1952/ GLOUCESTER CITY Rams vs. Lions Football Series

Gloucester High\’s Backfield Leads Lions to Title 

A rejuvenated Gloucester High school football combo put on a real offensive show last night before more than 4000 surprised spectators to hand its city rival, Gloucester Catholic High school its fifth straight setback in series competition by a 25-7 count.

Johnny Rieder and Phil Campbell took turns at the quarterback and fullback slots to mix up the \”Ramblers\’\” defense. Gloucester even used Steve Shimkus to call the plays.

Gloucester scored in the first quarter as soon as it got its hands on the ball, and then proceeded to tally in each of the following quarters. Catholic scored on a long pass play midway in the second quarter.

Note click on photo to see it full size.

 

Collect 19 First Downs

Shimkus, Bennett and Rieder pace the Gloucester ground gaining offense that netted 19 first downs as compared with five for the losers. They ground out 245 yards between them, including a couple of nice gains by Campbell.

Bob McDermott, Buddy Hodson and Wayne Boulden starred defensively, along with the booming Bennett. They held Catholic\’s offense to a nominal amount of ground.

Gloucester was quick to take the lead when MacDermott recovered Tom Baker\’s fumble on the opening kickoff on the Catholic 40. Campbell gained four. Bennett, one, and Rieder six for a first on the 29. Catholic then drew a 15 yard personal foul penalty. Shimkus in three carries went to the four and Rieder smacked over. Shimkus converted.

Campbell short-circuited a Catholic drive when he intercepted on his own 16 in the second quarter and started his mates on a touchdown drive. Rieder, Campbell and Shimkus combined their running efforts to bring the ball to the Catholic 46.

 Shimkus Scores

 After Gloucester was penalized five yards and Shimkus was thrown for a yard loss, Rieder was pushed out of bounds on the Catholic four. Shimkus then scored on a line play.

 Charlie Murtaugh then took charge and sparked Gloucester Catholic to its first touchdown. He drove his team some 90 yards after taking the kickoff. Murtaugh then passed to Jim Quinn on the 25 and he race over for the score. \’

 Gloucester took the second half kickoff and marched 60 yards for its third touchdown. Campbell and Bennett paced this drive that ended when Rieder passed to Boulden from the 11. Campbell had scored on the previous play but Gloucester was detected off-sides. Gloucester\’s final score came early in the fourth quarter when the charges of Coach Carlos Paisley traveled 52 yards.

 Gloucester Scores Again

 Campbell passed to Shimkus from the Gloucester 48 to the Catholic 48. Bennett smashed his way for 13 yards and a first down on the \”Ramblers\” 35 as the third quarter ended.

 Rieder gained seven and Shimkus eight for a first on the 20. Shimkus circled the flank for nine yards and Bennett made three for a first on the eight. Shimkus then took a handoff from the smooth working Campbell and race over tackle for the final six-pointer.

 Catholic\’s stars in defeat were Murtaugh and linesman \”Sonny\” Sessa who incidentally was injured and forced out of action in the second half after playing a bang-up first half.

 They played gamely but couldn\’t cope with the Blue and Gold\’s balanced and efficient attack.

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Firefighter Dies in Staten Island Blaze/Lt. Robert J. Ryan Jr.

The United States Fire Administration (USFA) has received notice of the following firefighter fatality:

Name: Robert J. Ryan, Jr.

Rank: Lieutenant

Age: 46

Gender: Male

Status: Career

Years of Service: 17

Date of Incident: 11/23/2008

Time of Incident: 0028hrs

Date of Death: 11/23/2008

Fire Department: Fire Department City of New York

Address: 9 Metro Tech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201

Chief: Fire Commissioner Nicholas Scoppetta

Incident Description: After responding to a two-story private residence fire, Lieutenant Ryan was working in the attic when a portion of the ceiling collapsed on him. He was transported to the Richmond University Medical Center of Staten Island where he passed away.

Funeral Arrangements: Visitation will be on 11/24/08 from 1900hrs to 2100hrs and 11/25/08 from 1400hrs to 1600hrs and 1900hrs to 2100hrs at Harmon Funeral Home, 571 Forest Avenue, Staten Island, New York. The funeral will be on 11/26/08 at 1100hrs at Sacred Heart Church, 981 Castleton Ave., Staten Island, New York.

Memorial Fund Contact and Address: Pending

Tribute is being paid to Lt. Robert J. Ryan at http://www.usfa.dhs.gov/fireservice/fatalities/

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MAAC Announces 2009 Girls in the Game Details

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Video: Lions over Schalick

October 30, raw video/Lions over Schalick 32-14; Hans rushes for 323 yards

more about \”ClearysNoteBook: Film\”, posted with vodpod

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Staying Power: Wounded Marines Ordered to do Their Part to Recover

By Fred W. Baker III
American Forces Press Service

CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. , Nov. 21, 2008 – Marine Capt. Ray Baronie was traveling in a convoy in Ramadi, Iraq, on Dec. 1, 2005 when an anti-tank round blasted his truck. Baronie\’s legs were shattered, his body cut and bloodied. His driver was killed. The truck rolled onto its side, and then he was shot at. But really hard times didn\’t hit until Baronie came back to the United States.

\”That\’s really when hell started. In one year, I had 46 surgeries,\” he said.
Baronie\’s right leg was amputated above the knee. He lost major muscle from both legs. He can tap his thigh bone through the skin on the back of his left leg. He now walks with the help of a cane and a prosthetic right leg. Scars cover his arms.
But Baronie\’s injuries haven\’t stopped him from stepping in front of a Marine formation and continuing his active duty. In fact, quite the opposite. His injuries have uniquely qualified him to run one of three companies in the
U. S. military designed to house and care for seriously wounded Marines.

Remarkably, Baronie was offered the job while he was still in the hospital recovering from his wounds. He now commands 100 or so Marines who make up Company A, Wounded Warrior Battalion East, part of the Wounded Warrior Regiment stood up at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va., by order of the commandant of the Marine Corps in April 2007.

\”I had to get better because I had to get back to work,\” Baronie said. \”How fast could I get back to work? That\’s what it came down to. I think me knowing that I had a job sped up my recovery.\”

Overwatch Key to Recovery

The Wounded Warrior Regiment comprises two battalions, one on the East Coast here on Camp LeJeune, N.C., and one on the West Coast on Camp Pendleton, Calif., and a third company in Hawaii. It is the realization of the Marine Corps\’ historic push to accommodate the influx of seriously wounded Marines since the start of Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom.

Each provides coverage for Marines receiving care in their areas. The battalion here has oversight of more than 300 Marines who are recovering this side of the Mississippi River. The West Coast battalion has oversight of about 200 recovering Marines.

To date, more than 6,600 Marines have received Purple Hearts since the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom. About 1,200 are seriously injured and still on active duty in various stages of their recovery.

Baronie is one of the Marine Corps\’ nearly 3,000 injured who have returned to active duty. And he is not the only leader in the company who was injured in combat.

Activity as Therapy

Staying active is key to healing, Baronie said. It is dangerous for Marines to stay isolated in their rooms for hours or days at a time. Baronie said he doesn\’t want any \”professional X-Box players.\”
The battalion staff work out of temporary trailers arranged in a horse-shoe pattern beside 1940s-era red brick barracks. Wooden wheelchair ramps snake between the buildings. A new $27 million barracks complex is under construction that will move the Marines closer to the hospital and other treatment facilities on base. The West Coast battalion has a similar barracks construction project planned.

Three nurse case managers make sure Marines keep their appointments. This is sometimes difficult because medications and brain injuries muddle appointment dates and times for the Marines. More than three-quarters of them suffer from post traumatic stress disorder or a traumatic brain injury, Baronie said.

Baronie cuts them no slack, though, for missed appointments. \”The reason why you were sent here wasn\’t to pull triggers,\” he tells the Marines. \”It wasn\’t to go into the field. It is to heal. You go to your appointments. You have to do your part to get better.\”

\”Life doesn\’t stop when you get wounded. You\’ve got to have some type of responsibility and, whether you choose to stay in the Marine Corps or move into civilian life, you\’re still going to have to press forward,\” Baronie said.

\”What happens when you go into the civilian world and that corporation you work for … is trying to make money and you don\’t come to work? They might not care that you\’re wounded. You may hear two words — you\’re fired.\”

The career planner for the company is himself an injured Marine who has stayed on active duty with a permanent disability, working limited duty. Marine Corps leadership has vowed to keep all injured Marines on active duty who can still work in some capacity. The limited duty assignment allows the Marine to receive a disability assignment from the service, for later benefits, but to stay on active duty in a job they can perform. The Marine can later decide to leave the service if he or she finds the circumstances too difficult.

For many, that next step is sometimes a greater dilemma than their recovery. Mixed emotions swell as they are forced to reconcile what they want to do with what their bodies will now allow them to do.

\”These guys are torn right now because all of them are grunts (infantrymen). They left high school and didn\’t want to go to college. They wanted to join the Marine Corps and they wanted to shoot and blow up stuff,\” Baronie said. \”And now … they may be able to stay in the Marine Corps, but they know that they won\’t be able to go back to that grunt community. They\’ll be found unfit to do that strenuous [job].\”

\”If the Marine Corps mission is slacking because of me, it will be time for me to go,\” Baronie said.
But for now, as Baronie moves around his company, inspecting repairs, talking to Marines and stopping in their small kitchen to see what is cooking, it is clear that he is one of them.
His injuries give him credibility. They know he has \”been there\” and do not hesitate to pull him aside to talk. Sometimes it\’s about problems. Sometimes it\’s just to talk.. Occasionally a \”wheelchair jousting\” match will break out in the halls, or — Marines being Marines — they begin good-naturedly beating each other with their crutches.

For Baronie and his Marines, this is home. \”I don\’t want to work anywhere else. I love just coming to work and hanging out with them. These guys are awesome,\” he said.

(Editor’s note: This is the latest in a series of AFPS articles about seriously injured servicemembers who are returning to active duty.)

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1955/Gloucester City Rams vs. Lions Football Series

Rams Wins City Title  

Marking their eighth straight triumph during the 1955 grid season, the charges of Coach Jim Hopkins on Thanksgiving Day in beating Gloucester High school finished the season with one of the best records in the history of Gloucester Catholic High school.

The Ramblers scored almost at will for the first three periods to win the annual city series by a 52-7 count before more than 3000 chilled fans.

Meanwhile it ended a winless campaign for the Blue and Gold gridders, although they did manage to break their offensive famine of not having scored a point.

Gene Miller, Lennie Lacavara and Frank DiGiacomo scored two touchdowns apiece in the one-sided victory while Dick Talley and George Gibison tallied single six pointers apiece. Miller converted after four of the eight teedees.

Jim Ashe made Gloucester\’s touchdown on a two yard plunge and also was the loser\’s standout player of the day in the backfield.

The Rams pushed across 20 points in the first period, followed with 13 in the second session, and closed out its scoring by posting 19 markers in the third period.

Coach Hopkins used his first stringers all the way as he gave his seniors a chance to play in their finale for the Maroon and Gold.

To single out a star for Catholic would be a hard proposition as all performed well on both offense and defense as they captured their third straight from the Public High eleven. The first five games of the series were won by Gloucester High.

Gloucester received and couldn\’t advance and punted to its own 29 in the face of a stiff wind. Gibison, Lacavara and DiGiacomo covered the 29 yards in five plays with the latter going over, Miller converted.

Another wind-blown punt gave the Rams the ball on the Blue and Gold 37 and in four plays it was 13-0. The payoff came on a 17 yard aerial from Miller to Lacavara after the latter had set the score up with a 22-yard end sweep.

Bob Viet set Catholic up again when he recovered a fumble on the Gloucester 20. Miller passed to Lacavara on the first play for the score. Miller converted.

Gibison was next to score when after the Rams drove 40 yards he plunged over from the one. Miller converted.

Lacavara intercepted a Gloucester pass near the end of the first half and returned it to the Gloucester 26. Gibison made five yards and after passing 11 yards to Talley, Miller swept the end for the score.

The sixth teedee came on a two yard pass play from Miller to Talley, and the seventh score came shortly after when Gibison was on the throwing end of a pass to Miller. The play covered 45 yards.

DiGiacomo made the final Ram touchdown when he scooped up a fumble and raced 37 yards to paydirt on the last play of the third quarter.

Walt Doherty set up Gloucester\’s score when he intercepted Miller\’s pass on the Catholic 32 and ran it back to the seven. It took Ashe three plays and he was into the end zone for his team\’s touchdown. Ken Lohberger booted the extra point.

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1963 Gloucester Catholic High School Alumni

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When East Meets West: Remembering Uncle Joe Barron

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Ticket Applications Available for the 2009 NCAA Division I Women\’s Basketball Trenton Regional at Sovereign Bank Arena

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Another NJ Politician Off to Jail, Thank You Mr. Spaventa, Only One Will Be Chosen

TIPS AND SNIPPETS:

Here we go again, another New Jersey politician is found guilty of committing a crime. What else is new? Over the past several decades 130 New Jersey politicians (both Republican and Democrat) have been sentenced to jail terms. It makes you wonder how these people sleep at night. Don’t they have a conscience?

Apparently not!

Former State Senator Wayne Bryant (Camden 5th District, Democrat) is the latest thief that will soon be wearing a new suit of prison blues. Caught with his hand in the taxpayers cookie jar a jury convicted Bryant on 13 COUNTS of selling his Senate influence to pad a government pension.

Bryant’s 28 year political career began in 1980 when he was first elected to the Camden County Freeholder Board. He served in that capacity until 1982 when he ran for the State Assembly. While in the General Assembly Bryant served as Majority Leader from 1990 to 1991. Upon the death of longtime Democratic Senator Walter Rand on January 6, 1995, Bryant was selected to serve the remaining term. In 2006 after being indicted Bryant resigned from the Senate.

http://www.answers.com/topic/wayne-r-bryant

I knew Wayne from the days he served on the Camden County Board of Freeholders and watched his rise into the state legislature. As a reporter I often covered events that he was in attendance. Always a firm handshake and a warm smile he was a typical politician. You couldn’t help not to like him.

Ask anyone in his hometown of Lawnside what they think of their beloved Senator Bryant and they will tell you in their opinion he was the greatest.

One wonders though when he decided that he was going to deceive these constituents and everyone else in the state? In other words when did he decide to become another shifty underhanded politician? Was it just greed? He had a successful law practice and from all accounts was financially secured. So what happened?

Looking for an answer to what makes politicians steal I found a number of theories. One that stood out more than the others was written several years ago by Richard Reeves http://realclearpolitics.com .

\”Among politicians, I have watched more than a few friends and acquaintances go off to prison. There are no hard and fast rules for corruption, but I have noticed that many Republicans go wrong because they believe that it is business as usual, un-American to pass up a chance at profit. They do what comes naturally in the private sector, but some of what comes naturally to a speculator is against the law for a public servant.

Democrats I\’ve known have gone wrong because they came to believe they had earned their way into a privileged class, complete with free meals and vacations, life on the fast track. Then comes a day, often when they are first faced with college tuitions for their children that they realize they can\’t afford the life of the people asking, begging them for little favors. They step onto the slippery slope of favors and loans and then bribes.\”

 If you would like to learn more about New Jersey’s culture of corruption over the past 30 years read the book The Soprano State written by Bob Ingle and Sandy McClure. The authors point out why the state of New Jersey may just be the most corrupt state in the nation. The only way to change things, get involved.

By Working Together a Problem was Solved: The TIP- Bill, if you get a chance check out the flag flying at the G.H.S. football field. It is shredded and hanging by one eyelet. I was very embarrassed while attending the state playoff game at the field yesterday between G.C.H.S. and Pope John XXIII. Everyone staring at this scrap while the visiting band played the National Anthem. I never saw a flag in worse shape than this one. I know you take this disrespect towards our country and our flag seriously like I do so I figured I would mention it to you.

I am happy to report that within hours after contacting School Superintendent Paul Spaventa the flag was replaced.

Mr. Spaventa writes, Bill, Just wanted to let you know that the problem with the flag was that the rope broke in the high winds. John Kenney called the fire department and they were able to take down the old rope and replace it with new. The rope measures 85 feet. Thanks again for your concern. We certainly wouldn\’t want to disrespect our flag.

HEARD ON THE STREET-The unofficial list of the applicants for the job of Gloucester City Administrator are: Ted Howarth, Patrick Keating, Paul Kain, and Kathy Jentsch. Only one will be chosen. The official announcement will be made at the January reorganization meeting of City Council.

~Bill Cleary

Related:

Powerful Camden County Democrat Guilty

BILLS POINT OF VIEW

TIPS AND SNIPPETS

Mistakes Have Cost City Taxpayers Millions

 

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