Today: Our Weekend Enjoyment Sectioij
^ f iW ;-iiv; FINAL Sunny, warm today, cooler THEDAM y tonight. Tomorrow fair and y Red Bank, Freehold T" pleasant. Partly cloudy and EDITION mild Sunday. \ Long Branch J BEGEFER 32 PAGES Monmouth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper VOL.95 WO, 205 ,, RED BANK, N.J. FRIDAY, APRIL 20,197S " TEN CENTS iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuiiiiniiiuiiiiiiuiniiniiiiiiiimuiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiciiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiMiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui •IIIIIIIIIIMI iiiiiuiiiitni ••••itiitniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiinn IIIIIII tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiH iN Say Mitchell Claims He OpposedX. • Watergate_____ WASHINGTON (AP) - that the Justice Department Today the New York Times and warned against judging Former Attorney General expects to see all three of said Mitchell had told friends who is guilty and who isn't un- John N. Mitchell was in Wash- them indicted, along with oth- he was present at three meet- til all. testimony has been ington today at the request of ers. ings last year when Magruder heard. Press Secretary Ron- a federal grand jury, and re- Second-ln-Coinmand and G. Gordon Liddy, later ald L. Ziegler expressed sur- portedly is accusing other Magruder, who was Mit- convicted in the conspiracy, prise that Dean had bypassed Nixon reelection officials of chell's second-in-command at proposed plans to bug the op- his office by issuing the state- planning the Watergate wire- the Nixon campaign, report- position party headquarters. ment directly to newsmen. tapping over his objection: edly has told federal prose- But the Times quoted sources Ziegler testily insisted that An associate said Mitchell cutors that Mitchell and Dean as saying Mitchell insisted he the President seeks no scape- may testify today. helped plan the Watergate rejected the plans at all three goats. Mitchell, former campaign bugging and later arranged meetings. Dean was present Today the Washington Post deputy Jeb S. Magruder and payoffs to buy'silence from at one or more of the meet- quoted an associate of Dean presidential counsel John W. men convicted of the crime. ings, Mitchell reportedly said. as saying that the White Dean 3rd now are engaged in Magruder has been unavai- An associate told the AP House counsel has passed a three-cornered argument, lable to newsmen, but his law- today that Mitchell has said word he is ready to testify un- carried out through public yer says he intends to testify privately if he had known of der oath that others "above statements and news leaks, voluntarily when called before the Watergate plan "he would and below" him were involved over which of them is respon- the grand jury. have tried to stop it." in the bugging. The Post sible for the crime. For his part. Mitchell told Won't Be Scapegoat quoted a Dean associate as Sources close to the Senate newsmen yesterday that the At the White House yes- saying Dean himself only fol- Watergate investigation have Magruder report is "non- terday, Dean declared that he lowed orders in whatever role told The Associated Press sense." won't be made a "scapegoat" See Mitchell, page 2 W, Gordoa Liddy John W.Dean 3rd John N. Mitchell Jeb S. Magrader U.S. Acts Against Viet Peace Pact Violations WASHINGTON (AP) - In a bodia, as well as carrying out macy. At least two trump Confirming the action yes- by the U.S. Navy, the minis- series of tactical moves, the a two-day raid in Laos, and he cards that could be played terday, Jerry W. Friedheim, try said. United States has served no- recalled the threat of "appro- would be sending Henry Kissi- the Penatagon spokesman, tice on Hanoi that the Viet- priately vigorous reactions" nger to Hanoi or to Paris for blamed "continued cease-fire The Jan. 27 cease-fire nam peace agreement may be issued jointly by President another round of negotiations violations by the other side in agreement calls for removal in danger of flying apart. Nixon and South Vietnam or reconvening the original 12- South Vietnam and Laos." of the mines. First the Navy suspended President Nguyen Van Thieu nation Paris peace confer- Recall of Maurice Williams, minesweeping operations in on April 3. ence. But the foreign ministry in deputy director of the Agency North Vietnamese waters. Room for Talk North Vietnam made the in- Hanoi said the suspension was for International Devel- Then the chief U.S. delegate Although these actions^fcere itial announcement that the evidence of a premeditated opment, from the P.aris re- to Paris talks on reconstruc- intended to be tajjen se- United States had suspended plan to prolong the sea block- construction talks was an- tion of the war-torn country riously, U.S. officials n?Hcd the sweeping of mines it ade. Besides, only three mines nounced by Charles W. Bray, was called home for "con- privately that there stilt-was placed in North Vietnamese of the tens of thousands in the the State Department spokes- AP Wlrtptiolo sultations." considerable room for diplo- waters last May. waters had been deactivated man. DEER RESCUE — Louisiana Wild Lite agents pull deer to safety after it And finally, Secretary of was surrounded by high waters from the Morganza Floodway that had to State William P. Rogers told be opened to relieve pressure'on a dam on the Mississippi River. Many Hanoi yesterday that the ad- deer were rescued in a watery rodeo. ministration would drop its assistance plan unless North Two South Jersey GOP Vietnam lives up to the pact signed in Paris Jan. 27. Seeker of Dock Union The three pressure moves were designed to persuade North Vietnam to stop infil- trating men and equipment Fund Raisers Indicted into South Vietnam and to TRENTON (AP) -William favors from a Trenton bank in buy a minimum of $6 million count of conspiracy, "with Office Shot, Is Critical withdraw its troops from B. Colsey 3rd and Bruce A. return for using their in- in securities from a brokerage other persons whose names HOBOKEN (AI>) - William union. He underwent surgery bond. He eventually agreed to Cambodia and Laos. Mahon, two top-level Republi- fluence to have $6 million in house to be designated and are unknown to this grand "Big Bill" Murphy, who re- at the hospital for removal of meet informally with commis- Rogers acknowledged that can fund raisers from South state funds deposited in the put Colsey on its board of di- jury." rectors in return for using portedly was attempting to the bullets. sion officials investigating the the United States had in- Jersey, have been indicted on bank. It said the two met in April, their influence in getting an take over a top job in the In- Police Run-Ins HobokeTi docks. tensified its bombing in Cam- state charges of trying to get Colsey and Mahon, along 1970, with Mario R. D'Antonia equal amount of state funds ternational* Longshoremen's Run-ins with the police Was at Track with former Slate Treasurer and that all three met a deposited in the bank. Union, remained in critical marked the union leader's Police said Murphy was at- Joseph M. McCrane, are re- month later with Raymond L. Firm Mentioned condition today after he was rise to power. tacked after two men dropped portedly key figures in state Steen, president and board ambushed by two gunmen. Known both as "Big Bill" him at his car parked on Pier Boy Killed by Car, and federal investigations into The brokerage firm was not chairman of the bank. Murphy, 58, was shot in the and "Wee Willie," he was ac- A. He was carrying $4,81K) and fund raising in Gov. William identified in the indictment head, arm and chest while sit- quitted in 1951 with his two had spent the day at Garden T. Cahill's 19B9 campaign. but published reports have Kugler said the bank had ting in his 1973 Cadillac as he brblhers, Francis and Mi- State Park racetrack. According to yesterday's in- said it was the New York firm cooperated with state author- waited at a traffic light here chael, of the murder of Nun- He drove to 4th and Wash- Another Is Critical dictment. Colsey and Mahon of Moore, Schley, Cameron & ities in the investigation. Co. with which McCrane's There was no indication who Wednesday night. Police said zio Aluotto, who was shot to See Union, page 2 LITTLE SILVER - One lying beside the curb. conspired between April 1 and brother Kevin is associated. made the initial complaint but they had no leads in the case. death in ILA headquarters youth was killed and another The accident occurred at May 31, 1970, to have the state officials reportedly Murphy, a business agent of here. Murphy was president seriously injured last night about 9 o'clock in front of Dr. Broad Street National Bank The indictment was an- Blue Shield learned of the alleged con- the 1LA local 2 and an inter- of the local at the time. when they were struck by a Marotta's home on an un- nounced by Attorney General- spiracy two months ago. national vice president of the He was held as a material car as they were standing by lighted section of the street. George F. Kugler Jr., who union, built up his power over witness two years later in the Rate Cut For said the investigation is con- Not Named a bicycle at the side of the Police said they had to turn 1 20 years as a labor leader in slaying of ILA official Francis road on Church St. Mr. Pittman's car on its side tinuing and that further evi- D Antonio is a Trenton busi- this waterfront city. Kelly, hiring boss on Hoboken 1.3 Million Police identified the dead to remove young Romano's dence would be presented to nessman and a former chair- Murphy was reportedly docks. the grand jury. man of the Mercer County TRENTON (AP) - Rates youth as Phil Romano, 19, body, which was pinned be- trying to succeed Thomas ' In lDlil, he was fined $51) and who lived with the injured neath the vehicle. The indictment charges Col-, Improvement Authority. He "Teddy" (ileason as president sentenced to 30 days in jail, for 1.3 million subscribers to sey and Mahon with a single See 2 Top, page 2 the Blue Shield plan will be youth, Robert Thomas, 16, at The youth was pronounced of the I LA, but union sources along with ILA state orga- 539 River Road, Fair Haven. dead on arrival at Riverview in New York said Murphy had nizer John Moody Sr., for con- reduced by 10 per cent June 1. The State Insurance De- Condition of the Thomas Hospital, Red Bank. His body no aspirations outside of New tempt of court for balking at youth as described as critical was taken to Monmouth Me- Jersey. questions of the Waterfront partment ordered the reduc- RegisterPromenaders tion yesterday. Blue Shield this morning by authorities at dical Center, Long Branch for His room at .St. Mary's Hos- Commission. Riverview Hospital, Red an autopsy. pital was guarded by rank- Murphy spent only five pays doctors' bills for sub- scribers. Bank. The Romano youth boarded At the EastepParade and-file members of the local hours in jail after posting $500 One of the youths was lean- with the Thomas youth's par- The announcement did not Belte Spero won't be writing a sonnet about "an Easter itiuiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuHiiiiiiiiiimHiiiiinHnniiiiin iiuiiii ing over the bicycle, which ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ko- come as a surprise since in- bonnet and all the frills upon it," But she will be among the had no headlight or rear re- walski of the Fair Haven ad- surance department had pro- promenaders Sunday at the Easter parade in Asbury Park. posed a reduction in February flectors, according to police, dress. and the other was standing in Accompanying her will be Register staff photographer Larry The Inside Story to cut down the size of Blue Young Thomas is the son of - Perna. • , -Shore Conference baseball roundups Page 21' Shield's surplus of nearly $20 front of it when they were . Mrs. Kowalski and the step- struck by the car. son of Mr. Kowalski. He has They'll combine their talents, for complete coverage of the Freehold results, entries, selections Page 22 million. annual spectacular in Monday's Daily Register. The driver of the vehicle seven brothers and sisters Black Hawks put Hangers against wall Page 20 Insurance Commissioner The state Public Utilities Commission, is the agency re- Herald to Easter l»agC JJ Richard C. McDonough said was identified as David M. Paul, Geraldine, Sharon and Piltman of 19 Old Mill Road, Theresa Thomas and Francis, sponsible for insuring that New Jersey residents receive "safe Bridge Advice 31 DAILY REGISTER the cut in premiums was de- and aduquaie" service at a "fair and reasonable" price from a ^Classified 24-28 PHONE NUMBERS signed to trim the surplus to New Shrewsbury. John and Patricia Kowalski. AP Wlrephoto When police arrived at the MAHON IN CUSTODY variety of companies — electric, telephone, gas, bus, railroad, Comics 31 Main OHlce 741-0010 Sec Blue Shield, page 2 The Thomas youth is a ju- saniliilion. accident scene, they found Dr. nior at Trinity Christian — Bruce A. Mahon ar- Contemporary Life 18,19 Classified Ads 741-6900 An Associated Press strike'force has written a series Antonino Marotta of HO School, Glcndola. rives at Mercer County Crossword Puaale 31 Legal Adv 741-0010 Car Control! about the PUC and the two lasers and an insurance agent Church St. administering car- Patrolmen Thomas Bruno Court House, Trenton Editorials S Display Adv 741-0018 Need a car? Need credit? who arc ils members. The first"in the series will appear Mon- dio-pulmonary resuscitation and Barry Parker are contin- for bail hearing yes- Entertainment 710 Circulation Dept 741-3330 We will arrange both — Call day in The Daily Register, Northern .Monmouth County's larg- to the Thomas youth, who was uing the investigation. terday. FiMUjW IS Sports Dept 741-0017 Bobjor Ralph, 229-4790. (Adv.) est newspaper and Monmouth County's most interesting news- HorrfsTOpe 31 Contemporary Life 741-0010 Olde Union House paper. ••> Make A Date 32 Accounts Payable 741-0010 Borough of Union Beach Azaleas Calico Yardage Reserve now for Raster Din- Obituaries 4 Accounts Recelvable...741 0010 Night Registration will be Hundreds in bloom, $1.50 up I.ibbie's Country Store, il ner. Call 842-7575. (Adv.) Real Estate Today 29,30 Mlddletown Bureau 671-2250 held in the office of the Easter special. 94K-8571 (Adv.) Church St., Sea Bright. (Adv.) Open Easter, 12-8 "In Your Easter Bonnet" Religions News 23 Freehold Bureau 462-2121 Borough Clerk, Municipal Peterson's Riverside Inn. Re- Edna's Millinery, 544-1553. The House on Monmouth St. Need Credit? Need a car? Sports 20-22 Long Branch Bureau...222-0010 Building, Florence Avenue, Harry's Lobster House servations — 741-7793. (Adv.) (Adv.) Easter Sunday brunch and Call Ralph or Bub, 229-47'Ju. iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' for the 1973 Primary Election, Still remodeling but open lor lunch, 10 a.m. to6 p.m. (Adv.) business! (Adv.) (Adv.) Easter Reservations Evergreens, Easter plants Palace Diner Richard's at Shannon's on the following evenings: Take the family out Easier and flowers. Berardi Florist, Open Easter Sunday, 45 Mon- Closed Easter Sunday. Happy Tuesday, April 24, Wednes- Lime your Lawn Pansies in quart baskets, 89c. Drug Addiction Problem? .iunday at the Lo'bstcrman, mouth St., Red Bank. (Adv.) • Easter. (Adv.) day, April 25, Thursday, April Kings Rd. and Seven Bridge Granular lime 59c, regular Leaf lettuce. Berardi Florist, Call 9KX-H333 Hwy. 36, Leonardo. 291-2194. M., Little Silver. (Adv.) 2(i, between the hours of 8 89c. Becker Hardware, Hwy Kings and Seven Bridge Rds., For Help Caboose Goes Country From Montrachet p.m. to 10 p.m. each evening. 34. Colts Neck. 747-0465. (Adv.) Little Silver. (Adv.) DayorniKhl (Adv.). and Western with Joe Dee and to Ppullly Vimzclls, white All persons eligible to regis- Brlody's Rumson Regular April Board of Edu- Ha,ve blaster dinner with us. his Top Hands, Kri., Sat. wines of the world to chal- ter, must do so by April 26, Join Us Easter Sunday! Minnie's Plant Shop Fisherman's Wharf cation meeting of the Atlantic nights. 64 South Bridge Ave.. Baked Virginia ham $3.25. lenge your palate at Crates 1973, deadline for registering Villa Monica (formerly Philo- Open Easter Sunday selling Have Easter dinner with us. Highlands Board of Education Red Bank. (Opposite, R.R. Liquors. 14 N, Bridge Ave., for the 1973 Primary Election. On the river, Rumson. 842- Stuffed fresh ham $3.25. mena's) Hwy 36, Highlands. Easter plants. 311 Monmouth will be held on Thursday, May Serving 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Station). (Adv.) Red Bank. (Adv.) (Adv.) SI,. Red Bank. 842-807(1. (Adv.) 2200. (Adv.) (Adv.) 3,1973 at 8 p.m. (Adv.) (Adv.) Tie Dtfy Register, Bed Bmnk - MkMteuma. S.I. Friday, April M, U73 Officials in BayshoreTold To Lead Fight on Superport MATAWAN - Warning that all gone on record opposing He contrasted the "average and North Atlantic Oceans, •'it's later than you think" thus entire proposal," he said. 16.000-ton tanker in use unload their cargoes in Ca- County Planning Board Chair- "Also a few, but too few. of today" with the "new 265.000- nada where it would be re- man E. Donald Sterner yes- our municipalities have regis- ton super oil tankers, which fined, and then deliver it with terday urged that Bayshore tered their opposition. will need 100-foot-deep chan- Ihe many hundreds of avail- service clubs and mayors take "Apparently many of our lo- nels to accommodate them." able average tankers to our the lead in opposing estab- cal officials and our citizenry Noting that "the energy various seaports along the lishment of a deepwater port are under the impression that crisis is already upon us," Mr. North Atlantic coast.' " oft the New Jersey coast. this deepwater super tanker Sterner warned, "Our answer He said Canada is receptive "Don't let your Bayshore oil port is just a pipe dream of must be found and found soon, lo that idea. become another Sewaren," some crackpot on cloud nine." and I again warn you, the fed- As an alternative, said the •Mr. Sterner admonished Mr."Sterner again recom- eral government is not going Planning Board chairman. "It members of the Matawan Ko- mended using "The two exist- to wait much longer before would certainly appear prac- tary Club at a luncheon meet- ing deepwater ports already they make a final decision." tical and economically fea- ing at the Don Quixote Inn. available with their pipe lines Mr. Sterner suggested that sible to build a pipeline from •Gov. William T. Cahiil and and refineries located at Point the new super tankers "make ttw superports in Canada un- our legislators, and our free- Tupper, Nova Scotia, and Car- the long 20,000-mile haul from der the St. Lawrence River holders and our Monmouth port, New Brunswick, Ca- Saudi Arabia.. .around South and along the edge of our fed- t'ountv Planning Board have nada." Africa and through the South eral freeway system, south- erly from Maine. •After all, if our oil com- panies found it was economic- ally sound to build our exist- Oceanport Approves ing pipeline from Texas, 3,000 miles across the United states, under Ihe Mississippi River and over the Appala- Renewal Revise Code chian Mountains to Carteret, N.J., why wouldn't it pay to to be completed within 60 Johnson (or permission for .BABE IN FLOWERLAND - Two thousand tulips business, have let their interest in flowers OCEANPORT - An ordi- build one only a few hundred days, if the work is not com- Monmouth Beach to use the afld up to a spring wonderland at Becker Hard- grow—in the form of 20 varieties of tulips. Includ- nance formally approving a miles from Canada'.' ware, Rt. 34, Colts Neck. And in the midst of it oil ed are Kaufmanniano, Fosteriana, Biflora, Draw- slight revision in the pleted within that time, a pen- Ocranporl jail for the tempo- . fs Corey Graham, 3, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. in, red and white emperors, and double-flowering borough's urban renewal plan alty of $200 a day will be as- rary overnight holding of "Either alternative would Robert A. Graham, Heyer's Mill Road, Colts peony type. and the filing of an appli- sessed against the contractor male prisoners only, provid- eliminate the catastrophic Neck. Joseph and Arthur Becker, owners of the R>9>ilir SloM PHolo cation for a second year of for each day beyond B0 days ing agreement could be threat of oil pollution and rui- federal funding for the pro- that it takes to finish the job. reached on the appropriate nation of our Bayshore and gram was approved by the L«wer *f Two Bids reimbursement of the cost He coastal seashore resorts." Borough Council last night. The Muccio bid on the said permission also would be Mr. Sterner scoffed at testi- The council also approved Blackberry Bay Park work contingent upon the working mony from engineering ex- out of an indemnity agree- LWV Releases Objectives List an ordinance providing an in- was the lower ol two received perts that a proposed super ment whereby the Monmouth crease in pay for the borough by the council. The other bid- tanker port would be able to tax collector, Harry L- Van der was Ralph Marano Land- Beach police would be respon- sible for any injury that may withstand hurricane winds of Note, from $2,810 to $4,B10 a scaping, Inc., of West Orange, over 100 miles an hour. year. Both measures were with a bid of $78,191.50. occur to one of their prisoners while in the Oceanport jail. "Let us never forget," he For Middleto wn's Master Plan passed unanimously following The council accepted a bid said, ". that we were given public hearings which drew no of $7,820 for a loader tractor Mayor Baxter also issued a these same assurances when for industrial planning are public comment. ' M1DDLETOWN - A con- dures for evaluating the im- major subdivisions and multi- with a diese) engine. The bid, proclamation declaring May the Texas Towers were built sensus of planning objiTlnes pact of proposed residential family developments and es- studies of the impact of indus- In other action, the council the only one received by the "Senior Citizens Month." He trial development on housing in 1958 along our Atlantic to be included in revision of developments on school facil- tablishment of improved accepted a low bid of $68,700 council, was from C. II. Rob- thanked the Senior Citizens of coast. needs, municipal costs and Oeeanport for all they have the township master plan has ities and continuous joint building codes, the League from Muccio. Inc., Farm- erson. Inc., Freehold, and in- "But in January, 1961, when urges. school population, studies to cluded a $1,200, allowance for done for the community and ,jbeen released by the League planning with the Board of ingdale, for construction of a only a typical northeaster hit Kdueatinn to ensure school fa- evaluate the effects of such a trade-in on an old loader. said "The senior citizens of v' of Women Voters Recommendations con- ballfield in Blackberry Bay the" one in the same general cilities can handle increased cerning commercial devel- development on neighboring Park and an access road Oceanport are undoubtedly To preserve the township's The council also accepted a area as the site of the pro- school enrollments, the opment include planning di- areas and on the township en- through the park to the wa- low bid ol $14,250 from Law • one of the greatest natural re- rural atmosphere and natural posed super tanker seaport, league recommends rected lo achieve commencal vironjnent and examination of ters of Blackberry Bay. ino Brothers, West Long sources of the borough." .resources, the LWV recom- that Texas Tower, costing $20 development of superior qual- the effectiveness of industrial Branch, on furnishing and de- mends conservation of ecolog- Planning for residential de- Councilman F. Edward million, toppled over with the velopment should include in- ity, revolution of commercial ratables for providing proper- livermg road gravel and bull- Mr. Baxter cited one senior ically valuable areas, protec- Waitt said that once the road lass of 28 lives." tion of flood plains and wet- centives for cluster zoning to strip zoning policy to dis- ty tax relief as opposed to re- is built, work can begin on tne dozer service. There was one citizen in particular for spe- save open space, housing to courage proliferation of enter- form of the state's tax struc- boat launching ramp that is other bid, from C. J. Hesse, cial recognition, Val Silbcrna- lands, control of erosion and \\W.A ;il Miil|>i>iiil drainage problems and acqui- serve all .socio-economic lev- prises bordering highways ture planned for the park. He said Belford, in the amount of gel. noting that Mr Silberna- sition of open space by the els, provision for multi-family and lo encourage more neigh- The League believes recrea- he expected the ramp to be $24,500. gel was being honored at a Ol l'.;iiii|i;ii^n Ooiil dinner April 28 by the Inter- township for future con- residential unils, estab- borhood shopping centers and tional planning should include completed by late summer or In addition. Mr. Wait an- FREEHOLD - The Free- national Union of Operating servation projects. lishment of criteria for deter- planning to make such neigh- consideration of facilities for early fall. nounced the Shade Tree Com- hold Area VMCA has passed Engineers, Local tin, in laid- Planning for continued im- mining optimum population borhood centers mure attrac- all ages and Doth sexes, better Location OK'd mittee had awarded a con- the half-way mark in its goal densities, improvement nf tive. location of facilities to serve well, for his service to the provement in township Mr. Waitt reported that Hie tract to Becker Tree Service union. of raising $41)0,000 (or a new ahools should include proce- standards for site plans of League recommendations all township areas, facilities state Natural Resources for $701) to plant 35 hemlocks year-round facility on E. accessible to the handicapped Council had ruled in favor of on two sides of the tennis Mr. Silbernagel served as Freehold Road. and provision of open space as the borough, approving the courts for screening. He said vice president of the union for "A gift of $7,500 from Frank well as playground facilities. proposed location of the the poles for the tennis nets, 20 years, giving up the post C Gibson Inc. took the YMCA Keansburg Board Agrees In conclusion, the League ramp, after a public hearing which were leaning, had been only last Jan. 1. He has been a campaign aver the $200,01)0 urges that planning include a in Trenton last week. The replaced and the courts now member of the union for 411 mark," stated Harold Wells, program for preservation of Concerned Residents for were open for public use. years. drive chairman. historic buildings and sites in Ramp Relocation, a group of Jail Use Sought The mayor also issued pro- He also reported the first On Blanket Teacher Pacts the township, encouragement Oceanport residents, has op- Mayor Elwood L. Baxter clamations declaring May 12 gift from the hotel and motel of better mass transit facilities posed the park location and KEANSBURG - The Board proved, as was a contract In response to a question said the council had no objec- Fire Service Recognition' Day industry, a $5,000 donation both local and regional and a urged that the ramp be lo- tion to a request by Mon- and the week of April 29 lo from the Freehold Motor Ho- of Education agreed last night with Mrs Mildred Robinson, from Mrs. Arlene Kelleher method of improving the cated somewhere else. to issue teaching contracts for to serve as attendance officer concerning the availability of mouth Beach Mayor Sidney B. May 5 Postal Service Week. tel. cohesiveness of Middletown The borough's application the 1973-74 school year tn (en- at a salary of j:i,3WI. the grammar school play- and countering current divi- ure and non-tenure teachers The board agreed to accept ground on nights and Sun- for state permission to build siveness among representa- the ramp now must be ap- in the junior-senior high a S10.1HNI cut in its$l.l million days, Mr. Preston said it was tives of different township lo- school and elementary school. currenl expense budget as or- available but explained that proved by Richard J. Sulli- Mitchell Reported Saying calities. van, commissioner of the Abstaining from the vote dered by Borough Council. the public would have to be state Department of Environ- was Ronald A. Hayes, who ob- Board member Thomas K. flexible on its use. mental Protection, who is ex- jected to voting the contracts Kinlin reported that the Mon- "The lights an- owned by pected to act on it within a He Opposed Watergate as a whole instead of individ- mouth County Narcotics Jersey Central Power and Blue Shield week or 10 days. ually. Council has been invited to Light Co. and we don't control (Continued) Councilman Peter A. Del- ministration's Watergate in- paign, said yesterday that Clerical, secretarial and map out a program for the ju- them," he explained. he played. Dean will allege in Rale Cut Forlera announced that a con- vestigation because rt turned Strauss' remark had lessened custodial contracts were ap- nior-semor high school. Robert Pupchinski, a stu- testimony that White House tract for construction of the up information about "per- chances for a settlement. dent, asked why there was no officials, including chief of 1.3 Million Oceanport Lions Swim Club, sons with whom I have had Sheldon S. Cohen, lawyer for action taken on the Student staff II. R. Haldeman, sought which is to be built in Black- personal and professional the Democrats, agreed, Council's request to have a (Continued) to cover up the facts behind berry Bay Park, had been relationships." He didn't saying no further discussions Union Office Aspirant smoking lounge for students. the case, the Post quoted &1 million over a three-year signed on Wednesday and said elaborate or name those in- are planned and "we are pur- "We were told it was a fire period. Dean associates as saying. volved. hazard, but the teachers construction should begin next suing the suits." The rate reduction is the Yesterday saw these other smoke in the school, so why week. — Court papers were filed - Sen. Lowell P. Weicker, Critical AfterShooting first for Blue Shield sub- fast-paced developments: isn't it a hazard for them?" he Mr. Dellera said Ihe con- claiming that an unidentified R-Conn., member of the Senate scribers in 15 years. 11 affects - Attorney General Rich- •">'-"• (Continued) decaying, came lo promi- asked. tract, with Viable Construc- employe of the Nixon cam- Watergate panel, said he those in groups of fewer than ard G. Kleindienst announced paign picked up eight cartons nence in World War 1 when Mr. Preston said that al- tion Co. of Freehold, contain- found his office safe opened ington Sts and, after he 11)0 persons or who subscribe he disqualified himself last of documents, including plans they were a major embarka- tliougti there is a problem of ed a clause requiring the work but, as nearly as could be de- stopped for a traffic light! two individually Sunday from running the ad- to bug the Watergate, at the tion point for soldiers trav- space availability, he advised termined, nothing was taken men armed with handguns McDonough said the re- White House complex before eling to France. After the w;ir the youth to put the request in from his personal Watergate -and wearing ski masks maining 2.4 million Blue FBI agents arrived on the day they were used as a cargo writing and present it to the files. An aide said it was pos- jumped out of the car that Shield policyholders may also after the Watergate burglary. port school principal, Walter Cole- sible someone could have pho- Shad been following him and be benefitted indirectly by the 2 Top GOP Fund The Waterfront Commission man Lawyer Peter H. Wolf filed tographed or copied some of '•ran to his car. 1 rate cut. runs 2i\ hiring halls for tht ap- "If you don't jjel any satis- the papers in an attempt to the sensitive documents. • 't The gunmen fireM "eight lo proximately Illlll men who The larger number of Blue keep his client's identity se- ?lir bullets through the win- faction there, give it to Mr. work on the docks. Bulger (Joseph R. Bolger. Shield policyholders subscribe Raisers Indicted cret from the grand jury Wolf ,jdow on the drivers side, re- The commission mnk over in large groups and their (loiuily Firemen school superintendent) and if (Continued) 1970 as a broker in attempting said his client turned the sumed to their car and fled. hiring procedures 20 years rates are largely determined records back to the Nixon JTtiere was no attempt lo rob there is still no action, bring it to lease the facility to the M«vl Monday apti in an effort to eliminate tu the board," Mr. Preston by how much money is pairt campaign shortly before the iMurphy, police said. was not named as a con- state. But the lease was never BELFORD - A testimonial some ol Ihc corruption and said nut year-to-year in claims election, and that he believes A Hudson County Prosecutor's The precise amount of the spirator or a codefendant. consumated then because of dinner honoring members violence thai have marked Mrs Julia Flemnnng. a par- most of them have been de- ^Investigator John Farley reduction lo the 2.4 million Kugler said the bank did not unfavorable publicity about with many years of service to dock lite. ent asked. "Will it be possible stroyed. ^called the shooting a "setup. " subscribers could not be de- accept the offer, did not put the cost. the Monmouth County Fire- for those children who cannot — Both sides in a multimil- 'p\i\ didn't elaborate. Police termined immediately. Colsey on its board and did It was also reported that men's Association will high- All Display afford to go to Spain this not do business with any bond lion-dollar series of lawsuits ^Chief (ieorge Cnmrmns said tnder the 10 per cent reduc- D'Antonio and'his partner had light the unit's meeting Mon- spring to get off the eight house designated by Colsey or sold the building to a Pennsyl- over the Watergate case ;jt was an "attempted ruboui." Opens \loiulav tion, as it applies lo small agreed that chances for an day at 8 p.m. in the Belford j[ "I didn't see anything." days that those students are Mahon. vania corporation but that 1 groups, a single person will out-of-court settlement have Independent Firehouse. ^lurphy told Cnmmins. it MAT A WAN - An exhibit of getting off. Colsey is a Mount Holly at- three lawyers across the drawings and ceramics by save IS cents a month; a lani- dimmed. Awards also will be present- happened so fast. I don't know "I have four in school and 1 ily. (j? cents; a married couple torney and former member of Delaware River were fronting ed to two young boys who res- "A'hoshol me." three Pratt Intitule students can't afford it Why should all the Republican State Finance for the pair and in fact The Nixon reelection com- will open Mnndav at 7 p m at h'.i cents, and a single parent mittee offered a reported cued an elderly woman from , Cnmmins said the two men those who cant afford it be with children. :)5 cents Committee. He is 40 and lives D'Antonio and his partner had a burning building. .Trinity Studio. 74 Mam SI penalized'" she asked. in Delanco. Mahon, 42, lives in sold it themselves. $525,000 to the Democratic par- £vho left Murphy at Pier A The works of.-,Constance ty to settle the matter But ivere being sought for ques- There was no audible reply For individual subscribers. Burlington and is a real estate The state eventually did PROGRAM TUESDAY Manser. Ant1r»- tlrasso and from the board, as Mrs a single person will save 21 and insurance broker. He is a lease part of the building as Democratic Chairman Robert HOLMDEL - Students in tioning. Howard Sleel will be on dis- .S. Strauss then said publicly The Hobokcn piers many of Fit-mining was applauded by ixnts a- miinth: a family, 74 former Burlington Counly did the federal government. grades one through five at the play through Saturday, April the youths assembled at the cents; a married couple. 5(1 freeholder director. Collected For Nixon that such a payment would in- Indian Hill School will present hem now empty and dicate an admission of guilt meeting. cents; a single parent with Conviction on the single Colsey was the head of a a physical education program by Republicans. children. US cents; and a stu- charge of conspiracy is pun- special Republican Executive at a meeting of the PTA dent, 11 cents. ishable by up to three years in Club which collected more DeVan L. Shumway, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. In the Blue Shield was granted a prison and a $1,000 fine. than $100,000 for President spokesman for the Nixon cam- gymnasium. Weather: Sunny, Warm ill per cent rate increase in Mahon surrendered to State Nixon's reelection campaign. IS71. It yielded 119 9 million in Police and was taken before As a reward, Nixon named Mostly sunny and warm bul of winter-like conditions and TIDES surplus or $i;i million more Superior Court Judge A. Je- him to the U.S. Maritime ess humid today, high about tornadoes that struck in the Sandv Hook than anticipated rome Moore, where he plead- Commission. '0. Clear and cooler tonight, nation's midseclion yes- TODAY - High 9:34 p.m. Yesterday's action does not ed not guilty lo the charge. ow in the upper 40s. Tomor- He, Mahon and McCrane re- terday and low 3:27 p.m. affect Blue'Cross rates, which Freed on Bond portedly were involved in •ow fair and pleasant, high in Tornadoes touched down TOMORROW - High 9:57 pay hospital bills. :he mid 60s. Sunday partly He was freed on $5,00(1 per- fund raising apart from the throughout the eastern Plains am and 10:15 pm and low sonal recognizance bond and official Republican State Fi- IT'S 10 cloudy and mild. and western Mississippi Val- 4:03 a m and 4:0(1 pm After McDonough s original In Long Branch, yes- was given permission to trav- nance Committee. Their ac- ley accompanied by some Sl/NDAY - High 10:38 a.m. proposal to cut Blue Shield el to Puerto Rico next week tivities are said^.to be the. terday's high temperature hail. Thunderstorms roamed and 10:54 p m. and low 4.41 rates, the organization ap- was 75 and the low, £3 de- with his family on a pre- focus of other state and feder- the region, and a severe-thun- am and 4:33 p.m. proved a S per cent increase viously planned vacation. al investigations. grees H was 65 at 6 p.m. and file overnight low was 48 derstorm watch was in effect Kor Red Bank and Kuinson in fees paid l» physicians. Mahon would not comment McCrane was charged in for eastern Oklahoma and bridge, add two hours; Sea Blue Shield claimed that the on the indictment nor would federal court Wednesday with O'CLOCK Today's 7 a.m. temperature was 48. northcentrl Texas before day- Bright, deduct 10 minutes; move was not intended to re- his attorneys. deliberately staying out of the break. ~ , \mg Branch, deduct IS min- duce its surplus but had been D'Antonio is a co-owner of country to avoid grand jury Do you know how A blizzard swepl the north- Eight inches of rain at utes; Highlands Bridge, add under consideration prior to the old Rider College building subpoenas. He is on his yacht your parents are? ern Plains today tn the wake I'aragould, Ark. 4(1 minutes. McDonuugh's announcement. in Trenton and used Mahon in in the Caribbean. Now Jersey Bell The/DaiJy Register, Red Bank- MMdletowB, NJ. Friday, Aprfl», lf»
Bombers Strike Near Phnom Penh Keansburg School PHNOM PtfNH, Cambodia — U.S. fighter-bombers at- KEANSBURG - Approxi- no emergency days? he was stopped mid-sentenct by tacked Communist positions on the east bank of the Mekong mately 250 junior-senior high asked. Mr. Preston. 1- *f ' River today only six to eight miles from Phnom Penh. school students demonstrated Board President George W. "If you are asking, "D# the It was one of the closest strike? to the Cambodian capital in front of the school yes- Preston Jr. replied that the teachers put the kid&tfp to since the Communist military offensive began in late January. terday morning to protest the school calendar for this year this?' I don't know." hc-*«d.- A large force of antigovernment Cambodians and their North shortened Easter vacation was made up last year and Samuel Capalbo, presfflent Vietnamese allies are strung out along both banks of the Me- this year. that there was no way that of the Keansburg Teachers kong from near Phnom Penh to the South Vietnamese border. The demonstration, com- the board could grant a full Association, denied the allega- The Communists have kept the 32-mile stretch of the mencing at 7:30 a.m. when week's vacation for the com- tion and stated that the teach- Phnom Penh-Saigon highway between the Cambodian capital the students usually start ing week. ers went along with tW re- and the (err/ crossing and naval base at Neak Luong closed their first classes, was or- "If you want to challenge sults of a survey madebjtthe throughout most of the offensive, and are dug in on all roads derly. Although some police next year's schedule, now is administration of parent^ask- leading lrom the capital to the provinces, stopping long-dis- cars were on the scene, no ar- the time to do it," he said. ing whether a shorter Easter tance traffic. rests were made. By 10 Mr. Preston stated that in ' vacation and earlier closing In southern Cambodia, government soldiers again aban- o'clock half the students were his opinion the demonstration date in June Were agreeable. back in school. did not accomplish anything, Schools are slated to close doned Kep, a coastal village that was the headquarters for the June 15, the same date as last Rigillcr stall Phol» Some members of the pro- but he suggested that the salt-water fishing industry. The government force retreated to DEMOCRATIC FORUM — State Sen. Ralph De Rose, standing, right, D- test group, and officers and youths meet Tuesday with year. the nearby hamlets of Ses Sar and Kompong Nung under Essex, a contender for the Democratic Gubernatorial nomination, speaks representatives of the Student Walter Coleman, school prin-- The survey drew some -ver- heavy pressure, the military command reported- to the Marlboro Democratic Club last night. Listening are, left to right, Council attended last night's cipal, to make their feelings- bal jabs from the audience, Pentagon Aid Control Bid Fails Marlboro Mayor Morton Salkind; former executive director of the state Board of Education meeting. known. . with a few residents stating that they had never seen it, WASHINGTON - President Nidon has rejected a Penta- Democratic organization,- Joseph Gannon, representing another gubernato- William Brucato, Thomas Mr. Coleman said this has nor the school calendar. Mr. gon bid to wrest control of US. military aid from the State De- rial hopeful, State Sen. Edward J. Crabiel, D-AAiddlesex; Assemblywoman Ontek, Laura Maltese and already been done. Plans are Preston reminded them that partment congressional sources say. Ann Klein, D-Morris, and former State Sen. Richard J. Coffee, Mercer Robert Fupchinski spoke in in the works and will be made County Democratic chairman. notices were sent out and ttiat "The President has overridden the decision of Buzhardt, behalf of the 30 other students public as soon as they are fi- at the board meeting with nalized, he added. the school calendar is present- Richardson and company and the aid program will stay the ed at public board meetings. way it is," Rep. Paul Findley, R-IU., said yesterday. young Brucato expressing Mrs. Mary Lou Aekerman, apologies for the manner in speaking from the audience, He added that in the future, it He was referring to Pentagon general counsel J. Fred Buz- will be posted in the school hardt and Defense Secretary Elliot L. Richardson. which the students asked for asked whether the teachers Marlboro Democrats more days off. halls. The Pentagon proposal surfaced earlier this week when had any say in the setting up Sen. Hubert'H. Humphrey, D-Minn., disclosed a letter written He stated that the' group of the school calendar and He concluded, "While 1 can by Buzhardt to' the White House Office of Management and found out only a few days ago made the suggestion that the not condone what happened Budget. that school will not be closed demonstrators were being here this morning, I want to .Buzhardt was quoted as saying the shift from State De- Hear Three Hopefuls all next week, but will reopen used as tools. thank everyone for keeping partment control to the Pentagon would make U.S. military Tuesday. "The teachers' could have order." j- assistance "less visible since it would be spread" through vari- MARLBORO — While three Richard J. Coffee, who is liberals and blacks. Reason Sought grieved against the adminis-- He looked at the four-lead- ous accounts in the defense-budget. contenders for the Democrat- Mercer County Democratic He said if he gets the nomi- "Why is there a shortened tration or board. Maybe they ers seated in the audience and ic gubernatorial nomination chairman. nation he will unite the Demo- vacation when we had no weren't happy, but if the kids said, "I hope that we can all believe alleged corruption in The other contender, state cratic party in the state and snow days off and there were did this on their own—" She work together." Delaware Seeks to Set Example lead a ticket which will gain 1 the Cahill administration will Sen. Edward J. Crabiel, D- DOVER, Del. — Six bills which comprise what Gov. Sher- be a major issue in the cam- Middlesex, who is Senate Mi- control of the Assembly and man W. Tribbitt says may be the most comprehensive envi- paign, Assemblywoman Ann nority Leader, was in Wash- the Senate. ronmental package in any state in the nation, poured into the Klein, D-Morris, thinks voters ington, D.C. He was repre- Mr. Gannon pointed to Sen. Environmental Agencies General Assembly on its final day before a long Easter recess. may view it as a "Tweed- sented by Joseph Gannon, his Crabiel's 20 years in the state Tribbitt in an address before a joint session of the legisla- ledee, Tweedledum" situ- campaign co-ordinator and Legislature, first as an assem- ture yesterday said he hoped Delaware could "set an example ation. former executive director of blyman and then as a state for the nation" by enacting laws to regulate development of its "I am not sure corruption the state Democratic organi- senator. He said that whileSeek Intercommunication wetlands and coastal zone and to control the use of its waters. will be as major an issue as zation. Sen. Crabiel was the Senate FAIR HAVEN - Municipal scores," and plans for a "tele- view Act; A-2003, prohibiting Among major provisions of the environmental package is some people think," Mrs. Independent Images Majority Leader during the environmental commissions phone tree" among area com- the construction of a deepWa- a bill which would place levies on shippers transporting oil to Klein said. The assem- Since voters are apparently Hughes administration, he generally agree on their missioners. ter oil port off the New Jersey a Delaware refinery or transferring it while in Delaware wa- blywoman apparently be- wary of backroom politicians "guided through one of the prime goals. Given the coast; and A-827, the Ocean ters. lieves that voters may think it who submit to the will of big most progressive programs marked individuality of many Regional Sessions Sanctuary bill. ] If enacted, that fee could apply to large numbers of ship- will exist regardless of who is political machines, the candi- ever." commissioners, they even fre- One of the immediate aims Bills of Interest pers bound primarily for New Jersey and Pennsylvania who elected governor. dates projected images of in- Sen. Crabiel's coordinator quently agree on similar of the state board, Mr. Levy The Fair Haven commis- lighter — or transfer from large ocean ships to smaller vessels Assemblywoman Klein dependence, also stressed his candidate's methods of achieving those said, was to develop periodic sioner said other bills of im- — at least part of their oil shipment while anchored in Dela- made these remakrs to a Mr. Coffee highlighted attempts to enact legislation goals. "regional meetings to discuss mediate concern, were A-2151, ware Bay, Tribbitt said. meeting of the township's Democratic successes in Mer- to lessen the possibility of cor- The common problem, 32 lo- regional problems." the Endangered and Nongame Democratic Club last night at cer County, and said they ruption and foster efficiency cal and county-level environ- "By the end of the year," Species Conservation Act, and Inflation Presses Controls Fight the Andiron. Also present were partly accomplished by in state government. mentalists decided last night, the state president said, "we most important of all, A-5(i9, WASHINGTON - An inflation rate that, if continued, were Sen. Ralph De Rose, D- a fusion of the old time politi- Business Acumen Noted is a lack of inter- hope to have a regional office the controversial bill'that would take 6 cents out of each consumer dollar by year's end Essex, and former state Sen. cal organization with young Mr. Gannon also alluded to communication among envi- serving this area." Associ- would allow citizens the right is creating new pressure for tighter wage-price controls. Sen. Crabiel's administrative ronmental commissions, and ation officials are in- to sue polluters. ' President Nixon is resisting any such move, but the resis- prowess by highlighting the failure to keep close tabs on vestigating funding sources to Several members of last tance appears to be weakening as reports of sharp price in- senator's success in the busi- environmentally important develop eventually, a pair of night's discussion group, creases continue to undermine his largely voluntary Phase 3 Suspension Asked ness field. He said Sen. Cra- billy due for votes in the state regional offices to serve the which included members of control program. biel began his career as an en- Legislature. central and southern portions the Monmouth County Envi- The latest Gross National Product report, announced yes- gineer in the 1930's, and is From last night's group dis- of the state. The association ronmental Commission, the terday, shows inflation during the first three months of 1972 up now president of the Franklin cussion, called by Derickson headquarters is in Morris- County Planning Board and Of PBA Members County Board of Park and by 6 per cent on a yearly basis. Contracting Co. "which em- W. Bennett of the Fair Haven town. The immediate effect of the inflation spiral, already felt ployes 500 people." Environmental Commission, Of immediate interest lo the Recreation Commissioners, fty most shoppers, officially is recorded today with Labor De- Sen. DeRose, a lawyer, re- and Stephen Levy, president commissioners is the fate of the Eco-Center, and commis- partment release of the March consumer price index. It re- On Merritt Issue ferred to himself as a "fresh- of the Association of New Jer- five bills scheduled for legisla- sioners from Middletown, flects the 2.2 per cent hike in March wholesale prices, highest man senator." He said that sey Environmental Commis- tive action next week. ' Fair Haven, Little Silver, JI 20 years. PLAINFIELD - Several fense against charges that since he ^'changes Con- sions and chairman of the Mr. Bennett singled out a Ocean Township, Howell they killed a local policeman Township, and Holmdel, will ^^onnlouth County residents stantly," nobody can label Ocean Township Commission, trio of protective bills dealing 1 Seek to 'Weed' Welfare Rolls were among 35 representa- during July, 1967, rioting here, him a conservative, liberal or came demands for better with the sea and shore lines trek to Trenton on Thursday tives of civic and religious said the statement will be de- reactionary. newspaper coverage, in- A-1429, the Major to demonstrate support of the WASHINGTON - The Nixon administration has proposed groups meeting here last livered personally to Gov. Wil- The senator is considered cluding Legislative "box- Coastal Area Facilities Re- bills before Monmouth County sweeping changes in federal welfare rules to help states weed night to draft a statement liam T. Cahill during the first by many to be the frontrunner legislators. out ineligible and overpaid recipients. calling on the governor to see week of May. in the primary race. Mr. Bennett also suggested The new regulations announced yesterday, cover eligibi- that policemen involved in al- The statement referred spe- Assemblywoman Klein said that environmentalists meet lity, appeals hearings and recovery of overpayments. They leged attempts to prevent cifically to incidents in Mid- she was a "social worker by regularly, perhaps quarterly, could save hundreds of millions of dollars in the $18 billion-a- George Merritt from speaking dletown Township public li- profession," and as such was Natural Area Data with state representatives to year welfare system, said Robert B. Carleson, a special assis- publicly on two occasions be brary m April 6 and Wcstfield unlike any other candidate. encourage pro-conservation tant on welfare matters in the Department of Health, Educa- suspended from duty and High School March 17. She said she is used to "work- votes. tion and Welfare. brought up on departmental Mr. Frost said, "On April B, ing with individuals on indi- Sought by County "The state builders associ- He said the initial reaction from state welfare adminis- charges. 140 Policemen's Benevolent vidual problems." ation does it, the optometrists trators has been "overwhelmingly positive." David Frost of the Association (PBA) members She pointed to her long ac- LINCROFT - The Mon- in a town, the naturalist said. do it, so we may as well do Carleson, Gov. Ronald Reagan's former welfare director, armed and in civilian clothes, Plainfield Joint Defense Com- tivity in the League of Women mouth County Park System is The parks system is seeking it," Mr. Bennett said of the' was brought to Washington by HEW Secretary Caspar W. . mittee, an organization sup- occupied almost every seat at Voters, and the need for "fo- plan. Weinberger to promote California-style welfare reform seeking sites in the county information from the public porting Gail,Madden and the library, prevented other cusing attention on people's that may qualify as "natural The group urged two report- throughout the nation. people from entering, and about the existence of such George Merlin in their de- needs." areas" to be preserved be- prize areas. ers present to increase cov- made it clear that Merritt's Tax Reform Seen Issue cause of their' unique natural erage of environmental news, life would be in danger if he "Since," Mr. Kellers said, Vasey Heard on Pentagon Papers ' Mrs. Klein, Mr. Gannon and features. "most often such areas are particularly that concerning LOS ANGELES - The first government rebuttal witness appeared as the scheduled Mr. Coffee agreed that tax re- upcoming legislation. Safety Items speaker." Kenneth T. Kellers, chief rather small and are usually of the Pentagon papers trial — called to say how the Vietnam form will be one of the major naturalist for the county park known by 'a few people Fund Rally war study could have helped an enemy in 1969 — has testified issues in the campaign. The system, said the survey will around town,' we depend upon Delay Rt. 33 He added that in March, two candidates and Mr. Gan- he couldn't remember what U.S. "ongoing operations" were in involve "Those areas in Mon- local response in order to do a Newark PBA members "in- non, speaking for Sen. Cra- Vietnam that year. mouth County that should be thorough job." Retired Rear Adm. Lloyd Vasey's initial testimony met Bypass Bids vaded Westfield High School biel, said immediate action preserved in their natural objections yesterday from attorneys for Daniel Ellsberg and in an unsuccessful attempt to would be taken on tax reform state bacause of certain The Monmouth County En- Anthony Russo who said his opinions regarding one volume of TRENTON (AP) - The stop Merritt from speaking at if elected. vironmental Council has State Department of Trans- unique features." The lands the papers were "a replay" of the government's original case a fund raising rally." The assemblywoman said surveyed will be utilized as agreed to review each site three months ago. portation has announced that He said the state American she would push for a more ef- recommended in the survey to contract bids on the Ut. 33 by- addenda to the county's Open Vasey insisted repeatedly that the volume in question — Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) fective state administration. determine its value as a natu- pass around Freehold will be Space Master Plan. dealing with plans for landing Marines at Da Nang — contain- expects momentarily to file All the candidates labeled ral area and make recommen- delayed to May 3. ed "very important information. This is a very revealing piece suit against the PBA "Seeking Gov. Cahill an inept adminis- Potential sites to be includ- dations concerning its in- of information for any country that has any hostile feelings for Bids were due to be taken to enjoin them from further trator. ed in the "natural areas" will clusion in the plan. GRANT the United States," he said. Thursday from 28 concerns, interference with Merritt or Mr. Coffee and Mrs. Klein be those that contain rare or Recommendation forms are but a DOT spokesman said de- with anyone supporting his ef- agreed that there should be unusual forests, plant life, available from the Monmouth PRINTERS . sign changes necessitated the forts to secure a fair trial." limited gambling in the stale geologic formations or wild- County Park System, Natural Israel to Mark Birthday postponement. The depart- 170 MONMOUTH ST. I Miss Madden and Mr. Mer- under state control, Mr. Cof- life, or special scenic quali- Areas Survey, P.O. Box 326, 741-9300 |j JERUSALEM - Israel continued to strengthen its big ment wants lo include special ritt are to be retried on May fee said he might be in favor ties. Lincroft, N.J., 07738. security net today to ensure that Arab terrorists don't wreck "breakaway" safety direc- 21. of several state-owned gam- the Jewish state's 25th birthday celebration. tional signs on the 3.7-mile by- Other candidates are un- Last night's-meeting took bling casinos, but Mrs. Klein developed tidal marsh or is- Armed soldiers and police are guarding airports and har- pass. place in the local NAACP of- said she favored having one lands or areas that provide bors in greater numbers than usual - and the guards are even In another matter, the de- fice. The statement to be sent casino, located in a municipal- key rest or feeding areas for out along the route through Jerusalem of the independence Be wise...4 ways you can save partment announced that it to the governor was endorsed ity such as Atlantic City. birds or migrating waterfowl, day military parade, still more than two weeks .away. has abandoned for the time individually by all those Sen. De Rose said he was in lands in flood plains or aqui- Reinforced patrols move through the narrow streets and being plans to extend Rt. 208 present, Mr. Frost said, and favor of prison reform, and fer recharge areas, or land alleys of Arab East Jerusalem, retaken from Jordan in the through Passaic, Bergen and by people authorized to speak the reinstatement of the death that protects lakes or ponds •1967 war. An occasional helicopter whirs across the old walled Sussex Counties. for their organizations, in- penalty in certain cases. He that support wildlife or have city at rooftop level. At an estimated cost of $5 cluding labor groups. and Mr. Coffee both high- historical value, such as old The Israelis fear Arab guerillas may lash out with Black million, the 20-mile long high- He said endorsement was lighted their push for strong millponds. September-type terrorism during the lavish celebrations that way would have run from Route received from Robert F. Pra- campaign contribution dis- reach a climax with the parade May 7. 202 in Oakland Borough, circl- A site may also qualify if it ther of Matawan, of the social closure legislation. is the last natural open space Israel's statehood was proclaimed on May 14,1948, but the ' ing the Wanaque, Kamapo action committee of the Uni^ 1 felt ntlimfy and Ringwood Lakes, and en- birthday varies each year with the Hebrew lunar calendar, tarian Church of Monmoutli SAVINGS CERTIFICATES iimiiiiii iiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiii ded at Rt, 94 near Vernon in County, Lincroft; Robert Sussex County. Moyer of the Monmouth Coun- mmiiY ty ACLU, and Joseph A. Ro- gers of the Monmouth County MAIN OFFICE: VFW Egg Hunt People's Coalition for Peace" INVESTORS eHElTNUT.IT.U •,»!... REKIOMIIKD IANK., M.J. M»1 LOVE and Justice (PCPJ). BRANCH OFFICES; PASSBOOK SAVINGS Hi RT. MrMIOOteTOWN, N J , 017' Is Tomorrow MEEAST MAIN ST., FREEHOLD H.J. I Mr, Frost said civic and re- hlirnl filj •ROADWAY, LONG BRANCH, N.J., 17740 KEYPORT - The 15th an- ligious leaders, other than qutrtarly Eitobtltritd in mi ftp jotm N. cart and Htnrr Clor nual Easier egg hunt spon- those present last night, are „ _ FUILISHEO IV 1MB RED BANK UtOliTB* sored by the Veterans of For- expected to endorse the state- LIVES BY Mcmbtr ol Ihc Anoelaltd PrtU-Tlw Aiioelalrt Press li fntlllrf e«- cluilvHy lo the UM lor rewDlkmlonof oil Iho local news printed In Ihli eign Wars Post and its Ladies ment and to join the delega- ntwipaper 01 well ai all AT" newi dlipalcnei. Auxiliary will be tomorrow at tion to visit the governor. _S*cond clou l»»l°9e Pole) a! Rrt'aank. N.J. (W70I and ol additional 1 p.m. at Wygaht Beach, foot moiling gfflcii. Publfijirt daily, MUidoy Hirough Friday. Moll !W>icrlp. The statement is also ex- From Oay ol Deposit lo Day ol Withdrawal •Ions poyablf In advance. of Cedar St. Interest paid : pected to be sent to Attorney tWMk IMonlh l»onin» sMontni I Year Peter Rabbit will be on General George Kugler and to PHONE. source tso
By MILTON VIOBST iHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiin achieve them by significantly executive and legislative enlarging the powers of the branches. President Nixon has issued executive. For example, the bill would an important invitation to THE NEW "Unfortunately," Nixon appropriately define the fol-' Congress. He has sent up a said in his message to Con- lowing presidential powers: trade bill that he really wants POLITICS gress, "the President and (1) To make war. It could enacted. The bill gives Con- those who negotiate at his di- iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii consider the President's gress its first real opportunity rection do not now possess au- bombing of Cambodia, his to impose a needed under- major objective has been to thorities comparable to those threat to resume hostilities in standing on executive-legisla- dismantle the federal welfare which other countries bring to Vietnam and the possibility of tive relations. apparatus, which he has done bargaining sessions." new Vietnams elsewhere. It's true, as so many have unilaterally. • He wants the White House (2) To impound funds ap- said, that Congress has not, Unwilling to use its ultimate to be empowered to negotiate VIORST propriated by Congress. By until now, had the power to weapon, Congress has passed international trade agree- would be inclined to give him withholding such funds, Nixon challenge the President's in- bills — but without the two- ments largely on its own. Con- the authority he requests, in currently is exercising a non- creasingly inflated assertions thirds necessary to override gress no longer would have international trade, since the constitutional veto over law- of executive authority. Con- Nixon's vetoes. So the Presi- any real say over the results. history of congressional in- fully established programs. gress has one ultimate weap- dent has humilated Congress That's a lot to ask of Con- volvement in this field is not Some limits on this power on — adjournment without again and again, with total gress right now. The Presi- encouraging. have got to be considered. Season of Hope voting a budget — but that impunity. dent is saying "trust me" — Omnibus BUI (3) To deny information to would close down the govern- Balance of Payments when, in the past few months, • But the trade bill can then Christians today solemnly observe The Passover holiday that Jesus Congress by invoking execu- ment, and it has never been The trade bill could change he has been saying "go to become the perfect vehicle tive privilege. Njxon has said another anniversary of the crucifixion and Christ observed is nearing its end, just as willing to use it. all that. It is important to our hell," and Congress has had for defining White House au- this power extends to all past death of Jesus Christ nearly 2,000 years is the Lenten season that was instituted by Previous Congresses have balance of payments, our in- to swallow it. During this peri- thority in other fields. I would and present staff aides. The ago. The church that was founded on His Christ's followers. For members of the been able to bargain with ternational relations and our od, his conduct in office has propose an omnibus bill, to be .attorney general has leap- teachings and instructions has many Jewish faith, the observance is a remem- presidents who had legislative economy generally. Its objec- raised serious questions about called the Presidential Pow- frogged him by claiming it for programs to pass. This year, tives are sound but, in com- whether he and his subordi- branches—called denomina- brance that God will prevail over oppress ers Act of 1973. It would cover every member of the federal Richard Nixon has had no leg- mon with the President's oth- nates merit trust. all the areas of power cur- tions—throughout the world and although sors. ljor Christians, this weekend supplies bureaucracy. Obviously, this islative program. His only er actions, it proposes to On balance, however, I rently in dispute between the bill could clarify this'power. ~?y differ on matters of dogma, their be- assurance that death need not be their fin- f that He is the Son of God remains ish, but that it can be the beginning of iirm. their true life. Yesterday's Holy Thursday obser- For the faithful of all religions, this vances were a commemoration of Jesus' should be called the season of hope be- Last Supper with his apostles, fie had Prelude to Act oXLove cause that is really what it is. Even the gathered with them to celebrate the feast IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII weather fits into the patlern, the budding By JIM BISHOP the services they had ren- but their feet, The Jews knew of Passover and to advise them of what plants and trees giving proof that the dark, dered to Jesus. Others ticked that, not tb conform to a would happen the next day when His Fa- They stood in groups in the their good deeds off on their cold days of winter have passed. THE host's wishes, was like bring- ther's instructions would be followed. An darkening stone room, ar- fingers. Peter, the burly fish- ing an unbidden guest. Peter guing about The Law, be- erman at the left of Jesus, ignominous death on the cross was or- New clothes and new fashions also are was the only one who pro- cause this was the primary REPORTER shushed them. They were act- tested. dained as God's signal of love for the man- part of this period of rebirth, a secular ac- subject of men of Israel. ing like "boanerges" — Sons IIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII "For I have given you an kind He had created. knowledgement that this is a very special When the lamb was taken of Thunder. example," Jesus said, "that We know, of course, that today's sad- time of the year, one which should offer^ from the oven, Jesus and the filled in the kingdom of God." They were not learned men, as I have done to you, so you apostles, speaking as always The 12 paused, as they often ness will give way to the joy of Easter spirit and encouragement to those whose" like the priests of the Sanhe- too should do." Over the in Aramaic, shouted: "There is did, to look at each other and drin. When they joined Jesus, mountains of Moab, an orange Sunday because the Resurrection He pre- sufferings and problems might otherwise no God but One!"' inquire with their eyes the they smelled of fish oil and moon hung like a lantern. The dicted did come to pass. bury them under a blanket of despair. meaning of the words. They sat on cushions around wood shavings. Andrew Sel- feast continued, and Jesus the outside of the table shaped To the right of Jesus sat dom spoke unless it was to told them that one of them like a capital U. Two servants Judas ish Kerioth. He was en-, ask a question. Peter had a boy John. Of the apostles, he would betray Him. Everyone Good Symphony News served the lamb and the herbs titled to this position because heart full of love and a loose would die first—in Jerusalem. asked: "Is it I, Lord? Is it I?" from the inside. They set rit- lie was the treasurer. Judas tongue. Bartholomew was a For two years and a few The New Jersey Symphony in recent es—such as Thomas 0. Boucher of Rum- was irritated because the boy The host dipped a morsel of ually clean dishes and goblets, dandy, whose cloak was bor- months, Jesus had preached charoseth and gave it to years has shown signs of becoming one of son, president of the Ciba-Geigy phar- or chalices, at each place. On John had squirmed between dered in purple. Philip was an up and down the Jordan and him and Jesus, so that he Judas. "That which you must the state's great cultural assets. It started maceutical firm—their professionalism in its breast, the night wind car- optimist with a sense of hu- in Jerusalem. Now he would do, do quickly," Jesus ssaid. ried a chill. Braziers were could look up at the master mor. to become something more than a New- the world of finance should be as helpful to preach no more. All of it could Judas departed. As Jesus lighted; the odor of lamb was and be close to his favor. be distilled into an essence: ark-based orchestra when the talented the orchestra as the top flight musicians it Jesus forgave the youth his James of Alphaeus was shy had given them wine, so He good because Jews ate meat to the point of pain. He had "Love you one another as I Henry Lewis was hired as music director is trying to recruit. only on feast days, and- this minor transgressions and passed bread among them in 1968. treated him like a son. known Jesus since infancy, love you." and asked them to do this in Inasmuch as the business contribu- was the Passover. and was ashamed to admit Passover Ritual One of the question marks that follow- tions are tax deductible, the stockholders 'Share It' commemoration of Him. They Jesus sat at the center. that, in spite of miracles he A servant walked outside would remember. "A new ed speculation about the orchestra's fu- should have no objection to the money Many times He had told these Jesus tipped a flagon of had witnessed, he doubted the table with a basin and a commandment I give you," he ture, however, has been its precarious fi- being used for such a worthwhile purpose. 12 that He was the messiah, wine into his chalice. Then he that Jesus could be the prom- pitcher. Water was poured said at last. "Love one anoth- held his right hand over the nancial status. It has been difficult for the the Son of Jehovah, and that ised messiah. Jude was a over hands held on top of the er; as I love you so I want you Even with a guarantee of $1 million a He must die as an act of love big cup and said: "Take this, symphony's board of trustees to plan for cousin to Jesus. Simon Zelotes basin. The hands were wiped too to love one another. By year for three years, the symphony will for all. Sometimes they were and share it among you; for I . was the blank face among the the future because each year's season en- dry and parsley dipped in this token all the world must still need public support. That is neces- in a fervor of faith; some- say to you that I will not drink 12. vinegar was passed around. ded with worries about how to erase a times they doubted Him. of the fruit of the vine until know that you are My dis- sary, iMr. Lowenstein explained, because Thomas, full of foreboding They all knew the ritual of ciples - by cherishing love deficit. of the trustees' philosophy that the orches- He dipped His fingers to the the kingdom of God comes." all the time, was losing his Passover. They drank, passing the cha- for one another." The word from Newark this week is tra should travel throughout the state as lamb and said: "I have great- hair. Matthew had been a tax Jesus departed from the rit- Later, it was difficult for ly desired to eat this Passover lice, and there was envy collector. He could speak and ual. He took the basin, the the most optimistic that symphony follow- much as possible. Those trips, in- among some that they were them to understand that his with you before I suffer; for I write Hebrew. On the outer towel and the pitcher, and ers have heard in a long time. Alan V. cidentally, provide students and elderly not closer to Him. death on the cross was not a say to you that I will eat of it edge of the table sat the other stood. Then he knelt, not to Lowenstein, president of the board, said a defeat - it was the ultimate people an enjoyment that would otherwise no more, until it has been ful- A few began to whisper of James, older brother of the wash the hands of his men, victory... three-year $3 million fund drive has been be denied them. started and that the initial response has We particularly like the idea of having been encouraging. the orchestra travel to the public rather . The trustees last November appointed than making the public travel to it, espe- a board of overseers, the 27 members of cially when those trips bring it to such The Agnew Daily Advocate which have volunteered to lend their tal- places as the Carlton Theater in Red ents to budgetary matters, including the Bank. That's one of the reasons we hope By ROBERT YOAKUM iiiiuiiiimitiiiiiuiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiimiiiiiiiiiiiii about Republicans tapping Meanwhile, Rep. Arvin O. fund drive. Inasmuch as the overseers are the overseers are able to attain that $3 phones, laundering money in What will Vice President Smedley introduced a resolu- the heads of major New Jersey business- million goal. .Mexico, making deals for tion yesterday calling for "an Agnew do after 1978 if he isn't ANOTHER campaign contributions, and elected President? Will he be the rest. "Nobody's going to Immediate investigation of drawn to journalism — the LOOK buy that malarky, except the Democratic National Our Vietnam Veterans field in which he has shown maybe what the President Committee to see whether such passionate interest? iiiiiimiiiiiiuiiiMiiiiiiwunHiiiiiiiiniuiin calls 'some of our so-called there Is substance to allega- Gov. William T. Cahill and a joint ses- were returned to us in groups and that is tions that it conceived and sion of the Legislature helped New Jersey One can't imagine the kind way one typical citizen here better people.' They would why they have been given special atten- of newspaper Agnew might branded certain charges buy used paper hankies if carried out the so-called 'Wa- give recognition to veterans of the Viet- tion, which, incidentally, they nchly de- publish in 1977, but one can about alleged improprieties In- they were colored pink." (See tergate affair' in a cold-blood- nam War in a most impressive ceremony serve. speculate now on the way the volved in the so-called 'Water- editorial, "Pinko Parasites ed, attempt to embarrass this YOAKUM Administration." last Monday. Although it was confined to The Vietnam conflict has been called Agnew Daily Advocate would gate affair.' Plague President," page 8.) honoring state residents who recently re- handle the Watergate espion- "The Democrats are trying "It's amazing how far the In an exclusive interview an unpopular war because of the dis-fl age story and charges of Re- with the Advocate Rep turned home after being prisoners of war, to make a mountain out of a Democrats and even some operations were a normal pre- sension it created in our nation. Perhaps publican fund-raising irre- molehill," said another in- Smedley said "If my resolu- Assembly Speaker Thomas Kean said the nervous Nellie Republicans caution of the sort anyone that is a permissible description, but it has gularities. dignant man on the, street. will go," said another Wash- would take when dealing with tion passes, I expect to uncov- POWs' presence served as a reminder of nothing to do with the fact that many New On page 32, just below the "It's a tempest in a teapot. ingtonian. "Just because John a ruthless, power-hungry, im- er solid evidence proving that all New Jerseyans who served in the war, legal • notices, readers might Sure, there may have been a Mitchell resigned a couple of moral, greedy, atheistic en- the Democrats caused illegal Jerseyans faithfully served their state and funds to be transferred to the some of whom "returned with broken bod- find something like the follow- little of the usual political weeks after the so-called Wa- emy — an enemy devoted, as nation when they heard the call to duty. ing: Citizens Call Campaign hanky-panky here and there. Committee for the Re-election ies" tergate episode, and just be- Sen. Scott put it, to 'acid, am- We're pleased New Jersey's official- Charges 'Contemptible'. But what's that compared to cause a few hundred thousand nesty, and abortion.' of the President, tricked the Because of the long time it took to dom made such a fuss over the POWs be- WASHINGTON, D.C. - "A President Nixon liberating dollars were set aside for so- White House into employing "As for Atty Gen Mit- . disreputable men, and bugged wind down the Vietnam War, its veterans cause' the intent of the program also in- callous, contumacious, and our prisoners of war?" (See called intelligence operations POW stories, pages 1 to 5.) chell's resignation, it was for their own headquarters. That were not treated to the warm welcomes cluded a belated "Welcome Home" to all contemptible effort to divert when he was campaign chair- Mrs Mitchell." (for inside attention from President Nix-1 man, people jump to ridi- bunch would stoop to anything that were staged for those returning from our residents who deserve our thanks for "It's Democratic hogwash," story see Martha Mitchell col- to win an election.' (See Edl- on's wise conduct of the con- , said a secretary. "Npbody be- culous conclusions. ! umn. "Hello. This Is Martha Wbrto Wars I and II The POWs, however, having honorably become Viet vets. flict in Indochina," was the tonal, "Smedley Should Seek lieves all those wild tales "The so-called intelligence Calling," page 21.) Senate Seat," page H.I Dally Register, Red Bank - MMdletown, N J. Friday, April 2
•T'ElEVlgtOX • MOVIES • D1NIMG OUT •HOBBIES Young Hopefuls Seen Hope of Broadway an active patron of area arts RUMSON - In his book iiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiuiiiMiuuuiimiMi enough to find the wings in gust Moon") and Keansburg It is a disturbing book for it Goldman is not only a thor- activities, and lastly, your re- "The Season" author William which to wait. the Pultizer prize winning brings into sharp focus all the ough researcher but also a porter. Goldman details, and occa- And that brings us back to "How To Succeed In Business problems, creative and cash- writer's, and reader's, dream. sionally decries, the plight of The Barn. Owner Lois Without Really Trying." Ran There was one sad note Sat- box wise, plaguing American The author, who among other the Broadway, and off-Broad- McDonald, who spends much ney chose a two character urday, one that hopefully will theater today. It is must read- things was the screenplay way—not to mention off, off By of her arts time engendering straight play, "Lemonade." not be repeated in the second ing for anyone interested in writer for "Butch Cassidy and Broadway—theater BETTE young people's interest in art, The Cast session. In addition to a ma- the dramatic arts, for Mr. the Sundance Kid," writes SPERO sponsored the high school dra- Cast for "Lovely Ladies, rked absence of parents, there succinctly, honestly, and well. ma competition as an in- Kind Gentlemen." included was even one teacher who did The book, which encom- centive for young people. Mrs. Craig Alfano, Turn Krasca- not attend the affair, thus re- HAVE EASTER DINNER passes the 1967-tiU theater sea- McDonald hopes, with the tore, Kevin Langan, Laura quiring his troupe to go on son, is not new and undoubt- help of benefactors, scholar- Viegas, Bill Van Zandt, and without his direction, not to WITH US IN THE edly was ready by many in its mention props and music iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMi iiiiiuiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii ships may be added to the Steven Levihe. Teacher advi- initial 1UH9 printing. But it competition next year. sors were Peter Smith, direc- which had been left and lock- WINE BARREL ROOM bears re-reading by the al- ed in the school by the absent Not All Responded tor; Diane Krahncrt, techni- ready initiated and first time evidence of who cares, right cal director, and Richard teacher'. reading by those theater buffs here in Rumson. N.J. Satur- She was a bit disappointed her first time out —in the Ludlum, musical director. The students, for their part, who have come to the fore day night at The Barn, a get an A for,effort, at least since Mr. Goldman's verbal catchall of area, amateur arts adults. Some schools were not "Lemonade" starred Dodie at all responsive; others Cue and Valerie Wenx and from this grader. The adults, foray onto the boards. activities, 1 was witness to the who didn't appear to rare, FAMILY 95 Broadway or No enthusiasm of some very pulled out after first signing was also directed by Miss have flunked. probable up and coming up as participants. But for the Coo. SPECIAL In my recent re-reading rest who bothered—so far? It But they can still pass, and Register Staff Ptifllo Broadway hopefuls, students "How To Succeed . ' in- THE PATRONESS - venture I discovered, proti- was a case of Veni, Vidi, Via. cluded a cast of Mike Minctta. gain a lot of pleasure doing it, 3 ably to Mr. Goldman's who took part in The Bain's by attending the April 2K Mrs. Lois McDonald, The first group of schools CHILDREN $2.00 first drama competition. Debbie Liedike, and Kathy delight, that the book is more competed for the judges and Jimincz. show. After all, what else owner of The Barn, relevant than ever. For, it Why should Broadway flour- could parents and teachers Rumson, and sponsor 1 an unfortunately sparse au- Judges are Angela Klytut raises the question, at least in ish ' Why, indeed, does it de- dience Saturday night. Final Knox, Interlaken, former As- have to do on a Saturday of the high school dra- this reader's mind, are we go- serve to flourish? Because competition will be held 7::i(l bury Park High School teach- night that's more important ma competition there. ing to soon have a Broadway there are some very earnest, p.m. April 28. Winners will be er and active member in than watching their own chil- delights in one of the — and who really cares? talented young people waiting announced that night and will dren perform? student performances. American Express • Master Charge in the wings—if they are lucky many Shore area musical and This weekend 1 found some receive awards. theater productions; William In the interest of not prej- Starsinic, Freehold,, music udicing any of the selections, and drama teacher at Free- WILLOWBROOK INN for the judges won't have hold High School and active in their decision confab until several theater associations 740 RIVER RD. 741-2099 FAIR HAVEN Dine & Dance . = April 28, 1 am not going to locally and nationally, such as comment on the comparative Theater 8 at Brookdale Col- lit the merits of the performances lege, Lincroft, the American heretofore except to say if in- Theater Association, and the "Molly" • itiative, energy and en- American Council of Drama thusiasm still count for any- Judges. "on llie pi i' iSiiM'sink U'IKT" ALPINE MANOR thing, these young people Also, Fred Caruso, Itumson, have already come a long production manager for the Dining Danbing HWY, 36 872-1773 HIGHLANDS way, films "The Godfather" and "(he finest in Those schools participating "The Valachi Papers," and American and Friday at 9 dining and dancing' Saturday were Middletown the April 24 television special, Continental Saturday at 9:30 and Keansburg High Schools "Man Without A Country;" Cuisine Featuring * ana me Kanney School, New Kenneth Friede, Rumson, Shrewsbury. Two schools New York,manager of TV The Jerry Kay Trio COMPLETE FULL COURSE chose musicals, Middletown Guide and a former president Breakfast at NO MINIMUM doing "Lovely Ladies, Kind of The Monmouth Players; 7 am No Cover Charge Gentlemen" (based on the Nina Segal, Rumson, a former EASTER DINNER drama, "Teahouse of the Au- fashion model who has been SERVED IN THE TRADITIONAL Luncheon at 12 STYLE, from $2.25 Maurice Caruso • at the Piano TAKE YOUR FAMILY OUT... Dinner at 6 Nightly From $5.95 Monday IN KEEPING WITH Thru THIS FAMILY HOLIDAY FOR A DELICIOUS LOBSTER Thursday TRADITION... DINNER Cocktail Hour Monday thru Friday THE WE WILL BE OPEN 5 to 6 pm AMPLE FREE EASTER SUNDAY AT 1 P.M. PARKING a la Carte EASTER Sunday thru Thursday Register Photos by Don Lordi FOR RESERVATIONS Till 10:45 BUNNY THE PARTICIPANTS - Laura Viegas and Kevin RESERVATIONS CALL Friday till 11:45 Langan act out a scene in Middletown High 747-2500 WILL BE HERE LIVE! School's entry in The Barn drama competition, Saturday till 12:45 "Lovely Ladies, Kind Gentlemen." As a film, the 872-1565 production was titled, 'Teahouse of the August ... TO GIVE COLORFUL EASTER EGGS Moon.' ollyFitchex-n TO ALL THE CHILDREN. f Inn&Mote COMPLETE CHILDREN'S MENU AVAILABLE The Proposition' DORIS "N ED'S ROUTE 35 RED BANK AND OF COURSE... SEA FOOD RESTAURANT 747-2500 DANCING Set at Brookdale "HOUSE OF GOURMET SEAFOOD" l.INCKOKT - As part <>f sored by ,the college's Public 36 SHORE DR.. HIGHLANDS, 872-1565 EVERY FRI. & SAT. NITE it's Spring Festival, Brook- Kvents Board. dale Community College will AS ALWAYS... The Proposition is com- present The Proposition, a pletely improvised — people. "THE BEST IN FOOD & MUSIC satric. improvisational revue, places,- situations, music and on Saturday June 2 at K.'.IUlyrics are created sponta- M0N. thru FRI. 9-9, SAT. 9-5 p.m. The show will be spon- neously by the actors and mu- sicians. The entire show is built on audience suggestions, phra; s, psychological prob- lems, political issues or public personalities which are turned FROMAGERIE within a minute into a five- minute encounter; a mini op- era starring a plumber, a RESTAURANT nurse and President Nixon; a musical comedy between 26 RIDGE ROAD Spiro A'gnew and Golda Meir; RUMSON and so forth. The revue is decidedly satir- EASY TO INSTALL EASY TO INSUIL OURABLE SIMULATE 842-8088 ic, its thrust being middle EASY TO 1NSTMI class, middle brow Ameri- SCRUBBABLE Woodgroin on Plywood EASY TO INSTALL THE LOOK OF SCUFF RESISTANT cana; and actors work contin- VINYL NATURAL PtCKY ually to pursue the humor and ALL 4'x8' REAL WOOD SHIELD (YPRESS WHITE PECKY CYPRESS to parody the cliches in the PANELS FROM PEG 'M' PLftHK WHITE •WACNUT ONYX everyday. • CAMBRIDGE GEORGIA PACIFIC • BURNISHED PECAN PEG N' PL ANK HAVE YOUR EASTER DINNER AT... • PECAN WOOD CHESTNUT The company is comprised • DESERT SAND • WHITE ASH RANCH HOUSE KNOT IY of college students and post FROST WHITE CEDAR • EARLY DUTCH WALNUT DISTRESSED NUTWOOD- students, making The Propo- Washable Durable ARKWOOD FROMAGERIE, SURROUNDINGS BEFITTING AMERICAN • ICEBERG ELM sition the country's youngest Vinyl Finish satirical rdvue. Reg, 7.95 THE OCCASION In late November 1872, the New York company of The Proposition marked its 7ll(lth performance, placing among SPECIAL EASTER MENU the five longest-running off- AND ALSO Broadway shows. The Proposition has proved CHILDREN'S MENU to be an important showcase for young talent. Its gradu- 3 SEATINGS... AT 1 P.M., 4 P.M.. 7 P.M. ates, found in many Broad- way shows, include .losh
•• • • • • Mostel, the son of comedian Zero Mostel. who recently WAIA-TEX MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW... played Herod in the film ver- sion o[ Jesus Christ Superstar JUST ARRIVED ATCO FIRST QUANTITY Tele. 842-8088 and Judy Kahan who moved from The Proposition to God- LARGE STOCK HAPPY EASTER FROM THE PETER FAMILY spell and is now featured in A OF SELF SPACIMG Little Night Music. 1st QUALITY AND NEW PATTERNS SELECT DISCONTINUED PATTERNS FREE USE OF TOOLS OUR FINE STAFF OF EMPLOYEES Hcservalions to see Proposi- tion may be made through the Institute of Community Ser- vices at Brookdale's Lincrafl HWY. 36 & UNION AVE. FROMAGERIE campus. Students will be ad- AT THE HAZLET UNION BEACH LINE mitted without charge. Tick- RESTAURANT ets Tor the general public arc Half Milt North oll.F.F. on sale on the campus. 8 The Dally Register. Friday, April», U7J Deodato May Become Television Today New York Ch«inel»-2.4,5.7,941,13 _ THE MERV GRIFFIN SHOW DAYTIME MOVIES O THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY ?*» O "Francis el AuiC "Ain't LoveUi Grand?" launtt BouseholdWord in U.S.10:30 O 'Tom Sawyar Detactiva" minister, and falls In lore. |R) By MARY CAMPBELL able response brought about the over the world. But every time 1*0 0 "God ll My Partner" O YANKEES BASEBALL AP Newsfeatures Writer recording and the recording has I have a chance I try to escape B "Ura of th« Swamp" Yankees va. Milwaukee Brewers. now brought Deodato to the de- and go to Brazil for a month or 4:00 O "Man Baait" IB WALL STREET WEEK "Also Sprach Zarathustra," 4:30 • "My Leva Cama Back" t:0O Q CIRCLE OF FEAR cision to be a performer instead so. 0 "Tn. Rob." (Part II) "Bad Connection." A telephone operator il punmtl written by Richard Strauss, ar- of solely a writer and arranger. "I was labeled a bossa nova by the volca and apparition of bar UU buJtUal ranged by a 29-year-old Brazi- And he has determined to do arranger for many years here. I EVENING when she plans to remarry. (R) lian, Eumir Deodato, and too OBB NEWS i GROOM 222 • whatever is necessary to estab- didn't get any other jobs. It got 0 THE RINTSTONES | "Mr. Wrong." An eccentric new teacher attract* played by a 10-man group called lish a level and maintain it — me worried for awhile. I "AiLra Nula" the atudenta to hla course but nil amoroua ad- Deodato, sat at No. 4 on the promotion tours, interviews thought it was going to be for Q BAT MASTERSON vancea toward Alice are rejected. (R) "The Diaapptarance of Bat Mutcraon" ' IB FIRING LINE best-selling pop singles chart and touring to give concerts life Then Creed Taylor of CTI 9:10 O THE ODD COUPLE for three weeks, ending April 7. with the 10-man group. The Records broke that label. He ffi GILUGAN'S ISLAND "Gloria, Hallelujah." Oscar Joina a daltai "Diamonds Are An Ape's Beat Friend' and winds up with an old frltnd, '. ' Deodato isn't a household group is different from the called me to do some arrange- ID HODGEPODGE LOOSE word, or wasn't until "Za- IO.-00 O'THE 'BOBBY DARIN SHOW people on the recording; most ments for Wes Montgomery. At 6:30 a I LOVE LUCY Guests: Carol Lawrence, Pat Buttram. rathustra," having been, in his of them were part of other that time he was having a big "Don Juan Is Shelved" 0 NEWS words, "back stage" in the O HAVE GUN, Will TRAVEL O LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE groups. hit. I got scared. I got sick for "In An Evil Time" "Love and the Return of Raymond;1*< "Lova aad tM record business. In fact, he was In Rio de Janeiro, where De- three months just on the (D BEAT THE CLOCK President;" "Love and the CUnle;" the arranger of the B side, ID THIRTY MINUTES WITH O BORIS KARLOFF PRESENTS odato was born, he went to col- thought of that. So Creed told 7:00 O CBS NEWS WITH WALTER CRONKITE , "The Fingers of Fear" '• "Just Like a Woman," of the lege tor three years, studying me to do a few arrangements, O NIC NIGHTLY NEWS ID THE LENOX QUARTET Roberta Flack record, "Killing engineering, and at the same not the whole album. I was so. 0 THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW 10:30 IB THE TURNING POINTS Me Softly with his Song," that time played organ and piano thrilled and so scared. I learned "Church Organ" 11:00 OQQ fflNEWS stayed ahead of "Zarathustra" O NEWS (C> 0 ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS behind a popular singer, having a lot. Creed gave me tremen- O THE AVENGERS "Golden Opportunity" on the best-selling chart. done all the arrangements for dous insight into record produc- 'False Wltneaa" < 0 THE LATE MOVIE His single is from the LP, O I DREAM OF JEANNIE "Seven Hills of Rome" (1981) starring Maria the show. "I was playing in tion and record making. After a "Permanent House Guest" Lanza, Peggie Castle.' An American a^nglng star "Prelude/Deodato" on CTI nightclubs, through around 3 in while 1 started getting as- m WORLD PRESS follows his wealthy fiancee to Rome. Records and there was no the morning every day, with signments with big singers. The 7:30 O YOUNG DR. KILDARE ID EVEINING EDITION thought of shortening that track "The Cage." A 20-year-old girl, neglected in an 11:30 0 THE CBS LATE MOVIE Mondays off. I was having to more 1 was doing it the more I institution for 13 yeara, reaponda to (he genUe "Wutherlng Heights" starring Timothy DadtWl, and putting it out as a single wake up at 7 to get to school, was learning, things like the treatment of Klldare. (R) Anna Calder-Marshall. The mystical mittlnc* cf: SI • until various disc jockeys start- O THE MOUSE FACTORY sur-croased pair, to obsessed with each fttlief, ttay having lunch at school and go- elements that give a song a 0 THAT GIRL Ignore, fatally, all the obstacle! put In thlir way. ed doing it. Deodato thinks now ing to the lab for experiments. chance of being a hit " "Absence Makes the Heart Grow Nervous" O THE TONIGHT SHOW it may be the biggest hit single Whenever I could get back Deodato likes to go camping O LET'S MAKE A DEAL 0 THE 11:30 MOVIE a Brazilian artist has had in the home I would get some sleep. and mentioned maybe buying a O THE COURTSHIP OF EDDIE'S FATHER "The Cardinal" (JM3) sUrrlng Tom Tryon, Romy THE PURSUED — Keren Black and Kaz Garas "Any Friend of Dad'a" Schneider, United States; the next he That gave me a premature ul- motor home or buying a boat. ID THE 5ltt STATE O THE DICK CAVETT SHOW arc two of the stars in "Bad Connection," a dra- thinks is Sergio Mendez's 8:00 e DR. SEUSS' SPECIAL Part II of the program of Alooholism In Ajntrleai " cer." It also led him to quit One of the songs on the album will be auen tonight. ' ' . ma about a young widow terrorized, when she is "Look of Love." college, quit performing and "Horton Hears A Who." Hana Conreid narrates is "Spirit of Summer," which thla children's atory about a hind-hearted elephant m NEWS about to remarry, by both her husband, who was Deodato hadn't played piano move to New York, which he Deodato wrote to enter in the who goes to the rescue of the harassed hamlet of killed in action, and his dead buddy, 1o be color- Wbovllle and Its resident Whoa. (R) ID REALIDADES for seven years when he per- did permanently in 1970. 1970 Rio Song Festival. It got O SANFORD AND SON 12:00 ID THE TWILIGHT ZONE cast on NBC Television Network's "Circle of "Tooth or Consequencea." Wlien Fred gets a tooth- formed "Zarathustra" at the "I think New York, Tokyo, second prize. "Basically I used ache, he Insists that Lamont find a white dentist ID THE Slit STATE Fcor." tonight at 9 o'clock. (Repeat) Hollywood Bowl at a concert Paris and maybe London are the same arrangement I used to cure him. 12:30 ID NIGHT FINAL • ;. the record company was giving 0 HOGAN'S HEROES 12:50 ID GOOD NEWS places where you can base down there. It is a song that I O THE BRADY BUNCH 1:00 Q MIDNIGHT SPECIAL to show its artists. The favor- yourself and still do things all think would sound nice in a "The Show Itvfl Go On." Marcia and her mother Host: Doc Severinson. Gueata: Henry Matifinl;' do a aong; and dance duet for the high school's Chris Manclnl, Vichl Lawrence, Dobid Gray. movie. I intend to use it in a Family Night Frolics program. (B) Timmy Rogers, Jerry Butter movie some time, as the O MILLION DOLLAR MOVIE O THE ONE O'CLOCK MOVIE "Trouble Along: the Way" (1853) starring John 'The Gospel According to St. Matthew" (IMO theme." Deodato has scored a Wayne. Donna Reed. A hard-bitten football coach 1:10 0 THE JOE FRANKLIN SHOW few movies but none lately be- tries to lead a small college to gridiron victory. 1:30 O THE LATE SHOW cause he hasn't been offered 10 THE TWILIGHT ZONE "Madame Curie" (18(4) starring Oner Garten, IB WASHINGTON: WEEK IN REVIEW any script he likes. He would Walter Pidgeon. 1:30 0 OKLAHOMA! 2:10 O NEWS AND WEATHER like to do some, using his 10- Gordon MacRae and Shirley Jonea star in this special broadcast of the film version of the classic 2:25 0 EVENING PRAYER . . man group to perform. Rodgera and Hammeratein rnuaical concerning two 2:30 O THE GREAT GREAT SHOW men and their mutual love for the aunt fir). IB) "Public Enemy" (mi) starring Jamit Carney, Also on the LP is "Carly and Donald Cook. . ^ " Carole." "I was motivated by Q THE LITTLE PEOPLE 4:00 O THE LATE LATE SHOW , Carly Simon and Carole King. "Little Boy Flu." In a cab going to New Jersey for a recording session that melody came to my mind. Usu- Monmouth THE FABULOUS ally the best tunes I have come like that — they jusj come, the Players Set entire piece. SHORE CASINO "After that I worked it out a Simon Ukt Dr., Atlantic UlgMutfs little bit, changed a few things Production around. I kept it for a better NAVESINK - Casting for INVITES YOU TO HAVE A opportunity, to record it. "Everthing In The Garden" "I use a cassette tape, so by Edward Albee has been when I have some ideas, it completed and the Monmouth SPECIAL EASTER could be in the middle of the Players' prouction will open WITH YOUR ENTIRE night, I just go there and put it at the Library Playhouse on FAMILY in. I find myself with half a May 4. dozen cassettes full of melodies Other performances of the • ENTERTAINMENT and never have time to go through them to see what is comedy are scheduled for • SUPERB HOLIDAY MENU useable. I whistle them, or May 5, 6,10,11,12, 18, and 19. • REDUCED CHILDREN'S PRICES hum. Curtain each night is to be • SERVED FROM 1 P.M. "I believe the basic idea 8:30 p.m. should be melody. If I go to the Director Billy Fansler of FOR RESERVATIONS... 291-4300 WO JAMES L. McCRAW piano, I start to elaborate too Red Bank announced a cast much. Your fingers command headed by Elizabeth Clarke of you rather than your mind. It Atlantic Highlands, and SHORE CASINO • ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS Band Has New CO happens a lot with whoever George Allgor of Ocean, as plays keyboard. I don't write the suburban couple whose FT. MOfrtftUTH - The playing professionally since arrangements with the piano, 389th Army Band has a new marriage is all but wrecked 1951. either. Your fingers auto- by the wife's extra-curricular commanding officer. Warrant Mr. McCraw is married to matically go on certain chords'. Officer James L. McCraw. activities. Dorothy Blair of the former Barbara Jansz, of Shrewsbury will be seen as OPEN ALL DAY! Mr. McCraw, 34, is from Colombo, Ceylon, whom he the chic entrepreneur who Youngstown, Ohio. He has met whiie stationed in Ger- brings sudden wealth to a been playing trumpet in Army Special Italian Easter Bread many. They have two chil- quartette of attractive home- bands for the past 15 years, Open Antipasto dren, Tony, 12, and Jeffrey, 9. makers. The role of the rich most recently with the 36th An enthusiastic Army band but careless next-door neigh- Army Band, Ft. Huachuca, recruiter, Mr. McCraw says: bor will be played by John Ariz., where he was first ser- "If anybody.wants to play in McLearen, also of Shrews- geant. the Army band, come to see bury. He is a January 1973 gradu- me at any time." ate of the School of Musicians, He can be reached on post The young man in the house Norfolk, Va. and has been at the band building. 207B. will be enacted by David Kranzoni and neighbors who are involved in the fast-mov- ing events will include Patty 1. Stuffed Rock Cornish Hen 6.75 Dombrowski, Agnes Kwik, GIVE MOM A BREAK 2. Roast Leg of Lamb 7.50 Mary Lee Kingsley, Joe Co- COME TO hen, Gibb Oram and George 3. Roast Pork Tenderloin 7.00 McKulla. TOWN and SURF with Apple Slutting Chet Hammann Jr. of Rum-' 4. Roast Prime Rib Ail Jus 8.00 son, is producing the show DINER and Mr, Fansler is also in 5. Lobster Franchese charge of tickets. He advises FOR EASTER DINNER early reservations and may AND BRING ALL YOUR LITTLE BUNNIES Sauteed in Wine Sauce An Invitation to Pleasure. be reached at 69 Maida Terr. — Special Holiday Menu - Red Bank. r 1887HWY35 671-1316 MIDDLETOWM 6. Shrimp Scampi 7.75 Sri'vinira Kull Course 7. Veal Parmigiana 7.00 Eumlr Deodato VEGETABLES: Poianes. BroccoV Sauieed Escamle ' First on paper. Then go to pi- PASTAS: L'iguine Wive C^n'Sa^.e* tiian! Siutfd Sh?:is. Pasta Cna ano; check it out. I've got my • Alfratto Easter Dinner best arrangements like that, DESERTS: AsscecJ uahan Pa&'r^s ..hee^e Cake R..;n "d'.p. O'dKer too. Box, Chicken Bieas" Puoo ng .viih ;ce Cream, "September 13' on the al- C'nd'en u'idc '0 jj t.'j o*' nenu ci-cf: Starting At bum came about because we 12:30 P.M. had studio time and we were having a break and the drum- PETERSON'S Italian-American Restaurant mer was playing a nice beat, a great beat. 1 thought, Why RIVER SIDE INN 1074 Ocean Ave., Sea Bright I MK CROSSROADS MNCROF1MNEW JERSEY don't we do something to it?' I lor «„„„„„„, c« 7414 shouted, Please record; don't HWY. 35 RED BANK .842-9857. ask the title!' 1 gave them a chord and it was pure jam. "I took the tape home and listened to it very carefully. I FEATURING the CLAM HUT marked down the number of r bars. Whenever the drummer breaks I mark it down. Then I ROAST TURKEY 4.50 built a little melody that would (it exactly on certain spots. I just added horns and flutes to I PRIME RIBS OF BEEF 4.95 Here Comes Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail & that tape; no more. 1 didn't; change one note. We just used Peter, Hopping Down The CLAM HUT trail for Easter the title ot the day we did it." Touring has started already, 1IBSTER TAILS ....5,95 with a week in Boston. Because Peter was a big Steamer" Eater About his own piano work on "Also Sprach Zaralhustra," Includes Deodato says, "I don't have And Cottontail a Sea Food "Nut" that much jazz technique; I Appetizers - Salad - Potatoes - Vegetables - Desserts don't have any piano jazz tech- \If~\ niqne. The only thing lean do is \[i' J play to the beat and do rhyth-1 / / ^""^ CHILDREN'S DINNER mic phrases on piano, reinforce If / Now Open 5 Days A Week the beat in other words, follow II 1 Wed. 5-9, Thurs. 5-9, Frl. 5-10 the beat. It was no style or III REGULAR MEMi AVAILABLE. Sat. Noon-10, Sun. Noon-9 anything like that. It became a II1 \\ style. " Adjacent to Highlands Lobster Pound "Again it proves that when NcwPftoMlfo: you're trying to do something Foot of Atlantic St. off Bay Avenue, on purpose it never works out. RESERVATIONS 872-0909 Things become things. They | HIGHLANDS never are. You can not predict' 741-7793 them or provoke them." 1 \ EVENING The Daily Register, Red Bank - Mttdlelown, NX Friday, April 21,1172 9 jg Amito JIHHWI ajtvtftl ver- U» a SIXTY MINUTES ' Waif Ow f*ct'ct CJlrtjl «4 << eUy. SUMDAY 0 SEE FOR YOURSELF ' fpfOSmVEL-Y BLACK 2 IMS MLLIONAttE MORNING * .:» 5 NEWS "Tin Mary * Mr. John Harden" - UK 0 CAU TO ntAYEX B COM! ALONG THtWGS WNHY SHOW WO B KINER'S KORNER mi HOUND CATS • SATURDAY AFTERNOON MOVIE It 0 RElieiON of Lust Woman" (IIM) aUrrlng Jeff 4:45 O SERMONETTE 740 B SEVEN O'CLOCK NEWS CHOOMN'S THEATRE - Richards, Venelii SUveunn. A newintjxrman Q WILD KINGDOM ~ Rtd Riding Hood- (1«H) MvU and a pilot are forced down near an Island in- ID CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP habited by * scientist and his daughter who have 6:55 O GIVE US THIS DAY ' B BUCK BEAUTY •TJie Hostage" . •-.•:•( H.R.PUFNSTUF renounced the world. 7:00 0 ARCHIE'S FUN HOUSE 0 DISTRICT t FRONTON! OJ THE TURNING POINTS 0 MODERN FARMER B CANDID CAMERA BO LPGA GOLF CLASSIC ; 2 WONDERFUL WORIP OF MOTHER WZZ EVENING MORMON WORLD CONFERENCE 1:10 0 SAIRINA, THE TEENA6E WITCH O OAVEY AND GOLIATH IB ZOOM fl ROHAN HOLIDAYS i:00 a O NEWS 7:12 MORNING PRAYER 7:30 B THE DICK VAN DYKE SHOW O WEEKEND PLAYHOUSE 7:JS o NEWS AND WEATHER When things start disappearing siound the bouse, 1 THliACIfiONS - 'The Two of Us" starring Michael Simon, Luce o the Prestons begin to suspect their maid's nephew I CONECnCUT REPORT Fahible. In Naal' occupied France of U«, an 7:30 0 THE HARLEM 6101ETR0TTERS Peplto. (Rl I APPRENOA IN61ES : eltht-year-old Jewish boy la tent by Mi parents a WATCH YOUR CHILD O WORLD OF DISNEY I MISTER06tR$' NEIGHBORHOOD to hide In the country with Catholic relatives, THE CHRISTOPHERS "Ride A Northbound Hone" (Part I) A con man 100 I I THE CHAN AND THE CHAN CLAN O BAT MASTERSON o0 SPIDERMAN steal* a young* orphaned boy'a only possession, a , 0 THE JETSONS "The Snare." 1:00 PATCHWORK FAMILY handsome black slalllon. Ill) 8 THE OSMONDS ID SALUTE TO SPRING o LIBRARY LIONS B THE GEORGE KIRIY SHOW *:» 0 CBS EVENING NEWS o WON0ERAMA Gueata: Hines. HUies and Did. i ,THE KA1HRYN KUHLMAN 5H0W G NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 0 B THE BI6 PREVIEW O THE REASONER REPORT o FAITH FOR TODAY •Pontius Pilate" Ut!85> starring Jean Marais I SESAME STREET O HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL 0 ORAL ROBERTS Jeanne Crnin. The Governor of a Roman province f:» a SCOOIY-DOO MOVIES . •The Han Who Wouldn't Talk" THE LITTLE RASCALS must decide whether to spare the life of a spiri- O THE PINK PANTHER O ROLLIN1 1:30 o COMMUNITY AT LARGE tual revolutionary or a dangerous criminal. Guest: Helen neddy. (R) a CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP ID ERICA I AK SATURDAY SUPERSTAR MOVIE a "Needle paintlnr." Erica demonstrates dolnp; "TMt OUJ In Wonderland." (R) 7:00 O UFO 0 DAY OF DISCOVERY needlework pictures In silk threads on a silk back- 0 NEW JERSEY REPORT "The Dalotek Affair." Disaster threatens when to ABBOTT AND COSTELLO •frounil. 0 JUVENILE JURY the Moonbase radio and video link with Earth 1:45 a MARYKNOLl WORLD 7:45 O THEONIE ISsM ©UNDERDOG v fslle. (R) - 9:00 OPPORTUNITY LINE Theonie demonstrates how to make meatball siu- g LANCER O TO TELL THE TRUTH a TV SUNDAY SCHOOL sages In wine sauce. 0 SCIENCE FICTION THEATRE O NEWS a THE ANSWER t-00 B M.ASH •The Mm Wlio Turned to Stone" (1057) starring O THE AVENGERS a DAVEY AND GOLIATH It appears that Hawkeye hu flipped whirr h* re- Victor Jory, Chtrlotte Austin. A group of 18lh "Death at Bargain Prices" a ject! the utlcntian-s of an Attractive nurse and ID CHILLER THEATRE to SUPERMAN leemi lo have developed an odd attachment for ctntury scientists discover how to prolong their °:I5 TV HEBREW SCHOOL . Major Burns. (R) llvei by absorbing blo-electrtcal encny ot (trU. "Voodoo Woman" (1957) starring Tom Conway, a 0WALIVS WORKSHOP Michael Connors. A scientist persuades a. beauti- 9:30 THE WAY TO GO G THE LAWRENCE WELK SHOW a JEWISH HERITAGE 0 PORTRAIT: A MAN NAMED JOHN 0' THE EtECTRIC COMPANY ful girl to undergo a ritual which tuma her into a Raymond Burr and Don Galloway star in this 10:30 0 JOSIE AND, THE PUSSYCATS. a part-time monster. o FAITH, HOPE AND LOVE special lhat dramntizei the Incidents in the life or I THE IARKLEYS O ZOOM o VALUES FOR THE SEVENTIES Archbliliop Angelo floncalll, the man who came 8I THE IRADY KIDS 7:30 O THE NEW PRICE IS RIGHT ID THE ADDAMS FAMILY from peasant slock to become Pope John XX111. I UNTAMED WORLD . O THE PARENT GAME 10:00 EASTER SUNDAY SPECIAL ID NEWS AT EIGHT _l MISTEROGERS1 NEIGHBORHOOD IB MASTERPIECE THEATRE. a SUNDAY " . ID TO BE ANNOUNCED s: BM O ALL IN THE FAMILY CURIOSITY SHOP 1:30 0 MANNIX llrtO 0 FUNTSTONES COMEDY HOUR Mike's1 donation to a Presidential campaign cauaea OSEALAIM10 a BATMAN A police Ueutenant's wife hires Mannix to protect 4 family feud when Archie siyi the money should ta her huaband from a threat on his life. (R) 0 SOUL TRAIN have gone toward Mike and Gloria's room and 10:30 POINT OF VIEW a GILLIGAN'S ISLAND O NBC SUNDAY MYSTERY MOVIE 0 IEWITCHED board. (R) (D "He« Ramsey." Aa the new Deputy Chltf of Police, - O SCI-FI MOVIE O EMERGENCY 11:00 Q CBS EASTER SERVICE Ramsey attempts to solve his first crime using • "War of the Cebenl Beut" (1H«) aUrruur BeJIj "Peace Pipe." The hospital staff works desperately EASTER SUNDAY applied laboratory techniques rather thari his re- truer, Roger Face. An army orflcer. whow •»• to save the life of a 7-year-bld girl, the victim of a THE FLINTSTONES puted fait-gun approach. (It) ponire to radiation la reiporuiMe lor hi* to-fool an auto crash caused by *. drunken driver. (R) e tody, («• berserk. 0 AMERICAN ADVENTURE a BULLWINKLE ID THE PUERTO RICAN NEW YORKER O HERE WE GO AGAIN REX HUMBARD (B WHO'S AFRAID OF OPERA? : CD SESAME STREET "Class of "17." Richard, Susan, Judy and Jerry ata NANNY AND THE PROFESSOR "La Trnviata" 11:10 O RUNAROUND have conflicting opinions about the college young 11:30 MAKE A WISH •:00 ©SPECIAL PORTRAIT PAINTING DEMONSTRA- O KID POWER Jeff ahould attend. a THE EASTER PARADE "Merv Griffin PrcBenti Isaac Hayes" Guests: The O MILLION DOLLAR MOVIE to Stftfle Singers. Albert King:. The Emotions, Johnny TION — Carol A. Pezzutti, Rumson, whose works O ROLLER DERIY For the 25th successive time, Channel 11 presents) Taylor. Luther Ingram. Carla TJiomaa. "Jigsaw" (1988) starring Harry Cuardlno, Brad- New York Clty'a famed Easier Parade. AFTERNOON ford Dillman. A scientist and a private detective O A8C SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE are currently featured in a two-man show, along Join forces to discover the whereabout* of a dead AFTERNOON "Three On A Couch" (1066) lUrring Jerry Lewis, with the work of her father, Santo C. Pezzutti, at 12:00 0 ARCHIE'S TV FUNNIES girl seen by them on a LSD trip. Janet Leigh. A one-woman nan tries doing a O AROUND THE WORLD IN 10 DAYS 1:10 flD DONALD GRAMM SINGS 12:00 O FACE THE NATION three-woman Job. (R) the Guild of Creative Art, 620 Broad St., Shrews- 0 CREATURE FEATURE l:J0 O BRIDGET 10VES BERNIE O RESEARCH PROJECT O BLACK PRIDE bury, demonstrated her oil portraiture methods at- "Indestructible Mm" (1058) aUrrlng ion Chanty, A perennially breaking bed not only causes sleep- 0 EASTSIDE COMEDY IB MASTERPIECE THEATER Jr., Ckeey Adame. A nun goea to nil death curs- ing problems for Bridget and Bernie, but Its re- "Hold That Baby" (1949) starring !*o GOrcey, k the Guild last week. The painting of the couple ; ing the three men who doubla-croned him follow- placement becomes the basil for an Inter-family Frankie Darro, The boys find a baby in thclf "The Golden Bowl,' Maggie attempts to change shown here, is of her parents and is titled 'Italian- ing in armored car hold-up. squabble. (Rl laundromat. tier life style In order to win her husband back. O IT'S ALL ABOUT YOUNG PEOPLE 9:30 O BARNABY JONES American Gothic' 0 FUNKY PHANTOM 0 THE SIX WIVES OF HENRY VIII An ambitious man hills his beautiful young mis- 0 THE ELECTRIC COMPANY "Anne Howard." O HOUR OF POWER tress wricn she decides to confront his rich, but I1:M O FAT ALBERT 0 A TOUCH OF GRACE 12:25 0 MIDDAY REPORT older, wife. O TALKING WITH A GIANT "The Engagement." Grace agrees lo marry Her- 11:30 O PUBLIC HEARING O NEW YORK REPORT 0LIDSVILIE bert and then breake him financially when she O MEET THE PRESS O SUBURBAN CLOSEUP chooses her ring. 0 ACTION THEATRE a EYEWITNESS NEWS CONFERENCE 9:50 ID DONALD GRAMM SINGS : "Red Ball Exprtu" (1952) starring Jeff Chandler, (D HEE HAW 10:00 0 NEWS Group to Hold Sidney Poltler. A "Red Ball" unit of supply trucks Guests: Oral Roberts, Richard and Pattl Roberts, ID THE KING OF KINGS crash their way through German-held territory to Frankle Lalne, Buddy Alan. IR) H. B. Warner and Dorothy rCumming star In O GARNER TED ARMSTRONG Cecil B. DeMille's classic pictorial transcription of ID FOCUS: NEW JERSEY stalled tanks at the front during World War n. IB HUMANITIES FILM FORUM ' the life of Jesus of Nazareth. OB MYSTERY MOVIE •:00 0 THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW I:CO O WHA HOCKEY PLAYOFF IB FIRING LINE ntan Detained" (10(2) alan-lng Bernard Arehard, Mr«. Morgenstern pays another visit to Minnea- "Christianity and Capitalism" Guest: The Right . ,Ann Stars. When a large sum of money It stolen polis, thla time bringing Rhoda's father along. (R) O SPEAKING FREELY Reverend Soper (ft) -from a company and ita owner murdered, the Q SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES 0 S STAR MOVIE 10:30 O THE PROTECTORS IsraeUDancing -turglar ta accused of both crimes. "The Honey Pol" (111671 starring Rex Harrison, "Day of Triumph" (1934) starring Lee J. Cobb. Harry and the Conteisa trail- a gang ot interim' • 0 SESAME STREET Susan Hayward. A rich, elderly man tails hla Joanne Dru. Ths events of the life of Christ are tiona) dope smugglers.' I.-09 0 THE PEOPLE, ' three former mistresses together to decide which told against the political background of tbe time. Q NEW YORK ILLUSTRATED RED BANK - An evening will be served. "Hand In Hand.'' A Catholic hoy anil a Jewish of them will inherit his estate. (R) 0 DIRECTIONS 0 SPECIAL: KING FAMILY EASTER of Israeli folk dancing, open Partners aren't necessary. , girl mt childish logic and a. disregard for adult 0 THE JULIE ANDREWS HOUR O METS BASEBALL O THIS IS YOUR LIFE There isn't any admission 'narrow-mindedness to overcome prejudice, (ft) Guests; Donald O'Connor, The Young Americano, Meta vs. Montreal (Doublehcader) Guest: Bhlrley Jones. to the public, will be held in 0 LASSIE Alice Choitley. (R) 2:00 O SUNDAY MOVIE FOUR ID WITH MAYOR LINDSAY fellowship hall of the United charge, but donations will be ."Search for Yesterday." |R) "Talk About A Stranger" (1052) starring George THE MONKEES t:30 O THE BOB NEWHART SHOW 11:00 0 O NEWS Methodist Church, Broad St., accepted to help defray ex- After years of feet In* guilty, Bob decide! to Murphy. Nancy Davis. A young boy who mistruata O MAYOR GIBSON t:M 8 1THE EVERYTHING SHOW tell hit mother something he'i never told tier a mysterious neighbor seeks to determine the ID ED6AR WALLACE MYSTERY HOUR on Tuesday at 8 p.m. penses. a EASTSIDE COMEDY before, that he loves her. (R) truth about the man. "The Malpsa Mystery." Just released from prison, Sylviette Pressman is chair- ,'Ohost Chasers" starring Lee Qorcey, HunU Hall. © I DREAM OF JEANNIE O NBA BASKETBALL a girl finds herself Involved in strange happenings. Israeli folk dances of The boys act out. to unmask a fake spiritualist Jeannle is forbidden to accompany Roger and 2:30 ID YANKEES 8ASEBAL1 IS SOULI varying formations and de- man of the Israeh dance eve- Tony to m, seance. .racket j&nd almost get kayoed by ghosts.' Ynnkecs vs, Milwaukee Brewers. vln A New Way" Guests: The Spinners. The Jim- grees of artistry will be ning. Carol Pohl 'is in charge a AMERICAN BANDSTAND 10:00 O THE CAROL BURNETT SHOW .3:00 O NHL STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS my Castor Bunch. (R) a SATURDAY AFTERNOON MOVIE I O ID NEWS % 0 METROMEDIA MOVIE 11:15 O NEWS taught by Karl Goldschmidt, of decorating the hall with Is-' ••QsJipter Story" (lMO) starring Walter Mat- O ASSIGNMENT: VIENNA thau, Carol Grace. A story ot the violent career •The Last Target." Jake Webster tries to prevent "A Tree Grows In Brooklyn" (1945) itarrinf 11:30 O THE NAME Of THE GAME New Shrewsbury, and special raeli scenes. Jean Franklin »f Jack Martin, cunning muter criminal. the vengeance murder of his boss and finds hfni- Dorothy McGuire, James Dunn, A girl grow* Howard suBpects that the supposedly happy mar- guests. will assist with refreshments. D THE ELECTRIC COMPANY self the prime suspect. (R) up in an unhnppy environment in Brooklyn. riage of a woman friend Is Just a cover-up for her a BASKETBALL W SPORTS 70"i fear and guilt. Refreshments, including O THE MANCINI GENERATION "Big '8' Men's Gymnastics Championship" The earliest inns and taverns O NBC BASEIALL 10.-30 a BLACK NEWS Q SUNDAY FILM FESTIVAL Jaffa oranges, pita bread, Is- Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Chicago Cubs. 3:30 0 CBS SPORTS SPECTACULAR 'Dodge City'; (1030) starring Errol Flynn. Bruce in Canada were opened in the B LIKE IT IS O HACK OMNIIUS Events: U.S.A. International Diving Invitational; Cabot. A riRtitlfig cattlemsn clashes with the boss raeli cheese and strawberries latter part of the 18th century. Guests: Taj Mahal World Invitational Welght-ifting. of Dodce City. ZOOM ID EQUAL TIME 4:15 O COSELL'S SPORTS MAGAZINE 0 THE DAVID SUSSKIND SHOW 1:10 METS BASEBALL 11:00 O O.NEWS O SUNDAY NISHT SHOWCASE 8Meta VI. Montreal. 4:30 O TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS 0_) 'ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS ABC Sports presents coverage of the final round "Through A aims Darkly" (10S1) starring Har- MO 0 MR. TOUGH GUYS "Oreateat Monster of All" of play from the La Costa Country Club in riet Anderson, Gunnnr Bjomstrand. Upon finding J YANKEE IASEIAIL 0 NHL ACTION Rnncho La Coata, California. - her father's diary,.a girl accelerates towards mad- ness, as she discovers her father's observation of Yankees va\ Milwaukee Brewsra. IS SPORTS 70 11:30 OTHE LATE SHOW 1 her Incurable schizophrenia. • THE'ELECTRIC CO. "Joan of Arc" (IMS) starring Ingrid Bergman. •'A Look At Archery" 11:45 O SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE I Trade Winds IiM 0 TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS Jose Ferrer. Tins film, depicts the final few years: 5:00 O YOU ARE THERE "Blue Angel" (1059) starring May Britt, CurtJur- ABC Sports preienta coverag* of tha third round of Joan's life. Q ABBOTT AND COSTELLO gens. ; of pjay in this golf tournament from the IA Coata O NEWS LOJ tries his luck as s door-Lo-door peddler selling 12:00 ID ENCOUNTER Country Club in Rancno La data California. OTHE 11:30 MOVIE vacuum cleaners. 12:30 O ASK CONGRESS mHKOCKTAIL LOUNGEHMH QMESAME STREET' •Go For Broke" (1051) starring Van Johnson, © THE MESSIAH 1:00 ID INSIGHT 4:00 ft CIS GOLF CLASSIC Lane NaVano. An uproarious story of America'! The Arion Musical Club perform, 1:10 8 THE LATE SHOW 'From Firestone Country, club, Akron, Oblo. most decorated combat unit of W.w. If, tht 4«n« 5:30 O CBS SPORTS ILLUSTRATED OCEAN AVE. 842-3292 SEA BRIGHT II HOGAN'S HEROES Regimental Combat Team. 0 WEEKEND PLAYHOUSE "Romanoff nnd Juliet" (1061) starring Peter Us- :"Fal Herman, Oo Boi-e" O SATURDAY NISHT MOVIE I "Story of Dr. WasscJI" (19«) starrinjr Gary llndv, Sandra Dee. 0 SESAME STREET "Tom Jones" (1063) starring Albert Flnney, Cooper, Lnrnine Day. The story of Navy Dr. Waa- 1:30 O THE GREAT GREAT SHOW Susannah York. Thia atory traces the adventure* •cl who rescued men from Jana in Java. "The Bnrretls ot Wlmnole Street" (1057) starring Fri., Sat., & Suri. 4:30 0 THE «OB«Y GOLDSIORO SHOW of a, country playboy from home to London. Guest: Sill Wtthera ID SUNDAY AT THE MOVIES Jennifer Jones. John Cielgud. O TALES OF TERROR "Palmy Days" (1031) starring Eddie Cantor, 0 SEA HUNT 0 WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS •The Phantom Lady" (UM) starring Franchot Charlotte Greenwood. A pang of phony fortune- ABC Sports will present live Mverage of an NBA O NEWS AND WEATHER Tone, Ella Rnlne's. A mun is accused of murdering tellers plot to rob one of their gullible clients, a 1:45 O EVENING PRAYER Playoff gamo with detain to be announced. hla wife, because his only alibi, a tin he rnit In millionaire bakery owner. 4s4O O KINER'S KORNER the night, seems to have disappeared like a phan- IiOD O SKIRTS CHALLENGE tom. . 0 THE MG VALLEY O CHANNEL fl FILM FESTIVAL These program listings are the most accurale ol any weekly television guide. "Ima|» of Tetttrday" "Gencvleve" (19S4I atarrlng Kay Kendall, Ken- All listings are supplied by the television stations and program changes re- 0 CANDID CAMERA neth More- Two couples and a huge sheep dog ceived are made up to the time The Daily Register goes to press. O ABBOTT AND COS1ELLO In old roadaler cars compete against e»ch other PRIMA in a croBi*country nice from London to Brighton. As an added service to television viewers, a listing is carried throughout lha "Amnesia." * Lou is about to propose to a girl 12.00 O SATURDAY TONIGHT SHOW with whom he has been corresponding through 1:21 0 COMBAT week in The Daily Register supplying viewers with the most up-to-the-minute a lonely Marts maga:lne. program inlormation available. flD MR. ROGERS' NEIGHBORHOOD 1:25 O NEWS AND WEATHER Actress Says Irish Need Change of Image ADVENTURE ByBETTESPERO the'first person to the disease. Miss McCambridge thinks the Her own Irish heritage "You just hear more about around and marries another Miss McCambridge was the Irish must bear, she is most stretches back to the 1500's, us (entertainers)," she added. alcoholic. So who's sick?" . ON RED BANK -"1 would like guest speaker at the annual concerned about the more en- according to a family tombs- There are no more in the en- Miss McCambridge. has to change the image of being meeting of the Alcoholism compassing cultural spect- tone in Ireland, with the des- tertainment industry than been actively working for the Irish.1?1 asserted actress Mef- Council of Monmouth County rum. This summer she will ignation of McCumberage among ministers' wives, or National Council On Alcohol- I WHEELS cedes McCambridge, with a held last night at the Molly journey to the Emerald Isle to (Gaelic for McCambridge). stewardesses." ism since ltHiy in its education J firm nod of the auburn tresses Pitcher Inn. Before her sched- compile information for a Before she gets to that She said the effects of alco- campaigns. She maintains al- ' EUROPEAN that underscore her own 100 uled speech, she'met with the book dealing with the arts bookwriting, however, her holism vary as far and wide coholism is the worst sickness per cent Gaelic heritage. press. contributions of the Irish. acting career will include as the afflicted individuals of all. Miss'McCambridge is a na- Irish Reputation She feels such contributions some summer tours in the themselves ("75 per cent are "Alcohol is the number one BICYCLE tive of Illinois. Her parents "Irish have a reputation for are many and cites ancient plays "Cabaret" and "The functioning") with women drug problem in this coun- were born in Ireland. She is alcoholism," she said, "but Gaelic music, poetry and the- Little Foxes." being no less affected than try," she stressed. "Alcohol- TOURS concerned especially about' they are only one of several ater writing, just to name a Miss McCambridge said she men. ism is not more important two aspects of that Irish im- ethnic groups where it's prev- few. In addition to such home- has never portrayed an alco- Miss McCambridge now than the other drug problems. age, alcoholism and the arts. alent." spun products as the Irish Ab- holic in a role but added it is lives in Los Angelas and has a It's 20 times more dis- They are both subjects of The actress cited other bey Theater, she said the Ir- difficult today, in a country son who is a Wall Street bro- astrous." which she knows a lot. groups, which she referred to ish muse has carried over to that has a conservatively esti- . ker. She said the effects of al- "I only know about alcohol- The'Academy Award win- as "the cold water peoples." the United States in the guise mated nine million alcoholics, coholism are especially dis- ism," Miss McCambridge ning performer (for her first such as the British, Welsh and of "some of America's great- to have a non-drinker part. astrous on alcoholics' fami- added, "that's my disease." movie. ''All;the king's Men") Scandinavians, as also having est playwrights, most notably "We're in an alcoholic ori- lies. is a forrner alcoholic. She acute alcoholism problems Eugene O'Neill." ented society," she said. "It's "No alcoholic becomes an Agriculture is Ireland's main speaks freely-though hardly within their nationalities. Cnllare Igitred kind of hard to depict an alcoholic by him or herself," industry, accounting for about S frivolously—of alcoholism, of- But when speaking of the "For too long the culture of American woman without a one-sixth of the national income she said. "It's a family dis- and for nearly 45 per cent of ten referring unhesitantly in somewhat tarnished image, Ireland has been rather shab- cocktail in her hand." ease, and often the alcoholic- 345 total exports, it provides em- from bily dealt with. We have been But such drinking is no is not the sickest one in the ployment for some 27 per cent Bicycling Is back — if you're young in heart or young content to think of the Irish as more prevalent among en- family. of the working population, a in limbs hare's what's in slora for you. jig dancers and parade tertainers, said Miss "Alcoholism is the fourth percentage which is gradually marchers on March 17," she McCambridge. She said "my largest cause of divorce," she falling as the pace of industrial- • Four dlferent packages, including individual and group departures said, "when surely Ireland own disease has been in the added. "But in many cases ization and of modernization • Low youlh, group or excision tare*. Irom SaBena Belgian World has had a lengthy and honor- recovered state for some the non-alcoholic, who di- within agriculture itself in- Airlines. able heritage." time." vorced the alcoholic, turns creases. • A 10-speed. Belgian-made, precision bicfeic, delivered 10 you in lOflQOflr Europe, and yours lo b'ing home alter your exciting European tour. • A vvell-planned itinerary designed with assistance and cooperation ol American and European specialists. RESERVE NOW... FOR • An accompanying molorcoach. especially equipped to cany riders NOW and bicycles over long or arduous stretches on group departures FOR LUNCH AND DINNER • Accommodations student and economy class hotels, Delicious lood ... courteous service ... and de- EASTER SUNDAY DINNER • European couoor accompanies OPEN FOR LUNCHEON lightlul atmosphere. You'll find all three at Jack Baker's new seafood Shanty in Red Bank. Popu- Vz PRICE FOR CHILDREN • Breaklast and dinner each day on group tours lar seafood bullet, only $3.95. \2 noon to 3 p.m. Monday Night 2 for Special • • Special teatura: All Sabena passengers can enjoy Belgium's Bonus dally except Sunday. 10 Day treats, compliments ol the Belgian National Toursl Ollice, In Businessmen's Lunch - Cocktails Wednesday Buffet >.... "5 all, they receive over S60 worth ol bonuses- Monday thru Friday ENJOY EASTER HERE Friday Seafood Buffet '4» Sunday Brunch *1" CALL TODAY COMPLETE INFORMATION SRBdal Dining Facilities for UTTiE Sat. & Sun. Complete lobster Dinner '5" Club ft Business Luncheons LOBSTER SHANTY (flril 2 children undtr 10 Irn) MONMOUTHiIfcCALL842.5500 Lunch Hours: 11:00 AM-2:00 PM 148 Bodman Plact, Red Bank, N J. , OPEN SEVEN DAYS Italian-American Restaurant from 12 Noon Admiral Scnbow Inn TRAVEL 1074 Ocean Ave., Sea Bright Tel: 842-8300 2 JackMih Slrt'tl, llifihlumk N.J. 60 MONMOUTH ST. RED BANK »•<• RA9.QA>;7 '"' •:' I'lmiic: 201-29I-I232 American ExpressCaidsHonored Convtnlent Parking and Rtar Entrance U The Dafly Register, Red Bank - Middletown, N. J. Friday, April 29, U73 Week's Lone Broadway Arrival AM Alone* "Cyrano" has been postpone NEW YORK (AP) - The achievement was summed up week's lone playarrival, "The by The News, "telling mo- untU May 13 at the Palace.., The (Old) Lone Ranger Orphan," collected five re- ments but overly ambitious." "The Fantasticks" goes into views praising purpose but footlight footnotes; Lainie its 14th non-stop off-Broadway faulting results. Kazan has left the cast of year May 4. David Rabe's mixture of "The Women" which opens Rides Airwaves Again Greek myth with contempo- Wednesday at the 46th Street rary violence and scientific Theater ... the premiere of COLONIAL By JAY SHARBUTT Whereupon he wrote to KEANSBURQ 787-0300 in a 52-week package — as a Free Smokina Section ;STONES friends he'd known for years test for a week. !te. 35 • Middletown One mile north of Red Bank NEW YORK - If you hear at 25 key radio stations in the "The response was tre- FRt.sV.-SUN. / ': •• - - 741-8344 "The Lone Ranger" on radio U.S. He proposed a revival of mendous," said the station's When Scorpio wants you... these days, don't be alarmed. radio's golden days. Twelve general manager. John Wick- It's still 1973 Nobody is wear- said they were interested and lein. "We got 3,MKI letters . there is no place to hide! ing bobby sox, digging bebop he was in business. from that one week. I've been jazz or driving station wagons But first there was a period in broadcasting for 12 years with sides of real wood. of negotiations with the Amer- now and I've never seen any- , IHtMIBSCHCORPORMWIf* • What is happening is an aur- ican Federation of Television thing like it." al lime warp caused by and Radio Artists. The talks BURT LANCASTER Charles Michelson, a Now involved fees that would have Wicklein was so impressed to be paid the artists on the his station now plays six of ALAIN DELON York broadcasting veteran Michelson's old show.s five who for eight years has been original radio shows. PAULSCOFIELD nights a week. .-JUlCHKl AMUR l.i Dinner Specials [From 2.75) Served From 4:30 promoting a gradual mini- Didn't Have List boom in radio nostalgia "We didn't even have a list Michelson says he often lec- "FAMILY STYLE GET-TOGETHER EATING" tures on campus about the -AND- BUSINESSMAN'S LUNCHEON He owns the rights to re br- of the original actors, any- United Artists SERVED DAILY FROM 11:30 oadcast a dozen half-hour ra- more," he laughed. "We final- show.s and that students in- First and Center Ave. Atlantic Hiqhlands dio series that were the real ly had a committee of actors variably ask what message NOW AT RED CARPET THEATRES BlKKcmdThe PHONE 291-3330 biggies of the 1940s, series like from the old days come in and the shows contain. ll "The (ireen Hornet," The~ listen to the shows and identi- "I always teMhem, there's MUSIC MAKER S MEJtfHir Shadow." "(Jangbusters' and fy the voices." no message,"'he said. "It's MALI CINEMA I "Sherlock Holmes." The necessary fee arrange- just pure entertainment. And He began leasing them to ments were made and he I tell them a good story well stations in 1965 and says the went lo work. done will last forever." shows now can be heard on Oddly enough, the greatest mure than 4W) stations in ma- fans at the start were college Mattison off Main jor, medium and minor mar- students running campus ra- DreikerBook Papk»9B8-3533 1HUHES kets across the U.S. dio stations. Was Distributor "They looked on this as Michelson got in the broad- camp material, you might Talk Slated casting business in 1938 as a say," observed Michelson, distributor of the shows that who says the radio nostalgia By School now are his golden oldies. His market now falls roughly into market went flat in the 1950s three categories. RED BANK - The Tower Lyric with the arrival of television. One is the youth market, Hill Cooperative Nursery "* 1 School is sponsoring a lecture He went into television as a teenagers for whom "The l.one Ranger" is something to be given by Peter Walker JACK LEMIYION buyer of U.S. programs (or on "Children the Challenge." overseas TV stations. But he new and exciting. The second IN HIS MOST DRAMATIC is the memory lane market, The program is to be held in kept the 16-inch shellac Westminister Hall of the First ROLE SINCE'THE DAYS GRACIOUS HOIIDAY DINING FROM I P V. •- RESERVATIONS 'UGGESltD records on which the words people who grew up listening OF WINE AND ROSES." BOUNTIFUt BOARD NOT AVAIUBIE EASTER SUNDAY Presbyterian Church, Harding 'to radio. The third is the (X) i COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR' (X) and deeds of Lamont Crans- Road, here, on Monday, April freeway market, motorists -[W'.tnttdtj.CmEHAIKlHINDUSTKIES. ton, Kato and others were 30, at 7:45 p.m. RT. 35, SHREWSBURY, N.J. PKWY. EXIT 109 • 201-7470200 preserved. who'd rather hear "Fibber "SAVE THE "We decided around Christ- McGeo and Molly" than mu- Peter Walker, an educator, NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED mastime in 1964 to throw out sic or news during the rush involved with the Family Edu- TIGER" these old records," said Mich- hour. cation Center in Delaware, WITH elson, 63. "But'just before we Here Given Tests came to New Jersey to begin JACK GILFORD did it, I got a little sentimen- One of Michaelson's newer study groups and counseling tal — it must have been the clients is WRVR-KM here, a based on the principles dis- holiday season — and I said, jazz-oriented station that last cussed in Rudolph Dreiker's OOD 'let's see if maybe we can do October tried the old shows — book, "Children the Chal- Town West something with them'." Michelson leases each series lenge." PRODUCTIONS' CONWAY M Hl|h«lv If at ?••"«' »»t YOUR FORTUNE? GOOD DINING... LOW PRICES BUSINESSMAN'S BUFFET St. James NEW EXPANDED MENUS Weekend at the Movies these schedules are pro- MALL CINEMA 2 — MATAWAN HOUSE SPECIALTY DINNERS vided by the theater and Frl. Up th Sandbox 7:20; 9:30 WHEN SCORPIO WANTS Sat. Up the Sandbox 7:30; 9:40 CINEMA 34- the times are for today Sun. Up the Sandbox 2:20; 5:05; 7:15; Frl. Charlotte's Web 2:00; 7:05; 9:05 YOU... THERE IS NO only. 9:25 Sot. Chorlotle's Web 2:00; 7:20; 9:20 Sun. Charlotte's Web 2:00; 5:10; 7:05; PLACE TO HIDE RED BANK NORTH OF RED BANK 9:05 TANG'S 741-0060 CARLTON — ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS STRATHMORE TWIN Frl. Save the Tlptr 7:30, 9:30 ATLANTIC CINEMA - CHINESERESTAURANT Sal. ond Sun. Kiddle Show 2:00 Save Frl. Voult of Horror 7:00; 10:05 Asy- CINEMA I- "SCORPIO" me Tiger t:0O; 8:00; 10:00 lum 8:30 Fri. Vowlt ot Horror 7:0O; 10:05 Tales Sat. and Sun. Kiddle Show 2:00 Voult From the Crypt 8:30 40 BROAD ST. RED BANK CINEMA Ml - ot Horror 7:00: 10:05 Asylum 8:30 Sat. Tales From Ihe Crypt 2:00; 3:35; STARRING Frl. end Sat. Love and Pain ond the 8:30 Voult ol Horror 7:00; 10:05 BURTLANCASTER Mon.-Thun. t Sun. 11:30 to 10 Frl. » Sat. 11:30 to 11 SO Whole Domn Thing 7:00; 8:50; 10:40 KEANSBURG Sun. Tales From Ihe Crypt 2:00; 3:35; Happy Birthday Wanda June 1?:?O a m. COLONIAL — 8:30 Voult ol Horror 7:00; 10:05 ALEX conn a minute to ALAIN DELON EATONTOWN Fri. ond Sot. Shomus 7:00; 10:25 Buck CINEMA 2- PAULSCOFIELD ond the Preacher 8:35 Frl. Pete 'n Time 7:00; 9:10 pray..a second to die COMMUNITY — Sun. Buck ond the Preacher 7:30 Frl. Up the Sandbox 2:30; 7:30, 9:4S Sat. ond Sun. Mad, Mad World 2:00 Shomus 9:10 Pete n Tlllie 7:00; 9:10 Sot. and $un. Up the Sandbox ?:00; MIDDLETOWN 4:00; 6:00; 1:00; 10:00 PERTH AMBOY DRIVE-IN - TOWN EAST — AMBOYS DRIVE-IN - Sheldon and Irving Frl. ond Sot. Sports 7:00 Five Fingers Frl. Up the Sandbox 7:30; 9:30 Town East Sot. Up the Sandbox 2:30; 4:30; 6:30; Frl.; Sot.; Sun. Voull ot Horror 7:O0; ol Death 7:40; 12:00 wild Bunch 9:45 10:20 The Mind Snotcher fi:41 Sun. Five Fingers of Death 7:00; 11:30 8:30; 10:30 Wild Bunch 9.10 Sun. Up the Sandbox 2:30; 4:15; 6:00; 7:45; 9:25 MENLO PARK ASBURY PARK TOWN WEST — CINEMA - SAVOY - Fri. Sove the Tiger 2:00: 4:00; 6:00; Frl. Scorpio 7:05: 9:05 8:00; 10:00 Community ARE BACK Frl. and Sot. Frill the Cot 7:00; 10:00 Sat. Scorpio 2:O0; 4:00; 6:00; t:00; Oh Calcutta «: IS Sat. Tarzon and the Jungle Boy 12 10:00 noon Save the Tiger 2:00; 3:00; 6:00; Sun. Frlti. the Col 3:00; 7:00; 10:00, Sun. Scorpio 2:30; 4:30; 6:30; 8:30 Oh Calcutta 3:10; 8:15 8:00; 10:00 ST. JAMES — KEYPORT Sun. Sove the Tiger 2:00; 4:00; 6:00; WHAT'S BARBRA AT Frl. Scorpio 2:00; 7:?5; 9:30 STRAND - 8:00; t0:00 Sot. and Sun. Scorpio 2:00; 4:00; 6:00; Frl., Sot,; Sun. All American Girl UP TO? COO; 10:00 7:00; 9:20OnACIeor Day 8:15; 10:)5 EAST BRUNSWICK LYRIC — HAZLET TURNPIKE- Frl. Sove the Tiger 7:<5; 9:45 INDOOR — Sot. Sove the Tiger 2:00; 4:00; 5:»5. PLAZA — BARBRA 7:45; 9:45 Fri. Soylenl Green 2:00; 7:25, 9:25 Fri. Scorpio 2:00; 7:40; 9:45 BELOW THE CRYPT LIES THE % Sun. Save Ihe Tiger 2:00; 4:00; SIS; Sol. Soylenl Green 2:00; 7:55; 9:55 Sot. and Sun. Scorpio 2:00; 4:15; 6:25; 7:30; 9:30 Sun. Soylent Green 2:00; 5:25; 7:25; 9:25 OUTDOOR — STREISAND NEPTUNE RT. 35 DRIVE-IN - Frt.; Sot,; Sun. Poseidon Adventure -IN- 7:00; 10:40 Prudence and the Pill 9:05 WIIIOF NEPTUNE CITY — Fri.; Sot.; Sun. World's Greatest Alh Frl. Charlotte's Web 2:00; 7:25; V 30 lele 7:00; 10:27 A Minute to Proy 8:47 Sot. ond Sun. Charlotte's Web 2:10; 4:10; 6:00; 8:00; 9:50 UATWIN WEST END OCEAN TOWNSHIP UA CINEMA 1 - HORROR "UP THE Frl. Pete 'n Tlllie 2:00; 7:00; 9:00 DEATH'S WAITING ROOM CIRCLE - Sal. and Sun. Pete n Tlllie 2:00: <:K): Music Makers Theatres Frl. Soylenl Green 2:00; 7:30; 9:20 6:90; 8:00; 10:00 SANDBOX" Sot. Soylent Green 2:40; 4:30; o:20; ^?1!I™. Based on stories by Al Fcklstein and Bill Gaincs fjjj 6:00; 10:00 UA CINEMA 2 - WITH Sun. Soylent Green 2:10; 3:50; 5;*0; Frl. Sounder 2:00; 7:20: 9:10 PLAZA-Hazlet 7:30; 9:20 Sot. and Sun. Sounder 2:00; 3:50; RTE 36 at MIDDLE RD.2E4 4434 DAVID SELBY NOW OPEN FREEHOLD 5:50; 7:50; 9:45 CHARLTON HESTON NOW PLAYING MALL 1- LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG SAYREVME ATI ANTIC HIGHLANDS MATHWAN Frl. ond Sol. Wgrlds Greatest AthlUe 2:00; 7:00; 9:0S EDWARD G ROBINSON Sun. World's Greolest Athlete 2:00; AMBOYS DRIVEIN ATLANTIC STRATHMORE (IO<) 727 IOOO 4:55; 7:00: 9:05 STRAND SOYlf NT GREEN Eatontown MALL 2 - People need H... in the yeor 2022. Frl. Save the Tloer 7:20; 9:25 Sot. Sove the Tiger 7:35; 9:40 Theatre Sun. Sove Ihe Tiger 5:15; 7:20; 9:25 G R A N T' S UENE BRICKTOWN KEYPORT THE MARTIAL ARTS BRICK PLAZA — CINEMA 34-Matawan DINNER'THEATRE Frl. ond Sat. World's Greolest Athlete 9134 583-3600 I G MASTERPIECE! 2:00, 7:00; 9:05 RCUTE 35 MORGAN. N. J. Sun. World's Greatest Athlete 2:00; 4:55; 7:00: 9-05 LEARN THE SECRET OF ON STAGE MALL CINEMA 1 - ALL-AMERICAN TOP NITE CLUB Frl. Scorpio 7:10; 9:10 WHITE STREET BROADWAY MUSICALS Sot. Scorpio 2:00; 7:30; 9:35 Sun. Scorpio 2:00; 5:15; 7:20; 9:25 RED RANK "5 FINGERS Tun., Wad.. Thurs.. Fri.. Sun. ENTERTAINMENT 747-0333 NOW PLAYING EVERY SAT. NITE Plus Co-Feature aWMC%h "CAMELOT" OF DEATH" COMING APR. 28 COMING NOW THRU TUESDAY - PLUS - Phyllis Newman WILLIAM HOLDEN COMPANY" FIRST RUN IN PAL JOEY'S COMING MAY 5 "THE WILD BUNCH" SUPPER CLUB Johnny Desmond Dancing Wed. thru Stirv Stalk or Lobsters Tails Sun. thru TlHjrs 3.93 Circle \ COMING MAY 12 "One delightful, hilarious ** *i 46*1 Atbu't hi C><«* I Marty Brill OcH^Ttmmnpin mo Children's Theatre heartache of a movie!'-uz SMI™ CHILDREN'S SHOW CHARLTON HESTON RAPUNTZEL Timothy Bottoms |LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG! May 19-20 SHOW-TIME. 9 P.W- EDWARD G. ROBINSON -IN — Maggie 5mith ANDTHE WHOLE "SOYLENT DAMN THING GREEN" Walter / Carol plus IATE SHOW EVERY N.TI PEOPLE NEED IT... Matthau Burnett IN THE YEAR 2022 Pete'n'Tillie" KURT VONNEGUTS All about hit and maniagtl Carlton PLUS -2nd BIG HORROR HIT ltd Bk /) » CICELY TYSON "HAPPY BIRTHDAY "BEST ACTRESS" CINEMAS National Society Of WANDA JUNE" CHILDREN S K-MARTPLAZA Shopping Center Film Critics ROD STEIGER MGM MATINEES ROUTE 35 -in- HAZLtT 739-»69 "SOUNDER ADMISSION ONLY •SAT.&SUN.2P.M.I TO LATE SHOW BLACK BEAUTY"! The Daily Register, Bed Bank - MMdletown, N.J. Friday, April», II7J 11
Democratic Club Endorses ENJOY DELICIOUS DINNERS Doaoghue, Bahrs Candidacy ATTHE ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Peter E. Donoghue and Ed- ward J. Bahr Jr. were en- RUMSON dorsed last night as candi- dates tor the Borough Council, by the Atlantic Highlands HOTEL Democratic Club. NO BRUNCH SERVED EASTER SUNDAY Also endorsed was the re- election bid of tax assessor William Griffin who has served in that office since EASTER SUNDAY DINNER 1967. Mr. Donoghue and Mr. Bahr are seeking the Democratic SERVED FROM 1 P.M. TO 10 P.M. nominations in the June 5 pri- mary election for two full term seats on the council* at RUMSON HOTEL stake in the Nov. 6 general election. 10 WATERMAN AVE. . RUMSON, N.J. RICE AND MANKIND — Participating in a rice supper sponsored by They seek to replace Donald TEL. 842-2000 Project Concern In connection with May 12 Walk for Mankind are, left to T. Loftus, a Democrat, and Fner E. iioaoghiie Edward J. Bahr Ir. right, Douglas Rose, 15, Little Silver, Anne Callan, 16, Little Silver, The Alfred F. Katz, a Republican, Rev. Peter Fosburg, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Rumson, who have announced they will and The Rev. Mrs. Joan M. Higgins, Director of Interfaith Hpuse, New not run for reelection. Shrewsbury. Borough Council is present- ly controlled by the GOP, who \ \ YYYV have a mayor and three coun- •iaia« anw mmm ^ HIM mimmam H ^^1^^ Board Delays Decision on Variance cilmen to the Democrats' three councilmen. KEANSBURG - The Zon- Salvatore Garrone of Belle- non-conforming use—and |ing Board of Adjustment last ville to rebuild a house at 19 been substantially damaged Mr. Donoghue has been a night reserved decision until Seabreeze Way. by fire. Garrone sought a member of the Henry Hudson ADDA •Thursday on an application by The original structure-a variance to rebuild the struc- Regional School Board of ture. It was denied by the Education, Highlands, five board on the grounds that too years. He served as board much of the structure had president from April, 1871 ROOM been damaged to maintain its through January, 1972. Prior PARENTS! non conforming use status. to that time he served as vice president 14 months. |DO YOU NEED MONEY TO SEND YOUR Garrone then filed suit in CHECK OUR LOWER PRICES FIRST! SON OR DAUGHTER TO COLLEGE? . Superior Court seeking to H,e is the school district's ALL TYPES IMPROVEMENTS' You'll save plenty if you get a free estimate on your new room addition, or any DON'T MISS THE overturn the denial. representative to the delegate assembly Of the New Jersey Superior Court Judge Mer- other type improvement, if you call us. We are the county's oldest and largest School Boards Association, ritt Lane Jr. ruled that the home improvement specialists - your guarantee of lowest price and satisfac- Monmouth College and chairman of the local il board's minutes failed to re- tion. board's community relations flect evidence to back up its ' committee. SEMINAR denial of the application. He "HOW TO FINANCE YOUR SON'S OR ordered the case reheard by Mr. Donoghue, a copy editor FREE ESTIMATES - 741-5060 DAUGHTER'S COLLEGE EDUCATION" April 21. with the Asbury Park Press, NO MONEY DOWN • TERMS ARRANGED ON ANY JOB • General Improvement! • Room Additions SPONSORED BY Giving testimony on behalf is 32 years old. He has lived in a Attic Rooms THtKpENTRAL JERSEY BANK » TRUST COMPANY of the Garrones last night the borough 25 years, and • Basement Rooms This series of four consecutive Wed. evenings, beginning were local builder Norman Al- lives at 49 Mount Ave. MONMOUTH CONSTRUCTION CO. • Bathrooms May 2nd, features top authorities in the field of financing exander and Louis Mustachio Mr. Bahr, 40, is in his third a Kitchens from the Lupio Construction year on the Harbor Commis- HIGHWAY 35 AT HEDDONS CORNER, MIDDLETOWN • Rooting, Siding and education. • Porch Enclosures Co., Howell. Representing the sion. Since January he has 741-50G0 - 776-6600 WEDNESDAY, MAY 2 WEDNESDAY, MAY 16 Garrones was Attorney served as vice chairman. 7:30 "CHOOSING THE COLLEGE 7:30 FEDERAL STUDENT FINAN- Stanley Yacker of Matawan. THAI'S BEST FOR YOU" CIAL AID Spukar: CHARLES T. STRAU3HN, II Speaker: RICHARD P.0WE. Deputy -Dir. Harold Coward of Holmdel Educational Consultant Loue- Div. of Student Assistance president of the Scoras Con< loy's College Counseling Ser- Office of Education Dept. HEW, Wash. D.C. struction Co., spoke oh behalf j:45 -WHAT THE COLLEGE 1:45 "HOW YOUR LOCAL BANK of the board. Robert H. Otten FINANCE OFFICER CAN MAY ASSIST" of Red Bank, is attorney for PO .. .- Speaker; FRANK DEREMER. V.P. Cen- i v>, Spsakar: ROBERT 0. LYNCH Director tral Jersey Bank & Trual Co. the board, ol Financial Aid Monmouth College WEDNESDAY, MAY 23 7:30 "THE FAMILY'S CONTRIBU- TION TO MEETIN3 COLLEGE Infant Death WEDNESDAY, MAY 9 EXPNS" 7:30 THE NEW JERSEY STATE Speaker: ALEXANDER 0. SIDAH, Jr.. Unit to Meet SCHOLARSHIP PR03HAM Exec. Dir. College Scholar- Spsakar: ELIZABETH I. EHART Dr. ship Serv.. N.Y.C. ENGLISHTOWN - The N..I. Scholarship Comm. '«:45 "SPECIAL PROGRAM" next meeting of the National 6M N.J. STATE LOAN PROGRAM Speakir: DONALD M. COLEMAN. V.P. Foundation for Sudden Infant 6p»«k.t: WILLIAM NESTER, Dil. N.J. Richard C. Knight Insurance Student Loan Program Agency, Boslon Mass. Death will be May 17 at 8 p.m. in St. Thomas Lutheran beautiful thoughts Question A Answer Periods and Coflee Break at eacli saisiofl. A nominal charge Church, Taylors Mills Road. ol J2 each covers maltrlals cost. Make check payable to "Monrrtoulh College Finance Seminar". The program will include an Italian supper, with all dishes "TO:"Sfpick""COMMUNITY ~~LAT7oNS,~Mo'NMOUrH"corL~aE, ~~"" ~ q being made by members o Wks^Sk^;. for Easter! W.LONQ BRANCH. N.J. PLEASE SEND JICKET(S) lor Ilie Monmoutll College Seminar the chapter. Make this Easter a season to remember for you and your family.. /* "HOW TO FINANCE YOUR SON'S OR DAUGHTERS COLLEGE EDUCATION" Election of officers will fpl with glorious (lowers to enliven a home and give a lift to the spirit.' NAME low dinner - ' ADDRESS Mrs. Stephen Davis, 46 Lau PHONE :.. rel Ave., Summit, has infor- $ 95 mation about the foundation. Easter Lilies 4 up Traditional ivory-white Lilies. Many huge hybrid blooms on each plant. Oecorated with colorful (oil. s ' Set Hardy Azaleas 3"uP Many colors and varieties of hardy Aialeas ... your sights in bloom now and will bloom outdoors year alter year Hydrangeas S595«P Hardy pink and blue snowballs ... lor your Home now, your garden later. on the $ 98 Tulips 4 UP Vibrant Spring colors ... all Ihe Iragrance ol Spring. highest rates. s 98 Hyacinths 4 uP Blue, pinks, whiles .,. one o> the most fragrant of all Easter flowers
.Golden Anchor Certificates Cymbidium Orchid $ 49 ayeir Corsage 2 from Day ol Deposit 9 'iM Overflowing with color and Iraoiance .. .all Ihe beauty ol nature at Eattert.de. 2-Year Maturity* Minimum $5,000 Multiples ol $500 Gardenias... 99° The perfect gift for Mom! Just right for the kids Sterling Anchor Regular Certificates / Certificates to give Mom a beautiful gardenia for Easter. ((\\
3 % 1% Magnificent, fragrant blooming Gardenia plants. ajiar Irom Diy 4 of Depoili Larger sizes $449and$9" C 1-Y*ar Maturity* SO-Day Maturity* Also available: Geraniums, Cineraria, Pocketbcok plant, Minimum $2,900 Minimum $500 Multiples of I2S0 Mulllplei ol S50 ... You name it! All in beautiful bloom! 5INTEREST ON ALL CERTIFICATES MAY BE CREDITED AND COMPOUNDED OR MAILED QUARTERLY ALL SAVINGS IN BY THE 10th EARN FROM THE 1st REGULAR PASSBOOK SAVINGS EARN FROM DAY OF DEPOSIT TO DAY OF WITHDRAWAL 'CertlHcaln optntd between regular auaflerly rjisltibuliofi dales may hive hfliai mali> filKk In twees', of Ihose slated 13 coincide with regular March 31. June 30. September 30 -ifW D*c«nB«r3l Barnsngipiynient dates. the garden center Open Sunday and every day from 9 to6-Rt. 71 .Monmouth Rd. Marine West Long Branch, N. J. Phone: 201/229-2587 TURNtR I«OJ. GAMHN CtNILS
and Loan Association
MlODLETOWN ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS UNCROFT IIWHtfWiylS . uay3e»l»« (34 Namian Unrai Road' (impt tOcnmiffititUamouV\M) .' ttifshotw Swppiry rtwij . ' MASTER CHARGE BANKAMERICARD 1 PHONE NUMBER FOR AU. OFFICES 6714(09 12 Tie Pity ftfgteter, Red Bank - MJdeHetown, N.J. Pridav, April Z», 1173 Pilate Is Recalled to Rome for Excessive Brutality A.D. headed back to the im- Editor's nolc: This is thr Those brash, spouting follow- words of the Galilean to him, diers to keep silent about their the subversive pockets, punish- pleading for some sign of re- experience. ing them, intimidating them, perial capital in disgrace, ac- last instalment or an Easter ers of the hung Galilean still cused of arrogant and criminal series about Pontius Pilate, ran amuck, spreading their lale morse. " 'Blessed are those "It's the infernal heat and inciting mob stonings that sometimes led to death. But the atrocities against the Jews, for the Judge o( ^esus. It is based that he lives anew and had who mourn, for they shall be sorcery of this country," he had comforted' ' told himself. Later, however, infection had persisted and a hearing before ffie"emperor. on Biblical and historical ar- "poured out his Spirit" for all. Night had descended ovejr the It even had affected Procula, Pilate clinched his eyes shut, according to the book of Nico- grown, infiltrating elsewhere, counts and ancient traditions. eveii to Rome. plying Roman freighter, her supplemented by modd and ever since that eerie afternoon Pm x remembering, remembering. demus, he received other re- The only sounds now were the ports that witnesses had seen One questionable, old manu- large, square mainsail still bul- conversational details appro- when the pigeon-headed cen- ging with the winter wind, and turion jabbered out his hys- slosh of waves and the scrape of Jesus "alive after his death, script says Tiberius blamed Pi- priate lo the recorded circum- late's "iniquitous sentence" for Pilate pulled his cloak closer stances. terical report: Truly this was the slender wooden tillers in and they heard him discoursing their locks as the two steers- with his disciples." the problem in a letter to him. about his neck. He had not a son of God!" heard any approach, but fBd- A twinge went through Pi- men worked in unison on the Now, six years after con- ByGEORGE W. CORNELL The whole affair had become See Pilate, Page U late. Dimly, he heard the poop-deck near where he stood. like a nightmare, smouldering demning Jesus. Pilate in 36 AP Religion Writer shouted commands of the ship's That strange, distracting af- and flaring in Jerusalem and The wharf at Caesarea pilot as the big square mainsail ternoon came back, that ebbing the countryside-around about, teemed with heaving porters of sown hides, decorated with day when the skies, darkened igniting deliriums among 3,000 and stevedores loading the the Roman she-wolf and cubs, and the ground shook and a people at the so-called Jewish 200-fqpt, square-masted mer- was hoisted to the full, catching Temple partition tumbled, ex- Pentecost, and continuing to chant ship with cargo. It was wind and driving the vessels posing the hidden "Holy of spread and infect the populace, LETTERS late afternoon before Pontius high prow faster toward the Holies," as the Galilean died on despite repeated arrests of the Pilate went aboard. He had sinking sun. the cross. instigators and threatening been recalled to Rome for ex- Pilate's ramrod frame Pilate had acceded to the re- warnings to them to halt their cessive brutality as governor of swayed with the forward pitch quest of the Jewish council activity. DO1TTLA1J6H, Uie province of Judea. and his slender hands gripped members, Joseph of Arimathea "We must obey God rather A lean, rigidly erect man of the railing. It had not been the and Nicodemus, to be allowed than men," they had insisted military bearing, he strode so-called "Christus" fevers to Lake the body down and bury defiantly. that had beaten him, not specif- it, before sunset in accordance Local magistrates, long-time GIGGLE, CRY .hastily up the gangway, looking to neither'side, followed by Ins ically anyway, yet all the ram- with Jewish law, in a nearby adjuncts of the Roman regime, wife, Procula, and a retinue of pages and retribution seemed garden tomb. had supplied raiding parties to New Jersey Bell slaves and baggage. to run together now. As related in the ancient non- comb the city, one of them led No honor parade, no martial As for himself, in the vying canonical book of Nicodemus, by a scholarly inquisitor from OR SIGH. drums, no dipping banners of ranks of imperial preference, the Roman centurion in charge Tarsus named Saul, hunting out legionnaires marked his de- he might be ruined, banned of the execution party had re- parture. Not even his sucres- from further trust, even exiled. isfe ported to Pilate on the crucifix- « sor, Marcellus. was on hand to The specific incident that had ion, how Jesus had died in six bid him farewell. He was under brought his downfall seemed to hours rather than the usual 12. a summons from the Emperor him a routine defensive mea- "Certainly, this man was in- Tiberius to answer a charge of sure, a cunningly accomplished nocent," the centurion had unwarranted bloodshed. destruction of that superstitious blurted out. The governor, on edge because of the sobbing of Behind him he left a haunting company headed through a •f. *«• record, including the crucifix- mountain pass northeast of Je- Procula, had let the im- ion of Jesus. rusalem. pertinent remark pass and dis- missed him. As the ship sailed that day, "Rebels all." he told himself. -LIGHTING Pilate emerged from the stern "They must have been rebels; Then later, in quizzing some cabin.to which he and his wife the whole province crawls with of his Temple collaborators, Pi- had been assigned, unable any rebels." cut it to bits. That ambush had not been late had learnecl of the weird, longer to abide her estranged As the historian of that peri- "Some of them they slew." the first time he had used sub- unsettling events three days af- silence. He wove his way od, Josephus, describes the epi- Josephus writes. "Others of terfuge and trickery to try to ter the crucifixion when the sol- among the wine kegs and sode, a magnetic Samaritan re- them they put to flight, and took keep these congenitally re- diers guarding the tomb fled in heaped grain sacks lo an aft ligious leader had excited a a great many alive, the princi- bellious Jews under heel, in- fright and the body disappear- railing and watched the shad- vast following with promises to pal of which, and also the most cluding the hoked-up trial of the ed. ows purpling the hills ot Judca. reveal the sacred, hidden ves- potent of those that fled away, Galilean. But the wily devices, '' We became as dead persons CLEANUP "An unnatural place," he sels of Moses on Mount Ger- PUate ordered to be slain." Ro- which he had savored with such through fear," they had bab- murmured. "Bewitched." izzim. Thousands gathered at man horsemen pounded the a sense of triumph, now had bled. "We saw an angel ... his It was an untamed, vehement the nearby village of Tirathaba, countryside, hunting them out, brought defeat. countenance was like lightning land, each volcanic height, each most of them armed, and start- executing them. .,. roll away the stoneof the PAINT UP whispering wind, each narrow, ed their trek through a gorge A Jewish delegation had com- Pilate put a.hand to his fore- sepulchre ... Jesus is risen as twisting street echoing with toward the mountain. plained to the emperor Ti- head, pressing it, trying to he foretold ... He truly does time, passions and mystery. Pilate, however, informed of berius, Josephus adds, accusing crush the ache. Too many live." . . "The granddam of the the movement by spies, had Pilate of wanton murder, insist- schemes, too many ruses, too The Temple allies of Rome Furies!" He shivered, not so deployed a heavy military force ing that the victims had not many broken limbs, moaning had bribed the soldiers to keep LIGHT UP much from the whiffs of damp along the trail, concealing Ihern assembled in the mountain area victims, throttled voices and quiet about the incident and to sea air as from memories, the in flanking ravines for an am- "in order to revolt from the trampled liberties, too much' claim that while they slept the • Now, when you're thinking of ways lo perk up the house ?fter misty, swarming images of de- bush. At the strategic moment, Romans, but to escape the vio- gore. disciples of Jesus had ferreted; winter's drabness, why not replace a tired light fixture with a fiant faces, the fallen, mangled the combined force of infantry, lence of Pilate." He was or- "Father, forgive them; for away his body. Pilate, as re- bright new one? bodies, the upthrust silhouettes spearmen and cavalry fell on dered to Face the accusation in they know not what they do." latedin the noncanonical gospel of laden crosses. the unexpecting multitude and Rome. Procula had quoted those dying of Peter, also ordered the sol- 4 light flush mount. Yellow & orange squares - 16" square pan with 6" white balls 60 watt each. Also available in chrome Dr. Bernard Schapiro finish or chrome with black cups. came home to a 73 Ford REG. $30.00 00 Country Squire because it drove Our Price 15 24 Petals formed to create these colorful tulip shades. 16" his family comfortably wide x 15" high. In green, white, yellow and orange. out of the house, tor. 49.00 Our Price 2950 Also Available in Swag At Extra Charge
Ceiling mounted, walnut stained driftwood plank accented with carved rosettes, body length 7": 4 It 60 watt max. Edison base- white diffuser. REG. 65.00 50 Our Price 49 OPEN THURS. & FRI. 'TIL 9 SATURDAY 'TIL 5 QUALITY ZAMPA , lo the ski lifts. To ftie campsites. "After an 8-hour trip of continuous To the beaches, nurseries ,md lumber- driving. I have neither a backache nor yards.To any and nil of this New Jersey anil stiff," says a man who ought to know. DECORATOR BULBSl family of five's vigorous year round If you want to see the station pursuits. wagons more Americans come home to Without leaving nnvthinpor any- than any other, drop by your local-Ford,. REG. one behind. Dealer's showroom. "1 owned a Chevrolet wagon pre- He has just what the doctor ordered. 2 for 1.59 vious to my Ford and there's no compari- son',' says Dr. Schapiro. 10-25-40-60 WATT " 1 he lord handles better, is more COME HOME TO FORD CLEAR, FROSTED, WHITE - 2,000 HR. comfortable, and it offered us a wider . range of options for 7o than the competition" Like a .split front seal with separate controls for passenger and driver. And THE LIGHTING CENTER rear facing seats with e.xlra padding. And ford's 3 way magic doorgatc. See jour local Ford Dealer. 79 E. NEWMAN SPRINGS RD. RED BANK, NJ. 1973Country Squirr shown uiili optional deluacluggage rack, beltpd white sidevv,ill tire*, drtunr'bumper group and tvheel covers. TEl 741-6400 The Daily Register, Bed Bank - MkldJetown, NJ. Friday, April tt, Wl 13 to Open in Newark jyCADSEWELLVAUGHAN will open in Newark shortly. well as many small businesses bank came up about 3% years the city: He said fl.S million dustry is something the black are only 48 biracial banks in A key to the bank's success, The bank, City National were being shortchanged by ago during a discussion in stock has been sold to just community is not sophis- the" country and only eight of he added, will be tbe fact that NEWARK (AP)- New Jer- Bank of New Jersey, has been the established banks. . among seven black business- over 2,000 persons. An in- ticated in and it is almost im- those are national banks. its board members and offi- sey's first bar* organized spe- ' organized primarily by black Charles Whigham, a mem- men. He acknowledged that it dication of how minority possible to make an alignment There are no total black in- cers are all residents of New- rificajljrto cater to the finan- businessmen in the city who ber ot the bank's board of di- was a bold idea since none of groups will support the bank of total black officers and stitutions, he added, but there ark. "We live here and work cial needs ofminority groups felt that minority groups as rectors, said the idea for the . them had experience in the' is shown in the fact that "72 to board members to have suf- are about 15,000 total white here," he said. "We Just won't banking industry. 73 per cent of the stockholders ficient expertise 'to run a banks. be doing business during the "But we saw there was a are black or, Puerto Rlcan," bank," Whigham said. He said when City National day and leaving the city at fleet} for it," Whigham said. he said. "In fact, I don't think mi- . opens it will also conduct a night. "We knew that banks in and Whigham said the other nority groups are trained in school for its customers." We "We hope to run the bank around Newark were not help- banks in the city have also banking and I believe I would plan to have a special area like any bank in any small ing the community by in- been helpful in getting City be very disappointed if I where people can come and community. The people will vesting in it or providing National off the ground by made a survey because it learn about the banking pro- know us and we'll know them. loans for the small business- making suggestions and rec- would probably show they cess," he said. "We'll teach That way when we consider man to help him build." ommendations: "Actually, know very little about the me- them the right words to use loans we can say we know the Furthermore, he added, the they also know there is a need chanics of banking." when asking for a loan, about person, and not just sit at already poor people of New- lor a bank like this and that Whigham, who operates a profit and loss statements and home somewhere outside the ark also have been unable to we won't be going into direct funeral service in Newark, how to handle their ac- city looking at an appli- get loans and are "forced to competition with them," he said to his knowledge there counts." cation." go to loan agencies that said. • charge too much interest." Although the initial concept "Banks in the city can came about during a meeting make money without that of black businessmen, Whig- kind of business and they ham said when the bank know it," Whigham said. opens there will be four mem- Whigham said City National bers of the board who are is scheduled to open in mid- white. June, but its concept has al- "Unfortunately we have ready been well received in found that the banking in-. t • •UldllKS 10 LaWII iVIHg! We believe it's high time Mr. Lawnowner was liberated once and for all from the backbreaking Pilate Is Recalled chores of lawn care . . . given equal opportunity with his apartment BAN ULTRA BAN dwelling friends to really enjoy his favorite hobbies. We'll take full charge of your lawn (except watering and cutting), and guarantee* results — 5000 at do-it-yourself prices! From Judean Pos (Continued) said to seek his acceptance and denly, he became aware that you would find it, to forgive and EXCEDRIN INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL Procula stood there beside him. you would be forgiven, and al- "It's a lonely time," she said. ways to love and strengthen CONDITIONING SPECIAL/Only each other, no matter what. treatment includei: sq. ft. "Yes, it is." » Power Aeration Treatment includes: Reseeding: MERION- You're not really alone, Pi- minimum ""Whatever mistakes you've • Power Rolling • - Power Aeration FYLKING mix (1 Ib. late." • Fertilization (40% ore.) • Power Rolling per 1000 sq.ft.) 4009 SQ. It. made, I still love you," she $•140 • Reseeding: MERION- • Fertilization Fungus Control Ea. 1add'1.1000 sq. ft He drew in a heavy breath of FYLKING mix (1 Ib. . (40% organic) Weed Control 510,00 said. He turned toward her, per 1000 sq. ft.) ' feeling the first spark of hope in air, his muscles loosening from himself for a long time, and she their military mold and the looked up at him with pained "vitus" staff slipped from his Full Service . fondness. "God loves you, too, relaxing-fingers and fell into despite the hurts dealt to him the sea. "Is it possible?" VTALIS tint Id ini Irm PJB She locked her arms around CONTROL Imm witer ta" ANNUAL ... by you, by me, by others." sq. ft. him, burying her face on his Ihil Imft-tX»" W tm He drew himself up rigidly, lUBkwl cost IIII" twMd W*Ml »»I •> per chest, and Pilate, stroking her PROGRAM compressing his lips to stop year hair, looked up at the range of ... on your lawn every 3-4 weeks their quivering. "I don't need 4O0Osq.-ft. stars flecking the night around with either a service or check-back. minimum the God sentiments," he said. them. BUFFERIN in Treatment includes: "You've changed, Procula." ARTHRITIS SPRING EARLY SUMMER LATE SUMMER FALL "Yes," she said. "I think I've Tiberius died before Pilate • Power Aeration • Power Aeration • Power Rolling Power Aeration could appear for the investiga- • Power Rolling • • Power Rolling Fertilizatio" n Power Rolling found some answers, some real • Fertilization • Fertilization (40% organic) Fertilization ones, through those followers of tion, and fourth century church (40% organic) (40% organic) . Fertilization (40% organic) historian Eusebius cites ancient i Fertilization - Fertilization 08% UF) Reseeding: the Way. As they teach, Jesus (45-O.0) (38% UF) Weed Control MERION-FYLKING was the truth, and it can clear reports that he afterward fell • Reseeding: • Weed Control Post-emergence mix (1 Ib. per into such calamities that he MERION-FYLKING • Chinch Bug Control Crabgrass Control 1000 sq. ft,) us, make us free." mix (1 Ib. per • Pre-emergence Chinch Bug Control Weed Control. • "Free? . . . Free from, committed suicide. 1000sq.lt.) • Crabgrass Control Sod Webworm Control Fungus Control Other ancient traditions, • Fungus Control - SodWebworm Control + CHECK-BACK • Grub Control what?" FEIYIINIQOE FEMINIQUE UJ • Weed Control • Fungus Control + CHECK-BACK, however, says that he, like his • Grub Control + CHECK-BACK "From the snares the world PALS + CHECK-BACK wife, became a Christian and sets for us, that twist us and that for affirming it openly, he CHEWABLE VITAMINS make us unreal. Jesus said the Call day or night for FREE estimate and lawn analysis was beheaded in Rome and his healthy don't need a physician, body thrown in the river Tiber. but the sick, the confused, the Christian friends retrieved it victims of their own bad judg- and buried him in France where ments and mistakes." She hesi- a hill near Vienne still bears his tated, gazing up at him hon- name. estly, but quite tenderly. "We To eastern churches, both he LCIWIY ® all make mistakes." and Procula are numbered Pilate stared straight ahead among the saints of a faith that Servicing Red Bank, Rumson, into the blackness, his clenched says its Lord whom Pilate cru- Fair Haven, Little Silver, hands white on the wet wooden cified died in agonizing for- Shrewsbury, Llncroft, railing, and she went on: giveness and love for all the Mlddletown and vicinity. ' 'He said his work was for the world's crucifiers of goodness 671-4660 lost ones, to reclaim them. He who see their wrongdoing and their need for such mercy. BUFFERIN Kill weeds 4 WAY while you feed grass!
MULTI SCRUB •unimuL MISS iti] CLAIROL SCHICK SUPER II CARTRIDGES 5'* FREE RAZOR R. Gary Stover U.S. Grant
Requested CLAIROL By Jaycees . SUMMESUMMER KEANSBURG - The SUMMER Greater Keansburg Jaycees have applied for a federal I BLONDE BLONDE PLUS grant for operation THRE- SHOLD, an alcohol education program being emphasized by the organization nationally. The federal funds are avail- able through a grant made to the U.S. Jaycees Foundation from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcohol- ism. ^ EDGE Local participation in the Coats Penetrates Shrivels Weeds fade program was announced by. || PROTECTIVE SHAVE BUGS BUNNY leaves... roots... , tops... away... Greater Keansburg Jaycees president R. Gary Stover. VITAMINS • Weerj killer sticks Killing action be- Roots die and Turf food nour- The program includes spe- : :lo leaves and in- gins as weed killer leaves shrivel. ishes grass to cial projects aimed at youth, •';gredients are ab- penetrates the grow over where community fact finding pro- sorbed. < weed's sap weeds have died. grams, a medical school pro- M stream. gram for Jaycees and profes- sionals, as well as projects .Save yourself some work! created by individual chap- Pick up Nutro Weed & Feed this weekend. RAYCROFT DISTRIBUTORS ters,
For Sale by the following dealers: Drug Addiction Problem? Call 988-8333. For Help Day or , Brookdale Mower Company Porter Tree Service Night. Llncroft Rumson LawBS Coal Company Wt'U TAKE CARE Of JMORRISTOWN, M NO. PARK AVENUE SOMERVIUE, O MAIN STREET ORANGE, 301 MAIN STREET! Shrewsbury & Fair Haven •HACKENSACK, MO MAIN STREET UNION, 102* STUYVESANT AVE BERQENFIELD. I ANSWBUN6 YOUR PHONE IBLOOMFIELD, U BROAD ST. RED BANK, U BROAD STREET Fair Haven Hardware Grecco Farm Market 40 S. WASHINGTON AVE. I • 24 HOUR Prictl «f*ciyo Wiu Apr. ie, 73 .— Wl rtUtn Ma A*Mto Urn* QuiMUti Mel fttipcnitM Mr Tfpttnpniiu Cmrt. Fair Haven Holmdel ANSWERING SERVICE cm 671-9200 III in 11 muni muni i 14 The pvfy Register, Bed Bank - MMdJetown, N.I. Friday, April 2», 1S71 Growing Number Believe Christ Died m Garden Areei The shrine is now inside the JEBUSALEM (AP) - Christian pilgrims by the ues: Dutch churchman with wide ber of pilgrims have ques- described by one Easter vis- fixion will ever fully be estab- thousands will pray at both tioned the Holy Sepulchre- itor as a "true oasis of tran- lished. walls built in the 16th century Where (fid Christ die? "Now in the place where He experience in the Middle by Suleiman the Magnificent. The rambling Crusader the Church and the Garden was crucified there was a gar- East. marked sites because the quillity in bustling Arab Je- So far archaeologists and Tomb this Easter Week. shrines were obviously inside, rusalem." biblical scholars have made But the spot actually was out- Church of the Holy Sepulchre den, and in the garden a new The entire Garden Tomb side the Roman walls during deep Inside the-Old City's The Garden Tomb has been tomb where no one had been concept appears to flaunt the not ouside, the tity walls. "One lady told me she toad little progress. But it wasn't until the end of not felt the presence of God in the main unanswered ques- Christ's time. Church suppor- walls is revered by millions as winning more supporters be- laid ... as the tomb was close 1,600-year-old Church of the ters say. the site of Calvary cause of its location — well at hand, they laid Jesus Holy Sepulchre tradition. the last century that the Gar- Jerusalem until she visited tion: "I want to spend the rest of But a growing number of outside Old Jerusalem's thick there." The original idea to pin den Tomb idea began to take the Garden," the Rev. Mr. Were the sites marked by my life here," says warden Christians also believe Jesus Turkish walls. "The Garden Tomb fits this down the exact location of the hold, thanks to a campaign Van der Hoeven said. the Church of the Holy Se- Van der Hoeven. "Its the best was crucified and entombed in For the Scriptures are clear- Bible description," says the crucifixion came from Em- launched by British Gen. The minister is not sure if pulchre in or outside the pulpit in the world." a garden area a quarter of a that Jesus was crucified out- warden, the Rev. Jan W. Van peror Constantine the Great Charles Gordon"; who visited tiie true location of the cruci- walls? " mile to the north. side the city. St. John contin- der Hoeven, a 33-year-old at the Council of Nicaea in Jerusalem en route home 325. He dispatched his mother, from his Chinese campaigns. Pmpress Helena, to the Holy Gordon was convinced that Lain! to see that his orders 60-foot-high liill just north of were followed. Damascus Gate was the true The spot finally chosen — af- Calvary. Two hollows in the ter it was disclosed in a vision face of the hill made it look to the Bishop of Jerusalem — like a skull — Golgotha, he NOTICE OF MUNICIPAL ELECTION was on the site of a pagan said. temple of Aphrodite built by He began a campaign that BOROUGH OF KEANSBURG, N.J. Roman Emperor Hadrian 200 eventually led to the estab- years earlier. It was on a hill lishment of the London-based, In accordance with R.S. 40:79-1 to 40:84-19 of the Laws of New called Golgotha, a name de- nondenominational Garden Jersey and the acts and supplements thereto entitled "AN ACT RE- rived from the Hebrew for Tomb Association, which has LATING TO, RELATING AND PROVIDING FOR THE GOVERNMENT "skull." jurisdiction over the site. Warden Van der Hoeven, OF MUNICIPALITIES GOVERNED BY A MUNICIPAL COUNCIL AND Constantine's shrines were whose father is secretary to A MUNICIPAL MANAGER", the terms of the present members of leveled by invading Moslems, Queen Juliana, admitted he but rebuilt by Crusader the Municipal Council of the Borough of Keansburg, in the County of himself was "not 100 per cent Monmouth, N.J. will expire at twelve o'clock noon on knights who reconquered Je- sure the Garden Tomb was rusalem in 1099. the true site of Calvary," al- TUESDAY, May 22nd, 1973 The knfghts enclosed Cal- though he lelt it was. He „ and their successors shall be chosen at a Municipal Election to be vary and the Tomb under one added: held in the Borough, on . ' roof of the Sepulchre Church. "It well could be, because it TUESDAY, May 8th, 1973 It is shared jointly by the is a rock tomb typical of He- between the hours of 7 a.m. and 8:00 p.m., the District Boards of rodian times." Greek Orthodox, Roman Election will sit at the following places: Catholic and Eastern Rites The Tomb, a two-room churches. Damaged by an cave, is surrounded by a lush FIRST ELECTION DISTRICT: Manning Place Fire House, Manning earthquake in 1927, it is still and well-tended garden, filled Place under repair. with well-manicured shrubs, SECOND ELECTION DISTRICT: Community Center Carr Avenue Over the centuries a num- flowers and tall shade trees — THIRD ELECTION DISTRICT: Blue Jeans Hall, 12 Church Street FOURTH ELECTION DISTRICT: Corrigan's Hall, 100 Main Street GARDEN TOMB ENTRANCE - Tourists cluster about the Garden Tomb FIFTH ELECTION DISTRICT: Keans. High School, 140 Port Mon-- in Jerusalem, the site which a growing number of Christians believe College Schedules mquth Road Christ was crucified and entombed. SIXTH ELECTION DISTRICT: New Point Comfort Fire House, 192 Carr Ave. Parents' Day Fete The following named persons have been placed in Nomination by petitions filed with the Municipal Clerk of the Borough of Keans- WEST LONG BRANCH - will be a social pause. An Monmouth College faculty "over-the-coals " Dutch Treat burg, N.J. for COUNCILMAN and their names will appear on the bal- and administrators, led by barbecue will be served at lots at the Municipal Election to be held on President Dr. Richard J. Sto- noon, and will be followed by Tuesday, May 8th, 1973. nesifer, will join to host the a series of diversions — per- 1. Raymond A. Reaney college's annual Parents' Day formance by the college observance on May 4 and 5. Equestrian Club, a concert by 2. Eileen M. Lloyd , Mothers and fathers of pros- the college band and a swim- ' 3. Francis Cappadona pective students, as well as ming and diving exhibition by 4. Eugene Connelly those of students already at- the college swimming team. 5. Walter M. Roeseman •-- • tending Monmouth, have re- There will also be'an art ex- 6. Peter L. Graham ceived invitations to the an- hibit and — throughout the af- nual open house which is de- ternoon — guided tours of the 7. Patsy J. Acconzo Jr. signed to provide guests op- campus. Harvey Marion portunity to explore not only Highlight of the May 4 pro- Municipal Clerk the campus, but some of the gram will be an aquacade di- Election Clerk issues pertinent in the field of rected by college swim coach education today. :Dick Steadman and will fea- In his letter of invitation, ture a fashion showing of wa- Dr. Stonesifer noted: ter wear. "Intentionally, we are centering parts of the pro- gram on discussion, for these THE BEACHCOMBER are perplexing days in higher •Heavy gauge all-aluminum pool. patio, walkaround decking and fenc- education, and parents as well ing • AN-alummum decorated pattern w.ill • Winlerrzed Uni-bond liner as students must face an ar- • Safety gate • In and out ladders I ray of questions not here- 24 Fl. x 12 Fl. OVAL tofore so obvious on the | American scene." In keeping with that note, the morning schedule on May 1 THE CORAL REEF with DECKING 5 will be devoted in the main Heavy gauge hot dippod gnlvnnized steel • Heavy lop senting ledge to discussion periods. Dr. Heavy vertical uprights • Winterized Pcrrna-fil liner. • Available in Robert S. Rouse, dean of fac- several combinations ot patio, w.iikaround decking and loncing • Avail- ulty and vice president for able in all Coral R«e We didn't leave academic affairs, will moder- ate a panel discussion to be participated in by key person- nel representing the campus community. Included on the panel will 15 Ft. REG. 624.99 be Dr. C. Norton Coe, dean of graduate studies; Loren D. Eagles Jr., acting director of development; Robert D. Lynch, director of financial aid; Judith McCann, associate Other Size Coral Reef Pools at Comparable Savings. dean of students; Harold McCullough, Student Govern- THE MONTE CARLO ment Association president; Heavy gauge all-aluminum • Wide top all-aluminum seating ledge Donald A. Norton, dean of stu- All-aluminum walls • All-aluminum wide vertical uprights dents; Dr. Kenneth C. Strei- Uni-bond liner • All pools listed have i It. depth. outjn the cold -big, academic dean of under- classmen, and H. Gerald McConaghy, assistant direc- tor of adminission. After the panel will be a 45- minute period devoted to a IS Ft. REG. 279.99 parent-faculty discussion. 99 A separate panel is'pro- this winter. grammed for the afternoon session on May 5 by the Stu- dent Government on the scope 18 Fl- of student activities offered at •fy REG. 419.99 Monmouth. . Between morning and after- 294" 344" noon sessions on May 5, there Not one home in New Jersey went cold this winter because of a lack of heating oil. Nor one gommercial or Temple Plans industrial building. 384" 429" Fact is, the heating oil industry even went so far Israeli Fete as to help out our competitors, the gas utilities. Monte Carlo Oval .__„.» MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - 24 Ft. « 12 Ft. ARQ99 We did it by taking on their "interruptible" gas REG 62999 ^u»* Temple Beth Ahm, the Con- servative Congregation, will load when they had to shut it off due to a gas celebrate the 25th Anniver- supply shortage. sary of the founding of the Not only that, but we also helped out our State of Israel with a special other competitors, the electric utilities. t Israeli cabaret social evening. 4B" The affair will be held on Wedid that by supplying them with huge Saturday evening, May 5, quantities of heating oil to replace coal starting at-9 p.m. in the social in generating electricity and to take up the hall of the Temple which is at 550 Lloyd Road. delay in the electric utilities" installation The evening will feature an of nuclear power plants. Israeli band and Israeli enter- We're proud of this record, and expect tainment. There will be danc- to continue it. The safe fuel ing and singing. A late supper will be served. A special We're the Oil Heat Council of New pu can count on. MON.-FRI. 10 AM 9 f>M birthday cake will have 25 Jersey. We represent more than 750 SOUTH AMBOY MIDDLETOWN LAKEWOOD candles representing, the 25th independent neighborhood retail oilheat ROUTE 88 birthday of the State of Israel. dealers in the state.' ROUTE 9 ROUTE 35 This program is open to the ,.-.• % Mile South ol ASP Chapel Hill Shopping Cenler Vi Mile West ol Garden Slate Pkwy. entire community. For reser- $a/m Wood* Shopping Center V/> Miles No. ol Naveifnk Bridge Oil HeatCouncllof New Jtmy 747-4940 364-8383 vations and Information, 721-5588 please call Donna Barrack, A Division at FUeTMetctwitt Association of New Jenay • 66 Monis Avenue, SpringileM, New Jersey • 201-378.1100. [HOURS: MON. Ofru FR1.12 noon-9 P.M. CHARGE IT! SS 566-7678, or Dorothy Sacks, SATURDAY 10 A.M.-6 P.M. SUNDAY 10 A.M.-5 P.M. 264-3863. •Down on the Farm The Daily Beglster, Bed Bank - Middtetown, NJ. Friday, Apr&M, mi 15 By SYLVIA POETEH er indication of how difficult it Undervalued Shares is to make it in farming today. 5 You arp typical of tens of YOUR MONEY'S — The average farmer's in- •yROGER«.SPEAR the calculation the net income millions of city families if, as come is about 75 per cent tbe Q — I bought 200 shares of Is divided by the bond's face you stare at tbe latest hor- • income of a non>iarmer. Tew Purex Corp. (NYS?) at 19%. SUCCESSFUL value plus .(as opposed to rible figures on tbe upsurge in WORTH small farmers get such valu- It has never gone back up to being subtracted for a dis- count bond) the annual aver- food prices and your cost of iiiluiHiiiiiiiiliiiuiuiiuiiiuuuiuuMniuii able fringe benefits as pen- - my cost price despite making INVESTING living, you angrily envision sions and health insurance, Vivors will be the biggest good profits. I blame this on age loss. The remaining pro- the U.S. farmer sitting on his But the small farmer, back- not to mention paid vacations farms; other key winners will the company's efforts to con- cesses are the saute as above. porch, watching the spring bone of our agricultural tradi- and holidays. " be real estate developers. glomerize and ultraconserva- The longer maturity a bond planting season arrive and tion, is still falling steadily be- tive management. — W.L. - consumer products, which ac- has the less accurate is this all readers of this column, hind — even though his po- — Costs to farmers have It's so obvious it needs no Send $1 with name and ad- rocking his way to easy been soaring - for fertilizer, further elaboration from me. A — Although Purex has re- count for about 10 per cent of method. Nevertheless you can street. And for good reasons: verty is camouflaged by the ported higher profits in each sales. Recently the in- get an idea of yields using this dress to Roger E, Spear, Red prosperity of the bigs. labor, machinery, grain, re- To stay in dairy or truck Bank Register, Box 1018 Item: Farm income has pairs. In the past two dec- farming or poultry-raising of the past five quarters the troduction of new products soared to $21.8 billion, nearly — The number of U.S. earnings trend has been errat- has been stepped up and un- r nd C n Stationi NeW ades, farm property taxes today, a fanner must Have (Roger Spear's 52-page in- YorkH !, ., ,?1M1!S!, ,double farm, income a decade farms has been halved since have approximately qua- huge herds or flocks or auto- ic and improvement in the De- profitable agricultural oper- vestment guide is available to - "•*• ')- 1940 to 2,800,000, lowest in the drupled and the average mated acreages — and that cember quarter was only min- ations scaled down. ' ago. past century, and of these, Company efforts to expand \ Hem: Farmers have been farmer's debt burden has more and more means the imal. Nonetheless for the year more than one million are be- quintupled. , triumph of the giant agribusi- to end June 30 a gain of about and diversify make sense, ; reaping the lion's share of the lieved doomed to fold during 15 per cent to $1.55 a share is helping to counteract the cycl- ; food price upsurge. Last year this decade. The number of — The full-time small farm- ness over the small jndepen-' er is disappearing from our dent. - anticipated. Management has ical segments of operations. ', the farmer got $521 of the farm failures is more than six been, aggressive in marketing Shares should be held for * f 1.311 retail cost of the mar- times that of small-business landscape. Two-thirds of our What is our national policy farmers are now depending on for this rural dilemma? Dp we the company's grocery and their above-average long-term ; ketbasket of farm-originated failures. prospects. j. foods which the typical U.S. non-farm sources for more have any policy at all to con- SPKIAL PRI-SIASON OfftR! — The number of Ameri- than half of their income: fac- trol the spreading of the agr- Q — Could you explain how ' family bought, a rise of 8.7 cans in our population living to figure yield to maturity on - per cent. The farmer's take of tory jobs, road construction, imonoUths? Do we have any GOOD ONLY UH1H APRIL 28ihl on farms has shrunk from school bus driving, in- facts on their social, economic a discounted and a premium- i meat alone jumped more than nearly 16,000,000 in 1960 to priced bond?—A.D. ' 17 per cent in 1972. vestments. and geographical impact? Do about 9,000,000. Only one in 20 A — Gladly. On a discount General Electric ; Item: Prices currently lives on a farm today against 'For Sale" Ads we even care what happens ': being received by farmers are Just a glance at a farm to our farm lands? is anybody bond the average annual capi- one in three in 1920. Mean- tal gain is first calculated by 4 32 per cent above the levels of while, the average size of U.S. journal or the real estate sec- out there trying to measure will send von : five years ago and the farmer tions of newspapers serving the trade-off — if any - be- subtracting purchase price ; farms has doubled. Small •from the face value and divid- 00 ; is getting 43 cents out of every farms account for less than 8 readers nearany farm ferri- tween food prices to us and •; dollar you spend for food orig- tory discloses a startling num- productivity on the farm? At ing the result by the number *40 in cash per cent of farm sales while of years to maturity. This fig- '; inated on the farm, the most fewer than 1 per cent of U.S. ber of farms for sale — even this watershed moment in •; he has received in years and at this peak period of farm farm and food history, where ure is then added to the cou- farms make nearly 25 per pon rate to get annual appre- if you order now! ;. comparing to 39.8 cents as re- prosperity. The only real stir- is our informed leadership? if you order on or before April 28th. Gerwat ElfClricl cent of sales. ciation. The two resulting cently as last November and iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiii will send you a special, bonus check For $40. si soon I — Our farm population is yields are added and divided as your installation is completed. *38 cents in 1971. growing steadily older, anoth- • And on and on the documen- by two to get an approximate ' tation stretches. Farm pro- Local Securities yield to maturity. • ductivity has soared about .Representative inter-dealer quotations at approximately 3, In premium bonds the an-, ; twice as fast as manufac- Senior p.m. yesterday from NASD. Prices do not include retail mark-v nual loss is subtracted from General Electric! ; turing industry efficiency in the coupon rate to arrive at up, mark-down, or commission. net income. Further along in- ' the past two decades. One For Reade BANKS v farmer can feed 51 people in CENTRAL AIR . Bid- Asked - V. David Shaheen Jr. ;' this country today versus 16 in Is Named American Bancorp W/i 15 11852. The volume of food and Belmar-Wall National...; 70 GYPSY CONDITIONING, other products sold by farm- NEW YORK - Edward L. Schuman has been named se- CentralJerseyBank 17% " 18% Law Firm '; ers in the fourth quarter of Colonial First National Bank !.. 5% 5% MOTH Deluxe 1973 Models 1972 was 49 per cent above nior vice president of The Walter Reade Organization, Community State Bank 53 55 Partnership , '67's levels. Exports of farm .First Merchants Nafl Bank 12% 13% products have skyrocketed. Inc. Sheldon Gunsberg, presi- CONTROL dent, said all division heads of First Nat'l Bank Toms River .'.....• 29% 31 15 YRS. EXPERIENCE • So the U.S. farmer is finally Franklin State Bank ; 29 31 For Shaheen : winning big? the entertainment division in the organization will report Jersey Shore Bank 25 27 ASBURY PARK - V. David LEARYTREE ' Astonishingly no. directly to Mr. Schuman. Bank of Manalapan.. ; 24^ 26 Shaheen Jr. has become a '; The "agrimonoliths" — New Jersey National Corp.. -31% 31% partner in the law firm of An- SPRAY SERVICE those enormous thousands-of- Included in the group are sehelewitz, Barr, Ansell and COLTS NECK, N.J. the vice presidents for theater Ocean County National 40 •• acre farms and ranches — are People's Nat'l Bank.Lakewood 285 Bonello. 542-5546 :;, raking it in. And this goes not operations; Continental, the motion picture distributing di- Shore National Bank 19 20 Mr. Shaheen, who resides in "only for profits on their pro- vision; concessions and the United Counties Trust Co 21 22& New Shrewsbury with his duction but also for the huge company's television division. United Jersey Banks of N.J - 24»4 wife, the former Virginia Mi- federal agricultural subsidies chael, and their two children, for as little as LESS Mhey have been getting. For Mr. Schuman has been the INDUSTRIAL" received the degree of juris HIGHEST company's vice president for Bid Asked GE'S ;. these I do not weep! doctor from Rutgers Univer- $40 planning and development fol-, Aerologkal Research 5c sity in 1968. INTEREST lowing a leave of absence to' Alkon Industries 3'4 4 IBONUS! JEWISH SINGLES While in law school, he was ALLOWED BY LAW serve in Washington, D.C., in Atlantic Appliance Co., Inc % 1% PRICE INCLUDES COMPIITI INSTALLATION ,IN an editor of the law review ON TWO YEAR DANCE politics. Brockway '18%. 19 YOUR WARM AIRDUCT5YSTEM,plui24,ODQBTU'l Sunday, April 22nrJ and received the Fidelity cooling power (ARI) Certified Rating: condensing unit and Mr. Schuman has been Buck Engineering ••. 5>4 5<£ Coii: 15 (t. pre charged tubing: Automatic Heating/Cool' Holiday Inn, Kenilworth Union Trust Company Estate YIELD 6% nig Thermostat (based on normal installation using exist- Idnilo Colonial Foods 3>4 4^4 l|t>. >0 3S l*», S.OOr.M.lolJM' a member of the Reade board FOR 1 VR. ing electrical penel. lurnace motor, plenum clumber and Planning Award. After gradu- 5 O/fl/ CERTIFICATES LIVE BAND of directors since 1971. Electronic Associates t% -6Vt ductwork providing it is adequately sized.) Rotiway, N.J. 07063 ation from Rutgers, Mr. Sha- A/a OF DEPOSIT —Electronic Assistance 2% ' 2% /4/U ON ONE YEAR Offer appfc lo 19)3 Oetae heen was law secretary to C. YIELD 6% . Central Air Cnndiliorim 1A FIC Mideli. Foodarama 3>/2 3% 0/ CERTIFICATES iiiS Gibson-Homans 7% 7% Thomas Schettino, former 0 OF DEPOSIT state Supreme Court justice. YIELD 5.65% FOR FREE HOME Interdata... 11% 11%' He received the degree of 5 SURVEY AND ESTIMAT King James Extended Care 1% 1% f DANCING^ master of laws from New .CALL AT ONCEI OFFER Laird 11 n/ ON REGULAR York University in 1971. u TONIGHT & SAT. Metallurgical'tnternational 1% 1%' 'n PASSBOOK i EXPIRES APRIL 28th! Mr. Shaheen will be in the SAVINGS THE FANTASTIC Midland Glass 8'4 8'^ Monmouth Airlines 14 % firm's office here at 513 Bangs 4 Monmouth Capital 8 9 Ave,, whert he practices with Deposits Insured Up lo DON CAMILLE TRIO Leon Anschelewitz, Max M. $20,000 by F.D.I.C. with BETTEANNLEE Vocalist Monmouth Industries 1 % 3/16 Barr, David K. Ansell, Ro- SAT. BRUNCH Monmouth Park... 9% 10% bert I. Ansell Francis V. Bo- CLARKE NOELNH5ON Monmouth Real Estate Investment 9'^ IO'/J - No Brunch Eattet Sunday nello, Richard B. Ansell and N.J: Natural Gas 17 17& WE*THfHM*KEH5 ro MONMOUTH COUNTY StNCt < COMING APR. 27 Alexander D. Lehrer. Richard Precision Optics % % L. and John L. Bonello main- 1 LEONARD ST. Radiophone Corp...... 2'^ 3 BIG BAND tain their offices in the firm's RED BANK 741-3454 Rowan Controller. 2% 2i£ Long Branch offices at 9 Me- Mamber Federal Rewrve, Federal NIGHT Servomation 14^ morial Pkwy. Deptnlt Insurance Corp. . MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR Spiral Metal 2% ' 2% EASTER DINNER NOW U.S. Homes fl% 10 Special Menu, call (or United Telecontrol Electronics 12'/j' 12% »Inlormallon. Walter Reade Organization, Inc 1% 2 WinslowTel y4 % Here are your OLDE Henry C. Frey Worthington Biochemical ... 10y4 1114 UNION HOUSE llllllllllllllllllltllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIUII II I Illllllll call 842-7575 * Don't be Wharf Ave., Red Bonk/% Frey Elected lawn's Association bugged INTERSTATE When You Need Money Fast ten worst enemies. AIRPORT Treasurer by DETROIT, Mich. - Coun- LIMOUSINE cilman Henry C. Krey of Ea- tontown, N.J., a 22-year em- tree & ploye of Bell Telephone Labo- we alto make loans to businesses ratories, was elected treasur- 1. Erosion 2. Dandelion 3. Fungus 4. Chickweed 5. Crabgrass er of the National Microfilm MONMOUTH COUNTY INVESTMENT CORP. shrub Association at the group's Highway 35 7K1-5M1 Mlddlatown 22nd annual conference at' Cobo Hall here. pests. SCHEDULED SERVICE Councilman Krey, super- visor for engineering informa- . Introducing; shrub and • NEWARK tion systems, at the Bell facil-, tree spraying service by 6. Army Worm 7. Billbug 8. Sod Web Worm 9. Grubs 10. Chinch Bug • LA6UARDIA ity in Holmdel, has been a member of NMA board of di- Snapper. Lawn* Doctor • JFK rectors for two years. Here is your lawns one best triend. The mower that works Think Ihe streets are unsafe? Take lawn service will rid you of the LOWEST RATES He also will be general Don't look now... but the a look at the villains, poachers and ravages of many pests who try lo FAMILY AND CHAR1IR RATES chairman of the organiza- annual invasion is about to robbers who every year try to make rob your lawn of its beauty and start. The time of tear your lawn their victim. You can health. We give your lawn the op- To like a beaver. MML loCuonBo $17.00 tion's next annual conference when caterpillars, gypsy continue fighting the uphill battle portunity to become a living carpet WONT. JFK $15.50 in Boston. molhs and crawling crea- for law and order on your turf. Or, thai will be Ihe pride of the neigh- Departures ako Irom Middlclown and It's the best riding | tures of all kinds begin starting now, you can buy the borhood. Call LawntDoctor now. Aibury Park Vicinities rlecessary proteclion for just pen- Isn't it a crime to let your lawn go TH E ONLY F.ULLY LICENSED Councilman Krey and nis their royal feast on your REGULARLY SCHEDULED LIM- mower you'll find. beautiful Irees and shrubs. nies per square foot. L»wn*Docior the way it is? OUSINE SEjRVICE IN MONMOUTH » wife, Brunhilda, and their OCEAN COUNTY This year. . . now, in children, Ingrid and Helga, Tough, rugged and,, lact... you can do some- Phone 681-5200 live at 353 Grant Ave. powerful enough thing about those pests.
to sweep, doze, liwn*Doelor r- new Iree and It costs no more to use Lawn*Doctor lor ill these phases of... haul, fertilize.or shrub spraying service will, Lawn* Doctor chase them, helping your" YEAR ROUND LAWN CARE prized bushes and trees to aerate when equipped INTRODUCTORY SKDINO: (•ii'I.T»,riin(,, 0 1 Lml. ( AUDITIONS ) withstand the onslaught. OFFER! with attachments. „ Service is provided lour times a year... oflener • Sltd • Power fcrile ' ' FERTILIZATION b> ^'l* *Cfu> pr»lfinI''"" '»' ivoHciiwi f»i ]«»• • Comfortable, safe maneuverability. n| : ti(& (!1e Wj< tri lj ( DMt e d 11 1 il needed, at no extra • FtrWire 4500 USS )l22t2» DupiM 1530* LJSS 33 ?0 • 'M' ~ * " ' '" c"* " »»'<>" • Power Roll J6U( wgiiK •Upii ?l! fti otMicitn pti 1 WQti DMIIt Uf'J »(KKJil-ficlLiiv« UiiDoctoi piadutl BARN THEATRE SUMMER SEASON • Fully enclosed transmission. • Five forward, cost. Speaking of cost. . . • Firhlire 1122 22 • Aquaurl 11 dep*f>i)-r|oop[C£(im. • . niifjitt cipitla'r ict.on. you'll find that It is quite WE£O CONTROL: SERVICES speeds plus reverse.« Powerful 5 and 8 HP reasonable. Compltl* only Cinljct mil csnlrtl !,u t,-vr.g jr.d bnnHttt -teds '•••'*»'•«!»'\-dfpi* c! ?") »fnti |«t|wif|itd«eo |2 it) 2 4 SIP| • rii(«lf|frii »ttf CHt'tl {'at V"v5-. 'tot l-H dut 'o ITJ! thin) • ftnttU lll« tkrct»pl Lawn*Doclor now t"t tc*V bti\\ • |i(N|fl t>, (Ur.fJ • OiClhil t)f ri^ptttiom In Woo limn ditelocufnl jntj pfO|!(li). SAT. APRIL 28th 2 - 5 P.M. engines. • Priced much lower than many bulky Oiin'ond 5hj(r.-«« • Pii tmt-rf ml crll|rm culrtl • FirtliliitlM if Until mil and stop being bugged by Type it" b| Duponl • BiUn bj Vmii • Bwini bi crnuirFQ' nniinnai garden tractors. shrub and tree pests. No 95 tfilwoi • Pntiniriinl crlklrm culril ulu ol».i * ,",'? ,,. °'''™' • SUN. APRIL 29th 7-9 P.M. obligation estimate fur- nished at no cost. •~" i •««»»' •> «•- V£?ttiWJ£Z£S$ .t «,„m ,„. McDonough. Power Equipment, Inc. A subsidiary of Fuqua Industrie!, Inc. FUNGUS CONTROL' Umi ind Idves) • Otnimnlil tin ni tWk ktia inHBi't JUIisi: Itisin )99l tf Oupfln! • B'old ipH cmlrol is»it(mc KIIO^' b
KEANSBURG - More than Waiter Koeseman, chairman his remarks to recreational creasing the numer of coun- Education; Richard Flem- 200 residents have voiced of the Planning Board, and activities, said, "School facil- ctlmen to five, with staggered ing, vice chairman of the their support for the candi- Peter L. Graham, a member ities are available in the eve- termSj will provide a more Planning Board and vice pres- dacies of incumbent Coun- of the Board of Education. nings and weekends provided representative and respon- ident of the Board of Educa- cilman Eugene Connelly; The candidates, who seek supervision is available. One sive government." tion; Edward Healy, chair- three Borough Council seats of our immediate goals is to 'In conclusion Mr. Graham man of the Board of Fire at stake in a May 8 election, make school recreational said, "We are willing to give Commissioners and a member Fort DAV were guest speakers at a rally areas open to the local public up our seats to have a five and former chairman of the in Jackie Keelen's Hestau- on an all year basis." man council formed." Recreation Commission; Rob- To Honor rant. Mr. Graham, an advocate of Publicly endorsing the trio ert Weston a merriber of the Discussing a need to run the a change of local government were Mayor Harry Graham, Housing Authority; and F. borough on a businesslike to a five-man system elected who is not seeking reelection; Gary Stover, president of the Schnabolk basis, .Mr. Connelly told the on a staggered basis instead Ronald N. Hayes, chairman of Greater Keansburg Jaycees audience of wellwishers, "Too of the three-man Borough the Citizens Advisory Board and a member of the Board of FT. MONMOUTH - A din- Council now elected every and a member of the Board of Education. ner-dance and presentation of many people look upon cities and municipalities as some- four years, said the slate is its "Man of the Year" award pledged to the change and iiiiBHimiiyiiiiiMiiinniiimiiiiniimiiiiHiiimiiuiiiiiiiniiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii is scheduled Saturday, Way« thing unique, and not as a business enterprise. This that the question will appear 12, by Ft. Monmouth Me- on the November ballot. morial Chapter and its aux- thinking is the real cause for STOCKADE FENCING iliary, Disabled American our government floundering "People are tired of degene- Veterans. at present." ration of government in $ 95 Keansburg," he said. "In- The event will be in the Mr Roeseman, confining r* 15 I NCO annex building 555 on the post, starting at 1 p.m. $ 95 Recipient of the "Man of MIDDLETOWN TOWNSHIP the Year" citation is to be 8'x6> 16 I Rtflsur sioff Pholo Harold L. Schnabolk, Sea I - INCLUDES ONE POST PER SECTION - I PREPARE FOR APPEAL — Comparing notes at organizational meeting Bright, a Ft. Monmouth engi- CLEAN-UP WEEK for 1973 drive of Red Bank United Jewish Appeal at Congregation B'nai neer with the Army Tactical WILL BE AS FOLLOWS: Israel, Rumson, are Leo Kugler, left. Little Silver, executive director, and Communications Systems N0 E 0F SPLIT RAIL FENCE I Seymour Corwin, center, Little Silver, and Dr. Allan Silver, Rumson, co- project manager's office. A 2r^, R WEEK OF APRIL 30 SPRUCE RAIL LOCUST | chairmen of drive. Goal of drive is $200,000. son, Howard Jon Schnabolk, HUUI c ot> Tft MIJIU M 24, was killed in Vietnam in (FROM BAY TO 36) IU WAY 4 95 f Aogust, 1967. | 10 FT SECTION-2 RAIL 1 POST 8 SOUTH SIDE OF WEEK OF MAY 7 95 TO MAY 11 I 10 FT. SECTION-3 RAIL 1 POST 1 1 i - ASK FOR A COPY OF OUR LATEST CIRCULAR COLLECTIONS WILL BE MADE ONLY ON REGULAR DAYS OF COLLECTION 747-5220 Loose debris must be placed in receptacles that can be handled NAVESINK HOUSE by one man. MONMOUTH BUILDING CENTER 40 Ritrenid* Avc Wood and branches should be tied in bundles that can be handled 777 SHREWSBURY AVE. SHREWSBURY by one man. OPEN SAT. MON. TUES. 7:30 A.M. TO 6 P.M. E Tree stumps should be cut so as to be handled by one man. WED. THURS. FRI. 7:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. g minium i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|iiiiiiiii|iii|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii[imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii
Introducing a$13,500 sedan that promises the most remarkable driving experience of your life: the new Mercedes-Benz 450SE
SQUAD SUMH) RICHER — Mrs. Sue Lindsay, president of Fairview First Aid Squad Ladies Auxiliary, presents check for $1,000 to squad president James Jonassen at unit's 30th anniversary dinner at Cobblestones, Mid- dletown. Looking on is David Thompson, president of New Jersey State tem, standard equipment includes power First Aid Council. steering and brakes; automatic transmis- sion; electric windows; AM/FM stereo receiver; tinted glass; twin front fog lights and front- and rear-seat armrests. The brief option list includes: leather upholstery; electric sun roof and CALL A fitted luggage. The final significance The 450SE incorporates more safety thinking than any Mercedes-Benz in history. . -V7EARS OF intense engineering effort each wheel. Purpose: to bathe all four JL were invested in the new Mercedes- disc brakes in a steady gust of air. No Mercedes-Benz motor cars: Benz 450SE. Technical advances every- domestic luxury sedan even employs from $16,498* to $6,662* where combine to produce handling 4-wheel disc brakes. Mercedes-Benz has Mercedes-Benz offers a vast range of response, security and stability that may used this system in its sedans for nearly a decade. Of course, the 450SE carries models. Here are suggested retail prices well surpass any Mercedes-Benz sedan for 8 of the most popular types: on in this tradition. yet built, according to the engineers. 450SLC Coupe $16,498 Shaped in the wind tunnel 450SL Coupe/Roadster $12,773 CELESTION Thomas F. Eagleton New front suspension 450SEL Sedan 514,605 This car's sense of control is uncanny. Its designers gave the 450SEa shape that 450SE Sedan $13,396 D1TLON 44 owes much to aerodynamics. 280 Coupe $ 9,994 Eagle ton Set The 450SE goes where you aim it— so 280 Sedan $ 9,319 precisely, that even veteran Mercedes- Massive windshield wipers are 220 Sedan $ 6,889 Benz drivers may find themselves as- meant to harness the car's airflow to stay 220 Diesel Sedan $ 6,662 A remarkable sound for a book- To Speak At flat on the glass,even at maximum speeds. tonished. 'East und Gulf Coasl poris ofenrry, exclusive of trans- shelf speaker. It employs a 12 Vanes on the forward pillars and catch portation, oilier options, state and local laxes, if any. The reason: a zero steering offset in. woofer, a 5 in. midrange and Fund Dinner gutters on the rear window are placed Copyright W7.1,Mcrcc
The splendor of spring can be seen, touched and felt In a single Easter lily. The trum- pet shaped flower, of the Illy is the herald of Euter and sym- bolize* purity tnd chastity. Some of our deepest con- victions and sentiments are expressed through long-estab- lished floral symbols. The pu- rity and majesty of the Easter lily reminds us of the triumph over death we celebrate in the miracle of the Resurrection. A dry, lifeless bulb when plah- ted, it bursts forth into • glorious bloom and new life each spring. The Society of American Florists points out that the lily plant you receive at Easter will combine fully-opened,' half-opened, and completely closed blooms. Each bloom when fully-opened will remain fresh for about five days. This means you can enjoy the beauty of the flowering plant for several days before and after Easter Sunday. • Ukes Water The Easter lily plant likes lots of water, but make sure it has good drainage. Place it in a bright, but cool, window. A south or west window is rec- ommended. Be sure to re- move the yellow parts, called anthers, when the blooms open to keep the white blooms from becoming soiled with yellow pollen. This will also help the blooms last longer. Remove blossoms as they fade so the water supply can nourish the remaining parts of the plant. After the lily plant has fin- EASTER ARRANGEMENT •>- A beautiful arrangement for Easter may be ished blooming, you may want made with the trumpet-shaped flower of the lily and some lullps\ for ac- to add it to your graden. The cent. ••' Yolks Have to Go bulb can be planted per- manently in the garden after blooms are lovelier to behold the danger of frost is over. than balanced twos, fours, or sixes. Only a few lily blooms ATTENTION RESIDENTS Having enjoyed the beauty OF By BARBARA GIBBONS of the flowering plant for sev- are needed for the arrange- ment; so, if you receive only RED BANK • LITTLE SILVER • FAIR HAVEN • RUMSOH i . eral days, you may want to On a low-cholesterol diet? You don't have to give up your cut the stems and experience one plant, you can enjoy this breakfast scrambled or lunchtime omelet. It's easy to make The Slim Gourmet that special happiness that artistic experiment. Little Silver Pet Shop your own low-calorie, low-cholesterol "eggs." And your home- comes from making your own The Illy is especially beau- made eggs will be fresher, better-tasting, less fattening and arrangement. Famed for its tiful when part of an overall has everything for cheaper than substitutes . . . because you make ingredient Fork-blend in a bowl until lump-free. Wipe a nonstick skil- lovu'eness in all parts of the perpendicular design which fresh with eggs. let with a little polyunsaturated oil, or spray it with no-calorie world, celebrated in song and allows full play for the natural "Fin, Fur and Feathers" Egg whites, that is. The yolks, alas, will have to go - be- lecithin spray. Heat the skillet over highest flame. When hot, story in all ages, the lily is the height of the flower. For cause they're the source of the cholesterol. Of course, you can pour on eggs. Cook as you would any other eggs. For an ome- perfect flower for the begin- added richness, any number GROOMING BY APPOINTMENT ning arranger. Why? Because save the yolks and freeze them for use in baking, or making let: shake the pan gently, lift the edges so that uncooked egg of other spring flowers can be Expert Personalized Service eggnpgs for the cat. When you really find yourself up to your can flow to bottom. Roll out of the .skillet onto a plate. Or ... this exquisite blossom em- used to fill out your arrange- ears In leftover egg yolks, try giving yourself an egg shampoo! scramble lightly over low flame. bodies such simple yet dra- ments—all the colorful pag- LOCATED NEXT TO LITTLE SILVER A A P Everyone in our household has shiny hair (except daddy. Ho matic perfection of line, tex- eant of spring-flowering How does this compare with two large eggs'.' doesn't have hair!) ture, and form that it almost bulbs. 842-2224 literally arranges itself. Whole Eggs Don't forget the beauty of How do you turn egg whites into eggs? Add a little dry 'Slim Eggs' Exciting Results powdered milk and a few drops o[ yellow food color. Mix it up Cholesterol 550 mg. none accompanying green foliage. and you've got it made .. . scrambled or an omelet, or a dip Protein 14 grams 15 grams Do anything with Easter The Illy has its own, but you for French toast. You'll have to try it to believe it: Calorics 17ti lilies and the results are ex- can further enhance this, if EASTER SERVICES CHOLESTEROL-FREE "SUM EtKiS" citing! If you still feel more you wish, with podocarpus, 3 large egg whites If you eat two eggs every morning, that's a saving of comfortable with a guideline magnolia, or huckleberry 6:30 A.M. Sunrise Service at Holmcjel Park 2 tablespoons dry skim milk powder . '28,105-calories a year - the equivalent of an eight-pound or two, here are a few: leaves. (rain location r- Church Chapel) 4 drops yellow food color weight loss — not to mention the cholesterol saving! The In making small arrange- Free From Draft American Health Association lias recommended that Ameri- ments, uneven numbers of The Society reminds you not 9:30 A. M, Sunday School - a film depicting " can limit eggs to three or less a week. to place your flowers in a Christ's Resurrection and Ascension drafty or bright, sunny place Here's a make-ahead mix you can store in your refrig- that will be too hot. Give the 10:45 A.M. Worship Servi.ce and Believer's Baptism erator for whipping up low-calorie, low-cholesterol scrambled- (Nursery provided Irom 9:30 lo noon) or omelets: Meeting blossoms cool positions in full light, but no direct sunshine. Your success with the lily 7:00 P.M. A Program of Chalk Artistry and Recorded LOfr CIIOLESTEflOL STOKE 'N' POUR EGGS Memo can inspire you to create a Steieo Music by Pastor Eugene F. Gregory 1 dozen large egg whites continuing series of tiny fresh 1 egg yolk (optional) arrangements to beautify V: cup dry skim milk powder INSURANCE WOMEN your home. A fresh flower a lit teaspoon yellow food color WANAMASSA - The Insur- day reminds you and those FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH you love that every day is as Stir together or whip in blender. Store in a covered Jar in ance Women of Monmouth Main & Third Streets fresh and full of promise as your refrigerator. Shake well before using. One-half cup of County meeting Tuesday at Easter. Keyport, N.J. mix equals two eggs. This makes enough for four mornings; 6:30 p.m. here in Paul Sam- may be frozen. Use within the week. peri's, will feature guest speaker Richard Johnson on Slim and trim with, seafood: Send a stamped, scif-ad- "Glass Specialties." Mrs. drcsscd envelope and 25 cents to Slim Gourmet Seafood Dish- Elizabeth Weselman will pre- es, in care of this newspaper, 50 West Shore Trail, Sparta, N.J. side. Mrs. Dorothy Ten 07871. Broeck, chairman of the nom- inating committee, will For Fashion Futures since 1919 present the slate of officers to the membership. TWINS'MOTHERS SOUTH AMBOY - Mem- bers of the Twins' Mothers Club of the Raritan Bay Area Annual After Easter Clearance will entertain grandmothers of twins at a meeting Tuesday at 8:15 p.m. here in the First Presbyterian Church, 150 SPRING FASHIONS Broadway. Mrs. Eleanor Cos- tello, Edison, program chair- trouscrscts with man, will present the mothers twin mnlchiiig of'twins in an original sketch. sweaters tire great news A buffet will be served. All mothers and grandmothers of for juniors twins and their guests are welcome. Mrs. Joan Burns, CIHII lii'H* ill easy rurr |in- Spotswood and Mrs. Helen IU'MIT anil aiTvlic. Muli'liin^ Duborg, llazlet, are in charge Beginning Monday, April 23rd cunlifiiiii mill |iiillovrr ln|i> of information concerning the imr niilf lr)i |innls lor vim event. wtiir lii^i'llicr or M'liuralcly. Dramatic Savings on Si/.cs j lit 15. • BIRD PROGRAM OCEANPORT '- "Birds of Spring and Resort Fashions S32. Monmouth County" will be the topic of Robert Henschel for now and Summer PRETTY GOWNS of the Monmouth Parks Sys- FOR tem, at a meeting April 26 at 11:30 a.m. of the Oceanport Garden Club here in the Com- 25% ,.50% Off munity Center. Also speaker, PROM AND GRADUATION will be a member, Mrs. Har- old Hendrtckson, on the topic Look romantic in a far-out . of course you can charge it!! "Growing Blooms for Show." Election of officers is sbhedr Selected Groups gown from our Formal Shop! uled. Plans will be completed for a May flower show. Coats • Costumes • Suits Pre-teen and Junior Sizes Art Auction MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - Daytime, Cocktail, The Sisterhood of Temple Beth Ahm will sponsor an art Evening Dresses auction Saturday, April 28, at Junior Bazaar the temple, 550 Lloyd Road. Given by Jeri Galleries of Marlboro, the auction will be All Sales Final Matter Charge Bank American! at 9 p.m. Viewing will begin at Circle Plata CANADIAN'S 39 Biood Stietl 8 p.m. Charge Accounts Invited ltd lank. N. J ihippinf Ctniar open late Friday nights! A framed original lith- Ni«n« in Manotqven.NJ. ograph by Sandy Lieberman Mien*: 2!J-4*SI RED BANK: 30 BROAD STREET will be offered as a prize. Refreshments will be served. H13 THIRD AVE., SPRING IAKE lte DaByE^gtster, Bed BaiA-Middl^fffl,NJ. Friday, A|^
By Dr. James M.Uag traceptives. Because I know about sex, I MIsiScatwreU* Miss IUmeisee SUssByu Miss Peters** have a healthy and intelligent outlook on Periodically, letters are received which Family Counselor the subject, and my knowledge does not stand on their own merit in expressing a point prompt experimentation — I know the risks of view on a useful experience in liying. Re- involved. Sometimes I even think that the cently, such a letter was addressed to me and purely on the stories of the acting-out, mixed . neglect among .girls may be to get "re- I felt that it did not require any change, only up minority of young people. venge" on their, parents, or to show rebellion comment. Personally, t am pleased that the teen-age against their system of values., My. initial comment was one of admiration group read columns about family living and .Ple.ase write.an article on why tjje Scott-Scatuorchio for the letter writer in that she had a sincere people. It illustrates a need for knowledge. neglect in the subject of sex occurs arid desire to help her peers. Dear Dr. Long. '•'.',•'.' what can be done about it. (I suggested that LITTLETON, Colo. - Mr. zone manager for the Hertz First National City Bank. Further, she points out to all of us that The other day a girl I knew left school some of my girlfriends should read the and Mrs.: Anthony F. Sca-Corp. Mr. Scott is the grandson of since she is a growing person she has feelings because of pregnancy. The school thought Health and Sex column in magazines.) If tuorchio here, formerly of Mr. Scott, a graduate cum the late Mr. and Mrs. Henry about the question of sexuality. she would be a "bad influence" on other parents see that there is a problem, maybe Monrriouth Beach, N.J., an- laude of the Taft School, Wa- . R. Storer and the late Mr. and Also, implied in the letter is a request for girls. The subject came up in a conversa- they will be able to help. What do you think nounce the engagement of tertown, Conn., Yale Univer- Mrs. Henry P. Scott, all of all parents to be aware of the need of the tion among a few of my girlfriends and I about "information prompts ex- their daughter, Miss Pamela sity, New Haven, Conn., and Buenos Aires, Argentina. His younger generation for factual and informa- was really surprised at their inadequate perimentation"? , Scaluorchio, to Henry Storer Cornell University Law father is a retired executive tive knowledge so that the adolescent will be knowledge about sex. They didn't know that .Please help me out — many many Scott of Scarsdale, N.Y., the School, Ithaca, N.Y., is an as- of International Telephone' better able to cope with problems of living. there is a chance of pregnancy each time thanks to you for your efforts, Dr. Long — son of Mr. and Mrs. Reginald sistant vice president in the and Telegraph Corp. and that they have intercourse. Some of them your column is always a help to me. Thanks international division .of the Western Union International. The letter also attempted to explode the H. Scott of Daytona Beach, myth maintained by many parents that sex in- thought that a week before or after men- again for your-help. Please write an article Fla. An August wedding is' formation will provide-for more ex- struation was a time that was "safe" if they for the Register. planned. 'Gacofalo-lllmehsee perimentation by the young. The writer in- had intercourse (during that time). To this:; 15-year-old young lady, many Miss Scatuorchio is a gradu- RED BANK — Mr. and Mrs. Bro'okdale Community Col- dicates just the opposite in that she is wiser for I am an intelligent girl. I'm 15 and I thanks for your opinion and thoughtfillness. ate of Red Bank (N.J.) Catho- John Illmensee, 195 River lege, Lincroft, and is attend- her own knowledge. know a lot about sex, considering my age, Your parents can be proud of their daughter. lic High School, Green Moun- Road, announce the engage- ing Newark College of Engi- The letter reveals a sensitive and con- That idea that knowledge of sex. prompts Dr. Uig will be happy toauwer qttt- tain College, Poultney, Vt. ment of their daughter, Miss neering. cerned individual which speaks well for many experimentation is a fallacy — the lack of UNS directed f him by mill la care *f The and Colorado Women's Col- Rosemarie Illmensee, to John of the younger generation. Sometimes' adults honest and comprehensible information Dally Register, Red Baak, N.J. 17711. CM- lege, Denver. She is with Citi- Garofalo, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glassey-Peterson tend to base their views on the younger group prompts negligence in the use of con- Hdeitiallly will be respected corp Leasing International, a Antonio Garofalo, 165 Spring subsidiary of the First Nation- St. BRIELLE - Announce- ment ismadeby Mr. and Mrs. al City Bank, New York City. Miss Illmensee expects to Miss Scatuorchio is the Eric L. Peterson, 633 Ocean be graduated from Red Bank View Road, of the engage- granddaughter of the late Mr. Catholic High School in June. and Mrs. Michael A. Sca- ment of their daughter, Miss She also is a student at Rich- Linda Joy Peterson, to Rich- tuorchio of Allenhurst, N.J., ard's School of Beauty Cul- and Mr. and Mrs. Dewey M. ard Douglas Glassey, son of ture, Red Bank. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Harmon of Church Point, La. Mr. Garofalo is a graduate Dinner for Lonesome Friend Her father is west central . Glassey, 39 Salem Lane', Little of Red Bank High School and Silver. An August wedding is planned. ^. Gehweiler-Ryan Miss Peterson, who expects RUMSON - Mr. and Mrs. gional High School. She at- to be graduated in June from John J. Ryan, 7 Church St., tended Mt. Aloysius Junior the University of Virginia, is Dear Ann Landers: A friend .why don't you bug out? — A mother's wishes. She told him ' announce the engagement of College* Cresson, Pa., and an alumna of Manasquan of mine is going through a bad Hipster From Cincy repeatedly that she didn't their daughter, Miss Kathleen Newark State College, and is High School and Green Moun- time. His mom and dad were Dear Cincy Hip: A 17-year- think a full-grown man should - M. Ryan, to Russell H. Gen- employed by Bell Labora- tain College, Poultney, Vt. divorced last year. His mom Ann Landers old no longer needs to be bath- be parading around the house weiler, son of Mr. and Mrs..tories, Holmdel. , Mr. Glassey was graduated works in an office all day and ed, diapered and dressed. He naked as a radish — and I'm from Red Bank High School, usually she has a date for din- does, however, need a sense' with her. Roland A. Gehweiler of Glen Mr. Gehweiler is a graduate medical consultants and find is not in danger. Assuming Rock and Brick Township. of Glen Rock High School and received an AB degree in ner and doesn't get home until of propriety about his person The juice from a medium- geology from Franklin and out if heavy smoking makes you can walk. and he certainly ought to Miss Ryan was graduated attended Ocean .County Col- 11 or 12 at night. Many week- snoring worse. He wheezes, size lemonshould yield about 2 Marshall College, Lancaster, ends she goes shopping, or Dear Ann Landers: I did show some respect for his tablespoons. from Rumson-Fair Haven Re- lege, Nichols College and hacks and coughs continually, not like your answer to the Fairleigh Dickinson Univer- Pa., and an MS degree from heaven knows where, and the CDA WORKSHOP the University of Virginia. He. kid doesn't get a decent meal. as if he has a cold. What are mother who was upset with sity. He is an architectural the facts, Ma'am? — Missing her 17-year-old son-just be- KEYPORT - Court St. Jo- representative for Whittier- is a candidate for a Ph.D. in I know my friend is lone- HONEYMOONS seph, Catholic Daughters of geology at Johns Hopkins Uni- Morpheus cause he walked around the Ruhle Millwork Co., Ridge- some and unhappy. He must Dear Miss: Snoring and ex- house with no clothes on. Any- America, will have a cancer field. versity, Baltimore, Md. ' eat whatever he can fix for • RESORTS dressing workshop Tuesday at himself and I'm not sure he cessive smoking are indeed one who thinks there is some- 8 p.m.. in the home of Mrs. knows how to cook. I just hate related.Your husband's nasal thing wrong with it has got to • CRUISES Marilyn DeCocco, Matawan. to think of his being alone so passages and respiratory sys- have a dirty mind. tem are irritated and he is What's wrong with walking Once you get used to using a much. He seems sad a lot of the time. breathing through his mouth. around naked in front of his •TOURS kitchen timer, you'll never This produces a heavier own ma? She gave birth to want to cook or bake without it. 1 have asked Mom if we can snore. him, bathed him, diapered have him to dinner a few Let him move into the guest him and clothed him when he YRNE TRAVEL SERVICE nights a week. We could come room. So long as he doesn't wasn't able to take care of 144 BROAD ST. • RED BANK DANCE home from_ school together (201)741-5080 __ and there is'always plenty to lock the door, your marriage himself. So, Ann Landers, CLASSES eat on our table. Mom says I shouldn't interfere in his pri- • Acrobatic • Gymnastic vate life. Also she doesn't • Biltnct B«am want to get in bad with his mother. Please tell me what Miss Crocker Miss Watson you think, Ann. There are Lazar-Crocker times when I think you know THIS OUR FIRST.. better than some mothers. — MIDDLETOWN — An- School and is employed by Sorry For Him nouncement is made by Mr. ~Electr" o "Impulse Laboratory, Jaix Dear Sorry: I can't see how and Mrs. Hilbert W. Crocker, Red Bank. an invitation to your home • Twirling 440 Kings Highway E., of the Mr. Lazar was graduated could be interpreted as "inter- engagement of their daughter, from Red Bank High School ference." I think it would be SPECIAL CUSSES Miss Lois Jeanne Crocker, to and Germain School of Photo- very nice (and greatly appre- EASTER For 2 and Syr. Old* Michael William Lazar, son of graphy, New York. He served ciated) if you brought the boy Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lazar, four years in the Marine to your house after school and ALL AOE5INCL. TEENS 107 Borden St., Shrewsbury. A Corps, including 13 months in asked him to stay for dinner. I and ADULTS June wedding is planned. Vietnam. Mr. Lazar is a car-; Expert Instruction hope you will do it soon. And Miss Crocker is a graduate penter affiliated with Local' often. RtiaonabteRatM 2250. of Middletown Township High Dear Ann Landers: I have two serious complaint's IEAH MAUER Driscoll-Watson against my husband and think SCHOOL OF DANCE RUMSON - Mr. and Mrs. School and the University of they might be related: Our 17 E. FRONT ST., RED BANK Robert E. Watson Jr., 7 Mon- Delaware, Newark, Del. She.marriage is falling apart and 747-8552 mouth Ave., announce the en- is staff nurse in the coronary I don't know what to do about gagement of their daughter, care unit of New England it. Miss Jeanne Lorraine Watson, Deaconess Hospital, Boston. For the past year my hus- to David John Driscoll, son of Mr. Driscoll is an alumnus band's snoring has become in- Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Driscoll of Boston College-High School tolerable. What really bugs of Hyde Park, Mass. An Au- and Boston College and is a me is that he started to smoke gust wedding is planned. ' member of the faculty at after having quit for four Miss Watson was graduated Lewis School in Massachu- years. Now he's up to two from Red Bank Catholic High packs a day. I believe the setts. smoking is causing him to snore worse. Or maybe I have Callaghan-Chambers an allergy to him. He smells HOMEMADE PLAINFIELD - The en- Mr. Callaghan is a math- of smoke even when he isn't gagement of Miss Kathi ematics teacher in the Middle- smoking. Chambers to William H. Cal- town Township School Sys- CANDY laghan, son of Mr. and Mrs. tem. He is an alumnus of We argue every morning be- Richard S. Callaghan, 36 Wil- Monmouth Regional High cause I wake up exhausted. LADIES: PANT SUITS • TENNIS DRESSES low Road, New Shrewsbury, School, New Shrewsbury, and He says to shut up and stop - is announced by her parents, •Susquehanna University. nagging him or he will move PANTS & TOPS • SWEATERS Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Cham- into the guest room. I'm af- AND DRESSES Wonderful Chocolates bers. The couple will be mar- Keep jars of catchup and raid once he moves out of our BACK IN TOWN AT ried here Aug. 4. chili sauce, after opening, in the bedroom the next move will refrigerator OP some other cold be to the divorce court. MENS: DOUBLE KNIT SHIRTS • SLACKS Miss Chambers was gradu- place. Please get in' touch with your ated from Plainfield High and SPORT GOATS... PROFESSIONAL School and received an AB de- gree in psychology from Sus- PHARMACY quehanna University, Selins- "AComplete Hallmark 134 BROAD ST. grove, Pa. She is employed as Social Expression Center RED BANK a psychological assistant at "When you care enough to send the very test" Selinsgrove State School and . for 741-5288 Hospital. ' EASTER' PASSOVER' CONFIRMATION ' MOTHERS OAY Distinctive gilts lor everyone. lor every occasion. 493-4022 "" R.S.V.P. 2113Rt.35,OAKHURST Gifts Cards & Things - FREE - ESTIMATES • DESIGN SHREWSBURY PLAZA SHREWSBURY DRAWINGS VISIT FACTORY* SHOWROOM MASTERS^ ELEANOR'S HAIR AFFAIR 407 UNION AVE. UNION BEACH John Richards is happy to announce Iha addition to our staff of H«r« are 3 RHSOM 22 AVERS LANE LITTLE SILVER • Cwvad Solid Wood Cora "IRISH MARY" OPPOSITE R.R. STATION (toimtrly with Holl/wood Btauiy Shop, Ktantburg) • Hand Rubbed Oil Finlshw Mary is known for. her excellence in permanent waving. Her HOURS •rfc* Out On*'* Nttwal tMufy hours will be Mon;; Tufes.-, Thurs. & Fri. 9 to 5 MON-8AT-10.530 • AIMflnyUitMrkto Inc. Shtlvaa . FBI EVE-TILL 9 PM. For Appointment Call 739-1120 CLOSED WEDNESDAYS Jf TkeD«fly Register, RedBank - MMdfetowa, NJ. Friday, April», 1171 Angry for NEW YORK - When New "Look at (Jim) Pappin, he Stapleton hit the streaking three games to one. self. He will have a chance in all at Black Hawks goalie Neilson rebound to knot the local media. York Ranger goalie Eddie got the puck on a break and Martin who was in high gear It would be tough to fault Tuesday: Perhaps his last Tony Esposito, but again the contest but Chicago was able Reay designated Stapleton. Giacomin said the defense he was stopped but that coming down the left side and Giacomin, except for the third ,jChance this year. short end of the situation was to come back and keep its mo- Stan Mikita and Ralph gave away the puck too much wasn't good enough. We had the latter let go with a stopper Chicago goal by Dennis Hull When Giacomin referred to theirs. mentum going. Backstrom as the team last night he didn't name any to give (Pit) Martin a break that struck the leg pads of 16:56 of the final 20 minutes, Pappin he meant a skater on Chicago was leading I-U "I'll see that open net for a spokesmen. Flni period - MOM. penolly - Rus- culprits, in particular. too and he scored. Giacomin and was counted as but by that time the starch a goalie type situation several near the end of the second pe- long time." Hadfield said. "I "srwlo ipertod - 1. Chlcooo. Hull W> But from his short post "Just a case of far too the second Chicago score. was gone. minutes before Martin's goal. riod when Ranger Captain Vic knew I had to lift the puck but Artgolll. Sloplelon M:K. PtnoWei - HoSlleld NY. 2:31; KorcD, CM. 4:13.- game dialogue one knows that many breakaways," the The visitors scored three "Fast Eddie" turnedciback Park got his feet tangled Hadfield in his anxiety to hit a when I saw how high it was Rolle, NY. !0:2« "Fast Eddie" was pointing goalie who had periods of bril- goals in all, while the New 21 shots and most of them while trying to advance the yawning net and tie the score going I didn't think it would Third ptrlod -2. New York. Hadlleid 2 lit SoS; Rotelle 1:M 3,Chlcogo.«tar- the accusing finger at Brad liance added. Yorkers could, for the second v|sre loughies. In fact after puck, and Pappin seized the lifted the puck over a stay in the building," he lln 5, Slopleton 14:11. 4, CMcow. Mgl 5 Poppln. Morlln 16:54. p""ollJ»»,,~ "' Park. It was Martin who got the straight game, show only one. Martin's tally the fans cho- opportunity, stole the puck sprawled Esposito and the net added while managing a weak Yln«"NY. ::»: Stoplelon Chi, 10:13 and hit the plexiglass at the Shots on goal by: • "We take chances and they winning goal at 14:11 of the Thus the best of seven in rused, "Eddie, Eddie" for and had no one in front of him smile. J Chicago ,. ,i',S ~ 21 don't," Giacomin who was last period after Park the semi final series goes several minutes in tribute to but Giacomin. Eddie pre- end of the rink. Chicago Coach Billy Beay. New "ork 10 19 10 — 3» coughed up the puck to Chi- his work. vailed. " Hadfield redeemed himself who everyone is trying to fig- Goolles - Chlcogo, esposito; New again superb in the nets said. back to the windy city with York Glocomin. "They hop aboard their blue cago defenseman Pat Staple- the Black Hawks in a com- Park can wear the goat The Rangers had the op- at 2:16 of the third period ure out, once again kept his A-l'.S0O oi3_3 line and wait for a break. ton near the Hawk's blue line. manding position leading horns until he redeems him- portunities. Thirty-nine shots when he swatted in a Jim personal war going with the Chlcogo 001-1 New york ° ° ' Yankees Mets Fail Unload Backlnto Orioles Doldrums BALTIMORE (AP) - Bob- NEW YORK (AP) - Burt by Murcer's three-run homer Hooton fired a three-hitter on the first pitch by reliever and contributed a two-run Orlando Pena capped a six- single in Chicago's five-run run New York outburst in the first inning, leading the Cubs second inning last night that to a 7-0 victory over the New carried the Yankees to a 6-1 York Mets for a split of their American League baseball doubleheader yesterday. victory over the Baltimore The Mets won the opener, 3- Orioles. 1, as Jerry Koosman pitched a The Yankees chased loser five-hitter and Wayne Garrett Jim Palmer with consecutive and Jerry Grote knocked in singles by Thurman Munson, the winning runs. Gene Michael, Horace Clarke, Roy White and Ron Blomberg The Cubs put the second for a 3-0 lead before Murcer game away with their first-in- smacked Pena's first offering ning explosion. Billy Williams over the right field fence for drove.,in the first run of the in- his first home run of the sea- ning with a single, Ron Santo son. followed with a run-scoring Designated hitter Jim Ray double and Ken Rudolph pro- Hart opened the inning With duced another run with a sac- his fourth hit in five trips rifice fly before Hooton's two- FIRES AWAY — Chicago Black Hawks' Stan A/U- night's Stanley Cup playoff game at Madison since joining the Yanks, then run hit. kita (21). left, fires a shot through the New York Square Garden. left after injuring his left knee All the runs in Chicago's big Rangers' Ron Harris (3) in the first period of last AP wmpftoto while being thrown out at inning were scored off New third on Munson's hit. York starter Jim McAndrew, Fritz Peterson, who lost his 0-2. Hooton, 2-0, allowed just first two starts, held the Ori- an infield single to Ted Marti- oles to five hits, including vjrez in the first, a double to Colbert Sets T of C Pace Earl Williams' fourth-inning AP Wlrephtlo CORNERED CUB.-Jose Cardenal of the Chi- GeDFge Theodore in the fourth RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif. They included two birdies 1972 Milwaukee Open and the in the opening round of the home run and his third in as cago Cubs makes a vain effort to steal second and aldoublc by Garrett in the' (AP) - Jimmy Colbert, and an eagle. He lashed a Greater Jacksonville Open a $75,000 Tallahassee Open Golf many games, before giving base in the first game of yesterday's doublehea- eighth! three-iron second shot 22-feet month ago. Tournament. way to Lindy Me Daniel with armed with a brand new driv- der but was run down by the New York Mets Fe- ThelMets broke a 29-inning er that helped him keep the below the cup on the 552-yard Colbert led by a single Dave Eichelberger, who won two men on base and one out lix Millan (16), top, and John Milner (28), lower 12th hole and ran in the putt. stroke over dark and swarthy at Milwaukee two years ago. in the ninth. scorinc drought in the fourth ball low and straight in the right. inningyof the opener, when gusty winds, stormed in front "I don't consider myself a Homero Blancas. Blancas, the was the only one among the New Ywt It) lommore (l) ob r cb r i they scored their winning runs of a select field with a six-un- dark horse," said Colbert, one last man to qualify for the leaders who has ever had a RtHnmdrf 1 0 WMte'lf 4 1 Grlc- • h• J-b 4 0 on a double by Garrett and der-par 66 and established a of the lesser-known players in tournament and the last man victory in a Professional Golf- Slombrglb 4 1 3 0 off the tee on the 7,114-yard Muretrcf * 1 4 1 single by Grote. one-stroke lead yesterday in this $200,000 tournament that ers Association tournament. Nettles ]b 0 4 0 4 0 Lakers A rePaced brings together the winners of La Costa Country Club Sharing the top spot with Hortdh O FlnlOomt the first round of the MONY- Altai dh O 4 0 Chlcogo (I) NtwYork (Jl Course, cut five strokes off Cotllsnrt O 3 0 Tournament of Champions. regular pro golf tour events Eichelberger after the first Mumon c Btlongr u 3 0 ob r h| . pb r h Michael ss O 0 James cf 4 0 11 Harrlsn u 4 0 0 for the last 12 months. par with a 67. round on the par-72,7,124-yard 1 Polmer p Btcktrlft 4 0 2 Mlllonft < 0 I Colbert, using one of the Prltrsnp 0 O 0 0 Killearn Golf and Country McDonllp Wlllomsll » O 1 Moyscf 4 0 0 new, graphite-shaft clubs for "Any time you win two tour- Tallahassee Open 0 O 0 To 103-93 Win Hlckmonlb 4 I OlSlouort 4 0 1 • Club course were rookie Mike LOS ANGELES (AP) - points and Mahdi Abdul-Rah- Sonto 3b 2 0 01 Jones If 4 0 0 the first time in competition, naments in eight months, I TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) Total! £ 6 10 Totals 12 1 S Hlxrpr 0 0 0| Milner lo 3 2 3 don't think you can be consid- — Six players carded four-un- Wynn, Gary Groh, Dick Craw- NtwYork 060 000 000- i Jerry West on offense and man scored 20 for the War- Cordenlr! 4 0 1| Garrett }b 4 I 7 made his round with a string Baltimore 000 100 000-1 Hundley c 4 0 0! Grote c 4 0 7 ford. Rocky Thompson and LOB - Mtw.York 4, Baltimore 1. 38 - huge Wilt Chamberlain on de- riors. Ktssngr n 3 0 Ot Koosrran p 4 0 1 of five consecutive threes ered a dark horse," said Col- der-par 68s yesterday to lead Clorke. HR — Murcer (I). E. Williams Terry Wilcox. (31. Jim McMillian tallied 21 for Reuchelp 2 0 0 • * starting on the 10th hole. bert, who took the titles in the a logjam of 50 who broke par fense last night paced a Los Peptone ph 1 0 0| Angeles fourth-quarter surge, the Lakers, 13 in the third pe- LoRoche p 0 0 0| 1 bringing a 104-93 victory over riod when the Lakers tallied Totol: 32 I 51 Totals IS 1 10 ' Mi ' I 'o|Z' 'i ' ' Udc' Chicago 010 000 000 - I dc' I Mr Canadiens Nip Flyers the Golden State Warriors and 31 points, 11 of them on free NewTork 000 200 01« - 3 E — Stoub. Sonto. LOB — Chlcogo 6, a 2-0 lead in their Western Di- throws. During the same peri- New York 9, 2B - Beckerl, W. Gorrelt, PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Young Rcjean Iloulc and 37- vision playoff of the National od, the Warriors collected 27 Slo* HR — Mllner 4. SS — C. Joints. year-old Henri Richard scored first-period goals last night that Chicago (7) Mm York (0) Basketball Association. points and only one free ob carried the Montreal Canadiens to a 2-1 National Hockey West scored 14 Laker points throw. Monday cf 4 I Mortlni ts 0 t Ppovlch 2b 4 2 Milton 2t> 4 0 0 for men only League victory over the Philadelphia Flyers. in the final period and a total Each team collected 40 field Wlllorm II 5 1 Thodorecl 3 0 I Hlstr II 0 0 stoubrf 3 0 0 The triumph for the Eastern Division champion Canadiens of 36, while Chamberlain goals with the Lakers' edge Ppilone lb 3 0 Jones If 3 0 0 Sonlo3b 5 I Milner ll> 2 0 gave them a 2-1 edge in the best-of-seven semifinal Stanley hauled down 12 rebounds in coming at the foul line where Cardenl rf 4 2 i Oyer c 3 0 Cup series, which resumes here Sunday afternoon. Kessngr ss 3 0 lMcAndrwp O 0 that last stanza and a total of they hit 24 of 28. Golden State Hooton p 3 0 ; Sodeckl p •_ . Montreal regained the home ice advantage It lost In the 30 as they made the differ- had only 17 foul shots, sinking I Boswell ph I 0 „r i1t series opener Saturday night in Montreal when the Flyers won ence before a capacity crowd 13. ,IK?""9 Kronpol !p?h 1 0 enroll 5-4 in overtime. The Canadiens look the second game at home, of 17,505 in the Forum. The Lakers, who won the 1 Stone p O 0 Totals 33 7 101 Totals 76 0 3 also in overtime, 3-2. Golden State led 50-46 at opener 101-99, shot well in the Chlcogo 500 000 011 -7 New York 000 OOO 0OO — 0 halftime and the score was opening quarter last night as DP - Chlcooo 2, New York 1. LOB - ? miii*i IBIA AI PinniAP 4 tied 77-77 at the end of three West and Gail Goodrich ig- Chlcogo >, New York 3. 2B - Santa. 2 Theodore, Cardenal, W. Garratt. 3B — quarters. nited them to a 14 (i lead after Rudolph. SB— Hiser. s — Rudolph. SF — Rudolph, Pepltone. your body PANELING CLEARANCE j Golden State went ahead XI- four minutes. I __ 79 but with 9:36 to play, the 5 OKORQIA iaSk. PACIFIC j^Mk 9 Warriors' top scorer, Rick Barry, was charged with his HOBIE CAT HEADQUARTERS fifth personal foul, a bad New Jersey's break for the visitors. Largest Dealer ANTIQUE 99 Midway in the stanza, Mel 14 ft. & 16 ft. ID Cash Counts, West and Bill Bridges BRONZE 4 Carry 80 BOATS 2 hit successive field goals to Just Arrived - All Colors 4>8 iheet build a five-point Laker lead PARTS & REPAIRS Simulated woodgraln at 90-85 and the Lakers we- Other Now & Used Boats In Slock finish on Particle Board EASY TERMS Reg. 6.20 ren't headed after that Barry fouled out with 2:IM left but by then the issue was Surf Sailing 5 nagReg. Sal* settled. f 200 Sheets Desert Sand» 6.20 2.88 4 The teams move to Oakland 1008 Richmond Ave.|H'way 35 So.] 428 Sheets Executive Plank* 6.30 for the third in the best-of-sev- Point Pleasant Beach. N.J. 3.33 A Dial 892-8303 129 Sheets Woodland" 8.30 3.99 4 en series Saturday night. Open 'Til 9 Dally Inc. Sunday 87 Sheets Cactus* 8.40 3.99 1 Barry finished with 29 22 Sheets Blonde Butternut* 8.20 3.99 4 40 Sheets Greenbriar* : 9.00 4.44 J (For the "health of it... Shape Up!!) 87 Sheets Tumbleweed*.,.. 9.00 4.44 f GYMNASTIC 54 Sheets Seville* 10.20 4.99 \ A little Hubby around the <>!' tiiin-tuni f° 62 Sheets Gray Mist* •. 10.20 4.99 J 28 Sheets Brazilian Chestnut* 11.00 5.55 J CLASSES AND TRAINING PROGRAMS these days? 30 Sheets Weathered Ash«* 12.90 5.99 I UNDER WAY NOW AT-? It's not good for your shirt buttons or 46 Sheets Antique white* '. :11.80 5.99 * 54 Sheets Roxbury Elm** 14.40 6.99 your health. 27 Sheets Brazilwood* 13.30 6.99 ALT'S GYMNASTIC SCHOOL 59 Sheets Expresso* ; 13.50 6.99 "sr Trim down,.tone ii|» and gel buck.inlo 455 BROAD ST. SHREWSBURY 21 Sheets Lemon Birch** 14.40 7.99 a Behind Little Silver Hardware the healthy shape of things. Enroll 17 Sheets Williamsburg Red** 15.50 6.88 2 your body! 44 Sheets Cotrage Aspen** 15.50 8.8B '4 19 Sheets Sunflower** 15.50 8.88 4 38 Sheets Ships Plank** 18.00 9.95 4 CALL 747-0070 For Red Bank call 842-9009 41 Sheets Oiled Walnut** .• 21.00 10.95 4 83 Sheets Midnight Elm** 18.00 11.99 f 109 Sheets Natural Walnut** 22.00 12.99 \ EXPERTJNSTRUCTION jDOdj/ Health 29 Sheets Natural Rosewood** 36.00 14.95 i •Simulated woodgraln Flnlih on Plywood For Boys and Girls of All Ages shoppe Spa "Wood Vtnetrtd plywood 5 MARINE LUMBER CO. TUMBLING • HIGH BAR THE MALL. BROAD & MONMOUTH. RED BANK VAULTING* PARALLEL BARS MAHOGANY. TEAK. tMKindPlYWOOOS l3920c««iAve. 4-UW.EKzibttMvi BALANCE BEAM • SIDE HORSE UKEW0D0364-6400 UNDEN 862-5570 ,1139 OCEAN AVE. SEA BRIGHT', 842-3355 UNEVEN PARALLEL BARS, Open Dally 7.-3D A.M. to 5:30 P.M. • Sat 7:30 A.M. lo 5 P.M. I | 5 , i «4 i i i3 . i i A . i i 'I i ATTENTION BOATMINI OPEN SUM. I to NOON J RINGS* TRAMPOLINE •-.. •„.- - The DaUy Register, Red Bank r MMdletowii, H J. Friday, Aprfl 21,118 21 Graziano lifts Wave to First Joe Grazianp unloaded his third home run in as Graziano's two-oul "gamer" came after sin- ' Limongello all hit safely. many games and delivered a game-winning single gles by Paul Skerl and Bob Wells. Limongello struck out two and walked three. in the seventh inning yesterday to propel Long Toms River Soulh got three runs off of Bran- Malawan almost caine back with late rallies. Branch into first place of the Shore Conference cher pitcher Steve Conte in the first inning on a Paul Casagrande stroked a single for two runs in . "A" Division with a 5-4 verdict over Toms River home run by Jerry Costain. the, sixth and three errors allowed the run in the South. Long Branch tied the game in the third when seventh. The Green Wave, unbeaten in "A," has three Graziano smashed a .two-run homer over the left Middletown exploded in the first to put Toms wins and a tie, for a shaky edge over Raritan. field fence. River North in a catchup situation for the remain- Matawan Regional and Middletown Township, all Coiile struck out 14 Indian bailers and walked der of the game. ,? , locked at 3-1. no one. Brian Carhart and Mike Chevalier singled and Raritan knocked Matawan from the ranks of Rantan's four-run uprising in HIP fifth inning Ken Jones sacrificed. the divisional unbeaten, 6-3, yesterday, while Mid- put Matawan away. Stove Ilagan walked and went Mike Stcffer rapped a Iwoiun single to right. dletown rapped Toms River North, 4-1. In a battle to second when Dennis Vandermark reached on an Fred Chalmers Walked and later scored on Ken An- of winless clubs, Brick Township whitewashed error. Kour singles followed. Mike Schinim. Paul drews' hit. Neptune, 8-0. • : Steinbrick, Kd Carroll dnd winning pikhei M.nk Ramos (20) was the winning pitcher. SeraphsGolf Devil Rally To Victory; BulldogsFall Mater Deis golf team Nips Titans evened its record at 2-2 by de- Shore Regional pushed in the third, and Mike Morton feating Asbury Park, 4-1. and Register Stair Photo across a run in the seventh in- singled home a pair in the Wall Township showed its sav- EASY OUT — Monmouth Regional's Jack Napier.(11) is an easy out at ning yesterday to defeat sixth to'give Keansburg the vy on the links with a $-0 ver- first base as Latewood's first baseman Stewart Holland takes the throw. Keansburg, 5-4, and cling to lead. dict oyer tough Rumson-Fair Lakewood came from behind to sting the Falcons, 6-4. first place in the Shore Con- A wild throw in the 12th in- Haven Regional. ference "D" Division with a 4- ning gave Henry Hudson its Matawan Regional (4-1) 1 record. win over Keyport in a game downed Cedar Ridge, 5-0, and Point Pleasant Boro (3-1) that scoreless until the 11th. l,ong Branch turned back moved into second with its 1(1- •;'• The winning run was scored Lakewood 4-1. Lakew.ood Grand Slam 1 rout of Holmdel, replacing •by Jim Nelson after he was will Twp. (S) HumlinFH (•) Keyport (2-2), which dropped 'walked by Rick Flynn. Bill 1. Vic Gerlon IWI. 40, d. BUI Boyle. 43. a 2-1 decision in 12 innings to -Little singled to right, sending 2-1 Henry Hudson Regional. •Nelsen to third and when the 2. Frank Bustier (W). 11. d. Will Laws!, •throw to third was wild, he f'Brlon RDOIMII (Wl, 41.
Good Friday Ma|ilc Vvr. al Oakhitnl Si. 7:00 a.m. Early Service. Anthems by Beth- } UNITED METHODIST CHURCH any, Celtic, Chancel and West- Noon -1:3O, Good-Friday Lilurgy UED BANK. minster Choirs along with Chapel EASTER WORSHIP " 247 BROAD ST. RED BANK (Choral works by Elgar, Purcell, Wesley, Stainer) Handbell Ringers and flautist fl 30 A.M. "GOOD NEWS FOR A Sermon by the Rev. Mr. Romaine: BROKEN WORLD" Associate Pas- "Victory!" 8:00 a.m. . 9:00 a.m. 11:00a,m. ••""• 8:00 p.m. Good Friday Liturgy tor Leonard Harmon speaking. Topic: "Signposts to Immortality" 9 .18 A.M. Church School lor all Identical Services. Anthems by atjos. 9:00 and Mr. Michael speaking Tower Hill Choir; Selections by 11:00 A.M. "THEY LOOKED. BUT 11:00 a.m. Brass Quartet and Tympanist . Easier Day DID THEY SEE?" Pastor David Fish, Sermon by Dr. Webster: "Easter Special Music buy All Choirs speaking. Offers You Life — Everlasting 7:30,9:00,11:00 Holy Communion Life!" Herbert Burtis, director 4:00 Church School Service Easier solo and anthems by mulliple . choirs al both services. Child care is provided at latter services. ' EVERYONE WELCOME ill. Autm ftr Stft 24 TTwDmiy Register, Red Bank - Mlddktown, N.J. Friday, April », 1973) lit. Auioi for Salt no, Autot for Sole 111. Autot If SOU lit. Autot for Salt CHICLE CHEVROLET IMt ftUiCK — LrUtf. Mr tsndttisned, JMWAB )«O - ««r»l HerKIKOmUC, pgwer ifltriftfl and ferofcM, rodio wit) Rofli Royce design, Four-abof/potfer 1970 LE SABRE it*. AuiwfwSoJ* WANTED Four-door. Air, fn "Jtfct ntw" ***** Port/ who needs 100% financing, with no heater. Excellent condition. W-XM. Hewing, oower disc brakei, rojlo. tun- JEEP UU.CS AMD iCHVICE money down, on o IM7 WALIBU. 7wo- ro Tmonlhs Call r»T-U3i or 495 ISP] old AKC registered. Shots Must sell 28 Riverside Ave.. Red Bank Ashing 1100. Call 495-0569 otter 5. Overlooking the Navesink River. Spacious Commercial Art II bedroom opartments. Central ofr con- Pointing A Decorating -Monmoutncounry-> LWC wir«Roortrv SORREL MARE - Nine years old. Model ditioning. 24-hour doorman, Indoor park- 635. Summer Rtntols stock. Experienced rider. All tack. Coll UGH LANGUAGE ~ Wi mahf ifQns, — — ----— —— Specloititi — repairs. 1 hi ogle work. ing, swim pool, marina. TV security, ter- PENNSYLVANIA — Pocono Loke cfwlef, INTERIOOR PAINTING. PAPERING ^ alter 5 p.m. 739 9765. ¥l m paiitn. cyjtom art ondjiyen thai tptak HOOFING SlOtNG — A(um1h~um, vin'yi; races. Mr. Priem (Ml) 741-1732. neep—• s II. L/ihwasnerI , 11 replace. Private lot you. Coll H94091 orlMJWM SCOTTISH TER^RTTR^Xk~c7moTeT lake and temii s court. Near golf ond 542-0779 \. Smith Slratohle, ttiatch, cedar Written guoran- enouse with balcony iol rates. Spring. Summer, 301 SPRING ST.. RED BANK, H.J. 741 -3306 tee on oil work, lobor. A7I-U/V- black, four months old. good with chil- overlooking the Navesink. Two bedrooms, horses. Speciui IUK PAINTING"^ Bruih onTipToy Alia wall •I7S weekly. 671-307)713071.. nPtCTKXS [U'dtn 5 U p»i,,, „„,„ ,, 109 m. , paprrlng Coll for frt* eitimofe. dren. Coll Wed. thiougti Sun. after 5 p m , two boths, lull dining room, corpefing ond U M fl m tm M Diamonds RodSchociintr M7-4MI Won. ond Tues., after 10 p.m. 5&J-IOS3. air conditioning BODMANARMS Spnrfi II. nifl k .M limn Si. m 351 Icrt 1 inorl Web M feknu Bought or Rcityled Sllp Covers WHTtE SHEPHERD PUP*S~~AKC regis~ APARTMENTS. 741-0516, 9 noon ond eve- U. >c* » •« IBuxdi A« I ki »lob 1-p.rr,, Si.) M» iff M0 n 10 tered. Three months old. 640. Furnfshed Rooms ^Hdil an nfit OR Soutti Mltt35aiRI J5to fmUwj H pgCNd II Lfi in buy m» tfiamondt yw *•"* «* RAUL JIMENEZ CUSTOM MADE SLIP COVERS — Zlp- Call evenings, 04? 85M. O W if rnryl* thtm for you ptrsorMlly, 'aintlng. interior ond exterior. Plus mt- ptrtd cushion covert, ••ptrtly fitted; SEA BRIGHT - Studio efficiency. One. FURNISHED ROOM — With private en KM- rrpa*ri. 739-1045 after I 30. ititcfttd. Coil Joon. »7l !»• person. All utilities. Furnished. V&otl-to- Ironce. Sitting room, kitchen privileges. BtAR") - AKC fegntered. 13 champion oman preferred. Inquire 43 Peters blood linei. 671-5347. 'loct* Red Bonk. i 705.HOUMS for sale 7W. HOUMI for Sola 7C5, KWMS for SO'« House* For Sale Houses For Sole She Rail) Register, Red Bank - MlddJetawn, N J. Friday, Aprfl 2», 1973 27 JUST LISTED! FREEHOLD .First Time Offered 705. Houut for Sole 7M. Howts for Soli 7M, H«VM* for UM FAIR HAVEN Fair Haven Colonial . • Bl'RO'S EYE Harry Drozln ft "COLTS NECK-W7/JW" . VIEW IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY ^ORAMEaCY TOWNHOUSE our bedrooms. 2Vi boths. Lively treed " CUSTOM Presents! > Four u Riglitw Sltrtl Phelot by Don Lordl CHANNEL CLUB TOWER — Walter W. Mihm, left, and Herbert J. Kend- all, center, developers of Channel Club Tower, study mock up of planned Careers Offered in Real Estate 17-story high rise building in Monmouth Beach with James Lynch, a vice president of Kendall Development Co., at opening of model apartments on EATONTOWN - Real es- through the initial training pe- lity of introducing courses in through the complications of for qualifying for the exam- condominium site on Channel Drive. Mr. Kendall is president of Kendall tate as a career presents riod, community colleges now real estate for college credit creating a new shopping cen- ination for a broker's license Development Co., which will build the tower. many opportunities, but the offer courses in real estate, through their Department of ter as well as an older person, from 42 to 90, with brokers' hazards and unknowns are and some universities offer Business Administration. depending on his knowledge courses taught only in com- also present, says William J. undergraduate > and. graduate "The future for young and judgment. He can equip munity colleges or higher. Ex- McGowan, vice president of degrees in real estate. Brook- people, because of the in- himself as a specialist to be a aminations will be adminis- the Monmouth County Board dale Community College has a creasing stress on education, competent appraiser, and in- tered by Educational Testing ^Knowing How' Helps of Realtors. course in real estate through competence and special- dustrial broker, or a' property Service of Princeton. "The emergence of the spe- its Community Services De- ization, is good in real estate. manager, for example. cialist in most occupations partment to qualify a can- Progress does not depend on "The Association of Real- has also affected the real es- didate to take the examination seniority or the approval of "There is legislation now tors at local, state and nation- When Buying a House tate industry. There are real for a salesman's license. others in the industry, except pending in New Jersey to in- al levels offers specialized estate brokers who specialize Members of the Monmouth to a limited extent. Success in crease the required hours of courses to its members which M1DDLET0WN - Knowing buy. You've heard that you One man majt. have many in commercial property, in- County Board of Realtors real estate depends on ability instruction for qualifying a lead to designations as spe- how to buy a home can make can afford a home two-and-a- outstanding debts. Another dustrial property, appraising, have entered into discussion and imagination. candidate to take the exam- cialists in various fields of the may have had a wife working the task easy and enjoyable, half times your annual in- property management, ex- with officials of Monmouth "A young person, for in- ination for a salesman's li- industry. These courses are full-time for the last 10 years. says G.J. Sterling Thompson, come. While most Realtors changing, investment, farm College to explore the feasibi- stance, can guide an investor cense from 30 hoiirs to 60, and open only to Realtors." president of Sterling Thomp- recommend that young per- ^ Regarding credit, it is recom- lands, and of course, single son and Associates. sons buy a home at the max- mended that you run a check family homes. Each requires "First, the prospective buy- imum of their earning poten- on the credit bureau before its own specialized knowledge er should dismiss any pat for- tial over the next few years," you ask your mortgage bank and abilities. Each offers op- mula for determining the relating a market price to in- to do so. portunity for a successful ca- Oil Dealers' Role Praised come can be erroneous. "If you have many outstand- price of the home he should reer. SPRINGFIELD - Anthony the case of the gas com- ing department store or credit have to look any further to Mr. Petrunis says the state "The first hazard young- J. Petrunis, president of the panies, many of their com- card bills, the credit bureau see who is gobbling up a lot of and federal governments people face on embarking on Fuel Merchants Associa'tion of can paint a rather bleak pic- mercial and industrial cus- the oil, and also aggravating should take whatever steps, V? Specializing In Real Estate »t a real estate career is that New Jersey, says not one ture and adversely affect your tomers are sold on an inter- the fuel oil supply situation. necessary to stop this waste. Over 20 Years earnings are most often di- home in New Jersey went ruptible basis. Increased de- "But the worse crime of One step he recommends is to chances of getting a mort- rectly based on commissions gage. cold this winter because of a mand during the winter made all," he added, "is the undis- have the electric utilities get from sales. This means that lack of heating oil. it necessary for them to puted fact that the electric • RESIDENTIAL SALES "At Sterling Thompson Gal- out of the new home heating the young persons should pos- He also said not one com- switch to standby fuel oil. The utilities are getting only 33 •HOME APPRAISALS lery of Homes, the homebuyer market. He said that with the sess a certain amount of sales mercial or industrial building per cent efficiency from this can take a 'dry run' on how oil industry provided oil to energy situation the way it is, ability and be ready to face- oil when they burn it. They're, much home he can afford. A had to shut down because of those customers while the gas all energy consumption should Member 2 Multiple Listing Services the possibility of low earnings literally pouring much needed simple asset-liability form the energy crisis. companies reserved their lim- be used in the most efficient Free Home Evaluations at first. oil right down the drain." provides a working tool on Mr. Petrunis said the 750 in- ited natural gas supply for manner. which the real estate con- Young Trainees dependent neighborhood retail residential customers. Pet- ADAMS AGENCY sultant can base recommen- "Very few real estate firms fuel oil dealers "did an out- runis said the oil industry dations. will put a young trainee on standing job in making sure didn't mind bailing out the salary. The opportunity for "Obtaining proper financing- that everyone in the state who gas companies, but that it ag- 842-5098 success is so great for those is not a matter of luck. Many depends on oil for heat had an gravated the fuel oil supply who master a certain degree SHOWMANSHIP At 110 Ave-of-Two-Rivers Rumson j persons have bank con- ample supply, in addition to Mr. Petrunis said that oil of competence that a salary is nections, but don't overrate taking care of its own, the also is making it possible for unnecessary. This is why men your influence. A Realtor, fuel oil dealers also bailed out the electric utility to meet all HELPS and women who have been in with his continuous use of the gas and electric utilities its commitments. Millions of other occupations are found in bank financing, is usually in a when they got into trouble. barrels of oil are bing used ev- real estate. good position to help the "When the gas companies ery week by these companies homebuyer align himself with "They felt they could were forced to turn off the gas while they wait to activate a suitable lending institution weather the first training pe- to many of their customers their atomic energy plants. whether he seeks VA, FHA, or riod financially, knowing the because of lack of supply, it' "In fact," Mr. Petrunis conventional financing.' rewards for success were re- . was oil which came to the said, "in 1972 the electric utili- lated directly to their ability resue to take up the slack. Oil "Last year local banks were ties used four billion gallons to serve the public. kept the gas heating custom- willing to make conventional of home heating oil, repre- loans up to 90 per cent of the "To help young people to ers from going without heat." senting 22 per cent of the resi- home value. Today most per- qualify for a license and get Petrunis explained, that in dential demand. You don't sons are getting 80 per cent loans. This may again go higher in Why New England? the near future, but all in- Good Response Reported stitutions are regulated as to When the "Good Life" starts right how high. here — second home condominiums "Banks are very cautious For Hillsborough Homes in exclusive golf and winter sports until their first dividend peri- ' community in northern New Jersey. od. Then depending how much FREEHOLD - More than a has an optional second level including master bedroom is being saved, mortgage half millioii^dollars in home suite arrangement, which in- with private bath, including 180 acre lake "for sailing, water skiing, fishing. Tennis money Is made available in sales in less than a month re- cludes,the fourth and fifth bed- stall shower. varying degrees of ease. In- pourts. Ski slopes. Fabulous clubhouse for gourmet din- flects the enthusiastic re- room or sitting room, large "What the architects, Ko- cidentally, over the past few ing. sponse for Whittier Oaks-in- storage area and complete • bayashi & Bostrom have done years the average person has Hillsborough, reports William bath. been saving 33 per cent more in the Longfellow," Mr. Steinfield, vice president of Entrance to the Longfellow is Steinfield said, "is to provide j • Two-bedroom aparlments start of his Income than he used to. marketing, U.S. Home of New through a covered portico into EXPERIENCE This amounts to about 8 per sufficient space and privacy in at $29,000. Jersey, developers-builders. the center hall which leads the home so that a variety of cent of his total take home straight through to the family COUNTS! • One acre homesites also available. pay today. The 80-home, single family activity can go on simul- community opened for sale room with sliding glass> doors taneously without one segment • Excellent investment in 1500 acres "With proper financial data, to the rear garden. To the of mountainous beauty late in March and "the re- of the family encroaching serious house hunting can be sponse has surpassed all our right is the wide-long living' upon the other." 65 Members to serve you • Only 2 hours from Jersey shore. undertaken. The advantage of expectations," Steinfield says. room with large window bay_ • Call for brochure. working with Sterling Thomp- and formal dining room. The The rural community of son is that everything can be Typical of the homes of- country-style kitchen with Hillsborough was selected for in Monmouth County! done at any time of day — in- fered at Whittier Oaks, the windowed breakfast room has U.S. Home of New Jersey's first cluding home inspection. Each Longfellow Ranch has 10 two-door refrigerator-freezer^ single home development in Gallery has full color photo- rooms, four or five bedrooms, built-in dishwasher and double Somerset County because of RED BANK AREA STEPHEN J. KROL graphs which help a prospec-. three full baths and two-car oven, cook-top range. Off the its unusual location, he said. To.reach Whittier Oaks at Realtor tive buyer know what's avail-' garage. It combines the kitchen is the laundry room able. It at least gives him a sweeping lines of a ranch with access doors to the rear Hillsborough take Kt. 206 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE means of clearly expressing home with interior spacious- • garden, and two-car attached north from Princeton and tum LISTED on page 326 of the yellow pages. 75 W. Main SI. 780-1600 Freehold. N.J. the type of home he would ness, traffic-oriented for con-. garage. The first floor also, right on Hillsborough Road. It like to buy. . venient family living. It also has three family bedrooms, is 2.4 miles to the community. ; 39 TfceDtfyRegltter.ErfBaik-MkkactOT^NJ. Friday, April a, «7J House Shoppers Are til, more successlul, they could" but now the kitchen is the most As'design director for U.S. $15,000 single-family detached ness end of housing, but he must interiors because carpenters Women are applying super-, will survive. It is a new twist cannot always be found .to- do and companies must begin to' afford the amenities. But now expensive room in the house to Home, Hart must be alert to houses to the$85,000 luxury com think ahead two or three years market techniques to house special work. operate on that theory instead everybody is amenity-con- build. Women are interested in changing ideas. He is respon- dominiums. The single family in his job. shopping and the housing indus- In arranging model interiors of being misled by marketing scious, even the economy house function and they run right to sible for the aesthetics and house is still the most popular, After trash compactors have try must be prepared for a buy- for builders they take intoac- trends based on house shoppers shopper, who now is well-trav- the kitchen when they shop for function, interior and exterior he observed, because most become standard kitchen equip- er's market that is just around cuuntthatthe house must be who need immediate oc- eled and well-read. They have a house. styling of homes that are to be people have grown up with one. ment, the heat .will be on for the corner. So says Spence Lee furnished. He has seen some cupancy. *' not begun to dictate, but they •'We are going into self- located in 14 states and the Spreading the house dollar barbecues, he remarked. He Hart, who has been active in houses planned so they could "We are moving from a will soon, because most people cleaning ovens, waste disposals Virgin Islands. Totally involved has become a mind boggier. As can see it coming; but he thinks many phases of home design for not be furnished, he observed. house market that accepted are not living in the kind of and trash compactors and," he in display models, he also de- much time is being spent de- there is time to spare. 16 years. Then. too. lifestyles are chang- minimal construction because house they want.". predicts, "within three years signs the lighting and some of signing the economy unit as the , "If women do not find what And with all the features that ing. The utility room and stor- the shopper needed a house in a Years ago builders installed compactors will be necessary the furniture. The company's more expensive home. they want at the first stop, they are turning the home into a age areas must be larger. The particular area. Returning vet- kitchens with a sink and space in economy houses as well as brand name is used on homes in ,will move to another. The com- "It is a change in our whole Utopian dream, some women master bedroom is larger to erans bought a basic house un- for a refrigerator, he observed, those in the luxury bracket." every category from on-site pany that has a better product philosophy," Hart pointed out. look for features like spiral accommodate eating, drinking "Little things are making the staircases. and television viewing, al- difference. For example .15 "We'd go along with it. but though other rooms are likely to years ago the economy house you cannot find a carpenter who be smaller. might have had 200 feet of ex- can lay out a spiral staircase. In tension cords instead of double fact we must design houses to Women are also looking for electric outlets as they do to-accommodate native materials security in houses they buy. and day." and the skills of workmen in it isn't necessarily alarm sys- If builders do not go along various communities. For ex- tems. It is psychological securi- with the housing pace, they will ample, in Florida, there are ty — the design of a home and be left "holding their houses" block masons so we use blocks its relation to another house in Where have all in his opinion. As a designer he in house design. Out of necessi- a community, so site planning doesn't like to get into the busi- ty we have gone to simplicity in is important. the listings gone? Real Estate Today Agency Reports Sale Of Thirty Properties RED BANK — Applebrook. Anthony Massa, builder, has Mr. and Mrs. Peter Schu- Agency Inc., Middletown, sold a newly built home at 203 bert have purchased a future member of Red Bank Area Ballantine Road, Middletown, home site on Borden Road, Multiple Listing Service Inc., to Mr. and Mrs. William Bar- Middletown, from Hillfield reports 30 sales. ry- Builders. The Schuberts are Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Gun- Mr, and Mrs. Peter Izzo of from Hackensack. thner purchased the home of Old'Bridge have purchased Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Gordon Anthony Massa, builder, at 146 Heights Ter., Middletown, • from Leonardo have pur- 201 Ballantine Road, Middle- from Mr. and Mrs. John Bu- chased 241 qherry Tree Lane, $2,425,800.00 town. delman, who have moved to Middletown, from Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Conrad E. Chicago, 111. Mrs. David Rupprecht who Miller of Circleville, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. William Dalh- have movett to Armock, N.Y. have purchased from Oak Hill rnan, who moved to Little 147 Ballantine Road, Mid- SOLD IN MARCH Builders,the newly built resi- Silver, had their home pur- dletown, owned by Duffield dence at 301 Dwight Road, chased by Mr. and Mrs. Wer- Builders, has been purchased Middletown. ner Metsch of Teaneck. by Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Jar- Hillfield, Section 4 • Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dono- Mr. and Mrs. John K. Wind- vis from Glens Falls, N.Y. Deepdale Drive, Middletown Silnnnn van, who moved to Brooklyn, sor of Oak Forest, 111., have Mr. and Mrs. John Scott Lo- Idlebrook Lane, Matawan 4J,suu.uu had their residence at 7 Turn- purchased the residence at 178 gan have relocated in Middle- Waterman Avenue, Rumson • berry Lane, Middletown, pur- Priscilla Drive, Lincroft, from town to 134 Heights Ten, for- Woods End Road, Middletown • chased by Mr. and Mrs. Peter Franklin Capital Corp. merly owned by Mr. and Mrs. Edgemere Drive, Matawan Lopez of .Matawan. Middletown Builders have Francis Casper. Bingham Hill Circle, Rumson , '"{JfJL Mr. and Mrs. C. Leslie For- sold a home site on Borden' Mr. and Mrs. James Morris slund of Ft. Wayne, Ind., have Road, Middletown, to Mr. and of Northfield have purchased Ballantine Road, Middletown • S'oonnS purchased the residence at 68 Mrs. Lawrence Fuchs. ' 4 Doris Lane, Middletown, Colonial Terrace, Colts Neck S'Sn 2 White St., Shrewsbury, from Also sold by Middletown from Roland Nash, who has Conover Place, Middletown : «'S2'2 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cather Builders were 44 Borden moved to Atlanta, Ga. Niles Avenue, Middletown ftfimSS" who have relocated in Shrews- Road, Middletown, to Mr. and Harmony Woods have sold 6 Lots in Middletown JsffiX bury. Mrs. John C. Mitchell of the future home site on Lom- Mr. and Mrs. Dyke Cullum, Holmdel; and 25 Hillandale bardi Court, Middletown, to Parkway Place, Middletown • S'SS2 who have moved to Belgium, Drive, Middletown, to Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Carriage Drive, Middletown - • - ",500.00 have sold their former resi- Mrs. Paul Wood of Elmira, Spendley of Middletown. Rumson Road, Little Silver : • 65,900.00 dence to Mr. and Mrs. Wil- N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. John Aulenti, Jean Terrace, Middletown • liam M. Champion at 17 Adele Stamford, Conn., have pur- Ocean Boulevard, Atlantic Highlands Court, Middletown. The Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Drum- chased the residence at 63 Champions were from Circle- mond of Oakhurst, purchased • Deepdale Drive, Middletown, Middletown-Lincroft Road, Middletown ville, Ohio. through Middletown Builders, from Anthony Massa, builder. Ilex Place, Matawan • Relocated from Circleville, a future home site on Craw- . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eriks- Mohawk Drive, Matawan • Ohio, are Mr. and Mrs. ford Road, Middletown. son have purchased 9 James Little Silver Point Road, Little Silver S'Snnn Thomas Dickerhofe,. who have Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kelby St., Lincroft, from Mr. and purchased the residence at 155 of Chicago, III., have pur- Mrs.. Lawrence Gray, who Leonardville Road, Middletown S ann nn South Lake Drive, Middle- chased the home of Mr. and now reside in Boston,'Mass. Park Drive, Middletown llinnnn town, from Mr. and Mrs. Ed- Mrs. Arthur Logan at 356 Red Mr. and Mrs. Barry Yorking Mallard Road, Middletown 7n'nnftnft ward Lewis. The Lewis' have Hill Road, Middletown. The have purchased two building Buttonwood Drive, FairHaven inq'nno"no moved to Alabama. Logans have moved to Vir- lots on South Ward Ave., Circle Drive, Rumson • II'QOOOO London, England, is the new ginia. Rumson, from Mr. and Mrs. Virginia Avenue, Hazlet ^oonnnn location of Mr. and Mrs. Jo- Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Al- Edward Drastal. Woodbine Avenue, Little Silver « nnn nn ' seph Hogan, who sold their lan have moved to Rumson Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Ra-. Alwin Terrace, Little Silver ; • iflonooo former residence at 53 Her from 7 Francis Court, Middle- vera, now residing in Wash'- 1 Drive, Middletown, to Mr. and town, purchased by Mr. and ington, D.C., have sold their Amelia Court, Little Silver J; ?^ Mrs. James Gaynor of Sparta. Mrs. Joseph V. Brunton of residence to Mr. and Mrs Oak Hill Road, Middletown ''8'2n2 Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. North Arlington, Lawrence K. Plaskett at 11 Washington Avenue, Matawan Innnnnn Hertgen of Englishtown have Mr. and Mrs. John A.Bal- Doris Lane, Middletown. Clover Lane, Rumson • w,uuu.uu purchased the home at 88 Fish dauf of the Bronx have pur- Mr. and Mrs. James Cusick 2,425,800.00 Hawk Drive, Middletown, chased the residence at 115 of Staten Island have pur- from Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hamiltbnian Drive, Middle- chased 19 Lombardi Court, Binder, who have moved to town, from Harold Duey, who Middletown, from Harmony New Britian, Pa. has relocated in Middletown. Woods, builders. Little Known Facts By JACK LITTLE ral beauty and ecology. highly favorable comment by Execgtlve Vice President Small wonder why Mr. all who are interested in the! N.I. Share Builders Assn. Reed, who is presently com- wise use of land for residen- Two million four is even great for us -but, frankly, we pleting his own home in Coun- tial purposes without destroy- (our 35 salesmen) need to restock the shelf -we have The tract discussed here is try Woods, and who is about ing it from most every other that of N.J. Shore Builders to launch construction at his standpoint. more qualified buyers for every area we represent than Association president Robert Country Hills tract, opposite It is sincerely to be desired any other time we can recall -if you want the best E. Reed in Holmdel, and Bell Telephone Labs building that the creation of Mr. Reed which is composed of 131 in Holmdel, is proud as he and' Prof. DeBoer will inspire; price, in the shortest time, call Monmouth County's acres of rolling hills and rides around his ecologically- others who may be motivated' #i.real estate marketing company, where by putting wooded glens. minded masterpiece at Coun- to build new communities Mr. Heed, who calls it Coun- try Woods. without damaging Mother Na- ' you first we continue to be first... try Woods, had divided it into Landscape architecture stu- ture and her old landscape' 108 building lots. Had the dents of Rutgers University's charm and beauty. plans been instituted, the de- College of Agriculture' and SHORT SHOTS - 13th art* velopment of spacious, out- Environmental Science in- nual NJSBA Home Buyers standing homes would have spect the Country Woods tract School which closed April $ ended up with row upon row frequently as part of their after a three-Monday nighif Makes it happen — faster. of homes and little else. course. The tract has excited record setting run, has no\jf But Mr. Reed, upon taking graduated 3,200 "students," title to the land, sought the $925,000 Sales scores of whom have gone ort counsel of Roy DeBoer, pro- to become satisfied home buy- fessor of landscape archi- In First Year ers . . . President Reed will tecture at Rutgers. University, MARLBORO - Jane Hoeff- lead a.Shore Builders delega,- pplebrook Agency and the two, after much ler, sales associate here with tion to Washington, D.C., Majr study, reduced the number'of Sterling Thompson and Asso- 17-22 to attend the National lots from 108 to 89. Then they ciates, has registered more Association of Home Builders put their heads together some than $925,000 in residential spring board of directors more and planned it so that real estate sales in her first MiddMown.N.J. Matawan, N.J. Rufflson. NJ. meeting. While there, he will, 950 Route 35 23A Route 34 112Ave.ofTwoRlwn parts of the tracts were set year with the company. check in with Congressman; (201)671-2300 (201)566-7600 (201)842-2900 aside as community garden She sold 20 homes in addi- James J. Howard and Coti-: spotsto be permanently pre- tion to signing just more than gressman Edwin B. Forsythe served from construction and $1 million in residential list- in an effort to see what has: erosion, and the many, bridle ings. been accomplished regarding Send for our complimentary "Homes for LMng" brochure. paths and walking paths were She lives at 16 Georgetown "runaway lumber prices." Mr protected by restrictions in Road, Colts Neck, with her Reed and other NJSBA ofli- deeds. husband, John, vice president cers visited the congressmen! Prof. DeBoer has stated of the Land and Home Devel- March 22 when they answered i Country Woods is a rare, ex- opment division of Sterling NAHB's "Call to Action" On' ample of how undeveloped Thompson and Associates, the lumber crisis, along with land may be put to residential and their children Betina, hundreds of builders from all use while preserving its natu- Madlan, and John Chandler. parts of the nation. HWNVJS 9NI1I39 V J1VW. Ql N) q3;i) ui siu|od fii X|uo q)iA\ piq 1 sr3 (spuouiBip Jnoj JO •- pea] PUB .duuinp oi puouiBip pju() SUPJOJ e aiieui 01 |i;nsnun si OM] pioi( on JI puouii'ip jai(Sii| StlJ s'm pa( XiSuipadsnsun mnos l[ sijsaq OA\I pit jjnj qjnos aui>|Eiu B paj(B|d 3At>n pinoM isa^\) ««d IN I «''d |««3 MMO.S.' jw ;,XBS noX op l 'qnp B paujniaj uam an aae lins am ui spjeo aajm p|3i| oil ieqi SuiAoqs 'spuouiBip i • L-3 oi r ha 11- r b M VII SIL| HJIM puouiBip puooas am 01 (0 0 t> b V"S -PIOM nu^ J3|B3P SV i\m\ ^seg 'uossaj s;m JOJ jo oDtuip am paXc|d jsa.w •|!Ej p|no« SPUOUIBIP OSSOUIJ apsds AUB )e miA\ aauBi^J B 3)(B) noX JO [EU31EUI SUO)G -uo3 noX'jaqjBj ts e jo SJIBJJB aqi ui aiqissod SB S qi33oi[B jo aie| ijojja -jutof JOJ ujnjaj pooo — •si jo ajnjEU am ui aq oj sja -i|io Suidiaq pue mm Suueqs p3A|0AUiun SE j|osjno.< da3» mi noX JI ami] uo pus (OZ 3unf-iz XBJV) IMIW30 uou>ni|s ,,jjo-spuBq,, B se - smauiiuioddB HE daax - "Ibilj UOI)EU1 jspisuo3 )ou op noX 'aidoad jo X)uo[eui sq) aipiun 'JOJ 'JBAS (IZ 'AO\-K po> 0IdU03S •jojm jo aajnos am -MOI) ,,'suapjnq,, ijpns ;dao I •UI.O) 'j3A3Mo ' - , asudjnse no^ XEP sqi ui A|JBS sn]B)s -3B 01 noX JOJ ASB3 1! S3)|BUI (61 IPdVIZ M^JBN) S3IHV ^iSONlHJ. JOJ ui 3q XBUI pjenS sm UMOP inpunuij jnoX aAOjduii o] Xini XqiBduiXs {BjniBU jnoA isnui r sio] oi\» Bjqn 3U.X SuiuoAa -nyoddo UB BABM XEUI noA — SUOIIE.IIJIJBJS pue sXoi 'ja3 L%2OOS «3K) noX j| XiMomiB jnoX japuaj pus uooujaijB 8u|jnp aiucs (oz XBW-OZ pjdy) snanvx -pa| am jo apis Joqio aqi uo -ins noX JOJ Xep jauueq B sit)i 31)1 JO 3J01U OJ PB3| X pue 'SJB3J 'SMOJJOS 'sujaiqojd 3)|EU1 UBD A*ia)B| 8u)XO[duiO •33u iou saop 3uiujoui vs s.aidoad jsqp jo ajeiis jnoX uaaq SABIJ no.< ueio PBi uoiu - (ZZ PO-EZ Idas) •aprnS ueqi ajouu qsnui jo juaidpaj XjqBjapisuoo puB ajuaiiBd — q . X[iep jinoX aq JB]S Xepq]Jiq aqi aq o) padxa uea noX 'j|as . <0Z MWBW-6I VJ) S3DSH -jnoX 01 S33uapijuo3 daax 01 p!j p oi ua[E ag lua^s jdai( J jnoX laq ndBJSBJBd Smpuods pojsiui aq UE3 noX asneaag sju|ds f]3M se maim noX"ind X|BA -3JJO3 am pBaj pue Xepqyiq J3A0J3J UBJ noX '3u|UJ0Ui -ipajja 3JB saiiiAilOB jnoX paps 'MOJJOUJOI noX -dn U3A18 3ABI) pinott siqj auo paAOl e jo stoips Dm •ue oi suoipafqo jnoX JO] ajojs ui si IBIJA\ puij ox sjaqio uaqM juiod aqi JSJJB Xq Xiiott »iq«i3p;suoi pasnes - (K idaSK'Snv) OOHI\ pooS si pooiu aqi piun Suol uiaqi PJEMOI 3uiss3j3ojd 1IBAA noX '3S0m JO) '.S3DI01P sq XBUI noX qSnoqx - (81 S3uo .. pue 3UI)(JOM noX sdasn 'aiqeu pue suoispap IUOJJ XEA\B ^3Bq q»j-OZ UBf) aid jo auo j|3SJnoX -icnBun UIOJJ JEJ aje 'jq3is uBid G jo XBM am u; o) ISJIJ am ajE noX 'op Xam ui aq iou Xeui Xam qSnom uaujM inq — ujsiuiiido (BJIIIBU JO) 3uui) aq XGUJ i] siiqei| Su| -UB jajjo oi tjsdJ] S 'suiie jnoX ]eqi aauaisisui JnoX 3U103J3AO S3UJIJ3UI0S •pusds jnoX inoqB Xes 0) aAeg 3ABI( pinoM noX JI spuauj pus jnoX :apisXeM am Xq [|Ej OI ssaaans jnoX pus JiasjnoX JOJ sjaqjo \H\\/A oi X[]nj3iB3 us) saA|iR|aj jo SBSPI am H33S S|BO3 pue suieajp jwqi A\O|[E sjBaj jno^ 'ssassod X||Bnsn -sn in* noX i\ snjBis IBIDUBU - (It 8nV-K ^IT) 03T Pino* sjaqio ajaqa isisjad o) r . noX )em PUiuj jo 3)E)s snoXot -IJ jnoX jajiaq UBJ no^ - (61 'JOABapua «au noX ssiqeua suijdpsip-jias JO; PUE 33JJ auIBS 3111 8A3I40B rive 3d 9»oom KIVO aoon-z sit E jjoddns o) 33UBpn|3j Jiaqi }U3{E] jnoA paawns oj uot} ) NUO3IHdV3 oi sjaqio d|3i| oi si UJSOUOO m!M noX luioddBsip XBUI sauo -iquiB ujoqui jnoX jo aajSap. °3[do3d uiejju UHUJ JOJ jaiqs ason« uosjad Xddeq e Acpoi 3iuoq am punoje H3ii| am t))!« o3 o) uojieunu -Aeq»q jo pui)| aiiuijap e 3DJOJ ysd isoui aqj J0J 3JB noX 'uos -jaiap pue ja/Mod||Tin iBuojidaa OI uB|d e jo'yed Xnenpe iou 1 £9^1 1 1 »• 19 I £ 1 1 6sH 85 y 1 991 ;;• K IS 7^ I Bt Zt- f- Z!l| A _6E 1 BcH 1 9E IH StH 1 11 1 »cH 1 fE ml I J' hzgl u icelM 32 i2 9;«B Iggj fz nmmu\ 0-3MVd m 02 oj'aNiv/i.NOOnOAJ 1 tl\ Zl\ 1 9ll L\ 9lH n U Zl M ni^l fi • C 2 i U1I31 (L/Ol/1 81 [T a a [TMs a tt T •iqqe J~ V "o •? •uoiltpoiK J8SAABH Zl V i w¥P 1 •,j8qDI»l 99 T "H 0 wn 1 H pill U 1 v oh | a a adodtesnu £9 0I0I11 0 LlU| 3 S 3H1-N0 gwii HDfWOS GN3dS QL j V N oloB fill 1 <1i gupcoijiuy Z9 ' " 3AVH 4N0TfXW I 0S-0WI9 VSWMT HSIMDCK1391 iHUtunt 1 n i Ju V ols•TIN v 3 w «tiuo 19 H V 3 «Mn 4 M 1 SUIIDIW) taip 1 i nail 4O|lunH 6t> j i jnfs I i 1 y Sj||O np 1 0 0 8C 1'OA 1 WSVISOHJ.N3 /W ©Nld33>1 A3 eUOOA. AWS •ipunq aj 9 Mi i\ poO las i|»i| q :a|zmd »/epJ8H»A oi uoimios AIMBIH unouojj 6> lusjaqpv 0C 00| 8JELUH53 (i sjoq pun SS3JPV E pueqsnq «& i • B^ps 10* papnpxa t^ 9J •uinuoN 9C PBM310N Z> pool NM0Q tpjiq H 0u|A»Aind is [•- r— p Si t it 09 >)|nS 61 #- 1U»UJ*|» ,,-BtjliiO.. II tno«»0 6(W»D i W r -^ ^ »|qnoji i- 8 -MermnjLJ '/ HD11MWWS \ 01 WWH.W 1 ftbya s,A3Mm MI yaro / 3WXIJ-MWW ' ——v qmoiu 9 «•••.> BuiS 1 Etoawsnooyaoal 'ayaa v sy •mvsz AaSNOHW.I j •OMOI3IPP,K - 32 The Daily Begister, Red Bank - MiddleUmn, N.J. Friday, April 28,1971 Democratic Primary Scrap Looming in Coastal District BRADLEY BEACH - It D. Philip Gerand hold an dates selected a week ago by will be Marlboro Mayor Mor- Azzqlina, Red Bank Coun- appeals the Monmouth Coun- "open primary" in which all the party's screening com- ton Salkind, and Freehold cilman Dr. Michael J. Arnone, ty Democrats will have a pri- candidates would appear in mittee. Councilman Walter J. Koz- -and Madison Township Coun- mary contest for at least one the organization column on There are three legislative loski. cilman Richard N. Cooper for of nine legislative posts to be •.the ballot. « districts, each with a senator Running in the coastal dis- Assembly. filled this year. Mr. (jerand said yesterday and two assemblymen. trict will be Ocean Township Central District - Sen. Al- Leave the The challenge will come he will npt consider an open In the Bayshore District, school teacher Herbert Bueh- fred N. Beadleston; Robert N. from Dr. Edward J. Lued- primary for the state and Assemblyman Eugene J. Bed- ler for Senate; Long Branch Ferrell, superintendent of Landscaping to Us deke, a Spring Lake Opto- county candidates and that ell will give up his lower Councilman Mrs. Gertrude elections, and Surrogate S. metrist, who once ran for gov- should Dr. Lueddeke run, his house seat to run for senate. Herman, and Point Pleasant Thomas Gagliano for Assem- ernor as an independent. name will go in a separate His running mate3 will be Councilman William Fitzpatr- bly. Or. Lueddeke said yes- column. Richard Van Wagner of Mid- ick for Assembly. Coastal District — Sen. •>> Our lives are enriched by land- terday he will file next week Dr. Lueddeke ran for (jover-' dJetown, and probably Madi- Seeking the one seat open Richard R. Stout; and Assem- scape plantings of trees, ever- for an Assembly seat in the nor in liMil and received lilt son Township Committeeman on the Board of Freeholders blymen Joseph E. Robertson, greens, and sod with their gifts coastal district under the slo- voles in Monmouth County. William E. Flynn. will be Matawan Township and Brian T. Kennedy. ol beauty, value and pleasure. gan "Democrat for Demo- That was (he year (Jov. Kich- Mr. Flynn's nomination isn't Councilman Philip N. Gumbs. cracy." ard J. Hughes was first elect- A part of that pleasure is in the certain because certain un- who will oppose Republican Romans clasped, hands in creative care ol our trained per ed. He will oppose the organiza- named objections to his candi- incumbent Albert E. Allen. court as a sign of agreement, sonne! can give to assure the tion candidates-William Kit- Dr. Lueddeke said he will dacy have been raised by The Republicans selected peace or friendship. From this healthy growth and,attractive zpatrick of Point Pleasant, file his petition with the office Middlesex County Democrats. their potential candidates a came the Christian practice of appearance ol your lawn — . and Mrs. Gertrude Berman, a of the Secretary' of State m In the central district, the week ago. They are: Bay-extending the right hand or fel- trees and shrubs. lowship. Long Branch councilman. Trenton Monday. Democrats will head their shore District—Sen. Joseph Dr. Edward J. Lueddeke Dr. Lueddeke had sought That's Hie day that the ticket with H. Joseph Dietz, a the backing of the county Democrats are to announced chairmen for S p.m. at the Colts Neck real estate agent, Democratic organization, but their slate of candidates lor Bradley Beach Borough Hall who will run for senate. Run- was not recommended by the the legislative ;ind county of- to formally approve candi- ning Tor the Assembly seals PRICE SALE Screening Committee. fices. (Most Varieties) He said he had then re- • Mr. Gerand has called a quested that party chairman meeting of the municipal New Jersey Bell SHADE FOR CANNEL IMMEDIATE CALL ORNAMENTAL DELIVERY* FRUIT TREES PLANTING Make A Date OVER 25 VARIETIES FROM 6 Ft. to 20 Ft. A paid directory of coming events for nonprofit organiza- UNTO OTHERS (Complete Selection of Flowering Shrubs 8 Evergreens) tions. Rates: $2 00 for 3 lines for one day. (1 00 each addi- COAL tional line; 13.00 lor two days. $1.25 each additional line; 15.00 for three to five days. SI .50 each additional line, J6 00 AS YOU WOULD for 10 days, $200 each additional line. 11000 for 20 days. BONGARZONE'S $J.5O each additional line Deadline noon day before publi- FRED D. WIKOFF CO. cation. Call The Daily Begister, 7410010, ask for the Datr Landscaping and Grounds Maintenance Secretary. HAVE THEM 236 MAPLE AVENUE SINCE 1939 OPEN SAT. CLOSED EASTER SUN. AI'HII, 11 FOR PERSONALIZED CONSULTATION St. James Grammer School "Faster Monday Card Par- BANK 741-0554 ty." 8 p.m.. High School cafeteria. I'elers PI.. Mon. Apr. 23. CALL UNTO YOU. RED PHONE: 542-0718 DAY OR EVENING Donation $1.75. Tickets: Mrs. T. I.abrecqtic Jr.. 747-31*2(1. WAYSIDE RD.««.»cii TMOH *„. t NEW SHREWSBURY \ APUIL24 "Babysitting Clinic," Middlelrwn Jaycoe-dtes, Thome Jr. High. 5 sessions — starting 'l'ues., Apr. 2\ and each Tiles, thru May 22.7:30-9 p.m. Pro-register: SI. S4201S5. \ APRIL 2S The Village Woman's Club "Klea Market." !l a.m. to 5 p.m., Middletown Shopping Center. HI. :I5. Middlctown. $5 per space. Reservations call: B71-22!)3orK?M5K2. .MAY 1 Concert: Cherokee Mezzo Soprano Hole' Casi'lla and Oscar Brand, folk singei'-gmlansl. Carlion Theatre, :i:45 and 8:30 p.m. Tickets arc now available at all Sluinbaclr stores. For more informal inn call S-I2-!H2II. • MAY 1, 2, 3 "Red Bank Antiques Show & Sale." Trinity Kpiscnpal 'Parish House, \V. Front St.. lied Bank. TUPS., Wed,, 12-11) p.m., Thurs., 12-tip.m. Refreshments. Adm. $1. MAY 4. .r>. 11, 12 The.Comedy — "How The Other Half Loves," Wagon "Wheel Playhouse. The Barn", Avc-of-2-Rivers, Humson. Don Brennan, directing. Curtain — H:3ll p.m. Tickets: 946-9756. MAY 6 "Truth In Nutrition'' rally, Broukdale College gymna- sium, Sunday, May 6, 2:30 p.m.. Featuring Dr. Wilfrid Shute, Catharyn Elwood. Beatrice Trum Hunter. Sponsored by "Citizens For Truth In Nutrition. Admission: Adults $3, Students $1.50. For more information: 774-'2246 or write 216 Belmont Ave.. Ocean, N.J. SPECIAL PRESEASON OFFER! GOOD ONLY UNTIL APRIL 28th! General Electric will send you $4000 in cash if you order now! If vtju order en or bcfoie April 28th, Genera! Electric wti vend you a ipecial, bonus check for $40. a:i soon vcur installation is completed. 'General Electric [CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING, Deluxe 1973 Models '."'".'•-.): LESS GE's $40 BONUS! PRICE INCLUDES COMPLETE INSTALLATION IN YOUR WARM AIR DUCTSYSTEM,,' ..; : OOStilu s -• •!•• h. .Kniv^iiul. FOR FREE HOME wet or dry, slink or swim, SURVEY AND ESTIMATE, CALL AT ONCE! OFFER juniors look great in 'IN' EXPIRES APRIL 28th! 'wo sun bodies, designed by a swim fashion leader to let you do everything all summer. Brown print antron nylon brief bikini with natural AVAILABLE WITH COMPLETE v soft, bared V bra to make you look quite some-body, 17.00 Soft slinky 2 YEAR GUARANTEE allure in an antron nylon white backless halter neck'dress that will make on parts and labor waves wherever you wear it, 23.00. In Junior Swimwear Fashions. MID-STATE MECHANICAL 55 WHITE RD. SHREWSBURY 842-7199 842-7109
e*(red Twenty Thou- 95 Washington St. dard Proposal Form in ihe manner des said 130,000.00 appropriation nol met by East Orange, N. J. 1ST} WOODSMAN TRAVEL TRAILER sand Dollars ignoted therein ond reauired by Ihe soid down payment, negotiable bonds of B'. Sleeps SIX. Fully sell contained Otrx-i or>rJ be dehvpred ot trip plncr onri on the specifications, must be enclosed in the Borough, each to be known ai "Cur- Executors extras. Used only once. e.7H>B7G Hour obovr named. sealed envelopes bearing ihe name and bir>g ond Rood Improvement Bond", ore Messrs. Roberts, Modderl ' The righi is reserved to rc|«l any or hereby authorlied to be issued in the & Holobinko fRAILER~FOR~SALe~- \m II- Prowler oddresi of the bidder, oddressed lo the (Tinooll Rood Must sell due to mnesv Pertfc' conditioi oil bids t( dwmrd lo Ifif mlfitst ot Hie Municipal Clerk of the Borough of principal omount of S28,5QO.OO pursuant Many extras with sole. Coll Wl 3628 County ol Monmouth to do 50. Keonsburg, ond must be accompanied to the Local Bond Low, constituting Sec Middletown, N.J. By order ot The Board of Chosen by a certified check drawn to the order tions 40A:2-l to iOA:?-«4 of the Revised Attorneys Illinois Ex-Governor OLDER CAWPER'BUS - Unfinished Freeholderi of the Counly of Monrnou'h. ol the Borough Treosurer of Ihe Stotutes of New Jersey. In anticipation April 20. 1973 17.10 1550. After'4:30 p.m. 14 Corolmo Awe JOSEPH C, IRWIN, Borough Df Keonsburg tor not less thon of the issuance of such bonds and to Port Monmouth. ten per cent (10%) of the omount bid. temporarily finance said improvements, rUiLC HEARING NOTICE April 70. 1973 ^if/25 negotiable notes ol the Borough in a is herebv given that ol 8:00 p.m.. or as Vm Jl' PATHFINDER TRMLEB - l,ki Contractor muil turnish survey bond principal omount not exceeding NOTICE m the amount ot the contract price soon thereotter as the motler may be new. Sleeps eight. Double dinette Full' 178,500.00 are hereby outhoriied to be reached, on Thursday, May 3, 1973. at self contained. Asking 13800 Call 79\17I1 CODE ENFORCEMENT ORDINANCE Righl Ij reserved to rejecf nny or all issued pursuant to end within the limita- BOROUGH OF SHREWSBURY bids it deemed to the interest or the the Holmdel School Administration tions prescribed by soid Low. The max- Building,- Hillcreit Road, the Planning BC IT OPDAINED by tht Borough Cl I lo do s_. imum role of interest which ony of soid Gets 3-Year Sentence Board will conduct 0.public hearing on Council Of the Borough ot Shrewsbury By Order of the Municipal Counc of obligations sholl bear it six per centum the application of Hofmdel Properties, CHICAGO (AP) - Former James R. Thompson, said MO. Sports Equipment as follows the Borough ol K .jura (6%) per onnurr. Inc.. oppllconts; Harry Oenovese. own- ARTICLF I - Appointment There U JAMES T. O NEILL may take a year. SURFBOARD FORSAl.F Section 3.