Cape May County Herald, 30 June 1982 IIIF issue link — Page 3

Dorii Ward SIGNING AUTOGRAPHS is what Gov. Thomas Kean did after speaking to an assembly and talking privately with fifth grade students on Tuesday in Cape May. It was the governor's first visit to the Jersey Cape since he became the state's chief executive. Family Day Set July 5

STONE HARBOR - The Chamber of Commerce will stage an all-day family Independence Day celebration Monday. July 5. with games and contests for participants 3 to 73. The program will start at 9:45 a.m. at the 91st St. recreation field. Prizes and trophies will be awarded to

1st, 2nd and third place winners in each age group in all events There will be a band concert featuring Dixie Land by the "Lucky Lindy's plus Three". Borough Councilman R. Jack Fitzpatrick and Chamber president David Rossow are co-chairmen.

'Seaweed’ Project

An Army Engineers' permit for maintenance of four units of Seascape (synthetic seaweed), and placement of additional units in the Atlantic Ocean north of Indian River Inlet, Delaware, has been asked by Coastal Protection Inc. of Claymont. Del. Seascape is the product in which 7-Mile Beach municipalities in Cape May County have expressed an interest in using combat beach erosion. THE DELAWARE project calls for maintaining four units of synthetic seaweed 110 feet outshore of the existing high tide line. The existing units will be increased in area so that

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Gov. Drops In on Students

CAPE MAY - The imaginative fifth graders at the elementary school here have had something of a problem the past six months. The governor of New Jersey solved it for them last Wednesday.’ Last fall, under the guidance of teacher Tom Levin, the 20 pupils made Christmas wreaths out of seashells (Cape May seashells, of course) and presented 40 of them to the . White House for display there. IN RECOGNITION of their efforts, the White House invited the pupils to Washington for a red carpet tour of the presidential home. Unfortunately for them, the tour took place during Christmas * week and they missed President Reagan who was vacationing. ’ Early irt the fall the pupils invited gubernatorial candidates Hhomas Kean and James Florio to discuss the campaign issues. Both sent their stand-ins. MORE RECENTLY the class made an American flag out of 2,145 clamshells. They wanted to personally deliver it to Gov. Kean in

the initial phase will eventually involve placement of additional 1,200 units in rows extending 1,200 feet along the beach. A secondary phase will involve placing 1,200 more units 200 feet from the high tide line-for 1,200 feet adjacent to the'ehoreline. The applicant's plans further provide for extending the project to cover ohe mile' of the eroding coastline.

his Trenton office, but school authorities said they had made enough class trips for one year and vetoed the idea. Levin made the trip without the children. It looked like the children’s efforts to meet a governmental celebrity would go down the drain completely until Cape May Councilman Harry Gilbert and County GOP Chairman Philip Matalucci came to their rescue. It didn't require much coaxing for them to convince the new governor to come to Cape May Depending upon how one loked at it. the mountain came to Mohammed or •vice versa WHILE THE 260 pupils and 22 teachers waited inside and local political dignitaries outside, a whirlybird descended on the recreation field and; sure enough, out stepped the governor with an aide, a State policeman and a pilot. After the greetings, he Mras ushered into the fiftn grade classroom where he signed autographs and handed out pens while the pdpils' cameras clicked away

Kean thanked them for their gift and said the flag is on display in his outer office for many people to see. Maybe, someone said,

Ronald Reagan will visit next fall. Don’t count out the possibility. Harry Gilbert already is working on it

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