April 18, 2012 THE VILLADOM TIMES II • Page 15 Lawsuit (continued from page 4) VFW. The club had recently lost its layout space in Ramsey, and the VFW had approached the council for assistance with maintaining the building. In recent years, the club and the VFW have been at odds over the use of the building due to the restrictions placed on the VFW. The terms of the lease, which was renewed in 2002, allow the VFW limited access to the building, a situation that has been problematic since the VFW has become more active. The VFW had planned to raze the Cliff Street building and construct a new home for Post 192, but the railroad club did not support those plans. The VFW then approached the borough to buy the neighboring property for a construction project. When that matter was close to a vote, the state VFW said the local post’s lease with the club was invalid, and the project was put on hold. Post 192 later attempted to evict the club. The VFW claimed that the club violated the lease, and asked the club to remedy the violations. The case went to court and was dismissed without prejudice. Arts program lauded at national conference Four members of the Glen Rock Middle School Exploratory Arts Program recently presented the school’s leading-edge program at a national conference on curriculum. Music teacher Kathleen Moscara, dance teacher Joanne Brown, visual arts teacher Linda Tomaselli, and drama teacher Terese Opiela were invited to present at the annual Association of Supervision and Curriculum Development conference in Philadelphia. They presented ‘Middle School Students Flourish with Expanded Arts Exploration,’ a two-hour described of the program that highlighted the many benefits Glen Rock students receive from the program. Glen Rock’s program has been used as a model of arts programming by the state in past years.