U.S. Silver Star Recipient Honored at NATO Summit

By Fred W. Baker III
American Forces Press Service

BUCHAREST, Romania, April 3, 2008 – Deep within the cavernous marble walls of the Palace of the Parliament here today sat two Texans, casually talking about – what else – Texas.

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Army Spc. Monica Brown, far right, stands with 25 other soldiers representing all 26 nations of the NATO alliance during an April 3, 2008, ceremony during the NATO Summit Conference in Bucharest, Romania, honoring those who have served in NATO operations around the world. Brown received the Silver Star for heroism in combat in Afghanistan. NATO photo

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The first was President Bush, here for the first full day of NATO talks. The second was Army Spc. Monica Brown, here to help kick off the first full day of the talks.

Brown, 19, is first woman U.S. soldier to receive the Silver Star for combat in Afghanistan. Brown and 25 other soldiers, all from NATO allies who have served in NATO operations, gathered at the start of the day to be honored by those gathered for the largest summit conference in the alliance\’s history.

At the start of the first meeting of the North Atlantic Council this morning, the group marched before the great circle of presidents and prime ministers, heads of state and governments and hundreds of others gathered from around the world.

\”Our soldiers, airmen, sailors and Marines frequently put themselves in harm\’s way so that we can be safe in our countries and our homes,\” said NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer. \”It is therefore appropriate that we start today\’s meeting by paying tribute to the professionalism and dedication of the more than 60,000 men and women who are currently deployed in NATO-led mission and operations.\”

A moment of silence followed in honor of those who have died fighting in NATO operations.

For the small-town girl turned combat medic, it was all a little \”overwhelming\” she said.

With only a few months more than two years of service, Brown\’s career has catapulted her from patching up troops under gunfire in Afghanistan to standing before some of the most powerful people on Earth. Vice President Richard B. Cheney presented her medal last month at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. Today, Brown met with Bush.

\”Overwhelming,\” Brown said just before her meeting with the president. \”I can\’t believe I\’m actually here and about to meet him.

\”I didn\’t ever realize I would be meeting the president of the United States. It\’s amazing. Absolutely amazing,\” she said.

Brown\’s journey began at 17 years old in Lake Jackson, Texas, where she joined the Army with her older brother. He is her \”best friend,\” Brown said, and they intended to attend training together. But he joined as an infantryman and was sent to a combat line unit that women are not allowed to join.

Her brother now serves in Afghanistan.

Brown received the Silver Star for heroism while providing aid under heavy gunfire to soldiers whose Humvee had been hit by an improvised explosive device during a convoy almost a year ago.

It was dusk on April 25, 2007, and Brown was assigned to the 782nd Brigade Support Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division. The convoy was on a routine security patrol in Afghanistan\’s isolated Jani Khail district when her convoy was attacked by insurgents.

The Humvee following hers in the convoy was hit. Brown left her Humvee to give aid to the injured soldiers, and the group began taking small-arms fire from all directions.

\”I was praying the whole time. I was hoping they weren\’t in a serious condition and they were still alive when I got to them. I\’m just glad they all got out of there (alive),\” Brown said.

Other soldiers in her platoon fired back. It was then that the situation went from bad to worse, when a truck loaded with ammunition caught fire and exploded rounds into the air.

According to reports, rounds were whizzing by inches away from Brown. But, she said, she wasn\’t paying attention to what was going on around her. Her focus was on two soldiers: Spcs. Stanson Smith and Larry Spray, who both had suffered life-threatening injuries.

Brown eventually was able, with the help of others, to load Smith and Spray into another vehicle and escape the gunfire and mortar rounds for a more stable area, where she continued rendering aid and called for a medical evacuation.

The event lasted about two hours in the dark of night. She later described it as a \”blur.\”

Both soldiers lived, but today Brown hesitates to take too much credit. She is only the second woman since World War II to receive the Silver Star.

\”I just did my job. I didn\’t expect any recognition for it,\” she said. \”I think that the men I was with that day should be recognized more than me, because without them I wouldn\’t be alive right now.\”

Still, Brown said today is more about who she represents standing before the president and the other world leaders at the summit.

\”It\’s an honor to be here to represent the United States, and the 82nd Airborne Division, and my unit and everyone that was in combat with me in Afghanistan,\” Brown said.

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TCNJ SOFTBALL TEAM SPLITS DH AT HAVERFORD COLLEGE

Media release April 3

Haverford, PA… The College of New Jersey softball team pulled out a split in a doubleheader at Haverford College on Thursday as the Lions dropped the first game, 5-4, and then handled the Fords 8-0 in five innings to earn the split.

TCNJ is now 12-10 on the season, while for the Fords are 9-7. The Lions will be back on the field on Saturday heading to Kean University for a New Jersey Athletic Conference twin bill with the Cougars.

Game 1: Haverford College 5, TCNJ 4
The Fords scored two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning with the second of those being the winning run, which came with one out.

The Lions had taken the lead in the top half of the inning with a pair of runs to erase a 3-2 deficit.

Freshman Colleen Cawley (Riverton, NJ/Holy Cross) paced the Lions at the plate going 2-for-4 with a run scored and a run batted in. Sophomore Ellen Seavers (Ridgewood, NJ/Ridgewood) also had two hits for TCNJ.

Pitcher Ashley Minervini (Cliffside Park, NJ/Cliffside Park) suffered the loss for the Lions with three of the runs allowed being earned. She also struck out seven Haverford batters and gave up six hits.

Game 2: TCNJ 8, Haverford College 0 (5 innings)
Freshman Alex Sietsma (Glen Rock, NJ/Glen Rock) fired a one-hitter in the five-inning victory to improve to 4-2 on the season. She also struck out three batters in her eighth complete game of the season.

After scoring a run in the top of the second, the Lions exploded for six runs in the third with Cawley coming up with the big hit driving in three runs with a triple.

Cawley finished the game going 2-for-4 with three RBI, while sophomore Rachel Greeby (Yardley, PA/Pennsbury) and senior Lauren Musacchia (Westfield, NJ/Westfield) were both 2-for-3. Seavers also had a steady game at the plate picking up her second multiple-hit game of the day

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David Lex Succumbs, former Brooklawn resident, graduate of GHS Class of 1972

LEX, DAVID P., SR.

On March 31, 2008, of Malaga, formerly of Brooklawn. Age 53.

Beloved husband of 25 years to Jackie (nee Caporusso). Devoted father of Melanie Panebianco-Maisch (Brian), David Lex, Jr. and Joshua Lex. Loving son of Dorothy (nee Shute) and the late Alfred Lex. Dear brother of Carol Fulgham, Jeffrey Lex (Victoria) and the late Michael Lex. Cherished Pop Pop of Gabriella Panebianco. Also survived by many nieces and nephews.

Mr. Lex was a member of Teamsters Local 628. He coached Franklin Twp. Little League from 1984-1999. He attended Alice Costello School and graduated from Gloucester City High School in 1972.

Funeral services were held on Thursday (today) at the ARDNER FUNERAL HOME, RUNNEMEDE. Funeral Service 8pm at the funeral home.

Interment private at the request of the family. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Disabled American Veterans, PO Box 14301, Cincinnati, OH 45250-0301.

Related: See Drive for Dave

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Gloucester Catholic vs Overbrook April 1

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#4 TCNJ WOMEN’S LACROSSE TEAM REMAINS UNDEFEATED

Madison, NJ… The College of New Jersey women’s lacrosse team improved to 7-0 on the season with another solid defensive effort as the Lions secured a 16-1 road win at Drew University on Tuesday.

The win sets up a showdown of top-five teams as the fourth-ranked Lions host second-ranked Gettysburg College on Friday at Lions’ Stadium with game time set for 5 p.m. The Bullets are also undefeated on the season at 12-0.

The loss knocked the Rangers to 5-4 on the season.

The Lions have been excelling at both ends of the field this season and Tuesday was no exception. TCNJ lowered its team goals-against-average to 3.28 per game and have scored at least 13 goals in every game this season.

Senior Karen Doane (Bridgewater, NJ/Bridgewater-Raritan) scored five times to move into 10th place on the program’s all-time goal list and became the 11th player in program history to rack up 200 career points. Doane has 201 in her standout career thus far with 159 goals and 42 assists.

Freshman Alison Jaeger (Hampton, NJ/North Hunterdon) netted three goals and set up two others, while Diane Haddeland (Mahopac, NY/Mahopac), Angela Wilmer (Cherry Hill, NJ/Cherry Hill West) and Lisa Seldeen (Wayne, NJ/Wayne Valley) each scored twice.

Senior Caitlin Gregory (Winslow, NJ/Eastern) made nine saves to pick up the win, while freshman Mary Waller (Bel Air, MD/C. Milton Wright) also saw time in net.

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Disabled Vets Motivate Each Other at Winter Sports Clinic

By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service

SNOWMASS VILLAGE, Colo., March 31, 2008 – As disabled veterans test their mettle this week during the National Disabled Veterans Winter Sports Clinic, they\’re finding motivation not just on the slopes, but also in each other.

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Retired Marine Cpl. Jason Poole, severely wounded during a bomb attack in Iraq near the Syrian border in June 2004, called the National Disabled Veterans Winter Sports Clinic the \”most fun, craziest, most beautiful time ever!\” He brought his girlfriend, Angela Eastman, to this year\’s clinic, his third. Photo by Donna Miles

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Four hundred disabled veterans, 67 of them wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan, said coming together for the six-day clinic is helping them push themselves even harder to achieve things they never thought possible.

As they heed the advice of Deputy Veterans Affairs Secretary Gordon H. Mansfield, a disabled veteran himself who opened the clinic last night urging them to reach out to each other, the veterans said they\’re finding a special brand of camaraderie that\’s driving them on.

Among them is retired Marine Cpl. Jason Poole, who was on a patrol near Iraq\’s border with Syria in June 2004 when a massive bomb killed three of his fellow Marines and sent him into a coma. Poole awoke two months later deaf in his left ear, blind in his left eye, riddled with shrapnel and suffering a traumatic brain injury.

Poole admits he was \”very scared\” to come to the winter sports clinic the first time in 2006, but quickly got over his trepidations. \”I had a blast!\” he said.

Now back for his third clinic, 25-year-old Poole savors every opportunity the clinic has to offer. \”I love it here!\” he exclaimed. \”This is 110 percent the most fun, craziest, most beautiful time ever!\”

What makes the clinic so special, he said, is the chance to spend time with other disabled veterans who understand him and what he\’s gone through. \”It\’s really fantastic coming together with all these different military members. What we share is why everyone has so much fun.\”

Now-retired Army Pfc. Adam Lewis was serving in Baghdad with 3rd Infantry Division when a land mine claimed both his legs in July 2003. What scared him the most about his circumstances, he said, was the prospect of never being able to do the things he once loved.

Motivated by his daughter, who was born during his deployment, Lewis became an active athlete, earning top honors in the Wheelchair Games in several categories and returning here for his third winter sports clinic.

\”I try to compete in everything,\” 27-year-old Lewis said. \”But this is about more than the competition. It\’s about the people you\’re around.\”

Now considering himself \”a seasoned veteran,\” Lewis said he tries to help more recently wounded veterans adjust to their new situations. \”I try to listen and see where they\’re coming from,\” he said. \”If they ask for advice, I\’m happy to give it.\”

Lewis said disabled veterans, regardless of when they served or which uniform they wore, share a common bond. \”A soldier is a soldier always,\” he said. \”It doesn\’t really matter who you are or what your rank (is). All of us share the same mixed emotions. The wiser the veteran I become, the more I realize that everyone is pretty much the same.\”

This time last year, Angel Gomez had just been medically retired from the Marine Corps and had to wear a helmet around the clock to protect his skull following surgery to relieve pressure on his brain.

Gomez was driving a 7-ton truck during a night mission in Ramadi, Iraq, in April 2005 when an improvised explosive device hit his vehicle and sent him into a coma. He awoke two weeks later to find the right side of his body paralyzed, a tube holding his windpipe open and his brain damaged by a traumatic injury.

Even as he struggled to recover, with grueling hours developed to regaining his ability to walk and talk, the Mountain View, Calif., native said he felt so self-conscious about his appearance that he withdrew into himself. He turned down opportunities to go on outings that provided a respite from the hospital, hating the way people stared at his helmet, his cane and the pipe sticking out of this throat after his tracheostomy.

Coming to the winter sports clinic last year, where he learned how to snowboard, proved to be a huge boost in Gomez\’ recovery. \”I got motivated going out there,\” he said. \”It was a big step for me.\”

This year, Gomez is back again, his helmet now gone, and ready to take mono-skiing so he can ski even faster than last year. But he said he\’s equally excited about the chance to spend time with his fellow veterans.

\”There\’s a big benefit of coming here, because you meet people on the slopes, at the concerts, dancing and at meals,\” he said. \”You spend time together and talk, and it really means a lot.\”

Marine Corps Reservist Jared Smith was mobilized at Camp Pendleton, Calif., in June when a spinal cord injury from running with a combat rucksack left him in a wheelchair with little hope of ever walking again. Less than nine months later, he\’s walking with one crutch and planning to try out an adaptive mono-ski here at Snowmass Mountain.

Looking forward to returning to the slopes, 22-year-old Smith said he\’s confident he can tackle the mountain and return to the skiing level he\’d built since he first picked up skiing 10 years ago. \”If there\’s one thing I\’ve learned since this injury, it\’s that you can do everything you did before,\” he said. \”You just have to do it in an adaptive way.\”

Now medically retired as a corporal, Smith said he\’s also excited about the opportunity to meet and mingle with other disabled veterans. \”When I look around here, I can see that we all have something in common. That\’s just not something you find in your hometown,\” he said. \”So just being here and getting to talk with them is pretty amazing.\”

Alfred Clarke, an Army Gulf War veteran who was medically retired from the Army due to an eye disease, returned this year for his fourth winter sports clinic to ski and snowmobile and spend time with fellow veterans.

\”This place gives me motivation,\” said the Tampa, Fla., native. \”It\’s someplace where I can talk with and hang out with some of the guys. There\’s a lot of spirit here.\”

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Gloucester City: Planning Board Recommends Apartments Be Designated as Redevelopment Zone

 

\”It is without a doubt one of the most dangerous places in the City,\”

Police Lieutenant George Berglund 

By Linda Boker-Angelo

NEWS Correspondent

The Gloucester City Planning Board approved a resolution last week recommending that City Council designate the Chatham Square Apartments and Gloucester Terrace Apartments as an area in need of redevelopment.

Located off Route 130 along the Newton Creek, the City is in the processing of purchasing Chatham Square, located near the new Meadowbrook Run development.

At Gloucester Terrace, which abuts the creek, prospective developers will have to comply with state and federal environmental laws as they relate to riparian rights and wetlands.

NJ Professional Planner Stan Slachetka of T&M Associates, Middletown, presented the results of his firm\’s redevelopment study.

Slachetka said the properties in question met the necessary criteria for the designation, a fact which was supported by the testimony of representatives from the Gloucester City Building Office as well as the City\’s Fire and Police departments.

Slachetka said his firm found the buildings to be dilapidated, with a lack of proper maintenance and security, making them a threat to the public.

He added that there are problems with structural stability in parts of the buildings.

Chief Housing Inspector Joseph Stecklair testified that about 65 percent of the apartments are unoccupied because the owner cannot get a certificate of occupancy due to numerous code violations.

Gloucester City Police Lieutenant George Berglund also reported that an exorbitant number of man hours have been spent at the apartments because of the criminal incidents reported.

\”It is without a doubt one of the most dangerous places in the City,\” said Berglund. \”It is a drain on resources. It is a real problem out there.\”

Board members unanimously approved the resolution recommending that the governing body declare the area a redevelopment zone.

The Board also voted to allow two property owners in the Historic District to paint their homes and make other incidental improvements.

These properties are located in the 300 block of Bergen Street and in the 100 block of Burlington Street.

The Planning Board\’s next meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 16, in City Hall, 313 Monmouth St.

 

 

 

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Gloucester County Officials ID jail suicide victim

source www.nj.com

WOODBURY County officials have identified the man who hanged himself with a bed sheet in the Gloucester County Jail as Michael A. Potts, a Clementon resident who was picked up on a traffic warrant out of Westville.

It is unknown what the traffic violation was, but on Wednesday, March 5, Potts was arrested in Camden County on the warrant and placed into custody at the Gloucester County Jail, officials said.

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Andrew Pee Wee Watson, of Deptford Twp. Age 83

WATSON Andrew \”Pee Wee\”

On March 29, 2008. Age 83. Of Deptford Twp. Formerly of Atlantic City.

Survived by his loving and cherished family of Gloucester Manor Nursing Home. Andrew was known as \”Pee Wee\” and always had a smile and a kind word to say. He was a member of the Holy Trinity Pentecostal Church in Woodbury. Andrew\’s viewing and burial was private at Evergreen Cemetery in Salem.

Expressions of sympathy can be e-mailed to the family through the funeral home website www.mccannhealey.com obituaries of Andrew Watson. Funeral Arrangements and Inquiries through: McCANN-HEALEY FUNERAL HOME: 851 Monmouth Street, Gloucester City. Ph: 856-456-1142. www.mccannhealey.com

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Rutgers Falls to No. 1 Connecticut

Media Release

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) — Connecticut\’s Maya Moore struggled to get open all night against Rutgers\’ smothering defense. Then, given a rare open look from long range, the fabulous freshman shot the Huskies back into the Final Four.

 

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Matee Ajavon finished with 18 points.

Moore hit a tiebreaking 3-pointer with less than 3 minutes left to propel top-seeded UConn past the No. 2-seeded Scarlet Knights 66-56 on Tuesday night in the Greensboro Regional championship.

Renee Montgomery and Ketia Swanier each scored 15 points to lead the Huskies (36-1), who rallied from a 14-point deficit to win their 15th straight game and reach their ninth Final Four — but first since winning the 2004 national championship.

\”I would say maybe it\’s our turn,\” UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. \”Also, I think the price some of these kids have paid, the last four years and this year in particular, they were destined and due. They\’ve risen to every challenge they\’ve faced and I couldn\’t be prouder.\”

Moore finished with seven points — just her second single-digit performance of the season — but her final basket couldn\’t have come at a better time. With the game tied at 49-all, she took a feed at the top of the key and, with two-time Big East defensive player of the year Essence Carson sagging off of her, pulled up and swished a 3 to put UConn ahead to stay.

The Huskies then were perfect on 14 free-throws in the final 2-plus minutes to snap their three-year hiatus from the biggest stage in women\’s college basketball.

\”When you think about, what\’s a Final Four mean to me,\” Auriemma said. \”I don\’t care if I never go to another one, but for these kids to get to their first, that\’s what coaching is all about.\”

Connecticut will face Stanford in the semifinals. The Huskies beat the Cardinal 66-54 in the Paradise Jam tournament in the Virgin Islands in November

Matee Ajavon scored 18 points on 8-of-23 shooting to lead Rutgers (27-7), the defending Greensboro Regional champion which was denied its second consecutive Final Four berth.

Carson finished with 12 points and 12 rebounds but was held scoreless in the second half, and Kia Vaughn added 11 points for the Scarlet Knights, who gave UConn its only loss of the season two months ago before the Huskies beat them by 20 points in the regular-season finale.

This time, two of the Huskies\’ highest-profile players struggled on the offensive end for much of the night, but came through when it counted most.

Moore had trouble getting touches while being swarmed by defenders Brittany Ray and Heather Zurich and managed just seven shots, making three.

Montgomery, who scored at least 20 points in each of the teams\’ two previous meetings, was just 4-of-14 from the field and made only one of her nine attempts from behind the arc. But twice in the second half she knocked down tying jumpers, including one with 7 1/2 minutes left that highlighted the 15-5 run that gave UConn its first lead.

Kaili McLaren, whose layup less than a minute later put the Huskies ahead for the first time, finished with 10 points, and Tina Charles added 12 rebounds.

Rutgers raced out to a huge, early lead when Epiphanny Prince\’s free throws with about 8 minutes left capped the 17-5 run that made it 25-11, but the Scarlet Knights largely did it with their trademark tough defense: They held the Huskies to two baskets during an 8-minute stretch, and during that span they forced UConn into 2-of-9 shooting and generated six turnovers with their half-court trap.

Eventually, UConn made it a game again by erasing that deficit with a 19-5 run that bridged halftime. The Huskies outscored Rutgers 12-3 during the final 4 1/2 minutes of the half to pull to 32-27 at the break — their season-low for scoring in a first half.

Montgomery\’s first tying jumper came with 18 1/2 minutes left, producing the first tie since it was scoreless.

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