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P«fe» CBANFORD (NJ:)CHRONICLEThursday, April 8,1982 •*e- ' •.. •..•[• Garwood council wants 1: . Parade in Kenilworth' meters out...parking Saturday...state ban on Maple...new OKs traffic light equipment _arj6___._. 11 y I I I I r field..-page iA^ teachers, .page 15

1- , • . -•..•*• • , • •. . / . •. .'•'••.. : VOL. 90 No. 15 Published Every Thursday Thursday. April 15,1982 •« ' /Serving Cranford, Kenilworth and-liarwitod - USPS136 800 Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, H.j. 25 CENTS

•**'.• V "'

Ira Lulinski escaped massacre and shopping at Kings. " . , Whether your family is, looking foiwardto a:Seciersupper tomorrow night or an again Because Kings is a family. And while all of us at Kings celebrate our own fey STUART AWBREV bee: n saturated with Jewish blood." the hands of the German murderers, , Easter dinner Sunday afternpon, one thirty is certain; There are all sortsof special Voters will try again Tuesday to holidays, we share that common feeling of for good food and a good family tiriie. Forty years ago German .soldiers Like many other wandering and keep coming back to me. I-see the Ghet- foods and feelings that set:it apartfrom ordinary meals. ' elect three members to the Board of massacred a thousand Jews in the homeless people; they entered a camp to. I live through the slaughter. I see the You'll see it and feel it in the clean store and friendly people that greet you when Ij Education and decide on a^school Polish town of Miory. Ira Lulinski for displaced persons, at Bad ditch with the dead. In those horrible And one thing you would neverdo without for your holiday meal is the kind of I budget for 1982-83. The election escaped but he lives with the nightmare Reichmanhal, Germany. • moments, my wife and children are wii quality that makps it truly festive i \ . . .,. you come in to shop. You'll notice it in all the-big.and little things we do — from the I called .off April 6 by Gbv. Kean after of an eyewitness to mass murder. . Frustrated in an attempt to get to me and they-do not let me alone, special Kosher slicers in our Deli Corner to the special Easter Bunnies who'll be ' /* r jf he declared a show emergency, in 11 Lulinski, then seven years old, fled Israel, they found relatives who arrang- comfort me and easp'ioy suffering You know you can count on us at Kings for that Jciad pf quality, bec^us? it's me ; north and central New Jersey coun- under, gunfire with his father. They sur- ed for them tocom e to Newark. The The Lullhskis have three daughters. here toentertauTthe little ones. •._•„_.•. .;.,__._.•„, ;_ -. ties. Pprgnng- m^uv V^ty<\' hftwv tb** land of quality y^carxyjeSffiry day of the year, rt hlit >hl» <|>ttu>r $ t Hfe _nk_,-I—tlinglri| n l(-arnw| nrtnn and a The parents are members of the Jewish With these thoughts rn-m^ f]po_i were dosed-at 3 p.m. cannot family perished that June 2. The dead ' religious authority, found a post in a Educational Center in Eljzabeth, where 1 cast ballGts again. Their votes are • list and in our aisles. And you'll find a feeling that goes beyond the business of food enjoyment of that special feeling of love that touches each of us in its own way. included Ira's mother, his sister and his synagogue in Elizabeth, and married a their girls were educated, arid the locked in the machine. The five can- two brothers. . • . •. second time..He died in 1975. children are members of "Second didates running for three seats are Last year Lulinski, who lives on Blake After completing schooling that, had Generation," an organization, of r Vincent Cicalese, William The Butcher'sCorner the Freezer Corner' Thetinner* Corner The DeU Corner* TheGrocerYCorner Avenue, wrote a brief for the been interrupted by the war, his son em- .children of Holocaust survivors. '-...• Fatality: Katharine Barberio was thrown from car and killed near In- McAulif fe, Charles McCarty, incum- 36th anniversary of the liberation of the barked on a successful career in the "Our family is vjgry much aware of bent, Richard Nicholls, board presi- tersection of Orange and Blrchwood avenues last Thursday' nlciht White Rose Cranberry Sauce survivors of the Holocaust This year he steel -business and is part-owner of the Holociiast," says the father. ,They Photo by Jon Delano. • ' • ' White Rose Green Beans ' Large 36 Size Indian River Atthe Sliced tq Order Counter: dent, and Edna Silvey.' Voters also will attend the regional observance Aluminum and Iron Specialties Co. in don't" dwell on the subject interminably, Kings US Grade A 9 ai. 49* Seedless Grapefruit Homemade Fruited Baked Whole or Strained 16 dz. 49* will- decide on a tax Jevy of ^1 which will be at Temple Beth-El in Cran- Edison. .' he says, but. they speak of it and read Cut or French Style million to support a $12.6 million cur- Green Giant Nibblers Red"orWhite__—-.',,.".. " Virginia Ham and Lean Smoked ford Monday. In June he will meet as he He married Libby Miller in 1958, and and write about the tragedy that befell Fresh Ttorkeys $ " ^ftid H ' ;:~"''lA i?S White Rose rent expense budget. Polls fitth e six ' has done for years with living' survivors credits her with showing great European Jewr#J___goaT is "to explain Cob Corn. . 6 ears 1.09 Crisp Juicy elementary schools- wilt be open from his hometown. • • , with Pop Up Timef —•-— L'<4 lbs-*-.O9 Red Delicious App|ps Tjh. fagsl-19 Horniel: -64 oz. understanding and empathy with the 'the- .causes that brought"'-the Ore Ida Crispere. r Apple Juice from 2 to 9 p.m. •—-../••.•; :—He and his wiferLibby, -have just suffering and tragedytie enctwWeTfecTjff'' 10-12 lb sizes r DUJUSSO GenoaSalami ; Howard Johnson Black Ribier $ Campbell's Cream of translated 15 stories about the massacre . his younger years. /• He concluded his memoir: "with all 18-20 lb. sizes lb: 5oz»1.29 Natural Casing '.., V4 lb. 2.59 and- its aftermath by another Miory Fried Clams Chicken Soup__ ^110.75 oz. 3/»l "Frequently J spend ' sleepless our means, we seek to fulfill the holy Ready to Serve Sau Sea Shrimp Sopressate (Sweet Venetian) native, Isaac Aron, which will be ' nights," he wrote in his memoir' "Dur-" testament of our martyred ones, that Blue Bird Smoked Hams: .' Grapes $ DolePineapple in Syrup Rape arrest trying published by ShengoldPubUshers this driver Sliced^to OixleF______-Vi Ib. 2.69 .ing these long nights, the horror pictures they.should not be forgotten; that the SKank Side______lb *1.19 CocktaiIi__Z__ three 4 oz. jars *2:f $ Imported from Chile m Polska Kirf^«> • »A lb. 1.35 Sliced, Crushed or Chunk_ 20 oz. 69" A 17-year-old Crahford youth has spring in a book titled "Fallen Leaves." etched in my memory of the war years Holocaust should not be forgotten for Butt SJH« - lb. *L29 Celantano Royal Prince Yants. 24 oz: 99< been charged with the rape of a Lulinski believes the stories must be and the suffering of Jews in our town at generations and generations." $ Cheese Ravioli _ I3OZ.H.39 Imported from Chile: Old Smokehouse Bacon _ V_ lb. *1.29 Center Slices_ __ : lb. 2.69 Saucy Sue Sauce =10 oz 79' 29-year-old woman and burglary of told and. retold to remind the world Severoli Tortelirii. _8oz-*1.19 Packham Summer Pears—= lb. 69* Burgermeister her home in Southeast Cranford last' Fresh Grade A fowl lb. 69* $ Green Giant:. about the Holocaust and to get across to elude police White Seedless Grapes___lb. *1.29 Hard Salami: % lb. 1.99 July 9. Det. William O'Donnell and USDA Choice Beef: l the message that it could happen again $ Imported from Israel Boneless Proscuitto___ A Ib. H.79 Green Beans French Style or , Al-Sdphmann, investigator for the to Jews or others whose, rightsrire A 13-yeslr-old girl who'was driving her headquarters, "she really floored it." Top Round London Broil _ lb 2.79. Minute Maid $ Large Jaffa Oranges __ 5/*Babkl a Traditional for Easter, lb. 2.39 Kitchen Sliced - « 16 oz. 2/89" county prosedutor's office, in- denied... . •••-•—»——• ";• ""~*. ,_• -•;•••;; rriother'st car erratically; without' the Officer Robert Merrill, patrolling on Fresh Lean Ground Beef x s Orangejuice 6oz. Florida Green Cabbage ____ lb. 25* Marinated Artichoke Salad k lb t.99 17 oz. 2/89" vestigated the case over a period of — "For the young Lulinski, the slaughter knowledge of her family was-icilled Birchwood, heard Thermanh's report of Fat Content ' - • • months. The woman was'forced into marked only a traumafic beginning to while trying to elude policemen last the erratic driving plus his warning that $ Tender Flavorful Finger 7 ___^ 2.5 oz. 59* not to exceed 27% : lb. 1.69 Stouffer's Lean Cuisine: a cellar at 1:39 a.m. and raped while an ordeal. Miory, near Vilna, had Thursday night. • the oar was moving at _ high rate of Carrots three 12 oz. pkgs. *1.00 Hormel Rosa Grande ; Lindsay. Pitted Extra Large Hoi-mel Cure 81 . Zucchini Lasagna (11 oz.)_ ea. $I,59 her children were sleeping upstairs. earlier been apportioned to White The- vjct'im, Ka.therine Phyllis speed. Thermann said he backed off the $ California Celery Hearts j Ig. pkg. 79* and.Leoni ' • • PipoOliv^ 5.75 oz. 99" The suspect was charged in Juvenile Russia and after- their escape he and his Barberio, was an eighth grade student chase near Solomon Schechter School. Smoked Ham ______lb. 2.99 Sara Lee International Cakes:' Fresh Italian Sausage'• • ~ ~ Long Green Cucumbers _____ 3/89* Kleenex . Court Monday and placed in the father linked up with Russian partisans ' at Harding School in Kenilworth.-.She Meantime,- Merrill positioned his car $ 7eXp 7^ Pepperoni - county juvenile detention tenter. who operated behind German lines. . left her_home at 494 Washington Avenue diagonally across the eastbound lane at _Hot or. Sy^et ______Ib: L69 $ Crisp Romaine Lettuce • •'•'• lb. 59* Dinner Napkins^li__ pkg; of 50 69" Chocolate Bavarian ea., 2.89 Sliced to Order V_ lb shortly before 9 p.m.."ostensibly to walk the Orange-Bitchwoqd—intersection— Extra Large Red Ripe -—r——-~ San Georgio . '-- . ' The Russians were anti-Semitic but Tobins First Prize Kielbasi _lb. *1.99 Pepperidge Farm needed the Jews who knew the area well to a'friehd's-home nearby and help her with.overhead lights flashipg. Hillshire I__basi______lb. H.99 Salad Tomatoes______lb. 79* Imported from France Lasagna ______16 oz. pkg. 69" baby sit. [ Pound Cake_ 10-3/4 oz.-H.29 $ and were willing to fight: The partisans, When Merrill saw the car coming $ $ Genuine Brie Cheese _. Ib. 4.49 Egg hunt Robert A. Guertin, police chief, said Patio Kielbasi -'••••*. lb. |.79 Sara Lee Croissants___ 5Vioz5i % 1.49 Calavo Brand European Schweppes Ginger Ale L 2 ltr. *1.29 organized as "Saz;ikiriis," attacked gar- rapidly up the center of Orange from the - Jones Dairy Farms: - (Burpless) Cucumbers _^ach89* Genuine Blue Cheese Ib. *3.89 Nabisco Triscuits______9.5 oz. 99" The VFW's annual Easter egg risons and transports ancr blew up she had no destination in mind and "just public school area, he reversed his vehi- $ Royal Crest English Muffinfins . $ bridges and rail lines to confound went for a ride." 1 Smoked Sliced Bacon lb. 2.29 package of six ' ~ \ -'•• • 12 oz. Calavo Brand Extra Large 7 Size Stilton Cheese from England lb. 4.99 Sunshine Mallo Puffs . 9 pz. 99" hunt which was' postponed last cle and edged back into Birchwood so $ Vermont Extra Sharp ' Saturday because of field conditions,' Hitler's army, "which had penetrated far At 9:18 p.m., about 25 minutes after that only one-fourth of the police car ex- Sausage Links______lb. pkg. 2.29 Dolly Madison Ice Cream, quart ^ *•' Hawaiian Papaya each 99* Health & Beauty Needs: beyond this point into Russia. she left home, she drove the eastbound Wi Th^dar lb. *3.89 $ will be held this Saturday at noon in tended into Orange. Biifferin Tablets___ btl. ot 60 2.19 I Uriami Park at the far end of South Father and son fought in many bat- •Oldsmobile through a j:ipp signin front s of the Cranford Post>6ffice, narrowly The "•• fast-moving Barberio vehicle .The Gardener's Corner* Ban Roll On_____l__b5oz li69 Union Avenue. Children between the tles. "We had toliv e through 750 days in Excedrin Tablets btl. 0^60*2*39 avoiding a patrol car driven by Det. veered out of control on.the opposite Globe I ages of 3 and 13 are invited.. , the woods," tha son recalls, plus-365 westbound lane, just beyond the en- ««»*••••_•••• days in concentration camp-a reference William Thermann who was following a the Dairy Corner suspicious vehicle on Eastman toward- trance to the municipal pool. Ontons 2lb- bag to a German-imposed ghettoization of It_ripped through a cement street Orchid 49* Towards the purchase of North;—.,-_;....•;•— • ••--•'— -— - : $|89 MiOTY during a brutal occupation marker and" a' guide wire and crashed Iri Large Idaho Baking Potatoes Vi gallon uf in 1941-42 before the Jews tin I Ll<_IIv Corsages each^-l- wnowas] to a roadside treetree „grove. The girl was .. \ 8-|0 oz. avg. size______3 lbs. 99* Kraft Sealtest "massacred;: ~" the intersection when the errant vehicle thfown from the car. Conservation Center ig now • crossed in front_of him, backed up and —-Easter Lillics 5 CWornia Natural rYesh operating on a 10 to 4 daily schedule After Germans retreated frorn^ the $ IGE €REAM then followed the car down Mifln. He saw Kescusitatibn efforts proved "futile. Colorful Ckineraria 6" pot 5.99 Muenster and will keep those hours through Soviet Union, the Lulinskis and other Shelled Aimonds_____ lb. *2.49 OFF partisans went to Miory to find the it hesitate at the Alden intersection and An hour after the impact. Miss Barberio Jersey Grown Hyacinths " ' . Cocktail Wilhlhis coupon April. Activity will increase there stop at Springfield. He pulled up behind was pronounced dead by a METS doctor $ Slices starting With the debut of glass Jewish synagogue and all Jewish homes 3 bloom ______each 4.99 Cherry Tomatoes pt. basket 89* destroyed. They fenced in the communi- "The horror pictures keep coming back to me." Libby and Ira Lulinski it with his overhead flashing lights ac- at the scene. She died of a fractured $ Minute Maid recycling April 24. The annual curb- with book including his personal testimony to massacre-of his family tivated. . " skull and multiple injuries. Azaleas— 10" Crown __eaeh 5-99 side ritual of spring Clean Up begins - ty grave and headed west to leave "the Grapefruit Juice. V4gal,*1.49 accursed European earth which - had 40 years ago this spring. With both vehicles stopped, Thermann Guertin said the officers performed Colorful Chrysanthemums '. .:.. Go(ulthru*' 4/13/82 O , LU#2I May 3 and will carry through that responsibly. He said they had a motor $ La Yogurt. _6oz. 2/69' * • • Limit-one coupon per family * • started to get out of the patrol car to talk 6 inch pot , .' ' each 4.99 ttif month. — _._. to the driver .'But the car took off on Spr- vehicle violator who was evading police. Mixed Bouquet Breyers Yogurt;— : Vtpint 3/H.29 He believes the driver panicked at the $ ' ingfield toward the river. The officer's from Canada .bunch 2.39 Friendship Sour Cream_ pint 89* i COKE, TAB, pursuit was delayed by a southbound wheel. Thermann's pursuit in search of Mini Carnations. Temp Tee Whipped Try free ad Witness to death at the ditch- car. He radioed headquarters that the a license identification and MerriH^s' from Israel i_ .bunch *2.39 vehicle was northward weaving toward highly" visible roadblock followed Cream Cheese 12 oz. »i.59 1 SPRITE or German soldiers and local police memory.-it will be before my eyes mediately fell into the ditch. departmental policy, he said. Thermann *Where Available __ lb. $2.59 Here's your chance to take advan- ordered aU Jews to assemble in the throughout my entire life. Horrible scenes occurred there. Orange. Polly O Mozzarella _ X FRESCA tage of a free classified ..ad for He said later that he thought the said at least one oncoming car on Polly pRicotta. ,3 lbs. *3.9? Miory ghetto -on June 2, 1942. Wary Around the ditch were standing People said their last goodbyes, call- Orange pulled to the side because of the selected items. See details and a resistors were lured on the pretext ed out "Shma Yisroel," cursed the driver was drunk. In the darkness he : 2 ltr.-btl..-. ' Wiih this coupon many German soldiers and police of police lights and sirens behind* the er- May bud BabyGouda _tb_-»L49. form on Page 16. that a census was underway. Ira the local population.. Nearby, there murderers and thus they perished. thought the motorist might have been a Land O Lake female,.but he was'not sure of thesex or raticcar. —• - Lulinski recalled the scene in this were heaps of clothing, personal We were standing near.the ditch. Services were conducted for Miss Margarine ______lb. qtrs. 69* ' excerpt from his memoir: thidJth __ur__turii^was_coming._The_order _theage^ •_ J ' ir The car stopped at the red light at the •• :Barberlo~Moriday~from theTCenilw6rth~ Kraft Soft Parkay _rwo 8 oz: tubr 89* - ^U#22 On this day of the slaughter, I was Jews who arrived there. The earth came to undress. At that moment.my Funeral Home. • Limit ODC coupon per Iamily seven years old. My father, Reb around.the ditch-the grass1 nearby - father gave me a strong piill'by the Canoe Club, with the police car behind it once again, this time with flashing lights Authorities are still seeking to learn Rep, Matthew J. Rinaldo will run Yosef.'my mother, Pearl, brothers were red, covered and saturated hand, gave a German a strong push more about the circumstances of the The Seafood Corner with blood. In the ditch were lying, and began running, together with and siren in operation. : fqrCongress in;thenew~'fishhook" and sisters-we all stayed together. - fatal journey'. . . ••••-._ ••' I Assorted Colors In the last moment, we lost one many who Were shot. me, away from the ditch. Shots rang Once on Orange, Thermann radioed 7th district including Cranford and : Garwood. Rep. James A. Cdurter another in the tumult.'^ i-~ :_-."._'._ - Cries otmen, women and children - out acqund us, but they did notstrike Frozen Jumbo Smelts_____ lb.-H.29-- j SCOTT could be heard from there. One - us. Fresh .Oysters: Select or Standard -\ will run in the 12th district including I remained with my jatber. He $ 1 T6WELS Kenilworth. Neither of the held fast onto my hand. We were all could still see movement in the ditch My father kept running, trees z. tin ______eaoh 2.29 Republican incumbents live in'the in great fear, forlorn and confused., I from those who were wounded. served as our cover, hiding us. Night It's fish "districts in which they will run but sensed the danger that was before us Across the width -of the ditch, there fell and we collapsed-totally ex- Fresh BondessJShad Fillet _ lb. $3.95 both have represented, large por- a,t that horrible moment.Our group ,was a wide board reaching from one hausted. While lying there for a tions of them in Congress and was driVen lowar_~lhe -ditch. We edge to the , other., The Germans while,.my father wept bitterly and Rinaldo is a native of ElSza^ were dead-tired, .drained, frighten- ordered people to undress and, in began to say "Kaddish." Later, he G«Kl thru " 4/13/82 O LU#23 largest city in the fishhook. They ed, depressed. their underwear, to stand upon the went to beg for bread from a peasant fishermen • Limit one coupon per family • faced choices because Democrats This picture before the ditch has board and in this way they shot their , whom he'knew. Thus; began our redrew the state map. The GOP still been permanently etched into my victims. Those who were shot inrir , wandering. Bridge construction took precedence Union County Federation of Sportsmen, has a court challenge pending. over fishing here last week. As a conse- complained that "all our fish are going : ' Pillsbury Adam Levin and Barbara Sigmund quence, Cranford and Kenilworth^ were intoWinfieJd." seek the Democratic nomination in largely bypassed by the state's trout^ .... Jhe closest stocking to the-north was j CRESCENT the 7th. Courter will run against stocking program. Sportsmen are upset. well above Route _ in Springfield. Peter H B. Prelinghuysen in the Resident recalls Ascension isle Mike Grossmann, president of the. Sgroi said allegations that the opening i ROLLS \ GOP primary in the 12th: Cranford Rod and Gun Club, blamed of gates has an adverse'impacton fish : 8oz.pkg. Wiihtha coupon Gregory Sgroi, township engineer, for "is not well fouhded." He said water failing to close flood1 gates sojhe river depths between Droescher's and the city could be stocked. He said Sgroi assured of Rahway vary only a few inches and Crime lesson as lonely World War II outpost him early last week that gates would be >f ish should be able to survive. He further Gwxlihru ^4/13/82 0 LU#24 \ , A brazen thief Stole $520 worth of 6,600-foot long landing . strip utilizing closed but then reneged. believes there is no reason trout can't be • • Limit one coupon per family Assembly of the British battle at water or inhabitants, and was con- stocked from the Boulevard southward. *• -» ! cameras and other photographic Ascension Island this week enroute to sidered the most isolated outpost on lava blasted frorri the sides of the more Sgroi said he had gates at Droescher's P.S. All prices effective through 'equipment 1n a Union College than 50 extinct volcanoes.on the island. Dam closed last Thursday but this caus- The conflict over water levels extends; the Falkland Islands brought strong which U.S. military personnel had been beyond local perimeters to involve state April 10, 1982 I classroom used by students of law memories to at least one Cranford resi- stationed in World War II. During the next two years after Army ed flooding at the construction under- [ enforcement last Thursday. The dent. Air Force personnel took over, some wa'y on the new South Avenue bridge We reserve the right to limit If one considers the 1,500 inhabitants : quantities; we do not sell to dealers; ! owniex, Raymond E. Shaffer of the He is Nat Bodian of Henley Avenue, of the Falklands as a small population 7.Q00 planes arrived, refueled, and project. So the gates were opened. departed from the mid-ocean spot refer- and we cannot be-respdnsible for | New Jersey Division of Criminal who spent over a year on Ascension for a British posession, it looms large in Sgroi told The Chronicle that "fish Passover and Easter greetings- - , Justice, told local police the items red to, by American servicemen as "The come second or third to flood control and typographical errors. Island during World War II as a Bodian's memory as contrasted with the from Jere Dudley and all the f were stolen when he left the room member of the U.S. Army Air Force. handful of British who inhabited Ascen- Rock." construction" and he contends the state jKi.men and women toaU • briefly after his lecture. sion as operators of a cable relay station While Ascension served as a vital air could have stocked trout with the gates $&B Green Stamps are our The United States had obtained land- for the British South Atlantic cable link between two continents, it was also open or closed. . . • lt '' ' way of thanking you ing and base rights toAscensio n from its stretching from England to South a military base from which American . Robert Fiorentino, conservation of- British owners and built an aircraft for shopping at Kings. America. • ' , bombers sought out German sub- ficer'for Union County, had made the Paper drives landing strip there early in 1942. The marines and surface raiders. At least case for keeping sufficient water in the j :..-/..„ ^ ••• '•• • - . Cranford resident recalls . Ascension On Ascension, Bodian edited a news- Boy S*-out Troop 178 of St. Michael tw» German submarines were sunk by river here to Sgroi several times before Island as a desolate outpost hosting paper, among various other duties. He planes based on Ascension during World the season opened. The state Division of School w ill conduct a paper drive in several hundred U.S. military personnel also served as a field correspondent for *?:-. :'• . -;•;./.:"•:<> WarH>. Fish, Game and Wildlife traditionally agencies. The state Department of ' the school parking lotSaturday from YANK, a U.S. army weekly newspaper for brief tours of duty. "" Bodian recalls the greatest battle stocks trout here if there is enough ' Transportation has a stream encroach- 9 a.m. to ,2:30 p.m. circulated to military personnel during fought by the Americans on Ascension water. ment permit for work it oversees on the Bodian was the Army Air Force World War II. Because Ascension was Island was the battle against loneliness As a result of last week's lowering, the South Avenue Bridge. But the state Scout Ttoop and Explorer Post 78 historian for the U.S. forces on the classified as a "secret" base during his and isolation, of being 7,000 or more division decided there was insufficient Department of Environmental Protec- will conduct a paper drive Saturday volcanic island and compiled and wrote service there, the number of topics on miles awuy from home and the comforts water below South Avenue and insuffi- tion has a say in river Water levels and at Hillside Avenue School parking a(U.S.) military history of the island which one could write were extremely of civilization, of living in tents, eating cient flow on the north side, even though quality. lot from 9 a.m.' to 4 p.m. Only news- from interviews with various personnel limited. papers wHl be accepted. Tied who. had been stationed there since dehydrated food, and living with a week- Hansel's Dam gates remained closed,. The Fish, Game and Wildlife division bundles will be appreciated. For Americans arrived in August, 1942. He U.S. rights to use Ascension had been ly water ration of five gallons, distilled for it to stock the local share of the under. DEP has over the past decade ^Kyillc* MillbMrn/Shon Hills f pickup call BUI Stickle, 376-2425, or subsequently updated the history mon- obtained from the British during the from the waters of the Atlantic Ocean. 168,000 trout, mostly rainbows, that issued "water lowering permits" to lUy Stoddard, 272-W65. thly until his transfer to another assign- Battle of Britain prior to the UJS. entry In World War II, Ascension helped win were distributed throughout the state municipalities. ment late In 1944. into World War II as part of the "l

Page2CRAhn^Rp(N.J.)CHRONia^Tht^day,Aprili5,l9e2 Thursday, April l'5; 1982 CRANFORD (NJ.) CHRONICLE Page3 Citizens protest renaming State, ovetrujecl by Bergen opens law office on Holly St.'" Bruce Hi Bergen has New Jersey. Services and Kean Col- opened1 an office for the Bergen is admitted "to1-leg*. ' . / > as Ihrive part of Lincoln Ave. West . bbard cm teacher's pay h*k& general practice of law at thebarof the state of New Bergen is'a member of £ For me first time, the Board of Educa-_ Michael Napollelio, assistant .principal, 10 West Holly Street in Jersey and the bar of the the board of directors of A proposal to rename a section of Dor- , other duplicate street names in i Several focal streets ant due for The Lincoln Avwoe West project is inford. - , nistrirt C.nitrt the United. Way of Cran- r refused to follow an »rlminigH-nHi«. rit^ Ufk pLdlfiCJpl " A native of for • the rBstrirf Of~NeW Aoffi\ak'i' ^Themajor prbtectisljnaita Avenue cohtAvenoeEwrti*ojertlasty«aKit^T iSReTss515f7 -ana leeson pians not louowea. West. Gregory Sgroi. township—yoWes recowfaw-Uui ul Ihe ro»d jncrem^nt be withhold because of un Bergen graduated from Jersey. for moire than a century Jy>s nBTaW^hion'Street, and different" for Most board members, howeverrfelt- se Western Reserve As a law student he was r the Township Committee. legs of Lexington and West End/; , :_ engineer, reports the state Department 1,363 feet, addjbonal curbing, ,— $atifactary performance. the delay between the observations and «»ngin> py iwwns me state myqimia" *>«<>» I^.*-*, «»»«..•-....—« viuumg, ggq ~ The teacher, Patricia' Krisfoffersen, University with a bachelor. ' As a staff attorney with a member of the Seton Appolonia suggested attaining ^a of Transportation will help underwrite a possibly widening. Sgroi«commends» the receipt of the written evaluations by Hall Family' Law Clink. displeasure about "south" prefix or-suffi* to the avenue. •iWho has a second grade dassatHillside of arts to sociology and the Union County Legal mail ad- reconstruction of mat-avenue between 3<* ***<* w«tth Hfe nlan inrhuW v*»*^_. the teacher did not allow enough time psychology and has a juris Services Corporation, As an undergraduate' he Vincent Cicalese, who lives on the. Walnut and Retford avenues. • Avenue School, had requested that her for her to improve- and she should be ui«s>c& ana personal papers ana cants. of eight trees. ^hearing- be conducted during the public doctorate from Seton Hall Bergen contributed to was editor of his univers- Bat the. police and fire departments said longer Dorcester 'stretch above Liv-. Local funds will pay for resurfacing of The estimated costis $Sr,O00, of which give a further chance! The only board University School of Law. drafting the New Jersey »ty .newspaper, was chair- . ingston School, soggestedthat if any Denman Road between FairfieW and portion of Monday's meeting. Usually member who supported the administra-, tbechangfrwetfdelimiiiatetionfusionon the state would fund 977,000. The figure ~ personnel matters are discussed in clos- He is a member of the prevention of Domesut .peYson of the student responses for public safety, purposes. name is changed, i| should be tbere., Lexington, iMOn Street between AWen doesn't include engineering fees. Uon recommendation was Patricia Mar- government, and was' vice ed meetings unless requested otherwise tinelH. Union -County Bar Violence Act, sigried into That section of Dorchester is separated "People want change, because nobody and Springfield, North Union between Association, the New law Jan. 11. He has also president bf the Zeta Beta from the other section by the farmland can find our end" of the avenue, hfe said. The Lincoln East work incurred cost nfcy the employe./ , Miss Kirstoffersen, a teacher for 25 Springfield and Norm, and Nomahegan overruns thatupset the governing body ' '; 4 AfteTtistening to reports of five class Jersey State Bar Associa- spoken on thevtoplc of Tau-fraternity. Earlier that is yielding to houses and by Liv- -- George Kalesckyof^o.SSOsnggested Court and Nomahegan Road. years, has tauglit 18 years in several this year he anticipated In order toavoi d this in the future, the ^observations conducted between Ian. 22 elementary schools in Cranford. Several ' tion and the American Bar. domestic "violence and ingston^euool. -"-'• >-~~-±~+~^. -^ -/••- it-would be better to aarae apartc after The local resurfacing program was Association, and serves on family law at confejrences. joining a Newark firm but the BiteelfamUyTDavid Swanson of No. committee approved a resolution ^ a*nd Marih 15, the board voted 7 to 1 of the parents who packed the meeting. s circumscribed this year due to budget establishing an encumbrance system . • i«gainst denying her an increment for the board oT directors of sponsored by the New decided instead to open his , , The proposal was tabled Tuesday 332 expressed opposition' to the avenue limitationsimiutuons. establishing an encumbrance system room spoke-on her behalf and others own practice here. after residents from jour of the eight name change, too. .•:,.-. The Township Committee will alsoex- for-all capital improvement projects, ' .4982-83. Irwin Pigman, principal, and Wrote letters. "' Public Interest Lawyers of Jersey Council for Human homes on the shorter, southeasterly sec- After hearing the citizens, Ed Robin- pkre possSejMSConstruction of Com- This involves a step4>y*tep reporting : .: « ». . . • • r. Math team at Orange Avenue School placed second in county in NJ. tion of the avenue protested. Michael son moved the .name change ordinance c Drive, which has * number of ^^^^^S* Math League contest. Seated, from left, are: Scott Arnesen, who plac- Appelonia of Wo. 334 noted that the be tabled. Gene Marino seconded and Firemen pried open door at top, then worked withpolice and First Aid Squad members to remove injured driver. Car at rear struck tilted School vacations under study ed second in county, Mara Rockleff, John O'Brien; standing, Jon Gor- former Ditzel farmland next door is be- tabling passed unanimously. The gover- don, Philip Morin, Debbie Cermele, Jeff Layton. ing marketed as Dorchester Estates: ning body will discuss the matter^t its vehicle at and Eastman. Photo by Joe Saladino. Questions about next year's spring board know which weeft they would He and Chester Jasfcet of No. 337 noted May 4 workshop.. , ' . . vacation .were raised at a Board of prefer for a spring vacation. Only five people question ' Education meeting Monday when a ten- The board also, will decide whether to girl extricated • tative school calendar for 1982-83 was open school the Tuesday or Wednesday OAS math team 2nd in county SATURDAY discussed by the board. . after .Labor pay. School would, end SATURDAY .. . As presented t>y the administration, either, Thursday, June 23 of the following A team of Orange Avenue School The third place team was Solomon SPECIALS SPECIALS or comment on town seventh graders placed second in Union Schechter . Day School, Cranford, with . the proposed calendar shows a five-day •day. •','•, •••,„ ••••"• •••• "•''. •<''.-'• :-•. " from upended car by 'jaws arbitration settlement "of a police pay yueekendbreak'at Easter, which is early Another item the board hopes,to' County m a math contest sponsored, by 151 points. ' . Only five residents commented on or the New Jersey Mathematics League. A questioned the township's $9.04 million contract - - next year, and a weeklong vacation the^ resolve April 26 is setting criteria for ad- yp The impact of the accident sent the 1 member of the team, Scott Arnesen, Scott led the Orange Avenue School Purdie car under the Albanese vehicle budget for 1982 at the public bearing on " McGratb queried some expenditures'" 4ast week in April. The administration mission into high' school honors, pro-, in her car after a collisioo Monday at aridcoDd^mned others. Hesaid the town \;firoposed closing school Holy Thursday, placed second in the county in individual team with 36 of a possible 40 points. which tilted against a utility pole. it Tuesday. . : gram. The board last month discussed Other team members and their scores H«rr>ptfif» and' E2astman -was rescued had top many narks but Sahvay said that sand Good Friday, March 31 and April 1, an administration proposal for tighten-. scores. ' " ' • .: • with the nejp bf the "Jaws of Life" Hurst Firemen had to block the angled vehicle Kenneth McGrath, 3 Normandie PL, a. Only two.points separated the OAS were: Debbie Cermele and John BAKE _ SHOP r and pry the door open from a 45 degree- frequent critic of the government, wasn't true. He challenged pay in- -1983 plus April 4, the day after Easter. A ing standards. This recommendation tool : ••• " , ("" • . • creases for committeernen rhetoricalh/,. full week's vacation is proposed for the was later; amended to permit a student team fronxJhe first place team: Orange O'Brien, both with 32 points; Mara: Firefightefs, |SbMcem£n andmepabers angle. :; • •• •" .• • '• • •'•• ' • '•• '• dominated two-thirds of the hour-long scored 155 points while Florence M. Rockliff, 28; and Philip Morin, Jeff FRESH STRAWBERRY . 7 LAYER On Friday a chain collision at North Bearing with a line-by-line analysis. "What do you think you are, senators?" week of April 25. to take'one of the qualifying tests a se- FRENCH of the First Aid Squad collaborated in That drew laughter. • . . Robert. D. Paul; superintendent .of cond time if desired and permit parents Gaudineer School, Springfield, had157. Lay ton and Jon Gordon,-all 27. CREAM CHEESE CAKE and North Union avenues caused neck The Township .Committee delayed CROISSANTS the delicate half hour extrication of Jodi . McGrath repeated ^his -caDs -for hBehoolsr -explained •-• this vacation and students to appeal a denial of-"ad- - ;':..;-;••;, BARS. ,.•;.. Albanesefromrher upended venicte,Sb& painsJg two Dersons:£ethSteber, 438 NT - adoption-until ne«t week's meetiigte c Union, a passenger in a car driven by order toincorporat e additional revenues eliminating the government role in' (Schedule would provide eight weeks of missions to the superintendent. Reg.5O 35* ca. was admitted to Memorial General 1 -•:Sfhnnl hftvupfn «»arh vi^fqtjori HP notpd College reps to visit TJC ' Roof hids in Reg. $2.35 $2.00 Reg $2.70$2.45 Hospital with broken rihft, alack injury JjiWg J -StgVr. ap* K1«*anw Wfiwrt. it anrt ftlri ation. flitting, rflsbs »t fsjjnfrnHc nc^p^ rhf» board MpTiday—it— ; and a possible concussion. 174 W; Roselle, RoseBe Park, driver of wfaiicn will drop-the tax increase pool and in Municipal Building renova- the February vacation, Ule week of Feb. considecuiisiucrr aann amendmenameiiuiiieiiti whicwiuuhr woulwuwdu ,TT , •_••., •> .„ „ ** c . She was driving south on Rastmcwn the second car, were both taken by the from l&S points to 12.5 points. The com- tion and trimming tans. He did favor *l.ts less than fiveweeks before Easter, a student who failed to . Un|on College will con- ma tion on four-year for schools squad to Overlook Hospital for treat- bined town, schootand county increase the current cable television tax on the l a and was struck broadside at 2:35 pjn. : ->Sam Morneweck. board member, said based on the new criteria to be admitted 'f^ ^J^-- ^A^^S^£SS^ ment ."••: • ••'• . ' . will be 36 points, . grounds, that "only suckers subscribe," l • A low bid of jusLunder_. 101 Miln Street, Cranford • 272-7089 by a. car driven by Laurence Purdie, • teachers and students need vacations if he orshehajra cumulativegrade point ?& night Thursday April missitnnTqu.remen^tui, pg y-, ass v Wayne I. Patew, * Wm g^ Saady WcckA,'finance student lounge oifn the $190,000 was-received by I 6:30 A.M. - 1 KM. lUES^SAIT"BiSXTKM. - called the budget "/viable fiscal plan other_critfc--of_specifie figures -was- ^^t^astTObl5^elfe=divided=per^ *e tionavailabilit, programy osf ofinanciaf study,l the-Board-of-Education— _woodL Jfe was moving west on Hampton. driver of the third car, received a sum- Nomahegan Building. aid andd campus life. In A passenger in his car, Richard King, mons for .careless driving. ;., for the township." It continues the cur- Henry Koehler, former committeeman, _^andLsaid-ththe best interese proposet of studentsd schedul. e was "in anmarkin. hon'ors-course;'^B"-throUgh-the-thirg period of a d Monday to put new roofs Mary Ann Fiorillo, board member,. taken in the same discipline. The event, which will addition, students will 412 Hazel Ave., Garwood, suffered a . On' Thursday, Adam budkiewicz, rent level of services despite risingman - who questioned several revenue items. course currently draw representatives have^the opportunity to on Livingston and Brook- head injury and opted to see bis own passenger in a car.driven by Darius dated costs and loss of state and federal Contrary to a report in The Daily .however, asked the board to consider The board also briefly discussed Mon- side Schools. This is (Scheduling a spring vacation the week districts. --- .----.-. v his fifth-birthday-to-be-admitted—to~ .Patterned after Unions- tion. Police Lt Thomas Kane said the South and South Union avenues with one vices, especially in "the public safety said he thought the budget is confusing traditional college day "Tuschyn KootmgUo., Inc., driven by Thomas E. Aagard, 160 Den- to citixens and advocates presenting it '• John Witherington, board member, kindergarten that September. Nicholls.. Although designed Roselle. -The board will April 15-24 stop sign at the comer was still visible to arena. In response to a question about held for full-time students mainly for Union College BERGEN CAMERA Purdie, and he received a summons for man Rd., who received a summons for rising taxes, he said that many costs with more clarity. Municipalities must " suggested moving the spring vacation to proposed Monday that children turning study the bids before mak- five between Oct. 1 andDec.31 be allow- each fall, college night is students who plan to a stop sign violation. . •: careless driving. were mandated by the state, citing use state forms and he hopes the format -'Easter week, but add a four-day conducted in the evening ing an award. The work police and fire pension hikes phis a state will improve. • . !: - • weekend from Friday, April 29 through ed admission based on tests. . ' transfer to bachelor's will be done th& summer. Morneweck, who said the test being for the" 3,774 part-time degree programs, the pro- Monday, May 2. students. The high bid was The board will make a decision at its used now is inadequate, asked the ad-, gram also is open to in-$231,000. The project will . piece of equipment for your, mininstration to see if tests existed College night will 'give' terested high school meeting- April 26. In the meantime, - students first-hand infor- be funded, through, the needs & budget Planning Board permits Richard Nlcholls, board president, ask- which "are more valid than the tests students and adults. board's surplus account. • TEACH YOU how to use it . ed PTAs and parents to let Paul or the we're using how." ' • CHARGE YOU a competitive Zawodniak is elected 15 N. Union Avev Cranford • 276-0234 DISCOUNT PRICE The Konica FP-1 puts you on .Automatic store front, two additions School board sets meetings Open 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Daily. Thurs. til 9 p.m. • CONTINUE TO TEACH YOU ' ' Pilot. Nothing to set Or figure! Leonard G. Zawodniak cial lines underwriter. production, petroleum photography as long, ^s you ByANNESHUHAN the diner. (Tne^ning board approved . The Board of Education tenured teachers,, grant- April 26 to swear in of Cranford has been He is active in the New refining and marketing • '. Major Charges Accepted •The' KQDicaJEPi-_1_flliminatas complex- has revised its meeting ing tenure to employes members elected next want to learn ~ :-V step found in other SLR cameras. The Planning Board has granted an thevariance^ipb^ajbton) elected assistant Vice Jersey Chapter of and manufacturing. It is exception from site plan approval to The board that the ., schedule for April follow- whose reappointment will Tuesday and to choose a president of Suburban Chartered Property • SERVICE your equipment - if, • Loads automatically, no fumbling. ing the postponement of board president and vice based in Morristown. • No shutter or lens settings required:- . allow Bell's Pharmacy, H^North Union zoning board conversion of a attain this status, and Propane Gas Corp. Casualty Underwriters . and when it needs it! WE ;>the school board election president. . ;:, \ ; • Automatic pilot means perfect pictures. '. Ave.; toinstal l a new residentiad l property to commercial use. terminat ing employes _, _ __Zawbdniafc,. cprpocate - shdlthelNew—Jersey,- —-WILL-SENDnt to-therr -TberpiopeHy. owned by William C :unlili*extTuesday. •_.'' whose positions have bees The board is meeting at '•—;— • r "' '_ insurance manager, is^ a Chapter of Risk & In- ; factory at NO CHARGE review by the Environmental Wagner, has frontage on North Avenue eliminated to reflect -The board also will con- graduate, of Seton Hall surahce Management' $159* sion, were two site plans for residential West and Orchard Street A p.m. tonight to act ondeclining enrollment. duct its regular monthly University, He holds an Society T BE UMtATEDl Our cameras personnel matters. This v in the flood fringe area. They The board will v. businesbusinessmeetins meetingg Jhtha L. associatassocia teJiplomainriske Jiploma-inrisk- ' ": ' strap & lans cap. additions to the Benrus managomont. and is—a- ' Suburban Propane home, 13 Munsee Dr., and the McKenna chartered property Corp. is an energy com- 24 EASTMAN $T • CRANFORD residence, 17 Heming Aye. She won big candy bunny casualty underwriter. pany with operations in 276-1024, Allan C. Kane submitted a revised Prior to joining Suburban Propane Marketing," oil landscaping plan for his property at 191 Christine Kain, had a10 of them as gifts. Then which provided her with a in 1976 he was a commer- and gas exploration and Serving you lor North Avenue East which the board bonanza in chocolate came the crowning rabbit three foot tall found satisfactory. Kane said,be will Easter bunnies this year. prize and sweetest gift of chocolate bunny worth plant maintenance-free juniper ground The five-year-old from all. She won a department $300. ell cover toreplac e crushed stones over 39 Georgia, Street received store drawing out-of-town plastic which impeded drainage on the property. by JOAN VARANELLI The board also sent two non-binding LOOK VNDEk LINCOLN Make You Jodi Albanese is shifted from car to squad ambulance. She suffered recommendations to the Baord of Ad- Did you know that you can take a broken ribs, a back injury and possible concussion and wasjustment for site plans involving use tour' underneath the Lincoln %— hospitalized at Memorial General. Photo by Joe Saladino. variances. The first is for relocating the Memorial, or visit one o/the world's What you shoal front doar and' owiBtweay a new largest collections of Russian A Little triangular entry at the New Cranford decorative arts or take a ride on a PHAR Democrats in search for town candidate Diner, 7 North Ave. East John Pivolas. mule drawn barge, all in our know about the owner and the diner and his ar- nation's capital? There's really tote RICHER! chitect, William Collins, explained that more to see and do than just totou r The Cranford Democratic Party is O'Leary said, "We believe Ujatttus. -the changes will improve circulation in the White House and visit the Capi'oJ jewelry appraisals conducting a search fora candidate for year the Republican administrations in building. You enn see "The FomV State, county and local governments are jacket or tnoonrotln at the Smith-' K* "v ~ An informed consumer Is our best customer! ' According to Tim O*Leary, municipal vulnerable because of the failure of the Roselle girl wins sonian, enjoy fine art and good food at the National Gallery, watcn pan- 1 x chairman, "We ar liri g f h simplistic 'Reaganesque' approach to •^•" . What is an Appraisal? government. "They all nKmi^ on the das at play in the xoo or try your candidate who can best represent the bandwagon with Reagan and now-they hand at brass rubbing at the Na- Smith, jdght,.andSandy, An appraisal is an opinion as to the authenticity, quality, Democratic Parry in this election." must ride with him to the end of the thian contest tional Cathedral. the show's7 carrfneieads are greeted •byJeni % *- pnd value of a piece of jewelry. This opinion should "As in the-pasjt, .we are looking for rhe many hotels of Washington, 1 nlfer Stone of Cranford, a guest during recent g, equipment and ex- Stephanie Wilkins, a junior at visit of Broadway stars to Cranford Junior v second. We have been fortunate to pre- Locally, only one seat on the Township 1 perlencQ. . sent high caliber candidates who have Committee is up for election this year. Abraham Clark High School, Roselle, package plans from" between 440.00 — Aeh4evers at JA—headquarters;—AHtj The declared price evaluation Is only one aspect of the ap- demonstrated an interest in the cotn- Anyone interested in being a candidate won the regional public speaking contest to $60.00 per rocurt, per night Some receives specially designed. combination sponsored t>y Cranford Lodge 17S of the have frt« parking and iom« ha\« praisal: And not the most important aspect at that! An ex- ; munity. • ' • should contact O'Leary at 376-1417. kitchens. /' hassock and storage chest manufactured by -V " ..." •• •••--• •"• ••-•• Knightsi of Pythias at the Community Slmcraft, a JA cbrnpany sponsored by Sim- plicit description of the jewelry Item, accurately depicting Center here March 31. There's mar* toWashington . DC. RON SOBEISON mons Company, represented by Hank SAVE 3' PER GALLON than politics and there is more to the design, the metal and the stones Is actually the most The theme was "Responsibility of Ron Sobelson, a partner in custom vascular leg and arm % Brenckman. important part! oil overflows on South Voran's Travel Agency Ithan airline For prompt payment! Pay within 15 days of delivery and you save 3* per gallon. Youth in Today's Environment" Miss tickets. So plan tovisi t Varan's and BeU's Pharmacy with Herb supports. Ron is constantly §1 A mysterious blend of oil and water tracted a cleanup, and the Rahway Wilkins will advance to the Knights of lt l capital weekend. Mason, has been a resident of " " ... .- • What Are the Types of Appraisals? surfaced on South Avenue West again Watershed Patarol, which guards that ci- Pythias state contest on Mays. In touch with the area's A last Thursday. Overflow from a storage ty's water supply ^was on the scene. Ab- Cranford for 16 years. Ron health professionals who 6% BONUS An Insurance Replacement Value Appriasal tank in the basement of the Sheet Metal sorption InptUw mix from entering the was graduated from West need advice on the proper Secretaries Weeh Is the type needed for proper insurance Workers Union building at No. 10S-106 UKES LEVIN / Our Budget Plan Custdmers receive the 3Vgal. discount PLUS nearby brook Oat flows to the river. : Side High School in Newark support for various problems ;•;: against loss or damage. sent the blend pairing onto the fcvenae. r^heriffl Uch an ADDITIONAL 6% BONUS when they pa*y by the 10th of the month! Adam (as was his partner Herb) requiring medical attention. An Estate" Evaluation is an "appraisal of the The same thing J»s happened several Dolan said the source *f the fnel oil k *Rate good thru 6/30/82. Later rates may fluctuate according to the market. times over the past two yean. ' " unknown, ttavep s into the bulking and Levin's campaign ta> Democratic and from Rutgers University Ron has been married for :? cash value of Jewelry based upon what»w|ll- nomiaition for ~ from the 7th mmmwx Leonard Dolan. finchief , aaid u> b samp purnpod into the hoidtng thk BSkoppiBCC College of Pharmacy. He has 27 years to his wife Greta ing buyer and •willing seller would agree to - causes a traffic and portion whiere tt mixw with water. In vet 94 North Avenue FTD has the without a forced sale, This type of apj>ralsal is usually lower Ttb tin» the federal En- been a registered phar- who is a teacher in the Cran- weather the tank ororinnalr/ filb and Ganrood~7«M)06S macist of the State of New perfect gift * than appraisals for insuraote replacement value. 276-090O

116 North Av«nu« W • Cranfortf • 276-4700 Jl Pharmacy '143 Chestnut Striat • Rotall* Park • 241-974>S * 13QWMt Third Av«nu* • ROMH« • 241-2700 7

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:. •»•- Page KRAtiFORb (N.J[.) CHRONICLE-thursday, April 15; 1982 Thursday, April 15, Utt'CRANroRD (NJJ CHRONICLE ' , • • ' ' t ' ' ,•'••••-'•. Thin Life Centers debuts cutting Inn thief gets prison term on Cleveland Plaza Friday offender wpert wife keife A Newark man pleaded guilty to a gumr v^iile two •ccornplic«su«re out- m&amnm local young people attended the pro- holdup at- the Coachman Inn atkl was side. A sum of $160 was stolen in the prc- by the Lifer's Group at] sentenced to 12 years in prison, -dawn holdup. •— • " • Thin Life Centers opens in Cranford at'' who hava triad all other Prison gram in their rotes as students from law Cleveland Plaza tomorrow^Thto la the avail, the firm reports: tour men. were arrested, later in from Superior Court Judge Virginia Newark on another charge-Local detec- which Lolly Wurfeel and Tonl Marotta learned hi a loving, caring climate] JApnTS. " ••••; lives William O'DonneH and Linn in next week's Chronicle, i co-founded to help people cope with substitutes true support for. ineffective cent years. Det Sgt Hilt Mason, wbb^saSd that He and Walter Askell, also known as Lockwood worked with two,New-ark moce problematic weight loss.needs. 'Sympathy, with a unique psychological The Juvenile .program has beenmore about an local youngsters have par- successful than the newer parent Alii 22, of 22 Franklin, Newark, were ac- police officers to solve the Cranfofd The formal address at the plaza is 123 program under the guidance of DrrAr- tkipated m the program after their first cused of entering the lobby with hand- North Union Avenue. V • nold Lazarus." awareness program run by the same case; ' •• '' • • . x. f*t l| i llliK ^—* with the law. Mason said the: long-term prisoners, Maguire reported. Dallas Crable, head of psychological an rate, covering repeat of- oss center utilizes Parents of juvenile offenders are in- support services, -has combined the .n*s been only one percent hibited by a number of factors including the newest, safest an'd most powerful v behavioral methods of Lazarus with his Mafure, the former assemblyman Second man fined in* embezzlement case system in rapid weight, loss history, lack of transportation to the prison, he own approach. who is aow on the advisory board of the A second employe Of Boyle-Midway Spina was also placed on probation for solving both4he very-real psychological Ms. Kamana Canton will head the said. .'•; •'.' . ... ' JBmate;group, reported in his speech Co. has been fined.for.his role in an : and physiological problems of the over- ^anford centeTi "supported by Ms\ Vi The tifers received national attention . four years.. :jvr",:.:..:..' . • ."••„•.• last week tbaM9,ot» youngsters have through a- nationally televised film call- embezzlement scheme against the firm He is the second of-seven men im- weight," the company says. - Ziccardi* Nancy^t>ella Fera, AUyson Pa^^^ted in u\e program since it was The client program begins with a com- ed "Scared Straight," which prompted / here last year. ', " ' plicated in the scheme to receive a Duncan, Emily Re8talnorMadeIynKeth launched more than five years ago. The penally. Jason K&hriman, a former _ lete medical work-up including an praise and criticism for the confronta- Antonio B. Spina, 248 Concord St. and Kathleen Manahan. . • program "keeps kids out of jail," he sales promotion employe, was fined eJectrocardiagram, complete blood and tional approach used by the inmates in CresskiU, was fined |l,025 after pleading It will be open from 8 to 5 Mondays, said dealing with first time offenders. guilty to charges of third degree con- . $1,525 and given five years of probation urinalysiJras-a^ell as a medical history^ Wednesdays and Fridays-, from 9 a.m. to two- months ago. The scheme involved and a psychologTcad-iwofile. This pro- Mason affirmed the impact from his' spiracy and theft. Superior Court Judge 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, and Indexes: Arthur Burditt with new cabinets and library volunteers who local perspective as head of the juvenile Several local groups have attended Cuddie Davidson imposed fhe fines theft of more than $100,000 worth of rner- gram is particularly designedlofpeople^ from 0:!M) to noon Saturdays. . chandise from the South Avenue plant who either have tried to lose .a large are updating historical work he and his wife began. From left Man bureau. "It has been effective," he said. the parent program, which accents March 26. TLC has other centers in East The low recidivism rate here is "very dialogue instead of confrontation. amowtt of weightaod were unsuccessful - Brunswick, EngDshtown, Livingston, l^ouise HaJLMarJan Zerweqk, Fran Henderson and Helen Sacllowsk] no rewarding,' * he said, and he believes the Mason recently coordinated a visit by or W have repeatedly regained their Lawrenceville, Ocean, Paramus, South 'weight losses on other methods...... juvenile program is "very productive. local clergymen which might result in Three DWI fines levied in court Plainffeld, Topis River, Cherry Hill, -Mason reports thai about 100 other .individual church group attendance. - Although this system auns to produce" Sheeps%ead Bay, N.Y., AUentown, Pa., Burditt collection on local Three persons received fines in possession. Joseph Duddy, 191K. Lehigh results, for people who jaeedvto obtain Abinton,Ea.t-and .West Palm Beach, Municipal Court March 23 for driving Ave,, was fined $265 on a*DWI charge large weight losses, it is called effective Fla<; •: .'";. •• ••.•• -••••• •••• •••'•• • :• Fewer juveniles taken into custody while intoxicated. Mrl HeMtert, 141 with a six month license revocation, plus for moderate losses (55 to 50 lbs.) and is Call 272-8383'for a free consultation or Jerome St., Roselle Park, wasimed $265 $20 for having no head lamps on. Nancy primarily designed to work for people" history debuts at ; A total of SSI juveniles were taken into Most categories of juvenile crime • additional information. and his license was suspended for six E. Mitchell, 418- Centennial Ave.N vvas township past police custody here last year. That is 2fi decreased with several notable excep- The Arthur, and Hazel Burditt Local percent fewer than the 471 in 1980. tions-assaults rose from 27 to 40, months. He was also fined $15 for not fined $265 for DWI, with a sewn month History Collection was,dedicated at the Brome said that a number '' - • ' '•.••• - .«_ ' "Thanks to the hours of careful work Rotary president-elect, participated in policemen here. V •''. vi Am^'-«M/V^Jii."'. had been entered. An in- Cranford Historical Society today. She • has~been .a trustee of the Pro-you devoted to this project the citkens of the deeBeanonT for R. Sloben, 23, 3012' yp Mrs! John Stone will speak at 8 p.m. at piietary House Association and has held Cranford will always have access, to this S. Wood, was charged with A thief kicked in a rear_| Ad paid for by Cranford Recycling Program the Municipal Building. Because of various offices in the' Kearny Cottage extraordinary source material, much of Dave Watson, ia^club—member, - CRANFORD BD. kicking Officer Paul Cym- door at the off ice building. renovations: underway downstairs, j Historical Association in Perth Aroboy. it obtainable in no other way," she told donated a copy of a novel called "Cran- baluk in the leg and ben- at 4 Centennial Avenue society will meet in the committee She Is past president of the Metuchen Burditt. "You have given us an ex- ford" in Burditt's honor. The 1904 work ding the thumb of Officer Saturday night. Tony chambers upstairs. ' . >'. Historical Society. cellent piece of work which will only by Elizabeth Gaskell relates adventures OF EDUCATION John Baer. .. ; Zeleniak reported to police. | Mr§. Stone will talk about the Pro- On May 2 the Cranford society will become more valuable with time." ' in an English village in the rnid-19th Pull Lever #5 Cymbaluk had stopped that $2,800 wortft of per- prietary House which proprietors "of follow up the lecture with a visit to the The materials are located near the in- Century. Watson noted that the real Sloben on South Union sonal items and profes- East Jersey built to hojige the last royal Proprietary House and other sites in formation desk and are accessible to Cranford in England is near Heathrow Pd. for by James & Avenue at 11:14 p.ih: sional equipment was governor of the state -before the Perth Am'boy;- students and.other researchers into the Airport outside London. . Elizabeth McCarty Saturday to investigate removed. On April 7 police motor vehicle infractions. Moh-Sat9to5 were informed that a con- Thurs;til9 Board grants Baer joined him as a struction trailer parked on Two involved in tv show member of the new crime Quine Street had been prevention task force. entered and that $2,500 Patatricir a Rice off broadcast on cable outlets againag at ib:35 p.m. April 4 variances Sloben was also charged worth of took were miss- lrh and Vicki this month. 23. Susan Stock is teaching The Zoning Board of Ad- with driving while intox- Kelsey of Cranford. are on the writing component of justment approved four icated, refusing to submit WESTFIELD the field crew of a "Union The show will be the hews course. Steve applications for variances to a breathalyzer test, 3J^ 8_vJtvato anda Jacqueline month. y -resisting- arrestr' two i HEBREW CLASS._ t 53:355 p.mm . tbWor-'l*ohardt direcdit ththe editinditi g They included: Viaceat counts of aggravated A-' -beginning Hebrew I PIPE SHOP vJ6n'/April2Oand labs. A. Buontempo, for a sub- assault against a class will start April 20 at Under Management • division oh a front parcel policeman, a red light the Union County YMHA. 214 E. BROAD «-WESTFIELE) at 730 Lincoln Avenue violation and careless High wire symmetry: PSE&G bucket men fix downed line that cut East; JdhnPrivolas,fora driving. 1622 - = power nn Cayuga Road last weok. Limbo foil on many streets and Tuesdays from 7:30 to 8:30 dbule and" several lines and snowstorm caused damages,,too. Photo by Greg p.mt'Siiimsii^ front door relocation at the Cranford Diner; Barry M. Batteries, and Judith Epstein, for a rear deck at 1028 LaCorte Terrace, and Cindy Smith, caps taken ' for a non-conforming use Pour spoked hub crips of a studio for the teaching valued at ?400 were stolen from the vehicle of St. Michael student representatives, left to of dance in her basement K. UNIOM COUNTY Oood News About Fuel right, Sue Fltzpatiick, Matthew Rock and Jen- at 1245 Orange Avenue. Stephanus Terblanche, 132 ARSON INVESTIGATION SOU AD. nifer Tucci are assisting In coordinating the Roosevelt Aye., last ICE OIL PRICES WalkAmerica effort at the School. The Thursday. On Saturday BARNETTS Eclipse show Joseph Dawley, 13 WTHol- county-wide 25 kilometer walta-thon is Sun- ARE GOING DOWN! SUPER FREE day, April 25 with a 9 am. starting time from A children's plane- ly, reported theft-of two two gathering sites - Kean College and Union tarium show, "The hubcaps valued at $100 Let us Install a new furnace or SAVINGS iiWVWI^Ill PARKING High School. Participants are Walking to Eclipses: Lunar and from his vehicle. modernize your present heating system Solar," will examine the A battery in a Depart-, raise funds to fight birth defects. To register ment • of Pubjic Works for WalkAmerica, call 761-0859. different eclipses and WINES & LIQUORS their causes. It willr be pickup truck parked on » YWCA COURSES presented at Trailside VOTE FOR Clark Street was reported Registration la open for "Trench cooking, Oower ar- Saturday and Sunday at 2 ~ stolen Tuesday. Another battery was reported . SEAORAM'S a new series, of classes at nu^p^Kteendancerpbics, P-m. This nionth's plane-L the YW€A, Westfield. and diet and exercise. Call tarium for general au stolen Monday from a Classes are: low calorie i33-2833, dlences is "As GIN rai Plymouth Brethren Church - on--Lexington Avenue. The. owner is Garth Eifitdge of Clark. 75 WILL NEVER TELL YOU SILVEY DOG SHOTS SAVE 4.20 The Board of Health's 12 ABOUT CRANFORD rabies vaccination clinic 230 Centennial • Cranford handled 310) dogs llasa t year. New response Vehide has arrived for-Onion County Prosecutor's Of- 276-9200 BOLLA BOARD OF EDUCATION DOGi BITESS fice Arson Unit which how has^ two. It was underwritten by state BAILEY'S • CLAN McGREGGOR: Forty two dog bites were government. Leonard Dolan,,Cranford fire chief and an original April 20. 1982 reported to the Board of "member of the unit, Is at left/L't.Edward Halnes, commander; John H. SOAVE IIRlSHCREAMl SCOTCH IrQIUIV Health In Cranford in 1981. Ctfl *» or n%N (or nttt Stamler, prosecutor; Charles Roberts and Anthony Wunderlich of MM tor by (OMMN *> B*e» SMtay. Jw* ItoMottwI. TNaa. There, were 12 other Rahway and Sprlngfiekffire departments, respectively, are at right. 1.51 1,. LAWN KMQ'S ANNUAL PROGRAM l» «IU at tho animal bites. ONCE IN A 2. oftammKJs&sssr •trl^ptraorialixMI Mrvlca. OVER THESE WE'RE FLIPPING OUT OUR USED CAR INVENTORY UFETIME SAVINGS - - - . v. . -'•" •'.-" .' :• '••• '-. ' • '•' YOU'LL FLIP NEW CAR 4. - LAWN MHO pramitM a lawn wrvlca avory dx YOU Lk r-aV.it* SPECIALS! ON EVERY USED CAR! weeks btcauM If • our kind of Individualized care and treatment that towum a greener more beautiful '79 FAIRMONT $4795 TAYLOR CELLARS RUSSi lawn ton '81CHEVETTE $4795 '80 CHEVY $6145 CHEVY Black 4 Dr., 4-Cyl. MALIBU CLASSIC 4 Dr., 6. FORD, 4-Dr., B-cyl.. CALIF. CHABUS LAMBRUSCO VODKA flp° BfeAND NEWI1 NEW! 1982 Auto Trans. Man. Steering Cyl., Pw/r. Str., Pw/r. Brks., Economy Eng. Auto Trans., 6. I4WN KINO helpe protect your lawn from damage. & Brakes T/Glaaa Rr. Air Cond., Tnt, glass, auto Pwr. Steering & Brakes, Air 3L Defrost Radio, etc.. Great trans. 28,1 10 miles Cond., T/Glass, Radio, Pin CAVALIER MPGI #468. #UPB3O Stripes, Mldgs., etc. Must CALL THE KING'S MEN FOR seal 31,176 miles PURCHASE OF ANY NEW OR USED CAR PROGRAM CADET '81 CHEVY 56795 '80 CITATION $5695 '78LDS $5145 MALIBU CLASSIC. Vfnyl CHEVY, 2-Dr., Hatchback, CUTLASS SUPREME CHEVROLET CHEVROLET Root, 4-Dr., 6-Cyl., Yellow. 4-Cyl., Auto. Burgundy wlWhlte Vinyl Economy Eng., Auto Trans., Pvwr. Steering & Roof, V/S, Auto Trens., • - I * • Trans., Pvvr. Steering & Brakes, Air Cond., T/Glsss, Pwr. Steering & Brakes, Air 2 DOOft COUK. wtth aundwd • «tandswd e<|ulprr»ent. 29 IMK3. Th*»

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Siii skte^t Towii explores costs, funding for takeover of rail station Thursday, April 15,1982 CRANFORD (NLJ.) CHRONICLE Page 7 A preliminary cost analysis of a pro- and renovations of the station and its en- 8epaMrtfflg-4Hrom police headquarters, the roundhouse and of the Civil Defense area at Centennial Avenue. ... ^!liBe :^25: Straight Club posed township lease of the comrtjufer virons. . - •;•".'•'•' make it accessible, providing a sense of CITIZENS Championship in Trap and rail staUott shows that operating costs Thestate agency anticipates spending security at the station and saving rent The township government is continu- "7*01 ye«r« or oldar - from Cranford Skeet beginsf this year's would be $9,962 a year, 1700,000 in renovatirtnsf Jhat Include money. Weeks said. However, Gene competitive season at the Sandy Weeks, final *-- ' jDdj»lal£oxm_ " "*"•"' ' "" Mri public safetj LuuuuLmioner, (ha oat of

w ppES^PfN*ae^«R*h^ • • III^.I • F m * tr ifi r"m*n,» n i i • i ^ 1 ^—i ^a^ppES^PfN(*aap^^ rtnovating~ifae oM-^ttatlonhouse „„„anrr, -• Ually offset by" rent saved in moving the parking lot improvements, coach lights opposes moving the Juvenile Bu!"eau potential sources to underwrite it and JUatl-p.m.; Juvenile Bureau Into the old station complementing those placed elsewhere* .there.: .' . . ••'. .'•/.', proposed use of the area near the roun- at 2;30p.m. . house which would be yeut free. The WMK -downtown, guarantees of the structural "' NJ Transit wants to {ease stations, on dhouse where four tracks are unused. ~ talfeepaid for North Avenue quarters is Integrity of the old staUonhouse and the entire Raritan Valley Line and con- other commuter-related repairs to centrate on commuter rail operations. It .Weeks initially hoped thatjseveral She also .anticipates $1,620 a year sidewalks, curbs and the entrance roof. has siarted upgrading work at the Gar- hundred dollars could be saved by gain- revenue from station news stands. Sta- NJ Transit will also supply real estate wood station and seven "others and its ing rent free leaBe of iheHillsideSchool ijon advertising signs and potential, technical assistance. , . hew rolling stock will debut this sita- -tunnel and the Park Terrnce area, but mer. " , . Conrail, not NJ Transit, owns those pro- lease of station property for such pur- perties. Tlie township has been seeking poses as a.dry cleaning drop-off and Anticipated costs to the town include some improvements at the tunnel, it - pick-up business^ bank wmdow or coffee $9,452 fonoi! and electricity plus $500 a Its projected, improvements at the local station are more ambitious than at hopes to" cau% the ceilings, fix the floor stand could generate addiUwiai income,- year for liability insurance. Weeks said and establish'a side ramp so bicycles • policing and maintenance'costs could be. most stations and are included in a subsequent construction phase. can be pushed easily instead of travers- ROSELLE CRANFORD HADASSAH Non-Dairy The analysis was made as part of the performed 4>y municipal departments ing steps. However, utility lines would Creamer townsMp's consideration- ofNJ Transit's without additional costs. The agency's proposal also includes have! to be dropped to- accomplish the proposal to lease tbestation rent-free in . Transferring the Juvenile Bureau - rent-free use of parking lots behind latter, so approval is beingjsought. IKC* PARKS'DEPT. exchange for. major .rearrangements would' maintain the philosophy of Swan's Cleaners, of a track area near AND FRIENDS [276-8900 ^xt. 30 or 276-67671 • Chplesterol free ,.-• MeHows coffee; Bardasz J«; 'Who's Who' : perkS up cereals, : desserts, recipes Dr. Ewa A. Bardasz, 18 from Warsaw Technical Can - Chemical Society, SALUTE • Costs less Springfield Ave., an University in 1967 and a Society of Chemical Indus- 1882-1982100TH ANNIVERSARY YEAR • Leading Brand engineering associate with try, Society of Automotive • Cprnes Frozen •••• Ph; D. from Case Western Exjton Research and Reserve- University in Engineers, and the Ameri- •• —•-•vi'-i'. Engineering Co., Unden, •1974;' -'. -X\- ••• • •*^: can Institute of Chemical FOODS INC. has, been -« selected" lor Engineers from which she HADASSAH MEDICAL CENTERS North Mington, MA 02381 She joined Exxon in 1973 inclusion in the 19th edi-as a staff engineer in the received a professional, tion of "Who's Who in the products research divi- development recognition •East.* .'.;• ;•:,.' ;.. . sion, advancing to senior certificate in 1980. A native of Warsaw, Aldo Service Co. Larry's Kosher Deli staff engineer in 1979 and 1 Poland, Dr. Bardasz came to ah" engineering assoc- 'EM MATTERS INVOLVING Boro Drugs-Kenilworth Lempert. Cohen-Kosher Meat Jos&ph Schecter to the United States in 1968 CUBEX INC. Builders General Supply Co. Linden Kosher Meat', N.J. (201) 964-0214 N.Y. (2,12)227-4745 from Factory iate in 1981. IMMIGRATION LAWS and became a citicen in She holds a patent hi Mademoiselle of Westfield R.A. H0MEWSPECT10N-N0W! '1973. She received a Butler Travel-Cranford " corrosion protection and is 205 W. Westfield Ave. COMPANY Malin's Dept. Store-Roselle OVERHEAD •« Chapman Bros., Plumbing ARCHITECT "master jof science degree a member ,of the Ameri- Alan M. tuhiner Maple Leaf Wine & Liquors Ro$elle Park, N.J. C«mpW» TriiupartitkHi Strvlc* £Ilnton MiHc Co. 47 Blake Ave. Granlord, N.J. DOORS ATTORNEY AT LAW Marty Samolsky • Cnnlofd Security 07204 276-9042 272-7471 Marino's Fish Market .. - 272-7174 Coach ft Four Restaurant, Nason's Ladles Wear^irideh ,'; avoid additional (201)241-4833 Cohen's'Famous- Frozen Foods Coinpliment^jof Pathmark County OH Co-Roselle damage: Bliss termite 401 Broadwiy, Sulla 400 Edwin R. Goldman The Pink Submarine. experts-r-.plus our technical Newport, N.Y. 10013 Jan Bab Co;, Inc: TEL: (212) 965-1250 Cranford Cleaners^" .• Realty Hair Design-Garwood f^prpvidea century of-'trained. Printing Service, Inc. Crystal Plaza Caterers -Robinson's-Cranford experiqnc"eTTSey.'llrcfiecR your'entire -EASY TO INSTALL TAEX: 226809 ETULUR • Painted/Unpainied Cool weather and lack of stocking didn't faze these anglers on open- *n; LUBINER 105 South Avenue. E. Steven Dale-Insurance ""James Russell Plumbing & Htg. Harrison, N.J. • t\juot> cittvl iTtflt/yUMCIVOIQ'9GQ 11(0(131 --•-Aluminum*-FlbieroiaSs" PER Jay Ing of trout season Saturday. From left: Paul Meade; Brian Meade and Cranford, N.J. 07016 prbblefns. 5 year guarantee included. :. • Wood-Solid. GAL Darrel's Gutf-Clark * Rusty's Italian Restaurant No Finger Joints Danny Schultz.all of Princeton Road. Photo by Greg Price. Sandler's Dept. Store . • Raised & Curved Panels . MISTER M'S Gorton Heating Corp. Jules Karriens, President Food PHONE TODAY: •; Plywood Panels COD •200 GAL MINIMUM Jean & Bill Haveson Sarafin's Service-Clark • Radio Controls • A1UTO BODY. INC, HAROLD F. Processing >M • Exptrt Collision Strvicr Furs'bySeVeryn-Linden SEE THEM MADE F ^4 BENNER, INC. HyneS Jeweler's-Cranford . 233-4448 GEIHIGHER.QUALITY Service & Installation AvaU. ,'• Insurance Work Shirley's Dress Shop Dr. Ewa Bardasz • Towing Available Body«F«mltr Dr. & Mrs. Wilfred Jordan AT BARGAIN PRICES" Stnljhttnlng It Touring Compliments of Inc. AAI I Trtl'l CDCC 654-4212 •Drs. S. &-M. Kingsly 317 Windsor Ave ' Westflald 60S South Ave.. E Cranford 'Suburban Cdrpets-Mtifbarrr Lumley, LJennant ESTABLISHED 7882 ~"TT ; VENDING :'*V (Nc«l to Inspection Station) MON-SAT 276-1111 Dr. Gary M. Kramer •" Tullio's Hair Spectrum " CALL • WRITE • VISIT r». ^ Dr. &Mrs. &Co., Inc. The town sanitarian EatbriatM FumlshwJ- Dr. & Mrs. Frank W. Krause Weinberg Electrical-Linden Compliments of I TERMITE CONTROL / made 232 vending ^Vi>.i Herbert duller Kublok & Kubick Opticians. Westfield, Cinema' Royal Food , machine and 106 food Brounell & Kramer, Realtors N«w Ro«d. Mjjnmouth Junction 272-9291 establishment' inspections Complifnehts Brounell-Kramer-Waldor Rutli&Ted ONE pF THE OLDEST ANDLARGtST '- Clear White tens Available . Insurors; Distributors. i-^Ssttil 12- last year. . of 143$ Morris Ave, iJnion Marines i Food Enterprises Inc. For a Carnation Hi : Inc (NY.) Great Lawn Clara & Edwin Aaron Susan & David Laibow Norma &-Paul Aaron •D. "Kathy"-Laibow ' *,f<&! Seafoods at an Alban Lewis Etta Leff 81 two Bridges Road Honest Price Flo & Lenny Applebaum Linda & Jonas Leifer 215'Blair Road vr> Fairfield, N.J. 07006 Greenbaurrf^* Call today Hilda Arbitblit Florence & Dan Lerner — Wpodbridgc. N.J. 07095 h).LY PERX & Roger Asoh Margaret & Arnold Le'Vine (201) 363-0900 ALUM. PRODUCT The ONLY Shirley & Irv Backinoff . • Cecelia & Eli Lobato, AUTO DEALERS AUTO SERVICE 232-7080 Ruth & Ted Manngs BANKS Polyunsaturated craamar. Connie & Frapk Baker Mi DUNCAN'S Peggy Bart Maple Kosher Meat Market Umill ALIIINIM CATCH Adele & Irwin Basow Harriet & Ron Mazur r —~—bSTfell« & ira Meitzer • ". ' SfHC-.S? .fRV TffM WMkih ld'\ -Sandy & Hank '.Bwaift.u.11 ^V « -~ Karen & Joe Becker ! ' Ellen -'ft-Walter-Metrh — OF CBANFOaO • WESTRELD Judy & Alvin Beingtein Midtown Savings '. FREE Home Irpprovement Your Complete THE Bert Qprnstein- Elaine & Bob Mittler Congratulations Products OLOSMOBILE : Automotive Service CHECKING M & Jesse Bernstein Estelle & Murray Model on your Avrille & ftalph Nu'ssbaum Storm Windoyvi &Ooors SALES & SERVICE Mln. $2OO. Ellen & Stuart Borker outstanding work American & Foreign 'Snowbunny": Robert Small and his daughter Klmberly molded a six lilohonno Carol & Donald Brandes Harriet & Ben'Odesky W Years Experience 272-4500 foot tall Easter season bunny In unseasonar weather last week. It Any Tlmo, Any Day Ihc! Sun- Welsh 232WI ACTION FRRms inc. days "for FREE Estimate-No Benita & Sy Bressler Sofia & Howard Parish 274-3205 11 H BroaH Street adorned frogt yard on Elizabeth Avenue before the thaw. Photo by *V BOULEVARD Obligation ... Barbara & Sy Britan , Bernice & Sy Paul Country Fresh "' MPi-'f NJ 154 330 | 10J South A vt.. Crqrj/brd CALL JQP DelanoTV 101 SOUTH AVENUE AVE KENILWORTM Barbara & Oscar Brooks Esta& Stanley Pearl Southland Ice Cream CRAMFORD Taste the fruits of Fern & Edward Cagan Sylvia & Julius Perlman Milk WEStFtELD 276-7573 276-6000 fVlernberF.DIC Frozen Crossing guards get pay increases ARNOLD H. Helen & Al Chodosh '. Roberta & Howard Phillips 780 Passaic Avo BUILDERS La Yogurt ' Hana & Stewart Cofsky "Millie :&-Alvin-PollocL. Food, W. C#ldwoll. N J. 0>00Mi«s, and will go to $4.20 on September l. Best • Additions . .. ^^ ASLIfCOVWIt y CLEANING for a total of three such days each year. Judith & Steven Dobrin Greg Reitman » Concrete Work _. WELL PUT IT BACK Alter one year, a guard who made Robert A. Guertin, police chief, said a Barbara &JHenry Ricklis Haagen-Dazs TOGETHER FOR YOU! KiCtk^Vl Wishes Ghita & Marcu Eibschutz • Fireplaces , •-« .,•*. Alterations Decorator-Fold $416 an hour last year and is now at new guard recruitment program is be- Dannon Milk Pearl & Leon Rieder Charles Rizzuto, • Commercial, P«sidentlal HIM. tuitom takfr-dwNii a Eve & Don Ellenberg MDT » FENOCTSTMIQHTENINB Additions $4.30 will make $4.50 starting: ing planned. ,. .. * *<• Judith & Barry Epstein Judy & Rich Rosenberg ~ President Icci Cream COMPLETE COLLISION SERVICE— Remodeling -; ra-lung Miifct'y^—- - Products- Ocnaral Rtpairs Rose Feld Marlene & Alan Roth .••••••.:.•-'•-•••:'••TOIWIB • . 22-1 f 38th Street "Dedicated- to Fully Insured Gail & David Salomon SEAFOOD 276,3300 ~ Don't worry ELlMACHINE &TOOL Long Island City. N.Y. Flbrencp & Bert Fine "Perfection" H.F.ICNNERJNC CALLCRANFORD ' SptclalUt*— SUPPLIES COMPANY. INC John Franks of Westfield Rosalie & Arnold Saltzman RESTAURANT OPEN 7:30 AM-6 PM Linda & Marty Samolsky 272-5177--; i SOJtTH *VE. E CBANFOtW- Naw-U.iKlM.chlnniy GLACIER Certified -r\4fo. Margaret Friedman Lil & Sami Samolsky FROZEN FOOD UCMIM #02160 276-1111 H2 Sluy yeiwit Avenne \Jplqa 241-6300 _BQn..aL.Barlmrs 4 Westfield Ave. 44 North AVe. E.,Cr«ntord ••...-.A Faintly.- ••••'••• ::••.••• ... GertacMittani Elizabethtown— Water •-'• ^^ Henrietta & Jack Schwartz • 3vTi. First Avo., "Ginsb' Sylvia & Ben Galen (2011352-2022 II It's FroinnW/Have II ~ FUEL OIL I0MIIMPIOVIMIN1 INSULATION INSUUTION Company has started its Marge & Jdck Ganek Jean & Leo Schwartz Atmand Pasaarolll. Pr«a. -annual hydrant-flushing Carole & Bernard Gershen ' " Adele & Fred Shafman 19T Ponn, Ava., Palurson program. In this six-week h United Counties Jean & Dan Shaw BLOWN operation, water pipe resi- Barbara & Ron Ginsberg - Open 7 Days a Week REEL-SIMM s'Trurt Company Beinstein's Irene & Norman Goldberg Burnice & Robert Siegel Hotel Bar CELLULOSE due is washed from lines Vlllagfe BakeVs Ethel & Al Silberman Futoran O'NiILL Tha prullcil bank (or •II . - Suzanne & Murray Goldstein Butter throughout the water sys- '. Lynn & Arthur, Marc & Jeff • e, Friendly Service FIBER tent, and hydrants are' . * your banking noads 1742 SI. Gcorgo Ave. Barbara & Abe Goodgold best Wishes Sales Associates -JASKOF tested for operating effi- Linden, N.J. 07036 , Helen & Paul Graboff Silverman * Since I92S ._• »W MIXHAl HllCMvl 1VSIIM | FO0DT0WN OF HILLSIDE Open 7 Days 486-9600 Fay Smolin Hotel Bar ,cun ENERGY CONSERVATION ciency. • ' Ruth & Irving Groen Sau-Sea ~ 023 LatovoUu Avo HEATING OILS '. " . ' 486-1636 Miriam Greenfield Shirley & Ernest Solomon Havjlhomu, N.J. 07606 Margarine Blown Cellulose In hifimes immediately . 1132 Liberty Ave. J Sidney & Stephen Solomon Food, Inc. INSTAI^LATIQNS ftOOFING • GUTTERS around the hydrants,, Hillside, N.J. Lil & Harold Gushin ,^f/iber Insulation . Dortnan % Glna Paslerrlak water may become tem- Abbie & Howard Halperia. . : __ Bea & Sandy Spector Yonkers, N.Y. : v Allu Zlolnlkolf Dorothy & Leonard Steinbach ••vi^-^-'j&!'••••••••>••'<;•••> •-^v ' ••••a;-;rr^..,., ,.i.•••,.>-. , • .. • porarily discolored. "This • &Co. Anita & Arnold Halpern Freedom of f«r, and Mre. Charles Wlschusen'are t^e new should; ^ hot- cause Maison Blossom & Alan Hatoff Nora & Kurt Steinef . • Clarkton Shoes ,.:M« 125 Michael Dr. ROSELLE SAVINGS •Harriet & Allen Herer Carol & Joe Steuer Choice! t^^m(llMM^M) 202 AttOf Street Thla .home Wfi^S listed with Wagner/, chief engineer, Syosset.N.Y. 11791 and Loan Petite Arlene & Marty Jacobs Sandra 8r Stewart Sussman ,tho Qntoii^Couhty Multiple Uatlng^Sys?am T**"008- f

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PageiCRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, April 15,1982

Onthere&apd: Thursday, April 15,1982 CRANFOT^rjrtN.J.) CHRONICLE Page 9 Trinity namps Announcement was made on Easter at annoui* mittee and vestry of Trinity Church The Union County Schocil of the Bible classes are "Aets of the Apostles," Trinity Episcopal Church of the appoint- here. They sought a replacement for the" wil1 "Epistle to the Philippians," and an opportunity rrtent bt a new rector, tho Rgfr. Arohic M , . , . begin its ten week spring semester Rev. Cauun Vincent Pettit, who left the remembrance, and has beeif"11611* ^ee'£; Classes- to -be • given- on - "Htghhght" from Romans." . \ rth Palmer Jr., effective July l. Fr. Palmer local church last October after ten years As World War II was ending, the hor- Though absorbed with represents no huge burden. Pro- XW V** ental in bringing together the "Tuesdays at 7 p.m. include "The Heart Registration will take place at 6:30 •( .. is presently rector of Trinity Church to become rector. of Christ Church, rors of the concentration camps were God r nd finances and the takeover-of jected costs for utilities and in- By STUART AJkVBREY Kearny, where he has served since just beginning to unfold. Three men who New Jersey^community,- to !* / " W*', . V™***' '• rail, NJ Transit is making good There is $5,000 in the budget for chanced on views of The Greatest Train Kearny and servers as a chaplain for the ing the final months1 of the war ' grams. on Earth passing through Cranford. pastor, has served as interim pastor, on its promises to the Raritan the station, $4,800 could be sav- New Jersey Afmy National Guard assistedi)y Rev. Lynette McNatty. > recall their involvement and The memorial, a sculpture in clay of a Christian Science -lecture slated It has 42 double length carsincluding feelings at the Ybm Hashoah^ obser- Valley lane. The contractor, ed by moving the Juvenile Approval of Fr. Palmer's appoint- Fr. Palmer, his wife Lyhne and their Torah wrapped with barbed wire; was , • . • '. ' 1 one with small compartments for little ment by the Episcopal Bishop of New vance scheduled to be held^afrtSO p.m. created by Etta Winigrad of Cherry Hill "Christian Science: What It Is and conviction that Christian- heating as showed up at the Garwood sta- Bureau into the old station and people UkeTMichu;;the;world's smallest, 12 year old daughterKaren wiH take iip practiced" in Christian Science goes Jerseyyi Rt, Rev. Albert Van Duzer residencehere shortly beforehe is due Monday at Temple 1 " and was selected frontmore thanlOOen^^-.Jsn'-t,"^ the UUeof a free public lecture tion, the* other day to start" some new revenue sources front man at 33 inches talT. It has four stock Bet "beyond the limits of conventional culminated the work of the search com- to take over the Trinity pulpit. Sponsored jointlyx% the Jewish tries. The impetus for a visible °y ^y Carson Fields of Atlanta, repairs there and the new roll- news racks, billboards and con- carsTor dancing elephants and camels Federation of Central New Jersey and memorial came from the commuaity of G«orgia, to be given in First Church of theology into the very heart of Christian ing stock is still on target for venience shopping leases can be a double decker for staff autos and the Union County Board of Rabbis, the survivors living in this-area as a way to Christ, Scientist, Springfield Avenue teaching and practice." . this year. Meantime, the Cran-" realistically anticipated. Some tigers, and The Pie Car-a traveling cir- Holocaust observance will provide an ensure remembrance for future genera- an(* Mi" Street, at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow, cus restaurant-cum-diner. . opportunity for a Christian hberator, a tions. The costs for venture were under- -M?8- Fidfc responds to many of the. Mrs. Fields explains that Jesus' fiord station continues to revenue producing use should Obituaries teachings, and healings represent a deterioriate-thelatesL peril is be possible through subleasing I instinctively feel that this movable jewistruberator and a camp survivor to . written by the survivors and members prevalent questions asked about Chris- ctty should stop, that RingHrig Bros. f the story of liberation from three of the community. tian Science, about its well-known prac- radically fresh, spiritual view replacing Walking to it from Walnut even if the town-decides against Barnum & Bailey should roll out the ferent and personal points of view. The program will include lighting of tice of spiritual, healing and its view of a material view. •.;'• ?•• Avenue. Three quarters of a movlB&tbe Juvenile Bureau. Everyone is welcome to attend. " tents, that the'elephants should carry Anthony LaRosa J. Perry Dr. John Farinella, Superintendent of candles in memory xrf, the six million Christ Jesus. Central to the lectureis the rnillion dollars for turning the the tent poles and we should have an all Anthony P. LaRosa, 75, Medal for his work in Schools, in Clai** served with the Jewish victims of'-'Nazism. Rabbi eyesore into a plus .for com- The opportunity for attaining day parade. , • died .Saturday at Com- scouting. He was a past Army's Eighth and Ninth Air Forces,in Ronald Hoffberg of. temple Beth E]. Gospel Fellowship sets ni^ht meeting inuters and the town as a whole a cleaner, more efficient and munity ; Memorial vigil member, counselor, Va< Intelligence and the Adjutant General's program co-chairman', will be the nar- That's what happened with circuses rator and cantor Ralph Nussbaum will There_will be a special "men only" FGBMFI. Members are encouraged to Js available from the agency if niore serviceable transporta- whenXwas a kid. I remember getting up Hbspital, ,Toms River,-subcommitteeman and office, and was stationed in England, J. Perry/Vacfia, 61,of sing * especially selected for "the meeting of TSe Full Gospel' Business bring a guest to the dessert and coffee the ttfwnship government has .at dawn for .the unloadings off railroad after a'brief illness." Born' chairman for the Order, of France and Germany from May 1943 to tion center for trains, buses and in New York^ City, he lived the Arrow. ' Belle Meade, formerly-of December 1945. " occasion. Students from Jewish day and Men's fellowship International this session. The cost will be $1 per person. tpe will and the foresight to/ taxis is at haUdt^These factors; spurs in small Midwestern towns. In its month. Instead of. its customary Satur- most of his life in Cran- :Mr. LaRosa was a Cranford, died April 6 at Henry Ricklis, a Millburn afternoon schools will also^partkipate.. The speaker will be Harold Hosteller, jftoveahead to run the station own way, the working side of the circus day breakfast, the, group will meet at 8 coupled with the chance to ford. He moved to Pine fourth degree member of Somerset Medical Center, businessman and past president of the The program is being* directed and coor- director of communications for the New- while NJ Transit.concentrates was as good a show as the one under the ' dinated by Alan and Fran Krebs of p.mT uttnorrow at Grace ft Peace York International Bible Society and; a reverse blight at the station and tent. Beach ten yearsfago after Toms River Council 496vSomervn*Ie. Cranford Chapter of B'riai.B'rith, served pn defivefing passengers. . •». • retiring as a machinist for Born in Elizabeth, he Rahway. • Fellowship. • Pajrt of the meeting will be member of the national Presbyterian the chance to present a "better Alas, the train never stops anymore. Knights of Cdlumbus^He with the Army's 20th Armored Division, % lived in Cranford. 15 years Liberation is the theme for this year's devoted to..the- history and ministry of Charismatic Communion. "'The township's first "cosj image of the town, merit full *wT It just roils up the Lehigh Valley rjVer to the Aloy Steel Company, served as the Council's 160th Combat "Signal Company in before moving to Belle holocaust observances. The three Analysis suggests the takeover support from the government. Long Island City where the elephants tie Linden. blood bank chaknian and France and Germany. Spring, at last. Photo by Greg Price. Meade in 1965. He was a speakers, along with S.W. BumbaU of tails and trunks and march back to "Mr. LaRosa was a was past^chairman of its Both men were with Army units which former president and cap-. Catholic Relations Co partner in Castle Pro- entered different camps within hours of Rahway, will be honored as liberators Manhattan. • . during the evening's program. tain of the Cranford First .mitteeJSe was a member ducts, Inc., Buffalo, N.Y., the initial liberation during the spring of A Funeral Home::. This year I followed thetn by a day for " Aid Squad. He was a of theVine Beach and and owned Quali-Plus 1945. "It is especially appropriate to recall Nature the debut of the 112th-«dition of The former scoutmaster of •Berkeley senior,, citizen distributorship for 12 • Murray Pantirer, a Hillside resident the Liberation,'' said Sally Kopstetn, of homelike atmosphere, -Troop 75, Cranford andjTOrganjzaUoiis: J .'_.-years. Mr.Vacha'was jr.' and tormer General Chairman of the ^t&th ~3 ByTARRISSWALKHAMUK days with little to eat and were weak. so their comings and goings are completely modern, doesn't need canvas or poles any more. Troop 70, Clark, and was He was a communicant communicant61 .Si. United Jewish Campaign of "the Jewish emphasize that we must riot forget the April is "melodied with the voice of Many died. Some eked out a meal on hol- hard to predict. - It's Madison Square Garden. Instead of past- neighborhood ^c6m- of St., John the Apostle JosepTv\Church, /\East Federation of Central New Jersey, is a attempted genocide of a people. It sure- aif- conditioned!. song sparrow, robin, redwing and oriole. ly berries. Many of you called to see FUNERAL Molly Rudd on Central Avenue going to the world, the world comes to •; missioner for the BoyChurch, Clark, and a Millstone survivor of several concentration camps 1\ has lessons for^us today. To retell the ojfstreet parking I And the call of the spring peeper is the what could be done and I suggested spotted a scarlet tanager. Rarely these the circus. This unit spends two months Scout's westera^district. member of its Holy Name member events is to remember them." and to very voice of April; But April can also be which-were iocatedlnJRoland, Germany- facilities. raisins and cut up apples for the red- fire-birds come through as earlyasTthe- of the year at theGardenr"; . ;T: He~re Wnflllw>l*t operations staff officer for' Hillside, representing the survivors of juncos had flocked to his feeder. yisiLher feeder with a double red band Daredevils persist. The hottest new JCiUlUCllC WUOIIieri u.S. Coast Guard Aux- and is especially appropriate.for school thought of these words last week on the Holocaust now living in this area. ' Ellie Wood on Manor Avenue spotted a on its leg: Some ornithologist had pro-' 'iliary Flotilla 48 of the age children. Fpr further Information, Tuesday morning when the phone rang act this year belongs to Elvin Bale, who Funeral services were Mrs. Kushner has been the guiding force flicker in her yarxTSS did Harv Nevalls bably put it there in the hopes someone 1963. /Third Northern Region. call the Federation office. 351-5060. DOOLEY COLONIAL HOME to Jet me know-there was no school on Elniora Avenup.Harv also spotted a y p p balancen d blindfolded on.a three-story. held yesterday for Mrs.-_Survi behind such a memorial"as a teihl' Thn i grr • • T rn iT ii Ti iii^t ir^ I—inma ima — • • -• - j i-y Surviving are his widow, woulld nutici e it aiiid seilid in art" report. "T The—high h 'wire-mesh gyru wheel t Jeannette M. Woolbert, 93, •>->6 wcstficld Avc, Wcstfitld because of the snow-snow in April. Hal pair of wood ducks in the river. Mrs. Florence Ellsv Josephine ; three sons, is where to send the report. I'll rotated at 70 miles an hour. He also roll- vwho died Saturday at 233-0255 Borland wrote them in another snowy Jack Warrington on Kensington of Washington,' a grati Kenneth of Philipsburg, William F. have to search the journals and find out ed a motorcycle over a highwire and : Muhlenberg Hospital, Walter H. Bieda spring 23 years ago. Avenue tallied a great blue heron over daughter and three great- •Christopher of Baltimore, who-to write to - such bandings are iought a spinning mechanical monster, Plainfield, aftera long ill- grandchildren. Seed and suet eaters were probably in near the shooting range in Lenape Park. generally reported for this purpose. Md., and Perry of A funeral mass for Palmer Tavern m Eliza- good shape, because many had not ceas- Big birds generally live a long time but They make it seem easy\ but dangers ness. Born in Erie, Pa., Smith Walter H, Bieda is being Arrangements were by Economy, Pa.'; a brother, beth. -. ed stocking their feeders yet. But the jTseems to me that there has been a Ospreys are making a comeback in persist, too. A young Bulgarian gymnast : she moved • to- Granford Funeral services for offered at 9 a,m, todayJiL robins- were in bad straits. There were great blue in the area f6r 12 or 14 years. southJersey. Last summer I-wrote of iJdibdidiMi William F. Smith were Si. Adalbert Church, He was a member of the aerial artist tried and failed a quadruple > the widow of Addison C. Funeral Home, 12 Spr-and three grandchildren. no open grass,areas where they could No one has ever seen a pair so it's hard the,ospreys that nested out beside the Services were Saturday conducted Tuesday in Elizabeth. Mr. Bieda, 88. Sons of Poland Standards search out an unwary worm. Two days to tell if there is a breeding pair there. Wetlands Institute. They raised one somersault, but was back for another Woolburt, who died in ingfield Ave. Lancaster, Pa. Mr. Smith, died Monday at Memorial - Freedom Society 89, Eliza- after .the snow, when,it began to melt, Billie Goodfellow oh Claremont Place; youngster. Wei 1 they're back. • One try rightaway. 77, died Saturday after a- General Hospital, Union. beth. and let the grass show through, robins added a, wood thrush to our 1982 list. . returned on the 25th jof last month and Ayel Gautier's versatile elephants Evetett von Gersdorff KUth S. >««-ainess. Born in New He came to the United Surviving are his son, congregated in the green spots and These brown fellows ,are rare in April the mate joined the family on .the 29th. ljave new rituals every year. This.. York Ciy, he lived in Cran- States from Poland 71 John of North Plainfield; feasted. Many of them had gone two but occasionally one stays nearby all Maybe they'll raise two young this year. Everett -^k. \;.von explorer advisor here. ford before moving to Lan-. years ago and moved to two daughters, Mrs. Helen FUNDING...?/ season they perform a highland fling. Gersdorff, 70,-di«| AprJL..4_ ~The:bigcats have a'new mentor and the t "Caster-"six"yearsagoTUntil Cranford from Union five, Zrebiec, Linden, and Mrs, at his home in 'Vfjnter Surviving are his wife, Falk his retirement, he was -a Albina Krowicki, Cran- Harlem Globetrotters have new razzle Park, Fla.. Funeral ser- . years ago, TRANSPORTATION PUZZLE . Mrsi Bethel M. von hairdresser here. He was Mr. Bieda retired in 1957 ford; a. sister, six grand- dazzle competition 'from unicyling vices were held there last Mrs. Ruth Shallcross, Gersdorff; three a member of Azure Lodge after 37 years as a pipe: children and three great- Viewpoint •roundballers.'"' week. Falk, 65, died Saturday at daughters, Mrs. Dorothy F4AM, Cranford. fitter.at the Exxon Bay- grandchildren. His wife, The world's only performing Bactrian Miv von Gersdorff jvas Muhlenberg Hospital, Uncle Sarti isn't alone in the transit dilemma. Local and state govern- w> M. Goeddert, Cranford, Surviving are his wife,. way Refinery. He also Mrs. Agnes Penczak camel bumps double humps better than ' born in Brooklyn and lived Plainfield, after a brief il- ments have difficult decisions to make, too. Mrs: Mary A Lashley, Mrs. Ethel Wiedeman formerly owned the Bieda, died in 1976,, Vote Vote no XJpset by pursuit ..any burlesque queen.as..par.to{.al,'jjliberr in Cranford m%re thajo,4O Neschanic. Station, and. lness: '' ty camel" troupe. - -—•-"•arzj-.——^_. . -Born in Kemlworth.-shf _Sjrnith,_-_ . and _his__stet . ..: A .^_ ^^^_ Mrg.' Lorraine"""C7~Cbr"-" mother, Mrs^ Augusta" -T«rtt the Editor: -To tho Editor: ' By interchanging units and constantly 1 lived in Elizabeth, .before The Cranford Parent-Teacher Council There must be a better way for. Florida two years ago: : ritore, Piscataway ; a son, Smith of Union. passengere per mfle Now that the taxpayers of Cranford seeking new , Ringling creates a Before his retirement, he -Richard Carl Vuaghh; moving jto Cranford 27 (PTC) would like to remind our Cran- have had additional time in which to con- policemen.to deal with traffic violators muter line with new coaches virtually new circus every year. I didn't was a pharmaceutical Falls Church, Va.; a years ago. She* was a com- Bill Wright, Cranford's ford residents of the new date for the up- sider the Board of Education's proposed than by chasing them at high speeds en- have time or inclination to be nostalgic foreman for the Schering municant of St. MichaeL and improved stations. The im- coming school election' on Tuesday, budget for the year ending June 30,1983, ding in death and destruction. Are law sister, Mr. Muriel Wood, representative to the county amid the three-ring action until I saw , Corp. He was a former Maplewood, and 11 grand- Church. UMW plans transportation advisory board, provements should draw more April 20 from 2 to 9 p.m. That day our they should realize the unfairness of it, officers so enamored by the power the finale. My childhood circuses always assistant scoutmaster and children. Mrs. Falk was a passengers to a more efficient residents will be asked to vote for three as it relates to the taxpayers present behind their badges, flashing red lights closed with a beauty shot fromacannon. made a good case in a signed ar- member of the Roselle candidates for our Board of Education and future economic situation. v and sirens that they forget that they are Now the shooting star, or shot star, is a ticle in The New York Times for mode of transport, if they aren't Golf Club and the Reunion fish dinner fare-hiked out of the picture. and to cast a vote regarding the 1982-83 Notwithstanding the closing of the'dealing with human life? * "human rocket" sailing overhead like Mrs. Nellie Grigaliunas saving Amtrak through .federal school budget. Bloomingdale School on June 30 1982, Committee of Roosevelt- A fish and chips dinner Were an astronaut without a module. GARWOOD-- Mrs. subsidies oaa j^ar with those for James A. Duqn, a Rutgers .pro- When I read of the tragic death of a who,;died in 1965. She isJunior Higji School will be served from 5 to 7 You sfiould ki^sw. 4Jw(l 272«75, Cynthia gets 60. ,..._- rational transportation policy great concerni^fo the PTC. We, as a couri- similar situations. I plead with the law the Dooley Funeral Home, p Us When I applied for a building permit iis beautiful 'week' and Benny Grigaliunas, Cranford. termed in Rosedale « i 2W-414S; or the There's an obvious local con- would also; include gas taxcil, urge every voter to exercise his or enforcement profession to correct this xhurch office hf-r privilege an^ go t"-*h«? polls on^ to rebuild my flood damaged porches a - criminal practice and end this needless .Cemetery'UVrrangements - nectioJOLto-all this. The company .money- lor - railroads" Buna were by the Higgins and day. Let's top the number of 1,645 Cran- few years ago-I was denied permission murdering. . • •• that reported train figures, the makes this telling point: "It is to enlarge my 12' by 6' porch by two feet being observed locally starting Sunday Mrs. Veronica Tassey. Bonner Funeral Home,"- ford residents who voted in last year's with cleanup pffnrtg nrgani/ed amonK Electro-MotivlectroMotive DDivisioivision of election. ~ ~ •' ' o-to in the "flood tone." iPlease withhold my name as I don't KKN1LWORTH-- Mrs. tjharonvUle. Her husband, lose their reliance on public I have been told that this area is still want police in all the area tp follow me volunteers through the Recreation General Motors, has built the Linda S. Leifer, President Department. "National Library Week" Veronica Tassey, 65, died William Tassey, died last new locomotives that will soon transportation. It's easier to CranfordPTC considered a flood risk and my neigh- everywhere I drive waiting to hope to April 4 in Sharonville, year. bors and I still carry flood insurance. see me commit a violation of the law. is also being celebrated at the local Joseph Sisko be running on the local com- maintain it than rebuild it." library. Both events were proclaimed by Ohio. She was a native of Mrs. Tassey retired BLACK The proposed Springfield Mall there- (name withheld). • \ Cranford - and lived in the township government. from the Wayne Wire CO., Joseph Sisko, 58, fore is a stunner to me inasmuch as the Kenilworth 30 years Linden, after 30 years CARPENTER Economic realities location is also in the flood zone. Is there formerly of Cranford, died before moving to Ohio employment., Monday in Rahway Keeping glass in town some logical explanation about cement several months ago, She Funeral arrangements ANTS CAN DAMAGE versus wood-building that I am over- DPW efficiency Hospital. He lived here YOUR HOME Last year Westfield sent awards to the municipalities in- vs. town sentiment r resided with her .sister, were by Mastapeter before moving to Clark 30 looking? Tojhe Editor: Mrs. Mary Tyjewski, in Suburban, Roselle Park. 442,000 pounds of glass off for volved. As an example, leaf To the Editor: . Barbara Neal On behalf of the Special Olympics Community years ago. A Navy World Come in today for your recycling. A lot of that was composting at the Conservation This letter is in response to the editor- 516 Riverside Dr. State Swim Meet Committee, I want to War II veteran, he was a Cranford glass. There are three Center will count toward Cran- ials in last week's paper "Liquor City" thank Gregory Sgroi and the Depart- Mrs. Emily O'Neill member of Garwood Post ood reasons for dumping it at ford's grant. and "Big is not Beautiful." ment Of Public Works for their quick 6807, VFW. He retired in Town sentMieijTtendsToward Tceep it calendar and lived in the borough 28 198O after 30 years as a ome once the opportunity There when needed arid efficient response to our request to KENIL^VORTH-A Bill lo !t» i«i£ue' 61* • C»IK«I« AMi f .small' while economic realities often clean the lower Centennial Pool parking Thursday, April 15; 10:30 a.m.! funeral mass for Mrs. years. She formerly own- sales clerk for Premier ^•civile eittnuv* g»)l«wt M Mod U begins. April 24. First, it underwrite the program, but the Ito the Editor: Itnt 11 MHwt pU<*i ind CM i«kMUy FREE $20 BILL dictate 'it has to be large:' the result for lot. This lot is used each winter to Seniors stress class. Community Emily O'Neill will be of- ed Millie's Restaurant in Electric Co. Garwood. htm ycur KMW 1 (wv it bnU£Mty itvj . Our heartfelt thanks to all of our very fluml«y ixA ttuy in M nuhK tot Bhit separates waste atlhe source of income prospects should attract Cranford is usually 'nothing.' I'll offer deposit snow removed from the Central Center; l p.m.: Beginners quilting fered at 10:30 a.m. tomor- Newark and was a good friends, neighbors and relatives for Surviving are his wife, its discard. Second, the Conser- local organizations who should two^xamples. Business district and results in much for seniors, Community Center'; 7:30 row at St. Theresa Church secretary for Kenilworth or your choice of a fabulous gift Mrs. Irene Cebula Sisko; iti bKWl by I <««ilury ot t«lat>J4Y be able to raise money by mann- i The former Pathmadc building is too the moral support, the offer of their debris after the snow melts. This lot was where she was a com- Enterprises. vation Center is more conve- p.m.: Bingo in St. Michael School. four brothers, Stephen of small to be a. foorf supermarket homes -for being there when we needed needed for additional van and bus park- municant. Mrs. O'Neill, Surviving are her hus- nient than WCRtfield for most ing the collection site. Last year Cranford, Frank, Nick and You may take your pick of a $20 bill or one of the following gifts . (economic), but too. large to be a liquor them. And last but by no means least, ing during the recently concluded Friday April 16: 9:30 a.m.: Arts / 67, died at home Monday. band, Raymond; a PHONE: Third, under the new State Westfield's recycling operation, . our FireDepartmeot;Messrs. Merwede Ernest, and five sisters, store- (towii). So it remains empty. Special Olympics held at the indoor crafts for seniors, Community She was born in Newark son, Joseph; two includes newspapers as (father and son), Guertin, Pattersonr Cross Pen/Pencil Set Recycling Act, glass that is 'which Cranfprd ordinance allows no more pool. Your cooperation helped make this Center; 10:30 a.m.: Tai-Chi for daughters, Mrs. Ruth Mrs. Julia Mudra, Mrs. GE Hair Blow Dryer Schmitz and Bowne, who did Such a fan- dimmed m the hometown now 'well as glass, grossed $30,000 than ihree video games per day a great success. seniors, Community Center; noon: Lemmons and Mrs. Mary Terry "Baker, Mrs. Mary 233-4448 Oscillating Fan in money being returned and netted $10,000 for youth locationttown). That's too few to open tastic job during our emergency April 6. aerobics for seniors, Community Katko, Mrs. Ann PUsko Proctor-SHex Toaster GodBle?sYouAll JohnC. Engle Katfaerine Nickel, a brother and Igloo Ice Chest oups, and the westfield an arcade • or similar Center; i p.m.: Ceramics fpr seven grandchildren. and Mrs. Joan Pollak. Detecto Scale to the hometown. - 24Ma£AtfhurAve. esr arent-Teacher Council hopes establishment(economic). Result is that -• j« -'...JUJ The wedding will be in October at the Mancini of EUwbeth, a director of The ford Adult School and has designs Hie action takes place in - ny Bell as her brother Jamie provided a June^In addition to the six regular per- JjailCe StUCUOS^ tO Garden Club of New Jersey. All par- sponsor a program^ "Antiques With Chanticler Chateau, Warren. "MrTTteid, a graduate ^of David Flowers," Thursday, May 6,at 7:30 p.m. published in many books,, magazines, , bitted and rotting lobby of The Hotel more serious side to the action. A formances on Fridays and Saturdays, ' •am Brearley High School,' is employed JS an ; ticipants are to have their entries' in and calendars:- ',.-*. p-Baltimoreona recent Memorial DayThe homeless* pair trying to find a. place to an additionarnon-subscription show will The Fusion Dance" Theatre,based in _ The future bride was graduated from place by 10 a.m. ; . ' The program will be presented by Mrs. iVV Studio, Cranford, the Verne, Fowler Cranford High School in 1976 and from alumnium siding mechanic with a local Raymond Wismer at the Gopununity •••Mrs. Wismer will demonstrate the use I morning dawns with the realization that belong, Paraskevas watt hardnosed and be presented Sunday ^May 30. i: . Cranford, will present its annual spring School, Colonia, and the Dance Ex- Drew University in 1980 with a B.S. cdmpany. • ' • :j • •' The tea chairman ls» «•»• • - Advanced and professional dancers master judge for the National Council of- _ __- v* p*mmr%j in IDG Tickets may be purchased for $3 at the Carol Rausch, 272-7366, or may be pur- notice on each of the hotel's inhabitants. Zim Brotilers will perfram from The Yvette Dance participating dance'studios. Joyce and John VanBrunt announce Garden Clubs and an authority on; A bright light inan otherwise drab midst of this odd group.Hi* innocence Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Herzog, Baton Zeta Tau alumni chased at the door. Geraniums and, came through in his actions as we.Il as in Christie plays the birth of their second child, John Ikebana, the Japanese art of floral "thA ; Rouge, La., announce the birth of a son, Miss Verderrosa hanging baskets may be ordered in ad- surrounding was Karen Okulicz as his lines . , to sing here Joseph, on Apri\ 3. 'Maternal "grand-, Jason Matthew, on March 26., He joins. vance by calling Barbara Sands, girl" withi many names. A seemingly Three local Union College students ,-parents are Mr. and Mrs. Rutmayer and, . dim-witted but well intentioned call girl, Ken Schwarz, as Bill Lewis the are performing in three Agatha Christie two brothers, Christopher, 4Vfe, and to meet Flower arranging 276=7690. . , • ' ' .•./.•; •••••:, : • The. second annual I il i Evening of paternal grandparents are MtandMrs Ryan^ 3. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. is engaged to ' Okulicz was charming. She showed a night clerk, andWilliam Church, as Mr. .mysteries being played in repertory , Mrs. Richard Jackson of Tallahassee, Katz the manager, were the most nor- Jewish Music will be p t s< nted Sunday, FFSA . Jack VanBrunt, all of Cranford. John John Lamparter, 101 Columbia Aye., definite understanding of the character April 25 at 8:30 p.m, at 1 eifiple Beth-El, through April 25 at the College's Little joins a 21-month-old sister, Jill, at home - Fla., international president of Zeta Tau mal of the h6tel's inhabitants, offering a ; Theatre. ' . and Mrs., Ru,th Heszog, Sarasota, fla., Alpha, will be the featured speaker at i and played her part well off each of the good buffer for the crazier aspects of the 338 Walnut Ave. I > LOST: 351 IBS. in Succasunna. • '.•-'. . demo Wednesday Story of creation 1 formerly; of Cranford. Paul Cymbaluk ' main characters. . play. They both kept the play believable The concert will feature The Brothers They are: Beth Wolfe, Cranford; »the Fraternity's New Jersey Zeta Day, : Okulicz was at home with her lines Marc Poirier, Garwood, and Dennis 11 •'.. Jean and John Dillon, 15 Roosevelt, Announcement tuts been made of the The luncheon . gathering, being planned Mrs. Charles Tardiff, a flower ar* while still being funny. * Zim whose' repertoire-l inc ludes Israeli ranger and judge from Short Hills, will I and actions, keeplngjbe story Une con- Fitzpatrick, Kenilworth. . Ave., became parents for the first time A son, William Francis, was born engagement x»f Maureen M. Verderrosa, by the .Northern New Jersey Alumni. at WJMC program Recognition should go to Kristina and Hassidicsotjgs as well aa American LOST: 195 LBS. demonstrate flower arranging before a Igealed to its weaker points. The students are playing roles in •"It was a rnirade March 14 when their daughter, Kathleen March 22 to Lori and William Beckley of Tort Reading, to Paul R. Cymbaluk, son Chapter, is scheduled for Saturday at Wetzel as Suzy and Bud Bernstein as her hits, Broadway music, ^nd English, IN 7 MONTHS. tOST:88lBS^ : "In the Beginning," a drama of the | Each of the actors contributed to pro- "Murder After Hours," "Towards I'm sSII pinchirig myself." ' Ann, was born at Overlook Hospital. She Slidell, La. Mrs. Beckley is the; former of Samuel W. Cymbaluk, Cranford, and the Westwood Lounge, Garwood. joint meeting of Crane's Ford "John"; Anne Blair as Mrs. Oxenham; Italian and Rumanian soiigs. The duo "Tak about !N 7 MONTHS. Gardeners and Spade,:& Hoe, Garden first*sev«in days of creation,.. will be i ductidh, however, it did not offer a good have performed ill EJuivpe,"; Israel,. Zero," arid "The Unexpected Guest," miracles! I'm Sandy 7m the is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lori Nusek of Cranford. The baby's the late Wanda J. Cymbaluk, Zeta Tau Alpha is the third largest, Drew Militano as the cab driver,Josef Albrinht grandmothers are Helen Nusek, Cran- Club at the Community Center Wednes- presented by Salvatore Anzalone at the | vehicle for their talents. Some of the Australia and throughw jt America. which are being rotated throughout the 195 lbs, fighter mirade at Thin Edward Bolinski, Cranford, and Mr. and The future bride graduated from group in the National Panhellenic Con- >t was very funny but the humor did Cybulski as Paul Granger III; Wendy 12-day run. Performances are each Life Centers! ford and Catherine Beckley, Muskegon, gress, haying \45 active chapters on col- day at 7:30 p.m. This isjn preparation Wednesday Morning Club philanthrope Their eight records areaired frequently Mrs, Edmund Dillon, Jersey"6itj(. Woodbridge High School and attended for a closed flower show Crane'? Ford tea April 21-at 1:30 p.m. in Calvary IP Romer, Betsy Greenblatt, Mickey Col- on"3ewish radio programs ~ evening at 8 p.m. and two Sunday -Richafd Mich. . Middlesex County College, Edison and lege campuses throughout the United lead anywhere. The more serious on, Carole S track, Marianne Asinance; Dwyer will haye>M"ay 12 at the home of Alice Lutheran Church,' I overtones in the play, also lacked convic-^ 11 flH thw matineesf at 2 p.m. ; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin SuHivan^SB River- Rutgers - States and Canada- In addition to ac- Man Lvnn MB™"*" ' prtwHtiirpa- Reserved and unreseryjed seats are side Dr., are the parents oPa. son, Lightcap.- Barbara Ullom will co- —The program has been-arrangedr TT sUll available. CaU Tickets for each perfuriiiauce am $3 A son, Christopher Anthony, was born She is employed lis~"a personnel ad- tivities in conjunction with campus life, hostess. ' . . for the public Patrick Michael, born March 11. Grand- March 30 at Overlook Hospital to Tricia ministrator for Tecknit, Inc., Cranford. the fraternity provides a. variety of photographed and produced by Mr. An- evenings. and $1.50 for U.C. y zqlone and is students. pparent s are Mr. and Mrs Robert Kileyy, anH Potpr Viirinn t Pfatitrol Am» Mo : Hpr finnnw a graduate nf rrantnrA philanthropic i iHliritl Members of the Crane's Ford garden' nHiirlinfigrnrie therapy department, recently went to the CBS radio system. A series of slides |psycbic and former waitress, and Bar- •WH Cranford, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald joins a sister, Adrienne Lynn, 2 V4 High School and Union County Police loal n fundsfd , a National Service Fund and "The Hot. L Baltimore"-can be seen- Composer fejatured Sullivan Boynton Beach. Fla., formerly Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Chiefs Training Academy, is attending its Crown Development Fund. Lyons Hospital where they made bed- will be show with musical accompani- ioara Heineman( April Greene), an aging Friday and Saturday nights at 8:30 p.m. of Cranford. Great-grandparents are Mrs. Anthony: Iazzetti, Cranford, and. Union College* ,A member of the Mrs. Quentin Brown, 1412 Sylvan side flower arrangements for patients. ment for each of the seven days. ESfcu^iny^ gave very good perfoE- and Sundays at 7:30 p.m. through May RuOTRoden, chairman^wasassisted by s. They were funny and thought Frank Kiley, Bayonne, and Mr. and paternal grandmother is Estherjfurino, Policeman's Benevolent Association. Lane, Sctoch Plains, is in charge of ar- Marion Vossler, tea chairman, will be 1- 10 at the Celebration Playhouse on South in Tribune j article ~, but the audience was left ; 7 Mrs. E. J. Klumpp, Boynton Beach. Westfield. — '"^~~ Mr. Cymbaluk is a police officer with rangements. All Zetas in the area are Rita Eckhardt, Ruth Detering,. Evelyn • assisted by Barbara Walker, Gertrude Avenue. . Eric Watson, a painist and composer/ Selby and Helen Quinn. ' '; . Ranlet, Harriet Lppaus.Kay Porter, Bea •• _j where their lives were going. the Cranford Police Department. welcome'and may contact Mrs. Brown 4 was recently featured irtcjng with other' With The couple will be married Sept. 18 in 232-9580 for reservations.- The nominating committee met at the Sarnowski, Catherine Sizer, Beatrice • Charlie Walters (Mr.Morse), toe hard Buckley book reviewed members- of the Calck HdoTc Dance home of Doris Grayson, chairman, to Warner, Helen Younghouse and Agnes Theatre in a story in the Peter Winograd, concertmaster of the St. Michael Church. , • • "MarcoPolo, If You Can" by William International prepare a slate of officers for 1982-83. ZebrowskL Presiding at the Tea tablets Ilioldovsky concert Herald Tribune. He is the ?on of Mr. and Plainfield Symphony, will be the Physician to speak Assisting Mrs. Grayson were Lois will'be Janet Hems^rth, president, F. Buckley Jr. will be reviewed by Dee Mrs. David Watson < featured soloist in the symphony's The Great Get-Away Hildebrant. Barbara Ullom and Alice Margaret Coe. vice president. Helen Bori8^oldovsky O Farese at a meeting in her home today fourth cfinreri nf t\\?, spnsnn hn. Vail-Deane alumni The Paris-based IV- 13, eight- Lightcap. The slate will be presented at Hoffmann, hospitality chairman, and .. „ .„ concert originally ^..^.^v-v. of Um liteiauueilcpfGnent of the Col- April 18 at 3 p.m. at Crescent Avenue ony Club of Cranford. years/old and blends .dbnee, mime, Weekend on holistic medicine the May meeting. -•_' ••• . . Susanne Boyd, treasurer. April 6 at Westfield High School has . theatre, music and language in its Presbyterian Church. Mr. Winograd plan reunion \ . • ...... b^en rescheduled for Sunday at 3 p.m. at SPANISH MUSICAL " presentations. Watson and the group will perform the Beethoven Violin Con- i)r. Carl M. Desiderio, founder of the V-. WHS- The concert is part of a subscrip- The Spanish Repertory .Theatre will recently appeared in the Bucks County certo and the Carmen Fantasie by Bizet- Vail-Deane School, founded in '4869, HoUstiq Medical Institute of North Club presents rock garden slide show ),\ tion series sponsored b,y the Communit.y, present "La Corte De Faraon" (The Playhouse in Pennsylvania^ but Oie|jr Sarasate. • '... •• Jersey, will speak on "Holistic Medicine >'J' —-The orchestrarunder theHirectiolirof announces the annual meeting of the __Sunny Acres Garden Club sponsored a attended the program at the Community- 3tionJ^Jpcalci}ncert__Pharaoh'frCourt)r a^musical comedy, at""main-focus-iir-Europe-TVatSqn main- alumni wiU be~SaTurday,""Sprfl" 24 at il in the Eighties" ar-a meeting of-the cancelled when performers were 8:15 p.m. April 28 in the Little Theater at tains a" independent musical career as Brad Keimach, also will play the Moza/t Greater Elizabeth Section, National. slide presentation April 1 on rock Center. - '". . .'.' a Symphony No. 40 and the Mozart Over- a.m. The 1982 reunion will be the last at gardens by Dr. Donald B. Lacey, a Mildred Wagner, Helen Holmqvist lUranded in Boston because of the bliz- Kean College. Call 289-1311 to obtain free film, composer, a performer with two the Elizabeth- location. The school will, Council of Jewish Women, Wednesday ii:--" • tickets. •'•'•• trios and soloist ture to "Die Entfurung aus dem Serail." . at the YMHA, Green Lane, Union at 8 specialist in home horticulture from and Eloise' Gillan attended a hor- Call 561-5140. . move this summer -to. the former. Cook College of Rutgers University. - ticulture workshop sponsored by the Rapid weight loss . p;m. ~ • ••" -:.. ••••.. '•..•; GUITARIST Beechwood School, Mountainside. Guests from other garden clubs also Desiderio has been practicing holistic New Jersey Garden Clubs March 30 and Hudson, guitarist, Art group's exhibit opens at lib • Hunger free •Medically supervised •Personal ^ PAY YOUR AGE Reunion. activities will begin. with a SINGLES DANCE, 31 in Metuchen,. . • present music and reception' in ^ the „ F'owler mansion, medicine in Kenilworth for five years The Cranford Creative Gallery, will judge the Call today for a free consultanon: (201) 2728383-^ " A singles dance party lies at 12:15 p.m. followed by a tour of the campusr and is rh<* nr^'r^f inqpwtnp r fnr Art Group will hold a show for awards. He The.program (or those of us who have failed with "con\*nlibnatdieting methods. will be held Sunday at 8 ty, April 29 in the member show at the Cran- Students will -perform in a modern ford public schools. received B.A. and B.F.A. ASK ABOUT OUR MffOPROGRAM FOR THOSE WHO HAVE 35 LBa OR MORE TO LOSE. SAVE UP TO 50% pnj. at the Ramada Inn, Theater at Kean Col- ford Public Library from degrees from Brooklyn dance group and a piano and violin duo. 'Members and guests are invited.-Call Rt. lg, East Brunswidk. FAMILY AFFAIR tomorrow through April Tenth grader Pamela Haynes, daughter 964-0127 for more information. College and an M.A. in art Call 238-0972 or 325-1780. 23. Robert E. Lee, Cran- history from Rutgers. of Mre.CohtiieJ. Haynes, Cranford, will NURSE/MIDWIFERY ford, president of the THIN LIFE CENTERS accompany violinist Naomi Parker, Wechsler's articles have UC alums sponsor PRACTICE group, is chairman of the appeared hi Art News and - -WHERE MIRACLES HAPPEN" Your age detemffhes youi'room rats fora limited time East Orange, ninth grader. Art students show. . . _ at the beatrtUu. Ramada Inn*. Cheek In will exhibit "A Time-Line of Vdtt-Deane In Hillside, N,J. the Arts publications. Fornierty Nutrition Control History:" '""" """.. The public is invited to Memhflrfr of thp shnw 01)2652900 SatuulBy tiftttT uBanr/OllSHVlOl Persons wishing furthey infomatibri1 view the show free „ committee are Robert 3I4M"159O twMiuMWfc pay your age for a deluxe room. If it Is your Birthday, Offering pre-natal, delivery in. a hospital these hours: tomorrow, 2 *fd(201) 272«3a3 '452-1990 Akntown (215)77fr 1611 are Invited to callthe development of- Alumni, faailty, staff and friends 6575110 receive a FREE Bottle of Champagne! fice.' •' . • •••,•.'•-••. Union College will be off to the races on birthing room with possible 12 hour to 5 p.m., Saturday, 10 Torgersen, Nicki Guzy, Sou* FkMMd (201) 668O720 West Pafa BeKh (3O5Tf589*H6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Douglas and Hubert Ihe medaly wpovi^d dMjion d Lean Une. Me 'Minimum as* 21. Offer include*.room only. Friday, April 23 when the Alumni ANTIQUES discharge, after-delivery if no complications, 14 ywn of oredhKy and Integrity for those who need m Association sponsors its annual "Night through Wednesday, 2 to 4 Allcock, Laura Johnstone, Franchises available. Offer expires May 25,1982. at the Meadowlands" excursion. SHOW post-partum and family planning care. We and 7 to 9 p.m., and April Marga Voegele and 22 and 23, 2 to 5 p.m., Seminars set on Open to the public, the trip will cost also offer normal GYN care, e.g., pap smear Margie Mencher Reservations must be April 15-18 Jeffrey Wechsler, Jeffrey Wechsler 36\tateyRoaa $7.50, which includes bus transportation (test for cancer), breast examination, etc. curator of the Rutgers Art made24hpurs*in Exit f35 Garden Slate Parkway from the Cranford campus at 6 p.m., ad- NATIONAL GUARD ,-. ., a*»nce. careers, dreams mission, a program*- and a reserved ARMORY Work closely with OB/GYN physicians. ESTATE SAL baft. NJ. 07066 (2(M) S74urm., Frl., $*\.: noon-10 p.m Call Mrs. M. Armfield, R.N., C.N.M., M.P.H. the YW, 220 Clark St. Sun.; noon-€ p.m ATOURGALLtRIES SAVE bO* **ch on ont or r*o 234 North Avenue, Hillside. NJ. Jenelyn Block, who heads an affir- 1 •dmlattoni with mil K) step-parenting mative actipn consulting firm ^and has 351-3006 winners in audition WENDY A psychoanalyst at the • EAST ORANGE, N. J. Featuring: conducted seminars for businesses and MANAGEMENT Available Mon-Fri! 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturdays 9-12 noon m educational institutions, says the career Four jazz dancers from the Yvette By Appointment Only Training Institute for The Estate Of Tho Late Serena M. McCoy Of Cronfprd, N. J Ifofcttu Mental Health Practi- Comprising Antique And Fine Reproduction Furniture An QUALITY seminar, to be held four consecutive Dance Studio were winners of their Accessories, Etc., Comprising: m district audition Monday in a Talent Ex- tioners, New York City, .Breads •Rolls- woinen. will speak Monday at the Sat TW 8 Chippendale Style Centennial-Mahooony Chairs, Dtin po competition sponsored by the Garden can Phyfe Style Mahogany Dining Table, Small Size Hepple Cakes • Cookies "piCORATORS ''considering changes, for those, explor- Mothers' Center of Central Celling Paint white Style Centennial Manogony Inlaid Sideboard, Chlppendql •>v,.v,rl ing upward mobility or lateral-g^ewtbr- New Jersey. Dr. Deboarh P«rlodTB(an(cet .Chest77Louli;XVrSty!e~Carved And" Decbrotec Donuts* Buns Ready For Sp.rirv and for women who hope to identify They are Susan Rihaldo, Cranford; We ^^ 7 Pc. Bedroom Suite, Carved Mqrble. Pedestal, Victorian Anc Hirsch's topic will be step- Empire Furniture Including Buream, Sewing Tables, Carvec Pies • Pastries WALLCOVERINGS alternatives to their lifestyles." Nathalie Hay, Westfield; Kelley BedsT Hitchcock Chairs, Gooseneck And Other Rocking Chairs, parenting. Secretary & Slant-Front Deski, Etc., Selection Of Chippendale and 'learning frtym Sh h ncy_5ty|e _Mahoaan/_FjjmJture_lncludlna—Cobln«tmok«t'« 1 ici 1 ed for six sessions from 2 to 3:30 pm. Not TEuzabeth. The final area competition , Chests, Etc., Orop-Leaf, Gate-Leg, Console And Occas- before appearance at The Garden State her own and four ste- ional Tables, Tea Wagons. Nests Of Tables, Bookcases, Dinlni a therapeutic approach, the class will 272-3921— MANUFACTURING PAINPFOR SO YEARS explore the uncoruieoua to appreciate Arta Center will ho fcrtd in Wpwtfleld in Opp. Rustic Mill Dlnw Style Marble-Top And Inlaid Tables, Wicker And Oak furniture, The workshop is free Sets Of Chairs, Sofas, Wing And Occasional Chairs, Shaving r 709-715 BOULEVARD • 246-4300 .dreams. ."• •'•.. .••' •' ' -''':'•• •,..•• •'-' May: ~. INDIA RESTAURANT Burton Ooodman and open t» the public. It Othef. Mirrors, Andirons, tamps, Paintings" And Prints, Etc. 492 BOULEVARD Hours: Mon-Fri 8-6: Sat. 9-6 . Registration for both classes may be ;NOW! Serving in yoiir neighborhood...the finest InSian Food. will be at 8 p.m. at the HUNDREDS OF OTHER ITEMS TO NUMEROUS TO MENTION made by contacting the Wtfild Parliameittariansto meet YWCA, 220 Clark St., YWCA. Mouth Watering Curries, Lamb Pasanda, Chicken Tandoori, Westfield. AALTEN'S GALLERIES ROSE BUSHES the Cranford Unit of Parliamen- Chicken Mussalam, Malai Kofta and' Seekh Kabob, plus many UTABLItHIO 1914 TOWN tarians will meet April 28 at 9:43 a.m. at vegetarian dishes. ' • AiMtleiMeni.N. HoXenr and Sem ' . HERSHEY'S the Capital Savings and Loan, 655 All our food is natural and freshly prepared daily op premises. No additives PHARMACTl PTA garage sale Exhibit: Friday, April lo, 9 A. M. - 3 P. M. . "Our Main Concern /s Your Health" Raritan Road. Student members will are added. ^ , QR TAKE OUT Scarbrough's % 1 present a program,. "You Are the T N i m For Info. Coll: 201-474-0800 Members NJ.S.HA. WE ACCEPT • DEUCATESSEN '""""""COUPBN""""""""" ^ *' •• • •'•' • LUNCH • 6 Blocks West Of Garden Slot. Parkway Exit US Parlimentarian." Election and installa- Bring Your Own Liquor .. ** M^or Cn^t CiiUs Accpppd TuesSat Noqn-230 Beauty Salon ~ ~ *~ , ALL MAJOR • Catering •' Salads at school Saturday All Loti Sold Sub|«ct Ta 10% Buve^s Premium . PRESCRIPTION PLANS tion of officers will also take place. CALL FOR" O1m\ ^Jttftft 6|NNER: CUTTING - BLOWING TI«M1 - Cosh Or CotWtod Check - Free PonVlnp In Our UK • Party Piattara • Ourilng Firmi MUk SPECIAL : . .15* Orange A,venue School PTA: is RESERVATIONS •*- */O*/OOO Tues-Sun 5:30-10:30 WIGS • TINTIHG -JP&iMS „ J FREE DELIVERY 1 Ron Scorese and his • Tatty Sindwfchu • Mra. Smith's Ptn sponsoring'its aecond annual garage FOIL FROSTING . • Nawipapart • Loitary Tickets Connors to exhibit dpUa family have owned and • Hard RoUs Fresh Dally Bring in this Ad for a ^ I sale'Saturday, beginning at« a.m. ',. KENILWORTH IjOPEN THURSDAY NITE^j THE 276-8540 "Open I Days a Week" 8 A.M.-10 P.M. Sat. 8-7 The event will be held rain or shjne in- Elizabeth and James Connors, who CompWla Baauty Services Offered • 21 NORfHL20TH STREET operated Quality doors at the •chool. i operate the Good Fairy Doll Museum in Mon-Fri 9-9 Sal 9-8 • Norma ChaseAnd MaryAn n Hahoney, Cranford, will exhibit antique dolls at a ^Vl MEN WELCOME Decorators at the same 502 BLVD • 276-9328 ^ 10% DISCOUNT! chairmen, said; proceeda jfirom the sale meeting of the Elizabeth Chapter of idS Miln St. Cranford location since 1959. Rori will go twoard cWWreii'a enrichment Deborah Heart and Lung Foundation 276-1471 Tuesday at the ytfHA; Union at noon. is very much a part of ON JACKSON i PEIKINS programs at the school', • •• V'-' The New Jersey JANIMNFS Kenilworth and can IE0IPUNT ROSE BUSHES :• f •>::tf^|^-:i^--.^jg|||i||^;l Public Theatre POODLE SALON remember trolley cars run- 1 > Prasantt ning along the Boulevard. DIAMONDS A Hufl» tXxrtfpn To Cboo— fnm TERRIERS 1 2 YEARS Quality Decorators J WHY TRAVEL? A SAME JEWELRY -i I^IIK llflF I • lANFOf.OWtt.ION SPECIALTY LOCATION WATCHES m m m m m m *«• m «• • all hen at the COACHMAN SftS specializes In custom made slipcovers, ^ CLOCKS '" .1.- •.". Closed Mondays • ••••^••••••t * IUN0AV7.30 upholstery, carpeting, • f- ## 276-232B 276-6513 OatoAUwjWWwf fortMtftevln 1*73 draperies and blinds. They 464 BOULEVARD fifA 34 NORTH 20th STREET •±M t*.X -k^tMM 272-4704 ••"••8.5O are proud of the work they Mofl-Thurs 9:30-8; Fri M • 1« SOOTH AVENUE, E •CRANFORD do and take particular pride In the fact that all work is ism t,>-,. / KENILWORTH ILVI TV done on the premises. SLIPCOVERS TRUCK MOUftJTID CLEANING 9YSTEM8 DRAPERIES ¥®&Mn-:* -i STEAM* ROTARY SPECIAL •w bllAlWirCUAWNO CARPETING

Acourati Rug CUanlng, Inc. String 17* Arms ^ UPHOLSTERY "~; IT. CLARK RJiO7O6« For 31 Y—tsI INSTALLATION mST^s^r^M OKN TNUfM. NIOHT OF AU DRAPERIES lots 24(1 ST I KRUHLWIITH ILVI. Thru May 16 MOMl • Office - JN0U9TRY 6SJ Boulevard fUCOOSERVICf . 632 Boulevard • 241-2975 241*2975

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t»agel3CHANF0M) (N.J.) CHftONICm tbunday, April 16. 1MJ rtf. Boys track starts strong Thursday, April 15,1982 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Page 13

By DAVIPPRINGLE 7 . discus, I4ps was first,Parkhurst second i their first dual meet on Tuesday, and Panagakos third. by 64 pointsTwinning by g jscpre. of 97 to 33. Coming in first for Cranford "Many boys really came through i meat of Champions coming here were' Bob. Schuster, too and 200 m;todayi" • • . \ TffllPfflTH*"* iff i^iampfaw^ gtvun Vyir. Tony DiGiovanhi,400^n; Dave Pringle, •" The boys opened the season' at the • Jersey Tournament of Rob Kero and Craig Anderson tying in Kearny Spring Relays April 3.Jto the.1 P ifl bokMts third annual ningdisabled and orthopedkally handi- the 600 m; Andy fiiore, 3200 m and the capped children an opportunity "for sophomore distance mefiley, the team of statewide swim meet April M at the mile relay team of^ Eric Domaratius, DiGiovanni, Brown.MorrowandPringle Centennial Avenue Pool. / , . • < •. -7:r •_••'• -7 Pete r Brown, Bob Schuster, and_ came in firfet. . - -- In-the sophomore . • : i>£ • Athletes from all over the state who -DiGiovanni. two-mile relay, the team of DiGiovannf, . ••A . •• qualified uv regional meets will be Placing second for Cranford were Ken Morrow, Anderson and Pringle taCUlty prtjpp**ing in the finals here. Several placed second,: IosingVto^^rooklynJI ,Cranford youngsters are among the laxmaiiij, .800 m and-' John Miller; 3200 Placing third were Domaratius, 400m ; team in the final 25 yards by tenths of a | -. swimnieriMKho nay enter one or more second. The distance medley winners i of the six scheduledlevents. Pringle!, 800 m, and Mike Glucksman, ;.SCmTrAGRES€ LOOKING FOR A OUTSTANDING 2 FAMILY .3200. . ;•:... • .'• ••. ',.;.•;• • ."' ••• received gold medals and the two-mile.;; : The meet begins'-at 9i»*jn. „ . lembers of the Oraitfbrd High School In the field jumping events Brown won relay team received silver medals. J fa silty wW pUy a benefit basketball afUNGFIELPRUN 7 the high jump: Vic Cooper tied for se- At the St. Joseph's-Montyale Relays * HOUSE IN THE game ^against the-CranTord Police the third annual Springfield Run will cond. .Dave McGeehan won. the pole held on Saturday,, the sophomore 3 r> pertment tomorrow.at,8 pjn..at the be held Sunday. Post registration starts vault, Wayne Aldredge was second and distance medley team of DiGiovanni ,; a. CHS gym. , . }>,-'•'•,•' at 9 a.m. on the Meisel Avenue field. The Alex D'Addio swings while Jim Beadle waits his turn Tuesday against John Bush third. • ; ; • •. . ' . , :• Brown ,' Kero —and Pringle placed \ CRRNFORD flREfl? >roceeds will be used to purchase a two mile nut will start at lO.&and the Keamy. With Gabe Noto and Jerry Ballman oa the mound for CHS, In the weight events, shot put, discus, second for silver medals. * nc w clock in the gym for bwflfrffflraH and lO.tyX) meter run at li a.m. There ire The two mile relay team of Pringle, £ locals were defeated, 6 to 4S Phpto by Jon Delano,.- ~." *T& javelin, the hoys swept 27-0. Hick wrestling. ; . seven age' groups in each race. Tee Parkhurst won the shot, Brown, was se- Miller, DiGiovanni • and Kero placed j Admission is $2 for adults, SI; for shirts will be given to the first 500 «K cond and Jeff Davis 'third. Kevin- Lips fourth and received medals. ' stpdents. ",: ' ••••;:.•.',.• W^sr:/:*: trants. For infonnation call 6S4-3400V - won the javelin, with Parkhurst second Schuster, Andy Moore, Domaratius, j CHS tennis squad wins 3-2 and' Fbrti PanagakOs thjyrd, In the Cooper arid Steve Gordon also ran well. \ By TORI IANNlBLU Playing third singles, junior Jim MEDICAL EMERGENCY Macher won a tough two set match, 7-5, The Cranford High School boys tennis 6r4."••.'•"•••'.-• -• . • • .' ;••; •••••; \ team which includes a girt on Ms>1982 Despite a good effort,, freshman Ken sports scene Two five room "apartments- in move in condition with ALARMS roster defeated Rahway 3 to 2 in its Duffy Was defeated at first singles, 4-6, By LISA PERROTTA : Padula drew walks, the latter two sen- •FUII basement Gas air heat . spacious rooms; Both apartments have fireplaces, dining opening match. Snow postponed the next 4-6. A long three set battle faced Elise While last week's spring snowstorm ding in a run each. Legg and Robin Aluminum siding , Young rootf rooms, modern kitchens and modern baths. Terrific ex-, ;. For santor citizens, people who jum • two scheduled matches, against Roselle Palumbo at second singles before she disturbed just about everyone's routine, Kolvek followed with RBI singles to br- Living room, eat-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath plus 1 pansion possibilities for additfonal bedrooms on 3rd floor. and Kearny, which will -be played at a went down by scores of f6r 6-0, 2-6.the storm created havoc for the spring ing the score to 12 to 7. ,. haiMficappod or Bve alone. v , • Top location, convenient to town where 2 family homes later date. . EUse, a freshman who, has. played- for athletic season at Brearley. All' games Padula, Legg, Kolvek, Kopyta and bedroom and expansion on the second floor. A MEDICAL EMERGENCY ALARM Cranford won both doubles matches,, the Cranford recreation summer tennis and, meets cancelled due to the wet Curley each scored in the last inning to GREAT STARTER HOMEI are rare!/ team, tried out for the. CHS girls team and one at singles. The first doubles ground have been rescheduled or will be pull the Bears to within one. run of the MUST BE SEEN TO BE APPRECIATED - SEE IT TODAY COULD SAVE YOUR LIFEI team of Jeff Ziegler and Andy Amstutz last fall. Before the season got, under- in the near future. Hilltoppers. $ 5QO ' • defeated their opponents way, she broke her collar bone and, was Both the baseball and spftball teams Allyson Glembocki took the loss for JS E. HOWLAND; INC; Now Available at Anwicen S«uffly<« Qjfl For DstaOs 6-0. At second doubles, sophomore Mike unable to play. She tried out again did manage to play one game apiece Brearley; She walked three, struck-oiit '/}'.'•./..'/, '•"•!* Find the home you're looking for • Brennan and Junior Keith Hartnett bat- recently and apparently is the first girl before the weeklbng hiatus. The boys one and; allowed 14 hits; Glembocki will Realt Victor 0EWNIS Realtor tlea bacSlfnd forth to win, 6-477-5. 77 ever to compete oriiheGHS boys team. secured a 3 to 0 victory over New Pro- alternate with freshman Robin Kolvek AMERICAN SECURITY SYSTEMS vidence, while the girls were edged out on the mound this season. When not pit-. 13 Eastman St. Cranford in CLflSSIFIEOVevery-weekiFKhe 276-7618 ... KiiTii 4 CtNlEMMIAl AVENUE CRANFORD 12 to ll by Summit. .. v _ching, Kolvek will seeLactioh^at third WORLD LEADER jc*im

SAME DAT M PROCZSSING fourth Quarter); Dnlyn, 7; Rock, 4, Softball iryouts Softball camp Boys basketball and Grbnsbaw, 2, scored for St. Mike's. . /''a .. PERFECT NOW AVAILABLE The Recreation and Parks Depart- :,-•• ST.MICHAEL'1 '_ boards. The finals' 'again pitted St. ment will conduct placement for the in third year League play ID the Suburban Thestartof the St. Agnes Tourna- Michael and'St: Agnes. St. Agnes • Carol Donner, head coach at Westfield Catholic league for fifth and sixth muithad St. Mike's playing St. Vin- Jumped off to an early lead and led girls softball team Saturday from 10 grade ended with St. Michael cent of Sterling with the locals win- by ten points early in the fourth HOME! Free Pick-Up & Delivery a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Hillside Avenue High School, will conduct her third soft- School and St. Ago* of Clark tied ning 38 to 23. Slattery had 22;period. St. Mike's fought back and tied the score. Shawn Van Vllet School field. The April 3 tryouts were ball camp for girls in grades 6 through with 12-2 records. A playoff was Dulyn, 9; Rock, 2; Mike BrigandO, 12 this summer. Two sessions, from held ho Cranford with St. Agnes 2; -Mike Grimahaw,2, and John then scored on a three point play to 1>YC^RANSFER PRINTING rained out and last Saturday's had a winning 35 to 25. Keith Slattery and McGrath, C/orSt. Michael^. Mike put St. Agnes back in the lead for small turnout because of the holiday June 28 to July 2, and Aug. 2 to 6, will be Hark Dulyn led Cranford with 12 Brigando represented St. Michael good. Shawn Had 25 points and was' CALL FOH WMCE6 AND SERVICES in a foul showing contest, losing 7-6. the MVP o* the tournament. The weekend. '" v 7- '.'•'.. held at the nigh school field from 9 a:m.' and seven points respectively. * to 1p.m. ,. An All Star game was held with Holy Trinity of Westfield was the final score was 41 to 38. Leading Slattery. Dulyn and Matt Rock next Opponent in the semi-finals. Cranford were Slattery and Grim- Pamper yourself in this huge up. to the minute ultra . 926-2333 o^^^n^.,^ 212-6444 Only those girls who have not played , Players will be grouped by age andrepresenting St. Mike's on the The score was .tied qt halftime. St. shaw, 12 each; McGrath. 8: Rock, on the team before should come dressed skill level. The program includes funda- American Division team. The Mike's pulled ahead in the third 4, and Dulyn, 2. Keith Slattery was science kitchen crisp and clean, gorgeous formal dining to play. Returning players donotha veto Anierican Division won 38 to 35 with quarter and won 40 to 31. Slattery chosen tothe All Tournament first — NQW is the time to investJhat tax money intb a home ofr—: mentalsHof- thV-8portr~strategjr and Slattery and Dulyn tlli th with 18; iohn McGrath, 9 7 in the'leanvT " V " room with bay windowr 19x13'living roorn.71 st floor try out but must register at the Com- special pitching instruction: A ratio of laundry and den, 40x16' master bedroom suite fit for a your own....Come see this well-maintained cape cod munity Center ora^Dee's^Tees. ,. Situated in ideal location. Very spacious, living room, din- one coach to ten players will be main- king, gas heat, thermal pane windows throughout. A total available immediately. Three bedrooms, Ir, dr, new kit- tained. ing room, kitchen,- puwdrii ruom, den 6n first floor; b is for girls to custom home with Humilities too numerous to mention. —chon, enclosed fioiit putuli-, ft?ilsl.iBd basement with ax- """ : J .tractive vWppdburnin'g fireplace. SELLER, FINANCING ... . bedrooms, 2 >47 baths, 3 A cat "detached garage, 5 grades 4-8. For more information call' *he fist'sess^'Juirie fttf t»e*!conf. Hurry, make.appointment to seel?' -••-••:• 27*6767 or 276-6900. < Each session' costs $65. For further in- ' available to qualified buyer, Call today! fireplaces', lovely patia. Ideal Ifbr the executive who needs , AMP KST CONTROL ; formation call Carol Donner, 654-6400. v . to entertain! ' ' " , .^ •• " ' ", t FREE INSKenON! Down the alley Garwood Wpmen's M. ©iffang m The race for the league kad WaltonSlealty McPHERSON REALTY COMPANY VFW Ladies St Michael tightens in the Garwood Womeo's RtAir B Bowling League M two points COST 0* OBU&mOH ** l On a poaltian night, the Tfanmy'i '-.. W • 117 North Avenue W. ° . REAL ESTATE BowUngBeauta av> scpente the first three teams. Car- nnktiaam tmtpL three gama to wood Lane* No, 1 swept Shelf and 276-0400 IT1 move into icooad place. GasWprka ' SSM 41M Janet D. Barton, CRS.GRI, REALTOR Protecect Your HomHonie From: -m*^» Perfect 1« •' 57 4S Bar-while Laneo Industries was Conford, N.J. 276-7900 AMTS »BATS *BSS «aEAS «MCE •MOTH8 •RATS Ttoa «fa» bmried Ugh aerie* PermancotTrio 55 45 sweeping Knmek Roofing: Veriotti van Roaeaan Waryn, U»; Elled NoNamea 52 Construction downed Garwood 19 Alden Street • Cranford M*UOB- TICKS •ROACHES «6ILVEKFl.SH •SPIDERS Konttdi. Ml; BtarW Cymbauk, Lama No. I three times for seven "A GOO&NAMt IS BETTER THAN RICHES" 106 North Union Ave.Cranfofd 272-4020 Mi; Janet Ribdro, SOB; Ifima Spianen J3 48 •SQURRaS*ETC. ~ SweetRoUs*Bnm 4SH" S4Mtpoints. DiUrick's Pine Spirits eked Sflydtr.Sca; BemGargano. «M; Dot - out a 5 to-Hfictory over Boynton- CatTaihw, «•; Blly Calfrey, 474; NoPUJs 44"~S6 HanmHoptftUs 404 5M& Mulford withtach game Mng very Beta HanrcO. «7 and Boonie dose. A total of two pins was the miteuffiosmm BiIankr.4M. BadRnden 34 . « difference in~tbe aenea. - -— - W --L-- i Bowlers for the week of —High-games-were- recorded by ManreUCooatructkn 4> a LisaNichotson.. 1W;; Lots Gloa, 15»15» ; MMarg e BBonoey , 17S117S-1HH ; %%~~ QARWOOD 47V4 Ann WurnaklW. . lA);; Kathyy Shea, as;JJoanKarl,182;KarelK nB Bnmner Wrhel. 168-158-151; Elinor Barney, BRAND NEW 47^ 110;. Claire GallagaD. 179;- 195-181; Margaret Beokovicb. 1SS; 1908 VICTORIAN «s 41 MUST BE SEEN! BeynOidiPliimbing Delores • Freaelone, 173 and Edna OUver, 182; Debra Webtr, «2 45 Chris Kroyer. 171. . US; Carol Biley, 159-158; Noreen Serving This Area For Over 26 Years BoUarTravel 4m 4H* Ugh series were, bowled by Ohar,lSBjEverynLawler,lS3;Diane St Michael Schopl §th and 6th grade basketball team, frorffieT Karen Bnmner SOS; Joan Byrne, Guertin, 151. High series were 507 Kathy Shea Stt and Rhena Jeaa posted by Marge Bonney, 4H; Lois seated; Jim Augsdorfer, Joe McCutcheon, vMatt Rock, Joe Andreola, 4TJ The league win bowl ^tois, - 4OJ- Millie- -Wihel, KH; Karkowsky, Chris Davis and Frank Smith; standing; Mike Grlmshaw, April 16. Elinor Barney, 485; Lisa Nicholson, 453. Mike Prlgan^p, , K«*'th .Sfattaryy, Mark hulyn finri Mlka r - Opening day at the am avis, left, and John Perdek. Warinanco" Park tennis "crVjoodLaneaNo.I i» n BOROUGH OF QARWOOD . courts, originally planned Boyntan-Muiford ua 75 OARWOOD, NEW JERSEY PIGEONS LEGALS PROPOSED ORblNANCE NO. 82-7 The town sanitarian in- for Aprtl 10 nas been .%&£&* "* m AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND OR- postponed. The new date is veroimcooatnicuoo as MI BOROUGH OF KENILWORTH DINANCE NO, !l-8 OF THE REVIS- vestiagted, eight com- Saturday. • GarwoodtaneaNa 2 54 141 KENILWORTH. NEW JERSEY ED ORDINANCES OF THEplaint. s about pigeons last, SNAPPER DEPENDABILITY PUBUC NOTICE BOROUGH OF OARWOOD. 1074. PUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby Qvel n > BE IT 'ORDAINED, by the Mayor many fewer than in some that an Ordinance ol which Ihs." and Council of the Borough of uar- following It a copy was Introduced:ad , wood, that Ordinance No. 21 -8 of the recent years. .read ana passed on Ural reading• bvy Revise_ d Ordinances of the Borough —OotvSnapper mowers and riders have the patentedHi- the Mayor and Council of the of Garwood, 1874, be and the same . Borough of Kenllworth. at a meetlno I emended as follows: .on the 13th day.of April, 1982;and' A unique home.in.top northside Cranford location. Stone ^ a powerful'vacuum to stand grass up for a smooth that the said Council will further OPEN FOR INSPECTION consider theaaldOrdinance for final (a) On the westerly side from TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD Lovely RANCH home priced for quick sale. Features living fireplace in living room, big formal dining room, updated cut. and air flow to blast dipping* Into large grass pas*aoe. op.tha tith^dayof^ Mjjj. North Avenue, to a point ending 182 CRANFORD. NEW JERSEY ' *" exfeniied northerly PUBUC NOTICE Is hereby given SUN. April 18, 2-4 P.M. kitchen with beamed ceiling, first floor laundry, huge catchers.The Snapper Ittand21"Hl-Vac»push that the following resolution was' room, dining room. BEAUTIFUL MODERN KITCHEN. 3 larHq^aT' whicri Jlrie of SecondiKvenue. adopted or the Towftahlp Commit- jnow«ra both feature strong full length solid steel , parson who may (b) On the aasterly aWe from North tee oHhe Townahlp of Cranford al a bedroorns, Bath, Den + driveway. 1V7 Besler Ave., Cranford recreation room with wood stove. 4 second floor 7 .jlrYwIllbe given an Avenue,, to a point endl . lublki meeting held at the Municipal aides, convenient durable cutting height adjust- to be heard ooncemlng north ol the nortKerty cui > or s» lulldlng. 8 8prlngfleld Avenue, - Also includes aluminum siding-Priced in upper 70's- bedrooms & 2 baths. 22 x 30.foot third floor room with rnsnts frpm 1 to 3", and folding luindi** for easy .,. condAva-nue. ' 4 bedroom Bi-level featuring 2 kitchens, 2 full baths, fami- ARET ADLER Call for details..... , -- skylight and bath. $ 1 29.QQ. JonwghXIerk AU,j Ytovage. The 21" »etr-pfop«Med modal has a l'the terms" •••• BY ORDER OF THF ly rOonii hardwood oak floors, hot water baseboard gas- " heavy duty 6-speetl transmission togo 1 -3 ED OR TOWNSHIP COMMITTEE iherabyrepasiad. . . OF THE TOWNSHIP OF CRANFOAD fired heating system. Builders guarantee. Call for an ap- -mph. Options to mulch grass, shred " ince shall take effect I RESOLLJT1OM ^ leaves and remove thatch* add MOINO Inim*)"* , upon adoption and WHEREA8Jtla the oplolon of the pointment. .••.'•.. BARRETT & CRAIN according to law. Township Committee of the * Realtors • * ,* versatility. The Snapper ;Hi- ill 13.1*2 Township of Cranford thai It- Is In the PAlfiE, PAIGE & best Kitaratt of the Township to vac" rlolnff mower l*ati»res j. MCCARTHY. Mayor • to fomlsh profsa- sSSlfe^ s2K8*enol design and field D.S. Kuzsma Realty 2'Nou kd. 4i Urn SlriM -on theflo sWttno,easjrcul iCIeni.,. i Avenue Wast In Mi I. HriuJSlnvl ting height ao>stment, «*• 1980 M«» RICHARDS, REALTORS S faJt REALTY WORLD, J IH0« • 2J2-INIM) qut^ response steering ami rear mount- The. nee was Intro- iknSondAc Redtor " " J72-8337 flfSl.raadifiQ.oJ SERVING WESTFIELD. MOUNTAINSIDE. SCOTCH PLAINS. FANWOOD requlrsa All Offices Independently Owrred & Op«r«t*d CRANFORD. CLARK. SOMERSET COUNTY, HVNTERDON COUNTY and VICINITY and exclusive drive system witr* sealed 181 NORTH WE. CHANFORB 278-19M etmitm and gear* make the * Swl ,«pn*a»' and durable. Options Hke the rear RE [, In Ihe Borough of Qarwood, k:-e do&t btakto and ne# snow btowen or a* soon thereafter as Ihe aKachment offer i seaaonvereaWty. SBBs .rr^-v-v.- .. •«Bs»aat5Ihe rightg lo ooncamlngtha ; ^any-resWentotthe MAKE AMERICA QETTERU FREE PCBEIC FORUM WWwB'lChrfk'' «ESOLveD,as , Come hear about the solutions to financing the purchase or sale of '' "<^J " ~~^ii4'''iii''' "'; UWNMOWER <**:<> '':,-<•;" YOVH TUtS. APRIL 20 7-9V-m- , THE CORONET 925•Springfield Ave., Irvlngton, NJ. PRIVATE THUR. APRIL 22 7-9 p.m. THE WESTWOOD 438 North Ave.. Garwood, N.j/ ' Par<st include: MORTGAGE BROKER, BANKER AND LAWYERS CALL NOW FOR RESERVATIONS - 622-7585 • 245-3155 Limited Capacity - Refreshments Served

''.'•'>. i Sponsored By: . • Cranford Board of Realtors v Eastern Union County1 Board of Realtors • Newark Board of Realtors i "*"* - • Q'~~i.~

•" '•' '• v' •'' •—:'-^-— -^ j^iQBiXONK^ ' :.'/:, State approves funds forne w CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Recreation equipment okayed nilevj building to construct i '¥•, ting the town by stocking these items, ^ •• »• '^______,iw ByANNESHUttAN < Page 15 discussed by the Borough Council fues- Plans for ahandica iped ramp at the Pa«el4 ^"^••'i^ttSfei''^^" KENILWORTH- The -borough *as Boroughs Council introduced an or- Thursday,- April 15,1982^ day. •••.••.••••" • '•*.;• . • • • • • public library should be ready for sub- received final approval for $600,000 in dinance Tuesday setting 1SB2 salaries for borough officers and employes. Vb The purchase of new equipment for mission to the Board of Education state funds toward installation of new the Little League field was unanimously sometime next week. traffic lights, along the Boulevard. The viah Keenan, finance chairman, said it - provide* "minimal salary increases" at approved by council. At the recommen- McCarthy said borough engineer, project includes five signals phis addi- dation of Dominic Carrea, head of Donald Guariello, is completing the tional surface improvements on North •a time when many people are getting no Council seeks removal buildings and grounds, the borough will plans which must be approved by the Michigan Aenue between Boulevard and raises at all. Robert Woods, councilman, 1 purchase two park benches,' three steel ' local and state boards of education. Jeffersoq Avenue and will cost atotal of' abstained from voting on the first and wood picnic benches, two sets of The library is located in the basement $800,000 with the balance to come from reading, saying he was "not ready to with parade and fireworics galvanized steel basketball nets and of Franklin School. The ramp, which has municipal funds. vote." The final reading will be April 27- of 'tombstone' meters four permanent trash recepticks. been funded through a com- The ordinance, as well as others in- : By P.L. BENTLEY .v B^RO8*iiiE4aoSr:^ will be dedicated by the fire depart- Authority:.'., (RVSAL and JKiUam & Council members expressed cojeero munity development block grant, would 1 j troduced Tuesday, appears in this issue .'• GARWOOD-"They definitely, posit- KENILWORTH- Hie big parade laun- (Befit . . • j.•'..•.' ••• " v-••• • "~~.—~ '••»•""••' Borough Council Tuesday that bids for Associates, the firm responsible for in- that much of the equipment previously run diagonally from the building to the of The Chronicle. ively must go" was Mayor John Jb Mc- ching the borough's celebration of its* Spectators, will be invited to the fifst the work will jtrofaatyy he advertised in stalling the meters. supplied to the park area was destroyed corner of Walnut and Third Avenue. ' Carthy's mandate Tuesday night regar- 75th anniversary is scheduled to get Utue League game of the season at the June. Calling the project "long Reporting for the DPW, Woods said The tombstone-like melers were con- by vandals. Both John McCarthy, This new plan will eliminate an- ding the newly installed sewage meters underway at i p.m: Sanvday: It hsd ;|4»Sti«etPafSKt" overdue," Mancino said be was elated that the storm sewer catch basin on Col- structed under the recommendation of mayor, and Carrea noted the tables now ticipated drainage problems and will The following resolution was passed by'the freeholders to com- located in three residential areas of the been postponed from Aprils wben heavy A fireworks extravaganza wiH "take that it is finally ready toge t underway. umbia Avenue has been lowered and the sewage authority, however, they owned by the borough had. to be kept at decrease the slope of the ramp. . memorateKenihvorth's 75m anniversary. •*•.•' borough. "They gotta go," McCarthy rains cancelled the 'parade and plaiwatBttck Brook Park aJT-^J p.m. In contrast, Mancino said he was several others will also be lowered to were unaware of what the new system the borough garage and brought down If approval is not received by both. WHEREAS, the Borough of Kenilworth was incorporated in 1907 as a orderedjrfter demanding a letter be sent- fireworks. ' • ;>.'•:>. .;••••• "."':":':;':• Souvenirs commemorating the dia- "shocked" at reporte of 20. incidents of facilitate drainage. He said the depart- would look like/the mayor pointed out. when needed due to vandalism pro* boards, the grant must be refunded to result of the exertions of the Koiilworth Realty Company, a corporation vandalism to anniversary flags and ban- ment is working tofil l pot holes, but add- to .the Rahway Valley Sewerage Gov. thomas KeanVofftce confirmed The fixtures 4vere placed in front of blemsr: •••• .:' • "~ _;£•/•'•.•••••• : the county for reallocation. - mond jubilee will be sold in stores along composed of stockholders frbmEhnira,New York, and carved out of por- this week that the governor will attend the Boulevard and copies of the ners and "to the concrete, flower pots • ed, "when we patch one, another one ap- homes on Myrtle, Fourth and Union The equipment will cost approximate' ceremonies at.'the renewing statin borough's history -written by Robert tions of Cranford and Union, and in 1007 had ^ voting population of 73 which were installed to beautify the pears." A collapsing section of R 23 Streets with the fourth one being in a va- ly $1,200. Carrea has asked the recrea- ..vpto_gl_g__d_^_^v_;^,._',''_...... , r . •: „'" ,...•,. '_r.>.J-n-im borough for. the 75th anniversary Street is also being replaced. cant area on Lincoln. tion committee to pay for two of the Several thefts rplriiratinn,'.-.- •'•,.'; : '/,;••; .-.,_/ Woods also reported mat the white School elections y • In Addition to Gov. .Kean, guest of the Scandinavian c^^ iW"1 The mnynr tr^r. the Borough Council tables since two are.jcurrently used for niversarycommittee^ , • •< -V;-rr. ;- speakers wtlTinclude"•'Rep..Matthew substance ^which_ was found blocking he woulcVhave a letter hand-delivered at summer recreation programs. No deci- many manufacturing Industries located within the Borough; and wheni they are .picked up for . sewers in several locations has reap- are Tuesday • Saturday's anniversary- parade will Rinaldo, Assemblymen Chuck Hard- , WHEREAS, the Boroujgfeof Kenilworfh has been an integral part of the. «..,... j^^^^Qy passed tonight's RVSA meeting to be held at 8 sion was made on that proposal. ' reportedi Jo ^police combine with the annual little League wick and Edward Gill, Sen C. Louis peared after, the sewers were cleaned. . • • */ • . '"*.'<• ' •' p.m in Westfield. The letter will offer Also under buildings and grounds, County of Union since its incorporation and mis Board wishes to Join to There had been, speculation that it * GARWOOD-A sewing machine was • parade and season opwrtng game. Bassanot state senator. John P. ordinance which provides fora $500 fine GARWOOD- Don't forget to vote two alternatives -"either they are Carrea announced bid specif icatJons are reported stolen from a home on Willow ' the congratulations to the citizens of Kenilworth on this historic occasion: for vandalism to anniversary resulted from a long term buildup of Tuesday in Jthe blizzard-delayed Festivities willget underway at 1 p.m. Gallagher of the 13th District who is a NOW, THEREFORE; BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of Chosen removed from the residential area and being prepared for a hew roof on the Avenue. Fred Snow said the machine,' in two places. The parade will begin Kenilworth native, and several former memorabilia. Mancino reminded soap'and other insoluable materials. Board of Education and budget elec- put in an inconspicuous place or they are borough garage! He said the work needs Freeholdei»of the County of Union that it does hereby extend its sincere Mario DiBella,.councilman, said that valued at (560, was found to be missing .from DiMariotv Park on S. Michigan mayors and mayors of neighboring residents that many souvenir items are tion. Polls will be open from 2 to 9 completely recessed into the ground." to be done and Joseph Stibler, public April 9 from the basement where it was . congratulations and best wishes to the people of the Borough of : being sold to commemorate m* anniver- a recent inspection by state law enforce- jun.,- ., • '•'• '•;• • '."•;•• '"''.• "• . Avenue. At the same time, ceremonies towns. • .• ' ••". ••..:•.•••••' •' -$ob.by Varela Krause wanted a'snowman so his auYits Lorraine and works supervisor, is drawing up re- kenilworth upon the occasionof the 75th Anniversary of the incorporation ment officials of the municipal lockup The mayor intimated if nib corrections last used about a month ago. Pohce said will begin in front of Borough Hall. The Cammarota said the parade probably l sary, and urged everyone to support the The board has rescheduled its * Denlse Vtirela, right, Joined by brother David and Kevin Gallagher, quirements. '•••.- of the Borough; and found no deficiencies for the second year were made by Killam or RVSA, the there appeared to be no signs of forted ~ parade will pass the reviewing stand at will not be rescheduled if it rains again cooperating merchants whoairesuppor-, meetings this month. The workshop fashioned a seasonal Easter bunny for.hlrn 1n front of his home on Plans for the new borough hall are entry. • ______BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this Resolution, suitably in a row! Mancino attributed the inspec- will be Monday, Aprfl-19 and the borough might revoke the electrical per- about 1:30 p.m. when the band from .Saturday. ,,'.. 'Myrtle Avenue. Bunny endured the first thaw but not the latest one. moying along smoothly, Carrea. an- An electric guitar, a pocket watch and prepared, be presented to the Borough at its Diamond Jubilee Celebra- tion results to "good administrators in reorganization meeting will be Tues- mits issued for the installation. David Brearley High School will paly 7 nounced. Dick Berry, architect, along chain, and a small amount of cash were Planning Board the Police Department, ' citing former day, April 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the Dominic Carrea, councilman, had "America," Dkk Salway, mayor of Cranford, of- with electrical and mechanical stolen from an apartment on North chief Joseph Ventre and acting chief, music room of Lincoln School. The also requested a formal complaint be Congratulatory fered an accolade to the boroughi_fdr its engineers, will meet next week with the Avenue on, Friday. Don Mendoza - ' monthly business meeting will sent to the two groups. He advised the Par] an on by state, county i 75th unnlvenary. "I wish EenUworttr H hormigh clftflc and coll •^f* *"*T police'who said that DiBella also noted that last month five foUow. mayor and council that 16 such unites ~ the parade continues to the Brearley 0>e best and 1 hope it doesn't rain," he treasurer to discuss the' plans. A entry was gained by forcing open the KEMLWORTH- The Planning Board members of the police department at- The Union County Regional High had been installed in the communities By D.L. BENTLEY will be offset by an insurance claim for fiM for qrwdtwi- program aHpm flu* said at the townahlp meeting in tingg hld^kild frontdoor; reference to the earlier postponemenir notified the mayor and Borftugh tended a series of three-seminars on Scliuul pistrict2witl have its serviced by the RVSA and half had been GAHWOOD- Harking will,be pro- the police car destroyed in an accident Brearley. chorale srifl singJ_fte«oHia- ment headsh , the mayor and Carrea. , Three coats and a hard hat were taken Council that it feels its 1962 budget is in- various law-enforcement-subjects on- organization, meeting_T.uesday, ..placedpresidential areas. Garwood, hibited on Maple Avenue off North late last month. The insurance company tion department wiH present a gyn> Kenilworth has "been a pretty good ; The citizen's advisory board, which from the cab of a truck at the Getty sta- adequate. In a. letter addressed to their own time Attending the seminars, April 27 at 7:30 p.m. at Jonathan however, got the brunt, the councilman Avenue near the Diamond building pen- will be paying just over $6,300 . nasties «how-andthe new ambulance ' "ior to us," he said. was instrumental in bringing the project tion on South Avenue. Steven DiTrolio, Itfayorlivio Mancino, board secretary which were arranged by the New Pro- Dayton High School, Springfield. A pointed out, with three out of four in ding final approval by the Borough A $950 trade-in allowance will be given about, will be asked to review final Scotch Plains, owner of the truck, John Filipek explained.that legal fees videncePD, were Lt. Brent David, Sgt. regular meeting of the board is plan- public view. Council. An ordinance to this effect was by the car dealer, Warnock's of Booton. plans. Carrea said Berry hopes to have discovered the items missing late Sun- Teaching jobs cut at Harding have been incurred as a result of recent William Hugelmeyer, detectives ned for election night at:fl p.m. at If the meters have not been complete- introduced Tuesday on the recommen- The borough will, therefore, only have to all the bidding documents ready by the day night. He said that some toolsj»hich charges against the Board by Ronald William Dowd and Harold Scbeidegger, Dayton. ly hooked up, the mayor stated, they dation of the police committee. pay $400 fdr the new vehicle. end of the month. ''"..''• • had been under the seat in the cab were MILWORT] KENILWORTH- An anticipated teacher, will teach six periods each day Scorese, and that the suggestion that and CpL Victor Smith. ; would not be put into use until the situa- A public hearing and final vote are Georgiana Guerrieri, councilwoman, reduction in enrollment of nearly 70 instead of seven. The industrial arts and minutes of board workshop sessions be tion was rectified. . scheduled April 27 at 8:30 p.m. on behalf of the streets and roads com- Although no final approval has been found under the truck and that someone. """ " .' ~ itheBoanhof - Edward Tripcka.Garwood'8 represen- _ The public abo will have an opportuni- mittee, requestedi-specifications_ be made,' the borough. is expected to had apparently tried to "remove the «*! Education Monday'....to eliminate two* Misr LittfeLeague tative to the RVSA, will.present the ty to discuss the 1982 proposed budget at ^awn"u]p~tbpurcMsehewsnow~plfiwihg receive-a $65,000 communlty::develop-" speedometer"; : teaching positions and reduce the -borough's demands—at tonight's, the same meeting. Council has budgeted equipment. ment grant to purchase Stoeffer's prp- would gain' needed expertise by atten J> Stroyt to hltild n parking number of hours of three ouWs for the Their, salaries will be reduced accor- meeting. .""'••• •-,..-. an approximate $1.6 million,, which The coUUcilwoman said the borough' p dingly. . ding the annual planning conference of 1962-83 school year. . the League of Municipalities. ' applications ready would raise taxes seven points. It owns a 22-year-old snow plow and a lot. Anthony. Richel, school superinten- assaulting police reflects a $28 a year increase on a The tending jobs being eliminated An additional expenditure of. $6,100 25-year-old salt spreader both of which The mayor said a recommendation dent, —GARWOOD— Applications-for—Miss- $40,000 assessed horne.—•-—: :: nrtt an Erifllinti pnaition currently IM»M ,400 to send eight board: developed a number of problems during had come from the^^grant committee to enroflmeht at seventh and eighth grades KENILWORTH- James-Barren is in Little League 1982 are available at Un- Two ordinances amending the finance set fo^April 23 , who is on maternity members . to the conference, would the storm last week. Joseph Stibler, appropriate ; the money. However, . has declined 20 percent in the past four the Union County'jail in.lieu of $3,500 cle „ John's. Hidi's, Quick Chek, and taxation statute were unanimously leave, and a fourth grade teacher. The "enable us to perform our duties more superintendent, will price new models. there will be a public hearing next week -GARWOOD- The Garwood PBA will yeara but there has not been a bail on charges stemming from a family Cumberland Farms and the police sta- approved oh final reading. The or- latter reduction wfll not result in the ter- proficienUy," the letter explained. Mary Jane "DeHanes head of the laws and a final vote, before being submitted hold its annual dance at the Westwood, corresponding staff reduction. He said argument last Thursday evening. tion. for public schools dinances establish the powers, duties to the freeholders for ultimate approval. mination of a teacher as the retirement Mancino said that the letter is "just a and licenses committee, recommended North Avenue, on Friday, April 23 star- this is the first time in the 27 years he ' Police were summoned to Barren's All Garwood girls between toe ages of and term of the department of T;he council is. anticipating buying of Dorothy Matthews in June will leave comment," adding, "They're not get- council increase the dog license fees ting at 9 p.m. . that position' open, for another teacher. has been at Harding School that the staff home on North 9th Street and arrested 8 and 13 are eligible. Applications must assessments. • • " - $1.50 nextyear to $6 per dog. The recom- Stoeffer's delicatessan and tearing ting it, they have $2,600 budgeted for the nun after he assaulted two officers who The affair is the organization's only Mrs. Matthews, a first grade teacher, has been reduced in the upper, grades be submitted by Friday, April 23. The should enroll soon Council agreed to purchase a new mendation Was unanimously approved. fund raising activity and benefits the .has been with Harding School for 25 despite a steady decline in students year." ••'•'•• •'•-•• . were trying to subdue him. He is charg- winner will'-be selected during opening police car for the sum of $7,734. The cost She said it costs the borough more Frank Brandofino objected to sending PBA Retired/Sick and Death Fund. .years. .• •' • ' ••;,_•• "..- •'..'. ;• from 1,100 in 1971 to 738 this year. The . ed with resisting arrest as well as mak- day cermonies Saturday, April 24. • rtioney for rabies clinics and ASPCA Woman, sentenced board members to the conference, say- GARWOOD- Parents" who intend to Tickets for the dance,' which includes enrollment next year is expected to be ing terroristic threats and aggravated Thomas Dolly, Little League presi- membership fees than is taken in Other teaching positions being reduc- ing funds would be better spent "on enroll their children in the first grade of a buffet, arei $67perTcouple..'.Theylate'. 670 students. He said the seventh and assault against Lt. Henry Moll and Det. dent, announced players are conducting Garwood public schools after they have Patrolman advances through license fees. ed hi time are at the seventh and eighth complying with laws." Brandofino and available at police headquarters or may eighth grades nave dedindd from 280 a Harold Scheidegger. the annual booster drive. Residents are attended kindergarten .elsewhere are GARWOOD- Robert McCarrick was. in store robbery grades. Robert Dimino, an English Scorese have been critical of the Board, DeHanes said the committee is con- be purchased at the door. decade ago to 206 this year and an an- urged to buy a booster to Jhelp defray asked to register their children before upgraded from a class B to a class A sidering an ordinance to license cats as ticipated 176 next year. claiming they have not been able toga m operating costs. . April 30. patrolman by the Bprough Council Tues- " GARWOOD- A local woman has been access to some of its records as they are ''well. Although the state does not fined $100 and placed on probation for The board also accepted the resigna- Library declares Umpires will meet a the field house day on the recommendation of Walter It wasn't hard to find 75 reasons why Kenilworth Is Great. Reportin entitled to by law. . James Callam, superintendent of stipulate that felines must be registered five years after pleading guilty to first Four residents Election Tuesday tion of Katherine MoDoy, a teacher of Tuesday at 7:30 pp.m. Additional um- school, said the education committee of. Maszczak, chairman of the police com- as it does with dogs, it would be in the O UOpBil Spanish, who is on maternity leave, 'ine -mitteer degree robbery of the Cumberland pires are needed > Boys 14 and older and the school board is studying ttrst grade -borough jurisdiction to institute an or Farms store last Oct. Araifona honored anuiesiy men who are interested are invited to enrollment in order to anticipate staff- Michael ,Wilson was appointed;:^--^ distribution license No. . Clark, (lew Jaraey «*2,trtSounft ahall taks affact upon ixiMlcatlon YEAREARS ICMI AND 10ft? '' ' Tennla Director (Municipal Couoa).. 2006-44-003401, heretofore laaued Dated: April 8 & 16,1082 . • Aid Building. Marie Simone's. classes at Harding proposed a "Frankenomics" plan to ingfield. attar final paaiana In tha mannar 8ectloTt TtVannuai salaries of tha fol__>wlno offlelala endernp to Raymond Beebe, trading aa The Fee: $13.44 . ' ilaaa. Applicant tar Ha Townah D ol Cranford for the yeara 1881-M shall be aa hereli Claeslflcatlon Ihiver^ordered School have written letten to Preskknt The new election date hascaused • rTavnTitsCy. -1 r itofui union provMad bylaw. •<—.- the Townahlp ol Cranford for the years 1 Accounting C KENJLWOBTH-.Vincent Fevola, III*. Block 1S9, Lot 18 RICHARD J.8ALWAV;. forth opposite their respective claasHlcatlona: ^Ronald, Re^gan» Sen. WjOluoi Bradley, , The project was an attempt to make the poBtponement-of a bond referen- Chairman o> tha Townahlp Admission ' chairman of the Planning Board, did not •front alteration: approve*!. Par Annum Salary Ranoa Aaalatant ( WInaTaam fwlntar) BaU&Wtobe Comml tt c OMnfiTaam (aummar) the' students aware of governmental dum for repairs to Harding School condwona. • •••'•'•" ofif* ! ** Minimum Maximum Aaaistant ( and Rep. Matthew Rtatkfe^qYessing deny the public access; toan y informa-- -gswirrspfuason»M2.,Mr. a **. for school creating ouama ch SwmTaamfwIntar) ILWORTH, NEW JE Tha foraoolno ordlnanca waa In- abar o Townahlp Commlttaa 1.200.00 2,100.00 Aaaistant ( their concern about "Rjaganniniffl" structure and introduce them to the from May 6 toMa y lit. " tion, cone inded J*». John Ba(3!aVi^u«Sa Orhj». ««i laa*Jlkjn4M m MW ol oon- 00 11720 A0 Aaalatant C ch Swim Taam (aummar) niduPUBLIuC NOTICnu i iL,Ee UvjoJ ; BlocfcMftUttBVC&iatiuctraararf thSbuaeaWoa.wManhour. treduoad arid paaaad on first raadlng Account ak POBUC NOTICTICE IS heraby given that an Ordlnanca ol which the following exam andihe "tte* Pedendtaai** •--•••-^^-'•••••- natponsibUitiesoUitixenship. " lWl f th 79 lala a copy waa IntroducedIntroduced ,re reaad and passed on first raadlng by Ihe Mayor and cleaned Saturday CouncthoCthf f tthha Borough of Kanllworth, at a meellngon th» 13th day ol April, "GARWOOD- JamefiJacCoy of Scotch- The students had strong opinions "no violatMn whatsoever" in VltelStatlstlca 1982, and that tha said Council will further consider the ssld Ordinance for • AquiUca Dlractor final passage on tha 27th day ot April, 1962, at 8:00 p.m. at Borough Hall, Plains has had his drivers license GARWOOD- The clean-up of the L.it- about proposed budget cj)bvfojr student records toTBe public- AMjatantUbr^plr^to, . KenllwortnTVlew Jersey, at which time and place any person who may ba In- Club women will "VFWelects slate Public Worfcs tareatad therein will ba given an opportuMfr loba.ha««l.coQc»tntno aald suspended for 60 days pending, re- tle LeagueField by Cub.P.ack.^T&.has loans, decrease to social security ._...... nlairatof r 3X.-^^_-«jL.»... 18.984.00 *!"*™n!"1 minatlon oi medical evaluatiftri' by benefits, : -to-public records was made by Ronald -Aaalatant to Townahlp Engineer - • - Flald> MAROARET ADLB been rescheduled trom Aprlfy to mis Assistant Townahlp Administrator Haad 5 • Borough Ci ' 'physical fitness unit of Ihe-state Saturda_y, starting at lp.mT tScorese at a March 9 meeting of the Bus Driver PRQPO8ED ORDINANCE NO. 82-8 afolFIra Motor Vehicle Bureau. ' ^SSS^^'S^'M-. depoiale bonnets ^ meetim? toniiAt Borough CoundL Scroese called for Head Coach Sw|m Team (winter) BE IT ORDAINED by tne Governing Body ot the Borough ot Kanltworth, In Parents and friends of the Little af of Police He»d Coach the County ot Union, New Jaraay aa followa:. .;•..!•'._. Judge James Leonard ordered the , Favola's removauV from office. -Scorese Instructor *> SECTION 1. The following officers and employees of the Borough of League are invited to help ridth e Myrtle KENILWORTH- Original bonnet 8,117^20 Inatructora - Recreation Program Kanllworth ahall receive annually as compensation for their services the suspension Monday as a result of an ac- Avenue field of glass and other debris in KENILWORTHf- Ekctioniatofficer* ' bad sought munites and tapes of Plann- giant-Typial • 181380.00 sums sat opposite their respective offlcea or positions: decorations is tonight '• program at a Community Davalopmant Offlcar cident March 21 In which McCoy claim- preparation for opening day April 24. wiU take place at a meeting tonight of ing Board meetings, some of which CoiulructlonCodaOfflclal. BulkJIngSub- I 21,903.00 meeting of the KenUwertfa Garden dub 20.8S7.2O .... •v 3SO.O0 ed to have blacked out before running in- Students find a lot the Veterans of Fore^n Wars Post B30 could not be found. - coda Official and Zoning Otttcar 3.10- at the home of Evelyn Mindas. Plans :> nt >n<>r< . Court and Vlolatlona Clark UBseo *M Aaaaaaman*8earehpf«car 3SO.00 to the rear of a parked Garwood patrol •t«pjn.attla«VFWh»lL/ "•:>. «•' Mwiriiw tffW ^**l ^ ^"g^ *'w^ ihi * Court and Vlotalkma Clark 13.00- Senior Clark-Borough Clerk's Office 11.23*00 also will be completed for the annual Clerk-Borough Clerk's Office 8,480.00 car on South Avenue. The care was Officers, nominated at a recent meeting last Wednesday that he had tha following I to tha Chief of Pollca Mayor 750.00 Canvass to begin floral exhibition in May at the meeting .are: commander, Howard MftOM announced: Townahlp Clark Racraatlon Aaalatant Council . \v . 500.00 totally destroyed. to learn in NYC KeiulwormStoteBank.Juh>Baroarise checked with other members of the. 1-82: Application, of Vincent A. Tnj Racraatlon • Maintenance Consumer Allslrs Director ' - 600.00 (a tor the "Improvement^d Ann BtraaT. BuontenScVMarann Bulldlna for a Recreation - Superyiapr I 8,300.00 Evans; -senior vice commander, board, its attorney and recent ap- ro 4.1Bto4.4^Vhour ' Cat GOaftaWUUUlv ' ' • ' ^ ' ' ' jartance from the raoiilramenta o? Hrectoro Registration Clerk ParKTUne CUrk-Aaaeaaor-a Office > KENILWORTH-^ve students from Richard Kugelmaim; junior vice conv plicants and concluded there was "no "••• • • s"-'- 8ao. VflCSJaof tha Zoning Ordlnanca) )j rector o . Asalstanca (Part-time) RaSlstratlon Manager Tax Colleotor Treasurer 12,704.00 for unlicensed dogs Judi Vogler sni itmnie LeikatBkw manden, Douglas Moon atid Richard to pannOM aubdivlalon of alrSS Mractoro Ic VVortca (only) 390.00 Windows broken at David Brearley High School wore cause for any type of disciplinary ac- iEast on Mractoroi itkxi and Partis ' Utility Workers • Racraatlon feffiRU-hrt Office 11,«eo.00 •tte»o>dbortwitare and flower cu '•afeff- Tax Collector'i s Olflce 8.809.00 ..GARWOOD- School crossing guards among a group of «^fted and talented ut Peon; chaplain, Bruno ZaunpagUone; 4.Soto4.dO/hour March aft andd SI i h 1 dlan of Buildings and Grounds will conduct a borough-wide canvass for by the Hew »||jiye>:^^e)»»Py.J«_fiff|)4» tflJttW.. - coatacil utiva j> Crossing Quarda 3.00 lo 3.83Aiour aolUUaali clal Pollca " 3.2Sto3.80yriour Center Street home unlicensed dogs on Saturday. GraoSr; Jufej advocate/iert loraroanl arkfBtarworapher-Polloe Department 9,190.00 ; the Univenity of Maryland o>i«rtm«it 17.J •He the resL.T .._._. 7,800.00 Licenses for dogs over the age of New York Cuy recently for a surgeon geoerat, Nicholas 10.081.00 GAEWOOD- Two incidents of van- 1.0.127, Malntananoa Man .,, ^J Attomay ehall ba entltlad'to receive compensa- unlcipal Court Clark seven - months may be- obtained at .'kindflf f^Ti^tiw^T fjprratjsaff_ • - fton for atflltlonaJ sarilcaa rendered, aa may ba_auTRorlMdby tneTownahlp ^P!Pfoaa^BBja|B;. •• / .;> vy.....*• ...... v •. .^i^l,.,!! i i .i^,:/: .'..;. VVf'^,|.j^^7..V^'V" i;"./^'. ia^iiiSiriullnln^^ • .3 70.00 to M.00/week ORDINANCE HO. 824 Driver hits >d {nstructora-Arta & Crafta 70.00 to SS.OOrwaek AN OBOINANCE TO AMEND PUBLIC NdTlCC la hereby given L .''•&• •••••-••;• ::^:^S«%.«^M*i^fr..f^v''.«y» raptwr «d tuparvlsortvenlng 2.28 to 2,78Aiour CHAPTEH 10. AHTICLE 2, OF THE that an Ordinance of which the -Parka e. Playground REVISED oriDINANCES OF~THE following la a copywaa Introduced, ""•sm' urt SupervfscV - BOROUOH OF OARWOOD. 1974. .. read and passed on llrst reading by 3.2Sto3:50mou3: r JOHN j. MCCARTHY. the Mayor and Council of tha ; J 1 10.00/court night Mayor Borouah of Kanllworth, at a meeting telephone »«Jpflg_ift>r7;',:isIi:,tv.j.:<>:..-,.^,, ..!•.•.,_..••...... • ,• ; 30O00 1440 fflcar-Actlng Dog Warden ATTEST: on the 1Jlh day of April, ttftt, arid 4.80/hour DORIS POLIDORE thai the aald Council will further consider the aald Ordinance for final 1 Borouoh Clerk Tha Borough Attorney ahall racalva raaaonaale teea lo/ servlcea partorm- STATEMENT passage on the 11th day of May. ad nOtlncluoad In salary. The foregoing ordinance wsa IMF{,M a i 8Oov0u p.m. at norouoBorougnh rwrHaA, All othether mnicipamunicipal employeeemployees ffor which no aalariaa are otherwise provid- adopted on final reading altar public Kenllworthllworth., New Jersey" , at whic' 'h pole yomdHwIHba ed, except members ott awieneedd profaeaton, ahall ba paid al Ihe prevailing healing on Ihe 13th day of April, time»an and place anai y person who may Uraator of Publlo rale which ahaH not be leas than lj.10 or more than 13.70 psr hour. be Interestenlersstad ththereie n will ba given an Urn* or part-llma baala aa opportunity to ba heard concerning i»W Ordinance. , GARWOOD- James • •^^•••^•••;.; Borouah Clerk n olttolale or an'lgjW* ) M {jS'^*i 0" ' .. Jl ba paid for tha legal holidays avoided injury-but his car RteJ-i'lifelk Lnoaof theywaf aa may be oatarmlnS was heavily damaged :M':^ij^^^^^M^^M^-:<^, xr£Wd?TE.K nte April 7 when he hit a tele- rp^cJo^naflcalnoohalaUnlhafawlthara (SOV ^^paW^'piS. phone pole on South 'An Or- Avenue across from the s# and Compensation. led and Pathmark exit. rl (^HSlfl otlon J of Ordlnanca No SM entitled"An Or- • and Compenaatte^' is again sdopiled and MulcAhey told police llcom'pe^tof^herelnabove aat forth la retroactive aa of that he made a left turn i Ortfrwnoa MwU lak« attaot upon final paaaaga and out of the store parking lot MANCINO, Mayor and had toswerv e to avoid LIVIO MANCINO. Mayor hitting a car in front of DORIS POLIDORE A0UR. I lima). AOUK, Borough Clark Borouah Clerk him. The first car left the Offtbef ted: April 19,1062 ' "XpHrio, toea scene.

if \ . I « -V issuerffor said purpose Is 138,000.00. {mum amount of notes to be Issued .(c) The estimated cost of bald pur-therefore' being the? amount of .Thursday. April 15,1982 CRANFORD (N:J.) CHRONICLE Page 17 : K <.-'•' •••••••••• ••."..••,".;', ;;":.v - ^: ••.._, -:..J,: pose is S4O.0O0.0O the excess there-oX3.000.00 down payment for. said SERVICES ot over the said estimated maximum purpose. . amount of notes to be Issued -SECTION 4. The following matters g therefore being the amount of ace hereby determined, declared, BUY, SFlL.TftADE OR RENT THROUGH THE PArNTlNG-INTEWOH ANf1f S2.000.00 down payment for said reclteJand stated: EXTERIOR, CALL purpose. . '„ (•) The said purpose described In SECTION 4. The Mowing matters Sectioni3^of this Bond Ordinance Is

(a) Tha said purpose described In ^ may lawfully aca,liir6 or • MASON WORK Section 3 ol this Bdntf Ordinance Is make as a general improvement or WATERPROOFtNQ'and no| a Currant ekpense and Is a prop- for a purpose for.whlcn the borough erty or Improvement which ttm Is authorized by law to nuke an tflorough may Lawfully acquire or appropriation.'and no part of the . make as a flonoral Improvement or "cost (hereof has been or shall be Stspa. waits, patio*, draff* lor a purpose for which the Borough specially assessed on property Cat 278-3620 Is authorized by law to make an ap- specially benefited thereby. REAL ESTATE propriation,.and no part ot the cost, (b) The period of usefulness of COMPLETE DECORATING thereof has been or shall be special- said purpose, within the limitations SERVICE -Draperies and slip- . ly assessed on property specially of said Local Bond Law and accor- • II III I < III I OTITil till MI • It benetltetf thereby ding to the reasonable life thereof Is. covers custom made (your (b) The period of usefulness ,of • live (5) years, inasmuch as said Im- fabric or mine); completely said purpose, within.the limitations provement Is the renovation anoVIm-.. ot said Local Bond Law and accord- provements to the municipal build- REDUCED TO $119,000 NEW LISTINGS HOUSE SOLD installed. .Woven- woods, ing to the reasonable lite thereol Is •Ings and the purchase of equipment' levelor and.Roman shades. 10 years. Inasmuch as said Improve- for the police department. ment-are two pick up trucks (3M Ion) (c) The supplemental d*6T state- OWNER ANXIOUS Also draperies cleaned, and a tractor purchased new. ment required by said law has been altered'and rehung at a -sur- (c) fie supplemental dabf sntte1 -duty node and filed In the office of ment raqulreaby said law nas been ' the Borough Clerk and a complete prisingly low cost. - duly made and filed In the Office al executed duplicate thereof has been Situated in office tone. 13 rooms, 2 car the Borough Clerk and a complete tiled In the Office of the Director of DISCOUNTED : executed dupllcalelhereof has been the Division of Local Government garage.v200' lot. Priced in the QO'/B. , ;%. filed In the Olllce of the Director of Services In (feet-Department of Com- PRICES ••.'••• the Division of Local Government munity Affairs of the State of New . 889-6315 Services In the Department of Com- Jersey, and such statement shows munity. Affairs-of-me State of-New that the arose debt of the Borough Jersey, and such statement shows of Kenllworth. as defined In said law. VICTORIAN COLONIAL COMPLETE LANDSCAPING that the gross debt of the Borough is Increased by this Bond Ordinance SERVICE.' Monthly care, of Kenllworth, as defined In said law, ' " mt of $57.000.00 and that Offers 8 rooms 2 baths,,; 2 car garage. power rake, seeding arid fer- Is Increased by this Bond Ordinance BbTRjations authorized by this : by the amount ot $38,000.00 and that bontl-Qrdinanee-will be within all TOOxi 50' lot. Convenient area near transpor- * tilizing, repair lawns, .shrub said obligations' authorized by this debt limitations prescribed by said Bond'Ordinance will be within all law. *' I This lovely "split level home on Martin Place was "work and trimming. Free debt limitations prescribed by said tation and shopping. In the 80's. c (d) The aggregate a Wount of not listedfay Dori s Weingus of Brounell & JKramer Real estimates: 376-2165. law. - • • • ' exceeding $3,000.00 for items of ex- I Estate and"sold by Joy Gibson of the same. agency. ' (d) Trie aggregate amount .of not penses permitted by Section exceeding J5.000.00 for items ot ex- 40A3-20 o! said law has been Includ- Brounell & Kramer'have been specialists in the salp penses permitted, by. .Section. ed In the. foregoing estimated cost, 40A:2-30 of said law has been Includ- of said Improvement or purpose. -HOMEVIEW REALTY CO- I of 1-family homes in the Cranford area for the^past LANDSCAPING ed-in the foregoing estimated cost SECTION S. The full faith and of said Improvement or purpose.' credit of the Borough of Kenllworth : • SPUING Ct£AN-UP 1 i d SOUTH AVE.JEA5l_ j_i I <*» ^^«7'r._^~ """'r- "-~--l:'' SECTION 5. • •Tha -•futY-taith-and, is hereby pledged to the punctual awners in^Onsntord for rnany years. • LAWN MAINTENANCE credit of the Borough ol Kenjlwprth paymen•t So_i theprlnc.. _ iclpa- 'l and of In- OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1-5 ons author •- : CRANFORp. N.J, . - <• Is hereby pledged to the punctual leresleresl of said obligations authorizeautz d • PBUNNING " payment ol the principal and of. in- b_y, this Bond Ordinance._. Sai. d obligal - • DRAINS INSTALLED * terest of said obligations authorized llifnli a shall bdbe. directi , unlimitelii d Realtor 272-5600 by this Bond Ordinance. Said obli- Obligations .of .the Borough cf 44 LENHOME DRIVE, S. • R.B. TIES INSTALLEff gation shall be direct, unlimited obli- Kenllworth rnd the Borough snail be (off Wabxrt Awe near Walnut School) gations of the Borough of Kenll- obligated to levy ad valorem taxes |l HELP WANTED 1 • PATIOS - SIDEWALKS worth and the Borough shall be obli- Upon all the taxable property within • FOR SALE • PLANTING * DESIGNING gated to levy ad valorem taxes upon the Borough for the payment of said all the taxable property within the obligations and Interest thereon Lovely 3 bedroom split featuring many n Borough for the. payment ot said wltnout limitation of rate or amount. FREE ESTIMATE obligations and Interest thereon SECTION 8. This Bond Ordinance WAREHOUSE COLOR TV 25" Console. without limitation ol rate or amount. custom extras—36' lighted inground pool, Beautiful wood cabinet. '925-3265 • 499-0556 . SECTION 6. This Bond Ordinance ' shall take effect twentyJ20) days Looks and plays like new. shall take effect twenty (20) days aftor the first -publication thereof, Florida room overlooking pool, red. room SEE OUR ABON after the first publication thereol after final passage as provided by $21Q. 2?6-7298 after 5 after final passage, as provided by said Local Bond Caw. with bar, finished office, living room with P'-m. 5/12 said Local Bond Law. APPROVED; REAL ESTATE SHOWCASE APPROVED: .-••.". -4 LIVIO MANCINO. Mayor Due-to our expansion, ATTEST: ••, ...... fireplace, aujto, lawn sprinklers. ' ALUMINUM SHOWROOM •• • _«_ LIVIO MANCINO.Mayor MARGARET ADLER. we are Wrjnfv-lf you are ANTIQUES; Set of 4 oak ATTEST: Borough Clerk FORINFORMATIONCALt chairs. $100. Washstand MARGARET ADLER. Dated: April 15,1982 Porch and Patio Enclosures ree:t<»,88 ' • f"f|eHicJfem. coascien- $165, misc. plant stands. Dated: Anril 15," 1982 BOROUGH OF KENILWORTH . 27^-2400 to 272-6411 • 4/15 Fee; J 48.16 KENILWORTH, NEW JERSEY -Jaiou«i88 Awning Windows -PUBUC NOTtCE- work, Wt WANT YOU!! ••' BOROUGH OF KENILWORTrf.' PUBLIC NOTICE it hereby given- MOPED-HERCULES. KENILWORTH. NEW JERSEY that an Ordinance of which the KIAMIfc & KIAMIE iidq,not call. $200.Cherry china cabinet, Nuprime Replacement PUBLIC NOTICE ' -•:- following la a copywaa Introduced, PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given read ana passed on first reading by Elizabeth tesed .firm. Columbia woman's .26/' • .. Windows that an Ordinance of.which the the Mayor^and Council ol the bikej_$45, excellent.coridi- .^__J,_Stojrm and .„.,. ' following (s a copy was Introduced, Borough of Kenllworth, at a meeting - PART TIME RN-LPN. Busy EXECUTIVE-SECRETARY - Fuil-uii "HfTon.. read ami passed on first reading by on tha 13th oayof April. .1982. and pediatric office. Union area. The right person will have in- Screen Combinations. the Mayor and Council of the that tha aaldXouncTl will further 20-30 hours per week. • $142 after days: for black and white. . Borough 01 Kenliworth, at a meeting consider tha said Ordinance for final telligence, excellent secre- 245-5750 . 4/2.2 CombinationCoors 25'Styles on the 13th day* of April, 1982, and passage on tha 11th day of May, ' Hours flexible, some Please=call? that the said Council will lurther ISeVat 8.-00 p.m. at Borough Han, tarial skills, and a desire to consider the said Ordinance for final Kenllworth, New Jersey, af which weekends. Call 964-8Q0O grow into a pqsition of UFETIME" ALUMINUM passage on the 11th day ol May, :tlme and place any person who may CRANFORD between 12 noon and 6 10 MONTH OLD' female 1982, at 8:00 p.m. at Borough Hall, be Interested therein will be given an broader responsibility. Sub- PRODUCTS INC. Kenllworth, New Jersey, at which opportunity to be heard concerning p.m. • . . • mit resume of experience ' beagle: She-has AKC papers. .AU .shots,...$40-00.. Cail- and a letter stating goats arid M 3 n!lMnCe "room' "charmer. 3j OftlifcH lAKfch APT. COMPLEX SEASONAL : - ' ° -MARGARET ADLADLEEH salary required. P.O. Box 272-8864: opportunity to be heard concerning BBorougo h Clerk [bedroom colonial with] CRT OPERATOR maintenance helper, must 307. c/o Cranford Chronicle. HOME IMPROVEMENTS said Ordinance. PROPOSED ORDINANCNCE_ NO82-. 8277 b e 110-8 " yri 351 . MARGARET ADLER AN ORDINANCE TQ AMENAAMEM ND OR- old. Coll "Buiuuuli Cli _ ION A f ING [first floor den, livingT 276-030; 21 Alden St.. Cranford, N.J. PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. 82-3 Full time position 07016. ! AUTOS No Job Too Small AN. ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR BUS STOPS IN THE BOROUGH OP [room has fireplace. > JOB INFORMATION: r FREE ESTIMATES THE INSTALLATION AND OPERA- KENILWORTH. • open for a phar- DALLAS, Houston. FOR TION OF A TRAFFIC CONTROL BE IT ORDAINED by tha Govern- [chestnut , wood trim: WIGHTAPPOIMTMEWTS of the .Borough of ; JTtaceutlcal order taker- Oversew, Alaska, * 2O;OOO KEY FULL TIMF SALFS as follows: ' " • [Close to park. Mid 70's. to $50,000 possible; POSITIONS, in expanding WASHINGTON AVENUE. . SECTION ,t. Thai Section 3 of Or- 6Q2-998 0426 Oept real estate' firm, congenial BE IT ORDAINED by the. Govern- dinance NoT. 56*38, adopted FOR SALE EDRICH REMODELING ing Body of the Borough of FULL UNION 6911, Phone Call Refun- office, hrs. .flexible. . Ex- GOVERNMENT SURPLUS November 25,1958, la amended In CARS AND TRUCKS many Kenllwortn. In the County olllnloh. Its entirety to read as follows: ' BENEFITS dable. perienced persons preferred., 272-6334 New Jersey,.as follows: •* "Section 3. The following places but we will train ambitious sold through local sales, - SEOTION 1. Tnat a traffic control are designated as bus atopa In the PART'TIME, 999. per week, signal shall be Installed aWrf • Borough of Kenllworth: under $300.00. Call operated at the Intersection of s.M Pharmaceutical back- opportunity in ladies applicants. All inquiries con- fidential. Call and ask for 1-714-569--O241 for your LOST Galloping Hill Road and Washington |l SiS3K BI-LEVEL ground or previous fashions.' $300. wardrobe, directory', on how to pur- Avenue. dt insurance benefits and trip broker. - Kiamie & Kiamie J SECTION 2. That the traffic signal B order taking exper- chase. Open 24- hours. '. Inslallatlin shall be In accordance, M hlfStiS'y c to Aruba when qualified. Call Realty. \QC." - 276-2400. TOTE BAG - Rafcquetballrac- with the provision ol an act concern- line'of I [with separate apartment* ience required. ""$142 322-5187. OFF qgflt, hair dryer,' sneakers ing motorvehlclesandti *" ding 100 feat easterly therefrom. after30days:— " JEEPS, CARS, PICKUPS with arches^ H:os4^fuat shall conform to or-ths. westerly curb line of North Select consignment items from_$ 3 5. Available at local Stoughton Ave. Cal" thetfe^tfhn, and ahatl be maintained. 12tfli£lna«l*na. extending 120 feet I years yourtg. Gov't. Auctions'. For Direc- 276-0190. _ - In Operation, as authorized by the weSTlny therefrom. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Department of Transportation In ac- [baseboard heat, jowr April 19, 2Q, 22, 23, 24 tory call 805-687-6000 cordance with their Authorization to c. Fourteenth Street • (far side) CALL CAROL (..-' PUBLISHERS NOTICE Install letter ol August 25,1981. ' Beginning at the prolongation Ext. 1668 Call refundable. All real estate advertised in- this . SECTION 3. This ordinance shall of the easterly curb HIM of Four- )maintenance exterior.' take effect upon approval by the teenth Street and extending 135 feet 351-6700 newspaper ii subject to thg Fedatal easterly therefrom. ... . TEMPORARY POSITION JMJMBLE Fair Housing Act of 1968 which Commissioner of Transportation as |Low90's. 1980 MOTOBECAfeE, ex- provided by law. - . d. South 19th Street • (near aide) cellent condition - very fast, makes it illegal to ..advertise any' ~ Inning at the westerly curb -preference, limitation, or SECTION 4. A copy ol this or- h19" J STORE - $450. 1978 SNARK, >x- discrimination based on race, cot- dinance shall be forwarded to the Three to,six month minimum. Possibility of perma- Union- County Board ol .Chosen [ALLIANCE REALTY! nent assignment. Must have excellent typing, steno cellent condition. $275 Gall '• •. ot, religion, sex, or national origin. Freeholders for concurrence, and a * . or. an intention to make any such copy to Mr. Walter W. Gardiner, •and diclephatw ^Mperionoo. Cead eommunirations . 276-3072. ; i_ij_'.Y preference. !imitatior».;V_.ox:' f 89-Uocd VOUR HOME No experience skills a mustt'Must be flMe to work-independently dscrimlnaslon. ... , /..w,*. jlneerlng. Thl» newspaper will not know-' BOULEVARD'. Waat- required. Further details - and be available for flexible time schedule. For train- 1 nr APPROVED: bound along the northerly siae~v~ ingly accaot any. aoVertlsJm • V •••.' * LIVIO MANCINO, Mayor v* . '••'il • n"' "'"tj send stamped, self- ing and operations office of a major corporation. real estate which is in violation of thereof at: ATTEST: a. Michigan Avenue - (far (Ida) REAL ESTATE addressad envelope to: the law. Our readers are Infocmed MARGARET ADLER. Beginning at the westerly curt) ttwtin d«veHlngs adveitisad In this Borough Clerk line of Michigan Avenue and exten- Austin Enterprise; P.O. Box Ca> 738-4461} < , 1 niwtpspw ara availabla on in. Dated: April 15,1982 . ' WANTED 1 & 2 b'edreorfl ran ding 105 feat wa«ta*ly thereof, L 829,-New Brunswick. Hi. equal opportunity basts. ' • ' Fee: J 18.78 . • . . b North 7th Street - (far side) ask for Lance Btiwer tals from S300-$450 foncor. WANTED 4 BEDROOM 08903. Beginning at the westerly curb poraie transferees. NoV fpUDh Olerk line, of Kingston Avenue and exten- Crartfor^NJ. ' opportunity to be heard concerning PROPOSED ORDINAMICl E NO. 82-10. ding 115 (eet northerly thereof. 272-4TO0 " !l said Ordinance. BOND ORDINANCE PROVIDING , b. Paaaalc Avenue • (far aide) '• . * PIANO LESSONS & THEORY Copies .are available during FOR THE RENOVATION AND Beginning at the southerly curb All. types of .music, taught. IMPROVEMENTS TO MUNICIPAL. regular.; working hours at. the Jllna of Passalc Avenue andextsn- «!•-. J.. Please call Karin fpr inter- Municipal Clerk's Office. BUILDINGS AND THE- PURCHASE dlng 100 feet southerly thereof. MARGARET ADLER OF EQUIPMENT FOR THE POLICE c. Trenton Avenue (far aide) view. 486-5 50-9_.__ar. Borough Clerk DEPARTMENT, AND AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF J57.0O0.0O Begjonbig-at the southerly curb 48J-535Tr- ._;•:; ^ pROPOSEtroriDtKWNce NO. 82-e BONDS OR NOTES OF* THE line of Traaton-'Avenue and exten- BOND ORDINANCE PROVIDING BOROUGH OF KENILWORTH FOR ding 100 feet southerly thereof. - FOR THE ACQUISITION OF TWO FINANCING SUCH ORDINANCE. .

: K. Atong NORTH BTH STREET. ,'' .-•• •:;^ • '". .' I authorized to be Issued In the princi- iHHr pal aum of SS7.000.00 pursuant to Southbound on.the waatarly side word limrt ' I this Local Bond Law of New Jersey. thereof at: • Include phone nidmber. .'. y • In anticipation of Ihe Issuance of a. Monroe Avenue - (far aide) CAHBOnETOB said bonds and to temporarily Beginning at the southern/ curb • Used itema priced from $5 to $77 only finance said Improvement or pur- HE* DEAL! _... ba- known as I pose, negotiable notes of «"• <«S}».^S^l : : roM«en>aa^t»ri<« ilpmant bonds,' • ar» hereby • No pet a

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VOL. 90 No. 16 Published Every Thursday Thursday, April 22, J982 Serving Cranford, Keniimorth and Garwood USPS136 800 Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, N. J 25 CENTS aM the tender loving care that it—and you -^~ to make sure that you get the best of itjq:fii^h Mi^and .>$geta.bJes;. The fact is^jfte: deserve^ treat them with such 'tehxler Loving Care that we call it our secft And, since we do so much to capture and maintain natureXnujtrition in fresh fruits and vegetablesrherc^re some tips tohelp^you do the saute.' are sojme of the lengths we go to. Remember that the biggest enemies to nVyitamin potency in fresh produce are Since quality is one of the keys to nutrition, we buy only the best, unblemished time, exposure to aiir and cooking ki . " ^fruits aiid vegetables. \^ buy b^ the cfateVhot the carload. - .. ••". . • ,->. So be sure to use your foods as soon as possible. Use refrigeratioja wisely. Use a One college . Vlfe also insist that everything we buy has been picked at the peak of ripeness and ripening bowl when ripening fruit at home; Slice fruits and vegetables as little as Union College and Union County sent to us the fastest way possible — by jet if necessary. Arid, if there has to be a possible*-- eating them raw.,and whole is thebest. When you^do slice, do it Technical Institute took- a toajor By ROSAUE GROSS* . . Meetings on the budget get underway Ftobert D. Paul, superintendent of I step towardmerge r Friday when the A series-of meetings has been schedul- time lag,"we make sure the product is nevero^f-riptrtdieifirgets to us. ''•.> tonight as the board meets td discuss;- schools, said he '.'fully anticipated the immediately before cooking of serving. When ybii do cdpk, copk quickly in a little i state Board of ^ducaltoa jroied ed by the Board of Education and the areas which might be cut. The ultimate budget would pass, adding it was the Because freshness is a key^fopreservirig vitamin potency, we not only hurry our oil or as little vv^ater as possible^ v ^ r unanimously to them as Township Committee to determine the decision is the Township Committee's "tightest one presented in years." 1 "Union County College." A key ele- size of a cut, if any, to the $13.5 million which has until next Wednesday to produce toyV>u, we also have the highest- Standards for proper refrigeratiori. And we Arid* of course, count on.Kings to start you off with ihebesjt quality. »[ .'•• • ment includes cancellation of a $1.9 school budget for 1982-83 which ..was decide. Nicholls,' after expressing elation at million debt from UCTI to the state' idefeatedi by 44 votes in Tuesday's elec- The Township Committee will meet at his victory Tuesday, said the board "putl_ The Butcher* Corner The Former* Corner The Deli Corner* The Freezer Corner The Grocery Corner if UCTI transfers two buildings to tion. This was the first time since 1976 7:30 p.m. tomorrow to be briefed by together what wfe thought was a the new combined entity. If enabling .that a school budget has been defeated. Ralph Taylor, its attorney, and Edward reasonable budget." He felt one reason it was voted down was the overall tax in- legislation and transfers of these . The vote was 756 in favor of the budget Murphy, administrator, on its respon- First.of the Season; ' At the Sliced 1o Order-Counter: '..•', Seneca Apple Juke. I6ozr*1.19 \ assets /proceed as planned, the sibilities and authority in the budget crease which included a 12.5 point in- USDA Choice Boneless Kraft and 800 against as 11.2 percent of Cran- crease in the municipal budget. JefRown Fresh Homemade USDA Choice Ore Ida Homestyle Potatoes $139 i schools could be one by July .-For a ford's registered voters went to the decision. £t 8 pjn. Nicholls, school Oven Roasted • [ summary of the structure, see story. 1>oard president, will present theboard's "Residents had no chance to vote on the California Red Ripe • wiHTSkins .", ' Mayonnaise 32 oz. jarr JL- . • polls The-proposed budget would have municipal budget," said Nicholls, "buf~ Beef Roasts «6 |b. $2.89 ) on Pages. added 15 cents pe> $100 of assessed ^ rationale for the budget it submitted to . Strawberries^- _ . pt. basket 99* Planks, Wedges or" voters. they voted on mirs V * —L Bottom Round or Homemade Caterer's Slices " •• ! IA lbs. Kraft Pourable Dressing value to property faxhil h Indian River Red or White A meetingjhas been scheduled by the SiriaihTip . 1000 Ixlaiill- 8 oz. 59' In a race for three Board of Education Both SilVey and MeCarty expressed Kraft Lo Cal Dressing 10.400 hours °wp^fl°^^IMd^ mixed emotions:—happiness at beit USDA Choice Boneless Large 36 Size. 3/99* Fruited Baked. •*lh,*2.3!>. Swanson goats among five—eandidatesr—ic*- school.board can present its reCOmmen- elected but sorrow at the budget defeat ~~Creamy CutumBer r Beef Roasts: efe- Sam Marino is the premiere cumbents Richard Nicholls and Charles dations for cuts, and the gwerahig body-^McCarty added-that"it feels great that Di Lussd Genoa Salami, J4 Ib. *2.49 Hungryman Pies QQ0 . or Italian '•• 8oz. 59* nteer aLRahway Hospital. The MeCarty were re-elected with 1,175 and will discuss them. However, since the. the electorate supported me again after Mia " " ~ ." Cranf ord man has contributed 10,400 • 1,057 votes respectively. Edna SUyeyJecL board-has-scheduledritsTTbrganlzatiwr^ail^I went, through in the first thVee EyeJtoundwiih Extra Fancy Grade ,OvaI Spiced Hamci__^: !^Ib*1.4S Chicken or Turkey—— VoZP^J- \ Artichoke Hearts 6 oz 79* 'hours there over a period of years. the field, with 1,267 ballots and will suc- 9nd business meeting that night, the -years." . Bottom Attached. 1b. *2.59 Large Crisp . Mich's Natural Hitkory Smoked Ronzoni Single Serving Entrees: ceed Gerard Paradiso who did not run.' J Planters Peanut Oil : 24 oz. *1.99 , He sorts and distributed newspapers time and . plac' e of Monday's meeting A total of l,672.of the township's14,87 4 USDA Choice Boneless Red or Golden Catering Quality ' •• Baked Ziti, Fettuccine to patients and departments three The two defeated candidates trailed well was unresolved yesterday. Regina Wine Vinegar' 12 oz. 79* behind the winners as William registered voters went to the polls. Of Beefsteaks: Turkey Breast % Ib. *2.59 Alfredo or Macaroni wijh g g mornings every week. The hospital The Township • Committee will make these, 116 did not vote on the4>udget^A~ Top °ound, Sirloin Tip,, Delicious Apples ib Fggplant Sw 99* Broadcast Crumbled took the occasion of "National McAuliffe polled 458 votes and Vincent its final decision on a budget cut at a SchickJiaus Bologna 2 5 oz 69' Cicalese Jr. had 430. charhtt presentintig resultlts by drdistrici t is on Cubed Round, Round Ore Ida Bacon. Volunteer Week" to honor him meeting 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. page 2. $ Calavo Jtrand Peppefidge Farm I among 462 others who help the in- The winners will be sworn in and Cranford's budget was one of seven or Liverwurst ^ •.Tiiestfay'• ~T T»~^^"""J -' •••.••••••s schoo• ••••.• l ^••••a ^g^inj | ,in^^£|— Cubes or Minute Round__, lb. 2.69 .California Avocados. 2/99* Chopped dnidns^u_r=L_ 12 or. 49* board officers elected Monday atp p rn $ Croutons > , stitution." ; t-uneiit expense budgets and two capital Top Round London Broil _ Ib. 2.99 Natural Casing '/4 lb. Jeno's Pizza Rolls at Lincoln School followed by the postponed from April 6 when Gov. Kean Imported from Chile: • outlay budgets which were defeated in halted voting jn 11 counties because of Cheese, Shrimp, Meat and ~ board's monthly business meeting. Red Emperor or Black ' Barbequed Perdue Chicken Mixed Bean Salad 17.25"ox. 995 18 towns in Union County. the blizzard. - " Untrimmed, {f-f2 lb. sizes - Shrimp or Combination 6 oz. 99* Ribier Sweet Grapes lb. 99* HntfrnmthrSpit lb H.89 Progresso Beans Plaza moves Custom Cut to your : Tender Endive Buitoni ... Freshly Made Potato Salad" . Red.k!idncy Beans or Hohyer O>mpany »nd Thin Life Specifications___j__ lb. *1.59 Imported fr g Centers have announced their open- lb.$1.99 JyJadejiiib/ Trieste CheeseTPizza 19 oz $2,49 "^Thik P 20OZ.49* Freirich Smoked————•— -— Horlda Fresh Crisp Mayonnaise .'• ' - - • !b 69* T ings at the new Cleveland Plaza. "A Sara Lee Coffee Cakes Campbell's Chunky local business. Penny Wise, will Butts or Tongues. lb'1.99 Chicory or Escarole Ib. 49* Freshly Made "._..... , Vegetable Soup. .I9oz. 59* Smithfidd Smoked l Struesel(II'/4oz.)or move there. Other ventures plann- Eggplant .Salad A lb. *1.09 $ Prego Spaghetti Sauce ing to locate at the site include a Sliced Bacon— lb. *L69 Bud Brand California Pecan "(I I !4 n7 ) each 2.19 Imported from England: ' 15.5 oz. iS9* drug store, jewelry store, spice Hygrade Ballpark: Mrs. Smith's Deluxe Regular or Meat Iceberg Lettuce Sturminster.. . . $ Del Monte Sliced Beets _ 16 oz. i»9* shop; art gallery, and a tobacco- in controversial dissent They re ready: Glueck farnilyhas.been saving glass ior months In an- All Meat Franks_ . lb. *1.59 Cotswood Cheese Ib. $5.69 App'e Pie 46oz. 2.49 newsstand shop. • . ticipation of this vyeekend when recycling is resurrected in Cranford. Extra Large • h< Geisha Madam • All Beef Franks. Cheshire Cheese »h *3.89 Aunt Jemima- By STUART A WERE Y ~- population that, is opposed to a tax in- Marino responded by saying the Judy, right, chairman of Environmental Commission, and her oz:1.19 .Cocktail Cherry„_, 1 „__:..„...•_. 1-L Stilton Chow -.-——», *4.99 .Economy Cranford's $9.04 million municipal crease, ' he said. A lot of people would operating budget is "not inflationary by children, David and Jennifer, will deposit rinsed bottles separated by Tuscan Frozen Yogurt. pint 89* Keebler Honey Grahams. 16 oz. *1.09 green, brown and clear colors. Bottle drop at Conservation Center The Seafood Corner Tomatoes •• pt. basket 89* $ Danes here budget was approved by JJie Township rather pay later. I'm casting my vote on any means" and said much of the tax in- Caerphilly and Gloucester Ib 3.89 Sunshine Chip Aroos__ 12 oz. H.2S> Committee this week wiffi a rare and the part of people who don't want a tax crease comes from capital im- runs 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and sunday. Photo by Greg Price. Calavo Brand European BeirutBrand Pita Bread ., .-: HealthA Beauty Needs: '". The Danish Junior Olympic controversial dissenting vote. increase." • provements-. . - . The Dairy Corner Wresting Team will appear in a Fresh Panready Mackerel _ Ib. M.59 (Burpless) Cucumbers____ each 89* All Varieties ii ;__ any size pkg.. 89* Colgate: . Gene Marino voted no on the grounds Salway responded: "the only way you In an effort to cut costs of long term Sweet Spanish Onions $ match against county wrestlers it the 12.5 point tax increase could Fresh Scrod Cod Fillet, Ib. '3.69 *When AvaUaMe ^ — toothpaste 4.6 QZ. 1,19 save points is to cut public services." He bonded indebtedness, the Republican Extra Large for Slicing. ... Ib. 39* eluding a number of Cranfo velieeti three or four points lower. said Marino had participated with. the majority has for the past three years ad- Fresh Tikfish Steaks - Ib. »5.79 Minute Maid Drinks . Shave Cream__ 1L oz. 99* piers at CHS arT"f™" Town moves to L, This dismayed the other four committee rest of the committee in long discussions dfed several .tax ftftifltet n pfoy nff - TeoderBeets, :bunch49« Bjc Lighters earh 59* mi u rl ! Crab Claws __lb. White or Pink Lemonade and members who each criticized^ the about trirn "B ™*?r Vp Wfi'h riinr 'HF'W $ y wrri wntrf BOP wnt miffrd DPW staff. In the end, the committee because "the rest of us on Ihe committee *h>* pyrf hag Marino opened the adoption pro- decided none of those services were cut. have to. swallow the results of • family pack of Fresh cedure with an announcement that he his(Marino's) increases in bonded in- station takeover would vote no in support of those who 198Z MX RATE debtedness." Sour Cream 8oz.' are "outspoken in opposition to the in- The Gardener* Corner Crisp Tender Fresh ESTIMATED Marino noted he had -also opposed the township government has decided that area and has previously considered S* ._• 10 oz. pkg. 89* Breakstone Sour Cream Dips crease." some operational expenditures in the to move toward a takeover of the com-purchase pf adjacent land, which now POULTRY He said the elimination of Clean Up U.3I . •" First of the Season: All Varieties—, ___*8oz.79* OFF committee's budget meetings. He said muter railroad station. might not be necessary. • . Mini Carnations 3 lbs, or more With this cvupua • Week could have saved one tax point, Red Ripe Sweet Watermelon, lb. 29* he had been opposed to hiring an addi- In addition to obtaining extensive •im- Downtown,_the.state.agency-wUl^co Imported from Israel bunch *2 39 Friendship Cottage Cheese In Our Butcher's Comer *- that possibly ^nctUie^jppini^ulcLhayjt: tional—poUcerriispatcher~and~<1w^uld provemeUts. in and arounSTThe station sider removing the two outside railroad Mixed Bouquet Fresh Crisp ~ '„• • iilar, Lowf at. Pineapple [ been saved by cutting operational ex- have gone deeper" to cut expenses like and rent-free use of the train, bus and bridges over Walnut Avenue, leaving on- Importedp fr from Holland Bean SpnHits — rApple. 8<>z. 59* penses and that one or two points more photography, conferences and publica- taxi facility, the township hopes to ac- ly a central bridge. This could be possi- $ Light N Lively Gotxl chni ^ 4/2Q/82 & LU#2I ; could have been eliminated by cutting tions. He said he was. also opposed to the quire rent-free land hear The Round- ble because trackage over the outside Fresh Rose BBouquet bunch 2J9 Limit one coupon per family Cottage Cheese. back on the capital debt reduction pro- "false economy" represented by mov- house that could accomodate parking bridges will be removed. *Where Available gram. . YoPlait Yogurt. 6oz.2/89* • Towards the purchase of ing some salaries outside the state cap for as many as lOu vehicles. NJ Transit rejected a township sug- -Each tax point represents about $5 to limit. Dick Salway, mayor, announced the gestion to remove the retaining wall at La Yogurt Plain Yogurt__ qt. *1.09 ' any package of - the average property owner in Cran- Warner plaza to gain additional street- Kraft Stack Pack Singles _ lb; *2.39 Robinson said he thought the extended Township Committee would pass a iPUIsbury Recycle ford. budget sessions had include "fruitful resolution to enter negotiations with NJ level parking. Itrwants to keep the right- Dornian Natural . After a hiatus of several years, A vote was taken immediately after suggestions leading to_aJ?alance-ofser- JTransi~ t on the takeover. This decision to- of-way-intact incase itisneeded for Cheese Slices.'. i Slice N Bake .recycling— returns—to—town—this-' that opening statement and the budget vices.' proceed^came after Sandy Weeks, com- railroad purposes in the future. : Mozzarella or Ptovolohe_ 66z. $I-.29 OFF f weekend. Qlass may be deposited at passed 4 to ,1. Marino's three fellow Robinson said' that neUJserthe'jsublHr ••mitteewomaft?^reported Oa^various op- The sidewalks, Wahthii coupon ; Ube Conservatioh Center. nonriO ins- quiakly " challenged -his- nor .the governing body want higher.^ tions Uiat emerged_during- a meeting curbs and lighting in the area and bbuild comments and his dissent. a single platform witha ticket office bet- Kraft Parfcay Margarine, lb.qtrs. 69* > a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday^ taxes. "I don't want a no vote to make among local and state transit officials There are separate bins for brown, Ed Robinson said Marino failed to yes_ votes. SeemlJike we want higher here Monday. .•»_..•. ween two tracks. It will consider town I green and clear glass. Judy Glueek "establish the climate" for voting no. taxes," he said. Marino said he didn't in- requests to build a ramp up to track "I'm surprised at your nay vote and at The state agency wants municipalities level and to apply anti graffiti ceatmg to— I asks depositors to rinse bottles for < tend his nay vote for that purpose.. to take over stations while it concen- Limit one coupon per family - - • the points.you made,to back it up," he \- station walls. "**?••*• sanitary reasons and not to leave Dissent on a final, budget vote has trates OH raili^rtnrt rtp<>rntihn5, 7* p*""-" .said. _.. .._.. v,. L ...... ,r~—— nship anticipates the takeover •Brown Gold—r— lurrying cartons or sack»at the site.— hi and sta. l Labels, stynrfoam .wrappings Doug Nordstrom said "I was not cost $9,»52 a year in utility and in- 1100% Colombian or raie you upposefanything other than tion improvements in Cranford and turn costs. Half of that could come "Cleanup;" the station area and environs^overto the-— I from bottles. Recycling drop will be sometimes line-by-line, and usually ar- township: Dick Salway said "you were holding a rive at compromises on expenditures there-from rented space. Other potential I open every Saturday and Sunday Salway said the town should take in- ^ t6or.T 'from now on. tough line on the DPW,'"a reference to a and cuts. The committee usually jcevenue sources include parking lots, $1.99 possible cutback in that departmental reaches a consensus on the 'general itiative in the process by seeking "im- "newSracks, rent free use of the Civil Wiihihncouptw staff that was considered in delibera- budget by the time public hearings are mediate relief" on leaky roofs, unsafe Defensearea at Centennial, advertising tions. held. At last week's hearing only five steps and broken platforms and longer sigft-space rental and lease of space in Leisure time Sandy Weeks, a Democrat, also ques- OZ* Z.SA citizens spoke and only two raised term benefits in expanded and improved part of the old station to vendors. tioned Marino's vote. She later accused criticisms. Adoption was postponed un- parking. He said Ed Robinson and NJ Transit's renovation proposals are G«Hxlihrii "4/20/82 Local,crafters and hobbyists will Weeks would handle the negotiations...... Limit one coupon per family I demonstrate and explain their in- him of "refusing to accept the respon- Chart prepared by municipal til this week to permit technical ad- being reviewed by federal transit i terests at a workshop on leisure time sibility for an increase in interest costs government shows local proper- justments, NJ Transit is open to rent free lease of authorities. Once approved, a design activities sponsored next Wednes- that resulted from projects bonded dur- ty tax rate apportionments. The approved budget carries a 12.5 the unused'trackage area behind the contract will be entered and design will l day by thft Cranford Parent Teacher ing his year as mayor." County approved Its budget point tax increase, or $62.50 more tn 1982 roundhouse, Weeks reported. The begin. The state hopes construction can'- I Bumble Bee , Council at Hillside Avenue School. After the first round qf criticism, earlier: School budget was for the owner of a home valued at $50,v^n» "4/20/82 O LU#24 ; f May 3 Rules and a schedule by •t ••':'. ••'•*.,.. .':, *'*;"*** Limit one ctxipon per family •••••••• zones were announced-by Gregory with higher fares ? ? Sgroi, twmlrip mgi neer,aod are io~\ ' *S^Upnce*c4foctive-through eluded as an insert in this edition of Higher fares may coincide with better the offing. ,.The precise impact in this [The Chronicle.. Extra copies an traveling conditions for local rail com- area was not announced, but the agency "Wbteservc die right to limit I available at the engineer's office in muters this year. said most interstate increases would be O^iamiBes; we do not sell to dealers; the Municipal Building. NJ Transit has proposed rate fare in- between 10 and 19 percent. -The iuidvM cannot be responsible for creases that range from 14 to 25 percent Cranford-New York one way fare is now "error*.- r—-•'---• for Cranford and Garwood commuter^ $2.05. : on the Raritah Valley Line. Jerome C. Premo, NJ Transit ex- S&H Green Stamps are our Lost hour If approved, the rates would become ecutive director, said 19 public hearings way of thanking you ' effective July 1. By that time, would be conducted on the proposals. Daylight saving! officially goes ln- Assemblyman Ed GUI reported this The closest one in this area will be April i ms for shopping at Kings. ^ , to effect overnight Saturday, if yon week, some of the new rolling stock will 28 at Westfield Town Hall at 8 p.m. don't want to lose an hour of sleep, be operating on the line. Some of the new Premo said the average bus and train set dock ahead during the day. If push-pull and cab cars will undergo fare increases around the state will be you don't want to get up «t 2 a jaki tests this week. about 18 percent. The new fares would $• I met docks, dont forget to do it The proposed fare increases announc- & raise $25 million in revenue. W)-. • sometime the next day. If you use a ed by the state agency would bike one sundial, remember it stays on stan- Here's a summary of the proposed in- way fares from Cranford to Newark by creases for local rail riders: SS cents, or 25 percent, and monthly rates would rise by $9, or 22 percent. Cranford-Newark fares V • Garwood to Newark rides would cost 25 Now Posed Hike ly^paEi®?^! >• ••'••.< % "Open' hours 'cents or 16 percent more one way and $6 One-way..... $1.40 $1.75 25%' or 14 percent more monthly. Monthly.... $40 $4239% 1 Cranford and Garwood are the two Garwood-Ncwark fares 'SnVdSfai .communities in the line's third zone Now Posed Hike jt 3Mmmmi which was created as part of a statewide One-way... $1.50 $1.75 17% ^Htatbln Govern- tippy Birthday: State Sen. "C, Louis Baasano Mayor Llvlo Mancino and celebration chairman "fare rationalization" program design- Monthly... $43 $49 u% PfMftnted Senate resolution praising Kenilworth Rudy Cammarota are at left; Cranford MaVor Dick ed to establish uniform fares for the (For fares toNe w York under proposed torVQywn of boroughdom" at parade Saturday. Salway and Assemblyman Ed Qlll at light. More same distance travelled. structure, add $1.50 one way and $42 Qctt Torn K**n, freeholder Rose Marie Slnnott, photographs on Page 13. photo by Greg Price. Commuter bus fare hikes are also in monthly.) •w V