Oh No…….It Was A Joke!!!!*

http://www.msnbc.msn.com

Then, an advertisement in Friday\’s Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News suggested flying from Philadelphia to Denver for $1.90 per pound — roundtrip fare based on total weight of passenger and passenger luggage. The Web site calls Derrie-Air the world\’s first carbon-neutral airline. It talks about how the airline will plant trees to absorb the carbon released by their planes.

The site also gives price quotes based on weight from Philadelphia to a variety of destinations, including $1.40 for every pound to Chicago, and $2.25-a-pound to Los Angeles.

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Pet Tips: Flea Collars Can Kill Canines

http://www.k9magazine.com

And in New Jersey, an entire litter of puppies, 6 weeks old, succumbed to what was later determined to be caused from a flea collar. Yet, not one of the puppies in the litter had ever worn such a device.

In each of the above true cases, the attending veterinarian reported that the deaths were needless and could have been prevented if a few simple facts have been known by the owners of those dogs. Moreover, veterinarians agree that literally 100% of the fatalities which do occur as a result of flea killing devices could be prevented.

Erica is celebrating her sixth birthday today, Saturday…..Close your eyes Erica make a wish…….and blow out the candles….

It is commonly known that heavy infestation of fleas and ticks contribute to death and disease. It is also known that more deaths and sicknesses are caused by fleas and ticks than are caused by flea killing devices. The sad part of it is that no deaths or severe illnesses should ever be attributed to flea collars.

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Hunting and Fishing: From One Generation to the Next

http://www.buckmasters.com 

By Joe Mayers

I want to dedicate this story to the man that got me into hunting – my dad, John Andrew Mayers Jr. My dad and I shared the passion of hunting and were always on the lookout for that next big buck. I lost him one week to the day after I harvested my deer. He only got to see the pictures of the buck from his hospital bed.

On Aug. 31, 2007, my 17-year-old son, Adam, and I went to \”our spot\” in northern Utah to build a blind and to scope out the area. We decided to build two blinds – one in a small grove of birch trees and the other in a small grove of pines. After we set up, we decided to stick around to watch and see if anything moved into the field.

The next day, we went back to our spot around 5:30 a.m. While we were waiting for the bucks and dosing off, my son quietly yelled, \”Dad! Dad!\”

I looked up and saw an outline of something in the field.

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2008 Carpenter Cup Classic Tournament Pairings and Draw

http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com

Each year more than 400 high school players from the tri-state area are able to showcase their skills in front of major league scouts and more than 220 college coaches.

The Carpenter Cup has been a catalyst for many players to receive scholarships or admission to some of the country\’s finest universities.

Additionally many Carpenter Cup participants have gone on to big league careers including Mike Piazza, Ben Davis, Mike Koplove, David Miller and Bobby Higginson.

Teams

Berks County Lehigh Valley
Inter Ac/Independents Mercer County
Burlington County Olympic/Colonial
Chester County Philadelphia Catholic
Delaware North Philadelphia Public League
Delaware South SOL American & Continental
Delaware Valley SOL National/BiCentennial
Jersey Shore Tri Cape

2008 Carpenter Cup Classic Tournament Pairings and Draw

 

Monday, June 9 University of Pennsylvania Baseball Stadium at Meiklejohn Stadium
Game # Time Teams
1 9 a.m. Berks County vs. Inter-Ac Independents
2 12:30 p.m. Chester County vs. Delaware County
3 4 p.m. Philadelphia Public vs. Mercer County
 
 
Tuesday, June 10 University of Pennsylvania Baseball Stadium at Meiklejohn Stadium
Game # Time Teams
4 9 a.m. Olympic Colonial vs. SOL National/BiCentennial
5 12:30 p.m. Lehigh Valley vs. Tri-Cape
6 4 p.m. Delaware South vs. Jersey Shore
 
 
Wednesday, June 11 University of Pennsylvania Baseball Stadium at Meiklejohn Stadium
Game # Time Teams
7 9 a.m. Burlington County vs. Philadelphia Catholic
8 12:30 p.m. Delaware North vs SOL American/Continental
 
 
Thursday, June 12 University of Pennsylvania Baseball Stadium at Meiklejohn Stadium
Game # Time Teams
9 9 a.m. Winner Game 2 vs Winner Game 1
10 12:30 p.m. Winner Game 4 vs Winner Game 3
 
 
Friday, June 13 University of Pennsylvania Baseball Stadium at Meiklejohn Stadium
Game # Time Teams
11 9 a.m. Winner Game 5 vs Winner Game 6
12 12:30 p.m. Winner Game 7 vs Winner Game 8
 
 
Saturday, June 14 RAIN DATE
 
 
Monday, June 16 RAIN DATE
 
 
Monday, June 23 Citizens Bank Park
Game # Time Teams
13 10 a.m. Winner Game 10 vs Winner Game 9
14 1:30 p.m. Winner Game 12 vs Winner Game 11
 
 
Tuesday, June 24 Citizens Bank Park
Game # Time Teams
15 10 a.m. Winner Game 14 vs Winner Game 13
 
 
Home team is in italics

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Larry James: The Mighty Burner Still Burns Bright

By Jack Heath
http://ramscrosscountry.blogspot.com


When F. Scott Fitzgerald said: \”There are no second acts in American lives\” he obviously had never met anyone like Larry James. Larry James has had a second and third act at least as good as his first– Olympic gold medal winner and world record holder.

Of course Larry is best known as a member of the 1968 United States Olympic 4×400 relay team which held the oldest American running record in track and field 2:56.16, and for winning the Olympic silver medal in the 400 that year. Many long time track and field fans recall Larry\’s winning 400 leg for Villanova in the 1968 Penn Relays– named one of the 10 greatest moments in Penn Relays history– where the \”Mighty Burner\” ran a 43 second leg beating a Baylor runner who ran \”only\” a 45 second leg. Long time Villanova coach Jack Pyrah called it the greatest race he had ever seen.
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Gloucester Catholic High School May Students of the Month

 

\”Students of the Month\” for May at Gloucester Catholic High School include, from left, sophomore Edward Friedrich, junior Ashley Krumenacker, freshman Dana Amorosi and senior Greg Zuccarelli. These students were selected by a faculty committee because of their outstanding leadership, scholarship, spirituality and service to the community.

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Economy Booms Again in Southern Baghdad Province

American Forces Press Service

BAGHDAD, June 6, 2008 – When Army Capt. Shawn Carbone first took a good look at the economy in Iraq\’s southern Baghdad province, he found it similar to his studies of America during the Great Depression of the 1930s.

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Hussen Jowd, a butcher in Arab Jabour, Iraq, serves a sandwich at his newly renovated butcher shop and food stand. Jowd received micro-grants that enabled him to increase his stock and expand his business. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Kevin Stabinsky

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);
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\”Most of the historically strong businesses were gone,\” said Carbone, economics team leader for the Baghdad 7 Embedded Provincial Reconstruction Team. \”The owners had left and packed up. The businesses were shut down, and there was mass unemployment across the board.\”

There were many reasons for the economic troubles of Iraqis in the area the 3rd Infantry Division\’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team took control of in June 2007. A lack of security forces had left a gap that al-Qaida in Iraq terrorists filled by using the area as a base.

Farms and businesses were damaged, and violence caused many to flee — some of whom have yet to return. Sectarian strife heated up following the 2005 elections, which left many in the area without a voice in government.

Basic needs, such as electricity and water, went largely unmet.

Carbone saw an opportunity to help turn things around. His training in economics at Niagara University, in his hometown of Niagara, N.Y., prepared him for the task of helping the citizens of southern Baghdad province.

\”It\’s rewarding, because it\’s an experiment in economics,\” Carbone said. \”This is from the ground up. It\’s much like our depression-era economics. I\’ve actually sent e-mails to my professors, asking them their opinions on some of these things and researched books on depression-era economics.\”

After security was established, the biggest obstacle to economic recovery, Carbone said, was the centralized nature of the economy in the past. Local industries such as a chicken hatchery, a poultry processing plant and a meat processing facility, for example, received inputs from and sold their goods to the Iraqi government at set prices.

\”Cooperation is the biggest thing,\” Carbone said. \”From where I sit, these businesses are complementary. But they never had a capitalist society, which is all about bringing down costs.\”

Now the government is in a state of transition and moving toward free trade.

\”Everyone is going through the change,\” Carbone said. \”Some of the government systems are not yet in place, but that\’s where we\’re heading.\”

In an effort to revive the local economy, the Baghdad 7 Embedded PRT worked in conjunction with 2nd Brigade Combat Team Civil Affairs, using money as their main tool. Armed with State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development funds, soldiers and civilians on the team looked for projects that would benefit the community as a whole.

Civil affairs soldiers used their battalion\’s bulk funds to stimulate individual small businesses through a series of $2,500 micro-grants. Though most of the projects focused on agriculture, which dominates the local economy and employs the largest percentage of people, other avenues were explored, as well.

Army Maj. Douglas Betts, commander of Company A, 415th Civil Affairs Battalion, said soldiers on the ground identified who could best use the grants.

\”The troop commanders and company commanders are all very smart guys,\” Betts said. \”They know what they\’re doing, and they know what\’s best for their areas.\”

Micro-grants were given to businesses ranging from chicken farms to Internet cafes. Most recently, a women\’s beauty parlor opened up in Arab Jabour, something that would have been impossible in that area until recently.

Betts said soldiers have found other creative ways to involve women in business. One example he gave was women\’s sewing cooperatives, which grew out of women\’s committees looking for ways to employ themselves and raise revenue for their causes.

\”Captain [Trista] Mustaine in the EPRT did a great job with sewing co-ops. That\’s a new one to me,\” Betts said.

\”One [co-op] that I know is basically made up of war widows,\” Betts said. \”These ladies want to do something for orphans and school children. They are actually making clothes and selling them. I thought that was pretty original.\”

The only condition that comes attached to the micro-grants is that business owners attend business training and meetings of their local business associations, Betts said. The formation of local business associations has been vital in helping citizens to help themselves. The focus now is in getting business owners weaned off of coalition forces funding and to get them working with their own government.

Basil Razzak, a bilingual, bicultural advisor with the Baghdad 7 Embedded PRT, said it took some adjusting for local farmers and businessmen to get used to the new economic model.

\”Up until now, it was all supervised by the government. Everybody belonged to the government,\” Razzak said. \”I remember at one business association meeting, the chairman said, [to Carbone], \’You are our boss.\’ He said, \’I\’m not your boss. I\’m here to help you and support you, but it\’s your organization and you can conduct your meeting as you like.\’\”

Razzak, a Canadian citizen who grew up in Baghdad and holds a degree in administration and economics from the University of Baghdad, said the capitalist spirit is slowly, but surely, taking hold here.

\”They are open to new ideas, Razzak said. \”They realize the era of state-owned business is gone. They are willing to work and cooperate.\”

Carbone said the stimulus coalition forces provided to the local economy already has produced unexpected results. As more businesses reopen and new ones appear, local entrepreneurs have taken it as a sign that it\’s OK to reopen their shops.

\”When they start to see these places opening with the help of coalition forces, some of the people have come back and opened up on their own,\” Carbone said. \”That\’s something we didn\’t expect.\”

One business owner who received significant coalition help has been encouraged to invest even further in his business. The owner of a meat processing plant in Arab Jabour received a grant to get his facility running again after shutting down operation in 2006. Prior to that, the factory employed more than 90 people.

He noted that one factory owner who received a grant then pitched in $200,000 of his own money. \”The money is out there,\” Carbone said.

\”The biggest thing was that when the owner came back to the area and saw that the security situation had changed progressively, he was more willing to reinvest and start over,\” he said.

Betts said he sees signs that businesses have returned to stay in the area.

\”I\’ve noticed it in the short time that I\’ve been here,\” Betts said. \”When we first went out, there were some shops, but there weren\’t that many. But I\’ve noticed in the past several months, in Sayafiyah especially, a lot more of those businesses. They look better, and they\’re repainted. People are repairing their shops and restocking supplies.\”

Betts said the greatest benefit of the renewed prosperity was a population that was employed and able to meet their needs.

\”That\’s the key to security. People that are able to take care of themselves and their families are not out there planting bombs and killing people for money,\” Betts said. \”I want to see a strong economy, because that\’s the cornerstone of stability.\”

(From a Multinational Corps Iraq news release.)

Related Sites:
Multinational Corps Iraq
Multinational Force Iraq
\"Click Bruce Bailey, of the Baghdad 7 Embedded Provincial Reconstruction Team, administers a micro-grant to a local metal fabricator in Hawr Rajab, Iraq, Nov. 14, 2007. In addition to growing his business, the fabricator received an order to build an aluminum table for Hussen Jowd, an Arab Jabour butcher, who also received a micro-grant. U.S. Army photo by Jason Stadel
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Rowan\’s Kulik expected to be selected in this year\’s Major League Draft

Rowan University senior left hander Ryan Kulik is expected to be selected in this year\’s Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft. The first five rounds of the draft are on Thursday, June 5 starting at 2 p.m. and it continues on Friday, June 6 beginning at 11 a.m.

A left handed pitcher, Kulik resides in Marlton. He graduated from Cherokee High School.

Awards/Accomplishments

  • 2008 Ranked #1 in Division III in strikeouts (144) and strikeouts per nine innings (13.77)
  • 2008 New Jersey Athletic Conference (NJAC) Male Athlete of the Year
  • 2008 NJAC Pitcher of the Year
  • 2008 New Jersey Collegiate Baseball Association (NJCBA) Division II/III Pitcher of the Year
  • 2008 American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) All-America first team
  • 2008 ABCA Mid-Atlantic All-Region first team
  • 2008 NJCBA All-State first team
  • 2008 NJAC All-Conference first team
  • 2008 NCAA All-Tournament Team
  • 2008 NJAC Pitcher of the Week five times
  • 2008 NJCBA Pitcher of the Week three times
  • 2008 National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA) Pitcher of the Week once
  • 2007 NJCBA All-State third team
  • 2006 NJAC Pitcher of the Year
  • 2006 NJAC All-Conference first team
  • 2006 American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) Mid-Atlantic All-Region second team
  • 2006 NCAA Regional All-Tournament team
  • 2006 Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Metro All-Star team
  • 2006 NJCBA All-State second team
  • 2005 NJAC Rookie Pitcher of the Week three times

Rowan Records

  • Career strikeouts leader (337)
  • Career innings pitched (330.0)
  • Tied for 1st in career games started (49)
  • Strikeouts in a season (144)
  • Tied for 1st in strikeouts in a game (15)
  • Strikeouts per nine innings in a season (13.77)

     

Career Statistics

Year ERA W-L App GS CG SHO/CBO SV IP H R ER BB SO

2005…. 3.24 9-3 15 13 4 1/0 0 91.2 92 34 33 13 58

2006…. 3.06 7-3 12 12 3 1/0 0 79.1 78 45 27 19 58

2007…. 3.48 3-2 12 10 0 0/0 0 64.2 57 38 25 20 77

2008…. 1.72 10-2 14 14 2 2/1 0 94.1 61 34 18 24 144

TOTAL… 2.81 29-10 53 49 9 4/1 0 330.0 288 151 103 76 337 

 

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TCNJ’S JESSICA BONELLI AND STEPHANIE HERRICK HONORED FOR ACADEMIC AND ATHLETIC SUCCESS

June 5

Ewing, NJ… Two runners from The College of New Jersey were cited for their academic and athletic prowess as senior Jessica Bonelli (Sewell, NJ/Gloucester Catholic) and junior Stephanie Herrick (Wayne, NJ/Wayne Valley) each earned a spot on CoSIDA’s ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District Women’s Track & Field/Cross Country College Division First Team.

By earning a spot on the first team, both student-athletes will move on to the national ballot and are candidates for the National College Division Academic All-America Team, which will be announced on June 25.

Bonelli, a marketing major with a grade-point-average of 3.48, capped her standout career with the Lions as a 10-time All-American. She garnered two of those citations last month at the 2008 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships placing third in the 400 meters with a season-best time of 55.61 seconds and was part of the fourth-place 4×400 relay team. She is a three-time All-American in the 400.

At the 2008 New Jersey Athletic Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships, Bonelli won the 400 meters and was part of the winning 4×100 relay.

In 2007, she was cited as the NJAC Indoor Most Outstanding Track Athlete winning 200, 400 and 4×200 relay team and then added that same honor during the outdoor season winning 200, 400 and being part of the 4×100 relay. Bonelli captured that same award in the 2006 NJAC Outdoor Championship and was previously a member of TCNJ’s 2005 National Champion 4×100 and 4×400 (outdoor) and 4×400 (indoor) relay teams. The senior is a four-time TCNJ Scholar-Athlete and three-time NJAC All-Academic Honorable Mention selection.

Herrick, who boasts a 3.50 GPA in communications, started her season running cross country and placed second overall at the 2007 NJAC Championships as the Lions garnered the team title. She was also an All-NJAC First Team honoree and then competed at the NCAA Atlantic Region Championships and helped the Lions earn an at-large bid to the 2007 NCAA Cross Country Championships.

In track, she was selected as the 2008 United States Track & Field Cross Country Coaches Association Division III Track Athlete of the Year and the Atlantic Region Women’s Track Athlete of the Year. She was tabbed as the 2008 NJAC Indoor Most Outstanding Female Athlete after winning the 800 meters and the mile, while setting a new conference record in the latter event. Herrick then went on to place seventh at the NCAA indoor championships in the 800.

In the spring, Herrick brought her All-American totals to seven picking up two more at the 2008 NCAA Outdoor Championships. She finished second in the 800 with a school-record time of 2:08.42 and was also part of the 4×400 relay team that placed fourth overall. At the NJAC Outdoor Championships, she won the 800 meters and the 1,500 for the second straight year. She is a three-time TCNJ Scholar-Athlete and two-time NJAC All-Academic Honorable Mention selection.

Both runners helped the Lions place 13th at the 2008 NCAA Outdoor Championships as well as winning both the indoor and outdoor NJAC Championships.

To be nominated, the student-athlete must be a starter or important reserve with at least a 3.20 cumulative grade point average (on a 4.0 scale) for his/her career. No athlete is eligible until he/she has reached sophomore athletic and academic standing at his/her current institution (thus, true freshmen, red-shirt freshmen and ineligible transfers are not eligible). In the cases of transfers, graduate students and junior college graduates, the athlete must have completed one full academic year at the nominating institution to be eligible.

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The New Gloucester Catholic?

http://ramscrosscountry.blogspot.com

By Jack Heath

The Diocese of Camden has plans to build a new 1,200 to 1,500 hundred student high school in Harrison, NJ. The school which could possibly replace the current Gloucester Catholic in Gloucester, NJ would have an athletic complex and a 500-600 space parking lot. The proposed new school would serve the rapidly growing population of Gloucester and Cumberland Counties and would still be only minutes away from Camden County students. There hasn\’t been a Diocesan high school built in over 40 years ( Paul VI was built in 1965). The Diocese is currently studying the feasibility of the new school and will have a final recommendation early this summer. As part of the study the Diocese has recently met with the State Department of Environmental Protection to discuss sewer capacity for the proposed school after receiving Harrison Township\’s approval.
The school would be located on Route 77 (pictured above).

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