ONCE A RAM, ALWAYS A RAM! Dave Jensen GCHS Alumnus Class of \’81 | cnbnews.net

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Main Stream Media Reports on Gloucester City\’s Fishing Ban at Freedom Pier

Kevin Riordan: Anglers up in arms over the fishing spot that got away

(September 23, 2012)Folks are not free to fish on Freedom Pier in Gloucester City, and the irony isn\’t lost on Dan Reader.

\”For being a river town, we don\’t have much access to the river,\” says Reader, 53, who customizes cars for a living and used to landscape vacant lots around town for free.

He has publicly \”resigned\” from his volunteer activities to protest the city\’s move to prohibit fishing from a spot some anglers say is among the best this stretch of the Delaware River offers.

Says writer and self-described \”die-hard fisherman\” Ken Doyle: \”It\’s very unfair that we can\’t fish because of a few\” troublemakers.

Intended to reduce vandalism and the theft of metal parts from light fixtures on the pier, the ban is actually \”a power trip,\” says Bill Cleary. The respected Gloucester journalist and the voice of the lively Cleary\’s Notebook website wonders why city officials \”are making such a big fuss\” about fishing at Freedom Pier.

READ via www.philly.com

BY KEVIN RIORDAN

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\"\"CNBNews Weekly Poll: Should Fishing Be Banned at Freedom Pier?
\"\"Attention Shad, Striped Bass, and River Herring Anglers
\"\"Gloucester City Mayor and Council Ban Fishing at Freedom; Signs Are Up Already Even Though the Public Hearing Hasn\’t Been Held!
\"\"NO FISHING SIGNS DIDN\’T STOP VANDALS FROM STRIKING OVER THE WEEKEND! | cnbnews.net

\"Enhanced

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TCNJ Take 1st Place in the Osprey Open

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Passenger Dies In Rt 42 Car Crash

GLOUCESTER TWP. — The female passenger who died in a one-vehicle car crash Saturday night on Route 42 near the Atlantic City Expressway has been identified by police as 29-year-old Itay Massaquoi.

 According to New Jersey State Police, Massaquoi of Williamstown was killed after the vehicle she was in ran off the road and slammed into a tree. The driver 30-year-old Monte Brown of Williamstown and another passenger Anita Saunders, 46, of Clayton were also injured in the crash.

Police said Brown was charged at the scene with driving under the influence.

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White House Honors Olympic Athletes includes Video | cnbnews.net

White House Press Release September 21, 2012

Every White House has the privilege of hosting some world class athletes. Every President gets an opportunity to welcome Super Bowl champions, winners of the NBA Finals, and other professional and collegiate athletes at the top of their games.

But every once in a while, the White House hosts a group of champions who represent us all — Team USA.

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Mitt Romney vs. Barack Obama: A look at five electoral vote projections – Arlington Conservative | Examiner.com

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Hooked on Fishing-Not on Drugs Program

 Will Provide School Children with Access to Fishing and Outdoor Activities


 

Friday, September 21, 2012 Trenton, NJ – Encouraging young New Jerseyans to avoid the dangers of drug use by engaging in positive, safe and life-building group activities, Governor Chris Christie signed A-638, creating the \”Hooked on Fishing-Not on Drugs\” Program across the state. The program will provide students with access to extracurricular outlets that utilize New Jersey’s incredible outdoor recreational assets. Established within the Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) Division of Fish and Wildlife, the statewide implementation of the \”Hooked on Fishing-Not on Drugs\” Program will also be funded through an appropriation of $200,000 from the Drug Enforcement and Demand Reduction Fund and provide students with the opportunity to embrace positive life skills as an alternative to the pitfalls of drug abuse.

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Five First-Half Goals Power Men’s Soccer Past Alfred

HOBOKEN, N.J. (September 22, 2012) – The Stevens Institute of Technology men’s soccer team dominated Alfred University on Saturday afternoon and racked up five goals in the opening period while cruising to a 5-0 victory. Senior Victor Daza (North Plainfield, N.J.) scored two and added an assist to lead the attack for the Ducks.

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REMEMBERING WHY OUR TIME, AND OUR LIVES, MATTER

September 21, 2012

ARCHBISHOP CHAPUT\’S WEEKLY COLUMN:

Writing in about the year 116, the pagan historian Tacitus described a fringe group of religious blasphemers who lived in Rome under the emperor Nero. They refused to honor the gods. They engaged in \”superstitious abominations\” and worshiped a crucified criminal. They were blamed for Rome\’s great fire in A.D. 64, and as a result, they were hunted down and put to death.

Three hundred years later, they were the official religion of the Roman state.

Numbers can be misleading. They\’re never the best way to measure the health of the Christian faith. The Church in Rome\’s catacombs was small. But she was stronger than any of her critics or persecutors. And that\’s as true today as it was in the time of Tacitus. A century ago, sub-Saharan Africa had fewer than 2 million Christians. Today it has more than 130 million. That\’s a growth rate of nearly 7,000 percent. We live in a supposedly \”post-Christian\” age. But Christianity is alive and growing rapidly across the entire Southern Hemisphere – arguably faster than any other religion in the world, including Islam.

That\’s the good news. Of course, there\’s another side to history.

In A.D. 600, the Mediterranean world had hundreds of thriving Christian communities. Around that time, two Greek monks, John Moschos and Sophronius, began a pilgrimage. They went to Egypt, Jerusalem and around the great Middle East heartland of Christianity. They wrote a journal called The Spiritual Meadow. A best seller in its day, and still a Christian classic, it was a kind of spiritual travelogue — a record of the wisdom, visions and stories from the historic center of the Christian faith.

John Moschos died in the year 619, unaware of an obscure Arab holy man named Mohammed. Within a hundred years, Muslim armies had overrun all of the Middle East, North Africa and most of Spain. Today, St Augustine\’s diocese of Hippo is a Muslim town in Algeria. In Iraq, Saddam Hussein\’s hometown of Tikrit was once a center of Christian scholarship. In the birthplace of Christianity, after centuries under Islam, Christian minorities face discrimination and frequent violence. They barely manage to survive.

Here\’s my point. Jesus said the gates of hell would never prevail against his Church, and his word is good. But he didn\’t promise anything about our local real estate and institutions. The Canadian scholar Douglas Farrow once wrote that \”St. Peter will have his successors until the Lord comes, but his successors may not always have St. Peter\’s.\” In other words, God is faithful — but he makes no guarantees about infrastructure or the status quo or even our next breath.

Human beings make history, not the other way around. This is why each of our lives matters. God is love; a God of life and deliverance and joy. He made us to be happy with him; to be loved by him; and to bring others to know his love. That\’s the glory of being alive. That\’s the grandeur of being a disciple of Jesus Christ.

The task of preaching and teaching, growing and living the Catholic faith in our time, in this country, belongs to you and me. No one else can do it. The future depends on God, but he builds it with the living stones we give him by the example of our lives.

So today, tomorrow, and in the coming Year of Faith — which begins in just a few weeks — we need to remember the words of the Epistle of James: \”Be doers of [God\’s] word and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves\” (Jas 1:22).

We live for the glory of God, and we prove it in the love we show to each other.

 

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A Message from State Senator Barbara Bruno, 18th Legislative District | cnbnews.net

 

As the days get shorter and the nights get cooler, our work in Trenton begins to pick up once again. 

 

Governor Needs to be Straight with NJ After Rise in Unemployment and S&P Downgrade


Unfortunately, yesterday we saw the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics announce that New Jersey’s unemployment rate rose in August for the fifth month in a row. The 9.9 percent jobless rate is the highest in 35 years, topping the previous 35-year high of 9.8 percent set in July. Meanwhile, the U.S. unemployment rate dropped again in August from 8.2 percent to 8.1 percent, showing that New Jersey’s recovery continues to lag behind the nation as a whole.

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