South Jersey Elite Soccer Club and the Don D’Ambra Soccer Academy will be hosting an Open House

Media Release

 

South Jersey Elite Soccer Club and the Don D\’Ambra Soccer Academy will be hosting an Open House on Tuesday, April 8th at 7pm at the Senior Center in Washington Township.

 

Washington Township Senior Center
315 Greentree Rd
Turnersville, NJ 08012

 

 

SJ Elite SC is a new premier travel soccer club focusing on developing young players and preparing them for opportunities beyond the youth level. We want to provide as much information as possible on who we are and what we are trying to accomplish. There is a lot of information on our website www.sjelite.com, however, we want to give you the opportunity to get a clear idea of what kind of program we are offering. Please bring your friends and anyone else who may be interested in learning about our new academy program. Please visit our website for specific directions to the Senior Center: www.sjelite.com

 

The SJ Elite SC Open House will give specific information on the following:

  • Total Turf Experience Staff & Facility
  • Total Turf Operations Building and offerings
  • South Jersey Elite SC & Staff
  • South Jersey Elite SC Expectations
  • Dr. Robert Cabry – Director of Health & Fitness
  • Parisi – Fitness Center
  • Official Apparel of SJ Elite SC
  • Tryout info and expectations
  • Questions & Answers

 

Any questions, please contact us at: [email protected]

 

 

Tryout Dates, Times and location

 

Specific tryout dates, times and location will be posted on the SJ Elite website on Friday, March 28th. Please visit our website for the specific dates, times and location for all tryouts. Tryouts will be held during the months of April, May and June.

 

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Gloucester Catholic High School Help KATRINA Relief Project

 My name is Kathy Cleminson and I am pleased to be writing you on behalf of the Gloucester Catholic Katrina Relief Project. Hurricane Katrina changed my life. More importantly, it changed the lives of thousands who still experience the devastation. 

In early 2007, my high school decided to break away from usual limits of community service and send a group of students to New Orleans. As I stepped off the plane I still believed my purpose was to hang sheetrock, but in reality I learned it was so much more. As a result I have made \”returning home\” my New Year\’s resolution, and on behalf of Gloucester Catholic High School, so many would be grateful if you would do the same.

In just a few days we helped rebuild the life of a woman who lost everything in the floods. She told us that every night since the hurricane she prayed for help in vain, but her patience was rewarded because \”God sent me the best help possible.\” Her faith in us made me believe in people.

We all have the responsibility to help each other, whether by entire movements or random acts of kindness.

However, it was not a jolt of inspiration that moved me to feel this; it was being human. It was seeing your friends in class on Tuesday and then putting up sheetrock on Wednesday. It was looking into the eyes of a woman who lost 51 years of all she knew in one day, but still opened her heart to kids who had everything. We tried to replace so many things she had lost, but we learned our real gift to her was our presence.

Two and a half years later, thousands of families are still seeking refuge in FEMA trailers and make-shift housing-if any. Even more devastating, this year will be the third these families can not return home for the holidays.

Together, in New Orleans, we made 2007 the first Christmas two families would return home. This was all made possible through student-based fundraising efforts and monetary donations that sent 23 students and seven chaperones to New Orleans for five days.

This June we will be returning with more people for 8 days and we need your help. Whether your donation is monetary, or a prize to auction off, it will be greatly appreciated and not forgotten.

In a way our journey to New Orleans was the climax of all Gloucester Catholic, and I as a result, believe in because we showed there are no limitations when it comes to helping others. There we learned things school will never teach and some will never learn.

I know kind people like you have made a difference in many lives over the years and now I am asking that you a difference in our lives for theirs. We are hosting a lunch at the Colonial Diner in Woodbury on Wednesday, March 19. Inform your server you are dining for Gloucester Catholic, 15 percent of your check will be donated towards our trip to New Orleans.

I would also like to personally invite you to attend our spaghetti dinner on Sunday, April 13, 4:30 to 8 p.m., at Gloucester Catholic High School to support our cause. The cost is $15 for each adult and $10 for each child under the age of 12.

Send donations to Gloucester Catholic High School, Mr. Joe McKenna, Service Coordinator, 333 Ridgeway Street, Gloucester City, NJ, 08030.

If sending a check, please make it out to Gloucester Catholic High School. On memo line please put New Orleans. Thanks for your support.

Katy Cleminson

Class of 2008,

Gloucester Catholic High School

 

______________________________________________

 

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Team Works to Turn \’Posse\’ Into Professional Police Force


By Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USN
Special to American Forces Press Service

NOWRAK, Afghanistan, March 24, 2008 – The landscape in Afghanistan\’s Zabul province reminds some Americans of a scene from a western movie. So did Afghan law enforcement when Army Capt. Curtiss Robinson and his police mentoring team rode into the province\’s Shahjoy district.

\"Click
Army Capt. Dave Perry and Afghan National Police commander Sakhidad plan a security operation against insurgents in the Shahjoy district of Afghanistan\’s Zabul province. Sakhidad commands police officers at Hassan Karez patrol base in Shahjoy, which maintains security and civil order along Highway One and all populated areas in the district. Perry leads the district\’s police mentoring team, which is training the Afghan officers to project their presence beyond the road into the nearby villages, where most security threats originate. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek, USN

(Click photo for screen-resolution image);
high-resolution image available.

Robinson recalled that the police force there at the time was really nothing more than a \”posse,\” because they had enthusiasm but no formal police training.

There were no police advisors in Shahjoy before Robinson\’s team got there in July, so the first step was to create a training plan for the police.

Robinson is an Army logistics officer with civilian law enforcement experience in South Carolina. Others on his team also had police experience, so they used it and their military training to teach the Afghans some fundamental policing skills.

The next step came from Afghanistan\’s Interior Ministry, which implemented a new \”focused district development\” strategy late last year to reform the Afghan National Police and improve local governance, public works and the rule of law.

Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan, with the Interior Ministry and the international community, developed a plan to take all the police out of their communities, retrain and re-equip them at regional training centers, and send them back to their districts.

Seven of the most challenging police districts were chosen for the first training cycle. Three of them, including Shahjoy, were from Zabul province.

During the eight-week course at the Jalalabad regional training center, Shahjoy\’s police learned about general police duties, weapons, building clearance, first aid, human rights and Afghan law and culture. After graduating, the police returned to their district and police mentoring team advisors began the next phase: sustainment training and advising. Now that they\’ve been trained what to do, Robinson explained, they need to practice how to do it.

The Afghan police officers will have to improve their skills quickly; after they returned to Shahjoy, Taliban insurgents also began returning to the area.

The commander of Nowrak patrol base, Lt. Fazal Rahman, took his men on a patrol and found a prepared fighting position with four rocket-propelled grenades for attacking passing trucks. It was only 25 meters from Highway One.

U.S. Army Capt. Dave Perry leads the Shahjoy district police mentoring team and has developed a patrol plan for the police officers. Rather than have them wait for trouble on the road, he wants them to patrol the nearby villages, where most of the security threats originate.

\”Policing before was static,\” he said. \”We\’re getting them out in the community to show the people some government representation so they know the police are there to help.\”

The next day, Rahman\’s men patrolled Nowrak village and Perry accompanied them through the village to introduce them to the village elders. The local citizens provide information, Perry said, and helping them is the heart of \”community-based policing.\”

The police in Shahjoy no longer resemble a \”posse,\” and officials hope having a professional police force will make the district seem less like the Wild West. Police Chief Mohammed Rasool said that perhaps someday the police in Shahjoy will need to carry only nightsticks – not guns.

(Navy Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek serves with the Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan Public Affairs Office.)

Related Sites: Related The Ultimate Sacrifice
Combined Security Transition Command Afghanistan
Combined Joint Task Force 82

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Rutgers Baseball Hosts West Virginia This Weekend

Media Release

PISCATAWAY, N.J. – The Rutgers baseball team welcomes West Virginia to Piscataway this weekend for a three-game series at Bainton Field. The Scarlet Knights and Mountaineers will open the series with a 3:30 p.m. game on Friday, followed by 1:00 p.m. games on Saturday and Sunday.

Rutgers has had success against West Virginia in the Garden State, winning the last 12 games played at Rutgers. The Mountaineers\’ last victory in New Jersey was more than a decade ago when they defeated the Scarlet Knights, 8-6 on April 5, 1997. RU and WVU did not meet last season on the diamond per league scheduling which includes each school playing only nine of the other 11 schools in the conference each season.

Rutgers is 6-13 overall after a split in midweek games against Rider (won 4-3) and Princeton (lost 1-0). The Scarlet Knights opened BIG EAST play against St. John\’s last weekend, dropping all three games to the Red Storm.

Senior catcher Jon Gossard (Harrington Park, N.J.) leads the Rutgers offense with a .351 average, including a team-high seven doubles. He had his season-long 10-game hitting streak snapped in the Scarlet Knights\’ last game against Princeton on Wednesday.

Sophomore righty Casey Gaynor (Toms River, N.J.) will start Friday\’s opener, junior righty Matt Giannini (Millington, N.J.) will get the ball on Saturday and sophomore righty Kyle Bradley (Howell, N.J.) will on Sunday. Despite a 1-4 record, Gaynor has been sharp with 34 strikeouts in 34.1 innings, and has let up two runs or less in three of his five starts. Giannini worked a season-long six innings last Saturday in a no decision against St. John\’s. Bradley is expected to make his first start on the weekend after hurling 5.1 innings in Rutgers\’ victory over Rider on Tuesday.

West Virginia is 19-4 this season, including a 3-0 record in the conference. The Mountaineers swept Pittsburgh last weekend in their first league action. Earlier this week, WVU knocked off Coppin State, 26-3, and took a double-header from Morehead State, 10-5, and 16-6. West Virginia enters the weekend on an 11-game winning streak.

The Mountaineers own a .364 team batting average, led by freshman second baseman Jedd Gyorko. The newcomer is hitting .474 with three triples and four home runs.

West Virginia is expected to go with the rotation of junior righty Josh Whitlock (5-0, 2.34 ERA) on Friday, senior lefty Matt Yurish (1-1, 8.14 ERA) on Saturday and sophomore lefty Steve Morrison (4-0, 1.47 ERA) on Sunday.

Sophomore righty Chris Enourato has been the Mountaineers\’ top closer with four saves this season in 6.1 total innings of relief without an earned run allowed.

Rutgers owns a 31-17 advantage over West Virginia in the all-time series with a series sweep in the last meeting between the teams in 2006.

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

TCNJ INDOOR TRACK TEAMS OPEN OUTDOOR SEASON

Media Release March 28

Atlanta, GA…The College of New Jersey men’s and women’s track and field teams opened the outdoor season in stride on the opening day of the Emory Classic hosted by Emory University on Friday.

The Lions had several strong performances highlighted by the women’s shot put taking three of the top five places. Freshman Sarah Wehrhan (Dodge City, KS/The Peddie School) won the event just missing an ECAC mark with a distance of 11.10 meters. Classmate Cristina D’Amato (Madison, NJ/Madison) finished fourth with a toss of 10.68 meters, while sophomore Ashley Krauss (Flemington, NJ/Hunterdon Central) was fifth with a mark of 10.58 meters.

Krauss and Wehrhan also placed in the hammer throw taking second and third, respectively. Krauss had a distance of 40.63 meters and Wehrhan at 38.81.

In the high jump, junior Kristen Tricocci (Cinnaminson, NJ/Cinnaminson) placed third clearing a height of 1.56 meters, while sophomore Danielle Kedzerieski (Waldwick, NJ/Waldwick) was third in the javelin with a throw of 26.53 meters.

Junior Nicole Ullmeyer (West Long Branch, NJ/Shore Regional) competed in the longest race of the invitational running the 10,000 meters in 41:40.51 to place fourth overall.

On the men’s side, senior Brian Donatelli (Whitehouse Station, NJ/Hunterdon Central) claimed fourth in the hammer with distance of 43.18 meters and teammate Martin Brown (Verona, NJ/Verona) was eighth with a heave of 38.23 meters.

Senior Galen Johnson (South Plainfield, NJ/South Plainfield) had a strong first showing in the 3,000 steeplechase as he took fifth with a time of 9:48.90.

Senior Andy Lim (Lodi, NJ/Leonia) added another top to for TCNJ taking eighth in the long jump with a leap of 6.22 meters.

-30-

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.

Bellmawr Senior Citizens Dedication Ceremonies

Friday, March 28th

Florence nee Tucker Messenger addressing attendees at the dedication ceremony of the Bellmawr Senior Citizens complex at Bell and Browning roads. Senator Rob Andrews and Bellmawr Boro Clerk Chuck Sauter look on.

Florence was born and raised in Gloucester City and has been a resident of Bellmawr for 40 years. She the sister of the late Mazie Cleary and the late Ed Tucker.

Photo by Edith Messenger.

Related: Ribbon Cutting Ceremonies

Related: Bellmawr

This post was imported from a legacy archive. Please excuse any formatting inconsistencies.