Awards Totalling $52 Go to 68 Summit Higl School Board Goes
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• Awards Totalling $52 Go To 68 Summit HigL *ifc Sixty-eight members of and Professional Women's Sigma Phi and the William William S. Lukens Humani- each. Included was The General Organiza- Lynne Lanm»b /rora the Summit High School Club, the College Club, and s. Lukens Humanitarian tarian Award, a College Anthony Borges, who tion Scholarship and the ed scholarships by «,«— and the class of 1973 shared $52,000 the Summit Area Award. Club scholarship and the received scholarships from Lukens Humanitarian Business and Professional ; presented in prizes, awards and Panhellenic Scholarship, as Three members of the Marjorie Eubank Award. the Cutter Foundation and Award went to Douglas Women's Club and the to Mark Mc*>ride, while . scholarships as announced weH as the Carol Keeney class received three Mr. Angiuoni received the State of New Jersey. Dempster, while'Tempe College Club. Laurence O'Mahoney also at the 75th annual gradua- Tornrose Award. scholarships and awards scholarships from the Ro- Loraa Bonorand received Biddle Hill was granted the The Kiwanis Club received a Rotary Club !- ' tion exercises held last Coming in as a close each. Included were Errico tary Club, UNICO and the scholarships from the College Club scholarship Scholarships went to Mar- scholarship, as well as one Thursday night at Tatlock second in awards and Angiuoni, Dennis Clabbj, State of New Jersey, while Fortnightly Club and the and the Brooks of Summit garet McMahon, who also from UNICO. Field. scholarships was Diane Jean Kimbrough, Patricia Mr. Clabby was granted Summit Education As- Art Award. received an Adel Lynch Top winner in the class Maluso. Miss Maluso also Kimbrough and Deborah awards by the Rotary Club, sociation, while Herbert Gets Two Awards scholarship, while Stacy A New Jersey State was Mary Ellen Behme, received an Adle Lynch Rosen. the Booster Club and the Cubberly was granted the The Combined PTA and Miller also received a scholarship was awarded who garnered awards from Nursing Scholarship as Miss Rosen, who placed Pieter Smit Memorial. Albert J. Bartholomew the Summit Education As- Kiwanis Club scholarship Linda Perrone, who was the Adeie Lynch Nursing well as awards from the at the top of her class, was Fourteen members of the Scholarship and one from sociation scholarships went as well as one from the Scholarship, the Business Cutter Foundation, Beta also the recipient of the class received two awards the Cutter Foundation. to Steven Hadley, while College Club. (Continued on Page 16) Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Summit, N.J. 07901. Under tW Act Of March 8, 1*79 VOL. 86, No. 6 273^000 Second Class Postage Paid at Summit, N.J. Thursday, Jane 21,1973 S6 a year 15* Circular Traffic Plan For Downtown Area Defeated In the face of opposition ordinance which would Under the proposal, traf- street, back to the railroad congestion was not the from members of the Sum- have established a one-way fic would have flowed one- bridge. problem, but that mit Area Chamber of Com- traffic pattern in the heart way from Maple street and Generally speaking, inadequate parking spots merce, Common Council of the city's business dis- Union place, to Beechwood members of the Chamber were the real problem. Tuesday night defeated an trict. The vote was 4 to 3. road, and then down Maple contended that traffic Speaking for Bryant W. Griffin, president of the Chamber, Peter Liebman of Douglas Motors said the Council Votes to Collar Cats organization was opposed Summit's cats will be Burgher of Canoe Brook which does not require would not control cats and to the proposed traffic pat- collared and licensed, bat parkway. Mrs. Schneider collars. be wondered about control tern until additional they will not be belled. So maintained that she of rats and field mice. parking facilities were ordered Common Council required unbelted cats to provided in accordance Joseph Kurczewa of Bal- Dr. Luther Roehm had with the TOPICS report. Tuesday night .** m Keep rats and mice out of maintained that cats were tusrol road, asked some His approach .was * WWIe no resident present her barn, while Mr. predators and it was a questions related to. type of reiterated by Hughe* supported the ordinance, Burgher said he was con- "nuisance to let thqm run". bell which would be Ryder of the New" Council passed the law c«med about use bf collars, Councilman Edwin S. required and determining Hampshire House, who requiring that all the city's which can hang cats, as Votey pointed (Hit that fees when a cat reaches the age maintained • that es- cats be licensed and well as the difference in the collected could be used to of seven months. He tablishing the parking spots collared, but the ordinance New Providence ordinance claimed the ordinance "take care" of stray cats. was amended after a was a prime prerequisite A FIRST IN SUMMIT — Jack Pyle, immediate past-president of the Playhouse recess to eliminate the before the one-way pattern Association, hands the gavel of office over to Mrs. Edward H. Kaos, who became the need for bells. was established. Playhouse's first woman president in the near 81-year history of the local gronp. Both Susan and Jerry Old Wilson Mansion Gets Problems supposedly Looking on is Mr. Kaus, who is himself a past-president of the Playhouse. Mr. and Robinson of 72 Mountain generated by the pattern Mrs. Kaus thus become the first husband and wife team ever to hold the top position avenue spoke out against were pointed out by in the Summit Playhouse. (Wottn photo) the regulation. Mrs. Robin- Frederic Rowe of 51 Union son maintained that cats Reprieve for Time Being Place, who maintained thai were self-regulatory and two lanes existing front not a threat to children and Decision to demolish including Mrs. Margaret that the land should be Beechwood road inte School Board Goes Out property. When Council- the old Wilson mansion was Cretsinger of 192 Summit preserved for park pur- Springfield avenue betweea man Luther S. Roehm said postponed Tuesday night avenue, maintained the en- poses. Beechwood and Maple the same condition applied when Common Council tire land use problem Speaking for the Wilson street would create mass To "Tell it Like it Is" to dogs, the audience deferred action of the ac- should be studied before a School PTA, David congestion, as would two? disagreed. ceptance of bids until the decision was made to demolish the building. (Continued on Page 16) (Continued on Page 16) By Anne Plaut program at the elementary Council of America, the Mr. Robinson pointed out next meeting on July 17. Joseph kurczewa of 114 Charged last month with and junior high school same group that sponsored that the bells were Residents voiced concern Baltusrol road agreed that a failure to communicate, levels will be upgraded. the publication of the innecessary since any bird about the future of the a decision should be made the Board of Education The decision for the highly-controversial K-3 caught is "either weak or property, which they hoped before the building was Tuesday night took pains to social studies was made curriculum two years ago, stupid." would not be developed into demolished, He further remedy the situation in a upon the recommendation which was ultimately dras- tract housing. Also speaking in opposi- pointed out that Council session lasting more than of a committee of teachers tically revised, there would Members of the Summit tion to the ordinance was had spent $65,000 to refur- three hours highlighted by and administrators who appear to be wide-spread Junior Baseball League Henry Dearborn of 32 Colt bish its own chambers in the adoption of a social had studied Jen of the support and endorsement wer*> not primarily con- road, who said the law was the City Hall, but did not studies curriculum for reputedly bettei programs for this one. For example, cerned about the future of unnecessary and that the feel that $77,000 could be grades 4 and 5, expression currently available, under Petrona McNair, 17A the house, as they were spent to renovate the Wil- of further dissatisfaction the direction of Dr. Donald William St., said the Black Community is about land use. son house. about the S.K.E. program W. McCarthy, assistant Caucus had reviewed the "overregulating" itself. He Members of the League, at Wilson School, announ- superintendent of Schools. curriculum materials and inquired as to the purpose including Victor Corallo of Speaking for the Summit cement of a study to be Satisfied is satisfied with them. of the law and termed it 7 Madison avenue, were in Taxpayers' Association, "impractical"! Harry Perlet of 10 Ox Bow conducted of a possible Although the program is The committee made its favor of the land being used lane maintained the hous% program for gifted published by Allyn and recommendation following Also speaking in opposi- for complete recreational and future upkeep after children, and the revelation Bacon, under the aegis of a survey of programs pilot- tion to the ordinance were iacilities, including restoration should not that the physical education the Education Research ed this year by fourth and Mrs. Joyce Schneider of baseball diamonds. warrant expenditures, but fifth grade teachers, by Stanley avenue and Vincent Several in die audience, examining new programs and observing them in Liquor Hours operation. In assessing the programs, the committee developed and Used a 26- Judge Steinbrugge Tells Grads Are Extended item evaluative ins- trument. A new ordinance which extends the city's liquor con- In its recommendation, Above the Lsftwi suming hours in the city's various bars and restaurants That 'No the committee has urged "Democracy, by its essence, is its own that our conclusions must be founded upon was approved by Common Council Tuesday night.