The Daily Register VOL. 98 NO.32 SHREWSBURY, N. J. TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1975 15 CENTS Ford asks for a halt in Soviet grain deals WASHINGTON (AP) - The Ford Administration is ask- ing American grain traders "to refrain from further negotia- tions" with the Soviet Union for at least a month because of declining expectations for the U.S. harvest this year. Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz said yesterday that it would take five months to unload at Russian ports the 9.8 mil- lion metric tons of U.S. grain already bought, so "there is no real hurry about additional sales to the Soviets." Butz said it is more important now "to make sure Ameri- can livestock production is not short-changed" for lack of feed grains just to boost exports or supply the Russians with their needs. Butz said he expected discussions and good relations to continue between U.S. traders and Moscow until negotiations resume. Further sales definitely will be forthcoming, he said. Butz has received heavy criticism for his support of the sales already made, which critics say will lead to price in- creases at American grocery stores. He said he still feels consumer food prices will not be ap- preciably affected by the U.S. grain sales or the crop report, which lowered the Agriculture Departments forecast of the R«fWw •*•» >MM kr Larry Pm corn harvest by 3 per cent. CRASH SCENE — Five persons were hospitalized Parkway. State Police said 23 other passengers The department has predicted a 6 to 8 per cent increase yesterday when a Transport of New Jersey bus hit suffered minor injuries In the crash caused by an in food prices this year over last year. Food price increases a guardrail near Exit 117 on the Garden State undetermined mechanical failure. have been about 14.5 per cent in each of the last two years, with the 1972 Russian purchase of 19 million metric tons of grain one factor. The secretary said he hoped for further but better spaced Russian purchases. He told a news conference that "ob- viously ... the actions we take are with the full knowledge 28 hurt as bus hits and concurrence of the President." Butz spokes shortly after the department's Crop Report- ing Board announced that, based on Aug. 1. growing condi- tions, the corn crop should be a record 5.85 billion bushels. That would be 26 per cent greater than last season's drought CORN CROP UP — Secretary of Agriculture Earl stricken harvest. Butz tells a Washington news conference yes- parkway guardrail July dry spells in Iowa and other areas of the eastern terday the nation's corn crop will be a record 5.85 Corn Belt led to the reduction in the crop estimate. billion bushels this year, up 26 per cent from last See Ford, page 2 year. HOLMDEL - A Transport causing the vehicle to skid wood, who injured his spine. know a mechanical problem of New Jersey bus hit a about 350 feet. Admitted for treatment of made the bus veer to the guardrail In the righthand Police said a small fire severe back sprains and mul- right, but we haven't been lane on the Garden State broke out when the gas tank tiple bruises and scrapes able to determine exactly Parkway near Exit 117 yes- ruptured and spilled fuel on were John Fekety and John what malfunctioned. It was Court refuses bid to block terday, causing hospi- the roadway. The fire, which Cremen, 30, both of Toms definitely a malfunction of talization of five passengers caused no damage, ex- River. the bus and not the driver." and minor injuries to 23 oth- tinguished itself, police said. State Police Sgt. Edward A spokesman for TNJ said ers. Admitted to Bayshore Com- Suchocki said the disabled ve- company officials were Accrodlng to the State Po- munity Hospital were the bus hicle was difficult to remove checking the vehicle to "try Long Branch police probe lice, here, the bus was en driver, Kenneth Fred- from the highway. tto find out exactly what hap- route from Lakewood to New- erickson, 41, of South Bound "They had to cut the engine pened." By WILLIAM J. ZAORSKI Thursday and Friday. Of 22 said the judge, because the cident in which 16-year-old ark at 7:18 a.m. when an un- Brook; Angelina Van BUIard, out of it and remove the Emergency assistance was officers issued subpoenas, 12 incident involved here re- Steven Russell was shot and determined mechanical fail- 55, of Kearny,, who was put tires," Suchocki said. provided by the Matawan FREEHOLD - The Long have testified. quires much soul searching. killed by a city patrolman. ure caused it to go out of con- in the intensive care unit with Although the cause of the Township Fire and First Aid Branch police failed yes- While the court declined to The committee composition The judge said that the in trol. Police said the right side multiple fractures, and accident has not been estab- .units. Trooper Charles terday in their attempt to get issue the temporary re- seemed to be a reasonable vestigatlon Is to determine of the bus hit the guardrail George Horaak, 46, of Lake- lished, Suchocki said: "We Mahieu investigated. a temporary court order to straints, it signed an order di- balance, said the judge. Coun- what police policies were and block a Long Branch City recting city officials to ap- cil did this so that whatever to prevent a repetition of the Council investigation of the pear in court Sept. 12 to ex- is recommended would come incident. city police department. plain why an order should not from more than just the coun- Concerning the questions of Superior Court Judge Pat- be issued permanently enjoin- cil members, said the judge, the investigative committee, Libel suit is threatened rick J. McGann Jr. said he ing the investigation until a ruling that the fact that citi- the judge said that if the would not sign a temporary full court hearing is con- zens are permitted to attend questions go far afield from court order to block the City ducted. the investigative sessions is the purpose of the in- Council from conducting This means that the police not in violation of the law. vestigation, the police officers hearings or from issuing sub- will have another opportunity The council resolution au- have a right to contest them, Little Silver official poenas to police officers. to present arguments In their thorizing the investigation on adding that they have their Judge McGann said he efforts to block the hear- its face appears to be a prop- attorneys with them during By MARK LONDON the mayor's departure, deco- would not make a ruling ings—should the hearings con- er resolution, said the judge. questioning. rum disappeared in the close about the scope of questions tinued to that September He added that while the lan- Judge McGann said the LITTLE SILVER - Coun- quarters, and councilmen fre- the council investigating com- hearing date. guage in the subpoenas seems PBA argument that the in- cilman William E. Trefurt quently spoke out of turn, mittee could put to witnesses In his review of the matter, to go beyond the expressed vestigative committee's ac- said last night that he will sue shouting at each other to cap- appearing before it. The Judge McGann noted that purpose in the resolution, he tions trammels upon its col- Councilman K. Edward Ja- ture the floor. judge said he would not tell City Council had included in did not see a substantial dif- lective bargaining agreement cobi for libel. The first discernible direc- the committee, which has a its Dec. 10 resolution that the ference. with the city is an effort to In a crowded, makeshift tion was toward adjournment. very serious responsibility, investigating committee The judge noted that David put off the hearings. council meeting room in the Democratic councilmen Ja- what questions it should ask. would include a five-member Resnikoff, a Long Branch at- Council has not adopted .borough hall basement, Mr. cobi, John A. Mortensen, and The next session in the con- citizens committee to be ad- torney who was named spe- anything, he said. The in- trefurt demanded that Mr. HA. "Hal" Steiner 3rd spoke troversial investigation in junct to the investigating cial counsel to the committee, vestigating committee prob- Jacob! apologize for his in favor of ending the meet- that city is scheduled committee. said the hearings include ably will make recommenda- charge last week of conflict - ing when the mayor had gone. Thursday night. The com- Council's action in giving more than just testimony tions at the conclusion of the of interests. Mr. Jacobi re- "It won't accomplish a mittee took testimony from the advisory committee the from police officers. hearings. fused to apologize. thing to continue," said Mr. subpoenaed members of the right to advise council was The investigation was in- The judge said he did not Mr. Jacobi made the charge Steiner. "It's clear how we department last Wednesday, probably a salutary thing, itiated after the Dec. 8 in- See Court, page 2 regarding Mr. Trefurt's vote are going to vote. I think the to limit applicants to the pa- mayor's not being here has a trolman vacancy on the police lot to do with your bringing force to four special officers. this matter up again." Storm blacks out Bayshore areas Kevin Tuohy, one of the four, Republican Councilman is a cousin of Mr. Trefurt's John A. Marrah countered, By BLAIR KAMIN last night after lightning voltage cables on Rts. 35 and police directed traffic man- wife. "There's work to be done." ually since traffic signals William Trefurt K. Edward Jacobi Eight hundred Bayshore struck two Jersey Central 36. The resolution to limit the Mr. Schenck, a Republican, area residents were without Power and Light Company Hazlet, Union Beach, West were temporarily out: applicants failed, 4-3, and the debate among council mem- policy not to allow political and Mr. Trefurt, an Indepen- power for up to 45 minutes transformers and two main Keansburg and Holmdel were Holmdel police reported council voted to advertise for bers. debate at council meetings. dent, supported Mr. Marrah's affected by the storm, which general flooding throughout the post. The council often has had However, Mr. Rell left the statement. it around 6 p.m. A spokesman the township with up to two Mr. Trefurt's announce- heated discussions that have meeting at the conclusion of Mr. Trefurt then read a res- for JCP&L said power was feet of water In some areas. ment of the suit culminated been closely policed by Mayor the announced agenda on bid- olution to rescind last week's restored in all areas by this Two Holmdel houses were more than one hour of bitter Charles F. Rell, who has set a ding for sidewalks and cur- vote to advertise for the pa- morning. hit by lightning. There was bing (see related story page trolman's post vacated by The spokesman reported shingle damage and a hole in 3). He said that he had post- Richard Canetto, who will that transformers at Poole Ave. the roof at the home of Jo- poned a business trip to at- join the Monmouth County and Rt. 36, Hazlet, and Rose seph Minafri at 10 Galloping tend the council meeting and Prosecutor's staff. Lane and Rt. 36, Union Hill Road which was hit at The inside story had to leave early in the Beach, were struck. 6:59 p.m. A model home in He referred to a section in morning for day-long meet- He said the transformers the Country Hill development the administrative code which THE HEATHER ings. were hit at approximately t on Crawfords Corner Road Mostly sassy aid quite warm today; Mr. Rell spoke strongly of states that the borough should p.m and that power was re- also sustained minor damage clear, cooler aid less humid tonight. Com- his disapproval of the possi- "consider qualified borough stored after 15 to 45 minutes. when it was hit at 6:15 p.m. employes" first when there is plete report on page 2. bility that the council would One of the complex of Inter- There were no injuries. discuss the patrolman va- an opportunity for advance- national Flavors and Fra- Police also said that Craw- Little Silver wont defend citizen's suit > cancy in his absence. ment." grances buildings was without fords Comer Road and Hol- Total Fitness series, part II 7 "We resolved that last Mr. Steiner quoted from an- power when the Rose Lane land Road were closed at 7:45 Cowboys waive Eatontown's Ed Jones II week," he said. "I will make other section of the code to transformer was knocked out. p.m. due to flooding. Both Henry Schaefer's'Oat In the upea' II the final appointment, and I support his position to adver- An A&P supermarket at roads remained closed all .11 Gene Butler: Gridiron chopper. will not be pressured, pushed tise for the post. He cited: Poole Ave. was similarly af- night, they said, because a DAILY REGISTER or panicked into making a de- "Borough Council reserves fected by the blowout nearby. foot of mud accumulated Bridge Advice H PHONE NUMBERS cision. With the council's help the right to add, to change, to Power was restored in both there. Classified 12.11 Maid Office S42-MW L e I will act carefully and delib- interpret, or to eliminate per- buildings this morning the Contemporary " ' Toll Free 671 »3«M» The JCP&L spokesman re- erately." sonnel policies, practices, and spokesman said. ported that power lines were Crossword Puzzle 14 Toll Free 5«6 KI00 Council President Grandin rules whenever it appears to down on Rt. 35 between Editorials :.* Classified Ads &4M7H Holmdel police said the two W. Schejick presided in the See Little Silver, page 2 Palmer Ave. and Laurel Ave., Entertainment li Circulation Dept S42-4HJ main voltage cables at Rt 35 mayor's absence. and Palmer Ave. were hit by West Keansburg. Financial 8 Sports Dept J42-4H4 Rumson Roulette Almost immediately after lightning at 6:59 p.m. A two- Make A Date IS Mlddletown Bureau I7I-225* Sidewalk Sale. Save up to Hazlet police said there was mile stretch, from Palmer minor flooding but no damage Obituaries 4 Freehold Bureau 4(2 2121 Attention Boaters 50% and more. 7 West River KING OF HOBOES - Seventy-year-old John Ave. to Union Ave. along Rt. in the township. Sports W.U Long Branch Bureau ..222-MII Our "Boating World" Supple- Rd. • (Hardrock Kid) Mlslen., who was elected King of 35, and the Holmdel Road In Union Beach, police re- ment. Don't miss it! On Fit, Final Tennis Sale area are serviced by the cab- Aug. 22. Make your reserva- the Hoboes during the 42nd national hobo con- ported no damage or flooding. Selling our entire tennis Lost Halter dresses-50% off. Ad- les. Power was restored at stock, dresses, rackets, etc., Black female Newfoundland tions now. For more informa- idas T-shirts, $2. More! The vention In Iowa says he's 'heading for Colorado to Power outages of less than 10:35 p.m. up to 50% off. Deal courts. named Heidi. Rumson area. tion, call Classified Display, Sport Spot, Broad St. Shrews- mine silver and gold' for his next venture — riding a minute were reported in the 531-0243. Reward. 842-8515 • 747-3526. 542-1700. bury. the rails to get there, of course. Mlddletown and Holmdel Red Bank-Shrewsbury area. 2 The Daily Register SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY, AUGUST 12.1975 Boat ramp action postponed to hear residents' ideas
FAIR HAVEN — Borough Council has postponed action using the facility ramp congestion. The proposed speeds, which the county called "realistic" until Sept. g on an ordinance regulating use of the Battin "The main problem is with outsiders who would be happy Other streets where ramps could be built, he said, are and which have preliminary approval from the state Depart- Road public boat launching ramp in order to consider resi- to pay the small five-dollar fee," she said. "It should be much Grange Ave., De Normandie Ave. and Fair Haven Road. In ment of Transportation, call for 35 mph from the Red Bank dents' ideas for improving the proposed measure. higher for them." addition, he asked council to consider enacting special decal border to Hance Road, 30 mph from Hance Road to Brown At last night's public hearing on the ordinance, opinions Carl Becker of 37 Second St. agreed and labeled the pro- allowances for the young and senior citizens. Lane and 40 mph from Brown Lane lo the Rumson border. ranged from raising substantially the proposed five-dollar posed sticker fee "the best damn buy in town." He doubted He also suggested making decal fees applicable only on Borough Council must approve the proposed speed limits ramp use fee, changing parking regulations to limit the num that the seasonal rate would deter outsiders from using the weekends, when the problem with non-resident boat launchers before they can be enacted. ber of boaters leaving vehicles in the Battin Road area and ramp. exists. Council authorized Jersey Central Power and Light Co. to providing more launching facilities to ignoring the issue in Councilman John B. McCarthy sympathized with them John O'Rourke of 94 Hance Road, however, prefers to- ig- install three street lights on Lewis Point Road at an annual hopes of not attracting publicity. but said riparian rights,' granted by the state to the borough nore the issue. charge of $178 and two lights on Pine Cove Road at an annual The proposed ordinance would require each boat to govern use of the ramp, guarantee the public equal access "We're only attracting a lot of newspaper publicity," he charge of Jl 19 launched from the Battin Rqad ramp to have a sticker, which to the launching area regardless of residency status. said. "The best thing to do is to forget il and stop talking A resolution was passed establishing opening and closing could be bought at borough hall for five dollars. Violators For that reason the borough could not charge non-resi- about it." times for use of the outdoor recreation area at the Youth Cen- could be fined up to $100 and/or 10 days in jail. dents a higher sticker fee than town residents, he said. Mayor W. R. "Ed" Kiely Jr., however, said that would ter on Fisk St. It will be open from 6 am to 9:30 p.m. daily. The measure was requested by residents in the Battin As an alternative to discriminatory fees, William Gamble not solve anything and recommended that the public hearing A public hearing will be held Sept. 8 on a zoning ordi- Road area who complained in June about excessive noise and of Hillcrest Road, who has three boats, suggested issuing sti- on the measure be postponed until Sept. 8. nance amendment which would add swimming pools and ten- traffic partly caused by a large number of non-residents using ckers only during regular borough business hours to make it If council decides to change the proposed ordinance to in- nis courts to the list of accessory uses allowed in the borough. the ramp. difficult for non-residents, who use the ramp primarily on corporate residents' suggestions, said John Warren, acting At that time, council will also hold public hearings on or- While everyone last night agreed something should be weekends, to obtain the decal. borough attorney, the measure would have to be reintroduced dinances accepting Lewis Point and Pine Cove Roads, both done to correct the problems, a number of divergent opinions Derickson W. Bennett of 13 Lexington Ave., executive di- and a new public hearing slated. part of Pine Cove Estates, as borough streets. were offered about how to accomplish that goal. rector of the American Littoral Society and long-time advo- The police committee will review the county engineer's Council approved the mayor's appointment of Malcolm A. Mrs. Nancy Smith of 117 Battin Road, whose property ad- cate of free public access to beaches, recommended creating proposal to change speed limits on River Road through the Specht of 14 Spruce Drive as a member of the Shade Tree joins the ramp site, had no complaints about borough boaters more boat launching facilities to alleviate the Battin Road borough. —•- Commission to succeed George Dahl, who has resigned. Little Silver official vows suit (Continued) But Mr. Steiner was not as- administrative code. cepted, Mr. Schenck defined dered many remarks unclear. be in the best interest of the suaged. He said, "We have a He said, "All those who the word using both sources. Mr. Steiner and Mr. borough to do so." responsibility to assure that vote against Mr. Trefurt's Mr. Trefurt warned that a ' Schenck entered into a shout- Mr. Marrah repeated the the police department is top resolution are guilty of incon- vote against his resolution ing match with Mr. Steiner position he set forth last caliber, and we should attract sistency." He produced a dic- was "illegal." He said that accusing Mr. Schenck of run- week: "We have qualified as many qualified people as tionary and a thesaurus, of- his observation was backed ning the meeting "in a bla- borough employes prepared possible to apply." fering them to anyone want- by legal advice, but he de- tantly partisan manner," and to apply. It will ruin the mo- Mr. Schenck argued that a ing to research the definition clined to reveal his sources. Mr. Schenck calling Mr. Stei- rale of the department if we vote in favor of advertising of "inconsistency." Not wait- Laughter, snickering and ner's remarks out of order. consider outsiders." violated the "spirit" of the ing to see if the offer was ac- refusals to cede the floor ren- The vote to rescind the res- olution failed by a 3-3 vote. The four special officers that Mr. Trefurt's resolution named are: Mr. Tuohy, Step- Good Humor ice cream hen Greenwood 3rd, the son of Stephen Greenwood Jr., the borough administrator, Charles Hoover and Richard Solari. undergoes tests by state Last week, Mr. Greenwood urged the council to discount By DORIS KULMAN charges that Good Humor Jersey have come out of the partment's consumer health his position in the borough products manaufactured in company's Baltimore plant. services. when considering his son. TRENTON - The state De- the company's Brooklyn plant The samples of Good Hu- New Jersey doesn't test ice partment of Health yesterday showed up to 4,000 coliform mor products the New Jersey cream manufactured in out- picked up eight samples of bacteria colonies per gram — Department of Health labora- of-state plants except on spe- Court rules Good Humor ice cream being and sometimes more. The le- tory took for analysis yes- cific complaint, Mr. Elliott distributed in New Jersey and gal limit in New York is 20 terday were picked up at told The Daily Register last oil import began analyzing them for pos- colonies per gram. The legal Good Humor's distribution week. He said there haven't sible bacterial contamination. limit in New Jersey is 10 co- plant in Fairfield, where the been any recent samples tests fees illegal The state check was lonies per gram. company is headquartered. of Good Humor products. prompted by the indictment The Brooklyn plant, which The samples included bulk Mr. Elliott said that while WASHINGTON (AP) - The In New York last Thursday of manufactured the Good Hu- ice cream, novelty cones, a coliform isn't necessarily U.S. government, collecting the Good Humor Corp. and of mor products distributed in dixie cup, a chocolate eclair, harmful its presence "is the oil import fees illegally for a present and former execu- New Jersey, was closed last and ice cream sandwhiches. best indication that a milk the past three years, could tive of the company, one of April during the investigation It will take about 24 hours product has been con- owe every American about $5 them a Matawan man, on by Brooklyn District Attorney to complete the testing for taminated after pasteuriza- plus a price reduction of charges of selling adulterated Eugene Gold. Company coliform bacteria and 48 tion." about 4.3 cents per gallon on Ice cream and trying to cover spokesmen insisted the clos- hours to complete the "stan- Gulius D'Ambrogi, director gasoline and other petroleum it up with false records. ing was for "economic rea- dard plate count" for live of the Bureau of Food and products. The 244-count indictment sons." bacteria, according to Robert Drugs in the Maryland De- But don't run out and spend handed up by the Brooklyn Since then, Good Humor Elliott, assistant coordinator partment of Health and Men- that money just yet — you Grand Jury centered on products distributed in New of the milk program in the de- tal Hygiene, told the Daily may never see a penny of it. Register last week that sam- For one thing, President ples of Good Humor products Ford is considering appealing from the Baltimore plant yesterday's U.S. Court of Ap- New Shrewsbury expects showed less than the 10 coli- peals ruling that he does not form colonies per gram that have the authority to place It^llltr IIOO plwt* state allows in vanilla ice fees on imported oil. White GOLDEN SPIKE — Reminiscent of the Union Pacific Railroad, Long cream and less than the 20 House Press Secretary Ron Branch Mayor Henry R. Cioffl uses golden hammer to whack the Iqst nail name change vote answer per gram it allows in other Nessen said Ford would dis- Into the city's $80,000 boardwalk extension project, which was completed to flavors. cuss the possible appeal with By GREG BORAK borough has been hit. In gen- names on each sheet turned Brighton Ave. The one-mile strip of boards, which begins at Bath Ave., was advisers today in Vail, Colo. NEW SHREWSBURY - Of- eral, the vast majority are in in today," Mr. Reed said yes- financed with federal Safe and Clean Streets funds. One of the men indicted is The import fees began in ficials expect to know today if favor of it and we got a real terday afternoon. "There's no James Jerram, 219 Ravine April 1973, when then Presi- enough people have signed good response to a pretty well way of checking all the Drive, Matawan, who was dent Richard M. Nixon ended petitions to put a question on organized program." names before tomorrow charged with 122 felony direct quota limits on U.S. oil the November ballot asking To bright the signature tal- (today) to be sure they are Court refuses bid to block counts for the alleged cover- imports and replaced them residents to rename the ly up to date and substantiate all registered voters." up, and 122 misdemeanor with import fees. Ford raised borough Tinton Falls. Mr. Trillhaase's optimism, Je- He would not predict wheth- counts, covering the alleged the fees this year. Councilman Walter J. Trill- rome S. Reed, borough clerk, er the number of registered contamination. Mr. Jerram, But the court said the fees Long Branch police probe haase, who last month pre- worked in Borough Hall and voters' signatures had been Good Humor's former direc- "are beyond the scope of dicted'the 646 signatures of at home last night checking accumulated by the deadline (Continued) is dissatisfied with work con- tor of quality control, report- their (the presidents') author- The police have no objec- registered voters required to that people who signed the set by Mr. Trillhaase. believe that the sensible thing ditions. He added that the po- edly Is now employed by its ity and cannot stand." tions to an investigation into put the issue on the ballot documents were registered However, if more signa- parent company. Thomas J. to do would be to tell the city lice grievance is that they are police procedures, he said, ar- would be amassed by Aug. 10, voters. tures are needed, Mr. Reed Lipton, Inc. Englewood Cliffs. it could not conduct the hear- being compelled to testify. guing that they should not be is confident that the goal has At last count on July 17, noted, the borough has until Committee ings, adding that the council Frank J. Fasano, assistant questioned about the Dec. 8 been reached. Mr. Trillhaase put the total Sept. 5, the date by which the Donald Kennedy, 101 should have the right to de- city attorney, who represents incident. "Personally, I feel that we number of signatures ac- petitions bearing validated George Ave., Edison, was in- termine if the rules are being Cap. Alexander Rota, the have more than enough signa- quired at about 375. signatures must be turned in dicted on 122 misdemeanor airs data followed. first officer to testify in the Mr. Fasano said that the tures right now," he said "I had about 12 to 15 peti- to the county clerk to get the 'counts. While the judge declined to hearings, challenged the police feel that their testi- mony will put themselves and "Just about every area in the tions with upwards of 25 name change question on the The corporation was in- privacy bill restrain either the hearings council action in appointing November ballot. dicted on all 244 counts. or the issuance of subpoena's, citizens to the investigative the city in jeopardy because "If we don't have the num- TRENTON (AP) - A legis- he did issue a temporary in- committee. of a civil lawsuit that is pend- ber of names required now," All entered innocent pleas lative committee is considering junction requiring that the Mr. Fasano told the court ing. Mr. Resnikoff, however, Ford asks for a halt said Mr. Trillhaase, "ft won't, and were released without a bill that would provide for stenographic transcripts of that the initial resolution by said no civil action is pend- be by much and I'm sure that bail for pre-trial hearings on state regulation of comput- police testimony in these council did not include the ing. Sept. 8. erized data banks. we can get the number of sig- hearings be sealed until fur- citizen members but that Mr! Resnikoff told the court in Soviet grain deals natures necessary by Sept. Sen. Matthew Feldman, D- ther order of the court. council changed the resolu- Mr. Gold said the company that the committee has only 5." Bergen, sponsor of the bill, Representing the PBA, El- tion because of public pres- kept two sets of books, one recently heard testimony (Continued) Mr. Reed said the commu- presided yesterday at a pub- dridge Hawkins, of East Or- sure. for itself containing true fig- from police officers and had However, Iowa and Nebraska officials said the Agricul- nity effort to get the signa- lic hearing on the proposed ange, unsuccessfully urged .ures on bacterial count, and a The investigation into the heard testimony earlier of 1 ture Department estimates for their states were overly opti- tures has worked well. Peti- protection of privacy. the court to issue the tempo- set of false records to show death of the Russell youth is others so council will have a mistic because the com crop has deteriorated since the Aug. 1 tions have been taken out by A principal thrust of Fel- rary restraints to block the New York state inspectors. moot, maintained the at- broad background of the sub- sampling. individual residents since dman's bill is to make the in- hearings until the Public Em- He said the company began torney, adding that no grand ject. Don Paarlberg, the department's top economist, said that April and more recently sent formation in the banks avail- ployment Relations Commis- destroying the false records jury presentments were re- since the Aug. 1 field surveys, rain has been sparse in Iowa to various borough organiza- able upon request to the indi- sion (PERC) acts on a griev- last November, but that a turned and the police officer The attorney maintained and other eastern Corn Belt areas and "continued or in- tions for circulation. viduals concerned so they ance filed by the police. charged with the shooting that there Is no irreparable creased stress" on the crops is likely. number were retrieved intact may know what the com- "I stand by the prediction under a subpoena served on Mr. Hawkins maintained was acquitted by a jury. The harm being done to the po- The soybean crop was estimated at 1.458 billion bushels, panies know about them. that the signatures will be the company. that under the-PBA contract investigative committee can lice, adding that everything up 18 per cent from 1974. rather handily obtained by "If our bill becomes law," with the city, a grievance is get a copy of the trial tran- that is done at the hearings Is Com and soybeans, as livestock feed, are the key in- the September deadline," Mr. Feldman said, "no agency — any combination of circum- script, he said, if it wants the done properly and in accor- gredients for producing the meat, milk and poultry products Reed said, "if, in fact, the Police will enforce public or private — will be stances in which an employe facts of the incident. dance with law. American families buy at the supermarkets. goal has not already been able to maintain or use infor- The crop report also indicated a record U.S. wheat crop reached. The names are depot parking rules mation about an individual of 2.14 billion bushels, up 19 per cent from last year. really not that hard to get." MIDDLETOWN - Police without his written consent, Chief Joseph M. McCarthy unless the agency has specific has announced that enforce- legal authority to do so." ment of parking permit re- Feldman said incorrect or Weather: Sunny, warm quirements at the railroad misused information can station parking lots will begin harm individual reputations THE GOLDEN BOOK Mostly sunny and quite at 7 a.m. cific Coast, while readings be- again Aug. 18. and destroy credit ratings. warm today, gradually be- Showers and thundersho- low normal were recorded in Business spokesmen were coming less humid, high in wers were scattered along the southern Texas. Vehicles not displaying this unanimous in recommending Jl r the upper 80s. »° ami a Atlaat-tt-a-BTGulf coasts ANNUA"L INTERES%T gives you 541% year's strickers will be given that New Jersey wait for con- EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD little cooler and less humid today. There was rain also in TIDES summons as of that date. Any pletlon of a federal study and tonight, low in the upper 60s. the upper Mississippi Valley, Sandy Hook commuter who need«A per- the law that comes from it Tomorrow sunny and pleas- the western Great Lakes re- mit may purchase one at the before going ahead with its Golden Passbook Accounts COLONIAL ant, high in the low to mid gion and Arizona. TODAY - High 12:37 p.m. Police Records Bureau, Kings own. Interest compounded and credited quarterly. 80s. Outlook Thursday: Partly Sunny skies were noted and low 6:51 p.m. Highway from 9 a.m. to 5 A spokesman for the Edu- TOMORROW - High 12:54 Minimum opening deposit of $100 multiples of $100 cloudy and seasonably warm. elsewhere. p.m., Mondays through cation Testing Service of thereafter. Withdrawals during the first 10 days In Long Branch, yes- Temperatures were cooler a.m. and 1:31 p.m. and low Fridays. Vehicle registration Princeton said regulation by terday's high temperature in the extreme northern 7:10 a.m. and 7:54 pm. must be shown. the 50 states could prove of each calender quarter without notice or penalty. For Red Bank and Rumson was 85 and the low, 72 de- Rockies and Plains states, but "costly and cumbersome" for H6IWWNA1BWK grees. It was 80 at 6 p.m. and it will continue hot and dry bridge, add two hours; Sea Ten metered spaces are firms that do business in the overnight low was «7. throughout much of the grow- Bright, deduct 10 minutes; available for infrequent users more than one state. The all-service bank thai looks oul loi you Long Branch, deduct 15 min- of trains. These spaces are lo- Today's 7 a.m. temperature ing area in the central Plains. The federal study is not due cated in Lot 1' and do not re- was 67. There was .05-inch of Above normal readings pre- utes; Highlands bridge, add for completion until June, quire a permit. rainfall in the 24 hours ending vailed along the northern Pa- 40 minutes. 1977, SHREWSBURY. N. J. TUESDAY. AUGUST 12, 1975 3 ORLD $978,000 grant to fund various projects By SHERRY C0NOHAN funnelled through the Board grounds, to $80,000 for High- nity Development Act which cial revenue sharing. cated on Ocean Blvd. near FREEHOLD - Improve- of Freeholders, is a block lands. specifies that money provided Perhaps the most ambitious West Concourse in a 70-acre ments to the Red Bank Rail- grant from the Department of Highlands plans to use its through it is to tjjer used (o project that will be under- waterfront tract owned by the Hoffa's 8on cites kidnap witness road station, installation of Housing and Urban Devel- allocation for the partial ac- serve low and moderate in- taken with money from the township. sidewalks in Little Silver near opment to aid 25 municipal- quisition of blighted proper- come areas and eliminate grant is Red Bank's plan to — Sea Bright: $10,000 to LAKE ORION, Mich. - Jimmy Hoffa's son claims a wit- renovate an existing pavilion ness to his fathers abduction pffered substantial leads to the the new high school and ac- ities in the county. ties for eventual development deterioration and blight in the acquire the railroad station in by the borough's public Hoffa mystery, but the FBI says it has no such witness and quisition of land for a riv- The amounts individual of a riverfront park along communities. that borough for improve- no promising leads. erfront park in Highlands are communities will receive Bay Ave. from Peoples Na- This is the first year that ment and historic pre- beach, behind borough hall, tional Bank, just north of servation. The $50,000 that for use by senior citizens. "We have nothing that we consider promising at this just a few of the projects that range from $(,500 for New the funds have been avail- Bahrs Restaurant, to Shrews- Red Bank will receive in — Shrewsbury Township: point, said Jay E. Bailey, agent in charge of the Hoffa will be financed by a $078,000 Shrewsbury, which will use able, but the legislation was bury Ave. Community Development $50,000 for electrical rewiring probe. "We have no information that he is dead or alive " federal grant approved last its allotment to improve play- funded for three years. The funds will get the project go- outside of governmental con- Hoffa dropped from sight 13 days ago. week for Monmouth County ground facilities at the Pear The funds are being grant- money being distributed un- The money, which will be Street and Pinebrook play- ed under the federal Commu- der the act comes out of spe- ing verted apartments on Barker The mystery intensified late yesterday when his son, Det- Ave., Belshaw Ave. and roit attorney James P. Hoffa, said a man who claimed he wit- The borough is now nego- tiating with the New York Crawford It which now is nessed the abduction of Hoffa on July 30 gave "very substan- served by 30 amp. service. tial leads which are being followed up very, very carefully." and Long Branch, Central Jew Jersey and Penn Central — West Long Branch: His words conflict with statements bj^BI investigators. .ailroads for a long term $20,000 to install pipes and They say hundreds of tips and leads are pouring in and being lease of the station When this catch basins on Golf St. to re- checked out, but that they have nothing promising to go on. is accomplished, it plans to lieve drainage problems at Speaking to reporters at his father's lakeside home 41 initiate improvements to the Heidi and Sherman Aves. miles north of Detroit, the younger Hoffa said, "One lead we station and to redesign the Other allocations include thought was very interesting and which is being checked out traffic pattern around the sta- $50,000 to Belmar to acquire has to do with an individual who claims he was an eyewitness tion and parking areas so as land for open space and rec- to the abduction at the Machus Red Fox." The Red Fox is a to eliminate congestion. , reation activities, $35,000 to fashionable restaurant where Hoffa was last seen South Belmar to develop rec- The FBI said it did not know to whom Hoffa referred. To this end the borough al- ready has obtained the ser- reation facilities, $54,000 to vices, free of charge, of a Bradley Beach to construct a Broiifinans agree to ransom sum Princeton planning and archi- senior citizens solarium and meeting room, $20,000 to How- YORKTOWN HEIGHTS, NY. - The family of missing tectural student who, while on ell Township for planning and Samuel Bronfman 2nd, an heir to the billion dollar Seagram's a research grant, is drawing design of a sanitary sewer whisky fortune, has agreed to pay a "substantial" ransom de- up the plans for both the im- mand even though the ransom letter gave no proof that its provements to the station, in- and water system in the Free- writers were holding the 21-year-old man. corporating a historic restora- wood Acres area, $20,000 to Millstone Towonship for de- Edgar Bronfman, head of the Seagram Co., Ltd., received tion of it, and the new traffic pattern. velopmenr-ot>ecreation facil- the letter yesterday morning, two days after his eldest son ities, $75,000 to Neptune telephoned him at his baronial upper Westchester estate to Little Silver is slated to re- Township to acquire land for say that he had been kidnapped by three men. ceive $10,000 for construction an anticipated recreation site, At the guarded gate of the stone wall surrounding the es- of sidewalks on Ridge Road leading to the new Red Bank $10,000 to Roosevelt to reha- tate, a spokesman said yesterday that the family "is going on bilitate an existing building the presumption that the letter is genuine and that Sam is Regional High School, which for use as a youth center, alive." is scheduled to open this year. $10,000 to Spring Lake He added, however: "There is no evidence to inciate Other' municipalities receiv- ing money under the grant, Heights to install playground whether the claim is genuine." facilities and $35,000 to Wall - Early today, Philip Freed, another family spokesman, the amount they are receiving and the projects it is for are Township to rehabilitate an said that the ransom had not yet Men paid and that there had existing building as a youth been no new communication with Samuel's alleged abductors. as follows: center. The Seagram's descendant told his father he was abducted - Eatontown: $15,000 to de- In addition to the money go- while driving to the nearby Purchase, NY., home of his moth- ™•^ill#f ftOff pfl#f# velop recreation facilities ad- er, the former Ann Margaret Loeb, who is divorced from LITTLE SILVER KICKOFF - Little Silver Re- or; Ralph OINaples, campaign manager, and John jacent to a proposed senior ing to the individual munici- Bronfman. publicans gathered at the home of Jerome U. A. Marrah, and Robert A. Steers, council candi- citizen housing structure to be palities, the county will re- Burke, 50 Riveredge Drive, for their campaign dates. Also honored were Mr. Burke and Mrs. located on West St. ceive $4,250 to apply towards klckoff. .Lett to right are Frank C. Lepore, GOP Marie A. Mueller, GOP Assembly candidates. - Fair Haven: $20,000 to the costs of administering the League blasts Commerce Dept. chairman; Anthony T. Bruno, candidate for may- develop recreation facilities program. The remaining NEW YORK - The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai on the westerly portion of the $33,250 will be placed in a B'rith accused the U.S. Department of Commerce of "cooper- Fair Haven Fields (formerly contingency fund by the coun- ating and assisting" in the Arab boycott policy toward Israel. the Lovett Tract) located on ty for unspecified local option Seymour Graubard, national chairman of the Jewish orga- Ridge Road between Hance activities. nization, wrote a letter of protest to Commerce Secretary Ro- Little Silver won't defend and Fair Haven Roads. The $978,000 total of the gers Morton charging that his department was disseminating - Freehold Borough: grant was the maximum the purchase proposals from Arab countries which include boy- $44,000 total, with $25,000 to be county was eligible to re- cott provisions against Israel. used for clearance of the di- ceive, based on the population "It is ironic that the Commerce Department distributes suit to void Maimone ruling lapidated Hudson St. School of the 43 municipalities who warnings to American companies to remind them that the for future development of se- banded together In a joint ap- plication (or the funds. The provisions of the Export Administration Act require a report LITTLE SILVER - don, 9 Westwood Court; Rita nior citizen housing on Hud- objected to the introduction of defending the suit "would re- county originally had been to the department of any request for boycott compliance, while Borough Council voted last Coleman, 36 Westwood Court, son St., $10,000 to construct a' the resolution. "This violates sult in legal and other costs eligible for a maximum of your department itself is disseminating proposed purchases night not to defend itself in a Myles and Lucille Standish, 12 water main loop on Fourth St. our agreement to discuss and expenses which should be $1,025,000, based on the appli- which include requests for Arab boycott," Graubard said. The suit brought against munici- Winding Way; George and running from McDermott to matters like this in caucus be- borne by the applicant for the cation of 45 communities, but letter was released yesterday. pal boards by a group of resi- Renee Maxwell, 4 Winding fore acting. It is ridiculous to Center Sts., and $9,000 to con- variance and subdivision, and Rumson and Holmdel later Graubard cited a letter distributed to American firms by dents seeking to void the ap- Way, and Barry and Paula decide so quickly on such an struct a water main loop on not by the taxpayers of the withdrew their support and "'the department's Office of Business Research and Analysis proval of a 21-home subdivi- Cohn, 12 Westwood Court. important matter." Otterson Rd. running from Borough of Little Silver." the grant maximum was re- with a June 1975 communication from Iraq seeking to pur- sion by Maimone Inc. A copy of the summons was Lloyd St. to Third St. Mr. Jacobi and Councilman Mr. Marrah, Councilmen duced to $978,000. chase 3,550 precast buildings. The suit, which names as received in borough hall yes- - Hazlet: $70,000 for acqui- HA. "Hal" Steiner 3rd ab- Grandin W. Schenck, and Wil- The bulk of the difference defendants the Mayor and terday. The defendants have sition and rehabilitation of the stained from the 3-1 vote in liam E. Trefurt voted for the between the original request council, the Planning Board, 20 days to answer the com- Hazlet Fire House on Middle Peron swears in third cabinet favor of the resolution. Mr. resolution. and the final grant was made the Board of Adjustment, and plaint. Road for use as a community BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - President Isabel Peron, Jacobi explained, "I agree The suit reiterates many of up by shaving off most of the Maimone Inc., calls the ap- Councilman John A. Mar- center. beset by a worsening political and economic crisis, has swom with the concept, but I don't the charges that character- allocation for administration proval of the subdivision "ar- rah drafted the resolution - Keansburg: $30,000 to in her third cabinet in less than a month with the first mili- agree with the way it Is being ized municipal debates on the costs, which now will be bitrary, unreasonable, capr- calling on the borough not to construct sidewalks on Port tary representative In more than two years taking over the pushecKhrough so quickly." subdivision, which had been borne by the county, accord- icious, unlawful and an abuse defend itself. He said, "We Monmouth Road. key Interior ministry. first proposed 14 years ago. - Keyport: $50,000 to par- ing to County Planning Board of the discretion vested in must act on this promptly be- Councilman John A. Mor- Yesterday's reshuffle was widely seen as an attempt by The subdivision is off Seven tially reconstruct Beers St. officials. said entitles." cause of the 20-day deadline." tensen voted against the reso- certain sectors of the Peronlst movement, the labor unions Bridge Road. from Short to Front Sts., Four of the county's 53 mu- Plaintiffs in the suit are However, Councilman K. lution. and the military to remove the last vestiges of the influence The suit charges that "the which will eliminate a flood- nicipalities did not participate Robert and Marjorie Gray- Edward Jacobi vehemently The resolution states that once exerted on the president by her former adviser and so- applicant failed to show that ing condition adjacent to a se- in the joint application be- cial welfare minister, Jose Lopez Rega. the approval of the proposed nior citizens complex. cause they are eligible for the Lopez Rega was forced into exile last month following subdivision could be granted - Manalapan: $20,000 for funding in other ways - Mid- criticism of his austerity methods as a cure for Argentina's without substantially impair- planning for the acquisition of dletown, which has a popu- ailing economy, and accusations that he misued public funds Little Silver walk, curbs ing the intent and purposes of land in the blighted areas lation over the 50,000 min- and had links with a right-wing death squad. the Master Plan, Zoning Plan, areas of the township for the imum for an Individual appli- However, a number of people loyal to him, including for- the Zoning Ordinance, and the purpose of constructing hous- cation; Oceanport, which has mer Foreign Minister Alberto Juan Vlgnes, had remained In pact awarded Hesse firm Land Subdivision Ordinance." ing. an ongoing urban renewal the government. Much of the suit centers - Marlboro: $53,000 total, project, and the cities of Long Military and labor leaders have also been pressing for around the legaility of the with $41,000 for rehabilitation Branch and Asbury Park. "poor workmanship." firmer action on the economy amid rising prices, soaring LITTLE SILVER - borough; public officials have granting of undersized lots for of low income housing in the Four other municipalities The council also denied unemployment and the fourth devaluation of the peso in five Borough Council awarded often stated that Shrewsbury the subdivision. It argues that Texas Road and Spring Val- opted at the outset not to join Santos's bid because of "mis- months. bids for a sidewalk from and Red Bank should help de- the procedure for advertising ley Road, area, and $12,000 in the joint application. They representation." In a letter to Rumson Road to the new high fray construction and mainte- public hearings on the lots for reconstruction of Martha are Colts Neck, Farmingdale, Mr. Greenwood, Fernando school and for curbing on nance costs. and granting variances for Place. Spring Lake and Sea Girt. Mars launch delayed three days Maple Ave. to M. Hesse Jr. .Santos, president of the com- The majority countered them did not follow borough - Matawan Borough: Those among the 43 partici- and Sons of Middletown. pany, stated "Santos Con- CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Technicians are replacing a that such a discussion of re- regulations. $50,000 for development of pating municpalities which The council postponed ac- struction Co. never worked sticky valve on a Titan 3-E Centaur rocket that forced a three sponsibility would be moot Also mentioned is the hard- Stillwell St. playground. did not have a project sub- tion on awarding a bid for for the Borough of Little Sil- until the financial burden to day delay in the launch to Mars of America's twin Viking ship caused by the borough's - Matawan Township: mitted in this year's appli- sidewalk construction on Har- ver." the borough is determined. spacecraft. acceptance of the dedication $50,000 for construction of ten- cation for funds are expected ding Road from Prospect However, Daniel O'Hern, The blastoff of the first spacecraft was postponed yes- by Maimone Inc. to the nis courts as part of the Cliff- to have projects approved for Ave. to the new high school. borough attorney, said that a terday after a last-minute test showed a valve about the size borough of an 11-acre lagoon. wood Beach Shore Protection submission in either the next The borough expects to re- letter sent to International of a silver dollar was stuck in an open position. The launch The Brief states, "The pro- and Recreation Facilities yean or the third year of the ceive $10,000 in Community Concrete Co., on Sept. 21, 1973 was rescheduled for 5:08 p.m. EDT Thursday. posed variances and subdivi- Project. The courts will be lo- program. The valve is one of 24 which ring the inside of the rocket Development Act funds later had been answered by Santos Park offers sions would result in an ex- nozzle of each of two solid-fuel engines which serve as the this week. When confirmation Co. International Concrete cessive and unreasonable use first stage of the launch vehicle. of the grant is received, the Co. was the contractor for the program on of land and would create po- The chemical nitrogen tetroxide is squirted through the council will act on bids for work the borough has attrib- tential traffic and drainage Elderly housing plan valves under high pressure to deflect the exhaust flame and that work. uted to Santos. nature study hazards, both to the land in steer the rocket. In accepting the bids of M. M. Hesse Jr. and Sons has question and in the surround- Kennedy Space Center officials said they will not know Hesse Jr. and Sons, the coun- just completed drainage work ALLAIRE - Allaire State ing area." backed by planners what caused the malfunction until the valve is removed, a cil threw out the low bids for on Tabor Ave., its first proj- Park is conducting its seventh The plaintiffs also claim process which requires draining of pressurized tanks contain- the work by Santos Construe-, , ect for the borough. Daniel summer nature program. that proper records of meet- ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS The area now is zoned resi- ing the nitrogen tetroxide. tion Co. of Newark. Acciani, the borough engi- ings were not kept nor — A zoning ordinance amend- dential. Permitted in the cur- Santos bid $5,105 to Hesse's neer, called its work "entirely The free program includes presented to the municpal ment that would allow senior rent zoning ordinance are Mideast trip decision expected $5,715 for the sidewalk work satisfactory." a nature center on Hurley bodies for reference. citizens housing to be built one-family dwellings, and Santos' bid for the cur- The council earlier defeated Pond Road, Farmingdale. The conflict of interests here has been endorsed by churches, a public school or WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger bing was $6,450 to Hesse's a motion to demand payment which contains live animals, charge, first made by Mr. Ja- the Planning Board. municipal park playground. says be likely will decide within the next 10 days whether to $6,625. for costs above the $10,000 nature displays and exhibits, cobi upon approval of the sub- Board members voted The amendment would pro- undertake a new round of shuttle diplomacy in the Middle However, the council unani- grant for the other sidewalk nature walks between the Ma- division on June 16, is con- unanimously that Borough vide for senior citizens hous- East. mously rejected Santos's bid, from the borough of Red nasquan and Hardwood trails tained in the suit. It states, Council adopt the ordinance ing. Kissinger said that chances of a peace settlement are noting that its work for the Bank. starting at Village Mill Pond "Due to the fact that said ap- set for public hearing Aug. 24. Proposed for the tract are "better than they have been in a while," but added a decision and nature trails, five at the borough has been unsatisfac- The motion was defeated 4- proval Includes two affirma- A 13-acre tract bounded by 150 dwelling units, 75 per cent on resuming shuttle negotiations will come after advanced state park. Two begin at Vil- tory. 3. Mayor Rell and Coun- tive votes cast by individuals E. Highlands, Sears and of which are designed as one- technical discussions with a two-member Israeli negotiating lage Mill Pond and three at fn a memo to the council cilmen HA. "Hal" Steiner, who are in conflict of interest North Aves. is being consid- bedroom apartments, and the team set to begin today in Washington. the nature center. aiepnen Greenwood, borough John A. Mortensen, and K. insofar as the within appli- ered for a complex. The prop- remaining as efficiency apart- He made the remark yesterday as he left Montreal after administrator, wrote, "Tom Edward Jacobi voted against cation is concerned, having erty is owned by Allen J. ments. An L-shaped building, addressing an American Bar Association convention. Santry (former borough engi- it while Coundlmen Grandin It also includes an inter- been the recipient during and Tracy, a developer. seven stories high, is planned. neer) states that Santos work- W. Schenck, John A. Marrah, pretive center in Allaire Vil- after the 1174 general election manship (then International and William E. Trefurt sup- lage, containing environmen- of a substantial campaign The Daily Register Concrete) was acceptable un- ported it. tal displays; wagon rides, 20- contribution from the appli- der the initial Installation. "The resolution raises an minute nature and historical cant." Good idea. Photo I.D. PuMlihed by The Red Bonk R rgir EtMMIihed In 1171 by John H Cook and Henry Cloy The problem was in getting entirely different Issue that tours through the village and The coundlmen referred to him to return for restoration cannot be properly decided Cash personal CJB checks Main Olllct surrounding area beginning at are Mr. Marrah and Mr. OM Refltler Plato. Shrewsbury. NJ OfTOI of property. Many calls and until we get word on the fund- Ihe visitors center; campfire Schenck, who were Republi- •ranch Omen prodding were necessary." ing, " said Mr. ReU. programs, given at the camp- at all 28 offices with your •» W. IS. MlaWelown, N. J OH« can candidates last Nov. Mr. HCxIMokn SI . FrttfttM. N j tint Mr. Greenwood also noted grounds on Saturday, Marrah has repeatedly denied m IrnOimy. Lout Iranch. N > 07H0 CJB Master Charge Photo ID. card. that Santos has a claim of The minority claimed that Tuesday and Thursday charges that his votes on this Member el me AuacMted Pre»» - The AtMciateO Pre» i» entitle* enclnhSy h> m» we 1 Ml (he Mot «e« *rMM in jhe newwoocr 01 $496 outstanding with the most students using the side- nights, consisting of slide matter have'been influenced well 01 all AP newt aUfOtchei. borough for restoration of a walk would be from Red shows, films of live animals by Maimone's relationship hedge on Rumson Road. Bank. and nature walks; and slide with the Republican party. lywn, n.j. Mr. Rell characterized San- The issue of payment for shows which will be given to Joseph Meehan, of Long tcrlptltnt poyoMt In advance t Monrht I Year CENTRAL JERSEY BANK HIM I3S.M tos's association with the facilities for the high school groups upon request at the Branch, is the attorney for borough as an example of haa been controversial in the nature center. the plaintiffs. 4 The Daily Register SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY, AUGUST 12,1975 IHIIIIIIIIIll|||||,,,,,1,ll|,|||1||lllm|1|HM)H1|11|M|(|||1|||| 11M1 „,„„„„„„„„„,„ Salkind to seek bill Obituaries '"" """" •••••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1 mini 11111M11111111111111111 to cut vehicle fees Mrs. Adelaide Guarino MARLBORO - Assem- By contrast, Mr Salkind for the working man and woman and put a halt to at ASBURY PARK - Mrs Middletown. NY. and Mrs. blyman Morton Salkind, D- noted, registration fees in least part of the exorbitant Adelide VitieUo Guarino, 83, Gloria Peprillo of Holmdel; a Monmouth, today assailed the neighboring Pennsylvania expense of minimal trans- 311 Sixth Ave. died yesterday son, Joseph Guarino Jr. of motor vehicle fee increases range from a low of $14 to a portation. On the state level, at Jersey Shore Medical Cen- Neptune; a sister, Mrs. Anna adopted early this month "a maximum of $11. this is one area where some- ter, Neptune. Tarantini of Newark; 14 crass and callous rip-off of "That means," he declared, thing meaningful can be done. Born in Teora, Italy, Mrs grandchildren and seven the average citizen" and "that the same standard And I intend to do it as quick- Guarino lived here for seven great-grandchildren. pledged to introduce legisla- Chevrolet, Ford of Plymouth ly as possible by cutting these years. She was formerly of The Memorial Funeral tion to roll back the charges. which costs $16 in Pennsylva- Newark. Mr. Salkind, who opposed fees back to the present level. Home, Plainfield, is in charge nia will cost $45 in New Jer- "This is the least we can do Her husband, Joseph Guar- of arrangements. the higher fees on the Assem- sey—and that's an uncon- ino, died in 1M8. bly floor, declared: "This is to curtail, at least partly, the scionable rip-off." erosion of workers' earn- Surviving are six daughters, Mrs. Joseph Daniels one of the most regressive Mr. Salkind said he is draft- Mrs. Rosa DiPitero of Liv- ings." RUMSON - Mrs. Martha and unproductive actions ever ing a bill for introduction in ingston, Mrs. Mary Grieco of Mackie Daniels, 75, of 88 taken by the state legislature. the next session of the legisla- Asbury Park, Mrs. Derna Ridge Road died yesterday at "To pile yet another ex- ture mandating a cutback to Plants found in yard; Zoppi of Newark, Mrs Adelia the King James Nursing pense on the backs of the av- the present fee schedule. Matarazzo of Lake Hopat- pot-growing charged Home, Middletown. erage working man and wom- cong, Mrs. Anne Crabbe of "These increases," he as- FAIR HAVEN - Kenneth She was born in Scamon, GREEN ACRES PARLEY- Left to right, Keyport Councilman Richard I. an displays an almost unbelie- serted, "only add to the bur- W. Mann, 35, of 120 Forman Kan., and lived in Riverton Volpe, Keyport Mayor William A. Ralph and Assemblyman Richard Van vable degree of gross in- Max P. Jakubek den of the man or woman St., has been released in his before moving here in 1956. Wagner, D-Monmouth, |oined Governor Brendan T. Byrne at Morven for sensitivity," he affc - MIDDLETOWN - Max P trying to make ends meet in own recognizance pending a She was a graduate of the the signing Into law of the state's $200 million Green Acres Act. Keyport According to tnr new law, Jakubek, 74, of 9 Conover this runaway inflationary pe- court appearance on a charge Univ. of Kansas in Lawrence plans to build a fishing pier with its share of the funds. motor vehicle registration Place died yesterday in Riv- riod. The person who must of growing marijuana. and a member of the Rumson fees would jump between 25 erview Hospital, Red Bank. use a car to get to and from He was arrested at 4:10 Presbyterian Church and a and 50 per cent' beginning Born in Hamburg, Ger- work finds the shrinking dol- p.m. Saturday by Patrolman former member of the Little Jan. 1. many, he had lived in Morris- lar diminished even further Robert D. Frank, who had Silver Women's Club Keansburg man succumbs In the passenger car cate- town and Scobeyville before gory, automobiles with a cur- when, on top of soaring gaso- conducted an investigation moving here 25 years ago. Surviving are her husband, line and motor vehicle prices, along with Patrolman Rich- Joseph E. Daniels; two rent rate of $12 would rise to He was assistant green- it costs a lot more just to op- ard D. Towler. They allegedly daughters, Mrs. Martha Hurst |15, those costing $18 would skeeper for the Navesink erate the necessary mode of found 19 plants In Mr. Mann's of Cincinnati, and Mrs. Susan to injuries after car crash be charged $24 and those for Country Club, here. transportation. backyard which they believed Cannon of Cedar City, Utah; which the fee is now $30 Surviving are his widow, to be marijuana. one sister, Mrs. Elizabeth WEST KEANSBURG - and transferred from Bay- jured. would be hiked to $45. "Somebody has to speak up Mrs. Helen Scovish Jakubek, Carman of Lawrence, Kan- .Frederick C. Bowe, 79, of 88 shore. Mr. Bowe was born in and a sister, Mrs. Martha sas; three brothers, George Carr Ave., Keansburg died According to police, Mrs. Hoboken and resided here 32 CJak in Germany. K Mackie Jr. of Pittsburg, yesterday at Riverview Hos- Scarmato was traveling east years. The John E. Day Funeral Kan., Thomas Mackie of pital, Red Bank, of injuries on 11th St. Miss Scott was A retired truck driver from Woman dies in plunge Home, Red Bank, is in charge Lawrence, Kan., and William sustained in a two-car au- heading south on Poplar Ave. of arrangements. Collins Brothers, Keansburg, Mackie of Leawood, Kan., tomobile accident here. Three other persons were he was a member of the Gold- and nine grandchildren. Mr. Bowe was a passenger injured in the crash, the hos- en Age, here, and the Keans- John D. Chernesk y in the car of-Mrs. Emma G. from 5th floor window The John E. Day Funeral pital spokesman said. Mrs. burg Senior Citizens. OCEAN TOWNSHIP - Scarmato, 54, of 51st St., Wee- Scarmato and Miss Frances LONG BRANCH -The believe she jumped." vestigated by Detective Lt. Home, Red Bank, is in charge Surviving are his widow, John P. Chernesky, infant son of arrangements. hawken, which collided at Flores, 13, a passenger in the nude body of a woman was The spokesman said that a John Naylor and Detective of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Cher- 7:46 p.m. Sunday with a car Scarmato car, are listed in Mrs. Clare Burkhard Bowe; found on a sidewalk alongside fifth floor hall window was -Edwin Hennelly. nesky of (05 Armstrong Blvd., Mark D. Turner operated by Miss Mary A. fair condition at Riverview two daughters, Mrs. Audrey the Sea View apartments here found open and the prelimi- died at birth Thursday in Rapolla of Union Beach and and police surmised that she nary report indicates that is TEQUEStA, Fla. - Mark Scott of Poplar Ave. at Popl- after being treated at Bay- Monmouth Medical Center, Mrs. Mary Sellick, here, (our jumped to her death sometime where she jumped from. They Event canceled Daniel Turner Sr., 60, who re- ar Ave. and 11th St., Hazlet, shore Community Hospital. Long Branch. grandchildren and two great- yesterday morning. reported no witnesses had MARLBORO - The Arrow- sided here, died Friday in police said. Miss Nancy Pancer, 17, a pas- grandchildren. Maguerite Norris, 28, of seen her fall or jump. head gymnastic clinic and Surviving, in addition to his Boca Raton. He was the fa- He was pronounced dead at senger in the Scott car, was Jackson Township, was pro- Police reported that Miss competition scheduled for parents, are his paternal ther of Mrs. Mary Beth Stir- Riverview. Hospital at 4:50 treated and released at Bay- The John J. Ryan Home for grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. nounced dead at Monmouth Norris was visiting a friend Aug. 25-28 at the YMCA's niveiss of Red Bank, N.J a.m. a hospital spokesman re- shore Community Hospital. Funerals here, is in charge of Paul G. Chernesky, here, and Medical Center where she who lived on the second floor Camp Arrowhead, has been Mr. Turner was born in Chi- ported, after being treated Miss Scott, 18, was unin- arrangements. his maternal grandparents, was taken by police respond- of the complex. canceled, camp officials said. cago, son of the late Mark Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Cash- ing to calls from people who Patrolman Richard Huneke The trampoline clinic and and Agnes Wilkerson Turner. es of Middle town spotted her lying on the side- responded to the original call. competition scheduled Aug. 2S He was a hotel manager. He ECOM building traffic flow walk In front of the apart- The death is being further in- at the camp will be held. Arrangements are under was a veteran of World War ment complex at 390 Ocean the direction of the John F. II and a member of the Epis- Pfleger Funeral Home, New Ave. Police arrived at 1:50 copal Church and a Masonic Monmouth. seen improving with signals a.m. Lodge. Surviving, in addition to his FT. MONMOUTH - Bar- cost Monmouth County moved through the inter- The incident was being in- Jess A. Robbing daughter, are his widow, Mrs. ring unexpected problems, (300,000 and the Army nothing section in every complete vestigated by the detective di- KEANSBURG - Jess A. Rosemary F. Turner, and a the new 12-signal lights traffic - is geared toward the peak cycle — from green to amber vision and a spokesman said, Robbins Sr., 62, of Beachview son, Mark D. Turner Jr. of complex at Tinton Ave. and hours of 7:15 to 8:30 in the to red and back to green. "Our investigation leads us to Rest Home, died Friday at Summit Point, N.J. Wayside Road in New morning and from 4 to 5 in Progress of the cars will be Bayshore Comiflunity Hospi- The McLaughlin Funeral Shrewsbury should be oper- the afternoon of every work slower in non-peak times. tal, Holmdel, following a brief Home, Hot Springs, Va, is in ational in about four weeks. day. In addition, there will be Accuse man illness. charge of arrangements. Consequently, the employes Army and county traffic protected left and right turn He was born in Wellsville, of the Army Electronics Com- safety engineers estimated lanes (yield to oncoming traf- TOWNS N.Y., son of the late Curtis mand who drive to work will that all the ECOM workers fic). of growing and Martha Truex Robbins. Nursing be less delayed in arriving leaving at 4:15 will be clear of Vehicle detectors are sunk KEEP THE HOT SUN OUT! He was a member of Ironwor- and departing from the the parking lots in about 25- into the pavement in certain marijuana kers Union Local 373, Perth ECOM Qffice Building minutes. lanes to assure the signal is MONMOUTH BEACH - A Amboy. According to engineers' fig- home is The same time lapse is cal- responsive to the traffic, de- 33-year-old man was arrested KEEP C001... Surviving are two daugh- ures, about 2,500 cars arrive culated for those employes mand. in a raid yesterday for grow- ters, Mrs. Constance Gerrity and depart daily. Nearly 2,200 accredited leaving at 4:45. Those depart- While a car stands in this ing and possessing marijuana of Rome, NY., and Mrs. travel through the new traffic ing at 4:15 and 4:45 represent SAVE IIP TO 21% ON AIR CONDITIONING COSTSI MATAWAN - Emery Man- detector zone, the light will police said. Sandra Christman, here; a intersection and the balance the largest individual groups. or Nursing Home, HI. 34, has stay green for a maximum of Richard W. Mackey, apart- son, Jess A. Robbins Jr. of of over 300 use side and rear The number of employes de- been accredited by the Joint 30 seconds in the morning, 40 ment 173 of Channel Beach Texas; two sisters, Mrs. exits. parting at 4:30 is much small- Commission on Accreditation seconds in the afternoon and Club, was arrested for pos- Pearl Ross of Wellsville and The new traffic control se- er. of Hospitals according to an 21 seconds at all other non- sessing under 25 grams and Mrs. Dorothy CoUins of West- tup at the foot of the drive- Once vehicles reach the IWINDOVT098 announcement by Richard D. rush-hour times. growing marijuana in his field; four brothers, Harry, way leading to the ECOM traffic lights, it is estimated Emery, administrator. The traffic lights will be home closet. Clare, Albert, and Clifford headquarters — estimated to that about 60 cars can be Accreditation indicates that working all night. They will Police said he used an Robbins, aU of Wellsville, and not be reduced to flashers ISHADE five grandchildren. the manor is operating in ac- "elaborate light setup" to cordance with standards of once traffic subsides. grow the drug. Up to 36" The John J. Ryan Home for Once the facility is com- Funerals, here, is in charge excellence set by the accredi- Participating in the raid "We stock shodes up to 72" wide" tation council for long-term Paper's employes pletely operational, constant were Chief Richard Keller, of arrangements. care facilities. Less than one time checks and car-volume Donald Manning, county de- out of 10 long-term care facil- flow will be studied and ad- tective, and Patrolmen Mi- Edward Tasto ities throughout the country justments will be made, when chael Murray and Richard El- 32 BROAD ST. RED BANK vote to union necessary. SPRINGFIELD, Mo. - Ed- earns this recognition. join legood. But, officials emphasize, no 741-7500 ward Tasto, 76. of 832 S. Pick- "There is always something Mr. Mackey was released LONG BRANCH - Edito- IUE and added that the union traffic system can work with- 1 way, died Friday at the Cox exciting happening here at on his own recognisance for a rial and mechanical employes was "embarked on intensified out the cooperation of driv- Medical Center following a Emery Manor to keep our court appearance Aug. 25. of the Daily Record last night organizing efforts in the ers. brief illness. residents busy and happy," He was born in Harrison, voted to affilliate themselves Monmouth County and gener- said Mr. Emery, commenting with an AFL-CIO union by an al shore area," with three dis- N.J., and lived in that state on accreditation. In May an Furniture center prior to coming here about a overwhelming majority. 'trict organizers specializing open house marked a celebra- full-time in the area. year ago. He was a retired tion of National Nursing In an election sponsored by noting birthday motion picture operator. the Nationl Labor Relations Mr. DiGiovanni said the Home Week. An art show fea- Record was the first news- FREEHOLD — Savings on Surviving are his widow, tured work by one of the resi- Board at the newspaper's of- furniture and accessories for Mrs. Helen Tasto; a daugh- fices on South Seventh Ave., paper organized by the IUE dents, and in June residents in its District 3, which encom- the home, a drawing for ter, Mrs. Richard Malone, planted a garden. members of the staff voted 19 prizes and a clown who will Back to School here, and four grandchildren. to 5 to join the International passes New Jersey and New "Our goal is to give the best York. entertain and give balloons to The Herman Lohmeyer Fu- possible nursing care, plus Union of Electrical, Radio the youngsters, are the main neral Home, here, was in and Machine Workers (IUE), In the next week, the news- Back to College many activities to meet their paper union will elect a three- attractions planned to mark charge of arrangements. social, intellectual and spiri- the largest industrial union in the first birthday of the Stein- New Jersey. member negotiating team tual needs," declared Mr. which will then draw up con- bach -Freehold Furniture Mrs. Clara Hickey Emery. Owen Stryker, a reporter Clearance Center tomorrow for the paper and one of the tract demands and begin bar- PENN VALLEY, Pa. - gaining with management. through Saturday. Mrs. Clara Hickey, 83, of 1128 principal organizers, said the Located in the Rickel-Path- staff reaction to the vote was Mr. Stryker said contract Greentree Lane, died Monday Lottery winners issues he expected to be dis- mark Shopping Center on in Philadelphia General Hos- TRENTON (AP) - The "elation." He said the NLRB Route 9 south of the Freehold A special section with would confirm the vote in five cussed included: job security, pital. winning daily lottery number overtime pay, medical and Circle at Schanck Road, the Mrs. Hickey was bom in At- for Monday was 93801 nine- days and then it would be center opened 'last Aug. 14. It timely tips about getting considered official. pension plans, cost of living lantic Highlands, N.J. She three-eight-zero-one. increases, vacations and job features a selection of furni- was a descendent of Abraham The winning Pick-It number The paper's owner, Walter descriptions. ture, bedding, rugs, lamps ready for School and College. Clark of New Jersey, one of was 230 two-three-zero. The B. Potter, had arrived from The Record union will be and domestics purchased the signers of the Declaration straight bet paid $298, the box his home in Culpeper, Va., under the immediate jurisdic- from showroom samples and of Independence. She was a bet payoff was $49 50 and the several days earlier and was tion of Red Bank Local 417, closeout stocks as well as re- member of the Daughters of front and back pair paid 29.50. present at the vote. Reached an established local with its duced from Steinbach's regu- Advertising from local merchants the American Revolution. later at his motel room, he main shop at the Bendix lar stock. Surviving are two sons, Jo- Program on snakes answered all questions with a Corp. plant in Eatontown. The clown will appear on to help you plan your shopping. seph A. Hickey Jr. and "no comment." j LONG BRANCH - The As to why tfie Record pick- tomorrow from noon until 7 Douglas L. Hickey; two sis- One staff member said, Topping Library for Children ed IUE to organize it, Mr. p.m. and registration to win a ters, Mrs. Sarah M. Barr of "Mr. Potter did not seem of the Long Branch Public Li- Stryker explained that the pa- jrecliner, stereo set, 45-piece Red Bank, N.J. and Mrs pleased (by the vote)." brary will have a free demon- per was too small to attract set of china, a rug and three Freda Swanson of Brooklyn, Mr. Potter owns interests in stration and talk on snakes any of the newspaper-related $25 merchandise gift certifi- N.Y.; six grandchildren and several Virginia papers, but • presented by the Monmouth unions so they had to seek out cates will take place tomor- nine great grandchildren. the Record is thought to be COMING TUESDAY, AUGUST 19 County Parks System tomor- a general industrial union. row through Saturday. the largest'one he owns. 202. Deoth Notices row at 10 a.m. In Mr. Diehl was one of four DANIELS - Morlbo M., of Rumiofi, on Nick Florello, a park Aug. II, U7S. Will ol Jot E. Mother ol Record employes who were Martha Huril and Sulon Cannon. VI* ranger, will give a demon- Nation ol ItM John E. Oay Funeral Home. considered management and IS Rlwrildf Av» . Rfd Bant. Tut!.. 14 stration with live snakes The Daily Register i.m. Funeral service private. In lieu of did not vote. He was not flaoen, pleaie make donolloni lo me Fir it Pretoyter Ian Church of Runnon. available for comment. Of the Northern Monmouth County's Largest Newspaper, GUAHINO - Adelide. Vllello an Aug. II, Teacher resigns 31 total employes, four were Monmouth County's Most Interesting Newspaper. I»7S. ReilOence 111 Sixth Ave., Aibury Park. Formerly of Newark. Widow ol Jo EATONTOWN - The disqualified from voting be- •teph Guarino. Mother of Joiepn Guorlno Jr., Mri. Rota OlPllero, Mn Mory Board of Education has ac- cause the NLRB challenged Crleco, Mrt. Derna Zoppl. Mrs. Adelia their eligibility. Mafaralia. Mri. Anne Crabbe, MM. cepted the resignation of Mrs. Gloria Peprlllo. Sitter ol Mri. Anna To- only at rpnllnl. Funeral from the Golante Funerol Susan M. Eriksen, a kinder- Hugo DiGiovanni, an orga- Home, 40a Sondfard Ave.. tvolltbura) nizer for the Washington, Newark on Thursday, Aug. 14 at I o.m. fit- garten teacher at the Wood- nerol Mail at Socred Heart R C. Church mere School, effective July DC., based international SPACE RESERVATIONS, 542-4000/HOME DELIVERY, 542-4000 Vdliburg at • a.m. Vlilllna hours Tuesday Keystone Savings 710 p.m. ond WaoVwsdoy f J and 7 10 p.m 28, 1975. Mrs. Ericksen is union; said he was happy the In lieu at flowers donations may be mode to the charity of your choice. moving from the area. newspaper organized with the ,! SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY. AUGUST 12. 1975 fht DfiBly Register 5 A Holmdel family is plagued with uninvited swallows HOLMDEL - Hundreds of birds descended on a home watch on the utility wires to the pool here on Chestnut Ridge Road this past weekend striking not "There was a definite pattern to their movements," Mrs. terror, but annoyance, in the hearts of Elaine and Victor Jed- Jedlicka maintains. "It got to be an entertainment for us. They'd come down in a wave every half hour, drink from the licka and their two children v The Jedlicka's and their weekend guests couldn't help but pool then return to the wires. Then another contingent would think of scenes from Alfred Hichcock's thriller "The Birds" fly down to take the place of the first group." when they saw hundreds of what they believe are swallows By Sunday evening Mrs. Jedlicka felt some action was in line the utility poles surrounding their home and try, not un- order. successfully, to make a bird bath out of their 20 by 40 foot in- She called the township police the township health depart- ground pool- ment and the county parks system, yesterday morning. Mrs. Jedllcka said the birds weren't the least bit shy Not the least of her problems, she said, was convincing about swooping in on the pool whether people were in it or people that number one: yes, she was serious, and number not. two: no, she wasn't crazy. Her children have had a brave swarms of the birds diving "I've kind of been afraid to even estimate how many down on the water, while Mrs. Jedlicka's cleaning of the pool birds there are," she said, "because people will think I'm ex- and patio area of droppings has become non-stop. aggerating. But we think there were at least 50 and more like Mrs. Jedlicka said the onslaught began, slowly at first, on over 100." Friday morning. "I really don't want anyone to tell me what to do, ex- By Sunday, she said, the situation had taken on some dis- actly," she said, "I'd just like some suggestions on how tp tinctly Hitchcockian undertones. Walking out on the patio at deal with this Its too early to close the pool, you know." about 6 a.m. Sunday to clean the pool for her arriving guests, The most "help" Mrs Jedlicka got was from a naturalist Mrs. Jedlicka saw hundreds of the birds perched on the utility in the county parks system. poles, "thick as thieves and not moving a feather." "The man said the birds were probably swallows and that "Spooky," she called it. swallows are now in a migration period," she said. By Sunday afternoon the birds had gathered up enough "I then asked him how long the birds would be here if courage to join the family and their guests at poolside. they're going to migrate soon and he said, in all seriousness, Swarms of them flew back and forth all afternoon from their that they'd be here until they leave."
FOR THE BIRDS - Mrs. Elaine Jedlicka of Chest- lining utility wires close to the Jedlickas' house Middletown board accepts nut Ridge Road has charged these birds with ha- Friday and spent the weekend swooping down on rassing her family. Hundreds of swallows began the family's 20-by-40-foot inground pool. Red Bank taxi ordinance rePort on computerization MIDDLETOWN - The in the name of the board, budgeting, scheduling, report Margaret Gunkel was re- Board of Education will take which took no formal action cards, attendance and lesser assigned from her post as as- no immediate action on a re- on the document. . problems. sistant principal of Bayview port and recommendations The committee's report rec- Mr. Jones thanked the and Nut Swamp Schools to is amended, hearing reset accepted last night from the ommends the board lease members of the Citizens Advi- the post of assistant principal Citizens Advisory Committee computer equipment from In- sory Committee on Comput- of Harmony and Nut Swamp RED BANK - A con- censes in the borough, and owners and council has now enterprise and we don't have on Computerization, Richard ternational Business Machin- erization, who have labored Schools, effective Aug. 16. troversial taxi ordinance that imposes a ban on soliciting of decided to eliminate the set any right to do that." F. Jones, board president, de- es (IBM) at a monthly rental since October to compile their John Dowling will serve as has been pending here for customers from the streets. number, and instead, give the In other busness, the coun- clared. of $4,222, plus $453 per month recommendations. assistant principal of Bayview months last night was In the original ordinance, council the authority to set cil introduced an ordinance for software, plus extras "The board will consider and New Monmouth Schools, amended once again. introduced two months ago, whatever limit it chooses de- eliminating the borough re- Mr. Jones explained the effective Sept. 1. He is cur- board will not be in a position which would bring the yearly the report and use it for the The public hearing was re- the council attempted to limit pending upon conditions. quirement that bars with res- costs to about $60,000. benefit of the people of the rently assistant principal of the number of licensed taxi Acting Mayor Walter M. taurants must provide visual to adopt projects which call the new high school. scheduled for Aug. 25. for significant expenditures Alternatively the equipment township," he promised. cabs. "Pat" Thackara, opposed the access to the bar from the could be purchased for about Mrs. Marie Racioppi, a The resignation of Mrs. Ma- The new amendments elimi- This was met with strong amendments saying he felt street. until it is advised how much state aid will be forthcoming $150,000. board member who is also a rianne Ossenkowsky, teacher nate a limit of 36 taxi cab li- objections from some cab the imposition of any limit The old ordinance was The school system's exist- member of the advisory com- of business education in the was in effect dictating how a enacted years ago to allow under the state's new tax pro- gram. ing computer system costs mittee, announced copies of high school, effective Sept. 1, person should operate his police to keep an eye on tavern about $38,730 overall annually. the report will be available to was accepted. Mrs. Os- business. activities from the street. "We may be looking for township residents in the pub- senkowsky has married and $350,000 to J4O0,000, " Mr. Adding an estimated $25,212 Expand bus service He had voiced the same ob- Adopted was an ordinance for a duplicate set-up for the lic library. will leave the area. jection when the original ordi- banning parking on both sides Jones warned. "We've been On recommendation of Dr. Cooper Electric Supply Co. asked not to take any action new second high school, the nance was introduced. of Allen Place within 100 feet total cost would be about Bernhard W. Schneider, su- Inc., (66 Rt. 35, was awarded for senior citizens "To me," he said, "limiting of Riverside Drive. This to on any new projects until the perintendent of schools, John a contract to install replace- financial situation becomes $63,942 if the present system KEYPORT - The Keyport Route 2 bus leaves from the number of taxis is the conform with a state require- were expanded. Deignan was appointed prin- ment lighting in the gymna- same thing as telling Stein- ment prohibiting parking with- clear," he added. cipal of Harmony School, ef- siums of Thome Junior High Democratic Club — which Second and Atlantic Sts. at Mr. Jones accepted the The contemplated new IBM two weeks ago initiated limit- 10:45 a.m. Stops include: Sec- bach they can't buy the build- in 100 feet of a traffic signal. system would provide a data fective Aug. 16 at a salary of School and the present high ing next door for expansion. A traffic light is being in- lengthy report, which consists $22,196. Mr. Deignan has school on a low bid of $5,568 ed free bus service to the lo- ond and Waverly Sts.; First of 25 pages plus appendices, center in the school adminis- cal business district for the and Walnut Sts.; First and We are tampering with free stalled at the intersection. tration building on Tindall served as assistant principal Mr. Bennett estimated the borough's senior citizens — Waverly Sts.; Atlantic and Road and a data entry station of Thome Junior High School new lighting fixtures will save will expand that service to Elizabeth Sts.; Maple Place in each high school. The com- and of New Monmouth and $14,000 in lighting costs in reach all parts of the borough and Green Grove Ave.; Green puter system would handle Harmony Schools. three years. beginning tomorrow. Grove Apartments; Hurley and The revised service will be Atlantic Sts.; Keyport Gar- available every Wednesday dens on Atlantic St.; Main starting tomorrow with pick- and Jackson Sts.; Main and ups beginning at 10:30 a.m. Hurley Sts., and the Ameri- A whole new world of shopping and return trips scheduled for can Legion Apartments. 12:20 p.m. Both routes will leave the Mrs. Edna Bergen, an orga- business district on return startsluesda^ August 19 nization spokesman, released trips at 12:20 p.m. at a pick- the expanded schedule yes- up point to be designated. terday. Said Mrs. Bergen, "The Route 1 bus begins its trip club welcomes any Interested at Monmouth Shopping Center at 10:30 a.m. at the Bethany senior citizen In town to use Manor senior citizen apart- the service. It's here for ment. Stops include: Broad them." The new, enclosed, three-level mall will introduce over St. and Maple Place; Maple The club is seeking sponsor- Place and Luppatatong Ave ; ship from a business or ser- 50 new stores, plus parking for over 6300 cars, and Broadway and West Third vice organization to help lots more. St.; Broadway and West maintain the service and ex- Front St. pand it. Approval denied V^fe're even changing for juvenile home our name to EATONTOWN - The Zon certificate of occupancy to ing Board of Adjustment has use (he home as a group home. denied an application from The suit is pending. the Children's Psychiatric The Planning Board, which •tflittr tlofl pholo MONMOUTH Center, Inc., to expand its fa- a referral from the zoners in CONTEST WINNERS — Gerice Guba, 18, center, was crowned "Miss cilities here with a group May, declined to give an opin- Highlands" at the borough's beauty contest, a part of the 75th Jubilee cele- home for adolescent boys on ion on the variance appli- bration. At left. Is Gena Wolly, 16, second runner-up. At right Is Diane Throckmorton Ave., ruling cation- and last month Sommers, 16, first runner up. The three winners will participate In a pa- the residential use would be bounced the case back to the rade on Bay Ave., Aug. 23. an expansion of a noncon- zoning board. forming use in a business The planners have declined zone. had recived the CPC case as Special events set When hearings began on the to render opinions on any use application last April, Theo- variances, following a Superi- dore D. Parsons Jr., attorney or Court decision handed in Sandy Hook area for CPC, contended that vari- down last May in a case in- ances were unnecessary be- volving Ocean Township. SANDY HOOK - Special lecture and tour to familiarize cause state law now requires The zoning board, however, activities scheduled for the visitors with Sandy Hook's that group homes be treated has continued to refer cases remainder of August in the bird life will take place Sun- as any single-family residen- to the planners, since borough Sandy Hook Gateway Nation- day, beginning at 9:30 a.m. at tial use. ordinances have not been al Recreation Area include the Spermaceti Cove Visitor The zoning board, however, changed to reflect the court "The World of Sandy Hook; Center. reiterated its earlier ruling, decision. the Sand, Sea and Sky," a "Sunset Hike," a 10-mile sale 16.90 that while the proposed home Last night, the zoners sent tour of the hook planned Sat- walk around the hook high- would be located in a struc- an application to the planning urday. lighted by the setting sun, will *25 'capri* no-set look wig ture used as a residence for board from Amusement Tech- Those wishing to partici- depart from the visitor center many years, the building was nology, Inc., of Asbury Park, pate should bring bag lunches at 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23. of dynel® modacrylic from now located In a B-l zone. to open a coin-operated for a picnic at Ft. Hancock Sunday, Aug. 24, at 3 p.m. The board contended that amusement center in the new and should assemble at 10 in the center Howard Hayden eva gabor® international the eight to 10 boys,who Monmouth Mall. • a.m. at the Spermaceti Cove will present an illustrated sto- would be housed in the facil- Coin-operated machines are Visitor Center. ry of the "Life Saving Ser- It's so easy to look like ity could not be considered not permitted in the borough. "Birds of Sandy Hook," a vice/ forerunner of the mod- you're on top this sum- apart from the center's other George Graveman, of Oak- ern Coast Guard. mer in a new, natural wig patients. The number thus ex- hurst, president of the firm, Red Bank man held All events are open to the cut, styled with a natu- ceeded the maximum number testified last night that a on 2 drug charges public without charge. ral shape. Casual to care for, of children, 12, permitted in maximum of 80 machines Primary schools your fingers can do the the state statute. would be placed in the 3,200 RED BANK - Louis J Mr. Parsons (lied suit in square-foot center. Nannini, 27, of 70 Locust Ave., to be open Sept. 3 combing. Terrific from every June challenging the The devices would consist is free on $5,000 bail pending EATONTOWN - All. ele- angle. Hat Bar Wig borough's refusal to Issue a a court appearance Monday mentary schools in the of video-type games such as III mi r Dept. All stores except Plainfield. hockey and rifle shoots, and on charges of possession of borough will open on Sept. 3. Ilx- I>ailv Rf yislir pinball machines. No pool ta- more than 25 grams of mari- Cafeterias will be in oper- bles or coin-operated movie juana and possession with in- ation on the first day of Classified Way machines will be allowed tent to distribute. school and hot lunches will be Steinbach Mr. Graveman said no eat- He was arrested at 12:26 served. dial ing, drinking or smoking p.m. Thursday, at his home by The Memorial School will would be allowed In the cen- Detective Sgt. Robert Clay- open at 8 a.m.; Woodmere "The Action Line" ter, and a uniformed attend- ton, Detective Raymond Pat- and Vetter Schools at 8:30 ant would be on duty during terson, and Patrolmen Robert a.m. and Meadowbrook and 542-1700 operating hours. Kuhn and James Clayton. Steelman at 9 a.m. *£eU* WK BED BAM< OPEN WED S FRl TO 9 PM BUCK TOWN CTOl QNiy TO 930 »T TO S3O SLN NOON 50C wmM*H OPEN MON TVHU SAT TO 9 The Daily Register Rocky has vice presidential blues
Established in IBTO-Publisbed by The Red bank Register By JACK ANDERSON iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii and invited him to check with military cut mean? States the study: "It would, mean no ARTHUR Z. KAMIN With Us Wklttei former White House aide BUI Timmons who had been American forces or basei President and Editor The outwardly ebullient WASHINGTON present at the press session. west of Guam. It would mean Nelson Rockefeller, according no military assistance to "I don't have to ask Tim- Asian clients. It would mean Thomas J. Bly, Executive Editor William F Sandford, Associate Editor to close friends, is suffering SCENE mons. I am talking to you," from the vice presidential snapped Rockefeller. phasing out all military al- blues. liances and defense com- | . TUESDAY. AUGUST 12, 1975 He also protested to White mitments - to be replaced, in This is a malady which affl- House staff chief Donald some cases, with nonmilitary icts normal, healthy politi- without power. Friends say Rumsfeld and finally to the treaties establishing various Busy hands are happy hands cians who wind up in the void he is chafing over his new po- ' President himself. Ford not RSON forms of cooperation and for- of the vice presidency. litical impotency. only reaffirmed his support of mulas of mutual trust. Theirs is not the ennobling The friends agree Rockefel- Rockefeller but' suggested power to shape bold national ler also has a combative, that they fly in a helicopter to plained a friend, to maintain "It would mean the end of policies or the awesome au- competitive streak. He be- the airport together to drama- a cheerful front. declaratory statements of po- thority to make great deci- came rankled, for example, tize it. Pentagon Paring: Some 47 licy that commit us to inter- sions. It is their unhappy fate over some recent cracks at- The Secret Service cau- liberals in Congress, who vention or the threat of inter- to wait in the White House tributed to President Ford's tioned against it, pointing out have their own ideas how to vention in the defense of as- wings for a tragedy they pray campaign manager, Howard the President and vice presi- slash government spending, serted interests in East will never happen. "Bo" Callaway. dent aren't supposed to fly to- asked the like-minded In- Asia." Woodrow Wilson's running Rockefeller had agreed it gether. But Ford overruled stitute for Policy Studies to In short, the study contends mate, Thomas Marshall, de- would be good political strate- the Secret Service, and Rock- review President Ford's that the massive military re- scribed the malady best. The gy to keep the vice presiden- efeller accompanied the Pres- budget. ductions would change our vice president, he said, "is tial nomination open. But Cal- ident to the airport for the The six-month study won't foreign policy "to more self-, like a man in a cataleptic laway was quoted in the Helsinki departure ceremony. be submitted to Congress un- restraint," which would help state. He cannot speak; he newspapers as calling Rock- This little triumph, accord- til next month, but we have "shed America's global pre- cannot move; he suffers no efeller a problem and hinting ing to friends, buoyed Rock- obtained an advance draft. tensions." pain. And yet he is conscious he might be dumped. efeller's spirits. It calls for a severe MO mil- As for America's allies, the of all that goes on around "This got Rocky's dander Footnote: A spokesman ac- lion reduction in defense study suggests: "They must him." up. It started his adrenalin knowledged that the vice pending. Explained the in- be self sufficient and must Vice President Rockefeller flowing," reported one in- president had his "ups and stitute director, Mark Raskin: consequently be allowed to apparently has come down timate. downs" but denied that he is "The presence of troops in a operate independently in their with this occupational dis- The vice president put depressed over his job. On the country is a sign of weakness. foreign policies even to the ease. He tries not to show it, through a call to Callaway contrary, the spokesman It shows that we have no oth- point of accomodatlng the his friends say, but down and told him coldly that his claimed Rockefeller was en- er way of Influencing coun- present adversaries of the deep, he is frustrated. newspaper statements "had thusiastic. "I'm having a tries. Something is wrong United States." For Rockefeller, who is ac- gone way beyond" the agreed ball," the vice president re- when we spend $1.6 trillion Proponents describe the In- customed to exercising pow- strategy. Callaway protested cently told an interviewer. It since 1945 on the military." stitute's solution as "sanity;" er, now occupies a position that he had been misquoted is Rockefeller's nature, ex- What would such a drastic critics call it "surrender." Apathy reigns supreme
By JAMES J. KILPATRICK ••••••' iiiiiiiiiimiiiim exander Solzhenitsyn came to gone, and Laos, and Cam- Washington. He is the great- bodia. Portugal teeters. Mo- Consider, if you will, a few est living spokesman of the zambique falls. The Novem- passing events in the news, CONSERVATIVE ideal of human freedom. He ber winds will bring word of and slug them copy-desk speaks of communism with a Angola's bloody conquest. style: Helsinki, Solzhenitsyn, VIEW terrible conviction, forged of Communism gains In Italy CIA, Portugal, Zumwalt. his own suffering. Prophet and Spain. Out of retirement, These are separate stories. iiliilliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiniiiMiiiiiimiiiii and poet, this bearded Elijah Admiral Elmo Zumwalt Collectively they cause con- dissent, but with no waves of stands in the tradition of voices a grave warning of So- cern. opposition. Granted, if the those who sound the alarm. viet naval strength. His warn- This is the concern: As a Helsinki conference stood Laocoon, who warned in vain ing is a one-day story. people, as a nation, we are alone — if the signing of that of the Trojan horse, was put KILPATRICK Look. Let us give the Com- forgetting what communism gauzy document were an iso- to death by serpents. Solzhe- press, the methodical cam- munists credit for candor. is all about. We grow bored lated event — its limited sig- nitsyn found the same repti- paign continued for the de- Over and over, for the past 30 Equal rights for all with the topic. The risk seems nificance would have small lian reception. struction of the Central In- years, without worrying about remote that the Soviet Union The state Senate just about went our nation and state a long time to meaning. But the Helsinki The President of the United telligence Agency. One thinks giving offense, they have and the United States ever statement was a yielding by States, acting on advice from of blind Oedipus, rendered made their intentions clear: down to the deadline, but its mem- admit that all of our citizens are net will engage in nuclear war. the West; It was one more bers did act in time to get a public his resident Machiavelli, sightless for his sins. The CIA They mean to dominate the being afforded equal treatment. Lesser risks arouse less inter- perceptible retreat; and the would not see Solzhenitsyn. has functioned as our eyes. world. They mean to ex- question on the November ballot. If Women's groups are in the forefront est. Why be paranoid? Let the event did not stand alone. For the President to honor We gouge them out. For a terminate the values of West- approved by the voters, it will add Communists look after their One June 27, obedient to an in focusing attention on this short- interests, and we will look af- the Russian exile might give quarter of a century, under ern freedom. "We mean," the Equal Rights Amendment coming. Legitimate female protest act of 1959, the President is- offense — offense to the successive presidents, the said the jovial Khrushchev, ter ours. sued Procalamtlon 4381, des- (ERA) to the state Constitution. about discrimination in hiring prac- Kremlin. A meeting would CIA engaged in those unsa- "to bury you." And he Call it apathy. Call it indif- ignating the third week of symbolize the bad old days of vory assignments that laughed. Winning that accommodation tices have resulted in improvements ference. Call it the New Isola- July as Captive Nations the Cold War. Mr. Ford want- amounted to the fighting of But let us observe, with from the Senate was a victory for in that area, but we still have a lot tionism. By whatever descrip- Week. The proclamation was ed no such symbols. So he fire with fire. In the shadowy, Hamlet, that one can smile, the New Jersey and Monmouth to accomplish. tion, the old watchfulness re- as perfunctory as a motion to chatted instead with the dangerous fields of in- and smile, and be a villain. If County Coalitions for the ERA. laxes; the anti-communist waive the reading of the min- brothers of Apollo-Soyuz; and telligence, espionage and sub- the alternative to holocaust is Some opponents of the ERA be- fervor wanes. Eternal vigil- utes. The President called Those civic and civil liberties groups lieve that it may work against those a few days after the joined version, it battled the Soviets' coexistence, of course we ance, said one of the founding upon the people to observe capusles whirled about the KGB on equal terms. Now the must coexist. If ultimately campaigned vigorously to get the who favor it the most—women. fathers, is the price of liberty. the week with appropriate globe, Mr. Ford trotted anti-anti-communists, suffer- this is not to be the coexis- proposal out of the Judiciary Com- Their reasoning is that by providing The founding fathers are also ceremonies, and he urged amiably off to Helsinki, there ing fits of morality, have left tence of slave and master, we mittee and onto the Senate floor for such equality, the amendment will a bore. rededication to the aspira- to attest, with appropriate the CIA discredited and dis- must understand, in the very tions of all peoples for self-de- a vote. place responsibilities on females There is a flabbiness here, ceremonies, the captivity of armed. heart and soul of our national a flabbiness of the spirit. The termination and liberty. And the captive nations. Do we care about these being, that communism is the Approval of the question by the which formerly weren't considered. world summit at Helsinki he stifled a yawn. electorate in November is necessary Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill things? We drowse. Commu- enemy of freedom. We are Among the one heard most fre- passed with a few ripples of At about the same time, Al- and in the great organs of the nism never sleeps. Vietnam is not understanding this now. to assure that women do have equal quently is that women would be sub- protection under the New Jersey ject to a draft in the military service Constitution. It will, for one thing, in the event of war. That is, of put an end to the need for individual course, a possibility. Should that oc- attacks on discriminatory laws. cur, however, it could be done in- A minority of one We expect a spirited public edu- telligently and reasonably. By NICHOLAS von HOFFMAN in • n minim such treats as televised de- ' that in his new and good book cation program in the months ahead Women are actively pursuing ca- bates between Jimmy Carter called, "Nader and the Power by the county ERA coalition. In- reers that were once thought to be " Brother Theodore, the great THE LIBERAL and Lloyd Bentsen The mea- of Everyman" (Grosset Ic volved in that campaign will be the province of males. Perhaps be- "philosopher, metaphysician sure of the Democratic Par- Dunlap, New York, flO). chapters of the League of Women and podiatrist," once said ty's purposelessness is that a Gorey imagines Nader com- cause of individual drive, females something which sums up the SIDE Voters, the American Association of are successful bank presidents, race man like Bentsen - a filthy ing back to his furnished contest for the Democratic rich whose only socially room after having conducted University Women, the American track jockeys, doctors, truck driv- Presidential nomination: "As IIIIIIIIIIIII iiiiiiiiniiiiiiii mil pleasing talent is picking a the most gloriously imagina- Civil Liberties Union, the National ers ... long as there is death there is ries a gonfalon whereon are good tailor — would presume tive campaign in 80 yean. He Organization for Women, the Wom- There should be no "unwritten hope. All of our great leaders embroidered golden words to offer his less than me- has said that, if elected, he en's Political Caucus and the Non- are dead. Moses is dead. Mo- like INNOVATIVE, BOLD, diocre self to his country.. will do things like make the law" that acts to curb an individ- hammed is dead. Buddha is AFFIRMATIVE, FORTH- Parents Organization. Or there is Scoop Jackson, von HOFFMAN bureaucrats in the Depart- ual's lawful aspirations. Wiping that dead. And I am not feeling so RIGHT, OPEN, RESPON- ment .of Agriculture go to The question deserves a re- a gentleman whose zig-zag- law from the national mentality is hot myself." SIVE LEADER. As Brother gery has brought him so low cano babies, one is hard put work on a farm a couple of sounding "yes" reply. It has taken what approval of the ERA will do. Left without hope among Theodore once exclaimed in that even George Meany has to see how he differs from his months every year. While In- the living are Jackson, Wall- delighted, aghast surprise, thrown the man out of the rivals in any important way. fusing his campaign with a ace, Udall, Humphrey et al, "Our graveyards are riddled swinging doors of the AFL.- The number of actors in the string of such ideas he has Our elections' superintendents moving backward in slow with corpses!" CIO saloon. Do you prefer Republican theatrical is few- also said how he intends to steps like a recessional of de- Lying ahead for the quick Jimmy Carter, the Georgia er. Here we are invited to lead the country towards a Mayor D. Philip Gerand of In her two years as superinten- formed and morally handi- of the electorate, who win wish peanut farmer, one of those imagine that Mr. Rockefeller humane and a non-destructive capped ecclesiastics behind they were among the dead Bradley Beach has been installed as dent, Mrs. Crowell, a Republican ap- media creations called a New and Reagan disagree with private enterprise and peace- each of whom a hunchbacked, disfranchised before this cam- South Southern Moderate, time living. Now the cam- the county's superintendent of elec- each other. To steal William pointed by Gov. William T. Cahill, public relations acolyte car- paign is over, are months of which should be taken to Allen White's epigram, "Be- paign is over and Gorey has a tions. He succeeds Mrs. Nancy Cro- tended the job in most commendable mean he served his full term tween them is tbat fantastic reporter ask Nader if he well of Middletown, the first woman fashion. Knowledgeable about elec- as governor without assisting imaginary gulf that has al- thinks he is going to win. Na- ever to hold the office. tion laws, she used her adminis- at a lynching. Past Mr. Car- ways existed between der answers, "Certainly. I trative skills to encourage the elec- ter we have the ever-recurr- Tweedle-Dum and Tweedle- said we can't lose and we ing Massachusetts Youngest Dee." can't, because even If we Mayor Gerand, a former county tion board's staff to deal most com- Brother, whom millions of his One leader, Brother Theo- don't get the most votes, we Democratic chairman, was nomi- petently with individual voters' fellow citizens believe to be a dore expected, hasn't died have won by setting up a true nated for the post by Gov. Brendan problems. liar or even a killer. Wouldn't yet. He is Ralph Nader. countervailing force against T. Byrne. He will be filling an office, Mr. Gerand has an impressive that be an edifying campaign against whose candidacy you the winner." that has undergone some important" background in government and the with him running. From '72 to only hear the argument that William Jennings Bryan -76, from Watergate to bil- changes in recent years. The most elective process, and we're confident the office of the American made that happen once. The lingsgate. Presidency is not available to important of them has been a more Great Commoner ran for the he will continue to provide each mu- Also sloshing about in the one so virtuous and able. As a Presidency three times and important role for the superinten- nicipality the exceptionally fine ser- miasma are: Udall, the Fa- people, It is said, we love poli- lost three times, but when he dent in easing the methods of voter vice which marked the brief term of ther of Postal Reform, whose ticians who proclaim their de- finished he had changed registration. Mrs. Crowell. friends always tell you how dication, but are careful not America. That's the role for good, how witty, how to live it. We can't tolerate a Ralph Nader, a Presidential straight-forward their candi- man like Nader, who earns a man. Action in Keansburg date is ... in private; Mr. quarter of a million dollars a But, If it is not to be, there Humphrey, a changed man year, lives on $100 a week, is still hope. As Brother Theo- Keansburg residents have voiced ing the rust from some nearby dead- after political plastic surgery and gives all the rest away. dore would doubtless put it, complaints this summer about rusty end pipes may alleviate the condi- took the Johnson era-Vietnam Too blunt, too honest. A we do enjoy a one hundred war wrinkles and stretched President who writes his own' percent mortality rate. water coming from the borough's tion. Ultimately, a capital improve- them smooth; and poor, di- speeches, who knows so much water plant. Although the water is ment program will have to be lapidated Fred Harris, the that, instead of being depend- Today in History Jerry Ford of the Left. unpleasant to drink and causes launched to replace old, undersized ent on being briefed like the Today to Tuesday, the H4th stains to laundry, it has been rated water mains. That will represent a To impart the Illusion of plnheaflrawt fruil flies who day of 1175. There are 141 above state standards and safe for costly program, but we're pleased meaning to this game of Wee hover over the White House days left in the year. King of the Midget Mountain, punch bowl, Nader can brief human consumption. that Keansburg officials are willing his briefers. No, can't be, Lin- In 1851, Isaac Singer of behold the villain, George Pittstown, N.Y. was granted to try to find the money for it. The Wallace. We're Instructed coln's dead, as Brother Theo- dore might say. a patent on his sewing ma- In another example of alertness, easy way out would have been to try that he must be stopped at all chine. the governing body has directed its to "explain it away" by saying that costs, which I take to mean What kind of campaign In 1941, President Franklin the condition only exists in the sum- somebody like Ed Muskie. In would Nader wage, what kind Roosevelt and British Prime borough manager, Eugene J. Bedell, fact, though, since Mr. Wall- mer when demands on the plant are of Administration would he Minister Winston Churchill to have individual complaints in- ace has commenced kissing run? Hays Gorey of Time unduly heavy. met at sea to draft the Atlan- vestigated. In some instances, clean- 'Stick with me. I've got a system.' black beauty queens and Chi- Magazine speculates about tic Charter. • SHREWSBURY. N J TUESOAY. AUGUST 12. 1975 The Daily Register 7 •30 Minutes a. week'' Look before you leap into fitness (SccMd if Five Parts) you sit, then stand and finally step up and five-second marks) start counting. Begin How sate is it lor you to exercise? down for three one-minute periods. with "Zero" as the second hand crosses over How can you be sure you won't over- For the test, you'll need a wristwatch or the five second mark. If you don't say do? This excerpt trom the new book a clock with a sweep second hand. You'll "Zero" you'll miscalculate Then count the "Total Fitness in 30 Minutes a Week" also need a ruler, to measure the height of number of pulses in six seconds. the step you'll be using during your test. explains how you can use your pulse The test has six grades First, you'll want to find the best place rate to tell how much activity is right Grade One is to record and interpret to feel your pulse. Be active for a minute or lor you. I your pulse at rest. so in any manner you wish — take a brisk Lowest pulse rate By Laurence E. Morehoui* walk, or climb a flight of stairs — to amplify In a relaxed, quiet state, register your and Leonard Grass your pulse. Now explore the following: lowest seated pulse rate It should be less It's time to get (it. Before anything, we The radial artery in your wrist, just in- than 100 beats per minute. If your seated have to make certain that your present con- side your wrist bone at the base of your pulse rate is near ten counts in six seconds, dition is such that you can undertake a fit- thumb joint. you'd better remain seated and get a full TAKE YOUR PULSE: Be- ness program without endangering your A. carotid artery on one side of your minute count. If it's 100 or over, try relaxa- fore you begin your exercise health. throat, either just above your collarbone or tion to see if you can bring it down. If youi program, you will need a below your jaw. Remember, don't close off pulse remains at 100 or more, you may have If you've developed any of the following wristwatch or a clock with a symptoms after hurrying up a flight of stairs the second carotid artery on the other side a fever or an infection. while you're doing this; you may shut down sweep second hand Take or carrying a bag down an airport ramp or But if you don't have a fever and can't poor tolerance The first would be your atti- engaging in mild exercise such as gardening, the blood supply to your brain. your pulse beat after being tude: you felt like quitting, you wanted to you should see your doctor immediately — A temporal artery at the side of your active for a minute or so in slow down, you ran out of gas, you began to and you should definitely not undertake a forehead (temple) just in front of your ear. any manner you wish. Check program until you do: pains in the chest; Again, press on one side only. Part II of the Total Fitness (eel worn out Physical indications would be profuse sweat, cramps, achy legs, a tremor dizziness or faintness; gastrointestinal up- You're now going to determine your series how you use your set; difficulty in breathing; flulikc symp- pulse rate by counting the number of pulses or twitching in the legs, shortness of breath, pulse rate to tell how much difficulty in breathing, a pounding In-art that toms. in six seconds and adding a zero to get the activity is right for you per-minute rate. Catch the rhythm of pulsa- hurts Any of these symptoms in a minute of I'm not trying to scare you. I simply mild exercise is a signal to slop your lest want you to be prudent. If you're severely tions for a while. When your pulse coincides with an easy time interval (at one of the and seek medical advice If you stop, sit deconditioned, there are certain com- explain why your pulse is higher than 100. down. Don't ever stand quietly after ex- binations you have to avoid that are for- then it's prudent to check with your doctor ercise. mulas for physiological disaster. to be sure that the rapid pulse is normal for The moment you finish, sit down and you and that there is no reason why you count your pulse If you felt some distress, shouldn't go ahead with activity. or your count is 12 or more, your test is over If your pulse rate is less than 100 — ten and you have ascertained that you have a beats in six seconds — you may proceed to low tolerance to exercise. > Grade Two. If you experience none of the symptoms SIMPLE TEST: First of three Stand quietly for one minute. Remain in 1-minute exercises on a step of poor tolerance and your count in six sec- an easy resting position, not rigidly at atten- onds is below 12, proceed to Grade Four. Re- is designed to test tolerance tion. Shift your weight or wiggle your toes, peat the one-minute test exercise immediat- to exercise Consult the ac- as you wish, but don't move around. At the ely. Then sit and count your pulse. If it's 12 ci companying table, which is end of a minute, count your pulse. The dif- or more in six seconds, stop. If it's under 12, important to the test before a ference between your sitting pulse rate and proceed to Grade Five Once again, repeat regime of exercise is pursued. your standing pulse rate is another key in- immediately. Take your pulse. The stan- dicator of your present level of fitness. If dards are identical to Grades Three and your standing pulse rate is twenty beats or Four. So are the admonitions. more higher than your sitting pulse rate, Recovery Rite that's probably higher than it should be, so Grade Six tests your recovery rate. If you're an overeater who stuffs himself ask your doctor if it means anything that As soon as you complete Grade Five, sit with food until he feels uncomfortable, would contraindicate increased physical ex- down, take your pulse, rest for a minute and you're primed for trouble. If you overdrink ertion. and overeat at the same time (as Is usually take your pulse again. The difference be- Your pulse rate should go up some; up tween your pulse rate at the end of the ex- the case), one further increment could kill 10 beats a minute is okay. In our system, if you. It could be a hot bath. It could be a ercise and one minute later should be no less your sitting rate was 7 and your standing than 10 beats. The rate should be no more strained bowel movement. Or it could be a rate was 8, you're fit to proceed to Grade bout of exercise. than 110 beats a minute Three. Any change of one count in six sec- If you have gone thru all six grades and It goes without saying that if you're onds is okay — provided you don't hit 11. about to have a heart attack, you shouldn't your heart rate hasn't passed 120 and you re- Grade Three is the first of three 1 mm cover rapidly at the end of the test, you've exercise. The person described above is a ute exercises on a step. You'll want to mea- candidate for one. demonstrated a comfortable rate of fitness sure the height of the step with a ruler, and and you can begin a maintenance program. One further injunction against an ex- consult the accompanying table. Find your ercise program at this time is if more than If you've had to stop at any time before body weight and move laterally across the the end, then you need a development pro- 30 per cent of your body is fat. That's the table to where it intersects with the vertical medical definition of obesity. You don't need gram to bring you to the maintenance level. column for your height step. Example: A You haven't flunked the test. You've simply a laboratory test to tell you if you're obese; woman weighing 140 pounds using an eight- you can see the fat hanging from your body established an important data point — your inch step will step at a rate of thirty lifts per present level of exercise tolerance. in pendulous folds. If that's your condition, minute. you should lose weight under medical super- Either way, you're r"eady for a program The test is simple: Step up with your left geared to your specific needs. vision before you start any intensive ex- foot, then your right foot. Step down with ercise. Next: Five simple requirements for good your leff foot, then your right foot. Repeat physical maintenance. Additional rest the lifts as many times as indicated on the Pram Taw Fltou In M MtaM I WMk" b, u» Even if you've seen your doctor re- ranca I UonhouM. Hi D , m Lagnrt (kaaa. |c) 1171 fcr table. Try to finish in one minute, no faster ca I. MoMma* Pti D BaailnH 6» Mnmalbn w cently, and he's cleared you for exercise, or no slower. Stop the test exercise at the » • ttf—j»|i, me IMaMWd >| Lai JMfMM ""••• there's an additional test to be made before first sign of poor tolerance. you begin your program. • There are several possible symptoms of STEPPING RATE (steps per minute) You administer this test yourself, by Body Height ol step (inches) weight counting-your pulse in various conditions of (pounds) 7 8 9 10 11 12 rest and mild exercise. Physical exercise 100 30 30 30 30 30 30 should feel good; there should absolutely be 120 30 30 30 30 30 30 no feeling of discomfort; this test is to make 140 30 30 30 30 20 20 Exercises are demonstrated 160 30 30 30 20 20 20 certain there won't be. by Kathy Elqart, graduate 180 30 30 20 20 20 20 The test will be no harder than climbing of Barbizon School of 200 30 20 20 20 20 20 stairs. It consists of taking your pulse while Register staff photos Modeling, Red Bank. 220 20 20 20 20 20 20
•I For coffee fans Guests have some crust
By BARBARA GIBBONS pinch of bottled orange peel Dear Ann Landers: I am downers, glue and heroin? ordered, send a dollar bill pinch of allspice writing to you because Are all these drugs dan- plus a long, self-addressed en- Want a nice Ice cold drink that won't pinch of cinnamon tonight was the last straw. ANN LANDERS gerous? Get Ann Landers's velope (20 cents postage) to warm you up with unwanted sugar calories? •4 cup boiling water I've been in the restaurant new booklet, "Straight Dope Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1400, Think coffee. cold water and ice cubes business for 12 years — start- on Drugs." For each booklet Elgin,IU. 6O120 ed as a dishwasher, then Not hot coffee, of course, but its warm- Stir instant coffee, brown sugar, orange dered tea. I was so stunned I does — what would you do if progressed to management. weather counterpart, iced coffee. Since cof- peel and spices in boiling water. Combine in couldn't speak. I served the you were in my place? — fee has virtually no calories, you might think a tall glass with cold water and ice cubes to I've seen some pretty strange tea and clocked them. They Speechless of it as a diet drink. fill. Only 13 calories each. things in this line of work, but stayed for about an hour, en- Dear S.: I'd inform the what happened this evening joying our linen napkins, wa- clods that they should picnic CAPPUCCINO FROST took first place. ter, salt and pepper, sugar elsewhere and then I'd usher for each serving: About 6:30 p.m. a young and dinner rolls. No tip was them politely to the door. 1 rounded teaspoon instant espresso coffee couple came in. I seated them left. SLIM GOURMET How much do you know single-serving envelope low-calorie chocolate and went for the menus. Something like this prob- about pot, LSD., cocaine, skim milk mix When I returned they were al- ably won't happen again for ready spooning Chinese food speed, meth, uppers and Most of the coffee consumed In this cof- 1 cup ice cubes and water another 12 years, but if it from cartons onto our dinner fee-loving land is served hot. Yet, even the pinch of cinnamon plates. They had purchased most confirmed coffee fan Is likely to forget When you bake a cake in a Combine instant espresso, chocolate egg rolls and chop suey down his favorite brew when the weather gets teflon-lined, fluted tube pan, A GIFT milk mix and cinnamon in blender. Fill an fl- the street from a carry-out warm, opting Instead for sugary-sweet soda use a plastic knife to loosen the TO GET ounce measuring cup with ice cubes and wa- place. pop. Since sugar is calories — and calories ter. Add to blender; cover and blend until all edges. The plastic will not mar YOU STARTED.. make heat - the Idea of cooling off with a ice is melted. Serve in a tall glass with When they saw me standing the lining as a metal spatula high-cal drink makes no sense at all! straws. About 80 calories. there with the menus they or- might. For a no-cal reviver with no calories to speak of, try strong black coffee in a tall ICED COFFEE CARIOCA glass with lots of ice. If you like your coffee for each serving: . sweet — but without those sugar calories — 1 rounded teapoon instant coffee 1973 PRICES stir In a Uttle liquid sugar substitute to taste. sugar substitute to taste TO HELP YOU FIGHT INFLATION If you like your iced coffee with milk or oth- '4 cup boiling water RECOVER YOUR OLD er flavor variations, try these ... all made few drops rum extract Ecstasy Calico in an "Instant." pinch of bottled orange rind KITCHEN CABINETS IN SEE OUR \ cup cold skim milk 22 CHOICES OF FORMICA ICED CAFE AU LAIT ice cubes WEDDING for each serving: squirt of aerosol whipped topping (optional) NEW COUNTER TOPS AND 1 rounded teaspoon good quality instant cof- cinnamon (optional) DOORS ALSO AVAILABLE BANDS fee sugar substitute to taste Dissolve coffee and sugar substitute in — PLUS — AND FALL IN boiling water. Stir in rum extract and or- •4 cup boiling water t 30 Styles and Colon and Designs on Complete Kitchen LOVE AGAIN. Join Between Aug.3rd & 31st, 1975 few drops vanilla extract (optional) ange rind. Combine in a It-ounce glass with nvrnoavfiny \ cup chilled skim milk skim milk and ice cubes. Garnish with a • We oiler an Service! — Including Plumbing and Electrical And Receive $3.50 Scale Free! squlggle of whipped topping and a shake of Wort Ice cubes, in a It-ounce glass • Complete Financing Up to 7 Year* — N.J. State License COLUMBIA Dissolve instant coffee and sugar substi- cinnamon, If desired. Under 100 calories Columbia wedding bands from $60. For Class Nearest You, Call 364-5511 • Maylag — Waste King — Thermo** — Jet Ah Magic Chef tute In boiling water. Combine with remain- (with topping). — Gibson — Amana — Hoi Point and Colorlc Appliances Or Toll Free (800) 242-5866 Ing Ingredients. Only 71 calories. Chicken Cacciatore, Veal Parmigiana, VISIT OUR BEAUTIFUL SHOWROOM OR CALL PLEASE BRING THIS AD WITH YOU. ICED SPICED COFFEE Minestrone — for these and more, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope and 25 KITCHEN BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN MASTERS (Vslld Only In Ana 31, NM Jrnty) for each serving: Ocean Plaza Shopping Center «J EUSSILLES' 1 rounded tespoon Instant coffee cents to Slim Gourmet Italian Recipes, in 36 Broed-il-the-Clock ty teaspoon brown sugar care of this newspaper, Sparta, N.J. 07871. »%aSg* » 493-4022 Red Bank S The Daily Register SHREWSBURY, NJ TUESDAY, AUGUST 12.1975 Dividend reinvestment Ways to save on food By DAVID R. SARGENT ""' "' minium i I increasing earnings an aver- By SYLVIA PORTER iiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiniiii (9) Check the containers age of 20 per cent annually (Eighth ol 21 clumns) with care when you buy fro- Q - I am a teacher with IS SUCCESSFUL over the last five years. For YOUR MONEY'S zen foods and never buy an years to go to retirement. the first six months of the If you mike an error in item that is covered with Would you list a few stocks current year, net was up 18 buying furniture, you're al- frost. for growth with low/moderate INVESTING per cent. Overseas business most surely stuck. It may WORTH (10) Buy such foods as meat risk? I would like companies continues to be ebullient, with take you years to correct you by cost per portion rather that offer dividend reinvest- imimiimiimmiimiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii results from this sector of its mistake and you'll probably IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHinilllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII than by over-all price. Divide ment plans, if possible. B. S. operations expected to lead earnings to $2.79 a share fully come out with a painful loss. the price of the amount you A — Dividend reinvestment Five well-situated growth an overall 1175 earnings ad- diluted. Foreign business has seasonal specials. But don't But if you make an error in When your shopping list is purchase by the number of seems to provide an ideal and companies which have such vance to about S3, from 12 51 grown rapidly, offsetting the buy the first of a crop; prices buying fruit, you can quickly ready, go over it to be sure portions the amount will sup- painless method for you to programs are: Citicorp, Col- last year. This would be in slower growth rate for its will go down as the supply in- leam from your mistake and you have chosen foods on the ply. build a retirement nest egg. gate-Palmolive, Dow Chem- line with its growth rate of food operations. However, a creases. days later come out ahead basis of their nutritional val- (11) Buy such foods as Not only do these plans allow ical, Heublein and Southern the last five years. new food plant being built in (16) Weigh the cost of gaso- when you again go shopping ue - not on the basis of their bread or cereals by cost per the quarterly dividend to be Natural Resources, all listed Foreign business is also a California will allow Heublein line — and time — in choos- for food. "taste appeal." ounce or pound. See which invested in additional shares, on the New York Stock Ex- burgeoning sector for Col- to tap the promising market ing a supermarket. The least Food is among the biggest (2) Avoid snacks - among package offers the most but most plans offer share- change. gate, accounting for about 75 for Mexican food. New food expensive supermarket in items in our cost of living and the most expensive food ex- weight for the identical price. holders the option of making Citicorp has achieved an per cent of earnings, which lines at Kentucky Fried your area almost surely won't it is the one area where you tras you can buy. They can (12) Compare package sizes cash contributions as well. outstanding growth record, incidentally have been gain- Chicken, expanding liquor be the cheapest if you have to can start saving substantially easily add 10 per cent to your in relation to how quickly you ing at an 18 per cent annual and wine sales and continuing drive twice the distance to from the day you determine weekly food bill but be among will consume the contents. rate for the last five years. growth in other operations reach it. to concentrate on so doing. the least valuable nutri- The "family economy size" is The dividend has been in- should allow Heublein to (17) Substitute among pro- To be specific, here are 28 tionally. no bargain to you if you end Local Securities creased annually for the last maintain growth at about 15 tein foods as prices dictate. keys to saving: up throwing out a lot of left- decade and this year should per cent annually. {3\ Keep in mind - as you Try beef or pork liver instead Representative inter-dealer quotations at approximately 3 (1) Plan before you go overs. be no exception. Shares are make out your food lists and of calf's liver; poultry instead p m. yesterday from NASD Prices do not include retail mark- shopping. Always have a pad attractive at only I7x esti- Southern Natural Resources actually shop for food — what (13) Analyze the real cost of of red meats; bean, cheese up, mark-down, or commission. handy so you can note food mated 1875 profit of $1.70-11.75 is primarily a pipeline com- you'll do with inevitable left- cooking from scratch. The and egg dishes instead of BANKS items you need as your sup- a share. pany, deriving 60 per cent of overs. If you plan to make cost of ingredients to prepare meat dishes. BID ASKED plies run low. split pea soup using a ham- 1975 earnings will probably earnings from this source. It something at home may (18) Use the recipes and bone, for example, buy the Allaire State Bank 8 9 be somewhat below those of has not encountered any gas sometimes be more than the food-buying tips offered to American Bancorp 5 6 1974 for Dow Chemical, inter- split peas when you buy the prepackaged equivalent — es- shortages and does not antici- you by the Department of Ag- Belmar-Wall National 85 rupting its 5-year average an- Wizard of Oz ham. pecially if staples are left pate having any difficulty riculture, your local con- Central Jersey Bank W& » nual growth rate of 44. per (4) If you possibly can, over. Community State Bank 10 12 meeting customer com- sumer organization and your cent. However, a sharp ad- mitments. Offshore Company, will be open shop in person. If you shop by local newspaper's food editor. Fidelity Union Bank Corp 30% (14) Save money by com- First Merchants National Bank 8 8% vance is projected for 1976. which is 91 per cent owned, is telephone, have food deliv- (19) Also use the Agricul- ered to your home and charge paring different forms of food First Jersey National Bank 10 10% Management of this leading expanding rapidly and con- on Tuesday — fresh, canned, frozen, ture Department's publica- First National Bank Toms River 13% 14% chemical company has been tributed 32 per cent of earn- these food purchases, you will tions, which are designed to SHREWSBURY - The Wiz- chilled, and dried. Franklin State Bank »W 10% notable for innovative pric- ings last year. Earnings pay for these conveniences — help you — available from the ard of Oz, a new children's (15) Always remember the Jersey Shore Bank 1* ing, excellent resourcing of should reach $6.40 this year, and the costs over a year will Superintendent of Documents, Bank of Manalapan 20 24 clothing store, will open at 483 raw materials feedstocks and placing the P/E ratio at a low add up to whopping totals. Washington, D. C. 20402. New Jersey National Corp 21% 22% Broad St. on Tuesday. rapid reaction to changing 8X. (5) Keep records of prices (20) Hunt for the nutrition Ocean County National 21 23 The new discount shop spe- conditions, which has allowed you're paying — particuarly lstMerchants bargains and don't overbuy People's Nat'l Bank, Lakewood 50 cializes in children's fashions them to withstand the reces- (Column readers should for such big Items as meat - meat. Use the guides devel- Shore National Bank 6% 8% and infants' and toddlers' ap- Shrewsbury State Bank .1.0 12 sion quite well. send their Investment in- and shift your menus as oped by the U.S. Department parel. establishes United Counties Trust Co 12 Heublein, for the fiscal year quiries to David R. Sargent, prices dictate. of Agriculture on the min- Marvin Trinker, the store's United Jersey Banks of N J 11% ended June 30, reported a 13 Successful Investing, c/o this (6) Shop the specials and imum amounts of each type owner, said: "At The Wizard per cent gain in sales and newspaper.) stock your freezer and pantry blood bank of food we should consume INDUSTRIAL of Oz, all clothes are dis- with foods you need or want ' NEPTUNE - Forty-two daily for proper nutrition. BID ASKED counted. The selection is main office employes of First when they are marked down. Alkon Industries '. % enormous — from blouses and Merchants National Bank vol- DON'T DEPEND ON LUCK (7) Consider quality in rela- Atlantic Appliance Co., Ine * % sweaters to denim jeans and unteered as blood donors tion to your use of the food. If Brockway. 18% 18% IT'S A tshirts to suits and jackets. you're using corn as part of when the bank took its first Explanation Buck Engineering 7 3 The size range is from infants another dish, you'll do just as step in establishing a blood C.R.G. Corporation 2 Stf LONG through 16 for boys and 14 for well with a less expensive bank program for its staff of new law Colonial Foods % 1% girls." form of corn. and their families. Detomaso % J4 WAY In its three-day grand open- (8) Check the prices of pri- The blood donor program Electronic Associates 2% 2% ing celebration, Aug. 18, 20 vate vs. nationally advertised was worked out in coopera- is scheduled Electronic Assistance l$jj 1% TO Foodarama 4 VA and 21, the Wizard of Oz will brands of foods. Every food tion with the Monmouth Coun- MIDDLETOWN - Angelo A. Mastrangelo, a member of Gibson-Homas 6 6% WIN have a magic contest. Free chain and many independent ty Blood Bank and in keeping King James Extended Care : 1 1% tickets for a day at Great Ad- stores sell private-label foods, with a Monmouth County the law firm of Fox, Schack- Laird 15' venture in Jackson Township at savings running to as much Bankers Association recom- ner, Neagle, Mastrangelo and Metallurgical International 2% H will be awarded. as 20 per cent. mendation that member Gassert, Newark, will speak Midland Gas 8 8ty banks establish a blood pro- to the Monmouth Legal Secre- Monmouth Airlines 14 % Home Owners, when you gram for the benefit of their taries Association on the new Monmouth Capital 5 • WISE! people. real estate settlement proce- Monmouth Park 13% 14% CHECK YOUR LAST Monmouth Real Estate Investment 3 4% NEED MONEY First Merchants is the first dures act Thursday night in' PRINTING BILL WITH THESE PRICES member bank of the associ- The Cobblestones. NJ. Natural Gas 10% U% Mr. Mastrangelo will also Perkjn-Elmer 23% 23% tH.11 100 copies $4.95 FAST... ation to create its own blood Precision Optics % % bank. conduct a workshop on the Radiophone Corp % 1% CALL US! By establishing the blood new disclosure/settlement 1.000 14.95 Servomation •% Priniid In bitch Ink Irom CAMERA READY COPY bank, all First Merchants em- forms. Spiral Metal 2% 3 Up To $10,000 CASH ployes and their families are Mrs. Helen Smith, Keyport, ITS. Homes 5}i . 5K No Polnttl No Commltilontl membership chairman, will United Telecontrol Electronics . % 1% No Brokerage Feat assured unlimited blood cred- TRETINA PHONE WE ALSO MAKE LOANS TO BUSINESSES it for themselves and their announce the program for the Walter Reade Organization, Inc % % Monmouth County Investment Corp. relatives for one year, re- association's annual member- WinslowTel '. 2c 12c INSTANT PRINTING 264-2324 Highway 3S 741-5061 • MkMletown gardless of whether they gave ship meeting to be Sept. 11 at Worthington Chemical t% 10% Stcondtry Mortgsg* Uctntt HWY.3S AIRPORT PLAZA HAHIT, N. I. 07110 I blood. Christie's, Ocean Township. 1 OPEN 6 DAYS THIS SUMMER SALE 644 SHREWSBURY AVE., NEW SHREWSBURY, N.J. 201-842-1177 STARTS (OPPOSITE CIRCLE CHEVROLET) MON.-TUES. 10-5 WED., THURS. FRI. 10 to 9 SAT. 10 to 6 WED. 10 A.M. "WHERE WE TAKE OUT THE LABELS AND YOU SAVE PLENTY" ,,,oT ,», cncc, I OFTEN IWITATED-N VER DUPLICATED I ] REPEAT Of A SELL-OUT SAMPLE PURCHASE S A% on all regular FAMOUS MAKERS FALL LINE passbook savings... INDIAN PATCH & MUSLIN • JACKETS • SKIRTS « From Day of Deposit • PANTS • DRESSES « to Day of Withdrawal SHIRTS • PANT SETS • ETC « Payable Monthly IN SAMPLE SIZES Provided minimum deposit is main- GROUP tained until end ot interest period. 5/6-15/16 $C 00
NAT. ADV. UP TO $19.00 IF PERF. J. TO NAT. ADV. TO $50.00
OVER 200 JUST IN FRESH BACK TO SCHOOL FALL SHIPMENT MISSES BETTER JUNIORS BETTER LADIES FAMOUS NAME 100% NYLON • POLYESTER • BRUSHED-FIANNEL • CORDUROY • NIGHTWEAR KNEE LENGTH BLUE RIBBON SHELLS PAJAMAS PASSBOOK LONG-SHORT SLEEVE SKIRTS SOLID COLORS S-M-L 90 day notice account Interest Irom day ol SIZES 5-13 » GOWNS • deposit, compounded daily. $500 minimum. $ 50 00 2. NONE HIWIIEK • IN GROUP GROUP NAT. ADV. TO tU. IFRERF. HAT. 7ADV. TO If ft IF PERF. PtRF. Higher Rates Available
OVER 2,000 TO CHOOSE on Certificates of Deposit. SUMMER VISIT OUR SUPER DENIM DEPT. JUST ADDED OVER 200 IN FRESH CLEAN-OUT TO OUR SUPER LARGE SLECTIONI JR'S -MISSES SPORTSWEAR PRE-WASHED DENIM AND FAMOUS MAKER-LOADS OF STYLES PLAYWEAR 00 $ Q0 % Off JEANS 7. ,. 8. 600 BROADWAY at NORWOOD AVENUE, LONG BRANCH NOW THE IRR. FLAWS ARE PART OF THE LOOK OAKHURST ENQLI8HTOWN KEYPORT MIDDLEBROOK LITTLE SILVER BRICK TOWN \ MIDDLETOWN MANALAPAN HOLMOEL NEPTUNE CITY 50 NATIONALLY ADVERTISED UP TO $18.00 IF PERFECT MARLBORO MY8TIC ISLAND'J Monmouth Medical, state strive SHREWSBURY. N J TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1975 to keep M.D. graduates nearby STATE B> LINDA Kills (Last la a series) A Monmouth County medical center and the state's me- dical college are pouring money and manpower into keeping New Jersey medical talent close to home. School board gives students jobs Monmouth Medical Center has a growing residency pro- WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP - The Board of Education in gram in affiliation with Hahnemann Medical College in' Phila- this South Jersey community believes it has put a crimp in delphia. high construction costs while providing summer jobs to stu- Ten of the 33 residents who were graduated in that pro- dents. gram this year opted to remain in the county, according to Students are being paid through a combination of state the Monmouth Medical Center (MMC) director of medical and school board funds to construct a 5,400-square foot ware- education, Dr. 'WUliam S. Vaun. house that will become an inventory center. The College of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey- Donald LeVan, comptroller for the school district, esti- Rutgers Medical School (CMDNJ-R) and the College of Medi- mates savings between $30,000 and $40,000 on labor costs. Ex- cine and Dentistry-New Jersey Medical School, Newark cept for steel celling joists and a large slab of prefabricated (CMDNJ-N) sent 145 MDs into the world in June. concrete, every brick, cinder block, step and floor has been A majority of the graduates, said Dr. W. Edward built by students. LeVan said nine students have put in be- McGough, associate dean at CMDNJ-R for medical affilia- tween 4,000 and 5,000 hours on the job. tions, have remained in New Jersey. The student workers earn between $2 and $3 an hour, de- Officials at both MMC and CMDNJ view the tortuous path pending on how long they have been in the work-study pro- of the state budget with trepidation. Forty-nine per cent of gram. CMDNJ money comes from Trenton. Although MMC is a. pri- Dr. SUiley S. Brrgta Jr. vate institution, many of its outreach programs require vari- Dr. Jaiepk P. Tassonl Dr. W. Edward MeGoigb Dr. William S. Vaun Hyland praises import oil ruling ous forms of outside aid. as formal affiliates. Twenty-seven other hospitals have more dencies. Sixty-five per cent of the 5th Channel students are TRENTON - Atty. Gen. WUliam F. Hyland of New Jer- Dr. Vaun at MMC directs a program wich leads a house informal affiliation relationships. from New Jersey. sey praised yesterday the federal eourt ruling striking down staff of 99 men and women through one of 11 residency tracks Martland Medical Center in Newark and Raritan Valley "Where a person does his residency," Dr. McGough com- license fees on imported oil. offered by the institution. In one program, family practice, Hospital in Green Brook are the two teaching hospitals affil- mented, "he often stays ... We want to prepare the foreign Hyland said the decision by the Court of Appeals for the there is a cooperative effort with Freehold Area Hospital and iated with CMDNJ. graduate for the best postgraduate training programs " District of Columbia invalidating the license fees on crude oil its attending general practice physicians. In addition, 31 Americans who have studied abroad for and petroleum products could save New Jersey consumers al- "We are providing, through our affiliation program, a "We're involved, just by our existence, in keeping medic- al talent in the state," said Dr. Stanley S. Bergen Jr., CMDNJ two years are returning to the U.S. to enter CMDNJ's pro- one more than $100 million a year in gasoline costs. replenishment of health manpower, sending doctors out into gram for their third and fourth years of medical school New Jersey was one of nine states and 10 northeastern our community," the director said. president. "We are strengthening our community hospitals with our affiliation programs ... we encourage our graduates Thirty of the 31 are from New Jersey. utilities that had brought suit to Invalidate the fees imposed "Many will stay. And that's the reason for our (Hahne- to stay in New Jersey. by the Republican national administration. mann affiliation) program," Dr. Vaun stressed. Harold G. Logan, associate dean of CMDNJ-R, stressed Hyland said, "The Ford license fee program would have MMC operates a 5th Channel program, an intensive nine "In addition," Dr. Bergen continued, "we have developed that as a state school CMDNJ looks for local talent first. had a devastating effect upon New Jersey and other plaintiff months of clinical training for foreign medical school gradu- a brochure to send to senior medical students throughout the "We don't have an official quota, but we make our biggest states due to their dependency upon foreign oil. the license ates who have had limited clinical experience abroad. nation describing the physical and environmental benefits of pitch to in-state students. We try to keep the out-of-state stu- fees would have not only resulted in a substantial increase in MMC operates in-service programs, affiliations with coming here to live and practice. dents at between 5 and 8 per cent." energy charges but also a loss of tax revenue Brookdale Community College, Ocean County Community "Our budget has been cut $2.8 million with the state budg- "The admissions situation is excruciatingly tight," said Dr The court said the administration exceeded its authority College and Monmouth County Vocational School. et situation. . . If those funds were restored we would re- Joseph P. Tassoni, dean of admissions at CMDNJ-N. in imposing the fees. Until five years ago, New Jersey had no state-supported store our faculty cuts and continue our plans for physical "The reality is that there just aren't enough spaces either medical and dental teaching facility. This year, CMDNJ has plant improvement... We want to add to the clinical faculty in New Jersey, or nationwide, for those who apply." Car impounded for $6,245 fines approximately 1,000 students, 89 per cent of them from New at the Rutgers location ... If we got a lot of extra money, Dr. Tassoni said that nearly three-fourth of New Jersey Jersey. somehow, we would get on that (teaching) hospital in Pisca- students who have applied to medical schools nationwide for NEW YORK - When Leslie Duberglas of Montclair, N.J., More than two-thirds of June's 145 graduate MDs are taway. the coming school year have not been accepted. gets around to claiming his blue Cadillac at the police auto working in the state. "Sure, we're having our problems," Dr. Bergen said, "but "Numbers are cold and impersonal," concluded Dr. pound, there'll be a $6,245 price tag attached. A $109 million teaching hospital in Newark ,1s under con- we are part of a state that made no commitment at all to me- Stanley S. Bergen Jr., CMDNJ's president," and medicine On Friday, police found the Caddie parked overtime on struction and plans for one in Piscataway are on the drawing dical education until 10 years ago ... We are beginning to and dentistry are warm, human pursuits . .. The real sinews Central Park South. A computer check showed that the vehicle boards. This new construction, CMDNJ officials predict, will gain ground." of a college of medicine are its people, the helpers and the had accumulated 146 parking tickets from Feb. 6, 1974, to enable the number of graduate physicians to double when the Dr. McGough, director of the 5th Channel program at helped. June 11 of this year. facilities go into operation. CMDNJ-R, said that two thirds of the 81 students in the clini- "The helped' in the case of CMDNJ is the entire popu- The unpaid fines and penalties added up to $6,245. CMDNJ has 14 community hospitals in the state signed up cal experience program plan to stay in the state for their resi- lation of the state of New Jersey." As of Monday, the car was still unclaimed. Illegal search causes suspension NEWARK — A federal marshal was suspended for a week beginning yesterday on grounds he made an illegal search of Hope — a remarkable comedian an apartment he thought an organized crime figure was hid- ing in. Richard L. Callaghan, of Emerson, a decorated, 12-year By MARYBETH ALLEN though, because he is a stand comes to cracking jokes. And, applause means much more Branca, who threw the home reached. Things clicked for veteran of the marshals service was suspended by his superi- up comedian who has stood without the censorship of TV, at the end. run pitch and Gene Her- "I Believe in Music" and a ors in connection with the entry of a Lynbrook, N.Y., apart- HOLMDEL - Bob Hope is, the test of time. his act is a touch more ris- The lyrics were written on manski, who played with the medley of love songs was par- ment on Nov. 20, 1974, when he was searching for Thomas in two words, Bob Hope. He's 72 now and quips that que. papers which he held in his Dodgers and Cubs. ticularly well done. Included Magano, a reputed underworld figure. For his opening last night his big chest and hard stom- Much of. his humor falls into hand. He had just composed Hope, who is sharing the were "The Way We Callaghan is fighting the suspension, asserting the at the Garden State Arts Cen- ach are all behind him. That's categories — and "current the piece, he said, while at bill with Trini Lopez, will be Were, " "You Are So Beau- charges against him are false. ter, he didn't do anything he true. It seemed the check suit events" rank way up at the the Holiday Inn here and he at the arts center through tiful," "You and Me Against According to the charges, Callaghan persuadA the land- hadn't done before. But what he wore was tailored for slim- top. He noted nonchalantly still had to memorize it. Saturday. Providing the back- the World," and "My Eyes lady of the apartment house to give him the keys to a flat ren- he did, he did well. mer days and the jacket ba- that he was happy to get off a He also introduced what is ground music is the Garden Adore You." AU were made ted to a woman thought to be Magano's friend. The man who was in- rely made it across his back. plane at Newark ... because to be his bicentennial song. State Arts Center Orchestra. famous by distinctive person- Callaghan then allegedly entered the apartment and troduced as "a great Ameri- Nonetheless, he's still very he had the same travel agent It's a bit of personalized pa- Lopez, despite his charac- alities; yet, Lopez managed searched it. can" sang a little, quipped a much like he used to be. The as Jimmy Hoffa. triotism, in which he men- teristic vocal trill, proved to make them his own. He was suspended on grounds he had no reason to believe lot. And, all in all, his seg- profile, the piercing look and He spoke, too, of the recent tions those Oscars he never himself to be a versatile per- He seems more at ease, the suspect was in the apartment, had failed to apply for a ment of the program was the flawless sense of timing doctors' strike . . . during won and the fact that he has former, he was attired in a though, doing songs along the search warrant and had failed to notify federal authorities on pretty much what you would are the same. As usual, any- which people could neither been able to joke about presi- white spangled outfit which style of "Bad, Bad Leroy Long Island that he was working in their territory. expect. He's remarkable, thing's fair game when it get sick nor get a starting dents right to their faces. he proclaimed "Liberace's Brown," during which he can However, according to Callaghan, he felt he had a reason- time on a golf course. And of This country, he sings, has gymsuit" and, after initial dance along to his heart's able basis for believing Magano was in the apartment, since the possibility of the CIA and given him the chance to do problems with the micro- content. He also appears to the landlady had seen Magano there before. Callaghan de- the Maffla joining forces so what he wants. phone, his segment of the enjoy performing some of his , nied searching the apartment. people could be mugged and Among those in the opening show went well. hits from the early 60s .. .like L,ast week, Callaghan asked U.S. District Court Judge bugged at the same time. night audience were Bobby The orchestra, however, "Michael Row the Boat Ash- Frederick B. Lacey to void the suspension pending a hearing, Then there's golf. "I enjoy Thomson, who was respon- seems more suited to Hope's ore," "Cindy, Cindy," "Lem- but Lacey turned him down, saying Callaghan had not yet ex- working a date like this," he sible for "the shot heard style than Lopez's and it took on Tree," and — orf course — hausted his appeals through the civil service system. said, "because I get to play around the world;" Ralph a while for a rapport to be "If I Had a Hammer." golf every day and that's my real business." He's played Parole Board decision upheld with Jackie Gleason, whom TRENTON — A state appeals court ruled yesterday that he terms his "favorite four- the state Parole Board properly rescinded the parole of a some," and with President man who was arrested with another man identified as a "hit Ford. It was frightening, he man" for the mob. said, to watch his ball roll The Appellate Division of Superior Court dismissed the past the ball of someone who appeal of Abraham Prins of Bayonne against the revocation could make him ambassador of his parole. to Newark. Prins served more than 12 years in prison for assault with And, speaking of Ford, he intent to kill and armed robbery before being resleased on pa- quipped "If he gave us re- role in May, 1973, with up to 17 years of his sentence remain- bates this year , think what ing. he'll give next year when he As a condition of his parole, Prins worked in the office of needs our votes." Meanwhile, the public defender in Hudson County. He was still working he added, the President just there on Aug. 11, 1973, when he was arrested on Long Island keeps skiing so he'll get used in a car with Salvatore Calcagno of New York. There were to the "snow job" he's given also two guns in the car. by congress. Prins' parole officer testified that Calcagno was reputed Movies are a source of ma- to be a "hit man" for Carlo Gambino's organized crime fami- terial and he commented, "I ly. don't make any pictures any The public defender's office argued Prins' appeal. more ... not the king they're making today. I can't pass the physical. And, if I could, I First National State ups rate wouldn't want those kind of NEWARK - The First National State Bank or New Jer- laughts." sey announced yesterday that it is raising its prime lending Hope was born in England rate from 7% per cent to 7%, effective today. and says he left because he Wilbur E. Dunkel, First National State senior vice presi- realized he had very little dent, said "We are Inclined to doubt that the rise will contin- chance of becoming king. Pri- ue ... but there's no question that the recent increase in mon- •••liltr tMfl xutn Dr Carl FM-IM or'to his appearance on ey market rates has pushed our costs up." THAT CLASSIC LOOK - Bob Hope, age 72, is this stage here, people were asked The move by First National State, the largest commercial week's top attraction at the Garden State Arts Cen- to rise to greet him. In re- bank in New Jersey, follows that of First National City and ter, Holmdel. His material follows a familiar—but sponse to the applause, he LOOK OUT LIBERACE! — When It comes to sartorial splendor, Trlni Lo- Chase Manhattan in New York. en|oyable—format and there were even some launched into a song about pez Is giving Llberace some competition. And, according to the way he people who sat on the soggy lawn to see last "It's not where you start — sang "My Eyes Adored You" for last night's arts center audience, Franki Union cop shot probing holdup night's performance. it's where you finish" because Valli is In for a run for the money, too. UNION — A Union Township policeman underwent emer- gency surgery early this morning after being shot as he in- vestigated the occupants of a car believed to have been used in a holdup. Standard and Poor ups county credit rate A police spokesman said patrolman Daniel Von Spreckel- sen, 32, stopped a car at Rt. 22 and Vauxhall Road late last FREEHOLD - Standard it rating agency, who were boost in the county's credit possible rating, behind a been considered a resort pleased that at least Standard night because It resembled the description of a vehicle used in and Poor, a New York credit given a tour of county-owned rating before the next major triple A, the top, and a double county," he said. "On the and Poor raised its rating for a holdup in Scotch Plains earlier In the day. rating agency, has upgraded facilities and industrial and county bond sale, scheduled A. tour we showed the represen- the county. The spokesman said Von Spreckelsen was shot in the its credit rating for Mon- housing development through- for Aug. 19. At that time Freeholder Director Philip tatives (of the credit rating Mr. Kavalek, a Republican hand as he approached the car and was shot again in the back mouth County from an "A" to out the county. $9,740,000 in general improve- N. Gumbs said he was satis- agencies) that we have in- who is seeking reelection to as he dashed for his patrol car to radio for assistance. an "A plus," County Adminis- Moody's informed the coun- ment bonds will be sold by fied with the improved rating dustry and agriculture—a lot the Board of Freeholders in A large-caliber handgun was believed to have been used trator Theodore J. Narozan- ty it would keep the county's the Board of Freeholders. the county received from more than just a resort November, attributed the im- in the attack, police said. Ick reported yesterday. rating the same as It has Mr. Narozanick explained Standard and Poor, but added area." proved rating received by the The suspicious car had fled when more officers arrived The improvement in the been, an "A-l," Mr. Narozan- that the improved "A plus" that he personally believed Freeholder Ernest G Kava- county largely to the "sound and found the wounded patrolman. The unknown assailants credit rating came after a ick said. rating the county has re- the county deserved an even lek, who along with Mr. budgets-" the freeholders have were believed to have headed east, police said. visit to the county last County officials had invited ceived from Standard and higher rating from both Gumbs and Freeholder adopted in past years. Other Von Spreckelsen, the father of two girls and a 10-year vet- Thursday by representatives the credit rating agencies to Poor is about the equivalent agencies. In any case, he said Thomas J. Lynch Jr. accom- factors, he said, included the eran on the force, was reported In serious condition as he un- of both Standard and Poor send representatives to tour of the "A-l" rating it has he felt the tour did a lot of panied the credit rating various county facilities, the derwent surgery at Memorial General Hospital here, the po- and Moody's Investors Ser- the county last week in hopes from Moody's. Both are two good. agency representatives on "forward looking industrial lice spokesman said. vice, another New York cred- the visit would result in a notches down from the best "You know, we've always their tour, said he too was development" in the county. 10 The Daily Register SHREWSBURY, N J TUESDAY, AUGUST 12.1975 Dodgers cool Phillies3 fever By The Associated Press and losing. Pitch poorly and we don't score enough runs to I scrambled like a guy who Lockwood, 1-1, replaced the sixth inning after a lead- lose, that's a killer." win, I can't help that " shoots fill or 70 and scrambles starter George Stone at the off walk to Rusty Staub and start of the third Inning and Andy Messersmith of the Whillie Crawford socked a Despite the four-hitter, all over the golf course. Joe Torre's double. Los Angeles Dodgers pitched held the Padres scoreless two-run homer and Dave Messersmith said he felt for- Mets srorf Staub had an RBI-single only his second victory in his Lopes doubled two runs through the seventh. Rick tunate to win Ed Kranepool belted a and Torre a run-scoring last nine starts last night, but across as the Dodgers Baldwin finished up. "It was a battle because I three-run homer and Skip double as the Mets picked up the right-hander believes he's dropped the second place was struggling. I would try a Lockwood posted his first Na- three runs in the first. San pitching the best ball of his Phillies three games behind Padres' ace Randy Jones, fast ball inside and it would tional League victory with Diego came back with four career this season. Pittsburgh in the National 15-7, surrendered all the Mets end up here," he said, holding five innings of scoreless relief runs against Stone in the sec- League's East Division. The runs in his six-inning stint. Messersmith (Mil) cooled his hand high. as the New York Mets beat ond, two of them on a double Pirates snapped a five-game Kranepool's homer, his off the pennant-minded Phila- "It wasn't a smooth game. the San Diego Padres, 8-4 by Jones. delphia Phillies, 7-1, in the na- losing streak by beating the third of the season, came in tionally televised game, giv- Atlanta Braves, 8-1. Felix Millan singled in a ing up just four hits He also The run-scoring walk to run in the second for New batted in a pair of runs with a Messersmith and Lopes' ba- York and another scored on bases-loaded walk and a sacri- ses-loaded double gave the Torre's double play grounder fice fly. Dodgers a 3-0 lead in the first Angels' thefts leave in the third. 1 "My personal satisfaction is inning. That was almost a Stone was a late replace- pitching well," Messersmith unique experience for Mes- ment for Jon Matlack. Mat- ' said after the Dodgers' fourth sersmith, who has been the lack, injured in an automobile ' straight victory and sixth in victim of four shutouts. Yankees holdingbag accident last Wednesday, was their last seven games. "My job is to keep 'em un- to return to action Monday "Frustration is pitching badly der three runs," he said. "If ANAHEIM (AP) - Califor- seventh innings. outfielder demanded a bonus night but was scratched due nia's running Angels stole a Dave Collins stole two for signing. Yesterday Jones to an upper respiratory in- club record six bases last bases to lift his total to 20 changed his mind and said he fection. night — four of them in a while Stanton had the other would sign with the Yankees The closest San Diego came three-run fourth inning — and theft. Rivers stole second and without a bonus, but his agent to getting a run off Lockwood lefthanders Frank Tanana third in the fourth inning was told by Yankees Presi- was in the fourth when ex- and Jim Brewer tamed the while Collins stole second and dent Gabe Paul that the Met Don Hahn walked with UP — Manuel Orantes lifts the trophy emblematic New York Yankees, 8-1. Stanton swiped third. American League club was no two out and Tito Fuentes fol- of victory In the U.S. Clay Court tennis tournament Mickey Rivers had four hits Yanks veto Cleon longer interested. lowed with a single to left. which he won in Indianapolis last night. and stole three bases, running NEW YORK (AP) - Cleon Later, Hubert Perkins, rep- But Lockwood got Hector his seasonal total to SO in Jones, the former New York resenting Jones, called Mets Torres on a fly to right field leading the Angel assualt. Mets star who was released General Manager Joe to end the threat. last month, will not be play- McDonald and asked whether Tanana, pitching for the Lockwood allowed four hits ing baseball for either of the the Mets might consider tak- first time since suffering a in his five innings of work, New York major league ing Jones back, now that Yogi broken little finger on his struck out five batters and Ashe falls teams this season. Berra had been replaced as right hand July 28, allowed walked two. Baldwin finished, manager by Roy McMillan. five hits in seven innings and Jones had agreed on con- up with two hitless innings. fanned six to take the major tract terms some time ago But McDonald told Perkins league lead at 171 — two with the New York Yankees, that the Mets had no desire to Jones surrendered 10 hits more than teammate Nolan but that fell through when the sign Jones. while striking out three and walking one. to Orantes Ryan. Jim Brewer worked 11111111111111111111111 1 1 1 nun iniiiiiiiiiiiiiii HUH nun Los Angeles (7) -.j(l) the final two innings, allowing Ob r I ob r h INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Spain's Manuel Orantes put Lopes 7b Cosh 2b 4 0 0 away Wimbledon champion Arthur Ashe in straight sets, then four hits but no runs. Buckner II 5 0 Bowo ss 4 0 I The Angels collected 13 hits Haled J 0 Moddo«il 4 0 teamed with countryman Juan Gisbert to win the doubles Oorvey Ib I 0 Lilmkllf 1 I against starter Pat Dobson, 9- How They Stand CeyJb t 7 Allen 1b crown yesterday and complete a sweep of men's titles at the Crwtrd rf 4 2 Jhnttnert 12, Sparky Lyle and Tippy Yeager c 1 1 Schmidt 3b 3 0 U.S. Clay Courts tennis tournament. AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Russell ss 12 Boonet 3 0 Martinez. Tanana boosted his Eost Division Mssrsmthp 2 0 Chrstsnp I 0 Orantes, a handsome lefthander from Barcelona, upset W L Pet. OB w SctKrp 0 0 record to 10-fi. Boston 70 46 403 - Pittsburgh 17 1 0 Ashe, 6-2,6-2, in singles and won a check for $16,000 Baltimore 6] SI 553 • Philadelphia M 5} .552 1 0 0 Lee Stanton's two-run New York 59 Si .513 10'/, St. Louis M 55 .522 .'/, After a quick shower, Orantes returned to the In- double highlighted the Angels' Milwaukee S4 63 .4*2 It", New York S» 54 .51] /', Totals 33 1 • Totals II I 4 dianapolis Racquet Club's stadium court with Gisbert and Cleveland . SI ft I .455 17 Chicago SS 64 .412 I]'/, LosAngeles. 030 004 000 -7 fourth while Dave Chalk Delroll 71 J»J34'i Montreal 41 65 .425 17'/, Philadelphia 010 000 000 I beat Wojtek Fibak or Poland and Hans Pohlmann of West Well DM E Schueler. DP Philadelphia I drove in three runs with sin- Oakland 71 45 .»II - Cincinnati 77 » W4 - LOB—Los Angeles 5, Philadelphia 6 Germany, 7-5, 6-0. Kansas City 44 SI .557 6', LosAngeles 62 55 510 15V, 2B-Lopes, Cey, Buckner. HR—Luilnskl gles in the fourth, sixth and Chlcogo it N .417 U'/j Son Francisco S7 59 .491 » 1291, W. Crowlord (7). S-Yeager. The second victory pushed Orantes' share of the $150,000 Te«o« 54 el .479 IS'1 Son Diego SI 63 457 24 SF—Messersmith New Ytrt (II CMtatrtKS) Minnesota SJ 45 .449 It Atlanta SI 66 416 26'/, purse to $19,000, while Fibak and Pohlmann split the doubles pb Houston 45 75 .175 14 California 51 44 .441 » Son Diego (4) New Yert (I) Bands ct I Nettles dh Yesteraay s Games runnerup check for $3,100. Alomar Jb I Vlntnedh Yesterday's RMMIs Ob r While II I Remy ft Baltimore 4, Kansas City 0 Pittsburgh I. Atlanta I Hllll.nl 3 0 I Clinescl 4 I Orantes went straight to the dressing room following the Munsonlb 1 Rivers ct Te«os 7. Detroit 0 Cincinnati 9, Chlcogo 3 Crubbph 0 0 0 Millan 2b 4 I I'nllii if 0 Gorrifl Ib Minnesota I. Milwaukee; San Francisco 9. Montreal 2 Fuenles 7b 1 0 3 Aloull match and would not talk to newsmen. Wlloms dh > Commit California I, New York I New York 1, Son Diego 4 HTorres ss < a 0 Unser ct { Nettles 3b J Stanton rl Oakland 4, Boston 3 Houston 7, St. Louis f Ivle Ib i o 1 Stoubrf 3 77 "I never play too well against him on clay," said Ashe. Only gomes scheduled Dempsey c 0 CholkJo Los Angeles 7, Philadelphia I Wiifflr-lilif 4 0 2 Torre 3b 4 I "But wait 'till I get him somewhere on cement or grass. Stnaley ss 0 Hampton c Today's Gomes Sluiriwi II 3 I 1 Krnepool Ib 4 I Jhnsn ph TMays Games 1 Meoll ss Kansas City (Spllllorrf 541 at Ball! K ubiok ID l I I Grolec 4 0 "If I played him on cement, I could make him look silly, Brnkmn ss 0 Tonana p Pittsburgh (Klson 9 1) at Atlanta Kendall c 3 I 0 Heldemnss 4 0 Dobson p more (Alexander 5 71 or Grlmsley III), 0 Brewer p 7:30 p.m. (Morton 14-12), 7:35 p.m. RJones p 3 I 1 GStonep 0 O also." Tomlin p Lvlep Texas (Penanowskl 0-1) at Detroit Los Angeles (Rou v 9) at Philadelphia 0 0 Mllner ph I 0 Mrtnei p I Ruhle 9 11.1pm. (Underwoood 11-1), 7:35 p.m. Locklearph I 0 0 Lockwood p I 0 The Wimbledon champ said last night's match was just Guldf y p Chicago IDettore 4 4) at Cincinnati Baldwin p 0 AP wlre«4»lo Cleveland (Peterson 4-7) at Chicago like a meeting earlier this year on the World Championship I Wood 12-141, 9p.m. IDarcy I 5), 1:05 p.m. BUSINESS OFFICE — Rowland Office of the At- Totals 37 I 9 Totals 34 I 13 Milwaukee (Broperg 9-10) al Min- Son Francisco (Falcone 1-7) at Mon- Totals 34 I 10 Totals 33 I 10 Tennis tour at Monte Carlo where Orantes won 6-2, 6- New York 000 000 -I nesota (Hughes 10-9), 9 p.m. treal (Warthen 5-4),1:05p.m. Son Diego 040 000 000 - 4 Son Diego (Johnson 1-0) at New York New York 311 003 OOx - I lanta Braves reaches first safely last night as Bob California 000 301 40> -I Boston (Wise 15-41 at California (Has 2. "The guy is just basically a better player on clay than I sler 3-111 or Lange 4-5). 10:30 pm (Seaver if 7), 1:05 p.m. E - Fuentes 2, Kubiak 2. OP - San OP-Colllornla I LOB-New York I. St. Louis (Denny 4-1) at Houston (Rob Diego 2, New York 1. LOB - San Diego Robertson (7) of the Pittsburgh Pirates leaps for California I. 3B—H White, Slonlon. Riv- New York IMedlch 10 12) al Oakland am," Ashe said. "Orantes wouldn't fall down on clay like I (Holtzman 14-9) 11 p.m. erls 7-171,1:35 p.m. 7, New York 3. 2B - Torre 2. Kubiak. high throw. Pirates beat the Braves, 8-1. ers, Chalkk. SB-Rlvers 3, Collins 2, R Jones, Cllnes HR - Kranepool (3) did tonight, but I feel like I'm on roller skates out there." Stanton S—Stanley. SF-Demosey. i i n IMII ii mil ii > i i Him • mi • iiimimi SB — Wlnlleld, Ivle. S - Lockwood. Ed Jones among pro gridders waived By The Associated Press was among eight players cut "The coach wants to see you Orleans Saturday night. "We Also cut were two draft Watson of Western Kentucky. Ed Jones of Eatontown, for- by the Dallas Cowboys. in his office." only have two offensive lines, choices, linebacker Dave Ben- The Philadelphia Eagles plus a few people, so they had son, a Hth-round choice from cut three rookies and Denver mer standout at Middletown Jones, defensive back, was That messenger is called to play a lot. They still were from Weber State, and guard reduced its roster to 64. township High School and the Cowboys' ninth round the Turk and he is easily foot- strong in the fourth quarter. I Dennis Pavelka, picked on DALLAS COWBOYS - ROOKIES: DE- Rutgers University, yesterday draft choice. ball's most feared man. FENSIVE BACK ED S JONES, RUT liked that. We didn't make the 16th round from Nebr- GERS; center Greg Krpolek. Oregon It was a bad day for Rut- State; running backs Willie Hamilton. The Turk will be making many errors, and I liked that aska. Arliono State, and Pele Clarke. Colora- gers grads all the way periodic visits around all the do State; quarterback Leo Gasienieca. too. We didn't fumble at all." Rutgers; defensive tockie Don Fish, Co . Lakewood LL around. The Cowboys also cut NFL camps for the next The other Washington cuts tawba; receiver wavnc Johnson, Hous- The Washington Redskins, ton; oncf back Walter Japies. Florida former Scarlet Knight quar- month. The timetable for cuts also included free agents Al- A&M, all cut draws Vermont who've split two preseason len Aldridge, a defensive end terback Leo Gasienieca while calls for the clubs to get down NIW ORLEANS SAINTS Veterans; games, had Coach George Al- who played with Houston and linebacker Charles Hunt and wide re- METUCHEN - Pairings the New Orleans Saints to 55 by Aug. 19, then 49 by ceiver Jack Phillips, both cut. Rookies- len grumbling after losing to Cleveland and in the Cana- linebacker BUI Malcolm, Eastern Mich for the Little League Eastern trimmed cornerback Tony Sept. 2, and 46 by Sept. 9. The loan; tackle Pol Tumpone. Michigan; final cuts are set for Sept. 15 Atlanta Friday night. "At- dian Football League; Carl Imebacker Mike McDonald, Catowbo. ^Regional Championships Pawlik, who teamed with punter Dole Lybccker, North Carolina; here, were announced yes- Jones a year ago. when teams must reach the lanta beat us at »h» lino «i Johnson, a guard-tackle who cornerback Tony Powllk, Rutgers, all 43-man regular season limit. scrimmage, both offense and played for New Orleans and cut. ' terday' National Football League WASHINGTON REDSKINS - Veler 1 defense," said Allen. "We in the World Football League The tournament will open teams must cut their pre-sea- Today's cuts will be made ans cut: running bock Doug Cunning- didn't play very well. When last year; and Craig Robin- ham. Free agents cut: defensive end Al- Thursday afternoon with Bur- son rosters to a 60-player lim- on judgments of players af- len Aldridge. guofd-locklc Carl Johnson, you make as many mistakes son, who also had played for tackle Craig Robinson. Rookies cut lington, Vt., going against it by 4 p.m. today. Rookies ter about three weeks of linebacker Dove Benson, Weber Stole; as we did, you're going to New Orleanes. guard Dennis Pavelka, Nebraska; kicker Lakewood, and Rotterdam, who played in the College All training camp and, for most Russ Brown, William J. Mary; quarter lose." back Alan Chadwick, East Tennessee NY., meeting Jessup, Pa. State; guard Jerome Hodges. Kansas; Star Game do not count teams, one exhibitiion game. Additionally, Washington wide receiver Tim Paulus. Kansas The losers of Thursday's against the limit so some The jire-season schedule's first Allen got the roster cutting dropped five other rookies, State; linebacker Brad Watson. Western Kentucky. ' games will meet Friday in a clubs will still be over the full weekend saw most teams off to an early start by chopp- kicker Russ Brown from Wil- PHILADELPHIA EAGLES - Rookies consolation contest and the limit when the deadline ar- experimenting with new play- ing 11 players yesterday. liam and Mary, quarterback eul: defensive bock Den Schroy. Mary- land; defensive back Mike Gombrell. winner's will meet Saturday rives. ers as coaches faced the Among them were running Alan Chadwick of East Ten- Sam Houston; place-kicker ferry to determine the regional Traditionally, cut players Tuesday cuts. back Doug Cunningham, who nessee State, guard Jerome O'Brien, Towton Stole. champions, who will compete DENVER BRONCOS - Rookies: de get the word from a ball boy Houston's new coach, Bum saw limited service with the Hodges of Kansas, wide re- tensive lineman Keith Austin, Cal-Riv in the championships Aug. 20- erslde; running bock Dorrell Patterson. or clubhouse man who is dis- Phillips, was pleased by the 'Skins last season after being ceiver Tim Paulus of Kansas Central Oklahoma Slate; defensive bock 23 at Williamsport patched to tell them that, Oilers' 13-7 victory over New obtained from San Francisco. State and linebacker Brad Routsell Williams, Arizona, all cut. GREEMBAY PACKERS - Rookies: III i mi i mil ••••mi m s mi s im guard Nick Boslalo, Sim Fraser; guard BIN Kalrll, Brown; linebacker Bonn AP wlnenxe Pierce. St. Norberl. defensive tockie Jerry Lawrence, South Dokoto State, oil DOWN -A Arthur Ashe takes a tumble while losing cut. to Orantes In the Clay Court finals. Ashe lost, 6-2, SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Rookies: defensive tackle Von Boolwrlght. cor- 6-2, to the third-seeded Orantes In a rain-threat- nerback Vlncc Phoson and linebacker Grid squads get early openers Jerry~Dahl. all waived ened match. A midsummer night's stream of sports iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiMiimm Montefuscos," prepares its fall television debut. In an unusual turn of events this fall, three But 'tis rumored that John The Giant will appear Monmouth County football teams will get the jump as a guest in one segment of the show as a long, on the gridiron campaign by opening the season a lost relative who pops up with the Frisco team! Colts Neck to play week early — Saturday, Sept. 20. CHA fades away i Keansburg will do the honors by launching its CHUCK Almost overlooked at the conclusion of the COLTS NECK - Colts then doubled home Marascio hoja.jfH.vTd/Mark Monaghan season at home against Immaculata of Somerville past high school year was the departure of Croy- Neck's baseball team, cham- with what turned out to be"drove in a third run. Ridge- before noon, while Red Bank Catholic will play don Hall Academy from the Monmouth County pions of the Northern Division the winning run as Ridgewood wood then scored single runs of the Jersey Shore League scored- once in the bottom host to traditional rival Mater Dei at 2 p.m. TRIBLEHORIS sports picture. in the bottom of the eighth The Leonardo "campus", of course, has been and winners of the state title half. and ninth to tie the game. Red Bank Catholic, the following Saturday, sold to Bayshore Christian School, which for the in the American Amateur Ridgewood led, 3-2, going Bob Feeney, who relieved will help Red Bank Regional baptize its new time being will operate as a private grade school Baseball Association tourna- into the eighth inning, but Mark Mazzucco in the ninth, school field in Little Silver in what has been the ment at Ridgewood, will be- i III! • 111 III! 111111 III MIIIIMII III I III! MM 11111 > • • I > 11111 • only. Scoras clouted a two-run got the win. traditional opening skirmish between the schools. gin play at East Meadow, Croydon Hall, mildly successful in independent Another departure from past years is that RBC bound by the traditional Sept. 1 opening of pre-sea- Long Island, Thursday. private school competition throughout the state, will play all of its games on Saturday afternoons, son drills and the Sept. 27 season openers. had little effect on the Monmouth County inter- with the exception of the Thanksgiving morning fi- East Keansburg native John Montefusco, for- Colts Neck beat Hohokus, 6- WE NOW HAVE nale against Rumson-Fair Haven Regional. scholastic scheme of things. However, three out- 0, Saturday, and Ridgewood, mer Middletown High School and Brookdale Com- standing CHA athletes of the past decade come to The reason for the early Sept. 20 start is the munity College standout, believes he has a chance 7-6, Sunday to take the N.J. mind — basketball's Norm Caldwell, and Vinnie title In what is called "Stan N.J. State Interscholastic Athletic Association's for National League "Rookie of the Year" honors, Thompson and football's Paul King. They rank Musial Tournament." The post-season playoff format, which calls for playoff the man he anticipates as his chief competition in among the best to perform hereabouts and may pair of victories gave them ' games involving selected teams on the Saturdays the post-season balloting is Philadelphia Phillies aptly be called three men on a dying horse. immediately before and the week after Thanksgiv- five straight wins in the double southpaw Tom Underwood. The close of Croydon Hall leaves Ranney elimination tournament. ing Day. Montefusco has a 10-6 record and a 3-23 earned School in New Shrewsbury as the county's inde- Len Glowenski tossed a Salt Hay To keep possible options open for playoff ac- run average with the San Francisco Giants, while pendent private school representative. Look for three-hit shutout in the win " tivity on Satuday, Nov. 22, schools which had regu- Underwood is 11-8 and 3.37. Ranney to build a strong interscholastic program, over Hohokus, and John larly scheduled games on that date were per- And even stronger candidate for freshman thanks to its $1 million athletic plan now under Scoras blasted a solo fifth in- mitted to move them to Sept. 20. Hence, the early honors in the NL overlooked by Mnntjrfium ii the construction opening for RBC Mater Dei and Keans- Montreal Expos' catcher-outfieJdeTGary Carter. ning homer. FRED D.WIKOFF CO. burg-Immaculata. Named as the Expos' lone representative on the Caigkt In • corner The Ridgewood win,' which Another NJSIAA provision allows the Sept 20 All-Star team, Carter sports a .280 batting aver- College-bound Red Bank Regional football clinched the tournament for combatants to open preseason practice three days age, 14 home runs and 52 runs batted in. grads: Bob Fiedler, Clemson; Dave Jeter, Colts Neck came in the 13th 236 MAPLE AVENUE earlier than normal, Aug. 28, and to,scrimmage as The emergence of Montefusco as a new, much Cheyney State; Charles Dillard, Hampton In- inning. Don McMahon and early as Sept. 5. talked about major leaguer only coincidentally stitute; John Summonte, Bates and Ira "Buster" Jack Marscio singled, and All other schoolboy teams, of course, are comes as the situation comedy series called "The Bacon, Chowan (N.C.) Junior College. Bill Marsella banged in the RED BANK in the Shrewsbury and Navesink rivers. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Off shore it seemed apparent that Thursday's storm scat- tered the bluefish which had been encamped on the Shrews- bury Rocks. Just where that big body of fish went was any- Sandy Hook Marine Laboratory will start testing this week to determine whether stiped bass in local waters contain body's guess. There was a short flurry of good fishing for 1 large bluefish, plus bonito and tuna on the Klondike Bank Sat- an unsafe level of polychlorinated bipheny. PCB , a chemical urday morning, but the rest of the day was quiet on all of the found in fish in the Hudson River. favored North Jersey Shore chumming grounds. Last Thursday, Ogden Reid, New York Commissioner of Environmental Conservation, advised against the eating of Mike Reuter of Bogota and Art Pontecorvo of Leonia fish from the Hudson River, particularly striped bass and lar- weighed two good sized tuna at Julian's Sport Shop, Atlantic gemouth bass. Highlands, Saturday. The larger was 50 pounds and 14 The warning was issued on the basis of sampling and tes- ounches, and the smaller was 39 pounds and four ounces. ting of Hudson River fish which showed concentrations of Frank Childs of New Shrewsbury, Tony Mamy of Red PCB in excess of level of five parts per million set by the Bank and Lester Williams of Jersey City reported chatching SELL OUT — All of the slips on "party boat row," tage of the perfect weather. Fishing was good for Federal Food and Drug Administration as acceptable for hu- 20 weakfish from five to 10 pounds and more than 50 fluke on man consumption. Recent sampling in the Hudson showed Atlantic Highlands Municipal Habor, were emptied fluke. Saturday. They fished at Sandy Hook on Childs' boat Tina out early Sunday morning as fishermen took advan- that more than half the fish tested were over the acceptable of Long Branch. limit with high concentrations above the Troy Dam and still excessive concentrations down to the Tappan Zee Bridge. Reid's department plans a meeting with General Electric Corp. and other users of the chemical to reach the depart- ment's zero discharge goal. It will also request Monsanto Gene Butler: Gridiron chopper Chemical, St. Louis, Mo., sole manufacturer of the chemical in .the US, to identify all manufacturers in New York State FT. COLLINS, Colo. - While Gene But- even helps during the off-season. This sum- "Then," he smiled, "we have some hel- using PCB. ler may cut a swathe through Western Ath- mer he has been working about 45 hours a lacious workouts. And dad is still 'the' man." Robert P. Whalen, New York Commissioner of Health, week at a day job and is then a bouncer at a letic Conference lines this year, the Colorado Gene realizes that he is probably too joined with Reid in warning people against eating fish from night club three nights a week. State University junior from Asbury Park small for professional football, and he has the river. Concentrations of six parts per million and in one may find that his future is in karate. He vividly recalls one game when he plans of starting a karate school sometime instance 37 parts per million have been found in striped bass The diminutive (5-8, 175) running back was an Asbury sophomore. He got hit so after his graduation from Colorado State. collected in the vicinity of the Tappan Zee Bridge. from the famous football-playing Butler fam- hard that he did a complete flip. The Hudson River is a major spawning area for striped ily has a black belt in karate, a sport he "I have guys coming to me all the time bass in Monmouth County waters. "I managed to land on my feet and kept started at age 14, and also has experience in now and wanting to pay me to teach them, National Marine Fisheries Service, Washington, DC, on running," he said. "Karate has helped me judo, boxing and wrestling. but I don't have time," he said. "My brother asks New Jersey fishermen to help obtain statistical and a lot in improving my flexibility and my re- and I talk about getting together for a school biological data on bluefin tuna. Judging from that background, people flexes. And it has also taught me to fall." sometime in the future. We might do it in Dr. Grant Beardsley of the NMFS Southeast Fisheries might feel that Butler is pugnacious. Not Ram backfield coach John Hancock, New Jersey or maybe in Colorado." Center, Miami, Fla., is the program leader for the survey. true; the 21-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Al who has tabbed Butler as one of his top four "We just don't have enough catch data on the number of tuna Butler of 1209 Fourth Ave , Asbury Park, is running backs, also feels karate has helped. Football honors have always come Gene's taken off the New York and New Jersey coast by recreational a scholarly former All-Monmouth County "I think his great balance and quickness are way: He made virtually every honorary fishermen," said Beardsley. "The annual catch estimate is, at running back who hopes to be an FBI agent a result of his karate training," Hancock team a high school player can make while at Asbury Park. Not as well known are his ka- best, poor because the catch is diverse and has not been ade- someday. t said. "I've seen him take some really hard quately sampled before." shots and just keep his balance and keep go- rate titles. He won the Grand Championship "I used to want to be a lawyer," Gene here in New Jersey a few years ago and was The objectives of the survey are to estimate the total said, "but a couple of government classes ing ... I know one thing. He's one of the guttiest players I've ever coached." a member of the Denver team that won the number of tuna caught by sports fishermen In 1975; to obtain changed my mind on that." Rocky Mountain championships this sum- a representative sample of length, weight, sex, and age of Actually, the entire Butler clan is into Butler led the Colorado State varsity re- mer. He placed third in the Western Inter- tuna; to estimate the recreational fishing effort; and to estab- karate. Gene's father, Al ST., started the serve team in rushing each of the past two nationals last spring. lish a data and sampling base for future monitoring of tuna kick about 10 years ago and the four sons seasons and played enough varsity ball last catches. followed after. Dad is now a second degree year to earn a letter. He was especially Out in Colorado they describe Butler as "a Most of the data is obtained from captains of charter, par- black belt; Al Jr., the first of the brothers to deadly on the specialty teams where he ap- veritable bundle of energy wrapped in a ty and private boats. Charter boat crews have been solicited make All-County, is a black belt in karate peared to be pn search and destroy missions. tanklike body composed of vast resources of to maintain daily logs of fishing. Postcards have been dis- and a brown belt in judo; Lindsay, All-Coun- Gene wound up going to Colorado State energy, strength and fortitude." tributed to fishermen who have volunteered to report their ty back the past two years, is a brown belt because brother Al Jr. had played for head He was the same way as a two-platoon dally catch and effort data. in karate; and Reggie, still a member of the coach Sark Arslanian at Weber State player for Asbury Park. Karate played its A list of tuna anglers has been compiled and a weekly Blue Bishop squad, is into it, but does not With similar interest in football and ka- role then, and it will continue to guide Gene telephone survey is being made to augment catch and effort yet have a degree. rate, the Butler brothers will probably al- in the future. data received from other sources. Obviously, Gene's interest in the martial ways have togetherness. "Everytime I get "It's been," he said, "about the best Results of the survey are expected to be available late in home, we all get together," Gene said. arts has helped his body strength, and it thing that every happened to me." GENE BUTLER the fall. Nine speedsters enroll in Select OCEANPORT - Robert his first stakes win on dirt Farm's Packer Captain 116, for this season's Haskell is as the Hollywood Gold Cup, Morton's sprinter extraor- this year. The son of Rock Don Brumfield; Marty Fal- Mrs. Ethel Kirkland's Ancient Charles Strub, Callfornian, dinare Gallant Bob totes high- Talk tallied in a division of lon's That Wing, 112, Doug Title. The 5-year-old son of San Fernando and Malibu weight of 129 pounds against the grassy Kent Stakes on Thomas; Miami Lakes Gummo has been a stakes Stakes. Racing in the east for eight adversaries tomorrow, June 15 and was a strong sec- Ranch's Kratos, 110, Jim Ed- winner all four seasons he'sthe first time in his 32 race as Monmouth Park stages the ond to My Friend Gus in the wards; Dan Lasater's Hy- raced and has career earn- career, Ancient Title picked $27,650 Select Handicap at six- Leonard Richards. The veter- potenuse, 109, Craig Perret; ings of close to $800,000. Cam- up topweight of 128 pounds furlongs. If all nine start in an Ray Broussard, fresh from W. O. Bartle Jr.'s Efficacious paigned mostly on the west and accounted for the the sophomore sprint the vic- a triumphant ride aboard the Man, 108, Bryan Fann and J. coast, Ancient Title has Whitney Handicap at Sara- tor will eam $17,972.50. fabulous Susan's Girl in the L. McCall's Bright Squire, scored in such coveted events toga on Aug. 2. Delaware Handicap will be 107, Don MacBeth. Gallant Bob will be gunning aboard the Maryland-bred. for his ninth stakes victory of On Saturday, the rich and the season in the Select, hav- The only filly in the race is prestigious $100,000 added Anthony cops PBA crown ing previously accounted for Dixiana's Red Cross (117). Amory L. Haskell Handicap JACKSON - Earl Anthony chance at going over the the Fairmount Park, W. P. The (117) speedy daughter of will be contested at the clas- of Tacoma, Wash., captured $100,000 mark — a plateau Burch, Zev. Patriot, Kelso, 1962 Sapling winner Delta sic distance of 1 1/4-miles on his fifth title this year and the never before reached by a Olympia and Annapolis. The Judge, has captured six of the main track. Known as the 18th of his five-year career professional bowler. Last son of Gallant Borneo's only eight outings this year and Monmouth Handicap prior to last night, taking first place year, he won six national ti- 1967, the Haskell out of the money finish in 12 like Gallant Bob, is a superior in the $50,000 Pro Bowlers As- tles. Anthony bankrolled tinguished array of previous starts this season came in the sprinter. The Chuck Werst- sociation Jackson Open. $99,585. winners, their number in- Rosetnont in June, his lone ler-trained filly won the the crew-cut Anthony piled The 37-year-old Anthony start beyond seven furlongs. cluding Nashua (1956), Dedi- was second when match Regret Stakes at Keeneland cate (1957), Bold Ruler (1958), up a 192-pin advantage at the The Kentucky-bred has sea- in May and Easily annexed a end of three days and 42 game play began Sunday eve- sonal earnings of $161,575 and Sword Dancer (1959), First six-furlong event at Mon- games of play as he won 18 of ning, but took over first place will be ridden by regular pilot Landing (1960), Carry Back mouth by four lengths on July 24 match games, while finish- when he swept all eight con- , Gerlarn Gallitano. (1962), Mongo (1964), and the tests in the first of three 21. No rider has been named ing with a gross pintail of only two-time winner West eight-game blocks. He led by at press time. 10,249. His tournament aver- Tinton Falls Stable's Talc Coast Scout, who triumphed 153 points at the 26 game age was 230. gets into the Select with 120 The remaining Select field in 1973 and 74. mark, then raised the advan- pounds and will be seeking consists of Eagle Mountain The outstanding prospect The $5,000 prize boosted An- tages 187 at the end of Mon- minimi m MINIM miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiim i iiiiiiiiiiiini mini iimimiiiiimiiiiiiiiim thony's earnings for the year day afternoon's first session GOLF GATHERING — The ladies of Ft. Monmouth held their nine-hole to $86,415 and for the second of games, when he won anoth championship. The finalists, left to right, are Phutalla Black, "A" Flight straight season he has a er five times. winner; Ava Boyer, "B" Flight champ; Kay McMurray, "B" FlightTunne- Monmouth Park today rup; Mildred Schultze, "A" Flight runnerup; Louise Stives, "C" Flight run- Monmouth Results nerup, and Lois Trlpold, "C" Flight winner. 111 — liS4», Clmf; 7 ye mam; IW I. Cllsta (Wilson) 3.M Evening Assoull (Wilson) t 20 3.40 7 40 Entries Selections Ewcta (7-4) US.M Abe s Boy (Perrel) 3 40 7 40 till - U.H4J; Clmt; 1 ye. 4 I Fly Ball (MacBoltl) 2.10 Dusted I Eslevei) 11.20 7.20 7.N III - M,JM; Clmo 1 Y. t Up Mdn; 6 Gay Roy (110) Estovei t-1 By Reggie Ster Fur. More America (1151 Perrel 2-1 2nd — 17,SM; Clmf; > ye 4. ••; N.i. Father's Shadow IPerret) 4 40 3 40 WenceslaKUII No rider 1! It Never Happened HIS) No rider II • reds, 6 I Amoray (Edwards) S.p) Savino to face Campbell 1—Wenceslas, Never Gone, Ir- Brovoche (MocBetn) » 40 4.70 4.20 Bio John Speclol III]) Edwards 10-1 Cole Nolr (113) Anderson 10 1 7111 - f 7,s«; Alw; I ye t v». Urn Why Swap (1161 Boltoior I? I Goldneslon (117) Edwords II ish Dictator Liberated Lli (Drury) l.M 3.40 Exclusive Duchess I Perrel) 3 40 1.20 Llantor (Ortli) s 40 Never Gone (III) Broussord 10-< Village Ramp 1117) Ceaeno 5-2 >.N Irish DIctMor till) MacBelh 3 1 Mod Prince (IM) No rider 10-1 2-Bold Jim, Antiaircraft, Dally Double (Ml 131 .M Pieceol Luck (Edwards) 2» 7.60 Another Fella 1114) Barrero IM Laiarito Money Penny (Ceaeno) 1.21 Apollo Sluleen III!) BrumlleM 2 1 tin — W.Me; Clme ]Y 26 27 30 Jl 32 you should °fTdl The Wizard of Id W JUST PUT THIS rx\l~ everybod XT iff OK HB4c? -4N ATTACK 1i I •50| 52 53 V, 58 61 I Your horoscope, birthday 1M LOOKING THE STAR VOU WE LOOKING AT TUESDAY, AUGUST 12 - heights to which you will aspire, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) - terms of new information, you THE DUMMY Bom today, you are one of those WHAT'RE VOU AT STARS THRU IS THE BRIGHTEST you do not allow them to dictate You will very likely have less might be wise to say nothing. • HAS IT mentally curious persons who is DOING, HEPS MY NEW STAR THERE goals which are too easy for you difficulty bringing present busi- Rest in the evening. TELESCOPE IS POINTED AT ever questioning the values and to attain. You will, regardless of ness deals to a satisfactory con- ARIES (March 21-April 19) - A STREET priorities of his society. Not one limitations, work to your fullest clusion than you imagined. You would do well to agree with LIGHT/ to accept the status quo, you are capacity. Redirect energies at evening. higher-ups when you can. Mat- constantly seeking better ways SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- ters that do not involve princi- and means of achieving better * * * Dec. 21) -The past few weeks ples can be handled in a political results, bigger goals, more ser- Wednesday, August 13 should have shown you the error manner. viceable ends. Fortunately, you LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Make of present ways. Do what you TAURUS (April 20-May 20) are able to save time, energy, an effort to gain the cooperation can to institute new methods of —You should be able to add to of those who can be of help to talent, and often money because operation on the employment your own personal coffers with- you on the present project You you are willing to work with scene. out putting anyone else at a others or to take from the past should not have to do it all your- CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan. self. material disadvantage Don't that which can help you to un- 19) —Maintain a friendly at- delay to do so. derstand the present; you do not titude even as you make it clear GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - insist, as do many bom under VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - that you are not to he dictated to As you think and talk of others your sign, on working alone. An unexpected health hazard may cause a setback in terms of by any, not even those in today, be charitable. You would You have weaknesses along time where the present project is authority. do well to remember that your 1 with your strengths, handicaps concerned. Take the bad with AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 1R) own position is not as secure as it along with your advantages, but the good at evening. —Morning upset as a result of a might be. you do not allow either to warp setback in business affairs CANCER (June 21-.July 22) - your outlook in any way. You ac- LIBRA (Sept. 23Oct. 22) - should not surprise you. Don't Take things as they come today. cept completely your limitations Concentrate upon today's goals; allow others to speak for you: If you attend to things out of and have learned to work well you may have to change those answer questions yourself. order, you may find that you and profitably within them. This made for tomorrow. Don't be PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) - have not done well by your is because, although you allow surprised to findyoursel f trailing Unless what you have to offer talent or your ambition. your limitations to dictate beind late in the day. another is of high quality in SheinwolcTs bridge advice By ALFRED SHEINWOLD club, dropping the king, led a It wouldn't be sporting to South dealer spade to the ace and ruffed a name West. Not as long as he Neither side vulnerabli I'VE OJI_y BEEN Today we continue our ac- spade. Then he led the queen keeps paying that hush mon- NORTH count of experts at work. Our of diamonds to dummy's king. ey. • AKX YOU'RE LATB little tale of slaughter comes In the middle DAILY QUESTION K 10 K 10 7 from the national tournament Partner opens with one 0 When Hodge led the good AQ 1072 some years ago in Houston. heart, and the next player pas- queen of clubs from dummy, WKS F.AST Houston expert Paul Hodge ses. You hold: S-Q J 5 J 2 East discarded. Declarer VI 5 .1 2 4 97 ft took the king of spades. The threw away the ace of dia- H-None D-J 5 3 2 C-J 6 5 i None "/ 09 4.1 king of hearts then revealed monds and led once more 4. .What do you say? i J5 3 2 0 U4 the bad trump break. from dummy. East's last two Answer: Bid one spade. If 4c> J (, 5 4 JL K9.1 Hodge led the ten of hearts cards, both trumps, were partner rebids his hearts SOUTH from dummy, covered by the caught in the middle, and you'll wish you had passed, 4 10 4 queen and ace. He continued Hodge made his grand slam. but you should make one at- A J X 7 fi 5 : with a club to the ace and a West should have put up the tempt to Improve the con- 0 A 06 X club ruff. jack of diamonds when South tract. 4 Now came the key play. led the six of diamonds. This ('A Pocket Guide to Bridge' South West North East 1 Pass Declarer led the six of dia- would limit dummy to one written by Alfred Sheinwold "j 2 • Pass monds from his hand and won is available. Get your copy by 2 "t Pass J 0 Pass diamond entry, and South j Pass a finesse in dummy with the sending $1 to Red Bank Reg- \ Paw would be unable to ruff often A Pass 4 NT ea Keep ten of diamonds. ister, P. 0. Box 1111, Los An- Pass enough to execute his little 5 i Pass 7 •'.• All Pass AS A SCOUT Declarer ruffed another geles, Calif. 90053.) EAR6 trump coup. * Opening lend - 4 one fe Q 1 1 SPIKE'S fH£60T\ HEV, SPIKE! WAKE UP . . I NOTICE THE IN LATE IDE WANT TO SEE WHAT ASiMUAAW, FAMILY HERE/.' LASTNI6HT.. WOO LOOK UKE.' ALKAPV.. NOSE! IHAVENT EVEN SEEN HIM The Phantom Beetle Bailey 1 A BATTLE ROYAL I BET IN THE HQOfT".., A 6JUARTEI? PHANTOM VEKSUS /ir\lY\ HE COULPNT A55fiS$lf $ua\ A FINE-TUNE CLEAR IT wh ft PICTURE? pp&gg y WHOEVER HE IS.. 1 ,. AMAZING-! SHREWSBURY. N J TUESDAY. AUGUST 12 1975 The Daily Register 15 iiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiu ,„„„,„„ | Television Today iiimuiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii At the movies EVENING New York Channels — 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13 " These schedules ore pro- MIDOLETOWN MIODLETOWN Q O WI°E WORLD: TOWN EAIT - CINEMA I- (D «*« TREK (Q FAMILY AFFAIR gj JEANNE WOLF WITH... vided by the theater and the Once it Nol EnougO ! OS 1 10 The Devil 1 >W 7 30 9 IS A female, capable of absorb- g) PARTRIDGE FAMILY Guest: Art Buchwald. MYSTERY times ore for today only TOWN WEST - CINEMA II- fj} BEWITCHED ' Tommy 7 W. 9 ]i Monly Python and the Holy Ccail 7 4S ing pain from others, Jfadi "Night Life." Charles Aldman, •ID IMU fQ SESAME STREET 10*0 Q(J BARNABY JONES HAILET 9 30 'To Go or Not to Go" MONMOUTH AITS CEMTEH If I FREEHOLD Capt Kirk and Mr. fpock Qj) THE LUCY SHOW "Murder Once Removed." A Anne Francis. When a man imrl) th« CarllMI - PLAZA - 0 THE WILD, WILD WEST Bite Ihe Bullel 7 10. t 30 MALL I - Into a laboratory ol death sailing error of which no ex- lakes over an entire restau- Eigtf Sanction; JO Stont Killed I 10 Bite Ihe Bullel 7 10 9 30 •JO f!) NBC NIGHTLY NEWS MOVIES III — CINEMA I - MALL II — •The Night of the Flaming IB TODAY IN DELAWARE perienced yachtman would be rant 'or an anniversary party PlnocCnlo II II I m II JO o m The Wind ond the Lion 3 00. J 30. t JS Ghost" Q I LOVE LUCY CINEMA It - The Wind and Ihe Lion 7 IS. 9 70 (B(J) ELECTRIC COMPANY at which ha and his wile I 30. ! 50. » 30. « JO Or* ol Oui Dlno MENLOPAR9X guilty brings death to a weal- Mufl It Milling 17 00 noon. I 00 J 00 Jowl? 00. 7 00 « 35 "Lucy Changes Her Mind" are the only guests, the res- «T Jl DRIVE IN - MENLO PARK CINEMA - thy manufacturer and veter- « 00 I IS Once it Nol Enough 1 4S. 3 4S S SO. taurant owner suspects the MOVIES IV - The Devil t Rain I 40. 17 Of o m O ABC EVENING NEWS an sailor and convinces Mi Don I Look in me Batement 10 30 I 00. 10 10 Tht Drowning Pool 1 30. I 30 EAST BRUNSWICK (0 CBS EVENING NEWS titter that It was no acci- celebration is more sinister SHIEWitUHT MATAWAN CINEMAM- TURNPIKE INDOOR - dent (R) than is appears. (R) CINEMA I- Jows! 00. 7 00. 9 30 Q) TAKE 12 Beyond me Door J 00 4 00 The Towering Inlernol 00 12:00 (J) NEWS FOR THE OEAF t 00 STBATHMOUE 'Wilmington Grand Opera Q Q POLICE STORY I 00. 1:41 12:30 (0 YOGA FOR HEALTH CINEMA II — CINEMAI - House" 'The Execution." The gang Q The Wind and Ihe Lion 7 10 ) 00 Pinocchlo 7 00. 7 00 One ol Ou land-style shooting of two 1:00 f) Q TOMORROW 7 30. 10 00 sauis is Milling } JS. I JS © BIG BLUE MARBLE EATONTOWN CINEMA II - (0 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE men on a quiet residential The periods of being a police COMMUNITY - The Devil i Rom 7 IS. 9 IS olficer in a big city will be Once it Not Enough J JO, 9 li ASBUHT PARK street reveals that a major LYRIC- fj) ROOM 222 discussed by Sonny Grosso, MIVS-IM — eastern drug ring is trying Tommy I 30, II 00 Calilormo Spin Chinese Prolemonoli ; 30 Force Four (X) McHALE S NAVY lor a "take-over" ol the city former New York Cityp o- 10 10 » 10 £8 WALSH'S ANIMALS liceman who worked on "The LONG (RANCH SAVOY - LONGO'S COMBINATION (R) MOVIES I - Second Coming of Eva I JS, 4 00. 7:00 Q CBS EVENING NEWS Q fl) NEWS French Connection" narcot- Jowl 7 IS. 9 44 In COM ol am Matinee 6 40. 9 OS Seven Delicious Withei 7 SS. ics case, end David Toma, 1.30pm S IS. 7 SS £1 LET'S MAKE A DEAL Q g MARCUS WELBV, MOVIESII — BAIIONET - ITALIAN-SEAFOOD BUFFET former Newark undercover The Wind ana me Lion 1 « 10 00 In Dork Star 7 30 The Devil I Rain 9 30 Q NBC NIGHTLY NEWS "Unindicted Wife" A politi- cose or rain Malinee 7 00 PARAMOUNT - cop whose exploits Inspired Tommy 7 30. 9 4S In cole ol rain Moti O ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW cian's wife, suffering from Q N. JERSEY: PERSPECTIVE ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS WEDNESDAYS 6:00 TO 900 ATLANTIC CINEMA - nee I 00 "Mayberry Goes Hollywood" hypertension, nearly sue The Towering Inferno I 00 OCEAN TOWNSHIP g MOVIE KEAHStUDG CIRCLE - O TO TELL THE TRUTH cumbs when she linds out The Drowning Pool 7 70. 9 70 $£95 that her husband is accused "Sundown" (1941). Gene Tier- COLONIAL- ALL YOU CAN EAT... Q ABC NEWS The Towering Inferno ? 00. 10 00 of taking a $750,000 kick- ney, Bruce Cabot. Q THE AVENGERS back. Q JOE FRANKLIN SHOW The only place in the world Large Variety of Saladi "Never, Never Say Die" Q I SPY 1:30 g MOVIE where Beardslee trout can be Shrimp Bisque Soup (Q NEWS "Laya" "My -Wife's Best Friend" found is Lake Crescent in Llngulne w/White Clam Sauca Q) BONANZA (0 RIVALS OF SHERLOCK (1952). Anne Baxter, Macdon- Olympic National Park in Stulted Shells A pretty girl oilers a 1,000 HOLMES ald Carey. Washington state. 1:56 Q COMBAT reward lo anyone who will "The Mystery of the Amber Chicken Cacclatore 2:00 Q Q NEWS kill Little Joe In a gun duel. Beads" Stuffed Clams • Bluelish Pomodora 0 MOVIE Veal Scallopinl Romano (H ON TOP OF IT |0 FILMS ON 13 (0 ROMAGNOLIS' TABLE "Dead Birds." A Him about "Meet Me In Las Vegas" Chicken Rollatlnl a la Florentine (1956) Dan Dailey, Cyd Char- "An Alpine Tradition" (R) the warring tribes of New Shrimp Franchese Guinea, a portrait ol a prim- Isse. fQ ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW 2:50 fl NEWS Pork Tenderloin Scapperelll itive society whose raison ADULTS 2.00 Qj) THE F.B.I. till g THE LATE LATE SHOW or Sweet and Sour Pork ' d'etre was war. Children 1.00 03 STATE OF THE WEATHER "Cry Havoc" (1944). Margar- Q) SAFARI and many more continental and seafood dishes pre- Q3 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES pared by our chef, Baha Qj) INTERFACE et Sullivan, Ann Sothern. 3) TV GARDEN CLUB £0 NEW JERSEY NEWS RPT. 7:15 Q3 FARM, HOME * GARDEN 10:30 gg WORLD PRESS LONGO'S RESTAURANT 7JX £) NEW TREASURE HUNT Q3 DEALER'S CHOICE STRAND THEATRE 1072 OCEAN AVE. SEA BRIGHT Q NFL CHAMPIONSHIP £g WOMAN KEYPORT 2640452 842-9857 * GAMES "Child Custody" "AIR CONDITIONED" "1969 NFL Conference Play- 11:00 "KEEP ON TRUCKIN" off — Cleveland vs. Dallas, Q3 BEST OF GROUCHO "GROUP" Minnesota vs. Los Angeles. Q MOVIES "MY MOTHER, MY BROTHER O JEOPARDY AND ME" •The Captive Heart" (1947). IN COLOR Q HOQAN'S HEROES Michael Redgrave, Basil Rad- "Cassanova Klink" RATED XXX ford. The reaction of men in Shorn ilJrti 2PM So. offlct optnl I 30 S« Q HOLLYWOOD SQUARES a prisoner-of-war camp and ntoi cMJtftl 'i P"C# Ladltu ,'» pttc* Von Make A Date Bttdfrt f) WILD, WILD WORLD the empty lives of their loved OF ANIMALS A paid directory of coming events for non-profit organiza- ones back home. Cinemas 1& 2* HAZLET 'The Ostrich" Q) YANKEES BASEBALL K-MART SHOPPING PLAZA.RT.35 • 739-9697 tions. Rates: $2.00 for 3 lines for one day. $1.00 each addi- Qi) LAST OF THE WILD New York Yankees vs. Oak- I.O.CARDS REQUIRED WHERE APPLICABLE tional line; $3 00 for two days, fl 25 each additional line; "Alligators" land A's. NEW F $5 for three to five days, $1.50 each additional line; $6.00 (0 KILN KRAFTS (0 03 PB S OR OEAF |7ro~c*RTrT~rHt"*T»c~| (Pt for 10 days; $2.00 each additional line Deadline noon day (Q INTERFACE Q) ALFRED HITCHCOCK before publication Call The Daily Register, 542-4000, ask "Guilty . . . Until Proven PRESENTS Innocent" (R) for the Date Secretary 33 JACK BENNY SHOW 1 •"•° O © GOOD TIMES 11:30 O (D CBS M°V|E Today - For children, Dial-a-Story with a Biblical The Evans family's joy at fin- "Night Must Fall" (1964). Al- I SeaBLUEn RIBBO CannerN THfATRy "E IW MtliHI moral. Sponsored by King of Kings Lutheran Church of ally getting to meet J.J.'s girl, bert Flnney, Susan Hampshire 1 ——p-• —* Middletown Dial 671-3319 Henrietta, is shrounded by A story which concerns a J.J.'i declaration that his Im- Welsh boy with a pleasant motion flirturt way with people whose dark 2 AUGUST 5 to AUGUST 18 mediate future could Include Am/i th /< rrifl/infl Henrietta and matrimony. (R) brooding Is hidden behind Pre-school registration. PEACE Inc. of Monmouth \