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East Camden

NEWS
April 14, 2012 | Inquirer Editorial
In a city where there is seldom any good news, the story of Camden youngster Jorge Cartagena is a refreshing story of good triumphing over evil. Last June, Jorge, 9, was caught in the cross fire between two drug dealers. He was shot in the face and callously left on a city sidewalk. After spending months in the hospital, he woke up from a coma blind. His alleged assailant was arrested shortly after the shooting that forever changed a young boy's life. Jorge could easily be a poster child for senseless violence in Camden, ranked one of the most dangerous cities in the country.
NEWS
March 7, 2011 | By Sally A. Downey, Inquirer Staff Writer
Agnes Klein Lieberman, 83, a Holocaust survivor who operated the Cherry Hill Kosher Market for 30 years, died of heart failure Tuesday, March 1, at her daughter's home in Vineland, N.J. Mrs. Lieberman, her parents, and three siblings were taken from their home in Hungary by German soldiers during World War II. In 1990, she shared with an Inquirer reporter the terror and anguish she felt when her mother and father were taken to their death. She recalled spending time at concentration camps, including Auschwitz, where she witnessed unthinkable events as a teenager.
NEWS
January 17, 2012 | By Darran Simon, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
As he was walking home through East Camden to feed his pet parakeets one Monday in June, 9-year-old Jorge Cartagena was struck in the temple by a bullet and left blinded - making him the 103d shooting victim in the city at that point last year. The alleged shooter, Greg Rawls, 29, who police said was aiming at someone else and has served time on drug convictions, was quickly arrested. On Tuesday, both the child and his alleged assailant were key parts in an emotional call to action by city and county officials urging residents to support a proposed regional police force that they said would help improve policing in the violence-racked city.
NEWS
March 9, 2012 | By Claudia Vargas, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
By the time all the dignitaries, friends, and others close to former Camden Mayor Melvin R. "Randy" Primas Jr. arrived at his funeral Friday, most were done mourning. Friday's ceremony, which started with a two-hour viewing and concluded with a 90-minute "home-going" service at St. John Baptist Church in East Camden, featured more laughs than tears. It was a reunion for current and former politicians, clergy and residents. People hugged and waved from opposite sides of the church, which was filled with nearly 1,000 people.
NEWS
February 23, 2012 | By Darran Simon, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
A Camden man detained Thursday as a suspect in a robbery is expected to also be charged in a series of daytime sexual assaults in the city in the area of Farnham Park, near Baird and Park Boulevards, authorities said. Kevin D. Cleveland, 19, of the 400 block of Rand Street, was taken into custody earlier in the day in the robbery of a "juvenile female" in Farnham Park about 12:30 p.m. Jan. 2 - more than two weeks before the first of three confirmed sexual assaults, the Camden County Prosecutor's Office and Camden police said.
NEWS
June 12, 2011 | By Kevin Riordan, Inquirer Columnist
The lady who brands herself the Diva of Do Right really, really doesn't want to go there. "I wish I could ignore Anthony Weiner," Phyllis Kae says with a sigh, pondering that congressional tweeter with the heater. "But I honestly believe I have something important to say. "I don't care what he has in his pants!" An ethics consultant, private investigator, and bail-bondswoman based in Camden, Kae, 65, has plenty more to say. She just published a book ( Wanted: Everyday Ethics )
SPORTS
April 7, 2013 | By Phil Anastasia, Inquirer Columnist
Jeremy Lopez is a little guy with big dreams: He can imagine himself playing shortstop for the New York Mets or pitching for the Boston Red Sox. Lopez also is a young man with an older man's wisdom: He knows that he'll never play in the major leagues and that education is his path to a better future. The Pennsauken Tech senior might not be a great baseball player, but he's a great example to his schoolmates, his teammates, and everybody else in South Jersey sports. He's a 5-foot-1, 110-pounder who breaks up fights.
NEWS
October 3, 2012 | By Kevin Riordan, Inquirer Columnist
There was a song in 1994 called "A View of Camden" about a Philadelphia woman whose apartment overlooked the Delaware River and a New Jersey city she could hardly see. People living in Camden in 2012 say they, too, can barely recognize the city - particularly in recent headlines about horrifying crimes, floundering schools, and pervasive poverty. There's also that counter-intuitive plan to replace the city police department with a new county force. Posts on Facebook, YouTube and elsewhere bemoan the media's focusing on the city's potentially record-breaking homicide toll (48 so far this year)
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