Cape May County Herald, 23 September 1981 IIIF issue link — Page 35

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Herald & Lantern 23 September 81 —— : WEDNESDAY,.SEPTEMBER 23 Kiwanis Club dinner meeting, Clubhouse, ill! Beach Dr., C6pe May, every Wednesday 6:15 p.m. Overeaters^ Anonymous (861-2350 for info.); St. Casimir’s £hurch, Lincoln & Clay Sts., Woodbine, 7:^0 p.m. Social sponsored by the Villas Women’s Regular Republican Club (open to public), Bayshore & Weber Rds., Villas, 8 p.m. Rally by CM County Branch of NAACP (info. 465-5736), City Housing Authority Bldg., Cape May, 8 p.m. Thurston Elmer Wood American Jfcegion Post 198 meeting, Post Home, CM Court House, 8:30 p.m. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 24 Masons - Hereford Lodge #177 F. & A M. meeting, 6300 Atlantic Ave., Wildwood Crest, 7:30 p.m. Toastmasters Club meeting (guests welcome), 2nd & 4th Thursday of each month, Meeting R., County Library, 8 p.m. Sea Isle City String Band Concert and Show, Deauville Inn at Corson’s Inlet Bridge, Strathmere, 9 p.m.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 American Shore & Beach Preservation Assn, annual meeting, Quality Inn, Wildwood Crest, today & tmwr. Fall Open House & Boat show, Stone Harbor Marina, Stone Harbor Blvd., Stone Harbor, begins today for three days. American Baptist Convention, Music Pier, Boardwalk & Moorlyn Terrace, Ocean City, begins today for three days. Graduating Ceremonies for Recruit Companies, U.S. Coast Guard Training„Ctr., Cape May, every Friday 2:30 p.m. CM Taxpayers AsSn. annual meeting, Golden Eagle Motor Lodge, Beach^& Philadelphia Aves., Cape May, 7:30 p.m.

SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 26 American Shore & Beach Preservation Assn, annual meeting (see under Fri.), Wildwood Crest, today. MI Marine Mini Series Field Trip (465-51 ISyfor info.), Cooperative Extension Service Education Cntr, Dennisville Rd., Court House, today. Fall Open House & Boat Show (see under Fri.), Stone Harbor, today & tmwr. Family Fun Day sponsored by the Avalon Recreation Dept., Elementary School between 30th & 31st on Ocean, Avalon, all day. Flea Market &( Tailgate Sale. Upper Twp. Senior Citizens Ctr. (reserve space 263-8077), Old Stage Coach Rd., Palermo, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Trap Shoot every Saturday, Bayshore Sportsmen’s Club (open to public), end of Arizona Ave., Villas, noon. Chicken Pot Pie Dinner sponsored by Dennis Twp. Boy Scout Troup #56 (reservations 861-2900, Dennisville School, Dennisville, dinners served 4:00, 5:15 and 6:30 p.m. Annual Harvest Champagne Gala sponsored by the Avalon Women’s Republican Club (info. 967-3575), Avalon Yacht Club, Avalon, 6 to 6:30 fi.m. "Calidris Canutus and Kings: Spring Shorebirds of the Delaware Bay Shore,” illustrated lecture by CM Bird Observatory director Peter Dunne, Firehouse, Yale Ave., CM Point, 8 p.m. ' Ecoloby of the Surf Zone, illustrated lecture by Dr. John McDermott, Wetlands Inst., Stone Harbor BIvd^B: 15 p.m. 50'b Dance for adults, sponsored by the Avaloh Recreation Dept., Community Hall, Avalon, 9 p.m. to 1 fKjn, SUNDA Y, SEPTEMBER 27 ) Fall Open House & Boat Show (see under Fri.), Stone Harbor, ends today. Fall Game Shows, CM Co. riding Club, Dias Creek Rd., CM Court House, 2hd & 4th Sundays.

q R N E R by fres//e Steyson.,^ c * For Mystery Lovers O Two enterprising women in different parts of the country have book stores specializing in books on crime, mysteries, intrigue and detection. Murder O Inc. in New York City is owned by Carol Brener; Scene of the Crime, in California, by Ruth Windfeldt. CQ If anyone qualified to judge good mysteries, they woOld be obvious candidates. Dell Publishing has engaged the proprieters of fhe two stores to pick classic mysteries which are published under the imprints of the names of the two bookstores. When you see A Murder Inc. or Scene of the Crime design on a mystery, you will know you have found a book you will enjoy. Many, althodgh not all, are reprints of British books. Some of the authors have familiar names. Hugh Pentecost has written many books, and two* Random Killer and Death After Breakfast, are included in the list. Elizabeth -Daly’s sleuth Henry Gamadge stars in Any Shape or Form, and Death and Letters. Bartholdmew Gill is represented with stories featuring Inspector McGarr,«the Irish policeman. Re is one of the few mystery writers who sets his plots in The Republic of Ireland, which gives his books an added dimension. I have enjoyed meeting Inspector Gently, Alan Hunter’s detective; and Michael Allen’s Detective Superintendent Spence—both traditional. English crime solvers. Each of the books I have sampled so far has been of the highest caliber. Mystery lovers have many treats in store as these books come out.

Leslie Steysqn is the pseudonym for a very real area bookstore proprietor.

County Calendar Items for COUNTY CALENDAR mu*t be received the TbumUy prior to Send them to Libby Demp Forreet, P,0. Box «M. Cape May.

NOTICE All clubs and organizations with regular meeting schedules are invited 'to submit — on a post card — updated information on meeting times, places and dates. Once received, we shall need to be notified only of special events and meeting changes. L.D.F.

Concert by the Bishop Kenrick H.S. Marching Band, Convention Hall, Cape May, 1:30 p.m. Cape Stamp Club (open to all), Lower Twp. Rec. Ctr., Bayshore Rd., Villas, every Sunday 2 p.m. 4-H Marine Mini Series final meeting (465-5115 for info.), Cooperative Extension Service Educational Cntr., Dennisville Rd., CM Court House, 7:30 p.m. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 Card Party sponsored by the Order of the Eastern Star, Masonic Temple, 6300 Atlantic Ave., Wildwood Crest, ll a.m. to 3 p.m. Avalon Women’s Civic Club meeting, Borough Hall, 32nd St. & Dune Dr., Avalon, 12:30 p.m. Overeaters Anonymous (884-4584), Advent Parish House, 612 Franklin St., Cape May, every Monday, 12:30 p.m. ^ Chamber of Commerce dinner meeting (season’s opener), Hahn's Restaurant (note change), Stone Harbor, cocktails 6, dinner 7 p.m. Cape Stamp Club gathering (open to all collectors), Lower Twp. Rec. Ctr., Bayshore Rd., Villas, 7 p.m. CM Women’s Republican Club meeting, American Legion Harry Snyder Post #193, 406 Congress St., Cape May, Executive Board 7 p.m.; general meeting 8 p.m. • g Ovcreaters Anonymous (368-5279), Boro Hall, 3100 Dune Dr., Avalon, every Monday 7:30 p.m. Assn, of Young Adults (AYS) meeting, Public Safety Bldg., JFK Blvd., Sea Isle City, every Monday 8:30 p.m. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 Rosh Hashana. Chess Club, Community Ctr., North Wildwood, every Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Square Dance sponsored by Millman Seniors, Millman Ctr., Villas, every Tuesday 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 30 Kiwanis Club dinner meeting (see Wed.), Cape May, 6:15 p.m. Overeaters Anonymous (see Wed ), Woodbine, 7:30 p.m. N CONTINUING ■Victorian Capets,’ 28-minute color film on historic Cape May, public showings, Welcome Ctr., Lafayette near Jackson, Cape May, Fridays & Saturdays at 9 p.m. thru oct. 3. Wildflower Artist Ruth J. Adams of Passaic, exhibit of works, Wetlands Inst., Stone Harbor Blvd., 9 to 5 Tuesday thru^alurday, Sept. 1 thru Sept. 28. Trolley Tours of Historic Cape May, meet at Beach & Guerney, Sats. & Suns. 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Historic Tours of Physick House, Victorian Museum, Physick Estate (884-5405), Cape May, Weds., Sat. & Sun. 12-4 thru September, Suns, in October. Walking Tours of Historic District Wed. & Sun. 10 a m. Meet at Mall Info Booth, Cape May

The State We're In (From Page 34)^ THAT TRIAL YEAR would see t DE^ soliciting voluntary participation by landowners in the Pinelands, through explanatory public meetings. A landowner would be able to seek financial assistance from DEP for any specific project involving public access to private open space. DEP would then have 30 days to approve or deny the request. Approval could lead to signing of an “access covenant" of a specified duration. To my knowledge, this is a brand new idea in the United States. But it’s worked amazingly well in Great Britain, and a similar idea is meeting the same success in New Zealand. One of the keys to Its success is having an on-the-scene representative who understands both open space recreation and the particular probems of the landowners involved. Under the British system, public facilities which are privately owned but publicly financed operate beautifully at only a fraction of what it costs to operate our public parks. THE PINELANDS IS the logical place for Stewart's pilot project. Surely there’s more land there which needs to he mafle available to the public than can possibly be purchased i Or should be purchased, for that matter, because we need to keep agriculture alive and healthy. Demands for more recreational open space grow much faster in New Jersey than the supply of money available for that purpose. This system is obviously one for which the time has come. The whole idea is carefully explained in a paper recently published by NJCF through a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. I’ll gladly send a free copy (including the text of A-3546) to anyone writing to me at the New Jersey Conservation Foundation, 300 Mendham Road, Morristown, N.J. 07960. David Morre is executive director of the N.J. Conservation Foundation.

35 Historic Cold Spring Village. Seashore Rd. 3/4 mile north of Ferry Rd., Cold Spring, 13 historical buildings, craft demonstrations, special* events & restaurant (884-1810), daily till 9 p.m. Black St White Photographs by Ocean City photographer Scott Griswold Jr., Rockford Gallery, 406 Asbury Ave., Ocean City, continues until Sept. 30. County Park (465-5271) featuring barbecue pits, picnic sites, playground & rec eqpt., ball fields, children’s zoo, bike St hiking trails, Rt. 9 north pf C.M. Court House, daily til dusk. Colonial House guided tours by Greater Cape May Historical Society (88^3630), adjacent to City HaU (rear), Cape May, every MoWay, Wednesday & Friday 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. George Boyer Historical Museum. Rm. 212-216 City Hall (522-2444), N.J. & Montgomery Aves., Wildwood, Monday thru Friday 1 to 3. Sightseeing Boats (sail & power cruises along the beach and backbays offered day & evening front many resort marinas; ask at dockside). Hedge Garden (topiary artistry), Fishing Creek Rd. btwn. Breakwater & Bayshore Rds., Fishing Creek, daily till dusk. • Ocean City Pops. Music Pier, Ocqan City, nitely c.pncerts Sunday thru Wednesday 8 p.m. Cape May County Art League. 1050 Washington Street, Cape May, open from 11 a m. to 4 p.m...Tuesday thru Saturday, 1-4 p.m. Sunday, closed Mondays. Art classes, lectures, exhibits. Exhibits change monthly; admission free. Sales gallery. Birding Hotline (taped message on bird sighting, Hawk watch reports, interesting phenomena & birding tips) by C.M. Bird observatory, 707 E. Lake Dr.. Cape May Point (884-2626). Wetlands Institute featuring nature Museum Aquaria, Observation Tower & Bookstore (368-1211). Stone Harbor Blvd., Tuesday thru Saturday 9 to 5.\ Sr. Citizen Swimming (884-8411 exl. 27) Elementary School pool, Cape May every Monday, Wednesday & Fri-, day afternoon 3:30 to 4:30. Belleplain State Forest, (861-2404) featuring hiking trails, picnic area, camping, ffesh water lake; daily. Cape May Point State Park, (884-2159) featuring nature trails, surfishing, scenic overlook, daily till dusk. County Museum (465-3535) in historic John Holmes House (Indian Whaling & Colonial artifacts. Victorian antiques, Genalogical info.), Rt. 9 north of Court House, Monday thru Saturday 10 to 4. City Library (884-3305), Cape Md.y, Monday thru Friday 10 to noon & 2 to 5. Saturday 10 to poon. tuesday & Thursday evening 7 to 9. Thrift Shop, sponsored by Assn, for Retarded Citizens, 6th & Maryland, Rio Grande, IVlQtiday thru Friday, 9 to 6 and Saturday, 9 to noon! Learning's Run Botanical Gardens, Rt. 9 btwn. Avalon Exit 13 G.S. Pkwy, & Sea Isle City blvd., daily thru Oct. 31 from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. !■■■■■■ COUPON ! BUY6ECLAIRS I AND ! GET 6

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