* City nsion

and Cool Efly and cool today and to- ; night. Clearing somewhat FINAL early tomorrow. I Red Bank, Freehold .(_. Long Branch EDITION Monmouth County's Mlome Newspaper tor 92 Years VOL. 93, NO. 232 RED BANK, N. J., MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 24 PAGES 10 CENTS miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiKiiiiusiif'iiijj, t «V''" •' U.S.May Keep Hand in

By KENNETH J. FREED couldn't really rule in or out," key enemy headquarters and Gen. Creighton Abrams, U.S. He added that Secretary of week they intend to keep WASHINGTON (AP) -In- the likelihood, of American air to protect the4, security ,of military commander in Viet- Defense Melvin R, Laird and fighting in Cambodia as long dications are continuing to • / and logistic support for troops American forces as they nam. Secretary Rogers gave their as the Viet Cong and North pile up that U.S. air, support ' Saigon keeps in . Cambodia are withdrawn from the war Abrams based his appeal, approval reluctantly and af- Veitnamese are a threat and perhaps more, will'be following the June 30-mandat- zone by destroying the ene- the source explained, on the ' ter raising many questions. there. ' provided for South Vietnam- '• ed U.S. withdrawal. 1 my's extensive sanctuaries in need to protect his men while When Nixon went on na- Laird followed by indicat- esd forces remaining jn Cam- •, . < 1 Klein was -. interviewed on '.Cambodia. still trying td meet Nixon's tional television April 30 to ing late, last week this was bodia after American forces \ • the CBS program "Face the ' Since then there have been previously announced sched- announce the border crossing likely and there might be pull out sometime next' Nation." '. • - : various and varying reports ule of withdrawing 150,000 he saidJJ.S. forces would pen- U.S. • air support for suck month. ••••• .' • • •• '• Nixon appeared to rule out of why the move was made, U.S. troops from South Viet- etrate no more than * 21.7 South Vietnamese operations.' Although President Nixon such American action • in • a including one that the over-. nam over the next year. miles from the South Viet- Rogers, who left yesterday seemed to say earlier this May 8 news conference. "I • -• throw of left-leaning but neu- Gave Ideas •{/ namese frontier and all for NATO talks in Rome, told month there would be no such .; would expect that the South- , tralist chief of state Prince The only way this could Americans would be pulled -newsmen as he departed he help, Secretary of'State-Wil- Vietnamese would come out , ' Norodom Siiianouk made the done, the general was said to back by ' June 30 with the agreed with Laird. He further liam P. Rogers indicated yes- at approximately the same : time right for a strike into have stated, was by first South Vietnamese apparently said the administration is not « terday U.S. air aid wouid be time that we do," he: said' Cambodia. knocking out the enemy sanc- not far behind. at all concerned about the provided for Sbuth Vietnam- then, "because when we Reason Explained tuaries in Cambodia. , Since that news conference prospects of a continued ese operations continuing' af-~ .come out our logistical' sup- ' ' But Nixon's public state- Abrams'' plea, sent shortly there have been statements South Vietnamese presence ter the American soldiers • v port and air support will also ' me'nt was supported over the after Nixon's April 20 speech by administration officials in its neighbor's territory. : ; 1 Withdraw. ::, < come put." .'•.'. weekend by a highly placed announcing the withdrawal, and leaders of the Saigon , The diplomatic chief added Klein Speaks Cited Reasons source among U.S. uniformed was followed by an emergen- government that qualified any. future U.S. action, such Nixon's .withdrawal assertion as providing air support to , Another administration of- . , In that news conference '-• ; military leaders. cy meeting of the President's ficial, Herbert; Klein, the Nixon said the main reasons.: • - This source said the sudden top military, 'defense, diplo- regarding the South Vietnam- Saigon's forces, would not be President's, communications v for the sudden move, into; • attack April 30 resulted dl- matic and national, security ese. disclosed in advance. director, said yesterday "I • Cambodia was to destroy, a .rectly from an urgent call by advisers, the source said- Saigon officials said last. (See U.S. May, Pg. 3)

By J. T. WOLKERSTOR0ER dia- and- the Annamites and "We can go farther into Army. We will never SAIGON (AP) - The U.§. Tonkinese of Vietnam has be- Cambodia," said President again have our hands tied Army helicopter settled-into come more arid more appar- Nguyen Van Thieu on May behind our backs.'1 the rice field north of Neak ent. •" ' • - 11, "and there is no .deadline , All of this makes the Cam- Luong, Cambodia, and a Vietnamese task forces for getting out.1' -." ', • • bodians nervous.: They hate Cambodian major kissed the have rolled west along High- The next day Vice Presi- and fear the Viet Cong be- pilot on both cheeks. way 1 in the Parrot's Beak dent Nguyen Cao Ky said Sai- cause they are; Vietnamese, •< The next day South Viet- to Neak Luong. They have gon's forces can stay-in Cam- not because they • are Com- namese Marines linked up sailed up the Mekong to bodia "many months," even munists. They bate and fear with the Cambodian Army PLUNGES TO DEATH — Phnom Qenh , and Kompong without U.S. logistic support. the' South Vietnamese, army outside Neak Luong, and the Cham. They have driven: He said Jhe thought South for the same reason. Professional parachute in- Cambodian major refused to west from the Mekong Delta Vietnam could keep 16,000 Squeeze Is Feared structor Kewirt Clifford shake hands with the Viet- to Takoe, and along the Gulf men in Cambodia. ."tam, afraid,1;' Prince No- namese commahder,. Nielton plunges to hi* of-Siam to Tuk Mfcas, Koni- Last.Thursday, Kyvsaid his rodom Sihanouk told a West- death if Wilton, Australia • As South Vietnamese for- pong-Trach, Kep and Kam- government has to "prevent ern newsman several years ces occupy more and more of pot. _.- .. Communist activities in Cam-. ago,, "that the Vietnamese yesterday befora a horri- southeast Cambodia, the cen- The Vietnamese. are ap- wH march rto. .the.,Mr ' fied crowd, mrfhic.1i included turies-old racial hatred, be-, , parently preparing for a long forts of> o^irl units there, >. in. from the Eqst and thei 'T^ais Wit 22-year-old wife, Don- tween the Khmers of Cambo- stay. .. cooperation with the Cambo- (See Cambodian, Pg. 2) naleen. Nie/lson, participat- ing in a "Jumpathon" to raise fund* to send the Australian twin to World Urges Disease War YOUNG REPUBLICANS r- Shown at the Young Republican convention in Asb, ury _ Championship Skydiving Park are, left to right, James Quaremba, a candidate for the SOP nomination for U. S. senator;1 William F. Dowd, Republican candidate for congress, and Jotin Web- meet in Yugoslavia, plum- HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - a handful of antiwar demon- buildirjg moments later, and available to patients once the meted to the earth after Nations of the world should strators interrupted briefly there were no' arrests. .> disease is recognized." ster, chairman of the Monmouth County Young Republicans. (Register Staff Photo) hjs main parachute failed cooperate this decade "to when they stood up in Sam .."Let us join in any man- Agnew ended a two-day vis- make life and health one Houston Coliseum and shout- ner open to,us — by increas- it to Houston after the speech. to open and his reserve birthright of all children," ed: "Peace now! Peace ing the exchange of jnforma-.* About 100 antiwar demonstra- chut* tangled in the main Vice President Spiro T. Ag- now!"' tion, by joining in coopera- tors stood peacefully outside chute. (AP Wireptioto) new said yesterday The demonstrators left the tive research projects, by, the coliseum, but - the vice Two Candidates Stalk In a speech to the 10th In- avoiding unnecessary dup-', president apparently did not ternational Cancer Congress, lication of unusual and expen- see them when he* left the Agnew proposed that the next Slip of the; Tongue sive facilities, by examining building through another ten years be the Decade PHIUDILPHIA (AP) r- ; the health hazards in our en- door. Votes Along Boardwalk Against Disease, Mrs. Raymond Brqderick, vironment,, by.: committing "By rising above narrow wife of the' GOP gubernato- funds when Wecan," Agnew Striding quickly away from said. By BEN VAN VLIET buck and began signing his self - interest," Agnew said, rial candidate,says some fun- ASBURX PARK -r The lot name.. : • • the.American Legion booth, Qiieen Is "let us join together in a de- ny things happen on cam- He said that to increase the Israelis of the politician isn't always "I'm running .for United ' Mr. Gross tacked across the termined venture to make p a' i g n s: "like being intro- cure rate of cancer "indivi- • States senate," Mr; Gross be- : convention hall and anchored 1 a happy one. ' " •..-' lifej-md health one birthright duced recently at a meeting duals must have greater ac- In fact, sometimes it's gan again. > himself in front of a blonde, Happy Job of all children born from this as 'the new governor's next cess to physicians, physicians Attack damned frustrating. For ex- s "that's right,1' said the vet, blue-eyed girl selling salt wa- day on regardless of nation- wife." must be better trained to rec- ample. 1 "Well, you gotta sign your ter taffy, ~ fy RICHARD McMANUS ality, race or religious be-; Her husband is the current ognize eancer- in its early Saturday, after the Young name on all the stubs not just "Hello, I'm Nelson Gross BED BANK - Some things hefs" ^tenant governor of Penn- stages and highly sophisticat- Lebanon the top one," as he shoved and I'm running for United .«Ye better to report on than Republicans' luncheon at the As Agnew began tp speak,' ed care -centers must ,be \.. « Berkeley Carteret Hotel, Wil- the tickets back to Mr. Gross. States Senate,-and I'd like aethers: ' , BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — you to wear one of my but- An Israeli armored force, liam F. Dowd, the GOP's "Oh," said Mr. Gross. ^Beauty "contests, for in- choice for Congress, and Nel- Mr. Dowd. had decided tons cause it'll match your backed by an aerial and ar- < lovely b,lue eyes." . sfance. tillery barrage, launched an son GrosSi the leading Repub- '. long ago he wasn't'going to ". Yesterday afternoon, at the attack today across, the lican contender for the U.S. attempt any politicking here. Well, that approach worked Molly Motor Inn, 20- southern' Lebanese fron- Senate nomination found He gave the man his dollar magic: She" took the button, ~ year-old Pamela Gnllan; a tier near the town of Bint themselves with an hour to and promptly received 75 shook hands with Mr. Gross tall and shapely waitress at Jbeil', a Lebanese military kill. cents change. and Mr. Dowd and promised the' Palace Diner, was spokesman reported. "Let's take a walk on the "But, I bought four tickets, to wear the button forever.' crowned Miss Red Bank Cen- Lebanese tanks engaged boardwalk and meet some aren't "they four for a dol- Ventures Onward tennial. This reporter was the Israeli forces north of the people," suggested : Mr. lar?" asked Mr. Dowd. With renewed confidence lucky enough to be a Judge village of Yaroun, just inside Dowd. Wrong Number the entourage (Mr. Gross had in the contest. (Inexplicably the frontier, and clashes were "Fine," said Mr. Gross "Four for a dollar," said two campaign aides, one of an editor and a senior, re- continuing, said a communi- and off they headed south- the vet, thumbing through whom had his pockets full of porter passed up the as- que. ward into Convention Hall Mr. Dowd's tickets, "but you buttons) left convention hall signment.) where they were greeted with didn't buy four, you bought and ventured into the day- Six of Ited Bank's choicest two elderly veterans selling six " light. young females paraded with- Replies To chances on a GTO for the "Oh," said Mr. Dowd, as With Mr. Gross leading the . in. arm's length and, believe Asbury Park American La.- he reached for another dol- way, they went right up to me, they are all winners, 7 gion Post. lar, (See Two, Pg.2) • but, in the considered esti- Criticisms Without a, moment's hesi- mation of the judges, Miss tation, Mr. Gross whipped out 'Gullah ranked the highest LOS ANGELES (AP) - a "Gross for Senate" button overall in the four categories Presidential Assistant H. R. and strode up to the booth of poise, personality, man- Haldeman, replying to criti- and said, "Hello, I'm Nelson The Inside Story ner of presentation and ap- cism that President Nixon Gross and I'm running for Yankees sweep, Mets divide Page 14 propriate attire. dldn!t consult with his advis- United States Senate." " Race track centennial starts early Page 18 Problem Posed ers before ordering U.S. "What?" said the old vet, Monmouth tourney bids tonight Page 15 A note on the last cate- troops into Cambodia, says evidently hard of hearing. Nixon seeks out advice more Cartoon by Qulnby Page IS gory: The contest was orig- "I'm Nelson Gross, that's Roster of weddings this weekend Pages 10-11 inally scheduled for poolside often than any other recent G R O S S," said the undaunt- and all six girls were ap- president. ed Mr. Gross, "and I'm run- Amusements 23 - Women's News' ..:10 & 11 propriately attired in well The current criticism that ning for ..." Astro-Guide 22 fitting battling suits. Foul Nixon often, acts in isolation "They're four for a dollar," Bridge 22 DAILY REGISTER weather forced the event in- is merely "the latest of the lib- Interrupted the vet as lie Classified Ads 17-21 PHONE NUMBERS doors, however, and the eral news media's attempts shoved a book of chances to- Comics 22 Main Office ^..741-OfllO^ Judges were Instructed to • to "undermine the President's ward the senatorial hopeful. Editorials 6 Classified Ads ...741-8900 note if each contestant's standing, Hnldcman says, shoes matched her suit. Bare Still unflustered, Mr. Gross Financial 9 Home Delivery 741-0010 feet Were to bo heavily, pe- "I nm completely convinced reached for his wallet, flipped Obituaries 4 Mlddletown Bureau 671-2250 nalized. This Is very difficult that President Nixon is the out a five dollar bill and Opinion Page 6 Freehold Bureau ....463-2121 to notice when there are bet- most un isolated president in wrote his name on the top Sport!) 14-16 LmigBranch Bureau 222-0010 ,„.. !•.•.„,, ( look t recent times," Haldeman said of a stack of tickets. Television ...! „ 23 Snorts Department 741-0017 0 nt nan MISS RED BANK —• Pamela Glillani Uft, was drowned as quaon of Red Bank's year- Saturday night at the Uni- Meanwhile, Mr. Dowd, who •IinillllllllllllllllMHlMEHIIIIIllllIllllHIW f' ) long centennial celebration yesterday, Minnie Boyd, 18, right, a ttudent at, Rod versity of California at Los was closely watching the One may also wonder if 1 Angeles, where he accepted somewhat more experienced Pro Tennis Clinic 5 weeks $0. Rug Cleaning by rug men. '. . ,;at all considered flank High School, .was a close runner up. Mayor Daniel O'Hern, one ofthe judgsi, tho Alumnus of the Year Mr. Gross, also reached for- Beginning ladies. 531-0874. Shehadl Rugs, Rt, 35, Shrews- (See Crowning, Page 1) beams approvingly at the winner. (Register Staff Photo) award. his wallet. He pulled out a (Adv.) bury. 74W2. •. (AdV,) -WE DAILY REGISTER, H£D BANK. MTDDLETOwT*, N. It MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 Cambodian, Viet Hatred Spreadr s (Continued) left In Cambodia. The South * The hostility the Cambodians two weeks ago and beat up centuries. We will,never be will inarch to the Mekong Vietnamese government says, feel toward the Vietnamese two other Vietnamese. dominated by the Viet- from the West, and there will it has negotiated safeguards invaders — both North and •Cruel Acts* namese. That is why the pop- be no Cambodia left. . for their lives and property, South Vietnamese is evi- Posters have appeared in ulation is rising against The Thais have not yet but it is doubtful that the dent In many ways.% The Phom Penh calling on the them." He indicated that he inarched from the West, but safeguards will work. Cambodian commander at United States to withdraw meant all Vietnamese, those North Vietnamese, Viet Cong Despite many command- Neak. Luong refused to shake the South Vietnamese Army. under Saigon's command as and South Vietnamese Army * ers1 conscientious efforts to hands with a Vietnamese: an- "The Vietnamese soldiers well as Hanoi's. forces now control virtually avoid inflicting civilian cas- other commander at Kom- have committed cruel acts "I'm afraid of what might all of Cambodia east of the ualities or damaging Cambo- pong Cham, asked if Viet- on the Cambodian popula- happen," one American said. Mekong. dian property, considerable namese troops would relieve tion," one poster read. "When Vietnamese troops 1 Only French colonial power damage has been done. The the town, retorted: "We don't A Cambodian military leave — if they leave — the kept the Thais and Vietnam- average Vietnamese soldier want those around spokesman told newsmen: Vietnamese civilians left in ese from dividing up Cambo- feels little or no affection ei- here." "Cambodians would prefer to Cambodia are going to be dia a century ago. The Viet- ther for Cambodian civilians Cambodian high school stu- die than stay under the rule dents In Phnom Penh killed of the Vietnamese. They subject to more reprisals namese had pushed south or for the Cambodian army. than ever." from the Red River Delta for Hostility Rise Seen a South Vietnamese sailor have been our enemies for almost 2,000 years, gradually "I'm afraid that in the taking from the decaying long run, this invasion is go- Khmer Empire most of ing to cause more hostility what la- now central and than ever between the Cam- southern Vietnam. bodians and the Viet- War Dangers Shadow A Vivid Reality namese," said one American. The Vietnamse did not take "Prasaut was almost com- over the western Mekong pletely destroyed, and there Delta until the late 18th and are almost no civilians left in towns like JCompong Tra- Spring NATO Meeting early 10th centuries, and RETURNING THE VISIT — If had been 46 years since Antonio Ditta, 95, of 19 Vietnamese expansionism is bek and Neak Luong." Howard Ave., Keansburg, saw his *i«ter Crocifista Leone, 84, but th» pair, fore- 4 POME (AP) - Foreign NATO's southern doorstep. "The greatly increased So- still a vivid reality to many He could have said the viet presence in the Mediter- ground, wore reunited last weak at a family get-together. Mrs. Leone will return Cambodians. same for Kompong Trach, ministers of the North Atlan- "You can't pose as a tic Alliance assembled in peacemonger in Europe ranean causes considerable to her native Italy after a 30-day visit with her brother. Joining the celebration are It was this deep racial hos- Tuk Meas, Kep and Tonle concern," said U.S. Secretary Bet. Borne today to discuss pro- while acting 'like a warmon- Steven arid Mary Alfano, Mr. Ditta's son-in-law, and daughter, and Mr. Ditta'j grand* tility that led to the massa- posals for a "stand-easy" ger right next door in the of State William P. Rogers cre of thousands of Vietnam- Cooperation between Cam- deal with the Soviet bloc. But Middle East," a representa- when he arrived Sunday sons, Emanuel Alfano of Belleville, standing, and Anthony Alfano, here. . ese in Cambodia in March bodian and Vietnamese the ministers' two-day spring tive of one key European night. "We are reminded that (Register Staff Photo by Don Lord!) and April. troops appears superficial. meeting opening tomorrow is NATO power said. "If the NATO will have a vital role More than 50,000 refugees One top South Vietnamese shadowed by war dangers in Russians cut back forces in in the maintenance of secur- from Cairtbodia have been general has several times ex- the Middle East and Indo- Europe only to send them in- ity in this decade." accepted by South Vietnam pressed his contempt for china. to Egypt, what's in it for Rogers is scheduled to give so far, and that total may Cambodian soldiers, the A series of expert studies us?" the council an account of the Reunion at Keansburg double. But half a million Cambodian government and prepared for the North Atlan- circumstances that led the Vietnamese probably will be Cambodians in general. tic Treaty Organization's Thus the Soviet posture of United States to extend its Council of Ministers under- hostility toward Israel and Vietnam war into Cambodia lines the alliance's interest backing for the Arabs is be- and of the situation there in an East-West program of ing examined in its intercon- now. Thrills Brother, Sister balanced, controlled force tinental context. It is sus- cuts. The deal NATO's mili- pected that the presence of America's allies in Europe By ED WALSH "She will be here with her brother fur 30 County Births tary men are urging calls for an increasing number of Rus- were generally frosty in their KEANSBURG — Antonio Ditta of 19 •days," he said: a 1.5 million-man cut in War- sian pilots and other military reactions to President Nix- Howard Ave. is 95 years young. In 1902 "When my father first came to-the saw Pact forces in Europe specialists in the Arab world on's thrust into Cambodia. he came to the United States from his United States he worked on the railroad in carries with it a considerable RIVERVIEW mduth, daughter, Saturday. in return for a 300,000-tnan 1 For one thing, they didn't native Italy. Twehty-two years later he re- New Orleans for 75 cents a day," Mrs. Red Bank Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dick- NATO reduction. That would spirioff element favoring the care for a member of the turned to his home for a visit. That was Alfano said. "He has since been all over Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Traux ert, 1 York Drive, Freehold, bring the Communist force Soviet Union's global strate- alliance crossing an interna- the last time he saw his sister. the' country in his travels. We also lived (nee Carmella Zerbo), 75 daughter, Saturday. down to about 3 million and gic interests, as well as the tional frontier—as the Rus- That is, it was the last time he saw his ,,'in Newark for a long time before moving Creek Road, KeanSburg, son, Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Gra- NATO's European force to immediate purpose' of sians have done—and they sister Mrs. Crocifissa Leone, 84, until last here'seven years ago." Friday. gone (nee Nancy Yarington), about 2,7 million. , strengthening the Arabs. made their view known. week, when, for the first time in the 46- She said that; Mr. Ditta's family has a Mr. and Mrs. John Evans 805 Newman Springs Road, The Russians have not re- year span they were reunited at a family history for long life. (nee Helen Ann Shumar), 58 daughter, Saturday. get together. NEAR CENTURY MARK sponded to earlier overtures 1 Hudson Ave., West Keans- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Effrain for mutual troop cuts, and "Everybody cried," Steven Alfano, Mr. "Hehas another sister In Italy that Is burg, son, Friday. (nee Susan Lippman), 38 few if any allied authorities How Congress Voted Ditto's son-in-law, said. "Everybody was so 87," Mrs. Alfano continued. "And three of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Free* Ennls Drive, Hazlet, daugh- expect an affirmative re- happy for them that they all cried." the family died at the ages of 94, 93, and man (nee Mary Etta Myl- ter, Saturday. sponse from Moscow now. Register Washington Bureau permit federal judges to re- Mrs. Leone who hails from the village 89," She said. hut), Lakevlew Apartments, Mr. and Mrs, Joe West One reason for this view is HOUSE tire at full pay at 60 after of Vita in Italy's Trapani province journeyed Although her stay will be short, Mrs. Eatontown, son, Friday. (nee Lois Fisher), 83 W. Sun- the deepening Soviet involve- On motion to recommit So- 20 years' service. to Canada first to visit nephews and Leone's agenda will be long remembered. cial Security Bill (HR. 17550) For the motion—Howard. nieces. Besides a sight seeing tour of New York Mr. and Mrs. Arthur See* set Ave., Red Bank, daughter, ment in the Middle East and with orders to add provision jnan (nee Madeline Luria), E. Saturday. Mediterranean theaters, on Motion defeated, 109-198 HERE FOR MONTH and the surrounding area a series of dinners . for automatic adjustment of (and bill was defeated). "After she spent some time with them are planned in. keeping with the best of Larchmont Drive, Colts Neck, Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore benefits to coincide with in- daughter, Friday. Massaro (nee Cara Tiantani- On bill (HR.176M) to au- she. flew to Kennedy ^Airport where I picked Italian traditions. No corned beef and cab- creases in cost of living. thorize J2 billion for military her up last week," Mr. Alfano related. bage on this menu. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hra- da), 310 Wall St., West Long. Crowning For the motion—Howard; construction including $322 boski (nee Charlene Faiio), Branch, daughter, Saturday. (Motion carried, 233-144 (bill million for ABM sites. 327 Park Ave., Union Beach, with automatic adjustment son, Friday. • JERSEY SHORE MEDICAL For the biWIoward. Neptune Queen Is provision, then passed). Bill passed, 334-47. ... Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Longo On motion to suspend the "• Mee Sharon McKinney), 316 Mr. and- Mrs. Herbert SENATE Two Candidates Stalk rules and pass bill (S.1608) to ' Middle Road, Harfet, son, Fri- Deuchar (nee Gladys Hop- No roll call votes last week. per), 9 Surf Ave., Ocean HqppyJob ' day-' t Grove, a son, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. William Hor- Mr. and Mrs. William Nutt (Continued) ton (nee Patricia Gribbon), 1 (nee Carol Randolph), 1411 in the judges' determination. Along Boardwalk Lear Place, Old Bridge, Rustic Drive, Asbury Park, I asked that question, which Crash Toll Now % daughter, Friday. a son, Saturday. did not seem unreasonable (Continued) "Olympia Bob's ride and nito." He was wearing a Mr. and Mrs. William Lud- considering the nature of the two uniformed special police. greeted four girls, who turned bright blue.shirt, blue and Mr. and Mrs. David John- contest, and, after some dis- wig (nee Sarah Coufins), 81 son ' (nee Nancy Bruce), 107 "Hello, ••-.. I'm Nelson out not only to be Under vot- white stripped pants, and Ramsey Ave., Keansburg, cussion among the judges, it Survivor Critical Gross..." he began. ing age {they were 17) but al- 'Broadway, Ocean Grove, a sneakers. daughter, Saturday. son, Saturday. was decided that points for PERTH AMBOY — Donna Wolfe car were not seriously As Mr. Gross was warming so lived outsfde the' Third Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gar- Mr. and Mrs. Robert beauty should be awarded in Blanchard, 15, of 127 Wash- injured,' according to police. up, Mr. Dowd turned to one Congressional District. Bouyed by this chance en- rigana (nee Patricia Mappi), the manner of presentation The teen-agers were report- of the guards and said, "Hel- . He told them that they CarDone (nee Pauline Nar- category. ington Ave., South Amboy, is counter,' Mr. Gross, accosted 228'/4 Freneau Ave., Mata- torano), 1620 Monmouth Ave., still in critical condition this edly on their way to practice lo, I'm Bill Dowd and .. . " probably knew a lot of peo- wan, daughter, Saturday. To determine their person- for a Memorial Day parade. Gesture Ignored ple and they should mention another elderly 'Couple who Lakewood, a daughter, Satur- morning in Perth Amboy Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Snow ality, the girls were asked The girls were members of He never finished, because his name. promptly said, "You're wast, day. General Hospital. (nee Nancy Kowalski), 3 Mr. and Mrs. Robert why they wanted to be Miss the Madison High School Col- the guard completely ignored , Fortune Wanes. ing your time, we're from Navesink Ave., East Keans- Bed Bank. None asked in or Guard. not only his words, but his Brooklyn." E w 1 ft g (nee Rosemary return why we wanted to be She is the sole survivor of Meanwhile, Mr. Gross' burg, son, Saturday. Dougherty), Maple Crest an accident that killed six of • / ' • outstretched hand. luck was rapidly waning. He • Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gold- Lane, Colts Neck, a son, Sat- judges, most just smiled and Mr. Dowd shrugged, waited introduced himself to a man, Come a long Way berg (nee Francine Zaslof- said something less than her friends on Rt. 9 in Madi- a moment and began again. urday. memorable. Two said, "Ex- son Township last Tuesday Stolen Car, who said, sure I know you, "And that's the trouble sky), 36 Galway Drive, Haz- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Silva "Hello, I'm Bill Dowd you're Mason' Gross" (presi- let, son, Saturday. cuse me,'" and moved closer. night. and . . . " The man never with Asbury Park,", said Mr. (nee Ruth Christiansen), 9 Outstanding Walk derit of Rutgers University.) Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rock- Buckingham Way, Freehold, Patricia Dietz, 17, of 63 Purse Found moved a muscle. Bill Dowd "No, no," said Mr. Gross, Dowd, "everybody, is from well (nee Linda Heon), 5 a daughter, yesterday. Lastly, points for poise Mercury Circle, South Amboy gave up. "that's anothfer Gross and I'll out of state." Thompson Place, East Keans- Mr. Gross was having Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Stou- were awarded for each .con- died Friday in South Amboy ( stand or fall on my own rep- After a quick stop for. froz- burg, daughter, Saturday. In Red Bank much better luck. venot (nee Marie Gauer), 714 testant's carnage, or how Memorial Hospital, becoming utation, not his." , en custard where Mr. Gross Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Wall Road, Spring Lake she walked around the hotel RED BANK — Police The other guard said "Well, the sixth victim, Laura Then came the highlight of gave out buttons to all, the Richard (nee Donna Snyder), Heights, a daughter, yester- lobby. It was hard to fault Booth, 14, of 123 Washington Chief Leroy McKnight report- I guess you must know my the day, when up walked As- 38 Fourth Ave., Atlantic High- day. any of the girls here, but Miss Ave., South Amboy, the fifth ed the recovery of a stolen sister since you're a Republi- girls, the entourage' did an car and a snatched purse, semblyman David Friedland- lands, son, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Meek- Gullan's walk was certainly victim, died Thursday in can. That's Mrs. Flynn." er, a Hudson. County Demo- about face and headed north. er (nee Rose Posades), 10 outstanding. Perth Amboy General. with contents intact, by po- "You don't mean THE Ann 1 MONMOUTH MEDICAL lice Saturday night. Flynn?" said Mr. Gross. crat, who greeted Mr. Gross tL i if i i Long Branch Mechanic St., Freehold, a Some of the other judges The car, driven by James like a lost brother. - nte daughter, yesterday. may have taken other con- He said that at 8:45 "Yeah," he said, "that's Mr. and Mrs- Frai* C° Bennett, of 2 Fifth St., Mata- right, I'm one of the seven Friend Is Won Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Silva siderations into account. wan Township, was heading p.m., Mrs. Dorothy Kelly, 1 (nee Rita De Zita), 73 Nor- (nee Ruth Christiancon), 9 Mayor Daniel O'Hern said Shrewsbury A\%., : Shrews- kids." Mr. Fjledlander , who hap- IsiiMMs wood Ave., Long Branch, son, Buckingham Way, Freehold, south on Rt. 9 when it "Well, I'll be damned," pens to serve as the minority something afterward about jumped the.... divider and bury, called to say hen purse leader in the state Assembly, Thursday. daughter, yesterday — " said Mr. Gross as he slipped 1 "not expecting to make po- struck a northbound vehicle had been; stolen in-front of promptly 'introduced Mr. llieuay •••"""DrriiTdnHrsrEng L o c k Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Meek- litical decisions." 128 Maple Ave., Bed Bank, them a couple of buttons. toflndoul ' Khoo (nee MiMko Hayashi), about half a mile from the Crossing the boardwalk to Gross/ .to his' wife saying, er (nee Rose Posadas), 10 Miss Gullan received $100 by a young Negro male. about professional 337 Third Ave., Long Branch, intersection of Rt. 34. the seats away from the "Claudia,' this is our next carpet cleaning? Mechanic St., Freehold, for her victory. She said she daughter, Friday. daughter, yesterday. Besides the driver, the She said the youth fled in beach, Mr. Gross came upon United States Senator." , Dulled, mailed-down hadn't given much thought a waiting car and listed the .. Mrs. Frledlander took the carpeting takes on new life Mr. and Mrs. Tod Grim youngsters killed in the crash : two older couples. "Hello, (nee Sherry Guidetti), 450 BEVERLY to how she would spend the were Jack Johnson, 16, of 415 contents of the purse as I'm Nelson Gross . . . ," he "Gross for. Senate" button with the gentle Service- Hampton Ave., Long Branch, Beverly, Mass. money. It was suggested that Atlantic Ave., Matawan $11 and personal papers. began. and pinned it to her, coat, Master treatment. Approved son, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. David F. Naz- she buy a gown for the Cen- Mrs. Kelly, ^was not hurt. "Democrat or Republi- smiling all the while. by carpet manufacturers. tennial Ball on June 5. Township; Pam Nolan, 15, of Isn't this your day Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Rivi- aroff, 188 Hale St., Beverly, 55 Mercury Circle, South Am- Police shortly afterward can?" asked one of the wom- The Hudson County Demo- to call us? era, 15 Main St., Port Mon- daughter, May 10. boy, and Debbie Dletz, 15, found the car on the lawn, at en. crats aren't overly happy Burner Backfires sister of Patricia Dietz. Oakland and Pearl Sts., with "Republican," said Mr. with Sen. Harrison A. Wil- the unopened purse inrlde. Gross with a big grin. „ liams, D-N.J., so it wasn't too RED BANK - An oil burnr Perth Amboy hospital offi- .Wrong Party surprising for Mr. Friedland- er backfired at 52 Leonard cials reported that the driver ., The car had been reported ; 1 stolen by .Lawrence Hagg- "Sorry^ said the women, er to go out on a limb "for a St. at 8:35 last night, causing of the second car, Robert Republican. ART AUCTION a minor blaze. There was no Wolfe, of Old Bridge, was re* quist, 208 Bond St., Asbury ; returning the "Gross for Con- 741-1312 Park. gress" button. She was still Mr. Friedlander said he damage and no one was In- leased from the hospital! shaking her head when Mr. was in Asbury Park "incog- SATURDAY, MAY 3Orh, 7:30 at 8 p.m. jured. The tenant is Elizabeth Drivers of two other cars | The youths had fled the Gross pulled up In front of the Thomas. that piled into the rear of the .scene, the chief said. Star Jet ride. at MOLLY PITCHER INN He walked up to an elderly 88 RIVERSIDE AVE., RED BANK, N. J. man resplendently dressed in FLUHR'S FUEL KIDS' a lemon yellow jacket, wide EXHIBITION DAY OF SALE FROM 7 P.M. brim straw hat, and white shoes and introduced himself. Come and Enjoy A Great Art Collection Weather: Rainy and Cool "Oh, a couple of big shots, Yes, a cozier, more Periods of rain likely, low was 55. It was 57 at 6 again by late'In the after- eh," said the man., comfortable home Is Including chance of scattered thunder- p.m. The overnight low and noon. Visibility one to twp Things started to get better storms today and tonight and the temperature at 7 this miles In rain and fog and for Mr. Gross, He found "in the bag" for YOU — ORIGINAL LITHOGRAPHS — ETCHINGS — ending tomorrow morning morning were 55. There was improving to better than five a couple who were from Ber- followed by partly cloudy a .07-inch rainfall. miles by tomorrow afternoon. gen County and who even re- when you heat with our OILS — WATERCOLORS — WOODCUTS conditions with chance, of MARINE TIDES membered his name. fine, dependable Fuel Many Out of Print Graphics - Collector Items scattered showers or thunder- Cape May to Block Island: Sandy Hook He then found a man who showcrs again beginning by Winds southeasterly about 10 TODAY - High 12:06 p.m. said, "Mr. Grow, you've got OH. Call us today to «m«._. ALL EXQUISITELY FRAMED late In the afternoon. High knots today and tonight bo- and low 6 p.m. my vote." V coming southerly about 10 to TOMORROW - High 12:24 Couple Split ' . place your order. MANY FAMOUS ARTISTS INCLUDING today In mid 60s, Low to- 15 knots tomorrow. Cloudy a.m. and 1:08 p.m. and low night in mid 50s. High to- "Yeah, his, but sure not loulcmgor—Chagall—Doll—-Dalkoloff—Frlidloendtr with rain likely and chance of 6:54 a.m. and 7:12 p.m. mine," said his wife, who morrow in mid to upper 70s scattered thunderstorms to- For Red Bank and Rumson Gat—&ropp«r—Ubadang—Llbtrmarv—Mlro—Panj except the upper 60s along added that "we don't see eye Plcaiio—Jhohn—Sllva—Soy«r—And Many Olhen day and tonight, ending to- bridge, add two hours; Sea to eye politically," .' the shore. Outlook Wednes- morrow morning followed by Bright, deduct 10 minutes; Mr. Dowd, whose "Dowd Conducted by» CHAHLIS J. LOMIARDO FRiE ADMISSION day, cloudy and cool. partly cloudy conditions with Long Branch, deduct IS min- for 'Congress" buttons are "W« AulM Organliatlont In Fund Railing" In Long ^Branch, yester- chance of scattered showers utes; Highlands bridge, add still sitting In a warehouse in HOPIWBU OALURY, (4091 444-3011 day's high was 60 and (he or thunderstorms developing 40 minutes. Newark, finally, struck out on KUEL OIL • BURNER SALES ^SERVICE his own, He marched up to • \ -THE DAILY REGISTER, BED BANK - MJDDLETOWN. N.}.-, MON'DAY, MAY 2S, 1970 3 Medical Center to Cite Top of the News Employes for Service NEPTUNE - An informal Mrs. Dorothy Brown, Mrs. reception honoring employes Charlotte Clayton, Ralph ATLANTIC CITY — A sweeping revision of the state's Cody, James Crudup, Mrs. criminal statutes consistent With Supreme Court rulings and for their many years of ser- vice to Jersey Shore Medical Sarah Darling, Mrs. Ann social changes In the past century has been called for by Center-Fitklri Hospital will be Mary Gabriele, Mrs. Jean the new president of the New Jersey State Bar Association. held 3 p.m. Thursday in Ford- Elizabeth Johnson, Mrs. Rita South River attorney Daniel L, Golden recommended Auditorium of the center. Lane, Mrs. Annie Mallory, Saturday night a Bar Association study to plan and help Speakers will be David V. Mrs. Rachel B. Martin, Mrs. initiate prompt changes in the criminal laws of the state. Carter, executice vice presi- Barbara Ann Marrow, Mrs. "The excessive length of our criminal calendars, the dent, and Ernest Kovats, ad- Mary H. O'Connell, Mrs. Irene expansion of individual rights as interpreted by our courts, ministrator. Talabesky, Miss Ida May Tay- ' and the general tenor of unrest and respect for law com- The following members of lor, Mrs. Mary A. Tidcombe, bine to make it essential (that the present obsolescent body the Medical Center's 20 year MLss Rachel Trower, Miss of criminal law be replaced as quickly as possible," Golden club will make the presenta- Joan Marie Waskis, Mrs. El- Bald. tions: Five year awards will len M. White, Mrs. Maureen be presented by Miss Flor- White; from Neptune City, ence Cook, laboratory-instruc- Mrs. Mary Jane Claffey, Mrs. Mexican Plane Is Hijacked tor; 10 year awards will be Mary Ann O'Day; from Ocean Grove, Mrs. Mary E. Fagan; MEXICO CITY — A Mexican arliner with 79 persons presented by Miss Sarah Wea- ver, R.N., central supply from Sea Girt, Mrs. Adriana .. aboard was hijacked from Yucatan to Havana last night, E. Patterson. the airline Mexicana de Aviacion announced. supervisor; 15 year awards, The airline said the plane was en route from the resort . Mrs. Gloria Dilione, R.N., 10 Year Award — from As- island of Cozumel, off the east coast:' of the Yucatan penin- director of nursing; 20 year bury Park, Mrs. Gladys awards, Miss Bessie Lyle, Hemphill; from Belmar, Mrs. sula, to Merida, the capital of Yucatan, when it was taken assistant controller; and pre- over by an unknown number of hijackers.' Celestia Baytala, Fred Marsh; senting the 25 year awards, from Fair Haven, Herbert There were 72 passengers and seven crewmen on board, David V. Carter, executive Sinclair; from Marlboro, the.aMine said, but it was not known in Mexico City whether vice president of the center. James Gibbs; from Neptune, any foreigners were among the passengers. Employes being honored iLouis Bray, Mrs. Elolse Car- are: Five Year Award — son, Mrs. lola Schanck, Mrs. Police Say Railway Is Quiet t from Asbury Park, Mrs. Ro- Areatha Sims; from Neptune NEW SIGHT IN PLEASURE BAY — Twin digesting franks and main plant of the Raccoon Island Sewerage Dis- City, Mrs. Helen Bailey, Miss 1 sette Brooks, Mrs. Pearl RAH WAY — Police reported all quiet last night in this posal plant rise on •Monmoiith Beach peninsula. The outfall of this main plant of the Northeast Regional Sewer Davis, Lee Thomas Gilbert, Julie Magyar. tense Union County community. Mrs. Barbara McQueen, Mrs. 15 Year Award—from As- One spokesman said things in Rahway appeared to be system will extend into the ocean and sludge will be barged to sea. (Register Staff Photo) Constantine Martin; from Bel- bury Park, Mrs.' Dorothy returning to normal. He added that weekend rains may have mar, Mrs. Lucia Costello, Goodman, Mrs. Sarah Mas- contributed to the lessening of disturbances. Mrs. Estelle Gustavson, Mrs. sey; from Neptune, Mrs. Ro- Polioce reported arresting 13. persons Friday night, Elsie Murray; from West salie Clark, Mrs, Anna Cor- most for curfew violations, although two men were ar« Belmar, Mrs. Ada Ivins, Mrs. win, Mrs. Virginia Holland, • rested for throwing firebombs and two for assault and bat- Pollution Spotters Given Jeanne B. Trail; from Brad- Miss Queen Esther Mitchell, tery on police officers. ley Beach, Mrs. Alma Bligh, Edward Payton, Mrs. Bessie Miss Mary Ann Restuccia, Bobbins, Mrs. Jessie Whit- Miss Patricia Roberts, Miss taker; from Neptune City, Youth Dies on First Plane Solo Janet Vail; from Brick Town, Mrs. Mary Perrotty; from Mrs. Gail Thalmann; from West Deal, Harold Kennedy. SAN DIEGO, Calif. — Sam Spry, a 19-year-old sopho- Bird's Eye View of County EatontoWn, Mrs. Donna more at Mesa College here, rented a plane May 13 and 20 Year Award — from WALL TOWNSHIP - From The problem areas were, in funnel ammunition storage Bright spots to the conser- Ciano; from Farmingdale, Bradley Beach, Miss Althea • headed southeast into the California desert on Ms first Mrs. Edith Goodman; from 1,000 feet up, Monmouth' Coun- several cases, less obvious bunkers. vationists were the eagle-eye Stewart; from Neptune, Joel long solo flight. He was found dead yesterday 20 miles from ty was a promotion man's than many expected. Drop- Freehold, William Strickland; Forgach. the downed aircraft. . Passing over the densely- views of the Middletown Area from Lakewood, Mrs. Adie dream — white sails speckled ping low over the Asbury settled portions of the Bay- 25 Year Award—from Nep- Spry had radioed that he would be 20 minutes late in sewer plant and the Raccoon Gaines; from Manasquan, the Shrewsbury, a matting of Park Sewerage Outfall, one, shore toward Marlboro Town- Mrs: Mary Anthes; ~ front- tune, Miss Celeste Russo; arriving at El Centro, 100 miles from San Diego. Then, of- green treetops stretched to- passenger peered out at the ship, co-pilot Stanley Herbert Island disposal plant now un- from West Long-Branch, Mrs.- ficials said, he apparently ran into heavy fog and was Neptune, Mrs. Marsha Bailey, 1 ward the sea, breakers licked; evenly blue water and pointed out the vast develop- der construction — as part Gloria Dilione. blown southward off course. - '•..', ".'"]'._. ••• the new Asbury Park break- quipped that "they must have ments now under way in that of the Monmouth County Reg- Some 200 miles south of the Mexican border in Baja, water. " turned it (the outfall) off township, as sub-divisions re- ional Sewer Plan. California, his single engine plane ran out of gas. Spry set it when they saw us coming." place the rolling fields and down intact in a desolate area two miles from the coast. But inside the 12-seat turbo- Hazy skies limited the vis- prop Beech 99, passengers' As Monmouth Airlines' pilot woodland. The contrast with ibility of the 50 passengers On the plane he left a note reading. "All right and walk- eyes were seeking out the sub- John Beemish circled eastern neighboring Holmdel and who filled Saturday's tours, ing to the coast." tle signs of land1 and sea con- Monmouth County, the dense Colts Neck Townships, where and thickening clouds can- tamination. green of the county's remain- low-density zoning is rigidly celed yesterday's scheduled Cancer Death Rate Cut Outlined Those aboard were partici- ing main natural assets were enforced, was obvious. flights. pating in the first Conserva- clearly visible over the Glen- Other highlights of the half- Neal Munch, conservation- HOUSTON, Tex. — A screening program using a com- tion Air Tour sponsored by dola and Swimming River hour tour included the threat- ist with the local Soil Conser- bination of methods helped reduce the rale of death from the Freehold Soil Conserva- Reservoirs built as part of ened tidelands of the Nave- vation District, said that an- breast cancer in a group of women studied, a New York tion District, and the flight the expanding Monmouth sink and Conesconk Point, other150 persons had to be , research team reported today. . plan centered on such fea- Consolidated Water Co. sys- the artificial reef area off turned away yesterday. The project involved 62,000 women in tte Health Insur- tures as the dredges in-Sandy tem, the 400-acre Shark Riv- Sandy Hook, and the Army "There's been quite a bit ance Plan of Greater New York. Half were offered the • Hook Bay, the "dead sea" er Park, the Sandy Hook Hol- Corps of Engineers' $7.9 mil- of interest," Mr. Munch said screening, and the other half received no special attention. dumping area off the coast ly forest, Burnt Fly Bog, and lion Bayshpre Hurricane Pro- last,night, with the result that Preliminary findings on the study, which began in 1963, and the new Raccoon Island the Earle.Naval.Ammunition , tection Dike, extending to "a second tour will probably were reported today at the 10th International Cancer Con- sewerage treatment plant. Depot striated with its mole- Union Beach. be scheduled for next fall. gress by Sam Shapiro, a vice president of the health plan. Goldberg Supports 'Objectors' NEW YORK - Arthur J. Goldberg, a candidate for the Proponents of Democratic Democratic gubernatorial nomination, has urged that con- scientious objection to war on any ground—religious or non-, religious—be allowed as a basis for exemption from military service. . . '. , , , GETS SCHOLARSHIP — Katharine A. Hogan, a senior ' Speaking in a television interview Sunday, the former Reform to Eye Convention at Ru-mson-fair Haven Regional High School, accepts associate Justice of the Supreme Court said: "Anybody who scholarship award from Carl S. Meng'er, chairman and in good conscience believes he cannot participate in a war By CARL P. LEUBSDORF The inevitable question is: It' could thus become the president of Triangle Industries, Inc. should be protected by law." WASHINGTON (AP) — If a party in a state needed center for those elements in He said he thought his views were consistent with the Democratic party reformers an interpretation, would it go the party who feel the Mc- • Constitution. will be warily watching a > News to the McGovern Commission Govern' group went too far special committee's efforts or to the ad hoc committee? and wish to slow or reverse to implement the 18 guide- O'Brien also said in his the reform drive. Triangle Scholarship Capitol Architect Is Dead .' lines set by the McGovern Analysis weekend letter to McGovern Only one committee mem- WASHINGTON — J. George Stewart, an ex-politician Commission for selecting the ad hoc group has "no ber, George Mitchell of once charged with trying to "make the Capitol into a king- 1 convention delegates. power to alter or dilute or in Maine, is also on the McGov- For Katherine Hogan sized Howard Johnson's," has died, ending a stormy 16-year any way veto the guide- ern commission. / The ad hoc group's work the commission chairman, is lines." NEWARK — Katherine A. a winner of the fourth an- career as the Capitol architect. to agree. x with the states is an effort to The others include former Hogan, a senior at Rumson- nual Triangle Scholarship The 79-year-old Delaware native died yesterday of But party, leaders say Gov. Grant Sawyer of Ne- avoid a repetition in 1972 of But uncertainties remain, Fair Haven Regional High Awards, sponsored by Tri- cancer at a local convalescent home. •'•,••• the widespread charges in the specifically in two areas: it does have the authority, as vada, who supported Sen. Eu- School, has been selected as President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed the former does the national committee, angle Industries, Inc., and ad- Chicago convention two years —Possible conflict between gene J. McCarthy in 1968; Republican congressman to the post in 1964,' although ago that delegate selections to recommend to the creden- Mrs. William Patman of Tex- ministered by the National . Stewart was not an architect, and what followed was some • the committee and the com- tials committee which of the often were undemocratic and mission in' interpreting how as, who would presumably Merit Scholarship Corpora- of the strongest controversy ever aroused by the job. unresponsive to the views of guidelines would be included represent the views of that Youth Hurt the guidelines would apply in the 1972 convention call. tion. many party members. in a given state. state's conservative party es- • McGovern promptly called tablishment; Geri Joseph of In Collision She and her parents were Controllers tfnion Seeks Power Neither major party has —The possibility the ad hoc upon the committee to rec- Minnesota, a close political introduced at the company's 1 WASHINGTON — The Professional Air Traffic Con- ever undertaken such a wide- group would recommend ommend "the commission ally of Hubert H. Humphrey LONG BRANCH - Lewis annual .meeting of share- spread:- reform effort, • one Vincelli Jr., 19, of 388 Bath holders in Holiday Inn, North q trailers Organization, after snarling the nation's airports against applying some or all guidelines be added intact to ' who has said the guidelines , three times in two years,, is fighting to become the sole made more difficult by the of the guidelines to the 1972 the call to the 1972 conven- are not binding; and Richard Ave. was treated and re- Brunswick. complexities of applying bas- convention. tion, while recognizing that, Stoner of Indiana., leased from Monmouth Medi- Open to the children of em- official union of the government's 11,500 controllers.' ic principles to widely differ- ; But; .the ,federal Aviation Administration and a rival Although O'Brien stressed by doing so now new legal cal Center for minor injuries ployes of Triangle and its sub- ing procedures in the 50 sanctions would be added." union have staked out their opposition in advance of Labor states. the committee was created Friday night after the car he sidiaries, scholarships are Department hearings on the matter tomorrow. "solely for the purpose of A third problem could re- U.S. Stand . was driving collided with an- awarded on the basis of - FAA "Administrator John H. Shaffer contends a»single--—-National Democratic.Chate. speeding the. implementation sult from the makeup <5f the other vehicle at Brighton and of the guidelines," an inter- ad hod group, all members of scholastic aptitude, financial nationwide unit would be inappropriate to the FAA's de- , man Lawrence F. O'Brien Second Aves., police report- centralized management. , has gone out of his way to as- nal party, memorandum pre- the National Committee May Go On need and general overall per- sure reformers the new com- pared for him said the pan-. which tends to represent the ed. formance in high school. mittee is designed to further el also would be involved in party' establishment, in In Cambodia Mr. Vincelli told police he Miss Hogan, who ranks 20th Times, Union in Agreement not dilute, the reform effort. "interpretation of the Mc- many states antagonistic or in a class of 261 students, is The first reaction of Sen. Govern Commission's re- indifferent to the reform ef- (Continued) was going south on Second NEW' YORK - The Printers Union will try to begin in- Ave. and made a right hand the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, S. McGovern, D-S.D., port." fort. "Our forces will be out of- William T. Hogan of 228 tensive bargaining talks with the Daily News today,,seek- turn onto Brighton Ave. He, • Ing to match a tentative contract agreement reached early Cambodia by July 1," he Kemp Ave., Fair Haven. Mr. yesterday with the New York Times that would provide a said, "but insofar as other was proceeding west on Hogan is vice president and Brighton, he said, when a ve- $41.69 wage increase over a three-year period. ; . aspects of the war are con- general manager of Star City The settlement with the Times came as printers in the concerned ... They (the ene- hicle veered in front of him Mines, Ltd., a subsidiary of. Times' composing room were conducting on-the-job union my) don't tell us and we and he swerved to the right Triangle. meetings for 19 hours a day. No type was set during the don't have any intention of to avoid it causing him to Miss Hogan plans to enroll meetings, forcing Times' publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger notifying them." strike a parked vehicle be- at Mount Holyoke College, - to threaten a shutdown unless an agreement was reached by Struggle Continues longing to Joan Neto of 40 Lo- and Intends to make econom- yesterday. Whether or not the admin- cust Ave., West Long ics her major course of study. istration wants to avoid tel- Branch. egraphing its Intentions to the Miss Hogan has been active State Police Re-enter Jacksor Patrolman Henry Christen- in sports and many other Viet Cong and North Viet- sen issued no summons after JACKSON, Ga. — State troopers moved in here to con- namese, there is one aspect investigating the accident. extracurricular activities. trol a short-lived racial outbreak involving an estimated 100 of U.S. policy that isn't being Negroes. covered up — the prolonged The situation was reported under control less than two struggle in the Senate over Gain more leisure time, pay your bills at home hours after it started. ' , a move to bar future U.S. in- The state patrol said two troopers received superficial volvement in Cambodia. injuries, apparently when struck by rocks. ' While sponsors of a -propos- Be wise...open a al to cut off all funds for U.S. forces in Cambodia after Checkmaster Abernathy Hits Nixon, Agnew June 30 kept up their search ATLANTA, Ga, — The Rev. Ralph David Abernatfiy today for an accommodation account says a five-day, 120-mile protest march across Georgia with the White House, Senate No minimum was the beginning of a drive to remove from political office opponents indicated they are "wrinkled old souls in positions of high trust"—Including prepared to wait out tho cur- balance required ' President Nixon and Vice President Splro T. Agnew. rent military operations. Service It our "What we need Is somo young 'soul power' to drive them They hopo to head .off any blggeit anal out of office, for we tire tired of old folks running tho coun- vote on tho main amendment try," Abernathy told a rally in Atlnnta which climaxed the FRIENDLY GATHERING — U. S. Sen. Harrison A. Williams, O-N. J., second from — sponsored by Sons. John protest march Saturday. left, and his opponent in the June 2 Primary election, .State Sen. Frank Guarini, Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., and "Today, we are marching against repression, and tomor- fourth from left, poio for the photographer at a luncheon of the Womon's Demo- Frank Church, D-Idaho.untll I- row we are going to bo rofilsteitfng to vote against repression, crat!* Club of Monmouth County at the Homestead Golf & Country Club. Be- the U.S. troops come out, i and the dny after wo will be casting,our votos,to sweep thus easing the Impact if, as Canwohtlpyou? out of office the racist politicians and political hustlers who tween them li Rep. James J. Howard, D-N. J. At left is Mrs. Gustav Froret, expected, the measure •have created the present situation," ho said. club prtiident. At right is Mn. Frank J. McCloiky, chairman. I Register Staff Photo) passes. . D.I.O, -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK - MIDDLETWN, N. J.» MONDAY. MAY 25, 1970 John Mitchell Jr. Martin P. Smith Sr. ten, Kit, Tbelma Btcbn tit - Martin here, and Thomas fimitii.o f Mrs. Wilson Named mw uw Neptune, Miw Elizabeth f. Sroitn Sr., 6f, of 300 Green- Keyport; four daughter". Wri. Obituaries John Mitchell, Jr., 41,.©! 68 Mitchell, here, Mrs. Mary . wood Road, died Friday at Ellen Owens of M>tmn, Peach St., who had both Harrison of Red Bank, Mrs. home. He was a retired cus- Mrs. Mary Ann Cumtnings of Head of Association kidneys removed two months Flemon Glover and Mrs. Car- todian of the Morganville Coallnga, Calii., MM. Barbara SHREWSBURY ~ Mrs. Cedar Crest College in 1958. ago, died Friday at Jersey rie Glover, both of Hemp- School. Miller, here, and Mrs. Lor- Noel W, Nilson has been Serving with Mrs. Nilson Shore Medical Center, Nep- stead, N.Y., and several Mr. Smith was born in etta Wilson of Matawan; R. W, May Dies at 63 elected president of Theare Mrs. Norman J. Field, tune. nieces and nephews. Hoboken and had resided here three brothers, Joseph Smith MIDDLETOWN - Rjidolph Friends of the Monmouth first vice president,.and Mrs. Mr. Mitchell had been a The Childs Funeral Home, most of his life. of Red Bank, James Smith of W. May, 63, of 334 Navcsink County Association for the John Scully, second vice pres- dialysis patient 10 months be- Red Bank, is in charge of He was a communicant of Fair Haven, and John Smith River Road died Saturday in 1970-1972 term. Mrs. Nilson ident. For the interim term fore his operation. He had re- arrangements,. St. Clement's Catholic Church, of Keyport, and two! sisters, Rlvervtew Hospital after a served as president of the 1970-1971, Mrs. George J. turned home following post- here; the American Legion, Mrs. Morris .Hartmen of Bast short Illness. Northern Monmouth County Goubeaud will serve as re- operative treatment and was Mrs. Ralph T. Darby here, and the Morganville Orange and* Mrs. \ Charles He was born in Rockaway, Branch of the American As- cording secretary, Mrs. Karl awaiting a kidney donor. LONG BRANCH - Mrs. Volunteer Fire Department. M. Jacobi, corresponding sec- He was born in Wards, S.C., Greig of Nutley. j son of the late James B. and sociation of University Wom- Grace Darby, 67, of 103 Lip- Surviving are his widow, Arrangements are under Lydia May. en from 1967-1969 and pres- retary, and Lewis R. Lowrey, and moved to this area 38 plncott Ave., Died In herMrs. Barbara Long Smith; Mr. May lived here 15 ently serves on the Board of treasurer. years agi. home, Saturday. three sons, Frank Smith of the direction of the Bedle Fu- years, formerly living in Directors of the New Jersey Members of the Board of Mr. Mitchell was formerly A lifelong resident here, Newark, Martin Smith Jr., neral Home of Matawan. Rockaway. Division of the AAUW. Directors represent several a member of the Board of Mrs. Darby was a member • He was an engineering ad- She is a member of the ex- areas of Monmouth County. Adjustment and made an un- of the Second Baptist Church ministrator with RCA, Som- ecutive committee of theThey are, in addition to the successful bid for the Bor- and was a former church ough Council in 1967. FURNITURE qO. : erville. He worked for RCA Monmouth County Friends of above members, Mrs. Adam clerk. for 35 years. He worked in Channel 13 and the Brookdale Boren, West Deal; Mrs. F.L. He was employed as in- Surviving are her husband, Keyport 264-0|81 Harrison 20 years and Wood- Community College Citizens' Garrabrant Jr., Neptune pector with the state Division Ralph T. Darby; two sons, WEST brJdge 12 years. Committee. Her musical in- City; Miss Helen Herrmann, of Weights and Measures. He Stewart Darby, here, and Features... * terests are reflected by her Long Branch; Mrs. Jere Hoh- was an Air Force veteran of Ralph Darby of Marlboro He was president of the the Korean War and was a • credit union in all three membership in the Mon- mann, Colts Neck; David Township; a daughter, Mrs. "Kroehler? mouth Chapter, American Kaplan, Red Bank; Mrs. Leo deacon at the Emmanuel Bap- plants. tist Church. Ruth Crawford, here; a sis- He was a former mem- Guild of Organists and the Kessler, Shrewsbury; Mrs. ter, Mrs. Anna Bass, also Organ Historical Society. She J.C. Lattimer, Freehold Surviving are his widow, EST. 1860 + ber of the Board of Educa- Mrs. Wilhemina Mitchell; a here, and four grandchildren. tion in Rockaway. has been tutoring handi- Township; Mrs. Richard Arrangements are under the capped students at Red Bank Marsen, Middletown; Mrs. daughter, Mona Mitchell of He was an elder of the Rudolph W. May Bowling Green, Iowa; his direction of the James H. Open Mon] and Fri. Evenings 'til 9) • High School since 1964. John Northup, Neptune; Wil- Hunt Funeral Home, Asbury First Presbyterian Church in liam J. Roehrenbeck, Middle- parents, Mr. and Mrs. John ,' Rockaway, and was a ruling Dover, two brothers. Harold Mrs. Nilson, wife of- the Mitchell Sr., here;, five sis- Park. elder of the First Presbyteri- May of West Palm Beach, president of the Little Silver town; Mrs. Harry M. Swartz, an Church of Red Bank, and Fla., and James B. May Jr. Council and mother of two Rumson; Gershom Tom- was on the advisory board of of Wharton, a sister, Mrs. children, received a bachelor linson, Lincroft; and Mrs. the Salavation Army in Red Frank Hall of Bergenfield, of arts degree in history from Koy Younger, Freehold. BLAISDELL LUMBER CO. Bank. and eight grandchildren. Surviving are his widow, The Worden Funeral Mrs. Florence Anderson Mrs. Margaret W. Hahn Home, Bed Bank, is in charge PORT MONMOUTH — Mrs. Lawn Care May; a son, David A. May of of arrangements. Florence Anderson, 78, of 27 Atlanta, Ga.; a daughter, Suffolk Ave., died Saturday Mrs William F Shuler of Mrs. Joseph P. Dvorovy in Riverview Hospital, Red Warning Bank. She and her late hus- Mrs. George W. Jacobs OLD BRIDGE-Mrs. Irene band, Clarence Anderson, Is Issued KEYPORT — Mrs. Ethel J. Sabo Dvorovy, 64, of Rt. formerly owned and operated Jacobs, 68, of 10 St George 516 died Saturday in Perth the Anderson Lumber Co. of FREEHOLD — If you in- Place died Saturday in Mon- Amboy General Hospital. She Belford. sist on using some sort of or- mouth Medical Center,' Long was the wife of Joseph p. Mrs. Anderson was born in ganic spread on your lawn, Branch. She was the wife of Dvorovy. Morganville and was the be sure to buy it from some George W. Jacobs Sr. Mrs. Dvorovy was born in daughter of the late Mr. and dealer or nurseryman you Mrs. Jacobs was born in Chrome and had also resided Mrs. Stephen Hyer. know. Perth Amboy and- had resided in Hopelawrv Woodbridge She had resided in Belford. Don't put your trust in Township, and Hazlet prior to someone who knocks on your here for the pa°st 50 years. moving here. for 45 years prior to moving, She i was a graduate of the here two years ago. door and tries to fast-talk you Monmouth Medical Center She was a member of the Surviving are a daughter,. into letting him spread some Nursing School and was a Full Gospel ..Tabernacle of Mrs. Hazel Applegate, with., stuff that: looks rich on your member of the Nurse's Alum- Keyport. ' ' , whom she resided; two lawn.' ni Association. She was a Also surviving are a son, grandchildren, and six great- That's the warning of Don- Jerome P,, Dvorovy of Wood- OF OUR "NEW SHOWROOM" registered nurse. grandchildren. . ald M. Mohr, county agricul- Also surviving are a son, bridge; a daughter, Mrs. Arrangements are under the tural agent. George W. Jacobs Jr., here; Veronica Moore, here; two direction of the Bedle Funeral He says: "The stuff that two brothers, Clifford and sisters, Mrs. Mary Adams of Home of Keyport. - ^ . looks so dark and rich may Sayreville, andita. Elizabeth be spent tea leaves, undecom- James Western, both of Me- Domice of Perth Amboy; two tuchen and two grandchildren. Mrs. Annie W. Crook posed muck or something else FOR THE "DO-IT-YOURSELFER" brothers, John and Nicholas just as cheap that may come Arrangements are under the Sabo, both Fords, and five FAIR HAVEN — Mrs. direction of the Bedle Funeral Annie W. Crook, 92, of 217 to as much as f300 to $400 for grandchildren. a single lawn. ' Blafsdel! Lumber Co. announces the opening of their .Home, here. Kemp Ave. died Thursday at new showroom devoted to the "do it yourselfer" The John W. MeWenbeck Riverview Hospital, Red "But these traveling opera- Funeral Home of Hazlet is in tors never give you a price with spectacular savings on many items to make your Mrs. Sushanna Stapf charge of. arrangements. Bank, after a short illness.' CLIFFWOOD BEACH — Mrs. Crook was born iri before the material is spread. house more livable. Stop.in today and browse. Mrs. Sushanna, E. -Stapf, 81, Warwarsing, N.Y. and lived in Once you consent to the treat- ROOM of 244.Greenwood Drive, died Mrs. Moore West Orange before moving ment and allow the man to Friday in Emery Manor FREEHOLD - Mrs. Made- here to 'live with her daugh-' apply it, you're stuck for the Nursing Home, Matawan. She leine G. Moore, 70, of Smith- ter five years ago. bill. DIVIDERS was the widow of John H. burg Road died Saturday in She was the widow of. "If the salesman tells you Stapf. Jersey Shore Medical Center, James L. Crook, who died in -his material contains lime or Mrs, Stapf was born in Neptune. 1949. - fertilizer and you feel you • IN YOUR CHOICE Brooklyn and was the daugh- Mrs. Moore, who was born She was a member of the must do business with him, ter of the late Mr. and Mrs. in New York City, resided Irvington Methodist Church. insist that he write this fact • SPINDLE BARS John Einwag. here 50 years. She was the Surviving are three sons, on his estimate or receipt. She was a member of St. widow of William A. Moore, Fred T. Crook of West Or- His action then comes under • GLASS PATTERN •Mary's Episcopal Church of who was a partner with his ange, James L. Crook of a law governing fertilizer Keyport; the St. Mary's Guild, brother, Charles in Moore's Wyckoff, and Milton Crook of sales. • LOUVERED and a former member of the Inn in West Freehold. The Verona; two daughters, Mrs. "But why not yourself church choir. , business is still owned by the William M. Martin of West trouble and buy any such ma- Surviving are a son, John family. Orange and Mrs. Alfred C terial you need from your lo- H. Stapf of Santee, Calif., and She was a communicant of Gopel, with whom she lived, cal dealer? - two grandchildren. St. Rose of Lima, Catholic seven grandchildren, and ...... The Bedle Funeral Home of Church. three great-grandchildren. John E. Wright Keyport is in charge of ar- Surviving are a daughter, The Worden Funeral-Home, rangements. Red Bank, is in charge of ar- HAZLET — John E. Wright, PANELING Mrs. James T. Carney, here; rangements. 42, of 14 W. Jack St., died DEATH NOTICES three brothers, Martin Nee of Thursday. He was employed CEKB — Gertrude evoted mother of An... jar..' Beach, and Mauro °R. and RICHNESS AND BEAUTY. Carney. Funeral services 8 a.m. Mrs. cecere was born in Tuesday at the Freeman Funeral Dominick Briscese, both here; Arrangements are under the Home, Freehold. Followed by a Re- Newark, daughter of the late a sister, Mrs. Arthur Jacobs direction of the Bedle Funeral Discounts up to iulem Mass 9 a.m. at St. Rose of James and Mary Norton and J..Ima R C Church. Freehold. Friends of Miami, Fla., and a grand- Home of Keyport. CORK may call at the funeral home Mon day 2-9 p.m. •was a resident in the county son. - .._.„„_... BECKUER - Clara of Red Bank, since 1947, living here since Arrangements are under the Mrsr Chmura formerly of Rumson on May 23, 1070. Wife of the late Frederick, mother 1956. She previously was a direction of the Bedle Funeral MIDDLETOWN - Mrs. of William H. jrrandmoUier of Thomas resident of Irvington and and Elaine. Services 8 p.m. Monday, Home of Keyport. . Theresa Chmura, 77, of 9 WALL PANELS At the John E. Day Funeral Home, Newark. Tied Bank. Visiting on Monday, U Crane Court dito'Saturday in and 7-P p.m, In World Wars I and II, she Mrs. Clara Seckler Riverview Hospital, Red PREFINISHED Enhance Any Room CARD OF THANKS inspected naval ammunitions RED BAUK - Mrs. Clara Bank. On behalf of myself and my chil- and ordinance items. A. Seckler, 76, of 36 Harding Mrs. Chmura was born in Insulates & Absorbs Sound dren, I would like to thank att my SHELVES friends, neighbors and relatives who She was the widow of Law- Road died Saturday in River-,, Poland, daughter of the late 1 Pkg. Covers 9 >q. ft. wore no kind, thoughtful and gon- LAUAN WALNUT TONE •rous In my time of need at the rence Cecere. view Hospital. Stanley and Rose Styborski, passing of our beloved Anthony and was a resident here nine 3 Panels Each Ix3x'/a" 25 Mrs. Seckler was born in FINISHED EDGES «e asVcaskedi ttno nii returmn .t„o H thM e liot ouri ed nU1 ] Bernard M. Hartnett, city laws be checked to determine record card. The card, he Hartnett, who is also the Mr\ Vanore y_ ^^'!_ J!!yi ]O!AiE£5Ll •' ! 1 pm. Friday. business administrator,. has Haid, could have been falsi- Joseph N. Denrpsey, city hearing officer, that .S^t. whether Sgt, Irene was then attorney, said he had sought Irene has not deliberately at- UllllUUillllUlJiJWUlWIUUWIUIUlWUU/lJIuiUUIiilllUtlUlillllliUyBIJIIW^ charged the sergeant with at- considered a juvenile in that fied. tempting to conceal two for- state. Mr. Savage said that his mer arrests when he filed for He also said his client was client could have been called a police lieutenant's test in ordered out of town at that before former Municipal March, 1968. time but there is no official Court Magistrate Thomas Symphonic Honors He said Friday that Sgt. indication that he was fined Baldino and ordered to pay Irene was arrested in 1945 in or jailed for the alleged of- support funds to his former Band Bids Flow In LONG BRANCH — Applica- liam Schuman, Clifton Wil- tions are now being received liams, Robert Russell Ben- Howard Bill Would for the ninth annual session of nett, Vincent Persichetti, the Youth Symphonic Honors Leonard Bernstein, Gustav Band of the Long Branch Hoist, Percy Grainger, J. S. Summer School. Bach, Ferde Grofe, George Ban Phosphate Use The program, which has Gershwin and many others. been organized for high The Honors Band has also WASHINGTON-Rep. James "Essentially, the bill I am progress into the elimination school and college students, performed much of the music J. Howard, D-N.J., today in- introducing says that after of this aspect of water pol- has been scheduled for June from- current Broadway troduced legislation which June 30, 1972, detergents con- lution." 30 through Aug. 6. The stu- shows and Hollywood films, would ban the use of phos- taining phosphorous may not He also commented that the dents will meet Tuesday and along with (he military phates in detergents by 1972. House Committee on Govern- Thursday nights from 7:30 to marches of John Phillip Sou- be entered into interstate sa. commerce. It also provides ment Operations held hear- 9:30 in Long Branch High "The phosphates in our de- Some of the outstanding so- tergents, while they may for legal action against those ings on this subject last De- "School. who violate the regulations, cember, and has made some loists at past concerts have claim success in 'whitening' The Honors Band has been been: Eve Slater (flute), Jay and gives the Secretary of the "excellent recommendations" organized for students who and 'brightening' have proved for the alleviation of this prob- Blake (trumpet), .Terald Ris- a menace to our waters," Mr. Interior responsibility for the have achieved a high level of promulgation of, standards of lem. "I would hope," he den (trombone), April Show- Howard said. instrumental music perfor- ers (flute), Tom Hill (clari- .water eutrophication ability, added, "that we will make use mance, and has been de- S Nunn Bush says iop brass _ vest pocket park to shoe shop 'These phosphates, because biodegradability, tqxicity, and of those recommendations in net), Tom Elliot (trumpet), they do' not decay quickly, the final legislative proposals. signed to provide talented and Richard Grossman (clar- § wants Tiffany finished brass on main floor. of effects on the public health students with .an opportunity inet). and do not respond to treat- and welfare, which must be "The protection of our wa- to study and play symphonic 1 leather on a chrome sole with ment in our septic tanks or met by all synthetic deter- ter supply is one of the most The conductor, Dominic R. band literature during the pe- Soriano, serves as chairman s boldly buttoned throat for quiet sewage treatment areas, have gents'.. •::- ,„ important problems facing our riod when they are on vaca- been able tq move directly in- '. "Of course, we 'must also nation in the coming decade. of the Instrumental Music De- ; tion from their regular partment and director of 1 masculine emphasis. to; our navigable waters., recognize federal responsibil- The Congress has made sub- school band. Once there,, they feed the. ity in assisting the industry stantial efforts io this field, bands at Long Branch High | Sizes 7 to 12, C and D, 28.95. , green algae, which consequent-; to develop alternative methods but a gfeat deal more needs The band has performed School. This will be his ninth ly...grows out. of control, re-:, to be done, in order that we some of the outstanding mu- year with the Youth Honors s Enter through the arcade or Broad and Front, Red Bank. of giving our housewives clean Band. 1 moving precious oxygen from, laundry. To this end, the bill may restore our waterways to sic written for, band by WiU the waters and, in essence;: provides for government as- their original state. I am murder our waterways. proud to be a part of that ef- sistance in research and de- The Largest Selection of — "Research studies from as velopment of- additives which- fort) and I will continue my Home of far back as 1965 have shown will not pollute the waters. work in the area of water pol- All National Brands Color TV 3 TOe'Department*of Interior is lution, particularly in my po- that phosphates are harmful sition as a member of the and Console Stereo to lower forms .of life in the. also directed to inventory Salts and Service for Over House Committee on Public in New Jersey water, and have profound ef- and report existing technolo- Works. 22 Years fects on the water itself. Con- gy on these substitutes, in sequently, I believe that the order that we can have a co- "Cleaning up our environ- Congress has a duty to the ordinated effort in this area. ment will be an expensive American people to require "I am pleased also that the proposition, but it is well the detergent industry, with House and Senate Public worth the expenditure to the cooperation of the gov- Works Committees are plan- establish long-range programs AIR CONDITIONER ernment, to find substitutes ning hearings on the phos- which will protect us, our for the phosphates now found phate problems in the near children, and their children, in cleaning substances, which future. Hopefully, these hear- If the expenditure is not are not harmful to the water ings will provide a basis from made, we will be facing the supply or life. which we can make real future death of the planet.'

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COG-10F Ckirtk WHI Cenr Ave. Kleqt Highway LINCROFT CHAPEL HILL MtwntM Springs Rood Shop Late Convenient PHONE Credit Terms Available PORT MONMOUTH (All offletil BELFORD Wednesday and It, iwer Mete lti*t» 787.0100 Ue*ere>IHe Me* Friday Nights Phone 7474082$ Member Federal Depo»it Inmrance Corporation THE REPORTER THE DAILY Operation Wiil-O'-ThoWisp I A Wretched Mw$ Established in 1878 — Published by The Red Bank Register, Incorporated By JIM BISHOP This office is strung with calendars. From bookshelves M. HAROLD KELLY, Publisher hang the' beautiful color scenes of Pan-American World Airways, the square-blocked day-to-day aphorisms of Father Arthur Z. Kamin, Editor James Keller's Christophers, the two-bit one given by the Thomas J. Bly, Executive Editor William F. Sandford, Associate Editor local bank, an Eastern Steamship Co. job, and one pub- lished by the Wretched Mess News Inc. __6 Monday, May 25, 1970 . When I want to know what day it is, I look at my watch. In sum, we are calendar savers. We also save cigarette coupons in case we have to buy a new lung. The Wretched Mess is the best calendar because it tells you nothing. For example, a month you An Arts Council Needed might guess is January is called Ginuary, Month of the Martini. The days are named Sonny, Money, Jipsy, Wombat, Thrlpsday, • Monmouth County abounds effort that will necessarily be ex- BISHOP Frugal, and Soggy. January first — or cultural activities — and literally hun- pended. Ginuary one — used to be New Year's Such a council would help bring dreds of our residents are engaged in Day. It is lusted as "Electrical Connection — Socket to Me together the many diversified orga- Day"l4«b 4th is Tired Bloody Mary Day (Vodka in Geri- many of the diversified groups that nizations now working for the com- tol); the/6th Ls Senior Citizens Fly-Zipping Clinic Day; the are helping to make the county a well- 14th is Bite Your Dentist Day (don't knock it); the 24th, mon goal of fulfilling our cultural through some animadversion of sound, may be referred to rdunded residential area. The many needs. United and coordinated, a year- as Euripes (Italian Torn, Fabric) Day.- groups focusing on the arts are work- round, comprehensive program could February 2nd, which is still celebrated as Groundhog be developed so that there would be Day, is Ground Hughes Day — Howard comes out, sees ing independently, and the results of his shadow, goes back in for six more years. It seems their activities enhance the nature of something of interest happening at all normal to me that Uie 17th comes up Phillips Screwdriver Our area. times, and, so that the many programs (Vodka in Milk of Magnesia) Day. Eighteenth is National do not conflict with each other in their Bigor Mortis Sit in Day; the 21st is Deflour Betty Crocker The Junior League of Monmouth scheduling. ,-• Day. County is presently engaged in an ef- * . * * fort to organize a "Monmouth County Monmouth County is fortunate to THE FIRST WEEK in March is Deport Excess Guitar Arts Council" to help coordinate and have so many persons interested in its Players Week. The 7th, for those who dine at home, is develop the programs already in cultural development. An arts council Wild Gravy Day, also referred to as Moose Juice. The 15th would unify these individual efforts begins "Trust No One Week," and the 30th is Plumber's progress. With so much activity, their Bowl Day, to be celebrated only in Flushing Meadows, endeavor is indeed a major undertak- into a comprehensive program that we Long Island. ing, but its merits far outweigh the could look forward to. April is Indifference Month, I am happy to report. The. 15th is memorialized as Marquis de Sade Invents the Bu- reau of Internal Revenue Day, preceded by the 11th, which is National Get-Your-Lumps Day. Bill Bailey Finally Makes Mayor O'HernV Decision It Home Day is the 20th. I do hope that you have a pencil handy to mark these Red Bank Mayor Daniel O'Hern's gently to make improvements in Red down because, when we finish, I ask the questions. May Bank. He has tackled problems in a is out of date and will be called Maybe Month. The 3rd 1ft decision to reconsider the possibility Best Friend Betrayal Day, so please remain at home and of seeking re-election is an action we variety of areas. He has given his best A CONSERVATIVE VIEW off the phone. The 12th, one of the best, is Malice-Toward- to the borough. hope will result in an affirmative All Day — time to get on the phone and backbite everybody. While we are not taking a stand The (17th is redundant, because, while it is Muggers' move on his part. While his years; in on any candidates at this time, we A Motion to Suspend History Day, this is celebrated in cities every day in the year; like • office have involved his decisions on Saint Rocco's Day, it is always sneaking up on you. ' ' feel an effort should be directed at By JAMES J. KILPATRICK penditures in Vietnam and Laos by Dec. The 18th is California Depopulation Week — send your many problems confronting the com- keeping gh outstanding young man A letter-is at hand from a young • 31, and to -require the withdrawal oLall -car on a free trip to Los Angeles. For all Indians who have woman in Massachusetts; the new book" U.S. military personnel from Vietnam by munity — many of a serious social involved in government. Mayor 1 never won a final .battle with John Wayne, the 22nd is nature — his devotion to the tasks O'Hern falls into this category — and by Justice William 0. Douglas still lies June 30, 1971. The McGovern-Hatfield How Day. open on my desk; and the mail brings a amendment has drawn some 20 co-spon- Self-Infatuation Week begins and ends on the 31st. before him has shown a. margin of . we believe he should consider continu- text of the. McGpvem-Hatfield amend- sors, among them Majority Leader Mike July is skipped entirely in the Wretched Mess Calendar be- constructive results. ing to work for the betterment of the ment to fix new dead- Mansfield. In one form or another,'some cause nothing ever happens in July except that the family community. lines in Southeast Asia. such deadline seems likely to pass the Sen- goes on vacation, mother waits until the car is doing 70 Mayor O'Herh has worked dili- Together these three add ate. to ask herself if she remembered to shut off the gas, the up to faith, hope and an * * * • . . kids cry with sunburn, Dad is smashed in the bar for two odd kind of charity; and WHAT IS ONE to make of all this? weeks, the mosquitoes are five feet tall and build their Mr. Sterner and Scouting together they propose a own runways on your bed, etc. retreat from reality. -The several authors, I venture to suggest, are living in a dream world marked by So we go to August, known as Harmless Indoor Fire- During the past 30 years, Mon- efforts of E. Donald Sterner, who My 22-year-old cor- the perfect clarity of Alice's orderly Won- works Month, excellent to remember as St. Rocco's Day served as council president for 30 respondent in Brookline derland. It is as if some senator were to occurs each fortnit. The 11th is Prune Eaters Victory Cele-. mouth County has shown tremendous speaks for young people arise in the morning hour to make a per- bration Day, but only in Eureka, Calif. The 21st, opening growth both economically and an pop- years. Despite his many other activi- generally: "Our basic functory motion: "Mr. President, because with hearty huzzahs across the country, is San Francisco ulation statistics. With this growth, ties, Mr. Sterner always directed a premise," she writes, "is nothing that has gone before is germane Chronicle Anti-Typoerrical Day. KILPATRICK itself is not a one particular organization also has* large portion of his time toward the tnat war to what we do today, I ask unanimous * * * scouring program. It was a genuine legitimate or necessary resolution of po- consent that history be suspended." FOR DRINKERS, the 23rd is Gall Bladder Stone In; kept in pace with the countywide . litical hassles. Only defense of one's, own "Hearing no objection," says the pre- ^ for Floridians, the day before is Befriend an Alligator Day. trend. The Monmouth Council of the effort by a genuine person. . shores legitimizes defensive force. My siding officer, nodding in his chair, "it is Women at Checkout Counters win" be cheered to know that. Boy Scouts of America has grown Through Mr. Sterner's efforts, the generation also assumes that as rational so ordered." the 28ft is Step-to-the-Rear Day. The mk4& an Exotic In- from 2,000 boys to more than 18,000 young of Monmouth County' gained beings we can reason with our human But neither ancient history nor con- dian dance day called Cherokee Strip. ^) tremendously. Now he is retiring from brothers . . . temporary reality can be so easily re- The next month, considering that WVhave skipped today -^ and the growth ^continues. July, is confusing because it is called Au Jus.lt was with the council presidency and we are "History is made by men, unless men moved. My young friend in Brookline has We have long expressed pride in this let history make itself by abdicating their faith that if her generation is left alone, some reluctance that the authors took cognizance of Las outstanding organization. among those who warmly commend responsibility for using reason. This is they can build in peace by reasoning "with Vegas and reserved the 8th as Go for Baroque Day. The A large measure of the success of and thank him for his devotion to what your parents' generation did in World our more rational brothers." Justice 21st is Hot Flash Trial Heats Day. Boy Scouting. War I' (for land and power gain) and Douglas, for his part, still hopes that wars Who can forget the jollity of the surgeon selecting the the council can be attributed to the what your generation did in World War can be abolished and a cooperative world wrong patient for the wrong operation — the 27th is Nation- II. My generation thinks we don't have to pattern established. And the sponsoring al Malpractice Day. ' INSIDE WASHINGTON concede to 'historical processes.' It is our senators, in their charity, would give the Septober is Back to School, Back to Work and Back to world now—if you want the carnage of . Communist enemy, in effect, >a free hand Back Month. The 4th is Risky River Day. The last week, war, you fight it—and leave us alone ,to in Southeast Asia. starting with the 27th, is Kick a Corporate Executive Week. • build in peace with our more rational It won't do. History is just as. Gibbon Novulgar, as a month, dawns with Annual Speak to The Costs of Campus Riots brothers." .. . - defined it—little more than the register of Your MotheMn-Law Day on the Thud of the month, line __; * *. ;; ....._•.•..:.•..,:- the crimes, follies and misfortunes of 10th is. Goof-Off Day, which may.be acknowledged on all MR. JUSTICE Douglas is 50 years old- mankind. And so long as men are less work days.. The 15th is Appliance Breakdown Day; the 17th By ROBERT S. ALLEN It could well be described as a graphic is Cavemen Discover Yellowstone Park in 10,001 B. C. The case of "cutting off their nose to spite er, but he echoes the theme: "Is our des- than angels, men will make such history. and JOHN A. GOLDSMITH tiny to kill Russians?" he asks. "To kill Goodness, rationality and reasonableness 18th is Cavemen Abandon Yellowstone Park, 10,000 B. C. College and university administrators their face." They may be vainglorious cru- Chinese? Why cannot we work at cooper- are very good qualities in men, but they The conclusion, of course, is Decucumber Month. The would be well advised to take a long, hard saders today, and bedraggled losers to- ative schemes and search for the com- provide very bad assumptions for the mak- 4th is when Tom Swift Invented Thomas Edison in 1888. The look at exactly what the thousands of ram- morrow. mon ground binding all mankind to- ing of foreign policy. 28th will be, remembered as To-Hell-With-Everything Day, paging students and abetting faculty * * ' * i- gether?" At another point, denouncing Our nation is deeply committed in followed by Ache All Over Day. For a copy of the Wretched Mess Calendar, write to members are really bringing about. CONFLICTING BILLS — Eep. Edith the anti-ballistic missile, Douglas laments Vietnam, and by extension in Laos and that ''the voices and pressures of the mili- Cambodia, as part of a continuing strug- anyone in the national administration. They are being given They may make out free with a penny, which has no moving parts ... some jarring discoveries Green, D-Ore., chairman of the House Ed- tary - industrial complex seem always to gle, now centuries old, for the preserva- —such as: ucation subcommittee, is still aiming at suffocate the pleas of the poor as well as tion of certain Western values. In a dream —Storming Congress reporting a higher education bill to the the pleas of those who want to be done world, doubtless these values could be FROM OUR READERS in mass anti-Vietnam full committee by July 1. She admits that'* with wars and create a cooperative world maintained by sweetness and by reason; and antldraft lobby- •a long shot. pattern for the solution of international in a dream world, neo-isolationism makes ing, and engaging in po- problems." sense. Unhapply for young women, old Also, even if she does, it's extremely justices and eminent senators, this is Hazlefs Efficiency litical campaigning may conjectural what the full .committee will Finally, I remark the proposal now ' pending in the Senate to get us out of simply not the kind of world we live in— Recreation Commission make press headlines do. ' w and television spectacu- Cambodia in 30 days, to halt combat ex- not now, and, not ever. P. O. Box 121 , Not only is this legislation deeply Hazlet, N. J. lars, but also may cost plagued by seething congressional anger schools their indispens- YOUR MONEYS WORTH To the Editor: at riotous students, instigating faculties The Hazlet Township Recreation Commission wishes to ALLEN able tax-exempt status. and bumbling school administrators, but publicly thank the first aid squads, fire companies and the • Without it, hundreds of educational insti- also by a sharp cleavage over rival bills- police who were on duty during the circus in our town Fri- tutions throughout the country would have one sponsored by Mrs. Green, the other day and Saturday, May 1 and 2. to shut down. . . by'the Nixon Administration. Low-Price Items Rise Fastest * * _* Every seat — 1,500 for each of four performances — —Altering and shortening academic By SYLVIA PORTER the price of hot dogs rose 13.6 per cent was filled and over 500 were turned away at the gate. Yet, calendars may lead to damaging taxpayer MRS. GREEN'S BILL would create a "Substitution" always has been a —nearly double the 6.8 per cent rise for the traffic control was so outstanding that residents and and student suits for un- _ new Department of Education and Man-._ key weapon you could use to help cut roast beef. At latest official report, frank- their out-of-town visitors commented on the efficiency with authorized curtailment of furters cost an average of 83 cents a power. It also contains provisions aimed your cost of living — and since this in- pound throughout the U.S. which the crowds arrived and left Leocadia Court. educational programs at curbing student disturbances and up- flation spiral took off in 1965, I, among _ The commission is indeed grateful for the cooperation and demands for tuition heavals. The administration measure others, have repeatedly recommended a Several times during '69, I under- we have grown to expect from our police, first aid men and refunds. would establish a non - cabinet National a policy of "substitution" lined how big a bargain turkey was and firemen. - State and federal how you could adapt turkey for year-round , Foundation on Higher Education. There is for meats and other meals. Between January and January., Very truly yours; statutes may be enacted nothing in the bill to crack down on stu- foods, for non-foods and Thomas H. Stansfield Jr., to withhold or withdraw though, poultry prices rose a full 9.6 per dents or schools. v services wherever feas- cent—with the key factor behind this in- Circus Chairman financial aid to schools This omission is a key"focal point of ible. whose students and fac- .crease a jump of nearly 14 per cent for opposition. Leading Republican committee- But now. ironical- 'turkey. The BLS now reports the average ulty members engage In men are demanding the inclusion of rc- ly although understand- political activity. , price for turkey at 56 cents a pound. (iOLDSMITH •" strictions. *.t"" ably, your adoption of * , * * —Costly increases in ^3*, Rep. William Scherle, R-Iowa, feels .so this policy on a mass fire and other insurance rates may range strongly about this that he has already scale is driving up the AND SO IT has gone: fresh and frozen from 33 per cent to more than double in tried to app'end such an amendment to prices of the popular sub- fish prices rose 13.3 per cent from Janu- some instances. ary to January; pork (another traditional- other measures. Further, he has PORTER stitutions more rapidly —Congressional resentment at the con- served nptice he will continue to do that, than the original higher- ly lower cost beef substitute) rose 17.2 tinued widespread campus disarray and both in the committee and in the full priced items. In short, as inflationary per cent overall; beef liver was up close disorders could intensify pronouncedly. House. price increases drain our pocketbooks, to 12 per cent; liverwurst was up nearly This backstage hostility is now so bitter Mrs, Green's anti-disorder provision, we have fewer and fewer ways to protect 11 per cent; sausage,* 18; bologna, 13; among legislators of both parties as to titled "Protection and Freedom of Expres- ourselves. eggs, 19 per cent. As for bacon, this has virtually rule out the likelihood of a new sion," states: "The primary responsibility entered, the category of gourmet, condi- aid to higher education bill being passed To put it succinctly, while hamburger ment foods. . ' v '• for maintaining freedom of expression, is a fine substitute for steak, cheese and this session. public order and the effective functioning This is in direct contrast to the trend The existing law extending federal aid dried beans are scarcely satisfactory sub- in the previous couple" of years, for then, of the, educational processes at American stitutes for hamburger. to schools and students expires June 30, institutions of education rests with the you may recall, the big boosts were for 1971. Education leaders, in and out of Con- trustees, administrators and other duly ap-' When the prices of the basics in sirloin steaks, roast beef, veal cutlets. gress, had hoped to enact a continuing pointed officials." foods, goods and services climb more rap- And it was to beat these increases and measure this year for fear there wouldn't For that purpose, the provision re- idly than the prices of luxuries in these still get sufficient protein that millions of be enough time to do that next year. quires that each institution receiving fed- spheres, the danger signals are flying Americans "traded down"' from high- • An entirely new (92nd) Congress con- eral aid must file a certification that "af- very high, priced cuts of beef to hamburgers and hot venes next January, and all legislation firms the Intention of the institution to * * • dogs, chicken and fish. will have to start from scratch, That take all appropriate action to attain the TO ILLUSTRATE, between the start This 1989-70 era is murderous: bUBl- means there will be less than six months purposes set forth . . . and to assure the •of '69 and of '70, the cost of hamburger ness recession, a stock market crash, in which to pass a new higher education timely termination of actions which tend rose 11.9 per cent-more than twice the climbing unemployment, mounting bank- act before the old one expires. That's why to defeat such purposes." 5.8 per cent rise for sirloin, steak. The ruptcies and now an inflation zeroing In the failure to do so in this Congress average price of a pound of hamburger on the basics. could prove very costly and- painful to All schools would have to submit a copy of their rules to the commissioner of was 66 cents according to latest official Add the moat tragic aspect of all is I thousands of students and hundreds of 'nationwide Bureau of Labor Statistics fig- that at the heart of it la n war which schools all over the country. education. Failure to comply with Uie pro- visions of the legislation would make a ures. everyone says must bo ended but which "Okay, otaff, what do I have to do for If that occurs, they will In a large drags on ana on endlessly, measure have only themselves to blame. school ineligible for federal aid, Also during this same 12-month peridd, i\ -THE DAILY REGISTER, R£D BA5K • MIDDLETOVN, N. J.t MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 Marlboro Water Shortage Ebbs MARLBORO — The severe esusary when a number of the development firm that strictions »nd noted "only a tional tracts will not UM wa- water shortage that has homes in ttie Whittier'Oaks built Whittier Oaks and is the few residents did not com- ter now being fed Into Whit* plagued areas ol ttie town- East area were without wa- parent corporation for Cen- ply." He added that no sum- tier oaks Bast; a totally new ship (or the. past two weeks ter service.' Mayor Salkind tral Jtssey Water Co. which monses were issued. eight-inch water maM with a is ebbing. said an investigation de\.t serves Wnittier Oaks. Representatives of U.S. separate pumping station will Mayor Morton Salkind an- termined the need for a new * The restrictions were ex- Homes and from Whittier be built into the present area nounced Saturday the lifting line to insure water service Oaks East reached an agree- by July 15; and residents of of tiie total water restrictions to the area. panded to cover the Mon- noulh Heights section, which ment as to plans for improv- Whittier Oaks East will be that have been imposed on "This line was installed by ing the system Thursday kept informed by corporate the residents of Wriittier Oaks U.S. Homes, Inc. and is now is served by Village Water Co,, because both utilities night. engineers on all future pipe- and Monmouth Heights, operable," the mayor report- line construction. The restrictions became nee- ed Saturday. U.S. Homes is draw from the same source. The agreement states addi- The mayor has sent out no- tices to residents informing them of new partial restric- tions on outside watering that Monmouth Medical will be in effect for an inde- terminate period. The new re- strictions allow homes with RIDING SCHOOL, INC. even house numbers to wa- Employes Honored ter on even number calendar SUMMER DAY CAMP days, and those with odd LONG BRANCH — Fifty, ic; John Meyerhoffer, pur- A Summer of Fun With Your "Own Hor»e" one employes of Monmouth chasing; and Miss Arlene numbers will water on odd number calendar days. Medical Center were honored Heilman and Miss Mildred For information call Mr. or Mn. Fred W. Stafford 471-1057 — for their devotion and loyally Residents Thanked 9834 tvcnlngi ... or writ* Tricorna Farm, R.F.D. #1, Holmdal, at the annual Service Awards Simms, therapeutic radi- The mayor thanked the res- N. J. 07733. Cloud Thursdays. Dinner in West End Manor ology. idents for abiding by the re- recently. SOMETHING NEW — Allen Nadler of Madison Township registers satisfaction at Both Robert C. Stanley Jr., opening of NadlerV Discount Furniture, 27 Monmouth St., Red Bank. Store spe- president of the MMC Board cializes in major brands of bedroom, dining and living room furniture and acces- of Governors, and Adminis- t »ories at discount prices. Mr. Nadler calls public reaction "better than antici- trator George J. Bartel paid pated." {Register Staff Photo) EARLY WEEK tribute to the members of the hospital family for the roles they play in maintaining a SPECIALS high level of excellence in pa- finast tient care, v DAVIDSON LIQUORS Heading the list of those re- FOR PRICE- ceiving awards was Miss Ger- SEE LOCAL WINDOW SIGNS Gourmet Food aldine Stockert, the center's FOR MEMORIAL DAY Howard Johnsons lee Cream chief pharmacist, who com- STORE HOURS ' pleted 25 years of service. MINDERS! BAR1MS WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMtT QUANTITIES. Two staff members, Mrs. Vir- ginia Czyz of nursing service, and Mrs. Ira Grissom of the laundry department, were LIVE IT UP OUTDOORS honored for 20 years of vice, and two others, Mrs. Helen Dann and Mrs. Jean HEINZ Jeffrey, both of nursing ser- vice, were 15-year awardees. Personnel Director Carl R. V' Chicken Parts Price presided at the affair KETCHUP at which service pins were BREASTS w/RIBS or MEATY DRUMSTICKS SAVE HARD CASH . presented to the awardees by their department heads. The Rev. Bertram Sathmary of ! ! FRY! the Long Branch Ministerium gave the invocation and the ! BAKE! YOUR STOCK benediction. i BROIL! Others receiving awards CHOICE TODAY!! were: 10 years — Mrs. Ger- BAR-B-Q! aldine Cook, business office; Mrs. Hilda Engle, Santo Guz- zi, Mrs. Carolyn Hunter, di- COUNTRY STYL5E - FRESH 9 Finast etary; Mrs. Marion Laursen Spare Ribs PORK - FOR BAR-B-Q COMSTOCK BLEND laboratory; Mrs. Betty Ging Mrs. Mildren Herschenhorn, FRESH - CENTER CUT Granulated Mrs. Susan Mount, Mrs. Su- Pork Chops [WHISKEY zanne Palmiere, Mrs. Alice Pieknally; Mrs" Grace Stew- COMSTOCK art and Mrs. Mary Volek of •r Sugar nursing service. CHUCK STEAKS 100% GRAIN For five years — Mrs. Dor- GIN is Hart, Mrs. Janet Kokoll, ONE PRICE ONLY Mrs.' Bertha Morford and i r i COOK OUTDOORS WYCLIFFE Mrs. Laura Napolitani, busi- ness office; Mrs. Clara Au- FOR A GREAT TREAT 1 mock, Mrs. Charlotte Kusner, coffee shop; Mrs. Rose Dodd, SCOTCH 61' 5 ! 1 lit Dominick Sparandeo, data Calif.Steak U^L Ground Chuck £>W processing; Mrs. Pearl Tyler, C dietary; Robert Norton, as- Fillet Steak "™. Ground Roundel 95 MIRACLE sistant administrator, plant IMPORTED DAVIDSON'S FAMOUS services; Mrs. Johnnie Lo- MR. DEU (Whore Available) SEAFOOD SAVINGS mans,, housekeeping; William WHIP IRISH WHISKEY BLENDED WHISKEY Epifano, Miss Lois Daniels, ROAST BEEF TURBOT FILLET Miss Bernice Gainey, Waver- KRAFT SALAD DRESSING ly Hicks, laundry; Dr. Joel SHAMROCK A89 40% Straight USDA Feldman, director of the de- Yilh. SNO-WHITE 10 Years Old ^TP Fifth Whiskies 49Ful9l Quart partment of nuclear medi- CHOICE GREENLAND cine. " '. \ 59 49 Also five years — Mrs. FIRST O' THE FRESH PRODUCE Carolyn Brady, Mrs. Celeste SCHWEPPES MIXERS Davis, Miss Barbara D'Espo- sito, Mrs. Helen MacConnach, Mrs. Joan Pedrazzo, Mrs. 10-OZ. Evelyn Penn, Miss Su- WATERMELONS zanne Phillips, Miss Gloria Richmond BOTTLES c Robinson, Christopher Sim- 99 mons, Mrs. Newell Travis, 6 nursing service; Dr., Maxim SWEET Schwappet Tonle and Gin — How goooooood Ir III Lemonade Schweppei Bitter Lemon and Vodka — None better! Asa, director of physiology and research; Lester Chap- JUICY Cash and Carry — Limited man physiology and re- WHITE-FROZEN search; Mrs. Merry Alston, RED COMSTOCK LIGHT or DARK Dr. Bernard Swerdlow, Mrs. Helen Wambach, Pollak clin- RUSSET • FOR BAKING FLORIDA . SWEET, JUICY RUM Potatoes 5^49' Oranges DAVIDSON'O S FAMOUS BRAND Small College Seen Attractive I 90 PROOF PHILADELPHIA - "Think small" if you're a high school RB-25 RB-25 , senior who is still looking for RB-25 THIS COUPON c THIS COUPON C THIS COUPON c WORTH 20 a college to enter this Septem WORTH WORTH 20 ber. 15 Toward lh« purchoit of any 10 oz. pku. That's the advice of Dr. Toward th« purchase of any IOMIIH Toward th« purchaso of any padcaao COLONEL ROY SARA LEE COFFEE CAKE Henry Klein, president of the tlutbrry, Raipbarry, Maplo, Almond STRAIGHT KENTUCKY American College Admissions SMOKED BUTT FINAST GRASS SEED AND A $3.00 PURCHASI Center, here, which has Just conducted, a survey on the limit 1-Good at Super Finast Limit 1 -Good at Super Flnwt Limit 1-Good at Super. Finast BOURBON WHISKEY current college entrance pic Good thru Tuei., May 26th flood tbru Tuet., May 26tli Good thru Tues.,Miy26U Nothing flijer lure. In Bourbon 49 The American College Ad available! missions Center is a nonprofit 5 Quart college application clearing- IVORY DUZ DOW FINAST 100% house which provides po- DAVIDSON'S INTERNATIONAL tential applicants to 700 East- DETERGENT COLOMBIAN COFFEE ern colleges and universities. SNOW DETERGENT HANDI The survey revealed that 2lb.7oz.pkg. CANADIAN AMERICAN most of the 700 institutions llb.4oz. WRAP 86 Proof Blended Whltticy still have room for additional pkg. 6 year old itralghr whhklei qualified applicants. Applica- 2 Ib. ( 31b. 6 oz. tions are running behind last 83 pkg. 82 roll 69 Ift99 year by 10 to 25 per cent, Dr. 87 5qt. IU/2 gal. Klein said. On the other hand, applica- CM Disinfectant ; 7oz,sUoS9e Mtilm Freeze Dried Coffee S oz. jar 1.B1 Liv-a-Snap Dog I Cat Treat ...,6 oz. 2 for 59c tions to public Institutions— Treot Potato Chips 6 oz. pkg. 39c Durkee Stuffed Olives 5% oz. jar 49c Progresio Wine Vinegar 25 oz. decanter 3Bc DAVIDSON'S Waldorf Bathroom Tissue, white, atit'd 4 rolls 38c state and community colleges Alrwlck Solid ; 5 oi. slzo 5Sc Penn Dutch Birch Beer.....' 6 pack 73c ICE COLD BEER Borden's Instant Whipped Potatoes Ib. pkg. 57c Hunt's Steak Houso Ketchup 14 w. bot.27o 49 —are up over last year. Heart's Delight Peach Nectar 12 oz. 2 for 31c Mllem Cocktail Mix 16 oz. size 47c Gulden's Spicy Drown Mustard ....1 Ib. 8 oz. bot. 16c VOQKA 4 BY THE CASE Hormol Spam 7 oz. can 41c Sweet 10 Liquid Sweetener 6 oz. size 77c Kleen Kitty Kat Litter 251b. pkg. 1.83 Queen Gels a Helmet PORT TALBOT, Wales FREE DELIVERY — PARKING — 747.3334 (AP) — Among the personal RED BANK-362 BROAD STREET headgear of Queen Elizabeth II is a white safety helmet, PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU TUES.. MAY 26th IN HOWEU TOWNSHIP. UM MUNCH, K0 MNK I ATUNTIC HUHLMBl NOT lEJMNJIBIi FOU W0. IMOM. n spokesman disclosed. She DAVIDSON'S WINES & LIQUORS 'voro it at tho opening ot » now,, steel plant' hero and 24 BROAD STREET RED BANK keeps it for similar hard hat occasions. 8 -THE DAILY BZGISTER, BED BANK • MIDDLETOWN, N.J.s MONDAY. MAY 25. 1970

IF . Politics Featured Over Weekend You an going to PAINT . . . It definitely was a political named chairman of the sen- therefore, didn't deserve the gress, because the Republi- Earlier Mr. Gross had con- Bobby Banker toys, weekend at the Shore. ate Labor and Public Wei. nomination. cans were saying the same fided that he felt Mr. Quar- DON'T! " Wv stand guard over U.S. Sen. Harrison A. Wil- fare Committee. Mr, Gross admitted that he thing about themselves eight emba's opposition In the pri- Call us for a liams arrived in Spring Lake Jn urging support for him- doesn't agree with everything miles north in Asbury Park. mary was "a technicality." your valuable papers." Heights Saturday and an- self, the senator said "we President Nixon does, and Hampering Scored And a Quaremba aide said Free Estimate on nounced that he was happy must maintain Democratic said he didn't intend to be a The Republicans said that that the real reason his boss ALUMINUM SIDING that the New York Times had majorities in Congress, to pro- "rubber stamp." the present Democratic Con- was in the race was to pave revealed he once drank (oo vide alternatives to Richard Mr. Dowd, who introduced gress was hampering the at- (he way for open primaries Instead much but was now on the Nixon." himself as "that kid who's tempts by President Nixon in the state. "Even if we don't wagon. Meanwhile, in the Berkeley- running for Congress," urged to accomplish meaningful get a single vote," he said His opponent in the June 2 Carteret Hotel in Asbury the Young Republicans to things for this nation and he "we will have proved our primary election — state Sen. Park, the young Republicans speak out to young people be- could really do great things point." OflH DAIIY • TO S:J0-W(D. ««d WI. TO • if he had a Republican Con- Frank Guarini, D-Hudson — were holding forth. fore election time. , Immediately after the YR also showed up and said that Their convention attracted "One of the country's most gress. convention Mr. Quaremba FREE DELIVERY New Jersey is fourth of all the former state GOP Chairman, serious problems," he said, Meanwhile, Mr. Gross was left for north Jersey. Mr, states in paying federal taxes Nelson Gross, who is seeking "is communicating with the finding himself on the defen- Dowd and Mr. Gross left for 741-7500 but ranks 50th in return of the Republican nomination to young." sive at the Young Republi- a cocktail party,, and Sen. federal revenues. oppose Sen. Williams or Sen. Crisis Ahead Seen cans' because Mr. Quaremba Williams stayed around until Guarini, whoever emerges 3 CONVENIENT In a rare display of friend- had decided to accuse the yesterday when he and three the winner. Back in Spring Lake CREDIT PLANS liness, both Sen. Williams Heights at the Homestead senator of aligning himself others showed.up at the cock- and Sen. Guarini agreed to Also appearing was James Irouw's Golf & Country Club Sen. Wil- with the Democrats. tail lounge of the Molly Pitch- Rent a safe deposit pose for the photographers. Quaremba of Bergen County, liams told the women that the "I support the foreign poli- HAS EVERYTHING 32 BROAD ST., RED BANK They were speaking before who opposes Mr. Gross. They er where all four drank what box. You have the policies of President Nixon cies of President Nixon," Mr. the luncheon meeting of the didn't bother to pose together he called "a healthy belt of only key. and the Republican adminis- Quaremba said with a great ginger ale." Women's Democratic Club of for the photographers. deal of authority. Adding that Monmouth County. The local attraction at the tration have pointed the na- tion toward what he called "I will not join with (Sen, -Voter Apathy Rapped convention was William F. Harrison) Pete Williams." Dowd, the 26-year-old Presi- "a crisis which I see building In his speech before the on the horizon. Mr. Gross said, "I really MdnmoutfiCounfy club, Sen. Williams said that dential assistant, who is run- don't like someone to infer "The only hope I see to put- National Bank voter apathy is the enemy of ning for Congress. that I'm not a supporter of ting this country back on the the democratic system. Support Seen Issue the President." ON THESE \ He urged the club to sup- The main issue in the cam- road to economic security; No 'Second Place' port his bid for a third term paign for the Republican back on the road to progress and noted that if re-elected nomination for Congress, Mr. for all our people, and back With considerable force, the HOME IMPROVEMENTS There's an office near you! on the road to peace," Sen. senator announced to the 75 he is almost certain to b Quaremba said, is "support You'll nsyer know how much for our President." Williams said, "is with Con- young Republicans that "I money you can love unles* He hinted broadly that Mr. gress." will not take second place to you call In for a free •Ill- Gross didn't support all of the Presumably, Sen. Williams anyone in my support of the mate. Do It today — »»u.ll President's policies and, meant a Democratic Con- administration." save! BASEMENT ROOM 1 Isiillliis Middletown Democrat uieday Cites Housing Stand MIDDLETOWN - John J. actions are the opposite of his Township Committee for con- to find out about - Murphy, who seeks the Dem? ..words, today. . : tinually approving the one professional carpet cleaning? ocratic party's nod for' the "As vice president of the family subdivisions, thereby lone Township Committee Council of Civic Associations 'giving the Board of Educa- seat in the June 2 primary he succumbed to the pres- tion an almost impossible Save Money on New Room Let our home care took another jab at his op- sures and prestige of joining task. Middletown deserves Our low prices have got to save you money. See for yourself. experts go to work ponent yesterday. with the Riverside Heights better," he said. Call ui, we'll Kelp with your plant and give you our complete on your soiled carpets. "He (Thomas J. Lynch, Association to oppose senior "Mr. Murphy said the Sew- money-laving price. Gentle ServiceMaster who has the support of the citizen housing. Apparently erage Authority "is running ALL TYPES IMPROVEMENTS treatment cleans every Democratic Steering Commit- he has found out since about rampant" as an autonomous • General Improvements • Room Additions • Attic Rooms fiber and restores tee) is now trying to echo my my telephone survey which body. "It is going to cost • Basement Rooms • Bathrooms • Kitchens • Roofing-Siding original beauty and 'balanced community' con- showed 19 out of 20 people . the township a small fortune • Porch Enclosures"* texture. Dulled, cept, buLhe is on record, in with opinions are for senior to rebuild every road," he matted-down the pasf two months, as op- citizen housing," he said. claimed. LOW INSTALLMENT PAYMENTS carpeting takes "I place my personal con- posed to the senior citizen "Middletown needs a. pro- on new life. victions and integrity above' condominiums proposed for gressive and experienced \, Approved by the influence of -pressure River Plaza," Mr. Murphy in Democrat who is not hand -'- carpet manu- a press release charged. "The groups. If elected I will make MONMOUTH CONSTRUCTION CO. picked by the party boss, who •* facturers. decisions based' on what is condominiums would produce will.not be muzzled, and who HIGHWAY 35 AT HEDDONS CORNER, MIDDLETOWN Isn't this best for • Middletown," Mr. a half million dollars tax rev- has the courage of his con- your day ; Murphy stated. .enue:Jeach.year, .thereby.eas:. victions," Mr. Murphy con- 741-5060 — 776-6600 to call us? • ing the tax burden through- "Again in his.zeal to echo out the township," he my zoning stands, Mr. Lynch claimed. has gone overboard on apart-, ' "By contrast I have stood ment construction. I woul up publicly and urged the approach garden apartments township to accept the rec- with great caution. ommendation of its Econom- "However, talking aboul ic Development Commis- wanting industry and federa 741-1312 sion," he stated. low income housing are just "Actions speak iouder than- pie in the sky promises unless words," Mr. Murphy contin- you are willing, as I am, to ued, "and my opponent's past call a moratorium on the building of one family homes until the Board of Education can catch up with our school needs," he continued. "It i not right for our children to leave for school at noon and return home in the darkness 20% OFF ALL WARDS ROOFING of night in winter. ON INSTALLED JOBS "The fault lies with the Savings apply to materials only Principal Quits Wards has an outstanding line of roofing to give HAZLET — The Board of your home top quality protection. Available in Education has accepted, with asphalt or asbestos in your choice of colors. regret, the resignation of Sycamore Drive School princ- WARDS ALSO INSTALLS ipal Richard Ellerman. PANELING—CEILING TILE—STORM WINDOWS and Mr. Ellerman, whose resig- DOORS—ASBESTOS OR ALUMINUM SIDING—GUTTER and LEADERS—PORCH ENCLOSURES ' nation becomes effective June Mail this card for your free Imtallatlcn estimate) 30, has been principal of the Name _..„«»...„._ school since it opened seven Address ^.. ] Phone .years ago. City „ State .„_ The board approved appli- Offer good for limitsd time only. cation to the state Board of Education for four $1,000 You'll like WARDS MONMOUTH SHOPPING CENTER "SrSfiST grants under the teacher in; novation program. WithYwr Purchase • TABLE mm • UMBRELLA • 2 CHAIRS POOL

SSSSSKS- mum Overlooking the beautiful Navesink Private and Semi-Private Riverfront Rooms of Gracious Distinction I Perma-Life Products (Mall Dear.) ,m Route 130 , ;•: ' from 20.00 per day Robbimville, N. J. 08691 j| Wmi have your rtprsitntaflve call. | undentand Wt • Facilities For Ml Ages and Diagnoses • Psychiatric Consultation • Occupational Therapy • Speech Therapy (here ii no obligation, 'Hi • Ambulance ana Umomlne Service •Laboratory and X-ray Services • Open Professional staff •Medicare Approved • Dental Service NAM« ...: .• .....I ;....1..M.... u. | • Auditory Rehabilitation • Inhalation Therapy « Outdoor Recreation Facilities Resident Care ADDRESS... .„,...... H • Individual Nursing Care Plan • 24 Hour Physician Service • Physical Therapy Diet Counseling ICITY",'., STATE M FHONI , ...... ,..! I -THE DAILY HEGISTEtVHED BANK - MJDDLETOWN, N. J.: MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 /

Agency Reports DO YOUR KIDS 12 House Sales LIKE MIDDLETOWN-i William wood, Elizabeth, purchased By ROGER E. SPEAR down markets losses are also one of which might better suit J. KInnear Jr., manager of 348 Park Ave., Union Beach, more severe. Over a iO-year your investment objectives. A HORSES? Berg Agency offices here and from Mr. and Mrs. Frank Q — For the second time period the fund's performance discussion with your fund m Hazlet, has announced real Piskowski. Robert Orr and this year, a company In which Successful was below average for its dealer would clarify exchange estate transfers in The North- Robert Barradale handled the I hold stock has cut its divi- group. However, In most re- privileges among the 11 funds. Let them hove a summer full of fun on a horit farm ern Monmouth County area: sale. dend. In my many years as an cent years a 58 per cent gain You would also have an op- Investor this has never hap- Investing . . . Mothers, are you looking for Interesting actlvl. Mr. and Mrs. John Laird, in asset value- placed it in the portunity to study the perfor- ties for your children this summer? Toms River, purchased 805 Mr. and Mrs. James No- pened to me before. Is this ble sold 41 Illinois Ave., Port above-average category. mance records, investment Neville St., Toms River, another sytnpton of a sluggish Keystone Custodian Co. objectives and techniques used Dutch Acres provides a planned program to keep from Mr. and Mrs, Dominic Monmouth, to Mr. and Mrs. economy? — J.A. by all Keystone funds. Robert Brock. Frank Magri 16 dividend increases made so sponsors 10 other funds, any your children busy and at the same time, learn the Peduto. Joseph Andrulonis A—Very definitely. Through far this May it is unlikely pleasures of horsemanship . . . and Chris IJason handled the handled the sale. mid-May dividend cuts and that the 126 boosts recorded Program Available June 22nd thru Sept. 4th sale. 908 Second St., Union omissions, were running far in in May of 1969 will be reached Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Pior- Beach, was purchased by excess of the 1969, period. 1 by May 30. While your situa- $3|- PER kowski sold 10 Mountain Ave. , Mr. and.Mrs. Howard Odell Seventy decreases and 77 tion is not enviable it is, ac- MEET ONLY 00 WEEK Hazlet, to Mr. and Mrs, John Sr. from Mr. and Mrs. Rug- omissions were announced. In cording to the evidence above, MR. FOULKS OF Deutsch, Asbury Park. Mrs. gerio Sacco. Mr. Magri han- the first five months of last not unusual. Joan Butterfield handled the dled the sale. year the figures stood at 24 METROPOLITAN LIFE! Mon. thru Frl. 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. Q — We purchased 850 ly the Week or All Summer. Only 7 In a Clad. sale. in each category. Increased shares of Keystone K-2 fund Mr. and Mrs, Richard Jazl- dividends were running 30 per Trantportotlon Available. - 73 Second St., Keyport was koff, Elizabeth, purchased 81 in November, 1969. Should we sold by Mr. and Mrs. An- cent below the pace of 1969's sell now at a loss? — J.K. HAROLD "BUD" FOULKS Morningside Ave., Keans- first four months. With only • Each srudenr hat Ms /her own personal hen* assigned for tliony Francisco to Mr. and burg, from Mr. and Mrs. I bought Keystone K-2 at •he entire period Mrs. Howard Tilton. James James Stafford. Mr, Orr $7.50 a share four years ago. Lail year Mr. Foulki' clients and frUndt railed on him to • Learn to ride properly — English or Western — 1 hour Connelly and Boyd Mason If I were to sell I would get create inturanct plant amounting to mora than • million minimum evey day handled the sale. Attorney Uses Yoga dollar! of Ufa insurance protaction for them. Mora than a handled the sale. only $4.30. My original 133 • Qualified positional Instructors rnillionl • Stable management — Grooming — Feeding Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ell- Mrs. Violet Fernloola sold SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)- shares are now 209. Should I 8 Lammers St., Hazlet, to Mr. Foulki davalopad plant of Ufa imuranea and ralatad • Learn how to properly toddle a hone "I practice yoga," attorney sell? - T.E. benefits for tha young man ttarting out at wall at for tha Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Mc- Walter Culpepper told the au- A — Writer number two Carthy of Lodi. Mrs. Alita tuecattful man planning retirement. Family Plant. Imagina- Call Now for Your Reservation dience at a political rally, should keep in mind that all tive plant for partner!, for small businessmen, and compra- Limited Openings Available Snyder handled the sale. and he proved it by standing or a part of the additional 76 hentive plant for industry. 89 Squankum Road, Eaton- on his head.with his legs shares now held by him repre- That't the kind of experience and competance to teak ouf town, was purchased by Mr. crossed. Culpepper, a Los An- sent capital gain, which re- when you want to talk imuranea. Mr. Foulkt lift at a mem- DUTCH ACRES and Mrs. Willie Byrd from geles lawyer who is an under- duces the capital loss appre- ber of Metropolitan's exclusive Preiident't Conference. He Mrs. Julia Watson of Phila- dog candidate for the Demo- ciably. Both writers should be it ready to help you, too. 671-5999 delphia. Mr. Pepsin handled cratic nomination for state at- aware that Keystone K-2 is HAROLD "BUD" FOULKS 19? Holland Rd. Corner Laurel Ave. MlflfltwfwWS torney general, said "When classified as a performance 667 GREENE AVE., Metropolitan Life 5J people start screaming at fund and as such is specula- MIDDLETOWN •,,.; ME;, aid Mrs. Elmer 'Gra- each other, I stand on -my tive. While gains in this cate- 671-1134 New York, N. Y. 10010 It Pays to Advertise in The Register ham'purchased 128 Lorillard head." S gory tend to be greater, in '^Aye.)'.Union Beach, from Mrs. Ruth ISctenidt. Mr. Pepsin Mndled the sale.. ' J23 Park Ave., Keansburg, field and Mrs. Bonnie. Rpsen- 'was sold to Mr. and ;Mrs> John Dester by Mr. and,Mrs, Herbert preen. Mrs. Butter- SAVINGS PLUS! Union . Beach,. from Mr* and Mrs, Frank Regan. Mr. Mal- , purchased 817 Center St., You can count on Stop & Shop for a lot more than the savings med handled the sale. you get with mini-pricing9. Count on us to bring you.foog"9 Hobcit A. Keenan - of unexcelled quality. Count on us for an endless variety in every department. For an unbeatable array of brands and' Named Ortho sizes. Count on us, too, for fast, efficient service Firm Treasurer by friendly maxi-men.... NEW BRUNSWICK - Rob- and bright, clean sur- ert A. Keenan, 126 Crawfords roundings in every store. Cortier Road, Holmdel,' has At Stop & Shop, all counts been .promoted to treasurer Scop add up to the ultimate ef Ortho' Pharmaceutical in food shopping. Mini- Corporation and elected a member of its board, of 'dir- Shop pricing*! ectors

Formerly assistant treas- / , • ....;• ( urer of Ortho, Mr. Keenan came to the company in 1968 "from its corporate parent, Johnson & Johnson, where he Jie^ the position of general Fully Cooked Hams auditor. Praor to joining J & J, he was employed by Lybrajid, Ross Bros, and Wateradded —Shank Portion Montgomery. Slice and serve or doll-it-up with your favorite glaze. BuR Portion 59c Ib. - -Mr Keenan, a native of Louis E. Cella •Ehglewood, holds a BBA de- gree from Pace College and Colonial Semi Boneless Cooked Ham, "is a certified public account- Louis Cella ant He is married and has .-.five children. Wins Pru IM. Grade A Young Hen Turkeys StoUlbi Promotion NEWARK - Louis E. Cel VSDA Choice Beef Sale! la of l Indian Creek Road, Holmdel, has been promoted Boneless Chuck Steak 95» Club Steak — '1.99» -'by the Prudential Insurance CQ. ^associate general man- Cube Steak ».* '1.09* Chuck Stewing Beef 89» ager rank. Mr. Cella has transferred London Broil *-* 1.19 > Short Ribs of Beef 69* from the New York group C office to the Newark group California Steak ** 85* Boneless Chuck Roast 89 - Alotof7hp office as regional group man- '1.19* California Roast ** 79>v tractor at a ager. Chicken Steak He joined the company's low cost development training pro- Fre.fc from oar otin Caterer1* Kitchen gram in 1957 and in 1962 was Two great buyt from our tea food dept. c "advanced to district ..group C Barbeque Style Chickens i,59 service' manager in New York. Fresh Haddock Fillets »79 Gelatines, Assorted Flavors 3AJ'l He became associate group Mum Plant Sliced Swordfish Steaks »89° Caterer's Kitchen Bean Salad 15 49C manager there in 1963, group Plants of white, yellow or $ C russot in foil-wrapped pots. Caterer's Kitchen Twin Subs J5 45 manager in 1965 and regional 5 Inch pot. .group manager in 1966.' 1.89 Caterer's Kitchen Chopped Onions Mr. Cella earned a bache- Mum Plant • Mill '2.49 lor's degree from St. Peter's Sun Glory Beverages Save on thcte frank* for your eookout! Mixed Flower Pan I lit* (it y College, Jersey Qjty-to 'M54r *2.49 b A » « |»J Ginger ale, orange, club It "V'm f I Stop & Shop All Beef Franks i! He also attended Rutgers sods, 5 other flavor* w sinus • Business School, Stop & Shop All Meat Franks * Mr. Cella, his wife and four Nepco Extra Mild Franks J Farm-Fresh Dairy Buys Stop & Shop Mayonnaise tllMUlWlllllHl e GEAR TRANSAXLE sons, recently moved from Armour Star Franks 85 24 Stonehurst Ter., Hazlet, pint Quart Bottle QQc e Axelrod's Sour Cream cup 33° Our best quality. Jv Schickhaus ,I.Y.. ,.,., Franks "•»&** 85 where he had been active in e Oscar Mayer Franks ««•«••- the Rarltan Township Jay- Pillsbury Hungry Jack's." 4tf39 89' e : '' Stop & Shop Ketchup Borden Frosted Shakes ''"' Fre$hneu make* the difference in flavor! Our best. Rich, thick C u „ Q Ac Sandwich Shop and tangy. Q bittlisO v C Frozen Food Values Cultivated Blueberries-49 Chain Expands •<§>« 250 Statler Napkins C SHREWSBURY — Rapid p Firm Green Cucumbers 4 39 Morton Pot Pies •«*.«.*..«™,, 4A!.' 69° Assorted colon. Stock up for Sandwich,,Systems Inc., here, C the picnic leason »h»«d. 29^ has executed a threes- year 2 Ib pkg Sun Glory French Fries 29 C C lease on property at 112 Som- Birds Eye Cool Whip -"25 c 5 California Potatoes-49 erset St., New Brunswick, for B&M Pea Bearish 3 r89 Th» HusKy ;M has an •Me- e l tric ' starlor, foaturts toiy a restaurant. .! Aluminum Foil ,,%'A 59 axchanga of qllacrimonlii a Sheldon B, Schwartz, assis- Health & Beauty Aids Fruit or Grapefruit S 59° llohl lurnlno radlui'and big /©I Iros thai rldi Jlghtly on your tant vice president of Jacob- » 500 in 7Q. coldcu Your *t»l buy lor yior- Krift Barbecue Sauce 3 ,'• T'M Cut-Rita Sandwich Bags 5$;M Stuffed Olivet JUS?,,,, 3 [•if • ps round ruggod yard. cart "I son, Goldfarb & Tanzman, Bradlees Cotton Swabs Poly Bog »»«• c Ul M, low con. Perth Amboy, handled the Sweet Mixed Pickles ,Ji'rt"jr 4fl Rfpa QHves "i'^ -JJ-M Paper Platet r^ Park Ave. and Oak Tree Road Next to Bradlees 1555 St. Georges Av«. owner and Daniel J. O'Horn Opin itindiyi • •• I-Mondiy thru tnurdiy • to » Omn un«iyi • li t-Mondiy thru silurdiy * to I aim aundlyi I H>-Mondiythru|iiu!aiy Hat MOWER oflbramoff, Apy and O'Hern, Opin Mondiy Uiru utumiy > to • WYCKOPP 430 Greenwood Ave. EAST BRUNIWIOK INC. Red Bank, was attorney for WURELTON (Brick Town) Route 70 WAYNE Route 23 and RaUer Rood CLIFTON 14 Main Avenue and Route 3 t»M IrniUyi • It I-Msndty thru IHurtiy i t« I . Cor.ofWyckoffAve. 233 Route laiShoppefi Mill) ' "Pur tha tut In Rapid. The existing building Optn Mondiy thru UlurdiV > to I Optn lunttyi I tt i-Mondiy thru liturdiy I ta • Oaan Monday thru Saturday I to I -, Vord C»r« Bqulpminl" , had been occupied by Cam- O»M lundiyl I u %-mttf ftru Mlgr

Mrs. Alexander Getty Mrs. Clifford Decker Mrs. Richard Bozza Mrs. Edward Bennett Jr. (The former Gail Siverson) (The former (The former Rita Serotkin) (The former Nancy Teeter) Cynthia Losey) Qetty'Seroikin NEW BRUNSWICK - lass College and received a Bennett'Losey Voorhees Chapel of Douglass master's degree in college ad- RED BANK — Miss Cynthia James Harris Jr. assisted. A College was toe setting here ministration from Columbia Elaine Losey,- daughter of reception was held in the Bet- Saturday for. the wedding of University, where she re- Mr. and Mrs. H. Lane Losey, tleground Country Club, Miss Rita Susan Serotkin, cently completed an adminis- 9 Pauls Place, New Mon- Freehold. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. strative internship. imouth, became the bride of The couple are graduates of Robert I. Serotkin of Aber- Mr. Getty, an alumnus of Edward Palmer Bennett Jr., Middletown Township High deen Ave., Iselin, to Alexan- the Mercersfourg Academy son of Mr. and Mrs. Bennett, School. She was graduated der Todd Getty, son of Mr. and Lafayette College, Beth- 267 East Road, Belford, Sat- from Bryman Medical Assis- and Mrs, Rodman Parsons lehem, Pa., holds a master's urday, at a ceremony per- tant School, New Brunswick, Getty, 7 William St., Rum- degree in psychology from formed by thettev. Edward B and her husband is a student son. . ' Rutgers University and is as- Cheney, in the United Meth- at West Virginia Institute of Rabbi Alfred Landsberg, sociated there as assistant di- odist Church. The Rev. Leon- Technology in Montgomery, assisted by Rutgers Universi- rector of financial aid. A cap- ard Howell and the Rev. where they will reside. ~- ty Chaplain Bradford S. Ab- tain in the U.S. Army Re- ernethy, performed the cere- serve, the bridegroom also mony. served as brigade adjutant Wagner Two children's playing fields conducted by Free, organized children's activity programs MARGOT SMITH (, volleyball, tennis, etc.) •sponsored by IF YOU ARE A SIZE Complete children's playground 14 YOU CAN be a site 10 by June 25 MIDDLETOWN BANKING CO. U YOU CAN be a slie 12 by June 30 Parking for 400 cars — membership limited to 200 families \ 18 YOU CAN be a ilie 14 by June 30 PER Dressing facilities —• cook-out area — surfing JERSEY CENTRAL POWER & LIGHT CO. 20 YOU CAN be a she 14 by July 15 MONTH 22 YOU CAN be a siie 16 by July IS Complete JUNE 2 & 9, 8-10 p.m. GUARANTEE 4 Month POP WARNER FOOTBALL TRAINING BROOKDALE CAMPUS, MNCROFT, BARN A If for ANY REASON You Foil to Plan (NO CHARGE to Children of Members — Children of Non»MI Ci^ Cellige, 7*S N.wman Iprlngi Rd., llncroft -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK • MIDDLETOWN, N. J.: MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 11 Conttsf Is Pitts-Buffalin Spchtortd Weddings , ». %,- Mrs, BttffaUn of Blmlra and Robert Alan Pitts o Cambridge, Mass., and ra youth Middletown, N. J., were nwrtI»C grief as rapidly as possible former president of Hose, Kimt all Ic Baxter, Inc. Mrs. Beach, East Keansburg, on sister while playing with the ^™l'" UqilVICI» and do something construe- Pitts is the widow of James A. I uf/alin. She is a graduate July 4. father's gun. tlve for the living. Sometimes of Penn Hall Preparatory School,.Pine Manor Junior Col- Applicants must be resi- professional guidance is need- lege and attended Elmira College*. She is a Junior League dents of Middletown and be Ijet us pray the child's par- member, between lft and 22 years of ents don't make the same mis- stances. He, too, accidentally ed. killed Jils sister. His grlef Mr. Pitta, son of Mr. and Mfs. Spencer West Pitts, 33 age. Application letters,' take my husband's parents f I hope the parents ot the Blossom Cove Eoad, Middletown, is a graduate of Phillips should be sent immediately made under similar circum- stricken mother and father dead child will stop blaming did everything under the sun Academy, Yale University, Columbia Business School and to Mrs. Louis De Mola, 35 themselves and treat the sur- attended the External de Notre?Dame, Grenoble, France. Half Mile Road and include to lessen the boy's feelings of viving youngster just as they WHEN DECORATING guilt. They showered him with Currently a doctoral student at Harvard Business School, birth date, school activities would have had the tragedy Mr. Pitts was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Bangkok, Thai- or Job, brief summary of hav« your DraptrlM attention and gifts and cater- not occurred. The inclination cltontd by ... land, for two years and formerly was associated with hobbies, interests and ambi- ed to his every whim-. The to be too permissive or exces- tions and a photograph taken Adjust-a-Drape results Were disastrous. He Corning Glass Works, IntematioNl Basic Economy Corp., sively over protective can be and Prudential Insurance Company. in a bathing suit. — FOLD FINISHING — grew up to be selfish, incon- disastrous. I know because A Sp«!«l FroMH That siderate, wildly egocentric — I am living with it.—Wichita i/*fr RUMMAGE SALE GUARANTMS UNOTH completely without concern Wife ** t tut jf'i/i i fif* t nwi - Afrtr Dry Clwnlng for others. Mrs. Peter Rosenberg Mrs, Kevin Frayler LEONARDO - The Ladies Dear Header: Thank you ml]l«r'« drapsry The death of a child is a (The former Miss Conover)] '(The former Miss Dempsey) IT'S A DATE Auxiliary of the Community for an excellent letter. And Fire Company will hold a cieanen tragedy. But the ruination of now may I add a word? The a beautiful, bright, promising surviving child sometimes at- FLOWER SHOW TWINS' MOTHERS Rummage Sale Wednesday 52 TfcrMkmorton St. Rosenberg'Conover and Thursday from 10 a.m. to youngster is equally tragic. tempts to take advantage of MTODLETOWN-The Gar- OLD BRIDGE - The FREEHOLD 462-5000 The best way to recover from grieving parents. MU>DLETOWN — Miss berg, 11 Second St., High- 4 p.m. in the firehouse, Ap- den Club BFD will hold its Twins' Mothers Club of the pleton Ave. Genevleve C. Conover became lands. standard flower show "So tfie bride of Peter Rosenberg The bride is a graduate of Raritan Bay Area will meet Let's Go," tomorrow from 2 tomorrow at 8:15 p.m. here May 17 in Westminster Pres- Henry Hudson Regional to 9 p.m. and Wednesday from NURSING HOME byterian Church, with the' School and is employed by in the First Aid and Rescue • 2*H _ NOW OPEN SUN. 1MI # • Private Hourly Lettom On Pay .BEAUTY. YrhaihiuvJbrttmomwItatSlHGtiltodaiit* As You Go Baits • ON-THE-MALL "WB MAY NOT BE THE BIOOEST, BUT • SUPERAMA SINGER WE ARE THE FINISH" SHOPPING CENTER • And the SINGER HoJ ^CredttPlan JsdesJgnedtofltyourlwlget ,t> RIB IANK — "4t Iroad ttrttt CALL TODAY— # New Shrewsbury _ IATONTOWN — MtnmouHi I41-96&7 B42-074I * Opm W«d. ond Frl. Ryu •ATHdtmafkOt THESINQER COMPA AMURY PARK — U4 Ce»kmt» Av«. 842-4366 ! it -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK • MJDDLETOWN, N. J.i MONDAY, MAY 25, 1970 City Officers' Suspension Sweep Studied

LONG BRANCH - County probe reveal such informa- suspension order at a 8 p.m. Mr. Hartnett's orders. ranks caused by the suspen*, shortage of men in the Police maxed a three-day Investiga- the investigation brariduded. Detective Capt. Andrew B. tion, the prosecutor said, news conference Saturday. The business administrator sions. He added that Detec- Department. tion. ' Mayor Paul Nastaslo Jr., Manning today continues a complaints will be issued The names of the employes also said he will check the tives James Jones and Her- Mr. Hartnett declined to Mr. Keuper said that, al- who is recuperating at home against those thought guilty. involved were released sev- probe brought about by the results of a recent Civil Ser> bert Cofer were called back say when or where the al- though he is aware of the de- from a recent heart seizure, Mr. Hartnett and Capt. eral hours later by Detective has not been avaUabje for suspension Saturday of seven vice police examination in an to duty during their vacation leged, Incident,took, place, but tails of the probe, he is not at Manning disclosed the mass Lt. William Walling under' attempt to fill the gap in the periods due to the emergency lie said Uie suspension cli- liberty to discuss them until comment on the issue.' city police officers and two firemen, Bernard M. Hartnett, city business administrator, an- nounced the suspension of two Join FOODTOWN'S detectives, five patrolmen and the pair of fire truck drivers. CHECK YOUR ) He added that Vincent P. LOCAL m Keuper, county prosecutor, FOODTOWN m will head the follow-up in- FOR SPECIAL m vestigation. HOLIDAY M STORE HOURS.:

CHARCOAL I s Capt. Andrew B. Manning BINS Listed as being under sus- *«?:= AIKHovors Hoffman Delicious pension by the business ad- For ministrator are. Detectives CANNED SODA Bar-B.Q Gregory Bova and .Joseph FOODTOWN jSSj Orange, Birch or • ' Miller, Patrolmen Patrick 1 1| MAS ROOT BEER < Conte, Robert Gfaziano, m :•#:• Campfire ' James Scialto, Augustus An- NAPKINS 29 MARSHMALLOWS fuso and Wllliain Boriforte. Fruit Punch, Cherry, Grap« or Orange The firemen named by Mr. FOODTOWN DRINKS Hartnett are Robert Faye and Alfred Fornioola. All the city 'workers are reportedly CAMPBELL'S married, except Patrolman Aiifuso. PORK 'N BEANS 2 s25 Mr, .Hartnett, who declined to release details of the Val Vita Yellow Cling charges, announced that the city employes were suspended on counts of. conduct unbe- SLICED PEACHES coming officers, moral turpi- > tude and failing to report a crime.' m Red, Grape; Orange, Apple Red, Pnieapple You Save More ^ — He said an incident last *:& 'S MARTINSON COFFEE 2«»*t week involving a teen-aged HAWAIIAN Green Giant ^ t West Long Branch girl sparked the investigation and 46-oz. I NIBLETCORN ..5sH .suspensions. The suspensions PUNCH 3 cans' • Seneca •'•'•..••'-.; .-. •. ^. are indefinite, according to LEMON JUICE b^3! Mr. Hartnett, pending the out- Foodtown vomited , . - ^^ j^^m ^ ^e^ ^ come of departmental bear- ings which are expected to SODA start next month. . Jilr. Keuper said Saturday fOODTOWN HOT DOC OR that Capt. Manning will seek Information which could lead to criminal complaints against HAMBURGER ROLLS ' the nine men. Should the REALEAAON LEMON JUICE YOU SAVE MORE! mrtmmmw* «^ UlQu Hike Grant STORAGE BAGS 25'J Funds For Frozen Food Dept. Savings WITH TWJ COUPON I Cm4iongM4et«irFaodt(nmSap«imiar « viBf vvvwwwnHn L Umil<>n.|>.rllal>b| lb. can Swift Brookfield Swift Premium All Meat Swift Brown W Serve •A At Advertised Over Swift Chubs Swift Premium :•:< Radio Station _ CHOCK FULL O'NUTS Storage Unit Pork Sausage I Franks 3 P.N.B.G c ft? Sausage Luncheon Meat 8-ox, 63' Bacon T COFFEOFFEE HOLMDEL - A fire of un- jf.Afon. Cheri 7c oil our rotulw.tow priC 8'oz. HQi> Bologna 8-oz.51' 16-oz, determined origin , caused roll i Candy limit on. por adult lemllr. considerable damage to an t89' Ham Salad 8-os.4S' .pkg. Coupon .kplrH Soturdoy, May JO. underground storage area of J9 CUPTHKCOUPOW a Rt. 520 farm yesterday. Kleenex Print According to Police' Sgt. Detergent Bruce Philips the storage unit Toilet Tissue Is located near several barns Title on a farm owned by the Holm, del Valley Farm Management Co. The farm is the site of 83 many charitable fund raising activities, Price, effective through iatmday, Moy 30, Not re.pomibl. for typoflrophlcal mon. W.r.,.rv. the rioht to limit qwanUtlwMwAtrTwinCoimty Croc.*' Sgt. Philips said hay and Middierown, N. J. Tom* River N. J. N. other farm materials were Rt. 35 & Mt. Hill Road Fithor Blvd. Ro«ta 33 42 Main St., ParkAve.feHwy. 3 3 being stored in the former • .

y

PSYCHEDELIC TRIP — Nick Minnvien, loft, Don S+achura and Dav« Martin make teit run of their color film on narcotics in Practical English, ipacial high school courto devised by Mitt Norma Montemuro, Middletown Town- thip High School English department chairman.

SOUND OF MUSIC - Georgia Reid, left, Ron Min- Movies Bring New Era SPLICING — Middletown Township High School se- nm« and Frank Locada, Middletown Township' High niors Chris Coyle, left, Dave Farrell and Gail Frederick School i^ion ; Practical English course, make trial n edit their film, "I Remember," conceived and shot by run of mu»lc they are keying to their color film on them as group project in Practical English class. Film Min* Dreams?1 Music is, timed to film sequences Of Education in Schools expresses student views on military service.. itypwafch. By BOB BltAMLEY The soldier further remem- taped and coordinated with doesn't solve any problems," • (Register. Staff Photos) MIDDLETOWN - «'Fix the bers a .touch.'football game the action when the film is the three students comment- . Frame! •Focus'it!" •• ;ambng the trees' and students finished, they explained. ed. These cries came impa-V arriving for • classes, through "We're just trying to show What is the reasoning be- tiently from members of a/ .the'snow of a'winter's day. what it's like to go on a trip," hind "Practical English?" group in a "Practical En- Pickets with peace symbols Don Stachura said. "It's not Miss Montemuro put it this ; Marine Ecologisfs glish" course in Middletown in the finale express the stu- propaganda; we're not com- way: ' r . * MONDAY, MAY 2s; mo v, ' -13 Township High School dents' opinion of the young menting on dope," he added. "These kids are what we r devised and led by Miss Nor-' soldier's present plight. A third group, including se- call 'non-readers—they're ma Montemuro, 'English de- Clicks and static marred niors Georgia Reid, 18, and : apathetic about the written Speech Is Scheduled partment chairman. •' the sound tape accompanying Ron Minnuies and Frank Lo- word. So instead of the print- The small picture projected the film. cada, both 18, huddled around ed word, the film gives them RUMSON - Dr. Jack near the ocean floor, and the on the classroom wall :-• "They're not satisfied. a record player, listening to. the opportunity to communi- Pearce, marine ecologlst at impact of solid waste dispos- Speak cleared tip as senior Dave They're working on getting the music for their film on cate in another medium," the the Marine Laboratories, San- al on offshore benithk com- Farrell, 18, fiddled with the the noise out of the tape," "Man's Dreams," timing the department head explained. dy Hook, will speak at St. munities. projector. Chris Coyle, 18, Miss Montemuro explained. music to the pace of the film "It also teaches them to George's*y-the-River Epis- A native of Tucson, Ariz., and Gall; Frederick, 17, the In another room, three with their stop watch. work together, but most copal Church he're 8:15 p.m. he holds a bachelor's degree At Chambei^Dinner other group members, also more seniors—Don Stachura "The film is about a boy of all, it gives them a place Wednesday. in conservation education seniors, checked the;, timing of from Humboldt (Cal.) State BED BANK - Jim Bishop, and Nick Minnvien,both 18, who dreams of getting *ven in the sun, both educational- • Dr. pearce played a key ChairiberV Commerce's first a sound tape on--' a recorder. and Dave Martin, 19—were with his teacher. He gets into role in revealing the dangers College, and a master's and noted author and columnist, annual dinner. ly and as a status symbol," as • their film—"I Remem- at work. on their film, about trouble with two others and she added. of dumping sludge off the Ph. D. in Zoology from the wiil.be the guest speaker at The event is scheduled for ber"—rolled. a psychedelic trip. Splicing New Jersey coast and .in sub- University of Washington. He the Red Bank Community they try to .take over the Planning and finishing Thursday evening, Sept. 24, The color film, shot partial- bits , together, inserting class. Finally the principal JQbs in which they are in- sequent government hearings. has conducted research on at Gibbs Hall, Ft. Monmouth, ly, in. a wooded area opposite frames of .animation, they comes in and they take off," terested means success in- He is a leading exponent of the West Coast, at Woods and is open to the public. the school and partially on completed, their reel of driig- Georgia explained. stead of failure to the stu- antipoillution measures and Hole, Mass., in Denmark and Tickets are $12 per person school grounds, is a series of induced hallucination and Away from school, the dents and allows them to pro- community involvement in in Scotland. and will be available at the cameo shots. A young soldier wooziness, including a "way- three boys wind up fighting duce something other stu- correcting environmental ' Dr. Pearce is a member of chamber office, 12 Broad St. with his helmet and rifle rest- out" car which travels with among themselves, and the dents admire. hazards. the Atlantic Estuarine Re- Mr. Bishop's syndicated ing in the woods recalls a boy, no one driving it and a driv- group splits up. "It's exciting to see their The marine biologist joined search Society and the Ma- column appears in The Daily and girl walking together er who drives without a car. "It's supposed to show that involvement," Miss Monte- the Marine Laboratories in rine Biological Associations Register three times a week along a sandy woodland path. Psychedelic music will be trying to take over the class muro summed up. 1967. His special field is be- of Scotland and the United nithic ecology, the study of Kingdom. He is also ainera- as well as in newspapers ber of the advisory council of throughout the country. He relationships of organisms that live on the ocean floor. the American Littoral Socie- narrated TV's "Men at War," ty. He lives in Fair Haven. ,g 26-instaliment half-hour He has been conducting 'series whlchwas telecast sey- studies on the effects of tem- Dr. Pearce was Invited to ; perature on the. behavior of speak at St. George's by the ' eral. yejrs ago. He }s, the marine organisms, the suc- social concerns committee of author of "A Day in the lite cession of populations on and 1 the church. of President Kennedy"; "The Day Christ Died"; ."The Bay Lincoln Was Shot"; "The To Give Honorary Degrees Day Kennedy'Was Shot" and others. • ' WEST LONG BRANCH Two Boys Rescued Mr. Bishop, a former resi- Rev. Victor R. Yanitelli, S.J., dent of Sea Bright, now lives president of St. Peter's Col- Jim Bishop in H^llandale, Fla. .lege, Jersey City, will deliver the principal address during In Bayshore Fire the 36th commencement ex- MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - go in with smoke masks on. ercises at Monmouth College, A two-yeaf-old boy and his We had to go in uncovered." Nurse Scholarship Saturday, according to an nine-month-old brother are in Chief Auriemma and announcement by Dr.. Wil- fair condition this morning in another fireman Richard liam G.( Van Note, college South Amboy'Memorial Hos- Lewicki took the children president. pital after. being overcome from their cribs and passed Availability Told "-, Dr. Van Note said the col- by smoke in a fire at their them down the ladder to lege will award three honor? home yesterday. waiting first aid men. I£)NG BRANCH — Mrs Wednesday in Auxiliary Hall ary degrees during the exer- Eric Smith, 2, and his "I thought the one I had ftvelyn Jackson, JR. N., schol- at the hospital, here cises. Rev. Yanitelli will re- arship committee chairman brother Christian were taken in my arm's was finished," There, will also be a wig ceive the. honorary degree of unconscious from their he said. "His face was red oTMoMnouth' Medical Center fashion show by Joseph and doctor of humane letters; Norses 'Alumni Association, : smoke filled bedroom by and I couldn't feel, any life , Linda Carchio Mrs Barbara John W. Kress, Essex Fells, township firemen who .broke in his body. It was an awful has annftincedithat a nursing Calabrese is chairman of president and member of the , feeling. scholarsfijp is'^ow available the event,; which is open to through the tiny window lead- board of managers of thfef' ing to their second .floor bed- 1 "We were still at the to [ a deserving Monmouth the public Howard Savings Institution, QcMfnty high school student room. scene- later when we re- Committee^' members in- will receive an honorary doc? ceived word from the hospi- tof; the fall semester. clude Mrs. JOyce Boyd, Mrs. tor of laws degree; and E. ' Mr. and Mrs. Harry Smith * /interested young people and ; their three-year-old tal that they were going to Bernadette Dombrowiecki, Murray Todd, Holmdel, tax make it," he stated. "It Jt.O&talrf further infor- Mrs. Renee Robinson and Ar- and financial advisor, will re- Rev. Victor R. Yanitelli E. Murray Todd John W. Kress daughter, Denise, who were Uon. ,by writing to Mrs, also sleeping in the house, seemed to give us all a lift thur Coleman" ceive the honorary degree of' to hear the good news." ikson at 218 Mechanic *St, Tlckets may be obtained doctor of science; from the Newark Star-Ledger Baltimore, Md., and as a Active in.civic,affairs, Mr. at 37 Woolley St., when the Ba and the 20th Annual Brother- trustee of Fordham Univer- Kress is a directpr of the fire was discovered at 9:48 Chief Auriemma said Mr. from .committee members or Joined College ^ -If ' ' ptireh'asedi at'the door. Those hood Award from the Nation- sity. He is chairman of, the Greater Newark Develop- am. escaped uninjured. Smith related that he was raise, money for-the Rev. „ Yanitelli; president of al Conference of Christians Governor's Advisory Council ment Fund, and a trustee of Smoke, Heat Intense asleep in his downstairs bed- attending are asked to bring St. Peter's since 1965, joined, rshiip, Hhe association their own cards, and Jews. on Project Upward Bound, a such organizations as the "When, we arrived the room when he awoke to the hold a"card party 8 pm the college in 1963 as director Mr.'r Kress was chosen the member of the New Jersey Greater Newark,Hospital De- house was full of smoke and smell of smoke. of student personnel service's. "Outstanding Citizen of New State . Scholarship .Commis- velopment Fund; Newark the heat from the fire was "He said the living room He holds a • • bachelor of arts Jersey for 1967" by the Ad- sion, a member of the board Museum; the New Jersey terrific," Fire Chief Louis was on fire and that he at- Youth Honors Concert degree from' Georgetown Uni- vertising Club of New Jersey,; of directors: of the Bronx College Fund Association; the R. Auriemma said last night. tempted to put- it out him- versity, and was awarded a and received an Anierican- Chapter of the National Con- New Jersey State Chamber of "The family was putside self. When he saw that he master of arts and the doctor ism Award from the Anti- ference, of: Christians and Commerce; the New Jersey and they told us about the couldn't, he got the rest of of philosophy degree at Ford- Defamation League of B'nai Jews,, and a member of the Symphony Orchestra; Sym- two children upstairs," he the family out of the house Registration Is Opened ham University. B'rith. advisory board of the Youth phony Hall; the United Com- continued. "The windows but wasn't able to go up- ••LONG BRANCH - Regis- community choral groups, as He entered the Society of Rev. Yanitelli serves as a-. Consultation Services, Jersey munity Fund and Council of were so small we couldn't stairs,"" the chief said. Jesus in 19*33 and was or- City." ,„ Essex and West Hudson; and tration! for the eighth annual well as from All-Shore and trustee of Loyola College, According to police, the tjottg Branch Summer School All-State Chorus. " dained 1948. During his ca- the United Hospitals of New- reer, he has held teaching po- ark, tots were revived by Larry Youth Honors Chorus is now The Youth Honors Chorus Gray and Detective Stanley being conducted for high will work in cooperation with sitions at Fordham Prep, the Mr. Todd, a Holmdel resi- Crash Hurts University of Scranton, Ford- Parrish, both members of school and college singers music departments in other dent , since 1941, moved to *ffn1 township First Aid Squad, who have achieved a high schools, choirs, and other es- ham College, and Fordham's Scholarship Fikic? Is NQW Jersey from his native Driver In Graduate School. who administered mouth to level of performance in their tablished musical groups. Connecticut in 1907. An alum- mouth resuscitation. field. Each applicant for member- In 1953, he was named di- nus of the Pingry School, Mr. ship must be in good stand- rector of student personnel Established at School Todd-has been tax and finan- Middletown Chief Auriemma said cause The program, designed to at Fordham University and in of the blaze is still unde- provide talented students ing in his local choral organi- cial advisor for Thomas F. MIDDLETOWN - A Red 1958, was appointed vice pres- •MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - Telegraph stock, will yield Milbank since 1955. Previous- Bank man was reported in termined. The fire, which with an opportunity to sing zation. < Each student must The Strathmore Civic Asso- $44 yearly at present divi- submit an application signed ident for student personnel, a ly he headed E. Murray fair condition In Rlvcrvicw was confined to the living a wealth of choral literature post he held until he joined ciation, which was dissolved dend rates. A separate check room and kitchen, caused during their vacation period, by the director of his local Todd & Co,, a, tax and ac- Hospital, Red Bank this morn- St. Peter's, in 1988, luis purchased secur- for $50 has been included as counting firm, ten years. ing after being injured in a considerable damage. Will meet on Tuesday and chorus. Students from other ities with the funds remaining a prize for the next graduat- Thursday evenings from June groups, who are not known Mr. Kress Is a director of For 25 years, he was with one car accident Saturday the following companies: in its treasury and donated ing class. The securities will Philips and Avery, a New morning. 30 through August 6. A pub- to the Director of the Youth them to the Ma'tawan Region- be held by Edward Scullion, Youth Is Held lic concert on August 7, 1070, Honors Chorus, must audi- Central Railroad Company of York City law firm, and earl- According to Police Ohief Pennsylvania, Delaware and al Board of Education for the school system business ad- ier, was associated four years Joseph M, McCarthy, Edward will mark the culmination of tion successfully to gain ad- establishment of the Strath- ministrator, and tho quarter- On Drug Rap this- Intensive rehearsnl mission to the group. Bound Brook Railroad, Lo- with American Cynamld Co. R, Foster, 24, of Box 144, was hlgh and New England Rail- moro Civic Association Prize. ly dividends deposited in tho HOLMDEL-A 17-year-old schedule. Auditions for the chorus Has Been Active traveling along W; Front St., way Co., National Newark The prize will bo awarded school's student activity ac- Prior to moving to ,the when he apparently lost con- Madison Township youth wan In addition to performing will bo conducted on June 15 and Essex Bank, New Jersey annually to a member of the count, A cheek will bo drawn arrested yesterday afternoon and 18 for those who have Shore, Mr. Todd was active trol of his car. The vehicle the bost in chornl music lit- Natural Gas Co,, New Jersey graduating class of Mntdwan on the account annually in tho In civic affairs in Union Coun- struck a fire hydrant and and charged with possessing erature, students will have not previously been members Realty Co., Jtagen Precision Regional High School who re- name of tho winner. narcotics, of the group. ty and serves as president of tree before coming to a halt. an opportunity to continue Industries, Inc., and Reliance sides In Strathmore and who the Men's Club of the Eliza- Mr. Foster was taken to According to police Sgt. and Improve their high stan- Insurance Co! •*• has demonstrated' good citi- The securities and check Sihanouk Recognized wore presented to board vico beth YMCA.'He was a mem- the haspltal by members of Bruce Philips, the youth was dnrd of performance during Ho has been honored by zenship, civic responsibility ber of the officials board of president Herbert Parker by the Fairvicw First Aid Squad arrested shortly before 5 the summer period away TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) - many organizations for his and community Involvement. St. James Methodist Church, where he was admitted with p.m. by Patrolman Thorns* from the(r school. The Libyan Revolutionary civic work and Is tho roclpl- The winner will bo solcctcd Theodore Endrcscn and Uwn- Elizabeth, and served soveii a cerebral concussion and Durdack In a wooded section • Another goal of the pro- Council announced, It rocog- ent of such awards as tho by tho school's scholarship ship Mnyor Hans Frochlich. years as president of the Sun- i.».id and arm lacerations. off Longstrtset Road. gram Is the social aspect, nissos tho exllo government New Jersey Education Asso. committee, undor the chair- Mr, Endroson and Mr, Park- day School Athletic League of Ho was Issued a careless Tho youth, who was also •the opportunity for students of Prlnco Norodom Sihanouk clutlon's Award for Dis- manship of tho head guidance er are- president and past Union County; He was sec- driving sumrnona by Patrol- charged with being under the to meet and renew acquaint- in Poking as "tho only, con- tinguished Service to Educa- counselor, president, respectively, of tho rotary of the St. James man Kennoth Perkias who In- Influence of narcotics, alleg- ances with tholr follow sing- stitutional Institution" of tion, the Annum Achievement association; Mayor Froohllcli Church Sunday School edly had 50 cubes of LSD in «V from school, church, and Tho securities, 17 shares of vestigated the 2:30 a,m, ni.s- Cambodia. Award in tho, banking field American Telophono and is a former trustee, 25 years. hap. ^ . : his possession. \% -THTffEF DAILY EEGISTEB,, BED BANK-MIDDLETOWN. N. UJ.! MONDAY,, MAYT a,25. v*i»197 0 • ^p Giants Give New Pilot Rolicking Sendofi ' Wwhho sat ouout tthe first gafflt the Braves. By ASSOCIATED PRESS Gaylord Perry won the first ton, winning 2-1- in 10 innings Diego's Pat Dobson was the Denis Menke ignited the with 3 sirt) *•* t?!"*- ——-—- w big rally with a single and Bob Veate blanked Montre- average, managed only one Charlie Fox says he's a pa- game with a four-hitter be- before bowing 4-3; Oakland victim of two errors by third al on three hits and struck fore three San Diego errors swept a twin bill from the baseman Ed Spiezio and an- delivered the last run with single in the nlgMcap ai* tient man. . .but the San another single. Jesus Alou's out 10. Matty Alou scored the Francisco Giants aren't tak- opened the gates in the fifth Chicago White Sox 5-1 and 5- other by shortstop Steve though the A's managed a 2; Washington trimmed De- Huntz as the Giants scored two-run single tied the game only run Veale needed on Al sweep of the twin bill. ing any diances. inning of the second game. Oliver's sacrifice fly in the Elsewhere in the National troit 6-4 and Kansas City de- seven times in the fifth on 7-7 and Tommy Davis' two- To make Jacksons «»y Tbe Giants gave new Man- feated Milwaukee 6-5 in 10 just three hits to erase a 3-0 run single broke the dead- first Inning and doubled even worse, owner Charles ager Fox a solid sendoff Sun- League, Chicago and New home another in the ninth. York divided a doubleheader, innings. deficit. Ron Hunt's two-run lock. O. Finley threatened theplug- day by sweeping a double- single was the key blow. • The room shared by Chuck ging outiiclder with a trip to header from Uie Sail Diego Ihe Cubs taking the opener 3-1 The Giants rebounded from Larry Hisle pulled the and the Mets winning the Saturday's 17-16 marathon Home runs by Spiezio and Phillies even in the ninth Dobson and Reggie Jackson Uie minor leagues to help Padres 6-1 and 7-6. of the Oakland A's isn't the "I'll let the players do nightcap by the same score; loss to San Diego, after which Huntz closed the gap in the with a two-out, two-run him find the batting eye that Houston downed Cincinnati King was fired by club own- seventh, but Frank Reberger homer and they won it in best place in the world to accounted for 47 home runs things until they prove to me go looking for base hits these they can't," said the 48-year- 10-7; Philadelphia edged St. er Horace Stoneham, on checked the Padres thereaf- the 10th on a bases-loaded and 118 runs batted in a year Louis 6-5 in 10 innings; Los ter in relief of winner Mike single by Tony Taylor. The days. Dobson isn't giving up oM Fox, who assumed com- bases — empty homers by 1 mand before the twin bill fol- Angeles drubbed Atlanta 8-1 McCovey in the fourth and McCormick. Cards Richie Allen struck many and Jackson isn't get- Dobson allowed a "rs*;1""; lowing ttie ouster oi Clyde and Pittsburgh beat Montreal sixth innings of the opener The Astros.tr ailing 7-0 af- out five times in regulation ting many. • ing run on a walk, opkJns King. 3-0. and solo swats by Bonds in ter 5'/4 innings, scored two play, tying the National Lea- Dobson's half of the room single and a sacrifice fly, the seventh, and Mays, in the runs in the sixth, added gue record. was in fine form yesterday. then permitted only two more Thus assured, the Giants did In the American League, The right-hander checked the - in the Padres with a barrage California nipped Minnesota eighth. another in the seventh and Los Angeles' Alan Foster Chicago batters to reach of four home runs in the open- 6-5; the New York Yankees Perry, 6-5, lost his shutout then flattened St. Louis with snapped' a personal three- Chicago White Sox on one - base, both on walks. He re- er and a seven-run inning in shaded Cleveland twice, 6-5 bid when Ivan Murrell hom- a seven-run spree in the game losing streak despite Gail Hopkins' first-inning tired 20 straight, at one the nightcap. Willie McCovey and >7 in 11 innings; Balti- ered in the fifth. eighth, ending a five-game yielding 11 hits in 6 2-3 inn- single-in the opener of a stretch. •hammed a pair of homers as more split a pair with Bos- In the second game, San losing streak. ings as the Dodgers pounded doubleheader. But Jackson,

pwawnnw »•••" i — Ryan Gives Yanks Scalp Tribe How They Mets Split In Two Slugfests Stand NEW YORK (AP)-Nolan eight in pitching his second CLEVELAND (AP) — Jer- bid for heroics in both games. homer, was called up a little Ryan overcame an early two-hitter of the season. ry Kenney led off the 11th in- Ellis slugged a three - run over a week ago'from the streak of wiktaess and pitched The Mets got him the lead ning with a double and scored homer in the eighth inning of minors. ,' a two*itter, beating Chicago, against loser Joe Decker in on Horace Clarke's two-out the second game to give the After the Yankees collected 3-1, in the second game and the second when Donn Clen- single as the New York Yan- 14 hits and the Indians 10 In giving the New York Mets a denon opened.with a single Yankees a 7-6 lead. kees beat Cleveland, 8-7, Belt Newcomers the wild opener, the . tiwo split of their doubleheader and scored on Ron Swoboda's and swept a doubleheader teams slugged nine homers yesterday. double. Swoboda took third yesterday despite six homers Ellis* homers both came in the second game. on the play at the plate and by the Indians in the second off newcomers. Lasher, the Phil Regan bailed Bill scored the. deciding run on victim in the opener, was ob- Horton opened the second Hands out of an eighth inning game, three by Tony Horton. .. £,-.MiAwaukfle ..B....10 Jerry Grote's sacrifice fly. tained in a trade two days inning-with a homer -and hit lnnlnKS jam in the opener as the John Ellis' first home run a two-run blast in the fourth t nuntB Cubs defeated Met ace Tom "Art Shamsky's single, an ago, and rookie Vince Colbert Milwaukee *lockwood 0-0) at error by first baseman Jim of the year .broke a tie in who gave up the nightcap after Sims had singled. Minnesota (Tlant 5-0 or ,Zep|; 1-0), Seaver, 3-1. --.?< the eighth inning of the open- Hickman and a sacrifice fly C1 I Cle»el»nd (11 gle by Don Kessinger in the Mets another run in the 6-5 victory. New Yort (6) abrn ab r h I ftb r n llS'l-lV tt B.H. Clarke.ab 4 11 Uhlaend'r.ef 4 11 Clarke,2b 6 12 1 Wilaend'M* 5 0 2 first inning of the nightcap eighth. Lindy McDaniel, 4-0, wasllurcer.ci 5 1 2 Leon,2b 4 11 Murcer.cf 5 02 icon.ab .40,0 ^h!ngffW and then walked Glenn Whlte.ir 5 2 3 SImi.lf 4 1 2 Wltlle.lf 4' 12' 1 8lmi,l( 5V1 ton (Lee -!-9> , , .' * • Regan relieved Hands wilh credited with both wins in re- Cater.3b 5 0 1 T.Horton.lb 40 1 Cater.3b 5 Oil T.Horlon41t 433 Beckert, Jim Hickman and Munson.o F&sse.c 4 10 Munion.e (22 Foster.rf 5 0 0 Only fitiin echeduled. (' ' the bases loaded and none lief and newly acquired Fred Woodi.rf 100 roster, rl 4 12 Wood».r( 5 12"1• Rolllna,3b 2 01 Johnny Callison, 'forcing a outrin the eighth inning of EHU.lb • 4 1-3 1* Bnmn.Sb 20 1 ElllJ.lb NcttlM.3b 3 0 0 Lasher, 1-5, suffered both set- Ktnnej,3b 0 00 Heldem'n.ss 2 0 0 Kenney,3b 1111 Fosse,- «....-,c- 5 2 2 East DM»lon run across. the opener. Cleon Jones hit 3 backs. MIctiset.BS _ _ - K/»Hiu,ph 10 1 Hansen.ss 4 111 Heldem'n.ss -5 1. 1- W 1. F«f. Kelrtch.p 2 0 0 Nett!es.3b 10 1 C'rob'rl'd.p 2 0 0 1 Moore.p 3 0 0 Chlcairo —M ITM3™ After that, Ryan settled sacrifice fly for New York's Hansen.ph 10 0 M'Dowell.p 2 0 0 Ward.pti 0 0 0 1 ColberUi OOO Right fielder .Bon Woods X'k'wski.p OOO Kllmc'tli.ph 10 0 Mlchael.ph 1 0 11 Ellsworfh.p 0 J 0 Bt. Louis ; 2} 10 ,HJ 1'J down, allowing only one more only run and Sharasky lined M'D'n'el.p 10 01 Laaher.B OOO M'DanleUp 0 0 0 I Hlnton.ptl 1 0 0 New York .20 21 •«« •%]!> made game-saving catches in Ellsworth.p 00 0 Tp'dlno.pn 10 01 Lasner.p OOO Pittsburgh ...» 2J .466 3(, hit and two more walks the into an inning-ending double both contests. He turned Plnson.ph 10 0 Montreal _„„...!« 24 .400! 8 rest of the way to even his play. Colbert.p 0 0 0 Aker.P 0 0 01 Philadelphia ...-.~i1« » AM «V4 Duke Sims' line drive into a -I 13 >1S | 42 7 10 West Division ^ ^ record at 3-3. He struck out Hickman's seventh homer double play in the ninth in- 39614 i 34910 New Yorkj -.MO ' "J"' l«jjt«" LosClAn'geles~::™24. 18 iTOl Sti of the year with' two out in New York HO 000 310-6 Cleveland ' _01O 401 010—4)0—7 AManta !Q 18 .Jfi ',, FIRST GAME ning in the opener and Cleveland 10O 102 100-S Ban Francwco -** 23 »\v% vj'h the fourth gave the Cubs their E—MoDanlel. DB-J»ev> York 1, DP—Cleveland 3. U)B—New York ^nstmf ..™.~:::|o u ••» »| Ghloco W> . I Mew York (I) reached over the fence to rojj Cleveland 1> IiOB—New York 8, «. aeveland 4. 2B—Murcer, I. El- »brh I »b rh first run and two innings later Cleveland 9. 2B—Munson 2. J. Ellis. lli, Whit. S, Kenney. HH—T. Horton 'fe.iprda>'s Hes.Hs . ['•s'E'r.ss toil Agee.cf 4 02 Sims of a homer in the 10th Poster 2, Clarke. Sims. 3B—iLeon. 3 (7). Clarie (2), K»se 2 (4>, Helde- Ohlcano 3-1. Now York }-J • • ieekert.2t> 4 0 11 Harrela'n.ss 3 0 0 they added another with two IDV-Whlle («, J. Site (1). 8-L. mann (1), Harisen (1), J. Ellis (2). Pittsburgh 3, Montreal 0 nWimM C. Jones,II 2 0 1 of the nightcap. Brown, Leon. SB-Oarke. 8-rLeon. SF—Ward. Philadelphia 6, Bt. Louis D, 10 In- 4 011 Shamsky.lb 4 0 2 out when "Billy Williams IP HRBRBBSO IP HnKRBBSO nings 4 121 Bos»ell;Zb 3 0 0 Horton's third home run of Cumberland « S 6 « 1 3 IXM Angelo «. Atlanta 1 . 4 00 Garrett.3b 3 0 0 walked and circled the bases Kckloh « 8 4-131 F. Peterson 2 1110 2 Houston 10, Cincinnati T , 4 0 01- 8woboda,rl 4 0 0 the-game, his seventh of the Kllmkowski H • 1-1 1 2 • 0- MUJ'Jin (W.4-0) 2 10. 0 0 0 Bart Francfsco 8-7."8an • Dttga 1-6 - 3 0 01 X>yer,c 2 0 0 oh Ron Santo's double. M'Danlel (W,W Jii 3 0 90 I linnd McDowell 1 12 5 5 1 " Aker 1.. 0 0 0-0 0 Tonight's Games 3001 Kranep'l,ph too That was enough to tag season, gave the Indians a 7-7 (I Clnolnnati (McGIOUiMn B-3) at 0 001 Grote.c OOO THE BALL IN BETWEEN — New York Mets* catcher Lasher (L, 1-4) Ban Diego (Roberts 4-2), nltht CTd'nofl.ph 1 o 0 Seaver with his third defeat tie in'the eighth inning of Ellsworth .. - 0 .Seaver.p. 2 0 0 Colbert 1 1 Lasher (h, 1S> 2 2 Jorg'ns'n.ph 111, in 10 decisions. In the three Duffy Dyer takps the high road and pitcher Tom Seaver the nightcap and ruined Ellis' T—2:57. T—2S9. A—19.421. iUC. I 3- Taylor.p OOO losses, tbe Mets have gotten hits the low road in pursuit of a bunt by Chicago Cub ,-| 33 3 81 30 1 5 •"CbSetxo ___.000 J01 001—3 just one run for their ace Glenn Beckert in the first game of yesterday's double- HewTork .000 TOO 010—l right-hander. DP—Cblcaso 1. LOB—Chicago \, header. Beckert, who left his hat behind (foreground), Vvm York: T. 2B—Kesslneer, Santo, Singles by Williams and Agee. HR—Hlcktnan (f). SF—C. Jones. - . Hickman and a force out wound up safe at first. The Cubs went on to take the IP HII HB BKiBt BB SSOO Hands (W. T-2) 7 6- 1• 1- -3 i gave the Cubs an insurance first game, 3-i, but/tho Mets came back to win the 0 0 0 1 1 7^) g 4 2 2 1 6 run in the ninth against re- nightcap by the same count. . IAP Wirephofo) 2 110 3 liever Ron Taylor.

8ECOND CAME Chlnis New Yotk <3> ' sbrh K'es'K'r.ss ASW.cf 4 0 0 Aaron Survives Error B«ckert,Sb 2 0 01 Harrels'n.ss 3 0 2 Williams, If 4 011 TSoswoll.Zb -3 0 0 4 00 Well,2b 00 0 3 0 01 Oiamiky.lmiky.lr 4 0 1 1 • iNSSSm 2 0 01 C. JonesJ ,l l(( CaUison,r< 8-0-0 CI'dCenonTUU r -»?- -Hl»«,«—— • 100 Garrett,3b 3 0 1 Bmlth.ph 3 00 6woboda,rt 3 12 To Overcome Wetekopf Jsmes.cf DecUer.p 2 00 Grote.o 3 00 Hall.pb 10 0 Ryan.p 3 00 Colborn.p 000 ATLANTA (AP) - Tommy knew I had just donated two had a three-stroke lead that 20 1 2 30 3 7 Aaron had just bent over on shots to the field." suddenly shrank to one. Chlc&so ooo New York,...... ^..OM 000 Olx—ooo3i the 14th fairway, picked up (^It was'iii the stretch yes- E — Wckman. LOB — Chicago 6, Winter rules were in effect Mew York S. 2B—Broomta. 3B- his ball,-started straightening terday in the final round of Harrelion. SB — Harrelson. SF — throughout the tournament, Qrote. Bwoboda up and saw a white line. the $123,000 Atlanta Golf Clas- with portions of the barren _. IP KBEBBBSO Decker (L, 1-4) 6 S 2 2 3 7 "I was pretty shocked, to sic; Aaron, gunning for his fairways lined. In the lined Colborn_ 2:1100 2 - say the ;least;" 1he softly first official tour victory in Rian (W. 3-3) 9 2 116 s areas, players were allowed 20,000 MILES W^-Byan. T—2:23. A-r«3,2M. drawling Georgian said. "I ; 10 years on the pro circuit, to lift, clean and place the ball. OR 2 YEARS "It got to be a habit," Except disc Aaron said. "Unconsciously, brakes and; Yarbrough Relieves Allison,I just leaned over and picked foreign) cars it up. Then I straightened up and saw the line. I knew I wasn't inside the lined area Wins World 600 Stock Race and felt like putting it in my for new Wha^,. CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)<- A crowd of 70,000 watched multitude of caution flags. "pocket."' cylindere.' Lee Roy Yarborough, his own the 400-lap race take its toll Allison's Torino, prepared Costs Two Strokes Add.l>10fot(',.;.'. car out with a dead clutch, as leader after leader was by former driving standout The action cost him a two- • Install brake lining on all four wheels "arcing" drumi,b,' jumped behind the wheel of knocked out. Only 16 cars Banjo Matthews, gobbled up -. stroke penalty, which he if necessary. '*' teammate Donnie Allison's managed to finish, with the the $39,600 top check by elud- called on himself. • Inspect master cylinder and replace all Ford and breezed past stalled winning four held to an aver- ing most of the afternoon's hydraulic brake hoses if necessary ' leader David Pearson tp win age speed of J29.680 by a troubles. "I remembered, . though, the World 600 stock car face ! that Jack Nicklaus once won • Remove, clean, inspect, repack and adjust yesterday at Charlotte Motor . a tournament after getting a front wheel bearings Speedway. " two^stroke penalty and I fig- Pearson had the $193,080 ured I could do it, too." • Adjust all four brakes THIS WEEK Material and Labor... grind in his pocket when his McEIreatli MM He did, surviving threat af- ONLY! Installtd by Goodyear Trained Mechanics clutch also went out with 55 ter bid after challenge as a •RAKE RELINK eUARANTM...|f Good miles to go. Instead of sailing host of players made their to an easy victory, the Spar- maleitaO, the Installing Goodyear Service Store wil move, then fell back, leaving BUY NOW-PAY LATER upon .urrender of th. original^nvoS' i* tanburg, S.C., driver had to Indy 500 Field Aaron with his first official push his Ford to the garage. tour triumph. Yarbrough's clutch had INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) fields in the history of the an- ON OUR EASY TERMS failed' with his Mercury run- — Veteran-Jim McElroath cient motor classic" averaged The last, and biggest, chal- ning second after 260 miles. was the only driver able to_ . a record 167.139 miles per lenge was mounted by Tom But the defending World 600 break into the lineup for the hour jn the 10-mile trials. The Weiskopf,. the leader through champion was able to grab at 54th Memorial Day 500-mile old mark was 166.295 set last the first three rounds, who | Compare this offer! least a share of victory lane race at the Indianapolis Mo- year. tied Aaron in the late going, • SinWareOffer! tor Speedway in the final then pumped his tee shot on again with his relief job for The spread between Al Un- Allison on a muggy 90-degree qualifying session yesterday. the final hole into the w^ater. ser's fast time and Sammy OIL CHANGE & afternoon. One of the best balanced Sessions' slowest was only Fidgets In Gallery from 170,221 m.p.h. to Aaron finished with a final- LUBRICATI IBS.373, compared wilh a drop v round 6J for 275 and fidgeted "GOLDEN ANCHOR" from 170.568 to 160.851 in last nervously in the gallery on year's field. the 18th when Weiskopf went INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES to the tee of the 512-yard par 15-Point Engine Tune-Up MINIMUM HO.MO Only four rookies, smallest fjve hole that offered a dis- Includes all labor and MINIMUM 1-YEAR number in nine years, were tinct birdie possibility to the parts listed below.nOnly Add $1II premium 'Q TERM able to qualify against vet- long-hitting blond from Ohio. oil it mod Earnings Compounded You get now spnrk plugs, points, rolor & condenser. Plus, "550 erans a USAC, NASCAJt, or Mailed Quorterlyl our specialists will clean funl bowl, air /liter A battory, Our car care oxperli have Iho "know how" lo uinko / 6 SCCA and World Grand Prix Tom promptly pumped his your car run .moother and stifer. Don't wait... and check-ignition wires, distributor cap, starter, rogu- tracks. tee shot into the water, took a bring your car In today and Inko advanlago of this • •> drop and found a trap with lator, gcnoralor, fan belt, cylinder compression & battery. low price ofler! First-time starters in the his next. He was weak on the INTEREST $850,01)1) Memorial Day race explosion and missed the will be Hick Muther, Laguna putt for a double bogey that Anchor Your Savings to , Beach, Calif.; southern stock dropped him back to a four- car ace Donnio Allison, Huey- way tie for third at 277. He town, Ala., who led much of finished with a one-ovcr-par GOODYEAR SERVICE STORES Sunday's NASOAIl fiOO - miler 73. at Charlotte, S.C.; Grotf Aaron, a 33-year-old native HWY. 35, EATONTOWN Weld, Kansas City, Mo,, and Georgian and long-time golf- HWY. 35, MIDDLETOWN Dick Simon of Salt Lake City, ing bridesmaid, claimed his 542-6510 . 671-2415 MIDDtETOWN ATL HIGHLANDS UNCROFT a former skiing and piira- 47I-240O 29J.0I00 first victory In the United (acr»u from Mlddlttown Shopping 842-4400 chutc jumping champion/I States in 10 years on the tour. \ TIJE DAILY REGISTER, R£D BANK • MIDIH-ETOWN, N. U MOMMY, NKY 25, 1970 IS Does Anyone Have the Key? •A* Bids Tonight in County Tilt With at least 13 team* hop- (14-6), Toms River (15 - 10), tlefield is still a hot scene as otltlng tomorrow to win. row. Asbury park; sporting i ing lor a bid In the Monmouth Lakewood (13-7), Middletown two championships remain in Toms River South, now in rather weak record, defeat- College Invitational Baseball Township (10-6), Manasquan the balance with only one second place, must overcome ed Ocean iast week, and will Tournament and only eight (14-4), Ocean Township (12- conference'game left on the Middletown to even hope for, try to upset Managquan when spots open on the draw, there 9), Howell (12-8), Ked .Bank slate for each team. a chance. the two clubs meet. Khould bo a lot of sparks fly- (11-6), Henry Hudson Region- Henry Hudson Regional has Ocean has beaten Mana- Red Bank, which has come ing at the seeding committee al (14-4), Shore Regional,(19- already sewn up the "C" srjuan twice this season, but on strong at the end of the meeting , at the West Long 6), Central Regional (M - 8), Championship, but both "A" the Spartans have lost enough season, will meet Ocean. The Branch campus tonight. IMater Dei (12-fl) and Marl- and "B" circuits have yet to "B" match-ups to other foes Bucs knocked off Manasquan boro (12-4), all records as (if Teams which Should-be giv- be nailed down. to rate only a tie for the top last week. en most of the consideration Friday, the tourney cutoff Brick has clinched a tie for spot. date. Middletown and Red Bank for opening berths in the tour- the "A" banner, but must Both Manasquan and Ocean nament are:, Brick Township The Shore Conference bat- survived first-round clashes overcome Neptune on its last will meet tough rivals tomor- in the N.J. State Interscholas- tic Athletic Association tour- nament, The Lions beat Lenape Re- Long Branch Trackmen gional, 2-1, while the Bucca- neers topped Watchung Hills, 2-1 on Friday. Marlboro and Howell weren't as fortunate on Sat- Rule Shore Conference urday. The Mustangs dropped one to Bridgewater - Raritan POINT PLEASANT - Long Tom Williams of Long jump honors. > event with a heave of 55-2, West, 2 - 1, and the Rebels Branch High School's track Branch and teammates Den- Larry Bova of Shore Re- while Shore's Ralph Yamello were nipped by Bridgewater- team had a rather easy time nis Morgan and Steve gional, had to fight off a bid tossed his 54-10. Raritan East, 3-2. , of winning its fourth straight Schwartz all won medals. by Raritan's Joe Deely to win Another Shore entry, Bill In the only other game over Shore Conference title at the Williams corralled the 220- the mile race in 4:33.5. Deely Hayes, took the pole vault 35th annual meet at Point yard dash, Morgan easily won was second in 4:37.7. •leap with a ]3-footer, and the weekend, Toms River Pleasant Boro's all-weather the two mile and Schwartz Jackson Township's Lou Vo- Asbury Park's Kevin White South defeated Toms River oyal here Saturday. jumped six feet for the high caturo won the shot put won the 449 in 51.2. North, 11-9. Of' 25 teams competing in the event, 20 scored. The-Green Wave gathered 38 -points, while runner-up Mater Dei Relay Marks Established Shore Regional accumulated 23. Lakewood and Raritan NEW MONMOUTH - Mater Schnoor hurled the platter javelin 180-4, while the Bull- of 8:17.9. tied for third with 18, and Dei finished second to Glen 134-2. dogs' two-milers (Brian Kelly, Tony Rediger of Red Bank Freehold grabbed fifth at 16 Ridge in the second annual , Rumson's Tim Costello took Dave Reed, Sabin Russell and Catholic won the shot put markers. Maier Dei Relays here Satur- the award for chucking the Pete Staple) ran to a record event with a toss of 45-5'/j. day. The host school accumu- Stan Perry of Freehold was lated 36 points, while the win- the only thinclad to win two ners gathered 38. events. The Colonial hurdler Schoolboy Sports Schedule took the 120-highs in 14.2 and Red Bank Catholic girls re- TODAY Track Bbll Track the 180-lows in 19.5. tained their title by grabbing M&ter Bel »t' New Brunswick Invitational • Kunabui* at Short jjcniyHwfaon-Regional at Hofflfiatt Keamstunt at Mnnmouth Tony Russell, Matwan's 24 points, while Matawan Re- Point Pleasant Bcarh at m. Ro»e Raritan at Uatawian gional was second and Pope _ Track Henry HudBon at St.; Joneptl't CTR) prize long jumper, broke the Bed Bank OaUi'- al Ocean Twp, Bed Bmii at Mlddletnwn Paul VI was third. Rumson-F.H. at Marlboro NT"at'Toh»" meet record-in the event with State Flra*i at Forogate Long Branch at Ocean ' Track MatorDe* at Raritan Frurunan InvK»ttoniil at JLsbury Pk. a .23% jump which obliter- In the, boys event, Rumson- THURSDAY Wall T»p. at Neptuns stale Tournament at Princeton ated the old 22-14 mark by Faii" Haven, Regional finished 1 Bateball Mater Dei Advances Wan at Nqptun?™" * Dick Harris of 'Point Beach Manasjuan at Wall HAIX'RDAY fourth behind Metuchen with Rurnnon-F.H. Ken. at Highland Fade Toms River N. al St. Rota Oirii Track three years ago. 26 points. Raritan ai Klataw^n Red Bank Cattwltc Btaiewida TOMORROW Ocean>at Runwon-P.'H. Inrttatlonat ait Monmoutll Cnllen BaKbaU Keantfourg at Hofliman at 10 a,in. Raritan's Warren Gordon Saturday wasn't a day for ' Red BanX at Lone BnaiKh Trnnh Shore Conference Oolt State Toumarni*»t was the only runner to break the record books, as only "A" Division Sflnore at RarUan To SJ Parochial Final a record. He reset the half- Karllan at Long Branch RumBOn'F.H. at RoseUe Park State Sectional•s at HlHighlanl d park three marks' set last year re- ' FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP, — Daly fanned eight batsmen. BrtcKTwur at Neptune both runners home with a mile event at 1:57.6 which mained after the meet —the Mater Dei struck like light- Tom« River s. at Mlddletown Twp, Mater Dei .advanced to the douWe. '• was one-tenth of a second girls' 880 and 240-yard hurdles "B',' DlvlBlon ning in. the sixty inning for Bob Gula was the losing •Red Bank at' Ocean Twp. Wall Stadium Hit by Elemepts finals of the South Jersey faster than Bruce Gardner of . and the boys' distance med- Manasquan at'Astrory Park / all its riins as Daly and Reilly pitcher in relief. He worked •Matawan, who ran at record Matiwan Reg. at Monmoulh Rei, Parochial "B" section of the ley. • Jaotajon Twp? at Howell •WALL TOWNSHIP - For went to work trying to dry both knocked, the ball over three and a third innings. s d Iast vear 1 out the macadam oval", But N.J. State Interscholastku _ P!* . - _ Mater Dei captured the dis- "C" Qlvlnlon the second time in as many the fence. Mater Dei will meet St. Pe- Koyport at Point Boro , . : another squall hit at .7:40, and ' Athletic Association baseball tance medley in 11:06.5 with Wallat Shore Reg. weeks the elements won out, Paul Albe opened for the ter'g of New Brunswick for Kauffman and Gill John Checton, Bob Hunt, Glen Central Re*, at Henry Hudson track management was Point Beach at Southern Reg. and Wall Stadium was forced - tournament here yester- Seraphs with a' single and the sectional championship; Win Doubles Event Kulbick and Tom Clark .run- forced to call a halt to the Red Bank Catftoilc at Rumson-F.H. to cancel its scheduled auto show before it got off the day by defeating Immacu- and Reilly followed connect- a title it won a year ago. OAKHURST - The team of ning the event. Marlboro at Ktanstrurg . • Toms River N. at St. Joseph'i (TiR) racing show. ground. . ' lata, 5-0, on the arm of Glen ing on a pitch and sending it The Seraphs are 13-6 this Herb Kauffman and George The one mile relay went to Tennis' over the fence,' some 320 feet MonmouUi at • Tlumoon-F.H. Daly and the bats, of Daly season, . Gill captured the Ocean Town. Metuchen at a record pace Shore at Lakewood An unscheduled thunder In addition to the regular away; - Golf ImmaculatB (0) I "Mttler Bel '^< " ship' Tennis Doubles, Cham- of 3:28.5.. .:.... State- Finals- — shower- at -6:30 p.m. Satur- modified-sportsman and lim- and-Tom Reilly. ah r. h I ebrh Metuchen also won the 440- Manamjuan at Shore Daly was next. He popped Btalford.cJ 3 0 01 HcBrlrlc.K „ . j pionship by defeating ,the ' Track day held up wartnup action ited sportsman stock cars The game, played at Rut-- Ruppe.SB 3 0 0 t Albe.cf 3 \ 1 yarder and the 480-yard shut- Mater Del • at-Bhore • . ' one out of the park nearly in M't'fo'no.lb 3O0| Ilcllly.lb 3 11 number one seeded team of but by 7:15 the rain had the three quarter midgets al- ' gers Prep School Field, saw the same place as Reilly's Daltcsslo.c 3 0 01 Daly.p 111 tle hurdles, both at record . s. 81aby,3b 1 n n i Stavast.rf 3 10 Neil Johnson and Richard slowed and a westerly wind so were scheduled to tour Daly release nothing but $>iast.. • ;., •;. ;..• ,i . : rau.rf 2 0 0 Nlcholis.c 2 11 Ludwig, 7-5, 7-5, here yester- speeds. r ' "" ' EDNKSA SWl'no.lf. 2 0 01 CoughMn.ss 2 0 0 Baseball the Shore Speedway in a tri- • goose eggs as only one lm- . • Andy Stavast kept things Paacale.2b 20 1. Mater Dei added the discus Mater t)el aA St. Roao started to clear the sides. Bodor.p 1 0 O'i Moainley,2b 3.0 0 day. . CBA at. Red Bulk CaUiolIc > \maculata batter got"4 M and B. Qula.p 0 0 Of to its list of winnings as Tim MonmoiMh College baaebail toumey Track crews immediately ple feature card. alive for the Seraphs ,by Murphy,lb 0 0 0 1 • .'-' , -.-•• • ~ •- v The.Ocean Men's/Singles only two reached first base. reaching on. an error. Mike • and Men's Senior Singles ' 21 0 1 ]' 23*5 5 Nicholas followed with a sin- Immaculata „; -.LI..0O0 ooo 0- - (over 40) will take place here Mater Dei ...._ .000 005 0-^i List Tomahawk, gle and Rich O'Brien drove HB—HeJHy, rDa!y. • SB—O'Brien. next weekend. Beacon Winners LEONARDO — Charles Poole Fires 76 to Capture St'ava and John Steig teamed to score an 83-27-56 for ' first place in the Scotch Four- Riverview's Coveted Bowl some full handicap play at the Beacon Hill Golf and RUMSON — Frank Poole Country club here yesterday. of West End fired a low. gross 76 Friday at Kumson coun- Harold Schaible and Mike try Club to become the sev- Lazo were second at 82-22-60, enth winner of toe Eiverview while Walter Larictln and Rob- silver bowl, emblematic of - ert Shanklin took third at golfing supremacy in the an- nual Kiverview Hospital In- 73-12-61. vitational. TOMAHAWK Poole, who plays out of Deal LINCROFT — A Two Ball, Golf and Country Uub, joins ,,Best Ball tourney was played T, Peter Doremus, Micnael Toscano, James Brown Jr., ', at the Tomahawk Golf Club K, Roe Sharaoba and two-time ( here yesterday with the team winner Dr. Everett Thompson J,of Harold Smith and Bud as recipients of the coveted award. : Mazza taking the first prize The presentation was made ; with a net score of 58. v "by Frank F. Blaisdell, presi- •t Charlie Kelly and Harry dent of Riverview's board of I'Palmatler were second with governors, at an informal din- ner and dance following tnc •n. afternoon competition. Poole also teamed with Dr. HolmdelBoaters Vincent Whelan to capture honors with a low gross of 76, Sail in Sunfish deieatlng 13ruce CucMon and LONG BRANCH - The Kay Jonnson on a mutch of cards Ciiarlas Shngluff Jr. Holmdel Boaters of Bell Labs and Thomas Lee were third held their first sailing series with a 79. of the year wltjh a 13-boat Samuel Carotenuto and Car- fleet made up mostly of Sun- roll A. Morley took low. net fish, here yesterday. honors with a 62, while Jack Carroll and Harry Patten John Perrin led the pack, were runners^up al 63. The While Jim Jimpell was second loams of J. B. Russell and -andHQWland Riidy,/Uilrj ____ Tranus K P. McCurter and LUCKY NUMBER SEVEN — Frank F. Blaisdoll, right, Peter Genoveso and Rudy RENT A CAR chairman of ttje Rivorviow Hospital board 6i gover- I'apaiella carded 64s. DAY • WEEK • MONTH nors, presents the Rivorviow silver bowl to Frank Pools Proceeds of the tournament •will go toward Wie building WALL of West End, who shot a 7& at the Rumson Country of a now emergency treat- We didn't make it any easier to look at. LINCOLN-MERCURY Club Friday to become the seventh winner of the innwibury Avanua at Sycamort ment center', the third phase 747-5400 award. I Register Staff Phofo) of Riverview Hospital's ex- Just easier to drive. pansion program. CHARMS INTERNATIONAL • You'd never know'it to look at it, but that's a you 25 miles to the gallon. It still takes only an Torre-Rohrey in Pinehurst Volkswagen without a clutch pedal, occasional can of oil. And It still won't go near MIDDLETOWN-Thc team ' Ralph Loam and Jan Bennett .What If does have is something called an auto- water or antifreeze. CUSTOM TAILORS of Ed Torro and Pat Itohroy were awarded third place matic stick shift. "Automatic" because you can If it were anything but a Volkswagen, you'd drive it up to 55 mph without shifting at all. "Stick BIG SALE 3 DAYS ONLY!! edged Bill .Martin vSr. and over Bill Nichols and Blta probably pay dearly for all this luxury, Monday, May 25 thru yXcdntiday, May 27 shift" because you shift it when you go over 55.' Instead, a Volkswagen with'an automatic stick Georgia Ponbrook on a match Toriiluml, both at. 60. MEN'S SUITS Once. shift costs a mere $1,978* $ of cards to win the mixed One-two In carding the most And that's just to help you save gas. tin keeping All of which reinforces what we've been saying $49 to 69 Pinehurst tournament at the throe's,, four's and flvo'd with a grand old Volkswagen tradition.) for 20 years, AND MANY MORE ITBMS AT HONG KONO f $HOWIN» 10AJiMo» P.Mi Bamm Hollow Country Club wore: Class 'A," Nick Euisi As a matter of fact, this Volkswagen still gives Looks aren't everything, L7WBTIAND^B5TLBMHNJ "MAOH TO M«A- over the weekend. and Ben Hoborts; "Class "B," •URH BXPHRTLY HAND TAILORED SUITS-TOP- COATI-JPORT JACKBTI * «HIRTI PROM »00 Hal Colcman and Tom Domp- OP THE WORLD'! tATBIT AND PINBJT KAB- Each team carded not 08s Shrewsbury Motors, inc. RIM IOO* IAVIIPACTION .WAMNTHO. lit tho beat ball, lull handi- sey, and Class "C," "'Tony PRPM THB WORLD'I FINBJT Mlttt cap, competition In' which Lontlno and Don fjyons. For Appolnlminl-cqll of vim Shrewsbury Avenue, Shrewsbury AMHRICAN BXPRISS MR. JACK IANI - t«l. JW-MOO husbands and wives could not Two weekends of prc-so> at HOLIDAY INN and O/NBR'S CLUI Broadway and Monmaulh P be partners. n nlors' -30-liole compoUtlon, ugguttd retail prrc* (Bail Coast) P.O.B., local loxai and ollxr d»ol»r dtlfvtry chord"/ 1/ any, oddlllonol. whiltwalli optional at ixlra Mil. CAROjCARP*t IHONORBD Will Long Branch ^ match of cards,' will bogln on Saturday*. 1 • . •" . ; • v" •••.•&•'••' -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK • MIDDLETOWN, N. J.: MONDAY, I^IAY 25, 1970 dnriiouth'sCenterinia] Begins on 0 pening Day OCEANPORT - July 30,is opening day with the inau- which gives fans the thrill of the Sorority, Sapling and actually the 100th anniversary gural running of the $25,000- seeing horses running directly Monmoutti (Invitational) — of Monmouth Park. added Monmouth Centennial toward them from the starts highlight the stakes program. Nevertheless, the progres- Handicap at V/t miles on of 11/6 and l'/j mile races. Momentos on Display sive New Jersey track will the turf. The Centennial Handicap is At the same time Mon- begin its Centennial celebra- Fashioned for 3-year-old and the first of 21 stakes races, mouth Park offers its impres- tion on opening day, Monday, up fillies and marks, the in- which carry a record value sive stakes schedule and at- June 1, and -continue the fes- augural feature will start out of $855,000, scheduled for the tractive overnight features, tivities through Saturday, of the diagonal infield chute. 60-day meeting. mementos from the past 100 Aug. 8. The chute is a strip of grass Four $100,00 races — the years of racing here will be The festivities begin on cutting across the infield Amory L. Haskell Handicap, on display. The Trophy Room on the second floor of the clubhouse has been converted into a Collins Headed for Varsity museum and pictures of prominent horses and people from racing at Old Monmouth With Montclair Next Year Park will be shown. Included in the museum UPPER MONTCLAIR - It hits, struck out 46 and walked exhibits will be portraits of is still more than nine months 19. presidents Ulysses S. Grant, away, but Coach Clary An- The former Mater Dei High Grover Cleveland and derson is most anxious to see School standout displayed a Woodrow Wilson, who estab- fine college curve ball and Bill Collins in a Montclair lished their summer head- THREE-HANDED SHAKE — Ed Jones and Skip Snable, foreground, left to u-JJI»t«wn TownshiD State College varsity baseball pinpoint control. While only quarters at nearby Long M to n ; uniform next spring. 5-7 and 165 pounds, Collins is Branch in Monmouth County striped Jacket, after the latter received the Thomas L. Blevins Memorial Award at the . '™J * l^J" "£ • The reasons for Anderson's sneaky fast and gets a good and attended the races fre- High School sports dinner at Buck Smith1. Restaurant Saturday night. The award