Cape May County Herald, 31 July 1985 IIIF issue link — Page 24

24 Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 31 July '85

You can't call Mother Nature. So call Lawn Doctor. fi\ LAWN* FIdoctor Cl \ A LAWN* DOCTOR \ VI of cape may county t I ^/j 613 Town Bank Rd., North Cape May \ W 884-7600 Study to be « „ IU- .i health can- specialist. At Atlantic Cnm- " nurse, mumty College. n-celve your training in: f cf nr * Nursing. ACC offers academic and clinical lIlLrdpiSl Ol study, including care of hospital patients. You'll be medical ldb rt a^v takl "u ixam <nr your Kt,^is,ea'iJ Nursv t Of h tl if* 1 "1 n * Respiratory Therapy. I lospitals. clinics and ICLI 11 IlLltll 1 home health care agencies need trained practitioners -.4 A er "* People Wl'h breathing difficulties " 1 • • Physical Therapy Assistant. Youll he trained to work under the direction of a physical therapist. • ( kcupational Therapy. I lelp birth defect and accident victims learn everyday functions like da-sv uig Al'C's pmgr.uii. one of two in the state, includes practice inouron-campus Activities of Daily Living apartment. • Medical Lab IVchnician. I earn to analyze WimkI and other body fluids You'll find job opportunities in hospitals, clinics and medical lahoratones. ( hir instructors are all experts in their fields. In clinical situations, instruction is often one-on-one. And everyone at Al'C is always ready to help you. ALT' is government supported, so you pay only S.'tii f>0 per credit. Clinical courses require lab fees and travel. You work in a variety of health care settings. The rest of >i >ur I ife starts at Atlantic C« immun i ty College Clauses begin Sept. 3. The Rest of c^r> r ~ J Your Life J j 0 [ L- - L — | Starts Here ATi.A^cuiMMiiNrncoi.i.ixiK J V .j | . . Send me information and call me to discuss details • ( ICS. I Watll l(> Just send me information 111 call you when I'm ready. J j know more about n.™ | Healthcare ***"• ! Careers "r suu" z'" I , I hone Ik-sl time to call l »ll ALL. Mail today to Admissions. ACL". Mays landing. S.J. OKiitO | wrm ,-xt tiHi* ttKwr.mi • 1 t ft \ I COMING SOON' M VJ \ BLOUSES. SHIRTS. PANTS AND ACCESSORIES PAR y ^11 LOCAl PAROt HIAl SCHOOLS AT 0ISC0UNT PRICES

[?]

SINCE THIS is the fifth week of July, Lower councilmen did not hold a work session Monday night. They're scheduled, though, for a 7 p.m. work session and an 8 p.m. regular meeting next Monday. Among the topics on next week's tentative agenda are overdue appointments to various municipal boards and authorities and Councilman Robert Conroy's pending proposal that council eliminate yearly pay for five members of the MUA ($1,200 each) and seven Board of Health members ($1,000 each). Council may also consider Councilman Joseph Lonergan's suggestion that it reduce annual pay for ward councilmen (three) from $4,380. Also expected on the Aug. 5 agenda are proposals that the county take over the Iawer/Township Chamber of "Commerce long-term lease for township land under its Bayshore Road head quarters (see front page) and the Planning Board recommendation that DiDonato Construction remove a portion of a wall around La Qunita Del Mar condominiums in Diamond Beach that allegedly was built into the township's Raleigh Avenue right of way. ACCORDING TO their tentative agenda, township zoners are slated to hear six hardship and four use variance applications at their 7 p.m. meeting next Tuesday in Township Hall. 2600 Bayshore Rd., Villas. Postponed from earlier meetings is J&B Construction's request for a use variance to build a 60-unit motel at Memphis and Atlantic avenues. Diamond Beach. Fred Kozlowski seeks use and hardship variances to build a residence in GB-I < general businessindustrial) zone at 8100 Bayview Dr.. Diamond Beach. Use variances have also been requested for: a 42- by

60-foot metal addition to an existing masonry industrial building in a residential zone at 252 Fishing Creek Rd.; and Constance Inc.'s request to build an unspecified number of residential units in a commercial zone at Raleigh and Pacific avenues. Diamond Beach Other hardship variances have been submitted for: a 10- by 30-foot housing addition into an existing front yard setback encroachment at 120 W. Hudson Ave., Villas, a 20by 24-foot attached garage within five feet of the property line at 955 Carol Ave., Erma, a garage enlargement into a rear yard setback encroachment at 810 Shumpike Rd.; a singlefamily home on an undersized lot at Myrna Road and Route 9, Erma; a sinlge-family home on an undersized Baywyn Road lot in Cape May Beach (Tolz tract) section of Town Bank. MUNICIPAL planners hold a work review session in Township Hall next Thursday at 7:30 p.m. During their July 18 regular meeting, planners denied a hardship variance for a 10-lot subdivision on farm land at New England and Shumpike roads. Cold Spring, and tabled for 120 days, consideration of a related major subdivision application. They conditionally approved a hardship variance and site plan application for the addition of a candy store to an ice cream parlor at Town Bank and Bayshore roads, North Cape May. and a minor site plan for a trash enclosure at the Bayshore Road Wawa. Planners approved; (Jeorge Dilworth's minor subdivision application to create three lots at Route 9 and Kathryn Boulevard. Erma ; a revised dune plan application for a swimming pool at Cedardale Avenue -and Bay Drive, south Villas; and a hardship variance with a minor sub-

division application to create three lots on Cape Avenue. Cold Spring. REMINDERS Besides the Zoning Board of Adjustment, the local Board of Health meets next Tuesday in Township Hall, but at 6 p.m.. followed by the Incinerator Authority at 7:30. mssh (ewseSsbb

^ *crown* ^ uk "foster grant* flfe ' Huge Selection Of $300 Sunglasses • The Latest In Style and Fashion.