Cape May County Herald, 12 August 1981 IIIF issue link — Page 14

HARBOR FURNITURE OUTLET

*18000Sq. Ft of Furniture To Choose Froml SOLID TRUCKUMD OF BASSETT SOFAS-CHAIRS « LOVESEATS NAS JUST ARRIVED! AH The New Fall Colors!! PRICED RI6HT-COME SAVE $$$

Exhibition Winners Announced

Longenberger; 12 4o 14 year olds, '‘Chartered Horizons” by Traci Gould. Professional division : photography, "Country Store’* fcy Jay Park; Figure, portrait, "Boys on the Wall" by Turner; Oil,

. ^ _ /'Westtown in Winter", by fessional ^xiivision was ^Black^J Wat-ercolor

N. WILDWOOD — Win: ners in the 16th annual Beach Drive Art Exhibition here recently have been an-

nounced.

Best of Show went to .‘Fall Fungus" by Cichocki; the Wildwood Purchase prize in the pro- ( ‘

DMI SflECE BEDROOM SET w/350 Double Dresser. Heodbord, Chest. Night Stood, Mirror

Just Arrived! PEOPLE RECLINERS "For All-Size People"

awarded" "White on Blue" by Alvg; the Marine Bank .Purchase pritt Went to "Wild • WaveSV by Ed Hewitt. * FIRST PRlEE winners were: 9 to 11 l^ars olds. "Day in the Water" by Lee To Deepen Lagoons SEA ISLE CITY-A permit from the Department of the Army for maintenance dredging of commercial and residential lagoons has been asked

by the city.

The lagoons to be dredg ed are ih Ludlatr. Thorofare south of JFK Blvd. and west of Park Rd.

Ffom My Youth" by Cichoifri; Graphic's, charcoal, pastel^. "Lobster Hbuse” by Coombs; Mixed media. "Doll’s Song”' by Gates; Sculpture, "Home

Run" by Johnston

AMATEUR DIVISION: Photography, "Dolphins in the Snow" by Frank Yanetti; Oil. figure, pdvtcgit, "Christmas ’52" by Linda Fisher; Oil. other, "Lighthouse at Bell’s-Isle" by Colleen Tomlin; Watercolor, "Summer Meadow" by Bernice Roskographics, charcoal* pastels, etc. "3 House" by James Stagg; Mixed media, "Tiger Lilies" by

Bernice Rosko. Other award winner*:

Children * division - 9 to II. ae cond. "A Touch of Ciaw" by

Heather Chartesworlh; third. "Still Life" by AJene Da It was, IJ to 14. a^cond. "Three Different People" by Andrew MacDonald; third. "Lighthquae'.' by Kerri OMrmeyer PROFESSIONAL division - Photography, second, "King of the Colony" by-Fineberg. third, "For Sale - A* l»" by Allen; Figure*, portrait, second. "White DnVra" by Fury Feraco. third. "Market Place" by Barbara Knipple (hi. other, second. "Antiques" by Coomb*: "Satlboai in Tow" by Rutherford Walercolor. "Waterfall" by Neil Chambert. secorid. "MaryUnd Farmhouse' by Phillips, third. ■Graphic*, charcoal, pastel*. "Feathered FTrsemT Kearney, second; "BlgBro " hyDane Tilghman nnd "Little Gretchen" by Yaknni*. tie for third MlsM-media. "Abstract 117" oy ffifland, second; sculptured "Repose" by Zaccanm. second AMA,TKIR DIVISION: Pbnloitrsphx. "ChestBot St." by Daniel W.A. lang. secifcd: "Stardust :*Veai*rles" by Alan Grass. Ujird: Klgarer'portrall. "(Rdng To Work" by Pat ‘■doinn I plograff. *e - rood; "SiHoy's Son" by Jessie Scbmltl. third. - OH. other. "DeVoe" >y James Stagg. second: "Nalorxil Brlllge" by Grrtte Keene, third. Walercolor. "Mlflion Dollar Pier" by Agne* Krons. second: Graphics, charcoals. ."Memories and TesInres" by 'Longenberger. second; "Tvler Park" by Jeanne Colver.

PAINTINGS • LAMPS* END TABLES • ACCENT PIECES

MA TTRESS SALE!

TWIN SIZE SET FULL SIZE SET

*109 ’119

Slogy )f the

'Recycling Plpns (From PAge 1 > like that one, nobody would object.’"' DeMEO NOTED THE MUA will support local recycling efforts by developing and' operating a regional recycling center, by instituting a comprehensive public education and promotional program and by establishing a counly->yide materials marketing cooperative beginning this fall. the MUA was among 17 planning districts in the state to apply for funds under the 1900 Natural Resource Pond Act. Cape May County was one of only two South Jersey Upommunities to reguest funds to implement a low technblo recycling progrjftv With the support of anticipated state grant, the MUA will construct and operate an intermediate processing facility to increase the quantity and quality of recycled materials, in the county. "THE DEVELOPMENT of this permanent recycling facility will be an important complement to our new county^vidc ^sanitary landfill to be constructed by N the ,/ ^Authority by 1983,” pointed out MUA executive director George Marinakis. “This new recycling enterprise will be a major step toward . achieving the long-range economic and environmental benefits of recycling in our county," he added. The MU\ proposes to implement source separation and recycling through f cooperative two-phased program. PHASE I will include the development of voluntary and mandatory source separation programs as well as curbside collection of newsprint, aluminum and glass in nine pilot' communities. The Authority is currently developing 4ndivldual program plans for each participating community, and an extensive public education program to support the community efforts. According t^inci, plans are also in the works to deve% a permanent recycling center which would he operational by this fall to receive, sort,, store and transport these recyclable materials and to obtain market agreements for the sale of these material on behalf of (he participating communities.

WINNING SEASCAPE which took Marine National Bank Prize at North Wildwood Art Show is held hy Artist Edwin Hewitt and Don Landis, manager of bank’s North Wildwood office.

"Discussions have been held in recent months with representatives of the nine pilot communities to identify their own' recycling goals, local program resources and constraints, and individual professional needs," Vinci explained. PHASE II of the county’s recycling program includes the construction of an Intermediate Processing Facility (IPF) to recover approximately 5,500 tons per year of recyclable materials. According to DeMeo, the IPF is a small, industrial processing plant designed to receive, sort, clean, densify, store, and market source-separated paper, metals and glass. “The go6l of the MUA's source separa tion program is to ultimatelv reduce the amount of solid waste being disposed of in county landfills by 25 per cent," DeMeo said.

News Digest

The Week's Top Stories

OUTLET

Exit 6 Parkway North Wildwobd Blvd. Burleigh, N.J. 465-3208 • 465-7677 r -• FREE SRNE RAT RELIVERT

RED CROSS WORKER Mrs. Hazel Beckman watches oyer Kathy Gallagher, LPN, as she donates blood to Summer Blood Drive at Burdette Tomlin Memorial Hospital. Drive collected 150 pints of blood.

< From Page 1 * 10 a.m. Aug. 18 at the Public Safety Building, John F. Kennedy Blvd. The hearing will be held by the state Department of Environmental Protection under the Coastal Area facility Review Act. The permit is asked by A1 Ciardi/COSPAR Inc., for property at Kennedy Blvd. and Pleasure Ave. For Landfill Site UPPEfc TWP. — The Township Committee continues to support the selection by the Cape May County Municipal Utilities Authority of a site on the township/Woodbine border here for the county’s interim landfill. Township solicitor James Waldron informed the MUA of the Committee's feel-, ings in a recent letter to the Authority. The township Planning Board objected to. the site, after the MUA had received a waiver from the Pinelands Commission to have the landfill at the location. “Now the governing body has assured the Planning Boaf-d, Pinelands Commission and us that they support our position," MUA chairman John Vinci noted.