Obit Almajean Groatman, Gloucester City

(nee Clark), age 76 of Gloucester City, passed away on Wednesday, March 14, 2007.
Mrs. Groatman was born in Camden and had been a long time resident of Gloucester City, New Jersey. Almajean was a caring person who would do anything for anyone, including our four legged friends. She enjoyed gardening and walking for fitness. She was a creative person who enjoyed arranging flowers and applied her talents at times at the Brooklawn Florist.
She is survived by her husband, Thomas B. Groatman Sr., two sons, Thomas B. Jr. of Brooklawn and Hunter W. of Plano, Texas. She had two grandchildren, Ian of Glouc-ester City and Hilary of Plano,Texas and a sister Dolores Sayers of Mantua.
Relatives & friends may visit with the family 10am to 12 Noon Thursday, March 22, 2007 at SMITH FUNERAL HOME 47 Main St. Mantua where a funeral service will be held at 12 Noon. Interment will be in Woodbury Memorial Park, W. Deptford, NJ.
Memories and condolences may be shared at:
www.smithfhmantua.com

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You\’ve Earned It : Lifetime \”Gaijin \” Status !

 WHEN EAST MEETS WEST

WEAST MEETS WEST 

Commentary By Hank F. Miller Jr.

Hank is a former resident of Gloucester City

 

After an extended stay in Japan, does one ever cease to regard oneself as a \”gaijin\” ( foreigner)?

After toting the label around with us for years, when we do finally return home we may fondly refer to our time in Japan as \”the gaijin years.\”I believe that in the same way you become an expatriate by living in Japan, simply leaving Japan you exchange your expatriate status for ex-gaijin status.

 

When I first came to Japan, I was happy with the status of \”gaikokujin\” and, like many naive foreigners before me, wanted only one thing: to become Japanese ! I wanted to become what I call a \”naikokujin.\”

I shunned the bed for a futon, chose tatamimat style apartment over one with chairs and furniture, and vowed to sit in the \”seiza\” position no matter how blue I turned. I would live only Japanese style ! Now I know why \”o-baa-chans\” (old Ladies)

Are so hunched over: This life style offers no back support.

When I become the age of these o-baa-chans, however , I\’ll probably be petrified in the seiza position.

Someone will have to carry me around on a \”zabuton\” cushion.

No wonder so many people turn to asceticism when they get older– what else can one do from that position?

 

Although I was still a gaijin, my Japanese \”naijin\” friends seemed more than happy to help me make my miraculous transformation. I envisioned before and after photos:

Before-rude gaijin; after-polite, cultured, self-effacing naijin with brownish blond hair.Here is some of the more absurd advice the naijins gave me, which unfortunately I followed:

 

Making my \”inkan in Japanese. Most foreigners have their own personal stamps made in katakana, reflecting their gaijinness, my naijin co-workers were eager to translate my name into kanji characters. After much deliberation, they all agreed on a kanji combination they felt was \”intelligent and scientific.\” Notice they did not say beautiful, comprehensible or having a lucky number of strokes, the usual formula for deciding on name in kinji.

The first thing that made me suspect the new spelling of my name was that it had three kanji instead of the normal two.

To this day, when Japanese see my stamp, they are completely baffled and cannot even begin to read it.

After so many embarrassing encounters with my uniquely stamped legal documents at the bank and post office, I changed my inkin to a gaijin friendly katakana one with the help of my wife Keiko, who wasn\’t around when my naijin were helping create this inkin.

 

Spearing like Japanese royalty. A naijin friend of mine,while teaching me Japanese, taught me to say \”go-kigenyo\” instead of \”konnichi WA\” for hello.\’ This, she said, was the Japanese used by the royal family, and if I used it I would be highly regarded among regular naijin and that this would prove that I was upper class, what a bunch of bunk that was !

I myself was not really up for the Imperial image, but she insisted it was the best way for me to speak. I yielded, however,people greeting me with extra large smiles to cover up their gigles, or worse, a cock of the head as the naijin wondered why the gaijin was using this stiff Japanese out of context.

Demoting myself to student status. At the engineering company I worked at, I was primed for najinness by 50-year-old engineers who spoke to me in extremely polite Japanese..

They told me to always bow and say \”shitsuri shimasu\” when entering the office and when leaving, to bow again and back out of the room while saying \”shitsurei shimashita.\” I followed this procedure every morning when entering the company administration office to stamp my incomprehensible inkin into the employee book while giving a cheery \”Go-kigen yo !\” yell, to the office staff.

 

It was two years before I realized the only junior staff entered and exited the room in this manner and not senior staff. Needless to say, I never became naijin and began to realize it wasn\’t such a bad thing to be a gaijin after all. As a matter of fact I think that we should proudly regard ourselves as \”lifetime gaijin.

 

 

 

Warm Regards From Kitakyushu City , Japan

 

Hank F Miller JR.

 

 

 

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Interstate 295 and WHP to be upgraded

BELLMAWR-A $3 million project to upgrade parts of Interstate 295 and the White Horse Pike to begin Monday, March 19, state officials said Thursday.

Among other changes to 295 in Bellmawr, workers will add skid-resistant paving to improve safety during wet weather, said the state Department of Transportation. They also are to resurface and stripe the White Horse Pike in Lindenwold and Clementon.

The four-part project is to continue until at least May 30

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Gloucester City Cruised to a 50-31 victory over New Egypt

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Obit Aaron T. Boyer, of Bellmawr

BOYER, AARON T., JR. \’JR\’
Of Bellmawr, NJ, age 57, on March 15, 2007. Born in Phila., he grew up in Deptford and lived in Williamstown for 25 years before moving to Bellmawr 7 years ago.
Aaron was a union truck driver and a DJ for many years. He was an Army veteran. He was also an avid fisherman.
Devoted father of Heather Kirsch and her husband Marty of Williamstown. Beloved fiancé of Vicki Clark of Bellmawr. Loving son of Irene Boyer of Deptford and the late Aaron T. Boyer, Sr. Dear brother of Irene Clark of Deptford, Andy Taylor of Deptford, Thomas Boyer and Allison Boyer of Runnemede. Loving grandfather of John Martin, Alex, Gabrielle and Nicholas Kirsch. Dear uncle of Nicole Clark and Brianne Taylor.
Relatives and friends are invited to his viewing on Monday from 6:00 – 8:00 PM at the FARNELLI FUNERAL HOME, 504 N. Main Street, Williamstown, where a service will follow at 8:00 PM. Cremation will be held privately.In lieu of flowers contributions may be made to the Children\’s Hospital Foundation, PO Box 7790, Phila., PA 19101-7790 for cardiac research. To sign the guest book online, please visit www.farnellifuneralhome.com

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Letters/PROJECT BOTTLED WATER

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New Jersey NEWS Round-Up Friday, March 16

by: DBK

reprinted with permission of Blue Jersey

Hello, New Jersey. My name is DBK and I\’ll be your server this morning. Can I start you off with a cup of coffee?

  • We open with a weather rap. After a couple of cloudy but warm days, winter returned to shake a little dandruff on the Garden State. Please be careful out there and if you must drive today, use a car or truck (the good jokes never get old). A list of school closings and delayed openings can be found here at NJ 101.5. When I was a kid it took a blizzard to close a school. And yes, I really did walk 3 miles each way to School 26 in Paterson. Anyone else out there who graduated from School 26 in 1972?
  • The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is at odds with the Department of Homeland Security over a program involving new technologies to secure cargo entering and leaving the ports. Speaking for the PA, Marc La Vorgna said:

    It appears (the program has) fallen into a bureaucratic black hole. With all the attention that is finally being paid to port security, it\’s really unconscionable this program isn\’t being followed up on. We\’ve reached out to (DHS) repeatedly and we\’ve gotten no answer.

    DHS representative Russ Knocke says that isn\’t true and that the program is active, with a meeting scheduled for March 29 in DC. The PA claims that the March 29 meeting is news to them, but now that they have heard of it, they\’ll attend. Sounds like someone needs a lesson in using Outlook, but it isn\’t clear who.

  • Governor Corzine signed three property tax relief measures into law yesterday, including a bill creating an Office of State Comptroller. He says he\’ll sign the final portion of the property tax relief legislation soon. The position of comptroller is an appointed rather than an elected position in the bill and is a weakened version of the original. In addition, the governor signed a weakened version of the bill that would have consolidated school districts. What do you think? Is this half a loaf?
  • Joseph M. McNulty and Sam K. John, who own the Friendly Maintenance Group, pled guilty to giving more than $60,000 in bribes to William Walker, the director of New Brunswick\’s neighborhood preservation program, and to paying $500 every four to six weeks to Richard P. Kaplan, New Brunswick\’s rehabilitation program construction inspector. Their company received over $1.3 million in rehabilitation contracts with the city. The two business owners claim that it was the only way they could get work for the company because of pay-to-play and that they delivered good services at a fair price.
  • The State Senate passed two anti-corruption bills yesterday by a vote of 37-0. The bills punish public officials who take bribes.
  • The Oceanport Borough Council voted 4-2 to introduce its 2007 municipal budget Thursday night. The two Democrats on the council opposed the budget, which increases the municipal tax rate. Their main objection is to the appropriation of funding for a borough administrator.
  • The State Senate passed laws yesterday that prohibit convicted sex offenders from using the Internet and on-line dating services. Similar measures have been passed in Florida and Nevada.
  • Can I bring you anything else? Thanks for stopping by and please come again when you have more time and money.

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    Camden City Fire Dept. Captains get $1.9 million in OT

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    St. Patrick Day Facts

    We all know that when three-leaf clovers come out, it\’s St. Patrick\’s Day. This Irish holiday is always celebrated on March 17th, which is the day that Saint Patrick died. He was a missionary way back in the 4th century who converted the Irish to Christianity.


    St. Patrick\’s Day – The History

    Saint Patrick was born around 385 AD in the United Kingdom. His real name is believed to be Maewyn Succat (he took on Patrick, or Patricus, after he became a priest). When he was 16, he was kidnapped by a group of Irish raiders and sold into slavery in Ireland. During his six-year captivity as a shepherd, he began to have religious visions and found strength in his faith. He finally escaped to France and became a priest – and later a bishop. When he was about 60 years old, Saint Patrick returned to Ireland to spread the Christian word. He used the shamrock, which resembles a three-leafed clover, as a metaphor to explain the Christian concept of God (Father, Son and Holy Spirit).

    St. Patrick\’s Day – An Irish Holiday?

    The first St. Patrick\’s Day parade didn\’t take place in Ireland, but actually in New York City on March 17, 1762. Now, over 100 US cities have St. Patrick\’s Day parades. New York should be called the Big Shamrock instead of the Big Apple because their parade usually puts the rest of them to shame.

    St. Patrick\’s Day – Did U Know?

    Green is associated with St. Patrick\’s Day because it is the color of spring, Ireland and the shamrock.

    Leprechauns are also associated with St. Patrick\’s Day, although the only reason they are is because they\’re Irish. Leprechauns are usually mean little creatures – with the exception of the Lucky Charms guy.

    People give Saint Patrick credit for chasing all the snakes out of Ireland. The truth is that snakes are not indigenous to Ireland.

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    Obit Lulu H. Gehringer of Audubon

    GEHRINGER, LULU H.
    (Nee Cunliffe) of Audubon, NJ, died on March 15, 2007 at the age of 88 yrs. Homemaker – Predeceased by loving husband Clarence (Jerry), dear companion Kermit Kroschel, also sisters Ellen Hobbs and Doris Wheatley. Lu was born in Audubon in 1918 and lived there all here life except for brief periods at Avalon, NJ and Fort Monroe, VA. She is survived by her brother Edward Cunliffe; three dear children, Carolyn Shontz, Robert Gehringer, Mark Gehringer; five grandchildren, Julie, Marty, Kathy, Gabbi, Luke; along with two great grandchildren, James and Kaitlynn.
    Lu was a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church and former member of Logan Memorial Presbyterian Church. Lu was active in church and also a den mother for cub scouts in Audubon.
    Lu graduated from Middle Township High School, Cape May Court House and before marriage was employed at Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company Philadelphia. An enthusiastic amateur collector of fossils and shells and member of several related organizations, she also enjoyed gardening and photography.
    A Memorial Service will be held Monday 7PM at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 324 S. White Horse Pike, Audubon NJ. Friends and Relatives are invited to attend her visitation Tuesday morning 9AM-11AM at HENRY FUNERAL HOME, 152 W. Atlantic Ave., Audubon, NJ 08106. In lieu of flowers, contributions in her memory may be sent to: H.O.P.E. – Helping Other People Evolve 1763 Route 70 East Cherry Hill, NJ 08003.

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