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MANV^PRIVATE- in dividual* and the Kennedy Domocratic Club are among those spearheading a drive to have a Crest poll mg fiace moved out of Borough Hall to a neutral site such as the Crest Library Some suspect that 4fficials under the guise of work sessions could actual ly electioneer from the poll mg place premise* STANLEY CAGE is looking nonplussed as his belov , ed Crest Museum is cur ,rontly "in limbo ' The Crest hud to demolish (he building to- provide some much needed parking space for police cars Eventually, the museum
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will receive spacious^ lavish new quarter when the fire departmenCmoves on to a new site donated by •Eugene Davalos. Cage, is breathing new life into the historical society. with a lecture series Charles “Hank" James just lectured on the Civil War. THE CREST S Rita Grant, an ex-model herself, is so proud of daughter Denise A. Sherwood who is now m o d eI i rf g for Bamberger's and the Philadelphia Models Guild Denise' is a former Urie's
cocktail waitress
BOB HALL IS readying selection of a squad of eight
Mews Notes from The Wildwoods Charles V. Mathis
SELL OUT
After 25 years Owner Rfetires
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lifeguards to represent North Wildwood in the Atlantic Seaboard Lifeguard Championships at Hollywood. Florida. Christmas week. “Scoop" Taylor will take 21 lifeguards to represent center island Wildwood. Wildwood pizza *n beer benefit tickets are on sale for $5.00 MR. AND MRS. Alan Gould are back from a Puerto Rico vacation. • • • JOE JONES, ex-boniface of Wildwood's Old Philadelphia Bar. is mulling the idea of re-entering the cabaret business with a North Wildwood bistro. DOUG HUNSBERGER. back from a. week’s photo assignments in Ocean City. Maryland, reports it is just as inactive as the Wildwoods. Ah. misery
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loves company. Summer resorts just aren’t in style in November, it seems. • • • THANKSGIVING IS hap pily looked forward to ixv the Wildwoods as the Outgoing tide of departing humanity is temporarily reversed. Collegians, out of town workers and even some from the sunny South return home for the holiday festivities. It’s all uphill now as winter holidays all boost our winter population until the blessed spring again makes us the ’favorite mecca. « • • ONE WORD we don’t seem to hear much any more is tacky. That is not due to any onset of gentility. A more likely explanation is just the opposite: we have been whelmed, if not. indeed; overwhelmed, by so much that is tq.cky that wo have become hardened. The tacky has ^become the commonplace; indeed, in some cases the»heathcn have tried to! cbnvince themselves ai^ us that tacky is actuallidchic. As. for example, designer jeans with the designer’s
name stitched on to give an effect of subdued ostentation. For the benefit of those who cannot remember an unpolluted environment, we have prepared a list of things in modem life that are tacky: •Gym shorts worn over long pants. •TV commercials for douches, laxatives and hemorrhoid preparations. •Clothes that bear messages, even when thr message is: Look. I can afford designer jeans. .•Large radjos, carried about in public, especially when turned on. •Howard Coselk •Men still wearing socks with swim trunks looking for all the world as if they absent mindedly forgot their pants. •Ladies wearing earrings and high heels with swim suits. •Women wearing hair curlers in any public place, remindful of the girl who wore hair curlers to her wedding because she waiUed to look nice for the reception! •City folks saying the shore is depressing when it rains. All we can think of when they so remark is a cold rain bouncing off dirty, dingy city bricks. Have they ever seen a beach fresh swept by Mother
Nature after a rainstorm? •Hats worn in restaurants, unless one is a member of the female sex - and then only if the hat is definitely feminine. No baseball caps, please. •The woni palimony. •"Palimony suits.” •Joyce Brothers •Folks when told that soneone is buying .them a drink - hurriedly switching from beer to more expensive mixed drinks. One could go On. but must one?
Center of Attention
Local Chefs Win Honors
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MAYS LANDING - Four Cape May County students were part of the ten-member team of chefs from Atlantic Community College's Academy of Culinary Arts that recently received the Gold Medal of the Society Cuisinier de Paris at New York City’s annual Salon of Culinary
Art and Exhibition.
Charles Pastore. Denise May and Robert Harre of Ocoan City, and Sharon Donohue of WUdwood, participated on the local team that also received first place honors for its presentations of petit fours, bread display, and decorated cakes. Among other honors, the team won the I Grand Prize for classical buffet, and the Felicita tions of the Jury, a special award for perfect,
presentation.
The ACA team competed against 60 teams of chefs from hotels, motels and restaurants across the nation, including about 20 student teams from the Culinary Institute of America, Johnson and Wales College and others. The event was part of the 7tn International IlVt el /Motel and Restaurant Show held Nov. 9 at\ (he New York Col-
Its sponsor, the
Soclete Culinaire, Philanthropique, calls the show a "free lance exhibit to permit the individualistic . presentation/of practical cookery." It is one of the
AvalorKjQogd
Practice Teaches GREENVILLE. N.C. - Patricia Timanus of 273 48th St.. Avalon, is among 180 East Carolina University teacher education students who have been assigned practice teaching in North Carolina public schools this semester. Each practice teacher will conduct regular classes under the direction of a supervisor and will be graded for performance.
largest shows of its kind in
the United States.
The Ac/ademy of Culinary Arts is a twoyear, comprehensive culinary program which is established in a new, state-of-the-art facility at Atlantic Community College. Only in its second year of operation, it has already .attracted students from all parts of the world. Originally designed to meet the need for qualified food and beverage personnel in the Atlantic City casino industry, the facility has expanded to include instruction in all phases of
culinary arts.
Sf nd the' Cranberry Mold Bouquet brTbanl«giving. It’s a beautiful arrangement of fall flower* that comes in a gorgeous, band-painted ceramic cranberry mold. You’ll send a decorative centerpiece for Thanksgiving dinner. And a wonderful kitchen accessory that’ll be remembered for years. ('all or visit our shop and send your bouquet almost anywhere in'the U.S. Just ask for The Cranberry Mold BouquefTrom Teleflora. Thanksgiving, Thursday, November 25. 9iagoM MAre/ (Hf/ rr rtf/ 'f/out me/ '/‘A of I Cresse & N.J. Ave. Wildwood Crest. New Jersey 08260 Phone: 522-0136 Olfetefloia
ATTENTION PARENTS OF STUDENTS OF LOWER CAPE MAY REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL REPORT CARDS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED FRIDAY NOVEMBER 19, 1982
BRIGHTEN UP YOUR THANKSGIVING TABLE WITH FLOWERS FROM -zHamaiin i COUNTRY BARN FLORIST FIVE MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED Order Early 465-5857 350 Hand Avenue, M^s H u ° use -. OTfetefloia
TAYLOR’S GIFT SHOP CRIB & BIKE RENTAL 14805 PACIFIC AVE. WILDWOOD 522-2737 J NAPIER JEWELRY • FENTON GLASSWARE ■ SEBASTIAN MINIATURES • XMAS ITEMS OPEN UNTIL DEC. 31 si LAY-AWAY FOR THE HOLIDAYS OPEN DAILY 10-5 Bob « Eleanore Wellington

