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The Big Central Conference released its All-Division football teams for the 2024 season. You can find the selections for the Patriot Gold Division below. NOTE : The selections were made by coaches from the conference and not reporters from NJ.com . If an athlete’s name is misspelled, please let us know and we will make the correction.. FIRST TEAM Terrence Hanratty, Bernards, Sr., FB/LB, Sr. Jack Morra, Bernards, WR, Sr. David Silva, Bernards, DL, Sr. Max Austin, Bernards, WR/DB, Sr. Logan Stevens, Bernards , RB/DB, Jr. Thomas Diemar, Bernards, DE, Jr. Finn Osborne, Bernards, OL/DT, Jr. Justin Simpson, Bernards, OL/DE, Jr. Nolan Walsh, Bernards, QB, So. Ben Cobb, Delaware Valley, WR/LB, Sr. Eric Klemmer, Delaware Valley, WR/DB,Sr. Will Weckesser, Delaware Valley, WR/DB, Sr. Will Fritsche, Delaware Valley, TE/LB, Sr. Justin Kollmer, Delaware Valley, FB/LB, Sr. Brayden Sozanski, Delaware Valley, OL/DL, Sr. Kelton Ibach, Delaware Valley, QB, Jr. Matteo Tramutola, Voorhees, RB, Jr. Kyle Borgh, Voorhees, OL, Sr. Lucas Knagenhjelm, Voorhees, OL, Sr. Dimos Maroulis, Voorhees, DL, Jr. Lamar Raiford, J.P. Stevens, RB/LB, Sr. Quadir Johnson, J.P. Stevens, RB/DB, Sr. Marquise Webb, J.P. Stevens, QB/CB, Sr. SECOND TEAM Aidan Gribben, Bernards, TE/LB, Sr. Daniel Ferguson, Bernards, OL/DE, Sr. Teagun Hartnett, Bernards, LB, Jr. Noah Ochab, Bernards, K/P, Jr. Luken Alberdi, Delaware Valley, OL/DL, Jr. Zach Majewski, Delaware Valley, OL/DL, Jr. Pat Boyle, Delaware Valley, TE/LB, Sr. Brayden Costello, Delaware Valley, K, So. Sam Meekings, Voorhees, QB, Jr. Logan Direny, Voorhees, DB/WR, Jr. Sean Weeks, J.P. Stevens, OL/LB, Sr. Yasir Riddick, J.P. Stevens, RB/LB, Sr. Mike Kinney can be reached at mkinney@njadvancemedia.com The N.J. High School Sports newsletter is now appearing in mailboxes 5 days a week. Sign up now! Follow us on social: Facebook | Instagram | X (formerly Twitter)The ruling comes after a lawsuit was filed by nine current players who argued that letting her compete was a safety risk and unfair. Subscribe to continue reading this article. Already subscribed? To login in, click here.
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It has been about two years since Patriots Point said fair winds and following seas to the former USS Clamagore. After a long journey up the mid-Atlantic coast to Norfolk, Va., the Cold War-era submarine was dismantled and recycled last year. But its legacy will live on. A surprise donation of a discarded collection of historic artifacts will help shape a future exhibit to keep the Clamagore’s legacy alive for future generations. The gift exemplifies the phrase, "One man's trash is another man's treasure." An album of original photographs taken by an unknown sailor who served among the sub’s earliest crews was found in a Florida landfill. A couple salvaged the scrapbook, researched the term "Clamagore" written on the back of a photo and pamphlet and mailed the items to Patriots Point Naval & Maritime Museum in Mount Pleasant. “What a moment of serendipity, a one-in-a-million chance,” said Meredith Kablick, director of collections and curatorial affairs at the state-owned military attraction. “It was full of photos in perfect condition of the inside of the ship and of the sailors when they're on shore leave. It's an amazingly preserved time capsule.” Photographs of the USS Clamagore and related documents found in a Florida landfill were donated to Patriots Point Naval & Maritime Museum. The images will be digitized and will play a part in the future exhibit focused on anti-warfare submarines, like the Clamagore, that were part of the so-called silent service. “We have no idea who this sailor was, but it gives us an incredible idea of what life was like aboard the submarine,” she said. “Hopefully with some research we can one day identify him.” Photographs of the USS Clamagore and related documents found in a Florida landfill were donated to Patriots Point Naval & Maritime Museum. The "Grey Ghost of the Florida Coast" departed from its home of more than 40 years along the Mount Pleasant waterfront in October 2022. The Patriots Point Development Authority’s decision to dismantle the submarine and recycle its materials came down to funding. Private efforts to raise money to preserve the vessel fell short. And the submarine was deteriorating, Its steel ballast tanks, which aid with buoyancy, were severely corroded, worn down by decades of exposure to salt water. Patriots Points estimated the salvage project would run more than $9 million. Crews prepare to tow the submarine Clamagore away from Patriots Point Naval & Maritime Museum to Norfolk, Va., on Oct. 14, 2022. The authority paid $1.5 million for Virginia-based Coleen Marine to haul and recycle the submarine. Once it left the harbor, the company took full responsibility and ownership. “Sadly, we weren’t able to save her. That was an incredibly difficult decision that had to be made, but we can still keep her memory alive,” Kablick said. Before the submarine was towed away, the state-owned attraction's curatorial and education staff tagged anything that could potentially be used for an exhibit. Patriots Point officials and museums across the country had hoped to get some of the salvaged parts, but it seemed unlikely at first. The Navy initially denied the request, citing liability concerns, but that was later sorted out with Coleen Marine. Patriots Point staff went to Norfolk to secure the items. “We knew we'd find ways to tell the Clamagore’s story aboard the Yorktown,” Kablick said. The museum is currently working on a master plan for exhibits housed on the Yorktown. It's part of a larger effort to add more displays and tell more history about the service of the ships and the sailors who served aboard them. Patriots Point chief of staff Chris Hauff said money was set aside in the budget to plan for the exhibit highlighting submarine technology and anti-warfare. SC storm was mighty enough to nudge a 30,000-ton aircraft carrier mired in pluff mud The Clamagore will be the centerpiece of that because of its role during the Cold War. Before the submarine was towed away, Patriots Point conducted a three-dimensional scan of the vessel, which will also be included, according to Kablick. Staffers also traveled to the World War II Museum in New Orleans earlier this year for ideas. “We plan to marry those stories,” she said. “There’s not a linear way to tell the story of the Cold War because there were so few inflection points compared to World Wars I and II. We want to make it more STEM-focused by showing visitors how these submarines operated, what life was like aboard these submarines, how the radar systems worked and the part they played in the silent service.” As for the photos, they'll be digitized and posted on Patriots Point’s website. Sid Busch (right) in 2019 describes his experiences as a sonar technician stationed aboard the USS Clamagore during a guided tour. Former veteran Sid Busch gave tours of the Clamagore for more than a decade when it was an active exhibit at Patriots Point. He would walk visitors through the cramped vessel, answering questions and recounting experiences on the sub as a sonar technician from 1969 to 1972. Some of the stories would be dead serious, while others more were light-hearted, like the one about Lady, a Labrador retriever sailors raised and kept in the torpedo room. While he regretted what became of the Clamagore, he said he hopes "her memory will be kept alive." “She was the last of her kind, the intermediary between the World War II submarine and the first of our nuclear submarines. She still has a very important story to tell,” he said. SC's Medal of Honor Museum plans at Patriots Point pivot as renovation gets underwayDavid Cameron changes mind to come out in favour of assisted dyingAnti-fraud efforts meet real-world test during ACA enrollment periodWeek in politics: Matt Gaetz steps down, new cabinet picks
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