Plan Rejected

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Plan Rejected CLUCK uCHiCKEN OPENS ON MAIN ST. SEE BUSINESS, PG. 24! I •:• Greater Newark's Hometown Newspaper Since 191 0 •:• 87th Year, Issue 37 ©1997 October 1 0, 1997 Newark, Del. • 50¢ THis WEEK Plan ·· · · ·IN· SPORTS . ... .. ~ . ·- rejected NEWARK EDGES By MARY E. PETZAK NEWARK POST STAFF WRITER CHRISTIANA IN EWARK PLANNING com­ mi ssioners have flatly N refu ·ed to consider any plan FOOTBAll by Commonwealth Development to raze the Farm and Home Bu il ding on ACTION. Main Street for a new retai I/apartment 19 complex. At th e monthly planning meeting Tuesday night, the commi ioner r c­ ommended that city council di ap­ prove and deny Commonwealth Management' subdivision plan on the gr und that it is the position of the commi. ion to preserve the existing AUTHOR RETURNS building. Conm1onwealth propo. ed demoli - TO LOOK AT See BUILDING, 15 ...,_ FAMILYS NtiS student PAST. 8 charged with -armed HOTDOG lADY robbery EWARK POLICE and ·cho 1 admini trators are SUFFERS N both inve. tigating an Oct. 6 incident in which a Newark Hi gh School tudent allegedly robbed anoth ­ SETBACK TO er male student at gunpoint. According to police, the 17-year­ 3 old victim told police that he was DREAM. approached around 12:48 p.m. on Monday by the suspect and two other teenage males in a vehicle at the rear of Newark High School. The victim said the vehicle t pped be ide him NEW CHRISTINA and th e suspect id ntifted a 17-year- SCHOOL See ROBBERY, 12 ...,_ MEMBER Old Roy NAMED. 4 Rogers site gets go ahead INDEX EVELOPERS FOR the for­ NEWS 1·5 mer Roy Rogers site on Main D Street have finally cleared POLICE BLOTIER 2 the first hurdle. Tu . day night, the OPINION 6 ewark Planning Commission voted to recommend the late t parking waiv­ LIFESTYLE 8 r and , u divi . ion plan to city council. BUSINESS The ucce .. ful proposal subm itted 24 by developers New ap Main treet DIVERSIONS 10 , how a two-story building with a 10.000 quare-feet "footprint' and a CROSSWORD PUZZLE-- 11 57.8 percent parking waiver. SPORTS 19-23 This wa the third Newcap ubdivi ­ ion plan and parking waiver con id­ PEOPLENEWS 18 ered by the planning commission since OBITUARIES 25-t& the beginning of thi year. CLASSIFIEDS See ROYS, 14 ~ I I PAGE 2 • NEWARK POST • OcTOBER 10, 1997 Visit us on the World Wide Web ~ 1 .'•• , r ), , ·:· POLICE BLOTTER • Police Blotter is compiled each week from University of Delaware student. near 45 East Main Street for a traffic check on lot at Newark High School. Police are investi­ the files ofthe Newark Police Department, the According to police, 17-year-old Holly Oct. 4 around 9:30 p.m. was wanted by New gating. New Castle County Police Department and Hrupsa of Harrington, wa critically injured Castle County police on outstanding warrants. the Delaware State Police by staff write11 on Oct. 2 when she was struck by a Jeep as Arnold Tabor Jr. of Claymont was also Mary Petzak. she crossed Elkton Road around 11 :40 a.m. charged with having an open container of beer Water pump taken Hrupsa died from her injuries two days in the car. from Shinn's later in Christiana Hospital. Former Post employee Jonathan Mejia, the 18-year-old driver of Newark Police report that sometime killed in accident the vehicle, was not injured. Police said no Towing signs removed between Sept. 28 at 5 p.m. and Oct. I at 9 a.m. charges have been filed against him Employees of American Towing told unknown persons removed a black and red A former staff member of the Newark Post Hrupsa was majoring in food science police that sometime between Oct. 5 at 8 p.m Scorpion water pump from the Schinn Paints was killed in,a traffic accident which occurred preparation for a career in nutrition. The 1997 and Oct. 6 around 1: 15 a.m. unknown persons store on East Main Street. Police are investi­ Monday, Oct. 6 around 6 p.m. on Route 13 in graduate of Lake Forest High School was a removed 10 company towing signs from a gating. Townsend. member of the cross-country and track-and­ parking lot in the unit block of Lehigh Drive. According to New Castle County Police, field teams. On the same night between midnight and 1: 15 Incapacitated man takes Charles Rolph, 64, wa at the wheel of his Hrupsa was listed on the high school's a.m., 10 other American Towing signs and 1983 Toyota Tercel traveling northbound on record board for holding one of the top-1 0 poles were removed from the unit block of handicapped parking sign Route 13 just south of Blackbird Landing fastest times in girls' cross-country recorded Thorn Lane. ·' Road. For unknown reasons, the vehicle left at Killens Pond. She ran on the state champi­ Newark police report that on Oct. 4 around the road, traveling 175 feet before striking a onship cross-country team in 1993 and in the 1 a.m. they found an 18-year-old man with a tree. Police said alcohol did not appear to be a Henlopen Conference girls' cross-country Teens arrested for DUI handicapped parking sign near Academy and factor. championship. East Park Place. Rolph and his 61-year-old wife, Eleanor, a She ran the mile, was a member of the On Oct. 5 around 2 a.m. police arrested a Police also observed that the man had con­ passenger in the car, were declared dead at the 4x800 relay and was a contestant in the 15-year-old and a16-year-old boy for driving sumed alcohol. scene. Police said the Toyota suffered severe Delaware High School Girls Track and Field under the influence at the ewark Shopping front damage. Paramedics and personnel from Championship. Center. the Townsend Fire Company responding to While in high school, Hrupsa waS a part­ Teen carrying beer the accident had to pry the couple from the time telemarketer for MBNA which awarded Equipment missing at car. her a college scholarship. She was to have on street Charles Rolph worked in the New Journal started work at the bank's Newark branch this Newark Lumber On Oct. 5 around midnight police charged advertising department for more than a decade week. a 19-year-old man with underage consump­ before coming to the Newark Post in the early Newark Police are investigating a report from Newark Lumber Company that some­ tion after he was observed walking on 1980's. Most recently he served as regional Madison Street with two Bud Lite beer cans. sales director for Chesapeake Publishing Assault on time between Sept. 26 at 8:30 a.m. and Oct. 3 Company ba ed in Elkton, Md. ·New London Road at 8:15 a.m. equipment valued at almost Chesapeake operates 48 community and $2,000 was removed from a storage area at the Out of control party business publications, including the Newark An 18-year-old man to1d Newark Police business. Police said the area was checked reported on Madison Dr. Post, Route 40 Flier, and New Castle that on Oct. 3 around 6: 10 p.m. two unknown once a week for inventory. Business Ledger in Delaware. white men sprayed him with pepper spray and Newark Police responded to a report of a punched him in the face. Car breakins at loud party on Madison Drive shortly after University student killed The man sa.id he was in a parking lot on midnight on Oct. 4. Police said an "out of con­ New London Road when the attack occurred. Newark High trol" party with extremely loud music was in crossing street Sometime between 6 p.m. and 7:45p.m. on progress when they arrived. The 19-year-old resident was charged with Newark Police are still investigating the Man picked up on warrants Oct. I , unknown persons removed cash and other items from two locked cars parked in the a noise violation. accident which resulted in the death of a Newark Police report that a man stopped discover discover duPont's duPont is extraordinary easy to get to. discover discover medical and duPont The duPont Hospital duPont keeps surgical team~ discover for Childr~n is less promises. Hospital for than 30 minutes We're expert in caring duPont's Children. from Philadelphia, its Discover the for kids through every personal touc:J~,. Discover the surrounding counties difference duPont's treatment phase. Our children's hospital We listen to you and southern New programs can make. team understands that and to your child's already serving Jersey. We're conve­ Just call thousands of families when it comes to your concerns and questions. niently located off from Pennsylvania, child, you want the best We respect your va]u­ 1-95 in Wilmington, 11-888-5333-KID I Delaware and New - that's why we place able time. We respond Delaware - and Jersey. And we're your child's needs first. to .your child's heatth there's plenty of free Thomas jefferson needs quickly and effi­ parking~ I 600 Rockland Rd. Wilmington, DE 19803 University Hospital's ciently. .And we kt!ep partner in pediatrics. Check out our web site! http:/ /KidsHealth.org. • The Nemoun Foundldon • Thomas Jeff-non UnMnfty • Medical Center of o.ware http://www.ncbl.com/post/ ' 0cr08ER 10, 1997 • EWARK POST • PAGE 3 >.: ,', I I I) ,, ·:· IN THE NEWS Can we help? Offices: The paper's offices are located conve­ Hot dog lady's niently in the Robscott Building, 153 E.
Recommended publications
  • Full Version of Cv
    Adrian David Cheok AM Phone: +61423977539 or +60128791271 19A Robe Terrace Email: [email protected] Medindie, 5081 Homepage: https://www.adriancheok.info Australia https://www.imagineeringinstitute.org Personal Date of Birth: December 18, 1971. Place of birth: Adelaide, Australia Australian Citizen. Summary of Career Adrian David Cheok AM is Director of the Imagineering Institute, Malaysia, Full Professor at i-University Tokyo, Visiting Professor at Raffles University, Malaysia, Visiting Professor at University of Novi Sad-Serbia, on Technical faculty \Mihailo Pupin", Serbia, Faculty of Ducere Business School, and CEO of Nikola Tesla Technologies Corporation. He is Founder and Director of the Mixed Reality Lab, Singapore. He was formerly Professor of Pervasive Computing, University of London, Full Professor and Executive Dean at Keio University, Graduate School of Media Design and Associate Professor in the National University of Singapore. He has previously worked in real-time systems, soft computing, and embedded computing in Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs, Japan. In 2019, The Governor General of Australia, Representative of Her Majesty the Queen Elizabeth II, has awarded Australia's highest honour the Order of Australia to Adrian David Cheok for his contribution to international education and research. He has been working on research covering mixed reality, human-computer interfaces, wearable computers and ubiquitous computing, fuzzy systems, embedded systems, power electronics. He has successfully obtained approximately $130 million dollars in funding for externally funded projects in the area of wearable computers and mixed reality from Daiwa Foundation, Khazanah National (Malaysian Government), Media Development Authority, Nike, National Oilwell Varco, Defence Science Technology Agency, Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Communications and Arts, National Arts Council, Singapore Sci- ence Center, and Hougang Primary School.
    [Show full text]
  • UC Santa Cruz UC Santa Cruz Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC Santa Cruz UC Santa Cruz Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Organizing for Social Justice: Rank-and-File Teachers' Activism and Social Unionism in California, 1948-1978 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6b92b944 Author Smith, Sara R. Publication Date 2014 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA CRUZ ORGANIZING FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE: RANK-AND-FILE TEACHERS’ ACTIVISM AND SOCIAL UNIONISM IN CALIFORNIA, 1948-1978 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements of the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in HISTORY with an emphasis in FEMINIST STUDIES by Sara R. Smith June 2014 The Dissertation of Sara R. Smith is approved: ______________________ Professor Dana Frank, Chair ______________________ Professor Barbara Epstein ______________________ Professor Deborah Gould ______________________ Tyrus Miller Vice Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies Copyright © by Sara R. Smith 2014 Table of Contents Abstract iv Acknowledgements vi Introduction 1 Chapter 1: 57 The Red School Teacher: Anti-Communism in the AFT and the Blacklistling of Teachers in Los Angeles, 1946-1960 Chapter 2: 151 “On Strike, Shut it Down!”: Faculty and the Black and Third World Student Strike at San Francisco State College, 1968-1969 Chapter 3: 260 Bringing Feminism into the Union: Feminism in the California Federation of Teachers in the 1970s Chapter 4: 363 “Gay Teachers Fight Back!”: Rank-and-File Gay and Lesbian Teachers’ Organizing against the Briggs Initiative, 1977-1978 Conclusion 453 Bibliography 463 iii Abstract Organizing for Social Justice: Rank-and-File Teachers’ Activism and Social Unionism in California, 1948-1978 Sara R.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of Pesticides
    ^^^mCONGRESS & THE PEOPLE THE POLITICS OF PESTICIDES THE CENTER FOR PUBLIC I ERRATA Chapter 1: Starting at the bottom of page 12 and continuing through the end of the chapter, footnote number 16 should be number 19, number 17 should be number 20, number 18 should be number 21, etc. In the "Notes" section beginning on page 67, the citation numbers for this chapter are correct as they appear. Pages 9 and 11: Of the 36 pesticides most commonly used by Americans on their lawns, 30 — not 24 -- have never been fully tested by the Environmental Protection Agency. Page 24: The settlement between the Herbs and Dow Chemical Company occurred in 1995, not 1990. Page 27: Footnote number 14 should be number 15. Page 35: Footnote number 43 appears twice on this page. The second appearance, in the first full paragraph, should be number 44. Page 70: In citation number 12, Alan Woolf s name is misspelled. Page 71: Citation number 42 should read: "The Center for Public Integrity analysis of 1987-96 campaign finance records." Citation number 43 should read: "The Center for Public Integrity analysis of 1996 lobbying disclosure forms." Unreasonable Risk THE POLITICS OF PESTICIDES THE CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY About the Center for Public Integrity THE CENTER FOR PUBLIC INTEGRITY, founded in 1989 by a group of concerned Americans, is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, tax-exempt educational organization created so that important national issues can be investigated and analyzed over a period of months without the normal time or space limitations. Since its inception, the Center has investigated and disseminated a wide array of information in more than thirty published Center Reports.
    [Show full text]
  • Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk: Strong Leadership During Troubled Times
    Cleveland State University EngagedScholarship@CSU Cleveland Memory Books Summer 7-2013 Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk: Strong Leadership During Troubled Times Richard Klein Cleveland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevmembks Part of the United States History Commons How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! Recommended Citation Klein, Richard, "Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk: Strong Leadership During Troubled Times" (2013). Cleveland Memory. 18. https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevmembks/18 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Books at EngagedScholarship@CSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Cleveland Memory by an authorized administrator of EngagedScholarship@CSU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk: Strong Leadership During Troubled Times Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk: Strong Leadership During Troubled Times Richard Klein, Ph.D Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk: Strong Leadership During Troubled Times Richard Klein, Ph.D An online accessible format of this book can be found at https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevmembks/18/ The digital version is brought to you for free and open access at EngagedScholarship@CSU. 2013 MSL Academic Endeavors Imprint of Michael Schwartz Library at Cleveland State University Published by MSL Academic Endeavors Cleveland State University Michael Schwartz Library 2121 Euclid Avenue Rhodes Tower, Room 501 Cleveland, Ohio 44115 http://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/ ISBN: 978-1-936323-02-9 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License CLEVELAND MAYOR RALPH J. PERK STRONG LEADERSHIP DURING TROUBLED TIMES TABLE OF CONTENTS Foreword 3 Acknowledgments 4 Introduction 7 Chapter 1: Pressing New Urban Challenges 8 Chapter 2: The Life and Times of Ralph J.
    [Show full text]
  • Future (Spokane, Waslangton, October'25-27, 1974); INSTITUTION Wa Ingtoncstli., Seattle: Inst
    DOCUMENT-RESUME ED 124 394 SE 019 64.4 AUTHOR Widditsch, Ann, Ed.. TITLE Procl.ldings of .Learning for Survival:, A Symposium on Environmental EdUcation and Water Quality for the Future (Spokane, Waslangton, October'25-27, 1974); INSTITUTION Wa ingtoncstli., Seattle: Inst. for Environmental S dies. ':--:,*.' = . SPONS AGENCY Finvironmental,Protection Agency, 'Washington, D.C. Office of Water Programs. ; . PUB DATE Oct 74 -, , NOTE 466p.; Some small. print AVAILABLE _FROM Tnstitute for Egvironmental StUdies,University of Washington, Sea'tle, Washington 981`95 (free) EDRS PRICE MF-SC.83HC-$24.77 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Conference R.sports; Conferences; Element ry Education; *Environment; *Environmental E ationy; HigheEducation; International Education; Re earch; Secon ary Education; Teacher Education; *Water Pont io:1 Control IDENTIFIERS *EXPO 74 ABSTRACT This book contains a reco d of papers and edited transcripts presented at a program sponsa ed by the Institutefor Environm,?ntal Studies: The program was,,part of, an International' Exposition on the EnvironMent, EXPO 74 held in Spokane, Washington. The program,ncorporated three areas of interest: deSigning and finding methods for improving environmental education at all levels of learning including professional educators, civil servants,elected officials, industrial representatives, students, and citizens; special sessions on water quality education for members of the Environmental Protection Agency Advisory Committee; and special sessions on the management of large-scale interdisciplinary reseafth projects for educators involved in a National Science Foundation grant. The general sessions included speeches onuniversity and ecnraary prograMs, international programs!, political views,and financin,g. The special sessions covered topics'in water quality education, curriculum, research, and publicservice. (Editor/MR) * Documents acqUired by ERIC include ma.y informal unpublished * * materials not available from other sources.
    [Show full text]
  • 293 Hon. Ginny Brown-Waite
    January 7, 2009 EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS, Vol. 155, Pt. 1 293 [From the St. Petersburg Times, Jan. 3, 2009] Mr. Moore was known in Pinellas and Hinesley, Moore was persuaded by a former BOISTEROUS AND FITTING FAREWELL across the state for his knowledge of Flor- PCTA president to lobby School Board mem- (By Thomas C. Tobin and Donna Winchester) ida’s budget and politics. He took tough bers for the four votes necessary to remove stances, including pushing for a teacher raise Hinesley. He failed, and to the day he passed CLEARWATER.—He loved roses and Broad- way musicals. He stunk at golf, though he this year even as the district plunged into a away he seemed to regret what he had done. had a whale of a time playing it. deep economic hole. But he maintained a Guerrilla politics were never Moore’s style, He was an optimist, active in his church, collaborative style and an optimistic out- and the failed attempt nearly severed his re- strong in his views. He was a reader and a look. lationship with Hinesley. ‘‘I’ll never go there smiler, a pundit, a partier, a people lover. ‘‘All of us knew that Jade meant what he again,’’ he would say. ‘‘I won’t do it.’’ And when it came to teachers, Jade Thom- said, that ... his views were in support of the The lesson was never lost, and Moore even as Moore—the executive director of the many, not of the few, and that he would al- found himself taking friendly fire as a result.
    [Show full text]
  • No Shortcuts: the Case for Organizing
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 5-2015 No Shortcuts: The Case for Organizing Jane Frances McAlevey Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/1043 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] i No Shortcuts: The Case for Organizing by Jane F. McAlevey A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Sociology in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York 2015 ii COPYRIGHT © 2015 JANE F. MCALEVEY All Rights Reserved iii APPROVAL PAGE, NO SHORTCUTS: THE CASE FOR ORGANIZING This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Sociology to satisfy the dissertation requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Approved by: Date Chair of Examining Committee ______________________ _________________________________________ Frances Fox Piven, Professor Date Executive Officer, Sociology ______________________ __________________________________________ Philip Kasinitz, Professor Supervisory Committee Members James Jasper, Professor William Kornblum, Professor Dan Clawson, Professor, UMASS Amherst THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iv ABSTRACT Abstract No Shortcuts: The Case for Organizing By Jane McAlevey Advisor: Frances Fox Piven This dissertation will explore how ordinary workers in the new economy create and sustain power from below. In workplace and community movements, individuals acting collectively have been shown to win victories using a variety of different approaches.
    [Show full text]
  • Secrets of a Successful Organizer
    SECRETS OF A SUCCESSFUL ORGANIZER TRAINER’S GUIDE Adapted for the National Education Association Center for Organizing CHRIS BROOKS, SONIA SINGH, AND SAMANTHA WINSLOW LABOR NOTES l labornotes.org SECRETS OF A SUCCESSFUL ORGANIZER TRAINER’S GUIDE Adapted for the NEA Center For Organizing, June 2018 INTRODUCTION Trainer’s Guide Organizing at NEA The NEA—in response to the relentless threats to public education, public employees, students, and communities—is partnering with state and local affiliates to build an Association-wide culture of organizing. Our goal is to build on our legacy of advocacy and leading the professions, fight for our mission of great public schools for all students, and grow sustainable, strong NEA affiliates for the future. A culture of organizing is one that promotes deep member engagement, leadership development, and collective action. At its core, organizing means facilitating collective action among a group and empowering others to take on leadership roles. A culture of organizing is an intentional and strategic approach to the work of the Association: one that relies on data analytics, thoughtful planning, accountability, and continuous improvement. The NEA Center for Organizing measures successful organizing through multiple lenses: robust member engagement, effective distributive leadership structures, and growth in membership. We seek to build these capacities through organizing campaigns built around the issues important to our members. Many different organizing strategies can lead to success; nonetheless, all authentic organizing is accountable for measurable goals and outcomes. Above all, we believe in leading with vision and aspiration, accompanied by concrete programs and plans. Effective organizing—which is what we all strive for—should result in increased member engagement of significant numbers of educators, expanding leadership, and real wins in the policies and practices that impact our members, our schools, our students and our communities—grounded in our values of equity, opportunity, and racial justice.
    [Show full text]
  • Tv Highlights for Central
    MediaCorp Pte Ltd Daily Programme Listing okto WEDNESDAY 1 MAY 2013 9.00AM LABOR DAY 2013: Dora The Explorer Special: Dora Saves The Mermaid (Schoolkids / Cartoon) (卡通片) Dora and Boots go on exciting underwater adventures to help save the mermaids kingdom, travel to the bottom of the ocean and find a hidden treasure chest on Treasure Island! 10.00 LABOR DAY 2013: The Secret Of N.I.M.H. (Schoolkids / Cartoon) (卡通片) Fun, drama and suspense come vividly to life in this enchanting cartoon fantasy, based on Robert O'Brien's award-winning tale of a timid mouse who becomes a heroine in spite of herself. 11.30 Ben And Holly's Little Kingdom (Eps 45 - 46 / Preschool) (幼儿乐园) Set in an enchanted magical kingdom with fairies, elves and insects, Ben & Holly is an animated pre-school children's show. Ben is a loveable little elf while his best friend Holly is a bossy but loveable fairy princess. 12.00NN Driver Dan's Story Train (Season 2 / Eps 27 - 28 / Preschool) (幼儿乐园) Join Driver Dan as he drives the train and its magical book carriage for more story telling! Features a new character Bippity the mechanical robot and all new environments. 12.30PM Doc McStuffins (Yr 1 / Ep 1 / Debut / Preschool) (幼儿乐园) Dottie Doc McStuffins is an amazing six-year-old girl who has the ability to talk to toys and stuffed animals! She heals and tends to all the toys and stuffed animals that need help and fixes all the boo-boos that happen throughout the day! Whatever the problem, the Doc is always in! 1.00 Banana In Pyjamas Animated Series (Sr 2 / Eps 45 - 46 / Preschool / R) (幼儿乐园) Everyone’s excited when a real live Prince arrives in Cuddlestown but then they discover he’s not what he seems.
    [Show full text]
  • M Iddletown Anxious to Start Work on Historic Grover House L Ily T U Lip
    ( i Schools & Camps M ystery store Papal visit A w orld o f new experiences aw aits H azlet officials don’t know w hy The head o f the C optic C hristian youngsters at sum m er cam p a new S ports A uthority store on C hurch returns to St. M ina C hurch Route 35 has been boarded up i n H o l m d e l Page 33__________________ Page 3 ______ S erving A berdeen, H azlet, H olm del, K eyport, M ataw an and M iddletow n FEBRUARY 3, 1999 40 cents VOLUME 29, NUMBER 5 L ily Tulip tract plans unveiled Adult com m unity, assisted living, retail uses proposed for Rte. 35 Holm del site site for multiple uses, including a BY CATHERINE I. AUMACK single-family, age-restricted com­ Staff W riter munity; a nursing home, an I n a community where resi­ assisted living facility and med­ dents are fighting develop­ ical arts building; and a 235,000- ment projects tooth and nail, square-foot retail complex. few were in attendance last week Julius Szalay of Menlo as the Holmdel Planning Board Engineering Associates, Highland began hearings on a three-part Park, described the various com­ development plan -for the former ponents at the Jan. 26 board meet­ Lily Tulip site on Route 35 and ing. Laurel Avenue. Besides approval of the vari­ The developer, Caydenzar ous components, the board also Associates, Rahway, who demol­ must approve subdividing the ished the buildings that housed 1 2 1 -acre tract into three parcels, the former paper-cup manufactur­ 60 for residential use, 37.7 for ing plant, wants to develop the Continued on page 4 Dressed in Colonial garb, Andrew Greenwald (l-r), 10, Nicholas Campanile, 9, and Anthony 1 0 0 Vazquez, 9, fourth-graders at St.
    [Show full text]
  • The Fight Master Magazine Spring Issue 2014 Safd.Org
    The FıghtMasterSpring 2014 The Journal of the Society of American Fight Directors FIGHT MATTERS Stand Up for Fight Direction BUILDING A CAREER AS A FIGHT DIRECTOR THE MOTION PARALLAX Choreographing Fights at The Lost Colony SAFE SEX A Look at the Intimacy Choreographer GIANT NINJA ROBOT BATTLE A Conversation on Collaboration and Mentorship NEW YORK CITY FIGHT CHOREOGRAPHY What Is Working and What Is Not WWW.SAFD.ORG Forwarding & Return Service Requested PRSRT STD 1350 E. Flamingo Road, #25, Las Vegas, NV 89119 US Postage PAID Bartlett, IL Permit No. 51 THE FIGHT MASTER SPRING 2012 | SAFD.ORG 1 FM_Spring 2014_Cover.indd 1 2/8/14 2:13 PM MACE was created out of the need to have one place where people could study physical movement in all its forms. We are continually progressing toward that goal by offering more workshops and classes each year in more movement styles. We bring in some of the best instructors in their fields of expertise because students deserve nothing less. If you want to be the best, you need to train with the best. While we cater to performing artists, our workshops and classes are for everyone. All shapes, all sizes, all backgrounds. MACE feels everyone can Movement for EveryBody benefit from movement training. After all, everyone moves. www.macetraining.org MACE is a 501c3 not-for-profit organization whose purpose is to provide education and training that specializes around physical movement in the performing arts. B THE FIGHT MASTER SPRING 2014 | SAFD.ORG Cover2+TOC.indd 2 2/8/14 2:14 PM Spring 2014 | Vol 36, Number 1 MACE was created out of the need to have one place where people could The study physical movement in all its forms.
    [Show full text]
  • Glebe Report 2000 10 06 V29
    -7\ \ -N TT-j- \ .\ \ 1 A \\I , \ t \.; , \\ \- 11 \.) , \ ' Til - I l i 1, ( I1. I 7' l .,._.. _ 1 4 Iv ' Noi,\ I I : 41.,,, ...1 _._______I 1 I ; ' - - 1 I.-- 7 k ! i _I ..,....4 }...; 1. .1[1111,111i)il / ,--- -1 tr .tr -`-..; - ' , , I , 1 (-)1' .4 P---,- _,-_ 1ft , , 1); .; I.-",-G-002..:0- , --R-.---P1----- --,TT-lb-977ln -i /V P --.1*...,. / i;'- ' /.. T41/ .` 4144'1 Ai,1 !lb' tf% ". r , ,.( , ., 0,, ,.. ------,..-..,- ' 1 - Ii I ;. 7Z.:-' '.?, !Ifillir(11(((11111-- . (.' .. \\ ,,..:?; '-:-<7-"'": 11</!'"," ' I \ ,,,., 1.-77 p -, 'A-, (. - f . , Y.,' q.f2;7,, repor - _ Serving the Glebe community since 1973 FREE Rally for Mutchmor Hundreds of protesters rode double-decker buses to the Ot- tawa-Carleton District School Board office on Sept. 26 to protest the board's decision to close nine schools.' Glebe residentsfrom tots in strollers to grandparentswaved Save Our Schools signs and cheered speakers from the central part of Ottawa. A group of school children formed a colourful dragon that caught the eyes of TV reporters. Delegations from the nine schools, as well as from the Glebe Community Association, empha- sized: "Nine is too many and Oc- tober is too early." "Is the mandate to cut surplus space, or to close aging schools?" Photo: Roger Lalonde asked the Elmdale delegate. Margaret Atwood receives key from acting mayor Allan Higdon The Mutchmor delegation said that closing Mutchmor would lead Honouring 'a remarkable individual' to program erosion. They criti- Margaret Atwood received the cized the facility report on reno- Photos: S. fermyn has been called "the Wayne Key to the City from acting mayor vation costs as "flawed," and Trustees debate the proposal Gretzky of literature." He said Allan Higdon at the Glebe Com- be urged the trustees and board staff to close nine schools inside the the expression should munity Centre on September 20.
    [Show full text]