Cape May County Herald, 26 June 1985 IIIF issue link — Page 26

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Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 26 June '85

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MAY MOST COMPLETE GARDEN CTfi 522 Seashore Ro«d, Erma ,_J?r ^§5fc IVe S//// Have A ISM Complete Selection Of: "o- ^ ? • Bedding Plants • Vegetable Plants I [i^yky • Rose Bushes ( v 7 * hanging Baskets i • Flowering : Fcees & Sus/ies jEBayiw • Ortho Products ^ And Much SHIP AHOY! SHOP AHOY! • GIFTS & NOVELTIES • HALLMARK CARDS • GLASSWARE • PET SUPPLIES • STATIONARY • CHILDREN'S BOOKS • HARDWARE • SEWING NOTIONS • KEYS • PAPERBACK BOOKS • PLANT SUPPLIES • SUNDRIES ■■■■*■■■■■■■ The MmiLfiril is here" HeHMIE and ready to crawl I llfcBllflBfc into your heart!

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From The Principal IBy Stanley Kotzen Principal, lower Cape May Regional High School

An empty school is like a starless night. It is there in space and time, but the glamour and the energy are missing. Walk our hallways this week and you are surrounded by rows of open and empty lockers, by classrooms with newspaper covering shelves of collected books, and occasional piles of forgotten scarves and gloves. The quiet is punctuated only by the tapping of typewriters and the sound of furniture being moved to provide for the summer cleaning schedule as we wind up one year and prepare for the next. INSIDE THE OFFICES the pace is furious as we complete the records of the 1984-85 school year and in a very real sense it is the most hectic time of the year. Working on report cards, transcripts, summer school, scheduling, registrations and parent

conferences fill o«r daily work schedule, but something is missing. The bells have not been turned off, so every 45 minutes they ring and instead of 1,000 students ind 70 faculty members filling the corridors of this building there is nothing. Every sound seems to echo in the school these days. IT WILL REMAIN like this for much of the next nine weeks with occasional bursts of activity during sports physicals, senior portraits and maintenance projects, but basically the office staff works alone and must adjust to each other all over again. We are all busy, but we lack the dynamic energy that only 1,000 teenagers sharing the same space can generate. It is now possible to concentrate for longer periods of time without interruption, but it becomes pretty clear after working for about three days during the summer recess that those interruptions are part of the life blood of any high school. THE SECRETARIAL staff seems always to be an afterthought when plaudits are passed around, but anyone who has ever worked in a high school knows how vital their services are. The paper work load is enormous and must be done efficiently if the school is to function smoothly, and when a school has a staff that is both dedicated and productive it is very fortunate. We have such a staff at Lower Cape May Regional, and its value is magnified when its members are left with the tasks of closing one year and opening the next. IT IS IRONIC that only when the excitement dies down do we have the opportunity to focus on the efforts of people who are so much responsible for a successful school year. So the lonely summer sounds of this high school are really a tribute to the work of our staff For Jane. Ina. Sandra. Carole. Peggy. Bonnie. Judy and Barbara, and for Jane. Jenny. Joan. Shirley, and Sunny, thanks for a job well done As one year slides into another and we begin to focus on Sept 3. 1985. these women work hard to make it possible for us to anticipate eagerly all the excitement of another school year Food, Bake Sale CAPE MAY - A food and bake sale will be held 9 a.m. Saturday. July 6. at the Cape Island Baptist Church, Columbia and Gumey Avenues. I

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You can t call Mother Nature. So call Lawn Doctor. 6\ LAWN# Kidocior < (1 \\ LAWNeDOCTOK 1 y\ OF CAPE MAY COUNTY i I L S] 613 Town Bank Rd„ North Cape May 1 \ & 884-7600 C I Lawn Docio' i"C k I f