Cape May County Herald, 4 November 1981 IIIF issue link — Page 13

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The" Digest Tops,ones >From Page 1) binding because it was submitted before the fee ordinance was finalized. MORE THAN 250 people came out to last Wednesday’s meeting only to find that the governing body has postponed until Noy. 11 the public hearing on the ordinance that set weekly beach fees at $2.50 and seasonal fees at $6. ($3. if tags are purchased before the first Monday in April). . \ Pantalone said the hearing was delay9d to allow the commissioners additional time to review conflicting opinions on the issue Critics, however, noted some motel owners who oppose the pay beach plan will have left the area for the winter by the time the hearing is held.' NAACP Supported On Two Fronts COURT HOUSE - The county branch of the NAACP has received official word that the American Civil Libertifes Union will throw its support behind the organization's fight *o guarantee that all citizens are treated fairly in the courts, and that minorities are protected from Injustice involving the Klu Klux J<lan. Word of the ACLll’s support cafpe from Leonard Frenkel of Atlantic County's' organization. He told the NAACP gathering last Wednesday that his group has alto received complaints that blacks and' poor whites have been both verbally and physically abused before and during trials He said what is needed is a compilation of the alleged abuses with names;'dates and facts REGARDING THE KKK which reportedly has purchased 20 acres of ground in.the county for a training camp — Frenkel guaranteed Jus organization’s support in combating their activities. He acknowledged, however, that the ACLU in other states has Worked to protect the rights of the Klan, rioting the constitutional right of any group to congregate. Probation in Arson COURT HOUSE — Although sentenced here in Superior Court last week to seven years in state prison for setting a Cape May home ablaze in October 1978, convicted arsonist James King will serve no time in the state penitentiary. Superior Cour^ Judge James A. O'Neill ruled last Monday that the former West Cape May man will receive credit (or the 489 days he Was held in the county jail — a period more extensive than if he would serve under the state’s parole system. WHILE THE REST OF the sentence was suspended, the judge ordered the defendant be placed on a five-year probation period. Originally indicted in late 1979 on five counts of arson, he had been charged with setting a series of fires that damaged three occupied and two vacant homes in the Broad St. area of Cape May. At a trial earlier this year he was found innocent on two counts of the indictment, pleaded guilty to one count, and had remaining charges dropped at the time of ^ sentencing. Supermarket Closed for Awhile FISHING CREEK - The Shop n Bag supenparket in the Breakwater Plaza on Bayshore and Breakwater Rds., here closed temporarily last Tuesday. According |to informed sources, it will reopen in a month’s time under new ownership. Sources report that George and Gladys Keller of North Wildwood are selling the supermarket franchise aod the Keller's Liquor Store corporation,'which operates the package goods store in the supermarket. Tlie Purchaser is identified as Jerry Gorman, proprietor of a supermarket in the Atlantic City qrea. Shop 'n Bag, the keystone store in the \ Breakwater Plaza shopping center here, opened in March 1980. The closing. 20 months later, was said to come at about the time union negotiations on a new contract were to commence. The supermarket employs almost a hundred people; the liquor store under a half dozen employees.

Camp Verdict Due COURT HOUSE - The jury, is expected to begin deliberations riere today in the murder trial of. Leroy-Camp. Camp, of Rio Grande, is charged with the stabbing death of Josephine Trombetta last December after the 29-yCar-old S. Dennis woman had been beaten and sexually abused- Both the defense and prosecution presented their summations in Superior Court Monday. Last week the jury heard testimony from the state medical examinier who performed an autopsy on the young woman’s body shortly after it was discovered in the woods off Stagecoach Road in January. With the aid of a mannequin, the examiner illustrated where the victim had been stabbed at least 32 times.

HIGH ABOVE the airport industrial park, this landmark is in need of 190,000 worth of repair.

Raps Reagan On Environment

(From Page 1) ment requirements of the Clean Water Act, had Congress sanctioned such waivers by the EPA. "This was nothing more than another effort by the EPA to reduce the clean water standards and further the degradation of our oceans," Hughes said. "It’s an attempt to save some money for municipalities by letting them pump inadequately treated materials into the ocean. "The EPA has already demonstrated its intent not to enforce the 1981 ban on sludge dumping in the ocean. This is another example of the Administration easing up.on environmental protection initiatives — especially where cost savings can^be achieved and the potential environmental harm can be downplayed,” Hughes said. THE SECOND DISTRICT congressman singled out Cape May County, N0w Jersey as an example where every effort is being made to comply with the ocean outfall requirements, instead of seeking waivers which would save money at long-term expense to the marine environment. Hughes, who authored the 1981 odean dumping ban, said he intends to seek a formal congressional oversight hearing on the ocean outfall issue. "Ocean outfalls were developed before I came to Congress, and I am not an advocate of this technology," he continued. "We must develop a long term policy to eliminate these pollution sources. As long as this technology is in place, however, the government must insist that municipalities comply with the minimum clean water standards which regulate their use." HUGHES' PROPOSAL would impose a one-year moratorium on the issuance of waivers by the Environmental Protection Agency for the use of ocean outfalls. Hughes said he offered the proposal because the EPA’s willingness to issue outfall waivers "could open the door for hundreds of plants to discharge inadequately treated materials into sensitive coastal waters." Hughes and Rep. James Howard (D-NJ) had both authored similar amendments on vthis issue. Their amendments were formally offered earlier last week by Rep. Robert Roe (D-NJ) during House consideration of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1981, and the amendment was approved.

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