Herald & Lantern 21 March '84
17
Wildwood Beveragexnen’s Association will oppose Senate Bill 1226, which would reduce the number of rooms mandated by the state before holds and motels could obtain licenses for alcohol sales. N.J. Sen. Carmen Orechio s bill would reduce the number of rooms from 100 sleeping units to 65. The measure could add as many as 10 new liquor licenses on our island alone! Senior citizen promoter Lou Lambert, tired of convention hall hassles with the Parking Authority, has purchased N J. Warehouse Sales showrooms in North Wildwood for a private convention hall to service his Senior Citizens and any other conclaves he can lure here. Lambert has ambitious and beautiful architect's plans to face-lift the facility. Lambert will host a wfedding and reception at his vast Delaware bayshore country estate in late spring for His Honor, Mayor Earl Ostrander, who will be tripping to the altar. The new convention hall will seat 5,000 in 46,000 square feet of flow space add will have its own huge dining room. Crest resident Mrs. CarORbe Doherty of the County Roost plans a November visit to Homer, Alaska, to see her daughter, Mrs. Lisa Seeman. Mrs. Seeman tells her mother that in Alaska, instead of “Where’s the Beef?” they mumble ‘‘Where’s the whale blubber?”
MIKE PRESTON of the Jaycees and Ben Lauriello of Wildwooth Growth Association are among the prime movers of the College Graduate Career Symposium in Wildwood from Memorial Day to June 1. Miller Brewing Company is spending one million dollars in media ads to canvass a quarter million college graduates (ages 20 to 25) from Maine to the Carolinas and east of the Mississippi. As many as 30,000 grads are expected to attend the three-day symposium at Wildwood Convention Hall. Representatives of 100 of the Fortune Top 500 companies will visit here- to preview their job banks for collegians. Among these will be Ford, PitneyBowles, Dow Chemical and most of the giants. "nie Mayor and Tom Parsons are arranging free motel accommodation for the industry executives. The symposium will be climaxed with a free beach concert between Fun Pier and Mariners Landing from 5:30 to 8 p.m. with a trio of name groups specializing in mellow ^ will recall the good old days when Jim Philip Sousa and other bands serenaded Boardwalk strollers with beach concerts at the Auditorium and other points. Thanks to the Jaycees, the good old days are back again with a beach concert on June l. The 90-member organization of young executives up to 36 years of age is booming center island! Bravo. • • • LIKE TO RUB elbows with jock stars? Centoisland, join the 1,000 or so members who drop in on Mike Wuko's and Brian McVan’s Attlis Fitness Center. Members include New York Jets star Jee
slews Notes from-
The Wildwoods Charles V. Mathis
Klecko, world wrestling champ Bob Backlnnd and Franco “Steelers" Harris. Wuko hosts his own daily five-minute physical fitness show on Ted Turner’s CTN News Network starting early in June. Attlis Fitnesp Center will sponsor a big new attraction for island business in July at Convention Hall with the AAU-sanctioned Mr. New Jersey contest. Over 150 mighty men will contend for five-foot tall trophies & other diadems. There will be guest posers from New York, Pennsylvania and Delaware. Joining Mr. New Jersey will be the Miss America Pageant for Miss New Jersey at Wildwood Convention Hall, switching here from Cherry Hall in 1985 as an annual early July week event. Convention
Hall Director Anthony Catanoso has jazz great Billy Kretchner in August concert while wrestling will be held five Monday nights during the season.
IN E£RLY MAY, Catanoso will bring the Fuel Mercharils Association, 5,000 strong, to Wildwood for the first time. Gloria Rothstein’s Antique shows from Suffern, N.Y. will, extend our season with a slkrw to attract 50,000 an tique lovers in early October. Another new conclave in June will be 3,000 NJ. Master League of Plumbers. April will be jumping with the biggest Jaycees three-day trade show that’s so big that circus tents will expand space of the big hall.
Easter will see a huge indoor arts and crafts show kicking off a three-day convention of 5,000 Grand Lodge of Masons and their families. Early April will s e brand new Pentecostal two-day meeting for over 1,500 attendees. Catanoso expects to recapture the Shrine’s huge September conclave for 1986. This year the MidAtlantic Shrine meets here the week after Labor Day.
COUNCIL WILL crack down on noise pollution. Previous regimes soundproofed the tightly closed doors of taverns. Council will rock and sock noisy party goers with fines from $100 to $1000 or 90 days in jail. They will silence auto showroom, motel, utility service truck and Broadwalk barker and amplified radio and record music loudspeakers. Barkers may be silenced altogether or forced to “bark” in natural low decibel “voice levels.” Taxpayers input is sought on the edict. A :
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