To Fund Operations

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To Fund Operations SEE STORY PAGE 2 Sunny and Mild Sunny and mlJd today, tomor- THEDAILY FINAL row and again on Thursday. Clear and mild tonight. -car / EDITION " " "' "' 22 PAGES Mounioutli County's Outstanding Home Xewspapor TEN CENTS VOL 94 NO. 80 K ED BANK, N.J. TUHSDAY, OCTOBER 19,1971 Freehold Bypass: Controversy Continues ByllALLIESCHItAEGER ters and "we should have had Sen. Beadleston noted that had exchanged. what the dollar amount will what he called the "contin- alignment and money was ap- it last year.1' funds for construction are pot Mr. Sagotsky quoted the be and if we will be able to ued, planned delay.:.." Mr, proved by the State of New FREEHOLD — An in- Routing Slated yet available, but he said the governor as saying, in a letter find a source of funds before Sagotsky's letter to Gov. Cah- Jersey for the right of way." dignant Harry Sagotsky, Meanwhile, State Sen. Al- Monmouth legislative delega- dated Sept 29: "I have been any potential bond Issue is ap- ill continues: Mr. Sagotsky refers to an chairman of the Freehold fred N. Beadleston (R-Mon- tion will seek inclusion of the in touch with the Department proved by the voters, but I "Freehold Borough is now opponent of the plan he calls borough Rt. 33 Bypass Com- mouth) yesterday announced funds in the 1972-73 budget. of Transportation and they in- can guarantee that this proj- suffering untold economic, "the Freehold millionaire" mittee, last night blamed that the exact route of the "When the budget is form u- dicate that the design and ect will be at the top of the strangulation, noise pollution, who, he says, formed a com- delay in the construction of a controversial bypass will be lated in February, 1072' " said right of way is basically com- list of those projects for which air pollution and unbearable mittee to object to the con- Rt. 33 bypass through Free- set by Dec. 31. Sen. Beadleston in a press re- pleted. "I have recently asked moneys will be appro- traffic congestion caused by struction of the bypass and hold Township on Gov. Wil- "In a letter which I re- lease, "we will also be seek. the Department of Trans- priated ... your officious action in Au- the continued dualization of liam T, Cahill and Assem- ceived today," Sen. Beadles- ing appropriations for the portation for a list of those "I also agree with you that gust, 1970, requesting a new •Rt. 33. blyman John I. Dawes (E- ton revealed, "State Trans- dualization of Rt, 9 from the projects for which there is no the dualization of Rt. 33 in this design, especially when tho Mr. Sagotsky'alleges that Monmouth). portation Commissioner John Adelphia-Farmingdale Road available source of funds and area Is long overdue..." federal government had when Assemblyman Dawes A dissenting Mr, Dawes said C. Kohl said his department to Lakewood." are in the position, such as the Mr. Sagotsky quoted his monies available for this con- served as mayor- of Freehold that, on the contrary, he had would postively make the de- Mr. Sagotsky read aloud to Rt. 33 Freeway, to go to the reply to the governor, dated struction and especially when Borough in 1968 and I960 "he pushed for the bypass through termination before the end of the Borough Council last night construction phase. last Satureday, expressing his the design was already' com- never appointed a committee a number of meetings and let- the year." letters he and the governor "I am not quite sure yet "sincere disappointment" at plete, and especially when the See Freehold, Page 3 to Fund Operations ByJIMMcCORMICK MARLBORO - The Town- ship Council last night unani- mously adopted an ordinance to assume financial responsi- bility for the Municipal Utili- ties Authority's new $1.8 mil- lion water system in the Wick- atunk-Morganville area. However, the key to when residents in the area will get water apparently rests with Mayor Morton Salkind. If he vetoes the ordinance today, bids which will be invalidated at 12 a.m. will have to be readvertised, and federal De- partment of Housing and Ur- Register Staff PtioFa ban Development approval HOLMDEL TREES —Toppling of 30-foot to 40-foot high trees on high school property was termed will have to be obtained "Unnecessary" and "contrary to good conservation practices" yesterday by Planning Board Chair- again. , mot) Larrabee M. Smith. Trees are being tqk,en down along stream on the school property, an area Estimates of the delay planners hoped would be left in natural state. range upwards of, two years, Council could override the veto three days after it is made, and if there was a way that the bids would not have to be readvertised, no one came forth with the solu- tion last night. TAX COURT OPENS — On hand for openlrigof the New Jersey Tax Court Mayor Salkind asked the yesterday were, left to right, Chief Judge William M. Drennen of the By SHERRY FIGDORE been carrying out an intensively detailed campaign over the court, State Supreme Court Chief Justice Joseph Welhtraubr U.S Dlstr, past several months to cinvince the. school board to relocate MUA to provide him with bid specifications to help him Court Judge-Anthony T Augelli and Joseph T. Grause, Red Bank, presi- . HOLMDEL — Bulldozers moved in yesterday, uprooting parking and athletic areas in the southeastern corner of the dent of the N.J. Bar Association. stands of 30-foot to 40-foot high trees edging the branch of school property at Holland and Crawfords Corner Roads. with his decision. Ramanessin Brook that flows through the high school proper- A recent public outcry, led by Mr. Smith, has probably "There are too many things ty, saved the life of a gigaptic old beech tree on the property, al- I don't know... questions I Set afire, the burning mounds of uprooted trees produced though in a seven-page letter just released to the school board, have... doubts that have clouds of smoke visible from a mile away during the. day, and Mr. Smith charges that an "obnoxious retaining wall" planned been raised," he said. were still burning, untended, late last night, •..,..'. for construction on the north side of'thf beechmay do the, ven- "It is unfortunate that there PUC Orders Gables Planning Board Vice Chairman Larrabee iM. Smith, ; erable specimen "more harm than goocT." is no room for negotiation. It termed the tree topplings the latest example of the school While coiMmending the board on changes made in grading is take it or leave it," he said. board's "riot caring" about site destruction caused by short- along the stream and elimination of a parking lot, Mr. Smith's The mayor said that one comings in the site plan for the school. letter still insists that the football stadium be moved about 110 thing that disturbed him most was the mandatory hookup PlacedUnderground Planning Board Chairman Jack Sipress, who is also a feet'to the east to more efficiently utilize the site, that tennis member of the township's Conservation Commission, took a courts be moved northward tora Uglier and more level eleva- clauso in the ordinance. more direct attack, and signed a complaint with township po- tion, and that the football practice field, whose orientation is Homes in the water dis- TRENTON (AP) - Builders' Association. necessity of extensive ex- lice against both the daytime open burning and the untended "diametrically opposite to the orientation of the stadium tribution area not hooking up Prompted by complaints that He labeled the decision un- cavation and the use of heavy fire. field," be corrected. are open to a $50 a day fine. overhead electric and tele- fair, arguing that builders in equipment. "The hardest decision I phone cables are potentially the Garden State should not Mr. Smith, backed by several planning board members, While Mr. Smith's objections are made as a private clti- Because it costs less' to and a small minority of Board of Education members, has Sec Trees, Page 2 have had to make deals with dangerous and aesthetically be saddled with the cost of in- police matters: Whether I displeasing, the State Public stalling underground cables maintain underground elec- \ would have to evict people Utilities Commission ordered since, in tho long run, this tric cables, electric com- from their homes if they did yesterday, that cables in New type of installation may ac- panies around the state will not obey the law," he said. Jersey's.new residential com- tually cost less than that asso- •be asked to help pay for their Enforcement Required munities be installed under- ciated with overhead cables. Installation as a com- Women: a Political Role The mayor is required to ground. But the PUC maintains that pensatory gesture. enforce all township ordi- The order takes effec' Dec. the cost of installing under; This probably will mean a By DORIS KULMAN Jennifer MacLeod, a psy- nances. If he did not, he could 31. It specifies that the cost of ground electric cables Is sub- slight increase In monthly chologist and director of the be recalled from office and in- installing, the underground stantially higher than the electric bills for customers In LINCROFT - Talk about Rutgers University Center for dicted; cables be borne by the devel- overhead method due to tho New Jersey. social justice, the speaker American Women in Politics. Tho water project will be in Dr. MacLeod discussed opers of the residential sites.. said — here's a group of four phases. The first would* This stipulation was criti- American citizens that's been "Women's Political In- be an extension of a water volvement" in a program co- cized by Alexander Feinberg, denied It: See Marlboro, Page 3 representing the New Jersey —classified from birth vir- sponsored by Brookdale Com- MedicalEducdtion: tually as a sesyant .clsyss and munity College and the Mon- taught their job is to serve mouth County League of A Special Report others.
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