Wi Annual Back-to-School Edition
SEE PAGES 7-13
The Weather Becoming partly cloudy ana FINAL ' mild this afternoon, clearing Red Bank, Freehold and cooler tonight. Tomorrow - Long Branch EDITION 30 PAGES: Monmonth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper VOL.95 NO.36 RED BANK, NJ. TUESDAY, AUGUST 15,1972 TEN CENTS uimmm Harbor Pollution Curb Pact Set NEWARK
Seeks Arms Equality ; Keaveney, . RED BANK - Two banking ,. J WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Henry M. Jackson is claim- ;lng growing Senate support as well as White House backing for executives have been appoint- bis, demand that the United States negotiate "equality" with ed to bead the business divi- ,the Soviet Union in any future strategic-arms-limltation agree- sion for the 1973 campaign for ' ment . ~ ' ' the Monmouth County United , Jackson counted 27 cosponsors for his equality amendment Fund. . going into today's third day of Senate debate on the five-year They are John L. Keaveney, U.S.-Sevlet interim agreement limiting offensive missiles. assistant vice president for in- As leaders continued to press for an early vote,' Jackson dustrial relations with The . said some of his supporters are unwilling to set a time until all Central Jersey Bank and pending amendments to the resolution of approval can be dis- Trust Company, chairman, posed of on the same day. and James E. Desmond, assis- tant vice president of First Jackson claimed unequivocal White House support for the Merchants National Bank, language .of his amendment, although conceding that the ad- vice chairman. . ministration has refrained from endorsing his or any other in- They will be trying to top terpretation. the record $132,251 raised by ART SHOW PREVIEW — Roberta Chase, left, of Mtddletown and Dana the business division last year Nixon Assesses Policy McKay of Eatontown display paintings to be exhibited along Main St. at to help support the 26 public the Eatontown art show Saturday, Sept.,30. The show, sponsored by the, service agencies that come THURMONT, Md. (AP) - Back wherehe launched ttpre - Eatontown Area Chamber of Commerce and Veterans of Foreign Wars, is under the United Fund. cisely a year ago, President Nixon is assessing his new eco- open to professional and amateur artists. Philip C. Carting, fund drive nomic policy in the wooded seclusion of his Camp David re- James E. Desmond John L. Keaveney treat chairman, said Mr. Keaveney and Mr. Desmond will be re- From all indications, including an optimistic set of com- sponsible for soliciting em- money to help support county agent in charge of the' 1 ments from key economic advisers the chief executive is im- ployes of utilities, banks, sav- agencies ranging from the Bank resident agency, which mensely pleased with results of the action he ordered last Aug. • : Shrewsbury Board to Seek ings and loan associations, American Red Cross to Girl included Monmouth and 15. . • • • . .,- and insurance companies em- and Boy Scouts, MCOSS, the. Ocean Counties. *• " When Nixon flew here yesterday - his third trip to the ploying 20 or more persons. Salvation Army, the WMCA,' He is a graduate of St. Jo- Maryland Jmountaintop retreat in a week — a White House land Vii-YWHA. The drive seph's College, Philadelphia. spokesman said he was "reviewing economic matters, eco- Opinion on Drivers Ruling They will also be respon- sible for obtaining corporate starts this fall. Mr. Desmond received Us nomic policies." gjfts. Mr. Keaveney and MA Prior to Joining The Central degree hi economics at St An- , The spokesman signaled presidential concern, however, SHREWSBURY-The of business. an agreement with the Na- Robert Otten, Red Bank, tional School Milk Program. Vreeland, Fair Haven, beaded Jersey Bank and Trust Com- selm's College in New Hamp- about congressional moves to exceed his budget — moves Board of Education, last the business division last pany seven years ago, Mr. shire, and has done graduate which the White House contends could hurt anti-inflation ef- night, voted to seek advice the board's attorney, said that Under the terms of the agree- there was some question as to ment, the U.S. Department of year. Keaveney served 24 years work in accounting and eco- forts. .••..'• from the New Jersey School The Monmouth County with the Federal Bureau of nomics. He has been with .'. • It was a year ago today that Nixon, after a weekend con- Board Association regarding the Department of Educa- Education will reimburse the tion's authority to establish school for an amount not to United Fund drive is a one- Investigation. At the time of First Merchants Bank for ference at Camp David with his top economic advisers, told, 9 action it could take on a rul- shot campaign that raises 'his retirement, he was special eight years. nationwide television audience .that he had decided to impose ing by the state Department motor vehicle standards. exceed $.03 for each half pint a wage-price freeze, to slap a 10 per cent surcharge on Imports of Education. The ruling re- of milk purchased by pupils. and to free the dollar from its links to gold. quires that drivers who trans- Board president. Alts. Kay The funds win be used to re- port special students nave a B. Jensen, Indicated that the duce the cost of milk for the school busdriver's license and board was sympathetic to students. * _• Keansburg Post that the taidcabs used obtain White Star's problem, and The board also approved ACtlOH Chess Play to Resume would take whatever action it REYKJAVIK, Iceland - Bobby Fischer and Boris student transportation plates. purchase of an electric range, • Spassky were scheduled to play their 14th game in the world could. . from AtlanticSuperama, New Qn YACclllCV Has 3 Candidates chess championship today after a two-day delay due to a me- The board action came in Pact te Awarded Shrewsbury, at a cost of 9207. response to a letter from Don- The board awarded a con- The stove win be used in the By ED WALSH Mr. Lloyd was appointed by' dical postponement by the Russian champion. PAIR HAVEN - The va- Mayor Graham when he first It was the American challenger's turn to play the white ald Sommers, president of tract to White Star for the school's special "Vertex Pro- cancy caused by the resigna- White Star Taxi Co., Red transportation of special stu- grain." KEANSBURG — A munici- took office as a councilman to pieces, giving him the advantage of the opening move. tion of the only Democrat on pal prosecutor, a former pros- 1965 With the then Mayo)* Fischer, leading 8-5 in the 24-game series, charged yes- Bank, asking the board to Op- dents to special schools at a The board approved the ap- the Borough Council will be pose the ruling. According to cost of $10.75 per day. pointment of Mrs. June Stry- ecutor and a former Munici- Leonard S. Bellezza and the terday that Spassky shouldn't have been awarded the post- filled at a special meeting pal Court judge have been, late Councilman Alphonsus M. ponement because the medical certificate he submitted did not Mr. Sommers' letter, the new The board also authorized ker, Red Bank, as kindergar- Aug.2L requirements would be so cos- Dominick Acerra, school busi- ten teacher, at a salary of mentioned as possible succes- McGratb. ; , specify his ailment. . The person appointed will sors to Howard A. Roberts, He was not reappointed In Chief referee Lothar Schmid said the complaint was "not tly as to put the company out ness administrator, to execute $8,200 per year. Mrs. Stryker be filling the unexplred term : will replace Mrs. Judith Sher- who earlier this month 1969 by the same adminis-' in good spirit," but that he would consider it of John J. O'Rourke, who re- stepped down as borough at- tration. • > man, West Long Branch, signed last month after ac- whose resignation for mater- torney. Mr. Roberts, also a Republi- cepting a job with the Pacific Although everyone ques- Explosive Poisons Bombers nity reasons was accepted Telephone Co. in San Fran- can, succeeded Superior Fair Haven Act tioned on the subject Is non- Court Judge Patrick J. last night cisco. BELFAST — A 19-year-old member of the Irish Republi- committal, it has been McGann Jr. as borough at- can Army is .dying because the guerrillas are using a chemical In other action, the board Mr. O'Rourke was elected awarded a fuel oil contract to learned by The Daily Register torney nearly five years ago] • '. for explosives that can be more dangerous for the bombers to a three-year term last year that Patrick D. Healy, Middle- than the bombed, the British army said today. Limits Handbills Deal Oil Co., Fanwood, NJ., and was the only Democrat on He resigned two weeks agp, the low bidder, at a cost of town prosecutor, has the in- saying someone from Us of-, The chemical is nitrobenzene, and IRA bomb factories the six-member governing side track for the appointment fice will remain until' an ap- FAIR HAVEN — An ordi- papers on private property til per gallon. body. have been stocking it for two months, a spokesman said. When nance aimed at ending the in- ; without the "express consent" as a compromise. - polntment is made. He the highly toxic substance is absorbed Into the bloodstream, it A student insurance plan, A spokesman for the council discriminate distribution of 'of the owner. It is already ille- submitted by C. W. Bollinger It has been learned further personal reasons in his letter produces symptoms of cancer, and "unfortunately there is no circulars and newspapers on ,gal to distribute such material said no decision has been that Councilman Raymond A. to council. cure," he added. Co., Montclair, was approved made on who will replace Mr. both public and private prop- on public property. by the board. Reaney favors the appoint- The 19-year-old is critically ill in a Belfast hospital after erty was introduced last O'Rourke, but whoever is ap- ment of former Judge William handling the chemical. The spokesman said two others, a night pointed will be faced with run- C. Lloyd, wlflle Mayor Harry youth and a teen-age girl, were killed last week when a nitro-.. ning in November if he would •~ It is an amendment to the Graham Jeans to the appoint- T „_.__„•_.„ benzene bomb they were carrying in their car exploded pre- continue Mr. O'Rourke's mentof a Eepublican, former J^arC6llieS maturely. borough's anti-Utter ordinance unexpired term. 9 adopted in 1961. Public hear- 20 Students Finish Middletown .prosecutor Rob- ing is scheduled for Sept 11. Before he left, Mr. ert H. Otten. Vandalism Mitchell Blasts dark The ordinance is aimed at O'Rourke had recommended Mr. Otten, a partner in the Nurses Aide Course the appointment of Mrs. Flor- Red Bank law firm of Orwell NEW SHREWSBURY - WASHINGTON - Former. U.S. Attorney General John controlling what Councilman ence Amos, his running mate Police are continuing their in- Mitchell delivered another blast at Ramsey Clark today, call* Ralph S. Weaver called the FREEHOLD - Donald P. bury Park; Iris Diaz, Long and Otten, served the town- Branch; Sister Patricia Deck- last year. Mrs. Amos is run- ship under the former Re- vestigation of two larcenies ing him "a naive American" Who was "unwittingly duped into "circular flow which is litter- Hoagland, Monmouth County ning again for council this and 13 cases of vandalism re- playing Hanoi's wretched ganle," ,. .: ?..! ing the town." Vocational Superintendent of ert, Red Bank; Barbara Ech* publican administration but ols, Long Branch; Susan Fu* year along with George A. was replaced last January by . ported over the weekend. Clark, who was attorney general in the administration of Mr. Weaver, chairman of Schools, has announced the Lambert! of Laurel Drive. Police say Shannon's Inn, President Johnson, returned from a two-week visit to North) the Public Work? Committee, completion by 20 students of riato, Holmdel; Clarithi Mr. Healy when the Demo- the first nurses aid classes for George, Asbury Park; Diane Those two Democrats are cratic majority took office. 640 Shrewsbury Ave. was Vietnam with a plea to end the U.S. bombing. said many complaints have opposing incumbent Republi- broken into sometime between been received from residents the 1972-73 evening school Hall, Red Bank, and Pauline Mr. Otten serves the Keans- "We are bombing the hell out of that little country and it has Kinsman, Middletown. cans Tyra M. Boyd and Wil- 2 a.m. and 9 a.m. Sunday and got to stop," Clark said at a pews conference in San Francisco' about unsolicited circulars year. burg Planning Board. Mr. an unknown amount of change Monmouth Medical Center, Also, Florine Mammary, liam C. Rue. Healy holds a similar posi- yesterday. "There .is no possible moral justification for it." .,' and newspapers being thrown In other business, Coun- y p taken from two machines, , He also said he thought the North Vietnamese had become oh private property as well as Long Branch, participated in Neptune; Sandra McJunkin, tioti n iin neighboringihbi' ' UnioUi n the program. - Middletown; Mary O'Connor, cilman Ralph S. Weaver During the same period, the "disgusted" at continued emphasis by Americans on when In the gutter and the street urged more participation by Beach. Drake residence on Neville St U.S. prisoners would be released. The ordinance amendment Students completing the Oakhurst; Carmen Poison, course were Patricia Bradley, Long Branch; Debra Solly, residents in the monthly pa- was allegedly entered and a Mitchell said "Mr. Clark's'•.behavior while within the fron- would make tt Illegal to dis- y per and bottle collections. small amount of change tak- tribute circulars or news- Wanamassa; Susan Schmidt, e tiers of a country waging war against an ally and the armed Neptune; Yvette Cesar, As- The next collection will be Cat Burglar' en. • •• " ;:,' , forces of the United States was inexcusable." Red Bank; Sybil Spence, Oceanport; Letitia Saundcrs, held Sept 9 behind the Fair In the area of Cloverdale Asbury Park; Frances Snl- .Haven Acme Market on River Hits Red Bank Circle, 13 mailboxes were ei- Mark Surrender Anniversary Keyport Code Bans dpwitz, West Long Branch; Road. RED BANK - The detec- ther removed from then* posts Elizabeth Warwick, Long "People always say they tive bureau is investigating a or damaged Saturday night. TOKYO — Emperor Hirohito led the Japanese today in ob- Branch, and Mamie Williams, are interested in ecology," series of incidents over the servance of the 27th anniversary of Japan's surrender' in Drinking in Public Asbury Park. Mr. Weaver said, "but we find weekend Involving what Chief MOTORISTS BEWARE! World War II. , \ a very small percentage of Back-to-school time In a tone similar to that used whoa he announced Japan's KEYPOKT — After token' dience, told council the board The second nurses aid class George H. Clayton Jr. calls a should be auto check-np will begin Sept. 18 at the Free- people turn out for'the collec- "cat burglar." surrender 27 years ago, the emperor told a gathering of about questioning from the au- did not budgetfor payment of tions." time in order to assure good water in its utilities account hold Area Hospital. Classes He said four homes were all braking around schools, 5,000 relatives of war dead that his lieart still aches with pity dience, Borough Council last The council approved the 1 when he thinks of those who died hi the war. night adopted an ordinance Council will accept bids on will meet 3-11 p.m., Monday entered in the same manner, playgrounds and all around, prohibiting the consumption bonding issues dating back to through Friday. Information appointment of Robert C. Os- through an unlocked door or a town where young children Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka told the meeting at the may be obtained from 'Mr. borne, 137 Church St, to the can pop out from almost Military Arts Hall in Tokyo that Japan's prosperity owes much of alcoholic beverages in pub- 1969 at. its Sept 11 session. first floor window, between 2- lic places other than licensed HQagland's office. Fire Department and 5 a.m. Sunday. anywhere. to those who devoted their lives to the nation, and "it is our The bonds totaling-^316,000 The chief Identified the vic- obligation to make relentless efforts toward a lasting world premises. are pursuant to ordinances During the public hearing tims as Sophie R. Burk, 132 peace." adopted over the past three Spring St., who was robbed of on the measure council noted years in both the general im- that alcohol may not be con- Middletown Police Arrest $30 from her purse; Clifford Gain more leisure time Police Clear Miami Park provement and water im- Tt/r v .i • T"k T» 1 Bohanan, 145 Mechanic St., sumed on any borough-owned provement accounts. Man, YoUth in DrUffS Probe&O taken from a purse; Moe MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — Helmeted policemen forced about parcel — including at Softball Council deferred until its pay your bills at home 100 campers to leave Flamingo Park early today, eight hours games being played on next meeting a decision on the MIDDLETOWN - A one- dal commendation, said de- Gordon' M Prospect Ave- after the City Council voted to allow demonstrators here for borough owned fields — in $158 missing from a wallet, application of Larrick Associ- month investigation by Pa- tectives armed with a search and Dorothy Laveratt, 103 • the Republican National Convention to use the shaded camp- front of firehouses, in borough ates of Rahway which seeks a trolman Stephen Xanthos, as- warrant signed by Municipal site. parks, or parked cars. McClaren St., $39 gone from a use permit to erect a Getty sisted by township detectives, Court Judge Ronald L. Horan purse. Police Chief Rocky Pomerance, who led the nonviolent op- Maximum fine, under the has led to the arrest of a Lin- Service Station on Maple raided a home at 860 Newman A fifth victim, Chief Clayton eration involving 40 officers, said the city needed more time to disorderly persons act, is $500 Place at Broad St croft man and a lfcyear-old Springs Road last Thursday prepare the 36-acre park for the thousands of protesters.-ex- and 90 days in jail. juvenile on charges of posses- said, Joseph Sole, 22 Oldfield Two ordinances, one of night, seized a quanity of Place, heard his screen being pected for the convention, which opens Monday. Council's liaison committee which will ban parking on sion and sale of marijuana. marijuana and arressted the to the Board of Education will cut at 4:20 a.m. and fright- Police first were greeted by epithets and shouts of "Pig," both sides of American Legion Police Chief Joseph M. juvenile. ened away the intruder. but the campers, most of them followers of the Zippie move- meet with board members to Drive between 11 p.m. and 7. McCarthy, who singled otft Saturday morning detec- ment, slowly cleared the fenced park after officers marched discuss the non-payhent of a a.m. daily, and both sides of Patrolman Xanthos for spe- tives raided the home of Ray- shoulder-to-shoulder toward the only available exit. $600 water bill council alleges Luppatatong Ave., between 6 mond M. Dominczak, -22, of The protesters, their number thinning to between 50 to 75, is due the borough. a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday Man Breaks Ribs Box 102 Newman Springs 2 Jailed Pending then roamed the streets of Miami Beach's senior citizen com- George Bolte, a member of through Friday, were in- Road, Lincroft, and seized munity. Zippie leaders tried to organize a march on City Hall, the board who was in the au- troduced. In Boat Mishap more than 25 grams of mari- Court Hearings but squad cars cut off the march and herded the demonstra- Council authorized a $10,500 MONMOUTH BEACH - juana, the chief said. RED BANK - Two men tors toward a church which had offered'to house convention Woman Is Fined contract with National Code Henry Hurley, 100 Locust A warrant was issued for who were arrested early-yes- nondelegates. Consultants of Montgomery Ave., Red Bank, is in fair con- Mr. Dominczak, who was not terday have been taken to the •uinBlHnniiiiinBiiiuiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiii 11 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiitiiiiranirii On Check Count Township for codification-of dition in Riverview Hospital, at home at the time of the Monmouth County Jail, Free- MIDDLETOWN - A, $50 . all borough ordinances. Red Bank, with Injuries suf- raid. He turned himself into hold, pending court appear- THEM1LY fine was assessed against a Theodore Huguenlii of 5 E. fered in a boating mishap. Detective Edward Kryscnski ances Aug. 28, when they will West Keansburg woman found Third St. was approved as a Mr. Hurley was reportedly yesterday morning. be represented by public de- ••';.- ' MAIN OFFICE: guilty in Municipal Court yes- member of Lincoln Hose Fire standing in the bow of a boat Mr. Dominczak has been re- fenders. CHESTNUT ST., RED BANK, M.J. 07701 BRANCH OFFICES: • terday of Issuing a worthless Co. when it ran aground in the leased In $2,500 bail pending a Robert C. Kee, 23, of New •7t RT. 15, MIDDLETOWN, N.J.,«774t Council authorized the dona- Navesink River. Patrolman preliminary bearing in Munic- Brunswick, is being held on JO EAST MAIN ST., FREEHOLD, N.J..077M check. OT BROADWAY, LONG BRANCH, H.J.,B77« Mrs. Carol L'i Torem, 31. of tion of a former borough Gerald Worthlngton of the ipal Court Aug. 31. $2,000 bail on charges of tres- < EtloOllshtd In 1171 by John H.Ceok and Henry Cloy 22 Hopkins Ter., was taken owned fire truck to the Coun- New Jersey Marine Police, The juvenile has been re- passing on private property, ' PUBLISHED BV THE BED BANK REGISTER into custody last Thursday by ty Fire Fighters Association here, investigated the acci- leased in the custody of his being a "peeping Tom," and Member of th» Associated P/ess-the Associated Preu Is endued ex- to be used for training pur- dent parents pending a hearing by clusively to the use forrepybllcatlonof all the local news printed In this Detective Robert Olsen after possession of marijuana. newspaper as well m all AT» news dispatches. a security officer at Sears poses. Mr. Hurley, who reportedly juvenile authorities. Michael L. Pitts, 18, of 100 Second class postage paid at Red Bank. N.J. 07701 end at additional The resignation of Albert E. suffered two broken ribs, was Taking part hi the raids and River St. is being held on mailing offices. Published dally, Monday through Friday. Mall subscrlp. Roebuck and Co., Rt. 35, tioni payoble In advance. signed a complaint alleging Bennett, a long time employe taken to the hospital by the apprehensions besides Detec- $1,000 bail. He is charged with 1 Week 1 Month 3 Monlh» 6 Months IVeor Mrs, Torem issued a worth- In the borough's public works Rumson First Aid Squad. The tive Kryscnski and Patrolman larceny of a tool box from tbe S.W 13.50 W.S0 118.00 US.M department, was accepted Xanthos were Detectives John Home Delivery by Carrier -JOCjnti a week . less check in the amount of accident happened at 8 a.m. rear of Twin Brook Wreckers, Single cony a) counter. lOCents. , with regret Sunday. Mulvey and Leonard Moon. Tiltonand W\ Sunset Aves. The paflyEegister,EedBMk-MiddJetown,N.J. Tuesday, Asgast 15, Ratified County Obituaries Mrs,V.R.Cim>lello Mrs. Harry M. Cook Ssacher Pact PERTH AMBOY - Mrs. FAIR HAVEN - Nellie M. North Long Branch, and the Victoria Rose CiccoleUo, $8, of Cook, 84, ol 49 3rd St. died, Fair Haven Auxiliary of Rlv- *24 Florida Grove Road, died yesterday at RivervLew Hospi- erview Hospital. Saturday at the Victor Me- tal, Red Bank, after a short, Mrs. Cook and her husband, Middletown morial Hospital, New-York illness. Harry M. Cook, celebrated (DLETOWN-The Association. , City. She was the mother of Mrs. Cook was born in Ma- their 66th wedding anniver- Jaf Education last night The board hired 19 teachers, Mrs. Marie Tropea of Hazlet. nalapan Township, and had sary on April 26. ratified an agree- retired one and accepted res- Mrs. Clccolello was bom in lived in North Long Branch announced yesterday ignations from eight more. Italy and had- come to this before moving here 18 years survived by a daughter, Mrs. tte Middletown Town- About 14 teachers vacancies country many years ago. She ago. Cora Kacen of Fair Haven; Education Association on remain to be filled for the had lived in Hasbrouck She was a member of the two grandchildren, and a 'contracts for 1972-73. coming school year. Heights prior to coming here Asbury United Methodist [..The MTEA membership is Hire Staffers two years ago. She was the Church' of Long, Branch, and The Worden Funeral Home —ifcted to ratify the new Hired were Mrs. Emily Do- widow of Michael CiccoleUo. was a past president of. the of Red Bank is in charge of ar- SeptS. herty of Red Bank, science, Also surviving are two other church's WSCS. She was a rangements. ; Meat of the new agreement, Bayshore Junior High School; daughters, Mrs. Ruby Pignotti member of toe Ada Chapter, negotiation 10 months, Mrs. Marion Parmentier of of Rutherford, and Mrs, Susan Order of" Eastern Star, Fair Mrs. Rose Schneider a, teacher salary scale pro- Lincroft, high school nurse; Mallszewski of Rochelle Haven. ~ increases ranging from Mrs. Eileen Margey of Port KEANSBURG - Mrs. Hose Park; three sons, Pantaleo Mrs. Cook was also a mem- C.'Schneider, 77, of 355 Carr Wfper cent to 9.6 per cent and Monmouth, elementary school CiccoleUo of Hasbrouck ber of the ladles auxiliary of averaging about 6.25 per cent, nurse; Miss Deborah Donovan AWARD WINNERS — The union representing manufacturing personnel at Heights, Louis Clccolello, the Oliver Byron Fire Co., Ave., died Sunday at home. •aid board member Warren C. of Red Bank, elementary Bendix Corporation, Eatontown, awarded scholarships to three students, She was the widow of Ernest here, and John CiccoleUo of H. Schneider Sr. DeBrown, board negotiating grades; Mrs. Diane Swaim of all daughters of union members. Shown, left to right, are Stanley P. Old Bridge; her mother, Mrs. Mrs. John A. Dellert committee chairman. The in- Belford, social studies, Bay- White, union president; Miss Cherrie L. Swann of Oceanport, graduate of Maria Rizzuto of Oakdale, Mrs. Schneider was born in creases can be met within the shore Junior High School; Shore Regional High School; Miss Cathryn C. White of Brick Township, L.I.; two sisters, Mrs. Connie ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS New York City and had re- ^framework of the already Mrs. Evelyn Marvel of Ocean graduate of Bricktown High School; Grant E. Peters, union recording sec- Flannery of Florida and Mrs. - Mrs. Mary Jane Dellert, 46, sided here 35 years. vadbpted 1972-73 school budget, Township, French, Thompson retary, and AAIss Janls Malara of Long Branch, graduate of Long Branch Jennie Olsen of Chicago; six of 71 W. Highland Ave. died JMr. DeBrown said. Junior High School; Robert High School. Sunday In Rrverview Hospital, She was a member of the brothers, John Rizzuto of New Red Bank. United Methodist Church of f On the new scale, teachers Miller of Collegeville, Pa., ele- Windsor, N.Y., Frank Rizzuto Keansburg and a member of i with bachelor degrees will be- mentary grades; Miss Bar- of New York State, and Jo- Bom in Brooklyn, she was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. the church's Women's Society |'gln at $8,100, rising through 13 bara Stern of West Long seph Rizzuto, Fred Hlzzuto, of Christian Service. |Bteps to a maximum of Branch, speech therapist; Raymond Rizzuto, and Wil- Thomas Hyland of Spotswood. ,113,900. Comparative figures Mrs. Roberta Zell of Matawan Pair Plead Innocent liam Rizzuto, all of Maryland, A resident here 12 years, Surviving are three sons, '.In the previous scale are Township, elementary grades. 20 grandchildren, and twoshe was a member of St. Ernest H. Schneider Jr., of •17,900 to $13,272. Teachers Also, Patrick O'Sbea of great-grandchildren. Agnes Catholic Church, the Jamesburg, Clifford E. •with more seniority will re- Keansburg, elementary Ladies Auxitary of Sandy Schneider of West Keansburg ,-ceive somewhat larger in- grades; Walter Woods of Hook Bay Post,. American Le- and Louis E. Schneider of I creases. Leonardo, physical education, To Charges of Theft The Vander Plaat Memorial gion, both here. Home, Paramus, is in charge Colts Neck; a sister, Mrs. Thompson Junior High Surviving, besides her par- Carolyn Cohn of New York; | Class Size Study School; Miss Vallorie Ivan of FREEHOLD - A 24-year- They were arraigned before against the account of Henry of arrangements. { The board adopted a recom- old Hazlet man and a 25-year- County Court Judge Louis R. F. and Kathlerine Ryan, and ents, are Her husband, John nine grandchildren, and six Middletown, elementary A. Dellert; four sons, Jobn T., great-grandchildren. rmendation of the MTEA that grades; William Callaghan of old Keyport man have plead- AiMns. two bank withdrawal slips : a joint committee of three ed innocent to charges of en- John Bacon, 28, of Long May 25, each for $900 alle- James, Raymond and Joseph New Shrewsbury, mathemat- Mrs. P. DeRosa Dellert, all at home; four Arrangements are under the : representatives each from the ics, Thompson Junior High tering two Holmdel homes Branch, denied that he broke gedly against the account of KEYPORT - Mrs. Pauline and stealing articles valued at into the apartment of Lottie Ann Pico, 9 Laurel Ave., daughters, Mary Alice, Mary direction of the John W. Men- • association and the school ad-. School; Miss Ellen Martin of De Rosa, 54, of 2028 Florence Therease, Mary Rose and lenbeck Funeral Home of • • ministration be set up to study Red Bank, elementary $845. Durant, 135 Sea View Avc., Keansburg. Ave. died yesterday in Riv- Mary Kathleen Dellert, also f the problem of class size. The grades; Miss Letltia Scanlon Long Branch, Aug. 4 and stole She also denied receiving erview Hospital Red Bank. at home two brothers, James > joint committee will act as an of Holmdel, elementary Angelo Bocchino of 28 Hem- a jack valued at $50. stolen property, the Beretsky Hyland of Garwood add Brian : advisory body to the board. grades; Miss Judith Falvo of lock St., Hazlet, and Jack M. check May 22 and the Ryan Mrs. Oe Rosa was bom in Hyland of Spotswood, and a Death Notices : A plan for class organiza- Red Bank, elementary, Carasco of 251 Atlantic St., Janice Evins, 25, of Brick check May 23.. Sharon, Ohio, and bad lived tion in the elementary schools grades; Mrs. Sylvia Fuller of Keyport, denied that they Township, denied four counts She also denied issuing a presented by the board secre- New Monmouth, mathemat- broke into the home of Martin of issuing forged instruments forged bank check for $32 to formerly lived in Plainfield. of Spotswood. tary was adopted, with Rich- ics, Thompson Junior High Schneider, 46 line Road, and to United Counties Trust Co.. the First Merchants National Arrangements are aider di- ard R. Anderson dissenting. School; Mrs. Mary Sizelove of stole a stereo set valued at Middletown. Bank, Red Bank, May 17 alle- She was a communicant of rection of the Postal Funeral fflie plan calls for double ses- Middletown, elementary $640 May 26, and that they She is charged with issuing gedly against the account of Holy Family Catholic Church, Home, bete. '" •••••• sions in some fifth and sixth grades, and Mrs. Barbara broke into the home of John a $46 bank check May 22 alle- Karen M. Courter, Oriole Union Beach. ," ^grade classes in Port Mon- Ladig, 784 Holmdel Road, gedly against the account of Road, Middletown, and re- Hemphill of South Amboy, ele- Surviving are her husband, Socr«a Htort, R.C. OHM* Rochellt Pork. ^nouth and Bayview Schools. mentary grades. May 17, and stole articles val- Walter Beretsky and a $46 ceiving the stolen check the MCAPtoHold Wtdntidfly. t:1S «M. IntVrmtnt Holy Frank P. De Rosa; six sons, Cron Ctnitttry, North Arlington. Tim 3Mtr. Anderson said he fears it ued at $205. bank check May 23 allegedly same day. tamlly will rtnlv* frltndi Monday and Peter and Frank De Rosa, at An Open House Tuexfey, 2-5 and 7-10 pjtl. , ; iloay lead to some students The new teachers will be home, John De Rosa of Hieing subjected to double ses- paid according to the new sal- RED BANK — An open M; of 4» TNrd sions two years in a row. Cheesequake and Julius De ary guide after it is ratified Rosa, Eugene De Rosa and house at the. Neighborhood :S.-iMviASlio-s, gVnraly students will no bytheMTEA, Marlboro Zoners to Rule Service Center operated by t.KoanSvi^Ai Pasquale De Rosa, all of Haz- 11 1 1 11 11 Singer he "rewarded" by Miss Marilyn Willis, who the Monmouth •Community ""* ' ' ^ ' ifelng suspended from school fet; a daughter, Mrs. Joseph taught home economics in Prestia of Hazlet; a brother, Action Program (MCAP) at 2 •and turned loose to spend Bayshore Junior High School North Bridge Ave. is. sched- iftelr time in idleness off Sept. 5 on Nursery School Tnomas Christman of Young- in 1971-72, will teach music stown, Ohio; three sisters, uled from 1 to 4 p.m. on School grounds. Dr. Bemhard there in 1972-73. Thursday, Aug. 31. JACKSON — Dewltt, ogt M, ol 41 HarrV MARLBORO - The "Saga viously presented a real es- JEdward Kowal. The sale of Mrs. Charles Mullen of Hub- ton Avi., Rtd Bank, Aw. 11 at Vtitram cW. Schneider, superintendent, Mrs. Bordta Gallagher, ele- Peart Robinson, supervisor Howttal, East Oranot. Surviving art till Of the Patchwork School' tate broker and a real estate the house is contingent on the bard, Ohio, Mrs. Lena Furillo widow. Mn. Matt* Jadusni two tltlwt. mentary music teacher in should end Sept 5 when the of the center, said the purpose Mill Ellntxtti Jocknn and Mn. Elk" sannOHnced. appraiser who testified that applicants receiving all neces- of North Hollywood, Calif, Colmaj, bom or Ntw Rodulle, N.V.; hh township schools since 1966, Board of Adjustment rules on the surrounding land values sary approvals. of the open house was to fa- torttr diuBhUr, Ml» Wary Quitn, a! ^ The superintendent asked and Mrs. Peter Carparelli of ttoim. H« w
i 5- SHOP YOUR FRIENDLY RETAIL TRADE BOARD MERCHANTS. THEY'RE YOUR FRIENDS NJEA Attacks Proposed State School Testing Plan ByCARLZETTZ said that the teachers view be given standardized reading tricts in the state "regularly ing comparisons of school dls- The association has also ob- evaluating teacher perform- jected to the use of a stan- the preceding statement the program as "purely a and mathematics tests next give reputable standardized "trictsrindlvidual schools, stu- ance as well as that of stu- dardized test throughout the which warned, "If the tests TRENTON HIGHLANDS - An ex was hired in mid-August. She Additional enrollments in he reported. Three-fifths of gers on Peak St. were a pri- other schools — and tuition Last year's girls inter- lands and Highlands elemen- panded curriculum, increased has the distinction of being each class are expected, Mr. the students will be coming to mary consideration in this de- paid for them — will be ac- scholastic athletic activities tary schools. Also tin the team 'busing services, a 10-period one of the first women in the Isch said. school a bit earlier in the day, cision," said Mr. Isch. commodated at the local are being increased with the is a child psychologist. day and H new staff members state hired for such a position. To accommodate them, one he added. "This is the first year we school. "This will effect an- addition of a girls gymnastics New staff menbers include will greet nearly 800 Henry Girl Vocational Students of the three portable class- Voluntary Basing will have school district- other savings," said Mr. Isch. team. two mathematics teachers Hudson Regional School stu- Mr. Isch said more than 100 rooms was converted so that Children from Highlands owned buses," said the super- At the same time, it will The hiring of a learning dis- and one new teacher each for dents when they return to students — including girls — more than one class can be will be bused this year, Mr. intendent. "We can effect a make for 100 per cent room abilities consultant teacher industrial arts, music, special school Sept. 6. are expected to be enrolled in held in the facility at one Isch said, but this will be on a savings on the additional bus utilization, he explained, but and a school social worker education, art, science and New vocational courses in vocational courses. time. This will be for small voluntary basis. Up to 350 stu- route with our own buses." no problems are anticipated will round out the three-mem- languages (German-French). the industrial arts and home classes. dents will be bused at the because of scheduling revi- With additional enrollment Students in special classes ber child study team to be A former librarian has also economics departments will board's expense. "Real dan- sions. and new classes, more state In anticipation of increased who formerly were sent to shared with Atlantic High- been rehired. include courses on building funds for vocational course enrollment "we are going on a construction, trim- and interi- reimbursement are antici- greater overlapping schedule or and small engines work, as pated. "Last year we received which will be more flexible well- as home planning and $17,000 for the vocational pro- for the kids," said Mr. Isch. furnishing and several gram," Mr. Isch said. "This Last year's eight-period day courses in clothing Instruc- should be increased because will be converted to 10 peri- tion. of the additional classes," he ods. Lunch time has been cut START OFF RIGHT... These vocational courses continued. from 50 minutes to 32 minutes, are being offered in addition Aside from vocational offer- to general business courses of ings, classes such as archi- last year. tectural drawing, introduction State Seeks CLOTHING FOR YOUNG MEN Last year's trades and in- to psychology, history of the dustry program, whereby stu- arts, music theory and mini- BY dentt-attended classes half a courses in English to.provide a More Safety day and worked in business broader choice of areas of the other half of the day, will study are being included. Also In Buildings be repeated. offered will be new home eco- TRENTON - The State De- Superintendent Joseph L. nomics courses in child care partment of Education is Isch said he,expects the and development and home beginning a new effort to im- CORDUROY SPORTCOATS" school will also become in- management. prove safety in New Jersey's THE TRADITIONAL volved in a distributive educa- Enrollment L'p school buildings. STRAIGHT MODELS tion program, similar to the OR The 10-year-old school will A new position of state su- BLAZER CONTRASTING TRIM trades and industry offering. house nearly 800 students, a pervisor of school plant safety A vocational coordinator slight increase over last year. has been established in the IN NAVY IN GREEN- CAMEL -BEIGE Bureau of Facility Planning BROWN Services of the Department's Boys 8 to 14 $25.00 Division of Field Services. VELVET CORDUROY HEFoolwoWH Howard W. Holcombe, who 15 to 20 $32.50 IN ' THE FUN PLACE TO SHOP FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY I has served in the bureau 23 GREEN-BURGUNDY years, the last 16 as archi- Young Men's tectural supervisor, has been Boys 8to 14 From 25.00 What's new is here...now appointed to the new job. 36 to 42 $42.50 15 to 20 From 32.50 The new effort is aimed at Young Men's checking more closely for un- '36 to 42 From 39.50 safe conditions in school build- ings and making sure that FALL HANDBAGS steps are taken to eliminate any hazards. Holcombe plans to work through the county Shoulder strap casuals superintendents of schools in determining where potential hazards may exist. $4*110 $1 Dr. Edward A. Spare, dir- ector of the bureau, said that the emphasis of the new safety thrust will be placed on providing assistance to local It'i a great fashion school districts as to what group ... in all sizes steps can be taken to ettmate CONTINENTAL BLAZER and shapes! Big and hazards. He said the bureau littl* polyurethones, will furnish guidelines for lo- POLYESTER KNIT genuine suedes and cal school officials to follow in vinyls with suede. checking the condition of their Goat-grained vinyls. buildings for safety. He said GREEN-RED- the Department is revising NAVY-BROWN SUITS A. Goat-groined vinyl S2.W and updating its booklet, •• Designs on real "Smoke Signals," which con- POLYESTER KNIT siMd* $3.99 tains suggestions on pre- C. Room/ polyure- venting fires, conducting fire NAVY BLUE than* bag $3.99 drills and making safety In- D. Smalltr polyur*- thowbog $2.99 spections. Young Men's I. Vinyl trimmed Spare said that the action Young Men's 36 to 42 wHh«Mde....$5.99 was taken by the State Board 36tc>42 of Education in 1963 requiring 70* the installation of automatic 49" fire detection equipment in every school building by 1968 was a major move toward greater safety. The need to check buildings more closely for potential hazards has exis- TRADITIONAL WOOL SPORTCOATS IN PLAIDS AND CHECKS ted for some time, Spare said, but staff limitations have, un- til now, prevented the bureau from maintaining the surveil- A GOOD SELECTION OF SLACKS TO COORDINATE lance seen needed. Richard Gates, assistant ar- chitectural supervisor in the bureau, has been promoted to succeed Holcombe as archi- tectural supervisor. Cassette television brightening student home study scene OPEN WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY EVES. TILL 9 P.M. Imagine a child entering his home, inserting a cas- sette Into the color-televi- sion attachment and watch- ing his homework. It sounds far-out, but these devices are already being developed by large companies. Cartridge tele- ay ton KI aqgg visions could become a top educational medium. Some educators look at Inside-story handbags this as a boon to televised MEN'S and BOYS' OUTFITTERS SINCE 1846 Campus size vinyl bags learning. Because learning with a place for ID's, depends oh repetition and photos, cards and more. the video recordings can easily be viewed more than larger size $3.57 once, It Is the biggest step 2 since the availability of ed- 19 Broad Street SATiSfACTtON GUARANTEED REPLACEMENT OR MONEY REFUNDED ucational film. Tfte Daily Begbtcr, Bed Badt-BUcWteteHU, N J. Tuesday, August IS, 1*72 er Back to Buys in Red Bank SHOP TO(/A? FRIENDLY RETAIL TRADE BOARD MERCHANTS. THEY'RE YOUR FRIENDS Single Sessions Restored in Highlands THE HIGHLANDS - Single ses- fourth, fifth and sixth grades with no doubling up. students are grouped accord- one level to the next, and par- hours will be in effect in the sions and non-graded classes by scheduling 14 classes in 13 • Most board members agree ing to their levels of achieve- ent-teacher conferences are coming school year. Last will be featured when High- rooms. Two kindergarten that though single sessions ment in reading and math- scheduled to report progress. year's schedule called for stu- CAMPUS lands Public School opens classes, which run but a Half will make classes somewhat ematics. Each child is as- To be continued in the 1972- dents to be in their seats at next month. day each anyway, will share a larger than might be desired, signed to a non-graded group 73 school year is a readiness 8:50 a.m. They took 40 min- LOOK Robert A. Zolkiewicz, ad- single room. Non-graded this evil is less than that under a teacher who may or program for kindergarteners, utes for luncb and were dis- ministrative principal, won classes and classes in fifth worked by split sessions. may not be his home room with pupils assigned to groups missed at 2:45 p.m. The new board approval of a plan to and sixth grades will be as- Calling the non-graded con- teacher. Students are free to according to their readiness schedule calls for pupils to re- eliminate split sessions in signed individual classrooms cept introduced in the first advance from one level to the to begin learning to read. port to school at 8:45 a.m., three grades last year "an un- next in either subject solely Such instruction gives kinder- take 30 minutes for lunch and qualified success," the board on the basis of their learning garten children a head start be dismissed at 2:30 p.m. approved unanimously exten- progress and without regard on first grade reading pro- The new schedule provides sion of the concept to fourth to age or ostensible grade. grams, the principal ex- the same number of teaching grade next month. Parents are notified each plained. hours — five hours and 15 Under the non-graded plan, time children advance from A new schedule of school minutes. Hazlet Pushes Expansion HAZLET - The 1972-73 Road to the former Hazlet gram is expected to get under He is particularly pleased school year, when it begins Ave. School at 82 Bethany way with a ground breaking with the extension of the con- Sept. 6, will see changes on Road. tentatively set for late au- tinuous progress program in the administrative level with tumn. the elementary schools, and, a new acting superintendent This school year will also along with other board mem- and his staff working out of bring with it implementation Curriculum changes, par- bers, is looking forward to the new administrative offices. of a school expansion pro- ticularly in English and his- school expansion. gram, with additions planned1 tory at the high school, will go Roman Cabrera was named into effect John Frascatore As far as enrollment goes, at five schools. Classrooms no significant problems or acting superintendent of and learning centers will be will become the new curricu- schools July 1. He replaces R. lum coordinator Sept. 1. major changes are antici- your added at Union Ave., Raritan pated by Mr. Cabrera. "En- Thomas Jannarone who re- Valley, Lillian Drive and Arnold Miller, Board of rollment has leveled off," he tired after 14 years in this Beers St. Schools; and a .Education president, said the said. headquarters school district. 'learning center only is coming school year "will see Twenty new teachers have Later that month the dis- planned at West Keansburg a closer coordination between been hired for the coming for trict's administrative offices School. the elementary and high school year, replacing those were moved from Middle The $1,086,000 building pro- school curriculum." who have retired or resigned. CAMPUS Grades Departmentalized FASHIONS ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS been recommended by the in their home rooms daily with Mrs. Patricia Schick — Departmentalization in Henry Hudson Regional from 9 until 9:45 a.m. At 9:45 handling science classes, Miss grades five and six will be a Board of Education as a mea- a.m. they will move to other Mary Beth Nevins teaching striking innovation as school sure to prepare youngsters for classrooms for the first of two English, Mrs. Elizabeth Dar- starts here next month. departmental work in the re- departmentalized sessions be- cy offering mathematics and For the first time, students gional school. fore lunch time. After lunch, Mrs. Augusta Peters teaching in those grades will move Uncrowded Classes one more departmentalized social studies. ABBE Because September's fifth class is scheduled, and stu- MEN'S SHOP from class to class in four Though school enrollment 52 Broad St. Red B study areas: science, social .and sixth' grade enrollment dents then return to their tends to remain constant in JUNIOR studies, English and math- has decreased somewhat from home rooms to end the school the district, Mr. Wuesthoff es- ematics, explained George H. last year's no problems of day. timates an enrollment of 48 to JUNIOR PETITE Wuesthoff, school superinten- crowding or oversize classes Each three to four weeks 50 new students in kindergar- dent. are foreseen as students move there will be a day without de- ten by school opening day. PRE-TEEN Designed as a move to mod- from class to class, the super- partmentalized work. ernize instruction in the intendent said. Teacher Assignments borough's elementary school, Beginning in September, Mr. Wuesthoff has an- departmentalization has also fifth and sixth graders will be nounced teacher assignments, Junior Bazaar Ocean Sessions Staggered Moster Charge Bank American) Circle Plata OCEAN TOWNSHIP — six. one through six. 3» Broad Str««l Shopping Center Overcrowding, will necessitate A public referen- Another Innovation will be IF ITS QUALITY YOU'RE LOOKING FOR Red Bonk, N.J. Manasquan, N.J. staggered sessions in the high Phone: 747-5392 dum will be submitted the intermediate science cur- Phone: 2J3-495J school here this year and split to voters in September riculum studies program for sessions in grades five and for construction of a 1,500 stu- grades seven and eight. In dent junior high school. this process, students work in- The district has just been dividually with teachers act- awarded, under the Elemen-" ing as consultants. Marking is BACK TO tary Secondary Education Act • done on a personalized basis. SCHOOL Title HI, a federal grant for Individualized reading will $57,500 for in-service pro- be introduced in grades K grams for teaching the handi- through two. capped. This is one of 31 sites Open classrooms with learn- selected in the state out of 200 ing centers in language, the applications. It will be used to arts and mathematics will be provide state-training for utilized for grades K to six. physical education teachers for working with handicapped THAT FLUENTLY children. MOSCOW (AP) - Special- For the first time, seventh ized schools in Moscow take and eighth grade girls will be pride in their teaching of for- given courses in industrial eign languages. The news agen- cy Tass, in one of its ventures arts, in line with the trend for 3-PC. VINYL MOUUIED VINYL GASES NOW IN technology in education. The into English, says: "Many LUGGAGESET graduates speak English or. VIVID BUTE! ORANGEf GREEN! COMPOSITION BOOKS hands-on experience with German so fluently as if they tools and building materials, have lived for several years in will be continued for grades 88 21"case •New York or Hamburg." sale 12 ;Reg. 15.9S Reg. 26.95. Week- Beautiful inside and out. With locks you can rely • ender, pullman and mir- on, easy-grip handles. rored train case. Big 26* Pullman Reg. 21.95 17.M value! 14Vi" Cosmetic Case Reg. 13.95 10.18 LAUNDRY, C SHOE 98 BAGS 98 RACKS 1 c INDOOR PLASTIC Oft CLOTHES O98 HANGERS V DRYER O Cardboard Mufllpfa SKIRT & TROUSER Classic charmers. Favor- CHEST OF £98 ite looks for the campus DRAWERS 3 UP HANGERS se!. Styles are the pretti- UNDER BED Over-The-Door est ever, pretty, perky and displaying feminine touch- STORAGE SPACE SAVING es. Stop in soon. BOXES HANGER FLUORESCENT RED-WBITE'BLUE COLOR-BRIGHT DRESS BAGS* SUIT BAGS M-W&TTIAMP VINTLCGYMBAG BINDER ENSEMBLE BLANKET BAGS PANT SUITS AND MORE DRESSES • SUITS BLAZERS Beg. 7.99. For home, Reg. 2.99. Leather CHARGE IT! 3-ring binder, composi- 32 BROAD ST. RED BANK dorm. Takes 14 watt look, water-resistant tion book, assignment . SPORTSWEAR bulb. Smart In avocado, vinyl, steel reinforced brown, gray. gusset. 16" book. Choice of covers. Est. 1925 "AFTER FIVE" fashions Free Delivery 741-7500 JOY SHOP Newman Springs Road BROAD ST. RED BANK Uncroft MON-TUES.-THURS.-SAT. 9:30 TO 5:30 10:00-5:30; WED. & FRI. 9:30 TO 9:00 SHOP EARLY Friday until 9:00 Daily ond Saturday 8-5:30 Wed. and Fri. 'til 9 p.m. AND SAVE! TteD«flyEcgfater,BedBari^MMdtetewit,WJ.THesday,Aiig«tli,»? It to 'HHPlWi Buys in Red Bank SHOP YOUR FRIENDL Y RETAIL TRADE BOARD MERCHANTS. THEY'RE YOUR FRIENDS Major Curriculum Changes in Keypbrt KEYPORT-Amajor "We are also bringing in In- have two marking penoas in dents will practice daily with year," Mr. Fredericks said. "I think you can say this change in high school curricu- troduction to industrial arts introduction to vocations; two the high school band. "In years past we have had year we will be taking a more lum is scheduled for the U72- and vocations," the superin- marking periods of drafting "We are also going to give students practicing together realistic approach to the 73 school year. tendent said. and one marking period each each student individual in- and you can imagine some of wants of the students and the Douglas W. Fredericks, "This course .represents the in metals and wood. struction or instruction with the sounds that came out of subjects they would prefer to school superintendent, said foundation upon which the en- Wrestttag Makes Debut related instruments this the music rooms. take," he concluded. dezvous "the practice of designating tire Industrial arts program is Varsity wrestling is also students as business, college built. being introduced for the first preparatory, genera} or voca- "Because 75 per cent of our time in the athletic depart- The Red Bank Mall tional will be eliminated. graduates enter the job mar- ment. "Rather than following pre- ket, the program is designed Last year wrestlers partici- BROAD at Monmouth, Red Bank scribed tracks each student specifically to provide in- pated in competition on the will have in individualized coming ninth graders an over- freshman and junior varsity College-Town has a fashion schedule tailor-made to his or view of the entire program levels only. bone to pick! It's a herring: that would enable them to BONE mix and match trio that, her particular needs and in- "We feel we have an ex- I. will be # 1 in your wardrobe!, terests," he stated. more intelligently select an cellent instructor in Arthur T Wear the patch pocket jacket, "Although this type of cur- area in which to specialize; a Travlos," the superintendent with the streamline pants or riculum isn't unique it is a trimester of vocation guid- continued. "Mr. Travlos was , choose the belted walker skirt first in this school system," ance in which they could be a district heavyweight cham- \ for a different look. This "two! Mr. Fredericks continued, exposed to opportunities for pion while attending Shore I suiter* will fit all needs. Bond- "and it is certainly a big step vocational training, job op- Regional High School and also ed nub. herringbone in brown forward." ' portunities and insight into competed while in college." ••or blackV56% Wool/22% Ny- training requirements for Store Music 1 Ion/22% Acrylic-bonded to- Data Processing Course various unions," Mr. Fred- Mr. Fredericks said the T00% Acetate Tricot. Sizes for New courses being offered ericks explained. . all three 6/6 to 15/16. For un- include data processing which school system's musical pro- | dercover wear a Wintuck rib will include Instruction in key During the course of the'gram will be expaned so that turtleneck. 17 color choices. punch operation and sorting. school year the student will seventh and eighth grade stu- , give you a new look with each turtleneck you choose!.., 'sizes S-M-t. New Concepts Planned For Marlboro Schools MARLBORO' - A number He said that two teachers different levels, while contin- of innovative programs were sent to Brooklyn Friends uing to be grouped with their will be incorporated into the School for training in teaching age peers," he said. curriculum here when schools the oped classrooms. Criterion Reference Testing open Sept 7.' Mr. DeFino said that if the is also being initiated in the And according to acting Su- program is successful, it can subject of reading in the Mor- perintendent of Schools Frank either be expanded to include ganville School. DeFino, the five elementary more first Or second grades, Under this program, a schools will be able to handle or can include the higher teacher sets up goals he U the increased enrollment, grades. _/ wants the students to attain at thereby avoiding double ses- New Reading Program . the end of the year. . YOUR FIGURE. sions. Another new concept called "The traditional achieve- However, Mr. DeFino the Continuous progress Pro- ment test is basically recall. gram, will be started in the Four-piece outerwear warned that unless a new This new concept sets goals pant suit pulls together school is built next year, Morganville School. and students must exhibit the The program involves hav- skills to attain those goals," taffeta-lined wool slacks, knit "there will be double sessions pullover vest, shirt and , in 1973-74." ing students study reading at he said. , , In the Marlboro Elementary their own pace. Students Mr. DeFino said that enroll- blanket plaid taffeta lined School, a program called the would continue to be grouped ment in the district's five ele- jacket, II "open classroom concept" is in grades, but in the reading mentary schools for the 1972- being initiated for two groups aspect of education they 73 school year is. expected to of first and second grade stu- would progress at individual be some 3,100 students. He dents. levels. said enrollment last year was Iidlvtdnal Progress "A student can be on the 2,612 students. Mr. DeFino said that this 10th reading level In the sec- The superintendent attribut- concept Involves placing the ond grade or in the fifth ed the increase to the fact two grades together under one grade," he said. that 221 students graduated supervising teacher. Each After the student passes a last June, while 435 more stu- Natebom. student, however, would prog- test on one level, he can prog- dents are entering school next Women's Specialty Shops in Red Bank, Naw Brunswick and White Hairs. ress at his own rate. ress to the next. month. "By the older kids being Grouped With Peers with the younger kids, both "We are heading in the di- groups can learn from each rectlon of having students other's experience," he said. progress at their own rate, at UnionBeach to Widen The surprising Maverick. OPEN DAILY 9:30 TO 5 - WED. ft FRJ.TO 9 [Technology Program UNION BEACH - Tech- school system two years ago Ldvertise in The Register noiogy for children, a Pn>. to provide elementary teach- Didyou know that this roomy, gram Introduced into the er's with a means of in- $ troducing work concepts and 6-cylinder American car is priced just 31 higher modern technology into their classrooms will be expanded . into 24 classrooms this year. thanaToyotaCorollal600? "We have been providing • this course from kindergarten through sixth grades but in 14 • classrooms only," William G. DiMaio, school superintendent said. "What the course does is provide the students with six years of training in the use of hand tools," he continued. "It also increases motivation and creativity." Children in the lower grades learn to work with cardboard; those in the upper grades use wood. All power tools are used by If yon can iffordaToyott Corolla I600-or almost the teachers. any little Import-yon caaaffordaMaverick. Look: Electives are also being FOOD MAVERICK Moor frcrlladar W.14O.*. presented to seventh and Maintenance: eighth grade students. TOYOTA COROLLA 1600 2-door 4-erfbidcr $2,109.' Even simpler, more convenient than tie little taqports. "In addition to the regular VW113 (Super Beetle) 2-door 4-cyUnder S2.1S9.' Toyota, for example, recommends normal service every 3000 nun or courses in English, social DATSUNFL51O Moor 4-cyUiidcr $2,306.' threcmonths, whichever comes first OnMaverick,lt's6000miIetor«ix studies, math and science the Muuhctuni^ nwicilxl null price ft! MMr nMcll. Eidufct dulcr pqanUoa student can choose from such cbugn it «nj, daUnlkm duisa, till* ud tuts. months. So Maverick's recommended service interval is twice as NOTE: People ask us how we ctn afford to offer a roomy, long as Toyota's. electives as art, first aid, 6-cylinder Maverick at about the same price as the little imports. French, general business, We also designed Maverick to be a simple machine to care for. In (act, First, we've been malting small can since 1908. Experience helps. we've even prepared a m anual which tells you ho w to do many maintenance, auto mechanics and photo- Second, we haven't changed Maverick-except for mechanical graphy, just to name a few improvements-since we firstintroduce d it. That kind of continuily jobs yourself. choices," Mr. DiMaio said. helps to control costs. One more convenience: there are over 5,600 Ford dealers in the country. Third, recent currency revaluations and devaluations have helped Toyota has about 850.' "We are also offering the restore the competitive stance of American manufacturers. student additional help in aca- Most little imports give you demics," he said. , Ample room inside. MsnerlcIA front seal,. 4-cylinder engines. Maverick gives v forexamalc: omr 5" more "Supposing a student likes yon a 6-cylinderenglne. math. Well, he can take addi- shoulder room than (left to right) Ponche 32.50,24 Inch 62.00, Hal-Nlta 52.00 tional periods of that subject. Toyota 1600. It's smooth. It's reliable. It lets you Train Cate 52.00,27 Inch Pullman 72.00, Garment Bag 145.00 If a parent feels his or her There's no wasted accelerate into turnpike traffic with child needs additional help in space inside Maverick. confidence and hold your own on steep a. subject we are offering ad- At the same time, there's hills. And it delivers surprisingly good ditional help," the superinten- none of that small-car gas mileage. dent added. crowded feeling. "We will also introduce Into the system a course on in- A good car for long trips. troduction to vocations as well , Maverick's track is 6.9" wider than Toyota Corolla's. Its wheelbase as expand our industrial arts is 11.1" longer. There's a bit more weight, too. By themselves, these FORD MAVERICK differences aren't very big-but they can add up to a big difference in the courses into the lower FORD 01VISION grades." way Maverick drives and handles the open road. Mr. DiMaio said enrollment Belter idea for safety... buckle upt It mayjust be the best car value in America today. in the elementary school will decrease this year by approxi- lownuva mately 35 students but will in-' liJMOMSIJtKT Major Credit Cards Accepted WOODMDCCCfNTB crease at Keyport High School DOREMUSFORD HDMNK.N.J. WOOOMDGEfNJ. — where local students attend Expert repairs done on premises — by approximately 40 stu- 90 Monmouth Street, Red Bank 747-2557 634-8800 dents. »- i he Dally Register, Red Bank-MJddfetown, N.J. Tuesday. August 15. U12 School Financing May Cause Tumult Court decWoos around the "The need to increase local support of a thorough* and ef- creed that, foeminimum-ai d the exchange^ A large group .Texas and an informal opinion 'tax burden and (2) improve country are revolutionizing taxes to make up for the state ficient system of free public 1 crees from the courts. funds be distributed under a will Iqse funds in $he-. shuffle, issued by Federal District The Legislature could clear- educational opportunity in the the way local citizens finance cutbacks may bring con- schools for the instruction of new procedure that has yet to and the wealthiest districts Court in Minnesota. New Jer- their public schools. Although troversy in msny of our weal- all the children in the state the problem up, NJEA says, poorest communities to bring be devised by the State Legis- 'probably will lose the entire sey's Botter decision was the by improving its procedures tJiem up to the level of W the first decisions occurred thier school districts," warns between the ages of 5 and 18 lature or the state Commis- $55 per pupil for the last half latest in the series. over 1,000 miles away, New Dr. Frederick L. Hipp,,' years." sioner of Education. Botter's for collecting and allocating best school districts in the of the present school year, - The state is appealing the state funds to (1) equalize the state. Jersey may be the first state NJEA's executive director. New Jersey's present proce- guidelines require that more Dr. Hipp said. Botter decision to the N.J. Su- to (eel the effects. "Teacher associations will in- dures for providing:state of. this rrfoney be distributed Some communities that lose preme Court, and a decision is More than half of New Jer- evitably resist any efforts to school aid gives each school to school districts on the basis school aid in the changeover expected this fall. Moreover, sey's 603 school districts face reduce educational quality. district only part of its oper- of their "need" as measured may have to borrow from state officials are asking Cutbacks in state financial aid Unless the state acts to ease ating funds. The state average by tax ratables. banks to keep schools open Judge Botter to postpone the for education beginning Jan. the problem, New Jersey may is 26%. The poorer the district . The concept underlying the through June, Dr. Hipp effective date of his decision I, reports the New Jersey be in for the most tumultuous is in tax ratables, the more Botter decision — to redistri- added. ' _ ' « to July 1, 1973, to carry New Education Assn., which warns year in its educational his- aid per-pupil it receives. Dis- bute state funds in a way that Jersey's public^chools tory." the highly variable local the changes may-cause more tricts with $30,000 or more per will help equalize educational school property tax is uncon- through the academic year than bookkeeping troubles. In essence, the Botter deci- weighted pupil in tax ratables opportunity - is admirable, stitutional, Judge Botter without reducing funds ex- Almost $100 million in state sion ruled that local school receive only the sop of "min- NJEA says. However, imple- ruled, because it places differ- pected in the 1972-73 budgets, funds will be reshuffled in the levies must be applied equally imum aid" — equal to $110 menting the concept will cause ing burdens on the residents adopted last February. second half of the 1972-73 to all taxpayers whether their per pupil per year, Dr. Hipp problems. noted. of each community and pro- Judge Botter fixed the Jan. school year, NJEA reports, as community is wealthy or Some school districts will vides differing opportunities. 1 deadline "to allow .time for a result of a decision made by poor in ratables. He bases Judge Botter's decision undoubtedly receive more Four'courts elsewhere have legislative action." NJEA Superior. Court Judge Theo- his decision on the N.J. State holds that New Jersey is not funds under the redistribution reached similar decsions. The agrees that improvements in dore I. Bolter last January. In Constitution, which states: doing enough to equalize than they lose in the elimina- first ruling came in California state school support should 1973-74, the reshuffling will in- "The Legislature shall pro- educational opportunity in tion of minimum aid, NJEA state; court last summer, fol- come from acts of the Legis- volve $200 million. vide for the maintenance and poorer school districts. He de- says. Some will break even in lowed by a similar ruling in lature rather than through de- Head Reviews School Financial Crisis SAVE ... By CATHARINE BARRETT . Catharine Barren, who contribute? the accompanying 1 •to some extent — in states' President, National Education article, is a Syracuse, N.Y., inner-city classroom teacher and all across the nation. Association a former member of the NEA Board of Director* and the for your children's future Public school education Executive Committee of the National Not only has the local faces a crippling financial Education Association! ou w property tax led to gross Save only &] a day fur 15 yearn and liy. rollcin' «|H' J '" ONCE UPON crisis. Needs continue to disparities; it is, in general, mount, but the necessary She has been elected president of the have »nv<)il $5,175. In addition, our high r>iiii|ioun Hickey-Freeman Hart, Schaffner & Marx Botany 500 - Haspel, Palm Beach KC316OB Carlos Sanlana, Buddy Miles The comedy alburn of the and other rock heavies get it Master Charge - Bank American) - American Express: year. Starling with the story including: on live in Hawaii. Unrelent- of the Godfather's crime em- Saturday In The Park ing, unbelievable, meaty Sid's CHECK LIST FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL NotvThat You've Gone/Alma Mater pire, The Crazy Gang Slate Of The Union rock and roll. creates "The Favor,"."An D SLACKS D SWEATERS Arrangement" and a not KC 31102* OVER 65 YEARS • JACKETS • SKIRTS • DRESSES very brave new world ol hila- rity. This album contains all new material— D SPORT and DRESS SHIRTS loaded with driving, rhythms, soaring vocals and Individual giant color photos D BLOUSES and BODY SHIRTS of the members of the group. It will all 24 W. FRONT STREET. D RAINWEAR D OUTERWEAR make you smile. KEYPORT, N.J. M 0 FOOTWEAR 264.0700 LIST $044 OPEN FRIDAY NITE TIL 9 PRICE 5.98 NQW LITTLE SILVER SHOPPING CENTER Op«n Friday .yinlng tin g p.m. 3 Open Fri. Nite Til 9 - Ample Free Parking OFFER GOOD WED, AUGUST 16 THRU AUGUST 19th IteDaUyHegister,EedBaiik-MIddlct«wii,NJ.Toesday,AagBrtl5.ttB 13 Students Run Their Own School in New York City NElfciW YOliX»/l*lK* \nr)(AP ) —- ii • . , . ______. - . ___._...... —»-___._._tui.^ _i » *___.i_i _u._ _.«_-___->_••_-_•_• « pen or Ireland. ture. I felt the pressure and A, student-controlled school It is indeed a group of teen- imal help from parents. over the summer the kids ing money from writing about The first year there were two fgers' dreams «>me true in the "People in this country — cleaned up the place, inter- us," says Lisa, "so we decided paid teachers, but the past year "It's real life and I feel like tightening up, knowing I had to with no tests, no grades, form of an alternative high b d I l ChoflW wa$ no rules, no required atten- blacks, women, students —— ...... school that they conceived, or- taking more control dance. A teen-ager's dream? ganized and now run with min- finally blew up under t p own lives and this student-run __._ in regular school. free school is part of that," ."•proposal to seek foundation 'The result is a book, "Start- P°mt ttere were 8 boys and sure and that was when I bad to Since the school is not ac- get out. explains 17-yeaMld Lisa grants. The school started in ing Your Own High School," for girls ranging in age from 12 to credited the students receive no Mamis, wbo has been in on the (September 1970 and immediate- which the students did the 17. taking courses that include "I don't think this school is BACK-TO-SCHOOL diplomas. However, lisa .al- the whole answer and not every project from the beginning two; ly attracted the attention of ed- drawings, layout and articles on the history of fascism, female and male ready has been accepted for the kid in the world should come to years agog . waters and writers various aspectp s of thep planning sexualityy, com- "All these people were mak- faU term by the New York State our school. Some need more SPECIAL! She and the others involved in orking f the school parative religion and macrame. the Elizabeth Cleaners Street o "We have courses in what- University College at Purchase. structure - it depends on how School were dissatisfied with, ever the students want," says "If I'd been in regular school able you are. to t unction on your their. regular schools, which Lisa. "If we can't find a teacher I probably wouldn't want to go own. This involves a great deal they found boring, impersonal, we form study groups ourselves to college but I have developed of responsibility. Nobody says oOFF! rigidly structured and not rele- like the one in world affairs. a greater desire to learn," Lisa do this, but things are de- notes. "I took the SATs and it manded of you by the group. tflMTED TIME ONLY - Free initialing vant. Each week a student is respon- "Our parents were unhappy sible for giving a rundown on was a very strange experience iyoY u wantt to t bbe a partt of th the Top Quality about our situation too, so some something in the news, like An- taking a test for the first time group _„,) want to work for the of the kids and their parents gela Davis, the Pentagon Pa- in two years. It was pure tor- school to succeed. STARFLITE started' meeting to discuss the idea of a free school," recalls Lisa, who left a "progressive" MOULDED Manhattan private school in the ninth grade to join the project LUGGAGE "There was a growing con- sciousness of what was hap- For Women and Men. Made of Polymite, the miracle of pening in the world and we tried truly modern luggage ... fade-7, scratch-, dent-, bruise- to get bur schools to be more resistant, imed with Starflite's exclusive new process lin- active politically but the admin- 1 ing. It s sIfKy, soft, durable. Bonded to each case without istrators refused,' she goes on. CLASS FAVORITES: glue. .makes all other lining old fashioned. Completely "We realized we weren't get- BOLD AND FITTING Washable-inside and out. In Jade,'Sapphire and Rubv ting anything out of school." for Women. In Charcoal for men Aftermany discussions to de- cide what kind of a school they wanted the kids started organ- REG. 20% OFF izing committees to interview TOTE BAG 13.00 10.40 teachers, publicize the venture, COSMETIC CASE 22.00 17.60 raise funds and look for a loca- tion. 21" WEEKEND 25.00 20.00 SPECIAL.SCHOOL - The Elizabeth Cleaners 24" Jr. PULLMAN 29.00 "We took over a storefront 23.20 and then it became a reality," Street School in New York Is a student-controlled 27" PULLMAN 34.00 27.20 school with no tests or grades or rules. Students Lisa relates. "It had been a dry at the special school were dissatisfied with their DRESS BAG 38.00 30.40 cleaners shop and still had the regular schools. Some of the students at the 1926 sign so we called ourselves the COMPANION CASE 24,00 Elizabeth Cleaners Street school are shown above attending an Informal TWO SUITER 33.00 26.40 School." class. THREE SUITER 35.00 28.00 SUIT BAG 33.00 26.40 1,535,000 Enrollment Seen COLORS MULTI PIG, BROWN & GOLD LEE LUGGAGE For State Public Schools BLUE & RED TRENTON - The state De- year. The number of class- per cent, compared with an' r Sales and Repairs partment of Education antic-' room teachers is figured to anticipated pupils increase of pates an increase in the num- climb to 80,800, a rise of 4,580. . some 2% per cent. Krupnick 418HWY.35 MIDDLETOWN ber of pupils, teachers and The number of classrooms is points out that the estimated SIZES 8V2 to 12 12'/2to3 5 to 9 1» IMIM North of RMl Baift Bridg* AJt) ACCO classrooms when New Jer-' expected to total about 65,800, percentage hike in the teach- l m sey's public schools reopen in Acrottfrom Steak 4 Brew O rJ. \jJj3 an increase of 3,200. ing force is about the same as This year's class vote goes to the bold look. It's no wonder. Girls find it hard to ."••••' ' Factory Authorized Service» September for the new school . Tne projections, were.pre- that experienced annually for year. pared by Dr. M. Jack Krup- several years. He notes that resist a toe to be put bluntly; a heel to go clunky. And moms like the durability Open Mon. - Tuw. - Wed. - Sat. Till 6:00 H&TMITHST17 SMITH ST.' Projections made by the de-: nick, director of the depart- the ratio of teachers to pupils. and the way Buster Brown ties it up for the proper fit. PERTH AMBOY partment show that enrolment' ment's Branch of Statistics. has been rising annually for is expected to reach 1,535,000) He noted that although enrol- some time. an increase of 37,000 over last ment is expected to increase The total number of person- this year and annually in the nel employed in the public foreseeable future, the rate of school districts, which in- increase, which had been 3 cludes administrators, super- BUSTER BROWN - RED BANK per cent for many years, will visors and persons who pro- be dropping to about 1 per vide special services, in addi- c«nt annually. tion to the classroom teach- 17 WHITE STREET 741-7116 ers, is expected to be approxi- , Krupnick cautioned that en- : rolment projections for the mately 93,200, ah increase of public schools can be affected 3,700 or 4 per cent over last year. "by changing factors. These factors include the student The expected availability of dropout rate, which has been 3,200 additional classrooms in remaining fairly constant to September will help accom- about 1 per cent of all pupils modate the increased enrol- enrolled; the number of chil- ment. There will be crowded dren moving into and out of conditions in some schools, New Jersey; the trend to es- but the percentage of pupils tablish nursery or pre-kinder- attending school part-time or garten. classes in public housed in classrooms consid- schools, and exchange of pu- ered substandard is expected pils between.public and non- to decrease, Krupnick said. PUTS IT ALL TOGETHER public schools. Last year, there were some 280,000 pupils WASTE USED FOR ROADS attending non-public schools. COLOGNE, Germany (AP) IN THE VERY LATEST — The West German Road Re- The projection on the num- search Institute is experiment- FASHION LOOKS FOR FALL. ComplMe Stereo ber of classroom teachers ex- ing with waste from garbage pected this coining year fig- incinerators for use in road •Go to the head of the class, with the total ures out to an increase of 6 building. look from Kinkel's. Separates are featured AM-FM in the season's top colors, new plush fab- rics and "Now" styles. AM by leading PHONO SYSTEM makers. So hurry, to Kinkel's for smart Colonial buys in latest back to school fashions. Cobbler • SWEATERS • BLAZERS • TROUSERS & JEANS THE FASHION LOOK FOR • SWEATERS •KNIT TOPS BACK-TO-SCHOOL • COATS (Shorts 4 Longs) Aristocrat • DRESSES (Smock & Jumper) Components purchased separately, 279.93. Only Radio Shack can • Brown offer you a complete stereo music system of this quality at a price so antique •SKIRTS (Long & Short) lowl Featuring STA-18 solid-state Stereo FM-AM Receiver with walnut finish wood case, tuning meter, illuminated slide-rule dial, stereo in- dicator light, stereo headphone jack. • SHIRTJACSEU E.cEtc Realistic's own 4-speed Automatic Turntable LaB-12A complete With base, diamond magnetic cartridge, arm on ball-bearing pivots, and anll-skale for flawless record tracking. A pair of MC-1650 Speaksr Systems, each with acoustic-suspension 8" woofer and 3" wide-dispersion tweeter in oiled walnut provide full, rich room-filling sound'. SURROUND YOURSELF Jumping-Jacks- WITH SOUND! Moit feet are bom perfect, They should May thtt way. NOVA '10 STEREO HEADSET T.N.T. Pamper your ears with full-range stereo sound at a low Super Color pricel Lightweight, air cushioned ear pads and adjust- Suede able vinyl headband for complete comfort. 50-15,000 »Brown, Tan, Rust Hz response. 4-16 ohms impedance. Includes 5' cord • Blue. Gold, Red with stereo plus and 2" transducer for best sound quality. KINKEL'S STORY: We nil Big MAIM la (ft* littti tnhtent lor Iht *nlln Umlly, without BlgPrlcttm SPECIALIZING IN Radio/hack ORTHOPEDICS FOR CHILDREN FACTORY DEPARTMENT STORE CHAPEL HILL SHOPPING CENTER SHOP-RITE SHOPPING CENTER 44 APPLE ST. NEW SHREWSBURY HWY. 35 1ft miles North of Red Bonk MIDDLETOWN AT MIDDLETOWN PLAZA Open Dally and Saturday 10 A.M. to 6 R.M. T 671-5688 MIDDLETOWN Off N Mon,Snt. 9:30-5:30: Tbun. I hi TiH 9 P.H. 741-6382 Thurs. and Frl. Eves. Till 9 P.M. MM.Ift» M. I0AM.roJMl 14 UJ2 Convertible Bonds Advice for Youth By ROGEHE. SPEAR od. This particular bond la currently attractive for pur- •y SYLVIA PORTER days from the time you reach Q — I am interested in the Successful chase. Also appealing are the age limit In^rder to make possible purchase of convert- Federal National Mortgage As- If you are among the 25 mu- YOUR MONEY'S sure there will be no lapse in ible bonds. Do you think these Investing sociation cv. 4%s of 1996 and tt* Americans under 2$ years coverage, no reimposed wait- are a good buy for an investor Greyhound 'Corp. cv. tys of of age - healthy, educated, WORTH .ingperioa\etc. in the 35-40 age bracket? - 1990. The returns on these eager for life - you also are If you go into military ser- Don't be misled by big ben- CD. three issues range from 1.3 among the most vulnerable of vice, check with your employ- efit maxlmums — such as A — I see no reason why rose 40 per cent. The pre- per cent to 6.2 per cent and cept to establish a tax loss. all age groups to financial dis- not immediately fatal, can er's personnel office. If the 9100,000— for, it's most im- convertible bonds would be in- mium over conversion value premiums over conversion Rockwood's leasing oper- aster caused by high medical mean medical expenses of employer's group policy cov- probable you'll ever have ex- appropriate fof you. In this narrowed from 1».5 per cent values 7 per cent to 9 per ations contributed less to rev- expenses. 115,000 to $20,000 or ¥25,000 - ers your wife and children, penses at this level. Keep particular investment vehicle to 7 per cent during that perl- cent. Thus a minimal rise in enues in fiscal 19711972, al- If you are under 25 and involving not only phenome- you may be eligible for a re- your ceiling in a more realis- you combine safety and ade- common share price would though real estate activities drive a car, you also are nally costly routine hospital duced rate on a policy which tic $20,000 to $50,000 range. quate return with excellent place conversion value above more than compensated. For among the most vulnerable of charges but also the costs of covers only your dependents. upside potential. Convertible your cost on these bonds. the year ended March, earn- orthopedic surgery, plastic Or, you may find that the IFF Reports all groups to automobile Do look into every possi- ' bonds, because of the con- Q - What do you think of ings were off 15 per cent. and/or motorcycle accidents. surgery, intensive care, physi- health insurance plans offered bility of getting this coverage version feature, are not limit- "Company has reduced for the In fact, while you make up cal rehabilitation. through the armed services Sharp Gain . Rockwood Computer (ASE), through a group and saving ed on the upside by the matu- formerly Levin-Townsend? second time the conversion less than 22 per cent of our What, then, should you do to for your dependents are more substantial amounts thereby: rity value as are straight rate on its 7 per cent deben- convenient and less expensive NEW YORK - Henry G. My 200 shares averaged $30 driver population, you ac-protect yourself (or should bonds. Commission costs are Walter Jr., chairman of Inter- tures in an effort to improve count for more than 36 per you tell a young man or wom- than the company policy. Also ' Do study the deductible and per share. — E.K. considerably lower than on a national Flavors & Fra- A — Having watched your its financial position. Cana- cent of the 1.6 million motor-, an to do)? „ notify your employer or insur- co-insurance features; if you comparable dollar amount in dian properties held by a sub- ance agent well in advance are willing to take a higher grances, has announced that invested capital evaporate ists involved in automobile, If you are a student and common stocks. Further, the net income for the second sidiary have recently been crashes last year. of your discharge from mili- co-insurance percentage, from $6,000 to $600, you have your family health insurance downside risk is reduced by quarter amounted to little to gain from selling ex- sold for $2.5 million. Why this startling juxtaposi- policy no longer covers you, tary service so your protec- you'll almost surely slash the fact that the interest rate tion will be'resumed without a your premiums, bo choose the $5,967,000, up 30.7 per cent tion of facts on age and finan- find out if your college or uni- factor provides a floor which from the same period last cial vulnerability? versity offers a group plan for gap- highest deductible your budg- the price will generally not et can take, also to slash your year. Net sales were Because if you are in this students and sign up for this. penetrate. $36,310,000, up 26.8 per cent Trust Reports Top Earnings And weigh with utmost se- premiums. age group, your coverage un- Such plans are usually low- from the 1971 second quarter. ' ed that the trust's total assets cost and well within even a riousness the purchase of ma- Price action in convertible EATONTOWN - Eugene der your family's health insur- Do apply the savings you bonds usually follows that of Net income for the first six W. Landy, principal executive increased to more than- ance policy well may have student budget. jor medical insurance — $5,000,000 for the first time Si; whether or not you are al-get through lower premiums the related common stock al- months of 1672 was $10,734,000, officer of Monmouth Real Es- lapsed. Usually, coverage If you are ineligible for a though at a somewhat slower an increase of 31.2 per cent the trust's history, and that: ends when a person reaches group policy, either through ready covered by basic family to building up extra coverage tate Investment Trust, report- in other areas that will give pace. Between January and over the prior year on net eu that the trust had record further expansion of the 19 or he or she marries. school or your employer, con- health insurance, a group stu- June TWA cv. 5s of 1994 gained sales of $69,011,000, an in- trust's portfolio is anticipated. sider buying an individual po- dent policy or a group policy you an added dimension of earnings for the nine months Because you are almost su- protection. 25 per cent while the common crease of 25.3 per cent over ended June 30. The board of trustees d* rely in the lowest income licy - preferably through offering limited benefits 1971. This is | equivalent to clared a dividend of 20 Cents, your local Blue Cross-Blue through your employer. For The trust's net operating in- bracket you will ever be in. earnings of 61 cents per share come before depreciation in- per share, payable on Sept. 15j You, therefore, couldn't possi- Shield plan when they hold the fastest growing form of as compared to 47 cents per to shareholders of record Aug.! their regularly scheduled health insurance in the U.S. is creased by 50 per cent over bly afford to pay even a frac- Forked River Point share for the first six months that of the comparable period tion of the cost of a major ac- open enrollment periods. made to order for your age of 1971. Family Policy in the prior year, to. 92 cents ' The equity trust has its of-' cident or illness running into group — with its urgent need fices here and its stock is many thousands of dollars. If coverage under your fam- for financial protection Mr. Walter stated that earn- per share. Depreciation, Homes Still Available ings for the full year are now which is considered a tax traded over-thercoimter. The. Prone to Risks ily's policy hasn't yet expired against huge medical costs. LACEY TOWNSHIP - The Forked River Point is situ- trust has 10 equity in- because you haven't quite Do's, Dont's expected to exceed 1971 earn- shelter, amounted to 49 cents Because you are young and Mayer Corporation is offering ated in one of the lowest tax ings by somewhat more than per share, leaving net oper- vestments and has com-' you are prone to take big reached the age limit, apply This type of insurance is, as special savings on its last few municipalities in the state. It for an individual policy you might suspect, complex, the'20 per cent previously esti- ating income of 43 cents per' mitments to purchase two ad- risks — and this goes whether remaining homes at Forked is located near exit 74 of the mated. share. Mr. Landy also report- ditional investments. you are a man or woman. A through the same company. and thus, heed these vital River Point, the waterfront Garden State Parkway. Ex- bad accident, assuming it's- You must apply within 60 Do's and Don'ts; community between Rt. 9 and press bus service is available the Barnegat Bay in Forked on Rt. 9, which abuts the com- River. / munity. All but' 7 of its 675 homes The Barnegat Bay, Atlantic have been sold, officials of the Ocean and several fresh wa- large Ocean County home ter inland lakes offer resi- building firm reported. , dents their choice of bathing, - The remaining homes are boating, fishing, gardening two and four-bedroom models and Other leisure activities. BANK WITH US... MONEY?built on large upland lots and ready, for immediate occu- Homeowners: pancy. They come with at- Borrow the cash you need for tached garages, wall-to-wall AND GET THE HIGHEST YIELDS the things you want. Avco I carpeting, triple-track com-, makes Secondary Mortgage bination storm windows, Loans to $10,000. screens, storm door and other PERMITTED BY LAW! extras. Mayer homes are Use the money for any purpose. Pay Take advantage of recent Federal Regulations andContin- off bills. Cut your monthly payments. backed by a five-year struc- tural warranty. uous Compounding that enable US to give you the most for Buy a new car or camper. Take a your money. Nobody pays more than US! ' : long vacation trip. Pay educational expenses. Or just have it on hand for emergencies. Preston Wins InsuranceCitation Need money? Mall us the coupon FOR EXAMPLE... and we'll do the rest. Or if you need DENVER, Colo. - Ernie money in a hurry, call now. Preston, former resident of Middletown, N. J., has been honored for his achievements Send this coupon to the nearest Avco Financial Services office in the life insurance business listed below,. in Florida. EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD on 2 to 5 year Sirs: I'd like to learn more about your loan service. He was one of 17 industry Time Deposit Passbook leaders in the U. S. featured GIDWS TO Accounts Name. in the July, issue of "Sharing Philip T. Smith Jr. Success," a national publica- tion for life insurance repre- Address- sentatives published by Elba Harris Trust A A.M. Systems Corporation here. YEAR Telephone No.. .Best time to call. _P.M. 1 Mr. Preston worked in the % •accounting division of Jersey Elects Smith EFFECTIVE ANNUAL Clty- -State- .Zlp Power" and Light in Keyport- YIELD on 1 Year Time s/rjA for 10 years prior to entering Senior VP 6R1WS TO Deposit Passbook the life insurance business Accounts ///FINANCIAL wiih National Standard Life CHICAGO - Philip T, ^/SERVICES, INC. Insurance Co. in Cocoa, Fla., Smith Jr. has been named a last year. He has been pro- senior vice president by the AND you can use our MONTHLY MATURITY SELECTION PLAN... select any moted to assistant agency board of directors of Harris month you wish fqr maturity, from 24 to 60 months on 6% accounts.. .from 12 to manager for National Stan- Trust and Savings Bank. 23 morithson 5%% accounts. . - ,.. AVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. Mr. Smith joined the New 158 Main Si, Matawan Ph. 566-8500 dard Life's agency in' Gain- Interest on all Time Deposit Passbook Accounts compounded continuously, from esville, Fla. York office of Harris Bank's 319 Main SL, Kaansburg Ph. 787-9000 investment department in Day of Deposit, credited and withdrawable monthly. •„; -I960. In 1967, he was named •to : • ', .V manager of that office and in Minimum deposit only $500. Available to individuals and charitable organizations only. 1970 moved here as division administrator of the munici-, pal bond division. A He is a member of the Mu- nicipal Bond Clubs of Chicago, YEAR and New York and the Wall. Street Club of New York. EFFECTIVE ANNUAL Mr. Smith, his wife,. YIELD on Regular Pass- Georgia, and their four sons book Savings Accounts reside at 25 Locust Road, Win- netka, III. He was graduated from Red Compounded continuously from Day of Deposit to Day of Withdrawal Bank Senior High School in when minimum balance of $10 is left in the account. .. . ; 1945 and from Rutgers Uni- Dividends mailed monthly, on request, on all Time Deposit versity in 1951. and Regular Savings Accounts when minimum balance of $2,500 is maintained. ROOT Van Alstyne Open your account now at any of our seven convenient offices, or use the coupon below.. Joins Radiofone RED BANK - David Van Alstyne Jr., a senior partner and founder of Van Alstyne, UNITED STATES SAVINGS BANK Noel & Co., New York in-, MuMHtUU vestment bankers, has been elected a director of Radio- NEWARK, Miln Office! 772: Broad Street, Franklin Office: 677 Broad street, Ivy Hill Office: 72 Mt. Vernon PI., Seventh fone Corporation. We havent forgotten In addition to his career in1 Summer lasts "til September 22nd .., the investment and banking' UNITED STATES SAVINGS BANK fields, Mr. Van Alstyne has P.O. Box 986, Nowark, N.J. 07101 been active for many years in Let our Haspel. help you public affiars. He was state Enclosed is $_ : (Minimum $500) lor Time OepoBit Passbook Account. senator for 10 years, served 0 6% a year, guaranteed to: • ] through the hot, humid weeks ahead. as president and majority (Please indicate month and year of term desired) COOL AND CRISP BLUE CORD SUIT OF leader of the State Senate and • 5% % a year, guaranteed to: as acting governor. (Please Indicate desired month of maturity, trom 12 to 23 months) POLYESTER/NYLON ... WASH AND WEAR ... He also has served as a Enclosed Is $ ($io or more) (or deposit In Regular Passbook Savings BY HASPEL* AT ROOTS £35 commissioner of the Port of Account, paying 5% a year, Compounded Continuously, from Day of Deposit New York Authority. He is to Day of Withdrawal, credited and withdrawable monthly. serving as a member of the I wish to open my account at the office checked below: Palisades Park Commission, and the National Advisory _ MainCilice _ Franklin Office _ Ivy Hill _ HlckorySquare Council on Vocational Educa- _ Half Dime _ Roseland _ Seventh Avenue tion.He is. chairman of the lat- Din my name only • Jointly with ' • . ter agency's budget com- mittee. • In trust for • . SOC. SECT Farfrom rejecting wood with SIGN HERE. _NUMBER_ ma Mfls.g MISS a knots or burls for making artis- PRINT NAME WERE __ tic carvings, a master wood carver usually seeks them out STREET. because of the beautiful surface CITY__ * STATE. -ZIP. summit patterns that can be created if Enclose with check or money order. .W» Honor th» Anwrlcan Expran Menay Crd •red bank jr>*K*[V»thufKtaVtil9 Wednesday & Iriday 'til 9 they are worked properly. More and More Companies Require The r, Bed Bmk-MMdldown, NX Tuesday, August 15,1978 15 Lie Detector Tests for Job Seekers DALLAS, Tex. Hear AFL-CIO Suit Busy ^Learning How to Learn' NEWARK— A three-judge panel heard arguments here yesterday in the New Jersey AFL-CIO's suit seeking to block a HOLMDEL - A mixed bag in a real way. "I find this reorganization ef the State Department of Labor and Industry. of whiz kid consultants, teach- workshop a marvelous think The Appellate Division of Superior Court judges are ex- ers, parents and school chil- tank'," Mrs. Seeman mused. pected to rule on the case later this week. dren are spending three "It's great to get together and The labor organization wants to halt the reorganization on weeks together to learn how share ideas with other to learn better. By grounds it contravenes the State Constitution and the Organi- LINDA people." zation Act of 1969. It feels the reorganization would jeopardize A late-summer sound and ELLIS Appealing Approach the jobs of civil service employes by creating more appointed light workshop dubbed "Re- One approach especially ap- posts. Creation" by its executive pealing to the teachers in the The AFL-CIO also contends the state made technical er- producer, Ralph Hendrickson, language arts area is the rors in submitting the filing plans to the legislature and the Bounders new coordinator of creation of a book using a secretary of state last May. elementary education, is turn- teacher-child partnership. State attorneys deny the plan is illegal and claim the state ing 20 of the districts' elemen- Pre-schoolers and those in the has the right to implement it. tary school teachers on to the early grades made, during the The case reached the Appellate Division after Superior idea of individualizing instruc- math devices ranging from workshop's second week, Court Judge A. Jerome Moore accepted the state's argument tion in language arts and bottle caps to baseball games books that they put together . in Trenton last Friday that the case was too important for a math. that teach concepts in arith- and bound themselves. They single judge to decide. If they already have He metic. then told a story to a teacher, idea that the child-centered •On Their Own' who wrote it down. The child, approach has it all over a "There's so much a teacher a reader or not, knows the sto- Study Mortgage Rates structured one, then the work- can do on her own and that ry because it's bis. He wrote shop gives them the appli- TRENTON — The present 8 per cent ceiling on.fixed mort- children can do on their own," it, and he's not likely to forget cations for their theory. gage interest rates may be removed in favor of variable or "Pamela Basista of the Village' that his first introduction to floating rates pegged to market conditions, State Banking "It (the workshop) gives us School teaching staff said. "reading" was such a pleas- Commissioner Richard Schaub said yesterday. new ideas to work on with our "And we can teach the chit ant one. children to make learning Schaub said the advantage of the floating rate is that dren to be more indepen- Five-year-old Joseph Popolo more fun," enthused Con- mortgage lenders would not lose money in future years should dent." of Algonquin Road, for one, stance Schulz, an Indian Hill other items, such as interest on savings accounts, increase. Take sea shells, Mr. Hen-will start kindergarten next School fourth grade teacher. drickson amplified. "If a child month with the major dis- "Right now banks say they're hesitant to put a whole lot of Ends Friday money into mortgages when they could be lacked into a low- brings them into class, we'd tinction of having been "pub- rate situation a few years from now," the banking commis- The workshop will be talk about them. Where they lished" at a tender pre-school sioner said. wrapped up Friday after an are found; the child would tell age. initial week in East Brunsw- He said if rates are allowed to float, the change would not us, we wouldn't tell her. We'd His book, bristling with talk Mtiiftr iloff tMto bf Uny Hn» ick, then these two weeks at come when rates are generally going up, but rather hi a period encourage her to ask ques- about activities that boys like BUT WILL IT PASS THE ZONING LAWS?-Thls Is the house that Jack Indian Hill. The cost to the of decline. tions about them. And then best, was almost as much fun, and some of his fifth grade pals built in a morning session at the summer district is $9,000 in salaries we'd be a resource for her, The recommendation of a floating rate, designed to pro- he said, as climbing in and out workshop ongoing at Holmdel's Indian Hill School. Their cardboard crea- (participating teachers are help her to find her own an- .vide more money for home buying and building, was among of the sturdy cardboard house tion is being enjoyed by Christina Popolo, 8, and her brother Joseph, 5, paid for their time), $1,500 swers." proposals put forth in a lengthy report of the State Mortgage he watched the fifth graders Holmdel students. consultants' fees and $1,000 in "There are so many ways to build. Study Commission last March. The Banking Department is ex- materials. amining the proposals. challenge a kid," said Board His sister Christina, 8, ing to turn from a structured ; "Children are complicated; of Education president John J. tion complete from "The man 3. Can you give me change? who'll enter fourth grade, is to a child-centered approach who" speeches to a nuts and Working with money. we need new ideas on the Landers Jr. Mr. Landers was enthusiastic about bringing has been great," be said in his bolts approach to building a 4. Let's plan a meal and fix Bay Seeded for Oysters ways they learn," Miss Schulz in the middle of the workshop, objects to the workshop and ever-effervescent way. voting booth. it and eat it How much food BIVALVE - More than 300,000 bushels of oyster shells said. "We can so easily get up to his elbows in paste and seeing them used as teaching Cooking was also featured do we need? How much does were unceremoniously dumped yesterday into the Delaware into a rut." scissors making a baseball materials. "Things from 'We hope to get district- as a way to learn arithmetic: it cost? (There's reality-tes- Bay near the Cumberland County shoreline. To draw the map for a game arrangement designed home don't seem like things wide objectives and programs measuring and learning how ting for you.) Dumping of the shells, dredged from tlje bottom of the winding path of innovations, to encourage children to chal- for school, but here they are from this workshop," the to triple a recipe don't come 5. Pie. Making a fruit pie. Chesapeake Bay off Maryland, is part of an all-out state and Mr. Hendrickson has im- lenge themselves with pro- and it's fun to use them coordinator, Mr. Hendrickson, naturally. An example for do- Learning to follow directions. federal effort to revive the onceJpri}sper Would Hike Flood Insurance JMYMYMOW/ S OOP?- i i\HYlt\f /Ml WASHINGTON-ThWASHINGTON - The NeNew Jerse Jerseyy commissione commissionerr o fo insurf insur- - /XII ttB|/C'l (J UOvli \~A\Jr C/f/f 1/1/ J JLM.1/ ancmroe vpstflrrtayesterdayv nmnnserproposedi increasininnvasinpg coveragrnvprappe fofnr rnmrrmrpiacommercial *——* ' ' •/ contents in flood-prone areas. The limit is now $5,000. Commissioner Richard C. McD.pnough said that $5,000 cov- erage hardly compensates most businessmen for their losses due to floods. In Reopening Reservoir At the same time, McDonougb said in testimony prepared for a Senate subcommittee hearing on flood control, there LINCROFT — County paiks complaints from adjoining of the problem, Mr. Carlson should "point put that it's a Students Gan't should be an intensive public campaign to promote the nation- officials claim they're in no property owners about noise, said "We have no funds for shame that it (the reservoir) al flood insurance program. position to reopen the Swim- late night parties and tres- police either." He suggested is closed, and mat the county As for flood insurance, be said New Jersey has had a suc- ming River Reservoir to fish- passing. sending a letter to Richard J. is in no position to open it." cessful response to the program "but a lot more has to be done ermen, but will investigate to Simple Request Sullivan, commissioner of the Horsemen Are Heard see if the state. Department of Pick Sessions to inform and educate the public of this fine program." Pleading their case at the state Department of Environ- The commissioners beard ' "Two years ago, he told the Senate hearing, New Jersey Environmental Protection is. commissioners' monthly mental Protection, seeking half a dozen horsemen who had only 3,863 flood policies in effect. Then the state began Ralph Alloca of Colts Neck meeting, the fishermen said help either from the state Di- stopped by briefly to encour- holding seminars and having direct contact with the munici- and Cole Gibbs of Neptune, all they asked was that the vision of Fish and Game or age the board's attempts to. palities, and the figure jumped to 9,377 by the end of last June. both members of the New Jer- parks people "sit down and from the Marine Police. establish an equestrian center In Middletown sey Federation of Sportsmen's talk to the water people." at Thompson Park for horse MIDDLETOWN - With all assignment to morning or af- Clubs,'and Henry Schaefer, shows and exhibits. Mr. Schaefer said they had Commissioners, while ternoon sessions, is unfair to Honeyihoon on Garbage Truck fishing columnist, insisted last three high school classes on spoken to Monmouth Consoli-' agreeing that the reservoir James J. Truncer, county both.students who work and night that the county Board of split sessions, what of the stu- CHATHAM TOWNSHIP - Newlyweds Patricia and Tom dated officials and had found was a "tremendous resource parks director, was author- their employers — especially, Parks and Recreation Com- dent who wants to spend his Crawford don't have time to argue about who takes out the them "receptive." that should be developed" for ized, to seek federal, Depart- he said, as he's been trying to missioners open negotiations afternoons gainfully em- garbage. They're too busy hauling it around in a truck. But, Freeholder Axel B. recreation,- also commented ment of Housing and Urban get answers to the problem with the Monmouth Consoli- ployed, but finds himself as- Patricia, 18; has been driving Crawford's big 10-speed gar- Carlson Jr., a board member, that any takeover of the re- Development (HUD) grant- signed to the afternoon ses- since May. bage truck and helping him load refuse each morning'since dated Water Company to take servoir involved negotiations funds to finance an additional said the matter was too com- sion? Mr. Jackson conceded that ' they were married Aug. 2. over the reservoir and reopen plex for immediate action by with owners of 123 privately nine holes at the Howell Park And what of his employer, employment has not been tak-. Crawford is an employe of the Model Disposal Co. in this it to sportsmen. the county freeholders or owned parcels of land adja- Golf Course. who may have trained him en into consideration in mak- well-to-do suburb of New York City. Patricia doesn't get paid parks commissioners. cent to the reservoir. The water company closed The 18-hole links at the several years and is counting ing student assignments, but but with her help Tom is able to finish his work two hours ear- : its waters to all fishing earlier Pointing out that policing The letter to Commissioner Howell Park, near Farm added that the school can and lier. • on his help during the coming this summer after repeated the reservoir was at the heart Sullivan, Mr. Carlson said, ingdale, opened officially on school year? will find jobs for those stu- The bride, a June graduate of a local high school, said,she July 10. dents who want to work, re- and Tom don't care for fancy occupational titles: "Some These are questions brought Mr. Truncer reported last before the Board of Education gardless of the session they people call themselves sanitary engineers, but we just call night that a total of 3,500 golf- are assigned to. ourselves the garbagemen." last night by Stanley R.- Peru Hazlet School Board Opens ers had teed off there last of 48 Princeton St. who oper- "It may not be the kind of Tom and Patricia wear cutoff blue jeans and old shirts to month, with about 300 on each ates Shore Hobby Supply, 64 job they want, but we'll get work, and both have shoulder-length dark hair. Tom is the Saturday and Sunday. White St., Red Bank, and jobs for them," the assistant garbageman with the beard. His wife occasionally wears a The HUD funds, if ap- hires three Middletown Town- principal said. straw hat to help balance the drums she sometimes carries on New Offices, Has Meeting proved, would pay half the ship High School students — He explained the seemingly her head. cost of the new course con-, HAZLET — After an open Nine positions were omitted The salary for the new posi- two boys and a girl - as part- rigid policy against transfers struction, estimated at house to unveil its new offices from the salary guide, which tion is $17,500 per annum. The time help. between, sessions for employ- $325,000. Zoning Suit Attacked at 82 Bethany Road, the is effective from September l, board hopes the creation of He finds all three are as- ment reasons toy reminding Board of Education met in 1972 until June 30, 1973. The the 11-month position will The commissioners signed to the afternoon ses- the board that the morning MORRISTOWN - Randolph Township, sued last month by awarded a $10,960 contract to sion beginning next month, session, preferred by most a private group for allegedly using "exclusionary" zoning .and. special session last night. position of adviser for the eliminate some of the diffi- Board president Arnold high school newspaper was culties which existed in the Benjamin R. Harvey Co. Inc. Mr. Peru told the board last students, is already over- land use laws, has filed a motion to dismiss the complaint. of Oakhurst, general con- night. Since the hobby shop is crowded by an enrollment It ssaid the suit by the Suburban Action Institute is tdo Miller opened the meeting by deleted on the decision that past, particularly in regard to the English department could tractor for improvements to open between 10 a.m. and 6 about one-third larger than vague to answer and that it was improperly drawn up under thanking the maintenance .intramural sports. perform this function. Also de- the Thompson Park Visitors p.m., unless the students can the afternoon session. New Jersey rules of court; staff for renovations to the Board vice president John building, which was formerly leted were the business ad- Center. be transferred to the morning The institute filed suit in Superior Court here contending T. Yannuzzi informed those Richard F. Jones, board the Hazlet Avenue School. visers for the newspaper and present the creation of the Other contracts for the im- session, they cannot continue president, held out a ray of that. Randolph Township zoning laws discriminate against mi- the yearbook. provements, which involve in their jobs,' he said. norities, young married couples, the eldefly, blue collar work- "The work was done in a' new position had been his hope to Mr. Peru. new restrooms on the first Received No Answers "I don't believe the door Is ers and students. short time," Mr. Miller The position of class play "pet project." He said his in- floor of the mansion, went to' A call to the office of Dennis completely closed. I suggest The institute, based in White Plains, N.Y., has filed sim- stated, "and it was done for adviser was omitted pending tention was to have a mean- under the $15,000 which had ingful position to coordinate M and R Mechanical Con- Jackson, assistant high school you see Mr. Jackson after the ilar suits against several other New Jersey municipalities. further study. Coaches for been allocated for the job." and control the athletic pro- tractors of Highlands, $9,450 principal, yesterday brought meeting. Perhaps something both male and female in- for plumbing and $3,915 for Mr. Miller also extended grams. no answers, Mr. Peru went can be worked out," Mr. Randolph Township replied in its motion yesterday that tramural sports for the winter heating, and a $1,949 elec- thanks to a acting superinten- on. "I talked to Leonard Moon Jones said. the complaint filed by the Institute "rambles on in 72 para- and spring were also omitted "I think the board's action trical contract to Little Silver dent of schools, Roman Cabr- tonight will do this," Mr. Yan- (a board member) and he told Mr. Jackson said he hopes graphs, most of which are repetitious and confusing and pending further study. Mr. Electric Co. me to call Mr, Jackson this creates a total impossibility to draft a legal answer since they era and his staff, and to board Miller stressed this does not nuzzi said. "It will no longer to complete scheduling of high, secretary Robert G. Havens The board rejected both morning," the storeowner make no specific allegations and claims upon which legal re- mean the intramural program be necessary for someone car- school students to the two ses- and his staff. bids it had received for pav- said. lief can be granted." will diminish. rying a full teaching load to sions "by the middle of next do the job as time permits." ing of parking lots and He added that he never got The board adopted a resolu- "In fact," he said, "we hope roadways at Holmdel a,nd week." Immediately after creating past Mr. Jackson's secretary, School opens Thursday, tion providing a salary guide to expand the program. Thompson Parks as "ex- who told him the criterion for Sniper Suspect Bail Set for the employment of person- That's why we want to study the new post, the board cessive." Sept. 7. adopted a resolution appoint- ass assignment is that if a ELIZABETH — Dominick Caruso, the 19-year-old accused nel in supplemental positions. this further." Some of the po- Mr. Truncer. said parks' at- ' ident attended morning ses- of being the sniper that killed one man and wounded others .A teacher's salary guide:for sitions that were omitted will ing Frank Farrell director of Queen's Father physical education for a peri- torneys had also questioned sions last year, he would at- here, was held today in $75,000 bail. 1972-73 was adopted by the be back in the guide at a later whether the two bids received tend afternoon sessions this Union County Judge Jacob Triarsi set the bail yesterday, board in early May, but an date, he said. od beginning Sept. 1,1972 and Is Carl Moody ending June 30,1973. from Stavola Contracting Co. year. Mr. Peru said he was after the prosecutor's office had demanded bail of'$250,0po, impasse developed over sup- Inc. and Charles J. Hesse, told there is no provision for RED BANK-Miss Valerie Mr. Farrell, in the school citing the intent of the defense to enter a plea of insanity. Ca- plemental positions. In an effort to reorganize Inc., were "indeed represen- exceptions to take care of stu- Moody, 20, who was elected to system for eight years, was ruso, of Elizabeth, was arrested two months ago and has been The settlement of the sup- the physical education depart- tative." dents who wish to earn money reign as queen of this week's formerly a history teacher, held since then in the county jail. plemental position salaries ment and the athletic pro- to pay their way through col- National Sweepstakes Re- and handled the job of direc- The specifications will be Judge Triarsi, in setting the bail, issued a statement that should clear the way for the gram at Raritan High School, readvertised, with bids retur- lege, as his employes are gatta, is the daughter of Carl tor of physical education as a Moody of Her Drive, Middle- said in part: signing .of a contract with the the board adopted a resolution nable September 5. doing. "The prosecutor urged that bail be set in the sum of $250,000. teaeners association. The po- creating a position of director supplementary position. town. .• . > i A bid from Vestull of South "They asked me if I He did not argue that the defendant woulU most probably flee sitions at issues were prima- of physical education. The A resolution was adopted Orange for paving the five In a story in yesterday's the jurisdiction and thus avoid a trial, but he contended that in. rily those of athletic coaches. new director will coordinate couldn't change the store Daily Register, it was in- appointing personnel to the tennis courts planned for hours to take care of it," Mr. view of the stated intent of the defense counsel to interpose an Also included were class and the physical education depart- supplementary coaching and Holmdel and four at Thomp- correctly repr-rted that she insanity plea, the release of the defendant could prove a dan- club advisers, and departmen- ment and extra-curricular Peru told the board. ' was the daughter 4 a former advisory positions listed in the son Park was held until the ' Mr. Peru stressed that he ger to the community. tal chairmen. athletic activities. earlier resolution. new road bids are returned. mayor of Middli-towo, Earl believes the current policy on Moody. 18 The Dafly Begister, Red Baak-MlddleUwn, N.J. Tuesday, August IS, im Pekiiig 'Warnings* Major Expansion Is Announced To U.S. Stopped By Middletown Engineering Firm TOKYO (AP) — For one The number of warnings Js- reason or another, PekinPekg has sued by the Peking govern- MIDDLETOWN - T. & M continue as president and sec- and construction supervision. Raymond E. Bonwell Jr. Stopped "warning" the United Associates Inc., consulting retary-treasurer of the firm, John A. Martin has been has been promoted to the po- States. late 1960s. There were seven and municipal engineers, 213 and Mr. Blum has been named chief of surveys in i sition of senior design engi- Nearly 500 times in 1958-71 in 1969 and six in 1970, They Rt J5, has announced promo- named to the newly created charge of field survey and neer, and Richard A. Finlay the Chinese issued "serious stepped up to IS in Ifi71 as a' tions and staff additions in a position of senior vice presi- right of way acquisition func- and Kevin F. Toolan have warnings" against what they result of what some quarters major expansion of facilities dent, operations. In this post tions. Frank W. Hahne has joined the staff in similar called military provocations saw as tension over In- here. Mr. Blum will direct technical been promoted to project posts. by the United States. dochina. Principals and owners are operations. manager. T & M Associates was es- But none has been heard Then came the decision in Richard T. Noble, Richard M. William E. Wright Jr. has Edward G. Broberg and Hi- tablished by Mr. Noble and since Christmas. 1971 to permit an American Scads and C. Bernard Blum been promoted to the post of ram A. Tuttle have joined the Mr. Schulz in 1966. Mr. Blum The people who record Pek- table tennis team, and three Jr. Mr. Scbnlz and Mr. Noble manager of municipal service firm as project managers. joined the firm later that ing broadcasts Here can spec- American news correspond- year. Beginning with a staff ulate whether the absence of ents, into China. A thaw in of eight six years ago, the the warnings is part of the Chinese-American relations firm fiat now expanded to in- move toward better relations had begun, but the "serious clude 56 employes. With the thatte'gan with Ping Pong di- warnings" did not cease im- addition of 2,400 square feet of plomacy in April 1971 and mediately. One April 10,1971, renovated office space to be brought President Nixon's vis- charged that a U.S. military occupied this month, T & M it to China last February. plane and warship had intrud- now takes up 8,000 square feet The first of 497 "serious ed into Chinese territory. in two buildings on Rt. 35 near warnings" heard here, was is- Eight similar warnings follow-. Frost Ave., north of Red sued Sept. 7,1958 by the Chi- ed until the most recent one Bank. nese Foreign Ministry. The was heard by monitors Dec. broadcasts that began then •,25. The firm specializes in pub- • were directed against Ameri- lic works engineering and ser- can warplanes and ships vice to governmental units. which Peking said entered its No private work is under- territorial waters or air space Youth to Attend taken. in "military provocations" GOP Convention T & M or its principals against China. China claims a serves as engineer to Eaton* 12-mile territorial limit at sea. WASHINGTON - John 0. town, Highlands, Monmouth During the period the warn- Bennett III of Marlboro, has Beach, Oceanport, Holmdel, FIGHT FOR REVIVAL — Monmoutn County's ings were common, China been selected to attend the Middletown and Long Branch. Democratic freeholder candidates, Thomas claimed 31 U.S. aircraft, in- Republican National Con- ' It also handles special engi- Lynch, left, and Leslie B. Tinkler, examine the re- cluding 20 unmanned' recon- vention next week in Miami Beach as a member of Young' Richard T. Noble Richard M. Schulz C. Bernard Blum Jr. neering assignments in sev- mains of a lobster boat, symbol of the once-thriv- naissance craft, were shot eral other area towns and pro- ing commercial fishing industry in Monmouth down. Records show there ' Voters for the President; vides service to a number of County. The candidates have pledged to bring the were two aerial clashes be- municipal authorities, county fight of the commercial fishermen to "Trenton, tween American warplanes The 23-year-old son of Mr. ^Feelthy Peecture' Sales departments, the state De- Washington, or anywhere else where solutions and Chinese MIGs, and that and Mrs. John O. Bennett Jr., partment of Transportation can be found." The candidates said lack of lead- two American fliers are still of Main St. Marlboro, is a and the U.S. Army Corps of ership from the county government was a key held in China after their West Virginia University grad- Slump Dismally in Paris Engineers. reason for the demise of the fishing industry. planes were shot down. uate. PARIS (AP) - This is an finished, I tell you. August been at it for 35 years, gave August of anguish for Loulou used to be my tjest month. It's up in despair and immigrated B., one of Paris' last "feelthy a disaster now.** last year to Israel where peecture" salesmen. His busi- The hustle was a good one Loulou says "He's selling ness is falling apart. while it lasted and kept black eye patches at the Wail- Under the gargoyles that Loulou on the street for 16 ing Wall." stare down into the street years. It was simple and le- At the rate things are going, from Notre Dang Cathedral, gal: the "feelthy peectures" Loulou thinks he'll pack it up Loulou moves quickly through were just nude reproductions next year and look for a job. the crowds, his hands flashing from the Louvre, but flashed The sexual revolution that Don't mips our gala new Dinnerware Affair^, like a blackjack dealer, un- so quickly and with enough killed business dismays and veiling just a glimpse of en- eye-rolling to make the buyer angers this man who consid- twined naked flesh. think they would be some- ers himself a bit of a commu- $ "Feelthy peectures, you thing more. Most of Loulou's nity pillar. want feelthy peectures, mees- clients were sufficiently coop- "I've got three sons, all of Save 25...get a place setting ler?" Loulou says in a kind of erative to wait unti they got them born at Hotel Dieu" — steam-powered whisper. back to their hotel to open the hospital next to Notre Again and again, heads turn their packet. Dame. "The little one is 2 and of Imperial Fine China away. Again and again, the In the old days, Loulou said, he'll go to the same kinder- men. in their 50s who used to business was so good there garten as President Pom- be Loulou's best clients, shrug used to be 15 camelots — pidou's grandson, Thomas. I and walk on. street hawkers — working worry about my kinds and I "Kaput," Loulou says. "It's Notre Dame. Now there is don't want them seeing that terrible. They get all this stuff only Loulou and his buddy, kind of junk when they're 14. from Denmark and Sweden, Tunis. It's no good, but it's floating His old friend and senior around. I don't understand FREE! now, and the Americans have it in the movies, even. We're partner, Little Max, who had anything anymore." Wants Birth Control Pills As Available as Aspirins SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - ing oral contraceptives freely aspirin-related deaths than Oral contraceptives should be available, he said. from the pill. as freely available as aspirin, "Improved knowledge and A former British diplomat, an American birth control ex- control and greater use of Lord Caradon, told delegates pert said today. oral contraceptives have there had been an accusation "Women of childbearing caused a dramatic fall in fer- that family planning was a age should be allowed to buy tility in the past decade," Ra- plot by the white nations to the pill over the counter in' venhold said. "They have re- limit other races. chemists shops and super- moved a mantle of ignorance "The best answer to that is markets," said Dr. Ray T. across the world." to point nut that if the white Ravenholt, director of the of- He reported that in 1968-72 world did desire to plot fice of population of the his agency financed con- against nonwhite nations one Agency for International De- traceptives worth ?20 million. of the most effective ways velopment. This included 53 million would be to deny those na- Ravenholt told the Inter- monthly cycles of oral con- tions any assistance whatever national Planned. Parenthood traceptives provided on in family planning and so Federation's first Southeast request to family planning seek to condemn them never to Asia and Oceania medical and programs in 70 countries. achieve advancement to scientific congress that con-' Dr. Malcolm Potts, the fed- greater prosperity," he said. trol of fertility was fundamen- eration's medical director tal to improvement of public based in London, told a news health. conference later that more Magazine Sale There is little risk in mak- people in Britain died from Fraud Charged MIDDLETOWN - Robert K. Wu, 44, of Cherry Hill, has , been arrested and charged with obtaining money under false pretenses. Police allege he solicited for See these beautiful place settings on display - m.agazine subscriptions al- at your nearest Monmoulh County National office. though magazines were never Limit; one place setting to a family, p/tass WEDNESDAY ONLY! delivered. More than 120 resi- dents here, in Lincroft, East Keasnburg and Keansburg re- ported they were sold the What a wonderful way to collect, a complete set of famous magazines by the suspect Imperial china at a fraction of its retail cost—while you build The suspect was released in a nest-egg of savings that earn interest from day of deposit, $1,000 bail for a Municipal compounded quarterly. Special Offer for Golden Court appearance Aug. 24. ICEBERG Passbook Accounts Detective Lt. William J. Exclusive new Seville pattern-hand-crafted, hand-decorated Halliday, the investigating of- Get one place setting free plus 3 ficer, made the arrest. with a soft blue floral design on pure translucent white china, additional place settings for $9 LETTUCE exquisitely edged in gold. when you open a Golden Passbook Three Divorces Account* with a deposit of $100 or Get your FREE Place Setting today—just by opening a savings more... or add $100 lo your pres- Granted in County account with $25 or more at any Monmouth County National ent account. Each additional $100 FREEHOLD - These di- Office. Or add $25 to an existing account. deposit entitles you to 4 place set- vorces have been granted in tings for just $12. Superior Court: Get additional Place Settings for just $3 each (including, tax) Joan A. Bcninato, Old with every additional $25 deposit you make. Accessory pieces Bridge, from Joseph F. Ben-' will also be available at comparable savings. WAREHOUSE PRICED iato, Aberdeen Road, Mata- Quantify rights reserved. wan, for extreme cruelty. Nol tesfonsAle lot typographical errors. Jacqueline M. Micciulla,. Oakiand St., Red Bank, from Emanuel Micciulla, Statcn Is- land. N.y., for extreme COUNTY NOTIONAL RANK eneliy. The bank that look* out for you Jfewy feitsjw, Hollywood MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION )*,, tang tan'.it irm Bo- mum, fitf $t k . * - .. jf. • ' . . , "* , , T1» Daily Register, Bed Bank—Middletown, N.J. Tuesday,AngBs, August 15, U7ifJ 2 It , ' Thriving Business Under Controls Surprises Many Nfl£f() straight ahead - and down. Worthwhile? Millions of words cit* and trade imbalances Will emergency regulations my. Many businessmen sup- in Montreal; showed almost to $1,152 billion this year, with now on* (toll year since Presi- Surveys showed.public con- will be written in an attempt conceivably could lead to a enacted under the great pres- port controls. Their mood is total acceptance of the fore- real growth making np more dent Nixon, faced with per- fidence waning. fo demonstrate or deny that further dollar devaluation sure of immediate problems bullish. cast for a continued strong ex- than 6 per cent and inflation tfstert inflation, joblessness It took no survey to realize this is the case and, to a point, even before.the'world mone- become a permanent part of Quite a Contrast pansion through 1972 and into less than 3.5 per cent And a. and foreign payments deficits, that foreigners were incensed some evidence can be offered tary system is rebuilt. the American outlook, accept- Contrast their outlook with 1973. year from now they forecast a . devalued the dollar and im- at the amount of dollars they to suit either viewpoint. The In broad summary, the evi- ed as the new ethic, woven that of a year ago arid you Dr. William Fruend, chief GNP of $1,271 billion. posed controls on the econo- were forced to absorb as rate of inflation has dropped: dence seems to Indicate that into the philosophy, enacted have one of the most curious economist of the New York Ironically, the emergency my. Americans — individuals and to about 3.5 per cent, but that, the emergency decisions of a into laws? Time will tell, results of the new economic Stock Exchange, who an- measures of Aug. 15, 1971, The President's action was their government — spent still is enough to cut the dollar year ago have resulted in im- Meanwhile, there is one ef- program. Businessmen, econ- nounced the results, said that. enacted with considerable dis- • stunning defeat for the phi- heavily abroad. In naT!n~20 years. Joblessness mediate practical gains for fect that surprises almost ev- omists, statisticians are all "rarely has there been such taste, are winning respect losophy of laissez-faire, an The American economy was has decreased from near 6 per the administration in both a eryone who learned their text- looking up. uniform optimism among from some unlikely directions. outlook that apparently coin- in trouble, domestically and cent, jxit &5 per cent of the la- political and economic con- book economics more than a A survey among members economists." Conceivably, they could be- cided with his broad view of internationally. bor force is still looking. text. dozen years ago. Business is of the American Statistical The forecasters predicted a come a permanent part of the society but which increasingly Practical measures, no mat- Still, the domestic economy The final evaluation of those thriving in a regulated econo- Association, which met today rise in Gross National Product new economics. offended bis political in- ter how abhorrent to basic be- is expanding, corporations are moves, however, remains to stincts. liefs, seemed called for. This making money, people are be measured by both future The fact was that the Amer- was an emergency not just of building their savings and a events and future historians. ican people were disturbed by economic dimensions but ob- housing boom continues. The The most important measure- theories that seemed not to viously one of politics as well. government still hasn't ment will be of the long-term work, by promises of econom- Pragmatism won out. . learned now to cut spending, changes in the American way ic turnarounds that led Have the results been and the continued budget defi- of life. Bedell Explores New York OTB, Backs Plan for N.J. By JOAN TURNER At a future public hearing ed, the general public finds a on the question, Mr. Bedell way to do it. KEANSBl'RG - State will invite Mr. Samuels and "Some people abuse drink- Assemblyman Eugene J. Bed- his head of security, Ralph ing, but that doesn't mean we ell, D-Monmoutn, believes Salerno, to speak. close down all the taverns. tbat legalized off-track-bet- Mr. Bedell explained that "I think a program such as ting would benefit the state of getting an OTB question on New York City's OTB would New1 Jersey. To familiarize this November's ballot would prove to be a good thing for himself with its operation, he be impossible, but added he New Jersey," the assem- met with the chairman of the will try for a November 1973 blyman concluded. board of New York City's Off- referendum: ' Track-Betting Corp., Howard He is also interested in a ca- FUZZY FUZZ Samuels. sino-type legal gambling oper- SOUTHAMPTON, England The meeting took place last ation to revitalize the Jersey (AP) — Policemen in the Thursday in the OTB shore areas, such as Atlantic Hampshire force are being en- couraged to grow beards if they headquarters at 1501 Broad- City, Asbury Park and Long feel insecure in their jobs. way, New york- City, a nine- Branch. Inspector John Moore, who story building, housing all "Of course, there will be some opposition from some made the suggestion in the phases of the unique program, force's house journal, explained complete with computers, church groups and citizens to my proposals, but when some- that "the beard is a sign of •HUM SMI I'M* security guards, television strength and gives the young surveillance, cameras and a thing like gambling, which, in- NEW PUMPER — River Plaza Hose Co. No. 1, Middletown, wet down this new pumper Saturday at Bobby a father-like image in the flrehouse on Foster St. Fire Chief W. Irwin Hendrlcks, left, congratulates Andrew Rocheford, wet- host of employes. EageaeJ. Bedel! cidentally, we all know goes the eyes of the juvenile tear- "This phase of the program on all the time, and is mob- aways." down committee chairman/ and Norman Long, captain of the company. journey to New York by two connected, and it is prohibit- in itself would create a multi- of his legislative aides, John employment situation here, Manna and Peter L. Graham. although I can't venture to UNCROWDED BADLANDS Mr. Manna also serves as WASHINGTON (AP) - Per- say bow many employes are campaign manager for Sep. utilized in the present oper- haps the Badlands National James J, Howard, D-Third Monument has a bad name. ation in New York," Mr. Bed- District, and Mr. Graham For some reason, it is one of ell stated. serves as president of the the. rare national parks or keys... only the He emphasized, however, Board of Education in Keans-' monuments that actually is un- that according to the facts burg. . dercrowded. In 1971, about a . supplied him by Mr. Samuels, While in New York, the men million and a half visitors tour- a $54 million profit has been were given a tour of OTB head- ed the desolate no-man's land, . realized by New York so far. quarters and a visit to a local .but it could easily have handled twice that number. beginning of the He was accompanied on his betting parlor. revolutionary... aUnewfor72 PHOENX" the crowd of HAMMOND ORGAN More features make the "PHOENIX" savers in Middletown. 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Unique in its' ability to pro- You've heard him as Mr. Music on TV and on his own TV and 5%% vide something for everyone, the Hammond radio shows. A fine artist and most gifted young organist who And... with any savings account of $1,000minimum you con have V-322 is complete with all that is required for will delight you with an entertaining variety of Hammond Organ music... from old standards, the latest rhythms, or your own complete musical enjoyment. .. personal favorites. Come in for some unexpected excitement FREE NO CHARGE CHECKING. and enjoy a really great musical evening with Larry Ferrari. PLUS BUILT-IN RHYTHM AND BENCH AT NO EXTRA COST! and only • FREE ADMISSION •REFRESHMENTS • CONVENIENT PARKING • BRING A FRIEND MIDDIETOWN TWO LOCATIONS ON ROUTE 35, MIDDLETOWN at New Monmouth flrf. and at Naveslnk Rlw M. Open Saturday 9:30 'III noon at Naveslnk River Office Cor. MAIN & MATTI50N ASBURY PARK . PR 5-9300 Open Daily 'til 9 P.M. Saturday 'til 5:30 P.M. Crossword 21 Consumes I PLUMB 'ACROSS 31i*mper BflbldOf**'' 1 Complain 35Shwpirti coin 23SonofSeth FERGOT VG 26 Jewish WUZ BELOW 5 French 38 Eiders 61 Chairnun't V0ND6R COMES painter 38 P. Bunym't weapon observance WORE PAW SEE LEVEL 10 There are tool 63Sh«)c«sp«are 27 Once, and seven 39 Diet- character '•gain 14 Seed 40 Lilies 64 Grown-up 28 Wading bird covering 41 Cream filly 29 Antelope 15 Eat sway custard 65 French 30 Sweetener 16 Kind of bag 42 Flim-flam ttudant 32-Law 17 Asian monk 43 Old violin 66 Meridian 33 Raiseup 44 Constructed 34 Summer 18 Circuit, of 67 Nudge : a sort • 45 Caboose eSSandhillr ,'shelters ' 19 Poker term 47 Mirrors 69 Latin 37 Area «nd Zip 20 Skinned 49 American infinitive 40 Like a 22 Gets over inventor DOWN violin the night 51 A kirn of 1 Part of the 41 Tank to Hi and Lois before Israel lag ; carburetor 24 Netherlands 52 Olive 2 Russian like 43Seti*fy ARBJt YOU SOIN© I CANT SET AW HAND river - stuffing 3 Fissure 44Vida- ( SATURDAY ). TO TAKE ONE? UNSTUCK FROM My 56 Like some 4 Companion, 46 Like a <5OU=CLUB 26 national 27 Playhouses Jackets of a sort spring 48 Aesop's Solution to YMMrday'i Puzilt B Cedar of India forte •HUH sauna amaa nann anaioGi aaaa ; fl Blunder BOQonebad anraa nnann nana 7 Sailors 52 Splendor njaaaanra aaaaaaa 8 Goodbye, to 53 Steel beam armmaa nBranmnaa Juan 54 Philippine aanaa arann nnnra 9 Little ;•< moslem nnn ann nan ana (failures 55 Stove part -Minn nnnn HPHIHH 57 New Mexico gnaaauaa uuuaua 10 Fixed looks atata uuutiu 11 Ages and city aaaanua aunuauH ages 68 Self*': ply l^Jfer Children's Letter CJUaCJ H13HUH HEJUU 12 Alaskan 59 Ended GHQU aauaa rjiaaa island 62 Time of- aaaa naaaa aaap 13 Ooze day: poet; Maty Worth 8/15/72 i |BIU II Iji... NO-IT WILL YOU (SET AWCAP I DENVER? B WOt-N0!THERE.'5A-A K BNt THAT, fOR W LU5SA6E!-! HWE VI ««£..WHERE UfiW. MWTERI HAPPEN TP P THE DRIVE TO THE w • l6 JI55V! TOCHECK.ONAPIANE TvO BE INVOKED IN THERE! &oA>$J MRPOCTISMAM. CONNECTION OUT Of OWMMOiO K JOB K? 9 1 ALMOST COMPUTED w I' IN CTRWNED w wL YOU'RE 50 QUIET ill * 1 1 AND SERIOUS TOMy, 28 30 7IP!"GOTBHS1NE» u>ftflnrb p • _ WORRIES ON 35 TTT MIND? - 42 :: «!. «i 1 . 52 53' 54 55 56 J j 1 59 60 62- 64 H66 67 T Your Horoscope, Birthday TUESDAY, AUGUST 15 - surprising — but that you Usu- as well be without logic alto- one - and three are better Born today, you have never ally manage to elicit such gether. This is a good time to than two. Ask advice from been without friends and com- openness from others, even consult with others. several persons this morning panions — but this does not when it is not their habit to be SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) and you'll see an improved af- Y IT1AKE6HIMA mean that you have never open, is surprising indeed. It — It is true that you may ternoon. ( WHII known times of loneliness, for ' is, of course, your gentleness have made your own bed, but ARIES (March 22-April 20) •yon are one who can feel al- of spirit to which others re- it is not absolutely necessary — Signs of'change are not to one in the midst of a crowd, spond. that you lie in it. Take the be'.ignored. You may have to even a crowd of good and loy- time to do the job over again. reeducate your senses if you al people who have nothing To find what is in "store for you tomorrow, select your SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- are to be able to remain alert' but your best interests at Dec. 22) — It is impossible to to another's needs. heart. Somewhat inclined to? birthday and read the corre- sponding paragraph. serve two masters at the TAUKUS (April 21-May 21) ward moodiness, you general- same time and seve them — The'intuitive Taurus should - ly allow your feelings to color Wednesday, August 16 equally well. Make up your be able to feel his way around both your approach and your LEO (July 24-Aug. 23) - It mind which interest to culti- today's difficult situations reactions to the events, situ- would be easy for you to over- vate. with exceptional success. ations, and circumstances estimate your ability this CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. Give and take in friendship. that make up your life. Nor is morning and as a con- 20) — Though you yourself GEMINI (May 22-June 21) it in your nature to do much sequence to bite off consid- may be a skilled artisan, you about this, for personal — Take care that you don't erably more than you can would do well to compliment burn so much energy during change is very difficult for chew. another, on, his attempt at you. the morning hours that you BRING THE DOCTOR ) 1 VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 23) - your favorite craft. have nothing left with which 'E'SFEEUN BETTER Y- Whatever you undertake SACK WITH NER.-C, WHBM'EF»NCIE5A/ ' A loving person who is unaf- AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. to meet afternoon demands. • AN4 ME MOTHER^* raid to demonstrate his feel- today will be marked by your 19) — Keep'yourself seqsitive 'Take it easy. GAME OF CARDS/ ings, you never leave others special creative mind and 4 THE VICAR/ to others' moods, The employ- CANCER (June' 22-July 23) in the dark as to their place — hand. Even failure tends to ment scene may be a place of — What the economy de- or lack of it — in your heart. look good in your hands. chaos this morning; help mands, give. Don't be sur- That you expect the same sort LIBRA (Sept 24-Oct. 23) - create order. A good day. prised if your financial needs .of openness from others in Unless your reasoning has PISCES (Feb. 20-March 21) come as something of a^ghock .their relationship to you is not fact as a base, you might just — Two heads are better than Mo some whq,are, close to yoij. Sheinwold's Bridge Advice By ALFRED SHEINWOLD one club. This was, of course, very start of the hand. sending 50 cents to'Red Bank If you were brought up in one trick more than he could East led a club after ruffing Register, Box SJ31§, Grand the old tradition, you were afford to lose. ,' < the third diamond, and South Central Station, New York, taught to draw trumps first The only hope was to begin ruffed. Declarer now led out N.Y. 10017. )•• and discard your losers later. the diamonds at once. At the the ace of trumps and another South dealer YES -MISS SHAPELY I LOVE THAT SHAPE/ AREN'T YOU The-defenders can't ruff any- second trick, therefore, South trump, causing all of the North-South vulnerable PASWOOP, is RES/3NED AND MR. I WISH I ( EVEN A LITTLE ) thing,, and you pay off your DITHERS GAVE -I KNEW WHERE \ BITJ-EALOUS?f led a diamond to dummy and trumps to drop. He could then NORTH THAT UPSTICK mortgage in no time at all. X SEE ON SHEBOUSHT continued with top diamonds. afford to concede a trick to '4 1053 ANP SHE rr But today's opponents are East ruffed the_ third di.a.v the ace of hearts and claim K8 • QI9 Today's remedy is not fully anything. The club had to be passes. You hold: S-Q J 9 H-8 V A62 O 8743 guaranteed: Take the dis- lost in any case. If East had 1 5 3 D-J 5 C-K 8 7 2. What do O 1074 O J5 * J 10 9 54 cards first and" discard your used a worthless trump for you say? 4K872 losers later. the purpose, South would Answer: Bid two spades. SOUTH West opened the jack of break even: He would lose an This weak response promises 4 A7642 clubs, and declarer hopefully additional trump trick instead adequate trump support and a V KQJI0 put up dummy's queen. East of a club trick. total count of 6 to 10 points, O 82 played the king, however, and As it happened, however, counting your distribution as 4 A6 South South had to take the ace. East's trump was not worth- well as your high cards. Wert North East Pass South counted his losers less. It was one of the two 1 0 Pass 2 0 UNANIMOUS (A Pocket Guide to Bridge Pass with some misgiving: at least trump tricks that the defend- Pass 3 4) MATCHING ! MARCHING written by Alfred Shelnwold is 4 • two trumps, one heart and ers were sure to win from the available. Get your copy by All Pass I NOTHIN'S Opening lead- A WOMAN 9GOKNBP. HUH? HE'S NEVER HEARD AN OPERA ON THE OTHER HAND, HE'5 SEENTHE $WW£ CWDS.ltiE OR A m 6RGUNP,THE5UN,7HERAIN, THE MOONLTHE STAfc,ACASTAfcACAT AND SEVERAL lOORMS The Phanlom Beetle, Bailey CHIEIj THE TIRANGI NOW THETIRANSI X A IT IS NOT OUR BATTLE" YET IT THOSE SOOP PEOPtE NEEP, ATTACKEP THE OOSAAtt" -MARCACHH UPON THE PEACEFUL ISSAIP, *WHEH THE TIGER IS OUR HEIP' IF ONLY WE „ 1HE/ TOOK LOOT-- MORI FISHERFCH.K--/PEOPi.e.. AT THE SATE, NO MAN , CCXJLP. BUT IT IS IMPOSSIBLE 51AVES--ANP HEAPS' THINK I'M THE GRBATEST BROTHER iH TOMORROW; WHY' TJie Dally Register, Red Bank-MkMletowflJ NJ. Tuesday, August IS, 1»72 21 Me Govern Out to Woo 25 Million New Voters ire are certain things test. "We really have not had (EDITOR'S NOTE ~There ere making rerty to woo stead of the rear guard hold- coordinator at the Re-elect need only lay out the Presi- .eration headed by Kietz, has a aresome 25 million of them - them with armies of canvas- >ur-own attitude of a few Committee. "We have been about Nixon that I know, that dent's record to win the sup- staff of 32 in Washington and to undergo the test of fire- voters who «1U be casting bal- sers, millions of dollars, rock montfis back, campaign aides saying all along that young I've seen in the past four port of young voters. 70 field people. The McGovern yet," said Lungreo. : lots in a presidential election concerts, posters and buttons. now predict President Nixon people are not against the • ye«frs, that I like," said Kathy "We are not going to argue young voter program, more Young Voters for the Presi- Tyfe, a Georgia State Univer- 1 The target of all this activi- will split at least even on the President, and now we will f the emotion of the war, * said decentralized, has four people dent has set up organizations (or the first time. They make sity senior working this sum- ty is the new voter, the 11 mil- youth vote. To many people prove it." Pat Logan, youth director for in Washington and 40 state in 37 states and recruited up the largest increment of mer in an Atlanta dress shop. 125,000 volunteers, said Rietz. lion 18-to-20-year-olds eligible that would be a surprise, for The best available figures the Re-elect Committee in coordinators. the electorate since women '••••"VUth McGovern, I just don't The goal, he added, is to have to vote in federal elections be- Sen. George McGovern, the indicate about 50 per cent of Pennsylvania. "We are going While the Nixon youth effort won the vote. Following is an knj w what to believe and organizations in every state cause of the 26th Amendment Democratic presidential nom- the eligible new voters are to say that it is ending and appears better financed, the article describing how Re- wlwt not to believe." two weeks before the election lowering the legal age and the inee, has mobilized a large now registered, slightly less in that the draft is ending. We McGovern people possess a publicans and Democrats and field 500,000 volunteers 14 million 21-to-24-year-olds and visible force of youthful the 18-to^O group and slightly Art Wieczorek, a 20-year-old will also point out that there vote-gathering machine that view the New Voter, and the. for the final push, possible impact on the No- who were not old enough to workers and was credited by more in the 2l-to-24,group. machine shop worker in Chi- are more young people, more has proven itself in the pri- vember elections.) cast ballots in the 1968 presi- the polls with being far ahead Among those attending col- cago, said he would vote for women, and more blacks in maries. The new voter pro- Why all the effort? Lnngren •Nlijon primarily because of a government jobs than ever By TERRY RYAN dential elections. among the new voters. lege, a minority representing grams of the Re-elect Com- did not hesitate an instant be- disastefor McGovern and the before." Associated Press Writer At, the Committee for the "We will beat them in ,an only about 20 per cent of the mittee and Republican Na- fore answering: "There are 25 De nocrats. "People keep put- Re-election of the President, area that McGovern has made total youth vote, about 65 per The response to this ap- tional Committee have yet to million new voters out there ting Nixon down, but the McGovern needs them, Nix- there is ah upbeat optimism a key element of his cam- cent are registered. proach, the selling of the undergo a significant field and you can't ignore them." whole Democratic party is too m wants them and both sides about these new voters. In- paign," said Ken Rletz, youth . A recent Gallup Poll gave President's record, has been unstable," he said. sufficiently favorable to sur- McGovern a significant edge, . ^tevc Hadland is 21, mar- over Nixon among the new prise some people" connected ried, father of. one child and with the Nixon re-election ef- voters now registered, 57 per anjadvertising salesman in cent to 41 per cent. But among fort. "I'm not saying it's over- Orange County, Southern Cal- whelming, but there is none of those not registered, Gallup ifornia's conservative strong- reported that 46 per cent fa- the hostility that some people hold. "I trust Nixon as I've expected," said Dan Lungren, vored the President and 43 neyer trusted another politi- per cent supported McGovern. director of special projects at : cian," Hadland said. "By not the Republican National Com- Nixon campaigners con- vojSng for Nixon, I'd be voting stantly cite this finding as evi- mittee. fof McGovern. I do not want The Nixon campaign's WEDNESDAY ONLY! dence of the President's to}iothat." strength among the unregis- young voter effort differs in tered young as they plan reg- $111 Chance, an 18-year-old several ways from that at istration and get-out-the-vote Texan who is skipping college McGovern headquarters. To U.S.D.A. CHOICE TENDER drives to deny' McGovern the to|!make money and get mar- the Republicans, anyone un- riejd, said he would vote for der 30 is a young voter. The " youth vote. Nikon "because of the action McGovern forces generally Associated Press bureaus he" has taken the last four cut it off at 25. around the country recently years on the war and the While the Democrats plan RIB STEAK interviewed young people, ecpnomy." some massive, nonselective asking them, whom they sup- 'fhe war and the economy registration efforts, the Re- ported and why. They found arp major issues with young publicans will emphasize se- young Nixon voters in the pepple, issues, that cut both lective door-to-door canvass- cities and suburbs, in the fac- ways.' Some of those inter- ing in areas highly likely to tories and on the farms. viewed praised Nixon for yield Nixon voters. The Among the reasons most of- wading down the war. Others McGovern forces are coopera- ten cited for supporting Nixon criticized him for not ending it ting with nonpartisan regis- were his experience, his han- completely. Some said he had tration efforts to the extend of dling of foreign affairs and a da)ie everthing possible to supplying volunteers. The Re- distrust for what some saw as limit inflation and cut publicans frankly distrust McGovern's vacillation on the .'unemployment, but others such drives as enemy ploys. said they viewed him as too WAREHOUSE PRICED war and welfare. They seldom Young Voters for the Presi- Quantity rights reserve* expressed sentiments or men- ; dedicated to big business. dent, a re-elect Committee op- Nor resporisibiB lor typographical errors. OUR REPRESENTATIVE — Andrea McLaughlin; 20, of Cherry Hill, tioned issues different from Nixon campaign staffers, in . the_ new Miss New Jersey-World, will compete "Sept. 1 in the Miss World- Nixon supporters in other age Washington and across the U.S.A. pageant,in Hampton, Va. brackets. cojintry, are convinced they Chew! Death Penalty Vote Long-holding FASTEETrTPowdei: Jersey Girl Seeking Sought by Tinkler It takes the A FREEHOLD — Leslie B. tacks of murderous felons," out Tinkler, a Democratic free he said. ' holder candidate, says he fa- Title of Miss World vors reinstatement of a man- NEWARK - Andrea dest of four daughters and a 10 dress and weighs 130 datory death penalty for cer- McLaughlin, a 20-year-old son. Her father is a medical • pounds. She is a graduate of tain types of crime, statuesque blonde from representative and her moth- Camden Catholic High School Mr. Tinkler, a lawyer, saic Cherry Hill, Saturday night er majored in chemistry as a and is employed as a sales- he will seek to organize law- was crowned Miss New Jer- college student. lady ,and model by Moana's yers, legislators, and the pub- sey-World at The Miss New The beauty queen stands 5 Dress Shop at the Cherry Hill lic in an effort to put the ques- Jersey-World Beauty Pageant feet, nine inches, wears a size Mall. She was Miss Camden tion on a statewide referen- DRIVE ABAKAN at the Gateway-Galleria here. County in 1970. dum. She will represent the Garden "It's about time," he said, State at the Miss World-U.S.A. Tennis is her favorite sport and her hobby is just what she "someone spoke for the civil Pageant in Hampton, Virginia fights of the hundreds of in- on September L ' School Opens hopes to make a career of—singing and playing the pi- nocent shipowners, policemen Miss McLaughlin was se- At Highlands ano. and ordinary citizens wh ucie lected by a panel of judges Miss McLaughlin won the have been murdered in the from the arts and business title after appearing in a hot course of holdups, robberies, and muggings." over 31 other semi-finalists in On Sept. 6 pants outfit, a bikini and an the statewide beauty pageant. HIGHLANDS - The public evening dress. Mr. Tinkler said while he The hew Miss New Jersey will agrees the death penalty PRE be a junior at Rutgers Univer- school will open Wednesday. The winner of the Miss Sept. 6. World U.S.A. Pageant will should be mandatory for the sity in Camden this fall, hav- slaying of a policeman, he Parents should register new compete for the Miss World ing transferred from the feels the, concept doesn't ex- students before Friday, Aug. title in London in November. Philadelphia Musical Aca- tend far enough demy where she has majored 25, between 9 a.m. and noon flPPROVED "The average citizen has in voice for the last two years. and 1 and 3 p.m. Next regis- tration wjll be Thursday, just as much right to protec- Miss McLaugh'lin, the Sept. 7. tion from violence as the po- daughter, or Mr: and Mrs. Pat- Free Speech School hours will be from • lice officer. In addition, the rick J. McLaughlin, is the ei- average citizen is seldom pre- CRR 8:45 to 11:15 a.m. for morning kindergarten, from noon to Pair Cleared pared or equipped to protect himself against the savage at SCHIFFMAN'S 2:30 p.m. for afternoon kin- dergarten, and from 8:45 By Court LOflDS a.m. to 2:30 p.m. for non- ASBt'RY PARK - Two graded classes and grades members of the Free Speech four through six. Parents of Coalition, which claims police Director Set kindergarten pupils will be no- harass those who hand out an- tified by mail regarding the tiwar leaflets, were found In- At Matawan session their child wilUtfend. ^nocent yesterday of violating On the first day of school, the state disorderly persons largest recreation kindergarten and non-graded law. Adult School vehicle dealer students should report to. the Joseph Rogers of Orlando, MATAWAN - Harry Haller school's main entrance on Wa- in the east Fla. and Robert Moir, here, has been appointed director of terwitch Ave. Other pupils were arrested July 12 on the the Matawan Community MLES—RENTAL-LEASING should go to the Linden Ave. boardwalk as they were hand- Adult School. FULL LINE SERVICE entrance. ing out leaflets opposing this Mr. Haler succeeds James Route 33 & 34 The cafeteria will serve country's military in- G. Long, who resigned after COLLINQWOOD CIR.. lunch the first day of school. volvement in Indochina. many years of service. FARMINGDALE, All children, except those in Municipal Court Judge Eu- Mr. Haller teaches English kindergarten, may participate 922-1222 gene Capibianco ruled that and aerospace at. Matawan in the lunch program. "There was no evidence in- Regional High School, where troduced that the defendants he is coordinator of the Gen- did other than pass out anti- eral Reading Program, an ad- war leaflets." The defendants viser to the Student Council had been charged with "har- and chairman of ADFABSAC rassing and molesting passer- (Administration, Faculty Ad- sby." , visory Board, Student Adviso- ry Council) and directs and Baptists Plane instructs (he high school equivalency program. Theater Trip New courses to be offered in RED BANK — The Young the adult school's fall term Woman's Auxiliary to Pilgrim are retail merchandising, Baptist Church will sponsor a mass communication, The In- New York theater trip on formed Consumer, Psy- Sept. 16. chology of Adolescence, voca- Following a performance of' tional horticulture, Health, "Don't Bother Me, I Can't Safety and Pest Control in Cope," the group will Have Our Environment, inter- Biiy now! Dealers are in dinner in the city. mediate photography, social a trading mood. UCTC is Proceeds will go toward dancing, beauty care, quilt- programs which the auxiliary ing, do-it-yourself decorating ready to help with your direct car sponsors at Christmas. Last and beginning needlecraft. loan. Attractive rates and terms. year, members hosted parties Registration will be Sept. 1, 2 for children at Marlboro Psy- and 3 from 7 to 8 p.m. in the Repayment plans that fit your chiatric Hospital, in the neigh- high school. budget. Big car. Small car. New or borhood, and in Ihc Sunday A new policy of tuition-free classes for Matawan senior used. We'll even pre-approve your united counties School. Donations are also made to the sick and the citizens has been approved by loan before you shop. Visit your needy. the board of directors, which trust company Mrs. Lorraine Hughes, vice includes Mrs. Marvin Ran- nearby office now for full details president, is chairman. Assist- dolph, president; Mrs. Robert where good things start to happen and fast action. • Mwi*«n>IFod«i»in«Mtv»Sfliem • FKHrilDtpoiil Insurant* Cocpojlioi ing are Miss Ruth Hughes, C. Wheat, vice president; Mrs. Evelyn Harvey, Mrs. Mrs. William Hutchins, trea- Margie Howard, Miss Ida surer; Mrs. David Cramer, Palmer, Mrs. Tillie Lewis, recording secretary, and Mrs. and Mrs. Anna Wilson, presi- Alphonse DeRosa, publicity dent. chairman. •V. 22 The Daily Register, Bed Bjuik-Middletown, N.J. Tuesday, August 15, 1S72 They Ye Miami-Bound for GOP Convention By LINDA ELLIS "On the National committee challenge." And who for women candidates for known Republican woman in level (Mrs. Neuberger also is wouldn't? ' freeholders and'council posi- the state. She was rewarded Behind every successful on the lS-member executive , While Mr. Neuberger's na- tions," Mrs. Winmill, whose for past efforts by' Gov. Wil- man is a good woman and if committee of that larger tional committee post re- husband has a seat on the liam T. Cahill whenhemade that sounds like old flashioned body) we decreed in 1968 that quires (among other things) New York Stock Exchange, her his administration's secre- flummery to you, you haven't for the next four years the DO squiring national candidates elaborated. tary to the Division of Tax; seen the roster of the New- committee would go over the around the state, she is a firm Mrs. Winmiil, who has per- Appeals. . Jersey delegation to the Re- national delegate selection : believer that local politicalor- haps the largest collection of _ "An individual who js dis- publican Convention next process with an eye to making ganlzations are "the miracle elephant figures of all sizes on satisfied attd who appeals for week. a report to the rules com- of politics." the Jersey shore, is not at all tax relief (sounds like she'd Of the 10 state delegates at mittee at the 1972 convention Predicts Republican Victory' reluctant to rhapsodize about; get everyone in the state) on large, two are female. Of 30 that would allow for more " "Without organization at Richard Nixon. "A great stra- property appeals to us, and I district delegates, three are equitable representation," the the district level you have tegist," she said, "who is assign the appeals to one of female. veteran Republican worker nothing," she declared. gaining strength among his seven judges," she explained. explained. "For too' many So where, one wonders, are own party, Democrats and She takes 'justifiable pride years we've been throwing "County chairmen make or all the party faithful who independent voters. He has in the fact that she moved the. bones to alternates and New break a campaign. Groups have licked the envelopes and accomplished so much for calendar backlog from back Jersey has been one of the can't be delivered anymore in made the coffee and hired ba- world stability. . . He could dates of 1961 and is currently worst offenders where women blocs, so the best individ- bysitters and also happen to have such progressive eco- working on 1969 through 1971 and blacks are concerned," ualized organization will win. be female? nomic policies, but Congress in her two-and-one-haif years - she said. The Democrats, are, while On the list of alternate dele- very enthusiastic,, amateurs, has tied his hands behind his in office. gates, that's where. Of the 10 Committee Recommendations and they're terribly frag- back ... I think the people A Working Person alternate delegates at large, The report will go before mented," Mrs. Neuberger will react to that Congression- "I like dealing with the av- seven are women. Of the 39 the rules committee this week concluded in predicting a Re- al opposition to President Nix- erage homeowner," the ener- alternate district delegates and before the full convention publican victory in Novem- on by not returning those to getic, pragmatic and political- (two from every Congression- for a vote next week. Its rec- ber. office who have opposed ly savvy lady noted, "because' al district, 12 are female). ommendations are: 50 per Boody ("Everyone calls me him." that's what I am. A working So we're back where we cent of the delegates to na- that") Winmill of Bay Head Ann Flynn, who's been person, who worked her *ay started: Behind every suc- tional convention should be also emphasizes county orga- up.., started from scratch in cessful man... women, 25 per cent should be around from the ground level nization in her job as presi- on up through state and na- every sense. I never could. There are three women younger than 30 years of age dent of the state Federation of tional politics, sniffs mass de- have done it without John from Monmouth County who'll and minority groups should be Republican Women. fections from the older Demo- (Mrs. Flynn's husband died be Miami-bound over the represented in proportion to "On Oct. 21, which we've crats over to her Man in the three months ago). He was weekend and a fourth leaves their population percentage in called 'Reelect the President. White House. such a terrific cook!" . today. The three who fly on a given district. These quotas Day' the Federation will ask "President Nixon has put Mrs. Flynn is not at all sure the weekend charter are Elea- are very similar, one will cooperation from all the coun- his We on the line in China that Nixon is a shoo-in in No- nor Day Winmill of Bay Head, note, to the quotas operative ty level people in distributing and Russia to help bring vember. "We have* to combat a state delegate; Ann De- (or the Democrats this sum- absentee ballots, and cam- world peace," Mrs. Flynn said those kids, those terrifically Sarno Flynn, an alternate mer." paign literature door to door, earnestly. "We owe him the active young workers of delegate-at-large and Jane A Republican state steering in shopping centers and so on. reelection." McGovem's. We have to get Gardella Clayton, a Third Dis- committee chooses delegates out and work. And we will," trict alternate delegate. "The Federation will also Ann Flynn herself has put a to convention from a list of go into the counties with coun- lot of hours of her life on the she said with a decisive nod. "interested persons," alter- The earliest bird to fly to ty chairmen to help campaign line and is perhaps the best-. "We will." Miami is Katherine Neuber- nate Jane Clayton explained. ger of Lincroft. She is nation- The Democratic reform al committeewomen from movemement mandated elec- New Jersey and as such has tion of delegates at public major responsibilities. Nation- caucus. al committee persons, two Favors Modified Quota from each state, had relati- Not one of the four women vely low profiles in the public is in favor of those specific eye until the Democratic Na- quotas. Mrs. Flynn favors a LOOKING AHEAD - tional Committee met on modified quota. They were New Jersey Federation prime time television to uniformly horrified by the of Republican Women choose a successor to Sen, power wielded at the Demo- president Eleanor Day Register Staff Photos Thomas F. Eagleton. Now a cratic convention by non-vet- Winmill, a delegate at By Don Lordi lot of people know what a na- erans. the convention, Is con- tional committee is. Mrs. Neuberger: "Quotas fident 'that man In the Mrs. Neuberger will not are un-American... In a White House' will be vote in Miami for the national melting pot, we're all Ameri- reelected, ticket but she will sit on the cans. But there should, there you don't get qualified without floor as part of the state dele- must be a voluntary recogni- It is not fair for the Demo- & Neuberger, Mrs. Neuberger experience, knowledge and crats to eliminate so many was able to make substantial gation. As national com- tion in each district as to com- training.... Women have mitteewoman she could have plete participation of the di- older people and I'll tell you contributions in various ways been discriminated against in why. Experience is necessary, to the Republican cause. laid claim to a voting seat, verse makeup of each district. the Republican party to a cer- but voluntarily stepped aside Delegates from a district like .it's vital and you cannot win Their two daughters are now. tain extent, but then they without it." grown with families of their this year to give the power Newark should obviously be haven't been very aggressive spot to another woman, Brigid black in proportion to the Mrs. Clayton: "If you be- own (one daughter is a in seeking office. Women lieve in something you should McGovern backer) and Mrs. M. Shanley of Bernardsville, black population and so forth. should be on local councils, who has not been a voting But quotas should not be man- have to work for it. But be- Neuberger plans to continue too, to keep watch over the lieving is not enough. You her efforts for the COP. delegate before. dated ... I'm a great believer 'housekeeping' functions in Asked about Republican in party discipline, working have to do day-to-day things, In 1960, as- a delegate to the the town: trash collection, gain experience before you plans for representational re- your way up... But yes, men presidential convention, she safe areas for children and so can be of real value to the or- form a la the quota system in- have the advantage. They on." gave one of the seconding don't lick envelopes very long. ganization ... All four of us stituted this year by the Mrs. Flynn: "The blacks speeches to nominate Henry Democrats, Mrs. Neuberger They often start off by being have been active for many and the young have problems years... There's been more Cabot Lodge as the vice presi- outlined the situation: aides to legislators and so on. dential candidate. Mr. Nixon, No matter what, advance- we don't have. Women repre- of an attempt this year to "There has been a great sent 52.7 per cent of the popu- bring blacks and the young telephoned her and left mes- deal of misunderstanding ment must be through ex- sages to call the moment she perience and expertise. lation of this country. I want into the organization. It takes about this and we should clear more women involved, I want time. We have worked for returned from the Miami hair- it up... In 1968, we set up the Blacks, women, the young, dresser, she reminisced. they should all be given posi- to hear what blacks and the years to have more women in DO (Delegates and Organiza- young have to say, in fact I positions of power and in- tion) Committee to study re- tions relative to their back- "When he reached me, it grounds and their abilities." make a point to find out what fluence, we want them ap- was 5:30 and he told me to forms to be discussed and they're saying. I would have pointed to judgeships. But voted upon in this upcoming have a blue dress and be Mrs. WInmlll: "Women to vote against the (DO) they must be qualified. A spe- ready to speak at 8 to the con- tU^ OP'UMJ°ne G. Clayton of Rumson, an alternate convention," Mrs. Neuberger should have a far greater quota. But, I would like to see cific quota is a terrible idea." g from the Third Congressional District, is known for her stage continued. "Unlike the Demo- vention and on television. It voice in government than they some kind of quota because Very much favoring the was thrilling and I loved the Cf the «MH?L? ehking^n9aS,er!)ents- 'Co01 and confident' is how members crats, who could act pre-con- do. I can't comment on the without one, minority groups Mrs. in front of her name oi me audience Bhave described her. vention, we cannot change blacks and the young except will never get anywhere, I'm rather than an Ms., Jane rules except during con- to say that whatever they are afraid. But, regular organiza- Clayton feels she has the best vention. they must be qualified and tion people must be included. of both worlds in being born female; Two sons, a business career she shares with her husband Harry, a house on Woodmere Avenue with high individualistic decor and two decades of political in- volvement. Different Outlets "Harry and I have different outlets. His is golf, mine hap- pens to be politics. My mother was once a candidate for mayor of Sea Bright..." As county committeewoman in Rumson's Third District for 18 years, the holder of various positions within the Mon- mouth County and New Jer- sey state Federation of Re- publican Women and an offi- cer of the Monmouth County Republican Executive Com- mittee, Mrs. Clayton has had opportunities, she noted, to at- tend national conclaves. "Business pressures have, always been too great," the attractive blonde explained, "but this year I made the time.... I believe strongly in Mr. Nixon and Mr. Agnew, they're familiar with our country's problems and they'll wrestle with them." Career In Politics Katherine Neuberger, who keeps close tabs on the care and feeding of 75 Black Angus cattle roaming near her his- THIS FARM VOTE toric Lincroft farm buildings, — Convention veteran began her career in politics in Katherine Neuberger of 1949 when then Gov. Alfred E. Sunnyside Farm, Lin- Driscoll asked her to help in croft, watches .Mary, 6, Rumson Roulette his campaign. "I licked enve- and Jennifer Wahl, 4, lopes, sure, but I was soon daughters of district 7 WEST RIVER RD. RUMSON promoted to supervising the committeewoman Mar- elevator at the Robert Treat ion Wahl, Little Silver, .(in Newark)," she recalled play farmer. As nation- with a chuckle. al committeewoman, Mrs. Neuberger will sit, In 1957, Mrs. Neuberger, a though not vote, with lovely, frank and well-in- the New Jersey delega- formed lady with a passion tion. Her main task in SIDEWALK SALE! for activity, was elected presi- Miami, is pre-con- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16 dent of the state Federatjon of vention work with the Republican Women. BATTLER FOR N'lXOJN^- Ann Desarno Flynn, alternate state arrangements com- (Raindate-Thurs.,Aug. 17) Encouraged by her late hus- mittee. deleaafe-at-large, would like to see a GOP landslide, but fore-, band, Harry H. Neuberger of All Sales Final . No Charges casts: 'It's gofng to be one heck of a battle.' the Wall Street firm of Hilson The Daily Register, Red Bank-MkMietowB, NX Twsday. August IS, 1IR 23 Ties With the Past Some collectors delight in. gathering ties with the past through famous signatures. Not all antique shops carry them, but you may have luck where they specialize in rare books, old About Antiques documents, maps and prints. Signature collectors will keep their eyes peeled for busi- ness or personal correspondence, authographed photographs, cheques, receipts, postcards, legal documents, and books from personal libraries and collections. Be cautious with signatures of presidents and prime minis- ters on government business papers—they may actually have been signed by a secretary. ., Famous and Infamous Signature collections cover the famous in every type of hu- man endeavor: music, drama, art, literature, politics, the mil- itary, sports, exploration—and of course the signatures of roy- alty are always in demand. Collectors with a bent for the un- usual may want to try including signatures of some of the more infamous characters of the past. Prices vary greatly—depending on age, scarcity and desir- ability of the signer. A letter signed by John Husley in 1929 may be had for around $10, while an Abraham Lincoln signa- ture from 1963 will likely be worth hundreds of dollars. (Ugliter Slot) Photo FLOWER PROJECT — Mrs. Charles Barnes, right, hosts a meeting for members of the Village Gar- den Club of Middletown to make flower arrangements for Walsoh Army Hospital, Ft. Dix. Participat- ing in the workshop are, from left, Mrs. Joseph Gluck, Mrs. Paul Eby and Mrs. Paul Sebastian, Mid- dletown. Twice a year club members make 75 bedside arrangements, 15 ward bouquets and two altar pieces for the hospital. Governor's Son Marrried at Mass EWU'G TOWNSHIP (AP) The bridesmaids were Miss Mrs. Cahill was graduated — Miss Jane Elizabeth Regina Cahill and Miss Patri- from Immaculata College, McManimon was married cia Cahill, Princeton, sisters Washington, D.C, and will be here Saturday, to William T. of the bridegroom, and Miss employed by the New Jersey Cahill Jr., son of Gov. and Kathleen Dwyer, Arlington, Bell Telephone Co. Mrs. William T. Cahili. Va., and Mrs. Christopher Her husband is a graduate The wedding ceremony was Brown, New Rochelle, N.Y. of Xavier University and will performed by the Very Rev. Thomas D. Geary, Collings- graduate from the Catholic Ralph Firneno, Provincial of wood, served as best man and University Law School later the Pallottines, at Incarnation the ushers were John P. Cah- this month. Roman Catholic Church. ill, brother of the bridegroom; Mrs. Cahill's father is an ex- The Nuptial Mass was con- Edward J. McManimon 3rd, ecutive assistant and regis- celebrated by the Rev. James New Hope, Pa., and Michael tered lobbyist of the New Jer- Mrs. William T. Cahlll Jr. P. McManimon, uncle of the McManimon of Ewing, broth- sey Bell Telephone Co. The (The former bride, and Father Firneno, a ers of the bride, and Brian J. father of the new daughter-in- Jane McManimon) friend of the wedding couple. McKevitt of Laurel, Md., and law of the Republican gover- Mrs. Cahill, daughter of Mr. James LePera, of King of nor is a registered Democrat. and Mrs. Edward J. Prussia, Pa. Mrs. Cahill's uncle, Francis McManimon, was given in The reception was at the McManimon, is a Democratic marriage by her father and Trenton Country Club after Assemblyman from Mercer was attended by her sister, which the couple left for a 10- County-. Miss Eileen Ann McManimon, day wedding trip. They plan The newlyweds met nine as maid of honor. to reside in Collingswood. years ago while vacationine with .their families on Lon| Beach Island. RejUUr Sl«l Wiilo Manley-Becker The governor has seven SCORING FOR DEBORAH — Mrs. Nicholas De Georgio, Middletown, left, a chairman of the Aug. 22 card and mah iongg party planned by the Red Bank Chapter of Deborah, completes plans for the event RUMSON - Miss Leslie Peter Hughes. other children, including a Mrs. Manley was graduated married daughter, Mrs. Neal with Mrs. Frank Tuohy, Little Silver, chapter president. The benefit will be at 8 p.m. in the AAonmouth Anne Becker and Thomas Wil- Reform Temple, New Shrewsbury. liam Manley were married from Georgetown Visitation Tully. Sunday here in Holy Cross Preparatory School, Washing- Catholic Church by the Rev. ton, D.C. and Marymount Col- Carl Hinrichsen of the Im- lege, Arlington, Va. She was Deborah maculate Conception Semi- presented to society at the In- nary, Darlington. There was a ternational Debutante Ball reception in the Sea Bright and the Gotham Ball. Benefit Beach Club. The bride, who is with Bam- The bride is the daughter of berger's Newark, and the Mr. and Mrs. George H. Beck- Shore Modeling Agency, is the Some Angles on Fish Aug.22 er Jr., Blackpoint Horseshoe, granddaughter of Mrs. James P. FitzGerald of Winnetka, Mrs: Thomas Mauley here. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. NEW SHREWSBURY - 111., and the late Dr. FitzGe- The Monmouth Reform (The former Leslie Becker) Manley Jr., 59 Kemp Ave., Fair Haven, are the bride- rald of Winnetka and Chicago, Temple, Hance Ave., will be the groom's parents. and of Mrs. George H. Becker By BARBARA GIBBON'S setting here Tuesday at 8 p.m. Miss Stacey Becker was of Rumson, formerly of South for the annual card and mah maid of honor for her sister Orange, and the late Mr. Wondering what to do with a windfall of fresh-caught fish jongg party given by the Red and Mrs. Harvey Ginsburg, Becker. The bride's father is dumped on your doorstep by the neighborhood angler? The Slim Gourmet Bank Chapter of Deborah the-bridegroom's sister, was chairman of the board of Resist the urge to turn the extras into garden mulch or Heart and Lung Center, matron of honor. Also attend- DIVA Associates, Red Bank. give-aways to unappreciative relatives.. .keep it all for your- Browns Mills. Refreshments ing the bride were Miss Mar- Mr. Manley, an alumnus of self! There's nothing you can serve that's slimmer than sea- will be served. Guests are garet Becker, her sister; Miss Rumson-Fair Haven Regional food. Your freezer, some aluminum foil and an hour of prepa- TO COOK FOILED FISH asked to bring their cards. Jean Manley, sister of the High School, attended Penn- ration time can turn that bumper crops of seafood into scores Simply snatch your fish from the freezer and pop them in bridegroom;-Miss Mary Kath- sylvania Military College and of easy dinners later on, every one a calorie-winner! the oven without further ado. Place the foil packets in a shal- Mrs. Nicholas De Georgio erine Hanson; the Misses is a student at Rutgers Uni- Hopefully your benefactor will have scaled and gutted his low pan to catch the leakage if any occurs. Have the packet and Mrs. Ray Yeager, Middle- Marilyn and Ann Wolke, twins versity. His father is vice catch at the dock (the sooner, the better; cleaned fish keeps wrapped-side down so you can open the foil and check on town, are chairmen of the from Venezuela, and the president of. Cooper Electric, fresher, longer.) However, if your fish comes complete with "doneness." event. In charge of reserva- Misses Judy and Janet Dunn, Middletown. heads, tails, scales and insides most cookbooks have directions The amount of time it takes depends on the size and thick- tions are Mrs. Nagle O'Brien, Beechwood Ave., Long also twins, of Philadelphia. The bridegroom's grand- for fish-cleaning. Or, ask your fishing friend to show you how ness of the fish and whether the packet is frozen or defrosted to clean.one, reassuring him that you plan to do the rest of the when baking when you put it in the oven. Branch; Mrs. William Fan- Paul Manley was his broth- parents are the late Mr. and ner, East End Ave., Belford; er's best man. The ushers Mrs. William 0. Mitchum of dirty work.yourself unless, of course, he insists! DEFROSTED FISH: bake in a preheated 350-degree oven 20 minutes for small fish, 40 minutes medium fish and an hour Mrs. Arthur Mayer, Farm were Joseph L.- Manley 3rd Goldsboro, N.C., and the late If you must do the job without any direction, be reassured Road, Middletown, and Mrs. and James Manley, also Mr. and Mrs. Joseph I.. Man- that fish-deaning is simply common sense. Fill .your sink with or more for larger fish. FROZEN FISH: double the baking time. Blanche Marx, Broad St., brothers of the bridegroom, ley of South Orange. water. Submerge the fish and scrape away allXhe scales, until Shrewsbury. Mr. Ginsburg, John Carlock, Mr. and Mrs. Manley will the skin is smooth. Snip off the fins. Chop off the head and For the best results, have fish defrosted. Michael Delaney, Ronald reside in Little Silver after a tails. Slit open the fish and remove anything that looks unfa- TO COOK OUTDOORS: Wrap fish in a double layer of foil. Committee members in- McCarthy, George Egner and wedding trip to Bermuda. miliar. Rinse and pat dry. Lay packets directly on hot coals. Cover packet with addition- clude Mrs. Jesse Greenberg, al layer of hot coals. Cook 10 to 20 minutes, depending on size. Mrs. Thomas Manning At this point you will have "dressed" fish. Mrs. William Klatsky and FISH 'FROZEN DINNERS' Then open packets to check for doneness. Mrs. Ralph Stein, Red Bank; (The former Manning-Frendock TO CHECK DONENESS: fish is cooked when the meat Linda Frendock) Now, lay out several sheets of aluminum foil on your Mrs. James W. Staples, Mrs. kitchen counter. Place a fish on each. Sprinkle the insides with loses it transparent look and becomes opaque. Fish should Nathan Marx and Mrs. Arthur NEW MONMOUTH - In St. Fruscione and Miss Joyce flake easily when tested with a fork, however, fish that is fall- Mary's Catholic Church here salt, pepper, garlic salt. Add some dried parsley flakes, onion Eckstein, Shrewsbury; Mrs. TRICKY TRAY Manning, the bridegroom's ing apart has been overcooked. Aug. 5, Miss Linda Marie sister. flakes and paprika If you wish. Tuck a few slices of fresh lem- Phillip-Matena, Mrs. George ' Krendock became the bride of Arthur Phair was best man on inside each fish (or a few bay leaves) for extra flavor. Spiro and Mrs. Paul Rose- LEONARDO - A tricky tray Wrap each fish individually, folding the ends of the wrap care- Curried Shrimp, Baked Bluefish, Lemon Sole, Oriental Thomas J. Manning. The Rev. and the ushers were Joseph nthal, Middletown; Mrs. John will be sponsored by the Bre- fully. Label each packet with a soft-tip marker and put in Lobster, for these and more send a stamped, self-addressed Gerard McCarron officiated Caruso, James Driscoll and Naylor, Belford, and Mrs, Ben vent Park and Leonardo Fire your ficczcr. You now have a freezerful of fu\s free fi ozen fish envelope and 25 cents lo Slim (iourmcl Seafood Dishes, in care at the ceremony which was Wayne Callow. Rassas, Mrs. George Marx ' Company Ladies Auxiliary dinners! of this newspapci, 50 Wcsl Mioi e "I ia-i, .Spai la, N 1 07971 and Mrs. Frank Tuohy, chap- Thursday at 8 p.m. in the fire- followed by a reception in The bride, an alumna of Mid- Buck Smith's Restaurant, ter president, Little Silver. house, Center Ave. dletown Township High East Keansburg. School, is a dental assistant The parents of the couple for Dr. Edward McKenna, are Mr. and Mrs. Charles Red Bank. Frendock, 52 Fairview Drive, Mr. Manning was graduated Middletown, and Mr. and Mrs. from Mater Dei High School Thomas J. Manning, 16 Sto- and is a steamfitter with Lo- nehurstTer., Hazlet. . cal 475, East Orange. He is a Out of the Darkness Miss Susan Frendock was member of the National 40 Riverside Ave., Red Bank maid o( honor for her sister. (iuard, Red Bank. Mr. and 842-3400 The other bridal attendants Mrs. Manning will reside in Dear Ann Landers: When 1 light one dim bulb in (he hail- were Miss Jean-Ellen Fren-' Atlantic Highlands. read the letter signed "Black way than to curse the dark- dock, another sister, Miss Ann Out" I was reminded of my 30 ness. Thank you for writing. years of married love in a Ann Landers CARD PART\ pitch-black bedroom, undress- • ISE".-. *. -I. „ « STS*. JO. CONCERT UNDER THE STARS KEANSBURG - The ing in the closet, and wonder- It was he who suggested a a few months we parted. But I CHILDREN'S CARE CENTER Ladies Auxiliary of the New ing why my husband had such must confess, Ann, that Presented by dim light in the hallway, with • infant Care Point Comfort Fire Company peculiar ideas about the body. the door left slightly ajar. young artist did more for me • Nursery School RUMSON RECREATION COMMISSION will have a card parly (He made all .the rules in our When he whispered, "You are than 30 years in the closet. Thursday at 8 p.m. in the fire- family.) a beautiful woman," I felt like I'm now seeing a man my • Kindergarten 389th Army Band house, Carr Ave. Mrs. Warren I was 50 when my husband a 21-year-old bride — and own age and we will be mar- OPEN ALL YEAR Young is chairman, assisted /died. For three years I never more womanly than at any ried soon, but I.will always be Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, August 16th 8:00 P.M. by co-chairmen Mrs. Harold^ looke' d -at a man, although lime during my life. grateful to that youth who 'many men looked at me. 1 look me out of the darkness. ANY AGE VICTORY PARK, RUMSON , Oaillard and Mrs. Jerome I am not so stupid as lo Nurttry and Kindergarten Curriculum Dally I.askowski. Tickets may be About eight months ago 1 dc- think I could build a lasting I'm sure this is the way it was Snacki, Hot Lunch, Outlined Stall Featuring 1 purchased from any member cided lo say yes to an artist relationship on fun in the bed- meant 10 be for all woman- 842-5213 FLORENCE BLUMBERG or at the door, who, I am ashamed lo tell room with a lad almost young kintl.—Frankiy-Speaking you'; was 1(> years my junior. enough to be. my son.^so after Appfond by D§p»rtm*nl of EduciHon (SOLOS) the dopr. Dear Frankly: .Better lo 115-119 Shrewsbury Avenue, Red Bank 24 Tke DafJy Better, Bed Bank-Mlddletown, N.I. Tuesday, August IS, U72 Royals Halt Reds Clip Braves KANSAS CITY (AP) - ninth. then Cookie Rojas and Richie version to the game - mainly er!" run, leading Cincinnati to a he was, indeed, that, with bis Bruce Dal Canton and Norm Angelini came on in relief, Scheinblum came through a shapely .young lady who His antics' delighted the 12-2 romp. Cincinnati uniform shirt ba- Angelini teamed for a four-hit wild-pitched the batters up a with run-scoring infield sin- dusts off the bases midway in 15,318 Braves fans, who then In the only other National rely covering the white "hot shutout and the Kansas City base, then struck out Bobby gles. the game — found they had a watched the feminine mys- League game, Houston de- pants" he wore for the occa- Royals took advantage of Murcer and got White on a Kansas City added its final new sweeper prior to their tique take its toll to an 8-0 vic- feated San Francisco 7-5. In sion. game-ending fly ball. • run in the seventh when Dal last night's game with Cincin- tory over the Atlanta hus- the night's other American sloppy New York fielding to A NMYttd) score three unearned runs and The loss dropped the Yan- Canton was safe on Clarke's nati. " bands. League game, Oakland beat ah r Clark.» 4 0 4 0 defeat the Yankees 3-0 last kees into third place in base- error at second and Mike Hov- Before the regularly sched- But the fans were less than Baltimore 5-2. Muriunc 4 S 4 0 Murcard 4 0 0 night. ball's American League East. ley and Lou Piniella singled. uled contest against the Reds, thrilled when the "real" game The Reds' slugger took the White If 4 0 \% contort rf 3 0 ScfinHmrt Dal Canton, 6-4, yielded The Royals nicked Steve Johnny Bench swept the the Braves engaged in anoth- got under way. Bench, ex- place of the Braves' "Susie Aloulb 1 0 Imib \% Kline, 13-5, for a pair of runs bases just for the hell of jt, er growing ritual, a Softball ploding out of a slump that first-inning singles to Thur- the Sweeper," who occasion- Mlchotlu 2 0 u :! man Munson and Roy White, in the third inning. Paul • then swept around the bases game against their wives. And had provided him with just ally plants a kiss on the cheek Altai pn i o _ DUCntnp * i Kcnuyu 0 0 0 Angllnl p 0 0 then retired 23 consecutive Schaal was safe on shortstop for real. halfway through the two-in- two hits in 87 at-bats, man- of a player or umpire — or Kline p J o 0 batters before Horace Clarke Gene Michael's error. Bobby The Atlanta Braves, who ning exhibition, out of the du- handdled the Braves by driv- swats one with the broom. Blombroph I 0 0 and Munson nicked him for. Floyd singled Schaal to third have joined the list of base- gout, broom in hand, ing in five runs with a single, He billed himself as "Bench singles with one out in the and took second on the throw, ball clubs adding a bit of di- came... "Johnny the Sweep- a double and bis 26th home the Basepat/,h Beauty" — and Kansas City on ON 10K - 3 Grim Works Out Without Contract By JONNIFALK him a holdout, and he had That sentiment was echoed been placed on the team's re- by quarterback Norm Snead, WEST LONG BRANCH - serve list. who came over from the Vik- Bob Grim's contract negotia- "Any fines will be between ings with Grim in the Tarken- tions may still be in the hands him (Grim) and Mr. Mara," ton deal. "Every receiver is of lawyers, but Grim himself Webster said later. different, and we have to ad- is finally in the New York Gi- Early reports said that just to his timing and speed," ant camp at Monmouth Col- Grim was unhappy with the Snead said. legehere. trade to New York, and the Snead also said that Grim's Grim, the talented wide re- sixth year man out of Oregon best pattern is an "out," and ceiver obtained from Min- state had this to say yes-he didn't expect his former nesota in the Fran Tarkenton terday: "It would be ridi- Viking teammate to have any trade, reported into camp culous for me to say that I trouble learning the Giant sys- Sunday evening and worked wanted to leave Minnesota, tern. "He may have missed out with the Giants yesterday They have a great team four weeks, but Bob is in good afternoon for the first time. there. But that is history now. shape," Snead said. "He was He had left camp opening There is lots of potential here, probably working harder than day, July 11, when he failed to It's early in the season." we were. That's the kind of in- come to terms with the Gi- Mixed Emotions dividual Bob is." ants. Since then he has been While Grim was holding out, snead said he had been in living in a cottage at Nor- rumors had him involved in touch with Grim during the mandy Beach and working out another trade. "I had mixed holdout period but did not talk at Brick Township High emotions about the trade ru- about the contract situation. School. mors," he commented yes- -He didn't ask me for ad- SMILES - New York Giant coach Alex Web- Contract negotiations are terday. "You could wind up vice," the quarterback com- t , left, welcomed missing wide receiver Bob stiinn-the hands of Grim's anywhere. 1 can understand mented, s er ;(3rim to training camp for the first time yes- lawyer, Wayne Hooper of San their feelings for wanting to Grim said, "I'm anxious to terday. Grim had walked out of camp opening day Francisco, and the Giants' at- trade though. And just be- get started and would like to jn a salary dispute. Obtained from the Minnesota torney, Dick Concannon. "I cause I'm in camp now start playing right away. But Vikings in the Fran Tarkenton trade Grim had BIRD IN FLIGHT— Baltimore Orioles third baseman Brooks Robinson think the dispute will be set- .doesn't mean they won't trade I know I'm not in condition his best season last year catchina 45 passes and leaps high Into the air to grab throw on the base-stealing Bert Campaneris tied in the next two or three me anyway." yet and have to adjust to the making the Pro Bowl sau'ad He is a six vear vet days," Grim said yesterday. of the Oakland Athletics. Campaneris was safe and later went on to score Grim said he has been run- system. Besides, I have to eran from Oregon State In the first Inning action. Grim's holdout apparently ning to keep Ms legs in shape earn a job here." ended Saturday when he and working on patterns at Webster Hints handled 34 times for the Vlk- eluding three rookies who talked to coach Alex Webster Brick Township but had not Coach Webster hinted that ings last season. were at the All-Star camp and mi Ifl f /ifFl/ff fi V 1 §*M ma after the team's intrasquad seen a Giant playbook until he he would play Grim at wing- "I'm no burner," Grim said, do not count against the 60- scrimmage. reported in. back, which is the strong Side "so I have to rely on moves." man limit. "I told Alex it appeared the "The terminology is differ- wide receiver. "The way we His best move so far was re- The best known of the five negotiations would be settled, ent, but the patterns are theuse motions and peels, he fits porting to camp. The Giants is defensive tackle Jerry If) • 1J?*O IwM1 I& and he told me to report in at same," he said. "It will take in pretty good there," the still have six other talented Shay, a seventh-year pro. 7 p.m. Sunday," Grim said. some time to get the timing coach said. wide receivers on the roster. Shay was obtained from At- "I had no idea the holdout down with the quarterbacks. However, Webster felt that Giant Steps lanta in 1970 and had a fine STOCKHOLM (AF) -Lasse 8:zo.6. 20.8, with Chuck Smith, also of WOuld last a month. I thought It's actually tougher on the Grim's action against the Jets The Giants placed five play- year for the Giants that sea- Viern of Finland set a worm Meanwhile, United States Los Angeles, third In 21.1. maybe a week at the most," quarterbacks to get used to a Sunday might be restricted to ers on waivers yesterday, re- son. However, he broke his record for two miles with a athletes finished first in six of he continued. "Wellington receiver." returning punts, a chore he ducing the squad to 57, in- leg in seven places in the time of 8 minutes 14.0 seconds the other 11 events. Bob Wheeler of Lutherville, Mara (Giant president) said U year's finale against Los An- at a pre-Olympic track and Lee Evans of San Jose, Ca- m was impressive in w1n.. j mn>t come t0 camp, he'd eles and s ent most ot last field meet last night. hf. won the 400-meter dash in 8 P ningthei,500.meters in 3:41.4, freeze his last offer. That, in season on the injured list. Emile Puttemans.of Bel- 45.1 seconds, nipping John- amfthe us ,iflM. rf re, ' fact, is what happened." others waived were defen- gium, the previous record Smith of Los Angeles, who 1 RKPS sive tackle Vcrnon Vanoy and team of Mann, Wohlhuter That offer, according to T 1 holder, finished second while was timed in 45.2 . Swenson, and Chuck Smith Grim, is somewhere between I f\tt offensive tackle Dick Hanson, Britain's Dave Bedford was Rich Wohlhuter of St romped to victory in 3:18.4, last year's Viking salary, and both second year men, and unable to keep the record .1 li JJ l ht end Ken Charles, 111. beat co-world nearly 22 seconds h d f wnat Grim feels he deServes 'S Kavanaugh Jr. P«e on the last lap and fin- LINCROFT - Mannv So- record holder Dave Wottle of after a season in which he ^ Kicker Jack Simcsak. ished sixth. runner.up Sweden. nerthinercmaof 2 LonIL B^H S" . .. Canton, Ohio for the second vards / 8 Branch, a for- Leo, the new athletic director (h Viern, who has scored the Other winners were Jean- "jer major league baseball at Red Bank Regional. time in two days. Wohluter TavaSi is the son of the best time this year in the was clocked in 1:48.2 for the Louis Ravelomanantsoa of ?ln thet Prpro BmlBowlTas last t «*W has txen named w Former Pirate scout 2" 10,000 meters and the second 800 meters, five-tenths of a Malagasy in the 100-meter t s"y basebaU coach at Chris- A concert violinist. Se- best after Bedford in the 5,000 year> tian Brothers Academy. nerchia was the only baseball second ahead of WotUe and dash in 10.2 seconds; Swe- ReDDrts lnvaUd . h mcsaK a meters, unleashed a powerful e 1U teach player in Montclair Stale Col- nine-tenths of a second in den's Ricky Brueh in the dis- ..The re°^tc of «80 000 « ^» « P^cal spurt over the last 400 meters of third-place finisher cus with a throw of 205 feet, education and health at CBA. lege history to make it to the front some naDers said I 1>m which left the British favorite en Swenson of Manhattan, 3% inches; Hans Lagcrqvist, " ?**? happy about the major leagues. He signed with K Z not valid "he oy Giant de- far behind. Kan another Swede, in the pole move," said Senerchia. the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1952 S de Putteman's previous record ^Iph Mann of Provo, Utah vault with a leap of lS-5; Senerchia. a member of the after competing his senior of 8:17.8 was set last year. scored an easy victory in the Great Britain's John Valen- Monte air State CoUege Ath- year for the Indians with a 352 mtin avera e HDC0 1,»H aid lav AndeSm Z Third-place Anders Gaerde- 400-meter hurdles in 50.6 sec- tine in the 5,000-meter run in letic Ha of Fame was a - % 8 - '- i S dHEoTw^Stto to tte physical educatio" n ' lected 17 doubles, seven rud broke the old Swedish onds. ' 13:51.4, and Sweden's Andres cLnceofBettine hurt The instructor ld record. Wayne Collett of Los Angel-.. Arrhenius in the shot put with at Red Bank High School for triples and eight home runs £ ftat be S under%?p! Manny Senere six onths last vear He mis «££" £ hav Gaerderiid was timed in es took the 200-meter dash in . a toss of 63 feet, 5ft inches. duri"E his collc8e ^reer. . ™ ciause offic"aS made "» T - Jdneeded Ire work Larson Ford Defeats Qlubs Split Wins Sea Girt Inn, 97-85 John's He was not saying anything BELMAR - Ron Kornegay, night. He scored 22 points. He will teach phvscial edu about his starting cast though. &IT0 his How They Ford to a ^victory over A! JftT l L —E A 0UIE Club and three flying the col- berger, Turnabouts and TEAM » ^ .n, . ™!in , . <:»a rirt im in HIP nnptiinc w Ois of the host Monmouth Stewart Van Winkle, Blue J?? the 3 K! Boat Club swept two races Jays, the largest fleet (22 CllTllC each yesterday as the annual boats) in the competition. RED BANK - The Rod National Junior Sailing Two-race winners for MBC Bank Parks and Recreation II Sweepstakes Regatta got un- *ePartmen".will open its foot- 0 The victory advanced Lar- were Steve TyrelJ, in M- Boltlmore Tolo^- ' : here m= I Ilk winner of tonight's 9 o'clock PLAYER AVE. the Navesrnk River in winds Wood Pussies. - .... nme^etweenileaeue-cham- ranging from 8 to 12 mph yes- In the five-boat Windmill The cimic is for res!dent SSfflSJi- ^rday, «-ere launched again class, Packanack Lake's Ed boys of high school age. It will Ookland «•% u .5I6_ & jfrry LvTh's aTd Safer held a slight edge over CrthplaceMikeDoolan's this morning in the final race <=»« Aug. 31. in each of the eight classes. C«h then«cs running, T.™ 4^g .«4M Tonffs loser vrtU play Sea Crissy Van Stolen of the host s Girt inn in Friday's? p.m. club vm his first and third yest e day M issVa nSicle n ^ t0 n^nTr iof 0 hduta consolation clash prior to the L ' P "" WfgS,- Bnm rhamninnshin pamp finisheh d secondH twicef . for th e7h nh scho J comomio (May VB)OI Cleveland elt: l PottyM de MBC's John Polinsky and 52 EngeT ^s fhe high " ' ior meir nign scnooi scorer for losing Sea Girt last FllmS Oil Water Erick Oliving split the vie- grid season. 2. Jon Harris, SSYC; 3. Murk winmiii, 2-21,8:30 p.m. tones in Albacorcs Registration will be held at Minncsolo (Corbin 6-() c\ Dtlrolt (Cols- Second race: 1. Meroentholer; 2. Poul the field free of charge. mon 12-11).'p.m. VCle, SSYC; 3. Wlnmlll Title to Red Bank .Milwaukee IPorsam 9-10) at Chlcagi = ll.nni.mlM S 35 td!«d Con"' ». »"-*-« DOU.« PLEASURE - a , in Flight »A." while John Nassau. , Regatta. The Shrewsbury Sailing and Yacht Club B .end mpped Jay Robinson Jr. -Weekend," showing the representatives returned to the Mavesink River , ^.T thls Flr5 Tf^TSBSgTSBiSgLL. M.C, ». A m, 5& SJ n sudden death on the 20th pleasures of boating and wa- morning for the findl race of the Monmouth cijg BU™II, l Flight «B» 8 ter skiing in Florida Boat Club-sponsored event. ''m M°nmculhBreeH •Out Dally Beglster, Bed Bank-MWdletcwn, N J. Tuesday, August IS,1972 25 Briefly Dancer Family Hoofs to Dynasty Speaking By The Associated Press Stanley is not only the lead- er of the clan, but he is not too Dancers are making hay In far away from being the lead- harness racing, all six of er in the sport of harness rac- Clemente ' Morton. them. ing. Stanley's career earnings Baseball had its DiMaegios, of $15,152,812 at the end of the Clemente Uncertain boxing its'FulImers andTJun- 1971 year, put him second to PITTSBURGH (AP) - H Roberto Clemente's sore ankles Billy Haugbton $16,878,936 on dees, football its Gogolaks, ; keep him on the bench much longer, the Pittsburgh Pirate golf its Turnesas and wres- the all-time high money win- right fielder may run out of time to collect his 3,000th career tling its Funks. ning list in the game. • hit this season.' But rarejjy has a family dy- Vernon's accumulated win- Clemente, who'll turn 38 this Friday, hasn't been in the nasty dominated one sport as nings Of $6,393,388, puts him in starting lineup for more than four weeks. In that span, he has the Dancers, whose roots are ninth place and Harold Jr. is had one single in two pinch-hit appearances, boosting his ca- planted in Ocean County. 24th with $3,998,180 on the all- reer hit total to 2,961-nine short of Honus Wagner's all-time Pi- At the head of the pack is time money list. Harold Sr. rate mark. the internationally famous has cut down on his driving to "I don't know when I'll be able to play. I just don't know," Stanley, 45, who owns a concentrate on training. But Clemente said. sprawling 85-acre horse farm he still Is well over the mil- in New Egypt. lion-dollar mark in winnings. Morton Steps Up The others are Harold Stanley, who started his DALLAS (AP) — Craig Morton stepped into the No. 1 Dancer Sr. 60 and Harold Jr., driving career at Freehold quarterback role of the Dallas Cowboys yesterday just as he 36, Vernon, 50, Ronald 23, and when it was rated as a little predicted but not necessarily the way he wanted it. Jimmy, 29. "country" track in 1946, rock- "I'm very sorry Roger got hurt," Morton said. "I didn't Harold Sr., Vernon and eted to stardom at Yonkers want to get the job back like this." Stanley are brothers. Ronnie Raceway in 1950. "He was su- Morton spent most of the 1971 season on the bench as Stau- is Stanley's son and Jimmy is per-spectacular in his first bach guided the Cowboys to the National Football League title a cousin. season at Yonkers," says Sam with a string of 10 consecutive victories. Anzalone, the publicity direc- Coach Tom Landry moved backfield coach Danny Beeves Freehold Feature tor. into the backup quarterback role behind Morton Monday and Stanley has been super- shuffled Sid Gilman from the research and development de- To Line Hanover spectacular ever since. Last partment into Reeves'.post. FREEHOLD — Line Hano- season proved to be the grcat- ver, driven by Robert Ma- est in the history of the Elephants 7, Donkeys 2 , loney of Dunmore, Pa., won Stanley Dancer Stable as it amassed $2.4 million in win- AP winsMta WASHINGTON (AP) - Many of the partisan Democratic the $2,600 Brielle Pace at LIVING DYNASTY — Harold Dancer Jr., Harold Sr., Vernon and Stanley Dancer, left to right, form a Freehold Raceway yesterday. nings. Of this amount, Stanley family dynasty In harness racing. Stanley is internationally famous and has won more than $15 million fans hoped loudly last night that the outcome of the annual personally collared $1,208,453. congressional baseball game wasn't a prelude to the fall elec- The horse paced the mile in in purses In a 25-year career. tions. 2:03 and 2-5, returning $8.20, Stanley winter trains his horses at his Egyptian Acres The Republicans did them in, 7-2, for the 11th straight $4.80 and $3.40. Second was year. Adele J, paying $3.69 and Farm In New Egypt and Po- mano Park in Florida. , And it was strong support from California — which both $3.20. Tharp finished third, paying $5.40. Vernon, who lives and Scarlet Knight Grid Brass parties will need this fall - that enabled Rep. Bob Michel of trains his stock on a farm he Illinois to notch his 10th victory against no losses in the yearly Ilt-P«»1M>»U14MT-1.-O7.1 . Michel Mir (Coord)...-....6.40 3.40 3.20 owns in New Egypt not too far summer duel against the Democrats. Mlciltnl N (McCdmatu).. 3.20 2.60 Trudy Cent IIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimiHIIIHII HIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIUHIMIIIIIIinlllUIIIMIIIIUIIHIHUUmiU!l«IIMIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIttlUrilllllllllUllllllllHIIIII Autos For Sale Help Wanted Help. Wanted ANNOUNCEMENTS Male or Female Lost and Found 1968CATALINA : TOOTH PAiRV TWATS MV •. Mole or Female LOST —"While molt col. block tars, STATION WAGON ?AA fOrZ gl'P ON THE stripped toll, since Sunday New Shrews- Loaded wlth.mony exiras In- bury area. S43-2918. cluding factory olr. In en eel lent A -CoatW... MEtfr owef NOTICE LARGE REWARD condition. Save newt For rtturn, or Information leading to re- HELP WANTED READERS turn, of 12-werk-old'female Irish Setter, with red collar and white markings be- RASSAS AND ADVERTISERS nealh lower lip. Lost seen near Deepdale PONTIAC Form area. Call 671-3706 or 671-4852 any- 395 Broad St. 741-5110 Red Bonk time. , ___ Eves, until » In compliance with the New-Jersey Law Against Dis- LOST — Reward. Four months old Irish 1970 CONTINENTAL MARK III — Leath- crimination, all Help Wanted Advertising now appears un- Setter puppy, in Highlands areo, been er Interior. Full power, olr conditioned, der the combined "Help Wanted Male or Female" column. missing since Aug. 1 Any Information,, radio.''Black. One driver. 10,000 miles, n29M037 »m Call 291-0731. Reference to age, sex or marital status may not oe ex- LOST — Miniature Yorkshire terrier. An- 1935 CHEVROLET pressed, unless a bona fide occupation requirement exists. swers fa "Misty." Black, tan and gray. 5100 Vicinity River Rd., Red Bank. Reword. 747-2976 Information regarding positions with possible bona fide oc- MUST SELL — 1964 Bukk Special. 1963 cupational requirements or clarification of the New Jersey , LOST — White Kitten with cretn collar. Ford Galoxfe. One owner, good condition, Shop Rite, Hwy 35, AAldtiletown. 787-6487^ private 872-1083. LaWAgainst Discrimination may be obtained by Galling the COST — Young femaltTcat, black with 1964 CHEVROLET VAN New Jersey Division on Civil Rights, (201) M8-2700, or by belae markings, Shrewsbury oreo. Re 14 SO writing to 1100 Raymond Blvd., Newark, N.J. 07102. word. 747-D6B9 Coll 787-6160 Autos For Sale Motorcycles Boats and Accessories 1964 FORE FALCON — Four-door, auto Autos For Sole malic. Radio, healer. Six cylinder. J150. RCYCrE JNSUR 18' CONVERTIBLE CRUISER — 14' runa- Public Notices Coll after 6 p.m. M6-9463. WANTED 1971 IMPALA Reasonable Rates bout, 50 h.p. Evlnrude, good condition. Help Wanted Help Wanted Four-door hardtop, factory air. 291-3790 after 6 p.m. ond weekends. 1963 JEEP Party who needs 100% financing on o 1970 GROSSINGER & HELLER AGEUCY TTOCK GROUP- We're available foi Like new condition. Save .now! 14' FTETERfiLAS — with full mooring cov- Male and Female Male and Female teenage parties, dances, weddings. Bar With snowplow. TOYOTA, Automatic. S1W5. For more In- 8roal*.M«chqnlc Sty \7jl-2IOO_gedjl_in_] Mltzvahi. You haven't heard anything un Phone 787-1865 formation call OASIS MOTORS at (201) HONDA 19.9 — CB350. Excellent median er, tilt trailer, 50 h.p. Mercury, ond acces- 721-7100. ._ leal condition, wo or best otter. 842-051' sories. Asking 9750. 739-0ol2.. AUTOMOTIVE til you've heard us. We'll help make your 1961 FORD — Country Squire Wagon. ASSEMBLERS event a success. Call 747-0062 after 6 p.m. 1961 PLYMOUTH — Four-door, white, RASSAS aller 5 p.m. BLUE JAY SAILBOAT —And trailer. Ex- Good condition. $150. Please call atler 5, We have Immediate openings In assembly MANAGEMENT and osk tor Blair. 747-9460. S100. Transportation, call after 7 p.m. 747- HONDA CL175 - 1972, low rnlleaBe, mint cellent condition. Asking S700. Call 671- S133. 395 Brood StPONTIA. 741-5160C Red Bonk condition. SHOO firm. 912a. work wiring ond soldering. Good eyesight OPPORTUNITY ENCOUNTER ANYONE? - Group strjrt \vov i niu/virn jr v i rmC ~~ #14uO Eves, until 9 ond manual dexterity required. Five day PONTIAC — Grand Prix 1967. Convertible Coll 291-1960 15,' FIBERCLAS — Custom Craft Runo- Rapidly expanding automotive remit chain ing In Mlddletown. Learn more about or besi ofler. Call before noon week. Full benefits include profit shoring. offers aboundlnfl opportunily for menace- yourself. Make new friends. Qualified or 0^^^(11^566-6765 (rare) power brakes, steering. Buckets, fwoTTScOLN — ContinentolTedonsT SACRIFICE.- 1971 Hondo KOCtttppiji. bout, 1966 65 h.p. Mercury motor, fully Please apply between 9 a.m. and 12 noon, A-l. 229-5614 after 6 p.m. four-door, loaded, one owner. Executive equipped, with trailer, MOO. Call 747-2433 ment. We are o division of one cl the leader. Call 7<7-P5W. ^^ Extended forks, custom seat, bars and ask tar Mrs. iW, Garrabrant. world's largest lire manufacturer, ono 1966 FATCON -"sbTcyiinder, four-door cors. One 19*6 model, S1200, One 1969 pipes. Runs excellent. 2(4-5196. after 5 p.m. weekdays, oil day weekends. ' DANCE? BAR MITZVAHfwED~DING? stick, A-l condition,'clean, economical. TRIUMPH SPITFIRE — 1970. AM/FM ra- nioWel, 12050. May be seen by oppoinlment outtmotlve retailers. We art seekftifl co- Quality music for any occasion. W25. 222-17P5. dio. Overdrive. Good condition. $1,650. only. Call Cooper Electric Supply Co., 1971 750 HONDA - CustomileD. 1968 LUHRS —26'. Fiberglas, flying WHEELOCK reer minded Individuals that are oppres- Call 291-1105 all 671-3155 after 6 p.m. middletowf, 671-50O0. Must sell. bridge. Sleeps two. Has head. In water. sive and able to lead others wtlh cn- 1971 PINTO — Gold. Call 787-6877 Many extras. Asking .3500. 787-6812. SIGNALS, INC. thuslasni. Start as Assistant Manager ana Standard transmission. 1970 OLOSMOBILE — VTslo Cruiser nine'^ 196« CHEVROLET SUPER SPORT train tor tosf promotion to Management. Coll 671-4887 atler-6p.m. passenger wagon. S2100. Asking 3600. 1W1 HONDA 750 - Slocked. 5,000 miles. 17' BOAT TRAILER — Good condition. .73 Branchporl Ave. • LoriS Branch Automotive or retail baefcoround aeslrea. AUTOMOTIVE ~M4 PONTIAC —Two-door. 326 cu. In.' Call 741-1144 olter 6 p.m. Call 7J7-7844 . $1350. Asking S255 222-6880 Company benefits include free hospl- Good condition. Best offer over S325. 9-PASSENGER COLONY PARK 1958 LTNCOLH CONTINENTAL — MariTiii Phone 8/2-1886 741-4466 tallzcttfon, drua prescription program, Autos For Sale 842-3965 57,000 original miles. All good tires, plus 1971. White, with white vinyl ^ool, red 196B HONDA CB35O 2V OPEN SKIFF - Six-cylinder engine, AUTOMOBILE free group life Insurance, paid vacation, mounted snows, air conditioner, all pow- sick leave, disability pension, retirement 1W~C~HEVR0CET— Four-door BeTAirT leather Interior. Loaded. Cruise control, Asking $350 good condition. U00. er, cleon. Call offer 5 p-.m. 222-2611. reclining seals, AM/FM stereo. S.500. Will Call anytime, 671-1698 870-2768 ofler 5 p.m. _ SALESMAN M/W programs and more. WANTED 307 V8. small economy model. Excellent accept trade. 222-0021. Evenings 542-6354. We are hiring now. ' Porty who needs 100% flnonclng on o \W tires, radio, motor like new. MOO. 741-2322 W67 HONDA - 305 Scrambler, A-l condl 23' HOUSEBOAT — Home mode, In"good or 7411538. PART-TIME APPLY DODGE POLARA? V8, power sleering. Mercedes -Benz Sales and Service 196B CHEVROLET BEL AlR — Six cylto- tlon, J350. Call afler 6 p.m. condition, with 35 h.p- Mercurv enaine Mr. Proft, J.J. Fields Automotive, 31« der, four-door, power steering, AM/FM and trailer. S650 or best offer. Call 641- air conditioning. 11695. For more Inlormo- 1962 VOLKSWAGEN — Excellent Condi Hwy 9 Freehold 462-5300 741-354. E>icell.nf PovPlan Hwy 35, Hoitet. tlon call OASIS MOTORS at (201) 7Jl-i radio, extra tires and studded snow tires. 2068 between 3 and 6 p.m. Hon. 5400 or best ofler. F8 H Motors Inc. Coll anytime, 767-.4B9. 1972 HARLEY DAVIDSON 74 - Fully All ftlnoe Benefits 7100. ; Call 741 3865 Authorized Dealers, dressed. 1100 miles. Like new. Best offer, SEA KING — 5 ti.p. outboard motor, APPLVlN PERSON AT AVON 196TDODGE POLARA -Four-door. Ra- 1961 VOLKSWAGEN — Convertible, blue. Dodge and Dodge trucks . 1969 VOLKSWA0;EN~BUOSWAUS S — RadToTfuiioTfu y 747-1475. - ' (used 20 hours). Car-top boot loader. Call AVON REPRESENTATIVES tight In- dio, heoter, olr conditioning. Excellent In good running shape. Call 291-3467 after Hwy 35 Ealontown, N.X' cpldJVIcarpeledJVIusI I sellell. BBestt offerff . ClCall l afteft r 222-7395, ofter 5 p.m. flation with extra cash earnings. Many 5, 870-975). 1971 HONDA - MINI TRAIL, 50 cc. Good RED BANK VOLVO condillon. 11375. 787-6372. __ ' 6 p.m. 542-1111 condition, $195. earn on estimated M0 weekly, selllno fa- 119 E, Newman Springs Rd., Red Bank 1»71 JAGUAR V-12 — Full power, air con- 1965 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 5EDAN KITSON CHEVROLET CO. 1965 CHEVROLET - Impalo. Automatic, . Call 872-1292 mous Avon products near home during ditioning, 2+2. Low mileage. Musi sell. — Full power, seats, doors, windows, Hwy 36 Ealontown V-B. Runs oood. S350 (km. Call oiler 5 BUSINESS NOTICES their Iree hours. Cali now for details: 671-2167 ofler 7 p.m. 5421000 SUZUKI -1971. 500 cc. NURSTNG Mrs. Ward. 741-4343 or 442-3377, 774- steering, brakes. Leather Interior, new Only has 2,000 miles. $700, H1O. ' Hid CHEVELLE — Blue~wltH wtiitiTvlnyi tires. Excellent condition. Best olfer. 671- \ . Quotable notables: "Any- body can win, unless there COLLECTION happens to be a second en- try.—George Ade. COLLECTION The rising cost of govern- ment: In the decade from .I960 TERY through 1970, the average U.S. family-rinchiding families in which tbe-wifc worked also—earned $74,871 From that amount Uncle Sam took about a year's pay—?10,070-in income and Social Security taxes alone. Sees Bill Aiding Small Businesses TBENTON - Assem- Hymaa John L Dawes, R-Mon- month,' said that he antid< pates a "substantial upswing in small business expansions'" as a result of Gov. Cabin's signing into the law Assembly biU 828 which permits banks to increase the amount of money loaned to businessmen under the Small Business Loan Act The bill, which was spon- - sored by Assemblyman Dawes and co-sponsored by Monmouth County Assem- blymen Brian Kennedy, Jo- seph Robertson and Chester Any, permits banks to in- crease from 125,000 to |S0,0DO toe total amount of loan mon- ey available for business im- provement' or expansion and establishes maximum interest rates that may be applied to such loans. Banks granting loans under the act may charge six per cent interest when the amount of the sum borrowed does not exceed f 5,500, and five and one-half per cent interest on the excess over $5,500 to 17,500. The maximum interest permitted on sums over $7,500 is five per cent. Procedure Is Changed By Planners EW GENE MIDDLETOWN - Resi- dents seeking minor subdivi-- INGT stons have been promised some relief by the Planning RSTC Board. Relief, that is, from having to sit through meetings that sometimes have lasted past midnight. The board announced it will review minor' subdivision ap- plications at its workshop ses- sions, held the last Monday of each month, provided the ap- plications are on file with the township clerk 10 days prior to the board's workshop. The board's decisions will then be announced at the out- set of its regular monthly NDRE meetings — the first Monday of each month - thus "letting ES the applicant go home early." If the application is not re- HOPS 815500 ceived 10 days prio* to the R SAVED ROUTE session, it will not be re- 400 viewed until the end of the EXCELLENT AND CONVENI AVAILABLE T. TEL6 regular meeting, as is the practice now.