Red Bank planners may scrap Westside proposal, B1 GHf-ATFR RFD3ANK EATONTOWN School cage poll Georgetown woes LONG BRANCH Despite first first loss, No .longer Number 1, Hoyas upset again. Today's Por.cart: CBA on top of the list. Mostly sunny Page B3 Page B3 Complete wcathor on A2 The Daily Register VOL. 107 NO. 180 YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER .. . SINCE t878 TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1985 . 25 CENTS Middletown OKs new school plan Nor do vocation-oriented students receive equal BY ALAN SIPRESS debate over whether High School North, provide* aa good an education at High School South — a question consideration at High School North, according to the MIDDLETOWN - The Board of Education lait night addressed in a report presented last night by the board- report. While 00 percent more students at High School overwhelmingly lupported a' school redtstriclng plan appointed Comparability Review Committee. North participate in the cooperative education program, that would create two four-year high schools but not Although the committee said it was impressed with which provides job experience, only two teachers are significantly change the attendance areas of the existing both schools, it found academic programs and facilities involved as compared to four at High School South. three-year high schools. at High School South to be superior. The committee also found "that South was more Since the last night's meeting at Middletown High "A difference in mission, that is the implementation attractive and had a better overall physical environ- School North was only a workshop, final approval of the of School Philosophy, was the most apparent inequality ment." plan must await the regular session next Monday. between the. schools In the ara of Program. For Upon receipt of the report, the board authorized The proposal would also transform the three Junior instance, there appeared to be more effortat South on Superintendent Guy M. Sconzo to prepare a study of the nigh schools into middle schools serving students in the part of the Administration to encourage Its student manner in which the district will address the the grades six through eight. body to continue their education beyond high school," comparability committee's recommendations. At the elementary level, the plan would shift 77 the report says. Brian McAndrew, committee co-chairman, said the students from Nutwswamp School to Middletown "Education as a value, demonstrated by the report does not imply that students at High School North Village and in turn move IB from Middletown Village percentage of students taking aptitude and achievement are receiving a inferior education to those across town. School to New Monmouth School. tests, was more apparent in South than at North. The He added, however, that adoption of the recommen- The board had earlier considered far more ambitious was confirmed further by administrator and teacher dations would eliminate the widely held belief that High high school ^districting plans, including one that would comments concerning the greater parent involvement School North is academically inferior. have substantially altered the attendance districts by at South." using Route SS as a dividing line and another that would As an example of the differences in programs, the But John L. Sullivan, a member of the committee as have separated upperclass and underclass students into report mentions that High School South offers Advanced well as a founding member of citizens group Middletown different buildings. Both met with strong opposition at Placement Biology, which makes students eligible for for One Repectable Education, said that High School a public hearing held Jan. 14. college credit, and trigonometry, while High School South is in fact a better school and that the The high school ^districting controversy has fueled North does not. See Middletown, page A7 GUY M. SCONZO Kean's budget hailed, scored TRENTON (AP) — Gov. Thomas fully the state's education program. walked to the podium. GOP legis- H. Kean promised everyone would There are no new taxes. lators began to chant "Four more have something to smile about after "The budget reflects our strong years! Four more years.'" as they studying his « 8 billion budget for economic position and our commit- had when Kean delivered his "State next fiscal year, but Democrats said ment to reduce the tax burden on of the State" address earlier this the Republican's bag of goodies our residents whenever possible," month. Kean has said he will called for excessive spending. said Senate Minority Budget Officer announce within the next two weeks Kean presented his budget for Walter E. Foran, R-Hunterdon. whether he will seek a second four- fiscal 1896 to the Legislature yester- However, Senate Majority Leader year term. day and asked lawmakers to ap- John Russo, D-Ocean. criticized the Kean's 70-minute address was prove his "sweeping program." governor's proposal, saying it is 50 interrupted by applause 45 times. "I strongly believe that New percent higher than the $5 9 billion The proposed plan will be re- Jersey's most important advantage plan put forth by Kean in 1982. viewed by the Democrat-controlled is its ability to compete as a low-tax state in the region," Kean said. Senate President Carmen Or- Joint Appropriations Committee, "That Is why the major emphasis in echio, D-Essex, said the budget which can alter the spending plan. this budget is one relieving the contains many of his party's The Legislature must approve the burden which taxes place on New proposals and predicted that the budget and return it to Kean, who is Jersey homeowners, businesses and plan will generate Democratic sup- required to sign it into law before individuals." port. the fiscal year begins on July 1. The proposals call for a $901 5 Kean delivered' his budget to The highlight of Kean's tax- million, or 114 percent, increase In members of the Senate and As- reduction program is a $100 million, spending over the current fiscal sembly in a joint session. Members one-time property tax rebate. The year that ends June SO. of Kean's Cabinet and Sen. Frank proposal is $10 million higher than a It requests $875 million in tax Lautenberg, D-N.J., also attended similar program blocked by Demo- relief for state residents, MM the annual event In the Assembly )crats in the Legislature last year. million to clean up the environment chamber in the Statehouse here. The rebate would provide an and an extra )Z70 million to fund As the Republican governor See Kean, page A7
FISCAL MC88AQE - N.J. Qov. Thomas H. Kean to a joint session of the state Legislature in Trenton GOP leaders tell Reagan gestures as he delivers his annual budget message yesterday. budget cuts top priority Judge orders j ail inmate WASHINGTON (AP) - Re- publican congressional leaders unanimously told President Reagan yesterday not to bother sending a moved to Ocean County tax-simplification plan to Capitol Hill until a package of politically painful budget cuts wins approval. BY KEVIN FRECHETTE "Every night they bang on my he visited Ciccolella and several door and yell, 'Clccolella, if you sign other injured inmates at the jail Treasury Secretary Donald T. FREEHOLD — A Monmouth a complaint you're not going to Wednesday after receiving a call Regan, the incoming White House County Jail inmate who complained make it to court,'" be said. from Rita Ciccolella, the inmate's chief or staff, was quoted as telling of being beaten up by guard* twice Ciccolella said he has not been mother. the lawmakers it will be weeks, last week is to be moved to Ocean allowed to send or receive mail Mrs. Ciccolella said her son had perhaps months, before the adminis- County Correctional Institution at since the incident, and has been called her Wednesday night to tell tration's tax-simplification program the request of his attorney. denied such necessities as soap and her three guards had beaten him up is ready. "I want out of here, I fear for my shampoo. the night before, after he had gotten Reagan met with GOP members life in this place," said the Inmate, His attorney, Carl Danzlger, into a fist fight with another inmate. of the tax-writing Senate Finance Freehold resident Alexander Cic- Freehold, said he sent a letter to She said her daughter received a Committee and House Ways and colello, whose complaints sparked Assignment Judge Alvin Milberg on call from an inmate who claimed to Means Committee, and conferred an Investigation Into allegations of Friday requesting that Ciccolella be have witnessed two guards beating separately with a group of bankers physical abuse at toe Jail. moved to another jail for the up ber son Wednesday morning after and homebuilders, in preparation ClccoteHa. t7, said he was beaten Inmate's protection. Ciccolella is in Ciccolella refused to stop demand- for released of the administration's up by guards last Tuesday night jail awaiting sentencing on at- ing medical treatment. ISM budget plan next Monday. after he had gotten into a fist fight tempted burglary charges. When she attempted to visit her The president told the home- with another inmate, and again Yesterday, Danziger said Milberg son Wednesday night. Mrs. Ck- builders and bankers his plan would Wednesday morning after he re- ordered Ciccolella transferred to coleUa said she was told by guards propose ftl billion In spending cute fused to stop demanding medical the Ocean County Correctional In- that her son had been Injured In a in fiscal IMS and would shrink the treatment for his Injuries. stitution fight with another inmate and was deficit to $140 billion by IMS. Since the beatings, be said guards Gerald Boswell, an assistant being taken to the hospital. Reagan's earlier plan was to have bean pwmding on the door to deputy public defender with the Boswell said when he visited the bring the deficit down to $100 billion his cell and threatening him. state public advocate's office, said JaH last week he noticed several within three years. inmates, including Ciccolella, with While Reagan has assigned a high facial wounds and bruises on their priority to both tax simplification bodies. He said he then ordered and budget cuts, the lawmakers told -Tuesday- Ciccolella taken to a hospital for him that spending redactions must treatment. come first. BUDGET TALKS — Sen. Robert Packwood, R-Ore.. chairman of People A2 JaU physician Jacob Louis said be Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., the Senate Finance Committee, talks with reporters outside the White Advice B9 Obituaries A7 did not fed Clecokllas Injuries chairman of the Senate Finance House yesterday alter he and other Finance Committee members as Aria A8 Opinion A6 Committee, said the Treasury sec- were aeiluu* enough to well as House Ways and Means Committee members met with Business B7 Sports 83 See Judge, page A7 retary "was quite amenable to the Classified B10 Television A8 feeling we had to go ahead with the President Reagan. Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa., right, looks on as Comic* B6 Your Town B1 See Baeget. page A7 Packwood speaks. LHeatyle .'. BB Lottery RN's, GNs, LPN's. Aides. Explore Make a dais A7 Winning numbers in the New Jer- the opportunities. See the Nor- 0 Jobs! Jobs! Jobs! Complete prime rib dinner for two, Movles A8 say lottery appear on page A7. ing/Medical Directory la May's »% off dinner to town residents, Read the Help Wanted columns in W••»• Sa«l T. Waters, Penninsula Classified section. Mon.-Frl. gR-lMft. today's Classified section House, Sea Bright. Al (V> OPEC ministers clash 'EOPLE on price-cutting plans Richie garners W GENEVA. Switzerland (AP) - Oil ministers clashed openly yester- day as OPEC began an emergency 4 music awards session and discussed a pair of LOS ANGELES (AP) - Host Lionel Richie won proposals that could lead to a cut In (our American Muiic Awards yesterday, while rock the cartel's base price for only the star Prince got three and Tina Turner, Anne Murray. second time in its history. Cyndl Lauper and the Pointer Sisters picked up two The 13 ministers of the Organiza- awards apiece. tion of Petroleum Exporting Coun- The three-hour ABC telecast of the 12th annual tries met twice in closed session and awards show honored winners of a nationwide public said no agreement was* reached opinion poll on music. prior to adjourning the talks until Richie, who was the only person to beat Michael today. Jackson out for an American Music Award last year, Less than an hour after the was honored as favorite male video artist in both conference started, the oil minister black and pop-rock categories, and his video clip, of the United Arab Emirates walked "Hello." was named favorite pop-rock video single out, complaining that Nigeria was and black video single. "stabbing OPEC in the back" by Prince, the 26-year-old rock sensation from exceeding its production quota. Minneapolis, won for favorite black single, with Ahmed Zaki Yamani. the Saudi "When Doves Cry," as well as top black album and Arabian oil minister, said later the pop-rock for the soundtrack album to his hit film. Shari Theismann Bruce Springsteen incident was sparked by a "mis- "Purple Rain." understanding" between Mana Miss Lauper was named favorite female vocalist Saeed Oteiba. the minister from the and video artist in pop-rock, while Miss Turner Ms. Theismann. married to the brash, talkative United Arab Emirates, and Tarn picked up the same awards in the black artist quarterback since his senior year at Notre Dame in David-West, Nigeria's oil minister. category. Miss Murray won favorite female country 1970. said she was stunned. Asked about the incident when he video artist, and her hit. "A Little Good News" was Theismann has been dating actress Cathy Lee returned for the afternoon session at voted favorite country video single Crosby, who recently said he had asked her to marry the Intercontinental Hotel, Oteiba The favorite pop video group award went to Huey her. said. "I think it is over." Lewis and the News, who hit it big last year with David-West, whose country broke an album called "Sports." Ms. Theismann. who has three children, said she ranks with OPCE in October to cut Bruce Springsteen won favorite pop single for expects her husband to file for divorce on March 7 prices on its own to meet competi- "Dancing in the Dark" but was not present to collect under Virginia's no-fault. 12-month separation statu- tion from Britain and Norway, it. Daryl Hall and John Oates made it three years te refused to discuss the matter. in a row as favorite pop-rock group, and Alabama With the outbreak of acrimony also checked in as favorite country group for a third Springsteen aids jobless adding to existing doubts about straight year OPEC's ability to act decisively The Pointer Sisters were named favorite black SYRACUSE. N.Y. (API - Rock star Bruce against sliding oil prices, petroleum group, their first American Music Award, and also Springsteen, winding up his seven-month "Born in traders in the United States sent WALKS OUT — Nana Saeed Oteiba, a minister from the United Arab won as favorite black video group. the U.S.A." tour of North America here Sunday prices of the top domestic crude Emirates, speaks to reporters yesterday after he walked out of a night, donated $5,000 to a central New York State briefly tumbling below $25 a barrel stormy session of OPEC officials in Geneva, Switzerland. Oteiba, a food bank for the unemployed. for the first time since 1979. key Arab oil minister, walked out ol the meeting after accusing Nigeria Shari was last to know Springsteen, who urged his fans to follow his Those declines followed the walk- of "stabbing OPEC in the back" by flouting cartel rules. example, has given more than $50,000 to steel- out by Oteiba and indicated at the workers' food banks in Pennsylvania. California, time that "the market definitely pressed by reporters as to whether meeting. WASHINGTON (AP) — Shari Theismann. the does not have much confidence in OPEC was discussing a cut in Its "If you take the weighted average estranged wife of Washington Redskins quarterback Colorado. Washington and Arizona since his tour began OPEC's ability to come up with an benchmark price of $29 a barrel for. (price), the adjustment will be just Joe Theismann. says she had no inkling their agreement," said Andrew Lebow, Arabian Light crude, said: "We're cents," Yamani said. He declined to marriage was over until their accountant told her He ended the 100-show tour before a sellout crowd an oil trading analyst at the New thinking about, as a concept, lower- be more specific. last year. of 41.500 fans in the Syracuse University Carrier York investment firm Shearson ing it." But the minister, Abdul Aziz The president of the conference, "I thought I was having money problems." she Dome. Lehman-American Express Inc. But al-Thani, refused to be specific Indonesian Oil Minister Subroto. said in an interview in the Washington Post Monday. Lebow said markets recovered most about any figures under consider- told reporters at the end of yester- I went to our accountant. In essence, he told me Springsteen. 35. and his E Street Band, plan a of the lost ground by day's end ation. day's session that Nigeria and Saudi I was getting a divorce." break before shows in Australia. because of evidence that OPEC was Shortly before the meeting Arabia had submitted separate "making progress toward an agree- started, Yamani told reporters that proposals to narrow the price gap ment." he expected a small reduction in between the cartel's highest quality 'Star Wars' plan scored Meanwhile, Qatar's oil minister. prices to be agreed on at this crudes and the lower quality blends. MOSCOW lAP) - The official serve as "suspended nuclear retaliatory measures." he said. Pope urges Venezuelans news agency Tass and a cosmonaut bombs." In a separate news analysis, Tass said yesterday a space-based anti- "As an expert. I am convinced said Discovery's secret mission missile system planned by the that under these conditions there is "was most directly linked with United States could malfunction and a great danger of an unintentional, Washington's plans for the use of to follow Catholic dogma start a nuclear war. i.e. accidental, nuclear conflict." outer space with military aims." They also called the just-ended said Rukavishnikov. who partici- Creation of the Stars Wars de- CARACAS. Venezuela (AP) - Mass at a flower-covered altar atop of his trip, when he criticized those secret military mission of the U.S. pated in the Soyuz-10 space mission fense is part of U.S. plans to achieve Pope John Paul II told wildly space shuttle Discovery the first in 1971 and the Soyuz-33 flight eight a steep platform. Members of the who "disfigure the evangelical a first-strike potential, said the cheering crowds in the Andes Moun- crowd, dressed in colorful Andean step in militarizing outer space. years later. commentary, written by Vasily message, using it at the service of tains not to be swayed by ideas that Indian ponchos and knotted caps, ideologies and political strategies In The Reagan administration's Star "As a result of various types of Kharkov. oppose church teachings, and last chanted "Long live the pope!" Wars plan for a shield against technical troubles, which per- The Soviet press has issued com- search of an illusory earthly libera- night urged the clergy to help and Some of the faithful walked to tion." nuclear missiles has been criticized iodically occur in the practices of mentaries on the Star Wars plan defend the poor. repeatedly by the Soviet Union, space flights, a satellite with nu- nearly every day since the Jan. 7-8 Merida, and many camped out The presence of archbishops which has urged a ban on develop- clear weapons on board may cease meetings between Foreign Minister under snow-covered Mount Bolivar Arturo v Rivera Damas of San ment of all space-based weaponry. obeying the orders from the earth," Andrei A. Gromyko and Secretary of "To be faithful to the church waiting for the pope. Seferina Salvador. El Salvador and Miguel Tass quoted cosmonaut Nikolai he said. State George P. Shultz, during means to not let yourself be taken Monsalve de Hil, 48, her daughter Obando y Bravo of Managua, in by doctrines or ideologies con- and son-in-law, walked 10 hours Nicaragua, at a Mass Sunday night Rukavishnikov as saying in an "This may result in an unsanc- which the two sides agreed to from the small mountain farming interview that the proposed anti- tioned nuclear explosion. Such an resume arms control talks. The trary to Catholic dogma," the pope in Maracaibo led to speculation that told the throngs in the southwestern community of El Carrizal. "The the pontiff might take up an active missile system is a plan to create explosion is surely to be mistaken talks will begin March 12 in Geneva, pope made a sacrifice to come "bomber satellites" that would for a nuclear attack and invite Switzerland. Andean town of Merida during Mass role as mediator in Central Ameri- on the third day of his Latin here." she said. "We wanted to ca's conflicts. American journey. make one in return." The pope, who has said in general Later, he met with a group of The Vatican described Merida, terms that he would mediate, of- Roman Catholic clergy in this home of the University of the Andes, fered a special greeting to the two THE WEATHER capital city and said, "There are as one of Venezuela's most religious archbishops during the Mass. sectors in which social progress and areas. It has been the seat of a But a Vatican spokesman, well-being manifest themselves in bishop since 1778. It is 420 miles Monsignor Pierrefranco Pastore, luxurious egotism, while other sec- from Caracas, the Venezuelan capi- said yesterday the pontiff had not Marine forecast tors remain in poverty, misery and tal. talked privately with either of the EST, Tue., Jan. 29, illiteracy." John Paul goes to Ecuador on archbishops. The pope met them Watch Hill, R.I to Manasquan, The church, he said, "cannot Tuesday, and then on to Peru and briefly Sunday night with a group of N.J. ignore these situations." Trinidid-Tobago. This is his sixth other bishops. Since arriving Saturday on the trip to Latin America and 25th San Salvador's auxiliary Pair through tonight. Winds first stop of a four-country tour, the abroad during his papacy. archbishop, Gregorio Rosa Chavez, northwest at 10 to 20 knots today and pope has emphasized several times So far on this journey, the pope said in a Sunday homily that when north 10 knots tonight. Visibility the clergy's need to defend the poor has held to traditional Roman Rivera Damas returns from over 5 miles and average seas will within the church's guidelines. Catholic themes — condeming Venezula he "undoubtedly will bring be 2 to 4 feet. Becoming cloudy Latin America has been a testing abortion, divorce and sterilization, us good news." He added, "Pope tomorrow with winds southeast at 10 ground for the so-called liberation supporting Catholic education, John Paul II is prepared to offer to 20 knots. theology, a blend of gospel teaching Church fidelity and strengthened complete cooperation of the Vatican and, at times. Marxist theology that families. for us to find a peaceful way out of Jersey shore has inspired activism among the Eighty percent of Venezuela's 16 our long and painful conflict." clergy. million people are baptized Roman Pastore said reports that El Mostly sunny today. Highs 30 to The Vatican has condemned the Catholics, but only about 10 percent Salvador was prepared to request or 35. Mostly clear tonight. Lows inclusion of Marxist analysis in of them attend church regularly. accept church mediation would have mainly in the teens. Cloudy tomoi- Roman Catholic theology. The pope yesterday repeated to be clarified by Salvadoran church row with chance of snow. Highs in In Merida.the pontiff celebrated comments he made on the first day officials. the lower 30s.
Tides Iraqi troops launch offensive Showers StaHowy « Sandy Hook BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iraq "failed to reach their very first tactics. All times Eaitern Standard Nrton* WMtwr Service NOAA. US OtOt Of Commerce announced yesterday that 40,000 of primary targets.") Iran captured the Majnoon its soldiers supported by air and The Iraqi communique said "our Islands along with 1,800 square TODAY: High: 1:11 a.m. and 1:30 artillery launched the first Iraqi forces advanced along three axes in miles of Iraqi marshland In a major p.m. and low: 7:45 a.m. and 7:51 ground offensive across Iranian the southern sector of the front and offensive last February. 31 30 <3 ca, Lima Roc* 40 31 01 CO, lines in nearly three years, and p.m. • IM 37 33 is co, LoaAngaW* «6 44 CO, occupied the determined positions." Western reporters rarely are Atlantic City 43 24 • n 30 27 CO, "occupied enemy positions." "The Iraqis are now entrenched In allowed at the front and independent AuaW S3 41 My M 30 01 CO, TOMORROW: High 2:02 a.m. and 40 21 edy 30 13 CO, (Iran said the Iraqi attack was the new positions which they have verification of conflicting claims, 2:26 p m. and low: 8:48 a.m. and j»»"o. a a 09 in Miam. Baacn 7S 5S Of "totally crushed.") won in a heroic battle." such as today's, is seldom immedi- r B
WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense whether the United States will again by Senate panel Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger shortchange defense as we did In the warned yef terday against any move 1970s," Weinberger said. to "shortchange" the nation's mili- Weinberger argued that a freeze WASHINGTON (AP) - Educa- Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts tary buildup as a way to reduce the in defense spending or drastic cuts tion Secretary-designate William J. said it would amount to "nailing the federal deficit, saying that "the in Pentagon programs would not Bennett said yesterday that Presi- dollar sign back on the doors to Soviets ill! be watching." help much In overcoming the deficit, dent Reagan has not given him the colleges and universities." which has been projected at $180 mission of trying to abolish the Sen Lowell P. Welcker Jr., R- In a nationally televised speech billion to more than 1200 billion. Education Department. Conn., said he would seek to prevent that was unusual for a Cabinet "For we must remember that for Bennett refused at his Senate quick action on the nomination until officer, Weinberger said any large every $1 billion that is cut from the confirmation hearing, however, to the White House provides as- reduction in defense spending would defense budget, we would eliminate to give unqualified support to the surances that it will not try to rob the United Slates of negotiating 35.000 jobs - and we would lose current structure of the 118 billion abolish the department. leverage, with Moscow and cost taxes those American citizens pay," Cabinet agency. At Reagan's re- Americans 35,000 Jobs for every he said. quest, Bennett said, h* will conduct Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the billion dollars cut. 'Weinberger said many workers a study within six months on the chairman of the Senate Labor and Weinberger's remarks on Cable who stood to lose jobs because of effectiveness of department's pro- Human Resources Committee, said News Network, after which he was defense cuts would not find new ones grams and how they might be no one with "any brains" thinks to field questions from reporters, and, thus, Increase the cost to the Improved. there is any chance Congress would came as Congress searched for government of unemployment com- Declaring himself neither "a rev- allow Education to be abolished. ways to cut ISO billion from the pensation and other programs for olutionary nor a subversive," Ben- Hatch, who had. hoped to get the projected federal deficit for the the jobless. nett stressed that he bad "better committee to approve the Bennett fiscal year that starts Oct. 1. Senate "In fact, if you cut defense things to do" than to wage a futile nomination by the end of the week spending by one dollar, you only AajUlaMlHaupllHi GOP Leader Robert pole has been TAKES OWN LIFE — Cleveland Superintendent of Schools fight with Congress over the fate of without dissent, said he will sched- saying reductions on the domestic reduce the deficit by about 50 the department, which Reagan has ule a formal vote next yesterday if side will be Impossible unless the cents," he said. Frederick Holliday killed himsell Saturday. In a letter addressed to said he would like to abolish. need be. Pentagon absorbs its share. Weinberger labeled "myths" re- students in the,8ystem, Holliday expressed frustration over "politics" Bennett, 41, chairman of the Weinberger said acknowledged marks on Capitol Hill that no which he claimed was damaging the system. National Endowment for the Hu- The soleXwitness against Bennett there has been waste in Pentagon domestic reductions are possible manities since 1982, defended bis was Rep. CaVdiss Collins. D-Ill., who programs. But he said inadquate without defense cuts or that the commitment to civil rights and has clashed with him before over his defense budgets were to blame and Pentagon has not contributed Its criticized as "too narrow ... and refusal to set affirmative action warned that major cost cutting share. He said the defense budget Angry school chief short-sighted" last year's Supreme hiring goals at the endowment. She would have serious consequences. President Reagan will present to Court decision in the Grove City questioned whether all the top jobs "As Secretary of State George Congress next week already has College case, which narrowed the at Education would be occupied by Shultz warned when he returned been cut $53 billion below 1981 scope of federal laws against dis- white males. from Geneva earlier this month,- it projections. takes his own life crimination on campuses. will be impossible to gain" an arms Weinberger said that while the agreement with the Soviets "if we Soviets have returned to arms CLEVELAND (AP) - The city's Joseph G. Tegreene, a Holliday When Sen. Paul Simon. D-Ill., falter now in our commitment to a control talks in Geneva, "they will superintendent of schools shot supporter, said he believed board complained that Bennett had been T-bills post stronger defense." test our will power and strength of himself to death in the stairwell of members had struck a deal that "a pussycat" in defending NEH "For, as Congress begins its purpose by watching to see if once a high school after writing a letter ensured the election of Ralph J. against budget cuts, the prospective modest gain budget deliberations next week, the again America will decide to cut saying he had become "sickened" Perk Jr. as board president- in Education secretary replied that he return for Holliday's dismissal as Soviets will be watching to see back on defense investment." by the "petty politics" of school had turned the endowment into "a WASHINGTON (AP) - Yields on board members who reportedly superintendent of the 78,000-student good, strong, proud agency." short-term securities, which last planned to oust him, officials said district, the largest in Ohio. week fell to their lowest levels in yesterday. Tegreene — a member of the seven- Questioned about Reagan's re- member school board as is Perk — two years, posted a small increase 'Star Wars' project "As of this moment, it appears ported plan to deny Guaranteed in yesterday's auctions. that my last piece of dignity is being had also campaigned for the board Student Loans to all students from president's job. stripped," wrote Frederick D. Holli- families with incomes above $32,500 The Treasury Department sold $7 day, 58, whose body was found by a "Unfortunately. I believe a deal and to put a $4,000 lid on the total billion in three-month bills at an called questionable student at Aviation High School was made between the three board federal aid even the poorest student average discount rate of 7.76 per- yesterday morning, two days after members and Mr. Perk that in could draw, Bennett said he had cent, up from 7.68 percent last week. WASHINGTON (AP) The —Surveillance, acquisition, track- he killed himself. A 357-Magnum exchange for them supporting him been briefed only in general terms Another $7 billion was sold in six- Strategic Defense Initiative ing and kill assessment — the eyes revolver also was found, said Detec- for the presidency that we (the about the budget Reagan will submit month bills at an average discount proposed by President Reagan is "of and ears of a battle. $10.5 billion. tive Robert Bolton. board as a whole) would vote with to Congress next week. • rate of 7.97 percent, up from 7.93 questionable value and astounding —Directed Energy Weapons — A supporter of Holliday's said the them to fire Dr. Holliday," percent last week. cost," says a new study which research on four possible ap- board planned to oust Holliday from Tegreene said in a recent television "My own visceral inclina- interview. forecasts that the research alone proaches to defense against miss- his $80,00O-a-year-job. tion..would be to say we should help The rates for three-months bills will cost more than the entire iles, including chemical lasers, neu- Holliday will be replaced by Tegreene said yesterday that those most in need," said Bennett, were the highest since Jan. 7 of this proposed budget for such programs tron particle beams and nuclear X- deputy superintendent Seymour Holliday called him late Friday "this will mean a hard impact, .a year when the rate was 7 78 percent. as the MX missile and the B-l ray lasers. $5.9 billion. Freedman until Thursday, when a night and was depressed and worri- difficult circumstance, for those at It was the highest six-month bill bomber. —Kinetic energy weapons — special meeting will be held, Free- ed about his future. the middle level or just below the rate since an 8.05 percent on Jan. 14. "The goal of rendering strategic "smart" weaspons that could de- dman said yesterday at a news The contract was up for a vote middle level." nuclear missiles obsolete implies stroy a ballistic missile in flight, conference. Schools are to open Feb. 14. Although the pact would Interest rates have generally been developing a virtually perfect de- possibly by rockets fired from today. Freedman said, "because I have ended in June, the board had He also said a freeze on govern- dropping since early September fense against nearly 1,400 land- space-based hyper-velocity guns. believe he (Holliday) would not have to reach some decision by March 1 ment spending was "a sound way to when they reached peaks of 10.63 based Soviet ICBMs containing over $5.9 billion. wanted his passing to deprive those or Holliday would have received an go" percent for three-month bills and 6.000 independently targetable war- —Systems Analysis and Battle children in any way of their school- automatic, one-year renewal. 10.75 percent for six-month bills. heads," says .the report by the Management — development of a ing." Perk, a former city councilman But Republican Sen. Robert T. Council of Economic Priorities. responsive, reliable, survivable and The letter, dated 11 a.m. Saturday and son of former Mayor Ralph J. Stafford of Vermont said the student The new discount rates understate The price tag for all this Is cost-effective system to direct the and addressed "To the citizens of Perk, was elected president of the aid cuts were "absolutely ludi- the actual return to investors — 8.03 impossible to say since the Strategic defense and a second function Cleveland and the children and staff Cleveland Board of Education after crous" and would drive middle-class percent for three-month bills and Defense Initiative program — popu- termed a "sanity check" on the of the Cleveland Public Schools," board member Stanley Tolliver and students out of college. Democrat 8.42 percent for six-month bills. larly known as "Star Wars" — is other layers $11 billion. was found in the principal's office of Tegreene withdrew their names barely in the research and develop- In a fifth area, support programs, the high school. from nomination. ment phase, the report says. But it $1.9 billion would be spent by the end The letter contained typo- adds: of the decade. Support programs graphical and grammatical errors, "The total program could cost would focus on predicting the mini- and Holliday noted in a postcript: JERSEY DISCOUNT MOO billion to $800 billion if it goes mum energy required to destroy "Kids, if there are any errors in this directly into full-scale development Soviet systems in all possible en- letter, I did not proof it carefully." OIL CO. after the current 5-year R&D gagement scenarios. "The fighting among school baord phase." The report says another $8 billion members and what petty politics is Instead, the council is rec- is scheduled to be spent on research doing to the system has sickened me ' ommending a more limited research and development of anti-satellite ... The events of the past few weeks effort aimed at exploring likely weapons, other ballistic missile makes my reporting to work mean- 91 weak links in strategic defense defense programs and strategic air ingless. The purpose seems to be systems. defense. * lost. There is a mindlessness that HEATING "This would provide a hedge Despite the vast sums proposed has nothing to do with the education OIL against Soviet breakthroughs," the for the SDI programs, the report of children or the welfare of the city. study says, "without unleashing a says, there will be few "spinoffs" This hurts most of all," the letter crash program of questionable value with commercial applications and said. and astounding cost." the tight security that is sure to be Aviation High School is on the Dafff* 1W Q1. The Council on Economic Pri- imposed "appears likely to prevent Lake Erie shore near Burke C.O.D. CAaH orities identifies itself as "a non- dissemination to industry of even Lakefront Airport and has an air •MUMY CHtCM profit organization established to those findings which do have com- traffic control tower, and Holliday disseminate unbiased and detailed mercial possibilities." had kept a small plane at the school, information on the practices of U.S. Asking whether such a major Bolton said. Holliday's body, with a corporations." The organization public investment is worth it, the single gunshot wound to the chest, 493-8777 publishes three to six studies a year. report says "for SDI, both the risk was found in the stairwell leading to William Hartung, one of the and the cost appear imprudently the tower. authors of the report, said the New high and the hasty Infusion of very The death was ruled a uicide by York-based public policy research substantial funding raises knotty Dr. Lester Adelson, the chief deputy group specializes in studying the questions." Cuyahoga County coroner. economic impact of military spend- ing. It It financed by donations, foundation grant* and member- ships, he said Many millions of people would be killed if even a small number of custom made nuclear missiles evades a defense Helq Land EVERYTHING GOES system and a multi-layered ap- proach would have to be taken to Twelve Inspiring Days build a "leakproof defense, the MIRRORS under leadership of THOUSANDS OF WINTER FASHIONS study says' Each of the layers would need independent sensors, weapons and control systems and would have for Father John J. to be defended themselves against attack from nuclear, laser or con- • Doors SHEEHAN our entire stock nothing Mi kick ventional weapon*. . of GHrmt winter we must main Over the next five years, the • Walls report says, this is how Star Wars rton for spring research money would be spent in • Over E FAMILY! fashions now! four major technical areas: Fireplaces The Daily Register • Living Rooms (USPS-145-440) RUSH IN FOR RACKS and RACKS of 1' PuWnhad by Tna R«<] Bank Ragiiiar • Sliding . EuabWwd m itV6 by John H Cook and Hanry CUy Closet Doors SUPER UNADVERTISED SPECIALS Ma>n Otvce On* Rtgraatf Pia». Shrawabury. NJ 07701 •1699 N'STYS* Apr. 15th 201 ( 542-4000 • Bar Mirrors WALK in the footsteps oljesus, His Blessed Branch Otlicat Mother, and the apostles PRAY where Monmoutn County CourVtouta, stood the stable In Bethlehem. KNEEL in FraaftQK) NJ 07728 tha garden of Gethsemane QAZE out over the Jordan valley from atop the Mount of Mtmbfi ot me Aitocatod Pratt Tha Astocaiw • Prau i* aMMad «*c u.i**y lo ma uaa of *l m# local Authorized Insurance Replacement Service Jericho. VISIT Nazareth. Cana. Mount of na*t prmwd in ma nawtpapar at wail at t« AP nawt Beautltudea. many other holy placet.. Then OapMchM fly to Rome. 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NEWARK (AP) - The state of tressed cities and urban counties Essex and Mercer counties Joined New Jersey asked • federal judge that have demonstrated results in the suit and an attorney for Hudson yesterday to order the U.S. Depart- providing low- and moderate-in- also said his county is considering ment of Housing and Urban De- come housing and employment. participating. The communities velopment to temporarily atop en- listed on the suit are Jersey City, forcing a provision of an urban The lawsuit focuses on a policy Irvington, Newark, Camden, North grants program that state officials statement Issued Jan. 9 in which Bergen, Paterson, Weehawken, say discriminates against New Jer- HUD said UDAG funding could be Trenton and Irvington. An attorney sey. denied to "speculative" projects for Bayonne said his community is that promote the migration of jobs considering joining the suit. U.S. District Judge Frederick B. from one area to another within a 50- Lacey reserved decision and set a mile radius. Richard Stearns, an attorney with Feb. 7 hearing in the case brought HUD's office of general counsel, by the state and joined by two Attorneys for the administration declined to comment on the suit, counties and nine municipalities. of Gov. Thomas H. Kean said the saying It had been filed just a few policy statement was issued after minutes before Lscey's hearing. The suit challenges provisions of many months of intense lobbying by the Urban Development Action members of New York City's con- Eugene Sullivan, assistant state Grant Act that federal officials say gressional delegation. They claimed attorney general in charge of liti- are designed to prevent the "pirat- that New York City officials feared gation, said the policy statement ing" of Jobs from one economically competition from New Jersey re- was adopted "out of the sky blue and depressed region to another. development projects, including all of a sudden," without benefit of ones along the Hudson River water- notice or public comment. Close to 190 million in proposals front. or requests for UDAG funding for "HUD's new policy was illegally Jersey City, Long Branch, Paterson, New York and New Jersey have adopted," the lawsuit said. Weehawken, Camden and Hudson been at odds over serval issues in and Essex counties are now pending recent months, Including a HO In the lawsuit. Sullivan said that before HUD. million UDAG grant made to Jersey since 1977 New Jersey munici- City last year. The states also have palities and counties have received The UDAG program was created more than $224 million In UDAG in 1077 to help stimulate economic disputed ownership of the Statue of funding, which has generated more recovery in urban areas. The grants Liberty and the handling of than til billion in private invest- are available to economically dis- chemical leaks. ment In the state.
We're Slashing Prices on Rsdtoe, Autosound, HI-FI, ON PICKET LINE — A woman with two small Medical Center, Newark. The nurses are striking lor children, center, walks through a picket line set up more pay. Telephones and More! yesterday by striking nurses at the United Hospitals Mt. Laurel plan advanced ENDOFTHE TRENTON (API - A Senate funds because the state could not — Permission for a municipality provide enough money to build all of MONTH committee yesterday released legis- to meet up to one-third of its fair- lation to help communities provide the affordable housing needed. share obligation by developing af- their (air share of affordable hous- But Kean said he would consider fordable housing somewhere else ing for low- and middle-income the proposal to use the realty within the region. AM/FM Stereo Receiver Cut 44% 3-Way Speaker System families under the state Supreme transfer tax to create a fund to Last Thursday, Republican law- STA-660 by Realistic* % -IgQ Q« f Optlmus*-400 by Realistic Court's Mount Laurel decision. rehabilitate housing in urban areas. makers announced plans to in- The bill was released by the troduce legislation that would per- Save'80 The bill allows municipalities to Senate Revenue Finance and Ap- mit communities to meet their 95 develop their own housing plans and propriations Committee in a 7-3 vote obligations under Mount Laurel by L9 determine the number of affordable with Democrats supporting it and contributing to the construction of noo O Q O irrrrrr o]199 Republicans opposed. Sponsored by affordable housing in nearby cities. 1198" units of housing the community Reg. 359.95 Democratic Sens. John Lynch of K WATTS Kft CHANNEL. MWMUM RW WTO I OHMS must provide. Kean has criticized the so-called FROM »21.M Hi. WITH NO MOM THAN I OH THO (tag. 199.95 It also creates two sources of Middlesex County, Wynona Lipman "builders' remedy" for Mount USE YOUR Leaf super-tweeter, funding to provide 163 million in of Essex County and Gerald Stock- Laurel cases, saying it would result Stereo Expander creates an in- credibly realistic sound most 12" woofer, tuned- subsidies to help municipalities man of Essex County, the bill is in overdevelopment. port, 5" midrange. other receivers can't match. build homes to meet their fair share. scheduled for a Senate vote Jan. 31. The remedy, developed in the 26s/*" high. The key provisions of the bill call Hurry inl #31-2097 The money would come from $25 state court system, allows a de- #40-2048 million in state funds and 138 million for: veloper to build four homes to be provided by an increase in the realty sold at market value in exchange for Weatheradio® Deskube AM/FM Stereo Component System transfer tax. which would be raised — The creation of a nine-member permission to construct one unit of in a companion bill that is cont- state Council on Affordable Hous- lower-cost housing. The four market By Realistic By Realistic ingent on approval of this measure. ing, which will divide the state into value homes will offset the loss of Save In its decision in January 1983. the regions to estimate the needs for the one less expensive unit. 28* Off • STA-860 AM/FM •360™ high court ruled that each develop- low- and moderate-income housing Under the Democrats' bill, a I Reg. Stereo Receiver ing community must provide its at the state and regional levels. municipality involved in a Mount 17.95 • Two Optlmus-400 far share" of affordable housing — The council to create guidelines Laurel lawsuit will be allowed to 1295 3-Way Spoafcars phase in the number of units ordered However, Gov. Thomas H. Kean for municipalities to use in de- Continuous fore- si SCT-40 Stereo n»_ 829
Panel OKs rules on smoking Desktop Calculator Dual-Cassette AM/FM Stereo System • EC-2001 by Radio Shack Clarinette*-114 by Realistic TRENTON (API - A legislative Sen. Frank Graves, D-Passaic. Gloucester. sponsor of the legis- committee yesterday approved and committee chairman and the spon- lation in the Assembly, said the bills Cut 33% Save 95 sent to the Senate a package of six sor of the bills in the upper house, have attracted the support of more bills that would regulate smoking in 95 said the measures may be con- than two dozen New Jersey or- •80 159 public places, despite a charge by sidered by the full Senate at its ganizations, including the Com- the tobacco industry that the meeting next Monday. 19 • Duplicate Your C—sttss munication Workers of America, the measures are unconstitutional. One of the bills would require New Jersey Business & Industry Rag. 29.95 • 2-Spaad Tumtabt* The bills, which already have employers to establish smoking and Association and the Garden State Handy 4-Key Memory Make personal copies of tapes, been passed by the Assembly, would non-smoking areas in the workplace. and New Jersey restaurant associa- limit smoking in the workplace, Employers also could ban smoking. Perfect for tax time! Percent, gross record off radio, turntable, or tions. profit margin keys. #65-660 "live" with optional mikes. government tyiildings, food stores, A second measure would require wlth 17 H| restaurants, indoor public places restaurants to post signs telling Harold Hochman, an economics Bananas, AC idapMf Mtra #13-1217 salt «* V1MB " flh Spaafcara such as concert halls and on buses. customers whether there are smok- professor at City University of New Joseph Katz, a lobbyist for the ing and non-smoking areas. York, said the measures would cost AM/FM Car Cassette Stereo Clock Radio AM/FM Portable Radio | private businesses an estimated $134 tobacco industry, said the legis- Other bills would regulate smok- By Realistic Chronomatic*-22S by Realistic By Realistic lation was an attempt to "outlaw ing in indoor public places and million a year to implement and smoking." government buildings and would ban government agencies about 193 Cut "These bills have problems. smoking in food stores with more million. They're telling people, 'If you than 2,500 square feet of space. However, Graves said recent 20" smoke, you have no rights.' Only Hotel lobbies would be exempt from studies show that the legislation smokers have any rights under this the legislation. would save industries billions of. legislation." Katz said. A measure also would prohibit dollars in increased productivity 2788 Edward Beder, an attorney for smoking on buses and other public and health-insurance costs. the industry, said: "I challenge the transportation vehicles. "Smoke Is Injurious not only to Reg. 59.95 Rag. 34.95 Tone Control constitutionality of this legislation. Fines ranging from $25 to 1100 the person's health who is enjoying Wake each morning to su- It seems to violate the rights of would be imposed on violators of it; it's also Injurious to the person Fits in most cars. With cable, Hear music, news and sports people who choose to smoke." four of the bills. Smoking on a public perb stereo SOUTKI #t who comes in contact with it," hardware. #12-1908 1 binary «xtr» anywhere. #12-668 Bmanw «n The two made the remarks during vehicle would be a petty disorderly Graves said. nearly two hours of debate on the persons offense and there would be Katz said the tobacco industry measures before the Senate Law, no penalty for violators in the disputes "in the most vigorous Public Safety and Defense Commit- workplace. terms" statistics that show cigaret- Daisy Wheel Printer 1 tee. Assemblyman Martin Herman, D- te smoke is harmful to non-smokers. 5 /4" Computer 20-Channel Scanner | DWP-210 by Radio Shack Disks PRO-2020 by Reatette New consultant at First Jersey Save \ By Radio Shack Save. •200 Cut •80 NEW YORK (AP) - A new Commission said yesterday. Bromberg was hired to study the consultant has been hired to study Benjamin L. Lubin, a financial company as part of a November 1984 33" the business practices of First consultant from Greenwich, Conn., settlement in which the SEC drop- Rag. SJngto and Doubia-Sktod Jersey Securities, one of the na- replaces Alan Bromberg, a law ped charges of illegal stock trading '599.00 against First Jersey and its presi- tion's most controversial brokerage professor at Southern Methodist 399°° 2J30S 3« Get 20,480 UHF and VHF houses, the Securities and Exchange University. dent, Robert E. Brennan. But Unbeatable value! Prints over 200 _ S JflL frequencies without crystals! Bromberg resigned the following letter-perfect words per minute. A S.S1M S3 an a OS M* #20-112 28-411 (ft month when it was revealed that he best buy! #26-1257 osw 2HH Binary fcx nwtnory backup ixtri Drug firm to lay off 1,000 had co-authored, with First Jersey lawyer Louis Lowenfels, a five- Hi-Performance CB 10-Number Memory Motion-Sensing NUTLEY (AP) - Hoffmann-La through staff reductions and other volume treatise on securities fraud. TRC-413 by Realistic Roche Inc will fire about 1,000 of its means. Bromberg said he wanted to avoid Phone Alarm 11.000 employees by next week, a "We made a commitment that we the appearance of a conflict of Trim-Fone- by Radio Shack. By SAFE HOUSE* spokeswoman for the pharma- would keep employees advised along interest. * ceuticals concern undergoing re- the way, " she said. Brennan has promised to imple- Low As Save 1 organization said yesterday. Ms. Glynn said the group affected ment any changes the consultant by the layoffs includes about 6,500 proposes. Neither he nor First •30
About 8.000 employees nationwide workers at the company head- Jersey admitted any wrongdoing In •at .^ak^aB were informed through newsletters quarters in Nutley, 1,000 workers at the settlement, which requires them Whit# or Brown Rag. and bulletins posted yesterday that the Belvidere plant and a few to observe all securities laws in the 1,000 of them will be notified on Feb. hundred employees at smaller dis- future or face contempt of court Hag. 99.95 Wee. #4*520/521 99.96 4 that they are fired, said tribution centers nationwide. charges. For fun and safety on the 69.96. Sale $39.95 Ultrasonic sound detects spokeswoman Carolyn Glynn, add- She said none of the more than Lubin specializes in securities open road. With mike. Tone. #4*522/523. Reg. motion. Built-in alarm. ing that the layoffs are to be 3,000 people working for two Hoff- operations for banks, brokers and #21-1507 79.96. Sale $49.95 effective immediately. mann-La Roche subsidiaries will dealers and insurance companies, She said the employees, who are lose their jobs during the first phase according to the SEC. He is • not unionized, were also told about of the reorganization. director of Mostly. Hallgarten, severance and other benefits so that Ms. Glynn said more than 3,000 Estabrook & Weeden Holding Corp. Check Your Phone Book for the and of the Jeffries Group. The they are prepared, in case they are people work for Roche Biomedical Store or Oeeter Nearest You among those fired. Laboratories in Burlington, N.C., settlement gives him 90 days to Ms. Glynn said the layoffs are the and several hundred an employed complete his report. result of a company decision to save at Medl-Phystcs Inc. in Richmond, First Jersey, despite its name, is 150 million in annual expenses Calif headquartered In New York. 23t Ocaanport Long Branch 840 Wvimson 240 RuwiBon • Avanua. naar Mr IM yaw lasa and doTHHE COCOSST IHEREOF yAv JANUARY 29. 1085 The Datify Register A5 north ot lha northarty ourb Hna of Wl K" MOnCB haraby appoint C Barnard Blum. BE IT OROAINEO bby lha Mayor a lavas novvi iw v*a wity swimming pool ahaM ba in eon* Jollna Ava. (Hwy. 36) to s point Jr to that otHca purauanl lo maand CounciCill olf tha IBorough ol 240 Rumson 23» Had Bank *— W—upon formanoa wtft tfta rulaa and M foot aouth of tha aoutharty Counoa ol Da Oay al Long provlalona ol P. S 40*7-16 Rumaon. County olf MonmoulMmolh ragujaBana of both lha Board of curb Una of Jollna Ava. (Hwy. 16) Branch harasy illlima «3 and Blaa) of Naw Jaraay: iaaa and na ia haraoy apporntao NOTICE OP MCIUOM —-. —.-.- -i.- NOTIOI womahop and ragular mia»ng a) I. TMa oonaact la awardad OWPWAWCI IHTITLID Tuaaday. 'aoruary la. lason wHnout compaWrva Mddmg aa a 1 That lha Borough ol to thai olfloa purauant to ma PLEASE TAKE NOTK-f »u> til THrZrZT TiZZZ, i. a. . -rough »f Ocoanpori Prom a point 100 foot -Piotaaalon.1 BarvW undar tha Rumaon maka tha following proviwon. of US 40.17-IS tr» Rad Bank P^lno? BoaW oini to?kaS a^ mWIM HXK OD» Saotlon If. SANITATION Monday. r>abruary II, IMS ka. w« «i okigai a_- ha northarty ourb llna of provlalona ol tha Local Public aqulpmant purohaaa: I. Said anornay I. ratalnad and \~ „« maaio naM on Ibl TlmothToTlmothToiaai n P E for nro- IMXK>M STANDARDS Joftno Ava. {Hwy 36) to a polnlgmmng at 1:00 PH. m tw Mu- nicipal BurMmg. Third Moor. 344 Conlracta Law bapauaa tha aar- A. Tapa racordlng UMaphon. appolntad to lha orllca of Plan- j „£ ,'Tgl ^^, S.Z^^ , , raiak»u»ar3Lnraiak»u»ar3Lna«r~a i aar2o£ iSir" •° o* 41 faat south ot lha southerly vtoo r.naar.d or paitoimad M » aqulpmanl for Rumaon Pollca nlng Board Anornay purauanl lo , r BB curb IMS of Jollna Avanua (Hwy. Long Branch. Naw Vpprovapp l ' Xmm \SSncm IIJVhIcIJoaVphX TIanTIn BEtTonOAiNBDaythaMayor ba dona by a paraon authortaad Daparlmanlapartmanl . RS40:S7-ls withoutoutt compaativcompatttva ( a appHcaNaMo TwoJaT a CanrBad "fito Mm to tThaI. Thatt aald Improvamanl and bidding .. a "ProfaaMonal Sar. i^ tTth purpoaa O i ! ^ST 2 Along tho north slda of jollna JannM C. OaFaMo i^ tT ? idl^ Avanua (Hwy. 3«). From a point CHyCtark •action 1 4$ toot aoot of tha aastarty ourb a. isss apd DaCfSTlOlll Sli Una of Savonth Ava. to a point M too. waal of tna waatarty ourb Hna • tiV.*rW'l,P~ II. ^' aaa^ai * awvi \s" .|f laraynuiw "~ ~ ~ ap^vw " T a. ^v a»« i» arSS Tna DrS mlSBMB In OU All r-J ot Bovanttt Avanua. 3. Copy ot thla raaotution ahaH aqulpmant for Rumaon Pollca aulhorliad by law lo practlca a „. locatad at lha cornar of Waat tha Local PubUo CaMrana Law Aton# tha aouth sldo of Jollna 2M Long aVBltCh b. pubkatwd in Ma Dairy Itagla- Dapartmanl tS.MOOO. racognliad prola.ilon and ;„„«." ammuH Zoin"M bacaua. na aarvwaa ranoarad •r a. raquirad by law within lan J. Thai Ina urn of Fifty Frva whoaa prolaaalon and pracuca I. ££.k M Lo£ , 2 iiand 22 or parformad la lo ba dona by a Avanua (Hwy 38). From a point l ¥ v 1 1 1 > |10)«ayaolltap..l.g.-*^^_ . %Mg«lr •• •» J»a^i a l («W0OJ)0#Aa IrVl rtftv| dollar J«ll*,« o-.r_ r^ulM r&fiiilalaM jb k.y la.. IB^,*«. ~.m.^, bioaar hid. a not Co7yr """ or«d"Vaa^lu"tton T * *^* * '• *. •' !i^o al'InU iliMMa paraon aumorlaad by Law 10 •"•" °* aJOSIB* 80 toot owl of tha aaatarty curb PMaaa taka none thai ma City Tha abova ri lullon .a. •» MMrl Ihar^t aa n»y ba -ajulrad par R S 40A:5-11 „„„',„. a^..^^ „, ,M „„. practlca a raongnliacl prolaaalon lino of Savanth Avanuo to a point Council ol tha CHy 01 Long movad by Mr. Montahaail aac- naoaaaary 10 carry out tha larm. 3. Copy of thltni. raaolullorax n .hall , 10 loot wool of lha wsSlirty curb Ing board and I. .vallabla lor Branch nava achadulad a budgal ondad by Mayor Paaamo and of thla ordlnanoa ba and tha ba pubflahad in lha Dally Ragla- ,„, by Law and tudaara not raquirad Hne of Savonth Ava. workshop maattno, tor Wadnoo- carrlad unanimouunanlmouMsy aama Ila. haraby approprlalad taMr aa raquiraragulrad by la!•<-w withi-'"•'n" '•lar", ^- Soctton 17 ENFORCEMENT Jollna Avanua (Hwy. M) and hou par H.8. 40AS-11 day. Fabruary 20. 1SS6 at ona CERTIFICATION "Id dMWatad Irom lha C.pil.i (10) day. ol It. paaaaga LEVIN S SPECTOR 3 A oopy ol thla Raaolullon » ara rantad to transl- Myrtia Avanua o'clock pm In tna Municipal I haraby oartrfy that tha abova Improvamant Fund for lha Tha abova raaolullon wa. Attornava tor Two J > •hall ba publlanad aa raquirad by of Hoarth and/or iha Conatruc- Along tha aouth slda of Jollna Building, third floor. 344 Broad- la a trua copy ol a raaolullon purpoaa ol making lha aloraaald movad by Mr Shay, aacondad APannaTahlp tion Officisi to anforco ma way, Long Branch. Naw Jaiaay. law within tan (101 daya M Ita Avanuo (Hwy. 36). From a point adoplad by tna Planning Board purchaaa and paying tha aa- by Mr Moorahaad and carrlad D.iad January 24 ISSS provlalons of this ordlnanoa ll 280 foal waal of lha waatarty ourb No pubHc participation ww ol tna Borough ol Kurrujon al a panaa In connacuon iharawlin unanlmouMy Jan 2S SS 00 than also ba tha duty of thallna of Myrtta Avanua to a point m Tha loraoolng H.aolullon waa on a slngts fsmlly taka placa. maatlng hald on January 22. 4. Thla ordlnanca .hall taka CERTIFICATION oharad by Counollman Manning. ownar of any pool to allow lha 480 laal aaol of lha aaatarty curb No formal action wHI ba lakan IMS allact upon Ita paaaaga and pub- I haraby cartlly thai lha abova danoa on n and ussd as an sc- Board of Maaith and/or tna Build- llna of Myrtta Ava. oaaaory to ttta rositfonoa. snd Jannla C. Daf aiio J. Oary Sammon, Sacratary llcauon according to law la a trua copy ol a raaoluUon ing Official sooaas to any swim- Along tha north alda ol Jollna PLEASE TAKE NOTICE Ih.t onondad by Counollwoman —1 pool la uttUsad wtth no ad- City Clark Jan. IB I21.M Jan. 2B 121.24 adoplad by tha Zoning Board ol . roll call ming pool or wading pool andAvanua (Hwy. 36). From a point Jan. aa 18.40 r> chargaa and not (or lha appurtanancaa lharato for tha __-^_^_^_^^^^^_^^^_^_^_ — ^ Adjuatmanl of lha Borough ot »Sf2fi*J»2i"!- •^••.•ww. «. >n^ u™ S ! Io8oa*ig; 228 feet wast of tha waatarty curb 240 Rumaon 240 Rumson Rumaon at a maaung hald on Adluaimant ol lha Borough of purpoaa of inapactton and tollna of Myrtia Avanua to a point AVES: Counollman Manning. aicartaln compfianca with thla 233 Long Branch — January 22, loss. Rad Bank, grantad approval to Counclrwoman MoOulra. Coun- 480 foot aoM of tha aaatarty curb NOTICI J Oary Sammon. Sacratary tna application ot Conitanca ordlnanoa and sJI othar partlnsni llna of Myrtta Avanua. PLEASE FMU (Of cilman Roonay, Mayor Norton: ordlnsnoas, at all rassonablo PLEAJK TAKI NOTICE that ^ that Jan 2S 121 Be pramlMM localad .1 NAYS Nona: ABSTAIN Coun- abova ground pools aqulppad lima*. Along tha Eaal sldo ot Myrtta An Ordlnanoa amandlng and u.t- ' Block 89. Lot 17. commonly cilman Furlong. Councllwoman Avenue. From a polnl 40 faal •upplamanllng Chaplar XI, "Tr.l- mant did. at a rsoulsr rnaattnQ on known aa 340 8hrawabury Ai Braarlay. Councllamn Mlllan II. VIOLATIONS AND north of tha norlharty curb line of fle of ma rawaad ganaral ordl- January IS. IMS grant a van- grant a varl- anua Jollna Avanua (Hwy. 38) to ananoaa ol tna City of Long I. MARY LARSON. Clark ol th. Borough of Saa Bright. Naw Jar- point 200 foot south of thaBranch, County of Monmouth. parmit southarly curb llna of Jollna Av- Slat* of Naw Jaraay "Bua Stop." aay do haraoy oanlfy iht tha fora- anua (Hwy. 36). houaa on pra...... MVIm . gmz^zxT*-* PLEAS«.L«NOITO^E ^*xssrtrjsif^ golng RaaoluUon waa adoplad by Introducad: D.c.mb.r 11, Road. Bumaon. Naw Jaraay. and Slrnirw?DU2 tna mayor and Council ol tha ••n>a«hovlolataalhl. ordlnanca Along tho waat sldo ot Myrtta 1SS4 ahown or, IM Tu Map of lha ™ rj't#vt.', sn* d shown on lha tha undarslgnod haa appllad lo varalon of single- family .sn- Borough of Saa Bright at Ihalr Avonua. Prom a polnl 114 faat Adoptad: January 22. I Mo Borough 01 Rum^n a. Lo. 14. %£„£>„«,ot tha Borough of tha Planning, Board ot tha Town- donca to mi«ad usa ot first floor Ragular Maatlng hald on January i In lha Municipal court. north ot tha northarty curb line ot _- Lot t. Block 116. ship of Fraahold lor approval ot s baauty shop and sacond floor Tha abova ordlnanoa waa fi-•IOC" 1 r»™^. »* ..M torfatt and pay a fins not aaeaad- Jollna Avonua (Hwy. 36) to anally adoplad at a ragular Copv M W lfl usad for swimming Coov of saM nsaoluilon la on °* Woaolutlon la on Bit« plan lo ranovata and aapand «P< "B zona Tha rasolution is MARY LARSON. Sorougn Clark Ing ona hundrad ($100) dollars poini 206 foot south of thaIng ol tha City Council ol • a City n "^ flla with iha Board of Adjustmant tha sKlsitlng atructura on tha «lad m tha oftlca ot tha sacratary. mum araa not axcoodlng 130 for tha flrtt offansa and not •«- lha Jan 2S 127 OO southarly curb Una ot Jollna Av- ol Long Branch. or inapacilon- and avallabla tor Inapactton pramlsaa daalgnatad as Block 32 Monmouth Stroat. Had Bank. squara faol and a maximum caadlng two hundrad ($200.) anua (Hwy. 38). walar dspth not sEcaadlng 12 Jannla C OaPailo OAP.V SAMMON GARY SAMMON. 07, Lot 1 on tha tax map ot tha and is avallabla for public in-236 Mlddl.town dollar! lor sach aubaaquont of- Along iha aouth side of FUv- Cnydam Sacrstary Townahlp locatad at lha Rouiaffl apoetlon. fanaa. Sacratary ingion Avanua. From tha wast- Jan. 2S SS.12 Board ol Adju.tm.nl Board of Adjustmant Routa 33 Fraahold traffic Clrcla Constanca Faata TOWNSHIP Or HIDOUTOWM Sactlon 10 REPEAL OF IN-arly curb llna of Myrtta Avanua to DATED January It. 1881 January 18. 1065 and for var.ancas to parmll lha •»•". » M 64 CONSISTENT ORDINANCES a polnl 65 laat waatarty ihara- 240 Rumaen Jan. 28 8 Dally '20 t DaHy 720 atructura to ba within tha ra- naaoLunoH All ordlnanoaa or parts ot anyfrom. quirad 100 taat front satback on WHEREAS, tha Local Public ordinance Inconslitant with tha Along lha north slda of Rrv- January;22. 1 9JA a.imaAM both Routs DO snd Routs #33 Contracla Law |N J.S.A ordlnanca ara Ington Avanua. From tha waat* RtSOLUTION 240 Rumaon frontago and tor vohicias to ba 40A 11-1 at aaq I raqulraa that
. i *i*h.ft_ * - .«ai j__* a ah _ Iha awarding ot contract, for srfy curb Una of Myrtia Avanua lo WHEREAS, thara aalats tha PUBLIC NOTICI ?.,.i. ,h. parkaawllhl u n lan (101 laal ol Iha , "KS,BE*S '"•'• V',"* ', "*" any dlroct baam of light from Sactton 20. EFFECTIVE DATE. a point 36 faat waatarty there- "ProraialonaT Barvloaa" wrmout shining on any adjoining prop- naatf for a Profasalonai Englnaar Tha following ordlnanca wa. DMdlng mual This ordlnsnca shall Uka attact from. for tha Borough of Rumaon Plan- introducad and paiaarl In flr.1 ^,i .Jl l Anyy paraop n or ppar aorta at. '•••'^onal aarvlcai lor lha yaarpublicly advamaad. upon its passaga and publication Myrtia Avanua and Broadway ning Board ss authorltod by Sactlon 4. ELECTRIC LINES. raading at • ragular maatlng ot n NOTICE IS MIREBY GIVEN as provldad by law. Along lha aast slda ot Myrtia RS.40.67-16. and No ovarhaad alactrlc Hnaa ma Mayor and Council ol tha ° " an opportunity to ba haard al a . that on January 21. 1980 tha NOTICE OP FINDING 0BW- Avenus From ths norlharty curb . and _KII K K^ ' shaH ba carrlad across sny WHEREAS, funds ara avaHaWa •ough ot Board ol Adjuatmant of rha NANCE llna ol Broadway to a point 30 for this purposa. and WHEREAS, Towntiup of Mlddratown. Naw swimming pool or wad ina KM Tha ordlnsnca published hsre- taat north iharafrom. tha Local Public Contracts Law. Sactlon 5 BUILDING PERMIT. Jaraay did appolnl Robart H. wlth was Introducad and passad Along lha waal alda of Myrtia R8 40A-ii-i. at. aaq.. raqufraa Otlan. an anornay at law. to * « g Avanua From tha northarly curb that tha raaoluUon authorizing Mrv. aa anornay to tha Board ol ina llna of Broadway lo a polnl 84 tha award of contracts for "Pro- lor tha parlod of January 1. IMS faat north tharatrom. tssilDnal Sarvtoaa" without com- to Dacambar 31. ISSS ' Along lha north slda of Broad- patlttva bids muat ba putXIshad TI.V ba Inapactad by in. _ 'ublic Thla appointment la mad. way. From a polnl 70 faat wasi of no mora than ton (10) days fol- •vllhoul competitive bids must bs Contracts Law (N.J.S.A. without compatltiva bidding aa a lowing lha adoption tharaof. 40A11-1 at saq ) raqulras that ul>llc tha waatarly curb llna of Myrtta ' Protaaallonai Sarvlca" undar ""*' »••"••• "''•' P ""'" Avanua to a point 35 faal assl ol NOW, THEREFORE. BE IT RE- ina provlalon. of tha Local Public >"> tnaraon. •• a maatmg ol uid M vo< nd Counc tha aaatarly curb llna of Myrtia SOLVED by tha Planning Board Conlracta Law baoauaa tha aald * * " » ba hald In Avonua. of tha Borough of Rumaon aa paraon I. .uthorllad by law lo Along tha south alda of Broad- follows: practlca Iha lagal promnon and way 1. Tha Planning Board is hara- thia prolaaalon I. ragulalad by From lha prolongation of lhaby authorlzad and dlractad to law and/or la an.mpt from -l < K IO I O ln
Now that the inauguration is over, there, said, "He didn't sound as If he was historians can ponder some of the great worried about me getting pneumonia." words spoken during the weekend by "Frank never likes to show his true statesmen who participated in the events. feelings," I told her. "Every time a Probably the most memorable were not sparrow falls he cries." uttered by President Reagan in his ART The Washington Post reporter refused inaugural address but by Frank Sinatra, to be persuaded. "I still believe he wanted who told "Entertainment Tonight's" BUCHWALD us all dead. Maybe not dead dead, but Barbara Howar. "You're all dead, every enough so we would never write about him one of you. You're all dead." again." At the time it was believed Mr. Sinatra A photographer from People Magazine was reacting to a piece about him in the said, "Is it possible Frank was saying Washington Post concerning his associa- wed all be dead if we bet on the Miami tion with Hollywood's so-called "Rat Dolphins in the Super Bowl?" Pack," and he was addressing the media haven't decided is whether he meant it "Could be," I agreed. "Now that you in general when he made the remark. figuratively or literally." mention it, Frank was always a big 'tters But after giving it a lot of thought, "I'm sure he didn't mean it literally," fan." Washington historians are now divided on a lady from Women's Wear Daily said. The Wall Street Journal man said, "The the meaning of the singer's outburst. "Even Frank Sinatra couldn't put out a big question is, if Sinatra was referring Last Friday night the issue was dis- contract on every person covering the only to the media, was he speaking for the cussed at the "I Did It My Way Bar and inauguration. My interpretation of his administration or just himself?" Grill." remarks is that we were all dead as far "Ronald Reagan doesn't want us all Keep government out A reporter from the National Review as talking to him was concerned." dead," Sam Donaldson said. "I talk to him said, "I can't believe Frank was talking "But we've all been dead for years in every day." Frank's mind," a CBS reporter protested. A bill introduced in the U.S. Senate Under the proposed federal legis- about the press. No one let him finish his "What about the CIA?" sentence. What he was trying to tell us "That's not news." "No one knows who they want dead, and could throw a monkey wrench into lation, a major league sports team was that we were all dead if we didn't "It was only news," I said, "because who they don't," a reporter from Jack New Jersey's plan for bringing a would not be able to relocate unless support President Reagan's 'Star Wars' Frank was in charge of the inaugural gala. Anderson's office mused. major league baseball franchise to the the league in which it plays gave its program." I'm inclined to go along with my colleague from the National Review that Sinatra's Garden State. "Then why didn't he say that?" the New I insisted on having the last word. "I approval. York Times man asked. words were misinterpreted. I have It from The measure sets up a procedure don't believe we're in a position to judge A sports franchise also would have "Because he just assumed that anyone a high source in the Surgeon General's what Frank meant by his remarks. The intended to protect the interests of to prove that it is suffering net with intelligence knew where he was office that what Frank was really trying important thing is they will be re- communities that now have pro- coming from." to say is that we'd all be dead if we had membered long after all the other 1985 operating losses that threaten its to cover the inaugural parade in minus-20- fessional baseball, hockey, football A columnist from the Washington Post inaugural utterances are forgotten, and financial stability. disagreed. "I ran the tape of his remarks degree weather. His main concern was and basketball teams. will be an inspiration to generations of The bill also madates that two over and over again and he was talking that we would bundle up and keep warm." inaugural gala chairmen for years to Its sponsor said the bill is intended about the media. The only thing I still baseball teams be added to either the Miss Howar, the only one who had been come." to provide stability in the location of National or American Leagues by 1988 professional teams, and give gov- and four new teams be created by the ernmental stadium authorities and National Football League. the taxpayers a say about any FROM OUR READERS A team which packs up and leaves proposed relocation. a city certainly has some moral and New Jersey Sen. Frank La u ten berg and crystal-ball gazing. in their work. We seek to advance our said that were the measure now the financial obligation to it. But it is also Psychics fail No "psychic" will ever locate Mrs. people according to their abilities. law of the land, it would impede the the city's obligation to keep a team Stavitskie. And that prediction is based on Our company believes in enhancing the solvent. Where's the wisdom in forc- Rumson common sense, not Tinker-Bell forensics. quality of life for our workers and for the state from seeking a major league To the Editor: James Randi community. Located in Red Bank, Seals ing a team to remain where it cannot baseball team, something the New I note with dismay that the Middlelown Eastern manufactures high precision Jersey Sports and Exposition be financially sound? police have seen fit to call in a "psychic " molded rubber seals used world-wide by Seals' thanks the oil, automotive and aerospace indus- Authority is expected to do It plans The idea of the federal government to do their work for them — to find a missing woman from East Keansburg tries. to build a stadium once it has the mandating the expansion of pro- To The Editor: named Leocardia Stavitskie. In doing so, Seals Eastern thanks The Register for We appreciate the continuing cooper- commitment from a major league fessional teams is foreign to us. The they have chosen to ignore extensive featuring a story and a photograph of ation of The Register and wish you and franchise that it will move to this major professional sports have done research done by their colleagues on a three of our employees in your Business your staff success in 1985. national level which proved that such ' state pretty well on their own. section on Dec. 30. Seals Eastern, Inc. showbiz techniques are totally useless in The three people described are exam- Daniel L. HerU Jr. providing information. ples of our 90 employees who take pride / President Seeress Dorothy Allison of Nutley. N.J.. further established that fact recently when she gave the police of Atlanta. Ga , 4:i possible names for a long-sought killer: TODAY IN HISTORY none of them were corret In spite of her An excellent suggestion miserable record, she has again been BY The Associated Press embassy. called in. this time by the NewBrunswick On this date: In his remarks at the recent sociation of University Women, the police, to find the killer of Karen Osmun Today is Tuesday, Jan. 29. the 29th day In 1820, Britain's King George III died. for them. loo. of 1985. There are 338 days left in the year. memorial tribute to Elisabeth A. American Civil Liberties Union, the In 1843, the 25th President of the United I expect New Jersey law enforcement Today's highlight in history: States, William McKinley, was born in Kelley, Stafford W. Thompson, a National Association for the Advance- officers to be mature, careful workers. On Jan. 29, I960, it was revealed that six Niles. Ohio. former president of the Red Bank ment of Colored People ... Calling in a fortune teller does not strike U.S. diplomats in Iran who had escaped Branch of the National Association me as a responsible act for public officials the takeover of their embassy by Iranian In 1845, Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The But her first love was education. In engage in. Good police work is the for the Advancement of Colored militants were smuggled out of the Raven" was published under a pseudonym She was a history teacher and result of research and hard work, not yoga country with the help-ofthe Canadian in the New York Evening Mirror. People, urged that there be some chairperson of the high school social living memorial in her memory. studies department in the Red Bank Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU , It is an excellent suggestion. school system. There, Freeholder Miss Kelley, who died last month at John D'Amico, a former pupil, remi- the age of 88. championed a long list GIVEN oanw fmvac* urn wuncms 9m. rmis nisced at the memorial program, &H atw. of worthy causes, many of them vatsm IFW TOHH 1X6 HIM PUSH ALLHB fwi 0F1BKOH Miss Kelley engraved in the minds of before it was popular to do so. She S0MBHN6 HAD A BUVTf you*, IJUST her students, an understanding of the FKKTBXKl worked on behalf of numerous com- tout' principles of American democracy. munity organizations, so many that any roster would give only a hint of We urge that Stafford Thompson's their number and diversity — the suggestion be carried through. It Monmouth Day Care Center, the would seem appropriate for Red Bank Monmout County Mental Health As- Regional High School to establish a sociation, the League of Women living memorial to this outstanding Voters, the Youth Employment Ser- teacher who devoted a lifetime to vice, the Monmouth County Correc- working for a better and more just tional Institution, the American As- society. IUESDAY. JANUARY 29. 1985 Till D*il) RLgktLi A7 OBITUARIES Dr. John P. DeCicco dies at 47, Kean budget hailed, scored the first time since be took office, million for nearly 1,000 additional In addition, Kean seeks an $B Freehold family practitioner average of DO to homeowners la with $30 million going to raise the prison beds and a $24 million, or 11 million allocation for a 5 percent addition to their annual homestead minimum starting salary for percent, Increase for the Depart- increase in welfare grants, $25 ment of Corrections, Including $9 FREEHOLD — Dr. John P Shore Medical Center, Neptune, and rebate of about f 180. Elderly and teachers to flt.SOO. million to expand the Pharma- million to operate the 400-bed prison DeCicco, 47, of RoberUville Road, disabled homeowners would get Kean is seeking $4M million for a ceutical Assistance to the Aged and later was a member of the staff to open in Camden in September. died Saturday al borne after a long there. another $17. Tenants would get a DO "Clean New Jersey" environmental Disabled program and $7.7 million program to Include f ISO million for He was a Fellow in the American credit on their slate income tax. Kean asked for $40 million to hire more to help the mentally retarded Born in Summit, he raided in Kean also proposed a ftt million toxic waste cleanup, $180 million for 500 additional social workers to and emotionally disturbed released Academy of Family Practice and low-interest loans to build local Maplewood and Camden before reduction in the transfer inheritance handle child abuse cases. He said from institutions. moving here It years ago. was a member of the Monmouth sewage treatment plants and County Medical Society. tax; completion of the four-year the number of reported child abuse Other key education proposals Dr. DeCicco was a member of the phase-out of the corporate net worth another $150 million to finance cases increased from 26,000 in 1983 Surviving are Ms wife, Jean Smith included an increase of $52 million staff of Freehold An* Hospital, and tax, saving New Jersey businesses garbage-burning resource recovery to 45,000 last year. served the Freehold area as • DeCicco; a MM, Brian John DeCi- WO million; and full repayment of plants for higher education, including $10 Also proposed for the Department physician in family practice for the cco, at home; his mother, Fortuna the state's unemployment insurance He also proposed $35 million to million for the nine state colleges, $8 past IS years. DeCicco or Lebanon; and two sis- debt to the federal government, hire 1,000 new police officers, $1.4 of Human Services were $2.2 million million for Rutgers University, $4 He was a graduate of Washington ters, Annette O'Neill of saving firms $110 million In million for $1 sute troopers and to help people who are above the million for county colleges and $3 8 and Jefferson University, Washing- Bridgewater, and Angela Delia of surcharges. $13.5 million to complete the state income limit for Medicaid but million for the New Jersey Institute cannot afford medical care and a ton, Pa., and the New York Medical He proposed a 1270.5 million, or police's automated communications of Technology. The funds include College, New York City. The Hlggins Memorial Home Is In system. $48.9 million increase in the state's $23.7 million for high technology 11.3 percent, increase to fund fully contribution to Medicaid. He served his Internship at Jersey charge of arrangements. the state education aid formula for The governor requested $60 programs. Katherine 'Renee' Buase COLTS NECK - Katherine "Re- Sigmund Eisner Co., Red Bank, and nee " Busse, U, died Sunday at was a member of Local 291 of the Budget cuts called top priority Monmouth Medical Center, Long Amalgamated Garment and Branch. . Clothing Workers. (continued) "The uniform advice to the presi- Packwood said, "1 think you can "many loud screams from a .ot of Born in Jersey City, Mrs. Busse dent from every body there, as we get both a spending-cut package and There are no known survivors. spending cuts first. The president by places." had lived in Red Bank and Belford and large listened, did not specifi- went around the room: "Spending a tax-reform bill by the first of Similarly, he said the tax-reform The Robert A. Braun Home For before moving here. cally respond one way or the other." cuts, spending cuts, spending cuts August, but I fear if you put the tax bill would cause anguish because it She retired in I960, after 30 years Funerals, Eatontown, is in charge of Describing Reagan's meeting and then, Mr. president, after we've reform first or put it simul- seeks to eliminate deductions con- of service as a machine operator for arrangements. with more than 20 lawmakers seated tackled that, after we've tried and taneously, you drain off so much sidered sacred by special interests. around a long rectangular table in hopefully succeeded, let's look at support from the spending cuts that "I would predict we will not see Catherine Stubbs the Cabinet Room, Packwood said the tax reform bill," the senator you don't get the spending cuts. a Treasury and-or White House tax the message was clear and firm. recounted. RED BANK - Catherine Stubbs, River, died earlier this month. A tax revision proposal drafted by bill for at least two, maybe three 91, died yesterday at the New Ivy Surviving are three sons, Ray- the Treasury Department would months," Heinz said. "Indeed. I will House Nursing Home, Middletown. mond T. Stubbs Sr. of River Plaza, eliminate most deductions, except predict that the administration will Born in Phalanx, she resided in William F. Stubbs Sr. of Toms mortgage interest, and impose a not send us a bill until after the Shrewsbury before moving here 30 River, and Herbert H. Stubbs Sr. of maximum tax rate of 35 percent. spending cut decisions have been years ago. Hazlet; two daughters, Elizabeth Middletown plan Reagan has indicated general ap- made by the Senate and maybe by Mrs. Stubbs was a communicant Peluso of Eatontown, and Veronica proval of the plan but has not the entire Congress. of St. Anthony's Roman Catholic Relss, here; 16 grandchildren, 22 (continued) would attend Middletown Village endorsed it finally. Church, here. great-grandchildren, a great-great- comparability report does not exam- School, which feeds High School Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa , a mem- Packwood said it was his feeling Her husband, John Stubbs Sr , granddaughter and three nieces. ine the cause of this inequality — the North. ber of the Finance Committee, said that most senators want to cut died in 1953. The John E. Day Funeral Home, lower socioeconomic composition of The board also plans to reduce the budget package, with deep cuts defense spending more than the $8.7 A son, John H Stubbs Jr., Toms here, is in charge of arrangements. the High School North student body, crowding at High School South by in some programs and outright billion that Defense Secretary To have examined this factor, he offering "magnet" programs in at elimination of others, will produce Caspar Weinberger has proposed. Mary Mauro said, would have exceeded the High School North to encourage mandate given the committee by the students to enroll there voluntarily, OCEAN GROVE - Mary Mauro, White of Eatontown, and Constance board. Initiated in September 1986, these 69, of Pitman Avenue, died yester- Narmour of Brick; a sister, "It's like studying the plague. We programs could, for example, be In _ were studying the fever and the fine arts, computer science or 260 Other Public NoMcot M1 Ma Bright 24* Monmouth County day at Jersey Shore Medical Center, Catherine Turano of Wall; a Neptune. sores but we were not allowed to do journalism, Simmon COURT ArTTICUl ! HOURS OP SALS COUNTY or MONHOUTH brother, Andrew Asaro of Florida; the bacteriological research and The only other redlstricting at the or New jsraav AND CONSUMPTION Of W- STATI or NIW JUHWV Born in New York, she moved LAW CHVItlON: OP.CHNANCII OP TM« NOTtCI TO BIOOeAS here four years ago. and five grandchildren. treat the cause. We were treating elementary school level would shift MONMOUTH COUNTY Oockat No. L-OM-ilt-e* Surviving are her husband, Frank The Johnson Funeral Home, Wall, the symptoms," Sullivan said. students, who live in areas of New CMI Hill Mauro; two daughters, Carmela is in charge of arrangements. He did, however, welcome the Monmouth Road, Tindall Road and oman FIXIMO DATS ?£%$& £ K 'SSSffTSSSSSVi'SSSffTSSSSSV board's rejection ofv a proposal to Melrose Terrace, and Cambridge divide the high school districts by Manor and King's Highway to *»?.» LSs& ALCOHOLIC Alice E. Batkay aavsKAOiaCNAPTEII , AKTICLS if «J "** *E"ra£_"llB Route 35, since he said this would Normandy Road, from Middletown HOUHaavsKAOS OFi BALI AND CON- 8"~l rr*MK*l. MM Jaraay at MATAWAN - Alice E. Batkay, Her husband, Thomas M. Batkay, have aggravated the problems at Village School to New Monmouth 1010 Broadway P.O. Bo. 17 WOM Long Branch. SUMmON ahoa k* •amtit 'O oo A M W»,P. ntniRg im 75, died yesterday at Rlverview died In 1978. High School North. School. ' • Jariy 077M-00S7 So 1) 22S-«70O Atlornaya for aoS, Medical Center, Red Bank, Surviving are two sisters, Floren- These changes, combined with the Born in New York City, she The only change in high school ce Dolan. with whom she lived, and removal of sixth graders to the IN"THE MATTER or JOSEPH SOOT resided in New Canaan, Conn., attendance zones under the plan M" •OONAACHUK, hmg Peggy Piacentino of West Paterson; middle schools, are designed to „,, before moving here nine yean ago. supported by the board concerns provide adequate space in the o'J*'0, ^dotT*1""1 52K and several nieces and nephews. O OUS TIMS. TUBES She was a communicant of St. students from the Applebrook and elementary schools for special ma court by aogHono. Tuoci. an AND RELATED REPAIRS AND Lawrence Roman Catholic Church, The Day Funeral Home, Keyport, Rolling Knolls neighborhoods. These education facilities, which are man- JJJ*JJJ J31^rTSlinwill?yllhio »aor . Laurence Harbor. is In charge of arrangements. students now attend the over- dated by the State, as well as for art tatltor and motfior. Brian w a.m. and t a.m." crowded Nutswamp School zone, and music rooms and full-size JJJfy TuSomamT** ' Anna Archer which feeds High School South, but libraries. • anotnor nama and IBM PC/AT WITH S1SK-SO MB —ar thing a daw for i HARD DISK AND ONB DtSKST UNION BEACH - Anna Archer, Surviving are two sons, Fred $3, died Sunday at Bayshore Com- ara. 1SSS. main within tfta Itcanaad Archer, here, and Richard Archer of ORDERED mat Iha 151ilhoayoh l oroMooa altar Mo TrON DEPARTMENT munity Hospital. Holmdel. California; three grandchildren and February. 1M MsB . aOOt • O00 o'clock In noon aa I forth m ftLoiZ Contract Oocumanta Mr Aa Born in Newark, she moved here Judge orders propoaod «or» ara on Ma In ma seven great-grandchildren. aftor oi oounaal rrihy bo hoard. omoa of ma Puranaamg DajMfl- 38 years ago. PUBLIC NOTtOS (continued) said his office will handle the cases ownaS >oflwK>S!coJniy"o; Tho lorao«ng_Oid»iaiioawaa Jjont She was a communicant of St. The Laurel Funeral Home, West T P Ann's Roman Catholic Church, Keansburg, is in charge of arrange- at a hospital jar. iMautwo btddara during iiinlnaaa Keansburg. ments. Freehold Area Hospital for^-raysT that the inmates complaints are ^"T'SPSS'"*"^"* STM "The deputy public defender has serious enough to warrant ag- ,T is FURTHER ORDEREDmat - Charles J. Sprague been saying that if he wasn't there, gravated assault charges. Clccolella wouldn't have been taken William McGrath, a supervisor in LONG BRANCH - Charles John Delivery Co., Red Bank. to the hospital, and that just isn't the FBI's Shrewsbury office, said Sprague, 59. died Sunday at Mon- iiie Surviving are his wife, Joan so," Louis said, adding that all X- agency began investigating the prooodingmadataforaochnaar urn^,^°2 J«J~* «^ MSTiii!Viino BOM
HOLMDEL - The effects of MMs arcbitecture, which translormed virtually everything from cities to Iron penny banks, can be seen In an exhibit of banks to be displayed In the Hotadel Library from Feb. 2 through April 1. The exhibit includes mechanical, "still," aad safe banks from the private collection of are* resident Martha Hawkins. Tb* display was arranged by the Hoimdel Hlitorloal Society. Banks served as both toys and as tools to teach chlMren thrift during the emergence of the middle class when saving money wu of great importance to many people, said Peg McEowen of the historical society. Most still (non-mechanical) banks are cast iron replicas of middle l»th Art to early 20th century architecture or commemorative shapes, animals or people. Architectural forms were favored because savers tend to think of an actual bank building when saving coins. This style of bank often depleted you public and private buildings during the Victorian era and eariy IMOs In precise scaled dimensions. The earliest known cast Iron architectural bank is an 1869 design called the "Cupulo Bank," a modest-looking structure with handpalnted detailing on windows and door. can Safe banks are replicas of Industrial safes. Most can be opened by means of a one, two or three-dial combination although others have a door with a key. All but a few can be disassembled. bank Mechanical banks were and are principally attractive because of the trick ways coins are received. The typical cast iron mechanical bank evolved during the 1870s. on Still banks were produced before the more sophisticated mechanical banks, although the same manufacturers often produced both. Sixes of still banks range from Lilliputian (miniature) through the more popular medium sizes (3 to 7 inches) to the largest (up to 12 inches). The Holmdel exhibit includes medium sizes only. The most Important manufacturer of mechanical banks was the J k E Stevens Co., which produced at least SO designs. Most probably cost a dollar or less when first sold, but a rare J & E Stevens original stashed away in someone's attic could be traded in for a Rolls-Royce, McEowen ftaatoer pMM *t Oat M» said. BANK EXHIBIT — Peggy Lasky, left, and Peg McEowen, Serious collectors of still or mechanical banks are warned to be aware of the many reproductions of cast iron banks manufactured during the members of the Holmdel Historical Society, discuss a lew of the 1950s. Hawkins said. "New banks are fraudently 'aged' by burying them antique "still" banks to be exhibited by the society at the Holmdel Boy Scout Bank in the earth to achieve an antique patina," she pointed out. Library from Feb. 2 through April 2.
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MAQAZME Long. distance runners competing mm ' Skat* Mar Caare1 »aj»a— •MK"Tkl*|Snar lor ti million In Lee Vegas, th* caat from "Police Acsd •my" sequel An off-the-wall character S«lma Dlsmond, Howia USA ALPM SKI SCHOOL • THREE'S A CROWD A whoa a kay witness to • Mandal. Opra Wlnfray (hoat Butch Findeiaen and Kalhy sophisticated sorority girl is robbery moves in with of •ChicagoAM."). Wood demonalrate parallal interested In Jack In spile ol MacQruder Q • CHARLES AN0B.8 skiing. • form that provides E.Z. Taylor'a attentions g gj FRONTUNE Street gang ABC NEWS NOmjNE control and creativity (R) mambara are interviewed in BURNS AND ALLEN 2:00* CBS NEWS O New* 8 Special Report prison snd In the Watta aec HONEYM0ONER8 NMHTWATCH * Hot DJ DON IMUS tlon of Loa Angeles (Pert 2 A MOVE **H "Cops • SALLY JE88Y RAPHA- ADV. __^_^__ And Robbsrs" (1973, Com- EL Scheduled how woman etng sdy) Cliff Gorman, Jo* Bolo can buUd their agoa i MOVE *•** "Doctor SHOW MOVE ** "Th* one • MOVE **H "Who'* >" (Part 2 ol 2) Big Brawl" (1980. Adven • VEOAS Minding Tha Mint?" (1067. (IMS, Drama) Omar Sharif. lure) Jeckie Chan, Joaa USAA MAKE MELAU0ME M Comady) Jim Hutton. Doro- Qereldln* Chaplin. 10:00 0Ferre1 r O STEELE SHOWBOAHBESHOWBOAHBE g Provna. • NOVA A look at new LauraHEMIUQTO and SlaelNe STEELbelievEe 12:00*} EYE ON HOLLYWOOD JOE FRANKLM Quasi*: unscrupulous agsnls are » medical rasssrch tech • HAWASFIVE-O rsportsr Kan Csrolsn MUSICAL AT MONM0UTH - Pattie Purcell and Monmouth College, West Long Branch. Curtain for niquas to combat malaria behind the sltempls on th* • STAR TREK discusses lha Mid East. John Young, cast members of the musical revue, the show, composed of songs by the sophisticated and other paraaltic die HI* of in aspiring young • TO THE MANOR BORN Judith Olnay who produced Broadway composer and lyricist Stephen eases • USA RADIO 1900 (R) lha vldao "On Chocolete " "Side by Side by Sondheim," rehearse one of their 8:30 • AUCC Alice's dreama of NEWS TMC MOVE *** "Equua" USA MOVE* •"The Right numbers tor the show, which bows Friday and Sondheim, is 8:30 p.m. for all performances. Heaping tha drudgary of fI CALL TO GLORY Ray (1977, Drami) Richard Bur- Approach" (1M1. Drama) continues through Sunday at Pollak Auditorium of Tickets may be ordered from the theater box office. trie dinar and embarking on nor Is shaken whan he ton, Paler Firth. Qary Croaby. Juliet Prows* • prolaaaional muaic career learns that hla fathar has SHOW MOVE wwH "Chil- 2:90 0 CANDC CAMERA ara enhanced by her meat cancer; meanwhile. Jackie dren Of Tha Com" (1983. TMC MOVE **tt "Th* ing with a popular country apanda tha night with a Horror) Patar Morton. Linda Lady In Red" (1979. Drama) •mat g daredevil pilot Q Hamilton Robart Conrad. Pamela Sua RITUALS INDEPENDENT 12:10© PORTRAIT OF AMERICA Martin S WHO'S THE BOSS? DISAPPEARING fORLD "Maryland" 3:00 j TREASURE HUNT Sondheinr s 'Side by Side' CHAM I230B LATE MSHT WITH DA • MOVE**** "Qunga Chaoa results whan Tony t ancourigai AngeH and TMC MOVIE * * • VB LETTERMAN Sched Din" (1939, Advenlure) Mona to turn Angela's ga Dreesad To Kill" (I960, ulad TV / radio personality Cary Qranl, Oouglaa Fair rage Into Mona'a new home Suspenee) Michael Caine, Joe Franklin bank* Jr. Angle Dickinson • STAR8KY AND HUTCH *20JBMOVE *•* "Th* Laat opens Friday at college i • EHTERTAJNMENT TO- OutpoU" (1961. Advanlura) MOV* **• "Chela In '0:10(B MOVE *** "Th. MOHT Feslured Robert Ronald Reagan. Rhonda WEST LONG BRANCH - The ver. A West Long Branch rsident, he was last seen at Monmouth in Mid-AirGeorge" (l»7»Pappard. Suspansa. Karen) «*s* •*"*•" <'»"• <>'•• Conrad. Graesle "«" mi) Vic Morrow. Alan Alda • MOVE ** (4 The Bar 3:30 ©HERE'S LUCY musical revue "Side by Side by is an assistant professor of English "Sweeney Todd." S-OOgf ROBERT KENNEDY AND I CARTER COUNTRY bary Coaat" (1976, Adven Sondheim" will be presented at at the County College of Morris. Purcell has appeared in "Pal MS TMES KMMdy be J»*» {NEWS lure) William Shatner. Monmouth College Friday through Joey," "Damn Yankees" and "Wit- comas a malor critic of U.S. 1I:O° (••NEWS Dannie Cola 4:000 HERE'S LUCY Invorvamant In tha Vietnam I TAXI USAWRESTUNQ(R) USA MOVE **» "Lova Montano, critically acclaimed for 1 Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in Pollak ness for the Prosecution" in re- war, and hi* popularity In- j SERGEANT M.K0 12:40 • COLIMO A prominanl That Brute (1950. Coma, Auditorium. performances at the college in "The gional theater. She traveled the craasaa in the polls While 1000 COUPLE photographer schamee th* dy) Paul Douglas, Jean Tickets for the revue, which woolgatherer," "Pippin" and "The East Coast as an original caat visiting Lo* Angalae m 1IMS daath of hla wila In a phony Peters. showcases the work of Broadway Fantasticks," has also appeared at member of "Italy Come to Ameri- during hi* campaign for tha kJdnjgjjn.ploMR, SHOWBROTHERSg Damocratlc Presidential VBEOROGK t:00O MOVE *» The Dear- 4MORA0SAT composer-lyricist Stephen The Dam Site Dinner Theater, ca," a musical review. She has been nomination, ha, loo, la m BENNY HS-l •layar" (1967. Advaniute) 4:1*TMC MOVE *** "Return Sondheim, may be reserved through Tinton Falls, and at Ocean County cast in three films: "Trackdown," •truck down by an sssaasin USA 0ONQ SHOW (R) L*« Barker. Rita Moreno, Of A Man Csllad Horaa" the theater box office. College. She recently completed "Phi Beta Rockers" and "Hob- (Psrt3of3)g SHOWBROTHERSg • THESAMT (1978. Adventure) Richard work as "The Girl" in a new film, • WIUC Tha boy* are >• FALL GUY Colt's efforts O TWUflHT ZONE Harris. Qaie Sondargiard. The production, presented by the nails." She attends Hunter College hirad to locale a haunted to save tha life of a ball- t:10ffiMOVE *** "Charly" 4:30QHERE'S LUCY speech, communication and theater "A Pleasant View," and appears in New York, where she lives. •hip but discover they're lumping murder suspect ara (1968. Drama) Clilf Robert 4:SSOCMESAT department and the office of the regularly as an entertainer in New Young's credits include Radio actually Marching lor their complicated by • reckless •on, Claka Bloom. 4:46 SHOW MOVIE ***tt dean of humanities and social York, where she lives. City Music Hall, dinner theaters, own boat. country music Mar. (R) 130ONEWS "Thaaa Three" (1938. Ora- • TOMGHT Quest host: HOOANSHEROES ma) Joel McCrea. Miriam sciences, is directed by Dr. Robert off-Broadway, and regional theater, MACORUDE*) 4 LOUD Join Rivers. Scheduled: Hopklna. Cioffi and features a four person Also a New York resident. Steel where he has had roles in "1-2-J-4- 1 cast: Jeanne Montano. a Monmouth is a native of Trenton and attended Count" and "Bad Boys Corner" and alumna formerly of Eatontown. Rider College before acting study at the lead in "Harvey." His singing Pattie Purcell. Bill Steel and John Circle in the Square Theater and in roles include productions of "Fid- Young. London at the Royal Academy of dler on the Roof," "Hello Dolly, ' AT THE MOVIES Dramatic Arts. Off Broadway, he "Speedy Delivery," and "Okla- Cioffi, who also plays piano was featured in "Practice," homa." He has appeared on two TV accompaniment, has served as di- "Camino Real," "As You Like It" soaps, "The Guiding rector or musical director for and "She Stoops to Conquer." He "Ryan's Hope." numerous productions at Mon- •auarly Has Cop (R) i;is. 3:1«. >:1I, JM, mouth, including "Sweeney Todd," EEM» SM 1:1S. "Pippin'' "Candide " and "The Um- as Aaui Pimarxxx) brellas of Cherbourg." He has $1,000 scholarship offered noon nraujh 1140 P.M. worked with the Judson Poets' Theater in New York and the for press photography study Monmouth Civic Chorus, Little Sil- The Bob Baxter Scholarship national Plaza, U.S. Route 1, New- Foundation is accepting appli- ark, N.J., 07114. cations for the 1985 scholarship of Deadline for the applications and $1,000 to a high school senior or the portfolio is April SO, 1M6. Since college undergraduate who is study- its inception, the foundation has ing to become a press photographer. awarded 11 scholarships of 11,000 The scholarship is named for Mr. each. Baxter of Union Township, a quad- riplegic who died May 14,1912 at the Veterans Administration Hospital, East Orange, after an illness of Senk on TV today nearly 11 years. EATONTOWN - Dorothy Senk, Baxter suggested the scholarship Lincroft watercolor artist and foundation be formed six years ago sculptor, is the guest on today's in order to promote the study of Special Events program on Storer news photography. The foundation is Cable Television, Channel S. believed to be the only one of its kind Senk is being interviewed by in the nation. Linda In a 15-minute segment begin- Applicants must be residents of ning at 8 p.m. New Jersey and they must be The artist is discussing a recent enrolled In a recognized college, exhibit of paintings of nous** and university or photographic school. boats which took place a* th*r Applicants must submit three Monmo ith County Library, Esslntj- letters of recommendation and Branch, Shrewsbury, a* w*U a* her prepare portfolios showing a cross- sculpture. section of their work. Senk is among area artist* exhibi- Applications may be obtained ting at the 10th anmal Christian from Jean-Rae Turner, adminis- Brothers Academy Art Show and """""^'niSajHiiwi trator of the foundation, at New Sale Saturday and Sunday in Un- vommtm/f^ Jersey Newspnotos, Airport Inter-•- croft. *•*••» Hi »»»IBI •**.••• The Daily Register B SPORTS .... COMICS.... JANUARY 29. lOHb Your Town BU8INE8S. GREATER RED BANK LONG BRANCH EATONTOWN Master Plan proposal may be scrapped BY CHRIS HAND announced the suggestion to change the toning, which ordinances to conform with the plan. Princeton, where large offices are allowed but outside was formulated by William Byrne, chairman of the Others who spoke at the meeting included former the central business district. RED BANK — The Planning Board may icrap a board's Master Plan committee. Board of Adjustment member Norman Lee, who voiced "Don't clog the arteries In and out of town," McGee propoul In IU draft Matter Plan calling for "creative Byrne, absent from the meeting, apparently agreed objections to a provision allowing buildings of up to 12 said. "Let the rest of the county provide the office residential development" (CRD) on the weitaide. to recommend the change following Saturday's meeting stories In an area surrounding the core business district buildings ... and let them have the gridlock." During toe second and final public bearing on the with members of the Westside Mlnlsterium along Broad Street. John Kay, president of the Red Bank Area Chamber plan, board members last night instead agreed to The meeting was the second borough officials have "We are just going to compound the problem of of Commerce, presented the chamber's recommen- consider xoning the area for single-family residences. held with the mlnisterium, composed of clergymen gridlock," Lee said of the proposal. "Red Bank may get dations to the board. Under CRD zoning, condominiums, planned residen- from westside churches. to be known as the town which shot itself In the foot." Kay recommended building a second tier to the White tial communities and apartment buildings would have "But density is not related to height," Blum said. The planners agreed to send the suggestion to the Street parking lot. been permitted In the area, bounded by Locust Avenue, "The problem it floor area. Shoulder-to-shoulder, four- Master Plan committee for further review. He said that widening Shrewsbury Avenue through Newman Springs Road and the Navesink River. story buildings r uld be worse (than a tall building)." The area currently has mixed zoning that allows Shrewsbury and Tinton Falls has been listed as a The sone has been the focus of strong opposition from Donald McGt •, of Clayton and McGee's Clothing multi-family uses in approximately half the area, priority by the county and encouraged board members westside residents since the Master Plan was in- Store on Broad Street, said Red Bank should keep high according the Borough Engineer C. Bernard Blum. to adopt "some provision ... for handling the heavy troduced at the end of last fall. density developments away from downtown. traffic flow from Shrewsbury when it reaches Red Residents maintain that if it is created, the CRD will State law requires all municipalities to have Master "People come to Red Bank because It Is what It is," Bank." encourage the development of luxury condominium! Plans and to review them every six years. The review McGee said. "If we create high density on the periphery that will raise property values and force them out. of the plan Is scheduled for completion by Feb. 28. of the historic district, nobody will be able to get to Kay also encouraged board members to "permit Approximately 70 people attended last night's Once the Master Plan Is completed and adopted by Broad Street." greater density In the central business area — which hearing, but few spoke after Chairman Paul Foreman the board, the Borough Council must rewrite zoning McGee said Red Bank should follow the lead of means higher buildings." Lumber Development business rejected plan revised BY LIZ SHEEHAN LONG BRANCH - The Board of in Red Bank Adjustment last night unanimously RED BANK - When asked his The project is being reconfigured. rejected the application of a New opinion of a developer's plan to build Some of the open spaces, including York-based company to locate a the 172 million Broad Street to the the ampitheater, will go," he said. lumberyard in a residential zone River, which features buildings of The pedestrian plaza, however, across from West End Elementary more than 20 stories, architect will remain, he said, as well as a School. Patrick Gil vary replied, "The pro- proposed transportation center off The board acted after hearing a ject is probably not as large as Front Street. recommendation from board mem- everybody thinks it is." The overall cost of building the ber John Brockriede, who headed a Gilvary may be right. project will come down, he said. But subcommittee that inspected the Yesterday, Ron Ryan, principal in Ryan emphasized that Broad Street property and the school area. *HWir pttf » mty Una the Ryan Group, the designers of the to the River will still be "a very Brockriede told the board that the THIS YEAR'S RECIPIENTS - Major General Roosevelt; Vivienne McCoach, Holmdel; and project, said his company is working large project." variance submitted by Suburban Paul A. Feyereisen, center, president of the William C. Schroeder. Wayside. The annual on a plan to reduce the size of the The idea behind redesigning the Outdoor Company. Newburgh, N.Y., Monmouth Council, Boy Scouts of America, with awards were presented Saturday at Buck project. project is to make it conform more should be denied, saying there recipients of the Silver Beaver awards James C. Smith's Restaurant. East Keansburg Gone will be the 20-story office with the borough's new Master "were other locations In the city Ewin, left, Hoimdei; William A. Counterman, tower and 22-story condominiums, Plan. better suited for this type of Ryan said. Instead, buildings will be The plan, which must be com- operation." between 10 and IS stories, he said. pleted by Feb. 28, makes the Before Brockriede's recommen- The development's futuristic de- project's site part of a downtown dation, several people of the SO- sign, another point of concern historic district. The plan also sets member audience, many wearing among longtime borough residents, height limitations of approximately green West End School PTO tags, Subdivision approved will also be changed, he said. 12 stories in the area surrounding spoke against the variance. "We're going to soften the design the core business zone on Broad James Vaccaro, president of to a more traditional style," Ryan BY TREVOR THOMAS Harold Schnabolk to split land at 2 frontage on a borough street. Street. Board of Education, told the board said. "The idea is to create a Badminton Lane, consisting of the Board member Robert M. Higgins The more we are in keeping with that the lumberyard would be "an streetscape which is in scale with SEA BRIGHT - The Zoning Racquet Court and a two-story criticized neighboring property own- the Master Plan, the more chance attractive, dangerous nuisance" for the existing Broad Street." Board of Adjustment last night apartment building, into two lots. ers- who stated in a letter to the the project has of being approved," the pupils and that it would cause "a The new plan will allow the tentatively approved a subdivision Approval was contingent on hoard they would not grant access be said. substantial Influx of traffic." Vac- developers "a little more massing that would allow the owner of an Shnabolk's being able to prove he through their business property at But Ryan stressed that revised caro said he and school board on the site," Ryan said. indoor squash court to sell the had a deeded right to provide a right 1070 Ocean Ave. for parking for the plans for Broad Street to the River attorney Peter Sokol. McOmber and property. Racquet Court. "What we're doing is taking the are still "in a very schematic McOmber, Red Bank, appeared at of way to Peninsula Avenue for the The board voted 6-1 to allow See Board, page B2 buildings and pushing them down. stage." the direction of a school board squash club, which would have no resolution. Susan Gray, president of the West End PTO. also cited traffic prob- lems as a reason to deny a variance. Hospital trustee Gray said placing the lumberyard at West End and Sairs avenues would cause a "serious problem with children and traffic." She said the PTO had been In head re-elected contact with the city about traffic problems at the school. FREEHOLD - Joseph V. Freehold Township. McLoone, president and general Krupnick, a New Jersey native There are 322 students at the manager of Freehold Raceway, was who has lived in this area since the school and approximately IS percent re-elected to a second term a* 1950s, is a partner in the Howell real are bused, said Principal Kenneth president of the Freehold Area estate firm of Weisgold & Krupnick Dunn. The board was also opposed Hospital Board of Trustees. The Lakewood resident is a member to zoning for commercial use within Three new members were also of the Ocean and Monmouth county a "few hundred feet or so" from the named to the board: Duane 0. boards of realtors, and various state school, he said. The property Davlson of Freehold, Jack Krupnick and national realtor associations. In proposed for the lumberyard Is now of Lakewood, and Jack Horenkamp addition, he was a charter member zoned for residential use. of Holmdel of the Howell Rotary, serves on the If the board allowed commercial McLoone, a longtime trustee, was boards of directors of the Howell use of the vacant property. It "will an active fund raiser and supporter and Lakewood chambers of com- chip away at the residential use of the hospital before it opened in merce and is a member of Jackson coming into the area," Howard 1971. Township's Industrial Committee. Woolley Jr. said. He said he spoke The three new trustees were He and his wife, Barbara, have as a member of the PTO, as an area named to replace Randall Minnlear two children. resident and as someone with 10 and James Montenegro, who re- Horenkamp, a township resident years experience on the Planning signed because of professional com- since 1968, is an electrical engineer Board. "I do not feel this Is a mitments; and Evelyn Silvert, for AT&T in Holmdel, where he necessary and warranted change of trustee secretary, who resigned to heads Information Systems. He is use." accept a position on the hospital's chairman of the township zoning parent corporation board. Trustee board. Attorney David Resnikoff, Red Arthur Kondrup will replace Silvert He and his wife, Doris, have three Bank, who represented the as board secretary. lumberyard, said he regretted that children. most of the group who attended the New trustee Davlson is a partner Re-elected as board of trustee hearing had not been present at the in the law firm of Bennet, Davlson officers were: vice presidents, R. December meeting when the appli- It Munoz. The Freehold native Michael Sullivan, David Metz and cant presented his case. serves as township prosecutor, the Rev. Albert Gibson; treasurer, borough Planning Board attorney, Charles P. Kaempffer, assistant Resnikoff said an expert tes- and holds other municipal legal treasurer, Edward J. Sweeney; and tifying at that hearing said there posts. He is a member of the* assistant secretary, Jack DeCerce. would be "no hazard" of traffic Battleground Arts Society and His- Sworn In to three year terms from the business. He also said he torical Society, as well as several "resented the fact of people bring- along with the new trustees were NEW HOSPITAL LEADERS - Joseph McLoone, with new trustees. From left are Jack Horenkamp, professional organizations. Kaempffer, Allan Gewirtz, Norman ing In the threat of dioxln" to the second from right, who was re-elected president of Jack Krupnick and Duane Davison. McLoone is Richardson and Sweeney. hearings on the variance. He and his wife. Susan, live in Freehold Area Hospital's Board of Trustees, chats serving his second term as board president. Victim of shooting $440,000 in repairs needed BY GAYLE E. RABIN alterations would cost up to $360,000, him to extinguish the lighted signs In other business, the council said Gaunt. FAIR HAVEN - The Borough that have been lighted since Novem- approved a request by the Mon- listed as critical ber. Arena was first told to turn mouth County Mosquito Extermina- Council last night received construc- Construction would start In the them off shortly after he opened in LONG BRANCH - A city man a report of a shooting at the spring if the renovations are ap- tion Commission for an aerial tion estimates totaling 1440,000 for April and had kept them off until who was shoot outside his home apartment complex at approx- proved by the end of February, he pesticide spraying over areas de- renovations to the library and November. Sunday night remains In critical imately 10:40 p.m. Sunday. Whan Borough Hall. said. The council would have to termined by the commission from condition at Monmouth Medical they arrived at the residence they temporarily relocate its offices until The council also gave Fannie March 1 to April 1. Paden, owner of a condemned house Center, a saokewoman for the were told that the victim bad According to Edmund H. Gaunt work Is completed in June. hospital said late last night. been taken to toe hospital in a at 129 Harrison Ave., seven days to The council also approved a Jr., the consulting architect, 160,000 submit a plan to the building request by th Board of Education for Jane Hollander, the hospital's private vehicle. would be needed to move the In another matter, the council At the hospital, the heroin was instructed Borough Clerk William C. inspector outlining a timetable of a change of polling places for director of public Information, entrance to the west side of the Districts 1 and 2 to the River Road found in the car, and Thomas waa Rue to fine Umberto Arena, owner renovations. said the condition of Edward building and construct a brick ftrehouse, and for Districts 5 and 6 then arrested and charged with of Umberto pizza and sub shop, 583 Adams. 135 Seavlew Ave., has Hot veneer. He said 110,000 would be The plan was suggested by the to the Youth Center at 38 Flak Ave. changed. ... possession of a controlled and needed to build a tpo-story entrance River Road, tSOO for continuing to dangerous substance and pos- light three neon signs in his window board as an alternate action while Adams' was brought to the lobby with a landscaped entrance Paden is trying to sell the house, Anthony T. Bruno was reap- hospital by Lawrence Thomas, of session with the Intent to dis- approach. after being denied an installation permit and sign variance. Rue was which was badly damaged in a fire pointed for a one-year term as the same address, who was tribute. He Is also held as a. two years ago. borough attorney, along with Joseph arrested after police found a material witness, and was sched- Plans to expand the first floor also instructed to apply to the County Courthouse for an injunction X. Seaman as borough auditor and "substantial" amount of heroin uled to be brought to the county libary onto the second story, convert "Something simply has to be Leon S. Avakian as borough engi- against Arena. in his car. according to Detective Jail in Freehold last night. the basement storage rooms into done," said Councilman Brooks Von neer. Sgt. Patrick Joyce. Joyce said Thomas was held in borough offices, upgrade heating, The council decided to levy the An. "The council has to be respon- Joyce said the police received lieu of 135,000 ball. ventilation and plumbing, and install fine after Arena failed to comply sive to the needs and feelings of the Neal Haviland was appointed as a a wheelchair lift and other interior with a letter from Rue instructing neighborhood." permanent board member. B2 The DrilyRegirtcr 'ursoAv JANUARY ?O inns • Many seniors to attend forum COMMUNITY CALENDAR MANALAPAN - About 1,100 people are contract which took effect Dec. 15. The new admitted to a hospital for an operation If he la expected to attend the Monmouth County Senior HFCA guidelines were devised to save a portion experiencing a substantial degree of discomfort. Citizen's Council meeting on changes in health of Medicare money and avoid the costs of As for a person over the age of 75, an operation TOD A V THVRSDA Y care benefits for the elderly, to be held at I p.m. "unnecessary" operations for the elderly. in the same circumstance will not be covered by Thursday at the Covered Bridge adult retirement According to Keiserman, the PRO has estab- Medicare unless the patient Is In danger of a life- RED BANK - Family and RED BANK - The Rotary Club community. Friends for MenUl Health will meet will meet at 11: IS p.m. at the Molly lished criteria for the extent of Medicare threatening situation. I bate to see people dying at 7:30 pm at the Menial Health The meeting Is designed to Inform senior coverage available to the elderly and, In some and going blind because they (HFCA) want to Pitcher Inn. citizens of federal funding cuts in both Medicare cases, the benefits named were discriminatory. save money." Association Office. 90 Monmouth St Dr. George J. Fahoury Jr., RED BANK - The Lions Club and Medlcald, and to answer their questions on Keiserman gave at an example the elderly For a patient over 78, cataract surgery la not Shrewsbury podiatrist, will speak on what they can do to minimize the problems that person seeking medical attention for symptoms covered under Medicare, he said, and the hospital will meet at < 30 pm at the Molly "Year Feet Don't Need to Hurt Pitcher Inn. may arise from the existing situation. of a stroke. According to the new criteria, administrations themselves have five days to M1DDLETOWN - Singles Again Each state has received a different contract Keiserman said, unless stroke is the official review hospiullzation In the case of any Roger Semplak will speak on the lac will have its weekly pre- Supreme Court. concerning the change in benefits from the Health diagnosis, the doctor Is Instructed to medicate emergency. weekeod dance and hot buffet at Care Financial Administration director in Wash- Instead of admitting the patient to a hospital as Among invited guests to the council meeting LITTLE SILVER - The^Red Uacroft Inn Newman Springs ington, according to David Kelserman, president a precautionary measure. are Gov. Thomas H. Kean, Sens. BUI Bradley and Bank Regional High>School Booster Road Orientation begins at I p.m., Club will sponsor a Chinese auction of the senior citizen's council. "The criteria become even more severe as a Frank R. Lautenberg, and Rep. James J. at 7:30 p.m. in the schools daanag it t pm All singlet arc The Peer Review Organization, East Bruns- person gets older," Keiserman said. "In the case Howard, all D-N.J., along with Freehold Area cafeteria. The doors open at 7 p m welcome For farther information, wick, a state branch of Medicare, received a of a hernia, a person under the age of 75 is Hospital administrators and doctors. Fmds raised will be used (or the call Singles Again. Wall group's scholarship and awards program FRIDA1 HOLMDEL — The Holmdel His- Shrewsbury chief pleased with law WEST LONG BRANCH - Singles torical Society will sponsor a cov- Again. qP p for those under 40, ered dish supper at 7 p.m. in the SHREWSBURY - Police Chief Raymond additional funds through bonding, officials said, beginning of 1984. We have managed in a very Holmdel Firehouse. A slide show will sponsor its weekly dance at 9 the police department did not have that option. difficult and creative way," she said. p.m. at the Holiday Inn Orientation "Bucky" Mass is "just tickled to death" featuring Holmdel homes and following Gov. Thomas H. Kean's signing of a bill Two new police cars were purchased last year According to Mass, Stump was Instrumental In events will follow. For information, will be at S p.m. that allows municipalities to exempt the purchase under state contract and one was donated by lobbying for passage of the bill. Members of the contact Gloria Dargue. president, or SATIRDAY of police cars from state budget caps. Circle Chevrolet Co. Another was purchased used state Police Chiefs Association, legislators and Peggy Lasky. "We've lived under the gun since 1975. It's the from Millburn for $2,000. The department also representatives of other municipalities wrote KEYPORT — The 1970 gradu- RED BANK - Riverview Medi- first financial break we've had," Mass said. owns a much older vehicle that Is used for letters and appeared at the Legislature when the ating class of Keyport High School cal Center's speech and hearing The deteriorated condition of borough police transportation to training courses. bill reached the Senate floor. is planning its 15-year reunion. department will sponsor its monthly cars received national attention two years ago According to CouncUwoman Arlene Stump, the Although no additional purchases of police cars There will be an organizational self-help meeting for the hard of when Mass ordered officers to drive no faster council's liaison to the police department, money are planned at this time, Stump said it would be meeting at the home of Eileen hearing at 10 a.m. in Blaisdell than 40 mph because the vehicles were "totally for the police car purchases was available a "matter for consideration" since the depart- Candeloro at 7 30 to form a commit- Center for Health Resources unsafe." because an appropriation for backbilling for the ment still utilizes the used vehicle that was tee to prex the celebration tentative- classroom 3. Council members had blamed the lack of landfill was retroactive to November Instead of purchased with more than 50,000 miles on the ly scheduled for October. For further RED BANK - Riverview Medi- appropriations for the badly needed police cars May. odometer. information, contact Taffy on state mandated municipal budget caps. "The situation In Shrewsbury has come a long According to Mass. a new, fully equipped police Natarcola. 4 Hurley St.. Keyport. cal Center will have its monthly support group meeting for gradu- Although other departments were able to raise way for the better from where we were at the car costs approximately 116,000. ates of the "Smoke Stoppers" TOMORROW program at 10 a.m. in classroom S. LONG BRANCH - St. Luke's SUNDAY New trial date for Planned Parenthood United Methodist Women will have their annual mission luncheon at MONMOUTH BEACH - Mon- mouth County Friends of FREEHOLD — State Superior Court Judge the family planning center are also trying to have bear the case, according to Planned Parenthood noon Mrs. Theresa Richter will Marshall Selikoff has set March 18 as the new the terms of the court Injunction extended to speak on the mission emphasis. Clearwater Board of Directors will attorney Richard T. Ansell The trial had been set meet at 1 p.m. at the Municipal trial date in Planned Parenthood of Monmouth make It more difficult for protesters to confront to begin yesterday. Korea Women of neighboring County's motion to extend a temporary re- clients and others entering the facility. churches and friends are invited. Building. 22 Beach Road. D.W. William F. Dowd, the attorney representing the Bennett, executive director of the straining order against anti-abortion groups that Anti-abortion activists argue that their First anti-abortion groups, was unavailable for com- Please bring a layZOered dish. have been protesting at the Shrewsbury clinic. Amendment rights would be violated by any LONG BRANCH - People with American Littoral Society, will attempt to prevent them from picketing the ment last night. chronic illnesses or those taking speak at 3 p.m. and a covered dish facility, talking with clients of the center and An open house Sunday marking Planned regular medication are invited to buffet and entertainment will fol- The restraining order, in effect since June, is intended to prevent "pro-life" demonstrators distributing literature critical of Planned Parent- Parenthood's 50th anniversary in the county register for the free Vial of Life low. hood's programs. attracted about 40 anti-abortion demonstrators at program at Long Branch Elks Lodge from entering the PPMC grounds and intimidat- MONDAY ing clients and employees entering and leaving the Newman Springs Road clinic. Two 742 from 1 to 3 p.m. at the lodge on The decision to postpone the trial proceedings, Shrewsbury police officers were on duty to Garfield Avenue. SHREWSBURY - The American the facility. Planned Parenthood is hoping to have the announced last Friday, was because Selikoffs enforce the restraining order and no Incidents RED BANK - Families Association of University Women, case load did not permit him sufficient time to were reported. Anonymous will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Northern Monmouth County restraining order made permanent. Officials at Riverview Medical Center's East Branch, will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Wing Shrewsbury Presbyterian Church. Middletown may investigate attorney POLICE BEAT MIDDLETOWN - Township Administrator that represented himself to Scotland Yard tour the Scotland Yard facilities. Herbert Bradshaw is "looking at the facts" to officials as the department's legal adviser. Loigman denied writing the letter after a copy determine whether local attorney Larry S. A letter on Loigman's stationery, with a obtained by The Daily Register was printed last Loigman represented himself incorrectly to New signature resembling his, was addressed to a year. Scotland Yard officials in London as the legal commander at Scotland Yard criticizing an Girl struck by auto officer for the township police department. officer of the organization's Metropolitan Police He said the complaint of a disgruntled township After his fact-finding effort, Bradshaw said he for his lack of hospitality. resident prompted township interest In the will decide whether to conduct an official The Sept. 4 letter states that Loigman visited FAIR HAVEN - A borough girl police said. matter. Elizabeth Novak, whose efforts to renew investigation into the matter. the agency while on vacation, that he was not the liquor license for the Grand Cafe on Route 35 was injured by a car while bicycling Coleman was taken to Riverview Loigman, who is not the legal adviser to the treated with the courtesy Middletown extends to to school yesterday, police said. had been stalled by Loigman, complained to the Medical Center, Red Bank, where police department, has denied penning a letter visiting police officials, and was not allowed to Township Committee, he said. Mary Roxanne Coleman, 8, of 28 she was treated and released for Parker Ave., was struck by the car bruises on her shoulders and right driven by Judy C. Foley at 8: IS a.m. in front of Foley's home at 162 Fair side. Haven Road, police said. No charges have been filed, Foley. 37. was pulling into her according to Patrolman William M. driveway and failed to see Coleman, Acker, the investigating officer. Two wanted in armed holdup RED BANK - Police are looking suspects fled. for two men in connection with One is described as a white male, Friday night's armed robbery at approximately 5 feet 8 inches tall, Burger King, Maple Avenue. wearing a red windbreaker, blue The men, one carrying a handgun, jeans and a blue-and-red ski mask. entered the restaurant at 11:25 p.m. and demanded money, police said. The other is described only as a The pair fled with an un- white male wearing a ski mask. determined amount of cash, police Sgt Anthony Abbatemarco and said. Detective Mark Fitzgerald are in- Police do not know how the vestigating. Hazlet man charged with car theft KEYPORT - A Hazlet man was Oldsmobile which Flynn was driving arrested early Saturday and had been stolen minutes before, charged with reckless driving, police said. drunken driving, possession of The car's owner, Patrick Levalle, stolen property and auto theft, also of Hazlet, had reported his car police said. missing from the parking lot of the Michael Flynn. 23. was stopped on Chowder Pot Restaurant, where he Route 35 by Patrolman Robert had been dining, police said. Caldes at 1:37 am When Caldes Flynn was released on $3,000 bail radioed headquarters to report the pending a court appearance Wednes- arrest, he learned that the 1962 day. Planners advising curb in variances EATONTOWN - The Planning applicant sought a variance for a Board was warned that a possible 91.5 square feet sign. The ordinance sign war may develop in the borough limits sign specifications to 25 if the board continues to grant square feet, unless a variance is variances allowing signs to exceed granted. ordinance specifications. Allowing increased sign variances Walter Kublin, member of the for certain merchants sets prece- Zoning Board of Adjustment, spoke dents for others throughout the as a private citizen last night when borough, Kublin said. he told the board that if variances He said variances should be are continually allowed, the board allowed only in hardship cases. will not be able to defend its Board member Paul Kirzow said ordinances. if the ordinance specifications are "I think all it is doing is opening unrealistic, they should be revised up a sign war which does nothing to during hearings on the Master Plan. beautify our town," Kublin said. The board heard three cases for He commented during a hearing sign variances or considerations for on a revised site plan in which the other variances last night. Board OKs subdivision (continued) Gary Fox, attorney for Shnabelk, Higgins said the letter, from said his client would not require any Margaret and William Weil, was access to Ocean Avenue for the "ironic" because the Weils had been squash facility. gaeawed a variance two years ago by . 6M Wailing Board to operate the;r Board Chairman Gregory Har- without providing any quail was the lone dissenter in the vote approving the splltup of the fiHet also saia d he failure to approve property. He said he oppaaad the the subdivision would represent a subdivision because traffic In the "hardship" for Schnabolk. who area was already congested and that ShJwvjbury/Ihe Manet Place/toute 35 wants to sell the business so that be splitting the property would com- Ai»AHend«te,C«iam«OT,Ea*Briin9WK** Et Bik &Emenn FaMd Old I could retire. pound the problem. Grot Neck. New City WMt Plains, W and Center Square, ft* SPORTS.... The Daily Register COMICS.... HIF6DAY. JANUARY 20 I'lliii Your Town BUSINESS. MIDDLETOWN HOLMDEL HIGHLANDS ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS Illegal dumping charged in Middletown
MIDDLETOWN - Joseph Kovelesky, of Kove at the end of Lakeside Drive, but "there isn't enough engineer, T4M Associates, for its work on Stephenville instructing the township engineer and administrator to Construction Co. Inc., has been inucd several land there now." Boulevard. determine why many letters to the township are summonses charging him with illegal dumping in Green Kovelesky was also issued a summons for a Jan. 14 They said that a retention basin was built higher than apparently left unanswered, and to set up a system to Lake, In the Fairvlew section of the township, according Incident, when a contractor working on the Steak & Ale the street, that driveway aprons were not scored and ensure "timely responses" to future correspondence. to Mayor James F. Maher. restaurant on Route 35 was allegedly caught dumping sidewalks were too thin to prevent cracking, and that Commlttoeman Paul Under made the motion in building materials Into the lake. tree roots had been destroyed during construction. response to the Fairview delegation's complaints. He A municipal court bearing on the summonses has Opdyke charged last night that Kovelesky has been One Fairview resident suggested that a voluntary said that at almost every meeting residents complain been scheduled for Feb. 8. responsible for dumping incidents every few months board of engineers be assembled to oversee the work that their letters to township offices have not been Kovelesky, who was reportedly attempting to fill In since 1181. She said the area has become hazardous. of T4M. answered. part of Green Lake to build homes on it, wat "caught Another resident, who said the lake had been drained Local attorney Larry S. Lolgman defended TAM, Township Administrator Herbert Bradshaw said that with his pants down" when a dump truck got stuck In when homes were constructed in the area a number of saying the Fairview residents unfairly challenged he responds to letters only after Inquiries from the mud beside the lake on Dec. U, according to years ago, said be thought the township's Instructions T&M's "unquestionable" reputation with their "minor, residents have been investigated and he has "some members of the Citizens of Falrview Inc., a local civic were that the lake should be refilled when the trifling, carping little attack." useful information to offer." organization. construction was complete. TJeM representative William P. Farrell said the work "Then I write back," he said. Bradsnaw contended The Incident gave the mayor and local police time to Last night, a delegation of Fairview residents pressed on Stephenville Boulevard was only 60 percent that he may miss "one here and there," but that in witness the attempted dumping. the Township Committee to force Kovelesky to restore complete. He said the work would be finished by early general, letters to his department are answered. According to Mary Opdyke, a member of the group, the lake to its original condition. summer, and residents' complaints will have been Kovelesky was not personally Involved In the incident, The residents said their letters to the township addressed by that time. In a related matter, the residents charged that a but received summonses for It because he had arranged engineer and administrator were unanswered. How- Maher tried to reassure the residents that the home owned by'Kovelesky on Balloch Place, in the with Angola Construction Co., a subcontractor doing ever, Maher and Committeewoman Olga Boeckel said township had Kovelesky under control. "We've been vicinity of the lake, Is being occupied without a township work on Stephenville Boulevard, for the they have communicated with the residents. The watching him like a hawk," he said. certificate of occupancy. Earlier this month, Kovelesky damping of building materials in the lake. officials took responsibility for the summonses issued Maher said he would consult Township Attorney was given notice to vacate the home, according to Opdyke said Kovelesky has plans to build two houses in the Dec. 31 and Jan. 14 Incidents. Peter Carton on the matter. Opdyke. She said neighbors have observed that the on a section of Green Lake included in a lot he owns The Fairvlew residents also criticised the township The committee unanimously passed a resolution home is still occupied. Army Corps of Engineers awards dredging contract BY BOB NEFF In with the same contractor, depending on the approval of various agencies," Stryker said. ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - A $3.7 million contract The commission plans to go out for bid on the project to dredge the Atlantic Highlands Anchorage was this week. awarded by the Army Corps of Engineers, Rep. James A Corps report last month showed the area covered J. Howard, D-N.J , announced yesterday. under the Corps contract to be 20 percent sand, allowing Weeks Dredging & Contracting, Cranford, will dredge the removed spoils to be dumped in the ocean. approximately 600,000 cubic yards of material from a The maintenance dredging, last done in 1956, is rectangular area extending 4,000 feet from the New required to restore the authorized 8-foot depth in the Jersey Central Steamboat Co. dock to the breakwater. area. The depth in the western 900 feet of the anchorage "I am glad that the Corps of Engineers is according is now approximately 4 feet, making navigation the waterways of our area a high priority," Howard virtually impossible at low tide, Howard said. said. "This job should be completed by the spring and "We had some really low areas," Stryker confirmed. the area will be open to full use In time for the boating While the money was not included in President season." Reagan's fiscal 1985 budget, the Corps agreed to The dredging will allow installation of additional allocate necessary funds for the project following moorings and "free up" the channel for commercial Howard's request in June. boaters and fishermen, said Richard Stryker, chairman "This is probably the largest grant the borough ever of the Atlantic Highlands Harbor Commission. received," Stryker said. "We'd like to thank Con- The commission hopes to "piggyback" additional gressman Howard and the Corps of Engineers — there dredging with the same contractor, including the area aren't too many of those (grants) around." from the bulkhead to the breakwater, at an estimated Stryker said the bill for the additional dredging in the school's new reading program. Looking on are cost of $250,000. bulkhead area would be the commission's responsi- PASSING THE BOOK - James Jeffcoat ol the bility. Dallas Cowboys, a former student at Cliffwood Michael Tarantola, left, Christopher DeCicco and "We'd like to tie it (dredging in the bulkhead area) Elementary School, gives a pin to David Bersch, Glen Giordano, all 10, Cottrice Pitts, 11, and 9, in recognition ot David's participation in the Tina Scott and Maureen O'Hagan, Doth 10. Loigman probe mulled
MIDDLETOWN - Township Ad- of the organization's Metropolitan Architect to update plans ministrator Herbert Bradshaw is Police for his lack of hospitality "looking at the facts" to determine The letter, dated Sept. 4, states whether local attorney Larry S. Loigman visited the agency while on MIDDLETOWN - An architect that drew the plans One irate resident said that the proposed 144 million Loigman represented himself incor- vacation in London, that he was not in 1972 for a new municipal complex was appointed last school budget wUl affect municipal tax rates signifi- rectly to New Scotland Yard of- treated with the courtesy Middle- night by the Township Committee to update those plans. cantly, but that residents also concerned with municipal ficials In London as the legal officer town extends to visiting police Nothing was ever done with the plans, but now that expenditures cannot attend both meetings because both for the township Police Department. officials, and was not allowed to the municipal complex is "splitting at the seams," the are held on Monday nights. After his fact-finding effort, Brad- tour the Scotland Yard facilities. committee has decided it's time to start thinking about Committeeman Richard McKean said the conflict shaw said he will decide whether to Loigman denied writing the letter moving into bigger quarters, according to Township should be investigated, and Maher said the committee conduct an official investigation Into after a copy obtained by The Daily Administrator Herbert Bradshaw. would discuss the Issue at Its next caucus meeting — the matter. Register was printed last year. He said that Police Chief Joseph M. McCarthy has when the Board of Education plans to adopt a new Loigman, who is not the legal written a letter to the township saying the Police redistricting plan. adviser to the Police Department, He said- the complaint of a Department needed more room, and that most other, In other business, the committee voted to change the has denied penning a letter that disgruntled township resident township functions were also pressed for space. format commonly used to order agenda items. The represented himself to Scotland prompted township interest in the The authorization of local architect William Miller to committee now will deal with ordinances and resol- Yard officials as the department's matter. Elizabeth Novak, whose revise his plans according to his estimation of current utions before public comments, in order to prevent legal adviser. efforts to renew the liquor license needs does not represent a commitment to build a new public debates on issues of concern to only a small A letter on Loigman's stationery, for the Grand Cafe on Route SS had municipal complex, Bradshaw said. number of residents from keeping entire audiences late. with a signature resembling his, was been stalled by Loigman, com- Rather, Miller is conducting a "feasibility study" at The resolution was passed despite the objections of - addressed to a commander at plained to the Township Committee, this point, to determine what sort of development is several residents, who said the public would be forced Scotland Yard criticizing an officer he said. LARRY S. LOIGMAN possible, as well as what is needed, according to Mayor to stay late to speak before the committee. Maher James F. Maher. attempted to assure the residents that meeting business The committee will consider working out a meeting would normally be completed before 9 p.m., giving schedule so that its meetings do not conflict with those residents ample time to voice their concerns at a Red Bank project may shrink of the Board of Education. reasonable hour. RED BANK - When asked his to the River will still be "a very opinion of a developer's plan to build Related story, page B2 large project." "• Trial date on protest curb set the 172 million Broad Street to the The idea behind redesigning the River, which features buildings of to a more traditional style," Ryan FREEHOLD - Superior Court Judge Marshall ment rights would be violated by any attempt to prevent project is to make it conform more more than 20 stories, architect said. "The idea is to create a with the borough's new Master Selikoff has set March 16 as the new trial date in them from picketing the faculty, talking with clients of Patrick Gllvary replied, "The pro- streetscape which is in scale with' Planned Parenthood of Monmouth, County's motion to the center and distributing literature critical of Planned Plan! ject Is probably not as large as the existing Broad Street." extend a temporary restraining order against anti- Parenthood's programs. everybody thinks it Is." The plan, which must be com- The new plan will allow the pleted by Feb. 28. makes the abortion groups which have been protesting at its The decision to postpone the trial proceedings, GUvary may be right. Shrewsbury clinic. developers "a little more massing project's site part of a downtown announced last Friday, was because Sellkoff's caseload Yesterday, Ron Ryan, principal in The restraining order, which has been in effect since did not permit him sufficient time to hear the case, on the site," Ryan said. historic district. The plan also sets the Ryan Group, the designers of the "What we're doing is taking the June, is intended to prevent "pro-life" demonstrators according to Planned Parenthood attorney Richard T. project, said his company is working height limitations of approximately buildings and pushing them down. from entering the PPMC grounds, and from Intimidat- Ansell. The trial had been set to begin yesterday. on a plan to reduce the slie of the 12 stories in the area surrounding ' ing clients and employees entering and leaving the William F. Dowd, the attorney representing the anti- project. The project is being reconfigured. the core business zone on Broad facility. abortion groups, was unavailable for comment last Some of the open spaces, including Street. r Gone will be the 20-story office Planned Parenthood is hoping to have the restraining night. tower and 22-story condominiums, the ampitheater. will go," he said. "The more we are in keeping with order made permanent. Officials at the family-planning An open house Sunday marking Planned Parenthood's Ryan said. Instead, buildings will be The pedestrian plaza, however, the Master Plan, the more chance center are also trying to have the terms of the court 50th anniversary In theVunty attracted about 40 anti- between 10 and 15 stories, he said. will remain, he said, as well as a the project has of being approved," abortion demonstrators at the Newman Springs Road injunction extended to make it more difficult for The development's futuristic de- proposed transportation center off he said. clinic. Two Shrewsbury police officers were on duty to protesters to confront clients and others entering the sign, another point of concern Front Street. enforce the restraining order, and no incidents were But Ryan stressed that revised facility. among longtime borough residents, The overall cost of building the reported. plans for Broad Street to the River Anti-abortion activists argue that their First Amend- will also be changed, he said. project will come down, he said. But are still "in a very schematic "We're going to soften the design Ryan emphasized that Broad Street stage." Dispatcher suspension nullified MIDDLETOWN — A four-day suspension issued last force. year to a police dispatcher by Police Chief Joseph "It's gonna have to come down. Everyone knows they McCarthy was nullified after the dispatcher, Linda are going to have to put a woman on the police force Melchionna, filed a grievance with Local 1044 of the sooner or later, if not this year then next year," Clancy Communications Workers of America. said. Melchionna contended McCarthy suspended her In There are two women on the list of patrolman October to bar her promotion to patrolman. Township candidates, according to Bradshaw. If they are passed Administrator Herbert Bradsnaw held a hearing on the by when job openings arise, "they're going to challenge matter in December and has decided to issue a it," Clancy said. disciplinary letter, in lieu of a suspension, for an The suspension report issued by the department incident last year. charges that on July 27, after being stopped for speeding Melchionna wu reimbursed for pay she did not by two reserve police officers, Melchionna swore at and receive during toe suspension period. However, the verbally abused the officers, and continued to do so later disciplinary letter has been placed in her file for at police headquarters. "disrespectful action to superior police officers," The report farther alleges that Melchionna told the according to Bradshaw. officers she would not acknowledge their transmissions According to Virginia Clancy, first vice president of while working as a dispatcher. According to Bradshaw, Local 1044, Melchionna feared the suspension might "be the report also charges that Melchionna refused to used as a weapon for them not to hire a woman as a make a report of the speeding incident. patrolman." According to Melchionna, the speeding incident led to Melchionna is fourth on a list of candidates for a confrontation on Sept. 14 between herself and THIS YEAR'S RECIPIENTS - Major General Roosevelt; Vivienne McCoach, Holmdel; and patrolman. She took a civil service examination, and McCarthy in the chief's office. Paul A. Feyereisen, center, president of the William C. Schroeder, Wayside. The annual awards when her number comes up she will be required to take Melchionna said that McCarthy "threatened" her were presented Saturday at Buck Smith's Res- a physical examination. Following the physical are when she went into McCarthy's office to find out why Monmouth Council, Boy Scouts of America, with psychological and medical examinations, and then an the reserve officers were demanding a statement from recipients of the Silver Beaver awards James C. taurant. East Keansburg. interview with township officials. her concerning the speeding Incident. She said charges Ewin, left, Holmdel; William A. Counterman, Currently, there are no women on the township police had never been filed against her after the Incident. M The Drily Register mrsnAv JANUARY ?n i'w. Youth employment help asked ited In the type of machinery they 14 or 15 years old. She expects this problem employing minority youths FREEHOLD — The Monmouth In this age category. But by provid- County Job Training Partnership can use while working. They aren't year's totals to be about the same. allowed to work In an area where Last year, young teens were ing employment, It helps to raise Agency is asking 11 of the county's family-income levels, which Is sore- largest municipalities to assist with chemicals are used or stored. The employed In beautlflcation projects laws, coupled with the fact that In Asbury Park and Neptune. JTPA ly needed In many cases." the employment of 14- and 15-year- is asking other municipalities to olds this summer. almost half of our applicants are in Callas said that after reviewing this age group, made it difficult to follow suit with similar projects this last year's numbers, JTPA decided Diane Shelton, deputy director ol find work for everyone In the past." summer. to ask the municipal governing JTPA, said 14- and 15-year-old According to George Callas, bodies for their help. youths are difficult to place because JTPA's Summer Youth Employ- "I was very encouraged by the ment and Training Program JTPA director, municipal cooper- of child labor laws, and asked ation would be a great help in enthusiasm of tar municipal of- county and municipal officials for subsidises the hiring of young people ficials attending the luncheon," between the ages of 14 and 21 with additional, urgently help yesterday at a special lunch- Job openings. Callas said. "I expect excellent eon. governmental and non-profit institu- results will eventually result." "The older kids do not have the tions. "This could be the first real The Summer Youth Program runs same type of restrictions placed Shelton said that in 19M, 1,408valuable step In good work ex- for eight weeks, from July 1 through upon them," Shelton said. "For youths applied for work through the perience for these kids," he said. Aug. 23. Wages are paid through instance, young teen-agers are lim- program. Out of this total, 689 were "There seems to be a chronic JTPA. Master Plan provision hits snag NEW EAGLE SCOUTS - Patrick Thomas McGowan. left, and residents since the Master Plan was Gerald Erik Chapman, Holmdel, due to receive Eagle Scout badges '• BY CHRIS HAND ministerium, composed of included former Zoning Board of introduced at the end of last fall. clergymen from west side churches. Adjustment member Norman Lee, during Molmdel Troop 131 Court ol Honor Tuesday, Feb. 5. RED BANK - The Planning Residents maintain that If It Is The planners agreed to send the who voiced objections to a provision Board may scrap a proposal in Its created, the CRD will encourage the suggestion to the Master Plan allowing buildings of up to 12 stories draft Master Plan calling for development of luxury con- committee for further review. in an area surrounding the core "creative residential development" dominiums that will raise property The area currently has mixed business district along Broad Street. (CRD) on the west side. values and force them out. zoning that allows multi-family uses "We are Just going to compound 2 Scouts to get During the second and final public Approximately 70 people attended In approximately half the area, the problem of gridlock," Lee said hearing on the plan, board members last night's hearing, but few spoke according the Borough Engineer C. of the proposal. "Red Bank may get last night Instead agreed to consider after Chairman Paul Forsman an- Bernard Blum. to be known as the town which shot zoning the area for single-family nounced the suggestion to change State law requires all munici- Itself In the foot." residences. the zoning, which was formulated by palities to have master plans and to "But density is not related to Eagle badges Under CRD zoning, con- William Byrne, chairman of the review them every six years. The height," Blum said. "The problem Is dominiums, planned residential award. He is also active in the youth board's Master Plan committee. review of the plan Is scheduled for floor area. Shoulder-to-shoulder, HOLMDEL — Two members of communities and apartment build- Byrne, absent from the meeting, Holmdel Boy Scout Troop 131 will ministry program of Saint Mary's completion by Feb. 28. four-story buildings could be worse ings would have been permitted In apparently agreed to recommend Once the Master Plan Is com- (than a tall building)." receive their Eagle badges during Roman Catholic Church, Colts the area, bounded by Locust Av- court of honor ceremonies on Tues- Neck. the change following Saturday's pleted and adopted by the board, the Donald McGee, of Clayton and enue, Newman Springs Road and the meeting with members of the West- Borough Council must rewrite zon- McGee's Clothing Store on Broad day. Feb 5. at the Indian Hill Gerald Erik Chapman, also of Navesink River. School. Holmdel, planned, developed and side Ministerium. ing ordinances to conform with the Street, said Red Bank should keep supervised creation of a "waist-high The zone has been the focus of The meeting was the second plan. high density developments away The new Eagle Scouts are Patrick strong opposition from west side borough officials have held with the McGowan. Holmdel. who organized garden" for the enjoyment and Others who spoke at the meeting from downtown. and led a group of scouts in the recreation of patients In the "People come to Red Bank be- repair and restoration of the Orange Holmdel Convalescent Center as his cause it is what It Is," McGee said. Trail at Holmdel Park for his service project. "If we create high density on the service project. The project in- He has served as junior assistant POLICE BEAT periphery of the historic district, cluded the replacement of two foot scoutmaster, senior patrol leader nobody will be able to get to Broad bridges and extension of a and in other leadership positions. Street." boardwalk Among his medals or awards are the Man arrested on auto charges The pair fled with an undetermined amount of cash, McGee Hid Red Bank should McGowan has served in several Order of the Arrow. Religion in Life, police said. follow the lead of Princeton, where troop leadership positions, including Arrow of Light, Ben Franklin Trail KEYPORT - A Hazlet man was arrested early Police do not know how the suspects fled. large offices are allowed but outside instructor, assistant senior patrol medal and Jockey Hollow Trail Saturday and charged with reckless driving, drunken One is described as a white male, approximately 5 the central business district. leader and patrol leader. He is a medal. driving, possession of stolen property and auto theft, feet 8 inches, wearing a red windbreaker, blue Jeans and "Don't clog the arteries in and out member of the Order of the Arrow Chapman is a writer for the police said. a blue-and-red ski mask. of town," McGee said. "Let the rest and received the Arrow of Light, SO "Hornet Report" at Holmdel High Michael Flynn, 23, was stopped on Route 35 by The other Is described only as a white male wearing of the county provide the office Miler Award. Ben Franklin Histori- School, and is a member of the vocal Patrolman Robert Caldes at 1:37 a.m. When Caldes a ski mask. buildings ... and let them have the cal Trail award and the Ad Altare group. Les Chanteurs, and treasurer radioed headquarters to report the arrest, police said, Sgt. Anthony Abbatemarco and Detective Mark gridlock." Dei medal, a Catholic scouting of his church youth group. he learned that the 1962 Oldsmobile Flynn was driving Fitzgerald are investigating. had been stolen minutes before. John Kay, president of the Red The owner of the car, Patrick Levalle, also of Hazlet, Bank Area Chamber of Commerce, had reported the theft when he discovered his car was Girl on bicycle injured by car presented the chamber's rec- Revolutionary War missing from the parking lot of the Chowder Pot ommendations to the board. Restaurant, here, where he had been dining, police said. FAIR HAVEN - A borough girl was injured by a car while bicycling to school yesterday, police said. Kay recommended building a Flynn was released on 13,000 bail pending a court second tier to the White Street appearance Wednesday. Mary Routine Coteman, 8, of 28 Parker Ave , was patriot remembered struck by the car of Judy C. Foley at 8:15 a.m. in front parking lot. Cops seek two in robbery of Foley's home at 162 Fair Haven Road, police said. He said that widening Shrewsbury MIDDLETOWN - Joseph Mur- Ruth Ann Moran from the church; Foley, 37, was pulling into her driveway and failed Avenue through Shrewsbury and ray. Revolutionary War patriot who Elisabeth Reed, regent of the local RED BANK - Police are looking for two men in to see Coleman, police said. Tinton Falls has been listed as a died June 8. 1780, was remembered chapter; and Mary Cubberly, Anne Coleman was taken to Riverview Medical Center, priority by the county and en- Sunday. connection with Friday night's armed robbery at Burger Stommel, Lenita Gullman and King, Maple Avenue. Red Bank, where she was treated and released for couraged board members to adopt Members of the Shrewsbury Laura Ferris, chapter members. bruises on her shoulders and right side. "some provision ... for handling the Towne Chapter, Daughters of the The men, one carrying a handgun, entered the On that fateful day, fanner Mur- restaurant at 11:25 p.m. and demanded money, police No charges have been filed, according to Patrolman heavy traffic flow from Shrewsbury American Revolution, placed a ray had resumed plowing fields William M Acker, the investigating officer when it reaches Red Bank." marker on his grave at the Old Pint after returning home from patrol at said. Church. Kings Highway. Sandy Hook. Within minutes, he was Participating was Helen shot — murdered by the Tories. Silvester, a descendant of Murray: The Murray farmhouse has been Henrietta Chittich. widow of a preserved as part of Poricy Park, descendant, and Ruth De Bruin, Oak Hill Road, and is the site of state historian. New Jersey DAR. many programs and demonstrations Also partipating was the Rev. pertaining to 18th Century culture. Council OKs extension of sewer renewal work HIGHLANDS - The Borough ahead with rehabilition work there Council yesterday authorized the at a cost of approximately 140 per Atlantic Highlands-Highlands Sew- foot, according to James. erage Authority to extend current "If we waited until the contrac- sewer system renewal work to tors left, the cost would be about include the replacement of approx- imately 200 feet of sewer mains near three times more than limply Shore Drive and Gravely Road. extending the work while the equip- ment is still there," James ex- Carbo Construction, currently under contract to the authority, is plained. installing feeder mains in the "There are condominiums and borough as part of a sewer system apartments in the area," James rehabilitation involving installation said, "it's not as if it only affected of a sewage pumping station. a couple houses." Some of the work the company Because the construction com- was to do was canceled approx- pany is under contract to the imately two years ago when the authority, the council will reim- borough did not receive some of the burse the authority for the work. expected federal funding for the Highlands became one of the first project, said Council President municipalities in the county to Katharine James. install sewers, and some of the But because of the deteriorated mains, which date back as far as the condition of sewer mains near Shore 1920s, are in need of replacement Drive, the council elected to go and rehabilitation, James said. COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY Newborn" at 8 p.m. at the Bayshore Community Hospital for the Mon- HOLMDEL — The Holmdel His- mouth Area ASPO/Lamaze. The torical Society will sponsor a cov- non-profit organization provides in- ered dish supper at 7 p.m. in the formation and support to expectant Holmdel Firehouse. A slide show and new parents. For further infor- featuring Holmdel homes and mation, write the organization at : events will follow. For information, P.O. Box 171, Keyport contact Gloria Dargue, president, or Peggy Lasky. SATURDAY TOMORROW HOLMDEL - The All-Shore Con- MIDDLETOWN - Singles Again cert, with a 145-voice choir, will Inc. will have its weekly pre- perform at 8 p.m. at Holmdel High weekend dance and hot buffet at School. Tickets are available at the ; Lincroft Inn. Newman Springs door. Road. Orientation begins at 8 p.m., dancing at 9 p.m. All singles are MONDAY. welcome. For further information, ' call Singles Again, Wall. MIDDLETOWN - The Middle- town Newcomers will have a lunch- eon meeting at 12:15 p.m. at Olde THVRSDA Y Union House. Red Bank. Those who MIDDLETOWN - Singles Again have resided in the township less will have its weekly pre-weekend than two years are eligible to join. Further information may be ob- •t Lincroft Inn, Newman tained from Benlta Cardaccio, i Road, Lincroft, with music Middletown Newcomers Club, P.O. • hot buffet. Box 57, Middletown, 07748. _ jtion is at S p.m., the dance at • p.m. All singles are welcome. MIDDLETOWN - Free high blood pressure screenings for per- sons 18 to 64 years of age will be FRIDA Y offered 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at The HOLMDEL — Dr. Kirk Kerensky Commons, Brookdale Community Srrewsbuy/lhe Market Mace/tout 35 College, Lincroft. Aha AllerxWe, Onmnwaoa EM Brunswick, Emtnon, F«Md, OW indqe, SpmgWd, m will give a slide-lecture on "The Great Neck. New City While Claim. NY and Center Square.t* Your Town MATAWAN ABERDEEN HA2LET KEANSBURG KEYPORT UNION BEACH rts Union Beach loses fire alarm service
UNION BEACH - The Borough of an emergency, Stopplello said. Transportation has denied a council Council will have to find another And the mayor said he "feels request, made in June, that it way to maintain the borough's fire sure" Wilson and Seber would make maintain Morningside Avenue. alarms. repairs in the event the alarms "I'm really let down, disap- Mayor Carmen Stopplello said failed to operate. pointed," Stoppiello said. "We're lait night that two firemen, who Stoppiello also announced at last looking for the freebies, but we can't have been keeping the alarms in night's meeting that the borough put our hands on them." good repair, have said they no will continue maintaining four The council also has been notified longer wish to provide the service. streets that the council had re- by Superior Court Judge Alvin Y. The borough paid the men a "small quested be taken over by state and Milberg that the council has until fee" in return for maintaining the county officials. March 6 to separate the office of the alarms, Stoppiello said. The council, along with the court clerk from that of two sub- "It wasn't really a contract," code officials. Stopplello said. "They were actually Bayshore Regional Sewerage doing the borough a favor." Authority, had asked the county The date is a 60-day extension of The council's safety committee, Board of Freeholders to maintain a deadline Milberg set in November, headed by Councilman Harry P. Eighth, Ninth, and Oak streets. But when he directed the council to Woolley Jr., will investigate replac- Stoppiello said the Freeholders separate the offices due to the Passing the book ing the service performed by Harry notified him that these streets did financial and confidential nature of Wilson and Jack Seber. not meet the requirements for the court clerk's work. James Jeffcoat ol the Dallas Cowboys, a former school's new reading program. Looking on are Stoppiello said Fire Chief Michael classification as county roads. The council sought the extension student at Cllffwood Elementary School. Aber- Michael Tarantola, left, Christopher DeCicco and Harriott assured council members The streets are heavily traveled last week. deen, gives a pin to David Bersch, 0, In Glen Giordano, all 10, Cottrlce Pitts, 11, and Tina at last night's workshop meeting by trucks carrying sewage to the Councilman John Keating is ex- recognition of David's participation In the Scott and Maureen O'Hagan, both 10. that the lack of immediate mainten- BRSA, which serves six com- pected to report Thursday on esti- ance is no cause for alarm. munities, prompting the council's mates he received for the construc- Harriott reported to council that request. The three Democratic tion of a wall between the offices, each chief has a plectron — a police councilmen had voted against the currently located in the same room Haulers may be dumped radio scanner — at home, which request. on the first floor of the municipal would serve as an alarm in the event And the state Department of building. KEANSBURG - The Borough Council last night Borough Attorney Morton Kramer. "All they have to discussed the possibility of starting a borough-run say is, 'Our costs have Increased, we need a raise.'" garbage collection system. "I think the next step is to get some quotes" on (expressing their dissatisfaction with the borough's garbage trucks, said Borough Manager Edward 10-day search continues two scavengers, Sano Carting Co., Keyport, and Tetro Wiegand. "We have to ask (many) companies what Carting Co.. Matawan, council members explored their prices are." different ways to implement such a system, citing "We should go right now and get some prices," said successful systems in other municipalities. Councilman Steven Cosgriff "If you make the effort, "They (Aberdeen) have their own garbage tax, and there's rewards in it... We have to find out how much for missing grandfather it's working out well for them." said Mayor Walter it (the system) will cost, availability, advantages, and Farley. "If we're going to clean this town at all, it's how other towns are doing." got to be with our own garbage (collection) system." "There is another alternative," Kramer said. "The BY ARMANDO MACHADO Matawan, have been helping police and family members Members said residents have complained that borough could buy the trucks, and still bid it to a search for Crank since he was reported missing, ABERDEEN - Police are still searching for a 70- garbage collectors from Sano and Tetro leave garbage scavenger." according to William Doggett. club president. year-old man who has been missing for 10 days. They cans and refuse in the streets during collections. In other business, Wiegand Informed the council that They said the maty reasons to take over garbage the borough's IMS budget will be adopted late. are being assisted by friends and relatives of the man, Doggett said Crank, who has several close friends in collection would be efficiency, cleanliness, and cost "The figures are not known yet," Wiegand said. "We who is said to be brain-damaged the club, always vonlunteered his help to clean up savings. don't know the anticipated revenues." parking lots at the Matawan railroad station and the 7- His family hopes he has found shelter from recent "They (Sano Carting and Tetro Carting) operate The payment of current bills was unanimously Eleven store on South Main Street near the station, and record-breaking low temperatures. under a tariff; that tariff can change any time," said approved. in cutting grass for neighbors. James Crank, of 111 Highfield Ave., was last seen by "We're hoping to find some kind of clue," Doggett a neighbor at 4 p.m. Jan. 19 walking near the Holmdel- said. " ... At the same time, we don't want to find him Hazlet border, between Bayshore Community Hospital, under these circumstances. At this point, we're hoping Senior citizens to discuss Holmdel, and the Hazlet Pathmark on Route 35 that he got on a train. "We've been canvassing the area and searching," said Detective Kenneth Wlcklund. who Is in charge of "He makes friends very easily; he's a mild-mannered the investigation. "Nothing has developed at this time." man, very easily liked... We try not to think of the worst An air search was conducted Friday by a helicopter things that could happen." health care benefit cuts and pilot provided by the county's Mosquito Com- Doggett said he and the other club members are MANALAPAN - About 1,200 which took effect Dec. IS. The new is admitted to a hospital for an mission, Wicklund said. But "nothing has shown up." focusing their search along railroad tracks and wooded people are expected to attend the HFCA guidelines were devised to operation if he is experiencing a Crank, who lives with his wife and his grandson, areas between the Matawan and Hazlet railroad Monmouth County Senior Citizen's save a portion of Medicare money substantial degree of discomfort. As Eugene Gray, 20, was described by Gray as a black man stations. Council .meeting on changes in and avoid the costs of "unnecess- for a person over the age of 75, an with gray hair and moustache, approximately S feet 6 "He always walked," said the missing man's wife, health care benefits for the elderly, ary" operations for the elderly. operation in the same circumstance inches tall, weighing about 113 pounds. Lula Mae Crank. "I expected him back about four to be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at the According to Keiserman, the PRO will not be covered by Medicare According to Gray, he was last seen wearing one rust- o'clock." Covered Bridge adult retirement has established criteria for the unless the patient is in danger of a colored glove; dark green corduroy pants; a green, She said her husband's doctor said last month that community. extent of Medicare coverage avail- life-threatening situation. I hate to yellow and rust plaid wool jacket; a red, white and blue Crank's mental disorder was getting worse. The meeting is designed to inform able to the elderly and, in some see people dying and going blind flannel shirt; and brown shoes. Crank's brain damage, she said, occurred in 1966, senior citizens of federal funding cases, the benefits named were because they (HFCA) want to save "We have no idea where he is," Gray said. "We're when he was hit on the head with a tow chain during cuts in both Medicare and Medicaid, discriminatory. money." just hoping and praying that he's alright; he didn't have a robbery at a gas station in Rahway, where he was an and to answer their questions on any money on him ... This one happened to be a walk Keiserman gave as an example For a patient over 75, cataract attendant. He's had a metal plate in his head ever since, what they can do to minimize the (from which) he never even showed up." she said. the elderly person seeking medical surgery is not covered under Medi- problems that may arise from the He said the family has checked, and will continue to "Never get hit on the head, or it will be the last attention for symptoms of a stroke. care, he said, and the hospital existing situation. check, area shelters in hopes of finding his grandfather. time," Mrs. Crank quoted the doctor as saying. According to the new criteria, administrations themselves have Each state has received a dif- All 28 members of the Shore Knights Athletic Club, "We go to church and pray," she said. ferent contract concerning the Keiserman said, unless stroke is the five days to review hospitalization in change in benefits from the Health official diagnosis, toe doctor Is the case of any emergency. Care Financial Administration di- instructed to medicate instead of Among invited guests to the rector In Washington, according to admitting the patient to a hospital as council meeting are Gov. Thomas H. David Keiserman, president of the a precautionary measure. Kean, Sens. Bill Bradley and Frank senior citizen's council. "The criteria become even more R. Lautenberg, and Rep. James J. The Peer Review Organization, severe as a person gets older," Howard, all D-N.J . along with East Brunswick, a slate branch of Keiserman said. "In the case of a Freehold Area Hospital adminis- medicare, received a contract hernia, a person under the age of 75 trators and doctors. Court caseload forces delay in Planned Parenthood case FREEHOLD - Superior Court planning center are also trying to bear the case, according to Planned Judge Marshall Selikoff has set have the terms of the court injunc- Parenthood attorney Richard T. March 18 as the new trial date in tion extended to make It more Ansell. The trial had been set to Planned Parenthood of Monmouth difficult for protesters to confront begin yesterday. County's motion to extend a tempor- clients and others entering the William F. Dowd. the attorney ary restraining order against anti- facility. representing the anti-abortion abortion groups which have been Anti-abortion activists argue that groups, was unavailable for com- protesting at its Shrewsbury clinic. their First Amendment rights would ment last night The restraining order, which has be violated by any attempt to been in effect since June, is Intended prevent them from picketing the An open bouse Sunday marking to prevent "pro-life" demonstrators facility, talking with clients of the Planned Parentbood's 50th an- from entering the PPMC grounds, center and distributing literature niversary In the county attracted and from intimidating clients and critical of Planned Parenthood'* about 40 anti-abortion demon- employees entering and leaving the programs. strators at toe Newman Springs THIS YEAR'S RECIPIENTS - Major General Roosevelt; Vivienne McCoach, Holmdel; and facility. The decision to postpone the trial Road clinic. Two Shrewsbury police Paul A. Feyereisen, center, president of the William C. Schroeder, Wayside. The annual awards Planned Parenthood is hoping to proceedings, announced Friday, was officers were on duty to enforce toe Monmouth Council, Boy Scouts of America, with were presented Saturday at Buck Smith's Res- have the restraining order made made because Selikoff's caseload restraining order, and no incidents recipients of the Silver Beaver awards James C. taurant, East Keansburg. ' permanent. Officials at the family- did not permit him sufficient time to were reported. Ewin, left, Holmdel; William A. Counterman, Builder charged with illegal dumping in lake
MIDDLETOWN - Joseph Kovelesky, of Kove at the end of Lakeside Drive, but "there isn't enough The Fairview residents also criticized the township instructing the township engineer and administrator to Construction Co. Inc.. has been Issued several land there now." engineer, T&M Associates, for Its work on Stephenville determine why many letters to the township are summonses charging him with illegal dumping in Green Kovelesky was also Issued s summons for a Jin. 14 Boulevard. apparently left unanswered, and to set up a system to Lake, in the Fairvlew section of the township, according incident, when a contractor working on the Steak it Ale They said that a retention basin was built higher than ensure "timely responses" to future correspondence. to Mayor James F. Maher. restaurant on Route 36 was allegedly caught dumping the street, that driveway aprons were not scored and Committeeman Paul Linder made the motion in A municipal court hearing on the summonses has building materials Into toe lake. sidewalks were too thin to prevent cracking, and that response to the Fairvlew delegation's complaints. He been scheduled for Feb. 6. Opdyke charged last night that Kovelesky has been tree roots had been destroyed during construction. said that at almost every meeting residents complain Kovelesky, who was reportedly attempting to fill in responsible for dumping incidents every few months that their letters to township offices have not been part or Green Lake to build homes on it, was "caught since Ml. She said the ares has become hazardous. Local attorney Larry S. Loigman defended T&M. saying the Fairview residents unfairly challenged answered. with bis pants down" when a dump truck got stuck in Another resident, who said the lake had been drained Township Administrator Herbert Bradshaw said that the mud beside the lake on Dec. Si, according to when borne* were constructed In the area a number of TfcM's "unquestionable" reputation with their "minor, trifling, carping little attack." he responds to letters only after inquiries from members of the Citizens of Fairvlew Inc., a local civic years ago, said be thought the township's Instructions residents have been investigated and he has "some organization. were that the lake should be refilled/' when the TtM representative William P. Farrell said the work on Stephenville Boulevard was only 60 percent useful information to offer." The incident gave the mayor and local police time to construction was complete. "Then I write back," be said. Bradshaw contended witness the attempted dumping. Last night, a delegation of Fairvlew residents pressed complete. He said toe work would be finished by early summer, and residents' complaints will have been that he may miss "one here and there," but that in According to Mary Opdyke, a member of the group, the Township Committee to tore* Kovelesky to restore general, letters to his department are answered. Kovelesky was not personally involved in the incident, the lake to Its original condition. addressed by that time. Maher tried to reassure the residents that the In a related matter, the residents charged that a but received summonses for it because he had arranged The residents said their letters to the township home owned by Kovelesky on Balloch Place, in the with Angola Construction Co., a subcontractor doing engineer and administrator were unanswered. How- township had Kovelesky under control. "We've been watching him like a hawk." he said. vicinity of the lake. Is being occupied without a township work on Stephenville Boulevard, for toe ever, Maher and Committeewomsn Olga Boeckel said certificate of occupancy. Earlier this month, Kovelesky damping of building materials In the lake. they have communicated with the residents The Maher said be would consult Township Attorney Peter Carton on the matter. was given notice to vacate the home, according to Opdyke said Kovelesky has plans to bulk) two houses officials took responsibility for toe summonses issued Opdyke. She said neighbors have observed that the on a section of Green Lake included in a lot he owns In the Dec. SI and Jan. 14 incidents. The committee unanimously passed a resolution home is still occupied. •2 TheDtityRcgkler ' 11| sl)A> JANHAII' . 1986 Suspension overturned after grievance hearing MIDDLETOWN - A four-day might "be used as a weapon for 27, after being stopped for speeding •uipetulon issued lait year to • them not to hire a woman as a by two reserve police officers, police dispatcher by Police Chief patrolman." • Melchionna swore at and verbally Joseph McCarthy was nullified after Melchionna la fourth on a list of abused the officers, and nihwiii to the dispatcher, Linda Melchionna, candidates for patrolman. She took do so later at polio tiaa*pir1ors. filed a grievance with Local 1044 of a civil service examination, and The report further alleges that the Communications Workers of when her number comes up she will Melchionna told the officers the America. be required to take • physical would not acknowledge their trans- Melchionna contended McCarthy examination. Following the physical are psychological and medical missions while working as a dis- suspended her In October to bar her patcher According to Bradshaw, 'promotion to patrolman. Township examinations, and then an interview with township officials the report alto charges that Administrator Herbert Bradshaw Melchionna refused to make a held a hearing on the matter in Currently, there are no women on December and ha* decided to issue the township police force. report of the speeding incident. a disciplinary letter, in lieu of a "It's gonna have to come down. According to Melchionna, the suspension, for an incident last year. Everyone knows they are going to speeding Incident led to a conf ronta- Melchionna was reimbursed for have to put a woman on the police Uon on Sept. 14 between henelf and pay she did not receive during the force sooner or later, if not this year McCarthy In the chief's office. suspension period. However, the then next year," Clancy said. Melchionna said that McCarthy disciplinary letter has been placed There are two women on the list "threatened" her when she went in her fUe for ••disrespectful action of patrolman candidates, according into McCarthy's office to find out to superior police officers," accord- to Bradshaw If they are pasted by why the reserve officers were ing to Bradshaw. when job openings arise, "they're demanding a statement from her According to Virginia • Clancy, going to challenge It," Clancy said concerning the speeding incident. first vice president of Local 1044, The suspension report issued by Abe said charges had never been Melchionna feared the suspension the department charges that on Julf**flled against her after the incident COMMUNITY CALENDAR
NEW HOSPITAL LEADERS - Joseph McLoone. with new trustees. From left are Jack Horenkamp, TODAY THVRSDAY second from right, who was re-elected president ol Jack Krupnick and Ouane Oavison. McLoone is KEYPORT - The 1970 graduating class of Keyport MIDDLETOWN - Singles Again Inc. will have its Freehold Area Hospital's Board of Trustees, chats serving his second term as board president. High School Is planning its It-year reunion. An weekly pre-weekend dance and hot buffet at Uncroft organizational meeting will be held at the home of Inn, Newman Springs Road. Orientation begins at 8 Eileen Candeloro at 7:30 p.m. to form a committee to p.m., dancing at 9 p.m. AH singles are welcome. For prepare for the celebration, tentatively scheduled for further Information, call Singles Again, Wall. October. For further information, contact Taffy Second term for McLoone Natarcola. 4 Hurley St.. Keyport. FRIDA Y UNION BEACH - The Union Beach Democratic WEST LONG BRANCH - Singles Again, a group for Committee announces that the next Bayshore Democrat those under 40, will sponsor Its weekly dance at 9 p.m. as president of hospital Organization meeting will be hosted at Union Beach by at the Holiday Inn. Orientation will be at 8 p.m. the Democratic County Committee at 8 p.m. at the FREEHOLD - Joseph V. as board secretary. and Lakewood chambers of com- American Legion Hall, Front Street. MONDAY McLoone. president and general Davison is a partner in the law merce and is a member of Jackson RED BANK - Family and Friends for Mental Health MATAWAN - February Is "love your library" manager of Freehold Raceway, has firm of Bennet, Davison & Munoz. Township's Industrial Committee. will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Mental Health Association month, according to the friends of the MaUwan been re-elected to a second term as The Freehold native serves as He and his wife, Barbara, have Office, 90 Monmouth St. Aberdeen Public Library. 186 Main St., who are president of the Freehold Area township prosecutor, borough Plan- two children. sponsoring a children's party at 7 p.m. at the library. Hospital Board of Trustees ning Board attorney, and holds other Horenkamp, a township resident Participants will make Valentines and snowflakes and Three new members were also municipal legal posts He is a since 1968, is an electrical engineer TOMORROW hear about the library and how it grew. named to the board: Duane 0. member of the Battleground Arts for AT&T in Holmdel. where he MATAWAN - The board of trustees of the Matawan- Each participant will be photographed for the "love Davison of Freehold. Jack Krupnick Society and Historical Society, as heads Information Systems. He is Aberdeen Public Library. 165 Main St., has scheduled your library" bulletin board. Refreshments will be of Lakewood. and Jack Horenkamp well as several professional or- chairman of the township zoning a special meeting at 7:30 p.m. In the library. The served and parents are encouraged to participate of Heimdel ganizations. board. board's building committee will report on the bids Registration is not necessary. a long-time trustee, He and his wife, Susan, live in He and his wife, Doris, have three recieved for the library's addition. At 8 p.m., the board MATAWAN - The MaUwan-Aberdeen Regional I active fundraiser and sup- Freehold Township. children. will meet with the Aberdeen Township Council and Community/Adult School will have registration tor the of the hospital before it Krupnick. a New Jersey native Re-elected as board of trustee MaUwan Borough Council to consider the planned spring program at MaUwan Regional High School, opened in 1971. who has lived in this area since the officers were: vice presidents, R. expansion project. Atlantic Avenue, today through Thursday from 7 to 9 The three new trustees were 1950s, is a partner in the Howell real Michael Sullivan, David Metz and p.m StudenU can also register at the Administration named to replace Randall Minniear estate firm of Weisgold & Krupnick. the Rev. Albert Gibson; treasurer, FREEHOLD - Singles Again Inc. will have a dance Building, Broad Street, room M, every day from 8:30 and James Montenegro, who re- The Lakewood resident is a member Charles P. Kaempffer; assistant every Wednesday at the Cinnamon Tree Lounge of the a.m. to 3:30 p.m. signed because of professional com- of the Ocean and Monmouth county treasurer. Edward J. Sweeney; and Freehold Hotel, Route 9. Orientation is at 8 p.m. with KEYPORT - Registration for the spring term of the mitments, and Evelyn Silvert. boards of realtors, and various state assistant secretary. Jack DeCerce. the dance beginning at 9 p.m. All singles are welcome Keyport Adult School will be conducted at Keyport High trustee secretary, who resigned to and national realtor associations. In Sworn in to three year terms to attend. School, Broad Street, tonight and Tuesday from 7 to 9 accept a position on the hospital's addition, he was a charter member along with the new trustees were RED BANK - Families Anonymous will meet at 7:30 p.m. For information on the spring term, contact Mario parent corporation board. Trustee of the Howell Rotary, serves on the Kaempffer, Allan Gewirtz, Norman D. Crupt at Keyport High School, days. - Arthur Kondmp will replace Silvert boards of directors of the Howell Richardson and Sweeney. p.m. in Riverview Medical Center's East Wing. Catholic Schools Week planned HAZLET - Sharing the Vision Sunday at 9 a.m., a special parish of Christian Values " will be the Mass will be held to emphasize the theme for Catholic Schools Week, meaning of Catholic Schools Week. Feb 3-8. at Holy Family School, On Monday, seventh graders will Route 36 Each day will include compete in a door decorating con- celebration of a different aspect of test with 1st, 2nd, and 3rd prizes for Catholic education the best decorations illustrating the week's theme. PTA to celebrate Tuesday will be grandparent's day in Kindergarten through fourth 40th anniversary grades. Students will have lunch with grandparents from 11 a.m. to ABERDEEN - The Cliffwood noon, and present token gifts from Elementary School PTA will cel- grandchild to grandparent. ebrate its 40th anniversary on Feb. Wednesday, a 5th grade Mass at 6 at 7:30 p.m. with a covered-dish 9:30 a.m. will be dedicated to dinner in the school cafeteria. sharing Christian values. At 11 a.m., The PTA would like to invite its a faculty-student volleyball game past presidents, and would ap- will be held. preciate hearing from anyone who Thursday is designated student can provide addresses for former appreciation day. officers. Further information is And on Friday, Feb. 8, the school available from Georgette Frank at will hold an open house from 9:30 to the school. 11 am. Calligraphy classes set for Hazlet HAZLET - Calligraphy classes San Diego for seven years before will be offered next month by the moving to Hazlet. Hazlet Recreation Commission, and Classes will meet on five con- registration is now open for area secutive Fridays starting Feb. IS residents. from 7 to 8 p.m. at the recreation The instructor will be Mary Ellen center in Veterans Memorial Park, Erickson. who Uught calligraphy in Union Ave. POLICE BEAT
police said. Robbers sought Coleman was taken to Riverview Medical Center, Red Bank, where RED BANK - Police are looking she was treated and released for for two men in connection with bruises on her shoulders and right Friday night's armed robbery at side. Burger King, Maple Avenue. No charges have been filed, The men, one carrying a handgun, according to Patrolman William M. entered the restaurant at 11:25 p.m. Acker, the investigating officer. and demanded money, police said. The pair fled with an un- determined amount of cash, police Brief ride halted said. Police do not know how the KEYPORT - A Hazlet man was suspects fled. arrested early Saturday and One is described as a white male, charged with reckless driving, approximately 5 feet 8 inches tall, drunken driving, possession of wearing a red windbreaker, blue stolen property and auto theft, jeans and a blue-and-red ski mask. police said. The other is described only as a Michael Flynn. 23. was stopped on white male wearing a ski mask. Route 35 by Patrolman Robert Sgt. Anthony Abbatemarco and Caldes at 1:37 a.m. When Caldes Detective Mark Fitzgerald are in- radioed headquarters to report the vestigating. arrest, police said, he learned that the 1982 Oldsmobile Flynn was driving had been stolen minutes Child cyclist hit before. FAW HAVEN - A borough girl The owner of the car, Patrick sd by a car while bicycling Levalle, also of Hazlet, had reported . yesterday, poll" «•*• the theft when he discovered his car Itoxanne Coleman, 8, of 28 was missing from the parking lot of . Ave.. was struck by a car the Chowder Pot ResUurant, here, ..Jtry Judy C. Foley at 8:15 a.m. where he had been dining, police hi front of Foley's borne at 182 Fair said. Haven Road, police said. Flynn was released on 13.000 bail Shrewsbury/** /Market Place/Route 35 Foley, 37, Ml pulling into her pending a court appearance Wednes- Aha. AJIcndHc Gnmnwaon, East Bnrawtck, Emenon, F«ftdd,OMBridKSc>rinjMd.NJ, driveway and failed to see Coleman, day. Grest Neck, New Oy wnitiPttns, NV and CemnSquBijK The Daily Register 3PORT8 .... COMICS.... Your Town BU8INE88. FREEHOLD MARLBORO FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP MANALAPAN COLTS NECK ENGLISHTOWN Builder charged Tax rate with wrongful drop in dumping in lake offing MIDDLETOWN - Joseph officials toook responsibility for the FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - The Kovelesky. of Kove Construction Co. summonsesi iissued in the Dec Hand Township Committee last night Inc.. has been issued several sum- Jan. 14 incidents introduced an 18 million 1985 mu- monses charging him with Illegal The Fairview residents also criti- nicipal budget which may result in dumping In Green Lake, in the cized the'township engineer, TftM a local property tax decrease of Falrvlew section of the township, Associates, for its work on Slep- approximately IMI cents per $100 of according to Mayor James F. henville Boulevard. assessed valuation. Matter. They said that a retention basin A municipal court bearing on the was built higher than the street, that Township residents will pay 9.7 summonses has been scheduled (or driveway aprons were not scored cents per $100 under the terms of the Feb. 6. and sidewalks were too thin to proposed budget. The amount to be Kovelesky. who was reportedly prevent cracking, and that tree raised by local taxes. $575,000. attempting to fill in part of Green roots had bean destroyed during accounts for approximately 5 per- Lake to build homes on it, was construction. cent of the total appropriations "caught with his pants down" when One Fairview resident suggested a dump truck got stuck in the mud that a voluntary board of engineers General budgetary appropriations beside the lake on Dec. 31. according be assembled to oversee the work of total $8,076,200 Funding for capital to members of the Citizens of T*M. improvements is $323,700. and mu- Fairview Inc.. a local civic or- Local attorney Larry S. Lolgman nicipal debt service is $650,700. ' ganization. defended T&M. saying the Fairview The incident gave the mayor and residents unfairly challenged TfcM's Because the budget is within the local police time to witness the "unquestionable" reputation with state cap law, no referendum will be attempted dumping. their "minor, trifling, carping little required on the municipal spending According to Mary Opdyke, a attack." package. The cap law restricts member of the group. Kovelesky T&M representative William P. yearly increases in municipal was not personally involved in the Farrell said the work on Step- budgets to 5 percent. incident, but received summonses henville Boulevard was only 60 for It because he had arranged with percent complete. He said the work Expected revenues, exclusive of Angola Construction Co.. a subcon- would be finished by early summer, current property taxes, amount to tractor doing township work on and residents1 complaints will have $9,331,500. The amount to be raised Stephenville Boulevard, for the been addressed by that time. by residents' taxes represents the NEW HOSPITAL LEADERS - Joseph McLoone. with new trustees. From left are Jack Horenkamp, dumping of building materials in the Maher tried to reassure the difference between total appropria- lake. residents that the township had second from right, who was re-elected president of Jack Krupnick and Duane Davison. McLoone is tions, including those not restricted Opdyke said Kovelesky has plans Kovelesky under control. "We've Freehold Area Hospital's Board of Trustees, chats serving his second term as board president. by the slate. to build two houses on a section of been watching him like a hawk." he Green Lake included in a lot he owns said. Total miscellaneous revenues are at the end of Lakeside Drive, but Maher said he would consult $6,175,100. That total includes "there isn't enough land there now." Township Attorney Peter Carton on Joseph V. McLoone re-elected franchise and gross receipts taxes, Kovelesky was also issued a the matter. utilities payments, state revenue summons for a Jan. 14 Incident, sharing, and assorted funds col- when a contractor working on the The committee unanimously lected through municipal depart- Steak It Ale restaurant on Route 35 passed a resolution instructing the Freehold hospital president ments, such as fines and delinquent township engineer and adminis- taxes. was allegedly caught dumping build- FREEHOLD — Joseph V. McLoone, president and Krupnick, a New Jersey native who has lived in this ing materials into the lake. trator to determine why many letters to the township are apparent- general manager of Freehold Raceway, was re-elected area since the 1950s, is a partner in the Howell real Anticipated surplus, already ap- Opdyke charged tost night that to a second term as president of the Freehold Area estate firm of Weisgold L Krupnick. The Lakewood Kovelesky has been responsible for ly left unanswered, and to set up a proved by the state Division of Local system to ensure "timely Hospital Board of Trustees. resident is a member of the Ocean and Monmouth Government Services, will be dumping incidents every few Three new members were also named to the board: county boards of realtors, and various state and national months since ltti. She said the area responses" to future cor- $2,899,000, an increase of $39,000 respondence. Duane O. Davison of Freehold. Jack Krupnick of realtor associations. In addition, he was a charter over last year. has become hazardous. Another Lakewood, and Jack Horenkamp of Holmde) member of the Howell Rotary, serves on the boards of resident, who said the lake had been Committeeman Paul Under made McLoone, a long-time trustee, was an active directors of the Howell and Lakewood chambers of Members of the committee credi- drained when homes were con- the motion in response to the fundraiser and supporter of the hospital before it opened commerce and is a member of Jackson Township's ted construction of new commercial structed in the area a number of Fairview delegation's complaints. in 1971 Industrial Committee. enterprises, as well as expansion of years ago. said he thought the He said that at almost every The three new trustees were named to replace existing ones, with the township's township's instructions were that meeting residents complain that He and his wife. Barbara, have two children. Randall Minniear and James Montenegro, who resigned Horenkamp. a township resident since 1968, is an ability to maintain a low residential the lake should be refilled when the their letters to township offices have tax rate in comparison with neigh- not been answered. because of professional commitments; and Evelyn electrical engineer for AT&T in Holmdel, where he construction was complete. SUvert, trustee secretary, who resigned to accept a boring municipalities. This year's Last night, a delegation of Fair- Township Administrator Herbert heads Information Systems. He is chairman of the position on the hospital's parent corporation board. township zoning board. drop in the tax rate was cited by view residents pressed the Township Bradshaw said that be responds to Trustee Arthur Kondrup will replace SUvert as board Committeeman David Segal as Committee to force Kovelesky to letters only after Inquiries from secretary. He and his wife, Doris, have three children. evidence that the township's pro- restore the lake to its original residents have been investigated New trustee Davison is a partner in the law firm of Re-elected as board of trustee officers were: vice gram of attracting business and condition. and he has "some useful infor- Bennet, Davison k Munoz. The Freehold native serves presidents. R. Michael Sullivan. David Metz and the industry was working, and paying The residents said their letters to mation to offer." as township prosecutor, borough Planning . Board Rev. Albert Gibson; treasurer, Charles P. Kaempffer; off for residents. the township engineer and adminis- "Then I write back," be said. attorney, and holds other municipal legal posts. He is assistant treasurer. Edward J. Sweeney: and assistant trator were unanswered. However, Bradshaw contended that he may a member of the Battleground Arts Society and secretary. Jack DeCerce. The committee will take input Maher and Committeewoman Olga miss "one here and there," but that Historical Society, as well as several professional Sworn in to three year terms along with the new from residents on the budget during Boeckel said they have com- in general, letters to his department organizations. trustees were Kaempffer, Allan GewirU. Norman a public bearing at its Feb. 25 municated with the residents. The are answered. He and his wife. Susan, live in Freehold Township Richardson and Sweeney. meeting. Committee calls for comprehensive Lone Pine cleanup BY TED LOUD drinking water supplies. private companies which admit to having legally committee meeting. Kondrup said Lone Pine has "no The TRC, comprised of residents and township dumped at the landfill. That plan would have been effect whatsoever on Freehold Township's drinking FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - A report by an ad-hoc officials appointed on the basis of their expertise in funded by the companies involved. water ... and I'm saying that categorically." group calling for a comprehensive cleanup and hazardous waste management or public safety, ex- The private plan was dealt a serious setback last But he added that Burnt Fly Bog. a hazardous waste monitoring process at the Lone Pine Landfill, here. pressed support for a cleanup plan offered by the EPA. week by a federal judge in Newark, who ruled that the site in Marlboro, could pose a threat to the township's received the official support of the Township Committee But, in a letter to the Committee, the TRC suggested federal plan for cleaning up the landfill was not subject water supplies since it sits on the Englishtown aquifer. last night. that the EPA's plan may not go far enough in addressing to judicial review. The companies had claimed that the One of the township's seven main drinking water wells The committee also urged the federal Environmental actions to be taken after the main phase of toe cleanup EPA did not give sufficient consideration to the is tapped into the aquifer. Protection Agency to "expedite its program of is completed The TRC also called for more studies into alternative plan, but the judge said the EPA was Because the plume, or the movement of water remediation" at the landfill, despite questions raised by what substances an in the landfill, as well as air empowered to act speedily in cleaning dangerous sites underground, is slow, any toxic substances from the the Technical Review Committee (TRC). monitoring tests during preliminary excavations of such as Lone Pine. Marlboro site probably wouldn't reach the township for contaminated areas. Meanwhile, as residents and local officials wait for Kondrup, a TRC member who also works for the slate many years, according to Kondrup. If a problem was cleanup to begin, Committeeman Arthur R. Kondrup Still, the EPA's preferred cleanup approach was Department of Environmental Protection, said the discovered, he added, that one well would be shut down. said the landfill posed no threat to the township's judged by the TRC to be superior to a proposal offered judge's ruling "removed a major obstacle" to getting Of greater concern to the township is the Raritan by the Lone Pine Steering Committee, a group of the cleanup under way. But he said no firm starting date aquifer, a much deeper underground formation which has yet been offered by the EPA officials, who expect is thfsource of most residents' drinking water here. the cleanup job to take two years. Kondrup said. So far, the Raritan has not been polluted, "We just pray to God they'll have enough money to he said. New trial date set for clinic do It," Kondrup said, referring to uncertainty over Kondrup noted that Lone Pine is upstream from the FREEHOLD - Superior Court planning center are also trying to not permit him sufficient time to whether the federal "Superfund" will be renewed by proposed Manasquan River Reservoir in Howell, which Judge Marshall Selikoff has set have the terms of the court Injunc- hear the case, according to Planned Congress. The Superfund was initially enacted at $1.6 is expected to provide drinking water for much of the March IS as the new trial .date In tion extended to make It more Parenthood attorney Richard T. billion in 1M0. but supporters hope to see it enlarged county. But he added that the contaminants, mostly Planned' Parenthood of Monmouth difficult for protesters to confront Ansel!. The trial had been set to to $10 billion. volatile organics, would tend to dissipate before they County's motion to extend a tempor- clients and others entering the begin yesterday. In response to a resident's question at last night's reach the proposed intake area of the reservoir. ary restraining order against anti- faculty. William P. Dowd. the attorney abortion groups which have been Anti-abortion activists argue that representing the anti-abortion protesting at its Shrewsbury clinic. their First Amendment rights would groups, was unavailable for com- Dispatcher's suspension nixed The restraining order, which has be, violated by any attempt to ment last night. . been in effect since June, is Intended prevent them from picketing the An open bouse Sunday marking MIDDLETOWN - A four-day suspension, for an incident last year. candidates for patrolman. She took to prevent "pro-lift" demonstrators faculty, talking with clients of the Planned Parenthood's 50th an- suspension issued last year to a Melchionna was reimbursed for a civil service examination, and from entering the PPMC grounds, center and distributing literature niversary hi the county attracted police dispatcher by Police Chief pay she did not receive during the when her number comes up she will and from intimidating clients and critical of Planned Parenthood's about 40 anti-abortion demon- Joseph McCarthy was nullified after suspension period. However, the be required to take a physical employees entering and leaving the programs. strators at the Newman Springs the dispatcher, Linda Melchionna. disciplinary letter has been placed examination. Following the physical facility. Road clinic. Two Shrewsbury police filed a grievance with Local 1044 of in her file for "disrespectful action are psychological and medical Planned Parenthood is hoping to The decision to postpone the trial officers were on duty to enforce the the Communications Workers of to superior police officers." accord- examinations, and then an interview have the restraining order made proceedings, announced last Friday, restraining order, and no Incidents America. ing to Bradshaw. with township officials. permanent. Officials at the family- was because Selikoff's case load did were reported. Melchionna contended McCarthy According to Virginia Clancy, Currently, there are no women on suspended her in October to bar her first vice president of Local 1044, the township police force. promotion to patrolman. Township Melchionna feared the suspension "It's gonna have to come down. J Administrator Herbert Bradshaw might "be used as a weapon for Everyone knows they are going to Probe of lawyer eyed held a hearing on the matter in them not to hire a woman as a have to put a woman on the police December and has decided to issue patrolman." force sooner or later, if not this year MIDDLETOWN - Township Ad- of the organisation's Metropolitan a disciplinary letter, in lieu of a Melchionna is fourth on a list of then next year." Clancy said. ministrator Herbert Bradshaw is Police for his lack of hospitality. "looking at the facts" to determine The letter, dated Sept. 4. states whether local attorney Larry S. Loigman visited the agency while on Loigman represented himself incor- vacation In London, that he was not Attractive landscapes chosen rectly to New Scotland Yard of- treated with the courtesy Middle- ficials In London as the legal officer town extends to visiting police FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - The Shade Tree Commission are to Plaza. Burger King, Mickey & for the township Police Department. Township Shade Tree Commission recognize the efforts of commercial Paul's Sunoco, and Freehold Shell. • After his fact-finding effort, Brad- officials, and was not allowed to tour the Scotland Yard facilities last night presented awards to six institutes, organizations and citizens After giving out the awards, the shaw said he will decide whether to borough businesses and one church with regard to appropriate and commission presented a slide show conduct an official investigation Into Loigman denied writing the letter after a copy obtained by The Daily for attractive landscaping on their carefully-planned landscaping and featuring photographs of the sites. the matter. properties. property improvement, property "Every one of these properties Loigman, who is not the legal Register was printed last year. maintenance as well as contribu- He said the complaint of a This year marks the first time the shows what makes Freehold Town- adviser to the Police Department, commission, established in 1962, has tions to the community and Its ship such a lovely town," said has denied penning a letter that disgruntled township resident honored those organizations in the residents." Klinger said. Township Committeeman Arthur R. represented himself to Scotland prompted township interest in the community who have made an effort The awards were presented to the Kondrup. Yard officials as the department's matter. Elisabeth Novak, whose to create an aesthetic atmosphere, Hope Lutheran Church, Elton- Mayor Clare Farragher added legal adviser efforts to renew the liquor license serving to improve the quality of life Adeiphia Road: the Peerless Tube that she hoped the awards, which A letter on Loigman's stationary, for the Grand Cafe on Route 35 had for all township residents and em- Co.. Asbury Avenue: and the Central will become an on-going program, with a signature resembling bis, was been stalled by Loigman, com- ployees, according George J. Jersey Bank It Trust Co.. Route 33. will spur other companies la the addressed to a commander at plained to the Township Committee, LAWRENCE S. LOIGMAN Klinger. shade tree chairman. Also to five Route 9 firms: AT&T township to improve their Scotland Yard criticizing an officer he said. "The Inaugural awards of the Information Systems. Juniper properties. •2 The D«*ty Register U'IKI>A> JANUARV ?n ines Agency begins program to employ teen-agers during summer months
FREEHOLD — The Monmouth olds this summer. county and municipal officials for County Job Training Partnership Dune Shelton. deputy director of help yesterday at a special lunch- Agency is asking 11 of the county's JTPA. said 14- and 15-year-old largest municipalities to assist with youths are difficult to place because "The older kids do not have the the employment of 14- and 15-vear- of child labor laws, and asked same type of restrictions placed upon them," Shelton said "For instance, young teen-agers are lim- ited In the type of machinery they Discussion set on can use while working. They aren't allowed to work in an area where chemicals are used or stored. The laws, coupled with the fact that senior health care almost half of our applicants are In this age group, made if difficult to find work for everyone In the past." MANALAPAN - About 1.200 the elderly person seeking medical people are expected to attend the attention for symptoms of a stroke. JTPA's Summer Youth Employ- PASSING THE BOOK — James Jeffcoat of the the school's new reading program, looking on are Monmouth County Senior Citizen's According to the new criteria, ment and Training Program Dallas Cowboys, a former student at Cliffwood Michael Tarantola, left, Christopher DeCicco and Council meeting on changes in Keiserman said, unless stroke Is the subsidizes the hiring of young people Elementary School, Aberdeen, gives a pin to David Glen Giordano, all 10, Cottrice Pitts, 11, and Tina health care benefits for the elderly, official diagnosis, the doctor is between the ages of 14 and 21 with Bersch, 9, in recognition ol David's participation in Scott and Maureen O'Hagan, both 10. I to be held at 8 p.m. Thursday at the instructed to medicate instead of governmental and non-profit Institu- Covered Bridge adult retirement admitting the patient to a hospital as tions. community. a precautionary measure. The meeting is designed to inform Shelton Mid that in 1884, 1,408 Hazlet man charged in car theft "The criteria become even more senior citizens of federal funding youths applied for work through the severe as a person gets older," program. Out of this total, 689 were cuts in both medicare and medicaid. KEYPORT - A Hazlet man was Caldes at 1:37 a.m. When Caldes the theft when he discovered his car Keiserman said. "In the case of a 14 or 15 years old. She expects this and to answer their questions on arrested early Saturday and radioed headquarters to report the was missing from the parking lot of hernia, a person under the age of 75 year's totals to be about the same. what they can do to minimize the charged with reckless driving, arrest, police said, he learned that the Chowder Pot Restaurant, here, is admitted to a hospital for an drunken driving, possession of problems that may arise from the Last year, young teens were the 1982 Oldsmobile Flynn was where he had been dining, police operation if he is experiencing a stolen property and auto theft, existing situation employed in beautification projects driving had been stolen minutes said. substantial degree of discomfort. As police said. Each state has received a dif- for a person over the age of 75, an in Asbury Park and Neptune. JTPA before. Flynn was released on 83,000 ball Michael Flynn, 23, was stopped on ferent contract concerning the operation in the same circumstance is asking other municipalities to The owner of the car, Patrick pending a court appearance Wednes- Route 35 by Patrolman Robert change in benefits from the Health will not be covered by medicare follow suit with similar projects this Levalle, also of Hazlet, had reported day. Care Financial Administration di- unless the patient is in danger of a « summer. rector in Washington, according to life-threatening situation. I hate to David Keiserman, president of the see people dying and going blind According to George Callas, senior citizen's council. because they (HFCA) want to save JTPA director, municipal cooper- The Peer Review Organization. meaty." ation would be a great help in East Brunswick, a state branch of providing additional, urgently medicare, received a contract For a patient over 75. cataract which took effect Dec. 15. The new surgery is not covered under medi- HFCA guidelines were devised to care, he said, and the hospital needed job openings. save a portion of medicare money administrations themselves have "This could be the first real and avoid the costs of "unnecess- five days to review hospitalization in valuable step in good work ex- ary " operations for the elderly. the case of any emergency. perience for these kids," he said. According to Keiserman. the PRO Among invited guests to the "There seems to be a chronic has established criteria for the council meeting are Gov. Thomas H. problem employing minority youths extent of medicare coverage avail- Kean. Sens. Bill Bradley and Frank in this age category. But by provid- able to the elderly and. in some R. Lautenberg. and Rep. James J. ing employment, it helps to raise cases, the benefits named were Howard, all D-N.J., along with family-income levels, which is sore- discriminatory. Freehold Area Hospital adminis- ly needed in many cases." Keiserman gave as an example trators and doctors. Callas said that after reviewing last year's numbers, JTPA decided Red Bank Burger King robbed to ask the municipal governing bodies for their help. RED BANK - Police are looking Police do not know how the "I was very encouraged by the for two men in connection with suspects fled. enthusiasm of the municipal of- Friday night's armed robbery at One is described as a white male, ficials attending the luncheon," Burger King. Maple Avenue approximately 5 feet 8 inches, Callas said. "I expect excellent wearing a red windbreaker, blue results will eventually result." The men. one carrying a handgun, jeans and a blue-and-red ski mask. THIS YEAR'S RECIPIENTS — Major General Roosevelt; Vivienne McCoach, Holmdel; and entered the restaurant at 11:25 p.m. The other is described only as a The Summer Youth Program runs Paul A. Feyereisen, center, president ol the William C. Schroeder, Wayside. The annual awards and demanded money, police said. white male wearing a ski mask. for eight weeks, from July 1 through Monmouth Council, Boy Scouts of America, with were presented Saturday at Buck Smith's Res- The pair fled with an un- Sgt. Anthony Abbatemarco and August 23. Wages are paid through recipients of the Silver Beaver awards James C. taurant, East Keansburg. determined amount of cash, police Detective Mark Fitzgerald are In- JTPA Ewin, left. Holmdel; William A. Counterman, said. vestigating. Cyclist injured going to school
FAIR HAVEN - A borough girl driveway and failed to see Coleman, was injured by a car while bicycling police said. to school yesterday, police said. Coleman was taken to Riverview Medical Center, Red Bank, where Mary Roxanne Coleman. 8. of 28 she was treated and released for Parker Ave.. was struck by the car bruises on her shoulders and right of Judy C Foley at 8:15 am in front side. of Foley's home at 162 Fair Haven No charges have been filed, Road, police said according to Patrolman William M. Foley. 37, was pulling into her Acker, the investigating officer. COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TODAY MIDDLETOWN - Singles Again Inc. will have its weekly pre- MARLBORO - The Art Work of weekend dance and hot buffet at Merald Goldman, a member of the Uncroft Inn, Newman Springs Freehold Art Society, is on display Road. Orientation begins at S p.m., aiihewMarlboro ^unic'Pal Building, dancing at 9 p.m. All singles are 1979 Municipal Way and Wyncrest welcome. For further information. Road, through January Her works call Singles Again, Wall, include mixed media, drawings and collages. MARg L MARLBORO - Fossils of New THURSDA Y Jersey" is on exhibit at the MIDDLETOWN - Singles Again Marlboro Middle School Media will have its weekly pre-weekend Center. Route 520. through Feb. 1. dance at Uncroft Inn, Newman This free exhibit is on loan to the Springs Road, Lincroft, with music school from the New Jersey State and a hot buffet. Museum. Trenton, and is open to the Orientation is at 8 p.m., the dance public. at 9 p.m. All singles are welcome. COLTS NECK - The Colts Neck Recreation Committee is offering a FRIDAY weekly recreational program for children three to five years old at HOLMDEL - Dr Kirk Kerensky the Colts Neck Reformed Church,, will give a slide-lecture on "The Route 537. each Tuesday through Newborn" at 8 p.m. at the Bayshore March 5. from 10 to 11 a.m. Community Hospital for the Mon- Activities include pre-school drama, mouUl Ar*a ASPO/Lamaze. The music, games and social inter- non-profit organization provides in- action. To register and for further formation and support to expectant information, contact the Colts Neck and "*w parents. For further infor- 1 0 Township Hall. Cedar Drive. SI— • ' '— —". —'-'• t "Tjv* v mmr^^ .? Bat*v organizatioVI Rei n at P.O. Box 171. Keyport. HOLMDEL - The Holmdel His- torical Society will sponsor a cov- ered dish supper at 7 p.m. in the SATURDAY Holmdel Firehouse. A slide show HOLMDEL - The All-Shore Con- featuring Holmdel homes and cert, with a 145-voice choir, will events will follow. For information, perform at 8 p.m. at Holmdel High contact Gloria Dargue, president, or School. Tickets are available at the Peggy Lasky. door. MANALAPAN - Manalapan Parks and Recreation Is conducting registration for spring soccer, foot- TOMORROW ball and cheerleading programs FREEHOLD - Leigh Garfield from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Pine Brook will conduct group therapy sessions School in the hallway outside the old for women with weight control gym. For further information, con- mm and/or eating problems, at her tact the Parks and Recreation office. 35 Court St The sessions will °"lce' ll° Route 522 and Taylors begin tonight from 7:30 to • p.m., ' and tomorrow from 1 to 2:30 p.m. FARMINGDALE - A doll show An interview U required prior to and sale will be in the Howell High joining the group. For further School cafeteria, Squankum Yellow Information or for an interview, Brook Road, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. contact the office. FREEHOLD - Singles Again Inc. MONDAY will have a dance every Wednesday MIDDLETOWN - Free high at the Cinnamon Tree Lounge of the bloolood pressure screeningi s ffor per Freehold Hotel. Route 1 sons 18 to M yean of age will be Orientation if at«. with the dance offered 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at The Shitwsbury/the Market Place/Home 35 j at I p.m. All singles are Commons, Brookdale Community Ate Altex**. Qrwwmmson, E*K irunw»tcfc, Emenon, FairMd, OW Bridge Springfield, NJ, to attend College. Uncroft. Great Neck. New CKy White Plain, Nf and Cmktr Squm,M JANUARY 29. 198S Sports The Drily Reg*** B3 Poll still Georgetown stopped has CBA in second straight as best SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - Dwayne and the teams played without a score from Washington hit on a 15-foot jump shot with then until Washington's dramatic basket Cardinal Hayes of the Bronx ended • aaai eight seconds left to put Syracuse in front COLLEGE put Syracuse in front 64-63. Christian Brothers Academy's H-game K^^ • I and sank a free throw four seconds later Syracuse is 13-3 overall and 5-3 in the win streak Saturday night, but that M^P as the ninth-ranked Orangemen squeexed BASKETBALL league. setback didn't have any effect on The •*» by Nq. 2 Georgetown 6543 last night in Big Georgetown. 18-2 and 7-2, led by up to Dally Register's weekly Top 10 basket- East Conference basketball. Ewing's layup tied the score 6040, and his nine points in the first half at 30-21 but ball poll. Georgetown, which had its winning free throw had the double effect of sending Syracuse made up the deficit in the last The Colts (13-1) are Just as firmly streak snapped at 29 games by St. John's 7-foot Rony Seikaly of Syracuse to the 4:09 for a 34-34 halftime score. entrenched at the No. 1 spot as they have Saturday, earlier Monday night lost the bench with his fifth personal foul. Washington finished with 11 points for been all season in the poll which includes No. 1 ranking It had held since the However, Syracuse's Rafael Addisdn, the Orangemen, while the Hoyas' BUI all games played through Saturday. preseason. the game's leading scorer with 26 points, Martin contributed 15 points and Michael CBA routed No. S Freehold Township, The Hoyas trailed Syracuse for more sank two free throws 18 seconds later to Jackson 10. 81-67, last Tuesday" In what was supposed than IS minutes of the second half before give Syracuse the edge again. It was the first time in 81 games that to be key Shore Conference "A" North finally regaining the lead with 3:07 to play Ewlng, a 21-point scorer, responded Georgetown, the defending NCAA cham- test and edged out Parochial "B" power on a three-point play by Patrick Ewing. with a pair of free throwrat the 1:54 mark pion, has lost two straight games. St. Peter's o( New Brunswick, 70-78 Thursday. CBA, 7-0 in the "A" North, faces another of its so-called challengers tonight at No. 8 Middletown South. The Hawks' 'Cardiac Kids' hope Eagles are in second place in the "A" Division North with a 6-1 mark. The Colts will be the heavy favorites since they easily beat the Eagles, 50-17, in its first meeting, but Middletown LEVITATION — Middletown Souths to accentuate the positive South (9-7) has improved since that Scofl Vaka (dark jersey) goes up with game and could make things interesting Midd|0lown North's Jim Gotii to BY DAVE SALTER this time around. Middletown also has defend , , ,h(J |a|ter Vaka and WEST LONG BRANCH - Although ""liTSSr STE coach Tom *• Eagle? have rnovecI ,n,c, The winning at the butter can give a coach Carpenter have won seven In a row Registers Top 10 poll. The Eagles gray hair and heart problems, the positive since a 64-56 overtime setback to St. face No. 1 CBA tonight. aspects may outwefgh the disadvantages Rose. Included in the wins were victories sasaaaBaaaBMsafaaaBBSBsraaaaBaaaBisaB in the long run. Monmouth College won In of Neptune and Freehold Township. n/W/O TAD -in overtime Saturday night which added to "We felt that the inexperience of our bUYb IUr 1U the list of last-minute contests for the players hurt us early," Carpenter said. ~~~~~^~~~ Hawks. Fortuntely, Monmouth has been "It took time getting use to a new on the top side of most of the decisions. system. We've been using a press- 1. CBA (13-1) To date, the Hawks have gone to the uredefense and different types of traps 1 Long Branch (1t-2> wire with St. Francis of N.Y., Brooklyn, and it took a while to get organized. 3. Asbury Park (It-!) lona, Wagner, Long Island University, "Our younger players have come 4. Rumswt-Fair Havea (1M) Hofstra and St. Francis of P.A. Monmouth along." he Mid. "And our seniors have 5. Freehold Twp (U-S) has won five of the seven barn-burners, played well." . 6. Red Bank Reg (1M> with a three-point loss to 15-1 lona and a Joe Benbrook, a 6-6 senior, Is the 7. Freehold Ul-2) two-point loss to Wagner the only leading scorer (13 ppg) and rebounder 8. Middletown Sooth (f-7> blemishes for the Cardiac Kids. with nine a game. Senior Tim Fogarty is I. Mater Del
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A car you can trust. Automobile. The inspection report stays with the ve- You earned it. Ofiicial Licensed DealerFor Thlt Area STRAUB MOTORS, INC STRAUB LINCOLN-MERCURY INC Buick-Renalt-Jeep Mercury-Lincoln-Continental Highway 35 at Parkway Interchange 117, Keyport 264-4000 264-8500 B4 The Daily Register UIESDAV IANUARY ?g 19a Eagles Cummings hits 32 defeat to power Knicks NEW YORK (AP) - Pat Cummings •cored a career-high 31 points and Joined Trenton with Botch Carter to lead a decisive M-17 NBA second-quarter bunt that lifted the New TRENTON - Second-ranked Middle- York Knicks to • 117-91 National Basket town South High School fought off a strong ball Association victory over the Los baskets by Rodney McCray. challenge from Trenton Central to score Angeles Clippers last night. Houston led for most of the second a 6541 girls basketball triumph over the The victory was the fourth straight for period and forged its biggest lead for the Tornadoes yesterday. New York, ah at home, while the Clippers period, 4640, with 2:12 left. lost their fourth consecutive game. A pair of baskets by Buck Williams Carter, who was only l-for-13 from the rallied the Nets to a 48-48 tie at the half. field in the last three games, hit six Olajuwon came to life in the third GIRLS consecutive shots in the first 4:55 of the period, pouring in 11 points as the the BASKETBALL second period as the Knicks erased a 28-22 Rockets opened up a 13-polnt lead with Los Angeles lead. 3:24 left in the period. Cummings, whose previous high was 30 Otis Birdsong and Kelvin Ransey each "We played with composure and never points while be was with the Dallas pitched In six points In the final three lost our cool.'' Middletown coach John Mavericks, then scored eight points in the minutes for New Jersey to cut Houston's Ahem said "We weren't that familiar next five minutes to help New York take lead to 80-72 going into the final period. with Trenton, but we know that they lost a $8-45 lead with 1:22 remaining in the The Rockets led 95-93 with 1} seconds to some good teams like Washington half. left to play when Ofajuwon lept to block Township and Notre Dame." New York, now 17-2», held the Clippers Mike Gminski's 20-foot Jump shot and The Eagles took an 18-11 first quarter to 17 points in the third quarter while ensured the Rockets' victory. lead, but Trenton came on strong in the Cummings scored eight more to pace the Dallas HI, Philadelphia 101 second quarter with a 23-12 spurt to take Knicks to an 88-06 margin at the end of the DALLAS — Mark Aguirre scored a a 34-30 halftime lead. period. career-high 49 points and the Dallas "They had two talented girls (Tonya Carter finished with 20 points while Mavericks held on to nip the Philadelphia Grant and Dale Hodges) that hurt us." Louis Orr added 16 for New York. Derek 76ers 111-109 last night. Ahern said "In the third quarter we Smith led Los Angeles with 27 points and Aguirre hit 17 of 25 shots from the field changed to a triangle and two from a 2-3 James Donaldson added 17. and 13 of 19 free throws to surpass his old zone and that helped us a bit." Houston (7, New Jersey 13 career-high mark of 46 points. The Eagles went in front late in the HOUSTON - Akeem Olajuwon scored The Mavs built a 13-point lead in the third quarter and then held off a late 22 points and blocked a last-minute shot to second half only to see the 76ers tie the Trenton threat in the fourth quarter. spark the Houston Rockets to a victory game 98-all with 4:36 to play behind Julius "Tracey Cahill hit four free throws for over the New Jersey Nets. Erving and Moses Malone. us in the quarter. ' Ahern said. "They The victory made Houston Coach BUI Aguirre scored eight points in the final were pressure throws because the crowd Fitch the sixth coach in NBA history to three minutes while Brad Davis made was making a lot of noise." reap 600 regular season wins. Houston three free throws and Derek Harper hit a Andrea Ashuck poured in 27 points and upped its record to 25-20. while the Nets pair in the last 50 seconds. grabbed 19 rebounds for the Eagles (15-1). slipped to 20-25. Philadelphia's Maurice Cheeks missed Cahill followed with 17. AaaocMadPtaaaalMo New Jersey started out hot, Jumping a 25-foot Jump shot with a second to play Grant led all of the scorers with 32 and BROKEN FAST BREAK — New Jersey Nets Buck Williams and Houston Rockets ahead 14-4 at 8:17 in the first quarter. But as the Mavs escaped with their second Hodges added 21. forward Ralph Sampson eye a loose ball alter Williams lost control as he was driving the Rockets battled back, tying the game victory ever over the 76ers against eight Middletown N. 48, Brick 37 towards the basket in first period action last night at the Summit. 22-22 with 54 seconds left after a pair of losses. BRICK — Karen Bruen scored 10 first- half points as the Lady Lions jumped out to a 27-9 halftime advantage in route of the Dragons Mary McCann added a dozen Brick tops points as North raised its record to 6-8. Brick s top player. Kim McCormick picked up three quick fouls in the first quarter and was held to just nine points Lions, 66-63 Mary Stalhngs led the Dragons with 10 MIDDLETOWN - Brick Township points and Chris Ward added 11 rebounds broke a 39-39 tie late in the third quarter as Brick fell to 4-9 _^^^^^ last night, and never trailed to defeat Middletown North. 6643. in non-con- SCHOLASTIC ference high school basketball. SCHEDULE BOYS TODAY •oyi HXtl BASKETBALL Sno'B ^eg *t Pom Beacn a«a darn Htg at St OOM
Maw Dw «t M«-VV MUo$of> Man«sau«^ at Po"i Boio Brick 15-91 moved out to a 31-23 fl B CalfOI.C II St JOftn V.«nn«y halftime lead before the Lions (4-11) tied -o««n at RaMai the game at 39. but they could never go ai Ocean T ahead n a) H«v«n Rag CBA at Midawown Sour* Bob Kroning scored 22 points for Brick. Chad McCallum had 21 for the Lions. g sac'-"* at Malawi" Rag «e«rM>n'8 at Kcypol Freeehold SI. Point Beach 31 Olria Baih.lb.il FREEHOLD - Freehold 112-2) broke °Q"" BMC at Sno»« R»9 5! aow r. R*d Btn* rtg away from a 2-2 tie with a 14-2 spurt and M D routed the Garnet Culls to stay unbeaten °O'"! Bo'o at ManaiQuan •• *e a! Ra"tan (8-0) in the "C" Division North. C-Mno,3 *«c a> Manaiapan Elis Billingsley and Lee Perry both Octa" '*D >t Long B>ancn 5' -on^ uRB Camoi'C scored IS for the Colonials and Scott q_-«jp fai' navan at Moimda' Conover added 13. Mv'to'c at M'Odieio*" Nof> Asbu'f Pa** at Mo"-ir»outri Rtg Matawa- *eg ai Naotu"* Wall 69, T.R. East 56 WALL — Kevin Giles scored 36 points and Dan Megill added 15 as Wall rolled past Toms River East. WRESTING The Crimson Knights (5-10) never trailed in the game. They led. 18-11, after SUMMARIES the first quarter and TRE ever got closer than five the rest of the game. SORRY STATE — Manalapan's Seth Waller, right, has during their 107-pound match last night. Waller went on to Uanalapan «, FraohoU T«p. It Randy Petrick scored 21 for TRE (5-8). Freehold Township's kevin Klinger all bent out of shape a 13-0 victory over his Patriot toe. 100 - ST«V« Rivtrs |M| d Kan Pillow 5-2 107 - Sath Aaiittr (Mi md, - Kavtn Kllngar 13-0 114 — Shawn Qlaniar (F) 0 Todd Thompson 7-2 121 - Dav* Sumrrwi (Fl rj Fr»M) RoDswio 6-3 128 - Kaitn Faiano (F> d Jell Oroea 6-5 34 - Scon Ki«n |F) d Turks help lead Manalapan Monmouth will face 40 — Stave Morano (F) d . John CabatMro ft-0 47 — Mika Liguori |M> md Ralph Quadatfno 26-4 Tom Staiaon (F> d Tom UcManon ft-2 MANALAPAN - The Turk borthers, Man GuOailn iM| p Jack WlttitUndoay U Mitch and Russ, each recorded late bout 87 - MUCH Turk (Ml p. K«v> wacntt 3N victories which sparked Manalapan past RUM Turk (M) d Kami Muliar «V3 WRESTLING _ Upsala team tonight K»ypori 17. Monmoutr. Itof. 24 Freehold Township in a non-conference m Kmd (Ki p Dan Shanlian 2 34 wrestling match last night. (continued) bench." Htmy Marcn«r{' (Mi won 6y torttri Chris VanDinten remains sidelined with Mitch, competing at the 187 pound class, Key port 37, Monmouth Reg-.-—/^ We're concerned with them, as we are 2t - Sun Bama IMi D Rich LftQuna 3 56 a foot injury, Ramon Rodriguez did 2B pinned Manalapan's Ken Wachel at 3:36 KEYPORT - Keyport dominated the - BIH Eculy" IK) rr\a Tha/i Hooki 100 with all our opponents," Kornegay con- practice yesterday but is still battling the 34 Dan Wartman 14-4 while Russ fashioned a 6-3 decision against middle weights to trim Monmouth Re- tinued. "They went to the finals of the 40 - Jim Scon (Ki «j L*a PippM 16-4 flu and Vince Howard and James Hinnant 147 Keith Muller. The victory upped the gional in "C" North wrestling. NCAA tournament last year and are very - MiNa Kind IK) d Booby MurHr 11-10 are academically Ineligible for the 157 - Efl S'T'1'^ (Ml D Irving Wanng 2 37 Braves seasonal mark to 7-2 and 5-1 in the Jim Kind (100), Bob Kind (169) and talented. They are a Division III team • 69 - BOD K.na iKi Q Rich var*»a 3 25 semester. Senior leaders Rich Pass and "A" North. Fred Shelasky (187) had pins for Keyport playing with Division I athletes. They are 187 - Frad Straiaatty IKI p Grtg Clarh 2 46 Karl Towns also did not practice yester- - Dan MClnnaa (Ml 0 John KokxU«t 3 35 Also recording victories for the winners (4-4) which upped its conference record to a very confident team because they 4 (3-ii MB l«-i day, but are expected to play tonight. were Steve Rivera (100), Seth Waller 3-1. always have a good record and are (107), Mike Liguori (147) and Matt Sean Barna (121) and Ed Smith (157) nationally ranked. But our kids are Gudaitis (169). had the pins for Monmouth (1-6-1). playing very well and are playing with a BOYS BOXSCORES 1st of confidence. We're Just looking RBC sets benefit forward to the game and to playing our RED BANK - The Red Bank Catholic type of ballgame." girls basketball team will play host to St. »• |H) Uag.li 7 i 15 G'W 14 S X WMon 1 0 2. HicU 0 3 3. Committee will seed Monmouth is also plagued with a John Vianney tonight. The varsity game Bufoogis 0 0 0 G'dora 4 5 13 TOTALS 26 17 M shortage of players, which is nothing new, wil begin at 6:45. Tom. Rl»ar laat (M) Ruhnh* 0 4 4 P«inc- 7 7 21. Fontm«ll« 4 3 11. To««y 3 but the Hawks have played well under All proceeds will be donated to the 0 6. Wl'kmin 4 4 1? Gooda" 1 0 2 TOTALS 19 IS M adversity and Kornegay hopes the trend "Renee Kelster Fund." Renee played »•• 1» II II It - M continues. "I think it's a combination of basketball at McCorristin High School tut 11 It IT 11 - : SC playoff teams things," Komegay explained. "I said at until she was paralyzed in an accident last trick T«p. IH) NEPTUNE - The Shore Conference the beginning of the year that our depth September. The game will be part of a Kroni«g 6 6 22 W«IH«t I 9 11 D.m*co 2 1 5 tMCh 3 1 will automatically qualify but can be tripleheader. The freshman game will 7. Finn 6 113. Spill* ' 0 2 Gowno 3 0 6 TOTALS 24 II basketball seeding committee for the boys seeded anywhere from first to 16th. would be a factor. So far, when someone 66 and girls basketball playoffs will be has gone down, someone else has stepped start at 3:45 p.m. followed by the junior First round of the playoffs will be Feb. varsity at 5:15. Ptattn. 2 3 1 PtiwO < 1. HcCaaum 10 I 21 Oo» 3 5 11. conducted on Feb. 14 at Cronin's Res- 16 at the home court of the higher seeded in and done the job. Also, the team has Otfnino 0 2 2. K«Mt»r 1 0 2 Cognut 5 4 14 MictwMki 2 1 risen to the occasion and it Is important The price for an adult ticket includes 9 TOTALS 23 19 63 taurant, Rt. 66 in Neptune at 8 p.m. team. The quarterfinals will be held Feb. •«« It It II II - H A coach from each boys and girls 18 at the home court of the higher-seeded for us to feel confident when we go to the free admission to one boys or one girls HIM. Norm it it ii n - a division will be -represented at theteam. basketball game. PMMN (II) Ba.ngHay 6 3 15. C«rguilo 204 IN P*ny3 5 11. Conowvr meeting. A boys and girls semifinal game will be 5 3 13 Huicnano" 1 3 I, Mlyn 0 I I. S»* 2 0 4. OaM 1 The committee will select 16 teams for held at Brick Memorial High School both 0 2. OConra i 0 2. S*iiW 1 2 4 TOTALS 22 17 61 both the boys and girls playoffs. All Polnl Baach (11) Feb 20 and 21. CBA still on top in poll Wiamcoax 3 4 '0. »•»" 1 3 5 Boniulali 1 0 2. Luis 0 conference champions and co-champions The championship games will be played 0 0. KaMy 2 0 1. O flamy 2 1 1. M*>« I 3 i TOTALS 10 11 at Brick Memorial Feb. 23. The girls game (continued) starters is capable of scoring 20 points ,, II It 1» It - §1 is set for 1 p.m. and the boys title game probably not play tonight. Jeff Johnson, in a game." 4 It IS 4 — II Track officials will be played at 2:30. who started last year, has replaced The next six teams in this week's Top The boys committee includes Dave Fogarty. Johnson had been making key 10 remain the same as last week. Warner of Freehold Twp. ("A" North), contributions this year coming off the Long Branch outlasted Red Bank meeting slated Jack Brace of foms River East ("A" bench. Catholic in an overtime thriller Friday GIRLS BOXSCORES South), Jim Carrigan of St. John Vianney f> The other starters tonight will be 5-11 and stays ID second place. They are tied RED BANK - Anyone iit(«<*le«I In ("B North), SUve Gcpp of Monsignor sophomore Jeff Daiker (11 ppg). 64 with No 3 Asbury Park in the "B" North becoming a certified track and field Donovan ("B" South), AI Longo of Junior Scott Vaka and either Keith Hooks race with (-1 records. Asbury Park, 1 2 • SOVWKI 4 1 10. S Manx 0 I I, Aalucb 10 official is urged to contact Jack Rafter at Holmdel ( "C " North) and Jack Kuhnert of (64) or Mike King <6-2to). however, still has big "B " North games 17. FlamanMum 2 2 « TOTAIS 23 It tS Red Bank Catholic High School during the Freehold ("C South). CBA will creat a lot of problems for left with Red Bank Catholic Friday and 452Mic»t ' 2 4. MX** 9 3 21. Tn™aa day, or call 229-5287 after 7 p.m. Coaches on the girls committee are Ken Long Branch Feb. 12. 10 2 "am tfOMi 1 0 2 TOTALS » I II . the Eagles. Ha* II 11 II » - U Rafter is in charge of all Shore cadets ODonnell of Neptune ("A" North), Kathy "We hope to limit them to one shot," ^Z, ii a • it - ti wishing to become certified. Dates of the Leslie of Southern ("A" South), Ed Jonas Carpenter said. "But they are tough on Rumson-Fair Haven Regional (12-1) first four meetings will be Feb. 14 and 28, of Red Bank Catholic ("B" North), Bob the boards and play a tough 1-3-1 zone. holds onto fourth, followed by Freehold M 14)61 Township (11-3), Red Bank Regional 3 3 0 B»u4v> 7 3 17. McCam 4 4 12. Merrota I and March 14 and 28 at the St. James Ward of Wall ( "B " South). Kevin Attrige "We have to control the tempo," be 0 2 2. KaMrer 1 1 3. TOTALS 16 16 4t faculty lounge. They will get begin at 7:30 of Mater Dei ("C" North) and Sweeney said. "We won't necessarily hold the UO-4) and Freehold. 4 Uatjff 1 0 ? Ward 1 0 2. McConnck 4 1 p.m. McKennan of Manchester ("C" South). ball, but we will look for the good shot. 2 rSnga 5 0 10. 2 I 6. TOTALS Middletown South replaces Mater Dai i. ami ii- ' Any official wishing to become certified Ocean Township girls basketball coach "(Joe) Paterno and (John) Crotty are in eighth place while Mater Dal slips ID JMM«t...lllltl-« • 4721 - 17 should attend four of six meetings, > Ron Tniex is the chairman of the their best scorers," he said. "But CBA ninth. St. John Vianney (8-6) rounds ott including the ones mentioned above. committee. is balanced and every one of their the Top 10. I UESDA* JANUARY 29. 19B5 TIlC Daily Wl HMBrT B5 Paris takes Clapp wins early lead two events in Masters in 'Sweeps' SHREWSBURY - John Parii of Keaniburg took the early lead in the Urd Annual Mailers Bowling Tourney RED BANK — Dan Clapp of the Long Branch Ice which drew a field of US participants over the weekend Boat and Yacht Club won two events in the National at Red Bank Lanet. Sweepstakes Ice Boat Regatta over the weekend on After the final aquad turned in their qualifying scores, the Navesink River. the cut was set at 567. That figure reduced the field to Clapp won the Skeeter event with his boat 72 who will be eligible to bowl in the second qualifying "Destiny" and then captured the large "A" boat race round on Saturday at 7 p.m. Prom this group the top with his "Imp". Hia crew in the "A" race was BUI IS by total pintail of the two qualifying rounds will McHeffey. Both are from Little Silver. advance to the finals scheduled for Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Skippers from the host North Shrewsbury Ice Boat Paris fired games of 221-278-244 to lead the qualifiers and Yacht Club won the other races. They were: Bill with a 743 series. There were 29 keglers who shot 600, Connell (DN's), George Fournier (Yankee), Bob or better, to hold the advantage of making it to the Furnbak (Arrows) and John Mulvihill ("C" finals. Skeeters). . Frank Zechman, of Middletown, the defending The regatta attracted 41 boats and ice conditions Masters champion, is seeded into the finals and will be were adequate. Strong winds Saturday forced thrust into head-to-head match play in an effort toretai n postponement of the "A" races, but the winds died his bowling crown this coming Sunday. down yesterday and a full schedule of races were A complete listing follows of all those eligible to held. return to bowl this coming Saturday. Their names and qualifying scores are: John Paris (743) - Arthur Wombough (686) - Bob Bazydlo (667) - Terry Miranda(667) - Armand Federici ICEBOAT Jr. ((41) - John Avella (641) - Thomas Meli (638) - Don Griffith (635) - Joseph Mazza (632) - Frank RESULTS Mermini (631) - John Miekoski (631) - Joseph Koeppel (628) - Kevin Parker (626) - Mark Fiorlllo (625) - Steve Emanuele (625) - Rick Schram (622) - Walt Salmon National Sweepstakes Regatta (611) - Edward Schulz (620) - James Stiles (615) - John At North Shrewsbury IBYC MagnotU (613) - Parker Bonn III (612) - John Moon DNs (612) - Nick Straniero (611) - Mike Devino (607) - Tony 1. Dan Connell (North Shrewsbury IBYC), 2. John Fariello (605) - Mike Cannizzaro (604) - Reg Berkley Larson (NSIBYC), 3. Tony Mancini (Long Branch (603) - Edward Shy (602) - Tom MarchetU (600). IBYC), 4. Henry Miltenberger (NSIBYC) Bill Deliman (5W) - Barry Shambaugh (5«8) - Yankees George Zulin (595) - Paul Albrecht, Jr. (5(1) - Ernest 1. George Fournier (NSIBYC), 2. Al Walthers Barraud (591) - Doug Kenner (591) - Joe Tyler (591) (Lake Hapatcong), 3. George Nielsen - Ernest Callahan (591) - Ron Wayde (590) - Tom Ross Arrows (589) - Ralph Cintron (567) - Dave Sharkey, Sr (587) 1. Bob Furnbak (NSIBYC) - Jimmy Smith (586) - William Dillon (586) - Gary Imbro (585) - James Murphy (584) - Mike Lukosius Skeeters (562) - Nick Merli (580) - Bob Serbe (580) - William 1. Destiny (Dan Clapp, Long Branch IBYC), 2. Steinbach (579) - Steven Kiessling (579) - Donald Whisper 2 (Jim Irwin (Irwin's Yacht Works) Corcione (579). "A" Boats Thomas Kalb (578) - Rich Squeo, Sr. (577) - Mike 1. Imp (Dan Clapp and Bill McHeffey, Long Uttleford (577) - James Parker (577) - John Savage Branch IBYC), 2. Snowflake (Bill and Howard (576) - John Brown (576) - Antonio Esposito (575 - Marsh, Long Branch IBYC), 3. Ruth (Dick Disbrow, Mark Homowitz (574) - Hank von Saspe (573) - William NSIBYC). Also ran: Say When, Blizzard, Phantom, Tanko (573) - Walter Boyd (572) - William Bordner nagielar photo ay Don Ut»» Ingenue. (570) - Pete Osmulsi (570) - John Jennings (560) - WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH ... Ice- Joseph Goertz (5(9) - Sal DiTrapani (568) - Thomas bit too much snow on the surface took its toll. boaters have to endure a great deal ... cold The pilot wound up out of the craft and on the "C" Skeeters Blythe (568) - John Spottke (568) - Lloyd Burlew (5(7) 1. John Mulvihill (NSIBYC) - David Luther, Jr. (567) - David Michaud (567). winds, thin ice ... but here's a case where a little cool, cool solid Navesink. LUKE FORREST Red Bank 'Y' boys win; girls are defeated backstroke and 10th in the free style event. PRINCETON - The Red Bank YMCA boys and girls Five girls recorded double wins, including Kim meet. Imbemba was second overall in the age group for swimming teams competed against Princeton last Castellanos, Tina Skokus, PAtty Pekarsky, Trish the meet. Cofone continued to do well as he won four medals in the Valley Gator Sprint Spectacular. He was second weekend, and the boys squad evened its record at 3-3 Considine and Jo Lee. Cofone also set a team record in the same meet. He was clocked in 1:21:37 in the 10-and-under 100-meter in the breaststroke event and had thirds in the butterfly, by defeating Princeton easily, 118-72. The girls team Castellanos won the 12-and-under 200-meter individ- freestyle and 100-meter Individual medley events. dropped to 3-3, losing to Princeton by a slim 97-93 ual medley in addition to the relay with Skokus, breast stroke. Cofone also set a personal best in a fourth-place finish in the 100-meter butterfly Skokus captured a second in the ll-and-under Kathleen Kohl and Jenna Holthusen. In addition to the breaststroke. ! boys squad had 12 first-place finishers, paced by (1:20:49)and also took fifth in the free style race. relay win, Skokus won the 11-12 50-meter breaststroke. Red Bank's youngest swimmer, Craig Walsh, took triple winners Chris Cofone, Brad Felix, Gene Cofone and Andrew Bennett captured the third-place Pekarsky won the 10-andunder breaststroke and the third place in the 6-and-under backstroke and freestyle Imbemba, and Will Cummins. Cofone won the 10 and trophy in the St. Nick Sprint in Westfield. Cofone set relay with Mary Beth Cahill, Hillary Matchett and events. Maria Bruno was third in the 7-and-under under 50-meter freestyle and breaststroke and then two meet records in the 10-andunder age group, Laura Kelly. Considine captured the 13-14 100-meter backstroke and fourth in the butterfly. Merom Mammen moved up an age group to be a member of the victorious winning the 50-meter breast stroke and butterfly races. butterflyand the relay along with Quinn Kennedy, Lee was fifth in the 8-and-under freestyle and Hillary medley relay team that included Marshall Branch, He also took third in the freestyle and backstroke and Megan Briggs. In addition toth e relay, Lee won the Matchett did a personal best in the 10-and-under Felix and Jim Graff. events. Bennett was third in the 8-and-under 25-meter 13-14 100-meter breaststroke Colleen O'Boyle took the individual medley, earning a fifth-place medal. In addition toth e medley win, Felix also captured the 8-and-under 25-meter backstroke and Juliet Chin won breaststroke, sixth in the butterfly, ninth in the 200-meter individual medley and the 50-meter the eight-and-under 25-meter breaststroke. breaststroke. Imbemba won the 13-14 100-meter In another recent competition, Heidi Hertler qualified butterfly, breaststroke and took part in the winning for the Nationals in the 50-meter freestyle with a time relay team that included Erik Frlcker, George of 26.0. The National competition will be held in New coach of Colts says McCurrach and Wyatt Ulrich Cummins won the 13-17 Orlando, Fla. in April. 200-meter individual medley, the 15-17 100-meter Imbemba and Cofone excelled in the Northern Jersey breaststroke and aided the winning relay of Mike Invitational at Bergen County College. Imbemba added Anderton, Scott Schumann and Scott Felix. another event to his Nationals entries by bettering his quarterback is top priority Schumann was alto an Individual winner in the 100- team record in the 200-meter backstroke with a time meter butterfly while Fricker captured the 100-meter of 2:08:86. He also bettered his team record by backstroke. Devin O'Boyle won the 10-andunder qualifying in the 13-14 200-meter individual medley, INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Settling the muddled Dowhower, 41, takes command of a team that was backstroke and was a member of the winning relay being clocked in 2:05:59. Imbemba went on tose t two quarterback situation of the Indianapolis Colts is a top 28th in the league in passing. The 239 points scored by team with Chris DeNoia, Ken Krista and Shawn more team records in the 100-meter breaststroke priority of Rod Dowhower, who was named coach of the Indianapolis was also the least in the league, and only Torbert. Chris Kelly won the 25-meter butterfly in the (1:06:72) and the 200-meter freestyle (1:56:02). National Football League team yesterday. two teams had fewer touchdowns. 8-and-under age group. Imbemba holds nine of 12 team records in the age "I want to go into the season with the quarterback Mike Pagel, who said earlier he wanted to be traded, Robin Snyder was the highlight of the girls meet as group, as well as two open records and two relay spot settled," said Dowhower after the news conference saw the most action at quarterback. The three-year she qualified for the YMCA Nationals in the 100-meter records. Imbemba placed second in the 100-meter where his selection was announced. veteran started the first seven games and nine of 16 as breaststroke with a time of 1:13:42. backstroke and sixth in the 100-meter butterfly in the The former St. Louis offensive coordinator coach Indianapolis compiled a 4-12 record. Mark Herrmann succeeds Frank Kush, who resigned the week before the started two games and Art Schlichter had the other five final game of the regular season to become head coach starts. of Arizona in the United States Football League. "I know the Colts used three quarterbacks last "In terms of my philosophy, the players are the focal season," said Dowhower. "I want them to know that all point. I look at myself as a teacher," said Dowhower, MEADOWLANDS three have a shot at the job and that there is no No. who owner Robert Irsay said was the only man offered 1 at this point. It all depends on how hard they want the job. lei: Paea, M,***, Oaf, 4 Farm Rebound (Campbell 8-2 6 Smooth Dava (Qaguardl) 3-1 to work, how their adapt to my plans and how they take Dowhower received a five-year contract, but the 1 Maaw Fane {Randan) 10-1 5 Snady Rrcci (Campbell) 6 1 9 Energlee (Lancaalar) 4-1 2 Baccnua Loben (WebMer) 4-1 6 J Ja Bermont (Webster) 10-1 10 J Fox (Caaa) 10-1 directions." terms were not disclosed. 3 Our Deny Bread (Loonay) S-1 7 Oeorga Royal (O'Donnall) 11-1 BUI: Peoe. 18.000. CM*. 4 Skip Anon (Coftaio) 11-1 8 AatonHhing Qrrt (Rankm) 19-1 1 BMB (L) (Collaio) 4-1 8 Flying A ( 0• > 1 a ) 9 Accordion (No Drivel) .3-1 2 Domlnalor (Pou 1 i n ) 9-26 Coneervatrve IDeCampk)) *-1 10 Shoo* Magic ISconone) .4-1 8-13 Echo Judga (Ooherly) 8-1 7 Bobby Oiark (CeNahan) 18-1 ark: Fee*, ea.oet 4 Speed « light IManrl) 19-1 8 French Onion Soup (Scoraone) 20-1 1 Loughenure (Campbell) ... .8,1 5 The Barrier (inAplce) . 11-1 Neptune tops pack 9 Beau Coup (Fewcett) *-1 1 Keyejone Shore (CampbaH) .3-1 6 Woodhin Sundance (LeBlanc) 3-1 10 J Ja Prune Time lADbaMo) 8-1 3 Welch" Scarlet (Davit) 10-1 7 Edgewood Odeavar (O'Donnell) ... 10-1 Mho. Ml 4 Ruddmglon Tipper (Qnmour) 11-1 6 EaMn Mlkay (No Orrvar) e-i (continued) game. Mary Dunham is averaging eight points a game I lead Oreeaer iBaldacnino) 16-1 5 Brokera Dream (Morel) 16-1 9 Sly Hanover (DtPtnlo) . 121 "Nine of our 12 wins have been against ranked while Geri Ann Boyle has a seven-point average. Other 1 Capavan (Donany) 10-1 8 (Wlgene Ma (Mornal 20-1 10 Hleway Bandit (King) : 8-1 3 Rait Area (Tullol (-1 7 stormy Puraurt (Caaa) .. 4-1 6*: fMa, I1D.0M teams," St. Rose coach Mike Robertson said. St. Rose key players are Kara O'Brien, Chrissie Nappo and 4 Ragal Amat (Mown) 10-1 8 Fly By Llghl (Laudan) .. 8-1 1 OH Streak (WaUimgion) .. 18-1 had won six of seven games since a 48-35 setback to Red Barbara Paterno. 5 Hal Trick Floyd IGagiiarrJi) 9 2 9 Jade Bunny iGagkerdil 11-1 2 Prince ol Ctuba (Baachy) .... 10-1 8 Croaaroad Wmdrmr (Slannleo) T-* 10 Sperkkng Burgundy |No Drivar) H 3 Oo BQ (Davia) 7-2 Bank Catholic before losing to unbeaten Notre Dame of Long Branch moved into a tie for first place with Red 7 Reggie Slue Chip (0 Donna 11) •k: TM, ***,*•• 4 Shewn rO'Donnea) 8-1 Lawrenceville Sunday (not included in this week's poll). Bank Catholic In the "B" North race with a 54-51 win 3-16 FeU ot Deuny |PouKn| 1J-1 1 JDa Tryai (MacDonald) 12-1 6 H H Legend (Cowio) »-5 9 AH Andy lAbbanano) 10-1 1 Took) Chip (Wino) 10-1 6 May Burner (No Drivar) . 1-11 "The RBC game was our worse game of the year," over RBC last Friday. Both teams have 6-1 conference 10 Promo Loben (WMg) *-l 3 SunDngM (O'Donnall) .3-1 7 JOa Alan (Fagkerone) a-i Robertson said. "After that one we got together and records and will be favored in their remaining am: TM, a*,***. Can*,, NM 4 Yankee Predator (Campbell . 7-1 6 Mickey Rabbit (Connor) 20-1 discussed what was wrong and we've played better conference games although RBC has a tough test 1• navaajmMWafeBrtao/ t*J Ww* ^rMriAaw(KrtutkMA^) 10-1 at f^iinn* flklA rWh—I i 9-2 16-1 3 uutnnfl i^*v unvajrj , •• ....,<•< 15-1 20-110 Boeion Bunny (No Drivar)... C 1 I Mf. Bfovpntoawi (Fort*)) 8 Regal Roaooa (Campbell basketball since." against No. 9 Asbury Park Friday. 3 Jtgs and At«is (Coituo) 61 7 Oa Odd (Caaa) 10-1 8 1 4 Ntefcy T Shagbtjrk (RaVkdM) *-1 6 Berkshire Buddy (Doha lath: Pace, 88.888 St. Rose has a balanced attack with 5-10 senior Freehold Township (11-3) and Mater Dei (9-4) remain (-1 8-19 Eaat Bmrwrick lODonnea) 'III 1 OaerfteM (No Drivar) 20-1 Michele Gunteski the leading scorer with 13 points a sixth and seventh while No. 8 Howell moves into the Top 6 KtjystonB Btyou (Wright) 3-1 10 AB> Boy (Davle) 2 Povrerhouee LobaH (lancaalar) . 6-1 7 Qrwnwood John (DsBanadWfcj) 11-1 7»: Paea. 86.8*8 3 Be In II (Oeokardil 3-1 game. She is also the leading rebounder with seven a 10 for the first tune. Holmdel rounds out the Top 10. • HfJfv*w Acton (Rpnvnan) 7-1 1 AHenoa Nero (Parker) .. 8-1 4 Nordic Aknahurtt (Dauplaiail 20-1 9 Dr. Bon** (Mavui) 20-1 • rww*^* .^^># ,'H^p,...... 5 Camden Katie (Fontaine) 6-1 2• rFtra rTBBt) OMcffcrf""W«if J(CamoMI ^r^W • •** V • M )f " .-,'• in*,,,,"*" 12-1 10 UuWMtlto (Daw) 8-1 3 JflraaW BuffMM (No DfiMr) 10-1 8 Ridgewood EHpreee (Manzt) i-1 4»: NM. fel.SM J aviavi i^^t^^ \T^V w*>w a ..... ,.,..,.,.•••»**...... ,.4 18-1 7 EMgaM Oaoar (KaamaJar) I Mtgatorc* (Mtnti) 10-1 54 CrowhuraHappy Harrt lAbbaMaoy (Wabalar) ) a-i 6 KM Reign (AbbaMlio) .... 10- COLLEGE SCORES ? Sro*)o*tust (R#*iw^#m) ...... 18-1 6 Juet Canl Wan (Dohertyi 9 Done C*» (Hade) .... 20-1 3 Road Hugger ID**) 20-1 7 DunacMon Dandy (0 Flkon) .. 8*1 10 Precleu» Mirage (No Drivar) .... laM •AST Ramapo 90. WoomliaW 76 Sahebury St 60. Roanoka 59 SELECTIONS Adalphi 61. E Srroudiburg 54 St. Anaalm 72. Bryanl 71 S Carolina 90. So Mmmippl 71 1 — Flying A, Manias F.lla. Amarican 64. WUNam 4 Mary 62 81. John Fishar. NY. 72. Mamltald 61 S. Florida 88. N C Cnanona 64 MEADOWLANDS RESULTS Amarlcan Ing. 63. Spnngflald Co* 57 SE Maaaactiuaalta 91. SndgaMMf Si 81 SMeon 90. Naur Orieent 74 Bacchus Loball AaaumpUon 80. Marrimack 69 Shippanaburg 93. York. Pa 68 Tn Chattanooga 71. E. Tanneeaee 81. 83 2 - Hat Trick Floyd, Rest Area, Bannay 88. SBnamn 65. OT S*na 66. BoMon u 59 Tn -MarVn 73. Troy 91 71 Brovm 74. Rnoda laland Coll 54 Stana Maighrt 93. Concordia. Mich 63 Tulane 64. Florida 81. 61 Crossroad Wlndmlr Canaiua 63. KM» Mampmira 56 Spring Cardan 111. Dalavan VaHay 69 B-Baanan (Wing) B2O 420 3*0 B-Fanan 8am (Donarty) 10.80 620 380 vVaahingjon. Md. 80. Toaaon 81 74 cnanauon 91. Saiam 65 SMvana Tach 63. NY. Poly 58 WaaNngam 4 Lea 71. Hamoden-Sydney 62 I — Hallviaw Action, Jig* and *-Ow Bay Prtta {DaCamola) S.*O4.aO a-Hap Bob Bobby IWapM) 940 6.40 Connadiciil 90. US International 85 Syracuaa 85. Oaorgamn 83 lUate. MuM Madia *-A*aooda Baau Ilinnnni) 580 t-BaM Koamoa lO'Mami 4.40 OaMoara 91. 87. Brooklyn Con 78 Tufa 98. HatHnic 81 4 ••• FtMtn Rabound, MtQftforcc. •a Itaoa M B111.** Otcttnaon 56. ayaouahanna 81 UMa 71. Marat 59 3-My Melody Quean {Oagkardll J.40 3.40 3 00 E. Nmarana 104. W. Naaj England 81 unca Tacfi 88. Madgar Evan 58 EASTERN FUEL CO Scoots Magic 8-Sprmg Fang (Ptukno).. 9.00 300 FDU-Madaon 61. Drw 59 W Maryland 99. Lebanon VaUay 75 5 — Sparkling Burgundy, Broker* 400 Franwm Plaroa 6O.Waai Cnaalar 83 W Virginia 81 90. Shepherd 76 Qannon 73. Edmboro 71 Weyneeburg. Pa. 60. Olenvllle St. 73 Oraam, Stormy Pursuit Orova C«y »7. FroatJuro 71 TRANSACTIONS HaMhoma 71. Oordon 70. OT • — Yankaa Pradator, Oa OoM, HovgMDn 79. gtiartdan 59 Akron 71. Monahaad *L 61 tlOVnmn 440 2*0 300 BkieMd 67. AvarM 84. SOT Sunbrlght 7-Oharma (Wiem ) 3*0 3.80 ilunlar Col TO. Wm Fvaraon a* Call For Jataay C«y St. 63. Dominican 72 Campbell 68. Bapaal » 6-Ronrvae Sunny (Davtt).... ' 680 CampbaMvW 84. Thomae Mora 70 7 — Happy Harry, ANanoa Naro, taaata («-7) ai,.aa LaRocna 87. Pann B\ -Bahrand 70 Low Crowhurat Lycomrng 87.Bapw BWa 48 Cumbanand 8*. LMon 6*. OT Md -E snen 7*. BMIuna-Caotrnan 70 Con ot Chananon 71. S.C -Alkan 67 Florida ing. 97. Edward wan al PRICE! • - echo Judga, BMB, WoodMM a-C!*a!Ot«L_ Mamulia) 81. 81. Crndnnaa 81 3 20 3 00 in BOSTON RED SOK-Slgnao Dava SiapMan. m- N Y Tacl> 77. Concordla. NY. 71 Jamaa Madleon 74. E Carolina 86 4-KaMrma Paoa On ICampsail.. (20 6 20 Hatdar. John Hanry Jormaon. CharUa Macnaa. Rob Niagara 86. Morn mil 80. OT Lrrnaatona 61. 8 C -Spenanburg 77 77!, 9 — Qo BO, Shawn, Boaton 8-Moumam imp {Makar) . 4.29 Wood ward. M*a TrupHo. Jim Doraay. and Ed Otynn. Ucnok 79. WaalMd 81. 78 Man HHI 65. Barur-Soow 7* Bunny pachara. and Qua Burgaaa. Kawn Rorrvna and M*a Norton SI 98. Bowra SI 89 Uarmja 68. VMI 83 458-1717 Oraarvaal. oultraidara. toona-yaa r conrracn Onaonaa 81 73. Naw HU 89 PWfler 94. AMnac Chrajian 58 -10 ^ rOwatnOuaa LooaH, Daar* 1-Kan Oaa ••> |01>onnal| a 20 in 2 80 CHrCAOO WHITE SOX—I PMa. Pharmacy 98. Pima BUa 42 Pnabywlan CoWga 83. Cokar 81 ••aid, canrOan Katw a-Croan Wood (OJmourl 3.40 US PrtBradloro 77. Clarion 86 Rarjloro ai. W. Carolina 77 COD. - 180 Oalron Mln. 7-Oougn Bo>n iDavk) 340 ganaral managar. on a tnraa-yaar oonaact 8lgnad Joaa Ptt-Johnatown 106. Loch Havan 89 HandMpO-Macon 64. LBarty BapM 47 BEST BET: Hat Trick Floyd (2nd) bm n-o turn Caako. nkakjai. and CMl (pack, pacnar M The Daily Register JANUARY .") 198b HAGAR CROSSWORD toil •1 Caapoharaetar M Trunk •SUundrynsm UCHmaawtw. 43 Now! MFkaMate MOtyontfiiotOkua 4ITeafare 44-grauae MOflom't 46CMwrone M H#f>ldry MKtn 22 Staggered <• Kinsman: •bbr. 67 Nymph onftMr BEETLE BAILEY MtaithwattwM Yulsrdav'i Puna) 8sr»«d: M OhrtRhwto L/ THAT (A/ILL VOU ENITERTAIN ME, I'M / MEANS SU66ESTIOH9? UMHU LIMIIH1I IJMI.Ikl III'JIIU LJL111LJ DOWN TRYING TO I TUflhl ULIUl! 14 1 Dote X LEFT IIUMHIIII IIIMIIIIIIIIJI'K'III 2 Fiimloott HUM UL-J[Ml l.ll IMtiM 4« Colonial iilNI.I II ULJLll'J II 13 ArelkUxl SSPoane HMLIHI.UI 1JL1LJU LJL1U 19 Facial laatura 4 Norcttat 34 AUS^kJwl IJHI.Il'lLI Ml 1H 84 Enllgbtan UUl'Jll I FilMmimw 36 HaWo I.II n © IMS United FMIM* Synthesis Inc SNUFFY SMITH LUKEV MUST BE STARTIN REPEAT GITTIN" OLD Jimmy! What does "I think it means that mean?" 'the car won't start.' " •I'MEVEN OLOCRTH*NTHE TEMPERATURE raw THE WIZARD OF ID YOUR HOROSCOPE By Stella Wilder read the corresponding paragraph. The financial situation is looking TUESDAY, JAN. 29 Let your birthday star be your daily up. Be aware of changes in the fam- Born today, you are highly intui- guide. ily scene. tive and imaginative and possess a WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Tenaci- natural interest in and talent (or AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) - ty is the secret of success today. If both philosophy and science. Ener- A period of upset early in the day you give up, you cannot expect to getic, persuasive and gifted with need not keep you from planned win out. the crusading spirit, you are a natu- activities. Don't let dismay VIRGO (Aug. 23-SapL 22) - ral-born leader who may well enter overwhelm you. Take care that in the midst of politics. Yon have an innate desire PISCES (Fab. 18-March 20) - tumult you do not give away trade MARY WORTH to please; yet you have enough secrets. Much depends upon your Bring determination and patience self-control. IN AW O*Y THE THE KEVS TO STARDOM integrity not to trade honor for to the doing of good deeds today. TERM'OUlCK WERE A FACE AND popularity, easy as it would seem to LIBRA (Sapt. 23-Oct 22) - Con- STUPVHAO Friends appreciate your foresight do so at times. Others follow you sider the impression you are NOTWIN&7O THE WILUNGNES5 in p.m. DO WITH willingly when you indicate a will- ARIES (March 21-Aprll 10) - making. Add a new dimension to ingness to direct them. Hard feelings diminish considera- your presence and increase chances You are deeply emotional and bly throughout a day that forces of success. take your greatest happiness from cooperation between warring SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) - More than one fresh opportunity your personal life with family and factions. comes your way today. Take advan- friends. However, there may be a TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - tage of as many aa you can. brief period when you concentrate Help others on the home front to almost solely on your career and establish an atmosphere of calm. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Oac. personal relationships go by theTension is draining much-needed 21) - Tie together loose ends that board. It will be a period of work energy. have resulted from great activity in and tension, but it will past. QEMIUNI I (May 21-Jun« 20)-Dis- the past few weeks. Don't put this AI»O born on this data ara Wil- sension within the family is the off. liam McKlni.y, U.S. pretMant; result of poorly defined duties. CAPRICORN (Dac. 22-Jan. 19) - BLONDIE John Fortytha, actor. Untangle responsibilities so they Objectivity serves yon well on the To see what is in store for youdon't overlap. employment scene. But sett it aside rr's MACS WITH MCrr i CAUSE IT MAKBS VOU j in favofavor of the subjective approacappr h NBW'TI»iPl.e-C' SAUCE, MOOSERAOISH COUGH, CHOK6 tomorrow, find your birthday and CANCER (Juna 21-July 22) - ANO CHILI ANOCWV BRIDGE ADVICE By ALFRED SHEINWOLD notrump bids, looked for a way to opened with one spade you'd bid Some of the 54 nations that put his partner in for a spade return INT since the hand is not strong competed in the recent Bridge through the king. Since East had enough for a response of two clubs. promised both majors. West led the Olympics surprised us with their East dealer unusual bids, like Chilean expert seven of hearts. Ricardo Kehdy's opening bid of two East won with the king of hearts North-S< notrump in today's hand to promise and returned the five of spades. NORTH length in both majors. (I'm not The Chilean experts then easily • 104 TIGER recommending; just reporting.) rattled off the first 10 tricks. Down 71082 West bid three dub* to ask for seven, vulnerable. 0843 more information, and East bid If West led the ace and queen of • AQ872 three spades to indicate more spades. South would take 12 tricks, WEST EAST spades than hearts. Outside of that, finessing through West for the king • AQ8 •J97532 everything was normal. and ten of dub*. The thoughtful 77643 9AKJB opening lead made a difference of rABTNUTOENTBY 075 OJ2 nine tricks. • K1054 John Plaut, West, sure that DAILY QUESTION SOUTH South had the Icing of spades for his You hold: •104'P 108 2 0843* • KB WeaU yea Ilka to hava AlfrW A Q 8 7 2. Partner bids one heart, VQ8 ShelawaM teach yea haw la play and the next player ptisn What OAKQ1096 haehgaauaaar A IZ-IMMB fcseklet do you say? • J96 will to aa the way to yea whea jr«n ANSWER: Bid two hearts. Don't East Seata Waal Nattt) HI AND LOIS seaa* *1JM) alas a ataasfai, aslf-ad- hesitate to raise with three low 2 NT! Dbl 3* Did anasei Ne. 10 Mvetaa* la lack- cards of partner's major suit Even 3* 3NT 4* Paas PIP THE CHURCH'S YOUH& MOvV WAS THE so... i gamaa), la ear* ef this aawaaa- if partner believes In bidding a Pass 4NT All Pan ^ SKATlHG PARTV &O, ICE JUST WENT FOR TUB s»r, P.O. la 1000, Las Aafelee, four-card major, hell usually have M, tor CAJ at least a five-carder. If partner Openinglead--??? CHOCOLATE AHQ SOME OF US CAN JUSTHAN6AR0UNP All RUN.. JANUARY 29. 1985 The Drily Regfcter B7 2M Ocaaoport MtOO»«H*H)ft NY STOCK EXCHANGE tna Buaerlor Caurt by Pie SuHdlna OfBsW. maa Ba I IgriarJtoaan. an arBBr tial such oooupant or e uch a manner aa may ba dfcactad by euoh Court and eflhe fniBI'inunn or rooming urtll oeei •fiaM be dlaburaed eooordlng to mae ordeardor or ludamanludarnanti oft thmea Court 10 me pereone found to Be entraed merelo by rinalordar o HCW 1 - 1 rjeeist inierferlria ttfth aaM aoeaaa. IhanMO by rinalordar or mdamant "•» Vt- T—IIK'1 a 3 40 ef euoh Court arsrta'sd. hamiar.. Ithai naaSmg m mla aaoaon ahaa naBMB « |« W. I ill if P fJ-104 a. ASdMnsl t»a«rara af •ulair»t Offloai. u • IM M%- % Hera* 04 I EM 17% be oonelrued ta Impair or laMM any way ma pavar al m* Euaanai terne leans sk> KM re* MM I1•Itl 3.7* • 3M 44% heraey aBiaal MI naw »su»ari a» raaa aa re«o»s: NAJMs I ^m latlnl^MttBii Bria. .1 j.la mA\Ai dBBMta^BdBBB i A.^ ^ t %B*aB6 L a a 1 ll|. ''akaM M 1 M7 17 • 111 a - % The Suldln, Oftwal la haraay auHIHia aM empooered la fnuntOBpiVny V9 DV*irMJ aV*B W&OmWW nOtPJaWialBlal MnO 99flBJUBal BTIBIB T NssaUI.M I1H1 14%* W oaarBtaa auah peiwari aa may Be nininary or oonver>leni 10 oarry • - > in* vi MraM l.M am am ilUnmaii tia a«iriini an* praiastins af ma Oramanoa. oxer or party » Mereel ^ZXL'mSr'i'KnXmir*" aw eev 01 At* M 17 III SSL " ,?,M° •% 7MM 11k- tl "iw .334 7 441 « * % InMuBW* ma Mlflna in BBMBan k) otriere HaraM aramad mi minii lit in 1111 nuniaai pi suss in 11 m iiiiiuiai in aria urn • 4744 <•»111 * n •uperior Caurt to mini me riiinriSlmni al the amount or me M*-H •W .11 tl M M%* W A. To Mveaaaata The daaaWg[^ BWiaMauiia •<• •erauati of Ml 1 1011 40H. S | I 371 M%- tl rt In erMf •»> eoouraey ef the eaata eel forth In the wnnlnlpsl Ban serpaoew ttm 2 40 1442 104— It mat M%- k IM 14 ItM 4Ht+ II | NMM II 1* I7%* % u aaeaoo p 14.-110.0. WaM k> Apeeal. k) haraay s*MBM. 171 4 - It PO» NUBVUI aM la aaarMna atmaaaaa N. eeoaonPU-111. CiiafTos4safOoouaeno>.» hereby aBaea'as MrfsM 11 M Hit 10 till ISMIM a%» w a near aeooon to road aeim n 1 IM im- it t1M7»77 .1 AMU M»» It |as* I 4M im BBS n»M 1 nm ufon aramliaa Mr lha ourpaaa of making aunkv MrM 1 20 tl TT* 4sH+ It | • -• - I fXM VKKATIOet AMD agent or braaar, nrm oomaany. pemersrie. oorporsan s..5-110s W 20 an* 11 0MMI1.M I Ml Mak aMrtaa aMI b* maaa ki auoti tnarnar M la AMJWr • MM Mk* % IIUIMtW MB O4> TM> or pereone ehaa sat. ram. transfer, (ram, Bjaaa. let. mongags a*n .14 Wk* » |Male l 32 11 TM 24»* % OkMa IM oauaa lha laaat iMamrarwanaa la aw ponton, in poo- ween • MM IW Of> MOMMOUTH, ITATI rajht of ooaupaney arwhswaMa ptipill af B»j safaiiB>>>_ar | *SB» l.M 7MM 41 -1 ouaac I 11 Ml 17*.* v, I 444 MW- W '""tD. T' o eat Dint and fu MduSee at aua* efHoere. ageMs and 371 C4M ISO • 11a ati* % auoh dlaposal of ownership or ooDupanoy be Bjwpefaur or par- Ma ss 21 IMuMU* ti employees ae he daarna neeaeeery to oarry out Ida purpoeee of Hie * 1 1 BO isrt CkMA IM 11 I 37H manem. any JssBtng urn. hotel. moM. rooming unn. board- jwata • 4M M * * 0M0M.M mghouee or premlees on wwoh s buadlng le locetes end la ueed for StS |Wa 2.11 111 H* It • ta n%* w S. Ta Tim in an* al BM HaiaBsna aM paaira uraMr ma AIMKr OMaC 1.40 HIM MW- W romance a> tuek oMoars and agams aa ha may gaaajnalB. ~ »n oooupency. tmlsss s uorBftuaej ol oooupany osmfyino tfial \m .40 IBM 2411 tl -» r%* tt i OMaMIMk • 1B30 41W-1 a. (actton P M •los.ad). form, la harakv ri3atad. bunding i ~" dinar t~~" AJces MM 1 112170 4IH- % H. Sanen P.M..10* 1. Servue. la deleted end rep ay die aaaaimaa ol maa Borough ol Ooaanpon. *uah »arBHoa4a at BaaupBitay 20 .'Stil ITU- s ]l OaMa .44 1 171 ilk* % Ml rB*k M 14 MIS im- tt . be and le hereby ahaa Bag/anladoroanlad«tthlntan(10iaayalromlht>a granlad a Vfmi I2M2 AaMis 1 10 *••. 1Mi M 7 ion 17%*1tl m in ' 11002 irfO * % aooata_ a aa lh thaa proparl» rnaWawanariimananaoa oeooode* otf ImMa *orouoBorougn al CuiiipTaHili or emara laauad by ma *u»«ng OWMal purauant la •44 IH— tt aa^a— Afk^^aM^a^i^B^B^ - *- —M fc. — ^^^••^^arfll timu* ————— — — ^HMlh^BV — — — Mfirt MM. 1 r.r >•!] Tha Bunding Onto* anaa c Pactt 172 Ooaanportmthoilata ol Now Joraoy lor tha control ol buHdlno and *XTr»aliiil«aii waropn ••ma 3.71 I M3. *»• t i • — • HIM itw- w loMJ UrwUwJalOVJ V*flP Dv ••rVIJaiJ UpOfl P*JVB1M«*1 W*4BT paWVOnslPjy *" vT aniHUaBon forma far euoh iisiBBnsti al oooupenoy. Uf 10a M • H ftcUa IM aniauaa aa hataki pravtiaiat aM aaoh aM a) of tha ra»uMIOM ol «Goh l •Men i M 10 12M7 MS-IS | 471 11 3M Mk- W ma *aau riaiiuli Malnlanarm Coaa. laaana MHJen. 1M1. ara riglaiaru man, am mna tiaraatnnla al auah paraona la ur»no»n •hail be evallaua at tha offloa of lha Borough dark m soa I2M3 41k* % tacTala940 - - -» aama eamat ba aaoanamad by aaM *uao»g OMoW »lha MCaa 2 M tlBtlaMfc* It IMM W%* % dd a w t tl II tn M • The Bunding official aha* aaM OBuaaia be 1 IBM 141 211322 Mil- tl Paetk* IS hereey refarrea to. aoopwd end made a pert tnareof. es If hj«V sol laa d raaionada daigancia, and «Sa aaM *u»oma OHMal Untk I2IMI 56 • It 711SSaMW* w out In thla Ordmanee aaasp) auoh pamena aa ara heremeflar I man ma aanrtng ol auofi « proprlete lorme of euoh cenfflcale of oooupanoy ACyan t.M inCara t.M IIS IM PanAm anaWdavHBI«ala(iaot.*ianlhaaarvtngo CARPENTERS — Experience In ENGAGEMENTS ramlng. trim, all around. Excel- lent opportunity Call 530-8342 6 Lost and Found CARPENTERS 9100 REWARD — Two-year oil) All year round Creighton-Biedermann cat. Orey ehon hair with white Call 496-1577 marhinoa Loei etnce early Jan. CASHIER — Exp on NCR New Monmouth Mellon ol preferred but not aeeentlal will Middletown. Can 971-9719. am the right applicant. Part ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - The Biedermann. is'a graduate of Henry •me hra. with friendly crew. Call engagement of Laurie Beth Hudson Regional School. Highlands. FREE FOUND ADS 942-3366 or apply In peraon Aa a eervtce to our community. Marine Lumber. 1139 Ocean Biedermann. 38 East Ave , to Rob- She is employed in the stock loan The Dally neglalar la ottering a Ave . See Bright. department of Bear Stearns and Co., FREE 3-llne FOUND ad for 4 ert Creighton. son of Mr. and Mrs. daya under our Loot * Found CHILD CARE WORKER — Plan New York. and aupervlae eclivttlea tor pre- William Creighton Jr.. 184 Port achool 4 acnooi age Degree 1 Monmouth Road. Keansburg. is Mr. Creighton is a graduate of wneety 4 will do in pan In find, preferred Roeume. Woman ! announced. Keansburg High School and is no the original owner Pleeae leeourco 6 Survival center cell uaal 642-1700 0-16 Broed St.. Keyport. NJ employed as a union carpenter. 07735. Ann Joan Sultmenn. The bride-elect, daughter of the DOQ 1/17 TINTON FALLS — latf* Mr. and Mrs. Edward An August wedding is planned. emeu tan lemale mixed Pug CLERK TYPIST — Pert time. 26 Owner pleaae call Aaaocletod hra. per wk. Mon-Frt, aoon to Humane Society. 922-0100 expand to full time. Muat neve Ignl bookkeeping 4 general eac- Cardinale-Breheny EXHIBITORS — For home 4 otahal axilla. Salary according Waure ahow 30.000 new face. to background. Cell 291-4399 Call Armlrong Enterprli KEANSBURG - Mr. and Mrs. Keansburg High School and is CLERK/TYPIST — condo ee- eoclation needa Individual wMh Joseph Breheny, 16 Washington employed by American Telephone FOUNmomD — Diane Baud cat 4940 good typing and general offtoe Ave., announce the engagement of Oolfvtew ct, Mini HHl. No. Caro- akllla Bookkeeping helpful. and Telegraph, Lincroft. Mr. lina. Contact 583-3411 Mon.-Frl 9-5 PM Salary com their daughter, Jennifer Anne Cardinale is a graduate of menaurata wfth axp Apply m peraon 10 AM-2 PM. Shadow Breheny, to Anthony John Keansburg High School and attend- Miss Biedermann Lake village. 1 Lock Arbor way. Cardlnale, son of Mrs. Carmella ed Brookdale Community College, MkMietown. Cardinale of 160 Highland Blvd., FOUND — Cat. Black male, white Lincroft. He is employed by the apot on cheat Oak Knolie area In CLERK TYPIST — Engineering here Mkldietown Call 8710774. leave department. General office work Boro of Keansburg. end Data Entry. Send reeume to Miss Breheny is attending Clerk Typlat poeltlon FOUND 1/24 — Large ruaty col- Electro Impuleo. PO Box 970 ored Dog. vicinity of Port Mon- Red Bank. NJ 07701. mouth. Foodtown Call 7*7-69*9 Equal Oppty Employer Brett-Dougherty FOUND — Black. Ian 4 white CLERK/DRIVER — Light rte- mixed female dog Brown collar, Ivery. and Moatly clerk dutlee no tag. Found on Harmony Rd , Pleaaant atore and Co-worfcere HAZLKT - Mr and Mrs. Joseph i Pa. i She is student at Kean MkMletown. Very friendly Weekenda a muat Apply In per- H. Dougherty Jr.. 11 Mallard St. College of New Jersey. Union. — .1029. aon no phone calle. Little Silver announce the engagement of their LOST — Brown Labrador Pharmacy, 10 Church St.. Lltee Her fiance, an alumnus of Anewera to Dillon. t< moa old Silver daughter. M Michael Dougherty, to Rumson-Fair Haven Regional High S100 REWARD. Any Information Kdward L. Brett, son of Mr. and can 797-0699 or 496-0799. School, attended Colorado Mountain LOST — Cat in Freehold Boro Mrs Lester J. Brett. 39 McCarter era*. AM white with gray patch on Ave.. Fair Haven. College. Glenwood Springs. Colo., head. Reward offered. Call and is a free-lance photographer for 431.0499. The bride-elect was graduated LOST — Black and grey male from Raritan High School and American Scholastic Productions. eat. Green flee oonar? Hea been Telephone attended the University of Scranton An August wedding is planned altered vicinity Leocadla Ct. Hajlel Cell 7974994 Collectors LOST — IVa yr. old. male cat BMCk/whlta. Anawera Scagliuso-Ruotilio 10 Bucky Leal oeen on Long- or MIH Brebeny wood Ave.. Falrvlew aectlon of Middletown Reward 747-9992. MIDDLETOWN - Mr. and Mrs. Massachusetts College of Phar- Raymond Ruotilio, 92 Lynn Court, macy, Boston. She is a pharmacist 9 Spaclal Notices Trainees AIRLINES NOW HIRING — Ree- Belford, announce the engagement and assistant manager for Thrift itlonrata. etowerde-Meward- Citibank USA m M and ground crew poallloni of their daughter, Donna M. Drugs, Somerset. available. Call 1-919-699-0241 s having an Ruotilio, to Mark J. Scagliuso, son Mr. Scagliuso is a graduate of for delalla. 24 hra. open house. of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Scagliuso, 46 Middletown High School North and 6TM AVE CLEANERS — 109 Main St. Oeeenpon will cloee It could be Henry Drive, New Monmouth. Rider College, Lawrence Township. their doora after 27 yra. Pleaae The bride-elect is a graduate of He is a certified public accountant '.k up your dry cleaning by Feb. the opening with Ernstand-Whinney, Newark. rTnanfc-you. Middletown High School North and FEDERAL JOBS you've Federal Government la hiring In your ana. Many openlnga oeen waiting for. without teeta. S12.0OO-4V.OOO Miller-Cunningham Call refundable tor too Info We're e dhrkMon of Citicorp, one 312-899-4365 eat E-1004. of the lergeet and moat prae- ugloua financial Inalltutlona In the Federal. Stale. 4 CMl country And rlghl now, we're MIDDLETOWN-Mr. and Mrs. Miss Cunningham is a graduate of lobe now avallebw In your iivfjfvttjVd In fntjMtfnQ IOITV# of Alexander Cunningham, 28 W. Park Middletown High School North and area. Call 1-*t*-6*9-*304 Of tMigMMt and mopt •mbmoo* APptlow Ave., Belford, announce the engage- is employed at Misco Inc., Holmdel. for Info. 24 hra. rjhrtduf* i f LEE ANDRA it*XMt«d In iMf-nine tataphon* CARDIN HAUTE COUTURE — Pierre Cardin fashions white silk ment of their daughter, Kelly Ann Her fiance is a graduate of Middle- Owed Zodiac Raadar oolttKttont wtiito woritlng in our organza into an elegant ensemble with slim skirt and orchid-shaped Cunningham, to Kieran. Bracken town High School South and Is 6*3-9292 n«w Shrewsbury. NJ. offlM. employed by Foodtown Super- LOOKING — for 26 people to I you don't alrMtdy h«v» • back- pleated top with giant shoulders. It is from Cardin's spring-summer MiUer, son of Mrs. Eileen Miller of looaa wiht d k ne ground in coDocttona. but h«v« collection, introduced yesterday in Paris. 40 Florence Ave., Leonardo. markets, Toms River. Miss RaottUo Can 74 customer MTVIC* «xport«no>, w*>'d ilk* to talk wtth you. flat- MARINE VETERANS •vant background could Inetud* Mambera of the 4th end_, 6t, h:' retail, banking, hotala, nw- Marine Dhrlelona who P*™*. 1* taurant*. airline reservation*, or paled In Hie Invaalon of two Jlma, Job thai make* Feb. 19. 19a. ere requeued to a to deal wtth contact Herb Thorpe at the C typing akllla would Low-cholesterol diet is best bet for heart Roglattr. 542-40011. E«t 263 BY LESTER L. COL-R.V., Michigan have minimized it. Forthat for more than 30 Ongoing studies for MRS. SYLVIA years scientists have PSYCHIC READINGS EMAN, M.D. Dear Mrs. V.: there undoubtedly are many years have re- 776-0572 some doctors who have been seeking insights vealed very special and OPEN I don't know who the RETIREES — Having trouolea 4 denied the relationship into the complex pro- positive information Ilka I am at Fort Monmouth? Feel We are all mixed up authority was whom between high cess of coronary heart that now is acknowl- Hxe a eecond deaa craren when you "beard." It may you aak for your earned entrae- HOUSE aboat cholesterol. I am cholesterol levels in thedisease (CHD). A major YOUR edged by most doctors menta? Tired of being put on Wednesday. Jan. 30th have been a layman -hotd" everynme you COM? lathi* sure that everyone like blood and the arteri- cause of mortality in eveywhere. Dis- type of treatment what you ex 3:00 PM-830PM ear family likes baiter, whose knowledge of theosclerotic changes that the United States, CHD HEALTH tinguished students of peeled whHe you ware JE"™worfcln" Tlnton Falla problem is probably no for your 101 omenr? Write me cheese and eggs. We occur as one gets older. results largely from a this problem have found Joe Rich. PO Box 47. Eeel Min"" i Hilton Hotel were told to give It all more accurate than slow buildup of plaque a distinct correlation •tone, NJ 09973 (Exit 106 on afv Now we hear that yours. Work Primal 920.00O-9a0.0O0 the Qarden State Pkwy) Dr. Donald J. on artery walls, clog- between the rate of Bonue For Into Can cboleiierol is really MI One more thing...If you c It may even be a McNamara is Professor ging the flow ol blood to __ heart disease in many (91THSHB00 Exi 342 attend, pleaae drop ue e Hne. or Important aad that It of the Lipid Metabolism the brain (stroke). countries in two striking can does not affect the doctor who expressed 15 Instruction » OOAM-5 OOPM Citicorp Credit an opinion about the Laboratory in New This early buildup of ening of the arteries). It have been identified in features, namely the BECOME A MASSAGE THERA- Servtcea MoInc... Depl 19. P.O. Boa heart. How do jrea fetl amount of animal fat in P18T — Forjnto can. 747-4768 9BU, Red Bank. NJ 07701 (212) shoal tUsT - Mrs. Importance of York City. In a recent fatty deposits is called is not a modern disease, the arteries of Egyptian 909-2499. Citibank USA la an cholesterol and may brochure, he points out atherosclerosis (hard- The remains of plaque mummies. the diet and the blood equal opportunity employer cholesterol levels in the M/F/H/v. blood. High cholesterol We look forward and triglyceride levels 51 Help Wanted to being part of in the blood play an your community. important role in the Mai* Of Famala) ACCOUNTANT — farmanenl Miniskirts evoke strange memories onset and progression of poeMon with Red Bank CPA firm coronary artery disease Minimum 1 year experience In CITIBANK BY E R M A loosely over eight rested, had we not no one ever saw. Full pmbic accounting. PertneraMp skirts that swirled of the heart. potential within 3 year* for qua*. BOMBECK yards of skirt with an been home room Had peraon Can Mr. Toacano « around our ankles and 741-2924 to. USA elastic waistband mothers, car-pooling There are undoubted- COOK — Short order E>- I know you're all ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY asked for a stronger children to a Bible baggy Jackets that ly many other factors =_ acad Apery peao familiar with the Towne 4 Country Inn, » III drink. Another one study meeting. gave no hint of what that are responsible for vtdual y. Kayport. woman at the party went to the phone with AT We all sat there and was hidden under- these attacks. High typing ekWe who gets attention by procedure. Muat be wen or. tears in her eyes and numbly looked for- neath ." blood pressure and ex- ganued, peraonaofo and enjoy saying outrageous dealing with people Muat have said she was getting a WIT'S ward to a future where One woman giggled, cess tobacco are only a experience Enoaltanl Pananoea nne oooka and pantry things. The one who, If alerting eatery and benefit pack- P*peraone1 . Buey reaaaura second opinion. everyone backed out "Last year, I even told few. Diet, age, gender, real glowing banquet b Mary announced, "I'm of a room. After all. if weight, exercise, stress ago. 36 Hr. week. Con 739-9696 expecting a Savior," For a while, we my Jane Fonda video be quick" talked among END Mary Tyler Moore and to stick it in her ear." and alcohol are some AIDE - For preaohool. Part or 542*300 would say. "Me too!" Mario Thomas had more of the important fun time Riapand to: PO Box Well, this person ourselves of what It 9915. Red Bank. COUNTS* PERSON P/T - Ex rotten back-of-knees, "Why don't they factors that determine pananoa mmn Ken'a DM. proclaimed the other was like when mini- ARCHITCCHTURAL 693-1111 skirts lived among us. who were all of us to want us to be happy?" the frequency of heart DWAFTSPOiaON — Full Itma, night that by this try to pull it off? The said one of my friends. CUSTODIAL POSITION* AVAIL. March everyone would attacks. ra experience, ftyouereoon- Fun Ome. pen nme 4 • You could never back of the knee cer- There was a moment Despite some scien- Me have knowledge of com. be wearing miniskirts pick up an object that tainly isn't the best of silence when one of cnon detexe.we offer you var- tifically confusing at- —r In rotpoo9tb4# in our Aoc again. had fallen on the floor thermostat on your Once I remembered part of a human body the women said, "How Bank AcNWetural team. Can K titudes, I would still MHcfiea, 741-1990. 9 AM-5 PM Can you imagine unless you were (a) In underwear, slide onto going through an en- I've ever about crossing our Mon.-fn. DATA ENTRY tire afternoon, only to suggest that people fol- what it's like to have the room alone (b) It from front to back legs once more in low their own doctor's 60 women suck in their were closely sur- and make sure there be told in a whisper, "You have to ad- comfort for old time's ASSISTANT OPERATORS "Your blouse is hang- mit," I said, "For the recommendation about DIRECTOR 2ND/3RD SHIFTS breaths at the same rounded by three walls was always a napkin, sake." diets for the moderate time? All the bora (c) had been married handbag, or pillow ing out from under last couple of years. OF NURSING Large Data Entry Servloe Co hee d'oeuvres were air- to the other occupant your skirt." It's been good. Everyone in the consumption of foods nearby to cover your that are high in animal borne for a fall three for at least ten years. Getting into a car Sweaters with sleeves room crossed their a prua. We offer permanent that would have slip- fats. This is a healthy minutes. When you were of- Finding your eight- and driving in a mini- legs. We would have to "Sery I covered Iowa. Over* remember It for a long approach to a problem la»wr»jraln» dtefwoata and One woman In a fered a chair, you had inch slip was an ex- skirt would have got- that still awaits com- baggy Jacket that hung to turn up the ercise in aerobics. ten moat of us ar- blouses with belts that time. CMF CORP. plete affirmation or de-of^iunSa ngO* 583-3860 nial. MM Hat. 39. Heat NJ OTTSO. Equal Oppfy Emioiat M/T SI M«lpW*nttd II HtlpWtnfd Si H«|p Wanted SI Help Wanted 1 Haly Wint-1 B10 The Drily Register ,\M Si M»lp Wanted EAOHSR-Osillllaaaari noire- FULL TrMl AUTO MECHANIC — FA* IHOP riTTin — nw ana NUfaH RN U/F - PART TIME — Mtdlcal oflloe * RECEPTtOWBT - PUD Time B>- 11 Help Wanted 51 HSIP Wanted 51 Help Wanted MuM nava . 4 day week. No Front dee*, heavy MIOVMtown, *T1 COSMETICIAN - Acakre DELIVERY DRIVER — Apply "•"••SStMJSX_ 1 a.m. 4 DRIVER/HELPER - Pan Unto, pafWnoa. Raa». raqulrad Apply LSrSST 4Sktauranaa RECEPTKNM.wsaT PARTr TIME - t g n Marty • famous. IN E Newman bul permsnent. ten yr). A funtn pafaon JAR Sunooo. 180 Hwy LrycSd diera: j-JO-S. Bend raeume IK !?.6?r..%!TW f7r'mont. Springe Rd Red Bank. place to work Apply Ml p aTrjy j 1 p.m. 767-0116 1aia.Bext01.Ha»>*«.NJ»Tf7»0 IWCHUM • muet Can KM Appl Splwak Florlel. ** Ava. t4p.rri. '41.11t1.LII*a Sliver Pharmacy DELIVERY PERSONS— Earn up OLUNTEiRS - *u-jrt IN FASHION Cape collar provides Haltering covfii lor upper arms One- bution closing creates a jacket look lor this smati oress Primed Pattern 9*M8 Misses Sizes 8 to 18 Valentine Love-O- Gram UN ! ROBBIE. BILLV. JOHN-JOHN as k,cky aa an O'Mom can ba havtng VelenKn MARIAN MARTIN, like YOU THREE!!' Huos and Kisses Pattam Dapt. 420 The Daily Register U-illlernemSM .WMtlUe. MT113T7 FMNSSW. Utrtsl at. IM. Fanara tMBtr NEW Soring-Summai Pjnetn Catalog Fin Ushnns rof busy •411 SIZES 1-11 10 ipprovll by Rsgrsler No women Free pjttsm coupon 5 IN MESSAGE Sano 12 00 plus 50c posltga Books ti SO • SOt el pin IJS-FettI W --V700 Iti-Fl l^rWerU%alaf%e^ fWir*a>ef%til* PATTERNS I J00 Autoi far Sal* B12 Tlie Daily teRMer VIMW JANUARY m. 198!- J00 Autet for $•!• MIAirtwfarSala WO Auteafsrlal* lOOAntOtHrlairO TOYOTA CHEVROLET NOVA 197676-307- . MUSTAMO K*7 PINTO HATOHeACK RIO BANK MOTOR* INC. VOLVO ten 109 Buildings/ 131 Co*****./ IN Truck* ft ( ll PPSS, AfO. Naw radial Ma. naw 191 Nawman •pnnga. Had awn* naw (*m lob. Hum food. AMC. mg $790. (Si Mtka (ii-MI S NAVIMNK RIVER — INTIMHATIONAl V-6 TRUCK OLDS D4U.TA (S 1(77 — VS an- TOYOTA OOPXXLA t(TT - INDUSTRIAL Mr vkrw. IM I or 2 1973 — 6 naw oraa. Ililglimi I. A/C. p/a. p/b. 4 floor nard- PLYMOUTH ROAD-RONNSR AM/PM. pood »raa. it* na*. run* OATSUN (SO SK 19SS - ( aod.. 1(70 — MrtasX tM raatwaw 2 building* tOf 'lail. 16.000 • Horn 1100.000. Caf 741-0*1* *09F»3».OoaanTw» lino or B/O. Can M*-T0*9 anar « *av bat mfwawn. AM/FM. IIIUHI (1600 ar B/O. Ca> 630-S040 '•ooo aq ft. ir naainm ioad- Mama. oond,. Cai AakMg MOO Day* ISM - 6 apd. 1(74 - Auav Ing lacHltlaa. modorn oonatruc 133 Income (*>4974. artar " ' OLDSMOBUE DELTA(•1979- USED YOLKSi won 4 741-2230. allar 9 PM741-36C ("rtew ««a«3.» r. TOYOTA - Mil, I9 0UARANTEED ^aj^rewnrr-*!** BtALTV IWMIMOI MaMHa gray Srtdga al OATSUN, 310 Hlliriainll..1S(1. aaoa*. oandt.. a*, atarao. (SBSS. PLYMOUTH SATELUTE - 71. SaVMtOMI OLDS-CADILLAC PARTS ALSO AVi K>l-3«*.0100 RUMSON - A ran IkyJ. Totaay Loa) ol ohroma Son Many naw parta. Runa