Cape May County Herald, 1 September 1982 IIIF issue link — Page 16

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News^>^^^ Digest (From Page 1) gone to the establishntent only to purchase a fish sandwich. According to reports, Capt. Raymond Saunders was in Swifty's Seafood when the raid took place Aug. 14. No charges were filed against the officer in connection with the incident.

MUA Court Fight WILDWOOD CREST - The governing body last week decided to fight court attempts by the county MUA to force the municipality to sign a resolution citing how they will bill residents for costs of the utility’s proposed regional sewage treatment plant. The MUA is fighting the Crests move in Superior Court, contending that the borough isn't following court orders issued several years ago mandating it join the proposed regional MUA treatment plant as a means of stopping pollution of back bays. WITHOUT THE Crest signing the resolution, the utility's application for some $43 million in federal funding to continue the project can’t moVe forward. The borough has hired an environmental engineer to work out a plan to upgrade the Crest treatment plant and make discharge from the plant capable df meeting federal water quality standards.

Permitted?

QHELLENGERS LANDING - The LoweTTownsnip Zoning Board of Adjustment will have to make a.determination next Tues., Sept. 7, whether a convenience store can be a permitted use ih this area of the entrance to Cape May. Southland Corp. has/bequested the board decide whether a Seven-Eleven can be permitted in the special Marine Business district. This an?a is supposed to be specifically for maBine>business activities, although the &riung ordinance does permit the retail, wholesale processing and packaging on site of goods considered to be "marine related" or "pertinent to marine use." EARLIER THIS YEAR the Zoning Board handled a similar case where it decided to allow a wholesale meat processing business to operate in the old Morrow Nut House warehouse at the foot of the Rt. 109 Canal Bridge. Seven-Eleven wants to construct a store at the intersection of Rt. 109 and Second Ave.

Killed in Crash

OCEAN CITY — A 71-year-old Atlantic Cily woman was killed here last Thursday when her car ran a stop sign/md collided with a truck. • The victim was Marion Engelhard, a third graefe teacher in Atlantic City for more than 40 years. The accident occurred about 12:46 p m. at 15th and Central Aves. Mrs. Engelhard’s car collided with a New Jersey Water Co. tank truck driven by Kevin Jones of Cardiff. Police said no charges were filed in the incident. Killed in Australia , OCEAN CITY - A 22-year-old local woman was among three Stockton State College exchange students killed Aug. 21 when a van in which they were traveling collided head-on with a tractor-trailer about 500 miles northeast of Sydney, Australia Suzanne Burton, a sophomore business major, died when the van apparently crossed a median strip and was severed. Ms Burton and five other Stockton students, all studying at the University of Wollongong, were enroute to the seashore resort of Gympie when the accident occurred. Concern at Vo-Tech COURT HOUSE — Several teachers from the county Vocational School attended the Aug. 24 freeholders meeting to express concern over this year’s reduction in course offerings and staff, as well as ask that the school board respond to a previous request that meetings be held evenings in-

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stead of afternoons. The teachers are upset that the office occupatrtms program — considered by many to be the school's most successful program — has been eliminated because of budget cuts. Education Assn, president Lorraine Richards also noted concern that some teachers still working toward their state teaching certification have jobs in the district while others with full certification have been laid off. Leader’s Choice, Says Matalucci UPPER TOWNSHIP - County GOP chairman Phil Matalucci last week made it clear that the decision ot/Which candidate will go on the primacy ballot under the Regular Republican Slogan will continue to be the prerogative of the local party leader, not a Republican Club. Township Republican Club president George Doerr requested the change in the system as a means of uniting the Upper Twp. party currently split over the Committee candidacy of Ruth Millward. In the June primary she narrowly'defeated candidate Jack McDonough, who had the backing of the Republican Club and former mayor Leonard Migliaccio. Local leader Daniel Beyel chose to place Millward under in the GOP column rather than McDonough. BUT. MATALUCCIreportedly believes the candidacy of McDonough was inspired by Migliaccio as an attempt to gain back control of the governing body. He indicated that the former mayor is still bitter over Beyel’s decision to oust him as mayor and elect Frank Kruk to the position. The Republican Club, according to the chairman, is a power base for Migliaccio. In the meantime, former freeholder William R. Wilsey has charged that Matalucci is blaming the split in the Upper organization on Migliaccio because the county leader still holds a grudge against the former mayor for not supporting him for freeholder in the 1971 primary.

A Thousand Books— (From Page 1) tion be given to the construction of a regional library branch in the southern part of the county THE PROJECT actually didn't pick up steam, however, until the spring" of 1980 when the freeholders and Counfy Library Commission began to seriously discuss the proposition. A financial agreement was reached calling on the freeholders to handle construction expenses with funds available in the 1981 county budget, while the Library Commission took on the responsibility of providing staff and equipment funding. The project really t>egan to move early in the spring of 1981, after the Lower Township Planning board approved the proposed site plan — a step necessary before the freeholders would authorize receipt of construction bids. Bids — totalling $630,000 — were finally awarded in July 1981. Groundbreaking took place in October.

Rabbi Counters—— (From Page l) that it would- be a concealed PLO explosive. They saw ammunition and weaporis that the United States has sent to Jordan and Saudi Arabia and which had come into the hands of the PLO. ' -'JVIUCH OF THE ammunition also was from Russia," said the rabbi. "Tanks, rockets, mortars. Jeeps, you name it.” They saw loving appreciation, too, from women and children who threw their arms around members of the visiting party and thanked them for liberating Lebanon. • Rabbi Atlas saw the tragic consequences of war, too. "It hurts as much to see the PLO harmed as anyone else," he said. "No one gains from war. Everyone loses, but, unfortunately, if someone attacks, you have to protect yourself." Mr. Atlas has been rabbi of Cape May County's only active synagogue since Sept. 5, 1970. A native of Mississippi, he came to Wildwood from Little Rock, Arkansas.