THURSDAY, MARCH S, 197*
ihfjUralii
Mayor’s Office, Five Council Seats Will Be Voted In Avalon
PAGE 3
Avalon voters will go to the polls Tuesday, May 8»h to elect a mayor and five councilmen, replacing the current commission form of government. All petitions must be submitted no later than Thursday, March 22nd, according to Mrs. Dorothy Brennan, Deputy Borough Clerk. The five top vote getters will be elected to the councilmatic seats. Avalon voters last November voted to change their old form of .government. A Committee of Petitioners, consisting of Mary Grace Keen, Thomas White, Sr., John A. Halbe, Thomas Millar and Marion J. GiltnSp, requesting the form of government be changed, was responsible for presenting a petition to the Borough Clerk. Signatures of 25 percent of the 1,453 registered voters were required, or 63 signatures. The petition was submitted with 577 signatures recorded, 522 of which were
validated.
Thus far, Elsworth Armacost, • the present Mayor, and Thomas J. White, Sr. have taken out petitions for the mayor’s office. Those who have taken out L.T. Tax Assoc. Mtg. March 20 Lower Township Tax Association meeting will be held Tuesday, March 20th at 8 p.m. at St. Raymond’s auditorium, Ocean Ave. & Bays bore Rd., Villas. Guest speaker will be Captain Larry Dalton, Lower Township Police. Francis Larkin To Speak & Show Video-Tape At ASCO Francis J. Larkin, Director of Guidance for Middle Twp. High School, will be guest speaker at the Avalon Senior Citizen Organization meeting, Tuesday, March 13, at 1:30 p.m. in the Brough Hall, 32nd & Dune Drive. He will show a video-tape, Retirement and Its Myths", featuring senior citizens clubs in Cape May County and elsewhere. Vo-Tech Placing Most Grads The Cape May County Vocational Technical Center has recently completed a survey of its 1977-78 graduates and learned that 93.5% of the students available for work are fully employed. A breakdown of this figure reveals that 72% of the graduates are employed in occupations for which they were trained, and 21.5% of the graduates are employed in unrelated fields. Another 6.5% were unemployed. The Alumni Dinner originally scheduled for February 15 has been re-scheduled for Thursday evening, April 5, at 6:30 p.m. Anyone interested in attending should contact Vo-Tech’s Student Personnel Services office at 4653064. Vo-Tech will be honoring outstanding graduates and also employers who participate in the Cooperative Industrial Education
Program.
Vo-Tech is accepting applications for the 1975HW Practical Nursing classes. LITERATURE DEPARTMENT TO MEET MONDAY The regular meeting of the Literature Department of the Women'a Community Club of Cape May will be held at the Cape May Library on Monday, March 12at 1:30p.m. Fhe program will be “The Education of the Little Tree.” • Mrs. Frank White will serve as hostess. Members and friends are invited to attend.
petitions for the Council persons at-large are: Rachel H. Sloan, Jane Ann Cunningham, Pauline C. Petrica, Lawrence T. Clark, Otho Sommers. Marjorie L. Zook, Mary Grace Keen, Phillip Francis Judejski, Raymond S, Gray, Jr , and Thomas White. (It is expected Mr. White will file for the Mayor's post.) Mr Clark is County C of C Opposes Gas Rationing The Cape May County Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors took unamimous action at their recent Board Meeting to oppose. President Carter’s proposed gasoline conservation measures. Letters of protest have been sent ) to U.S. Senators Harrison Williams and William Bindley, (Congressman William Hughes, Senator James Cafiero, A^semblWnen James Hurley and Joseph ^Cninnici and Governor ByrncT President Richard Lynch has called on all Cape May County business owners and operators to write ""to- their Federal representatives concerning the President’s proposals.
the only person thus far who has filed his petition. The winners will take office August 1. Mar. Films At County Library On Friday Marth 9, at 7:00 P.M., the Cape May County Library will present the classic Japanese film, The Seven Samurai. The film will be presented in the Public Meeting Room at the County Library Building. During the month of March, the Children’s Department of the County Library will be presenting weekly movie sessions. On Thursday, March 8, at 4:00 p.m.. the films presented will include Gunga Din and the Pied Piper. On March 15, the Librafy will present Paddle To The Sea and Shark. On the 22nd of March, Grasses and Snow Girl will be included in the program. On March 29 the children's movies program will present William Tell, and Jungle Cat. The film programs at the County Library, both adult and children, are free to the public. For further information, contact the library at 465-7837.
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INTEREST
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