The Daily Register
VOL. 97 NO.69 SHREWSBURY, N. J. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1974 TEN CENTS evaluation explained, queries answered of 15 homes per working day the old and new assess- The Cleminshaw executive Mr Amundsen said an an- By JANE FODERARO ly nave to move, you would nouncement will be made • • get money for it," the ap- and appraisers price as many ments," Mr. Amundsen said said data cards were filled as 50 homes a day He said "But we're only responsible out for all properties and about residents' setting new LONG BRANCH - "The praiser said. hearings. more we fix up, the more we that a professional appraiser for the current market val- should be available at infor- "Yeah, you have to move One citizen stated his home fork up," stated an irate citi- because you can't pay the called in to assess one home ue." mal hearings now being con- zen last night during a public could take up to a full day to,,, City properties formerly ducted with residents who was reassessed at $50,000. but taxes," a woman called out, three area realtors had sug- meeting on property revalua- and she was applauded do the job. were assessed "at approxi- wish to appeal their assess- tion here. Nothupeclrd Hike questioned mately (2 per cent of market ments. A resident protested gested putting it on the mar- ket at $30,000 The J. M Cleminshaw Co.. A question that frequently Another questioner said his value, while new assessments that the cards are not avail- the firm that recently reas- property assessment had are set at 100 per cent of real able. We would like to know resurfaced last night was: how the realtors arrived it sessed all 10,000 properties in How can you value a house jumped from $13,500 to (33,500 value ac ordered by the coun- Mayor Cioffi interjected, the city for tax records, was without looking at it inside or and wanted to know why. ty and state. The last reva- saying that residents who the price," Mr Amundsen re- center stage with facts and outside? (A number of Long "Many people have estab- luation in Long Branch was in didn't see data cards should sponded, "an accepted ap- figures In the Junior High Branch residents in recent lished a relationship between 1961 make new appointments Seecitt, page! School auditorium. In the au- weeks have claimed that Cle- dience were more than 100 minshaw personnel failed to residents, many of whom sub- appear at their homes for as- mitted written questions, or sessment purposes.) complaints, to the profes- Mr. Amundsen replied, sional appraisers. "The contract called for us to Democrats eye field The meeting was arranged make three attempts to see by Mayor Henry R. Cioffi in the interior of each structure response to a public outcry To the best of my knowledge, after new values were set on every structure was mea- properties. sured on the outside and, if William Amundsen, a Cle- our enumerators could not get as Kennedy bows out minshaw appraiser, gave a in, they estimated what was presentation on procedures, inside." By Tie Associated Press cause of family responsi- regulars and the pre- used in the state-ordered re- "It was not our intent to re- bilities. dominantly black loyalist valuation, then fielded ap- ward those who let us in or State Democratic chairmen The AP tried to contact all group — were counted sepa- proximately (0 questions sent penalize those who didn't," he say it's too early to tell who is the Democratic state chair- rately. on cards from the audience continued. the frontrunner for the 1976 men to ask who they thought "I don't think there is one and read by Mayor Cioffi. The appraiser reported that presidential nomination in the the frontrunner was and who frontrunner now," said Paul Mr. Amundsen responded to enumerators were sent to wake of Sen. Edward M. Ken- they personally' felt had the Lamboley of Nevada. "I think the complaint that home- each property to record mea- nedy's withdrawal. best chance of defeating it's really a toss-up. We're go- owners are penalized with surements and collect per- Ah Associated Press survey President Ford two years ing to see a real scramble higher assessments and taxes tinent data which was turned showed that Sens. Henry M. from now. ' now." when they "fix up" their over to appraisers. The ap- Jackson of Washington and Thirty-two of the chairmen The contenders themselves f homes: APPRAISER FIELDS QUESTIONS - William praisers set final prices after Walter F. Mondale of Min- said there was no clear expressed a similar view. Amundsen, appraiser with J.AA. Cleminshaw Co., "We may have emotional personally viewing each prop- nesota were the most fre- choice, six named Jackson as Jackson said in Washington ties to our homes and not erty. quently mentioned con- the frontrunner, three named that the race is "wide open explains data sheet, projected in background, used view it this way, but owning In revaluation of Long Branch properties. He He said that in a "mass tenders, with Sen. Lloyd Mondale, one named Bentsen now." Mondale said Ken- residential property is an in- produced assessment," enu- Bentsen of Texas a close and one named Sen. Edmund nedy's action makes him spoke to more tha n 100 residents at public meeting jvestment. Should you sudden- third. S. Muskie, who, like Jackson, about reassessment of properties. merators inspect an average "strongly inclined" to run. Kennedy, considered by unsuccessfully sought the many to be the leading con- nomination in 1972. Eight of Jackson was the most often * the chairman were not avail- named by all the chairmen — tender for the nomination, said yesterday he would not able for comment. The total those who definitely thought be a candidate for president is 51 because the two factions he was the frontrunner and Freehold Regional District Sea. Edward M. Krnnrd\ or vice president in 1976 be- of the Mississippi party — the See Keaiedy, page I schools are back to normal FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - classes Thursday and Friday dicate that 40 per cent of the The association is sched- It was back to normal yes- returned to school, and that district's more than «,000 stu- uled to vote on the agreement terday in the five schools in sports and extra-curricular dents boycotted classes Monday at 8 p.m. in the high the Freehold Regional High duties were resumed by boy- Thursday, and 75 per cent did school here. School District as wording of cotting teachers. so Friday. According to the contract, a two-year contract is ham- He said last night that he The superintendent said the starting salary for teachers has "no Intention of ex- varsity and junior varsity with a bachelor degree will mered out in time for a ratifi- jump from $8,500 to $8,900 in cation vote Monday by the ercising punitive action" game schedules will be ful- against the students who boy- filled. the first contract year and to Freehold Regional High $9,300 in the second year. School Education Association cotted classes "at this time." The board and the associ- Dr. Whyte said such action ation reached tentative agree- At the top of the scale, sala- (FRHSEA). ries will jump from $14,650 to Dr. Ronald A. Whyte, su- would be difficult due to the ment on a two-year contract "sheer number of students in- Sunday after to marathon 30- $15,900 the first year and to perintendent of schools, said $16,900 in the second year. students who boycotted volved." The estimates In- hour bargaining session. In addition, approximately $20,000 was given the associ- ation by the board to increase honoraria and to bring female State can't enforce coaches up the the honoraria level of male coaches. Several residents ques- tioned the board about the ne- gotiations at the board meet- new lobbying rules ing last night. One resident asked Dr. CLOTHES PUT OUT TO DRY - Clothing Is placed cleaning up after Hurricane Fifi. Death toll in dis- aster may rise to 12,000. See story, page 2. TRENTON (AP) - The Chamber of Commerce went requiring candidates to reveal Whyte why teachers did not on tin roof of building at La Brea, Honduras, yes- state has adopted regulations to court and obtained a re- all contributions of more than give regular instruction to terday, as villagers in Aguan Valley begin to require disclosure by lob- straining order against any $100 to their campaigns. students Thursday and Friday byists of how much they such action by the commis- The lobbyists' disclosure who did not boycott classes. spend to influence govern- sion. regulations would require ei- Dr. Whyte said he Instruct- ment decisions but the rules The order is still in effect ther Individuals or organiza- ed the principals to have can't be enforced. and the case is pending in Su- tions to report the amount of teachers remain in their ,000 ransom set on tot money they spend for "politi- The New Jersey Election perior Court. classrooms and instruct stu- David F. Norcross, execu- cal purposes." dents who attended. He said CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP)- FBI agents joined police in er children, both teen-agers. said he lost it in traffic. Law Enforcement Commis- The commission considers Police say the 4-year-old the search for the child. Witnesses told authorities a Police said Mechem subse- sion adopted the regulations tive director of the commis- he received some reports of sion, said yesterday "we're legislative activity a clear ex- teachers not adhering to that daughter of Charles S. Mech- Mechem left his home in man of about 30 with light-col- quently received a call at his yesterday. Although the rules ample of "political purposes." em Jr., board chairman of the prosperous Mount Look- ored hair and driving a 12-to- office and was directed to a become effective tomorrow ready to go," but acknowledg- directive, and that he will ed that until it Is settled, lob- If the regulations are en- Taft Broadcasting Corp.. was out residential area twice 14-year-old white car stopped car in the parking lot of a they cannot be enforced be- take action when he learns kidnaped as she played in during the evening. The first byists are "insulated by the forced the commission would who the teachers are. near where Allison and a dairy store near the Mechem cause of an existing court or- be the judge of reports by lob- front of her home. trip took him to a phone booth playmate were riding tri- neighborhood. der. lawsuit" from meeting the re- Dr. Jocob Lewis, board a few blocks from the house. quirements of the new regu- byists. It could question a lob- A $2,000 ransom was de- cycles. They said someone In the vehicle, which police When the commission in- president, was asked if the manded yesterday for the On the second trip, he was leaned out of the car. spoke lations. byist's report and if it found a board has enough money in said was the kidnap car, offi- dicated about six months ago violation could fine offenders safe return of Allison Mech- followed by a second car car- to the youngsters, then pulled cers said they found a ransom that it was considering estab- The commission was estab- its 1974-75 budget to meet the em in one of at least two rying police. • the girl into the car and sped lished last year to enforce the up to $1,000. note in the pocket of a blue lishing reporting require- terms of the contract. phone calls to the family, po- He had not returned several away. jacket and a shoe belonging 1973 election disclosure law "We can just about make ments for lobbyists, the State Lobbyists must now make lice said after the abduction hours later. Ron Laker, a university stu- to the missing girl. quarterly reports to the state it," Dr. Lewis responded. yesterday. The Mechems have two oth- dent who was painting a He said the board included Bob Gilmartin, news direc- attorney general listing their house nearby, told police he tor at WKRC-TV, a Taft sta- legislative activity but are not funds in its budget'for the sal- saw a commotion and at- ary increases. tion here, said there was con- required to make a financial Raids net 9 arrests tempted to follow the fleeing cern about the amount of ran- The inside story disclosure. Raphael Zackowitz, a board vehicle in his own car. He som asked. member, said the "students BULLETIN Seized in addition to heroin, THE WEATHER The disclosures would be had no right to walk out of required of non-profit organi- police said, were two revolv- school and cater to the teach- LONG BRANCH - Police ers and a sawed-off shotgun. Saaiy aad cool Uday; clear, net as cool zations such as the League of ers", tonight. Complete report on page 2. Women Voters and of non- arrested seven adults and two The investigation was Festival memories; Deborah Meyers, a junior juveniles and seized heroin launched, officials reported, profit public service organiza- at Manalapan High, said Mr. Eagles apset Cowboys •• defense, Dempsey kicks page It tions like Common Cause as estimated as worth $3,400 and after a series of complaints Zackowitz told a student several firearms in a series of had been received from resi- food stamp eligibility Baillle's sh«*tUg water: Nailer's heave* page 17 well as from business and early Wednesday morning professional groups and indi- raids here early today, Capt. dents of the northern section A boat Aatlqies page It that he did not know what the of the city. In "Art Forum," Carol Jacobson writes about the 24th an- Natural Food Associates coaveae page II viduals who make their living Michael A. Irene of city po- issues were in the negotia- lice reported. nual Red Bank Arts Festival. She also travels along the festi- as lobbyists. Police said formal charges DAILY REGISTER tions. She said Mr. Zackowitz Capt. Irene said the raids val's memory lane a bit. The column will appear in tomor- Classified 18-21 Labor Unions and their po- also told the student that he would be continued through- have been lodged against all row's Contemporary Life section Comics II PHONE NUMBERS nine suspects, who were still Mala Office * MZ-*M litical committees also fall was not being paid for being out the day and many more Contemporary Life II, II under the disclosure require- a board member. arrests are expected. They being questioned at press Sylvia Porter, in "Your Money's Worth." says millions of Editorials.....' ( Classified Ads 54M7M time. The raids, they said, Americans aren't applying for food stamps because they Circulation Dept S42-4M9 ments. Mr. Zackowitz said people were conducted by more than EnterUlameat 14 p were started at 5:30 a.m. aren't aware of their eligibility. The first of a two-part series Sports Dept...... M2-4N4 kept on telephoning him and 30 police officers of the city Hockey As I See It 17 Farm House Restaurant waking him up. He said he department and the State Po- on the subject will appear in tomorrow's Daily Register, Make A Dale U Mlddktewa Bureai.....i71-225i Colts Neck Racquet Club Open Tucs. through Sun worked Tuesday night, and lice Narcotics Division after Leagues now forming. Northern Monmouth County's largest newspaper and Mon- 4 Freehold Bareaa. 4*21121 Little Silver, 741-7257. Avail- mouth County's most interesting newspaper. Long Branca Bareaa ..22fWlf that his "family comes first." an undercover investigation Tryouts for all classes of Sports. .!(. 17 able for*small banquets and "If you can get someone to in which local officials also players. Ladies' League parties. tryouts are Wed. and Frl., ..Baity's Do It Yourself Doris '•' Ed's eysale take my place, I will glady participated Air Conditioning Special: 10% off all hockey equipment resign," he said. Sept. 25, 27. Men's and Mixed Dinner - Wheatslone Bridge Wed. and Thurs. nights, Pet- Bafers' Famtas Restaaraal Doubles are Sat., Sept. 28. G.E. Deluxe units and kits including sticks, skates and Highlands - Twin Lobsters Mr. Zackowitz was elected OWf Union House • Clam Hut Restaurant. Open priced for quick sale. Call ite Lobster Tails, $5,95. protective equipment by The place to go after the Come from 9 a.m.-l p.m. or 3- $7.95 plus a complete menu of to the board from English- 5 p.m. any of those days. 741- .Tues. through Sun. Highlands. Clarke Engineering Co. 741- Special Meeting Highlands CCM, Lange, Cooper, Koho. show. Kitchen open to 12 N.J. 291-1284 3454. sumptuous seafood delights. town by receiving nine write- Mon-Sat Wharf Ave. 8567. Board of Education, Thurs.. Sherwood. ABC Sports. Little Open seven days. 872-1245. in votes. Sept. 26,1974, 7:30 p.m. Silver. 2 The Daily Register SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24 1974 Jury told East Orange man was stabbed during dispute tinued. He said Thorpe then because he wasn't sure where FREEHOLD - Patrick A house, then returned outside a who was deeply involved in slaying, testified that Mr was about time to teach the Mr. Kuntz said Mr Wheeler the nearest hospital was, he Thorpe, 23, of 22 Middletown few minutes later with a knife the Black Muslim movement. Wheeler had told Thorpe that women first." Mr. Kuntz said. had insisted on walking the came back out of the house and went over to the car. rushed Mr. Wheeler to the At- Ave., Middletown, fatally and stabbed Wheeler, who had been drinking and had he had come to Thorpe's He said this greatly upset Mr. few blocks to the Thorpe lanic Highlands police station stabbed William Wheeler Jr.. was unarmed, in the bark and said he was "going to get that house to kill him Wheeler because the babies home because he didn't want "Wheeler told him I came and from there he was trans- 17, of East Orange, on May 4 the neck. , nigger straight," referring to Mr. Kuntz, who also is came first and were every- Thorpe to run away as he felt to take your physical life,' ferred, by ambulance, to Riv- • few hours after arguing Thorpe. known by the name Kamile. thing sure he would if he saw tht'ir Mr Kuntz said He said Mr erview Hospital, Red Bank, The state will seek a con- car. with him about teaching said he had been with Mr. The argument was loud but Wheeler got out of the car where he died shortly after viction of first degree mur- He said he was tired of Wheeler throughout the after- again at that point and that young people about the Black der, Mr. Carton told the jury Thorpe using Allah's name no weapons were in sight, Mr. Mr. Kuntz said he followed midnight on May 5 Muslims, First Assistant noon and evening of May 4 up Kuntz added. in the car at a distance be- Mr Wheeler and Thorpe "Blood was coming out of of seven men and seven wom- and not doing any work, Mr to and after the stabbing He moved, along with several County Prosecutor Malcolm en. Wilson asserted. He said he He said he and Mr Wheeler hind Mr Wheeler When Mr his mouth like a water foun- V. Carton charged yesterday. said they first saw Thorpe, Wheeler got to the Thorpe persons who had gathered at tain," Mr. Kuntz said in de- The tnal is being held be- would produce testimony that whom he said had taken the left and went to Long Branch, the scene, towards the rear of fore County Court Judge John Mr. Wheeler, who was known then returned to Atlantic home, he got into an argu- scribing the wounded Mr. In his opening remarks at name Baku, at a liquor store ment with Thorpe and hit the car and out of sight Wheeler Thorpe's murder trial, Mr P. Arnone. by the name Janine. had said Highlands a little later and in Atlantic Highlands in early Thorpe in the jaw with his A few minutes later, Mr . He described Mr. Wheeler Carton said testimony during William E. Wilson, the de- he was going to take the head evening and that Thorpe and went first to Mr. Wheeler's of Thorpe. aunt and uncle's home to pick fist. Kuntz said, Mr. Wheeler as about 6 foot 3 or 6 foot 4 the trial would show the fense attorney, argued that Mr. Wheeler had gotten into and muscular and said he slaying occurred in front of up some glasses he had left Thorpe said "all right, all came up to him with blood Mr Wheeler's actions earlier The first witness to take the an argument at that time. pouring out of his mouth and knew the "basics" of karate Thorpe's home after Wheeler on the day that he was stand, Barry Kuntz, of Bel "Wheeler was talking about there and then to a party. Fi- right," and wentnnto the nally, he said, they went to house and Mr. Wheeler got asked him to take him to a but did not have any formal hit Thorpe with his fist He stabbed were the cause of his mar, who lived in Long the babies. The defendant hospital Mr. Kuntz said that belt in the sport. said Thorpe went into the death He said Mr Wheeler, Branch at the time of the said ... the babies, that it the Thorpe home. into the car, Mr. Kuntz con- Floods subsiding Whyte won't resign after hurricane TOCOA, Honduras (AP) - Military officials in the dev- top FRHS position The floodwaters from Hurri- astated San Pedro Sula-Cho- cane Fifi are subsiding and loma area in the heart of the president, said "no decision Ulua Valley estimate between FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - countless hundreds have left Dr. Ronald A. Whyte said last has been made on the mat- their refuges in trees and on 5,000 and 6,000 bodies have ter." rooftops in the Aguan valley been burned or buried. night that he will not resign as superintendent of schools Robert W. Mantei, a board of northeast Honduras. Now Like many other refugees member, said in accordance they are flocking to refugee in Tocoa, Mrs. Perez' family •• in the Freehold Regional High centers looking for food and School District. with state law, the board can- worked in the valley's thriv- not discuss a personnel matter clothing. ing banana industry. An ae- Dr. Whyte told a Daily Reg- rial tour showed mile after ister reporter after a Board at a public meeting until a de- Several hundred are sleep- of Education meeting that he cision is made. Ing on the classroom floors of mile of flooded or wind- wrecked plantations, and the has "taken no actions which No board member con- a school in this small town in would justify any need to re- firmed that any discussions the heart of the valley. They .odor of rotting bananas was heavy in the air. sign." have taken place on the mat- have powdered milk for their ter. babies and a few local grape- John Taylor of Boston, an His statement came amidst Dr. Whyte said he would re- fruit that survived the storm. executive of United Brands, published reports that a ceive tenure if his contract is But food and clothing have one of the country's two ma- board majority would attempt jor banana producers, said renewed in June. He said he not arrived, and there are no HURRY UP AND WAIT — Vietnam War era deserters begin arriving in to facilitate his removal be- has not asked and the board blankets for the sleepers. the crop was almost com- large numbers from collection points around the country for the first time fore his contract expires in pletely destroyed. Others put has not offered to grant him yesterday as part of President Ford's conditional clemency program. The June. tenure before then. "We are all dying of hun- the loss at about $500 million and said it would take at least deserters came by bus from Ft. Knox, Ky., plane from Fort Ord., Calif., and Dr. Whyte's status arose The superintendent said the ger," said Ophelia Perez, who several drove to the processing center 30 miles south of Indianapolis. last night after representa- escaped from Fifi's neck-high two years to rebuild the plan- board made it clear through tations. tives of several school affil- statements last night that he water with only the mud- iated parent groups expressed Dr. Ronald A. Whyte splattered, ragged dress on Finance Minister Manuel would continue on through his support for Dr. Whyte. They contract. —• her back. "When is help com- Acosta Bonilla told a news are: The Freehold Regional ing? Look at my son, he has conference in Tegucigalpa, Fair Haven slates meeting Dr. Whyte said he has not Council of Parents, the PTAs Schools, and the Manalapan discussed the matter with the no clothes. We have lost ev- the Honduran capital, the of- of Freehold Township, Marl- erything." Booster Club. board. He was appointed su- ficial estimate of the damage boro and Freehold High Dr. Jacob Lewis, board Though the banana plan- done by Flfl's rampage last on regional school traffic perintendent in Jan., 1973. tations in the Aguan Valley Thursday night was $900 mil- and the neighboring Ulua Val- lion, half the estimate given FAIR HAVEN - Harold serve students from Little Sil- Chief Jakubecy had termed ley were extensively dam- Sunday by Col. Ruben Villa- Schaible, Red Bank Regional ver, Shrewsbury and Red a borough bicycle ordinance aged, officials said casualties nueva, the chief relief officer High School superintendent, Bank. "limited and almost useless." City revaluation questions around Tocoa were very in the San Pedro Sula-Cho- has promised to meet on Oct. Mr. Kiely said that Mr Discussion centered on per- light. But the government late loma area. The colonel said 17 with concerned residents Schaible anticipated that the mitting the use of bicycles on last night raised the official later that while he used the who signed a petition asking school would serve approxi- sidewalks. "Our main con- estimate of the total dead in term dollars, he was actually the borough to block off Cam- mately 1,500 students, with cern," said Councilwoman answered in public meeting northeast Honduras to be- speaking of Honduran lem- bridge Ave. during school six or seven buses traveling Katherine C. Shafer, "is to plras, each worth 50 cents keep the kids offRiver (Continued) $80 in some areas. luation started two years ago, tween 7,500 and 8,000 hours. to and from school. As for Another written question noontime traffic, Mr. Kiely Road." Mrs. Shafer said the praisal technique Is the-firm-used enumerators Borough Council announced from the audience was: "I've with 150 hours of experience. last night that the open meet- said the superintendent has council will combine to meet information. So we would ac- had my property on the mar- assured him that "by no with the police to discuss cept a letter on a broker's But the Cleminshaw firm lat- ing is scheduled for 8 p.m. at ket for a year at $25,000. I er switched enumerators with the Municipal Building on means would any students be adopting a policy and enforc- stationery in reconsidering would take $22,000 if I could Keyport center permitted to leave school ing state laws. the assessed value." two years experience in the River Road. Regional board sell It. The property was reas- field. members have been invited to grounds," except for a hand- The council also authorized The appraiser was asked if sessed at $42,000. What should attend the meeting. ful who would be involved in the borough clerk to advertise the high cost of living was He reported that final as- I do?" sessments first will appear on Councilman W.K. (Ed) work-study programs. bids for bulkhead work on taken into consideration in discussion slated Grange Ave. the revaluing process. Mr. Amundsen termed this property tax bills in August, KEYPORT - Mayor Wil- himself to a special com- Klely said Mr. Schaible is "good information" and liam A. Ralph last night ap- "very cooperative'and will- The council decided to meet In other action, the council He replied that the courts 1975. He estimated the total mittee that will meet next asked the questioner for a let- assessment of Long Branch pointed Councilmen James R. week with a Recreation Com- ing" to discuss traffic prob- on Oct. 15 and Oct. 29, instead appointed Mrs. Terry Render say tax assessors should "not ter on broker's stationery. Birmingham, Richard I. mission panel to discuss the lems with area residents who of the scheduled Mondays, to the Board of Health for a reflect momentary vagaries" properties will be $326 mil- "Having a willing seller and a lion. Formerly, it was $151 Volpe, Donald F. Miller and construction of an indoor rec- have expressed concern that which are holidays. one-year term and Mr. Fred of financial markets. willling buyer is what it's all Bassini to the Zoning Board million. reation center In the borough. students will use the borough The council also reported "But the .courts never about," he said. as a shortcut to the school that it had discussed the bi- of Adjustment for a one-year The city administration es- The move came in answer term. It also appointed the really defined 'momentary Mr. Amundsen said ap- timates that next year's tax Kennedy from Red Bank. cycle safety program with vagaries,' " Mr. Amundsen praisers use up-to-date Prop- to a recent request to The regional school, sched- Chief of Police Carl Jakubecy following to the Citizens Com- rate, based on the new assess- Borough Council from the mittee for Preservation of the added. erty Tax Bureau manuals is- ments, will be approximately uled to open next year, is lo- and Robert Charticr, school He also was asked whether sued by the state to arrive at bows out commission, asking the gov- cated in Little Silver and will superintendent. Fisk Chapel; Councilwoman $2.75 per $100 assessed valu- erning body to take part in Shafer; Edgar V. Denise, cost-per-foot of property fron- replacement values for resi- ation, or roughly half the cur- the initial planning. Doris Scheuing, Ruth Wiltsie, tage varies from area to area dential structures, then de- rent tax rate. , of race and Charles H. Gompert. in the city. Mr. Amundsen duct deterioration factors. Mr. Amundsen acknowledg- (Continued) Frank Poling heads the replied that frontage costs For example, a built-in oven, ed that senior citizens living those who said there was no committee, appointed earlier Eatontown probes ^T were set at $300 to $350 per range and dishwasher cur- on fixed incomes are hard hit clear choice so far. The by the Recreation Commis- foot, on Ocean Ave. in Elbe- rently is priced at $620. by property taxes, terming it Washington senator was men- sion. ^ , Nixon to beron; at $250 a block inland; at A number of questions "a social problem." He said tioned as a possible candidate $150 to $175 on Cedar Ave., dealth with the qualifications New Jersey permits a $160 re- "At this point, we do not west of the New York and by 19 state chairmen. Mon- have a site picked out for the of enumerators who visited duction in property taxes for dale came in second, named fare m apartment ^ hospital Long Branch railroad tracks. city properties. Mr. Amund- facility, but we all do know EATONTOWN - County was caused by "an electrical He said the price is as low as persons over 65 who earn as a potential top contender what we want," said the may- sen said that, when the reva- $5,000 a year or less. by 18 of the state chiefs, and and municipal fire officials short circuit in the building for a week or. are still investigating the which ignited beams in the LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) Bentsen was third with 13 "The recreation facility will mentions. cause of a fire which dam- basement." — Former President Richard probably be a new building. aged four apartments at 133 The fire started in the M. Nixon, reportedly feeling Others suggested as pos- In its initial stage, it will Shrewsbury planners set sible Democratic presidential Stoney Hill Road ground floor laundry room at depressed and fatigued, will probably house meeting According to Fire Chief 1:30 a.m. Sunday, burned be hospitalized at least a candidates in 1976 were: rooms for athletic teams and week for "extensive tests and Govs. Jimmy Carter of Donald Henderson, the blaze through a first floor kitchen possibly showers, too," he and then spread to the second treatment" of phlebitis. Georgia, George C. Wallace added. meeting about Genola tract of Alabama, Reubin Askew of floor, where it was finally ex- His face described as pale, Florida, John J. Gilligan of Mayor Ralph said that no tinguished two hours later. Nixon checked into Memorial SHREWSBURY - The new professional building on that extend into both residen- Ohio, Dale Bumpers of Ar- cost estimates have been Chief Henderson said that Hospital Medical Center of Planning Board has set Broad St. until Oct. 21 to sub- tial and business zones. presented by the commission, fa two apartments were put Long Beach through a rear Tuesday, Oct. 29, as the ten- mit revised site plans showing In the Aslanian application, kansas, Wendell R. Anderson 8et entrance yesterday. The for- of Minnesota and Edwin W. but went on to say that the ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS "out of commission" but that tative date for a meeting with an extended buffer zone and the ruling would render the borough's federal revenue — Democratic candidates for the electricity had been re- mer president's physician, Borough Council and a buil- additional parking places. back 100 feet virtually use- Edwards of Louisiana. Dr. John C. Lungren, said Also mentioned were Sens. sharing funds might be com- Borough Council and county stored yesterday in the sec- der who is proposing a "vi- Haroutioun and Vokuhi As- less, with the 50-foot buffer lo- mitted to fund part of the offices will participate In a ond floor apartments. Nixon would be there for at able alternative" to the lanian, under contract to pur- cated entirely within the busi- Russell B. Long of Louisiana, least seven days. Birch Bayh of Indiana, Rob- project. candidates night at'8 p.m. Residents of the apartments present residential zoning of chase the 2%-acre tract from ness zone of the lot. ert C. Byrd of West Virginia The borough currently has Friday in the Democratic were safely evacuated at the Lungren refused, however, about 180 acres of the Genola Alphonse Tomaino, and their approximately $47,000 in un- Club local headquarters, First time of the blaze and there to provide specifics on the tract. architect, Gerard A. Barba, After discussion by Mr. To- and Frank Church of Idaho; maino, Mr. Dolan, and Shade U.S. Reps. Morris K. Udall of committed revenue sharing and E. Washington Aves. were no injuries reported. treatment Nixon will receive In a letter to Mayor Robert were told that 105 feet at the for the painful ailment which C. Lawrence 3rd, Wendell A. Tree Chairman Al Rogers, Arizona and John C. Culver of monies for the remainder of Scheduled to attend and an- However, two firemen from back of the tract must remain 1 the calendar year. Additional swer voters questions are the Eatontown Fire Co., has afflicted his left leg. Smith, a Newark attorney as a natural buffer with its however, Mr. Barget advised Iowa; former North Carolina the board not to recommend Gov. Terry Sanford and Bos- funding is forthcoming in Democratic county chairman which fought the blaze, were General plans call for Nix- representing Holmdel builder mature trees intact, although 1975. John Fiorino, county clerk treated for smoke inhalation. on to receive anticoagulant Barry Rosengarten, requested the Shade Tree Commission changes in the ordinance to ton Mayor Kevin White. clarify the issue. Oregon state chairman "But we don't know how candidate, and Ray Kramer drugs in an effort to dissolve the joint meeting to discuss may require additional plan- much that will be," he added. and Thomas Lynch, freehol- two blood clots now resting in "a comprehensive plan" now tings. >> James Klonoski said the nom- Planners to oppose the area of his left thigh. "In this situation,"tfhe at- ination is "up for grabs" and Mayor Ralph said he would der candidates. being finalized for the portion Most of the tract, proposed torney said, "it's obviously have more information after They will join Borough Burger King project Such treatment also is de, of the tract now in an R-l for a two-story, 13,440-square added that no matter who is si ne 1 t0 best for all concerned that the the candidate, "the Demo- next week's meeting adding, Council candidates Robert A. EATONTOWN - The Plan- 6 < prevent the clots 'zone. foot office building, lies in the ordinance should remain as it crats will be moving into the "We have to lay some Masella, John A. Sheehan Jr., ning Board is expected to from breaking loose and mov- Mr. Rosengarten and Gen- B-l zone fronting on Broad St. is." White House." groundwork first." and Robert R. Dziadosz. pass a resolution at a special ing through the blood stream ola Ventures Inc., owners of The 105-foot strip in the rear The board recommended meeting Oct. 7 opposing a use to the lungs or heart, where the property, have hired the is in an R-l zone fronting on that Borough Council amend variance pending before the they could cause death. Matawan firm of Chester & Buttonwood Drive. the zoning codes to define and Zoning Board of Adjustment Lungren did set down tight Schoor, Inc., to develop the The application precipitated expand landscaping require- Weather: Clear, cool to expand Goody's, Rt. 35 and ground rules for public infor- proposal "as a viable alterna- a demand from James T. Do- ments as requested by Mr. Sunny and cool today, the Wyckoff Road, into a Burger mation on Nixon's hospi- tive to the present zoning, Ian, 3 Buttonwood Drive, Rogers. high in the low 60s Clear and Today's 7 am temperature TIDES King restaurant. talization: Written reports which experience has in- whose property abuts the site The proposed amendments not so cool tonight, the low was 46. Sandy Hook The resolution will probably will be issued at noon each dicated is singularly in- under discussion, that.the would, in part, require 5M near 50. Partly cloudy and The crop-killing frost that TODAY - High 3:11 p.m. slate that although the board day, and every word will be appropriate and which has re- trees be preserved, even if it square feet of landscaped milder tomorrow with chance hit the Midwest moved east- and low 9:49 p.m. feels the chnge would up- cleared in advance by the for- sulted in extreme economic meant settling for a more area in each 10,000 square of a few showers in evening ward today, and more rain TOMORROW - High 3:44 grade the present operation, mer president. • hardships to the owners." shallow buffer. feet of parking area. • or at night, high near 70. Out- fell on the already soaked a.m. and 4:11 p.m. and low which has seating for 36, and Lungren told newsmen af- Without defining what con- Attorney gives ruling The board approved a look for Thursday: Fair and southern Plains. 10:05 a.m. and 10:43 p.m. would in fact reduce the non- ter Nixon, his Wife, Pat, and stituted a "viable alterna- Earlier in the meeting, request from Hamilton-Rari- seasonably cool. Frost and freeze warnings For Red Bank and Rumson conformity of the use by mak- his youngest daughter, Julie tive," Mr. Smith's letter said Board Attorney Martin M. tan, inc., developer of Marc his clients would eventually In Long Branch, yes- were out overnight from bridge, add two hours; Sea ing it more of a sit-down res- Nixon Elsenhower, slipped Barger had ruled that the in- Brook Estates, to delete a re* western Virginia to Maine Bright, deduct 10 minutes; taurant (permitted in the into the hospital that he had request "appropriate rczon- tent of the ordinance was to quirement for sidewalks id terday's high temperature ing" to implement the plan. was 58 and the low, 50 de- Cold, clear air extended into Long Branch, deduct 15 min- zone), the expansion would examined the former presi- locate buffer areas at the the 11 lot subdivision, since grees. It was 54 at 6 p.m. and the Ohio, Tennessee and Mis- utes; Highlands brrdgc, add create traffic problems at the dent and found "evidence of The board gave applicants zone boundary rather than the houses involved border 1 the overnight low was 46. sissippi valleys 40 minutes. busy intersection. physical fatigue." proposing construction of a the property line in properties cul-de-sac. SHREWSBURY N J TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 24 1974 The DGtfly Register 3 ORLD Middletown schools plagued by vandals By Ike AUKUM Press MIDDLETOWN - Vandalism at it* township N 17 schools Mr. Davidheiser continued At Thome Junior High School Neither the board secretary nor the board members could took a startling and unprecedented upturn during the summer where, he said, the students were so eager to have football (a give any reasons for the tremendous increase in wanton dam- months. James W Davidheiser Board i>f Education sei-rc- cilities, the football goal posts were vandalized, leading la a age of school property, but they agreed that the increase in Frost damages food crops tary, said last night. charge of |U2 to repair a bent cross b»r vandalism is not confined to the schools "There has been as much vandalism at the schools in the In a brief business session the board approved attendance Z l0 a AnHri r klllm t : * ~ > 8 'rost has dealt weather last three months as there was during the last live yean," At all three junior high schools the nets in the HOC u«ah at the high school dunng the taming school >ear by Jorg Midwest corn and soybean producers another blow Mr. Davidheiser told board members as they met in ad- have been repeatedly slashed, to the point that the goal pusts Hufnagel of West Germany, an exchange student sponsored and may mean higher consumer prices on meat, milk and journed session. will have to be left standing without nets, the board secretary by the American Field Service said Among other instances of damage, a great many windows Approval was given for installation of three fire hydrants by ih.?iffiCUIi.?y 'r'Wing lemPer»«"« which willed across in school buildings are being broken by golf balls. Mr Da- "We're having problems like we've never had before Monmoulh Consolidated Water Co at the new high school the Upper Midwest on Saturday and Sunday nights may have Mr Davidheiser summed up site. The board members also adopted a policy (or determin- caused the loss of another 200 million bushels of com, and the vidheiser said. He added that he cannot tell whether the gaU figure on soybean loss could be twice as great balls are being driven through the panes by golfers practicing Total damages from vandalism during the three summer ing eligibility of students for reduced price and free milk in months is $4,M6 The total includes items like $4H0 (or 40 largo the township's schools One result may be consumers paying 'stiU higher prices on school grounds or are lost balls later found by children and thrown through the windows windows in Fairview School. $420 for 12 thermopane windows On recommendation of the secretary, contracts were ior meat, milk and eggs," says Waller Goeppinger, chief ad in Thome Junior High School and an appalling %?>* Mi for 40 mimstrative officer of the National Corn Growers Association "All I know is that we find a lot of golf balls inside awarded eight suppliers with low bids on 115.078 worth of in Boone schools with broken windows," he said large windows in Bayview School audio-visual equipment. < . i. nmWiC*n ^Tnen would probably have raised a record The damage is by no means confined to window panes, e.l billion bushel corn crop this year," he said on Monday After the spring storms and summer drought it was looking like a crop of 5 biUion bushels Matawan High needs extra "But the frost damage has covered such a wide are that 4.8 billion bushels is the maximum that can be expected It could be less." Oil nations dealt triple rap teachers for basic classes UNION NATIONS, N.V. - The Ford administrations MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - The proposed policy re- type of thing, he said, is not rejected bids on purchasing a coordinated attack on high oil prices marks the beginning of a Overloaded classes in basic ceived support last night from necessarily done by students gymnasium divider at Mata- new offensive to turn world sentiment against the producing high school'courses is making Dr. Regan, and Steven Le- in a particular school wan Ave. School because they nations and to unite Western Europe with the United States in it necessary for the Regional vine, a former board mem- Alphonse DeRosa, board were "in excess of budgetary energy cooperation. Board of Education to hire ber. No date was announced president, said security police allocations." President Ford, Treasury Secretary William E Simon additional personnel at a pro- for completion of this study. patrols at the schools have The board planned to spend and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger all came down jected cost of approximately been increased. But he noted, for a maximum of $12,500 to 115,000. Michael F. Kidzus, board "While we are spending mon- be paid for the divider Bids, hard yesterday on the continued high prices set by the other member, suggested that in an Dr. John F. Regan, superin- ey to replace some items, it when they came in, ranged oil countries. They warned that no nation, including the oil effort to curb vandalism in tendent, attributed a one-peri- costs us more to pay people between $30,500 and $38,000. states, could escape the consequences if the world is pushed the schools that the board od overload each tn art, typ- to perform surveillance." Mr Scullion said into a depression. "work closely with PTA's and ing, science, and two-period Contracts were awarded for In speeches by Ford and Simon in Detroit and by Kissi- parents. overloads in mathematics, to Mr. DeRosa said usually it construction of a concrete nger at the United Nations General Assembly, the United States all is the school that is shielded an influx in the junior class. "I am tired of spending stairway at Lloyd Road but demanded an end to rising oil costs. from public view by lack of The superintendent said $1,500 a month to repair bro- School, and for district-wide Ford said the yearlong spiral risked a "breakdown of lighting or trees that is the 1,725 students were antici- ken glass," Mr. Kidzus de- refuse collection. world order and safety." object of vandalism over pated in these classes, as well clared. "Vandalism bills are weekends. Santos Construction Co. as English and social studies not good for any of us," he Inc of Newark was the suc- Defense bill action due classes. However, between added. "We are.trying to curtail it, cessful bidder for the WASHINGTON - A record $82 6 billion defense appro- 1,789 and 1,790 students in the Dr. Regan, on the other but we cannot guarantee to stairway construction with a priation bill is coming up for final congressional action in the junior class have caused the hand, said, "There is a kind eliminate it, " Mr DeRosa bid of $4,285. Refuse collec- Senate. overload, he said. The in- of vandalism we cannot get said. tion will be done by R-F and Action is expected today. creased number, he said, our hands on. Windows are On Mr. Scullion's recom- M Refuse Collectors of Mata- Despite a M 5-billion cut from Pentagon requests, the bill could possibly be due to more broken every weekend," This mendation, board members wan for $8,190. is the largest single appropriation package ever considered by transfer students from pri- Congress. vate and parochial schools It Is $1.6 billion above last year's funding for military and JAZZING UP LIBRARY — Bob Wilber, left, and than were anticipated. Kenny Davern were leaders of the Soprano Sum- civilian payroll of the Defense Department and development The mathematics classes, Keyport delegation to seek and procurement of weapons systems. mit for a program presented at the Eastern Branch he reported, will need addi- The House passed the bill 293 to 59 yesterday despite ob- of the Monmouth County Library, Shrewsbury. tional personnel for six weeks jections that it contains funds in an undisclosed amount for only. Typing classes Dr. Re- the Central Intelligence Agency and money for aircraft the gan described as "always a sewer priority in Trenton Air Force did not want. problem." In addition, he Rep. Robert Giaimo, D-Conn., said money for the recently Concert attracts noted a "good response to sci- KEYPORT - Mayor Wil- The ordinance amend- tions on such a road unless disclosed CIA covert political activity in Chile apparently ence courses." As a result, liam A. Ralph announced last ment will be considered for fi- the county approves them." tame from prior defense appropriation bills. He called it the superintendent said, "the night that he will lead a dele- nal passage after a public The councilman went on to "shameful." capacity audience chemistry classes are much gation of Keyport officials to hearing scheduled for say that he hasn't received a too big." Trenton on Thursday to meet Tuesday, Oct. 29 at 8 p.m. reply, to date, from the coun- Money for the additional with state officials, urging Mrs. Marie Cottrell of 147 ty regarding the survey. Economy package endorsed personnel to handle the extra them to immediately approve Main St. presented Mayor and Mayor Ralph directed NEW YORK — Twenty-one economists have endorsed a to County Library classes has not been budg- funds for the proposed exten- Council with a petition signed Councilman Volpe to contact package of 22 proposed legislative items aimed at eliminating eted. However, Edward J. sion of Bayshore Regional by approximately 85 borough county traffic officials for some government quotas and stimulating competition within By MARYBETH ALLKS bassist; Dick Hyman, pianist. Scullion, business adminis- Sewerage Authority service to residents asking for a traffic their recommendations. certain industries. and Bob Rosengarten, musi- trator, was instructed to the boroughs of Keyport and light at the intersection of Added Mr. Volpe, "The in- With a few reservations and exceptions duly noted, the SHREWSBURY - The new cal director of the Dick Cav- make the necessary budget Matawan. Maple Place and Main St. tersection is a great concern economists signed a resolution supporting the legislative public address system came ett Show, drummer Serving adjustments. The mayor said the They also asked Council to of mine and also the police. package at a day-long conference yesterday in preparation as compliments of Friends of as master of ceremonies was Dr. Regan announced that a borough's engineer and at- restrict parking along both Once we know what the coun- for President Ford's economic summit conference in Wash- the Monmouth County Li- Art Vincent, who presents preliminary report on an ad- torney "and a number of roads within 100 feet of the in- ty is thinking, then Council ington on Friday and Saturday. brary. "The Art of Jazz" on WRLB, dition to the regional high councilmen" will be present tersection. can consider action." The action was the nearest thing to a consensus on anti- The music came as com- Long Branch. ' school should be received at the high level gathering. Councilman Richard I. The governing body went inflation measures discussed at the presummit meeting. But pliments of the Soprano Sum- The musicians hadn't next month from architects Representatives from Bay- Volpe, chairman of Borough on to certify Harold W. Tlce two other economists in attendance, J. Kenneth Galbraith of mit. played together since cutting studying the possibility of shore Regional and the Council's police committee, of 3 Chingarora Ave. as a per- Harvard University and Nat Goldfinger of the AFL-CIO, re- And the audience just their "Soprano Summit" al- high school expansion. Borough of Matawan are also said that the police depart- manent borough employe. fused to sign the resolution. They said the proposals were "ir- came. . .and came. . .and bum — and they quipped that He said architects have al- expected to attend the meet- ment conducted a traffic sur- His appointment as water relevant" to fighting inflation. came. they had forgotten who was ready made a feasibility ing, which will be hosted by vey of the intersection two treatment plant operator Is People parked their cars on supposed to play what. A study of using the old Broad Rocci Rlcci, assistant to the months ago and sent the re- effective Oct. 1. every coAceivable patch of highlight from the record was St. School for additional facil- state Department of Environ- sults to county traffic offi- ("lean air seen worth cost pavement and themselves on "Egyptian Fantasy," a song ities, and that they have met mental Protection commis- cials. WASHINGTON - Inflation is making clean air more cos- desks, filing cabinets, stair- featuring a haunting beat. with elementary school prin- sioner, David Bardin "We had to do that because Resisting arrest tly, but the nation's environmental protection director says cases, and the floor. Strong •• Elliagton cipals to discuss current en- Hopes for answers Maple Place is a county charg;ee is denied it's worth it. Every seat in the house was The group is strong on rollments. He said architects "I'm hopeful that the state road," he said. "The borough FREEHOLD - A 19-year- Russell E. Train, administrator of the Environmental taken long before the pro- Duke Ellington and chose his have been to the high school people are ready to talk and can't impose traffic restric- old Leonardo man pleaded in- Protection Agency, told the House subcommittee an public gram began — and Sunday "In A Mellow Mood" as its in- "to determine how much give us some answers," said was definitely a day to go troductory warm-up tune. The space will be needed. Mayor Ralph. nocent yesterday to resisting health and environment that the increased cost of living was arrest on Jan. 22 in Atlantic being felt by those trying to clean up the environment under down in the annals of the Eas- pace was perky for "Oh Sis- "We expect in another few "As far as Keyport is con- Hazlet board ter Ain't That Hot" and more Highlands. the Clean Air Act. tern Branch of the Monmouth weeks time to have something cerned, we expect to hear County Library. solemn for "Song of Songs," a Stephen Morgan, of 4 Leon- But he defended the added costs yesterday, saying that it concrete," Dr. Regan said. some news about the sewer- soprano sax solo introduced may issue 4 ard Ave., Leonardo, entered would be "more inflationary to do nothing about air pollution" The jazz test, which began Mr. Scullion reported that a age project's movement on during World War I. Thursday. It shouldn't be all the plea at his arraignment than to act now despite the economic situation. the library's fall season of revised policy on public ac- cultural events, was co-spon- Particularly enjoyed by the cess to student records which open-ended talk," he added. summonses before Superior Court Judge Train, reviewing progress made in implementing the Thomas L. Yaccarino. He is Clean Air Act, said under questioning that the added costs of sored by Brookdale Commu- young was "Penny Rag," a was to have been considered Earlier this year, DEP's HAZLET - Robert Van list contained approximately accused of resisting arrest by the act "are buying very real benefits." nity College, Lincroft. Its suc- tune written by Mr. Wilber in by the board last night was Fechtmann, a member of the cess is a tribute to John H. 80 projects. The Keyport- Patrolmen Charles Mazza- He said failure to reduce air pollution would increase in- the tradition of Scott Joplin "withdrawn for further con- Board of Health, asked at last Livingstone Jr., library direc- "When I wrote it 10 years Matawan extension was 51st rella and John Newton. flation by reducing worker productivity and boosting the cost sideration." night's meeting of the board tor, who has worked to make ago," he commented, "no one on that list. Thomas G. Sergeant, 19, of heakh care that would result from pollution-related illness- The issue, nevertheless, that summonses be issued to the Rt. 35 structure a commu- much had heard of him (Jop- whose address was unavai- es. brought public comment The current cost of the four township stores unless nity cultural headquarters. lin). I'm glad to see my inter- despite its withdrawal. project is $1.5 million. Unless they clean up their premises. lable, pleaded innocent to at- (Army procurement criticized Willing helpers est in ragtime is everybody's Mrs. Dorothy Buchen, earmarked as a special prior- Mr. Van Fechtmann said tempting to break and enter He noted that two years interest now." Strathmore School teacher, ity project, it will not be fun- that J.M. Fields, Pantry the office of Dr. Ronald Senz, WASHINGTON - The Army is still considering a report ago, when the first concerts Also featured in the pro- told the board, "You may be ded until 1976. Pride, Pathmark and K-Mart, 37 E. Washington Ave., Atlan- that says there are serious problems in the way it goes about were given, the library lacked gram's first half, before the dealing with a pandora's box Borough Council adopted all on Rt. 35, have been issued tic Highlands, on July 15 with buying billions of dollars worth of military hardware. its stage, piano, and public musicians "threw away" if you open school records." two ordinances for final pas- warnings on a number of vio- the intent to steal drugs. The Army's Pentagon staff and key commands involved address system. However, it their music to play "free- She asked board members sage. lations by township sanitarian in procurement have been studying recommendations of the had "four strong, willing high lance," was "Fish Vendor," to include teachers in the ad- The first authorizes the is- Leo Waivers and still haven't Army Material Acquisition Review Comrm'ttee. A spokesman school boys who helped move which was a big hit in France ditional study, that will be suance of $81,000 in bonds and removed shopping carts from The Candle Light said there may be action within the next few months on man- furniture" and the idea of during the 1950s made of the policy. notes for street improvements their parking lots or cleaned fW Gfn Tlmt AH Offttm agement changes to implement some of the panel's proposals. presenting musical programs The second half, which be- Citing current legal battles on Luppatatong Ave. and Per- up refuse. Pantry Pride was "Historically, the Army has not done a good job in mate- in a cultural setting. gan with "Cottontail," fea- in other parts of the country shing Place. also asked to clean up a PLACE MATS I'i ' rial acquisition," the committee said in a two-volume report stream that bounds the east- Members of the Soprano tured solo numbers and was where records are open, Mrs. State aid expected (ADD SPICE) || delivered to the Pentagon five months ago. ern side of its property. Summit, who were on the an effective talent showcase. Buchen said wording of the Councilman Harold A. Stout The panel also credited the Army with "striving to cor- stage for the latest concert, The afternoon's only flaw new policy is extremely im- pointed out, '.'We will be reim- If the stores don't conform rect its shortcomings." were Bob Wilber, curved so- was the intermission, which portant. "I suggest you be bursed by the state for part of within five days, Mr. Van Fechtmann recommended prano saxist; Kenny Davern, was much too long . . .consid- very cautious when you study the cost of this project. We that the summonses be is- The Mosl Deserters say life was normal soprano saxist; Bucky Pizze- ering there was nowhere to this," Mrs. Buchen told the expect to receive about sued. CAMP ATTERBURV, Ind - Many of the first Vietnam- relli, guitarist; Milt Hinton, go and nothing to do. board. $38,000 under the present Bountiful Board In other business the board era deserters accepting President Ford's clemency offer say state aid formula." Weekday s ;ii Noon they led normal lives under their real names with little fear Improvements include the rehired Ivan Davis as tempo- of being hunted. construction of storm sewers, rary dog warden and dog SIM) ^ from VfW pound keeper. "I had a driver's license in my own name, worked under Hearing continues today concrete curbing and repav- jny own name, had my own Social Security number, was a ing. William Haines, board registered voter and paid taxes in my own name," says The second ordinance member, said there isn't ShaOolubrook Thomas King, 27. enough work in the township adopted by Council provides Route 35 Eugene Wade, 27, of Alliance, Ohio, said he turned him- in Marlboro zoning suit (22,000 for the construction of for a full time dog warden. self in twice before only to. be released because the Army Mr. Davis is hired for three Shrewsbury FREEHOLD - A court ments throughout the town- Mr. Hobaugh said that the water mains along Luppata- could find no records of his being AWOL tong Ave. and Pershing months at $3 per hour, for a hearing on a Brooklyn com- ship, the Zoning Board of Ad- township underwent a rapid maximum of 25 hours a week. (201)747 0200 pany's plea to construct 392 justment's denial of a vari- growth period during the Place. multiple dwelling units in ance and the planning board's early 1960's but that this had ^ ComTnented. Councilman The Daily Register Marlboro will continue today. denial of site plan approval. slowed, down at the end of, Stout, "Both ordinances are that decade. He did not an- tied together as far as the SERVICE IS OUR Main Oftlci In testimony yesterday, the The company wants to con- One Rcgttttf Ploio. Shrt.Jbury, N J 07rt>l , firm, Prime Feather & Down ticipate that the expansion work goes. Improvements to Branch OMIcti struct 314 one bedroom units BIGGEST ASSET ! 176 HI. JJ. MWdltlown, N.J. ova Co., produced a planning con- would continue at the same the water supply system will 30 Eatt Main SI. Freehold. N.J. O77M and 7H two bedroom units on rate because of the town- be made first." tn BrooOwoy. Long Broncri 07710 sultant who testified con- its 34.94-acre tract at Rob- ship's present zoning ordi- Construction is expected to Published by The Red Bank Register cerning population and land ertsville and Ryan Roads. Eitobllihed In 1171 by Jorm H. Coo* and Henry Cloy statistics of the township. nance. begin in late October. CAN WE HELP YOU ? Member 01 the Associated Press - The Associated Press Is entitled Ordinance introduced exclusively to the vse for republlcatlon ol all the local news printed In - The nonjury hearing was R. Lee llobaugh, a planning William J. O'Hagan Jr. or me newspaper as well as oil AP news dispatches. expected to resume this consultant with Herbert Allenhurst is representing the Council went on to in- Second class postage paid at Red Bonk. N.J. 07701 and at additional morning before Superior Smith Associates, Trenton, company. Township attorney troduce an amendment tn the mailing oMIces. Published dally. Monday through Friday. Mall suMcrlp- ttom payable In advance. Court Judge Merritt Lane Jr. also testified about his projec- Herbert B. Bierman is repre- borough's traffic ordinance which, if approved, will make CENTRAL JERSEY BANK The firm is challenging the tions of population of the senting the township. Gerald 1S5 township's zoning ordinance township for 1980 based on the A. Marks of Freehold is rep- Kearney St. one-way between AJNTD TBLHT COMBANV Home Delivery try Corner SO Cents a week Single copy at counter 10 Cents prohibition of garden apart- base period of 1960-70. resenting the zoning board. Elizabeth St. and Barnes St. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE £OHPO«»ATION 4 The DttrilyRegister SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24.1974 Old Timers Day fete to be held WMMMMIIIMMHH Denis J. McCarthy, RED BANK - Anyone who p.m. The speaker will be p.m., the senior citizens are ex-Freehold official considers himself an "old Martin Murray, a professor of invited to attend a free show- Obituaries FREEHOLD - Denis J timer" is invited to partici- human affairs at Brookdale ing of "Claudine" at The Movies III IIIIIMUIIIIIIWIIIIIIHUIIIIIIIIIIIIIimiHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIII HIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIH McCarthy of 19 Barkalow pate in the 15th Annual Old Community College, Lincrofl, Ave., former borough Regis- Timers Day, which is sched- who will discuss senior citizen The day is being planned by trar of Vital Statistics and uled for tomorrow. activities in the county the Chamber of Commerce member of the Local Assis- Registration will begin at 10 Awards will be presented to and the Department of Parks Cliff Arquette dies;tance Board, died yesterday am. in Marine Park, where the oldest person, the person and Recreation. in Freehold Area Hospital, games and talent contests who traveled the greatest dis- Freehold Township. will be featured. tance to attend, and the Mr. McCarthy retired three Guests will be transported couple married the longest. A I comedian was 68 years ago as airelectronics via a shuttle bus to Trinity magic show will be presented Day Care LOS ANGELES (AP) - Co- instructor at the Army Signal Episcopal Church, W. Front by Doug Keller, owner of the median Cliff Arquette, who School, Ft. Monmouth. St., for a hot lunch at 12 30 House of Magic on Whitest. program to lived in the shadow of the An Air Force veteran of Other entertainment attrac- pudgy-faced, homespun World War II, he was a com- Harold F. Carter tins will be accordionist Hans be discussed Larson, the Old Guard Or- "Charley Weaver" television municant of St. Rose of Lima LANSDOWNE, Pa. - Har- KEANSBURG - An open chestra and Glee Club, and character he created, died Catholic Church, and a mem- old F. Carter, 67', died forum on day care programs the Red Bank Senior Wom- yesterday of a heart attack. ber of the American Legion, Thursday in Delaware Me- will be presented tomorrow at en's Chorus. He was 66. the K of C, Board of Health, morial Hospital, Drexel Hill. 8 pm. in Little Flower Day Exempt Firemen's Associ- In the event of rain, the Arquette had been admitted Pa. Care Center, St. Mark's HaU, ation and the Board of Vis- luncheon will be held as Saturday night to St. Joseph's Mr. Carter, who was bom Myrtle Ave. and Kennedy itors of the exempt Firemen's planned at 1 p.m. At 3 30 Medical Center in Suburban in Port Monmouth, N.J., had Way, by the Monmouth Coun- Association, all here. Burbank. A hospital spokes- lived in Lansdowne 45 years. Mrs. Clara G. Cooper ty Welfare Board. man said he complained of Surviving are his widow, He was a son of the late Speakers will be Mrs. Pearl he^rt trouble. Mrs. Edith McCarthy, and James G. Carter and a broth- , RED BANK - Mrs Clara Brown of the welfare board two sisters, Mrs. Frank C er of Mrs. Leona Matthews * Actor Dave WUlock, a long- G Cooper, 85, of 59 South St., and Mrs. Lenora McDermott, Gibson, here, and Mrs. Ame- and Mrs. Minnie Alms, both time friend, said Arquette died Sunday at the Medicen- director of Monmouth Day rigo W. Sacco of Long of Keansburg, N.J. had been planning to marry ter, here. Care Center in Red Bank Branch. Mr. Carter was a senior an old friend, Mariam CaU. Born in Freehold, Mrs. The Hlggtns Memorial partner In Hornblower and Cooper was a lifelong area The speakers will describe "He and Miriam began dat- Home, here, is in charge of Weeks Bonding Corp.. Phila- resident. the purpose, community in- ing in the 30s, then they both arrangements. delphia. She was the widow of Jo- volvement and finding of day married others. The romance Besides his sisters, he is seph P. Cooper and a commu- care centers in the county. CHff Arqaette started again about two years survived by his widow, Mrs. nicant of St. James Catholic Little Flower Day Care Paul A. Burke Ruth Cleaver Carter, and two Church, a member of its Ro- ago when she came to visit "rube" and a "dirty old man" Center is a facility for fami- HOWELL TOWNSHIP - daughters, Mrs. David Lea- sary Altar Society and of the RoaMoriMiaMM him when he was in the hospi- — became better known than lies in the Matawan and Paul A. Burke Jr., 54, of 30 E thern of Berkeley Heights, Red Bank Democratic Club. IN MEMORIAM — Joseph M. Molovet, executive tal with his first heart at- his creator. Keansburg area offering day Plaza De Las Flores, died N.J., and Mrs. Philip Swayne director of Middletown Housing Authority, stands tack," WUlock said. "Weaver" captivated au- Surviving are a daughter, care for the pre-school chil- before bronze plaque and flagpole, dedicated last Sunday at his home. of Perkasie, Pa. Mrs. Dorothy McCarthy of dren of parents who work or Arquette made his tele- diences by telling exagger- Bom in Jersey City, he had month in memory of the late Adele Braelow Luf- vision debut with WUlock on ated homespun yarns and Freehold; two sisters, Mrs who otherwise need the ser- tman, wife of authority chairman Col. Harry I. lived here seven years. Edward R. Paight vice. Children can come alt NBC's Dave and Charley reading "letters from Mama in John T. Madden of Lincroft Luftman, who helped her husband arrange federal show, an ad lib comedy show. Mt. Idy." His wife, the former Mar- MATAWAN - Edward R. and Mrs. Herbert J. Langler day or a half-a-day on a five, three or two-day a week financing for the township's first high-rise low cost Born Dec. 28, 1(05, in To- guerite Gregoire, died in 1971. Paight, 46, of 2 Willow Ave.. of Rumson, two grand- He Introduced the Weaver children and seven great- basis. The center is open senior citizens housing project, Daniel Towers, on ledo, Ohio, Arquette quit An Air Force veteran of died yesterday in John F. character in 1953 on the Den- grandchildren. from 7:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. New Monmouth Road. Cost of plaque and pole school at 14 to get into show World War II, Mr. Burke Kennedy Hospital, Edison. were paid through small contributions from the nis Day show and later took it business. For the next three served at one time as an in- An Army veteran of World John E. Day Funeral onto the Jack Paar and "Hol- project's 100 families to show their gratitude, Mr. years he played in a band at terpreter for the United Na- War II, he was employed as a Home, here is in charge of LOTTERY NUMBER Malovetsald. lywood Squares" television Cleveland's Euclid Beach, tions. He was a communicant driver for the Jones Motor arrangements. MM., Sept. 2): 87815 shows. then went into vaudeville. of St. Rose of Lima Catholic Freight Co., Edison. Weaver — a bespectacled Arquette did his first radio Church, Freehold. He was a communicant of St. Clements Catholic Church, grandfatherly character in network show with Fred As- Surviving are his father, rolled-up shirtsleeves, talre and Charlie Butterworth here, and the K of C in Key- Paul A. Burke, Sr. of Min- port. crooked tie and floppy hat and later worked with Burns neapolis; and two brothers whom Arquette called a and Alien. Surviving are his widow, William J. Burke of Min- Mrs. Helen Paight; his father. He was a regular on the neapolis and Col. Robert J. 202. Death Notices ~ Monday-through-Friday day- Ezra R. Paight, and a broth- COOPER - Clara 0. ol ««d Sank en S»pl Burke with the U.S. Army in er, George Paight, both on, II, 1174. WMn of Iht latt Jo.tph P.. time game show "Hollywood motlwr ol Dorolhy McCarthy, illttr ol Bonn, Germany. Long Island. Mri. John Maotttn Old Mr.. H«rbtrt Lona- Squares" from its inception in Itr. Funeral mail Thur.doy t a.m. Si. Arrangements are under The Day Funeral Home, Jomn Catkallc Church, Htd tank. VI. UN. Itatbn ol *» Jrtn E. Oo» Funtrol Homt. Funeral arrangements are the direction of Freeman Fu- Keyport, is in charge of ar- IS KlvtrtkH Avo.. Rod tank. Tundoy " p.m. and Wtdnnday 1-4 ond 7» P.m. incomplete. neral Home, Freehold. rangements. Sherwb-Mams helps you do it all
STYLI-PIRFKT® VINYL WALLCLOTH p SMppabie. ChooM Iran 198 p*tt«TMl Bill Johnson, Jr., Middletown, says: ••When your Ont ol our moil popular ptpwi. 141 bwHitHul p. norm to chooMfrom. Al l with pm-pattadl checking account Regularly prtcad tomtUOup I runs out on you
The answer is Overdraft Checking. It provides a cash reserve you can use whenever you wish.. .for any purpose. Simply write checks for more than your balance.. .or tell us now much to transfer to your checking account. Ss=r- If s another feature of our UCTC "One-Statement Banking." Visit any office fa full credit account wtth us. details and an applicatioa Move up to United Counties Trust. Wffm Helping you is why we're here. Stop by soon. SALE ENDS SEPT. 30, 1974 COLOR COORDINATE YOUR HOME-INSIDE AND OUT-WITH PAINT, WALLCOVERINGS united counties trust company AND CARPETING AT THESE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS DECORATING CENTERS. where good things start to happen MIDDLETOWN RED BANK Member Of Federal Ftelnve System • Federal Deposit Insurance G»ix*alion 137 Broad St. Zkjid lacattimb m ta depute Belford Office Eatontown Office Keansburg Autobank Middletown Office ASBURY PARK SEA GIRT FREEHOLD 45 Leonardville Road Executive Center. One Main Street 242 Main Street 857 Highway 35 Rte 35 and Sunset Ave. Rte. 35 North of Manasquan Circle Freehold Mall Chapel Hill Office Keansburg Office Lincrolt Office Port Monmouth Office M343 449-3737 462-6333 443 Highway 35 Church Street and Carr Avenue , 600 Newman Springs Road 57 Highway 36 SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 24, 1974 FBI questions Howell man on six county bank holdups By SHERRYCONOHAN one in North Arlington, six of up man put the money in a The robber, or robbers, es- A Howell Township man them in Monmouth County bag and fled. caped with I5,5«O from a Red who was arrested last week The other two reportedly are No one in the bank at the Bank branch of Ike Colonial in a Bergen County bank rob- in Union County time of the robbery saw a gun First National Bank on April bery is considered by the FBI Additional arrests are ex- and none was found on Tepper 11; $5,000 from a Freehold to be a prime suspect in the pected in the string of hold- when he was arrested branch of the same bank on string of Monmoulh County ups, according to the sources The scenario followed in the May 9; $8,000 from the Key bank holdups staged by the In the North Arlington bank North Arlington holdup was port branch of the same bank so-called "Thursday bank the same as that used in the on June I; $1,000 from Bel- robber," according to in- robbery, Tepper allegedly Monmouth County bank rob- mar Savings and Loan Associ- formed sources. handed the teller a note beries, only the holdup man ation, Belmar, on July 11; an Norman Walker Tepper. 45. saying be had a gun and de- managed to escape each undetermined amount of cash from the New Shrewsbury of Rt. 33, Howell Township, manding that the money be time. He was variously de- was arrested by North Arling- scribed as having shoulder branch of the Colonial First ton police last Wednesday put on the counter. The hold- length strawberry blond hair, National Bank on July ?4. a moments after the Peoples library party short shaggy strawberry Wednesday, and $3,000 from Trust Co, 19 Schuyler Ave , blond hair and black and United Counties Trust Co., North Arlington, was robbed is Thursday white salt-and-pepper hair. Lincroft, on Aug. II. a CLEANUP AT SANDY HOOK — Students from students from the high school will visit the park of approximately M.000 SHREWSBURY - The li- The holdup jnan was dub- Friday. South Brunswick High School in South Brunswick during the five days, with a different group arriv- Tepper, unemployed and brary has resumed Us winter bed the "Thursday bank rob- A federal bank robbery Township pick up debris oh beach In Sandy Hook ing each day. They are spending half of the day the father of seven children. schedule, it is open Monday ber" because the first four of charge, upon conviction, is unit of Gateway National Recreation Area yes- picking up litter and debris that has washed ashore was apprehended a block from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 the six bank, robberies in the punishable by a maximum of terday as part of five-day program blending envi- and the other half receiving instruction on the en- from the bank by a couple of p.m.; Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 5 county occurred on a 25 years in prison and/or a ronmental studies with cleanup work. A total of 200 vironment. policemen who were respond- p.m.; Wednesday, 3 to 5 p m , Thursday $10,000 fine. ing to a silent robbery alarm Thursday 2 to 5 p.m.; Friday triggered inside the bank. The 3 to 5 p.m.; and Saturday 9 money was recovered and a.m. to noon. 630% .uZi~ 6.oi /o Candidates see need for citizens forum Tepper was jailed on a feder- A party for the Wizard of here's FAIR HAVEN - The Fair tions and complaints from they feel the borough can to help communicate these is- al charge of bank robbery. Oz Reading Club is scheduled -^ -6.27 A Haven Democratic candidates residents. help solve, but they nave dif- sues. An FBI spokesman in New- Thursday at 3:15 p.m. Prizes for mayor and Borough Coun- ficulty attracting attention. "In this way," Mr. Brad- line-up The idea is proposed by ark confirmed that Tepper will be presented to Jennifer cil are calling for estab- They also have ideas which ford said, "we hope to be- Mrs. Mary Jane Mullins, can- was under investigation in Monahan, first grade; Holly lishment of a "citizens fo- can benefit Fair Haven, but come quickly alerted to gen- 3/6" ~ didate for mayor, and council connection with other bank McCrum, second grade; Ka- rum." find It Impossible to gain a eral problems and ideas and candidates Christopher Kelly, robberies but declined further ren Walsh, third grade; David INTEREST sympathetic ear." to attend to them before they The idea is to have at least Barry Bradford, and Pierre comment. I'oyner. fourth grade; Diane First Merchants become crises. We feel that one member of the governing Lay ton. The candidates said they Informed sources said Tep- Nutley. fifth grade, and De- communication and commu- Tune Deposits body at the Borough Hall would have at least one mem- per was under investigation nise Walsh, sixth grade. "Many people," Mr. Layton ber of the governing body nity should become syno- each Saturday to hear sugges- said, "have problems which in at least eight other bank The next meeting of the li- available Saturday mornings nomous." robberies in addition to the brary board will be Oct. 3. Recreation unit sets activities KEANSBURG - The De- painting for children eight partment of Recreation will years of age and older, J.F.K. sponsor the following classes: Community Center, Mondays, Beginning Monday, oil from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Beginning Oct. 2, oil paint- Fair Haven to start ing and needle point for se- nior citizens, J.F.K. Commu- new library hours nity Center, Wednesdays, FAIR HAVEN - Beginning from 10 a.m. to noon. There is Oct. 1, the library will be no fee. open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 Arts and Crafts classes will p.m. and Tuesdays from 7 to begin Tuesday and will meet 9 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 every Tuesday and Thursday a.m. to noon. from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. APPLIANCE CLEARANCE SALE T.V. — STEREO — WASHERS REFRIGERATORS — DRYERS RANGES ETC. ANDERSON'S 30 BROAD ST. HAZLET PLAZA RED BANK RT.3S Opm W«d. « Frl. Nile* Op«n Emy Nlte
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TO 9 ^ Patriotism isn't dead The Daily Register Host suggestions put the main emphasis on the na- Established in 1871-Publubed by The Red Bai* Register By JACK ANDERSON must bull through to the end no matter what the costs. tion's 200th birthday. "From Minutemen to Spacemen- ARTHUR Z. KAMIN Our appeal for a Bicenten- W A milNr* TON Tni* rationaleo f loyalty di was proposed by Kathenne President and Editor nial (login - "the right Gilmartin of Union, N.J.Step- words," we urged, "to reaff- wAMiim, i urn vorced from princjpl; jt ta hen A LeviBe of Villanova, irm our faith In America" — C/>r,.,r sttouel in Watergate. In the Pa , suggested "190 Years Thomas J. Bly, Executive Editor William F. Sandford, Associate Editor bat brought an outpouring of and covered up the various and Counting-On You! sentiment from the hearts of iiiiiMiiMiiuiHimiiiiHinimHiiiiiiiiiHiiiH acts of Watergate, by their I TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1974 the people. with a dubious cause to pro- own admission, the Nixon From Newport News, Va., We have received thousands mote. The second has a ring presidency had usurped the place of country. It was now Howard L. Goshorn came up f of suggested slogans from all to it peculiarly suited to a with a ringing slogan: "The We mustn't meddle internally comers of the country. As we country founded on the propo- "Our President Right or Wrong" whose power, pre- United States: Born in Tur- 9 had hoped, most of the offer- sition that the government ex- Margaret Stern of New ,i, Matured in Freedom with any nation big enough to retaliate. ings are sincere and thought- ists, not as a good in itself, rogatives and prestige had to m0 but to protect the rights and be protected at all costs, even York City contended' ": "Th" e Enduring in Equality." Ralph ful. They reflect our highest M Jones of Philadelphia of- ideals, not just patriotic emo- advance the ideals of the pop- by means of crimes. lessons of Watergate should tion. ulace. But the nation at large, never be forgotten and should fered this: "Our Freedom - when at length it lasted the arouse us To a new moral Toughened on the Anvil of There is a power In slogans, In recent years two Presi- stance. We remember The j tice, Refined in the Flame for good or ill. They help to dents, one a Democrat, one a sour fruits and penetrated the us Republican, both with high deceptions, determined that Alamo' andd we remember of Liberty." mold opinion and their in- 'The Maine' and we remem- fluence can linger for gener- purposes and memorable error must be discarded even though the flag itself be ber 'Pearl Harbor' — each Jack Gilliam of Albu- ations, providing impetus for achievements to their credit, querque suggested: "The a wise policy or a crutch for a have been forced to step wrapped around it, and wrong representing a low point in must be put right even though our history. And we rose Greatness or Our Past has foolish one. aside because they did not Built the Road for our Fu- make the above distinction, the nation be tormented by above each, as we can now - The tragic conflict of the governmental paralysis and remembering — rise above ture." And Irene Prommer, past decade between succes- while the nation as a whole who wrote from Fair Oaks, did shamed by the public dis- Watergate." She proposed: sive presidents and the nation grace of its most revered of- "Remember Waterage." Calif., of the setbacks she has at large can be seen, in a The selling of the Vietnam suffered over a long life, told way, as a conflict between War to the American people, fice. Also stressing the lessons of the past, Norma Thomas Col- of her faith in America and the differing ways of looking and its expansion and prolon- It was in this spirit that urged the slogan: "America at America embodied in twogation long after its original most of our contributors com- vin of Tacoma, Wash., sug- gested: "We've Got a Good for Liberty, Unity and Prog- slogans of more than a cen- purpose was clearly beyond posed their slogans. Their ress." tury ago. attainment, were accom- motivation is clear not only in Thing Going in America. We the mottos themselves but in Know Where We've Been." We have been deluged not One was Stephen Decaur's plished by misrepresentations only with slogans but with of- "Our Country Right or and manipulations out of Lyn- the moving letters that came Other suggested slogans are don Johnson's White House. with them. eloquent in their simplicity, fers of prizes for the best slo- Wrong." The other came gans. We will sort through from Carl Schurz, the friend These acts were partici- "I feel this is hardly an op- such as- "I Love America," portune time for arrogant na- which was first proposed by these offers and announce of Abraham Lincoln: "Our pated in by often-honorable them in a future column. Country, When Right to be men because of the general tionalism or self praise," Miami's wise Hank Meyer. wrote Alva K. Fancher from Evelyn M. Stroman of Wayne, Meanwhile, please keep your Kept Right, When Wrong to idea that once the nation's ideas coming. Send your sug- be Put Right." pride and prestige are com- Lakeside, Calif. "We have Pa., suggested the Bicenten- many things to be proud of, nial might take its slogan gested slogans to Slogans, c-o Both have a certain appeal. mitted to any venture, right Jack Anderson, 1401 16th But when you think about it, or wrong, wise or foolish, a and some things that should from the Negro spiritual, dispensation on honor and be cause for shame." He sug- "We've Come This Far by Street, N.W., Washington, the first could serve as a jing- D.C. 20036. oistic motto for any country reason is in effect, and we gested: "We Are Trying." Faith." Now is the time for a deal By MILTON VIORST iiniiiiimiimiiiHiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiimiiiiiiii grown suddenly rich from the population now hurts every- price-gouging on oil have one. Understandably, the rich United Nations Secretary proven substantially less gen- countries are unmoved when General Kurt Waldheim, in a THE NEW erous than the industrial they hear leaders of undeve- talk In New York earlier this countries. They've offered loped nations say, in effect, month, took to task the rich POLITICS some modest credit benefits that the rich must share so Industrialized countries of the to the oil-less lands, but the poor can spawn. world for cutting back on IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIUHIIIIII they've given away next to What his condition suggests their assistance to the poor nothing, not even to their own is that the time for pity and countries. tries — and count on getting impoverished peoples. charity may be over. Instead, Our spiraling costs His strictures, I think, come supporters within them. The rulers of these coun- Waldheim might more profit- at an Inappropriate moment Now, rich as the industrial- tries, far from investing this ably explore the possibility of The Senate-House Economic the loss of revenue being offset by — when it's particularly diffi- ized countries remain relative money to reduce the Inequi- a deal. Committee has asked President closing tax loopholes the wealthy are cult to appeal to the rich to the poor ones, the psy- ties between rich and poor, Whether we in the industri- have used it to manipulate Ford to vigorously use the Council countries' better natures. chological atmosphere has The result, to be sure, is not al world like it or not, the un- now enjoying. shifted. The rich feel not only the international monetary that the rich are starving. But developed countries have two on Wage and Price Stability which In the past, It's true, the The spiraling costs for the ne- rich countires were obsessed that their world is threatened system to their own profit soaring demand for food has powerful weapons to hurt us Congress created at his request to cessities of life must be curbed. If with growing richer — and — but that it's the undeve- The rich countries have good unleashed world prices, and — their oil and tfleir popu- induce business and labor to hold they continue at their present level the richer they became, the loped nations which, in large reason for feeling angry. the delicate economic struc- lation. Conceivably, they can down wage and price increases. or go even higher, the small busi- less they seemed to care measure, are threatening it. The atmosphere has shifted ture of the industrial world offer us reasonably priced further as a result of the probably is in greater danger energy and serious population The 12 Democrats and eight Re- nesses throughout the land will be about the poor countries. As a starter, of course, the Even the United States, oil-producing countries growing scarcity of food. from inflation than the more control in return for a more publican members of the committee especially hurt. The situation is al- which was the most generous abruptly took a bite out of the Weather Is partly to blame. primitive structures of the un- equitable sharing of the were unanimous in voting for the ready desperate and it begs for dra- in total aid, in recent years industrial countries' sense of But more to blame Is the gal- developed world. world's wealth. recommendations it sent the chief matic change. With more and more contributed a decreasing ratio security with their new loping increase in mouths It's not possible any longer Or they can be Irresponsible executive. Even though one of its workers going on the unemployment of Its wealth. prices. Almost without ex- that must be fed. The food for the rich countries to dis- and greedy, as the industrial ception, these oil-producing surpluses that once charac- miss population as a problem members, Rep. William B. Widnali, rolls in Monmouth County and the Until a year or so ago, how- nations have been — and the ever, Waldheim and other countries are undeveloped. terized agriculture in the in- of the poor countries. The un- world will continue on its col- R-N.J., favors reimpdsition of wage state, the picture is gloomy, indeed. humanitarians could tap the But, unfortunately, the un- dustrialized countries have willingness, or inability, of lectively suicidal course, until and price controls, it was not among Presidential pressure on bin guilt feelings of the rich coun- developed countries that have vanished. these poor countries to limit the inevitable denouement. the suggestions the committee ap- business and labor — called jawbon- proved. ing — is going to require, according We no longer favor those con- to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, the trols because they didn't work in the President to work seven days a week past, principally because so many on it if the guideline recommenda- Chrome and common sense exceptions were made. Many large tion is to prove successful. By JAMES J. K1LPATRICK IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIH approved the "Byrd Amend- and transshipped through wage increases resulted in an in- The committee's report was pre- ment," which had the effect world markets. American crease in prices, but other price pared in compliance with Mr. Ford's Eighty top executives of of permitting the renewed im- consumers will pay an extra hikes came about, too, in the con- request to Congress in his Aug. 12 North American steel com- CONSERVATIVE portatlon of Rhodesian $40 million a year, and the trols' breakdown. Sen. William address. It will be added to the vol- panies met here last week to chrome. Meanwhile, the price .Soviets and the Japanese will talk about industry problems. Proxmire, vice chairman of the umes of advice he is receiving from VIEW of chrome ore from the Soviet laugh all the way to the bank. What they talked about, Union had been soaring. The There are other ironies, of committee, said industries such as his own advisers in preparation for among other things, was illllliliiiiiiiiiilHillllllillliiimiiiniiiliiiilll Japanese were profiting from course. Repeal of the Byrd steel, chemicals and petroleum had the economioVsummit. chrome — Rhodesian chrome. the export of stainless steel Amendment would make the increases ranging from 40 to 80 per The steel men, meeting un- futility and folly, the United sheet (made from Rhodesian anti-Communist United States Runaway inflation normally is cent in the past year, with no justifi- der the auspices of the Ameri- Nations undertook to impose ferrochrome imported in cov- more dependent for a strate- caused because public demand ex- cation on the basis of costs. can Iron and Steel Institute, economic sanctions on Rho- ert defiance of the sanctions). KILPATRICK gic material upon Communist ceeds supply. In today's conditions, see the issue in wholly prac- desia. The idea was to bring Russia. Repeal would place Such unconscionable hikes natu- The American ferrochrome however, prices keep going up stead- tical terms. Chrome is an In- the breakaway government in industry was languishing. equipment, domestic require- the United States, which cried rally lend weight to increased de- dispensible element in the ily while purchasing power falls off Salisbury tq its knees. The By early 1972, when the ments for'ferrochrome will out in principle against an mands by labor. making of stainless steel. So United States honored the increase from 470,000 to drastically. Byrd Amendment opened the Arab embargo on oil, in favor What the committee wants is a long as Rhodesian ferro- sanctions. No other important closed doors, several things 525,000 tons annually. If the of a U.N. embargo on Rhode- chrome remains available, set of guidelines from the council The President has acknowledged nation did. Rhodesia declined had happened. With Japanese Byrd Amendment Is repealed, sian chrome. Repeal would be mounting domestic stainless to be brought to her knees. our domestic production ca- which will govern both prices and that the domestic economy is the na- engineering and Italian equip- seen by African nations in the steel will move swiftly from In 1(71, Virginia's Senator ment, the industrious Rhode- pacity will drop from 240,000 U.N. as a mere sop, and these wages, and a toughness on the part tion's number one problem. We be- critical to desperate. Harry F. Byrd took the lead sians had built the finest fer- to 200,000 tons. Somehow, at nations would continue to in- of Mr. Ford to see that they are ob- lieve brainpower is available to him By way of background: In in restoring some sanity to a rochrome processing plant in exorbitant price, 325,000 tons sult and to oppose the United served. that can bring about a solution. His- I960, in ai act of hypocrisy, lunatic condition. Congress the world, squarely atop their of ferrochrome (or its sheet States in any event. Also asked by the committee personal toughness will have to be tremendous fields of chrome equivalent) will have to be By killing the Senate bill, all-encompassing, making certain ore. They were shipping fer- imported. And this is the the House could strike a-Mow were an easing of the tight money sharp-edged irony: One way that no segment of our nation is rochrome throughout the for chrome, consumers and policy, a }5 billion cut in federal world. The United States steel or another, it will still be common sense. It's a blow spending, an expanded program of spared because of political consid- industry swiftly became a Rhodesian chrome, shipped worth striking. public service jobs and income tax erations and thoughts of an election customer. In 1973, the U.S. cuts for low income families, with that is more than two years away. imported 155,000 tons of fer- rochrome; at least 105,000 tons came directly or in- Today in history directly from Rhodesia. Highway bond issues Where are we now? The By The Associated Press In 1934, Babe Ruth made Senate, Incomprehensibly, The state Senate has approved want anything to interfere with its his farewell appearance as a voted last December to re- Today is Tuesday, the 267th regular player with the New two bills authorizing public ques- acceptance by the electorate. peal the Byrd Amendment. In day of 1974 There are 98 days York Yankees. tions on the November ballot that If the Assembly heeds the pleas July, the House Foreign Af- left in the year. fairs Committee voted 25-9 to In 1941. in World War II, Al- would permit issuance of $300 mil- of organized labor and discards Today's highlight in his- lied governments pledged ad- approve the repealer. House tory: lion in bond issues for highways and those of environmentalists, they'll sponsors admit privately that herence to the Atlantic Char- railroads. The Assembly is sched- On this date in 1955, Presi- ter. vpte for the highway bill and Uov. they do not now have the dent Dwight Eisenhower suf- uled to vote on them next week. Byrne will most likely sign it into votes In sight to win passage In 19(3, the U.S. Senate ra- fered a heart attack while on tified a treaty with Britain law. If that is the case, New Jersey on the floor. Without some vacation in Denver. We are reserving decision on the vigorous arm-twisting from and the Soviet Union limiting residents should prepare themselves On this date: nuclear tests. merits of these bills, even though we President Ford, they cannot to give the questions a great deal of In 1780, during the Revolu- Ten years ago; Willi Stoph know some of the highway improve- get the votes. Temporarily, tionary War, Benedict Arnold thought via deep soul searching. the bill languishes. Mr. Ford, was named Premier of East ments would benefit Monmouth escaped to a British ship after Germany, succeeding the late New Jersey has enough maca- who voted In favor of the County and that construction work- attempting to betray the West Otto Grotewwohl. dam jungles, and we hope that its Byrd Amendment when he Point fortifications on the ers need the jobs. was a Michigan congressman Five years ago: Eight per- citizens — in a desire to curb gov- Hudson River. sons were put on trial in Chi- three years ago, has given lip In 1789, the U.S. Supreme One of our fears is that voters ernment spending — will not keep service, but no more, to the cago, charged with conspiring Court was being formed and to incite riots at the 1968 will reject not only the $300 million the state from its commendable ef- repeal measure. There the President George Washington matter stands. Democratic National Con- questions, but the 1200 million forts to preserve open land. If the named John Jay of New York vention. ' bond issue question Green Acres proposa. . l is killed, What does all this mean to as the first Chief Justice. consumers? The new catalyt- In 1869, there was panic on Thought for today: If you. that will appear on t\ie ballot In, therms no way of knowing if that ic^ converters to control au- that regard we share the views of space will be available in the two O»rln In Th« PUIn Onltt Wall Street after an attempt are patient in one moment of llerblock i* taking « h'w «*«'** "II«»/'"**'» ° uo°1'' tomobile emissions demand by financiers Jay Gould and anger, you will escape a hun- State Sen. Alfred N. Beadleslon, R- years it would take before the qucs- stainless steel. Once these James Fisk to comer the gold dred days of sorrow — Chi- who says he doesn't lion could be asked again. The MMBH touch converters become standard market. nese proverb. SHREWSBURY N J TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 24. 1974 The DaOy Register 7 West Long Branch's mayor replies to a critic J44 Norwood Ave. cooperated in the repair and country or how we can expect and unjust act of the presi- West Long Branch, N.J 077M maintenance of borough prop- Topping off his plea to the ners, if for no other reason which come to mind only to To the Editor: erty. President to grant no am- than to conserve the supply of understate m:iy feelings any criminal or law-breaker dent must be condemned and to pay for his mistakes. revoked. In response to a letter In my years as a member FROM OUR nesty under any circum- newsprint. But if you must After this absurd injustice. As a law-abiding American Respectfully, which was circulated in our of this government, I have stances, the colonel comes up print his heavily biased tones, 1 do not see how we can have please afford others the citizen, I feel that this absurd Leon S Adamski town, the borough ol West tried to avoid friction in our with a challenging statement anv faith in the law of this READERS democratic opportunity of Long Branch, I wiih to reply whole family. We have re- to the President that is just equal space for balancing and as follows: solved our differences and incredible: "... If yotf are in- MUiiniiniiii luiuiHiiiiiini strumental in letting these sobering opinions at the same I'm sorry that Mr. Levin have always put the cowards off easy, you could time. has seen (it to attack my borough's interests above our information to the attention of NOTICE TO MILITARY SERVICE be responsible for the loss of Sincerely yours, .leadership of our fine own. It will be a sad .day your readen> borough. When Mr. Levin was the next war, by having set a Hal Sherman when we can no longer oper- Sincerely yours. policy whereby a multitude of VOTERS AND TO THEIR elected, I invited him to join ate in that way. A citizen and veteran Clarence M Kelley cowards could avoid service of W W II with us in our continuing ef- Very truly yours, Director forts to maintain the high with little or no punishment " RELATIVES AND FRIENDS Henry J. Shaheen. The loss of the next war, in- standards of borough govern- Mayor deed! Not only does he bore Unjust act ment. To his surprise and n the hooks us with a dogmatic position 17 Chestnut Drive perhaps consternation, there 10 Oyster Bay Dnw on this difficult problem but Hazlel. N.J. 07730 was little to find fault with. FBI today Humsnn. N.I he compounds his lack of To the Editor: He observed the dedication of If you are in the military service or the spouse or dependent of a The Daily Register has re- charity and understanding by I am a wage-earner, tax- the borough workers, the United States Department person in military service or are a patient in a veteran's hospital or ol Justice ceived a copy of ihe fnllnvunn predicting Die only thing that payer, ex-serviceman, voter, various appointed boards and letter for publication a civilian attached to or serving with the Armed Forces of the Federal Bureau of military men apparently live and member of the "silent- the volunteer agencies. He Dear Mr President Investigation for: the next war. majority." I am mature United States without the State of New Jersey, or the spouse or de- saw us worry at budget time, 1 speak now as an ordinary enough, to realize that there pendent of and accompanying or residing with a Civilian attached balancing the needs of the Washington, DC 2053-1 To the Editor: citizen who looked to you al- In a remarkable gesture the are problems in America and to or serving with the Armed Forces of the United States, and de- borough against the taxes to most as a "beacon" — cer- It was a pleasure to read new President accepted a faults with our system of gov- be levied. He realized that we tainly as a great hope that sire to vote, or if you are a relative or friend of any. such person, the article on our Red Bank suggestion from one of his ernment. I have, never- had no control over the your integrity and fair mind- who, you believe, will desire to vote in the General Election to be resident agency which ap- sons to reconsider the subject theless, always had a deep- spending of N per cent of the ed judgment would lift us all peared recently in The Bails of amnesty. Then the Presi- down faith in America and its held on November 5, 1974, kindly write to the undersigned at once taxes collected. When he first out of the mire of Nixon poli- Register. This interesting and dent posed the thought coura- leaden. making application for a Military Service Ballot to be voted in said spoke about the investment of tics. Perhaps that you would informative interview with geously and in a most serious The Watergate scandal pardon Nixon is not the issue election to be forwarded to you, stating your name, age, serial surplus money, he knew that Special Agent in Charge J. and sincere manner, not for was, to say the least, deeply Perhaps thai you did pardon number if you are in Military Service, home address and the ad- we were in constant touch Wallace LaPrade and Senior any political gain, but rather disturbing to me, however, af- Nixon at this time is the issue dress at which you are stationed or can be found, or if you desire with our bankers and that we Resident Agent Victor J to a veterans' group. That he ter the initial shock subsided, while the spectre of deceit were borrowing money for as Campi was well written, and has acted so Is one of the I felt that we, as a nation, the military service ballot for a relative or friend then make an appli- and mistrust still linger over little as 3 per cent. He knew I hope you will express my most heartening acts of a would survive this crisis and cation under oath for a military service ballot to be forwarded to our country and Us unique that we would move when it appreciation to the writer, leader to "bind up the become stronger because of system of government. him, stating in your application that he is over the age of 18 years was feasible, and we did. Of Jim McCormick wounds" of the recent war it, for, ironically, evil often and stating his name, serial number if he is in military service, home course he joins us in this ef- Most Americans long to lay and close the ranks between begets good. fort. to rest the nightmare of Wa- generations. The vengeful and address and the address at which he is stationed or can be found. Articles such as this give Indeed, the investigation 1 When he needed help and the public a better under tergate. Indeed, rest and vindictive attitudes of the which followed, and the work Forms of application can be obtained from the undersigned or your advice in running his depart- standing of the FBI, and it peace have been ours for this colonel can only serve to fur- of Congress and the Senate municipal clerk. ment, we provided both and was good of you to bring this your anniversary of one ther divide and alienate our seemed to be accomplishing Dated: September 5, 1974 month in the White House young people whose voices, it just that. I was again starting Nixon was resting and we the must be admitted, were the to feel better about America people wen1 recuperating. real reasons for our final Now, we are told that Pres- withdrawal from the most un- ident Ford has granted an Now perhaps it is still not justifiable and ridiculous war "unconditional pardon" to too late Let the pardon re- the country ever fought. What Richard Nixon. If I was main, but open the books, the price patriotism, Colonel? Ben|amln H. Danakln, County Clark tapes, the reports to ihe shocked by Watergate, I was Election Department American people. We can Mr. Editor, I ask that you sickened by this act of the Highway #9 & Campbell Court take the truth far better than give us relief from further president. I cannot find words Freehold, New Jersey 07728 drown in a sea of cynicism historical and simplistic patri- to voice my reaction to it. Benjamin H. Dantkln, otic subject lessons from the "Grossly unjust," "total- Respectfully submitted—: County Clerk Americanism chairman eme- itarian," "disgraceful," -"urn Mrs. David Freeman ritus of the National Sojour- believable," are a few words Independent Republican
Happy camper Family and Children's Ser- vice Inc. of Monmouth County 191 Bath Ave Long Branch, N.J. 07740 To the Editor: Guess who's home from camp? Remember the little boy around the corner who has no daddy and is the oldest of five children living in a three-room apartment? Well, your generosity enabled us to pack him up and send him away with 884 other children for two weeks of carefree camping in a place where youngsters laugh and sing from morning til night. What did he bring home? Not just dirty clothes and a new pet frog! Somewhere, tucked away in his blue jeans pocket is a sense of broth- Today erhood and a love of sharing that you gave to him. He has a new friend and some valu- able memories to take back to school. His smile is his thanks to you and more than enough in- centive for us to continue, with your help, this worth- while program. He thanks you for a won- Stylish low heel derful summer and I thank A really terrific moc topped with just a touch you for opening your hearts. of smart ornament! In camel or Mack man-made. Sincerely, Judy Sparling . Retiring Chairman Campership Committee Futile protest II Marcshire Middletown, N.J. 07748 To the Editor: Throughout the history of Watergate I clung to the be- lief that there is such a thing as justice and that Nixon would have to answer for his actions before Congress or a court of law. Now, with Presi- dent Ford's premature par- Reg. don, I have lost my faith in justice. In frustration, I join with a multitude of Ameri- 10.99 cans spitting into the wind in futile protest. Sincerely, Paul T. Brady 877 Crepe-Soled Wedge Tourtillot letters A sensationally soft crepe-soled wedge that 45 Glenwood Drive goes anywhere in style. In rich tan man-made. New Shrewsbury, N.J. 07724 To the Editor: It is indeed astonishing that • The Register continues to With things costing more, and budgeting our 7V»% "Big Dollar" for 4 to 7 years and only •print those long-winded, pe- dantic, super-patriotic letters becoming bewildering, isn't it nice to know $1000. k (fashion Shoe Salon from one Col. R. R. Tourtil- that there's a place to go We have a plan just right lot, USA Ret. His letter ad- where you can save a little for your savings appetite. dressed to the President in ... or a lot? which he objects violently to United You deserve a buck today the proposal of some sort of At our bank, we have — come on in and save your amnesty for non-Veterans of Vietnam Is truly a reflection many ways to make your way - right here... right Alexander) of military paranoia at work. dollars grow. now. How else can one describe a A special not* to out high Interest savers ... You can feast on our 5% Federal taw and regulation prohibit the pay- letter that rages about "cow- ment ol a time depotit prior to maturity unless everyday Regular Savings three months ol the interest thereon is forfeited ardly ingrates" and "scum" and Interest on the amount withdrawn is reduced and "dregs" and "cowards" Account §r help yourself to BanK to the regular paaabook rate OPEN EVar MKHT TO «.» M. NO MAIl M WOW 0MBS.I and "copouts" and "despi- MID STATE MONMOUTH SHOPPING CWTBt - EATONTOWN, N.J. cable deserters and draft dod- gers." Phone Number tor All Offices-264-2800 Member F.D I.C 8 TheDMlyRegfcter SHREWSBURY. N J TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1974 Vegas hotel executive frowns on Jersey casino plan jersey would be biting off blacks." patronage and expediency By PETER M. HALDKN more than it can chew were it (Sect* •» Five Artklfs) Put race won't be the only i hire the best men in the stumbling block facing pro- business to run my casino." to legalize casino gambling •In order to run a casino. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - posed casinos in Atlantic City, he said. "If I were in Atlantic he declared. City, I'd have to hire the son you have to have expert*. For Downstairs, the huge casino example, you need employes was alive with throngs of ele- "There's no way a state of the mayor or the nephew can operate gambling, either or a state senator to keep my who can spot the professional gantly clad tourists hoping to cheats. You need dealers, ride that hot streak to for- efficiently or effectively," license clean. The spoils sys croupiers, and the like. tune. said the executive "They can tern may work for politicians, "New Jersey would be bel- The games people played control it, like they do here, but not for businessmen. ter off if it ju*t legalized slot were varied: blackjack, but they can't run it " "This Is a business that craps, baccarat, roulette. Political pressures, he needs a bead and a tail or it machines, which run them- Only the motivation remained stated, would lead to hiring won't work." selves, and forgot about the constant. and firing practices based on The executive said New rest." One floor above, a hotel ex- ecutive, who declined to be identified, sat in his office suite and flatly predicted that racial and political factors would prevent a repetition of NOTICE TO PERSONS DESIRING that scene from ever oc- curring in Atlantic City "Look at the kind of tourist CIVILIAN ABSENTEE BALLOTS we get here," he said. "They're basically anjiffluent crowd that can afford to fly here or are passing through on their way east or west. If you are a qualified and registered voter in the State who expects "And, let's face it, we don't to be absent outside the State on November 5,1974, or a qualified have a problem with . . . and registered voter who will be within the State on November 5, blacks." 1974, but because of illness or physical disability or because of the He paused to choose his observance of a religious holiday pursuant to the tenets of your reli- words carefully. AP mum*** "How many of our guests gion, or because of resident attendance at a school, college or uni- THE STRIP — The famed Las Vegas Strip at midday. Casinos dot the Strip as far as the eye con see. would want to rub elbows versity, will be unable to cast your ballot at the polling place in your with the blacks in Atlantic district on said date, and you desire to vote in the General Election City?" he asked rhetorically. to be held November 5,1974, kindly write or apply in person to the "Or the blacks from South undersigned at once requesting that a civilian absentee ballot be Philadelphia and New York Court approves arbitration who will be drawn to Atlantic forwarded to you. Such request must state your home address, and City? the address to which said ballot should be sent, and must be FREEHOLD - The Tinton torney for the teachers asso- reduction of Instructional per- In the letter, which was "They might run off your signed with your signature, and state the reason why you will not Falls Education Association ciation, told the court that all sonnel. written June 17 and was read better customers." has been given the go-ahead three complaints were con- be able to vote at your usual polling place. No Civilian absentee Miss Abda's contract was Into the record, Miss Abda Asked about black guests at from Superior Court to pro- tained in the same grievance ballot will be furnished or forwarded to any applicant unless request not renewed because of a de- thanked the administration Las Vegas hotels, including ceed to binding arbitration which was filed with the su- crease in enrollment at the for telling her they would his own, the executive said, therefore is received not less than 7 days prior to the election, and with the Board of Education perintendent of schools on school, necessitating a reduc- keep her in mind for the next "The blacks we get here are contairte the foregoing information. Forms of application can be ob- of the Tinton Falls Schools on tion In staff. vacancy to come up in the April 23. two complaints. affluent ones, people with tained from the undersigned or your municipal clerk. Judge Lane held that the district but said she was get- Judge Lane said he didn't class. They're not your street Dated: September 5,1974 Superior Court Judge Mer- non-renewal of the contract of ting married in two weeks quite understand the other ritt Lane Jr. Friday ruled Miss Abda, a non-tenured and planned to move out of two complaints, but held they Wells elected that the teachers association teacher, Was strictly and so- the area and would not be should go to arbitration. He could seek arbitration on lely a management responsi- available for another assign- said Mr. Barger could get the to state board complaints that the Board of bility and was not arbitable. emtn In the district. particulars of the complaints PRINCETON - Robert C. Education failed to properly The Board of Education Mr. Barger said he as- from the arbitrator, Wells of Matawan was elected Benjamin H. Danakln, County Clerk post Job vacancies and that had contended the teachers sumed the other two com- to the board of directors of Election Department the administration failed to association should take its plaints of the teachers related Bloodmobile visit is the New Jersey Association Highway »9 a Campbell Court give the teachers representa- complaints to the state Com- to Miss Abda, even though slated in Freehold for Mental Health at the asso- Freehold, New Jersey 07728 tion in matters affecting their missioner of Education, rath- they did not so specify. If ciation's annual meeting in continued employment. FREEHOLD - The Red er than seek binding arbi- they should go to arbitration, Cross Bloodmobile will be at Nassau Inn. He denied permission, how- Benjamin H. Danskln tration. At the hearing the he added, he wanted a bill of the Park Ave. School, Rl. 33, Mr. Wells is the Monmouth ever, for the association to County Clerk board's attorney, Martin M. particulars from the associ- Monday Sept. 30 between 1:30 County adjuster and director move Into binding arbitration Barger, argued that the Is- ation explaining what they and 6:30 p.m., Jack Stein- of welfare and president of on a third complaint — that sues in the case no longer ex- are all about. berg, chairman of the annual the New Jersey Welfare the non-renewal of the con- isted anyway because Miss "I say that if it relates to blood drive, has announced. Council. tract of Denise Abda, a sec- 1 Abda had moved out of the Miss Abda it's moot, if it Doctors and trained Red ond grade teacher at the Ma- area and had written a letter doesn't relate to Miss Abda. Cross technicians will be in hala F. Atchlson School last to the school explaining she I'd like to know what It is," attendance as well as volun- jear, for the current school no longer would be available t>e said. teers from the borough and year constituted an improper for a Job In the system. Theodore M. Simon, the at- Freehold Township. InaCarteret You Can Look Gbod .. INSURED savings account your money moves in AND IT NEED NOT BE A BAD EXPERIENCE one direction only UP! CLAYTON & MAGEE SAVINGS GERTIFOTES-GUMANTEED INTEREST Full interest rate from day of deposit. Wide choice of maturity dates.
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i —l M BBBJ All Passbook and Certificate Accounts are available to individual* and all corporations, and art Insured to $20,000. by FSLIC. rrzs _l aD2E CARTERET Men's and Bay's Outfitters since 1846 SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 19 BROAD STREET RED BANK Airport Plaza, Route 36, Hazlet • 63 Church St., Keansburg • 160 Main St., Matawan OPEN WED. & FRI. EVESTIL 9 P.M. Main Office: 866 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 07102 • 201-622-8010 17 offices in Newark, East Orange, South Orange, Verona, Madison, Phillipsburg. Oradell, Hazlet, Keansburg and Matawan Student aid prospects SHREWSBURY N J TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 24 1974 By SYLVIA POBTEU •"•"•- " """ Mr..— urcome , number ofi other chil Mining firm rebounding t0 SUpport the bread Whether you are merely a YHllP MrklV^^o """ ' " should eventually provide (The authors cannot answer better than average student X"«J« JMUINEY S wlluiers *& and reUrement By ROGER E. SPEAR half Aad DAVID R SABt.lVT A concession from the Phil more substantial pension ben- all mail personally, but will or one with a straight-A plans, unusual financial bur- ippine government to develop efits I would stick with your answer all questions possible record, your key to getting a dens such as other children in Q — I bought 200 shares of and operate a nickel mine present plan in their column.) scholarship or large amounts WORTH college at the same time, an Mannduque Mining & Indus- and refinery, which is sched- ol other financial aid to this expensive illness, whether the •••••••>• •>••<• im •>» spouse works, debts. trial (ASE) last spnng at $5 a uled for completion this era of spiraling living costs, but with two^chUdren $2,890 The CSS also weighs your share. It is now down to month, will significantly alter SHOP A COMPARE will be proving need You sured by what it can "reason and with three $2,190 Out of family's total assets - cash about $2 Would you suggest the company's sales break- cannot Just plead poverty. ably afford." Today's student an adjusted effective income 7 savings, equity in the home, holding or taking the loss - down. Nickel will then con- You must prove it. financial aid programs are of $20,000, parents with one securities owned, etc. — and D.S. iiiiauiiijiiiMjaiiiiiaiUiillliaiilliililftllllllllli If you are the gifted child designed to fill the gap be- dependent child should be applies a share of this total to A — Because 81 per cent of of a very needy family, you tween that sum and total col- able to contribute $4,910 to- the amount a family can af- total sales are denved from have the best chances for lege costs ward each student, but with ford to contribute. This snare, copper mining (15 per cent SUCCESSFUL most scholarships and aid The basic guidelines for es two dependent children $3,990 from cement) shares of this programs. But help also is though, is comparatively and with three $1,130 timating how needy you and small — less than 10 per cent Philippine producer reflect available if you are a student Be warned: if you're plan- INVESTING your family are have just - and assets up to $10,000 are the widely fluctuating course town's in a family which has other been updated by the College not counted. If the family ning on college in September of copper wire bar prices on burdensome expenses. Or you • I •• IIIIM In Scholarship Service, part of head is more than 55 years 1975, your financial aid appli- the London Metal Exchange may get help if college costs cation deadlines are only a the non-profit service of the old, even higher asset totals This price has receded sharp, tribute SO per cent of sales, are especially high at the in College Entrance Exam- few months away. Go at once ly from the peak levels SAVE FUEL! are disregarded, for there are copper 40 per cent and ce- sitution you want to attend. ination 'Board in New York deductions for a retirement to your high school guidance around the year-end No- office and get a copy of CSS's ment 10 per cent. Strong Conserve energy. This is the For instance, a family with City. allowance. netheless, for the first half, worldwide demand should three children to support on a If you are facing this era's "Meeting College Costs A company sales were up 59 per best value around. Caff today. Your family may have a to- Guide for Parents and Stu- continue to buoy prices for yearly income of $10,000 is monstrously high college cent with net income gaining this metal. Shares should be considered by most colleges tal income of 115,000, for in- dents." It's free and will give 71 per cent before extraor- On our HEAVY DUTY costs — as parents or stu- stance, but after all adjust- retained for recovery. today as in greater need - in you an idea of what contribu- dinary credits. On a pershare dents — this updating is of ments are made, the (igure Q — I am presently in- terms of eligibility for a tion will be expected from basis, Mannduque reported 16 crucial importance to you CSS uses to estimate an ap- vesting via Educators tax- scholarship and other aid - your family. cents versus 10 cents for-the "HUSKY" For the CSS helps major U.S. propriate contribution by sheltered annuity regulations than a family with one child colleges determine the eligibi- your parents may be only in a variable annuity. At this WHITE and an income of $20,000 lity of students for financial 112,000 of adjusted income. point, I find myself with a Even the $20,000a year fami- aid — and its new updating, The contribution expected cash value $800 less than I ly may be considered says Alexander G. Sidar, Jr , Bank promotes ALUMINUM from this two-child family have put Into the plan. What "needy" - if there are three "will give many more stu- may be only $100 a year,' Si- is the future (or this type of COMBINATION children to support and if the dents a better chance for get- dar says, against a f 1,600 con- annuity? Would I be better off college charges $3,000 to ting larger amounts of finan- tribution under the old for- Mrs. Pintavalle investing in some other long- WINDOW $4,000 or more a year (as so cial aid." mula. SCHENECTADY, NY - active member of the Sche- range tax-sheltered plan? — many now do). How does the CSS figure As of 1975-76, here is what Mrs. James Pintavalle has nectady chapter of the Ameri- S Y Although less needy stu- "total" costs and family the CSS believes parents been promoted to assistant can Institute of Banking A — The variable annuity dents in middle-income fami- 'need"? should be able to contribute manager of the Rotterdam of- concept - to provide an in- lies are expected to contribute In calculating total college each college year for each fice of Schenectady Trust Co. flation-resistant pension in- substantial shares of their costs, the CSS includes not child — at various income after taking part in the com- come for retirees — has come MINIMUM EACH earnings, savings, and assets only tuition and fees but also levels and with varying num- pany's management training under increasing fire re- 6 toward college costs, your room, board, transportation, bers of dependent children. program. cently. Sagging market val- family's total financial pic- clothing, books, spending Out of an adjusted effective Mrs. Pintavalle is the ues for the underlying com- ture is taken into account — money. In calculating family income of $8,000 a year, par- daughter of Mrs. Catherine mon stock portfolios have and the amount your family need, it lakes into account ents with one dependent child Ksposito and the late Salva- provided decreasing monthly is expected to pay is mea- these major factors: family should be able to contribute tore Esposito, formerly of benefits to retired annuitants INSTALLED $290 towards each student, Long Branch. at a time when raging in- She has been with the Sche- flation has seriously in- but with two or three children 'DON'T CONFUSE THIS HEAVY DUTY can contribute nothing. Out of nectady Trust Co. since 1965, creased their living costs having served as teller and WINDOW WITH THE LIGHTWEIGHT an adjusted effective income While some pension experts FLIMSY WINDOWS" of $10,000 a year, parents with head teller in the branch op- see a decline in the use of one dependent child should be erations division before her these vehicles (or pension • Triple Track able to contribute $820 toward current assignment. programs, others point out • FuNyWM«M • Mln. 6 at This Sal* Price DALE each student, but with two Mrs. Pintavalle is also an that for currently employed • Picture Ffam * D*ttyn »Uo toGian t 101 United InchM children only $450 and with persons covered by variable three $180. Out of an adjusted annuities this could prove a CARNEGIE effective income of $12,000 a Raritan Nation boon. Payments made into a 32 BROAD ST. RED BANK program during a bear mar- DALE CARNEGIE* year, parents with one de- COURSE pendent child should be able is organizing ket offer greater potential for 741-7500 long-range appreciation and to contribute $1,2(0 toward HAZLET - The Arrow Mrs. James I'lnUwllr each student, but with two de- head-Bayshore YMCA, a pendent children only $900 branch of the community FREE and with three $590 YMCA in Red Bank, has an- nounced that the "Raritan Out of an adjusted effective Nation," comprised of tribes 10 WAVS THIS COURSE Preview Meetings; income of $14,000 a year, par- serving fathers and sons in WILL BENEFIT ents with one dependent child OPEN HAZIET the Malawan-Hazlet-Keyport MEN AND WOMEN should be able to contribute SHOM MINI INN, IT. 15 So. area, is having orientation $1,900 toward each student, ntm, HfT. I*- ...I Ml. meetings. 4 InaMM Pciu and Confidinci but with two children only Sptok EffKtivily IHUH., oa. i * ML $1,380 and with three $1,000 The meetings will begin at 8 THUS., OH. II I ML DAYS Ml Yourself and Your 14MS Out of an adjusted effective p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 8, at the Strathmore School, Matawan; l« Tout Btit With Any Group NEPTUNE income of $16,000 a year, par- JUMPING MOM COUNTtY CUM ents with one dependent child Wednesday, Oct. 9, at Syca- ONLY JUMPING HOOK ID. should be able to contribute more Drive School, Hazlet; Think and Sptalt on Your Fe.1 Tim., oo. i J ML $2,730 toward each student, Thursday, Oct. 10 at Beers SALE Control Fear and Worry Street School, Hazlet, and run., oci. • JPJI. with two dependent children 644 SHREWSBURY AVE , NEW SHREWSBURY, N.J. 201-842 1177 It a Better (onvtriotionolM Tuesday, Oct. 15, at a Key- $2,010 and with three $1,510. (OPPOSITE CmCLt CHEVROLET) STARTS Prnrnteti by port location to be announced. Develop Your Hidden Abilities Out of an adjusted effective Wit WIITtOM t AStOC Interested persons may ob- WED. THUR. FRI. 10 to 9; SAT. 10 to 6 WED. 10 A.M. 10. font That letter Job, Mori liKomi income of $18,000 a year, par- «0 StMhf M. tain additional information by WtfcMiiif. M. J. 07040 ents with one dependent child telephoning the Bayshore "WHERE Wt TAKE OUT THE LABELS AND YOU SAVE PLENTY' Ttk 7U41M should be able to contribute YMCA office. $3,810 toward each student, OFTEN IMITATED — NEVER DUPLICATED
OVER 200 JUST IN FRESH THIS WEEK BY POPULAR REQUEST... Community intoduces JUNIORS BETTER BRANDED YEPII ANOTHER SHIPMENT "SUPER NEW FALL "75" STYLES JUNIORS FAMOUS LABEL SWEATERS FALL "75" STRAIGHT LINE • CARDIGANS • VESTS • TROUSERS PULLOVERS • SIZES! BELTED • SELF BELT POLYESTER NONE AND $70NON0E $C00 $£00 HIGHER RAYON HIGHER BLENDS 7 5°VTO 6 IN GROUP IN GROUP FANCIES AND FLAT RIBBED KNIT 100'S OF COLORS AND STYLES NAT. ADV. UP TO $18.00 IF PERF. NAT. ADV. UP TO $22.00 IF PERF.
"SPECIAL PURCHASE" OVER 350 ALL NEW JUST IN FRESH JR'S. BETTER NAME BRANDED MISSES - JUNIORS BETTER • SAVE THE WILDLIFE PRINTS • SOUDS. DENIMS • CORDS • WOOL BLEND • DOTS • STRIP!S • NOVELTIES SHIRT Tbjhe^)youoopcwitti life's little surprises. SIZES 8 TO 18 AND Write-A-Loan is a free personal checking account that includes an available line ol credit CINCH to help you cope with unexpected expenses. Here's how it works: BLOUSES WAIST As a line ol credit — As a Iree personal checking account — AND 00 JACKETS I NONE * You apply lor a line ol credit from $500 to $5,400. * No minimum balance required, HIGHER * When your credit's approved, that money is yours f No individual check charge, $700 f No charge for monthly statements. 4 to use whenever you want, no questions asked. All IN GROUP you do is write a check lor any amount to the limit v No monthly service charge. of your credit. NAT. ADV.°VPTO $20.00 IF PERF. * You pay interest only on the amount you use. And Community's Write-A-Loan. NAT. ADV. UP TO $28.00 IF PERF. you don't have to repay the entire amount before Another good idea from the bank that is using your line of credit again. the best friend your family ever had. DIRECT FROM A FAMOUS BRANDED N.Y. MANUFACTURER OVER 350 ALLNEW JUST BROUGHT IN FRESH THIS WEEK •Hf Community MISSES 100% POLYESTER FALL "75" SIZES 7/8 TO 17/18 Mix 'N' MATCH State Bank and Trust Company » SHIRT JACKETS • $roo $ 00 FriendFor your conveniences of ,th olticees arFamilye located in: . MIDDLETOWN/1250 ROUTE 35 T0 NAVE8INK/100 ROUTE 35 BLAZERS • SKIRTS • * 10 UMCHOFT/NEWMAN SPRINGS ROAD & MIDDLETOWN-UNCROFT ROAD LEONARDO/ROUTE 38 AND COORDINATED BLOUSES IN GROUP NAT. ADV. TO $30.00 IF PERF. other convenient offices In Union County. PIN STRIPES • SOLIDS • CHECKS • DOTS MEMBER F.D.I.C. 10 The Deify Register SHREWSBURY N J TUESOAV. SEPTEMBER 24.1974 French dolls delux The French, it seems, have a knack for excellence, whether it be in the production of food, the design of furni- ture, the flair for clothes - or in the production of dolls de- luxe. One of the supreme doll manufacturers in Paris for many yean was the Jumeau house, which was established in the 1840's by Pierre Francois Jumeau. To Jumeau and his son us Emile, fine workmanship was a way of life. Their early dolls had kid bodies stuffed with sawdust and bisque or porcelain 11 heads. Well formed, they had small waists and large hips, and were sold either undressed or dressed in all kinds of exquisite attire. This was followed by an all-wood version which 3m Jumeau crafted to a high level of perfection. ABOUT ANTIQUES i In the IBM's a factory was established at Montreull, near Paris, to produce dolls heads of bisque and porcelain. Pre- 1 I i viously these heads had been made in Germany. These M M Jumeau Dolls are generally considered to be the finest dolls i made. They had rosy cheeks, unusually expressive over-sized eyes, and were often crowned with human hair wigs. completed models Over the years he won medals from the Heads move Paris Expositions and the various Exhibitions in London, In the lHHO's Emile Jumeau is credited with inventing the Vienna, Philadelphia, and in Sydney and Melbourne, Austra- rubber-string composition body. The heads were separated so lia. that they could move. Previously most Jumeau Dolls had Evolution conllBurd been of adult figures, but with the new body many types of The Jumeau Doll was continually being perfected. Vari- little-girl dolls were made. They almost all wore earrings, as ous French patents were obtained for Emile Jumeau, for ex- many little girls at that time had their ears pierced. The ample, for an eyelid which dropped to portray a sleeping doll Jumeau Dolls came in 14 sizes, the largest being about 29 in- The evolution of the doll has continued to this day, with the ches high. The trademark Bebe Jumeau can be found on the result that Jumeau Dolls currently being manufactured bear bodies of dolls that were made after 1880. little resemblance to the old. You should be prepared to pay a Jumeau accumulated many awards for all phases of his few hundred dollars for one of those almost perfect creatures doll-making craft — for the bodies, the clothes, and for the of the doll world of yesteryear Hiccoughs are no joke
THOSE FABULOUS FIFTIES - Leading a cheer mella Brown. Mrs. Brown Is chairman of the party for a nostalgic Sock Hop being staged Saturday at planned by the fire company's Ladles Auxiliary. 9 p.m. In the Colonial Room of the River Plaza Free beer will be served and music will be by The Dear Ann Landers: May I at work for nearly a year. flrehouse, Applegate St.. are, from left, Mrs. Har- Revival. respond to "Mrs. Sherlock Our sex life was wonderful riet Rocheford, Mrs. Pat Meeker and Mrs. Car Holmes"? She wrote about ANN LANDERS before the accident, and it is the dude who hiccoughed ev- wonderful now. ery time he was in a crowd. Again, my thanks for all the She was sure he did it to at- me medication and pre- parents to send you to a ther- good you do. — An Ann Fan tract attention. scribed complete bed rest. In apist. No need to be explicit. Dear Friend: And my about 13 days I stopped hic- I am not a professional, but Simply tell them you feel thanks to you for another coughing. I am an authority in the sense depressed and troubled and chance to inform my readers Weddings that I'm a victim. Please tell In the past two years, how- that you want professional in this very sensitive area. I Mrs. Sherlock that she could ever, I have had three recur- help. appreciate the opportunity be wrong. rences, each lasting from one Once you understand WHY immensely. to three weeks. This meant you are stealing from your Dear Ann Landers: I am a Kaczmarek-Galiastro The first time I had the hic- getting back on medication coughs it went on for nearly dad you will be able to stop. married woman, past SO, too PERTH AMBOY - Miss port. and waiting it out. Please tell A good therapist will also eight weeks. After several people not to jump to con- darned old to blush. But I do Francine Galiastro and Parents of the couple are help you straighten out a few days I had to go to the hospi- clusions when they hear anyway and it drives me Thomas A. Kaczmarek were Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Ga- other problems which you tal. Everyone thought it was someone hiccoughing in a crazy. I feel my face and married here Sept. 14 in St, liastro, 29 Parkview Drive, very funny, but my chest was didn't mention, but in all pro- neck get hot for no reason ex- Stephen's Catholic Church by public place. It could mean bability exist. Hazlet, and Mr. and Mrs. so sore I could hardly stand real trouble. — From Alpine cept that I am slightly embar- Mrs. Thorn N. Tattle the Rev. lgnatz Juziemski. Chester Kaczmarek, Perth for the doctor to put the ste- Dear Ann: I've been read- rassed by something that is Mrs. Thomas Kaczmarek Dear Alpine: The illness (The former There was a reception in the Amboy. thoscope on it. He told me I ing your wonderful letters said. To look at me you'd (The former you describe causes spasms Linda White) Town and Country Inn, Key- Attending the bride were had a physical problem, gave about people in wheelchairs. think I was'dying of shame. Francine Galiastro) of the diaphragm and can re- Mrs. Frank Zsilavetz, matron In my opinion, one of the Whenever anyone mentions quire surgery. Pope Paul had of honor; Mrs. Joseph Mul greatest services you have it, I get redder — which it several years ago and he rain and the Misses Valerie ever performed is letting makes it twice as bad. Is Tuttle-White Stevens-Evans had to be hospitalized. I'm Kramer, Bernadette DiMarco people know that just because BELFORD - Miss Linda by the Rev. John Koch. RED BANK - Miss Joan ald Pannone were ushers. glad you wrote. It may open a there anything-I can do'about and Ann Marie DiMarco. a person (male or female) is Karen White and Thorn N. Parents of the couple are Dawn Evans, daughter of Mr. Mrs. Stevens is an alumna few eyes and close some it?»-Tomato Face in a wheelchair, it doesn't Tuttle, a film producer, were Mr and Mrs. Albert White, Michael Balogh was best and Mrs. John Barry Evans, of Rumaon-Fair Haven Re mouths. Deai T. Face: Blushing is mean he or she cannot per- an involuntary act, so accept married here Aug. 24 in Bel- 555 Hopping Road, who had a man. Ushers were Karl 18 Elmwood Lane, Fair gional High School. She and Dear Ann Landers: I am a form sexually. it and stcy> fretting. In my ford UnitejjLMethodist Church reception at their home, and Chigas, Ben Soltys, Richard Haven, was married here her husband are graduates of 15-year-old girl with a terrible Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Tuttle of Kaczmarek and Mr. Zsila- Sept. 14 in the First Presby- Drexel Institute, Phila- problem. My husband and I were younger days I secretly en- delphia. Mrs. Stevens is with vied the grls who could blush LOSE FAT Cincinnati, Ohio. vetz. terian Church, Tower Hill, to I steal from my dad's wal- married only ten months the Burroughs Corp., Down- because I'm alive-skinned Mrs. Eileen Florence was Robert Louis Stevens, son of let when he has several bills when he had an accident that STARTING TODAY Mrs. Kaczmarek was grad- ingtown, Pa. Mr. Stevens, a matron of honor. Heather Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Ste- in it and 1 figure he won't paralyzed him from the waist and could never muster up ODRINEX contains tin most uated from Raritan High vens of Camptown, Pa. graduate also of Wyalusing the slightest bit of color, no •flectlva reducing lid available Florence was flower girl. miss one or two. Last week I down. He spent two months in School and is employed as A reception at the Shrews- (Pa.) High School, is em- matter bow hard I tried! without prescription I One tiny Mr. Tuttle had David Kalla- collection teller at United Jer- took $20. a hospital with a broken neck ODRINEX tablet before meals and bury River Yacht Club, Fair ployed by the Getty Oil Co., Confidential to Why Me? her as best man. Peter J. sey Bank/Mldstate, Keyport. We are not poor and I am and eight months in that won- you want to aat INS • down go your White was the usher. Haven, followed the ceremo- Delaware City, Del. derful Rehabilitation Institute Most things that shouldn't caloriei - down goes your weight I not hard up for money. In The bridegroom is an ny conducted by the Rev. Dr. fact, I babysit and have in Chicago. happen to a dog happen to Thousands ol women from coast Mrs. Tuttle attended Ly- to coast report ODRINEX has helped alumnus of Perth Amboy Charles S. Webster. SPAGHETTI DINNER plenty of my own money to I took a three-month in- people. Cheer up. This could coming College, Williamsport, them lose S, 10,20 pounds in a short High School and attended Mrs. William J. Balmer was buy whatever I want. struction course to learn how be a blessing in disguise. If he lime • so can you. Get rid ol ugly tat Pa. Her husband, a U.S. Navy Miami-Dade Junior College, OAKHURST - The Ladies couldn't take that little "set- matron of honor. Also attend- How can I stop this rotten to care for him. We both were and live longer I veteran, attended Ohio Uni- Miami, Fla. He is employed Auxiliary of the Veterans of ing the bride were Polly habit? - A Thief instructed on the sexual as- back," what would he do if he ODRINEX must satisfy or your versity, Santa Barbara (Ca- by W. T. Grant Distribution Foreign Wars Post here will encountered a major crisis? money will be relundad. No questions Evans and Marilyn Kutner. Dear Friend: I urge you to pects of living together. lif.) City College, Santa Bar- Center, Edison. serve a spaghetti dinner Sun- asked. Sold with this guarantee by Evan J. Balmer was ring talk to a guidance counselor My husband has been back Is alcoholism ruining your bara Art Institute, and re- After a wedding trip to Ber- bearer. day from 3:30 to 8:30 p.m. at at school. Or, since money ap- life? Know the danger signals ceived a BA degree from SHOP YOUR muda, Mr. and Mrs. Kaczma- The bridegroom had Rich- the Post Home, 212 Norwood pears to be plentiful in your and what to do. Read the Brooks Institute of Photo- NEAREST rek will make their home In ard Stevens as his best man Ave. There is a special price family, you could ask your Mrs. Mocci booklet, "Alcoholism - Hope RITE AID graphy in Santa Barbara. Sayreville. and Richard Adam and Don- for children. and Help," by Ann Landers. heads PTA Enclose 35 cents in coin with HOLMDEL - Mrs. Ernest your request and a long, Mocci is president of the In- stamped, self-addressed enve- dian Hill School PTA. Ralph lope to Ann Landers, P.O. Robinson, school principal is Box 3346, Chicago, III. 60654. honorary chairman. Serving with Mrs. Mocci are Miss Cathy Beam, first Clubwoman hosts vice president; Mrs. Irwin membership tea Baron, second vice president COLTS NECK - Mrs. John for ways and means;' Mrs. M. Marino Jr., Spring Garden John Carpenter, recording Ave., hosted a membership secretary; Mrs. Robert Capa- tea for. members of the Wom- nelli, corresponding secre- an's Club of Colts Neck today tary; Mrs. Samuel Rise, trea- here in her home. Mrs. Jo- surer; Miss Jane Hubiak, seph DeGrandis is president publications; Mrs. Albert Per- of the group, which opened its kins, room representative; club year last week with a Mrs. Joseph Ioviero, sun- luncheon in the Old Mill Inn, shine; Mrs. Clarence Spring Lake. Guests were McMerty, membership; Mrs. The investment-minded saver will want to take advantage of this exceptional high in- Miss Ursula Anderl, who at- Daniel McCormick, Hi-Lites tended Citizenship Institute at terest rate. Our 7.50% Savings Certificate*, compounded daily, earn our effective an- Newsletter; Mrs. William Douglass College, as the nual yield of 7.90%. Minimum deposit is $5,000 and you can select an annual maturity Smith, pre-school; Mrs. club's delegate. between 4 to 7 years. So, if it's high yield you ^imj^on your saving* Investments, you'll Charles Burke, publicity book; Mrs. Michael Hode- GARDEN TOPIC get it at Metropolitan Federal Savings. §f| cker, cultural arts; Mrs. Jo- OCEANPORT - Douglas seph Catalano; audio-visual; Krampert of the Monmouth Mrs. George Thomas, safety; LIMITED OFFER-ACT NOW! County Parks System, wiU be Mrs. John Djorkholm, school guest speaker at the opening education; Mrs. Robert A variety of Other savings plans and savings certiflcat meeting of the Oceanport Burke, legislation; Mrs. Tim- are also available. There's one designed to meet your Garden Club Thursday at 1 othy Foley, hospitality; Mrs. p.m. here in the Community specific savings goal. Edward McHarg, parlia- mm Center. His topic will be mentarian; Mrs. Francis "Along Our Streams and Riv- Burke, Monmouth County icr ers." The program is open to Council and Mrs. Roderick the public. The club has Stephenson, publicity. METROPOLITAN named Mrs. Thomas Shriver, Fire auxiliary chairmai mann oufi itus standard - flower'T show "Signs of Our i Times luncheon slated s" set for Oct. 10 from 1 LINCROFT - The Ladles to 5 p.m. in the Community federal SAVINGS Center. Auxiliary of the Lincroft Fire id Loan Association Company's luncheon and ST ER E0 A *ubttanti»t fMWftlty, fashion show In the Lincroft reduced r.teafli Inn Saturday, at noon, will W ADB 9 6 IN JERSi? CITY IN MATAWA'N TOWNSHf IN EDISON TO .deposit* art wl Oakwood Shopping feature fashions by the Joy Bergen Avenue Strathfnom Shopping Center on Savingt Cti Shop and Trolly Tots. Tickets State Klshway 34 BEAUTIFUL MUSIC at Montgomery Street Wood Avenue may be purchased from any Auxiliary member. 24 HOURS A DAY SHREWSBURY. N J TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 24 1974 The D^fy Register 11 Crash course on college fareW
•y BARBARA GIBBONS late-day snack. If fruit's unavailable stock up at the super- market. Here's a crash course in calorie-watching for Ihc college- SLIM GOURMET No extra-curricular snacking. it's your biggest iknM! bound: Make a pact with your roommate to keep the rabbits away Education is broadening, unfortunately. Many a life long or study in the library Watch out (or the hotplate htttCM weight problem gels started in freshman year But breaking Avoid vending machines away from home needn't mean splitting your seams In fact, lightly buttered toast Don't skip milk in coffee or tea. but Coffeepots, hotplates, popcorn makers and room-size re- It can be your big chance lo lose excess weight due to home- skip the sugar (use calore-free substitute) Do skip sugared frigerators can help or hinder, depending on how you use bred eating habits cereals, pastries, syrups and spreads Avoid fatly sausage and them (and if they're permitted). Coffee, tea, bouillon or low- Despite the usual bad-mouthing, dorm food is generally bacon, buttered waffles, pancakes cal cocoa mix can save you from the soda machine. Popcorn better than collegians give it credit for (yes, there are ex- At your main meal (midday or evening) choose lean flavored with butter-salt can stave off a potato chip trip A ceptions!). Unlike differing home or restaurant meals menu meat, poultry or fish, two low-calone vegetables, and only fridge can store fruit, diet drinks, unsugared yogurt, ensp planning is usually under the direction of a dietician and in- ONE starchy choice: potatoes, com. peas. rice, spaghetti, vegetable snacks and emergency reserves for unavoidably cludes everything needed for balanced low-cal eating First macaroni or bread. Beward anything that absorbs melted but- missed meals. Semester Spread comes from skipping fruits, vegetables, milk ter. Regard sauces and gravies as grease-suspect Have a Get a small bathroom scale and use it every morning' A and other must-haves while doubling up on desserts and 1 generous salad with low-calorie dressing comprehensive calorie chart should be among your reference snacks. books and a daily tally of your calorie intake should be part of Get your doctor's okay — check to see that your weight Lunch or supper could be a hamburger, or sandwich with your homework. With determination, you can come home sev- worries aren't caused or compounded by any physical dis- cold meat, boiled ham, chicken or turkey roll . but be wary eral sizes slimmer! order. of fatty lunch meats and mayonnaise-laden fillings' Have to- Don't skip meals, particularly breakfast Why attend class matoes, pickles, lettuce, coleslaw or salad on the MOY ur. How many calories a day should you eat to be the weight with your brain asleep? choose a salad plate with hard-cooked eggs, tuna, cottage you want? For a personalized figure-it-yourself guide and diet For a speedy breakfast choose a high-protein cereal with cheese, vegetable and fruit. Drink diet soda, coffee, tea or tips, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope and 25 cents to milk (preferably skim) and a high-t fruit or drink (orange or milk. Slim Gourmet Recipes (or Reducing, in care of this news- tomato). Or, a moderate portion of lean ham and eggs with Avoid desserts; choose fresh fruit for each meal, or for a paper, SO West Shore Trail. Sparta. N J O7K7I Noted nutritionists to speak
• n.ott Man **•)• FASHION PREVIEW - Mrs. Betty Rieger, Lin at Natural Food convention croft, left, chairman of Saturday's noon luncheon WEST LONG BRANCH - The 18th annual convention of a lobbyist for the protection of the consumer was established at the LincroM Inn planned by the Ladies Auxiliary the New Jersey Chapter of Nalurai Food Associates will be during the famous "Peanut Butter Hearings" in Washington of Lincroft Fire Co., gets an advance look at two of conducted at Monmouth College Saturday. The program Recently she has testified before Chairman Paul Rogers the fashions to be shown that day as Mrs. Jayne starts at 8:30 a.m. and continues to 6 p.m. Dinner, served at against regulations for "Food for Special Dietary Uses" and Bidgood, Middletown, models an ensemble from noon, will be available. in favor of the Hosmer Bill. The Joy Shop, and Donna Anderson, 2, Ocean The convention presents an opportunity for those who are Dr. Alan Nittler obtained his medical degree from the Township, shows off a dress from Trolley Tots. interested in getting first hand information on the production, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine He served with Both shops are located in Lincroft. distribution and processing of natural foods. rank of captain in the Medical Corps with special work in neu- Exhibitors from all over the country will have foods, cos- ropsychiatry. Later he returned to his hometown of Santa metics and leather goods for sale. Cruz, Calif., to carry on orthodox methods of general prac- Scouts plant trees There also will be a baked goods contest for which prizes tice, until he became more aware of the importance of nutri- will be awarded. tion to health. At present his practice is centered around nu- RUMSON - Members of Shade Tree Commissioners The highlight of the day will be the nationally known tritional and glandular factors in the cause and treatment of Girl Scout Troop 9R here Mrs Kawson Atwood and speakers, Dr. Alan Nittler and Miss Ruth Desmond Miss Des- hypoglycemia and allied conditions. worked with the Rumson Mrs. Peter Carlmell and mond will present her talk "Congress and Your Health; The Dr. Nittler has had experience as a writer and for three Shade Tree Commission in troop leader Mrs. F.N. Latest Developments" at 10:30 a.m. Dr. Nittler will present years wrote a monthly column "Off the Cuff" for the National replanting the HIMIIK h(( Schmidt. "Introduction to Nutritional Medicine" at 3 p.m A discussion Health Federation Bulletin. He is currently carrying a ques- Road divider, which had lost Participating Girl Scouts in- will follow each lecture. tion-and-answer page for the Let's Live Magazine. His latest many older trees during last cluded Jane Lempeck, Kerry Miss Desmond is co-founder of the Federation of Home- is a new fact-packed book called "A New Breed of Doctor," winter's ice storm, with Diamond, Beth Cilman, Amy makers, served as its secretary, and now is serving as its which offers information on where to find nutritional physi- Kwanzan cherry trees and Berry, Heidi Kornfeld, Kathi president-editor. She is a wife, mother and grandmother and cians; products that have been found useful in therapy and in ivy. Heckendom, Liz Connor and has been a volunteer worker for the Girl Scouts of America combatting specific illnesses. Directing the project were Michelle Zifchak. and an active member in a Daughters of the American Revo- lution chapter serving as its registrar. She received a certifi- cate of service from the New Jersey chapter, NFA in 1966. The National Health Federation presented her its Humanita- rian Award in January 1973. Beatrice Trum Hunter dedicated her book "Consumer Beware" to Miss Desmond. The National Nutritional Foods Association will present her its Rachel Car- RaMlfiM1 it off tfb#t# son award at the annual convention. Ruth Desmond's fame as RESERVATION TALLY — Mrs. Coney Powell, AAlddletown, seated, and Mrs. John Naylor, Bel- ford/ who head the committee for Saturday's din- ner-dance at Bamm Hollow Country Club, Middle- town, a benefit sponsored by the Red Bank Chap- Meeting Memo ter of Deborah Heart and Lung Center, Browns Mills, review returns for the party which will start with Dutch treat cocktails at 7:30 p.m. and MEMBERSHIP COFFEE READING PROGRAM feature music by Joe Valentino's orchestra. HOLMDEL - The New- HOLMDEL - A talk on the comers Club of Colts Neck school's reading program will and Holmdel will have its be presented by David May, a membership coffee Thursday representative of Ginn Pub- ... the Savers Way to Higher Interest Planned Parenthood at 9:45 a.m. here in the lishing Company, at the open- United Church of Christ, ing meeting of the PTA of St. Main St. Babysitting will be Benedict School here ANNUAL YIELD names 5 to board available for the event, open Thursday at 8:30 p.m. in the to newcomers in the area. TO MATURITY RED BANK - Mrs. Bar- Mrs. Thomas, chairman of cafeteria. An open house will Mrs. John Chavers, is presi- bara Turner, president of the information committee of follow with teachers in their dent; Mrs. Harry Hughes, PPMC, is on the PTA of classrooms. Refreshments Planned Parenthood of Mon- first vice president; Mrs. Little Silver, and was on the will be served. mouth County, has announced Stewart Bucher, second vice the appointment of five new board of Morrislown Planned president, all of Colts Neck; DUPLICATE board members. They are Parenthood. 5-year Certificate Mrs. Patrick Mackin, corre- BRIDGE CONTEST Mrs. Christina Hewitt, Dr. "Adding these members to sponding secretary; Mrs. Minimum deposit $10,000 Carl Marchetti, Mrs. Jean the board will definitely be an WEST LONG BRANCH - Donald Spencer, recording The New Jersey Bridge Hood, Thomas Shostak, and asset to our agency. They secretary, both of Holmdel. Mrs. Janet Thomas. bring new ideas and concepts League will conduct a series and Mrs. George Paisley, of duplicate bridge contests Mrs. Hewitt, a former pres- that can be applied to better Colts Neck, treasurer. ident of The People for our services" said Mrs. Turn- this season for the benefit of Planned Parenthood aux- er. the Monmouth County Unit, CLUB LUNCHEON American Cancer Society, the % iliary, is on the committee for Planned Parenthood is a RED BANK - The Wom- a Better Environment, and is first slated for Friday at 7 4-yea% r Certificate non-profit voluntary health an's Club of Red Bank's fall p.m. (200 tables) here in the affiliated with Friends of the agency providing reproduc- luncheon Thursday at noon in Minimum deposit $10,000 Monmouth. County Library Holiday Inn. Mrs. E. J. Sal- tive health services and edu- the Molly Pitcher Inn will mieri, Little Silver, is in 7 Association. feature a fashion show by 735 cation for sexual responsi- charge of details. Dr. Marchetti is chairman bility to Monmouth County Helene's of Shrewsbury. Mrs. of the medical advisory board residents. Grandin J. Chapman is chair- CURRICULUM NIGHT of Planned Parenthood. He is man, assisted by Mrs. Otis W. active in Boy Scout pro- The board is planning.a ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS "Rags to Riches Fair" for Emery. Mrs. Albert E. Wed- - At the Atlantic Highlands % grams. Oct. 12 at Seven Bridges Road gebury and Mrs. John Keilt Elementary PTA's opening Mrs. Hood has been a board are in charge of reservations. and Little Silver Point Road, meeting of the year Thursday 3-year Certificate member for four months and at 7:30 p.m. "Curriculum Minimum deposit $5,000 Little Silver. ART AUCTION is employed by the Depart- Night" will be featured. Par- ment of Labor and Industry The agency also is sponsor- MATAWAN - The Mata- 7.08 ents will meet their children's 4 as an interviewer. ing a forum for medical pro- wan Chapter of the Women's teachers. School bags and Mr. Shostak is an assistant fessionals on "Family Plan- American Organization for school 'shirts will be on sale professor at Brookdale Com- ning and Human Sexuality" Rehabilitation Through Train- Refreshments will be served. munity College and was in- on November IS at Monmouth ing will sponsor an art am** volved with the speakers bu- Medical Center, Long Branch. tion Saturday at 8:30 p.m. NEEDLEPOINT »/2% reau at Brookdale. He is cur- Information about these and here in Temple Shalom, Ayr- MIDDLETOWN - The Ju rently chairman of the educa- other programs is available mom Lane. Mrs Judy Bixen 1 -year Certificate nior Woman's Club of Middle- Minimum deposit $1,000 tion committee of PPMC. by contacting the agency. is in charge of details. town will meet tomorrow at 6 6.8P 8:15 p.m. at Westminster Presbyterian Church, Tindall Interest payable from Day of Deposit, compounded daily Road. Mrs. Alice Jeliinek will give a needlepoint demonstra- Tell the time Aid date tion, to which the public is in- Federal vited. electronically... »f the Certificate at a touch! reduced to the The Candle Light IjS passbook rat*, The new quarto crystal watch Fw Gift* Tin* AII piif***" III The first completely new way to tell time since time DEAD FLOWERS j$ began. Guaranteed accurate within a minute a year. Never needs maintenance, oiling or cleaning, (KM D«Y K nor are there any moving parts to wear out. Only time »««ANGI»«HT5) "Ij computer to tell the time, seconds and date. Made intneU.SAi325.
600 BROADWAY at NORWOOD AVENUE, LONG BRANCH
JEWELERS OAKHURST ENGLISHTOWN KEYPORT WAYSIDE LITTLE SILVER MANALAPAN MM • UttM'i Htil-CMri. •CCMHI. Wl MOfI mt\ M* ckit|t unit. MIDDLETOWN HOLMDEL NEPTUNE CITY MARLBORO IS Iroid Street Man*if»n Mdl Monnwwtti tod Mnk RI « Freehold Shopping Cantor BRICK TOWN Open Wednesday Mon . g-t Open Monday Thru and Friday a 30 To 9 00 Fnday Tin 9 30 pm " NI900pm Saturday 106 ROSE SOCIETY PROGRAM The Jersey Shore Rose Society will have a meeting and a pro- the monmouth courtly gram in the Thompson Park Visitor Center on Tuesday, Oc- tober 1st. from 8:00 PM to pork system 11:30 PM. Guest speaker for the evening will be Mr. Frank Benardella, District Director, American Rose Society, who will talk on"Rose Growing Sim- plified". This activity is open for all who are interested in attend- ing. PUPPET-MAKING WORKSHOP SERIES fiBrOf The Monmouth County Park System is sponsoring a Puppet- Making series for youngsters 9 years of age and over on Sat- urday afternoons from 2:00 PM to 4:00 PM in Thompson Park. This series will meet for 8 ses- sions beginning Saturday, Oc- tober 5th, and will run thru Sat- As summer fades away and the days become a little shorterEvent, the nights a little s urday, November 23rd, 1974. cooler, we move into what many people consider the most beautiful month of the year. This is the month of changing leaves and the smell of woodsmoke; Under the instruction of Mrs. the time children start thinking about the ghosts and goblins who make their Judith Schwab, participants in annual visit during this month. It is a month of change and this change is evi- this workshop will have an op- dent in the varied colors of the landscape, the migration of numerous birds, portunity to develop a puppet and the preparations animals will make for the coming winter. What better character through creative ex- places to witness these dramatic changes than in one of your county parks. pression, to develop small fin- There is a Monmouth County park near you, so come out and enjoy October. ger coordination and personal You might also look over the activities your Park System has sponsored for this expression through art mate- month and pick out one or more to attend. rials, and to learn the history of puppetry through song.
The registration fee for the series is $15.00, with all mate- rials needed supplied by the activities for Park System. Registration deadline is October 1st, 1974. October Activity Place Time For additional information, please contact the Park System GALE'S Industrial Supplies 4^ *TGIW Canoe Trip Toms River 8:00 AM offices in Lincroft. Keyport, N.J. 5 *Conoe Club Trip Delaware 8:00 AM JERSEY SHORE OPEN 5 'Archery Clinic Thompson Park 12:00 Noon SCHEDULED FOR OCTOBER 20th Outstanding bicycle racers 5 'Sailing Clinic Turkey Swamp Park from through New Jersey and | The Candle Light the eastern seaboard are ex- *CADV MUID COMCPIITl 2:00 PM "ICAII MANHOLE* MAtON MATMULS For Gi/tt Thai Art Difftrt* pected to vie for prizes ex- 770 River Rd., Fair Haven 6 Monmouth County Park System ceeding $2500 In total value in 741-2144 flagafnton fcumi torp« k Annual Horse Show-English Division E. Freehold Park 8:30 AM the First Annual Jersey Shore •WIN •vallM Im Open scheduled for Sunday 6 Mobile Arts: October 20th. MINER SUPPLY CO. Ocean County String Band Shark River/Park 2:00 PM Sanctioned by the Amateur Bi- EACHY M0ADL0OMS . REMNANT DVT. 8 Spelunking Club Meeting Thomi 8:00 PM cycle League of America and LUMBING 10 Bicycle dub Meeting n Park 8:00 PM sponsored by Steinbach Com- INIW fr UUD1 MUGHT » SOLD pany and the Monmouth Coun- ^APHERNALIA ty Park System, the fifty mile, RSOUTH OF THE KRUMMV K»UW» ••I. FRONT (T RED BANK. 741.0301 ON WONDERFUL Wl»T FBONT 11 Botany Club: Fall Preview Park 9:00 AM three lap competition will begin in Asbury Park at 1:00 PM. Its STERUNG THOMPSON a ASSOCIATES 12 *Canoe Club Trip Manasquan River 6:00 AM route will follow the coast along Rfltor • • I r», 12-14*Hiking dub Trip Ocean Avenue north to Mon- offices in WMMM S HOVHtHIAH. *M p .(i . • i •. , .• . moufh Beach and wind up Mar Iboro Ml ¥UU§t, Northfield-Lake Placid Trail Thompson Park 6:00 AM back at Steinbach, Asbury 12 Autumn Nature Walk Shark River Park 10:00 AM Park. There, ten prizes, in- ANCHOR MARINE cluding first, second and third COLLINS & SMITH 13 Bike Tour (#3, 31.2 miles) Thompson Park 9:00 AM place awards of $1,000, $500 •M-5411 Iniurtnct Ctvt HUM Iran. FrMMlN.J. 13 Monmouth County Park System and $250 U.S. Government 482-6045 Savings Bonds will be present- Annual Horse Show-Western Division I. Freehold Park 8:30 AM ed to the winners. Comptlmtnit of Butch's Car Wash N»m»n Spring, (load. Rtd Sink. NJ. 15 Canoe Club Meeting Thompson Park 8:00 PM Mr. & Mrs. James Witte (Acroti from A « 9) Representative high level State, M1-741-O101, Visitor Center County and local officials and 16 TGIW Bike Hike (#3, 31.2 miles) Turkey Swamp Park dignitaries are expected to wit- ness this first of its kind event WALKER & WALKER JEP SALES INC. 10:00 AM to be held at the New Jersey 4X1 la* trial SkMl. VsrMi. RJ shore. Spectator entertainment • R0»ltort-Appralsers 809-585-2300 16 Nature Seminar: Weather Thompson Park 8:00 PM Shrewsbury - Holmdel t^cKlii. hi Tarf Urtumiic* !»»•« will be provided by a Dixieland Visitor Center band and antique bicycle 17 Hiking Club Meeting show. W.H. POTTER* SON. INC. Thompson Park 8:00 PM ItodMIRd. (714152 Mlddltlown DOREMUS FORD Visitor Center QOODAU/KUTHWICK/WHltL HOHSC 700 SWEWSBUm Ml.. NEW SHREWSBURY Any racer with an Amateur Bi- MMMVA 19 Fall Nature Hike Holmdel Park 10:00 AM cycle League of America li- cense is eligible to 'participate. JVMV Coist Tobacco Company community state bank 25,26*Canoe Club Trip Delaware River 7:00 AM Entry forms may be obtained 1M« f Sir** South B«tm«r. NX ml iriBi compwy MUMM • -£rr ~ 26 'Hiking Club Trip Island Beach 9:00 AM from the Monmouth County M1-0M4 Park System, P.O. Box 326, W C»> «l|HW 27 Bike Tour (#5, 47.7 miles) Turkey Swamp Park Lincroft, New Jersey, 07738 or at the Service Desk of any (KS1 9:00 AM KITSON CHEVROLET Steinbach store or asterisk ad- BM* 30 'TWIG Hike Thompson Park 8:30 AM vertiser on this page. COLONIAL^ EatonlowM, N.J. THE GARRABRANT AGENCY LINCROFT INN fitlttott-lnturort 4» Mata Strati. Aikiiry TirlL NJ NEWMAN SPRINGS RD. LINCROFT 7*4-7500 741-8170 VISITOR CENTER EXHIBIT MIDDLETOWN LINCROFT PHARMACY OCTOBER 13 THRU NOVEMBER 4 GARDEN CENTER "Accomplishments In Art" is a series of distinctive showings which has been es- M2-A NtwmM Springs M. Lincroft Hiway 35, Middletown 741-7616 tablished by your Monmouth County Park System to provide Monmouth County 671-1050- artists an opportunity for regional recognition of their work and talent. The open- ing show will feature the works of Dick Honymar, Joseph De Orio and Judith Leisure Travel Service N.J. Natural Gas Company Schwab. •42 Ntwman Spring! Read Asbury Park, N.J Uncroft. NJ An opening reception will be held on Sunday, October 13th, at the Thompson 741-6500 Park Visitor Center in Lincroft from 2:00 PM to 6:00 PM. The artists exhibiting their work will be on hand to meet with visitors and to discuss their work. The ex- Agway Inc. Storr Tractor Company hibit will run thru November 4th, from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM daily. lawn QvOtnmdHotf Supptlti HP** Avtnui. Ingllthlomn, NJ 4NSw» kmm. EntiliMtM.il 4M-7U2 201-232-7800 SPECIAL NOTE: Follow the *. Park System registration material, Information sheets CENTRAL JERSEY BANK and brochures may be acquired at any participating advertiser who r» ftm nrr coi.r>¥>NV CIRCLE CHEVROLET displays an » on his advertisement. 22 OFFICES Shrewsbury Ave. Shrewsbury the monmouth county porks ore yours, .enjoy them f The Daily Register FDR's last year iv as a lonely one SHREWSBURY N J TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 24, 1974 ^3 ^J t-/ l> JIM BISHOP (Sectarf •( a series *f II)
APRIL 1944 - ty the first of April President Roosevelt began to feel better To silence the ugly rumors regarding his health, he attended an informal dinner given by the White STATE House correspondents He sat in a tuxedo and black tie. smil- iy TV AMdaicd Prcn ing, smoking, nodding, exchanging quips one thing that brought a deep guffaw from his chest was when Bob Hope S took the stage as master of ceremonies and said. "I've al- ways voted for Roosevelt as President. My father always Court hold* decision on Catena voted (or Roosevelt as President." TRENTON - The Male Supreme Court has reserved de- The President proclaimed to his official circle thai he felt cision on Jerry Catena's latest bid for freedom well and slept well. He complained of lack of appetite and The court wat asked to decide yesterday whether the re- sinus headaches, but these were minor matters. If Mrs. puted Mafia boss has to talk bit own way out of jail. Roosevelt and Anna were told anything, it was that Admiral The court heard an appeal by the State Commission on In- Mclntire advised the President that "he could quite easily go vestigation (SCI) of an order by a Superior Court judge that on with the activities of the presidency " would set Jerry Catena, 72, of South Orange, free after four When the day's work was done, his delight was to ask Ar- and a half years in jail for refusing to answer questions about thur Prettyman for the cocktail table, the shaker, the in- organized crime. gredients for drinks and ice The members of the White House Martin HoUeran, SCI executive director, revealed for the staff could see the glee with which the President mixed — first time that one question Catena refused to answer in a "with the precision of a chemist" — and, sitting in his wheel- closed session was if he had sworn an "oath" not to reveal chair, would shake and shake until an assortment of cold- what he knows about organized crime. stemmed glasses were produced. SI HoUeran told the court this "crime path" was the real •No Me at home" reason Catena won't talk. He seldom drank more than two martinis, and sometimes He said the invasion of privacy Catena claimed in written varied the routine by mixing Scotch old-fashioneds, but he re- testimony filed with Superior Court Judge George Y. Schoch fused to surrender the work. "See who's home and ask them is just a legal ploy by the suspected gang leader. to stop In," he would tell an usher And now, in these long and Catena is reportedly heir to the crime family of the late sometimes sick days of 1944. he would be told softly. "Sorry. crime boss Vito Genovese with operations centered in north- Mr. President, there is no one home." ern New Jersey and extending Into New York. The President would meditate and then set the unopened Judge Schock ordered Catena's release in July when he shaker on the end table. "Oh, never mind," he would say. said he was convinced by the written testimony and by oral "Ask Arthur to help me into bed and I'll order dinner and do testimony from Catena's wife and daughter that Catena some reading." would never answer crime commission questions. His heart's desire was to have cheerful people around him Judge Schoch said Catena's continued confinement would from the morning awakening until the final good night And be Illegal punishment. yet the White House calendar, embracing the early days of spring when he was very ill — in effect, a dying President — displayed a retributive vengeance on the part of his wife, who dined with friends and allowed the President to eat alone 3 Yardville escapees sought from a tray in his bed. SMILES FOR PHOTOGRAPHER - There were no fectlonately and holding her daughter's hand. Oth- private endearments between President and Mrs. ers In photo are Anna's two children by a previous YARDVILLE - State Police and corrections officers Perhaps the President was too sick to dine in company Roosevelt from 1918 onward, and a quiet rivalry marriage, Curtis "Buzzie" and Eleanor "Slstle" were searching this morning for three men who escaped from The facts do not lean in that direction. He kept political and existed between Eleanor and her only daughter, Dahl, and, left to right, Mrs. James Roosevelt, the Youth and Reception and Correction Center here, author- personal appointments by day, and his ingrained loneliness Anna (Mrs. John Boettiger). But official portraits John Boettiger and James Roosevelt. ities said. showed sharply in the calendar listings of "Lunch — tray — (this one taken In 1937) show Eleanor smiling af- Ed Ramsey, a spokesman for the state Department of In- with Miss Grace Tully." It was Mrs. Roosevelt's choice to stitutions and Agencies, said the escape was discovered about grant her husband 15 minutes of her day, in the morning when The air at Hobcaw (the South Carolina estate of financier German officers after "unconditional surrender " Mr. Roose- 9:30 p.m. yesterday during a routine count. he was breakfasting in bed. Aside from drawing a chair Bernard Baruch, FDR's friend and counselor) was still cool. velt was shocked, but he drank to it. Inspection of cells found bars sawed and that a metal bed- closer to the bedside and saying good morning and asking "I want to sleep and sleep," he said. "Twelve hours every Five months later the Allies began to worry about the stead had been used to pry the bars apart, Ramsey said. how he felt, the First Lady spent the remainder of the short night." For several nights of the first week, the President phrase. German Propaganda Minister Josef Goebbels re- time consulting letters from citizens asking questions regard- The three men apparently then made their way across a slept his twelve hours. In the White House Eleanor was hurt broadcast it to the German people - that Germany would be ing length of service, Insurance benefits, and begging leniency field, and the police search is concentrating on woods and a that her husband did not phone in that week. Unwilling to enslaved by the barbaric Russians. In Japan It was cited to after courts-martial. highway In that area, he said. wait longer, she phoned him. He said he was feeling much support the Tojo government's contention that the Americans Ramsey identified the three missing men as John L. Na- Mutuality of high ideals better, that he had slept more than usual, and had let "the would kill Japanese prisoners and ravish the empire. tale, 23, of New Providence, serving a five-year sentence for Eleanor Roosevelt was diligent in reading these unsoli- world go hang." It was a sweet figure of speech, but untrue MAY 1944 - A call was put through to Seattle Anna lis- breaking and entering; Joseph Felcon, 19, of Willingboro, cited letters, asking her secretary, Miss Malvina Thompson, tened to the deep, affectionate voice. Yes, she said, if her fa- serving a 12-year sentence for armed robbery, breaking and Throughout the waking hours he had Admiral William to reduce them to simple questions, and then requesting the ther wanted her to live at the White House she would move. entering, conspiracy and threats to injure; and Charles Geb- Leahy at his side, with the latest war bulletins; he had Admi- President of the United States to resolve them so that "Tom- Her husband, John Boettiger, was a major on assignment hardt, 25, of Ship Bottom, serving a five year sentence for ral Wilson Brown, naval aide; General Watson, military aide. my" could respond. Relations between Mr. and Mrs. Roose- with military police. There was no reason to remain in breaking and entering and larceny. Two portable telephones were set in the President's room velt from 1918 onward were cordial and, although there are Seattle. But she proposed to call her mother about it first One was connected to the White House switchboard. The oth- photogaphs of them kissing at railroad terminals, the endear- Anna felt that she needed Eleanor's permission. Mrs. Roose- er was used for personal calls, such as the one made almost ments were part of the front, or image, they had elected to velt did not appreciate the presence of another woman — daily to Mrs. (Lucy Mercer) Rutherfurd in Aiken — 140 miles McOellan to seek lottery hearings present to the world. They never slept together, seldom dined even her daughter — as hostess In the White House. Her as- away. She told the President that she would drive to Hobcaw together, but appeared to sustain mutual respect for each oth- sent was grudging and full of questions. Anna put it on a WASHINGTON - John L. McClellan. D-Ark., says he is to lunch at his pleasure. He made a date and, as always, drew er. The President's goal was to leave the world in a better truthful plane: Father was lonely. giving consideration to requests for hearings on legislation to strength from their privacy. prevent a shutdown of state-run lotteries. state than he found It; Mrs. Roosevelt had a parallel aspira- Reaching to forgive tion. He worked the boulevards of the broader aspects of One morning Mrs. Roosevelt and Anna flew down to Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., made public a letter yesterday spend the day with the President. Mrs. Roosevelt asked a lot The "Big House" (at Hyde Park) was a beautiful house, ex- from McClellan that was written Sept. 11 asking for early statecraft and diplomacy; Mrs. Roosevelt was in the dingy al- quisitely furnished, but Mr. Roosevelt intended to gift wrap it leys looking for the poor to feed. It was this respect and mu- of questions about her husband's health, and she was satisfied hearings. McClellan Is chairman of a Senate Judiciary sub- and give It to the National Parks Department As long as he tuality of high Ideals which kept them together, not. as some that the rest was doing a lot of good. Consciously or uncon- committee to which the legislation has been referred. remained in office, however, he would return to this place. have stated, his ambitions. They worked better together than sciously, the President felt more relaxed with Anna than with "Perhaps with some support from subcommittee mem- Eleanor. The sparkling witticisms, the revealing anecdotes Eleanor, who appeared at times to be reaching modestly to apart. Whatever they amounted to as co-workers, it is a su- forgive her husband, would ask in plaintive notes: "Why don't bers whose states are most affected, hearings can be sched- rety that Franklin and Eleanor would each have been less about "life on the farm" were reserved for his daughter. It uled later in the session," McClellan wrote Scott. was after this trip that Eleanor told her intimates that, when you come to H.P. with me on Thursdays and return to Wash- than half of the total if they had broken the marriage in ington Monday nights? E." In the absence of action by Congress, Attorney Gen. Wil- court. she wanted to know what the President was doing, or how he liam B. Saxbe has said he intends to take court action to halt felt, she asked Anna. Alone with his daughter, he told her, At one time Mr. Roosevelt answered his wife's notes with I state-operated lotteries on the ground they violate federal anti- The days were warm, and becoming kinder. But the Pres- "When I leave the White House, Anna, I am not going to live dispatch. Now, gray of cheek, he would turn them over and gambling laws. ident was in trouble politically. This was an election year. If in the big house." The reference was to Hyde Park say to a secretary, "Put this in your file." Thirty-one years his purpose was to ask the people to return him to the White had elapsed since they had clung to each other Whether House for a fourth term, the old Roosevelt would have exuded 'Oie down, two to go' Eleanor, as the wronged person, was ready to spend the sun- confidence. Instead, he quarreled with the press; he picked a There was a war going on, and there were smaller wars set years hand in hand she confided to no one but Franklin. If Pike toll recommendations awaited deliberate fight with Congress, a fight he knew he could not among allies. Italy surrendered. Chancellor Adolf Hitler dis- she made,the shy approach, she was rebuffed. It seems NEW BRUNSWICK - The New Jersey Turnpike Author- win. patched extra divisions to Marshal Kesselring, who was or- strange that, in Washington, the gossip capital of the world, ity has not received any recommendation from its traffic and He asked the Congress to pass a measure which would in- dered to hold Italy if he had to kill Italians to do it FDR said, Eleanor never heard a whisper that her husband's heart was revenue consultant regarding any changes in toll rates, a sure the right of servicemen and women to vote in the next "One down, two to go." still where it was in 1913, in the snowy palms of Lucy's hands. spokesman for the authority said yesterday. election. The Senate responded like a frightened rattlesnake. Publicly the Big Three had agreed at Teheran that "un- (From the book, "FDR's Last Year," published by William A report from the consultants, Coverdale and Colpitts, is It quickly passed a bill leaving the matter of soldier votes to conditional surrender" would be demanded of the enemy. Morrow & Company, Inc. Copyright (c) 1974, by Jim Bishop not expected until early next month, the spokesman said. In the Individual states. The House Elections Committee report- Privately Marshal Josef Stalin, at dinner with Churchill and Distributed by Klag Features.) the meantime, reports of imminent toll hikes are more than ed the bill to the floor favorable. Mr. Roosevelt felt stung. Roosevelt, drank a toast to the summary execution of 50,000 Tomorrow: D Day arrives, and politics follows. premature, he added. A statement from the authority said, in part: "Ever since the turnpike was opened to the public 23 years ago, and despite an increase In operating costs, there has been no in- 600 county Republicans crease In toll rates, except for a very slight increase involving only some of the truck classification. "When the authority receives the report of its traffic and revenue consultants, it will study them and should there be a honor former Sen. Stout recommendation to increase rates, the authority will conduct a public meeting on the matter." SPRING LAKE - Before a sellout crowd of more than 9 600, former State Sen. Rich- Prisoners housing hearings start ard R. Stout was honored by his fellow Republicans at CAMDEN — Hearings began yesterday in a suit brought their annual 1100-a-plale din- against the state in Superior Court here by four municipalities ner at the Monmouth Hotel. in an attempt to block the board of some prison inmates at Mr. Stout was elected to the Ancora Psychiatric Hospital. Senate in 1951 and was the A motion for a restraining order against the state was dean of the upper house when dropped when Joseph T. Maloney, the deputy attorney gener- he was defeated last year in al representing the state, agreed to the request that no in- his bid for a seventh term. mates from Leesburg State Prison be housed at the state hos- During his years in the Leg- pital until the present lawsuit is concluded. islature, Mr. Stout had held Judge R. Cooper Brown presided as one witness for the every Senate office, and had state, correction officer Capt. Stephen P. Dwyer, began testi- Col. R.R. Tourtillott Capt. Frank C. Lepore Carmello Malmone been acting governor on sev- fying in the case brought by Winslow Township and joined by eral occasions. Hammonton, Berlin Township, and Monroe Township. Sen. Alfred N. Beadleston, The municipalities, in three counties, adjoin the 660-acre who was elected to the Legis- state psychiatric hospital where the Department of In- 3 honored for patriotism lature the same year as Mr. stitutions and Agencies wants to house about 90 Leesburg Stout, served as toastmaster prisoners who will work at the hospital. LITTLE SILVER - Three ognized by Freedoms Founda- orious achievement. residents have been honored tion with two medals in the and reviewed Mr. Stout's pub- The towns object to the housing of prison inmates at An- Carmello Maimone was also lic service career. cora, citing possible dangers to hospital staffers, patients and for their patriotism. categories of letters to the presented a Certificate of editor and public addresses. Sen. Beadleston, who is nearby residents. They claim Institutions and Agencies Com- Colonol Raymond R. Tour- Recognition for adminis- Capt. Lepore, the Ameri- Senate minority leader, also missioner Ann Klein does not have the right to use the site, lillott, (USA ret.) and Captain trative support of the Ameri- canism chairman of the chap- took the occasion to strongly deeded to the state by Winslow for a hospital, as a prison. Frank C. Lepore have re- canism Program of the Ft. ter, received the George criticize the state Democratic ceived the highest American- Monmouth Sojourners. Washington honor medal from administration. REPUBLICAN DINERS - Former State Sen. Ism Award on behalf of the Freedoms Foundation for out- The awards were presented He said the Democrats, Richard R. Stout, left, guest of honor at the 19th Ft. Monmouth Chapter of the Casino proponents to print paper standing community pro- by Col. LaVon P. Linn, na- since taking control of the annual Republican SlOO-a-plote dinner at the Mon- National Sojoumers. ATLANTIC CITY — Local casino gambling supporters grams and was recognized by tional president elect of the state in January, have man- mouth Hotel, Spring Lake, greets Sen. Alfred N. said yesterday they will make a one-day foray into the news- Col. Tourtillot was also rec- the Sojourners for merit- National Sojourners. aged to squander some $300 Beadleston. paper business to raise funds to back the gaming referendum million in surplus funds left over from the Republican ad- The boosters said they planned to print 15,000 copies of a The Republicans presented candidate, Kenneth W. Clark, ministration of former Gov. full-sized newspaper-like flyer which will be sold at 75 cents Mr. Stout with a plaque com- who is opposing Rep. James Court backs board denial of variance William T. Cahill. around Atlantic County on Oct. 11. FREEHOLD - Superior their property located on the the record. memorating his years of pub- J. Howard, and presented in- Buyers will be asked 'to give what they can, according to Court Judge Merrill Lane Jr. northwest comer of the inter- Sen, Beadleston called for a lic service, and gave his wife, cumbents Benjamin H. Dan- The court noted that Mr James Cooper, finance chairman of the Tourism Development has upheld the denial of a section. return of integrity to state Nancy, a color television set. skin, county clerk, and Free- Miller had opposed a variance Council of New Jersey. An associate said it was hoped the pa- variance by the Ocean Town- Judge Lane held that the politics, and a retention of in- holders Joseph C. Irwin and application for construction of Mr. Stout also received a pers would net more than $1 apiece. ship Zoning Board of Adjust- plaintiffs demonstrated be- tegrity here in Monmouth Axel Carlson. Sen. Beadleston a residence upon this tract of plaque from the N.J. Confer- Cooper also revealed that the council, which consists ment for construction of a fore the zoning board that the County through the reelection also introduced Joseph J. Re- land before he purchased it ence of Mayors presented by primarily of Atlantic City business interests, has raised one-family house at West lot was undersized and that of two GOP freeholders this gan 3rd, Republican candi- and now that he was the land West Long Branch Mayor $244,000 in cash and an additional $83,000 in pledges In pro- Park and Wallace Aves. no additional land was avail- year. date for sheriff. mote casinos. owner he sought a variance. Henry Shaheen. The variance denial was able to make the lot con- The Republican freeholder, Heading the brief program He aid there had been "a sudden upswing" in fund rais- challenged by Mr. and Mrs. forming. The judge added The court held that the candidates are Joseph C. lr- Introduction of Republican were Robert C. Stanley Jr., ing, and he predicted the Nov. 5 referendum would pass. Louis J. Miller Jr. of 26 Wall- that the zoning board's con- plaintiffs failed to satisfy the win. who is director of the candidates were by Senate •'Chairman of the finance com- Cooper said additional copies of the "Yes Edition" flyer ace Ave., Ocean Township, clusions that the plaintiffs negative criteria for the five-member board, and in- Minority Leader Alfred N. mittee, dinner sponsors, and would be printed and distributed later as an advertising sup- who wanted to construct a produced insufficient evi- granting of bulk variances cumbent Axel B. Carlson of Beadleston, who urged the Mr. Danskin, county Republi- plement to some newspapers in the state. single-family dwelling on dence was not supported- by nuoded for the undersized lot Manasquan. election of the congressional can chairman. 14 TheDailyRegis«er SHREWSBURY. N J TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24 1974 Bayshore YMCA to begin WADB swim lessons, gym jams LOCAL COMMUNITY Television Today KED BANK - A fall pro- gram lor three and tour year gram which features swim- olds, will have four sessions NEWS & WEATHER New York Channels — 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13 " annually, the first of which |1J) |S0) (52) |54| N J PUBLIC IROADCASTIN6 •:30 0 01 MASH ming lessons and gym jams All profrimminf on thtas channsls will b. Ua«a4 AN biTkvr of the d ly, Hawkeyc directs the M A B H has been announced today by begins Sept 21 and runs u Channel 53 unlasa otharwlat notad. unit In n irriei at not-by thi book dcciilon* which ruuv .irtinjt romm md officer Frank Burni much William Van Lenten, director through Nov. 16. Classes will ATLANTIC DAYTIME MOVIES fnwtralkMi nf the Arrowhead-ffayshore be held only at the Cross of CINEMA 291-014P f40 43 "Story of Ruth" I Part III I "D«.id and O O NBC WORLD PREMIERE MOVIE 1 YMCA, a branch of the Com- (ilory Church. Cambridge lattithaba" I Part II "TV RlranRC ;.nd I»eid)y Ocrurrence" tUrring ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS Kubrrt Stark V.-r. Mllei Shortly BfUr a family Drive. Matawan 12:00 m "Fira O«tr England" movi-a Into a htiuri* in a reunite ;trra. itrunjt and munity "Y." TONITE AT 7 * 9:30 1:00 O "Hara Coma lha Wa«a«" mex| lirnbte lhinj[i Hart happening Mr. Van U'ntcn said par- Morning classes will be O "Tha End of tha Affair' 0 MERV GRIFFIN SHOW ents interested in the pro- Mondays and Wednesdays or "THE GKAT GATSBY" 4:00 O "Journay To Shiloh ' O O ABC TUES. MOVIE OF THE WEEK ffi Lava li A Many Splandorad Thing" •Thr Ore it NiiRMia" starring Ricfinrd Boone, Ml grams may register in person Tuesdays and Thursdays STARTS TOMORROW 4:30 B "Kincji Go Forth1 I Part II ihirl Sarki A iegrnduy f<-tm.ly livlnr on the MEL BROOM' Niaj; in Rjvcr during the Deprt-aaion, helps guide at Camp Arrowhead in Marl- from 9:15 to 11:30 a m An af- and rescue I how who dare challfruje the falls boro or at the new "Y" office ternoon class will be given EVENING until one day they thrm^elvn are lured by the "HAZING SADDLES" •fiO O O O O CD NEWS myHlt'i toiw and merrtlrai fiver on Middle Road and Union Mondays and Wednesdays «os"lAST0f««!U" B BEWITCHED • BEAT THE CLOCK Ave. in Hazlet. Information from 1 to 3:15 p.m. "Rnm'a Hot Hrdwiirmrr'' 0 SPECIAL OF THE WEEK Gym Jam children are di- 0 IT TAKES A THIEF "A Tribute to -Georj!* Gerahwtn" on mailing registrations may "LcK'krd in tin- Oudlr of Kir Krcri" 0 EYE TO EYE be obtained by telephoning vided into age groups accord- 01 THE MOD SQUAD "The Garden of Love ' An exploration of the his- Thr Hrjniid trirs to lot-ate thp futhrr of a young tory of Ideal romantjr love- from the Virgin Mary Arrowhead or the new branch ing to maturity and ability COAST fnrin buy iiml Ir.uns liri Involved in a loan-shark to the rourttv lady of the Middle Ages to tht IllflCC and are supervised by certi- nu-kr-l. modem swinging sinajlei. (It) B TODAY IN DELAWARE B EYE TO EYE Swimming lessons for non- fied teachers.. THEATRES. ID THE ELECTRIC COMPANY "Painting (he Town" swimmers, beginners or inter- The program is directed by ID SESAME STREET IS2I MASTERPIECE THEATRE (52) ZOOM "Hie Unpleahantnt-SH at the Dellona Club" (Part mediate boys and girls in the Mrs. Dana Endresen, assisted 4:10 ft NBC NIGHTLY NEWS IHI iltt six through 13 age range will by Mrs. Inghd Lucas and 0 I LOVE LUCY 9:00 O 0 HAWAII FIVE-0 "I'll Kill 'Em Again" PoatcanSs be Saturdays through Nov. 16 Mrs. Linda Silvers, all of Community Dlrtt NroOa nn A'.'fnf McCI uTctt to rt-member crime victims of from 9:45 to 10:30 am in the Matawan. O ABC EVENING NEWS precede a aeriM o fre-en4( t<*d murders. 4D PIATING THE GUITAR 0 BONANZA indoor pool at the Y here. OT ZOOM Little Jo* Is seriously Injured by a band of rene- Lessons will consist of a con- gade Indians when he and Host try to warn |52| INTERNATIONAL PERFORMANCE centrated half-hour lesson fol- *- "Romi-o mil ln'i' I IMI ranchers of approaching trouble 7:00 O ID CBS EVENING NEWS 0 PHANTOM INDIA lowed by a 15-minute practice "On the Fringes at Indian Society." Several groups O THE NEW TREASURE HUNT of people have been living In India for centuries period. El THE NBC NIGHTLY NEWS and have been excluded, or hive refused to tnter, B ANDY'GRIFFITH SHOW the mainstream of society. (R) Bus transportation is in- "Alcohol and Old Uttr 0 JEANNE WOLF WITH ... cluded in the program fee and O TO TELL THE TRUTH Ouest: Douglas Fnlrbanks Jr. HAPPY OCCASION — Members of the Happy B ABC NEWS «:J0 09 PERFORMANCE consists of four places where Time Story Time Theater rehearse their perform- 0 THE RAYMOND BURR SHOW "An Antlqua" registrants from the northern "Ttt|.'(jcd for Mtirdrr" (521 EVENING AT POPS Monmouth County area will ance of "Goldilocks and the Three Bears," part of 01 THE F.I.I. "P.D.Q. Bad!" (R) their audience-participation program for children Thr Fit I hul I In to invr a kldnnp victim In order 10:00 O 0:» Super Copi« N ITRATHMORE ••••••••»»»•» dletown. Dial 671-3319. Thofl Entertolnment 1.50. i.l K. 10 CINEMA I- CIMmall- LONO •RANCH Bu»lerondBIMn7:IO, 9 MOVIES I— CINEMA II- THREE BIG FEATURES ChlnolownI-15, 5. 7:J5.»:4J Cloudlns7:».?;IS SEPTEMBER 24 MOVIII II- Serplco 7:10 Bong the Drum Slowly Exclusive New jersey Annual Card Party - Ladies' Auxiliary, BPOE 233, Our Tlm»7:4S.9:*> MIDDIESROOK Engagement CINEMA I- at t p.m. Dessert will be served. Tickets $1.50, at the Bononoi 7 Sleeper 1:20 Everything door. 40 West Front St., Red Bank. Tha Great Goriby 7,»:» You Alwoyi Wanted To Know About Se« LAST DAY SAL'S MIDOLETOWN CINEMA II- TOWN IAST- OurTlme7:30,l:l5 5erplco7, t:IO THE MOVIES I! SEPTEMBER 24,25 Tavern Restaurant ASaUlY PARK "Zolita" TOWN WIST- IAVOY- Ocaan I Ifighton A»a» «7ft Shrewsbury Corners Antiques and Crafts Show Wolklng Toll 7:15,9:15 Lovelond7:35, 9 We Hi. Long Branch OIV STARTS WED! 40th Year Serving HAILIT LYUIC- "Girl Service" Tues., 10 to 10, Wed. 10 to 5, Broad and Sycamore, RT IS DRIVE IH- Pollcewomon 9 Super Chick 7:30 LAST TIME TONITE The grandest Shrewsbury. Lunch 11:30 to 2. Admission $1,00. Thunderboll ond Llghtoot 7)0 Mon PARAMOUNT- 'OUR TIME" LUNCH & Who Loved Cat Dancing • J» Weilwor Id 9:10 Super Copt 7; 3D "Gland Hotel" musical of them all! PLAZA- NEPTUNE TomarlndSeed7:10, 9:» NEPTUNE CITY- STARTS TOMORROW STARTS TOMORROW SEPTEMBER 25 CINEMA I— Westworld 9 10 Super Com 7:30 15th Annual Olde Timers Day - At Marine Park, Red DINNER Animal Crocken MS, t: 10 "THE LIFE AND TIMES CINEMA II— OCEAN TOWNSHIP "MUTATIONS" That's Enterlalnmenl 7. IX CIRCtE- Bank. Games, prizes, talent show, hot lunch, entertain- ITALIAN CUISINE TomoflndS*ed7:M,9:?5 OF XAVIERA HOLLANDER" Optn T Day A W—k KEYPORT PLUS ment. Registration 10 a.m. Co-sponsored, Red Bank Area FKEEMOLO Shrewsbury at Herbert SI. STRAMD- LUCY Zollto 3, < 31, 7:l«. »:J4 Girl Service MALL I— In Color Rated X "CHOSEN SURVIVORS" Chamber of Commerce, Dept Parks and Recreation. Rod Bank Til, 5 3S, 1:13, 10:S0 Gland Hotel 3:S], TpmorlndSeed7:IO, 9:M 6:31,9:0? MAIL II- No on* undef 18 admilied $iso Thot i f nlerlolnmenl I UMm 1:M OfHT SEPTEMBER 27 Prool ol age It required MAMti "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the Open Dally from 2 P.M. Jets, but Were Afraid to Ask" — Featuring Rumson Au- thor Kay Islin Oilman and three Jet players, at the East- Ocaan t inohton A.ei 1 LUCILLE BALL „ "MAME" ern Branch of the Monmouth Co. Library, Rjute 35, Wait End. Long Branch 'tacaai Shrewsbury, at 8 p.m. Panel discussions, auction of uni- LA1T TUM TONWHT forms. Admission $4. Children under 12 free. STARTS^OMORROW SEPTEMBER 28 MEL BROOKS "First Annual Plea Market Art Show & Sale" - Port BLAZIKGSADDLES Eatontown Monmouth FTA, on school grounds, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Rain STEVE McQutxn date Oct. 5. Space available $5 Refreshments and soft * Rte 35'- Middletown One mile north of Red Bank AUMcGRAW drinks will be sold,. Reservations call 787-1610 of 787-6917. .':, •• ' 741 8344 Starrlm CAM* MONTCOMnV • Ml MIDI - And Wiastaclm CMOMCUII •THE GET*WAY" MIL MMTUL - LESLIE WHITE Neptune City "Flea Market" - 50 dealer spaces, $5 each, at Lin- croft First Aid Squad grounds, Hurley's Lane, 9 a.m. to 4 PllfccU kt IMMKNK KYNOLBS • Screenalay ay WMMIT MtQKt p.m. Snack bar. Grass field. Reservations, 842-7290, 842- sy SAJDNH OLSON WracM ey MCNAM FMNKIM LAST DAY! 5572, 747-2177. Rain date, Sept. 29. RHI HIV "ATTBON OFF MAM "WESTWORID" aMUlUf Asaummiw Plus "IHI SUKR COM "Fifties Sock Hop" - 9 p.m. to 1:30 a.m., Rivet Plaza Fire Htom. Free beer or BYOB Music by 'Reviv- 1 STARTS WED! al." Tickets, 741-6281. 741<«770. See you at tin- Hop FIRST RATE COMEDY nr. mns Monmouth Medical Center will sponsor a seminar "Current Trends in N. J. Nursing" on Sat., Sept 28 at the ANIMAL DIAHANN CARROLL Medical Center Ann Camaby of the N.J State Assn. of Nurses will be the speaker. Registration fee $5.00. Inter- CRACKERS ested nurses may register with MMC Dcpt of Education and Training, 222-5200, Ext. 475. "CLAUDINE" ALUEO ARTISTS presents Molly STEVE DUSTHI SEPTEMBER 29 Tailgate Flea Market, Sun., Sept 29, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Superb Dining mcQUEEn HOFFmm Rain date Oct. 6. Congregation B'ifai Israel, Rumson. Re- ma FRANKLIN J.SCHAFFNER lilm servations $5 per space. Call 741-7899 or 842-8695. Rra 35 a D..I Road IM M77 ptvuon OCTOBER 5 LAST TIME TONITE TECHNrCOLOfT "Chinese Auction" - To be held at the St. Paul Bap- CHEFS DINNER SPECIAL SAT. A SUN. WOODY ALLEN TRIO — PLUS — tist Church, 196 River St., Red Bank, at 6 p.m Refresh- ments will be served Prizes galore. Donation $2. TONIGHT STARTS TOMORROW OCTOBER 6 Toyin Gannariya "MUTATIONS" St. Mary's Rosary Guild, ColU Neck - Communion PLUS Dinner after 5 p.m. Mass. ft. Griffin Memorial Hall. Tunisian Lamb Specially CHOSEN SURVIVORS with Broccoli and Guest speaker. Charles Comito. Tickets, parish hall, after Korlander Rice $150 Ticlmkultr® tuMkMMMaD Sat. eve. and Sun. a.m. Masses Information, 946-9611, Cotlee 431-2286.
OCTOBER 12 Rta IS a DMI Road ... ,,,. "Square Dance" By Ladies' Auxiliary, VFW Post $ 1953, at Post Home, Ramsey Avc, Francis PI., Keans- COMPLETE DINNERS FROM 6.95 LAST TIME TONITE burg, 9 p.m. to 2 am. Donation $5 person, including hot JULIE ANDREWS LUNCHEONfrom $2.95 "OUR TIME" OMAR SHARIF meal and free beer. Chairlady, Pearl Cosentino. Reserva- MAURICE AT THE PIANO UONTHUR — IN — tions in advance only, 787-0744. STARTS TOMORROW A POWERFUL MOVIE OCTOBER 20 DANCING "Antique and Flea Market" - Red Bank lladassah. FEATURING THE JERRY KAY TRIO "WALKING 10 a.m. to 4 .p.m., Middletown Shopping Center, Rt. 35, FRI. 9:00 P.M. i SAT. 9:30 P.M. New Monmouth Rd $5 space Snacks 842-8017 Rain dale TALL 10/27. $150 an »vco Embsjiy nlnu SHREWSBURY N J TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 24 1974 The Daily Register 15 Elected PUC board is proposed TRENTON - Assem- blyman Morton Salkind, I>- Monmouth, has introduced a bill providing for an elected We'll meet you on the corner state Board of Public Utility Commissioners (PUC) The governor now appoints the three-member commis- of Route 9 and Route 33. sion with the consent of the state Senate That's where the Freehold action is.The bt^t in harness racing (In our view.) The bill provides for mem- bers to be elected to six-year 11 races, 9 exactas and the new trifecta on the last race. A great day terms Not more than two in the afternoon. Everyday. Post time I'M). Be there. members may be members of the same political party The Freehold Afternoon. Mr. Salkind said a compan- ion bill will be introduced in Wsa whole new day, the Assembly providing for a POLITICAL GAME — Getting ready tor recent softball between the Mo- state Power Authority to own naiapan Democratic and Republican Clubs ore trom left. Incumbent Paul and build future electric gen- Hccione and Bruce Nissenbaum, GOP candidates for Township Committee erating plants which utilite rn«Hi!f V.en T ak "^ incumbent Kenneth G. Olsen, Democratic committee tax-free funds. candidates. The GOP won 20-15. The assemblyman said the authority would sell power to private utilities. He said cus turners could save 40 per cent Court tells teachers to file of the costs on capital con- struction projects. He said the authority would sell power to private utilities new grievance with board at cost, therefore resulting in FREEHOLD - Superior from moving to binding arbi- stituted an increased work a further saving to custom- Court Judge Merritt Lane Jr tration with the board on the load for the teacher and prop- ers. Friday issued a preliminary grievances. erly should move to arbi- Mr Salkind said an elected injunction prohibiting the Red The board contends that the tration. PUC "would be more respon- Bank Teachers Association teachers should be compelled sive to the citizens of New and 34 teachers at the Pri- to take their grievance to the Martin Barger, the attorney Jersey." mary School from seeking state Commissioner of Educa- for the Board of Education, The PUC regulates rates binding arbitration at this tion rather than seek binding contended the order had noth- for private utilities in the time to resolve a grievance arbitration. ing to do with working condi- state. tions and therefore was not sub- they have with the Red Bank The grievances were sub- ject to arbitration. He said Board of Education. . mitted by the teachers to the contract with the teachers At the same time, Judge school officials in November specifies that teachers will re- Lane suggested to Theodore 1972 and centered on an ad- main in the classroom while M. Simon, the attorney for ministrative directive that, art and music are taught and the teachers association, that during periods when music contended it was an adminis- the teachers file a new griev- and art specialists are in a trative prerogative to direct ance setting out clearly their classroom, the regular class- that teachers teach read- complaint. room teacher should teach ing to half the group during Set Your Sights reading to half the children He said that after the new those periods grievance is prepared a date while the specialist gives in- would be set for a fuU hearing struction tn art or music to "This is something, that if on the Board of Education's the other half. it is to go further, should go to complaint seeking a per- Mr. Simon, in arguing for the (state education) commis- manent injunction blocking permission to seek arbi sioner and not to arbitration," the association and teachers tration, contended this con- he argued. on the Highest Rates. Breakwater Cove project sheriff sale is authorized FREEHOLD - A Mas- He issued the directive in would be the minimum price sachusetts company which connection with foreclosure that would be placed on the holds the mortgage on Break- action brought by C.I. Mori- town house project when it is water Cove, a 90-unit town gage Group against Break- auctioned at a sheriff's sale. house complex in Monmouth water Cove. He explained that is the Beach, got a green light from Judge Lane, at. the same amount needed to cover the 4TO7YEAR Superior Court Friday to pro- $1.7 million mortgage and time, denied a related request ceed with a sheriff's sale of $500,000 in unpaid interest from Snyder-Westerlind Inc., CERTIFICATE the financially-troubled proj- that is due on it. ect. which built the condominium, to consolidate the foreclosure Superior Court Judge Mer- action with a separate suit Breakwater Cove, located ritt Lane Jr. directed Thomas seeking a mechanic's lien on the Shrewsbury River on Compounded Daily •Minimum $10,000 F. Dwyer, attorney for the which Snyder-Westerlind has Seaview Ave., opened in June trustees of C.I. Mortgage instituted against Breakwater 1972. Units initially were ren- Group of Boston, the mort- Cove. ted as apartments and later gagee, to submit an order for were offered for sate-as, con- a sheriff's sale. Mr. Dwyer said $2.2 million dominiums. 7. 2H TO 4 YEAR iniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii CERTIFICATE Yield On County Births Compounded Daily* Minimum $5,000
Ilillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
RIVERV1EW Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Mo- Beach, son, Sept. 19. 1 TO 2* YEAR Red Bart nica (nee Barbara Kleva), 20 Mr. and Mrs. James To- Montclair Ave., Neptune, maskovics (nee Denise Coop- CERTIFICATE Effective Mr. and Mrs. Harry Raupp daughter, Sept. 19. er), Madison Gardens, Old Annual Yield On (nee Linda Mulrennan), 57 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Agar Bridge, son, Sept. 19. Compounded Daily* Minimum $1,000 Chingarora Ave., Key- (nee Jeanne Reddy), 182 Sea Mr. and Mrs. Paul Betcher port, son, Sept. 18. Breeze Ave., East Keansburg, (nee Patricia Widmer), 1 Mr. and Mrs. John Horl son, Sept. 19. Bonafede Place, Keansburg, (nee Barbara Murray), 59 Mr. and Mrs. James Coupe son, Sept. 19. 0/ Irongafe Road, Matawan, (nee Brenda Harney), 62 Mr. and Mrs. James Bove 90-DAY TO 1 YEAR (laughter, Sept. 18. Long Point Drive, Brick (nee Dorothy Keough), 28 To Mr. and Mrs. Peter Piney Town, daughter, Sept. 19. Willow St., Port Monmouth, CERTIFICATE (nee Patricia Higgins), 103 Mr. and Mrs. John Ku- daughter, Sept. 19. • 00^^ ^^Annua1l Yiel d On57 %^lli\5^ Main St., Keyport, son, Sept. rowski (nee Mary Lou Alia- Mr. and Mrs. James 6 Compounded Daily* Minimum $500 18. wat), 323 Dock St., Union McLaughlin (nee Toni Far- ro), 72 Ayrmont Lane, Mata- wan, daughter, Sept. 19. Mr. and Mrs. James Reid (nee Pamela Arner), Stone GOLDEN Hill Farm, Colts Neck, daugh- % ter, Sept. 19. PASSBOOK Effective Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Panick INTEREST wivUr Annual Yield On (nee Maryann Yaremko), 266 PAYABLE MONTHLY 90 day golden PassBooTTl Compounded Daily* Minimum $500 flfc«EW*WA»/ Harvey Ave,., Lincroft, son, Sept. 19. Mr. and Mrs. George Bel- loni (nee Mary Ann Lauria), SPECIAL 0/ 0/ Ken Gardens, Cliffwood, son, CONVENIENCE A> Sept. 19. /O PASSBOOK Effective Annual Yield On MONMOUTH MEDICAL INTEREST PAYABLE MONTHLY 5.47 LMg Branch 5.25 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marti- Compounded Daily nelly (nee Judith Peterson), SAVE BY THE 10th OF ANY MONTH, 240 White Road, Little Silver, EARN FULL INTEREST FROM THE. 1st. OUR FREE BOOKLET HAS . daughter, Sept. 4. REGULAR PASSBOOK SAVINGS EARN INTEREST FROM DAY OF DEPOSIT TO DAY OF WITHDRAWAL PAYABLE MONTHLY Mr. and Mrs. Edward Urba- LIKE YOURS,... FOR OVER 25 YEARS! nowicz (nee Mary Sakell), 154 Morris Ave., Long Branch, M MTHOO STOf«D SID WETTING IN 7 TO 4 W son, Sept. 17. HOI A 0«UO Ot A Dili. iUT JUST A UHM EXfKISf TKM Mr. and Mrs. Peter Clarke NtQUl AWtOV|DirMANYDOCTO«S.THltNU«TONe MITMOO (nee Beverly Shipp), 147 Wal- M« ftOVf N SUCCtSSHU fO* TMt rAST 23 YfAM IN COMKT- V • ING THIS CONDITION WHIN NOT CAUSED nut Drive, Brick Town, son, »t CHKJANIC OfHCT 01 DISEASE. HUP Sept. 17. YOU* CHIID NOW W«TE KM FHE SOOKlf Tl Mr. and Mrs. Henry Steimel MARINE VIEW (nee Shearon Krryuda), 27 Copy*! 1*1. THttNUHTONt CO Bayview Ave., Keansburg, son, Sept. 17. ..._.VUII out Oftict Of Miil Coupon-— SAVINGS Mr. and Mrs. Donald Brake (nee Patricia Pesano), 30 At- MIDDLETOWN • ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS • LINCROfT lantic Ave., Long Branch, mumroHeo., 5TATI son, Sept. 17. M INWirHT ML. PHONE NUMBER FOR ALL OFFICES 871-1400 VMUTITUMI, Mr. and Mrs. Harris Cro- U. UNI ckett (nee Candace Walker). 55 Cooper Ave., Long Branch, Mrnnlxr FSUC daughter, Sept. 18. 16 The DtaailyRegister SHREWSBURY, N J TUESOAY. SEPTEMBER 24.1974 Rooker rakes Cardinals to revive Pirates By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - "We came in here at a point where we were forced to win two out of three," said Manager Danny Murtaugh of the lilts burgh Pirates. 115th steal of the season but was thrown out trying to steal Murtaugh, whose Pirates had trailed St Louis by lft third Ted Suemore then followed with a stogie, but the Car- games with 10 to go, watched his team wipe out two-thirds of dinals could produce no more offense. the deficit by beating the Cardinals 1-0 in 10 innings last night Reliever Dave Giusti saved the game for Rooker in tne to close within one-half game in the National League East 10th. "I think that's about as good as I've seen Jim Rooker DctJger mitt*' »• 4 pitch all year," said Murtaugh in complimenting the Pirates' Strongman Mike Marshall made his 101st appearance, winning pitcher who worked nine innings of shutout ball. "But I would say that through the whole year Hooker's bailing Don Sutton out of a tense, eighth-inning jam and pre- record of 14-11 is not indicative of the way he's been pitching. serving a 4-3 victory for the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers 1 would say he could've won three, four or five more games." over the Atlanta Braves. The Pirates' victory also represented a personal triumph The victory stretched the Dodgers' lead to five games for hard-hitting third baseman Richie Hebner, who singled over the Cincinnati Reds in the National League West and re- across the winning run. duced their "magic number ' for clinching the title to four. Sutton, 18-9, needed help from Marshall after giving up a "I couldn't lay off his high fastball," related Hebner, who single to Craig Robinson, a triple to Ralph Garr and a home connected on a 1-2 fastball from Lynn McGlothen. "I wouldn't run to Rowland Office. Marshall gave up a base hit to Marty say the pitch I hit was a ball, but we had been swinging at some bad ones." Pere* before retiring the side, then checked the Brave, in the Ahead of the Hebner hit, pinch-hitler Paul Popovich had ninth. faced McGlothen, 16-11, leading off the inning and popped a Bill Buckner collected a double and three singles and single over shortstop. drove in one run to lead the Dodgers' attack He also took a Rennie Stennett then sacrificed pinch-runner Miguel I)i home run away from Dusty Baker in the fourth inning when lone to second and Hebner delivered his winning drive down he leaped high to spear the drive, his glove clearly over the the right field line. top of the leftfield wall. "It was a heck of a decision to make when a guy was Sutton, 18-9 with eight straight victories and 12 victories in *• atrepfcete pitching like Rooker was," acknowledged Murtaugh, who had his last 13 decisions, also singled twice and drove In two of the CALLING CARD - Smith's the name, Reggie to double play lost night was unsuccessful, as Pitts- lifted the left hander for Popovich. Dodgers' runs. his friends, and sliding's his game. Unfortunately, burgh Pirate second baseman Rennie Stennett "But we hadn't scored a run in It innings," he said. Sutton's two-out single in tne fourth Inning scored Willie the St. Louis Cardinal's attempt at breaking up a relays to first base In time for a twin killing. "We're on the road and I thought it might be a good time to Crawford with Lot Angeles' first ran.Crawfor d had singled and moved to second on BUI Russell's Infield single. Defense, Dempsey kicks Murcer bat lift Eagles over Cowboys has reason PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Dempsey, whose winning clval's 48-yard field goal at- among the league's 26 teams. "The defense and Tom Dem- three-pointer was set up when tempt with seven seconds left And the Eagles' clutch de- psey's two pressure kicks won comerback Randy Logan in- fell far short and wide to the fense was supported by the for living it," said Philadelphia Coach tercepted a Roger Staubach left of the uprights. statistics, which indicated Mike MeCormack after the pass and stepped out of The Cowboys, who beat At- that Dallas did everything but NEW YORK (AP) - It took problem, his teammates fig- Eagles eked out a 13-10 Na- bounds at the Dallas 29-yard lanta 240 in their opener a win the game. The Cowboys, Bobby Murcer 77 games to ured he didn't need the rock- tional Football League vic- line with 1:49 left. -y, week ago while the Eagles on the ground and in the air, get the home run range in er anymore. So they chopped tory over the Dallas Cowboys Dempsey said that, on the were losing 7-3 to St. Louis, piled up 385 yards to 166 for Shea Stadium, and now that It up. in last night's national tele- winning kick, he was facing a took a 7-0 lead in the second the Eagles, notching 20 first he's finally found it, the New Murcer halted the strange vision game. crosswind going from left to period on a three-yard run by downs to only five for Phila- York Yankees hope he Shea homer hex by Just going Dempsey's second field goal right. rookie Doug Dennlson. The delphia. doesn't let go. back to his normal method of of the game, a 45-yarder with "I aimed for the left .pole Eagles tied it in the third Dallas Coach Tom Landry s^iujuig. "I changed every- quarter when comerback Joe Murcer tagged a pair of 25 seconds remaining, gave and watched it go through said the key to the game was weekend homm tlu/helped thing trying to hit .homer the Eagles their first victory just as I hoped," he said. Lavender picked up a Denni- the fumble by Dennison "If e he ch e<1 the Yankees sweep a four- »« . •••*•> 1"8 of the season and evened both The Cowboys had a chance son fumble and burst 96 yards we score there," he said, m But a l he down the left sideline for a game series from Cleveland J •»•»«• " . teams' records at l-l. to send the game into sudden- "we're up by 14 and they and sent New York into the "I really didn't feel any death overtime after Stau- touchdown. have a long, uphill battle." final eight games Of theIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIUIHIIII pressure on that winning field bach completed passes of 27 MeCormack was especially Dempsey sent the Eagles American League East race goal. If you don't like that and 23 yards to Drew Pearson proud of his rebuilt defense, ahead 10-7 with a 33-yard field type of situation, you don't for a first down at the Phila- with a one-game lead over rlfYIrV since the Eagles last year goal early in the fourth quar- the Baltimore Orioles. belong in the NFL," said delphia 31. But Mac Per were next-to-last in defense ter, but Dallas came back to tie it again on a 28-yard field The Yankees had yesterday . 1 goal by Perclval with 8:34 re- off and start the final 10 days r 9 maining. of the season hosting the Bos- Sill I1( I The 27-year-old Dempsey, a ton Red Sox in a twl-nlgbt Ali: Only mira
In extremely close voting, with eight first-place ballots Texas defeated Wyoming 34-7 Nebraska rounded out the One member >of the panel the Buckeyes of Ohio State and (13 points. and rose from ninth to sixth Top Ten. called this week's votfng the replaced Notre Dame today Alabama, fifth a week ago, with 588 points. The Second Ten consists of toughest he's ever had to do. as tbe No. 1-ranked team in received the other four No. 1 Last week's 7-8 teams, Wisconsin, Oklahoma State, "You've got six or seven The Associated Press college votes and 8(6 points and Louisiana State and Penn North Carolina State, Ten- teams and after that throw football poll. moved up a notch to fourth by State, were upset by Texas nessee, Arizona, Illinois, Loui- 'em in a hat," he said, adding Five new teams appeared battering Southern Mississippi AfcM 2114 and Navy 7-4 and siana State, Southern Califor- that he spent at least four in the Top Twenty as a result 52-0. Nebraska, last week's skidded to 17th and 19th. re- nia, Penn State and Miami of hours wrestling with his bal- of the wekend's rash of up- No. 4 team, dropped to 10th spectively. Arizona State Florida. lot. sets. by losing toWisconsi n 21-20. trounced Texas Christian 37-7 Wisconsin made it by ed- Last week'8 Second Ten FoUowing Saturday's 51-10 and jumped from 11th to sev- ging Nebraska. Oklahoma consisted of Arizona State, Michigan, a 31-0 winner rout of Oregon State, Ohio enth. Pitt shot from a tie for State knocked off Arkansas UCLA, Southern Cal, Mary- over Colorado, climbed from State received 23 first-place 15th to eighth with a 27-17 26-7 one week after the Razor- land, N.C. State and Pitt tied sixth tofift h with 756 points votes —three fewer than triumph over Georgia Tech.. Jiacks upset Southern Cal. Il- for 15th, followed by Ten- TOTTWtNTV Texas A&M, a newcomer tolinois thrashed Stanford 41-7 Notre Dame - and 1,110 of a Tin Top Twonty, wllti in.1 P4oci votn nessee and Arizona, with possible 1,220 points from a In parffittttMt, Mown record and total the rankings, zoomed all the and Miami stunned Houston Houston and Stanford tied to polntl Polnli MDolatM on bails of 70 II nationwide panel of 61 sports 14-14-114 III01 1HIHK-HIM : «IAy to ninth by beating LSU. 20-3. 19th T«AM w L PH. ' writers and broadcasters. 1 Ohk> Slate 1711 1*0 l.lib ;•• 1 Notrt Ooma IMI 1«« 1.104 The Fighting Irish of Notre 1 Oklohomolll loo *1j Dame, who walloped North- Ak*omo(4| IM SH Michigan 2«-0 7H western 48-3, received 26 first- . Tenoi l«-0 SM Casey boys, girls cop place votes but only 1,104 Arliono ilert. 144 477 .Pitt lit 171 points. TtxotAlM !
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The Wizard of id )) • _ P I I Bi •I (( fi I •utss ys?u AN* AFTER THAT and be seen. make the mistake of building nevertheless controlled Not one to take friendships *XJ CAN A LWAYS CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. tomorrow entirely upon your enough in your creative, lightly, you hold your personal yesterdays. Consult others in YOU'RE ONLY TOUNGONCE, y BLAME IT ON V 19) — Business and/or pro- EH, MISTER CAPP?j individualistic impulses that relationships in the highest fessional contact are such that the field. you never allow your origi- regard. Loyal — though not toyou can ill afford to ignore GEMINI (May 21-June 20) nality to get the better of your such an extreme that you them at this time. What you — A day filled with "green instinct of judicious decisions would support your friends in fail to cultivate may well lights." You should be able to and actions. Because you are disreputable activities — anddisintegrate. meet several goals and attain greatly interested in material ready to help where and when AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. several objectives during success, you habitually con- you can, others can depend 18) — Both family and career afternoon and evening. sider any proposed enterprise upon you for material and matters require your utmost in CANCER (June 21-July 22) in the light of the gain to be spiritual aid. the way of attention this You can put recent plans made — or lost — as a result Wednesday, Sept. 25 morning. Take care not to into action today if you are of your involvement. Only a confuse issues during the wise enough to seek the advice promise of gain can bring you LIBRA ISept. 23-Oct. 22> - afternoon. of one who knows precisely «-.,I.,,. [»- >.»j;M fully into action. Hitch your wagon to a star if PISCES I Feb. 19-March 20) what your objective is. Nubbin You are one of those you must — but be sure that — There may be some LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - individuals who never deals you are capable of remaining in-fighting on the employment This is no time for you to be HOT less than honorably with your steadfast to your ideal. Keep scene as a result of your recent sitting idly by while others associates. It never crosses standards high. make gains and reputations. OPEM success. Don't expect every- your mind to take a shortcut SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) one to accept losses with Do what you can to initiate a THESE LETTERS to success at another's ex-, — Take care not to attempt, grace. new and better deal for pense, just as it would not more than you can achieve ARIES (March 21 April 19) yourself. occur to you to lie or cheat today. This is no time to fail in — A new idea in combination VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) your way to the top. It is the sight of others; your best with a new ambition should — Keep yourself in readiness essential to your success, bet is a sure thing. bring you to the attention of for that single opportunity however, that you leam to SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-those who can make or break which can carry you to the top. take advantage of those Dec. 21) - You should find it ypjir- chances for advance- Take advantage of any chance breaks which come your way a simple matter to make new ment. to be seen in action. SheinwokTs bridge advice By ALFRED SHEINWOLD bright idea of leading dia- South wanted. He won with Box 1111, Los Angeles. Calif. Blondie monds, and South would then the ace of clubs, cashed the 90053.) South saw that his'oppo- TIT K lose three diamonds in addi- ace of trumps, took the queen CORA'S HP WELL, WES " ' ME SELLS nents might go wrong if left tion to the king of hearts. of clubs and got to dummy BROTHER IS OUT [ IN A PRETTY -( STEEL-TOED ) South dealer 1= LIMITED > SNEAKERS TO { to their own devices, but he If South took the trump fi with a trump to discard two OF WORK East-West vulnerable AGAIN ; ( GANOY DANCERS J also saw a chance to give nesse at once, West might fail diamonds on the king and them a push in the wrong di- to shift to diamonds. But jack of clubs. Now only two NORTH rection. South believed that a since South didn't like to diamonds could be lost, and * AK bridge player should always leave these matters to the contract was safe. ) 109732 spades, and declarer won in Misdirection was the an- • Q854 the next player passes You tf K5 dummy with the king. South swer. At the second trick, hold: S-A K H-9 7 2 D-Q 9 8 4
"f&OTASOOP A5 Off ICIAL TEAM WKIN6 THIS mST SEASON, WHILE SEVENTY-SIX &ROUrsP BALLS K. V iPtA AW«EAPV.. STATISTICIAN, I VOU WERE IN RI6HT FIELD. NINETY ROLLEP THR0U6H HO1R LEGS HAVE A FEW 1 EIGHT FLY 8ALLS 60UNCEP ANP tfOU PR0PP£P TWO HUNPREP FlGUftSTORETOTrJ OVER HOUR HEAP... FLY BALLS YOUR Fai?IN6 AVERAGE k FOR THE SEASON WAS .000 rk
The Phantom Beetle Bailey A CRIME-Flf3HTER? NO. HUNTER ,,,S4R4RI 6UIPE., BUTCHER, BAKER, CANPLEr) 6 PONE THAT ALL MY 6MME WARPEN ? NO,,. STICK /MAKER,,,LAWYER. -S WHAT'* TO LEAP A NORMAL LIPE. SOA1ETHIN& SOMETHINS TO (56T ME DOCTOR, .^TN BESGAKMAN, LIFE, I /MUST FIRST OUT Of THE JUNGLE. THIEfi..7H/WM.,? MOLPIN& FINP A JOB. WHAT UP THE AAI I FITTEP FOR? 'TENNIS MATCM 11K Dtrily Register SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24.1974 Atmosphere in high schools hinders learning process M. & ft carrie, d. ^....beyonJd th...e. ..schoohMil dents will follow them,. Thne .IIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIUIIHWMMMtHHtMtMMMH from the social structure cheating ex'.ends from the result will be schools where By ELINOR MULTER forge notes, but the incidence which exists outside the presidency ft the top to the walls. discipline problems diminish, of such forgery is surely schools nor from the atmos- welfare recipient at the bot- The task of turning schools where combat will not be the Neither rapid technological boosted by the school's sug- phere of combat which school tom. What schools can and into communities where in- motivating force and where upgrading which puts comput- gestive procedures. Psy- LEARNING administrations have built should do, is seek to build an nocence is assumed and re- students themselves will sup- ers into each classroom, nor chologists know, and school sponsibilities are shared falls within their domains. environment of humane con- port the disciplining of those extensive curriculum revision administrations should learn, initially on the shoulders of Admittedly, schools can do sideration and mutual trust who misuse and abuse their with more vocational pro- that young people, like all of school officials. If they can grams and greater individ- WORLD little directly to change the within their enclaves in the privileges. us, tend to live up or down to hope that Its lesson will be rise to the challenge, the stu- ualization is likely to do much our expectations. fabric of our society where to Improve pupU attitudes to- Even more distressing is ward education until we make iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiii the increasing tendency of significant progress in huma- teachers to assume that stu- nizing the public schools. dents are cheating. In one in- prove otherwise. Reacting predictably, stu- The problem of dehumani- stance a good student with The most common circle of dents take great delught in zatlon is particularly acute at correct answers received a restriction is the hall pass. acquiring or retaining extra the high schools where the at- "D" on a mathematics test That coveted piece of piper hall passes, to be used when mosphere has degenerated to though she had the correct which permits a student to an occasion presents itself. that of an arena. The contest answers. The "D" was for walk through the buildings The whole thing is ridiculous. Is between the pupils and the failure to show the work, officials, the former trying to when classes arc in session In at least one high school Since students who cut though no instructions to do see how much rule-breaking system, pupils who bring classes are reported anyway, so had been given at the time they can get away with be- notes from parents to be ex- it is difficult to see any justi- of \he test. When she asked fore they are caught, the lat- cused early are subjected to fication for this demeaning why such a drastic reduction ter making more and more the humiliating business of of grade was made, the practice. If students are noisy having school officials call rules to prevent rule-break- in the halls, that problem can teacher responded: "How do their parents to confirm the ing. be dealt with without requir- I know you weren't cheat- note. The assumption is that AU students have been en- ing students to get a piece of ing?" We have come to a sad the student has forged the ex- circled by the rules on the as- paper before they can go to point when honest students sumption that they are guilty the library or the lavatory. cuse. must prove that they are not of misdeeds unless they can Of course, some students do cheating. Granted that increasing numbers of students do cheat, Brookdale plans programs and granted too, that this works a hardship on the hon- est student; this does not jus- tify an assumption of guilt. on open classroom concept Increased cheating in schools cannot be separated LINCROFT - The*new minlstrators) from 1 to 2:30 of "Open Classroom," the Educational Exchange Center p.m., and "Organizing the center, located in the Adult at Brookdale Community Col- Classroom for Open Educa- Information Center, will offer lege will launch the first of its tion" (for students and teach- a place where teachers, ad- five "Open Classroom" pro- ers) from 8 to 10 p.m. A nomi- ministrators and parents who grams Oct. IS when Edward nal fee will be charged for are seeking more "open" and Watson, senior schools advi- each session. This special creative approaches to educa- sor of Lancashire, England, program Is presented In coop- tion can meet in a relaxed will speak on "Open Educa- eration with Kean College, and supportive atmosphere. FORCED TO QUIT! tion: A Britisher's View. Union. There will be opportunities to Mr. Watson will discuss: Other workshop sessions participate in workshops, at- "Understanding Open Educa- being offered during the year tend demonstrations, consult tion" (for parents) from 0:30 Include: with open classroom teach- AFTER 60 YEARS IN RED BANK to 11 a.m.; "Bringing About "Learning to Read in the ers, purchase recycle mate- Change in Schools" (for ad- Open Classroom," With rials and become familiar with Amora Smith, resource teach- audio-visual materials, books 135 MONMOUTH ST. er In the Princeton Regional and equipment used to help The Candle Light Schools, Oct. 17 and 24, 8:00- "open up " the approach to 10 p.m. teaching. ACME FURNITURE RED BANK "Science in the Open Class- Barbara Goldstein, man- room," James Messersmith, ager of Community Education PAPfRWAUlg science advisor, Science at Brookdale, is director and IS (TMNBI mum) |j World Magazine, Nov. 6 and Anthony Grabelle is volunteer SI- 13,8:00-10:00 p.m. coordinator of the center. 7,1 n "Open Classroom," (a re- The Educational Exchange ApvamiwuiiMT peat of last spring's course) Center will be open every with Ellen Kuris, director of Tuesday from 2:30 to 5:30 Now Many Wear Princeton Teacher Center, p.m. and from 7 to 10 p.m. Nov. 7 and Dec. 5, 7:30-to 9:30 starting Oct. IS. FALSE TEETH p.m. GOING OUT OF With Mort Comfort "Math in the Open Class- Rotary has picnic Thtr know « dtntura tdhwiv* tu Up. FASTEETH* Powdtr ftvM room" Victor Wagner, teach- MATAWAN - The Rotary OMtturM 1 longer, firmer, ittititar er In the Brooklyn Friends Club had its annual family hold. You f«d more corofortibU... Mt nun wtumttjr. Why worn? 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