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Councilman Seeks Assembly Seat
By Chris Lundy BERKELEY – Longtime official James Byrnes
has put his name in to represent the 9th District in the state assembly, hoping to bring a new voice to state politics.
Byrnes is a retired facilities director for a school district in Monmouth County. He served on the Berkeley Board of Education and was appointed to the Township Council in 2012. He’s on the board of social services. In the past, he was screened for the 3rd District Congressional seat.
“I’ve always been an Ocean County guy. I went to Ocean County College,” he said. “I really like what I’m doing in Berkeley,” he said. There are a lot of projects he’s been involved with. For example, he’s been working on the dog park on .9 acres of vacant land on Butler Boulevard. There’s another where the Holly Park residents want a park built on the end of Main Street. These two projects both had roadblocks from the State Department of Environmental Protection. Byrnes said he’s hoping to fight for local municipalities against over- bearing state mandates.
Byrnes said he’s going to go before the screening committee up against other Republicans, including Lacey Committeemen Mark Dykoff and Timothy McDonald, Stafford Mayor Gregory Myhre, and Barnegat Committeeman John Novak. In a previous article, these four challengers were profiled; Byrnes was unable to be reached. As of this writing, Assemblywoman DiAnne Gove has not said publicly if she is running for re-election.
Each State district has one member of the senate and two in the assembly. Senator Christopher Connors said he will not run for re-election. The 9 th District’s other assembly member, Brian Rumpf, has said that he is looking forward to serving beside Berkeley Mayor Carmen Amato who is the frontrunner for the senate seat.
Ocean County Republican Chair George R. Gilmore said those who have turned in letters of intention would be scheduled to meet with the screening committee on February 11. Recommendations then go to
2023 Power In The Pines Air Force Base Open House
LAKEHURT – The 2023 Power in the Pines Air & Space Open House will be hosted at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst from May 20 to 21. This event is free and open to the public. Check back for more details.
The USAF F-16 Viper Demonstration will headline the event along with other performers.
Ocean County GOP elected committee people who will vote on their selection at the mini-convention scheduled for March 8. Following that is the primary election in June to see which Republican winds up on the ballot in November.
The 9th District is made up of the following areas: Barnegat, Barnegat Light, Beach Haven, Beachwood, Berkeley, Eagleswood, Harvey Cedars, Lacey, Lakehurst, Little Egg Harbor, Long Beach, Manchester, Ocean Gate, Ocean Township (Waretown), Pine Beach, Ship Bottom, Stafford, Surf City, and Tuckerton. This legislative district makes laws that govern the state, as opposed to the two senators from New Jersey who make laws for the nation.
In the wake of Amato’s possible move to Trenton, longtime political ally John Bacchione has announced he will run for mayor of Berkeley this year.
Bereavement Support Group
WHITING – The group will be meeting on January 27 at 1 p.m. in the D & E room Deerfield Clubhouse, 6 Congasia Road Whiting, off Route 530. Anthony Lipari is the speaker on stages of grief. Social time and refreshements.
For more information call Rosie at 732881-1044.
Check out Dr. Izzy’s Sound News on Page 20
Hindenburg: Continued From Page 1
Hindenburg to land when it first came to the base and he helped build Hangar One (located at the Lakehurst Naval base which is part of Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst),” said Denise Maynard, a local photographer. Her grandfather was Harry Brown.
Her mother, Virginia Brown, said she and her husband came to Lakehurst in 1925. We’ve seen a lot of changes.”
Brown described what she observed on May 6, 1937. “We saw this great big dirigible go over as it passed overhead outside our house and then we heard a big noise. As soon as we heard that my father took off and we didn’t see him until the next morning.”
Her daughter noted, “she worked on the base for 35 years and retired from there.” Brown said she worked for the Navy Exchange in the office and her husband was in the service.
“She saw the Hindenburg and I saw the Blue Angels when they crashed,” Maynard added.
Lakehurst Historical Society member Bill Schmidt has been collecting the memories of people like Brown. Joyce Safford McGee is another long-time borough resident who Schmidt spoke to in his ongoing mission to communicate with those who are connected to the Hindenburg tragedy.
Schmidt who does presentations at the LHS Museum and other requested locations about the Hindenburg, sat down with McGee and her daughter Jill Lewis and went over some family history. They were later joined by The Manchester Times for another session of memory sharing about interesting times gone by.
“Joyce was five years old when that day (May 7, 1937) took place,” Schmidt said.
“That afternoon we knew the dirigible was going to come over because in the morning as it went over it was low enough - about a tree top high - that they would wave from the windows to us and we would wave back so we knew that when they left, they would come back again,” she said.
“Being as young as I was, I didn’t know the reason that they had left and came back again. I was outside playing in the yard and it started to rain. We had a bad thunderstorm and as I was walking across the ground and walkway back over to my house it blew up,” McGee said.
McGee added, “I didn’t know what it was. All I knew was this great big red ball had knocked me to the ground and I got up and ran to my house. My sister was four months old and in a carriage, and they said the carriage had bounced on the floor. My older two sisters were there watching her.”
She said she ran outside again and “I never saw so many people come to a house as they did to our house.” The highway wasn’t in place at the time and where the current 3 B’s restaurant is located on Route 37 is where her family house was.
“Lake Street ran all the way down to the bog and from the bog right across is where the field was,” she added. “Everybody started to come and I didn’t know where they came from. I was a little leery; I was just a little kid and to see all these cars coming, you wonder what in God’s name is going on. My mother came quick and grabbed me and put her arms around me and checked the other three kids to make sure they were all right,” she added.
McGee said, “everyone came over and asked ‘is Doc” okay?’ My mother said she hadn’t heard yet. Doc was my father who was one of the ground crew of the Hindenburg. He was handling the (landing) lines.”
When her father David Reese Safford was first in the U.S. Navy he had medical experience which is how he got the nickname of “Doc.”
“Down the street from us was Auggie Miller who was head of the Lakehurst Fire Department and he came over to the house hollered, Dolly, Dolly (her mother) and he said I just talked to Doc and he’s fine and he wanted me to tell you he’s fine and he can’t come home until he’s released and it could be quite a while,” she added. When her father did return, “he came to our bedroom and kissed each one of us on the cheek and said ‘I’m okay. I’m here for you, go back to sleep,’” McGee said with tears in her eyes from the memory. “We loved our father dearly. He was a very special man.”
She would learn later that her father had aided a woman and her son who had jumped from the zeppelin and were on fire. He had wrapped his coat around them and put them into an ambulance. Her uncle was at a theater in Toms River at the time of the incident and “he said that after it blew, the noise was so loud that you could hear it for miles and miles. They announced it. The man from the theater came up and announced to the audience that the Hindenburg had blown up at Lakehurst.
“My uncle said everyone just peeled out of the theater and just left. He said there wasn’t a soul left in the theater and of course he came right to our house,” she recalled.
The family has a copy of the May 1949 edition of The Airship News that published an article about her father, and his commendation for his efforts at the airfield that day.
WASHINGTON, D.C. –
Tapped by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) to chair the influential Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC), Rep. Chris Smith (R-4th) vowed the bicameral panel, under his leadership, will “aggressively counter the transnational repression of Xi Jinping’s brutal dictatorship and ramp up scrutiny of those who are aiding and abetting the Communist regime.”
“The CECC has been instrumental in advancing critical legislation - including two laws I coauthored, the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act and the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act - to hold the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to account for its heinous atrocities,” said Smith, who has chaired 76 congressional hearings on human rights abuses in China.