Gloucester City: (1899 History) Pastor at St. Mary’s Accuses his assistant of assault

Submitted by Jack Heath

From the archives of the New York Times November 22 1899

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College Baseball: NO. 6 RANKED TCNJ POSTS 7-5 WIN OVER ALBRIGHT AS LIONS COLLECT EIGHTH STAIGHT WIN

Media Release April 1, 2008

Ewing, NJ – Ranked sixth in Division III, The College of New Jersey\’s baseball team tallied a 7-5 home win over the Lions of Albright College to collect the team\’s eighth straight victory. TCNJ improves to 16-2 overall, while Albright drops to 7-11. The eight wins in a row matches TCNJ longest winning streak of the season as the Lions started 2008 by reeling off eight wins.

TCNJ\’s senior Rich Gawlak (Plainsboro, NJ/West Windsor-Plainsboro-South) drove in the Lions\’ first two runs of the game with a two run double to deep right field and helped the team get off to a 2-0 lead. Senior right fielder Matt Barrett (Pennington, NJ/Hopewell Valley) went deep with his first career homerun, a solo shot to left center in the bottom of the third. TCNJ would tack on another run in the inning and lead 6-0 before Albright broke up freshman pitcher Connor Henderson\’s (Monmouth Junction, NJ/South Brunswick) shutout bid.

Henderson worked six inning and scattered five hits, yielding a run with three walks and four strikeouts as he made his first career start for the Lions and is now 1-0. Freshman reliever Sean Flanagan (Manalapan, NJ/Manalapan) made his first appearance on the year before senior Nick Amabile (Holmdel, NJ/Holmdel) entered the game in the seventh inning and struck out the side to help the Lions out of the jam after Albright tacked on three runs and sent TCNJ to the bottom of the seventh with a 7-4 lead. Albright sent the entire lineup to the plate in the inning before Amabile was able to end the threat.

In the top of the ninth, senior Kyle Wenrich (Reading, PA/Reading) came to bat with bases loaded and two outs and was struck out by TCNJ\’s junior Eric Gertie (Cinnaminson, NJ/Cinnaminson) to end the game and preserve the victory by the home squad. Gertie collected the save, his fourth of the year for the Lions.

Sophomore Derek Althouse (Manheim, PA/Manheim Central) took the loss after working four innings with four earned runs off seven hits with four walks and two strikeouts and is now 0-2. Sophomore Shane Stein (New Ringgold, PA/Blue Mountain) worked two innings for Albright, yielding one earned run off five hits with a walk and a strikeout.

Albright\’s senior Jordan Boyer (Hamburg, PA/Hamburg) drove in two runs and was 2-5 with a pair of runs, while Wenrich was 2-5 with a pair of runs scored.

On the game, Gawlak and freshman Matt Giermanski (Oradell, NJ/River Dell Regional) both drove in two runs, while rookie outfielder Anthony Palmiotto (Manchester, NJ/Manchester Township) added a 2-4 day at the plate with an RBI and junior shortstop Jeff Toth (Parlin, NJ/Sayreville) went 2-3 with three stolen bases in the game.

TCNJ returns to action on April 3 hosting Moravian College in a 3:30 p.m. non-league match-up, while Albright College is back in action on April 4 when they visit Widener University for a 3:30 p.m. contest.

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Rowan University Student-Athlete Day

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Gloucester City Board of Education Approves New Line of Clothing for Employees

By Nicole Maiese

NEWS Correspondent

The Gloucester City High School (GHS) marketing club \”Lions R Us\” presented its new shirt design for women faculty to the Board of Education during this month\’s meeting.

Club members pointed out that instead of the golf shirts from before, these shirts are blouses.

They are in four different colors – magenta, light blue, lavender, navy blue, and pale pink.

Lions R Us also presented new Gloucester City Lions Bags, which were approved by the School Board.

These bags can be used for vacations, and the heavy duty ones can be used as knapsacks. They are $8 each.

The GHS representative this month was sophomore Brandon Labbree, a member of lots of clubs who was honored to speak on behalf of the school.

Mary Ethel Costello School\’s representative was sixth grader Janice Lee.

She said she loves to play instruments, read, and sing. Also, she loves her school and all her teachers are nice.

Cold Springs School\’s representative was third grader Sarah Deeds, who said she absolutely loves her school and that all of the teachers and the principal are nice.

The School Board congratulated the GHS Lady Lions basketball team for an excellent season.

The Board approved field trips for all of the schools, as well as the field trips for the College Bound Program for Camden County College.

Members raised a concern about head lice within the schools.

All students\’ heads will be checked and those with lice will be sent home, not back to class.

The School Board is taking every precaution they can, and advises the students to do the same.

 

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Gloucester City Easter Event: Danaka Bennett winner of Easter Bonnett contest

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Gloucester City Easter Celebration: Emily Burt winner

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Stockton BASEBALL TEAM WINS POSTS 2-2 MARK IN FIRST FOUR NJAC GAMES

Media Release April 1, 2008

(March 27) The Stockton baseball team was overwhelmed 21-5 by Rowan in its NJAC opener. Scott Fisher (Toms River/TR East) went 2-5 including a two-run homer in the eighth inning and Joe Sacerdote (Deptford/Gloucester Catholic) was 1-3 with a double and a run scored for the Ospreys. Stockton committed five errors and allowed Rowan 23 hits in the game.

Rowan led 8-0 before Sacerdote scored Stockton\’s first run on a groundout in the bottom of the fourth inning. The Profs added a run in the fifth and then 11 more in the sixth and one in the top eighth for a 21-1 count. Fisher blasted a two-run homer in the bottom of the eighth frame and the Ospreys added a pair of runs in the ninth on a ground ball to shortstop by Matt Allen (Salem/Woodstown) and an RBI single by Mike Mitton (Lanoka Harbor/Lacey Twp.) for the 21-5 final score.

(March 29) Stockton split an NJAC home doubleheader against New Jersey City. The Ospreys dropped the opener 11-8 but rallied to win the nightcap 5-4 in 10 innings and earn a split of the twinbill. Scott Fisher went 5-9 with a double and five RBI in the two games.

New Jersey City scored five runs in the first inning and increased its lead to 7-1 after an inning-and-a-half in game one. Stockton rallied to within 7-6, but NJCU scored three runs in the top of the sixth for a 10-6 advantage, and the Gothic Knights prevailed 11-8. For Stockton, Joe Sacerdote went 3-5 with a double and Pat Goodwin (Mays Landing/Holy Spirit) was 2-3 including a solo home run in the first inning.

In the nightcap, Fisher ripped a walk-off RBI double in the tenth inning to complete Stockton\’s comeback for a 5-4 win. Fisher delivered Goodwin with the winning run after Goodwin led off with a walk and stole second base. Earlier, the Ospreys trailed 4-2 before tying the game 4-4 on a two-run single by Fisher in the bottom of the eighth. Fisher finished 3-4 with three RBI and Matt Allen was 2-5 at the plate for Stockton.

(March 30) Stockton scored in six of its nine offensive turns and defeated Ramapo 12-2 in an NJAC makeup game. Chris Discher (Cherry Hill/CH West) went 3-6 with three RBI and Joe Sacerdote was 2-5 with a home run and two RBI. Winning pitcher Scott Fisher hurled a complete game, allowing two runs on six hits with nine strikeouts.

Pat Goodwin and Craig Rich (Hamilton/Steinert) also stroked two hits apiece for the Ospreys, who totaled 14 safeties and capitalized on six Ramapo errors to score seven unearned runs in the game. Sacerdote blasted a two-run homer in the top of the first to spark Stockton to an early 3-0 lead. Matt Hunt (Marlton/St. Joseph) later stroked a two-run single in the sixth inning that increased the Stockton lead to 10-0, and the Ospreys cruised to the 12-2 victory.

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Brooklawn: Mayor and Council Oppose Governor Corzine’s Budget Cuts

\”We are doing everything right and then we are told we will not get any aid because we did so well last year,\”Brooklawn Mayor John Soubasis 

By Sara Martino

NEWS Correspondent

Mayor John Soubasis and members of Brooklawn Council recently went to Trenton with the intention of letting Governor John Corzine know about their objections to the reduction of, or non-existence of, state aid to the municipalities.

\”We are streamlining everything possible. Why are we getting penalized by losing state aid?\” Mayor Soubasis asked.

During last week\’s Council meeting, the mayor said more than $119,000 of state aid was lost this year.

Discrencenary aid dole outs are up to the governor.

\”Some municipalities receive it who shouldn\’t,\” the mayor said.

\”We are doing everything right and then we are told we will not get any aid because we did so well last year,\” Soubasis said.

\”We are making it work because we are operating on a shoestring. We are fiscally responsible. The town is run like a business. Our only funds and revenue is received from borough owned rental homes, property taxes, and writing tickets,\” the mayor said.

The municipal budget for FY2008 was introduced in the amount of $2,605,000.

If approved and if no state aid is forthcoming, the increase in taxes would be 6.5 cents or an increase of $52 per year on an average $80,000 property.

\”We will continue with our services. There will not be any cuts. Brooklawn is a clean, safe environment in which to live in and to work and raise a family. But, there is no magic, no Brooklawn money tree,\” the mayor said.

Council okayed a resolution opposing the governor\’s proposed state bud-get.

Borough Engineer Chuck Riebel said the NJ Historical Society gave the go-ahead to start the redevelopment project along the waterfront.

The process had been delayed because the Historical Society had to determine if any artifacts may be unearthed or destroyed and they did not want an endangered plant along the water to be lost.

\”Maybe we could start this summer or early fall to finish the gazebo, install an emergency boat access ramp, install lighting and establish the riverbank,\” Riebel said.

Other resolutions that were approved include; the increase of the temporary budget; adoption of a three year agreement with Camden County for CDBG grant for the improvement of properties; a borough home credit for heater contracts ($20); awarding of a contract with Winner Ford for a police vehicle; rental increase for borough homes; and an application for Open Space funding to purchase playground equipment.

Related: Brooklawn

 

 

 

 

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Face of Defense: Soldier Writes New Chapter in Family History

By Staff Sgt. J.B. Jaso III, USA
Special to American Forces Press Service

CAMP TAJI, Iraq, March 31, 2008 – As some 19-year-olds are going to college, hanging out with friends and beginning their adult life, one Multinational Division Baghdad soldier is beginning his adulthood in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

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Army Pvt. Derk Hayes, a Peru, Ind., native, who serves in Multinational Division Baghdad with Company C, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, receives a commander\’s coin for excellence March 9, 2008, from Army Lt. Col. Richard \”Flip\” Wilson, commander of 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, at Camp Taji, Iraq. Photo by Sgt. Brad Willeford, USA

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);
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Army Pvt. Derk Hayes, a Peru, Ind., native, is the youngest soldier in his unit, the 25th Infantry Division\’s Company C, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team.

From a very young age, the soldier\’s mother said, Hayes knew he wanted to be a soldier.

\”He always said that he was going into the Army,\” Candace Hayes said. She remembers him saying that when he was 6 or 7 years old. By following through on that dream, Hayes opens a new chapter in the line of his family\’s service.

Hayes\’ great-uncle, Virgil Hayes, served in the Army during World War II and passed away in 1995, when Hayes was 6. \”The last time I saw my Uncle Virgil, I told him I would join the Army,\” Hayes said.

His grandfathers also served. His paternal grandfather, Lyle Hayes, is a Pearl Harbor veteran who was awarded the Purple Heart for injuries he suffered in Japan\’s Dec. 7, 1941, attack on military forces in Hawaii. His maternal grandfather, \”Hoot\” Gibson, retired after serving 30 years in the Air Force.

After attending basic combat training at Fort Benning, Ga., Hayes was assigned to the 27th Infantry Regiment \”Wolfhounds\” at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, where he spent three weeks before deploying to Iraq.

\”I knew it was going to happen, but not that soon,\” Hayes said. \”Telling my mom was hard. I care about her more than anything.\”

His mom was at work when she received his text message and phone call notifying her that he was deploying in weeks.

\”I broke down and just started to cry,\” the soldier\’s mother said. \”I just prayed, prayed and prayed; I was so scared.\”

Almost four months into her son\’s deployment, his mother admits it\’s been tough for her. \”I\’m doing better and praying for him every day,\” she said. \”Some days I cry, but he reassures me that he\’s fine.\”

Hayes said he communicates with his mom as much as possible. Candace Hayes said she also talks with other military mothers in a social network. She is a member of the Web site www.milclub.net, which is a place for troops and their families to communicate and share their experiences. She communicates with other mothers who have children deployed, and said \”they are helping me get through this.\”

In his first four months in Iraq, Hayes has been on more than 30 patrols, where he helps to provide security for the brigade\’s embedded provincial reconstruction team as it travels throughout northwestern Baghdad\’s Taji neighborhood.

Hayes received his 25th Infantry Division combat patch March 9 at a ceremony here. The ceremony was a \”time to pause and recollect on the gains that we are making,\” said Army Lt. Col. Richard \”Flip\” Wilson, commander of 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment.

After presenting Hayes with his combat patch, Wilson asked the soldier to join him in front of the company formation, where he presented him with a commander\’s coin.

\”I felt great. Getting a coin inspired me to do better,\” Hayes said. \”I\’ve never seen (a coin) before, and I was really amazed. I\’m keeping it in my pocket below my heart.\”

Candace Hayes said the military has helped her son make the transition into adulthood.

\”The military changed him for the better,\” she said upon hearing that the battalion commander had recognized her son. \”I\’m really, really proud of him.\”

(Army Staff Sgt. J.B. Jaso III serves in Multinational Division Baghdad with the 25th Infantry Division\’s 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team.)

Related Sites:
Multinational Corps Iraq
\"Click Army Pvt. Derk Hayes, a Peru, Ind., native, is assigned to Multinational Division Baghdad with Company C, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division. Photo by Sgt. Brad Willeford, USA
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WHEN EAST MEETS WEST: Cherry Blossoms in Japan

 

Commentary by Hank F. Miller Jr. 

 

The first Week in APRIL is the best time to view cherry blossoms in Kitakyushu City, Japan. 

 

The Japanese has a special affection for the cherry tree with its transient blossom. 

Nothing excites Japanese people the way cherry blossoms do. Cherry blossoms are one thing that Japanese people are very proud of. 

 

They can\’t help but smile when someone mentions the magic word: o-hanami=cherry blossoms. The subject of cherry blossom viewing has long occupied an important place in Japanese fine arts and literature. 

 

Even today cherry blossom viewing is very popular among the Japanese. When cherry blossoms are at their best, groups of friends or business colleagues arrange picnics under the trees in popular viewing sites such as Ueno Park in Tokyo, and there are many famous viewing places throughout Japan. 

 

Here in Kitakyushu City there are very many places to view cherry blossoms, in fact about a five minute walk there is a park with beautiful cherry trees. Cherry blossoms under a clear, blue sky are most beautiful, and when seen at night by lights shining up through the blossoms they are most beautiful, they are really very enchanting. 

 

Some people enjoy their beauty in a quieter mood; while others spread straw mats under the trees on the ground and go on drinking, eating, dancing etc. they go on a singing spree till the wee hours. For many Japanese, cherry blossom viewing is merely a pretext for having a drink at an outdoor party long into the night. 

 

I have to admit that, under their spell, it is difficult not to see the radiant beauty of these lovely trees. But, as any Japanese will tell you, the reason any flower is so beautiful is because it is so temporary, so fleeting. 

Yearly we too, Keiko and I look forward to walking to the park near our home and picnic under the trees, it\’s so relaxing to be among the beautiful cherry trees. 

 

Warm Regards from Kitakyushu City, Japan  

Hank F. Miller Jr.  

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