WHEN EAST MEETS WEST/ The Times, There has been a change

   Commentary By Hank F. Miller Jr. 

 

Thumbing through some of my faded old photographs of my early days abroad here in Japan, I find a mustachioed face with hair almost down to my shoulders and water-clear eyes, eyes perhaps indicative of a vast space behind My face. Thirty years almost thirty years later the mustache is still here but the hair is just a memory it\’s still here but shorter and thinner. 

 

Only the wide eyes-and perhaps that empty space-remain today. 

But those eyes have seen a lot in the past three decades. The Japanese of now is not the Japan of then. Here are just a few of the ways it has changed. 

 

Inhale and you can almost smell it -the heady fragrance of money. 

Japan was not quite a poor sister in the mid 1970s, but since that time she\’s been tossing yen around like confetti. Forget those damp years after the burst of the bubble-years of overall gloom, business foreclosures and micro fractions holloweening as interest rates. Yet years when Japanese cash registers still ring with respectable vibrato.

 

Now you see it everywhere-in architecture, fashion, and on the streets of pearly neon. Japan was once working class, but not anymore. Shaky economy and sky-high prices be damned, the Japan of today is flat-out rich, rich, rich to say the least! 

 

\”But no place beats the old\’ USA!\”Says an American buddy, basking with pride up on his quiet prairie town of pot-holed roads shopping opportunities starting and stopping with Wal-Mart. Yes, the folks back home are as fine as people anywhere, but in 30 years time Japan has upped the ante affluence-wise. Increasingly wealthy and increasingly cosmopolitan-I also find that the Japanese of today are simply increasing. Not in numbers, but in size. At 5\’8,\”(173 cm) it used to be that I could hang on to a subway strap and gaze above every head the entire length of the car. Now I\’m lucky if I can see as far as five feet. But it\’s not just height that\’s evolved here. 

 

\”Hey, look! A fat guy!\” 

A foreign friend once elbowed me this while nodding to a man on the street. In the 1970s, obesity here was rare enough to raise eyebrows. 

Maybe it still is, as most Western counterparts. Yet, sumo-size is not exception it once was. With plump bellies and chubby cheeks both up and down-today\’s Japanese carry much more meat than their earlier models. 

For proof, check out seating arrangements still around from yesteryear, like in the peanut gallery of Japanese Diet, a spot where visitor used to 

\”slide\” right in. Now the only workable verbs are \”squeeze\” and \”cram.\” 

Junk food, fast food, snacks food-through the years the Japanese have adopted the worst eating habits of the West. But as the West wises up to those wicked dietary ways, so do the Japanese, after all we now have Billy\’s Boot Camp CDs, plastered all over in TV commercials, and they are selling like hot cakes, what a clever guy Billy is! 

 

A 1998 cover article of The East magazine predicted the end of \”smokers\’ paradise\” in Japan. And paradise it was. The offices of the engineering company where I worked in 1977 and the faculty room of the high school where I started teaching in 1983 boasted only one nonsmoker-me. Yet, to me perhaps the largest change is on people\’s faces. 

I think the Japanese of today show much more emotion than those of 30 years ago. 

 

Here\’s a sample\”victory\”interview from TV shows of the \’70s: 

Emcee: Well, Taro that was quite a game you played. Your winnings include 300 tons of gold, plus eternal life. Tell us how do you feel? Taro 🙁 Head down, feet shuffling, and voice barely audible) Oh, I suppose I\’m pleased. Sports heroes, game show champs, contest winners-it was all the same. People were humble. Too humble. Unnaturally humble. As if to be happy was a crime. Contrast that with the first-pumping \”guts poses \”of modern athletes or Olympic swimmer Kosuke Kitajima\’s gold medal whoop at the games in Athens.  

 

Thirty years ago such reactions would have been picked apart by the Japanese press as sheer embarrassments. But today it\’s really OK, with the resulting release of feelings being somehow much healthier. Now it\’s not so unusual to see Japanese hug each other in public too. Sometimes even when they\’re sober. A wealthier, heavier and happier Japan. That\’s 30 years of observations in a nutshell. Of course, some things haven\’t changed at all-a topic for some another time maybe, OK? 

 

Warm Regards From Kitakyushu City ,Japan  

 

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Anna Gellura, 77, of Mt. Ephraim a member of the sons of Itlaly

GELLURA, ANNA
(Nee Dalanni). On August 12, 2007. Age 77. Of Mt. Ephraim, NJ.
Beloved wife of the late Angelo C. \’Sonny\’. Devoted mother of Deborah (George) Henderson of Merchantville, NJ,Thomas R. (Earline) Gellura of Gloucester. Loving grandmother of Richard (Elizabeth), and Lori. Dear sister of Rose Hall of St. Louis, andthe late Otti, William, Domonic, and recently deceased Helen. Also many nieces & nephews.
Mrs. Gellura was a longtime member of the Sons of Italy, Lodge #2362, Mt Ephraim.
Relatives and friends are kindly invited to attend her Visitation Wednesdy evening 7-9pm at the
MAHAFFEY-MILANO
FUNERAL HOME,11 E. Kings Hwy,Mt. Ephraim, NJ
856-931-1628
There will be a celebration of Life Memorial Mass, Thurs. 10am at Sacred Heart Church, Kings Hwy, Mt. Ephraim, NJ. Interment of Cremains will be New St. Mary\’s Cemetery, Bellmawr, NJ. Family request In Lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to The American Heart Assoc., 1 Union St., Suite 301, Robbinsville, NJ 08691 in Anna\’s Memory.
Expressions of sympathy and condolences may be sent towww.milanofuneral home.com

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Gloucester City Residents & J.S. Hovnanian Help Build Extreme Makeover Home

 

Photo: from left to right , Councilman Nicholas Marchese, Site Development Manager with J.S. Hovnanian, Ty Pennington from Extreme Makeover Home Edition, and Don Yoos, Director of Construction with J.S. Hovnanian

On July 30th on Federal Street in Pennsauken the Extreme Makeover team and local builder, J. S. Hovnanian & Sons, Inc. along with hundreds of trade contractors built a home in less than 100 hours. This home was completed with the utmost speed and quality to help a family from Camden, the Marerro\’s. The family moved in Monday and is doing well.  

Gloucester City Councilman Nicholas Marchese is a Site Development Manager with J.S. Hovnanian and was a part of the building of this home. When asked what was the best part of this experience Nick replied, \” the ability to bring so many different trades together and have them all helping each other is something that\’s not normally done. On this project we made the impossible, possible. I\’m proud to have been a part of this endeavor and thank the Hovnanian family for the opportunity to help.\”  

With everyday being 90 plus degrees the entire team worked very hard to bring this special job in on time. Gloucester City helped by donating 1000 bottles of water to the effort.

Photo:Our local massage therapist, Marika DeTot of Back to Front on Kings Street donated her time both morning and night massaging the weary workers so they could continue working.

Many local restaurants and food providers donated food the entire week. Hundreds of organizations were involved in making this project a success.  

The Marerro family will have the future help of the Extreme Makeover team to run this home economically and efficiently. They continue to monitor each and every home they have built to date to make sure each project remains a success.

Photo: Gene McLeer, of J.S. Hovnanian, Tonya McQueen, from Extreme Makeover Home Edition, Councilman Marchese, and Paul DiMeo, from Extreme Makeover Home Edition.


see more photos

Barrington Tries Extreme Makeover; Playground Edition

JS Hovnanian Dies 
 

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NY Times Archives:Brooklawn Comedian Dies on Stage, 1/22/48

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School districts make leadership changes/New City Supt. Salary $145,000

By MATT KATZ
Courier-Post Staff

Headed into the new school year, there\’s a shuffle among the top school posts in South Jersey.

Mount Holly Superintendent Paul Spaventa was hired by the Gloucester City school district, a low-income, Abbott school system, as the new superintendent. He will start as assistant superintendent of the 2,200-student district in November and begin as superintendent in January.

No replacement so far has been named in Mount Holly for Spaventa. He is a former superintendent in Clementon, a former vice principal in Gloucester Township and at Gateway Regional and a former teacher in Collingswood.

A resident of Gloucester Township, Spaventa replaces Mary Stansky, who is retiring after nine years in the Gloucester City district and 28 years in education.

Pemberton Township also has a new schools chief. The new superintendent, Michael Gorman, began work Aug. 1 and will earn $172,500, according to his contract.

Gorman was the superintendent in Glassboro, where the district credited him with improving fourth- and eighth-grade test scores and addressing the fact that a disproportionate number of black male students were classified for special education.

Gorman has been replaced on an interim basis by Leonard Fitts, who was until this spring the interim superintendent in Camden.

Fitts is expected to be an interim superintendent for nine to 10 months, according to a district statement, and will be paid an undisclosed sum on a per diem basis. Fitts is a former county superintendent.

The Glassboro school board will begin looking for a replacement Sept. 21 when it meets with the New Jersey School Boards Association.

Source http://www.courierpostonline.com 

 

Spaventa named to lead Gloucester City schools

The Philadelphia Inquirer, August 14, 2007

 The Gloucester City school board has named Mount Holly\’s school superintendent, Paul Spaventa, to become chief in the Camden County district in January.

Spaventa was appointed Thursday and will join Gloucester City in November as an assistant superintendent. In January, Spaventa will replace superintendent Mary Stansky, who will retire Dec. 31 after heading the district for nine years.

Spaventa, who holds master\’s degrees from Temple and Rowan Universities, will be paid $145,000 annually. He has been chief in Mount Holly for two years and has been paid $128,000. An educator for 28 years, he previously was schools chief in Clementon and was a teacher in the William Penn and Collingswood districts.

Gloucester City is one of the state\’s 31 special-needs or Abbott districts, which receive additional state funding under court orders to bring spending in line with their wealthier counterparts. The 2,200-student district has four schools with pre-K through 12th grade. It has a $38 million annual budget and 425 teachers and support staff. – Melanie Burney

Source Philadelphia Inquirer http://www.philly.com

 more stories on Spaventa
 

  

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WHEN EAST MEETS WEST/ the Freshman Wears Prada

  Commentary by Hank F. Miller Jr. 

\”Because I want to make a statement, \”says the girl.\”And my statement is that I am unique, which my choice of fashion demonstrates.\”So that was her answer. 

And the question? Why the Bulgaria watch, the Louis Vutton bag, the Christian Dior blouse and the flirty whiff of Chanel? Why–little Miss College Student–Why the obsession with so many brands? 

Then this unique girl flashed a Max Factor smile, turned and took a seat with her classmates–each dressed almost the same, \”all decked out in very expensive high class brand name gear. 

\”Cheek to cheek chick. True, not all Japanese coeds come packaged in so many labels. And many more can better afford Hello Kitty than Hanae Mori. Still, in Japan there exist a sizable number of young females who do not leave their homes for school or work without at least one designer item in their ensemble. 

 

Some say these women are to brand goods what hot air is to ballons that may be true. The fashion industry might not crash without them, but neither would it fly so high. 

The well–heard figure is that one third of the world\’s brand items are produced by Japanese.Chuo Avenue in the Ginza is but one of many Tokyo spots where the fashion boutiques line up like models on a walkway. Not that the shops are packed. Subtract both the window shoppers and the tourists and Chuo Avenue might echo with the remaining footsteps. 

 

Yet somebody is buying. For along with the boutiques come pawn shops specializing in used brand goods. Further evidence includes women bedazzled in fashion. 

Or perhaps in well–fashioned fakes. Regardless in Tokyo even some college freshman wears Prada–or at least what looks like it. So much so that girls selling themselves–so called enjohosai–in order to keep up with the Takahashi, fashion–wise have long been passe. Even a boom of one-of-a-kind goods reflects against the trend it is backing–the national passion for brands. 

 

Why? Is it as simple as peer pressure, like the coed who insists she is matchless, despite being matched by all her friends? Or is it–as is often argued–just a middle class lust for luxery? Granted, I don\’t possess much fashion sense myself. I wear no brands at all, unless you count the stains of French wine and the German mustard on my cuffs. Typically, I leave my house with holes in my sweaters and socks, my wife Keiko permitting such shabbiness only because she says the openings go so well with the one in my head. But my holey head sees more to Japanese status–seeking than fashion.  

 

Snobbery Japanese–style operates on a number of levels, with one fine example being the–gakureki shakai syndrome, where advancement in life is tied to university rank. 

 

To get to the top, you have to start at the bottom, but in the ideal scenario the steppingstones in between are embossed with the names of elite schools, from kindergarten up. Society then presents pecking orders for almost every endeavor you\’re a better company man if you work for let\’s say Mitsubishi,Soni,Toyota or the like than if you get paid by any place with a lesser–known shingle. You\’re a better stewardess if you can serve tea for let\’s say JAL, you are a better clerk if you can dot i\’s for the Ministry of Finmance, you are a better ballplayer if you can shag flies for the Tokyo Giants. And so on.  

 

Perhaps this is the root of Japan\’s designer crazed world. The idea is not that man makes the clothes, but rather that proper form demands a good fit of class.\”Was I your fashion statement then?\”I ask my wife, nothing that too many a foreign spouse is a retreat from \”Japanese–ness.\” \”Was I your moment to buck the trend?\”She tells me she thinks differently. That she instead sought a ritzy brand name from overseas. So that\’s how she got me. Words that make me blush. Until her next line. Which is? 

\”Now–those pawn shops. Where are they again?\”  

 

Warm Regards from Kitakyushu City, Japan 

Hank F. Miller Jr.  

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New York Times Archives/Gloucester City’s Ray McCann Pitches a Three-Hitter

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New York Times Archives/ No Rise in Cancer Rate Found at Superfund Sites

January 20, 1999

METRO NEWS BRIEFS: NEW JERSEY

Cancer cases among residents in six communities around three radioactive Superfund sites in Essex and Camden Counties are no greater than the average number of cases reported elsewhere in the state, the State Department of Health and Senior Services said yesterday.

The study announced yesterday was a follow-up of earlier departmental studies that raised the possibility of increased cancer levels among residents of Camden, Gloucester City, Montclair, West Orange, Glen Ridge and Orange. The follow-up study found that these residents were at no greater risk of cancer than people in the rest of the country, said Marilyn Riley, a department spokeswoman.

The department looked at incidents of cancers of the brain and nervous system, lungs, breast, and other parts of the body, from 1979 to 1991, among residents near the U.S. Radium site in West Orange, the Welsbach site in Camden and the General Gas Mantle site in Gloucester City, Ms. Riley said.

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George Hamilton, owner of Terminal Vending and Shorty\’s Newsstand

HAMILTON, GEORGE SR. \’SHORTY\’

On August 10, 2007. Born on October 7, 1917 and a resident of Oaklyn for 50 years. George, best known as \’Shorty\’, own-ed and operated Shorty\’s Newstand in Fairview for over 35 years. George then turned his interests toward the vending business and with his brothers by his side, he built Terminal Vending Company into a thriving business that stood as a local landmark in Oaklyn for over 50 years. George had many interests which included traveling, private coaches, boats and private planes which he loved to share with everyone.
George was the loving husband of the late, Vera Hamilton (nee Panko). He was the brother of the late, Thomas Hamilton. He is survived by his brother, Robert Hamilton, Sr. (Mary) of Laurel Springs and his close personal friends Rev. John Bloh and Bobby Baker. George is also survived by his 8 children: George Hamilton Jr. (Janet), Patricia DiSalvio (Carl), Linda Bach, Sharon Gaidas (Rick), Joan Cardegnio (Rich-ard), Joyce Hamilton, Richard Hamilton (Kathy) and Debbie Lucchese (Thomas); his 13 grandchildren, Tracy Bach, Brian Bach, Robert Bach, Jamie Sapnas, CrystalCardegnio-Weller, Samantha Hamilton, Danielle Wilder, George Hamilton III, Max Hamilton, Nicholas Lucchese, Rachel Lucchese, Jason Hamilton, Olivia Hamilton and 7 great grandchildren; George was well known by many, loved by all and will be greatly missed.
Relatives and friends are invited to his view-ing Tuesday from 6:00 -9:00 PM and again Wed-nesday from 9:30 – 10:30 AM at the HEALEY FUNERAL HOME, 9 White Horse Pike (at Kings Hwy.), Haddon Heights. His Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Wednesday 11:00 AM at St. Rose of Lima RC Church, 4th Ave. and Kings Hwy., Haddon Heights. Interment private. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in his name to the American Cancer Society, 1851 Old Cuthbert Road, Cherry Hill, NJ 08034 healeyfuneralhomes.com

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A solitary place to fish is not that hard to find

By Doug Skinner

This time of year tensions are running high. The shore traffic is clogging the highways, the heat is unbearable, and it seems that there is no end in sight. How do you deal with the friction of summer?

I run away.

The fishing is great in South Jersey, but sometimes you have to spread your wings and cast a little further to find the peace that only a quiet day on the water can provide.

Sit down, poke around on the Internet and plan a camping trip. It doesn\’t matter whether you head north, south, east, or west, what is important is being able to stretch a line without the sound of a busy highway looming in the distance.

Searching for solitude doesn\’t have to be difficult. There are a number of places within an hour\’s drive that can provide great fishing opportunities as well as the peace and quiet that we all deserve once in a while.

If you\’re camping on a lake, look to the feeder creeks and streams to catch the most fish. The water in the shallow lakes of South Jersey is often extremely warm this time of year, and during the middle of the day fishing can be quite difficult unless you seek cooler water.

Predators like largemouth bass and chain pickerel will hold along the shoreline in these feeder creeks and wait for minnows or other prey to pass. The moving water is oxygen rich and a welcome reprieve from the stagnant main body of the lake.

If you\’re camping along a river or stream you may be in for a surprise. The cooler water keeps the fish active and aggressive. Largemouth bass and chain pickerel rule the lake, but they can be found in healthy numbers on the river as well.

Many big bass and pickerel live on the river, but along with these popular game fish some others seem to be more prevalent in the river. White perch, calico bass (a.k.a crappie), and a variety of catfish seem to love the cooler moving waters of a river.

Fishing for catfish can provide some of the most productive and exciting fishing on any river. This is a great activity for kids, simply because catfish will eat just about anything that floats by.

Thinking about throwing out an old package of hot dogs? Is chicken liver on sale at the grocery store? (Even if it isn\’t, it\’s generally cheaper than buying a dozen night crawlers).

Since catfish are primarily bottom feeders all you will need is a medium-sized bait hook and a sinker. After you cast just be patient and let these wily cats come to you.

Try to keep the line fairly taught. If you do, you will be able to pick up even the lightest nibble. When you set the hook on a large catfish hold on, because they do not like to come off the bottom and they will fight hard to stay there.

Perch and crappie will chase anything resembling a minnow. In the river Rapala\’s suspending Husky Jerks are indispensable. If you don\’t have any of those in your box sometimes all you need is a plastic grub and a jig head.

Experiment with different colors to find an effective match. Perch are some of the best eating fish in freshwater, so bring some back to camp and cook them over the fire for a meal to remember.

There are hundreds of places to camp in South Jersey; all you have to do is look. No matter where you go, don\’t forget your fishing rods. There are fish in just about every pond or puddle in the state and with a little effort you\’ll have no trouble hooking a few.

Doug Skinner covers freshwater fishing for the Courier-Post. He runs a fishing club at Gateway High School and is a volunteer fishing instructor for the Boy Scouts. He can be reached at [email protected]

More Fishing stories and photos
 

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