutionary War for freedom and we are still fighting.

I serve my second tour now and anyone writing me would be really nice. My email is [email protected].

Please when you have five minutes kneel down and say a prayer. Pray that all of those serving in Iraq will make it home safe
to see their family another day.

Commenter name: Cpl. Robert T. Wolf U.S.M.C.

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The College of New Jersey: Klimowicz Named All-American

Holland, MI–The College of New Jersey women’s basketball junior center Hillary Klimowicz (Scotch Plains, NJ/Scotch Plains-Fanwood) was named to the 2007-08 State Farm Coaches’ All-America Team Honorable Mentions for NCAA Division III on Friday.

The Women’s Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) and State Farm announced the 2008 National Collegiate Athletic Association Division III State Farm Coaches’ All-America Basketball Team. This year’s team marks the first State Farm Coaches’ All-America Team, as Eastman Kodak held the previous sponsorship for 25 years. Selection committees in each of the eight WBCA geographical regions select 10 of the top women’s basketball players in the nation to be honored. In addition, an honorable mention team was also selected.

Klimowicz was one of five players from Region 3 named to the national ballot for the 2008 State Farm Coaches’ All-America Basketball Team for the Women’s Coaches Basketball Coaches Association for Division III. There are eight different regions and the 40 finalists, who were voted upon by WBCA member coaches in each of the eight WBCA award regions.

The State Farm Coaches\’ All-America Basketball Team was announced at the NCAA Division III Women\’s Basketball Banquet at Hope College in Holland, Mich.

The 2007-08 Lions went 22-7 on the season and won the New Jersey Athletic Conference South Division with an 11-2 conference mark and advanced to the conference championship game. The team then earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Division III Championship and moved into the second round of the tournament.

Klimowicz has reeled in numerous conference honors as she was selected as the 2008 NJAC Player of the Year and a First Team All-NJAC honoree.

The center had a banner season leading the team in a host of categories. She was the team’s top scorer and rebounder averaging 16.9 points and 11.0 boards. Those numbers rank her second and third, respectively, in the New Jersey Athletic Conference. She also leads the conference in field goal percentage hitting on 64.4 percent of her shots (206-for-320) and blocked shots per game at 4.10 per contest. Those numbers rank second and fourth nationally.

Klimowicz has received a host of other honors this season, including being named the NJAC Player of the Week seven times and ECAC Metro Player of the Week twice. She was named the most valuable player of the Gwynedd-Mercy College Classic and earned a spot on the Marymount University Tip-Off Classic All-Tournament Team. She recorded 20 double-doubles this season and scored in double figures in 27 of 29 games.

Klimowicz was previously recognized for her effort in the classroom as she earned CoSIDA’s ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District II College Division honors. She was named All-District II Third Team as a psychology major and boasts a grade-point-average of 3.318.

Klimowicz was a 2006-07 All-NJAC First Team selection after joining the Lions from NCAA Division I St. Joseph’s University where she was selected the 2005-06 Atlantic 10 and Big Five Rookie of the Year.

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Josephine Schefseck, age 93, of Deptford

SCHEFSECK Josephine E.

On March 14, 2008. Age 93. Of Deptford. Formerly of Boonton and Plainfield, NJ. Devoted mother of Linda M. Shafer and her husband Robert Stone Shafer of New York. Beloved grandmother of Robert P. Shafer and his wife Karole A. Shafer and the late Robyn Lynn Shafer. Cherished great-grandmother of Rebecca Ann Shafer and Joshua Stone Shafer. Loving cousin of Carey Pohrishak.

Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend her graveside burial and prayers on Monday, March 24 at 1 pm in the Hillside Cemetery, Scotch Plains, NJ. There will be no evening viewing.

Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through our funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com under online obituaries of Josephine Schefseck. Funeral Arrangements and Inquiries may be made through: McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, Gloucester City, NJ 08030. Phone: 856-456-1142

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Gloucester City: How Can We Stop The Thieves from Stealing Our Donations?

BILL\’S POINT OF VIEW:

Thank you to the Gloucester City Little League for sharing the information about the organization\’s finances. It helps to fill in some holes for example how the $52,000 was accrued. Besides the money being stolen some of us wondered either to themselves or out loud how come the Little League had so much money in their treasury. Your explanation answered some of those questions.

For those who are just tuning in the former treasurer of the Little League, Harry Fox Jr., was recently charged with embezzling $52,000 from the organization. And as many residents are aware this isn\’t the first time something like this has happened in Gloucester City.

Over the years I have watched, as you, in 1980 money stolen from the Mustangs Football organization cookie sales (a mother of one of the players stole the funds).

Also in the 1980\’s there was a City fireman who took $10,000 plus from the annual Softball Marathon.

Then again in 2007 there was another City fireman caught stealing funds from the same account.

And now the latest, $52,000 being stolen from the Little League organization.

There have been some recent comments posted about what could be done to stop the thieves. The most recent from an unknown person who signed their name Tired of Donating to Thieves makes the most sense, have the treasurer bonded. \”If the treasurer was bonded the organization would get their money back and the bonding company would go after the thief, \” he/she said.

I also feel it is not too much to ask that all organizations disclose full financial statements to the public each year. Some organizations feel if they give out that information the public will not be as generous. I don\’t believe that would happen. And on the other hand other organizations feel the public has no right to know how their donations are being spent.

Recently in one of my columns I suggested that all clubs and organizations require two even three signatures to withdraw money from their bank account. And give full financial disclosure to the members each month. Following the publication of the column I received a call from Mike Kenney, treasurer of the Mustangs. He said after reading my thoughts he made the motion to do just that at the Mustang meeting and the organization approved it. Let\’s have a Cheer for the Mustangs!

All groups who solicit donations from the public should be required to release their financial statements on a yearly basis. That includes coin drops, golf tournaments, firemen\’s softball tournaments, fishing tournaments, cookie and candy sales, beef and beer events, door to door solicitations and so forth on.

As mentioned before, openness would help discourage those with \”sticky\” fingers.

If you look back to what type of punishment the thieves mentioned in the past received all of them got off with just a slap on the hand. They get no jail time, instead the Courts sentenced the crook (s) to community service, a few years probation, and the thief can take their time making restitution. Is it any wonder we are reading more and more about corruption in volunteer organizations?

To put it in simple terms the thief has gotten away with highway robbery and received a free interest loan to pay back at their leisure.

The time has come to put measures in place so this won\’t happen again in our community. And if organizations are not willing to be forth coming then the public should withhold their donations until they make full disclosure of their expenses and expenditures.

Related: Harry Fox Jr. Arrested

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