Executive Director Takes Sewer Unit Reins SEE STORY BELOW
Clearing, Cool MEDAHY FINAL Clearing and cooler this after- noon. CJear and cool tonight. Red Bank, Freehold Sunny, mild tomorrow. Long Branch 7 EDITION (8» Details, Pag* 2) Monmouth County's Home Newspaper tor 90 Years VOL. 91, NO. 239 RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 20 PAGES 10 CENTS Voters Cut Gubernatorial Field to 2 Today TRENTON {AP) - New from seeking a third consecu- Cape May and William T. Ca- John L. Hennessey, Sea Harry L. Sears, the assistant Meyner has been criticized gress from heavily-Republi- Kelly is counting on a heavy Jersey voters go to the polls tive term. hill of Collingswood. Bright tavern owner and po- Senate majority leader and a as too old by most of his op- can Bergen County, but lacks vote in Hudson County to give today to narrow a cumber- Former Gov. Robert B. Others litical novice. close friend of President Nix- ponents. He has also been at- identity statewide. He has him a big edge in a five-man Meyner, forced to retire in Other Democrats include On the Republican side, Ca- on; state Senate President tacked for his role as the ad- been endorsed by the New race. some Held of 11 gubernatorial 1960 by the same two^term re- Rep. Henry Helstoskl, favor- MU is a political moderate Frank X.- McDermott, and ministrator of the cigarette Democratic coalition, erst- Parsekian, 47, is running as candidates down to two. quirement, is trying for a po- ite of the party's liberal wing, with the support of U.S. Sen. William E. Ozzard, a former industry's advertising code; while supporters of the late "an independent Democrat." Polls were open from 7 litical comeback at the age of state Sen. William F. Kelly Clifford P. Case and other state senator now a member his legal work for Engelhard Robert F. Kennedy and Eu- He sought coalition sup- a.m. to 8 p.m., as voters cast CO and is considered the front- Jr., candidate of Hudson party leaders and Sandman is of the Public Utilities Com- Industries, which has hold- gene McCarthy. port but lost.it to Helstoski. their, primary ballots for one runner in the Democratic County's powerful Democrat- a conservative with a reputa- mission. ings in South Africa, and for Kelly, 58, is running as the He contends the state party of six Democrats or one of contest. ic organization; D. Louis Ton- tion as a political maverick. The race In the Democratic his law partner's representa- candidate of John V. Kenny, is. dominated by political bosses and that only his can- five Republicans. They are The Republican race is con- ti, of Holmdel, executive di- Arrayed against them primary has centered largely tion of the insurance industry who overthrew the late Frank are three other candidates, in its effort to increase auto Hague as the leader in Hud- didacy can end their rule. seeking a post that will be va- sidered a toss-up between two rector of the Garden State ' on one candidate — Meyner, cated next January by Gov. Republican congressmen of Parkway; Ned J- Parsekian, all of whom call themselves insurance rates in the state. son County in 1949. Kenny and Tonti, 51, maintains that it's Richard J. Hughes, a Demo- opposite political persuasions a former state senator and moderates or progres- who served as governor from Helstoski, 44, has been Meyner, former allies, split in time for new faces in govern- crat who is barrred by law —Charles W. Sandman Jr. of motor vehicle director, and sives. They include state Sen. 1953 to 1961. elected to three terms in Con- the late 50's over patronage. (See POLITICS, Pg. 2, Col. 6) U.S., Australian Vessels Collide 56 Missing in Ship Crash PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii The big carrier Melbourne Treaty Organization taking bourne and kept afloat while Tuesday a Navy spokesman classified material and other '(AP) — A small armada of sliced through the destroyer part in the maneuvers. survivors were taken on said. documents, the Navy said. naval vessels criss-crossed USS Frank E. Evans some It was not known how many board the bigger ship. Helicopters from the Kear- Survivors included the de- the South China Sea off the 650 miles southeast of Manila. survivors were injured, but Hours later, the Navy re- sarge shuttled medics onto stroyer's skipper, Cmdr. A. S. . Philippines today for survi- Just why remained a mys- the Navy said one seaman ported flooding in the severed the damaged vessel, then McLemore, and his executive vors of a predawn collision be- tery. Weather was clear, the was evacuated in critical con- hull of the destroyer had been fanned out over the water to officer, the Navy said. tween an Australian carrier seas calm, and both ships dition to a hospital near Sai- controlled. hunt for survivors. Australian Rear Adm. G. J. and a U.S. destroyer during were equipped with modern gon. The carrier suffered a B. Crabb was aboard the car- SEATO maneuvers. The de- radar. gashed hull above the water Small boats from the de- No .casualties were reported stroyers James E. Kyes and rier, according to SEATO of- stroyer was cut in two and The 216 survivors, all crew- line and some damage to her ficials in Bangkok. The Mel- her bow section sank. men of the destroyer, were aboard the Melbourne. flight deck. There was no Everett F. Larson dotted the sea around the stricken sister bourne headed for Manila af- One American sailor was transferred to the USS Kear- The bow of the destroyer fire, the Navy said. ter the rescue work. known dead and 56 un- sarge, a carrier that also was sank two minutes after the "We've established the ex- vessel. accounted for, the Navy said. among 40 warships of six na- collision, but the rest of the act time of the collision at Secondary salvage opera- It was the second time in tions of the Southeast Asian 4:15 a.m., Phillipine time," five years the huge Austrial- There were 216 survivors. ship was lashed to the Mel- tions were ordered to recover ian carrier had been involved In a sea disaster. The first, involving an Australian de- stroyer took 82 lives. Adm. John J, Hyland, com- mander of the Pacific Fleet, 2 Coeds Slain in Atlantic County GUTTED BY FIRE — This -fwo-story frams fiouie »t ,' r I -. • • . •••, , " .'; ...>.*».• ^ . CS- • — .. j •••.-•.... ,.• ...... W ordered a court of inquiry in- SOMERS POINT (AP) - Susan Davis, of Camp Hill, derbrush close to where the to the second disaster. 457 Palmar Ava./ West Keansburg, wj< wrecked by An autopsy report today dis- Pa. died of a wound in the girls' car was found Friday A fleet tug was dispatched fire early today. Owners Mr. and Mrs. John Haddow closed that two coeds whose neck that cut her larynx. morning. from Hong Kong to assist in jumped to safety from the second floor. About 60 bodies were found near the Miss Davis also had wounds Miss Davis' body was nude the. salvage and rescue oper- Garden State Parkway were on the left side of her abdo- and her jacket^dress and un- ation. firemen were at the scene. (Order Photo Page 2) victims of murder and died of men and the right side of her der garments were in a heap .The SEATO naval exercise, (Register Staff PJioto—Don Lordi) stab wounds. neck. close to her, police said. ''Sea Spirit," was canceled. The autopsy was performed Miss Perry was fully •Australian; Navy Minister Dr. Edward Albano, New at Shore Memorial HAspital in clothed, police said.. Clive Kelly told newsmen in Jersey's ehlef medical exam- Somers Point. The girls had been unac- Adelaide, Australia, that the iner, said both girls died of The coeds, both 19-years- counted for since 4:30 a.m. destroyer had been escorting wounds Inflicted with a small old, had been vacationing in Friday when they left Ocean the carrier as it took on knife, possibly a pen or par- Two Escape Ocean City, Miss Perry was City, a popular teenage re- planes and that both had ing knife. The autopsy report the daughter of Ray Perry, a sort, in a convertible destined been steaming side by side. did not reveal if either girl bag company executive from for Camp Hill to join the Da- was raped. "I can't help feeling dis- Excelsior. Miss Davis was the vid family. may that it happened again Elizabeth Perry, Excelsior, daughter of soft drink bottler All were to drive to Dur- to the Melbourne," Kelly Minn., died of a chest wound Wesley S. Davis of Camp Hill. ham, N. C, for the gradua- said, referring to the similar House Blaze that penetrated her right Then- partially-decomposed tion of Miss Davis' brother collision on Feb. 10, 1964. "A lung. She , also suffered bodies were found near the from Duke University. lot of people will look upon it WEST KEANSBURG — A engulfed in flames when the wounds in the abdomen and Garden State Parkway yes- Police said they had no def- as a jinx on the vessel." couple leaped from the sec- first fire unit arrived at the Susan Davis Elizabeth Perry the side o£ her neck. terday afternoon In thick un- inite suspects in the murders ond floor of their house scene. The first alarm was In the earlier accident, the here when it was engulfed in and that a murder weapon 25,000-ton Melbourne sliced turned in at 3:59 a.m, and the had not been found. through the destroyer Voy- flames early today. second at 4:02 a.m. The girls attended Monticel. ager off the coast of Aus- Mr. and (Mrs. John Haddow "With any kind of a wind," lo Junior College in Godfrey, tralia. The bow sank immedi- escaped serious injury when he said this morning, "we'd 111. School officials said Miss ately and the rest of the ship they jumped from the second still be-there. We were wor- Pompidou Seen A Shoo-in Perry completed her fresh- went down in three hours. story of their two-family ried about the A&P next door man year at the two-year all- Both disasters occurred in frame house at 457 Palmer and the liquor store on the PARIS (AP) - Georges the first round of voting Sun- Communist leader Jacques for a boycott, they may throw girls' school and that Miss darkness, but with clear Ave. when fire raged through other side." Pompidou today appeared day, polling only 23.13 per Duclos, who ran third Sunday their votes to Pompidou to Davis "had graduated. They weather and calm seas. the dwelling and burned out Mr. and Mrs. Haddow were certain of election to the cent of the vote to with 21.08 per cent, an- ensure Poher's defeat. said Miss Davis planned to The 3,500-ton Voyager was the stairway. treated for abrasions of the French presidency following Pompidou's 44.45 per cent. It nounced the committee's call Although the Communists enter Ithaca College in Itha- Australia's biggest destroyer . Fire Chief Harry Kegley re- arms and legs at the scene the Communist party's refus- was questionable whether a for a boycott of the June 15 have never before urged ab- ca, N. Y. this September. at the time. Its skipper was : ported that the home, in a by the East Keansburg First al to back provisional Presi- Communist endorsement vote. He denounced both stention from a national elec- (See COEDS, Pg. 3, Col. 7) among the 82 dead. business district here, was Aid Squad., They were the dent Alain Poher. would have done him much Pompidou and Poher as tion, when they have done so owners of the two-family Strong pressure built up on good since it probably would "capitalist reactionaries." on the local level, Gaullists house, living on • the second Poher, a Centrist, to with- have scared away some of But lie implied that Pompi- often have profited. floor. The first-floor apart- draw from the June 15 runoff his anti-Communist support. dou was the lesser evil, by Poher had rejected Pompi- ment was vacant. singling out the provisional which will elect Charles de But the party's central com- dou's earlier suggestion tiiat Chief Kegley said the house Gaulle's successor. mittee made that academic president for special criticism Sewer Unit Executive he withdraw to foster nation- was destroyed. An initial in- Poher ran a poor second in last night. for having said during the al unity. But Bertrand Motte, campaign that West Germany vestigation revealed that the vice president of the Centrist fire started somewhere in the should have access to a Euro- party, said last night that pean nuclear deterrent. cellar and swept upward since his standard - bearer's Director Takes Reins through the house, he said. Questions Answered While many of the 4.8 mil- position was hopeless without About 60 men fought the lion Frenchmen who voted Communist support, Poher LITTLE SILVER - Wil- Mr. Rooney said he retired fire with nine pieces of equip- for Duclos are not members might try to strike a deal liam R. Rooney, Fair Haven, last Thursday from his job ment. Companies called out Now, Addonizio Says of the Communist party and with Pompidou and his Gaul- a member and treasurer of as manager of quality con- were the West Keansburg, may not abide by the call lists. the Northeast Monmouth trol of International Tele- North Centerville and East NEWARK (AP) - Mayor mayor, emerging from the County Regional Sewerage phone and Telegraph-Federal Keansburg units. They Hugh J, Addonizio, who for- grand jury room. "I just hope Authority since its inception, Laboratories. cleared the scene at 6:28 a.m. merly refused to answer the people of Newark have yesterday assumed the new- He said his new job with the questions from an Essex faith in me." ly-created post of NEMCRSA regional sewerage authority County grand jury investigat- Assistant County Prosecu- executive director. The job "is quite a challenge." Pope Invites ing possible corruption in the tor Michael Kiccardelli said The Inside Story pays $17,000 a year. municipal government, says According to the resolution Morris on Flight he could not "confirtn or de- Profile on a dynamic hostess . . Page 8 The executive director's po- establishing the executive di- he has now answered 42 ques- ny" that Addonizio had an- sition was created and Mr. RUMSON - James J. Nor- tions put to him by the jury. The Adlers mark 50th anniversary _ ...Page 9 rector's post, the appointee swered the questions. The at- Rooney, who has been a Fair must be a resident of the ris of Avenue of Two Rivers Mayor Addonizio appeared torney said he could not dis- CBA, Rumson, Monmouth net survivors Page 10 Haven representative to has been informed by the regional district. Vatican secretary of state, before the panel yesterday cuss answers made before Monmouth Park Today __. Page 11 Northeast, was appointed to and answered all its ques- the grand jury, which was the job by unanimous vote at Mr. Rooney will supervise Archbishop Giovanni Benelli, tions, many reportedly con- empaneled last year. Testi- Coll golfers are riding high — Page 11 a special authority meeting authority employes, prepare that Pope Paul VI has in- mony before a grand jury is last Thursday. the payroll, prepare and coun- vited Mr. Norris to accom- cerning renovations made on Allen-Goldsmith ... , 6 Sports 10, 11 pany him on his historical his $59,000 summer home on taken in closed session. Milton A. Mausner, Red ter-sign checks or drafts, pre- Amusements ._ 19 Stock Market ...... 12 pare the operating and capi- papal flight from Rome to Hope Road, New Shrews- The mayor appeared before Successful Investing 12 Bank, authority attorney, at- Geneva on June 10. the grand jury last Tuesday Astro Guide 18 tal budgets, act as paying bury. He was expected to re- Births .. Surf, Field, Stream U tributed the failure to notify Cardinal Maurice Roy of turn for additional question- when he refused to answer Television 19 newspapers which regularly William R. Rooney agent, supervise the prepar- Bridge .„ IZZ.18 ation of billings and repre- Quebec, president of the ing today. about 12 questions put to him Women's News 8, 9 cover NEMCRSA meetings in Pontifical Commission for about his summer house. He The Chock Wagon _ 10 advance of Thursday's spe- term "at the pleasure of the sent the authority in direct "I have nothing to say Classified . 14-17 DAILY REGISTER contact with the public. Justice and Peace, of which said to answer the questions .18 PHONE NUMBERS cial session to an oversight, authority." The appointment Mr. Norris is a member, has now, but I might have some- Comics became effective immediate- thing to say after the investi- would be violations of his Crossword Puzzle - 18 Main Olflce 741-0010 Contracts Awarded An early advocate of the re- also been invited. gation Is over," said the Constitutional rights under Editorials 6 Classified Ads -741-6900 Also at that meeting, con- ly. gional approach to solving the Mr, Norris, who is presi- the Fifth, Sixth and Four- Herblock 6 Home Delivery . .741-0010 tracts totaling $2.5 million for Mr. Rooney resigned his au- problems of sewage disposal, dent of the International Mi- 'Decorators Sale teenth Amendments. Addoni- James KUpatrlck :.... 6 MWdlelown Bureau .671-2258 sewer line installation in Lit- thority scat to take the exec- Mr. Rooney was the Fair Ha- gration Commission, with „ Furniture, fabrics, rugs, ac- zio said at the time he was a Movie Timetable ....__ 19 Freehold Bureau ...... 462-2121 tle Silver and Oceanport were utive director's job. He put ven representative to the Re- headquarters in Geneva, and cessories. Jurie 5,.6 ami 7, 9 "target of this Investigation." Obituaries 4 Long Branch Bureau 222-0010 awarded. his resignation as one of Fair gional Sewerage Study Com- a paper chamberlain of the a.m. to 5 p.m. Joan Ann Chllton He then appeared before Sylvia Porter Sports Department -741-0017 Mr. Rooney, a former Fair Haven's two representatives mittee, which guided the idea Cape and Sword to Pope and Associates, 630 Broad St., Judge Gluliano who ordered Haven councilman, was in a letter to Mayor Robert through four years of. study Paul, expects to fly to Rome Shrewsbury, N. J. (Adv.) him to answer the questions. named to serve an indefinite A. Matthews,' - ' XAUTHOKITY, Pg. 3, Col. 6) this Saturday. -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BAXK• MIDDLETOFN. N. J.: TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 on Brochure Sparks MCAP Set to Replace Matawan Township Hassle Its Absentee Members ?' MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — group that suddenly appeared from the mayor and Republi- LONG BRANCH - Changes welfare committee, have had then on election of new board An attempt by Mayor Hans on the corner," in answer to can George B. Brenon, caus- in the by-laws of Monmouth problems in getting a quorum members will be staggered. .". H. FroeMich to answer a pub- Mr. Mullins' statements that ing the mayor to be over- Community Action Program together. Election Planned ruled. .'lished political statement re- the group was not what it ap- Inc., and action to replace The county Board of Free- Election of community rep- garding the Industrial Com- peared. The mayor called for his trustees who consistently holders will be told that cer- resentatives to the board initial remarks to be stricken ' mission at last night's meet- Mr. Taylor chastised coun- miss meetings were proposed tain of the members it ap- should be held on Aug. 15 an- and then attempted to issue '. ing ended in a flurry of par- cil for its involvement in at last night's meeting of the pointed to MCAP fail to at- nually so that it will precede commission business. "You're a statement of the history of liamentary gambits, shouting, MCAP Board of Trustees. tend meetings, and a request the annual meeting, the com- not helping by throwing cud- the commission's woes and ' a recess and finally conces- will be made to have those ' mittee said. Currently the an- sion. gels at us. Find something his efforts to shape up the The by-laws committee, chaired by Robert Gonza- members replaced. nual board meeting was to A spirited exchange began else to fight about, he told body in a businesslike way. lez, will work out the proce- The by-laws committee al- have been held on May 1. Un- '.when Robert Taylor, chair- the council. "It's hard enough Mr. Gehricke. called the der the new proposal, the man of the Industrial Com- to keep the members togeth- mayor out of order each time dure for replacing members so proposed that the term of of the board who regularly elected members be in- meeting will be on Sept. 1, on mission, took exception to er and not fight with each he spoke, causing Mr. Froeh- which date new officers also otherwithout fighting you as lich to call a recess until "Mr. fail to attend meetings. To creased from one to two 7 council procedures May 19. will be elected. •:, At that time, the council well.* Gehricke cools down." date there has been difficulty years. This means the pres- The board will examine the "adopted a resolution permit- 'We Never Hear' The Ill-minute recess ended in committee sessions, and ent board members will proposals' in executive ses- ting the commission to enter "I appeal to you to stop- in the mayor's concession and some, such as the health and serve for another year. From sion. iinto a contract with the Plus- this so we can get on with statement, "I don't want to FIRE VICTIMS — Mr. and Mrs. John Haddow of 457 lactor Group Ltd. of New our work, he implored the concede, but it's a warm A proposal to convert the • "Vork to execute an industrial council. "I expected flotation night and I don't want to Palmer Ave., West Keansburg, who escaped serious Head Start program into an ^brochure. collars, not millstones, from keep you all so I will give a injury earl/ today when they jumped from the second Shops-Apartments all-year round Day Care Cen- 1 ter program was referred to you people. If you want to ' statement to the press after floor of their 'home that was engulfed in flames, fast • The resolution came unex- the meeting." the education committee. - pectedly, Recording to Demo- talk to us, call — we never in an ambulance after first aid treatment. The house hear from you. Mayor Froehlich later told Mr. Taylor told the board cratic members of council, wai destroyed by fha fire, reported at 3:59 a.m. •_ despite Councilman Jerome As Mayor Froehlich at- reporters he had intended on- Plan Being Studied that this year's summer Head : R. Kaye's advice a week tempted to answer Mr. Tay- ly to give the commission a (Register Staff Photo) Start program will operate as - earlier that the council had to lor with a reply to a pub- goal system whereby certain MIDDLETOWN - A pro- His statement was reiterat- usual. It has already been -approve all contracts under lished Democratic attack on things could be accomplished posed shopping center-garden ed by Mrs. Peggy Kompfner funded with $264,000 from the •the Faulkner Act. the May 19 actions, he was on the brochure by certain apartment complex off Rt. 35 of Holland Koad who added office of Economic Opportu- interrupted by Democratic dates after a long period in was briefly debated by the that approval of the complex nity. Funds expected for 1970 The May 19 council meet- Councilman Walter Gehricke. which little progress had Wants to Fill Pond Planning Board last night and "would start an apartment could be utilized to fund the •' ing erupted into a battle with been achieved on the docu- referred to its zoning sub- explosion within the town- proposed day care program. commission member William "It is not proper to use this forum to rebut campaign re- ment. committee for a report next ship." The proposal will cover :F. Mullin, who subsequently The brochure is planned month. resigned. Another member, leases to newspapers," he Gerald Heagney, president year-round day care centers said, raising a point of order, to draw more industry to va- WithKids,NotFish Harold Painkin, also resigned The proposed $2 million of the Homeowners and Tax- in four communities — Long and motioned to stop any cant properties throughout RED BANK - Fill Mohawk ations," he said, "and the ratable, which would abut the payers Association of Lincroft Branch, Red Bank, Freehold •the same week, and the the township. According to "township manager has also further discussion of the mat- Pond with kids instead of quicker we can get all the Applebrook development, had said "Our group would like to and Englishtown. These new ter by the mayor. present plans, it will list trout this summer, Patrick kids off the street and in been referred to the planners go on record opposing this four centers will bring the to- received a written resigna- numerous available site's. tion from member Michael Time Was taken to study McAlary, Peters Place, urged swimming, the better off by the Zoning Board and any other garden apart- tal of year round centers to the rules of council until it Plusfactor has indicated it the Borough Council last we'll be." last month. ment proposal." seven. Three already are op- -" Alterman. will be sent to 10,001) busi- was determined that the night. Warren N. Gaffney of 53 erated by the Inter Commu- All were Democratic ap- nessmen and industrialists as Mayor Daniel J. O'HiJrn re- Planning consultant Robert chair had to rule on his own Mr. McAlary, who two Hamiltonian Drive, who act- 'pointees and all claim an enclosure in the first is- jected Mr. McAlary's re- Strong reminded the audience nity Coordinating Council, in statements. The mayor said weeks ago told the governing ed as attorney for many ob- as their reasons for resigning sue this summer of a new in- quest that a committee be that Zoning Board referrals Asbury Park, Neptune and he didn't feel he was out of body "there is a crying need jectors at the Zoning Board disagreement with council's dustrial publication, Mar- named last night to investi- are not ruled on by the Plan- Hazlet. order. His decision was im- for one or two municipal meeting, told the plan- action on the resolution and kets and Plant Locations." gate his proposal, recom- ning Board, which is only a mediately appealed by Mr. swimming pools, especially mending instead that Mr. Mc- ners last night that "erecting The ICCC-operated centers the direction of the commis- "I recommended only recommending body. are funded with $113,000 each sion with regard to the bro- Gehricke. for the kids," last night sug- Alary put his idea before the apartments on this site A subsequent vote drew ab- guidelines which the commis- gested Mohawk Pond as a borough's Hecreation Com- would have an adverse effect In other referrals from the from OEO funds through chure. sion was free to accept, re- MCAP. Former chairman John stentions by Mr. Kaye and "stopgap" until a municipal mission when it meets tomor- on the master plan." The zoners the board ruled that Republican Thomas Powers, ject of modify. The opposi- pool is built. row night. Mr. McAlary said proposed site is in an R-22 the applications of Louise Plaudits Received Trabachino is also rumored tion apparently cannot stand to be resigning but acting two no votes from Mr. Gelj- It would be "a nothing job" he would. zone. Reynolds of Magnolia Lane, The board yesterday re- • ricke and Republican Stanley to see anyone take leader- and wouldn't take more than who seeks permission to erect ceived the plaudits of Brook- Township Manager William ship," the mayor stated. ,Russell said no written resig- Pianko, and two yes votes a month, to drain, clean, fill a boarding home for sheltered dale Community College. A nation has been received yet. and ready Mohawk Pond for care on her property; and letter from Fred Hazlett, the . Pair Replaced a swimming summer, Mr. Dismiss Matawan Mrs. Eileen E. Majors of college's admissions director, Earlier in last night's ses- McAlary said. Magnolia Lane, who seeks expressed Brookdale's appre- sion Mr. Russell appointed Chestnut St. Protest: He said the size is right — permission to rebuild a ken- ciation for the cooperation it ' Richard L. Paula, a local at- large enough for three muni- nel on her property, would received from MCAP in the torney, and Gerald Bench of cipal pools, he noted. There's School Pact Appeal adversely affect the intent of recruitment of both students -36 Drexel Lane, to replace a dam so the pond can be the master plan. and faculty. Mr. Alterman and Mr. Mullin. Thanks to the Tanks drained easily and, with the TRENTON (AP) - State a point beyond recall before The application of Francis In his monthly report, Jo- Mr. Taylor, in his state- borough's artesian well on Education Commissioner Carl effective action was taken by RED BANK - No thanks agreed that the trouble with the property, the pond can be J. and Grace Sannelli, who seph E. Taylor announced ments to council, said the to the tanks if Chestnut St. the road is that the National L. Marburger said yesterday Saker. wish to erect a building that that MCAP's Housing Depart- /commission had no idea coun- filled. There's adequate that there is no practicable ever is in good repair, a coun- Guard tanks "tear it up." Mr. parking space and lighting, "Under such circumstances will be used for the sale of ment is preparing a proposal *tU's approval was needed for cilman and a borough resi- Gettis said something should relief he can afford a con- the commissioner finds that agricultural products, was for a county-wide non- benches, grills and a tool tractor who claimed that al- the contract despite lftng dis- dent agreed last night. be done about it. Mr. Oakley there is no practicable relief ruled in keeping with the in- profit housing corporation in liouse, and the property al- though he was the low bidder cussions with former Manag- The councilman is Thomas said he thinks so, too, but he which he can afford to peti- tent of the master plan. ready is partially fenced-in, on a Matawan school project its efforts to provide good er William J. Schuchart. F. Oakley, who heads the can't figure out what, since tioner and therefore, the con- v Projects Approved housing for the poor. Details • Therefore, he explained, the Mr. McAlary pointed out. . he was denied the contract. street and road department he doesn't know "what you tract will remain undisturbed After public hearing the of the proposal, primarily its commission proceeded with Trout Survive Peter J. Saker Inc. had committee, the resident is can do with the federal gov- as awarded," Marburger said board approved the major funding, remain to be worked • the brochure, which has been ernment." The pond is stocked with asked the, commissioner to in dismissing Saker's petl- James V. Gettis, and the trout for the annual fishing subdivisions of Lone Oak out, hi said, and the board pending for almost three tanks belong to the New Jer- "We repair the road every set aside tlje^contract award- 'years. derby and they don't die "so ed to Mjehi^.. Riesz.&.C.b. Honias, nislx" lots off Cherry will receive a fuller report at sey National Guard whose ar- year," Mr. Oakley said. "And it's not polluted," he said. Tree: Farm Eoad; Woodview next month's meeting. :t': He defended the Plusfactor mory, like Mr. Gettis home, the minute 'they bring the Inc. and "asaga the'contract The parks and recreation to him. Acres, 13 lots off Nut Swamp " group as "not some shadowy is on Chestnut St. tanks out, they tear it up." department could man the Politics Road; Lincroft Estates, Mr. Gettis complained "I'm paying good taxes," Marburger said Saker bid swimming pond, and if the $491,396 on the Broad Street (Continued) 16 lots off Middletown-Lin- about the condition of Chest- Mr. Gettis complained, "and, borough leased out a snack croft Road and Hilltop Man- Four Face nut St. to the Borough Coun- just because of the National School project.and $244,325 on ment. He's running on a Boy Burned, bar "it would be fairly lucra- the Ravine Drive School, and strong antkrime or, eight lots off West Front cil last night. Guard, I have to stand for " tive," he ventured. plat- Street. Mr. Oakley and Mr. Gettis that." $732,396 on a combination. form and is openly soliciting Dope Count The major cost, Mr. Mc- A third bidder was low at votes from Italian-Amer- Hospitalized Councilman Theodore J. The board gave site plan Alary said, probably would $241,009 for the Ravine Drive icans. Labrecque Jr., police com- be about $10,000 for sand to approval to Humble Oil & Re- In Rumson project. Hennessey, 53, says of his fining Co. for reconstruction By Blaze Shade Tree mittee chairman, reported create a beach. "Maybe bus- RUMSON — Police here that in response to complaints Saker said the Matawan candidacy: "You've got to of a service station on Leon- . LITTLE SILVER - David inessmen could help. Maybe Board of Education violated have arrested three youths voiced by westside residents each businessman would buy get your feet wet sometime." ardville Road, and a man and charged them Dillon, 10, son of Mr. and Unit Elects last week, the police depart- the bidding laws by awarding Like Meyner, Sandman, 47, William G. Bassler of Red Mrs. David D. Dillon of 36 a couple of bags of sand," a contract for the two proj- with possession of an alcohol- ment set up the radar unit is the main target in the Re- Bank was appointed board at- ic beverage and a narcotic Southvale Ave., was listed in Mr. McAlary, a local busi- ects on the basis of Riesz's Its Leaders on Bridge and Leighton Aves. nessman (he owns Corrigan's publican race. One of the torney, succeeding Robert Ot- and being under Influence of fair condition this morning in He said 10 summonses and low bid for the combined job. principal arguments used the latter. FREEHOLD-Neal Munch Plumbing and Heating, Oak- ten who resigned last month. Riverview Hospital, Red about 15 warnings were is- Marburger said that against him has been a lack of Freehold has been elect- land St.), suggested. The four were identified by Bank, with burns suffered in sued to drivers as a result. whether or not the Riesz com- of party loyalty, based on the ed as chairman of Monmouth The YMCA and Ocean police as Raymond Piano, \a back-yard accident Satur- Stop signs have been placed pany was the lowest bidder gubernatorial race four years County Shade Tree Commis- County Park have swimming 21, Valley Drive; James day night. at the intersections of Brow- on the general construction ago, when he entered the Hazlet Crash sion. areas like that he proposes Clancy, 19, W. Highland Ave., Little Silver police reported er and Depot Places, Mr. La- proposal for additions to the primary against a hand- Thomas Koenig of Inter- for Mohawk Pond, Mr. Mc- and Terence Kelly, 18, Sev- that the incident occurred this brecque said. two schools, tiie work already picked organization candidate : way: laken was elected vice chair- Alary added "and there's no performed had proceeded to Injures 3 enth Ave., all Atlantic High- Donald Somers, owner of reason on God's earth we and narrowly lost. : David was playing in the man. Association Superin- HAZLET - A three- lands, and Charles Andrews, the White Star Taxi Company can't do something, immedi- rear yard of the C. H. Sulli- tendent David C. ShaW will Cahiil, 56, has also had dis- car collision at 3:23 a.m. to- 19, Valley Drive, Highlands. whose office is at the rail- ately, along these lines." serve as secretary, the posi- crimination charges lev- day hospitalized one driver, They were apprehended ? van home, 41 Southvale Ave., road station, complained that tion formerly held by Mr. Cites Beach Cost Fire Series eled at him—he was accused injured three other people May 15 when Patrolmen = with tiiree Sullivan children the stop sign facing east on Munch. The fattier of four, Mr. Me-. of owning a summer home on and resulted in the issuance James Fenn and Robert Well- -at 8:46 p.m. the youngsters Monmouth St. and Bridge The association directors, Alary noted the cost of send- restricted property. His of a ticket for impaired driv- ner were investigating the apparently built a fire in a Ave. "is the most neglected Is Probed in a resolution, commended ing youngsters to the Sea assets include the support of ing to Jack Reddy, 24 Oregon car in which' they were sandbox, poured a cup of sign on earth," adding that NEW SHREWSBURY - John Scott for his leadership Bright bathing beach from the Bergen County Republi- Ave. parked at River Road and gasoline over it and ignited he has "yet to see a police- Bed Bank: 60 cents bus fare; Police and fire authorities .it. as chairman during the first can organization, the state's First St. man give anyone a summons 50 cents to get on the beach are continuing their investi- Police said he was the driv- Beer was found in the vehi- David's shirt went up in two years of the association's gation into four fires in 24 most powerful, and endorse- existence. for going through it. And I "and if they buy some lunch, ment from Case and former er of the third car involved cle and Piano was charged flames. Mrs. Sullivan rushed call police twice a week to that's $1.85 per kid." hours which kept firemen in the accident. him into her home, cut off Directors of the association Gtfv. Alfred E, Driscoll. with threatening a police of- report an accident there." A swimming site would here busy last week. the shirt and called police. elected at the spring forum Admitted to Riverview Hos- ficer, disorderly conduct and Mr. Labrecque said that in- keep the town as well as the Police Chief James A. Her- McDermott, 46, gets his They dispatched the First were Air. Koenig, Matthew pital, Red Bank, with a spi- inviting minors to have alco- tersection is under investi- kids cool, Mr. McAlary sug- ring said the first one was at support largely from central • Aid Squad, which took the Taylor of Hazlet Township; nal injury was the driver of holic beverages in his car. gation, He said the borough gested. 1:10 p.m. Wednesday when a New Jersey. His platform in- youngster to the hospital. Mrs. Dorothy Gorsuch of cludes a strong law and or- the first car, James Hyer, 17, At that time, police detect- is seeking permission to use "We've had some bad situ- mattress in the rear of a gar- of Main St., Keansburg. The • He reportedly, is suffering? Middletown; Mr. Scott of At- bage truck blazed up, and the der pledge. ed an odor of marijuana in lantic Highlands; Mr. Munch, railroad property for a stop second driver was Thomas the car and confiscated a sub- from burns to the upper sign "and the police chief, the sparks set grass fires along Sears, 49, is basing his ' body, hands and face, ac- and Mrs. Margaret Crooks of Tesczeskoski, Sharon Place, stance which was sent to the borough attorney and the rail- to Lead Shafto Road and W. Park hopes on a heavy turnout in East Keansburg. cording to police. Sea Girt. Azoy Ave. NAD Earle responded, State Police laboratory In road are working out some his home county of Morris. A Trenton for analysis. feasible agreement." to Israel along with the Tinton FaUs moderate, he was one of the According to hospital au- Trip Fire Co. Last Friday, the lab re- "That's where the situation PUTNEY, Vt. - G. Whitney principal New Jersey sup- thorities, treated for injuries At 7:15 p.m. two grass fires were Henry Koch Jr., Main ported the material to be was eight years ago," Mr. Azoy, son of Mr. and Mrs. porters of his old friend Nix- marijuana and the four Somers commented. G, V. Azoy of Buena Vista broke out, according to the on at last summer's Repub- St., Port Monmouth; Thomas County Births chief, one at the end of Knoll- Redie, Sharon Place, New were arrested on the narcot- Ave., Rumson, N.J., school lican National Convention. wood Drive and the other on Monmouth, and Joseph Colo- ic drug charge. master at Woodbury Forest Wayside Road. Damage was Ozzard, 54, is the most out- All have been released 1n RIVERVIEW Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fur- Father, Son (Va.) School, has been ap- spoken of the Republican can- russn, Plymouth Ave., Port Red Bank long (nee Mary Wiedger), confined to grass in both Monmouth. All were passen- $500 bail each pending pre- 1 pointed to lead an experiment didates. He represented New liminary hearings In Munici- Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zol- Bethany Road, Hazlet, daugh- Admit Offenses cases. gers. group to Israel this summer, Jersey's sportsmen in a legal pal Court here. The narcotic ; dak (nee Lois Erlaoher), 12 ter, yesterday. The alarm went off again FREEHOLD -On the it was announced by Gordon challenge to the state's gun Patrolman William Burke hearing has been scheduled 'Center St., Middletown, son, MONMOUTH MEDICAL at 8:21 Thursday for a fourth day of trial, a Long Boyce, president of the Ex- control laws and is counting issued the summons. for June 16. _.Saturday. Long Branch grass fire on Hance Ave. It Branch father and son plead- periment in International Liv- was controlled by the North- on their support in the pri- Mr. and Mrs. Nicolas Val- Mr. and Mrs. Winston ed guilty to charges of ob- ing. mary. ,;.CQff (nee Olga Garini), Dutch Churchill (nee Joal Leone), side Fire Co. structing two state troopers A native of New Jersey, No injuries were reported. ' Lane Road, Colts Neck, son, 158 Monmouth Road, Oak- last July 29 when they were yesterday. Jiurst, daughter, yesterday. Mr. Azoy was graduated from charged with a disorderly per- Deerfield (Mass.) Academy Conditioner Gas The Weather ' Mr. and Mrs. John Askin Mr. and Mrs., Johnson Wang sons complaint. 5 Fort Employes (nee Ann Greaney), Rt. 35, (nee Lillian Lin), 31 Cedar in 1958. At Princeton he re- Leaks Into Bank Partial clearing and cooler clearing during this afternoon. Samuel Wetzel, 42, and his ceived his bachelor of arts Get Service Pins BED BANK — Police Chief Middletown, daughter, yester- Ave., Long Branch, son, yes- son, Richard, 19, of 157 Pa- this afternoon, high in upper Visibility five miles or more day. terday. degree in 1962. FT. MONMOUTH - Five Leroy McKnight reported that 70s. Fair and cooler tonight, vilion Ave., Long Branch, employes in the Procure- with fair weather tonight and Mr. and Mrs. Charles JERSEY SHORE MEDICAL Last summer Mr. Azoy firemen yesterday were low 50-55. Tomorrow mostly tomorrow. Neptune were on trial for assault and conducted the Operation ment and Production Direc- called to the Monmouth Coun- Luckinbill (nee Melissa Mil- battery on state Troopers sunny, high 70-75. Thursday's ler), Balmoral Arms, Mata- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crossroads Africa team in torate, Army Electronics ty National Bank, Broad St., outlook, sunny and mild. TIDES John Petzaek of Colts Neck Nigeria where Africans and wan, son, yesterday. Deutsch (nee Catherine Law- Command, were presented when gas escaped from lines In Long Branch, yesterday's and James Jeffrey of Prince- North Americans worked to- Sandy Hook Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hind- lor), 41 Koenig Lane, Free- service pins and certificates leading to air conditioning high was 78 degree and the erliter (nee Leila Ratzlaff), hold, daughter, yesterday. ton in Colts Neck when they gether in reconstructing flood by Col. Jacob B. Cooper- equipment. George L. Bielitz, TODAY - High 11:18 p.m. pleaded to the lesser charges. defenses for a river town. low was 62. It was 72 at 6 ando low 5 p.m. Bayberry Lane, Middletown, Mr. and Mrs. David Burlew house, director. bank president, said 11 peo- p.m. The1 overnight low was County Court Judge Patrick This spring he organized and Bon, yesterday. (nee Carol Ketcham), 20 Main Receiving the awards were ple were evacuated from the 65 and the temperature at 7 TOMORROW - High 11:59 J. McGann Jr. accepted the escorted students on an ar- basement of the bank as Mr. and Mrs. Frank Conti St., Farmingdale, son, yester- Edward Washilewski of Red this morning was 66. There a.m. and ... p.m. and low pleas and set July 10 for sen- cheological tour through a precautionary measure at (nee Winifred MacFarlane), day. Bank, 30 years' service; John was a trace of rain. 5:48 a.m. and 6 p.m. Deerfield Road, Hazlet, PERTH AMBOY GENERAL tencing. Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. Blake of Sea Girt, Marcella 11:26 a.m. The air condition- For Red Bank and Rumson daughter, yesterday. Perth Amboy Frank Moore of Eatontown Mr. Azoy has taught in Sicily Dzierbinski of Perth Amboy, er was functioning again in MARINE bridge, add two hours; Sea Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cow- represented Samuel Wetzel. and Nairobi and has traveled Max Grabenstetter of Me- the afternoony he said. Westerly winds 10-15 knots Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Wat- extensively in the Yukon, Bright, deduct 10 minutes; son (nee Carol Wheeler), ard (nee Marcella Conklin), Charles Frankel of Asbury tuchen and Harold Barnfield Firemen used exhaust fans this afternoon, (onight.and to- Long Branch, deduct 15 min- 61 Broad St., Keyport, son, Park represented Richard Africa, Europe and Central of Brick Township, 20 years' morrow. Visibility improving Laurel Drive, Little Silver, America. to' clear fumes from (he utes; Highlands bridge, add '• daughter, yesterday, Friday. Wetzel. service. building. to about five mites witfa. slow 40 minutes. -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK • MIDDLETOWN, N. J.: TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 3,, Top of the News Board Member to Raise TAIPEI, Formosa - South Vietnamese President * Student Petitions Issue Nguyen Van Thieu said today he won't talk about a coali- tion government for his country when he meets President RED BANK - It may or The Monmouth County been given to the handling Nixon Sunday, but they'may discuss "a more concrete pro- may not be on the agenda, Chapter of the American of the student grievances. gram" for toe Paris talks. but the Red Bank Board of Civil Liberties Union, which If there's a ban on circulat- TltieUl coacIuding a five-day state visit to Nationalist Education will be discussing contends the right to petition ing petitions in Red Bank}* the Red Bank High School is protected by the free High School now, it's of fairly cnina, told a news conference he expects to discuss the student petition brouhaha gradual replacement of U.S. troops in Vietnam with South speech guarantees of the recent origin. Just four when it meets behind closed First and Fourteenth Amend- months ago, students who cir- Vietnamese forces when he meets Nixon on Midway. doors tonight. "We may also discuss a more concrete program on how ments to the Constitution, is culated petitions in school to move toward peace at the talks in Paris," Thieu said. Mrs. Robert Kopka, one of keeping a close eye on ad- were commended by the board But "I have no intention to discuss the coalition govern- the three-member board mi- ministrative procedures at and praised by Dr. Hoops who ment because r do not intend to do so, and I think President nority to vote for permitting the high school. said the petition approach Nixon would not intend to do so with me." the students to circulate the Mrs. Kopka said that when was "a model of proper pro- petitions asking that a fa- the board adopted the student cedure for the school." The The Viet Cong's National Liberation Front in its recent vorite teacher be rehired, 10-point peace plan called for a coalition government for grievance policy "I felt we petitions at that time urged said "we have to discuss" should discuss it further and that the birthday of the late South Vietnam to arrange elections and supervise the with- last week's events surround- drawal of foreign troops. Thieu has said repeatedly he make it more inclusive. I Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King ing students' attempts to pe- tried to table it." But her ef- Jr. be observed as a regular would, "never" accept such a government. Nixon has taken tition. no definite stand on the subject. forts were voted down, she school holiday. She said she intends to noted. "The board majority raise the issue at tonight's The policy was adopted in thought that banning the Expect Sanitation Men Back meeting. response to a state Board of petitions would keep things NEWARK — City officials say they have assurances a A coalition group, born of Education request for board quiet," Mrs. Kopka observed walkout by about 700 sanitation men that left an accumu- the public rally held 10 days policy in dealing with .student last night. "We* (the three lation of some 100 tons of garbage on city sidewalks will ago to protest the situation in disorders and grievances. dissenting members) tried to end today. • the Red Bank schools, will 'Prefabricated' tell them it would do just the The walkout started yesterday as the men voted to stay move one step further at a opposite." WELCOME ABOARD — Little Silver Mayor Gordon N. Litwin, left, congratulates meeting scheduled for 8 p.m. The Red Bank policy "was off their jobs to press their demands for higher wages. rather a prefabricated thing The letters announcing Later, however, city authorities said they received assur- Retired Army Lt. Col. Rufus Z. Johnston, center, after his appointment last Thursday in the Red Bank Thursday night's meeting Community Center, W. Ber- that the Superintendent's ances from officials of Teamsters Local Union 945, which night to $l0,O00-a-year job as the borough's first municipal administrator. Round Table worked out," state that "Red Bank schools represents drivers and laborers in the city's Public Works gen Place. Church and civic Councilman Charles Rell, chairman of the council's personnel committee, looks groups are being invited to Mrs. Kopka said. The Super- are hi trouble" and declare Department, that the men would be on the job today. that concerned citizens "need on. *" (Register Staff Photo) send representatives to the intendent's Round Table is a meeting, and interested indi- monthly meeting of school all interested Red Bank citi- Rocky Calls Trip a Success viduals also are being urged superintendents in the county. zens to help us work out the NEW YORK (AP) - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller says to attend. State Commissioner of Ed- problems." that despite the anti-U.S. demonstrations his Latin-Ameri- Politely Worded ucation Dr. Carl L. Marbur- The letters went out over ger emphasized his displea- can trip was a "tremendous success" in terms of finding Name Johnston Little Silver's Mrs. Kopka said last night the signature of Detective Lt. out what the people are thinking. that the petition the students sure with Red Bank's stated Benjamin H. Glover, presi- "Despite the problems that developed," the trip brought wanted to circulate asking policies — and with those dent of Red Bank Concerned Into ''sharp focus the feeling, hopes and aspirations" of that Nicholas Anton, a first- adopted by most school Citizens, which co-sponsored Latin Americans, he told newsmen on his arrival last night First Borough Administrator year teacher of French and boards — at last month's the recent public rally at- at Kennedy Airport. state Board of Education tended by more than 300 ' LITTLE SILVEE - Mayor ed with the Russell M. Borus and returned to the borough Spanish, be rehired "was worded carefully and politely. meeting. He lumped Red persons. The rally voted Gordon N. Litwin with the Real Estate Agency in r-:ir and the army base four Bank with those districts overwhelmingly to call for an Recommend Pact for Professor unanimous backing of the I didn't see anything wrong Haven. years ago. When he retired with it." whose policies, he said, in- investigation of the school JERSEY CITY — A one-year teaching contract with- Borough Council last night Commanded Post he and his wife, Mrs. Estelle dicated little thought had system. appointed Rufus Z. Johnston While in the Army, Mr. G. Johnston, elected to settle She said she doesn't think • out tenure has been recommended for a controversialist. the denial of the right to pe- Peter's College professor, the subject of a student strike and as borough administrator and Johnston commanded the post at 20 AlwinTer., here. clerk at a combined annual of Vasslncourt in Trois Fon- His salary breaks down to tition to the students is board .sit-in, by the American Association of University Profes- policy. sorc. salary of $10,000. He was se- taine, Morre Deft, France, a $2,500 a year as borough clerk The recommendation, delivered yesterday to the Eev. lected from more than 60 ap- town of 9,000 military and ci- and $7,500 a year as munici- "I don't think we have any Coeds Found Slain written or definite policy on Victor Yanitelli, college president, was based on the conten- plicants. vilian personnel. His position pal administrator. He will (Continued) serve simultaneously in both the matter," Mrs. Kopka said, • tion that the teacher, Thomas Haessler, had not been given The mayor said "I am most was the equivalent of mayor. The Atlantic County prose- behaved," he said. "I wish I Previously he had com- posts, beginning June 16. "these things are pretty much sufficient notice that his contract would not be renewed. pleased to make this appoint- left to the building principal." cutor, Robert McAllister, said could get girls like them all ment" and added there had manded the 69th Signal Bat- Mrs. Dicksie Hoyt Callan, their bodies were found about the time." been "at least three men in talion and the Student Officer national water skiing cham- "We do have a student GIs Given Trial Rights grievance procedure," she 20 feet apart and were pur- He said the girls had spent the borough we would have Detachment at Ft. Mon- pion and a physical education posely hidden under leaves. WASHINGTON - You'll find very few Americans ir- gladly appointed to the posi- mouth. teacher in the Red Bank added, "which these students a great deal of time on the followed..." ' He said a state trooper bad reverent enough to disagree with George Washington. But tion." • Mr. Johnston attended school system, was appointed beach, swimming and sun- toe Supreme Court, which a lot of Americans find unduly ir- to the recreation committee Following the established found the car at 11:50 a.m. bathing. Mr. Johnston retired as an Peekskill Military Academy procedure, the students first reverent anyway, has turned its back on a policy set by and Patricia Fritsche, Linda Friday and had a towing Syben said the girls prom- Army lieutenant colonel in and Officer Candidate School asked permission of James D. agency haul it away. He said The Father of His Country and given soldiers and sailors June, 1966, and has since at Ft. Monmouth. Coates and Greg Langley ised to write when they ar- a right they never had before. Evergetis, the high school the reason the area was not worked for Rowan Controller He first came to Little Sil- were appointed counselors in principal, who refused it. : rived h\>me safely. Their trip That right, established by 5-3 vote yesterday, is to have the borough's summer searched then was because Corp. as assistant to the pres- ver 28 years ago when he was They then went to Superin- they believed it was a routine ended 10 miles from the re- the kind of trial other citizens are entitled to when they are ident and has been associat- stationed at Ft. Monmouth recreation, program. charged with civilian crimes in peacetime. Their fate for tendent of Schools Robert C. abandoned car case. The re- sort house. Off-duty crimes unrelated to military duties should not be Hoops, who refused permis- lationship to the girls was sion, too, and then to the One of the fathers, Perry, decided by court martials — which, Justice William 0. noted when the Ocean City said he suspected foul play al- Douglas observed, "are singularly inept in dealing with board,-where the majority Police issued a 13-state miss- turned down the request. The most from the start. the nice subtleties of constitutional law." Holmdel Water Shortage Spurs ing persons alert after the students circulated the peti- parents reported their daugh- "The girls simply were not tions anyway, gathering more ter missing. temperamentally capable of Union Leader Denies Extortion Laying of Main to Old Manor than 3pff signatures before the driving off some other place NEWAEK - Union leader Peter W. Weber, who is petitions were confiscated by The fathers, who came without letting us know," charged with extorting money from contractors during 1983 HOLMDEL — Many homes June since 1960 that I'm M. Schulz spent more than an a high school vice principal alone with their families, late Perry said before the bodies and 1964, has testified that he spent more than-$40,000. on in the Old Manor section suf- aware of>7 charged Maypr hour at last night's meeting who reportedly threatened a Monday, identified the girls were discovered. pleasure boats in 1968, but. added that none of the money fered from intermittent lack William HV Menges. I',' ruling on a number of perco- student leader with two weeks at Shore Memorial Hospital "They called Tuesday night was the result of a bribe. of water last weekend. The "And every year they lation tests that have ac- suspension. here. and again Wednesday," Davis During cross examination at his trial yesterday, Weber shortage keeps alive a tradi- promise new equipment," he cumulated in the Absence of A parkway maintenance said. "They had gotten a bit testified that he loaned $18,400 to his secretary Aug. 1, tion that the Board of Health added. the board's executive officer man who was aiding in too much sun; they'd been 1963, so she could buy a boat. He said also he spent $22,- has promised to halt this Board member and Town- Joseph P. Quail. Mr. Quail the police hunt found the bod- shopping; they said they met 000 to refloat and repair his own boat which sank May 6 year. ship Committeeman David has missed the last two board Authority ies 150 yards from where the a few boys on the beach but 'Of that year. Weber said his secretary Mitzi Bocha, never George S. Kinkade, general Cohen blamed the situation on meetings. (Continued) car had been discovered, 200 nothing exciting." repaid the money although the boat was sold in 1966 for manager of the West Keans- "catch-up action," explaining Says Tests Not Made and planning before disband- feet off the parkway. burg Water Co., which ser- that increased mse very Mr. Schulz was also direct- State Police Sgt. Joseph Ko- Davis ruled out boys they about $14,000. ing to become the NEMCRSA had dated at the shore resort vices the northern half of the quickly takes up the briefly ed to follow through on sew- in October 1965. bus said one of the victims township, told board mem- expanded water supply. as being involved. "We con- age pollution tests in catch The authority is construct- was lying face down and the Would Stall War Criticism bers, many of whom received While agreeing that exces- basins along Holmdel Road other face up. tacted the college J-oys that ing a $31 million sewer net- they had dated shortly after WASHINGTON - Senate Democratic Leader Mike complaints from residents sive use in the Raritan Val- supposedly being contaminat- Police speculate that the work which will serve 12 com- the girls failed to arrive home Mansfield, who only yesterday threw some punches at Nix- during the holiday weekend, ley U.S.A. development prob- ed by seepage from the Holm- motive was not robbery since munities. Friday," he said, adding that on administration war policy, now suggests a moratorium that excessive use and resul- ably caused the weekend del Village Shops. Mr. some small bills and change none of them knew of the on such criticism until after the President's Sunday meet- tant low pressure caused the shortage in Old Manor, board Quail's written report stated Efficiency Expert were found in the purses of girls' whereabouts. . ing with South Vietnamese chief of state Nguyen Van Thieu. problem. members want specific plans that four private laboratories As chairman of the Fair the victims. Mansfield said in an interview the Senate ought to dis- To alleviate the condition, from water, company officials he had contacted did not per- Haven Borough Council's fi- Police said the girls' suit "They were not the boy play as much unity as possible behind President Nixon to Mr. Kinkade said the com- to stave off future emergen- form such tests, nor did the nance and administration cases were still in the trunk crazy types," Davis said, de- strengthen his position in the discussions with Thieu on Mid- pany will begin laying a new cies. state nor Rutgers. committee, Mr. Rooney was of the car and apparently no scribing his daughter as one way Island. eight-inch main from Cherry They directed a letter be Mr, Menges asked that Mr. credited with introducing ef- violence occurred in the car who would not "jump into "The President is in ai.difficult spot," Mansfield said. Hill to Crescent Drive, in Old sent to the company inviting Quail submit a detailed re- ficiency measures which cut since there were no obvious something and let the chips "I have some uneasiness about Thieu's position. But I am Manor, this Thursday, with representatives to a meeting port at the next board meet- costs. signs of a fight. fall where they may." sure Mr. Nixon will acquit himself well In representing the this new water source expect- Monday night with the board ing of the status of dye tests When he left office as Fair Police did not speculate if The holiday was to be a majority opinion in this meeting. In my view, the majori- ed to be completed within a and the township engineer, A being conducted in Holmdel Haven councilman two years the murders occurred at the special treat for the Perry ty of the people of this country want a responsible solu- week. copy of the directive will be Village and Wychwood, where ago — he didn't seek reelec- scene or elsewhere. girl. tion of the war and they would not like to see any road- A new booster pumping sta- sent to the Public Utilities septic water has periodically tion — Mr. Rooney made a The coeds had stayed in "Liz was from Minnesota blocks put in the way of it." tion at Crawfords Corner will Commission. contaminated a branch of suggestion that has taken the rooming house for girls and getting to the seashore increase pressure sufficiently Mr. Cohen and Mr. Men- Ramanessin Brook running root. He proposed a regional operated by Walter Syben and was a big deal for her," said to alleviate problems in the ges urged that the state De- Wants Wiretap Data Told through the area. garbage disposal system on his wife. Syben said the girts Davis. Crawfords Hills Estates area, partment of Health and the Details demanded by the the order of Northeast, and had been there since last HOUSTON — Lawyers for Cassius Clay told a federal Board members were not PUC be called in immediate- News of the deaths came to judge yesterday the Justice Department must disclose all board include tests complet- was instrumental in setting Tuesday and were cheerful content with the proposed ly if the water company's ed, future plans for continu- Mr. and Mrs. Davis and Per- Its wiretap information or dismiss its prosecution of the up the first meeting of the when they drove off early ry, who had joined them in first-afd measures. plans appear inadequate to ing them, and the status of group that has evolved into Friday to beat the holiday former heavyweight boxing champion. "This (the low pressure) avert future water crises. Camp Hill, through an ex- Judge Joe Ingraham delayed until tomorrow morning two Wychwood homes whose the Shore Refuse Disposal traffic. They had originally has been a problem every Township Engineer Richard dye tests were positive. cited reporter who telephoned arguments* on a defense motion to postpone a hearing the Study Committee. planned to leave Friday eve- them. Supreme Court ordered to determine whether wiretap con- During his tenure as coun- ning. versations were involved in Clay's 1967 conviction on a cilman, Mr. Rooney also "My wife told those girls, Without a word, they • charge of refusing to be drafted into the armed forces. served as Fair Haven repre- be careful, be careful," Syben walked past two newsmen 'Contributing to Delinquency' sentative to the Municipal said. who had been waiting on the Soviet, Red Toll Falls Off Public Service Coordinating Syben said the girls re- patio of the Davis' contempo- Committee, a nine-town public plied that if they got tired rary brick and stone home. SAIGON — The total number of Americans killed in ac- Charges Dismissed by Klatsky they would pull over to the The fathers did not talk to tion in Vietnam last week was about the same as the week utility watchdog group. He is RED BANK - Municipal igi Nannini, 22, of 26 Deane Road, Hazlet, and with pos- a former Fair Haven Plan- side of the road and rest. newsmen after they identified before, allied sources reported today, but South Vietnamese "They were very nice and the bodies in New Jersey. and enemy totals dropped sharply. Court Judge William I. Klat- Way,-River Plaza. On April session of a dangerous knife. ning Board member. sky yesterday dismissed 29, Mr. Nannini was charged Mr. Slusarz entered a plea He attended the University sophisticated. You could tell The sources, reporting in advance of the official sum- immediately they came from mary to be issued Thursday, said the combat death toll charges against August A. with atrocious assault and of guilty yesterday on charges of Detroit and has a degree Boy Is Injured Kauffmanh, 26, of 27-29 W. battery on Raymond F. Slus- of assault and battery on Mr. good families, the girls were was between 50 and 300 U.S. troops, 231 South Vietnamese in business administration RED BANK - Kenneth Front St. of contributing to arz, 19, of 3 Chestnut Ridge Nannini on the same date. attractive and very plain in and at least 2,637 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong. The of- from New York University. Goubeia, 9, of Virginia Ave., the delinquency of minors, The judge levied a fine of their manners," he said. ficial figures for the week before May 18-24, were 265 Amer- He also attended Newark Col- , "They hugged my wife and Hazlet, was reported in fair icans, 413 South Vietnamese troops, and 3,968 of the ene- but the judge ordered jail sen- $50. lege of Engineering and Rut- tences on two other counts. Powell's Talk kissed us goodbye," he re- condition in Riverview Hos- my. American battlefield deaths from Jan. 1 through May Also fined in yesterday's • -gers University. lated. "The Perry girl told pital this morning with a con- 24 totaled 5,009, or an average of 238 a week. If this rate The judge dismissed Is Called Off court session were James Mr. Rooney is a member me and my wife: 'I love you cussion suffered in a bicycle continues, the total number of Americans killed in the Viet- charges that Mr. Kauffmann Cummings, 52, of 22 Taylor of the Fair Haven Volunteer for what you are.' accident yesterday. He was RED BANK — The fund- nam war will pass 40,000 by early October. The total May had contributed to the delin- Lane, Eatontown, $25 for be- Fire Co. and the Republican "They were quiet and well- admitted at 9:17 p.m. 24 was 35,530. ' quency of two young teen-age raising dinner planned by. the ing under the influence of al- Club. girls March 10 by encourag. Shrewsbury Avenue AME cohol on Shrewsbury Ave. on He resjdes at 108 Princeton Poison Gas Hearing Postponed ing them to sleep in a vacant Zion Church for Saturday in May 30; and Eddy Daniels, Road, Fair Haven. Mr. and Gain more leisure time, pa/your bills at home the New Irvington Hotel, NEWARK - A federal court hearing designed to have apartment. The girls were re- 442 Hendrlckson Ave., Long Mrs. Rooney are parents of ported to be runaways from Lakewood, has been can- Branch, $50 for being under a son and a married daugh- top U.S. government officials explain why they should be celled. permitted to ship 7,000 tons of poison gas through Eliza- Riverview Academy, Shark the influence of alcohol and ter. wise...open a beth was postponed yesterday until a later date. River Hills. Guest speaker was to have using loud, obscene language The authority has begun But Judge Klatsky sen- been Rep. Adam Clayton on May 30. construction of the treatment Checkmaster Escapee Yields, One Holds Out tenced Mr. Kauffmann to a Powell, D-N.Y. The church plant and main pumping sta- total of 60 days in county jail was notified by the congress- Summer Schedule tion on Raccoon Island off account LUMBEBTON, N. C. — One of two convicts who es- on charges of failing to give man's office that he had been Monmouth Beach, and antici- taped from a prison camp after killing a guard surrendered a good account of himself ordered by his physician to For Library Set pates beginning operations in No minimum today, but his companion held out under police siege of a while on the roof of Leon's take a complete rest and was ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS- 1972. farmhouse, with the home owner as hostage. Cleaners, 68 White St., on forced to cancel his scheduled Mrs. Helen S. Donoghue, di- Jimmy Lee, 21, gave himself up shortly before dawn. The regional sewer network May 30 and for being under appearance for the church. rector, announced the local will serve six authority mem- Ricardo Resendez, 26, stayed in the house with tobacco public library will go on a farmer Isley Wilcox as his captive while 200 lawmen waited the influence of intoxicating The Rev. Alfred S. Parker, ber towns: Little Silver, Fair liquor at the same time. Mr. pastor, announces that other summer schedule beginning Haven, Shrewsbury, West nearby. Monday. Police bathed the house in floodlights during the night. Kauffmann pleaded guilty to phases of the fund raising Long Branch, Oceanoort and The escapees had briefly held Wilcox's 55-year-old wife; both charges stemming from project are proceeding and Hours will be from 10 to 11 Monmouth Beach. It also will his 16-year-old son, Lynn Wilcox; and Mrs. Wilcox's daugh- the May 30 incident. will culminate Sunday with a.m. and from 1 to 5 p.m. serve six customer towns: Sea the dedicatiqn of the new par- Monday through Friday, and Bright, Rumson, Shrewsbury ter by a previous marriage, Mrs. Ruby Brown, who was In another case, Judge Klat- Pan we help you? visiting from her home nearby. All were released un- sky referred to the Grand sonage by • Bishop Milto , from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Township, New Shrewsbury, 'CENTRAL JERSEY BANK harmed. j/~. Jury two charges against Lu- Smith. Wednesday nights. Red Bank and Eatontown. UlMMHOff. O. I.C, > -THE DAfLY REGISTER, RED BANK • MIDDLETWN, N. J.i TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 set if they are advertised lat- Paul V, FeHmberg er than June 10. ; r :~ Two Contracts Let The $31 million regional BATAWAK - Pa"1 «• Cliffwood Residents Resolve Gas Fellenberg, 78; «7 Middle- sewer network will serve,six Mi Heights died yesterday member and six customer in Marlboro State Hospital Tanks Row With Midland Glms By Northeast Sewer towns. Mr. Fellenberg was born MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - The meeting was called aP Cliffwood Ave. and George LITTLE SILVER - At a trunk line through a section of special meeting Thursday, Oceanport. In Germany and came to this The continuing conflict be- ter residents loudly protested Gumbs of County Road. Completes Courses' country In 1923. He was a the construction of two pro- Councilman Daniel Downey the Northeast Monmouth tween Cliffwood residents and Both were low bidders. RUMSON - G. J. Sterling son of the late Ernest and pane gas storage tanks, need- was also named to the com- County Regional. Sewerage The authority authorized its Thompson, president, Ster- Johanna Menzel Fellenberg. the management of Midland ed in glass production when mittee. Robert Taylor, chair- Authority awarded contracts secretary to advertise for He was a resident here three Glass Co. on Cliffwood Ave., natural gas is not available. man of the Industrial Com- totaling more than $2.85 mil- bids for construction of sew- ling Thompson Gallery of years after living several seems resolved. The tanks, built at the mittee, was asked to be avail- lion for the main trunk lines ers in Little Silver, Shrews- Homes, with offices here, in years in Cliffwood. Mayor Hans Froehlich an- firm's site without Planning able to meetings. in Little Silver and Oceanport. bury, Oceanport and Mon- Middietown, and Matawan, Mr. Fellenberg retired nounced last night an amica- Board approval of the site The committee will be Somerset - Valley Construc- mouth Beach, all member announces that Mrs. Ruth from E. I. DuPont De Ne- ble settlement. He explained plan or a building permit, asked to meet regularly to tion Co., Somerville, was towns, and New Shrewsbury Bailey, 4 Lincoln Ave., Rum- resolve any differences, be- mours Co., Parlin, in 1955. that a meeting last Tuesday were "the straw that broke awarded a $1,879,000.13 con- and Shrewsbury Township, son, of the firm's Rumson He was a member of the tween the company and resi- in his home of residents and the camel's hack" according tract for the main trunk line which will be authority cus- office, has completed the re- firm's 25-year club. to Mayor Froehlich. dents and check progress of Midland management has through Little Silver and a tomers. quired courses and passed Surviving are his widow, cleared up numerous com- any grievances. "It seemed a real confron- section of Oceanport. The bids will be returnable the) state examination to Mrs. Bertha Heuer Fellen- plaints and led to an under- tation was a real possibility," Mayor Froehlich also D.A. and L. Caruso Inc., at a special meeting July 8. qualify for her real estate berg; a daughter, Mrs. Rob- standing of the firm's poli- the mayor explained, adding squashed rumors of an immi- Elizabeth, was awarded a if they are advertised by ert P. Ward, here, and a nent pull-out by the company broker's license. cies and problems. that area residents had be- Dr. Harry H. Brunt Jr. $610,800 contract for the main June 10, and at a date to be sister,'Mrs. Erna Wittman come increasingly infuriated which had circulated when Of Colorado Springs, Colo. the Planning Board postponed Julius Froehlich with the firm's alleged con- 'Services will be Thursday tribution to dirt, debris and a decision on the tank site HospitalAide at 1 p.m. in the Eedle Fu- WASHINGTON - Julius noise in the neighborhood. plans last month. neral Home with the Rev. Froehlich, formerly of 405 "The failure to get site plan Eldrich Campbell officiating. In an effort to quell the ar- approval and a building per- Fourth Ave., Asbury Park, gument the mayor said he ar- Gains Post Burial will be in Shoreland N.J., died here Sunday. mit, were I feel, an unfortu- LONG BRANCH - Dr. Memorial Gardens, Hazlet. ranged for the meeting be- nate oversight," Mayor Surviving are two sons, Dr. cause "the residents' opposi- Harry H, Brunt Jr., director F. E. Froehlich of New Froehlich commented. "Mid- of psychiatric services at tion to the storage tanks was land officials have assured Miss Migiion E. Loew Shrewsbury, N.J., and Walter not based on fear but rather Monmoutli Medical Center, Froehlich of Washington and me that they will comply in has been elected recorder of a culmination of a long list every way with township ASBURY PARK - Miss five grandchildren. of real or imagined grievanc- the assembly of the Ameri- Mignon Estelle Loew, 86, of regulations if the Planning can Psychiatric Association, The funeral was held yes- es." Board gives approval. I hope 1402 Grand Ave., died Sun- terday in Syracuse, N.Y. at the annual meeting in day in Riverview Hospital, The confrontation came now that the board can act Miami, Fla. with Manuel Terner, presi- in this matter based on the Red Bank. She formerly lived The assembly is composed dent of Midland and Wallace facts and not on emo- at 1256 Ocean Ave., Sea Irwin Thompson of representatives of the dis- Isenberg, a vice-president. tion from residents." Bright. FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP — trict branches and is one oJ Miss Loew was born in Irwin Thompson, 65, of 8 Residents who attended and He added that the firm's APA's policy-making bodies. Red Bank in the building Helen Ave. died suddenly at who were later named to the officials have indicated that Dr. Brunt attended the that now serves as the bor- his home Sunday. mayor's ad hoc Midland once the propane tanks are Miami meeting as represents ough library. She was the Glass Neighborhood Advisory installed, the plant plans to tive of. area three which Mr. Thompson was born in expand the main building daughter of the late William Jackson Township, son of the Committee, were F. E. Jure- covers New Jersey, Pennsyl- Interest! L. and Sarah Little Loew wicz of Locust St., Eli Blank- storage facilities by 200,000 vania, Delaware and the Dis- late David H. and Florence square feet. who owned 50 acres of land Leming Thompson. He had ley, Carmella DiGiambattista trict of Columbia. He is also between Rumson Eoad and been employed in the main- and Mrs. Jean Wagner, all of Midland explained at the a past president of the New River Road. A pond on the tenance department of the May meeting of the Planning Jersey District Branch. property, Loew Lake, was Garden State Parkway. Mr. Board that the propane stor- The newly-elected APA of- named after the family. Thompson was Democratic College Aides age tanks are not dangerous ficer joined the staff of Mon • Miss Loew was a member county committeeman of the. and were needed to serve mouth Medical Center late if the First Presbyterian fourth district, here, and a At Workshop auxiliary equipment at the last year after serving as Church of Rumson. member of the Freehold plant when the N.J. Natural Medical Director and Chief At Middietown Banking Company your savings start: earning She is survived by a cous* Township Democratic Club. LINCROFT - Three top of- Gas Company shut off power. Executive Officer of the An- interest at the rate of 4% from the day of deposit to the day ficials represented Brookdale in Albert Loew of Plain- He belonged to the DeBow This, they explained, oc- cora State Hospital in Ham- of withdrawal, compounded quarterly. There's never an' inter* field, and two nephews, Wil- . United Methodist Church and Community College at a re- curs on the average of 26 monton, the newest of the liam E. Taylor of Amherst, Local 196, American Federa- cent regional workshop which days a year, usually in win- state-operated psychiatric fa est penalty for taking money out. Interest once earned, even Mass., and Henry P. Taylor tion of Technical Engineers. brought community col- ter, when the demand from cilities and the. only one in for a single day, is never lost or withheld, even if you with* of New Town. lege presidents and trustees private users increases. southern New Jersey, Surviving are his widow, together to consider contem- draw before the end of the quarter. " The funeral will be at 11 Mrs. Adele Thompson; a son, a.m. tomorrow in the Flock porary issues facing their in- Ralph Thompson of Denver, stitutions. Funeral Home, Long Branch, Colo.; a sister, Mrs. Ruth So start your MBC savings account today, and get ALL the With the Rev. Harvey C. Broderson of Jackson, and a The chairman of the Brook- Local School Ties in interest your savings earn. Douie officiating. Burial will brother, Melvin D. Thompson dale board of trustees, Maj. be in Greenwood Cemetery, of South River. Gen. W. Preston Corderman, OUR SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ALSO GIVE YOU THE Brooklyn, N. Y. To the World's Biggest The funeral will be Thurs- and vice chairman, Mrs. Har- CONVENIENCE OF THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES day at 11 a.m. in the C.H.T. ry E. LaTowsky Jr., accom- , ^Paul S. Kirk Clayton and Son Funeral panied Dr. Ervin L. Harlach- Computer Complex • Statement mailed quarterly, showing your savings balance, Home, Adelphia, with the er, Brookdale president, to I KEYPORT — Paul S. Kirk, . the workshop in King of Prus- WEST LONG BRANCH - The the hugs ITT computer directly with interest earned thru that quarter Rev. W. C. Pierce of the As- . Electronic Computer Program- In all the Important programming S, of Broad St., died yester- sembly of God Church offi-. sia,' Pa/ The two-day work- Shop was sponsored by the ming Institute at 245 Monmoulh languages — Including COBOL • Passbook need not be presented with deposit nor for with- day in Monmouth Medical dating; Burial will be in Park Highway has announced the and BALI Bunion stressed that at American Association of Ju- Center, Long Branch. Pleasant Grove Cemetery, establishment ol a direct tele- ECPI, both art parr of the reg- drawal. nior Colleges (AAJC), the A retired tailor, Mr. Kirk Jackson Township. communications link between the ular curriculum., and there U no New Jersey Division of Two- Institute's programmer '- training extrd charge. was born here. He was a • Savings transactions haridied at any window Including Year Colleges and the Penn- laboratories and ITT's IBM 340- This new breoklhrough In pro- son of the late Robert and Mrs. Kuiiiincrer sylvania Bureau of Commu- »S computer Installation In Para- gramming education Is but the drive-in windows. Harriet Walker Kirk. His nity Colleges. mus, which fs the world's largest latest of many *hlcJ> have earned wife was the late Helen.: ORANGE — Mrs. Oscar O. commercial data programming, j Jjr ECPI erjuBntajM^Jnl^rja- s%tiYour signature Ngtee^ by'the Autho-Vfsor Identification Dodge Kirk. Kammerer, 87, mother of Major items on the agenda service complex. "JWial ropu'tlttltry^TW olden; edu- Emil O. Katrimerer of Fair were the problems and chal- Robert K. Bunion, director af cational irtilllufTon of III' kind, system. •. " \ He is survived by a daugh- Haven,- died Sunday in Mid- lenges posed by increasing ECPI-West Long Branch, sold, ECPI has a nallonwlde network ter, " Mrs. Floyd Gardner, "Rather than install o scaled-down dietown Township. She re- faculty militancy and the ap- of more than 100 schools, which here; two sons, Paul K. computer* we chose to tie directly makes, the ECPI1 diploma one of sided here. proach to negotiations and Kirk here, and Robert E. Into this huge computer Installa- the most wldely-recognlied and. collective bargaining, Kirk' of Wabasso, Fla.; two Also surviving are two tion by having a computer control respected In Ihe field. other sons, Oscar W. Kam- terminal Installed here." Bunfen "Sinn our students arc trained sisters, Mrs. Martha Me- explained that the IBM 310-30 com- Govern of New York City merer of Beachwood and STUDENTS SERVE PTA In BAL and COBOL and many puters sometimes used for pro- . ethers are not, we< find employer MIDDLETOWIM BANKING COMPANY Harold G. Kammerer of LONG BRANCH — The and Mrs. Hazel Whiter/ of crammer training are nor designed Interest In ECPI graduates very, Hillside, and six grandchil- Bloomfield; a daughter, Mrs. foods classes of Long Branch; to handle programs In the Im- very high," Bunten commented. portant COBOL and BAL/3M5 dren. Carl Goller of Orange; a High School prepared and . ECPI's lulltlme professional place- 1250HI(tany35 , 100 Midway 38 • programming languages. "Without brother, Louis Kond of Mo- served a salad plate lun- ment director assists graduates In ftdJacBirt to Shop-Rite) (atNavMlnkftimRHd) Services will be in the these two languages, a program- desto, Calif.; nine grandchil- cheon for the PTA Council of finding and reviewing employment ming graduate Is Ill-equipped to Bedle Funeral Home at ' opportunities. ECPI offers an Apti- dren, and 13 great-grandchil- the Long Branch Public qualify for a place on the stoff II a.m. Thursday with the tude Test to potential applicants. OPEN SATURDAY TILL NOON at Navtsink Rivar Office dren. Schools. of a full-scale modern computer 'Rev. Charley A\Bender of- Arrangtments can be. made by Mimtwr Fidinl Dipnlt Iniiiniict CapoaUon Installation." ficiating. Burial will be in Services will be tomorrow Four senior foods students calling 541-2800 or visiting ECPI Green Grove Cemetery. at 10 a.m. in the Johnesee —Patty Davis, Paquita Rod- Using the IBM terminal, ECPI at Hi Monmoutti Park Highway, Nutley Home for Funerals, riquez, Sara Jane Garten and students will be oble to pogrom Ruth Green-served. Alfred B. Jones Nutley. FREEHOLD - Alfred B. Mrs. Marion Becker Jones, 72, of 37 Center St. WEST KEANSBURG - died in his home yesterday. Mrs. Marion Frances Beck- 7 He was born in Freehold er, 46, of 59 Holly Ave. died "and was a U.S. Army veteran yesterday in Riverview Hos- of World War I. He was a pital after a brief illness. She pnember of the Bethel AME was a registered nurse on the "church of Freehold. staff of the hospital. He was the husband of the Born in New York City. late Mrs. Mae Jones. Mrs. Becker had lived in this Surviving are a sister, Mrs. area for 22 years. She was Margaret Duckenfield of the daughter of the late -Freehold; a brother, Charles Frank and Margaret Donlon Jones of Newark, and two fos- Behine. She was a commu- ter daughters, Miss Martha nicant of St. Ann's Catholic Butts and Mrs. Margaret .Church here. Peace of Freehold. Mrs. Becker was a charge Services will be at 1 p.m. nurse on the staff of River- Thursday in the Bethel AME view Hospital. A veteran of Church, with the Rev. Mal- World War II, she served in colm S. Steele officiating. . the Army Nurse Corps for Burial, under the direction of three years and was stationed the Freeman,Funeral Home, in the European Theater. Freehold, will be in Maple- She and her husband, the wood Cemetery, Freehold. late Frank Becker, formerly DEATH NOTICE LOEW — Mlpnon Entile, of 1402 operated the Flamingo Hotel Grind Ave, Asbury Park, formerly and Bar in Keansburg. She o( 125*5 Ocean Ave., Bua "Bright, June 1, IMO, age 8fi. Funeral services was a member of the N. J. Wednesday, June 4th at 11 A.m. from Ttlf Flock Funeral rtomc, 243 Broad- Tavern Owners Association way, Lonj Branch. Friends may call and the Bayshore Tavern today 2-4 and 7-0. Interment Green- wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y. Owners Association. CAM) OF THANKS Surviving are a daughter, We wlah to express our heart/pit thajllm to the Uazlct FlrM Aid Bquact Miss Margaret Ann Becker, for their prompt arrival when we needM them most. A special Ihank at. home; and a sister, Mrs. you to a police officer, who wafi flrat Elizabeth (Lillie) M. O'Hare to arrive and administered tile oxy- gen to my ailing wife Hl» Uiooihlful- of West Keansburg. nefa prolonged her life. I am sorry I do not knijw Ills name. Thanks also A Requiem Mass will be of- to Father Ook for the spiritual bless- fered Friday at 10 a.m. in ing!! ami John J. Ryan for the funeral afrBtigemeots. Also, to all our friends St. Ann's Church. Burial, Hid neighbors frn- Lhrlr many wonrier- fnl and well remembered rteens dur- under the direction of the Ry- ing our time of sorrow, thank you. an Funeral Home of Keans- rlod Blffls each and everyone of you. William J. Miller burg, will be in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Middietown.
Halo Oine«: IH Chmlnot St., Red Bulk. N. 1. 0TU1 Branch Offices: When you have a Trimline phone, every- 18 inches longer, is compact It will fit almost line phones in either wall or table models, 111 lit. 35, Mlddleloun, N. I. 30 Enal Main St., Freehold, N. 1. thing you need to make a call is right in the anywhere, because you don't need to see the just call your Telephone Business Office. Vlt Broadwar. Lon» Branch, N. /. palm of your hand. The ten lighted Touch- base to call. Also available wilk standard dial in new a In H7a~by JollnTT Cook and Henry Cl« 8 Published by The Red Dan]! Register Incorporated Tone pushbuttons, which let you "dial" The cost of a Trimline phone is low. Only compact design. Member of the Aaaoclntrd Prcsi -- Ths Associated Pren is entitled •snluelvely to the use for republlcatlon of sll the. local news primed In thlg twice as fast, come to you. So does the con- pennies a day. And there's no extra charge Qtwipaper M well < u all AP news dlipa.tr.htl. venient recall button that you push just be- for color. If you want Touch-Tone service, iecond Olafs poauge paid at Red Bank- N. J 07701 and at addlllonal New Jersey Bell •ulllnf offices. Publlahed dally. Monday throjjh Friday. fore making another call. the additional Touch-Tone charge covers all . fart ol Aa NiiiwmU* B*U Syatm Home Delivery by Carrier — fflntle copy at counter, 10 centa: by Carrier BO Cehu Per Wilk. The Trimline phone, with a cord that is the phones on your line. To order your Trim*> 1 monUi-|l;tll « months—114.00 i monttie—»7 W u months—127.00 Subscription Prlcei In Advance •,TBZ DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK-MIDDLETOWN, N.J.i TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 Brookdale College Pair Rob Three Of $300 Cask FREEHOLD *- Police aw The victims were Frank early 20's, one 5 feet 8 inches, continuing their Investigation Jarczyrwld of Levittown, Pa,, thin, with an Afro haircut ana Gets 500 Tuitions of an armed holdup late and Gerald and Rosemarie' wearing all black dt "' Wednesday night which net- Icfcer, 401 W. Sylvania Ave., and the other 5 feet 6 I UNCROFT-Some 500 stu- slon to the college and nave ted the robbers $300 in cash. Neptune. ' also thin, in a white shirt i dents, to date, have informed sent in their tuition deposits. Police Chief Henry T. Lef- ' tfie two men handed over dark pants. Brookdale Community Col- The college is still await- kowich said the incident oc- their wallets and Mrs. Icker lege that they plan to be on ing word from about an equal curred at 11:52 p.m. at the surrendered her purse. They hand when classes begin In number of students have have intersection of Phyllis Drive contained personal papers, Sentencing Set September. been accepted but have not and Manalapan Ave. credit cards and approx- FredB. Hazlett, director of yet replied. Applicants are al- The f^jiief gave this ac- imately $300 in cash. In Drug Cose admissions, reports that this lowed three weeks to send in count: The two robbers fled on is the number of applicants their tuition deposits from the Three people were con- foot, but apparently they had FREEHOLD - Monmoutll who have accepted admis- time they are notified of ac- versing on the corner when a vehicle nearby, the chief County Court Judge M. Ray- mond McGowan has set July ceptance. two men in their early 20's said, as police patrols failed approached them. One pulled to find anyone walking in the 10 for sentencing of Andte Mr. Hazlett explained that Land, H. Ward Ave., Kuni- Firemen's Fair the college is proceeding a small-caliber, plated pis- area. tol and said, "I'm sorry, but son, who has pleaded guilty slowly in admitting students The chief has issued a Is Under Way put up your hands and give county alarm for the pair, de- to possession of hashish at his at this time: me your wallets." scribed as Negroes in their home last Jan. 27. |. KEYPORT - The fire de- "We want to be certain that partment is sponsoring a fajr^ *we\ do not admit more stu- dents than we can accommo- through Saturday from^.m. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY — Meeting with Ma j. Gen. William B. Latta, left, com- to midnight at Atco Field, dateX,he said. "Overcrowd- Beers St. ing Rootll Bakar't column, "T*. Ottorm," h« am. paw* Nwwnbwr 11—TW to Drive CMMiwn SW shirt man. You tempt Speaher-DR. HAIM G. GINOTT Antfiof of rho run-away notional b«M«|ler, "Bo- him to color with stripes brow. Fount and CMM," ho h on accomplish*,! plotform por- oomtfrf. I and tattersalls, *•••** 8.00 to 12.00. A« lanloni will ha hoM In Pollak Auditorium, Woodraw Wilton H.II, MOHIMMHI Coflog., Watt Una. Branch, NJ., ttaiting at •:JO >.*>. You deserve an Oscar, $1100 ^ ,«„. fa, ^ mMm lmtu ltnmhr. •Mo). Plaooa aaka ehoek payaMo to tha "MoRMoarh CoDaaa but settle for a Sarkt." for marmrriant, or farraar fnformaHon, plaaia wrt. H rho Offiea of Comwrnlty RabHoM, MoMmMtb Cblkgo, Wo* to| Branch, NJ. 0TO4, or phono 322-*«M, ntenrion gift wrap on the house. 2S7. • • • • * • Thh Uetar. S*rl« b toontorad by: The J.ney Shore Branch of tha AAUW The Central Jerwy Bank and Truit Company Th. New Jerxy Natural Gs< Company Wild, wet-look Israeli fitted jacket. Snap button pockets, i BROAD AND FRONT STREETS (J* the event a speaker fa unable to appear, Monmouth epaulets. White, navy or yellow, 16.00. The Square D I CcOege retenta iha ritfbt to propide an appropriate RED BANK, NEW JEfiSK 07701 third floor, Natelsons J. Kridel. tabttUmte.) TEU201.741.530O FROM OUR READERS GISTER Idiots and Ignoranceg M. HAROLD KELLY, Publisher Florence Boad Middjetovra, N. 3. Arthur Z. Kamlo, Editor / T Thomas J. BIy, Executive Editor William F. Sandford, Associate Editor teXdi Astor Smith, who agrees with the wstric. ton° aglinstTrayer in our schools^writes; tot she^^shocked —6 Tuesday, June 3, 1969 by the "total ignorance of the public" who disagree with the ""i am'shocked by ignorance, too. Hers! -She wrote "Why should a Moslem be subjected to a Christian prayer or a Christian to a Jewish prayer. One general enough to ^jaSSan?SK that the 23rd Psalm Reordering of National Priorities says nothing. It is accepted by the Moslems, ther Chris- tians and the Jews. They all share the same God. The Aware that President Nixon must The senator suggests that the Presi- Moslems accept Christ as a prophet along with Moses, and grapple with the colossal tasks of re- dent gave undue weight to the coun- Mohammed. The Jews accept Moses as a prophet and solving the Vietnam war and curbing sels of military advisers in preparing Christ as a teacher. Even the prayer said by Christ to inflation, Congress has not pressed Matt: 6 would not offend the Jewish people since it is di- the budget. Only $1.1 billion has been the chief executive to offer ambitious rected to their God, toci. pared from a swollen military budget, One prayer ruled unconstitutional by the Warren Court programs for the easing of the nation's was "God bless my family, God bless my school, and God domestic ills. but $2.9 billion has been cut from bless my country." Anti-Semitic? No. Anti-Christian? Unfortunately, Mr. Nixon has crucial domestic programs. He says No. Anti-Moslem? No. ,.'-»,' seemed to be more concerned with How about that shocking little "God is great, God u $5 billion more must be appropriated good, and we thank Thee for this food." Imagine all the augmenting an immensely powerful for domestic spending if new crises damage that must have done when our children said it! military establishment than attack- are to be countered. The First Amendment says there shall be no law pro- ing substantive problems intimately hibiting the free exercise of religion in addition to the por- affecting the moral and physical Mr. Nixon is undoubtedly correct tion so often quoted. How can anyone with any sense of in his assessment of unchecked infla- reasoning' defend a court that took prayer from tax sup- health of the nation. ported schools and then ruled it is constitutional to give Thus there are signs that Congress tion. Soaring living costs impose a taxpayers' money to Catholic schools for textbooks ana may not be so patient with the Presi- cruel hardship on low income groups. busing? I agree with Assemblyman Azzolina. They are a dent. U.S. Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R- Such people as Robert S. Benson, bunch of idiots. , former Defense Department official, Sincerely, N.Y., has urged Mr. Nixon to reorder Lillian Holbert national priorities away from building claim, however, that as much as $9 "limitless" military power and toward billion could be cut from the defense restoring "domestic tranquillity." budget "without reducing our security Aid Squad Praised Although he maintains that the or touching those funds earmarked for Lincroft, N. J. President has initiated more realistic the war in Vietnam." To the Editor: It has come to my attention that the Lincroft First Aid policies dealing with inflation and For a start, Mr. Nixon might delay and Rescue Squad has launched its annual fund-raising other economic problems than the deployment of the questionable ABM drive. I would like to' express my assistance to them by Johnson Administration, Sen. Javits program pending the outcome of dis- calling attention to my personal experience as a recipient believes Jhat the Nixon. Administration armament talks with the Soviet Union. A Letter From Rickover of their devoted work In their endeavor to provide aid to unfortunate persons who require assistance in time or has failed to articulate new approaches Denial of funds to needed public pro- By JAMES J. KILPATItICK "Would the majority of the electorate serious illness and injury. to such problems as the nation's de- grams in tumultuous times could prove Several weeks ago, Sen. John O. Pas- accept their argument that, given our un- On Sept. 29,1965, while engaged in a trial at the Court caying cities, tax reform and the revi- to be a disastrous example of false tore wrote to Adm. H. G. Eickover. The met domestic needs, we cannot afford an House in Freehold, I was suddenly stricken with a severe senator asked for the admiral's views on effective defense position vis-a-vis our po- sion of foreign economic policies. economy. stroke to the extent that I was entirely incapacitated. K where the nation is going and what needs tential adversaries? Or that war Is so hor- was my desire to be moved to my home and not to a hos- to be done in a military way at a time of rible that it is better to suffer defeat than pital. Arrangements were made, unknown to me, so that national debate on pre- to light? upon my arrival at my home in lincroft, the Lincroft First Fort, Eatontown in Accord paredness. "As for the high cost of preparedness, Aid and Rescue Squad was waiting to carry me into the Rickover responded it is in fact no greater proportional to to- house. The squad members assisted me in many ways to It is comforting to learn that Ft. a cutback in aid, which subsequently with a letter that merits the extent that words cannot express my thanks and appre- Monmouth and Eatontown officials was restored. the widest possible read- tal U.S. output than 10 years ago—8.8 per ciation to the squad and its members. have reached accord on educating 100 We like to think of Army young- ing. Let me give him the cent of total U.S. goods and services. Omit- The building of the Lincroft First Aid and Rescue Squad ting the costs of the Vietnam War, and was recently severely damaged by fire, causing serious fi- new students who are to be housed in sters as part of the county community floorr "The first point I allowing for inflation, our armed forces nancial problems. •:, ?"" I new construction dn the Capehart and, as such, deserving of the best would like to make," have less buying power today than a dec- It is hoped that this small expression of public thanks Area of the fort education possible. In addition, these Rickover wrote, "is that to the Lincroft First Aid and Rescue Squad will encourage ade ago. Geographically, the area is in New children — who quite often have in judging between con- the public to realize how fortunate they are to have such "In the Soviet Union, on the other a devoted and efficient organization to offer add and assist- Shrewsbury. Eatontown, however, has traveled extensively — can enrich the flicting views on this mat- mPATRICK ter, the deciding factor hand—according to the annual report of the ance to those dependent upon them when illness or injury for a long time been educating chil-' lives of those with whom they go to must be their relevance to the world as congressional subcommittee on foreign eco- strikes, and will assist in helping their fund drive to go dren from the fort school. it Is, not as we would wish it to be. nomic policy issued last June—resources over the top. Eatontown's Board of Education The amicable settling of the Cape- Granted the hldeousness of modern war, have been diverted from the farm sector A sincere and devoted friend to defense, where outlays rose dramatical- and Borough Council naturally express hart question is evidence that the fort can we deduce therefrom that mankind is now wise enough to forego recourse to ly In 1966-67, after remaining static since concern about costs when Eatontown and Eatontown are continuing the fine arms? A look at history should put us on 1962 . . ." The Center Is a Success taxpayers are adversely affected. This relationship that has been cherished guard against those who claim that hu- * * * Red Bank Community Center occurred a few years ago, when gov- by Maj. Gen. William B. Latta and his manity has now reached a state where "IF HISTORY teaches anything, it is 144 West Bergen Place ernmental red tape was responsible for predecessors. the possibility of armed aggression can be surely that weakness invites attack; that Red Bank, N. J. safely disregarded in formulating national It takes ,but one aggressor to. plunge the To thtf'fiditor: policy. -; .:••. world' into "war'against the wfehes of doz- On behalf of the president and the board members of "I am reminded of the intense opposi- ens of peace-loving nations if the former the Red Bank Community Center, we would like to publicly Red Bank and Recreation tion to the Navy's 15-cruiser bill in 1929. is militarily strong and the latter are thank your newspaper and particularly Doris Kulman for the Outdoor folk dancing, scheduled in expanding the department's func- It was argued by many that with the sign- not . . . fair and accurate reporting of *!-e center's activities since ing of the Kellogg Peace Pact the year "As a lawyer, you are familiar with its inception. We think it is fa^ to say «at without the. for tonight in Marine Park, is among tions and in working with area or- before, it was no longer necessary to build Blackstone's statement that security of the promotion help of'The Hegister we would not have pro- the events arranged by the Red Bank ganizations, he and council's Recre- new warships. And this in light of the les- person is the first, and liberty of the in- gressed so far as we have today. sons of World War I which erupted despite Parks and Recreation Department ation Committee, headed by Council- dividual the second 'absolute right inherent After 10 months of operation, we are happy to report men William S. Anderson, deserve the various Hague Peace Treaties! These in every Englishman.' Just so, the first that we have an active enrollment of over 500 people. The program announced yesterday by ships were of inestimable value to helping praise. right of every American is to be protected There are programs for adults, teen-agers, young people and the department is ambitious, Indeed, us to win World War n. The war itself was against foreign attack, and the first duty of \mrsery age children with more activities starting each Whether it's the little ones at prolonged because the Congress — heeding government is to keep our nation week. and is designed to appeal to young and supervised play or the Old Guard play- the 'merchants of death' argument—in 1939 alive. Given the world situation, this calls We would also like to thank the many Monmouth Coun- old — and those in between. •' ing shuffleboard, Red Bankers should prohibited shipment of war materials to for maintenance of a defense capability ty residents who have contributed cash, books, games, Britain and France. records and. even a piano. The local firms and businessmen We continue to be impressed by feel fortunate that the summer will which is adequate to discourage potential * * • aggressors . . . have been most cooperative in lending us equipment and the enthusiasm Alfred A, Gatta, rec- afford them so many enjoyments THEN, TOO, weight must be given to "There can surely be no doubt that the giving valuable advice. For all this help, the Community reation director, has exhibited. Both within the confines of the borough. the credentials of those propounding op- overwhelming majority of the American Center is extremely grateful. posite views. Are they public ser- peop'e are ODoosed to relinquishment of We're convinced that our director, Mr. Aaron Knight, INSIDE WASHINGTON vants, charged with the awesome responsi- our defense capability, recognizing full well is doing a wonderful job and we all feel proud of the results. bility to secure our country against for- that there will then be no one left to pre- Visitors are welcome and we hope some of your readers eign conquest? Or are they private in- vent the takeover by Communist power. will stop in at the center. dividuals not accountable for the conse- Whether one takes the optimistic view that Very truly yours, ; Unwelcome Mat for Fortas quences of their opinions, who feel free to a permanent East-West detente can be Howard Rtidrow V. •• express their personal abhorrence of war negotiated, or the pessimistic view that Linda McKean By KOBERT S. ALLEN of law. They implied he would be better Publicity Chairmen aid JOHN A. GOLDSMITH advised to occupy himself with writing or and to agitate for a reduction of the fi- ultimately we shall have to fight for our If former Justice Abe Fortas Insists nancial burden military preparedness im- liberties, this nation has no future if it teaching. poses on the taxpayer? allows itself to be outmatched militarily." on returning to Us old lav firm, of which Carolyn Agger (Mrs. Fortas) attended he was one of three founders 23 years The Fort's Cannon the meeting, but said nothing. She is sixth- 6 Roslyn Drive •go, it will be over the opposition of an ranking partner and head of the firm's tax YOUR MONEY'S WORTH overwhelming majority of its partners and Oakhurst, N. J. division, with a number of lawyers and To the Editor: associates. accountants working directly under her. That was made stark- In response to the man complaining about the cannon Among attorneys, her income is reported Revolution Hits Office at Fort Monmouth: ' ly clear at an unusual to be in excess of $100,000 a year. showdown on the natter. By SYLVIA PORTER 64-year-old furniture makers, displayed the * Thank your lucky stars the cannon that awakens you li The vote produced the following re- being fired from Ft. Monmouth. Only three senior sults: For Fortas' return—Arnold, Porter The U.S. consumer revolution has fi- new office concept to a selected group of partners voted in favor of nally sifted down to the area where 34 business executives in the first of a series Haven't you ever been awakened by the bugle and ever and William McGovern, fifth-ranking part- •thrilled to the Stars and Stripes being raised? Ever listen in Fortas' rejoining the ner; against—34 other partners and associ- million of us spend a full one-third of our of seminars in New York City. Speaking on firm. lives—the office. "The Office and the Human Performer" the evening to the sounds of taps? You have a lot to be ates; not voting—Miss Agger and Norman thankful for, and better lose a minute's sleep in the morning,. Following is the in- Diamond, fourth-ranking partner. Doomed to extinction or to undergo were Robert Propst, sculptor, inventor and creator of the Action Office concept. Also be able to "roll over for as long as you like" than to live side story: Since this meeting, some firm drastic change are of- Accounts differ on fice concepts and hard- explaining ways to meet the challenge of in under another rule with many sleepless nights. wno ro members have hinted they will quit if For- ware created for a way turmoil in the office was Joseph N. Happy to hear our cannon any time. P iwsed that Fortas tas disregards this overwhelming rejection Dorothea P. Cross resume connection with of life dead and gone. Schwartz, marketing manager of Herman and does come back. One promising young You know ... the com- Miller. The session was jammed—as have the firm. According to one version, he ini- attorney slated to join the Arnold, Porter tiated the move. Another, it was made by pletely enclosed "boxes" been previous seminars in Los Angeles and "shop" changed his mind and accepted an- in which the bosses iso- Grand Rapids. his close friend and fellow founder Paul other offer. Porter, New Deal chairman of the Federal late themselves behind Actually, the success of the concept Communications Commission. • * * monster mahogany sta- seems assured. Companies which already Porter is credited as ON THE GRIDDLE - A leading mem- tus symbols; the inhuman have installed a German sytem somewhat being very eager to have ber of the House Judiciary Committee row up fy — Diplomas Buchner, Robert Joseph Freibaum, Dennis James Hies, Ralph David Imholte, Lee,, John A. Le Moine, were conferred on 179 seniors Burke, Martin J. Cain in, Garden, Ernest Anthony, Robert L. Ives Jr., John Jo- Raymond Charles Leonard, at-Cbrlstian Brothers Acade- Dennis 'Thomas Cameron, . Gardella, Alfred Lee Garfall, seph Jakubowski,. Edmund Thomas Scott Lukas, James my-last night during gradua- Vincent Josepir Cassini, Jef- Francis Anthony Genovese, G. Kardauskas, Steven Wal- A. McAllister, Kevin Joseph 1 tion exercises in De La Salle frey Scott Chapman, Anthony James Patrick Gibbons, Paul ters Katz, Gerald John McAuley, John Francis Me- Auditorium. John Ciaramelli, Robert Michael Giblon, Gerald Ralph Keane, Christopher James Cabe, . John Robert ' Me Presenting diplomas and James Connell, Robert James Gironda, Peter M. Gladlng, Kearney, Kevin James Kear- Donough, Mark John McGov- awards were Bishop George Conway, Patrick Edward Peter Glcibcrman, James ney, Thomas William Keai- em, Christopher James Me W. Anr, S. T. D., of the Tren- Coyne, Paul Raymond Cro- Hugh Gorman, Graydon sley, Daniel Michael Kelly, Grath, John Peter McLaugh FAMILY BARGAIN WORLD ton Diocese; Brother Stephen nin, and Richard Alan Cum- Gregory Goss, Lawrence Patrick Lawrence Kelly, •lin, Paul James Mahan, Phil- Rt. 35atPatterson Ave.,Shrewsbury McCabe, F.S.C., CBA princi- mins. Richard Gray,'Joseph Charles Thomas Charles Kennedy, ip Agatino Maimone, Frank 100 Ft. North of Shop-Rite—741-501? py pal, and Brother Kevin Buck- Also, George Richmond Hageman, Robert Joseph William Joseph Kenney Jr., M. Malousky, Joseph Michael ley, F.S.C., vice principal. Daly, Jean J. Deutschle, Harkins Jr., Kevin Harper, Kevin M. Kerry, Nicholas Marotta Jr., Gary David Attending the seventh an- Richard John Diely, Douglas Allen Will Harris U, Blair Raymond Kiernan, John Ed- Marshall, Gerard J. Matton, WED. TrIURS., FRI. 10-9; SAT. 10-6 nual commencement were Alexander DiGuiseppe, James Brian Hartnett, David Paul ward Kilduff Jr., and Vin- Joseph F. Meacham Jr., An John: 'C. Henderson, Dr. Michael Dinen, John Ray- Hauber, Gregory James Ha- cent de La Salle King. drew Melanson, John Doug- OVER 600 JUST IN FRESH TO CHOOSE George A. Sheehan Jr. and mond Doughty, Gary Stephen zell, Keith Lee Hediger, and Also, Edward Joseph Kin- las Mercogliano, James Ste Pe)^- E, Fleming, school Dreyfuss, Michael John Duf- Frederick S. Hencken Jr. ney, Steven A. Kiraly Jr., phen Meyer, Stephen An- LADIES'—1969 SUMMER founders. fy, 'William Henry Ellis, Also, Charles Fistie Hen- David Peter Kordulak, thony Michaels, Richard Jean J. Deutschlo delivered Frank Louis Ferrentino, Law- derson Jr., Robert .Joseph George Aloysius Krogmann Thomas Monahan, Michael the valedictory address. rence Preston Feyereisen, Herrmann, Michael E. Hon- III, Richard L. Kugele, Don- "William Moschitta, Theodore Receiving awards were: Louis Vincent Filoso, Patrick konen, George, Steven How- ald Phillip Kurkjian, Robert Joseph Moss III, Louis F. • DRESSES • BRA-SHIFTS Gregory S. Uchrin — The Joseph Finnegan, Donald er, Leon Glover Hoyt III, A. Laskowski. Daniel Robert Musa and Dennis J. Nitto. Brotiierlnthony John Plaque James Franklin, Joel Henry Mark Owen Hurley, Robert J. Leary, Gerard Frederick Also, Nicholas Joseph No for General Excellence and vak, William Gordon Oakley the John C. Henderson Rene Peter Paladini, Joseph Plaque for Mathematics. > PANTSUITS • Gerard Pallone, John Panac Moony J. Ciaramelli — Teacher Education Graduate done Jr., Robert Richard EMBROIDERED BIBS • SLEEVES The' "Bishop George W. Ahr Pearson, Anthony Mark Per- VOlLE <• FLAIR SLEEVES * JERSEY Plaque for Religion. na, William Alford Perrin ARNEL * DIRNDL COLLARS Edmund G. Kardauskas — Jr., Alan John Petrasek, Gary CULOTTES i* PEEK-A-BOO TOPS The Brother Albert Bernard School to Give 10 Degrees Raymond Picher, Raymond Plaque for English. Paul Pietrucha, Michael Ed- WITH MATCHING BRAS Vincent H. Bifid - The WEST LONG BRANCH - Dr. William H. Atkins, in the ' Hazlet school sys- ward Pontone, Daniel Paul LINEN • PIPING • BUILT-IN BRAS Brother Bertrand Andrew The first 10 persons to com- chairman of the Department tem and holds a bachelor of Porzio Jr., William Anthony HIP-PLEATS • COTTON Plaque for Spanish. plete their requirements in of Teacher Education, said science degree in elementary Postel, Michael Joseph' Pow- BELL BOTTOMS • PRINTS James M. tibbitt - The the graduate program of the two graduate students will re- education from Monmouth. ers, A. E. Rancatore, Blaise STRIPES i* SOLIDS • PLUNGE BACKS John B. Higgins Plaque for Department of Teacher Edu- ceive the master of arts in John S. Jones, Parker Louis Raspanti, Ronald L, French. cation will receive Advanced teaching degree, while eight Road, West Long Branch, is Rediker, Brien George Reidy, ROUND COLLARS • POINTY COLLARS Frank L. Ferrentino — The degrees at the college's 35th persons will receive the mas- chairman of the Social Stud- Daniel Joseph Reilly, Joseph APACHE SCARFS » POLKA DOT Dr. George A. Sheehan Jr. annual commencement Sat- ters of science degree in edu- ies Department at Shore Re- Xavier Rice Jr., William A, ETC., ETC. • SIZES 3-15 Plaque for Science.. urday. cation. gional High School and holds Richards, Vincent Anthony Rifici and John Joseph Rigby. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED UP TO $24.00 Michael P. Sokolowski — The college began offering Paul J. Boucher, Alpern a bachelor of science degree . The Peter B. Fleming Plaque graduate courses after it had Ave., Elberon, arid Jeffrey in secondary education .from Also, Thomas J. Roman, for History. OVER 400 JUST IIS FRESH THIS WEEK . . . received state Department of H. Karger, Henry Hudson Monmouth. Ernest Mark Ruberg, Michael The graduating class: Higher Education approval of Michael R. Krautheim, Buddy, Edward T. Runco, LADIES'— 1969 STYLES Earl Baldwin Alexander Parkway, Hiverdale, N. Y., its program in 1967. The first Lake Ave., Spring Lake •Gary Stephen Rutledge, Gary i* BIKINIS m, Dennis Michael Baccaro, will receive the master of graduate students enrolled in arts In teaching in the field Heights, teaches at Shore Re- Vincent Sagui, Richard Jo- • 1 & 2 pc. STYLES William John Badecker pi,' the Teacher Education De- seph Saker, Rudolph Nicholas Bray Bruce Barnes, Michael of secondary education. He is gional High School, and holds • BOY LEGS partment in die 1967 summer Sama, Frank Ralph Sant- Thomas '. Barnett, Robert employed by Ft. Monmouth a bachelor of science degree • CUT-OUTS session. in secondary education from angelo, Douglas E. Schuster, SWIM COO James Bartlett, Robert Ar- as operations research ana- • COTTONS Fairleigh Dickinson Universi- Michael Patrick Seuffert, thur Beck II, Henry Anthony lyst. Mr. Karger, a teacher in Brent Gillespie Shearer, Joha i* DENIMS None the New York City school ty. Bedell III, Peter Black, Rich- Eric Smigler, Lawrence Fran • STRETCH Higher ' ard Thomas Bocim, Martin Park Tract system, holds a bachelor of James G. Meaney, Timothy cis Smith, Michael Paul So- • PUCKERED John Bosak, Kenneth Andrew arts degree in history from St., Brick Township, is chair- kolowski, Nicholas Joseph COTTON SUITS U Bott Jr., Stephen Richard Monmouth. man of the Science Depart- Sparta, Joseph John Sportelli, SIZES 30-38 Nets $15,000 ment at Shore Regional High Receiving master of science Robert Frederick Stern, Ed- NATIONALLY ADVERTISED TO $19.95 degree in education are Fran- School and holds a bachelor ward John Sullivan, Joseph In Ocean of science degree in physical Peter Tarallo Jr., Barry C ces R. Calabria, Herbert Over 400 Just in Fresh OCEAN TOWNSHIP - Drive, Englishtown, who education and education from Tessier, Peter James Therkel Over 200 Just in Fre$h holds a bachelor of science St. Peter's College. sen, James Michael Tibbitt LADIES' — 100% COTTON Township Council last night Ruth M. Weiner, Norgrove Christian Paul Tomato, MEN'S BETTER sold a 15-acre Industrial Park degree in business education Jrom Monmouth. Ave., Elberon, holds a bache- James Laurence Toole, Peter SPECIAL tract for $15,000. lor of science degree in sec- Coulter Trentacoste, Kenneth Laura P. DeWyngaert, Sun- The property went to Her- ondary education from Mon- J. Tumia, Gregory Stephen SWEATERS rise Road, Belford, holds a BERMUDAS Auto Air bert Axelrod, Bernard Duke mouth. TJohrin, Albert Joseph Villapi- • POLYESTER bachelor of arts degree in' ano Jr., Wayne H. Wallace, • BUTTON FRONTS 50 and Harold Bader. They were fine arts from Monmouth. She Gladys Willman, Roseld • COTTON represented by Harry Tumen, Ave., Deal, teaches at Ocean Charles Bolton Walladi, Mi- 00 • SHORT SLEEVE Conditioning teaches at Thorne junior chael Hugh Ward, William • MADRAS 2 ( Asbury Park attorney. High, Port Monmouth. Township High School • PLAID • SOLIDS • MOCK TURTLE NECK TO TUNE-UP A measure to repeal the and holds a bachelor of sci- •Edward Wattiker, William Robert Wlnckelmann, John T. • CHECKS • ETC. • STRIPES _ criminal registration ordi- Althea H. Egbert, Asbury ence in zoology from Ohio 3 3 Wolf and Gerald V. Yanuzzi i* SIZES 26-42 NONE HIGHER 88 nance, downed by the state Ave., Asbury Park, teaches university. • SOLIDS NONE HIGHER fog. 22,95 15 Supreme Court last montii, Nationally Advertised to $8.95 Nationally Advertised to $9.95 was approved by couHQiJ. ,•; Other codes passed by coun- Only 50 Just in Fresh Over 800 Just in Fresh cil action were an ordinance Master of Science in Physics to prohibit the sale of meat LADIES' BETTER NONE HIGHER LADIES' pej 4^ wrapped in other than clear, and colorless packages; a • TENNIS 10 00 • GIRDLES SO measure to set parking regu- Degrees for 5 at Monmouth lations on Sunset Ave., Wick- • GARTERS *"£*• WEST LONG BRANCH — the degree," Dr. Derek A. Ave., Oakhurst, a research apecko Drive and Larkin SETS '4 Among students receiving de- Barnes, department chair- physical scientist with Divi- Ut WARDS faerory trained Place, and a code to change • Dacron • Nylon • BRIEFS 4 50 Metrician! qtt your olr-eondl- grees at commencement ex- man, said. sion E of the Institute for the name of Hanklns Place • Polyester i* Twill • Asst. Colors I HeiMr In TOP OPERATING ercises Saturday at Mom He said research undertak- Exploratory Research. He re- oo shaft lor tfcoi* hot days oHsad. to Elberon Blvd. • V-Necki • Asst. Styles • mouth College will be five en In the department covers ceived a bachelor of science • Etc. • Check All BalM and Pullays All three ordinances were men representing the first degree in physics from Mon- 17 • SIMS S.M-L NONE HIGHER approximate methods in quan- i Clink All Hotel introduced at the May 19 group to graduate from the tum mechanics, plasma phys- mouth. Nationally Advertised to $40.00 Nationally Adv. up to $4.95 t Ckttk SyiMm lor Leoki council session. master of science in physics ics, atomic structure and James D. Schumacher, • ftnharg* SyiMm Anthony Kostrna Jr., 187 program begun two years ago. laser holography. The thesis Stony Hill Road, Eatontown, Over 1500 Just in Fresh with thlt COUPON Over 1500 Just in Fresh Pinecrest Road, and James The first graduate students presented for review this se- who hojds a bachelor of sci- MEN'S BETTER MonmoMlh Shopping Confer T. Hopkins of 409 Wells Ave., in the Department of Physics mester, he added, dealt with ence degree in physics from MEN'S BETTER lalontown Circle were named special police of- enrolled in September 1967. problems in the first two Monmouth. He is a physicist SILK 1:30 A.M. 'HI 9:30 P.M. ficers by the council. There are 27 students in the areas. In Solid State and Frequency • BRIEFS program. The students are all em- Control. • NECK 3 •H3NUOWNERSI "By the end of Hie semes- ployes at Ft. .Monmouth. Dr. Barnes said Mr. LaFor- • T-SHIRTS ter, these people will have Their names, and addresses gla, Mr. Ross aid Mr. Schu TIES completed the 24 credits of are: Leonard M. Compton, macher investigated problems advanced course work and the Eaton Crest Drive, Eaton- • Wide • Mod • BOXER in ^mathematical physics • Paisley Prints N0NE HIGHER BORROW®'7500 thesis which Is required for town, a physicist at the U.S. which are of Interest in plas- SHORTS Army Electronics Command. ma physics, astrophysics and He received a bachelor of SftT . SIZES s.M-1 NONE HIGHER CONSOLIDATE YOUUPR T O I DfBTVRI. TO PASY field emission theory. END DENTURE MISERY science degree In physics Nationally Advertised to $3.95 Get CASH AMOUNT <0 M0. Mr. Compton and Mr. Reg- Nationally Advertised to $1.75 YOU PET Of NOTE PYMT. from Monmouth. additional H0OO 13SS.40 22.59 Witt Salvatore F. LaForgla, Dal- ister, he said, applied varia- OVER 800 JUST BROUGHT IN FRESH $2000 2711.67 45.20 tEHIOIK las Drive, Toms Eiver, who tional techniques to calculate oath! 6770.19 U2.M holds a bachelor of science growth rates of instabilities MEN'S — PERM-PRESS W.LONO BRANCH TOMS RIVER : soar KMTirillYl 542-7300 244-5400 17SO0 10,168.20 1(9.47 degree in physics from St. observed in nuclear fusion de- (JUST IN TIME FOR FATHERS DAY) Bonaventure University, Or- E.BHUNSWICK CLARK lid IninnM AnlliWt ut All 1MM vices. Miracle plastic DENTURITE leans, N.Y. He is a physicist 257-80OO 382-7400 SPECIALISTS IN HOIYU refits loose demures in live min- RE-f IN ANC ING utes. This "Cushion of Comfort" in the Display Techniques cases sore sums.You eat anything. Branch, Communications- Laugh, talk, even sneeze without Automatic Data Processing 7 Motorists »» HOOPER AVE., TOMS RIVER, N. J. embarrassment. No more food SHIRT-RIOT 2(1 HIGHWAY 18, EAST BRUNSWICK, N, J, panicles under plates. Lab. • DRESS and SPORT • SHORT SLEEVE CORP' 1114 RARITAN RD., CLARK, N. J. DENTURITE last* for months. David F. Register, Eaton Are Fined LUt.ciut.ti.ri.iMs Ends daily bother of powder, Crest Drive, Eatontown, a • BUTTON DOWN COLLARS • PASTELS paste or cushions. Just remote NEW SHREWSBURY - when refit Is needed. Tasttless. physicist in the Solid State • ETC. • ETC. NONE HIGHER Traffic violators appeared In Odorless. Mosey back guarantee. and Frequency Control Di- NATIONALLY ADVERTISED TO $7.95 At all.drug counters. vision. He earned a bachelor Municipal Courtyesterday be- fore Judge Lawrence A. Car- MIRACLE PLASTIC „ of science degree In physics ! : OVER 800 JUST IN FRESH TO CHOOSE u from Boston College, Chest- ton 3rd. ' 11 denturite Willie M. Santy of Newark KFHTb I /ll.Sf. TEETH nut Hill, Mass. "UNISEX Raymond L. Hoss, Dover was fined $55 and had his drivers license revoked for • •• six months when found guil- HOTEL ty of driving while impaired. BELL-BOTTOMS Elaine Conway of Keyport was fined $30 and had her • DUNGAREE TYPE • DENIM driver's license revoked for • HIP HUGGERS • WIDE BELT LOOPS OWNERS 60 days, for driving at 85 • BLUE—BEIGE—BLACK—BROWN miles per hour in a 60 mph • ETC. • SIZES 26 - 38 NONE HIGHER we speciqliie In industrial, commer- zone. Thomas J. Ely of Ridge- wood was fined ?20 and had NATIONALLY ADVERTISED TO $8.95 cial durable carpet and now we his license revoked for 30 days for speeding 75 in a 60 OVER 900 TO CHOOSE JUST IN FRESH make it especially attractive to you mph zone. MEN'S 100% COTTON . . . with special "in stock" carpet Frank J. Glaqutato of Totp- wa was fined $17 for careless • STRIPES designed to save you many dollars driving; James J. Oberdich of New Monmouth was fined • MOCK and give you performance. $15 for speeding 69 miles per TURTLENECK hour in a 60 mph zone, and • SHORT Donald W. Sinclair of Eliza- SLEEVES beth was fined $'2 for mak- ing an unsafe move without • SOLIDS the use of his signals. • SIZES ., Matthew N. Laury of S-M-L RT. 35, SHREWSBURY 741-6272 Orange was fined $25 and was Optn Dally f :M to 5:Hi Wrtntsdoy « Friday 'III t ordered to pay $65 for con- NATIONALLY ADVERTISED TO $5.95 tempt of court when convict- RT. 35, SEA GIRT 449-5900 ed of a 1966 charge of speed- Oe*i Dally rM to i:W; Wttmtitt * Frldoy 'III t ing 80 miles per hour In a 60 mph zone, ' . FEMALE HELP WANTED! -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK - MIDDLETWN, N. J.t TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 Cool in the Kitchen Margaret Panic-Proof Party Hostess By MARGOT SMITH business," Margaret, row a "They promised me a stove, have the bride and bride- SEA BRIGHT — Having mother of five and grand- and I got a hot plate!" groom leave the wedding re- spent two fast hours with mother of four, recalls. The ship was garlanded ception before the gflests find Margaret Stern, I will never Within four months, the with flowers and boughs, and rose petals melting in their again be terrified at the Stern endeavor netted a wed- yellow-clothed tables were hands. thought of entertaining. ding, at $1 a head. Her repu- set with forest green dishes. "Photographers should not Margaret Stern is an un- tation spread without benefit "Since then, we've done it become intrusive at wedding sinkable hostess, a genuine of advertising and Margaret 12 times. I can really say I've receptions. It's the bride's panic-proof giver of parties. acquired a helper. Now she catered around Manhattan!" day, and she should enjoy She has successfully steered has 40. There were parties on tug her own party." three at a time (one her own In the early days of her boats, in a converted chicken Music Helps daughter's wedding recep-, career, Margaret took on an coop, and a poolside wedding Music helps any party, tion) and come up bubbling order for dinner for 1,000 to reception. No challenge ever Margaret says, whether it's like fresh-poured champagne. be served in the Elizabeth foiled Margaret Stern. an eight-piece band or the Though she claims that Armory. It had no kitchen Keeps No Lists phonograph. A theme helps, business procedures foil her, and no running water. She never makes lists or too, 'sets a mood. that long-range planning "We cooked everything in keeps records of how much Margaret says that her own leaves her cold, and cooking my home on my six-burner, ; food is needed for her parties. private parties have taken is not her forte, Margaret two-oven stove and took it Each assignment is like start- place with minimum time for has got herself chin-deep in over to the armory in my sta- ing all new. Bouncing from preparation. Only once has a catering service that keeps tion wagon. I had the brilliant one to another, she has al- she issued written invitations. her in a constant party whirl. idea to freeze scoops of ways "found a way," no mat- "We always had a Christmas And Margaret loves parties. mashed potatoes (those were ter how bizarre the specifica- . open house for all the chil- "Every one I give is my the early days of freezers) tions. After each party, the dren's friends, but they just first. And I have a ball!" but forgot about the defrost- indomitable hostess reviews 'happened." Margaret's theo- Laughing all the way, ing. We had thawing potatoes the proceedings and calls it ry is that if you spend too Margaret, whose business is spread out on the piano and "the best ever." much time planning a party, based in Westfield, and whose all the living room tables." A success story like Mar- you're too immersed in de- Sea Bright home is on the Dishes for 1,000 garet's has got to have a tail to enjoy it yourself. river at 253 Ocean Aye., tells "They brought in two formula. Margaret suggests a guest of bow it all started, 23 years stoves at the armory, to keep Keep cool, yes, but how? list that doesn't bring the and thousands of fried chick- things warm, and a nice jani- Spontaneity Is Key same people together all the ens ago, when she had three tor ran a. hose through a win- ' "Don't get overcome with time, "people enjoy meeting tots under four, a husband dow to provide water.* I had details," Margaret says. "I new people." down with illness, and a no idea of how many dishes hate details. The main idea If she had her way, Mar- mighty good recipe for lemon had to be rented for 1,000 is to get everyone relaxed garet would outlaw steam meringue tarts. people. They came in three and having fun. A little of tables and receiving lines. Many impulsive decisions truckloads ... It was a the unexpected adds life, and "Neither contributes any- followed the one which cata- beautiful party!" no one is going to worry the thing." pulted her into the catering Having surmounted that next day." Spontaneity is the If she had her way, and she , business. She simply said to challenge, and further bols- essence of Margaret and the usually does, Margaret Stern, a friend, "I'm going to 'do' tered her reputation, Marga- •key to her success. "If some- the hostess who fed 2,000 at parties." ret tackled Con Edison's or- thing goes really wrong, don't a two-day plant opening and DYNAMO HOSTESS She got an Immediate con- der for a Circle Line boat let it become obvious." then rushed to the bedside of Margaret Stern of Sea Bright, lover of parties, throws her boundlesi energy tract, dessert for eight ladies. tour around Manhattan, Believing that a party her seriously ill daughter, Into her catering service, and then relaxes completely at her watersiide home. "Those tarts really came out breakfast and lunch for 250, should end in full swing, would go on "having a ball" high and nice, and I was in aboard ship. Margaret subtly manages to forever. (Register Staff Photo) • 'Oliver' Premiere to Benefit THE FAST GOURMET Arthritis Foundation Chapter Upstairs With the Nixons RUMSON — The Monmouth dation. Funds realized from Kennedy, Shrewsbury; Mrs. County Committee, N. J. this premiere showing will A. Vincent Lawrence, Rum- By POPPY CANNON flowers on the Nixon table from Cambridge, she said, Serve immediately. Chapter, The Arthritis Foun- help support the Chapter pro- son; Mrs. John Lenhart, WASHINGTON - Con- — often smaller, simplified "Let's have steak tonight. On PARSLEY POTATOES - dation, is sponsoring the pre- gram of public and profes- Rumson; Mrs. James Nelson, siderable renovation and re- versions of the official floral their budget, they don't get Potatoes are potatoes are miere showing of "Oliver!" sional education as well as Fair Haven; Mrs. Frederick decoration has been afoot in centerpieces which include it very often." potatoes. But to give them a Friday, June 20 in the Lyric patient and community ser- W. Rose, Fair Haven; Mrs. the President's private apart- orange lilies, yellow gerbera THE NIXONS' truly cheflike flavor, add a Theatre in Asbury Park. vices in Monmouth County daisies, yellow and white small, quartered onion, 4 Albert Schwartz, Long ments at the White House, FAMILY DINNER "Oliver!," tile winner of six and surrounding areas. Branch; Mrs. Erma Sween- but as yet there has been marguerites, carnations, whole peppercorns and a tiny Academy Awards, including Beet Salad Mrs. William Wrightson ey, West Long Branch; Mrs. no official showing. Never- snapdragons and spoon chry- sliver of crumbled bay leaf "Best Film of the Year," is Jr., Rumson, is honorary santhemums — also in shades Sauteed Calves Liver Nathan Troum, Deal; and theless, top to the cooking water. Boil entertainment for the whole chairman of the committee. of orange, yellow and white and Bacon quickly until just tender. Mrs. Earl G. Tyree of Fair secrets have family. Aides include Mrs. Charles — and often a few white Parsley Potatoes Drain immediately and toss Haven. Tickets for this bene- leaked. The Mrs. Ralph Berman of J. Bajart, Oakhurst; Mrs. look of the sweet peas and sprays of Green Beans Amandine in a heavy pan over heat Rumson, is chairman of this James Barker, Rumsonf Mrs. fit performance may be ob- drawing ;..; gypspphila. Chilled Baked Apples until they develop a cover- tained from anyone on the Sabayon Sauce fund-raising project for the Andrew Dedick, Rumson;; room and Unlike many first fami-' ing of' "downy feathers." committee or at any Walter SAUTEED CALVES LIVER benefit of the New Jersey Mrs. James R. Hinton Jr., the private lies, the Nixons did not bring Some people like to mix the Chapter, The Arthritis Foun- Fair Haven;' Mrs. Andrew Reade Theatre. AND BACON — Remove the dining room a family cook with them to chopped parsley with butter, skin and membrane from 1 to pour over the potatoes. and kitchen the White House. Chef Henry (which Jac- lb. calves liver; have it cut With liver, however, we like queline Ken- Haller cooks their meals, but into slices about % inch thick. them best with plain, chopped nedy in- no grand cuisine for them Roll in flour which has been parsley. stalled) is CANNON when they are alone. seasoned with salt, pepper GREEN BEANS AMAN- known to be now — defi- When the President's and a little paprika. Heat 4 DINE — Why not use frozen? nitely yellow. schedule permits, they like . tbsp. butter or bacon drip- SABAYON SAUCE' — Hi When the Nixons dine with to eat early — between 7 pings in a pan which has the top of a double boiler the Nixons en famille, the and 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Nixon been slightly rubbed with combine the grated rind and table is often covered with rarely makes suggestions garlic. Saute liver quickly, > juice of half a lemon and 'A a sunny yellow cloth, not un- about the menu, for already not more than 2 min. on each cup orange juice or white side. Sprinkle very lightly like those used at the last the chef knows their likes wine, V3 cup sugar, 2 egg three official state dinners'— and dislikes. On one occa- with grated lemon rind and yolks. Set over hot water and when, however, they were sion, however, Mrs. Nixon 2 or 3 tbsp. lemon juice or beat with a whisk or rotary surmounted by embroidered made a suggestion. When dry red table wine. Serve beater until thick. Cool organdy covers. daughter Julia and her young on heated plates and pour slightly, then fold in 2 stiffly Almost always there are husband David came down the sauce over the liver. beaten egg whites. PTA to Instruct Newcomers Install Slate On Policies , LINCROFT - Newly elect- president; Mrs. Jon, ed officers of the Lincroft MIDDLETOWN - The secretary, and Mrs$| Newcomers Club were in- Albano, treasurer. *"*„ annual Monmouth. County stalled at a ceremony held hi New committee chairmen School of Information will be the home Of Mrs. Stuart Ed- are Mrs. Robert Huck, Mrs. held tomorrow in the Mill ington, Lincroft, retiring pres- Donald Morris, Mrs. John House, Rt. 35, for all PTA ident. Westbrook, Mrs. William members interested in con- The new officers are Mrs. East, Mrs. Nicholas Papada- centrating on proper proce- Robert Girard, president; kis, Mrs. Robert Ruti and Mrs. Pnilip Weinseimer, vice dure and learning to adhere to Mrs. Bruce Robinson^. PTA policies and principles. Registration will begin at Garden 9:30 a.m. and reservations for Slate luncheon may be made with Mrs. Coleman Stromwasser, Club Elects county treasurer, Freehold, Closing The chairman, Mrs; Fred Officers Rauffus, Holmdel, has an- SHREWSBURY - New of- oounced that the state instruc- Event ficers of fee Shrewsbury Gar- tor will be Mrs. Edwin En- Mrs. Elnar Postrom Mrs. Richard Garley den Club are Mrs. Robert LITTLE SILVER - Miss NOT GRIM ABOUT GRIMM sign, N. J. Congress secre- Phyllis Finston, actress and tary, East Keansburg, Assist- Luehman, president? Mrs. Unda Buterbaugh, J 6-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. ?t Suterbaugh, impressionist, presented a ing Mrs. Rauffus will be Mrs. Gerald Whalen, vice presi- musical program for the 246 Harmony Road, Middlefown, displays her painting based on the Paul Morris, Belford, Mrs. New Presidents dent; Mrs. Walter Deiss, sec- Woman's Club of Little Sil- Grimm fairy tale, "The White Snake," which is included in a Robert Schunneman, New ver. RUMSON — New officers of Antiques Show, to be held retary, and Mrs. Albert Kol- recently published edition of Grimm's Fairy Tales. Monmouth, Mrs. Walter the Holy Cross School PTA The club's new officers are Haynes, Freehold, Mrs. Char- Noy. 10-12. Assisting Mrs. (Register Staff Photo) have been announced. "Uiey arsick, treasurer. Mrs. A. Lee Don, president" lotte Madusky, Red Bank, and Sheehan will be Mrs Thomas are Mrs. Richard Garley, Smith and Mrs. ' William Mrs. Neville Orr and Mrs. Mrs. Winfield S. Watts;: first Mrs. Vincent Lamano, Union p1 resident; Mrs. James Stump vice president; Mrs.^Robert Beach. Blake. Earl Frick were voted in as and Mrs. Thomas Cangialosi, the club's first associate Winfield, second vice presi- Mrs. George Gillam, county vice presidents; Mrs. Andrew RUMSON—Mrs. Einar Pust- members. dent; Mrs. John Anderson, Debut of Young Illustrator third vice president; Mrs president, Belford, attended McDerby, vice president and rom has been elected presi- the National Convention in adviser; Mrs. Raymond Gar- Standing committee chair- John Newbon, treasurer; Mrs- MIDDLETOWN — Two years is a long Road, was selected as one of the seven dent of the Rumson PTA, suc- Cleveland, Ohio. side, treasurer; Mrs. Edwin men are Mrs. Wendell Rhem, Robert Lyman, recording sec- time to wait. Linda Buterbaugh can testify United States winners. Another year passed O'Connor recording secretary, ceeding Mrs, Robert Herr. birds, conservation anl horti- retary; Mrs. M. J. Berdahl. to that. before the book was published. Only re- and Mrs. William Ryan, cor- culture; Mrs. Frederic Mes- financial secretary;] Mrs. Rob- Other new officers are ert Colleran, correspondine Two years ago, when she was 14, she cently available, the book is well worth the Medical Assistants responding secretary. Mrs. Neil Ltndeman, execu- sina, garden therapy; Mrs. 1 Whalen, program; Mrs. secretary and Mrs. Laurie painted a tempera impression of "The wait, for the translation of the classic Plan Bosses Night Committee chairmen are tive vice president; Miss Nina Mrs. Robert Beck, hospi- James Wilcoxln, roadside, ci- Bouwmeester, Federation sec- White Snake," a Grimm fairy tale. Her stories Is excellent, and the illustrations are LONG BRANCH - Dr. Har- Noonan, vice president; Mrs, retary. tality? Mrs. Edward Roper, Louis Dell'Omo Jr., secre- vic and litter;' Mrs. Hugh S. painting, done as an art class project at bright and effective. old Gable, president of the Boyd, telephone and member- Monmouth County Medical So- membership; Mrs. Philip tary, and Mrs. Charles Krau- The closing luncheon will Thorne Junior High School, was then en- Torsney, health and welfare; ship, and Mrs. Charles F.H. be June 11 in the Channel Late Arrival ciety, was guest speaker at ter, treasurer. tered in a contest sponsored by the Follett Mrs. John Guth, library; Plans are being made for Jo'nnson, properties and hos- Club, with Mrs. John Runyon a meeting of the Monmouth as chairman. Publishing Co. The contest, open to children Linda's wait was furlheriprolonged last Mrs! Carl Bunn, volunteers; the "Rumson Country And pitality. ( County Medical Assistants As- Mrs. Adam Kretowicz, public- Delegates to the 'New Jer- of all nations between., the ages of 4 and 14, Crafts Fair" to be held Oct. 4. Special committee chair- week. An exhibition of the illustrations sociatjon in the Family and ity; Richard Conley, pro- sey State Federation Conven- was designed to discover whimsical illustra- was to have opened at the Monmouth Coun- Children's Service of Mon- gram; Mrs. Robert Porges, men are Mrs. Jared Halver- tion in Atlantic City were tions for a new edition of Grimm's fairy ty Library, Eastern Division, Broad St., mouth County headquarters, ways and means; Mrs. Perry son, Junior Garden Club; Mrs. Mrs. Watts and Mrs. Bouw- Bath Ave. Zesty Croutons tales. Linda received $10 and a copy of the Shrewsbury} A delay in transit forced a Campanella and Mrs. An- Robert S. Hill, literature; meester. book as an award. postponement in the opening date, but now Mrs. Miriam Harber, presi- thony Arban, newsletter, and Melt V* cup butter or mar- Mrs. Glen Appleyard, library; Mrs. H.B,.Sharer was chair- dent, announced t'ne Bosses' Charles Reynolds, civics and garine. Add 2 cups bite-sized man of hostesses arid the re- Worth the Wait the exhibit is hung and on view in the Li- Mrs. Gerard Barba, year- Night meeting will be June legislative. toasted corn or shredded rice ceptionists were Mrs. Oscar 'X year later, Linda, daughter of Mr. brary's Children's Room, The exhibit will 18 In Paul Samperi's Restau< Mrs. George A. Sheehan cereal. Stir U> coat •venly, book, and Mrs, Roger Power, A. Newquist and Mn. John tod Mr*, C, P. Buterbaugh, 266 Harmony continue through June 16. rant, Colonial Terrace. Jr., will ba chairman of the Toss with green salad. publicity. Indoll, • THE DAILY REGISTER, BED BANK- MIDDLETWN, N. J.: TUESDAY, JUNE 3, TT'C . | Clubwomen Present 11 S A I Awards at Luncheon NEW SHREWS _.Y - Mrs. Whelchel won Wgh rThe bowling department of game with a 201 and Mrs. tie Woman's Club of New Donald Arsenault won the ANNUAL LUNCHEON Shrewsbury held Its annual High Series Award. The most LITTLE fILVEB - The an- awards luncheon. Mrs. Har- Improved bowler award went nual luncheon of the Women's vey Miller and Mrs. Eston to Mrs. T. R. McCraeken. Society of Christian Service, Whelchel were chairmen. Embury Methodist Church, Mrs. Bichard Stenz present- Mrs. Carl Nill from Syca- will be heM this afternoon at ed the awards, more Lanes presented the 12:30 o'clock in tfte Church award for high average to The "Tigers," with Mrs, Na- Mrs. Arsenault with a 143. Hall. Mrs. John D, Blair will thaniel Morgenthal, Mrs. Ken- be the guest speaker, and in- neth Macdonald, and Mrs. Officers for the coming stallation of officers will take Herbert Schweers, were first year were elected. They are place. place winners. The second Mrs. Arsenault, president; RUMMAGE SALE place team was the "Go-Go Mrs. Bechtle, secretary, and. Mrs. Ronald McKenzle Mrs. D. James Slckels Mrs. John Jamison TJNION BEACH - The Al- Girls" with Mrs. Joseph Bech- Mrs. Benjamin Pickering, (The former (The former (The former tle, Mrs. Malcolm Marken- treasurer. Patricia Graleski) Mary Ann Benshaw) Faye Steele) tar and Bosary Society of dorf and Mrs. Whelchel. Third Holy Family ^Catholic Church place went to the "Boomer- Bowling will resume is sponsoring a spring rum- angs," with Mrs. C.F. Chris- Wednesday, Sept. 3. Those In- mage sale today and tomor- topher, Mrs. J.J. Hirce, and terested in bowling may call Mrs. J.R. Gable. Nuptials Announced row from 9 aim. to 4 p.m., in the chairman. the church basement, Rt. 36. McKenzk'Qrcileski Catholic Nurses TEEN FORUM KEYPORT-Miss Patricia the Veterans of Foreign Wars American Telephone and Tel- T. Graleski and Ronald Post, Middletown. He is em- egraph Company in the Rari- Mr. and Mrs. Abe Adler To Hold Wayne • McKenzie, Hights- ployed as a supervisor by the tan River Center, Piscataway. town, were married May 24 Annual Dinner here in St. Joseph's Catholic Double Trouble Church. Sickels'Renshaw AVON — The Monmouth By JEAN ADAMS WORTH THE WAIT: (Q.) Parents of the couple are EATONTOWN-Mlss Mary Golden Wedding County Chapter of Catho- TWICE IN TROUBLE: (Q.) Many ask you about petting Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Gra- Joseph Foster was best lic Nurses will hold its annual My girl friend is in trouble. and going all the way and if Ann Renshaw, daughter of man, and ushers were Doug- MILLBURN-Mr. and Mrs. of Russia were married there leski, 218 Nolan Road, ifior- Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Ren- Abe Adler of Bradley Beach, dinner Thursday, June 5, here She is 14. This guy has made It is all right if they are In ganville, and Mr. and Mrs. las Sickels, brother of the in 1919 and came to this coun- in Kelly's Rathskeller, Rt. 35. her pregnant twice. She has love. I am 18 and have been shaw, 17 Meredith Drive, New bridegroom; John Bobbins, and North'Miami Beach, Fla. try in 1922. They lived in Joseph R. McKenzie, Colmar Shrewsbury, was married The guest speaker will be tried to stop him but can't. going with a man I'm going Manor, Md. James LaFointe and Stephen were honored at a reception Irvington for many years, un- Her parents are trying to to marry for a year and a May 24, to D. James Sickels, Reed. here in the Short Hills Cater- Frank L. Citru of the New The Rev. Joseph Rueinski, son of Mr and Mrs. Donald til moving to the shore area Jersey State Narcotics get me to tell them who he is half. We have talked about it, The couple will reside in ers, in celebration of their and Florida, in recent years. but I prom- and we both came to the pastor of St. Clement's Cath- Sickels, Lakeview Ter., golden wedding anniversary. Bureau. olice Church, Matawan, offi- Eatontown, formerly of Lin- this borough. The bride, a Mr. Adler operated a mill- ised her I same answer. Every man graduate of Monmouth' Re- Hosts were their children, Ticket chairmen are Mrs. wouldn't. would like for his wife to be ciated. croft. The Rev. William T. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Adler work business for many years J.X. Boyle, 433 Garfield Ave., Schneider. officiated at the gional High School, fa em- in Newark and Irvington and What should a virgin when she says, "I Mrs. John Scopp was ma- of Union, and Mr. and Mrs. Avon, for Ft. Monmoufn; I do? do." tron of honor for her niece. ceremony here in St. Doro- ployed at Western Electric David. Rappaport of Mata- then opened a lumber yard Mrs. Frances Carvery, 229 W. thea's Catholic Church. A re- Company, New York City. in MicMletown, when many Please We've done a lot of petting, Mrs. Ralph Madonna was wan. Included in the proces- Sylvania Ave,, Neptune City, print this so bridal attendant. ception was held in Old Or- Mr. Sickels, a graduate of sional ceremony, as honor at- farmlands still existed there, for Jersey Shore Medical Cen- even heavy petting. But we chard Country Club. and was one of the early busi- other girls are willing to wait until we John A. Drager was the Middletown Township High tendants, were their four ter; Miss Madelyn Shan- can stop be- best man. John Barbers Jr. Miss Suzanne Elsler, cousin School, is an artist employed grandchildren, Neal and Beth ness pioneers in that town. non, 359 Bath Ave., Long are married to go any fore it's too further. ushered. of the bride, was made of by W. T. Grant Co., New York Adler, and Barbara and Jill He is now retired from active Branch, for Monmouth Medi- late! - A A reception was held in honor, and bridesmaids were City. His father is president Bappaport, business, but still owns the cal Center, and Mrs. J. S. We do have to exercise a Worried Girl ADAMS lot of will power to say no Buck Smith's Restaurant, the Misses Patti Kane and of Overhead Door Corp., Red Mr. Adler, born in Poland, Adler Shopping Center on Et. Reed, 2fl Second St., Fair Ha- Friend 1 n East Keansburg. Sue Halburta. Bank. and former Anna Weinbraum 35, Middletown. •ven, for Riverview Hospital. Washington State. and mean it. Many times we could have gone all the way, The couple will reside in (A.) -Parents of a 14-year- but we didn't. Hightstown. old girl should make it their I believe if a boy really The bride was graduated Jamisori'Steele ANN LANDERS business to know where she loves a girl, and she loves from Freehold Regional High SHREWSBURY - Shrews- Bridesmaids were the Misses is and who she's with at all him, he will understand and School. She is employed as a bury Presbyterian Church was Marilyn Kish and Kathy times. wait. It won't be easy but he secretary by IBM, Dayton. the setting May 24 for the Dorn. Patricia Steele, sister They also have the right can do it. — L. of Bridgeport,. The bridegroom attended wedding of Miss Faye Steele of the bride, was flower girl. and the obligation to find out Conn. schools in Maryland. He and John Barnett Jamison Russell Schroeder was best No More House Call the cause of her troubles. (A.) Keep telling your served in Army Intelligence Jr. The bride is the daugh- man. Ushers were James They Can ask her. They don't story! It contains a lesson during his three-year enlist- ter of Augustus L. Steele, 45 Steele, the bride's brother; Dear Ann Landers: My boy home from the hospital. I'm willing to do so again. have to ask you. ment. He has returned from Silverside Ave., Little Silver, •Robert Jamison, the bride- husband and I own a profit- They had their stomachs Busy mothers forget and worth living. Vietnam and is a. member of need to be reminded. If they ask you again, • * e and the late Grayce Winifred groom's brother, and Alan able carpet business. My pumped. It wasn't a very Steele. The bridegroom is the Wolf. brother works for us. Vernon pleasant experience for us or Alcohol is no shortcut to suggest that they ask her. Want personal answers to for them. DOES BAD CARE? (Q.) your questions? Write to Jean EXPRESSES THANKS son of Mr. and Mrs. Jamison, The bride is a graduate of and I do the selling and my social success. If you think KEANSBURG - The Gran- 165 Harrison Ave., Fair Ha- Red Bank High School, and brother and a helper do the Please inform all mothers you-have to drink to be ac- This 19-year-old boy says Adams, Box 2402, Houston, in your reading audience cepted by your friends, get he's in love with me. Is this Tex. 77001. Be sure to enclose ville Towers Senior Citizens ven. is employed by Dorn's Photo installations. possible? I'm 12. Social Club has expressed its Shop In Red Bank. Yesterday a socially promi- that no bottle is childproof the facts. Read "Booje and a stamped, self-addressed en- The Rev. James Steele offi- and no shelf is out of reach. You — For Teen-Agers -He calls, me up all the velope. appreciation to those who at- ciated. The bridegroom is a grad- nent woman came in and time. I've tried over and uate of Rumson-Fair Haven selected some expensive car- All medicines and cleaning Only," by Ann Landers. Send tended its first annual card A reception was held in fluids should be kept in a 35 cents in coin and a long, over to get him to stop call- party in Buck Smith's, East Gibbs Hall, Ft. Monmouth. Regional High School, and peting for a ing, I refuse to go out with is an employee of Shrewsbury small room. metal box or a cupboard — self-addressed, stamped enve- Storage Hints Keansburg. Chairman of'the Mrs. George McGinnis was under lock and key. purely., lope with your request. him. To maintain the good tastes affair was Mrs. Mary Mc- matron of honor. Miss Doro- Motors. He served four years Vemori sold 1 1 in the U.S. Navy, it to her. the extra trouble is worth' a " Ann Landers will be glad He came oyerioithe house ils, store packages in a Mahon. thy Reitz was maid of honor. child's life. Your youngster to help you with your prob- once and" T introduced him cool dry place in the She asked to my dad, My dad just said, if he would may not be as lucky as ours. lems, Send them to her in kitchen. After opening pack- — Cuyahoga Falls care of this newspaper, en- "Nice to meet you," and ages, be sure to reclose inner jay the car- walked out of the room. I pet person- Dear C.F.: I've printed closing a stamped, self-ad- moisture-proof wrappings and such warnings in the past but dressed envelope. would go to my mom, but JUNE IS GIFTING TIME ally. Instead she's not alive any more. tops to preserve crispness of 0 f telling Does my dad even care, do the cereals. her that •"«*•"«»» you think? — J. in Maine. someone LANDERS (A.) He should care. Tell LEGION SALE FOR DAD and GRAD else does him about the trouble this LEONARDO - The Leonar- the installation, he said, "I'd 19-year-old is making for you do Memorial Unit of the be happy to." and ask him to help you get American Legion Auxiliary American Tourister Tiara Today Vernon left the rid of him. will hold a rummage sale in shop with the lady's carpet- You should not see or talk the Post Home, Rt. 35 at Ap- a bear for wear and a ing. He was gone five hours over the telephone to a boy pleton Ave., Friday and Sat- and I was worried sick. He Of 19. urday. tiger of a value! came back at 6:00 P.M. — drunk as a skunk — said they'd had a few cocktails, Rberjlos* reinforcements produce nigged got to talking and lost track wear with athwndlng light weight. The vinyl of time. He also said my eoveo resist tears like sin. The sculptured brother should go over to- toe. and tingy floral print IWogj mob morrow and lay the carpet- If a pleawre to look at Inside and out. Add ing as lie never got around tongue-m-groove type stainless steel do-' to it. CAMP l«nn. Gam odton lodes that can't snap I am furious. If Vernon open, foam rubber cushioned handle* for com- had been picked up in our fortable carrying, and you'll know why seo- , truck for drunk driving it toned travelers 90 for Tiara grass green could have ruined us. When for HERi walnut for MM. A. garment bog, 1 tried to explain this to 24.95,- B. coimefic 35.00; C gormeat carrier, him he called me square 43rd YEAR 7*95; D. 2T case, 53.00; I. weekender. TOP PERFORMER — James V. Ewing, deputy post and said personal attention 35.00; f. tote bag, 24.M; G.'2-sufter, 53.00; engineer at Ft. Monmouth, presents a work commen- UNDER SAME OWNER! Is good for business. What H. 21* companion case, 35.OO; i. attache, do you say? — Alma . dation to Miss Ruth Alma Harrison, 34 Park Ave., Shora'i Original Day 32.95; K. ukra-tnm attache, 29.95. Bear Alma: Personal at- Shrewsbury. The award, the sixth rhat Miss Harrison Camp . . . Country1! tention IS good for business, has received during her 38 years of service at rt. Foromoit In Experience but when it gets TOO per- American Camping Ann sonal it's bad for business. Monmouth, is in honor of her outstanding performance Approved MimDir Tell Vernon ta. stay in the rating and sustained superior performance. SJj»—iv. nationally shop and cut of the truck chief of the Administrative and Management Division, and let your brother make "RecogitUed Pioneer ' all house calls from now on. Office of Post Engineer. Directly on the Dear Ann Landers: I'm a Cool Ocean widow who is getting mighty Molherivell Series fed up on women who view GOSPEL SERVICES 643 Ocean Avenue WEST END every unmarried female as NEW YORK - Continuing • SPECIALISTS IN SWIMMING INSTRUCTIONS • i threat to their marriages. through June 7 at Marlbor- (UNDENOMINATIONAL) A woman I work with was oUjjh-Gerson Gallery Inc., 41 Tht "Swimming Camp" with 4 SALT WATER rOOLS leaving the office just as I East 57th St., is the "Open" HELD IN Y.M.C.A. • 2 Instructional Pooli • Olympic Sin Pool • Children's Pool , was. Her husband was wait- Scries, an '• ' ' n nf re- 166 Maple Ave. Pooli CHLORINATED for Assured GERM-FREE Protection ing in front to pick her up. cent paintings by Robert Private Beach on Premises Motherwell. This is his first Red Bank When he saw me, he poked Baseball— Basketball his head out the car window exhibit since his retrospec- Commencing Frt., June 6 and asked If I'd like a lift tive in the Museum of Mod- Football -Track & Other home. (They live a few ern Art in 19C5 and reflects Wed. and Frl. 7:45 P.M. Sports Instructed by blocks from my apartment.) a continuity of his work in EXPERT COACHES I said, "Yes, thank you," the mid-sixties, yet combines Sundayt 5:00 P.M. and started toward the car. new forms in his well-recog- I • Unsurpassed Fotlllrloi His wife leaped in front of I • kit Program • lest Staff me and elbowed her way in- to the car to make certain tuixrler In Evtry Rupct I didn't sit next to him. w« Invite comporUM I said, In a voice dripping FOUR YEW OLDS with honey, "Your husband . . . tleri, end intelligent, «nd «i nurture n such IIHU children BOYS AND GIRLS 4VJ TO 12 YEARS CAN be, «re Invited to join our new Unii»ra«rten e (lies. Our is very attractive, Myrtle, TEEN AGE GROUP 13 TO U YEARS but I make it a rule never lucceis in teaching reading «nd .Mettle to auellfied five- to attack a man while he's yaar-oldi encouragad ui lait y««r to billive that lometMng AIL DAY—8 week, from June 23 to Aug. IS more in th« way of roadmen training could b» don* tor ser- —(all tncluihrt rat*) $275 driving." Her face turned red tain fjur-ysar-old children then wts b»!ng •nompllihed. We and she didn't reply. Her hus- ttarlod thii program, and it cart.inly workad, with a "'' nnBI" S weeks (mln. anrollmnf—all-lnclnilve rate) tJ W bur actually going into formal r»adlnq and number work during band laughed for five min- Nursery Camp 3 to AVi Years — Special Low Rate utes. This morning when I tho y»»r. We plan to continut permanently with thaia groups saw her in the office she was and are ready to emmlne applicant!. Tht children will «tt«nd ,;... All A%e Groups Limited very cool. clasi In- our primary ichool e«nter at Rumion, wilier* li By ALFRED SHEIXWOLD [ What the world needs now is a simple way to tell whether South dealer or not an opponent has a sin- Both sides vulnerable gleton. You can't just stare at NOBTH a man and tell from the look • QI87 I in his eye. The method sug- CJ QS H gested in today's hand may O AK94 help when you have no other 4 852 a guide. WEST EAST m • 62 • 53 South tried the queen of CJ863 VK10972 hearts at the first trick, but OJ875 06 East put up the king and + AI06 4KQJ94 Snuffy Smith South had to win the trick. SOUTH FINE AS THEM FLflTLANDERS EUeR' BLESSET \ Declarer drew two rounds of • AK1094 FROS HAIR, HflUE MORE DADBURN TIME I PASSED I HOW DID trumps and gave up a club. © A4 SNUFFY FUN THflM ENNVBODy ONE ON TH' / O Q1032 VE LIKE STREET THEW'D The defenders cashed their NBAJVflRK OMTH'FACEOF • 73 CITV, THIS GREEW flIRTH BUST OUT heart trick and then led two LAFFIN more rounds of clubs. South Sonlh Wut North But CALEB? 14 Pus 3^ Pi» ruffed the third club, led a 4 4 All Paw diamond to dummy's king and then wondered whether Openingletd-93 ' to win the second diamond I with dummy's ace or with his own queen. Either play If West had started with on- would be successful if the ly one diamond he probably five missing diamonds broke would have led it. The fact 3-2, but if they broke 4-1 that West had not opened :a South had to guess where to diamond suggested that he win the second diamond. did not have a singleton in Hanlpn Leads Elks Conclave that suit. WILDWOOD — State Presi- lead the marching unit for Two Possibilities Phantom South-therefore took the dent Edmund H. Hanton, a Red Bank Lodge and will host South knew that each de- second diamond with the BUTWHALEYNOWN6ER jnember of Red Bank Lodge the members and guests ,at HAS HIS WHISTLE- fender had started with pre- queen. East failed to Mow 233, will preside at the 56th the Surfrider Motel, 5th and cisely two spades. If either suit, and South could lead the annual convention of the New Surf, North Wildwood. defender also had five hearts next diamond toward dummy Jersey State Elks Association and five clubs he would have for a finesse with the ace- here Thursday through Sun- Hear Thyroid Expert a.- singleton diamond to fill nine. day, More than 25,000 Elks out his hand. and their guests are expected RED BANK — An expert DAILY QUESTION to attend. and pioneer in the use of Both defenders were crafty radioactive, isotopes ad- and would do their best to As dealer, you hold: S— Q ' The Red Bank contingent dressed the quarterly meet- confuse the "count," so South J 8 7 H- Q 5 D -A K 9 4 will be headed by Mr. Han- ing of Riverview Hospital's couldn't tell much from the C- 8 5 2. What do you say? Ion. He will be accompanied medical staff. Dr. Solomon play of the cards up to that Answer: Pass. The hand is by Past State President Silver, professor of medicine point. Still South eventually not quite worth an opening Charles A, Hotaling and Sec- at Mt. Sinai Hospital, New came to. the correct conclu- bid. Avoid opening a border- retary Floyd S. Gray, both of York City, spoke on the diag- sion that East was more like- line hand when a substantial Red Bank Lodge 233. Exalted nosis and therapy of thyroid ly than West to hold a single- part of your strength is in Ruler Walter Hemhauser will disease. ton diamond. queens. Beetle Bailey BUT WHAT SMH/ WHEM IF TME HEAR MIMCUS5 SARSE SPOTS TME LIKE A CAPTURBP ENEMV/ WE'LL HEAR ON MlM COO LIKE A HI6 WAVTOTriE POVB STOCKAPE Hi and Lois 'FOR SOMEONE WITH t-3 »SUCH UTTLE CLOTHES, JT SURE TAKES VDU A LONG TIME/ F06O,AI.UTAN'Gl-eD OF TUB NEW (ML & Mr T COINTBV. mey WANNA sefiiesr -THE DAILY REGISTER, BED BANK • MIDDLETOWN, N. J.: TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 TV COMMENT Today 'Peyton Place' Just Fades Away m WCBS-TV aWNEW.TV OWOR-TY fB WNDT-TV By CYNTHIA LOWRY radio network decided sud- it was all over for "Peyton of a Palestine resistance NEW YORK (AP) - Born denly to kill off some long- Place" was the line "the movement involving trained O WNBC-TV © WABC-TV O WPIX-TV 9 IndieifM Color noisily, television series are running soap operas — some end" on the screen. Next commandos. likely to die quietly. "Peyton in mid-episode — it received week the time period will be DAYTIME SPECIALS "Summer Focus" is a Place," after five trauma- such a freshet of anguished filled by "The Guns of Will catch-all series title. The sec- filled years on ABC, slipped letters from listeners that 8:55-5:00 © School TilwWon S,,vi« Prear4m, 9:00 O FIRST TUESDAY 9 . Sonnett," a western limping ond show, Thursday night, away Mon- they had to tell them — by DAYTIME MOVIES ' ' Teenage occultism, anti-smoking programs, the ster- to the end of its trail. will take up the subject of ilization of males in India and Micronesia (U. S. day n i g h I mail — how some of t h e 'Focus' on Mideast abortion. 10:00 O "East Side of Heaven" Trust Territory). wi thoul stories worked out. Earlier ABC presented the Hostess Is Signed O 'The More the Merrier" IB EEN CHRONICLE even a fare- In the case of Helen Trent, first of its "Summer Focus" 12:00 Q "Earl of Chicago" "The Clark Terry Quartet" well. who had been proving for ABC's syndication division 9:30 O THE DORIS DAY SHOW 9 news hours, a rather interest- has signed Betsy Palmer to 1:30 (D "Night Club Scandal" The tfind- years that romance could ing report on the apparently 2:00 O "High Barbaree" Several valuable objects disappear at the ranch up show, as come into the life of a wom- a long-term contract and and Buck insists they were taken by the hired hand. unhealable breach between 3:00 O "Kan«aj Pacific" a matter of an over 40, a form letter to named her hostess of its day- (R) the Israelis and the Palestine time show, "Girl Talk." Miss 4:30 O "The Unimpected" O N.Y.P.D. 8 fact, showed fans revealed that she just Arabs. a callous up and married the latest ro- Palmer has been acting in the O "Beloved Infid.l" "Wha t's A Nice Girl". When a young girl is found The narration succeeded in dead In a hotel room, the detectives are hindered disregard of mance in her life and went absence of Virginia Graham, g presenting the two viewpoints star of the show from its in- EVENING by the deceased girl's co-workers and boyfriend. thth e faithfufithfl abroad to live happily ever with notable impartiality, al- ception seven years ago, who (R) viewers. LOWRy after. 6:00 O Q NEWS S 10:00 though the cameraman's best left in February in a dispute O CBS REPORTS: GENERATIONS APART 8 The network and 20th Cen- It is highly unlikely either O McHALE'S NAVY "The Youth International". Examines how the film was of Israeli families over money. Miss Graham youth rebellion manifests itself in England, Japan tury-Fox, the studio that ABC or the studio wants to O 6 O'CLOCK MOVIE turned out more than 500 epi- wrap up the serial for the farming the land won from apparently is out of the show, mm aria *fc# T * *. and Mexico. sodes, could have at least viewers. Primary interest of Jordan during the six-day but there is some resulting O 10 O'CLOCK NEWS 9 war two years ago but har- litigation to be cleaned up. O THE DICK CAVETT SHOW 9 shown the consideration and the producers now seems to class of Quinn Martin, pro- be "Peyton Place's" financial ried by military action from For Viewing Tonight Guests: James Earl Jones, Mary Hopkin, Mort across the river. H Sahl, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Albert Schweitzer. ducer of "The Fugitive" and future in re-runs. "First Tuesday," NBC, 9-11, "Miss Parmenter" O YUMMY, YUMMY, YUMMY 8 tied up a few loose ends. Not only will we probably The program did point up monthly current events show IB TV HIGH SCHOOL starring Julie London, in a one woman show. • Those storm-tossed char- never know whether Dr. Ros- a new element entering an including exerpts from an in- •:30' 0 MY FAVORITE MARTIAN © NEWSFRONT acters were starting out on si was acquitted, but the dis- old dispute: the emergence terview with Sirhan Sirhan. i S™'™BS NEWS-6:3B REPORT 10:30 ID ALEX DREIER UNLIMITED 9 a new adventure. Dr. Rossi appearance of Alison will Lighthearted musical treatment of the space age was about to go on trial for never be cleared up. Alison, and how it relates to height. Featured are Dick the murder of his fiance's Kallman, Lee Barry, Oscar Brown, Jr. as true blue fans will remem- . ex-husband and a young man 10:40 O KINER'S CORNER 8 ber, was played by Mia Far- was about to give himself up ALTER I|f[ EADE I HEATRES 10:55 O THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF SPORT 9 row and she disappeared the B THE FRENCH CHEF on a hit-and-run charge. day Mia quit the serial. 11:00 BQOfD NEWS. WEATHER, SPORTS 8 7:00 D CBS EVENING NEWS WITH Years ago, when CBS's file only clue we had that ^ WALTER CRONKITE 9 0 OUTER LIMITS y O II O'CLOCK MOVIE SSS? » "The 49th Parallel" starring Laurence Olivier, Brie • UDIANK • ' MTODUTOWN Portman. Six fanatio Nazis have survived the at- 'West Side Presents tack of their U-boat. (1942) HARLTOH TOWN 11:30 0 THE LATE SHOW "SWEET M 741-MM 1 J7MM0 "Bombers B-52" starring Natalie Wood, Karl Mai- Story' Now 7:30 den, Sergeant who resents commanding officer, CHARITY" •• AtnmrPAU making a play for his daughter, is ordered on a HELD OVER secret mission. (1987) At Bene • AYfAIR O THE TONIGHT SHOW 9 MORGAN — An updated FrI. & Sat., May, 30 & 31 |l| 77MMI 2nd BIG WEEK O THE JOEY BISHOP SHOW 8 version of "West Side Story" June 6 & 7 •". Resenting the dominant rol« 11:35 ID THE MAE WEST FILM FESTIVAL is featured at the Club Bene "I'm No Angel". Portrays a midway dancer with Holmdel Village School a shady past and con men pals, who falls for • Dinner-Theater. McCAMPBELL ROAD handsome socialite. Beninato Productions will 8:30 P.M Admliilon 2.50 I'm Europe/ baby. 0 TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES 9 12:00 O THE DONALD O'CONNOR SHOW 9 feature a new young cast in Reiervatlons 747-3697 O THE MOD SpUAD Q 1:00 O TONIGHT'S NEWS 8 the tragic love story of a I sent you Dirtdi Elm Mease, 6 Week '•••••• fm^"' ' ?nd in the Country". The iquad in- O JOE FRANKLIN SHOW 6 modern-day Romeo and Juliet flltrate. a rural trailer camp to lnvesti^te the trapped in the backwater of German Modes and death of a narcotics Informant. (R) New York's West Side. Russian Roulette. O DIVORCE COURT 9 1:05 0 THE BEST OF BROADWAY The Romeo is Tony por- "Davis vs Davis". A poor girl marries a rich man "Beut of Morocco" (1960) starring WUUun 8yl- trayed by Robert Donmoyer, tfrtrwWwWWW and learns that Ufa in the jet set is too superaonic. veiter, Diane Clare, Drama about a man who be- hero in the Jets gang; the Vacation Tow *22Si ID THE HONEYMOONERS oomei involved with an archaeologist and a beauti- — LAST TIMES TONITE — ful vampire. Juliet (Adele Paige) is CD WORLD PRESS 9 Maria, sister of the leader of BOUNO SERA MRS. CAMPBELl" 1:15 O THE GREAT GREAT SHOW Pus • "Support Your Local Sheriff" Now we're even. 1:00 O PAY CARDS 9 the rival Sharks gang. "One Touch of Venua" (1848) starring Ava Gard- STARTS WEDNESDAY Players test their memories and luck to pair up ner! Robert Walker. A. statue of Venua comes to life Curtain time is 8:40 night- cards for money. Art James Is host. for twenty four hours and raliea havoc with the ly except Sunday, when it is O BASEBALL 8 romantic life of a department (tore window trim- 7:40 p.m. Reservations for New York Mets vs Los Angeles DodfOT mer. dinner should be made in ad- ., ffl MONDO CANE 9 1:40 O THE LATE NIGHT NEWS vance. Gualtiere Jacopetti'a round-the-world, hard-hitting 1:45 O THE LATE LATE SHOW I The bitter-sweet tragedy documentary. (1863) "Let's Be Happy" starring Tony Martin, Vera will remain at the Club Bene •i!0 O THE RED SKELTON HOUR 9 Ellen. Girl inherits legacy and travels to Scotland, where the meets an impoverished peer and an Am- through June 29 and will be Guests: Carol Lawrence.Lou Rawls (R) erican salesman. (1957) followed by "The Pajama SUBSISTED FOR OENIRAl ' O JULIA 8 2:00 O NEWS AND WEATHER Game," opening July 1. "Am I, Pardon the Expression, Black listed?" Julia AUDIENCES learns that she has been declared a security risk 3:35 O THE LATE LATE SHOW II 2001 m jjfle .SmpVy SBiFJJ^McC "at the aerospace plant where she works. 'lW)" '" bott. Hated' cattle boss Is taked by tovW»'» 1 ._ aspaceodyssey 0 THE MERV GRIFFIN SHOW 8 ' '''•"' leaders, to drive their cattle to Tort Clenuon2%- f Theatre Six wwwwv O IT TAKES A THIEF 8 (1867) . "The Baranoft Time Table". With the help of an I EATONTOWN ROUTE Ji American playgtrl, Alexander Mundy attempts to 5:15 O GIVE US THIS DAY Gives Youths steal a document divulging the master plan (or a OMMUNITY PTUNECITY Communist takeover of South America. (R) ' 542401 ff' Utah © TO BE ANNOUNCED* Free Tickets fC ZC 2»>iOUtmCI METUCHEN — Theatre lC.dO uusuiHu Last Day at Community — "KILLING OF SISTER GEORCI" Six has donated $1,200 worth DRIVE-IN 264 2200 Lait Day at Neptune — "SOUTHERN STAR" of season tickets to the Mid- STARTS TOMORROW Seltzer Elected Trustee Jazz Concert Sunday dlesex County Office of Eco- nomic Opportunity for alloca- THIS PICTURE HAS A MESSAGE: tion to disadvantaged young Of Garden State Ballet By Brewer Quartet people. David •Morning, MCEOC JIM BROWN NEWARK - Ronald Selt- set, and George B. Under- TINTON FALLS - After a dom of expression by indivi- youth development director, RAQUEL WELCH wood, Short Hills. lapse of about seven years, zer of Oakhurst has been dual members of the group, said the tickets would be dis- the Old Mill Gallery will re- BUST REYNOLDS elected trustee of the Garden This foundation is the spon- but the quartet as a whole tributed by the MCEOC, sume its jazz concerts. State Ballet Foundation. He soring organization for the moves in the .same direction NAACP and the Urban Is vice president of Bam- ballet, New Jersey's resident Scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Sun- to interpret music as we see League. Those Magnificent Men berger's in New Jersey. ballet company. It is in the day will be a jazz concert by it and feel it." Theatre Six is eligible for in their Flying Machines Mrs. J oseph H. Lerner, final weeks of a record year the Dave Brewer Quartet. Dave Kenny, on vibes, has a $750 reimbursement from in which it has visited 30 New president, announced the elec- Featured will be works by played with the American the New Jersey State Council Jersey cities, and appeared tion of eight other trustees: such jazz exponents as Miles Wind Ensemble and the Na- on the Arts for the tickets, Ends Today: "2001: A Spac. Jules Aresty, Trenton; Louis in 16 public concerts and 74 Davis and Bill Evans. The tional Orchestral Association. provided the state funds can Odytsey" & "Wild, Wild Planet" V, Aronson, 2d, Far Hills; Jo- educational programs reach- program will also include Ken Bichel has placed in sev- be matched on a local basis. seph M. Byrne 3d, Short Hills; ing more than 100,000 chil- works by Herbie Hancock, eral national piano competi- LeonKranztoiir, East Orange; dren and adults between Oc- Gary Burton and original tions, and has signed with At- Donald A. McMahon, Convent tober affd May. compositions by Mike Garson lantic Records. Both of them Station; Anthony M. Surano of New York. are from New York, and are Air-Conditioned NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED of South Orange; Mrs. Jo- both candidates for their mas- Brewer, who has his drum ' seph L. Tabourne, Jr. Somer- Present Student ter's degrees in music from studio at 2 W. Front St., Red the Juilliard School of Music, Awards Today Bank, had this to say on the New York. Acres of FREE Parking! FREE Smoking Sections! LAST DAY TODAY presentation: •ATONTOWN '69 Talent Expo RED BANK — Students at Richard Halajian of Brick "The quartet will play our •k Starts Tomorrow! -k DRIVE-IN "SOUTHERN STAR" and Bed Bank High School who Township, bass, has played Set at Center own arrangements of these throughout the metropolitan At Both Theatres! t S41-420O "THE UGLY ONES" have won honors in athletics works. Our interpretations are WOODBRIDGE -r Mem- area and is well known for his representative of things that bers of the New Jersey High- and academic work were to virtuosity. STARTS TOMORROW are being done in jazz now. way Authority have revealed receive their awards at an as- Brewer has been teaching The concert will not be a re- that the 1969 Talent Expo, a sembly this morning. percussion a number of years. iteration of the past, He has recorded with a va- BRICK PLAZA showcase of New Jersey's All varsity monogram win- SKQPriKG CENTER, ROUTE 70 W-MOO talented teenagers, will be "We try to present a dis- riety of groups and has made presented this year in co-op- ners received letters at the tillation of some past influ- several TV appearances. He eration with the New Jersey assembly instead of the ences and current trends in is writing a book on drum Jaycees. sports banquet as In previous jazz. We believe in the free- instruction. Preliminary contests for years. this year's Talent Expo, slat- .WWVWVM«/WWVSA,A< , ed to be held at the Garden Jeathofa- State Arts Center in Holmdel Retarded Students ASBURY rARK Arts Center Box Office ASBURY PARK Sept. 20, will take place dur- Are Guests at Dance Bunfighter YRIC ing the months of July and HIGHLANDS - The Henry ARONET August. These contests are 77S-10H Hudson Regional School Fu- I open to any New Jersey resi- Is Handling Direct Sales i A Universal Picture 'Technicolor V ture Teachers of America j dent between the ages of 13 tickei t salel s frof m 1010:330 a.m. Club sponsored a dance in HOLMDEL - The box of- ahd 18. to 9 p.m. Mondays through * Starts Tomorrow! °Ar Atlantic Highlands Grammar fice of the Garden State Arts "GO1-FORTHE FURY, Each of the eight winners in Center has opened, to start Thursdays and from 10:30 WINNER Si School for students at the Red A TRIP TO THE MOON, THE FORCE AND FUN OF a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Fridays and last year's show received $200 Bank School for the Retard- direct sale of single-event Saturdays, It will be closed STARS . . . AND BEYOND! In U. S. Savings Bonds. And ed. Music was provided by tickets for its 1969 summer ACADEMY Sundays. the eight runners-up received the Armadillos. season. "ANGRY, TOUGH AND a $100 Bond, plus an oppor- While remaining subscrip- The box office at Telegraph 2OO1: A SPACE ODYSSEY FULL OFSTING!".W tunity for further public, ap- Club members designed and Hill Park will be open tor AWARDS made decorations, served re- tion seats for both classical "A PICTURE YOU MUST pearances. and popular series can also Including The eight performing cate- freshments and supervised SEE THIS YEAR IS if_" games for the children. Each be obtained at the box office Singers Set to Tour KEIRDULLEA CABY LOCKWOOO Best Actress gories in the Arts Center's before the season starts June Talent Expo competiition are: youngster attending the af- The Arts Center fair received a gift bag. 12, it will serve throughout PARAMOUHIRCTURES classical (Instrumental and the summer as Uie main out- HOLMDEL — Singers Steve vocal); popular (instrumental AMEMORIAL ENTERPRISES AN let for advance and night-of- Lawrence and Eydie Gorme land vocal), and instrumental In Spring Concert performance tickets to the in- ANAVC06MIMSYFIIM are scheduled to tour the group, vocal group, dance SPRINGFIELD, Ohio -Di- dividual events scheduled in NAMlONtNAA KICK ILVD..HICI TOWN 477tMI p&eRorooLe and speciality miscellaneous. ane Messner, daughter of Mr. the center. Garden State Arts Center at Applicants for qualified con- and Mrs. Joseph Messner, The seasfln opener Thurs- telegraph Hill Park here for KATHAKINtHtPBURN testants for 1909 Talent Expo iL. 103 Apple Orchard Drive, day, June 12, at 8:30 p.m. will the first lime around 2 p.m., GRAND PRIZE can be obtained at any pub- THeLIONINWlNT6R ». New Shrewsbury, will be be the Philadelphia Orches- tomorrow, following a press "BEST FILM" lic, private or parochial junior tra conducted by Eugene Or- FOR ADULTS ONLY singing in the Wittenberg conference. 11M CANNES FESTIVAL high or high school in New University Choristers when mandy with The Romeros, Jersey. All applications must the group presents Its spring Spain's first family of the The couple, motoring to the be completed and formarded site, plan to take a close look concert Wednesday at 8 p.m. guitar, as guest soloists. The HURRY! LAST TIMES TONIGHT I to area chairmen, Including Ormandy - led Philadelphia at the facility where they will James Jeffries, 805 Main St., in the Wittenberg Union. The Th« PLAZA, BRICK PLAZA, FREEHOLD concert will feature works Orchestra also opened the appear with Woody Herman Protest „„*,! SflVE FREE T.V. AjSbury Park. 1 and his orchestra for a week's by Berger, Pinkman, and Inaugural season last year "IF IT'S TUESDAY. THIS MUST BE BELGIUM" Applicantions must be in by June 12. engagement in August. lone 15. Brahms. 20 -THE DAILY REGISTER, RED BANK - MIDDLETOWN, N. U TUESDAY^ JUNE 3, 1569 Semones Appoint Realtors To Celanege Pos/ Stock Market Decline Enters NEW YORK - Jason Se- Hear Panel Successful mones, S Dundall Place, Haz- let, N. J., has been appointed Its Ttird Successive Week Of Lawyers manager, division accounting, NEW YORK (AP) - The money crunch to develop as it change, 908 fell and 412 rose. SHREWSBURY — A three- Investing of Celanese Chemical Co.. stock market extended its de- did in 1966.. New 1969 lows topped new way panel discussion among John S. Zolvik, company cline into the third succes- highs by 1M to 23. lawyer guests was a feature The Dow Jones average of By ROGER controller, said Mr. Semones sive week yesterday in a ses- 30 industrials slipped 4.39 In the shortened session, of the last meeting of the Spear E. SPEAK will be responsible for pro- sion curtailed by 45 minutes to 933.17. It had lost 9.89 volume contracted to 9.18 mil- Momnouth County Board of viding operational accounting at the start because a storm Realtors in Rod's Shadow- Q — You mentioned recent- off 2 per cent while earnings points last week and 19.85 lion shares from 11.78 million ly that shares of one fund dropped from 9 cents a share services for the division staff delayed Wall Street workers the previous week. The Asso- Thursday. The exchanges brook. can be exchanged for those of as well as terminal and dis- in getting to their jobs. were closed Friday in obser- The attorneys taking part to 4 cents. Dividends which ciated Press 60-stoock aver- another. I would like to ex- were resumed last year were tribution facilities, With subway transportation age fell 1.3 tn 332.3 with in- vance of Memorial Day. .^ were J. Gerard Carton, As- change the income fund I halted by floods, the New dustrials off 2.5, rails off .2 Trading in Reading & Bates bury Park; Lawrence A. Car- hold for a growth fund. But, recently cut from 15 cents to York and American Stock Ex- and utilities off .6. reopened for the first time ton 3rd, Atlantic Highlands, won't I be liable for a large 10 cents quarterly. Supermar- and Joseph F. Grabler of the ket operations contribute 78 changes held off opening of The New York Stock since May 23, when it was capital gains tax?-—G.M. halted because of a heavy in- N. J. Title Insurance Co. per cent to sales while the Retired trading until 10:45 a.m. Exchange common stock in- A — Shares of mutual funds flux of orders. Since then it The program was prepared remainder of revenues are Analysts said the reluc- dex declined 25 cents in the by John Fiorino, Matawan, which are managed by the tance of investors to move average price of a share. has announced acquisition of same company can, usually derived from distribution of two companies with interests chairman or the board's law. dairy products, manufacture strongly into stocks was, in Standard ' & Poor's 500- Gordon I. Morlson yers and realtors committee, be exchanged at asset value Senior their opinion, due to anxiety stock index dropped .52 to in Indonesian oil fields. The for a small fee. This investor of candy and swimming pool issue soared 17% to iVA. Thomas E. Hogarty, of Ho- that the vise would be 102.94. garty Agency, Spring Lake, service which is offered by chemicals. An agreement to squeezed even further on the Oils displayed strength in was inducted as realtor mem- management firms applies acquire a Los Angeles opera- Of 1,553 issues traded on an otherwise declining mar- Promoted only within its own group of Citizens tight money situation and dis- the New York Stock Ex- SHREWSBURY - Gordon ber by past president Paul P. tor of six discount outlets was appointment over failure of ket on the American Stock Boya. funds. For a young couple recently announced. the Vietnam peace talks Exchange. Nine oils were at I. Morison of ill Beechwood buying a growth fund toward Drive, has been promoted to Sworn in as new salesmen retirement, the service would Until a definitive upward FREE to advance substantially. the top of the most active members by Mr. Bova were list. vice president of the Bank of allow low-cost conversion," at trend in earnings is once CHECKING ACCOUNTS They took pains in their New York. George P.. Menzella and Dor- retirement, to an income- again firmly established, Ar- The exchange index dipped othy Stiiermeyer, both of the den-Mayfair shares will prob- market reviews to emphasize 8 cents to 130.95. Volume Mr. Morison has been with oriented fund. • no maintenance their belief that the govern- the bank since 1952 and is Otto Agency, Freehold; Es- ably remain sluggish. I would charge ment would not allow a dwindled to 4.76 million telle Bass, of • Baron Associ- Reports on capital gains sell and reinvest in an issue shares from 6.97 million in the comptrpller's division. ates, Freehold, and Joanne • no minimum He was appointed assistant and dividend distributions are with a well-established balance required Thursday. Gaining 2 points or W. Miller, of Ken Twyman sent to shareholders annual- growth trend such as Boise- more'Were Reserve Oil, Ca- treasurer in 1956, auditor in • no activity charge* 1957 and deputy comptroller Agency, Sea Girt. ly for their use in filing fed- Cascade. Egg Market nadian Homestead and Inter- eral income tax forms. continental Industries. Impe- in 1963. NEW YORK (AP) — Whole- Little Silver Man Whether distributions are tak- rial Oil, Austral Oil and Mc- He is a certified public ac- en in cash or reinvested,'cap- Attend Convention sale egg offerings ample, for Culloch Oil added more than countant in New York. Is Issued Patent slow demand yesterday. ital gains taxes are paid an- MIDDLETOWN - Mr. and a point. SAYREVILL-E - Robert D. nually and not at the time Wholesale selling prices Toomey, 48 Mottingham Way, JMrs. Joseph Azzolina, 75 Her based on exchange and other Corporate bonds dipped and Robert H. Durna of sale or exchange. Drive, attended the 67th an- governments were mostly Little Silver, and George Member Federal Bewrr* volume sales. Promoted by Pru Vassil, Old Bridge, have been Q — I received, some time nual Navy League-convention Fedetal Deposit - Iniunne* Cwf. unchanged. ago, 30'shares of Arden-May- in Washington, D.C. New York spot quotations NEWARK — Robert ' H. issued a patent for an inven- follow: tion relating to the method' .fair as a gift. There has been Yesterday's closing prices:! Duma of 304 Boston Blvd., no progress in share price Standards 31-3214. v AOP Ind 54 Int T*l ft Tel S% Sea Girt, has been promoted and apparatus for producing Whites Adaona Ex 17% I-TJB Imp 3414 aluminum, chloride by react* since. I am interested in Air Prod 43 Johns'Man 37H to programming analyst in Fancy large (47 lbs min) Air Reduc 2714 Jones & XJ 27 ing aluminum powder with building a portfolio for future MAPLE BUNK BEDS Allcs Op 22 JOJT Mis the Prudential Insurance 33^-35; fancy medium (41 lbs 51 Kaiser Al 3714 chlorine. growth.and would appreciate Complete with mattresses, Alles Lud 23tt Kennecott 48% Co.'s computer and insurance average) 2V/2 - 23; fancy Alleg Pow your views on disposition of Allied Ch 32% Koppers services department. The invention has been as- guard rail and ladder. May smalls (36 lbs average) 18%- Mrs. Lois H. Gelling Allls Chal 31% Kraftao signed to National Lead Co. these shares.—P.B. 79 Kresge.SS 6O',i Mr. Durna joined Pruden- 00 Alcoa ' A — I find it difficult to also be used as twin beds. 19%. Am Can 56 Kroger 3754 Mr. Toomey is assistant 31'/. Leli Port O 19 tial after graduation from work up much enthusiasm for Am Cyan 12 manager of the development ENTIRE SET Browns Agency Names Am M Fdy 23%Leh Vel Inrt Franklin and Marshall Col- Arden-Mayfair. A long antic- Am Motors 1091 I/OF Co and engineering department 159 Fancy large (47 lbs min) Am Smelt XU, Lib McN 1214 lege in 1965. ipated earnings turnaround Mrs. Getting Am Std 41 LlBg & My 3854 of National Lead's Titanium Am TclATeJ 5654 I Litton 5251 Mr. Durna was a program- Pigment Division, here. Mr. which appeared to have be- RUMSON - G. J. Sterling Am Too 36 Lultcns Stl Huffman & Boyle AMP Inc. iS'A Magnavox mer before his promotion and Vassil formerly was em- gun in 1968 seems to have Thompson, president, Sterling Anaconda 43% Maratli OH 8514 it attending life Office Man- been reversed this year. In Thompson Gallery of Homes, Armco Stl 831i Martin M 25 K, ployed as a chemical engi- Rt. 35 Circle • Eatonfcnvn, N. J. 542-1O1O JUNE Armour 57 Vi Masondte 6614 agement Association classes. neer in that department. the first 12 weeks sales were with offices here, in Middle- Armst Ck Merck WEEKEND „,,„ AsM Oil MOM 3251 town and Matawan, an- Atl RlcWld 12854 Mdnn M&M 107 EXTRAVAGANZAS nounces the appointment of Avco Corp 30 M P A 80 WITHOUT BEING EXTRAVAGANT Bubcock W 31% Mrs. Lois H. Geiling of 28 Bavuk ClR 14 Marcar Seaside tour witd lunch, dance Boll & How V'i Mor-Nor and show, concert, movie. 4-day / Highland Avenue, Fair Ha- Bendlx 4554 Nat Biso 52% ven, to the sales staff of the Betli Steel 35 . N Cash Reg 12B14 3-night Plan from $105 for two, BoeWB 44 Nat Distill 33V4 including room, meals, garage, firm's Rumson office. Bordcn 31'.4 Nut fiypa 30Ii Borg Warn 31 Nat Steel 52% many extras. For reservations, Mrs. Geiling holds an insur- Brunswk 22% Nla M Pow lD>s call 609-345-446* COUECT. Bucy Erla 25% No Am Rock 33% ance license and was former- Bulova 5314 Nor Pac 52% ly associated with Metropoli- Burl Ind 39% Nwat Alllln """' Case, JI 18=4 Outb Mar tan Life Insurance Co. Her Cater Trac Wit Owens 111 73?t Cclanese 70 Pan Am Wld 20'_ other business experience in- dies A Oh 6Qtt Penney, JC 511i flRarlborougfe'iUciibeim cludes ownership and opera- Chrysler 8014 Pa Pw 4 Lt """" Cltlts S* 8414 Penn Ccn 5 Magic Acres on the- Ocean at Par* tion of a theater and lun- Cooa Cola 72s.. Peiial Cu Place, Atlantic City 08404. 68 Years Cole Palm 49% PerUln Elm White Family Ownership-Management cheon club, over a six year Colum Gas 29 Prinr Elliot S. Ryan, Geneial Manager period. Coml Solv 2014 Phil El Con Edis 33 Plilll Pot Con Can 63 Vi Pub Sv E&G 33J4 CPC Intl 38% Pullman 50*4 corning, Gl 268% RCA Cm Zcll 65 Reading Co Curtfss Wr 21"'_ MAKE THE BIG MOVE! Deere 43>4 Revlon Dentsply 50 Reyn Met 39 Dow Cftem 74 >i Reyn Tob 39ft Dress Ind 34=4 Rob Controls duPont llB'i St Jos Lead 39 Duq Lt 2814 St Regis Pap 47(4 "Start Saving East Kod .„--, Seam Roeb 70«i End John 33% Shell Oil Firestone —* ' Smith. AO 29 Sou Pac ruccp 50 Sou Ry Ford Mot Spenry ltd for Junior!" OAC cp 2514 Std Brand Gen Clg Std oil Cal Gen Dynam &td oil NJ Gen Elec 94 Gen Fds 8114 Stud Worth t/ PER ANNUM ON Gen Motors 80% Texaco Genn Pub Ut 279294 4 Tex G Sul G Tel & Tel 38% Textron £ SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Gen Tire 24 Transamef Oa. Pac Cp m% Un Carbide Gillette 56"4 Uniroyal /° FROM $10,000 Glen Aid 13 Unit Alro 5 Goodrich „„ United Corp 13% Goodyear 30«4 US Plywood 7114 Annual Dividend Per Annum On Grace Co 345i, US Smelt 4SH Gt A*P am I US, Steel L% Compounded k Ofn Savings Certificates Greyhound WalworUi Quarterly ' ' From $5,000 Gull oil WclsMlrta Hamrm Fap 3394 Wn Un Tel Hera Inc 43 Weatg El 111 Cent Ind 60H White Mot .. ANCHOR YOUR SAVINGS TO ... InI s RRand d 4S9i Wltco Chem 36 I B M 319 •£ Woolwth Int Haorv 3294 Xerox Int Nick 379i ad LOAM American ASSOCIATION Cdn Marc 1% Kin Ark 8 Creole Pet 35 I Molybdenum 329i Equity Cp 6?i IPhoenix stl I39i MIDDLETOWN I ATL. HIGHLANDS I LINCROFT Gen Plywd 8T4 IPren Hall 43 £71-2400 I 291-0100 . I 842-4400 Gulf Can 25H ITechnical 22?i Imp oil 22 I Utah Id S in Dig they must.,. Pay we will! simply ONE-derful lor summer! The BRA-DRESS from Italy Extravagantly flattening in luscious, hand-screened prinfs. The/ fit beautifully and keep their cool through long, jcorching days. Never worn one? Don't wait another min- uta to discover the joys of bra-dressing I Hand washable. GRASS Sizes 8 to 16. ' 13.00 SEED KEEP OFF ireinbacb'i budgit drtim — all itor»i ... Current sewerage system construction work throughout this area promises crystal clearness to Finance your sewer the blue waters of Monmouth County. This, too, Is crystal clear. Such modern improvements involve system hookup costs extra cost to each of us . . ' an extra cost which in through us on terms time will prove well worth-while. One of our financial experts will be happy to help up to five years you handle your individual sewer system hookup costs, on terms up to five years, or assist you with any other home improvement loan. Visit The Central Jersey Bank and Trust Company office nearest you. THE CMIWE SHOP tfainbaeh's • ubury park • rid bank 10 to 5:30 CENTRAL JERSEY BAM HELP YOU ? wed. and frl. till 9 p.m. • brick town 10 till 9, Allenriurst • Allentown - Bradley Beach • Eatontown Parmlngdalo • Ft. Monmouth • Freehold (2) • Freehold Twep, sat. till 5:30 p.m. Long Branch (2) * Marlboro • Matawan • Neptune Cit/ SERVICE IS OUR. Rumfon '' Saa Brism • Shrewsbury * Spring Lake Heights MCMBCfl PCOtnAL PCPOS'T tN5'ji.«firr CC»P«MTHW BIGGEST ASSET! '•-»"•