33 municipalities seek Pre-inaugural bash dog catchers, page 9 delights GOP page 14 The Daily Register Monmouth County's Great Home Newspaper VOL. 104 NO. 174 SHREWSBURY. N.J. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19.1982 25 CENTS Governor Kean begins without mandate ByJIMMANION The swearing-in ceremony was Just part of His victory over Florio culminated a politi- taxes to inspire investment. day that was to have been highlighted later by cal career that began when he became an Essex Kean and his wife, Debby, are the parents of TRENTON (AP) - Republican Thomas H. inaugural festivities in Parsippany and Edison. Inauguration Eve County assemblyman in 1M7. It also Involved an three children and he has said the family will Kean is beginning a four-year term as governor A formal Inaugural Ball at SMO per couple is unsuccessful bid for the GOP gubernatorial remain in its Livingston home until the end of that promises to be filled with political confron- is hectic, page 3 the school year. scheduled at the Parsippany Hilton while a $100 nomination that he lost to former Senate Presi- tation. per person reception Is scheduled for the Pines dent Raymond Bateman in 1877. The Keans will be the initial First Family to Kean succeeded Democrat Brendan T Byrne Manor In Edison. reside at Drumthwacket, a mansion in Prince- Kean's election was not certified until a as New Jersey'* governor when he was sworn in Kean is taking office without a clear man- ton that is being renovated to replace Morven, today by Chief Justice Robert Wilentz. Kean, whose father was a congressman and statewide recount in every voting district was also in Princeton, as the official governor's date front an electorate that gave him a victory whose grandfather was a United States senator, requested and paid for by Florio. By mid-De- For the first time in eight years, a Re- margin of fewer than 2,000 votes over Democrat house. comes from a patrician family that became cember, Kean's final victory margin settled at Kean also will be the first non-lawyer gov- publican will control the executive branch while James J. Florio of Runnemede. wealthy through development of utility interests 1,707 votes. Democrats bold narrow majorities in both ernor since Walter E. Edge, a publisher, be- Democrats' gave ground, but held a 43-37 and real estate. In the non-political world, Kean Kean campaigned on a platform closely houses of the Legislature. came governor for the second time in 1944. edge in the Assembly and a a-18 majority in the was president of Realty Transfer Co., a firm aligned to the "supply side" economic policies Meanwhile, on Inauguration Day, Florio was Kean, 46, a millionaire businessman from Senate, margins that will be vital to any pro- that handles real estate investments for the of President Reagan and has said that one of his scheduled to chair a congressional subcommit- Livingston, is New Jersey's 48th governor. gram, initiated by Kean. Kean family fortune. early initiatives would be a cut in state business tee meeting on asbestos in Newark. Elite fliers plunge to doom in unison By ROBERT MACY
INDIAN SPRINGS, Nev (AP) - Strict training to keep their eyes only on the plane next to them may have led three pilots of an elite Air Force stunt squad to blindly follow the lead of a fourth and slam into the desert after a 400 mph dive. "Normally, be (the leader) is the only one looking where he's going," said Air Force Sgt. Jack Conner. The Thunderbirds' commander, Maj. Norman L. Ldwry III, died along with the three other pilots in yesterday's accident during practice. The Thunderbirds pilots, who sometimes fly as little aa three feet apart in their T-38 Talons, are trained to "fly off the commander-leader," watching only the plane next to them and not the ground or Instruments because of the tight for- mation, Conner said. "We don't know whether it was a mid-air collision or a case of follow the leader into the ground," he said. "At the speed they were going when they came out of the loop, I just thought, "That's the end of that for them fellows," said W.G. Wood of Indian Springs, who witnessed the crash as he CRASH SCENE — Air Force officers guard the wreckage at the scene where four Air Force Thunderbirds crashed yesterday, killing the four members of the precision flying See Klilr. page S teams. EPA ignores ocean dumping • By ANDREW SIIKKIIAN ty shore. R«tltt*r »IM<* fcVJMM M J. CMMMf "The decision that the (Reagan) adminis- NEXT ICE ACE IN HOLMDEL? — Joseph Artelli of Holmdel gazes upward at an A Reagan administration decision nWto en- tration has made is that they are going to permit "ice tree" he created on a neighbor's property. With Artelli is his dog. Little Bear. force the December 1981 deadline for an end to the continued dumping because it's cheaper," ocean dumping will probably mean continued Hughes said. "Congress made the law and their dumping of chemicals, .sevgage sludge and obligation is to implement that law as they dredge spoils off the Monmouth County coast for found it." several years, The Daily Register has learned. EPA officials said the agency is merely An ice tree grows Rep. William J. Hughes, D-N.J., yesterday following the dictates of the courts and has said he will launch a congressional inquiry into started to formulate compromise standards for By SUSAN HOOPER \, the federal Environmental Protection Agency's ocean dumping, such as lengthening the dump- Cold spell breaks decision not to enforce the deadline for an end to ing limit to a 60-mile or 106-mile point in the HOLMDEL - With just a little planning, ocean dumping set in the 1977 amendment to the Atlantic. Joseph Artelli has turned a township bead- in county, page 9 Marine Research and Protection Act. James Marshall, EPA Region II pubUc af- ache into a thing of beauty. Hughes, chairman of the House Merchant fairs director, said the formulation of new stan- Artelli has created an ice tree here - a Marine and Fisheries Committee, vowed to sub- dards will take "a significant amount of time," massive, stately structure which resembles, the middle of January? According to Artelli, poena EPA Administrator Anne Gorsuch and because of the need for a new set of studies and variously, a froxen waterfall, a northern it's all part of a township pUn to keep pipes other federal officials to investigate why the the required public hearings. mountain face, or an ice king in some ancient from freezing in bitter weather. EPA decided not to contest a recent New York New York City filed suit against the EPA Norse legend. The water main to Charles of the Riti District Court decision to permit continued last April for continued permits to dump an The natural sculpture - visible to passer Group Ltd. runs under his family's house dumping. annual 3.3 million tons of sewage sludge at the sby on Route 38 here - is formed by water here, Artelli said. If water isn't allowed to The New York decision allows New York 12-mile dump site off Sea Bright, which would dripping from a garden hose suspended In a drip from the main, Artelli explained, the City and eight New Jersey municipalities to have been prohibited as of Dec. 1981 under the tree on the vacant lot next to Artelli's house pipes freeze and the company loses its water continue dumping some 7 1 million tons of sewer Marine Protection and Research Act signed into at JIM Route 35 sludge annually 12 miles off the coast of Sea law in 1977. What is a garden hose doing In a tree in See AaIre, page 4 Bright, and millions of tons of chemicals and See EPA, page i REP. WILLIAM HUGHES dredge spoils elsewhere off the Monmouth Coun- U.S. diplomats in France The inside story Redistricting is final By BARBARA KATELL- of office. As far as Monmouth County is con- THE WEATHER cerned, the new measure is Identical. But it TRENTON - It finally appears official — at makes changes In district lines in North Jersey plan increased security least for now. Monmouth County will be divided that some critics contend make it more vulner- Light saow likely, freesUg rala later. among four congressional districts under a bill able to court challenges on constitutional PARIS (AP) - U.S. Ambassador Evan Grif- Ray's apartment house said the killer was short, that was passed by the Democratic majorities in with long hair, dressed in casual clothes. High la low Ms. Complete report page I. grounds. fith Galbraith and his aides are studying special both houses of the state Legislature yesterday. measures to protect U.S. officials in France Galbraith said he was "probably a professional Sylvia Porter: Tai break rulinii 7 The new bill passed the state Senate 21-18 and undoubtedly an experienced killer." Gov. Brendan T. Byrne, a Democrat, is after only brief debate. But the Republicans In following (he assassination of an assistant mili- WillGrimsley: Dave Coweas returns.... 1* expected to sign the new redistricting plan into A-foreign news agency in Beirut, Lebanon, the Assembly 'filibustered" for more than four tary attache on Galbraith's staff, Lt. Col. Rob ReiaaMa: Dam Site's musical 13 law before he makes way for incoming Gov. Charles Robert Ray. said it received a handwritten statement in Dr. Joyce Brothers: Guill la life U hours before the measure finally was brought to barely legible Arabic claiming toe Lebanese Thomas H. Kean, a Republican, at noon today. a vote last night. Security was increased for senior members But the Republican minority in the Legisla- Armed Revolutionary Faction was responsible The Republicans acknowledged that they of the Paris embassy staff two months ago after ture has promised to challenge the district lines Charge d'Affaires Christian Chapman escaped for the murder. Diplomats In the Lebanese hoped some of the 43 Democrats in the 80- capital sa id they had never heard of the group. Advice.. DAILY REGISTER in federal court on the grounds that they fail to member chamber would get tired and leave an assassination attempt. But no special protec- PHONE NUMBERS meet U. S. Supreme Court standards of "one The statement said the United States was Arts before the vote was taken on the last day that tion was ordered for lower-ranking officials, Main Office man, one vote." Galbraith said, because it was believed only the "the bead of the Zionist-reactionary-fascist al- the Legislature could act while Byrne was gov- liance in the region," and that "Reagan and Us Classified 17 Toll Free 171-NM The new bill replaces one of questionable ernor. upper echelon were likely targets. Comics II Toll Free MM1M legality that was signed by Byrne last Tuesday President Francois Mitterand and Premier administration and their agents in the area are Sec CoagressloBal, page i out to defeat and slaughter us ' Editorials I Classified Dept S4M7N just before the last legislative session went out Pierre Mauroy promised an intensive bunt for Ufeslyle 14 Clrralatloa Dept.... HMMt Police said the shooting was similar to the Preguat.orThiakYoaAre? Haaor Roll of Bulaess ValeallM's Day the lone gunman who shot and killed the 43-year- Make A Date... IS Sports Dejrt MMM4 old army officer yesterday and escaped on foot attack last Nov. 18 on Chapman, the acting bead Call BIRTHRIGHT, 747-2423 Tell everyone how long Love-O-Gram. You may win of the embassy before Galbraith's arrival. Each Mevles 13 nmnuiia Bsreaa.. 171-ttM you've served Monmouth a romantic dinner for 2 at the in morning rush hour traffic. They offered in- OMtaaries 4 Freehold Bareai... 431-UK County. Call at The Daily Olde Union House, Red Bank. creased protection for the embassy staff, and American was walking from his apartment Spent M Loa« Brack Bansa. tO-Mll Register for space reserva- For details call Classified Galbraith said the security situation was being house to his car to go to work. Each attack waa made with a 7«6mm pistol. And each time the Television II Slate Bureaa... Mf>ttt-MSI Call For Help Day or tions 671-2250. Dept., 542-1700, for informa- Night. tion. A woman who saw the shooting in front of See Security, page I SHREWSBURY, N J. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19. T982 Probe of downed jetliner continues WASHINGTON (AP) - Although disappointed that critical flight recorders were not found In the tail of the downed Air Florida jet, federal investigators tay they are confident the "black boxes" soon will be retrieved from the icy Potomac River. Fibers the key in Atlanta trial "We think they're right where the tail section was," chief investigator Francis McAdams said last night. He added that ATLANTA - After two weeks of testimony in Wayne B. divers are continuing to hear "two distinct and separate" Williams' murder trial, prosecutors have begun introducing electronic signals from the recorders. the disputed evidence that they say is a cornerstone of their case - microscopic fibers found on the bodies of the two Investigators nope tbe "black boxes" will provide key victims. _^ information about the last seconds aboard Air Florida Flight 90 before it clipped a busy commuter bridge last Wednesday State crime lab microanalyst Richard Ernest took the and crashed into the river, killing 78 people. witness stand late yesterday to identify four packages of Divers were to resume probing the murky, ice-filled fibers and hairs removed from Williams' car with a special waters early today with recovery of the two recorders their vacuum tool during a June 3 search. first priority. Williams, a 23-year-old free-lance photographer and aspir- The 26-foot long tail section. which had housed the devices, ing talent scout, is accused of murdering Nathaniel Cater, 27, was raised from the river yesterday, but investigators soon and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, and dumping their bodies into tbe found the two boxes had been forced free from the wreckage, Chattahoochee River. presumably by the impact of the crash. Cater and Payne were among 28 young blacks whose "The recorders are probably the most valuable tool in deaths here during a 22-month period sparked one of the most accident investigation we have. Without them it makes the intensive police investigations in U.S. history. There have investigation far more difficult," McAdams said at a news been no arrests in the 26 other killings. conference. One of the key elements in the investigation was the The National Transportation Safety Board believes the accumulation of microscopic fiber evidence taken from the recording devices — one which monitors conversations in the bodies of Cater, Payne and some of the 26 others. cockpit and the other instrument readings — may provide answers to a number of key questions: Mailer feels 'very responsible' —How much speed and power did the plane have on takeoff? NEW YORK - Author Norman Mailer, who helped in- —How abrupt was the angle at which the nose of the plane mate-writer Jack Henry Abbott win conditional release from first rose from the runway? prison six weeks before he allegedly murdered a man, says he —Was the pilot concerned about too much ice forming on feels "very responsible" for his role in the slaying. the plane's wings? But Mailer said at a news conference yesterday he would —Were the pilot and first officer aware of what was going help Abbott again because "culture is worth a little risk." wrong? He acknowledged making mistakes in sponsoring Abbott, These and other questions, say the investigators, are vital saying he "did not read Abbott well enough" to know that the in determining the cause of the first crash involving a major APMMt budding author was not ready to "live quietly in New York" airline in 26 months. EXAMINE WRECKAGE — Salvage personnel begin da Jetliner after it was recovered from the Potomac when he got out of prison. With the easing of the extreme cold that hampered re- examination of the tail section of the downed Air Flori- River yesterday in Washington. Earlier in the day, Mailer testified about his relationship covery operations during the weekend, divers have stepped up with Abbott, who is charged in the July 18 stabbing death of the grim task of pulling bodies from the wreckage, which is in bly were ejected from the tail section because of "an unusual have seen the Air Florida plane fly with its nose higher than Richard Adan, 22, in the East Village section of Manhattan. 25 feet of water. kind of impact." what air safety experts say is normal under the condition! Abbott, 37, has admitted to killing the part-time waiter and Seven bodies were recovered yesterday, bringing tbe total The fuselage broke in two at almost exactly where the prevailing the day of the crash. aspiring actor and playwright, but says the slaying was a to 53 and leaving an estimated 21 yet to be found. Only two of voice recorder was located and the flight data recorder, The witnesses reported tbe plane had its nose up 10 "tragic misunderstanding." the recovered bodies had not been identified by last night. slightly to the rear and above a door "could have been torn degrees or more shortly after takeoff when, according to Four motorists also were killed when the plane clipped the lose" by the impact, McAdams explained. McAdams, the maximum tilt should have been closer to IS Under frequently hostile questioning at the news con- bridge. McAdams, one of five members of the federal safety degrees. ference outside court, Mailer called Adan's death "an One of the five people to survive the crash, flight attendant board, said he would be surprised If the "black boxes" were Such a nose-high position might have been the result of not absolute tragedy," and said, "I'm sorry as hell about the way Kelly Duncan, was released from the hospital yesterday. The damaged since they are built to withstand the force of 1,000 Gs having enough air speed, especially if the aircraft, unknown to it turned out." other four survivors were in fair or good condition and were and temperatures of 2,000 degrees. the pilot, had an unusual amount of ice on the wings. Some said to be improving steadily. In other areas of investigation, McAdams said the task witnesses have said they observed ice on the plane, while McAdams said the voice and flight data recorders proba force has come across a number of witnesses who claim to others said they did not, investigators said. Judge awards custody to kids f TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. - A judge, citing the courts' responsibility to children of divorced parents, gave three Interlochen boys custody of their parents' house. Role of church Grand Traverse County Circuit Judge Charles M. Forster Mystery hero to be named? granted a divorce to Allan and Cheyrl Church on Jan. 5, and ordered that each live with the children on alternate months. WASHINGTON (AP) - A survivor of last week's Air Autopsies on the 46 bodies recovered through Sunday The boys — David, 15, Donald, 13, and Dale, 11 — will expanding in Florida crash in the icy Potomac River says he thinks he raised speculation that Arland D. Williams of Atlanta, remain in the home in their small community just west of can identify the mystery man who sacrificed himself tbe only victim found to have drowned, might have been Traverse City, while their parents move in and out and pay while helping five others to safety. the mystery man. The other 45 were killed on impact, the the bills. Polish crisis Joseph Stiley, 42, of Alexandria, Va., called a news autopsies showed. "It's a natural situation," Forster said yesterday. "Both conference today at the National Hospital for Or- parents testified that the other was a goad parent. And they U.S. Park Police Paramedic Gene Windsor said the WARSAW, Poland (AP) -The role of the Roman Catholic thopaedics and Rehabilitation, where he and three other helicopter he was on came within 10 or IS feet of the man said the children loved each other. The only dispute was Church in Poland has expanded since the advent of martial crash survivors are reported in good condition. between the two of them. and he described tbe man as middle-aged and balding law five weeks ago and the crackdown on the independent "He believes he knows who the man is and can with a heavy moustache and silver hair above his ears. "This wouldn't work all the time, but in this case, it's union Solidarity. identify him," said Mary Shaw, director of public affairs ideal because his parents live virtually next door and her Williams had a silver beard and moustache and silver The church has become the single most powerful voice ' for the suburban Arlington, Va., hospital. hair over his ears. parents are only a mile or two away," Forster said. addressing the Communist authorities now that the independ- The unidentified man sacrificed himself during "The kids love it." said Church, a 42-year-old electrician, ent union has been suspended. rescue efforts by helping five other people onto a line District of Columbia Police Inspector James Shugart who is spending this month at his parents' home after 17 years "And I might also say an embodiment of peoples' hopes dropped by a hovering helicopter. He sank into the frigid said investigators still are trying to determine whether of marriage. "They don't have to change schools or change for the future," said one Polish journalist. waters before the helicopter could return to get him. Williams was strapped in his seat when his body was friends, and they can come and visit me after school." Archbishop Joief Glemp, the Polish primate, has spoken Shaw said other survivors to whom she spoke were recovered Friday. Mrs Church, a 37-year-old secretary, said the judge's out forcefully at least three times, condemning the continued unable to identify the man. Asked what recollections the Yesterday, Kelly Duncan, 23, a stewardess, became intent was "to award the children custody of the parents, and detention of thousands of Solidarity members and the practice survivors had of him, she said, "They are very hazy. the first survivor to leave the hospital. Shaw quoted her it's the best thing that could have happened." of requiring workers to sign loyalty oaths repudiating the They Just can't make a positive identification." as saying, "I don't think I'll fly as a career again." union to keep their jobs. He has warned that the "circle of those hostile to the authorities is spreading." Contraception controversy seen But Glemp has also called for "cooperation and dialogue" WASHINGTON - In a move certain to stir controversy between the government and the people, and the government among advocates of family planning, the Reagan adminis- is trying to put across the idea that lie and the church are on Excise tax splitting GOP ranks tration may require that parents be notified any time a child its side. under age 18 gets birth control material from a clinic that An official who asked not to be identified said tbe WASHINGTON (AP) - phones and perhaps some be enough to transfer as sidies directed at main- receiveslederalfunds. archbishop's meeting Jan. 9 with Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelskl, President Reagan's reported "luxury items," some many as 40 programs from tenence, equipement and oth- The proposed regulation is receiving serious study despite the premier and Communist Party chief, "could be seen as a plan to impose excise taxes sources said. federal control. er capital investment, but not an opinion from the general counsel of the Department of tacit expression of support by Glemp for Jaruzelskl, who is on some consumer goods will Transportation Secretary for operating costs. also considered moderate these days." Congressional sources, Health and Human Services that it goes further than Congress hurt the "little guy" and risk Drew Lewis was quoted yes- intended "The basis for cooperation between church and state is who asked not to be identi- But Lott and Kemp, a per- economic and political defeat terday as saying he hopes to sistent critic of recent pro- It is expected to stir new debate over the government's the shared concern for the fate of the nation," said the new fied, said White House ad- for the GOP, two leading send a proposal to the White posals to raise taxes to trim role in providing family planning services and whether the government newspaper Rzeczpospolita in an editorial yester- visers expected the proposal House Republicans say. House soon for a 5-cent-per- budget deficits, said, "Re- well-established rule of physician-patient privacy will apply day. to turn several federal pro- In an apparent split within gallon increase In the federal publicans are being urged to in minors. "This concern is stronger than differences dividing the grams over to tbe states Republican ranks, House tax on gasoline. enact tax Increases on per- I'arenll should know when one of their children under state and church. It is a platform for similar sounding appeals would become the dominant GOP Whip Trent Lott of Mis- Mayor Richard Caliguiri sonal consumption on the the uge ol 18 is being given a prescription drug or device of for calm, common sense and self control." issue of the 1982 con- sissippi and Rep. Jack Kemp of Pittsburgh, who met with basis of deficit projections this kind so they can be aware of any risk their child is Deputy Premier Jerzy Ozdowski, the highest ranking gressional session and elec- of New York, chairman of the Lewis, said he thought the which contain enormous taking.' said Richard S Schweiker, the cabinet member who Catholic in the government, told a news conference yesterday tions. House Republican Con- proposal to produce about $5 potential for error." heads the department. dialogue between church and state "is alive and guarantees ference, said they "are deep- These sources said Baker billion a year In new revenue "Leaving aside tbe ac- Schweiker approved the regulatory change before it was getting out of the crisis." "Talks between the two sides have not been interrupted ly disturbed by the lack of and Michel expected a dif- would be before Congress this curacy of the deficit sent to the Office of Management and Budget for review, political and economic com- ficult time pushing Reagan's year. projection," they added, department spokeswoman Claire Dorrell said yesterday. for one moment," he declared. Despite 36 years of Communist rule, more than 90 percent mon sense demonstrated in program through Congress, Caliguiri said he and other "why must OMB eoonomisU of the 36 million Poles are baptized Catholics and more than 75 the current tax-increase cam- adding that final decisions state and local officials were always 'go after the little percent attend church regularly. In the 16 months between paign." apparently had not been told that $4 billion of this new guy,' to the detriment of the —People- Solidarity's formation in August I960 and the declaration of They made their remarks made on which programs the money would go into the national economy and the Re- martial law Dec. 13, the church exerted a moderating in- in a Jan. 14 letter to budget president would propose turn- crumbling federal highway publican Party." LONDON i AIM — fluence on the union and its leader Lech Walesa and tried to director David A. Stockman. ing over to the states. system, including streets and "To continue the present Marie Osmund is the mediate between it and the government. Reagan is expected to an- But sources said several bridges in urban areas. The cburse is to court economic leading candidate to play nounce his plans during his days ago that the money from remaining $1 million would and political defeat in 1982 Hi il.mi s Princess Diana State of the Union address to proposed excise taxes and go to state and local govern- and beyond," the con- in a TV movie planned by a joint session of Congress perhaps other revenue would ments for mass transit sub- gressmen said. ABC. Th« London Daily Jackson State court Jan.26. . Slur reported yesterday. Reagan aides gave a pre- The tabluid said the view of the speech yesterday movie will cover Diana's battle seen ending to Senate Republican Leader GM and UA W still at odds lite up lo her marriage to Howard H. Baker Jr. of Ten- WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court is ending a nessee and House GOP Lead- I'rince Charles. 33-year- The union is seeking greater Job security old heir lo the throne, at lengthy court fight stemming from the 1970 Jackson State er Robert H. Michel of Illi- DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp. College shootings, which have become a symbol of the civil nois. will permanently close some of its plants this and profit-sharing programs in return. St Paul's Cathedral last But Smith said he did not believe GM July in rights struggle waged by blacks. Baker declared the ad- year unless the United Auto Workers grants With two justices dissenting, the court refused yesterday dress would be "a humd- wage concessions in current bargaining on a could possibly guarantee protection for a The Star quoted an un- to revive a lawsuit seeking monetary damages from the city inger" but refused to reveal reopened contract, GM Chairman Roger B. specific number of Jobs in return for con- idrnlihed spokeswoman of Jackson, Miss., for the slayings of two black students and details. Smith says. cessions. lor ABC saying: The the wounding of three others at the predominantly black "I think it's going be full Tbe UAW has said that negotiations on story must be handled school. "If we don't get a competitive wage rate, laslelully The actress of substance ... far more than there are going to be a lot of them (plant any concessions must be complete before The shootings took place on May 15,1970, just 11 days after we choose must capture just a report; I think there'll closings)," Smith said yesterday in an in- Saturday, when the union's GM and Ford members of the Ohio National Guard shot and killed four the innocence and charm be innovative ideas and sug- terview with the Detroit Free Press. bargaining councils meet in Washington. students and wounded nine others at Kent State University. that has made the prin- gestions, and I think it will Smith added that previous plant closings The talks began Jan. 11 amid the U.S. auto For several years, the Jackson State and Kent State cess the darling of the chart the course for our polit- during the auto industry's 34-month slump industry's worst slump in a half-century, six MhrteOsmood shootings became loosely linked together as symbols of the world ical debate for months and "could be Just the beginning." months before traditional midsummer nego- movements toward greater equality for minorities and maybe for years to come," Meanwhile, the pace of contract talks tiations were to begin. Current contracts do The paper said Miss tattemng foods to keep against the war in Vietnam. Baker said. between the UAW and GM was accelerating not expire until Sept. 14. Osmond was the 'front- h'oin waking her hus- Robert F. Mullen, a New York lawyer who represented the Officials have said pre- runner ' in the network's , band, according to an as a weekend deadline for negotiating con- relatives of the slain students and the three wounded students, viously that Reagan, facing UAW bargainers appeared to be concen- sc.i rch lor an actress article in the current tract concessions neared, UAW officials said. said that with the lawsuit over the Jackson City Council may ballooning budget deficits, trating yesterday on reaching a new agree- with essential qualities Redbook magazine. consider his long-standing request for compensation for the has decided tentatively to ment at GM. UAW President Douglas Fraser i ill i beauty and In- The magazine said "There's obviously a lot of work to do," victims. call for an Increase in excise led tbe union's team in a series of subcom- nurence." Mrs Reagan often turns Owen Bieber, UAW vice president and bead I believe that they (the City Council) will consider it," taxes on certain consumer mittee sessions with company negotiators. lo the comfort of food of the union's GM Department, told reporters Mullen said in a telephone interview. goods and turn the revenue yesterday at a brief news conference. "I when she can't sleep at Forty-three members of a contingent of 69 white city over to states. don't know at this point whether we'll have Meanwhile, Alfred S. Warren Jr., GM ,NKW YORK (AP) - night, but. "too con- police and state highway patrol officers opened fire for 29 In exchange, the states an agreement or not. That remains to be vice president for industrial relations, told While rrcsident Reagan siderate of her husband's seconds on a women's dormitory after several disturbances also would Inherit federal seen. The tempo ol the talks is picking up." reporters that OM wants to cut prices on Its injovs jellybeans, the rest tu risk waking him and an attempt to burn down the Army ROTC building at programs, including some cars by $1,000 to 11,200, bat acknowledged lust lady prefers to with the crunch of Jackson State. dealing with highways, Ford and OM are asking the UAW for that such cuts would require a reduction of smirk un low-calorie crackers or celery, the At least 12 students were injured in the incident, in education and welfare. concessions that will allow the nation's two about 95 an hour in overall labor costs, esti- limds. but at limes Naacy first lady silently peels addition to the two who died. The case decided yesterday was Under the plan, taxes biggest automakers to reduce their labor mated at $20 an hour. Reagan resorts to more and eats a banana." filed on behalf of the two slain students and three of the would be increased on alco- costs and prices to compete with foreign Fraser has called that proposal "out- injured. hol, gasoline, tobacco, tele- manufacturers. rageous and unacceptable." SHREWSBURY. NJ TUESDAY, JANUARY 19.1982 The EMfy Register 3 Father slays daughter, wounds wife, kills himself WEST ORANGE (AP) - A father of lems,1 he said. man and his daughter were both pro- Ihree - apparently despondent over fi- Marina Sanchez filed a complaint bank was going to foreclose the mort- them." nounced dead at the scene, Palardy with the West Orange police against her gage on the Sanchez's home. nancial and marital problems - ihot Palardy said Guillermo Sancha, J7, said. Sanchez used hollow point bullets, husband last December, charging him Upstairs neighbors reported the gun- and killed hit (-year-old daughter, shot his wife, Marina, five times In the He said Sanchez, a quality control and between 14 and 16 rounds were with assault with a knife and assault fire yesterday morning and police of- wounded Us wife and two tons, then arms, legs and upper torso with a 9mm operator at Dusenbery Co. of Randolph, fired, the chief said, adding that killed himself in the family home here, pistol at about 7:45 a.m. Sanchez then with Intent to do bodily harm, Palardy ficers entered -the apartment through a Sanchez had a gun license. The chief had been out of work for about eight said. police said. turned the gun on his daughter, weeks because the firm was dosed due kitchen door after first trying to contact said he was unable to determine if Police Chief Edward Palardy laid a Jeanetle, 5. and wounded his sons, 12- Sanchez by using a bullhorn. to a strike. But. Marina Sanchez dropped the Sanchez had a license for the 9mm variety of factors may have triggered year-old John and 11-year-old Willie. Marina Sanchez, a guard at the Es- charges, telling detectives she was "The officers saw the victim lying weapon. the shooting yesterday morning at a Palardy said. sex County welfare department, and the seeking a divorce because of abuse and in his pajamas in bed neit to his daugh- two-family home in Ibis city's Valley two sons were reported In stable condi- ter," Palardy said. "He was lying on section ' threats in the past, the chief said. The The chief added that shortly after 9 Police found the pa jama-clad tion in the intensive care unit at College couple had been married IS years. top of his son, Willie, who was moaning. a.m., a co-worker arrived at the house "There la evidence of a history of Sanchez dead of a single gunshot wound Hospital in Newark, said Bernlce Per- The gun was cocked with a live round In to pick up Sanchez to bring him to the marital discord and financial prob- Just above the heart, the chief said. The elra, nursing supervisor. Palardy said he understood that a the chamber. The gun was between Dusenbery Co. to walk on a picket line. .he a STATE For Byrne, moving day Ford lays off night shift EDISON - More than 1,500 workers on the night shift at finally conies the Ford Motor Co s Edison plant were laid off yesterday in a move by the company to cut back production of its Lynx and Escort subcompact models. By PATRICK BRESUN The layoffs affect 1,450 hourly workers and about 100 salaried employees, said a company spokesman in New York. TRENTON (AP) - Brendan T. Byrne spent his last full The night shut, which began at 3 p.m., produced 432 cars a day as governor enjoying the company of his friends and staff, day, said company officials. The Escort is Ford's largest making last-minute decisions on legislation, and overseeing selling model, said a spokesman. the mundane chores of moving out. It's the first time in more than 10 years that Ford has Byrne; who was to leave office at noon today, wanted to eliminated the second shift at the plant on Route 1 that give his successor, Thomas H. Kean, a clean desk and a manufactures the subcompact cars. homey office as soon as possible. The shift was cut out in 1858 and reinstated in ISM. He began moving out of his small private office two weeks Remaining on the payroll will be about half the work force ago, packing the framed newspaper cartoons of himself that - about 200 salaried employees and 1,500 hourly workers. once covered all the available wall space. Slowly his desk, too, was emptied, and the painters moved in. That left Byrne his larger office - called the Cabinet Byrne ups prescription aid Room — to hold his private meetings But by yesterday TRENTON - Gov. Brendan T. Byrne has extended low- afternoon, even that office was not Byrne's alone. cost prescriptions to the disabled and raised the maximum "The Cabinet Room is filled with boxes, just leaving him income of those allowed to receive the aid. enough room on his desk to sign papers," said Edward Hoff, Byrne signed a law sponsored by former Senate President AT GALA BENEFIT — Thomas H. Kean, a Republican members of the Colonial Musketeers ot Hackettstown Byrne's cabinet secretary. Joseph P. Merlino, D-Mercer, that raises the Income ceiling being sworn in as governor in Trenton today, chats with at the Newark Museum benefit reception last night. While Byrne was meeting privately in the Cabinet Room from 19,000 to 112,000 for people eligible for the $2 prescription yesterday afternoon, movers and Kean aides waited at the purchases, the governor's office announced yesterday. door so they could hang portraits on the walls that onc"e bore The new law also includes disabled people in the coverage 9 the souvenirs that Byrne chose to display publicly. for the first time. Those included family photographs and several pictures of In other action, Byrne also vetoed a bill to change the New Kean gets 'a bit anxious Byrne with his long-time political ally, former President Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority to a public corporation. Jimmy Carter. Byrne said incoming Gov. Thomas H. Kean had reserva- By TOM ROSKNTIIAI. Democrats, such as Essex County Ex- In keeping with the inauguration's . But one of Byrne's favorite fixtures in the Cabinet Room remains — a large portrait of Democrat Woodrow Wilson, a tions about the legislation and wanted to review authority ecutive Peter Shapiro and Newark theme of "The past and present assure NEWARK (AP) - Governor-elect Mayor Kenneth A. Gibson. New Jersey governor who became president, even though the operations. a great future," the museum's north The outgoing governor also formally asked the Federal Thomas H. Kean sailed through several Kean, a member of the board of new administration will be Republican. gallery was decorated in dried and fresh Highway Administration to abandon plans for a proposed 19- pre-inaugural festivities, but he admits trustees of the museum, said he ar- Hotf said Byrne studied and acted on dozens of bills and mile segment of Interstate 95 from Mercer County to Som- he is getting a bit anxious now that ranged for the pre-inaugural event be- flowers arranged in a colonial-inspired clemency requests during a 2Vi hour meeting with Attorney erset County and a link with Interstate 287. Inauguration Day is upon him. cause "this is one of the finest theme, Newkirk said. General James R. Zazzali of Rumson, Chief Counsel Donald Kean attended his last pre-inaugural museums in the state and It is in the A brass quartet played as the Keans Linky and Chief of Staff Harold Hodes of Manalapan, all of gala last night, greeting hundreds of state's largest city." greeted the guests on a receiving line. whom will leave office with Byrne. well-wishers at a cocktail reception at Byrne kills insurance bill Joining Kean and his wife, Debby, on The chairmen of the event were John Byrne arrived at the State House at 11 a.m., held his Newark Museum. He said he was taking the receiving line were state Attorney business meetings and then spent the late afternoon making a TRENTON — Outgoing Gov. Brendan T. Byrne refused to it all in stride. L. Kraft of Rumson, of the Newark law General-designate Irwin Kimmelman rare excursion to the cubbyhole offices of his aides, lawyers sign a bill designed to strengthen efforts to combat insurance firm of Kraft and Hughes; Kevin "It's sitting behind that desk (as and Kean's choice for Secretary ol and secretaries in the wing opposite his own office, thanking fraud in the state. governor) that I'm not sure I'm ready to Shanley of Bernardsville, chairman of State, Jane Burgio. them and bidding farewell Byrne said that although he approved of the bill, sponsored lake in stride," Kean said after spend- After about half an hour, one of the the board and chief executive officer of Byrne's wife, Jean, spent yesterday supervising movers at by former state Sen. Eugene j. Bedell, D-Monmouth and ing more than an hour greeting mem- party organizers gave Burgio, a former Fidelity Union Bank, N.A., Garden Middlesex, he killed it because it was the only bill from his the state-owned mansion. Morven, in Princeton, where the bers of the Newark Museum and the assemblywoman, a nametag so people State; and David Sherwood of Mon- administration's package of legislation aimed at reforming New Jersey business community. would stop asking her, "And who are Byrnes lived with most of their seven children for the last mouth Beach, president of the Pruden- the state's insurance laws that passed the state Legislature. Nearly 500 people paid 1100 each to you?" eight years. Byrne noted "I have consistently pledged to accept noth- attend the reception given by the Money raised by the reception will tial Insurance Co. of America Hoff said a portrait of Byrne will join those of other 20th ing less than the comprehensive solution that Is needed to Friends of the Museum, a group which go to a special development fund for the Shanley and Sherwood are both century New Jersey governors on display in the governor's ensure that auto insurance is affordable and available to New sponsors the institution. museum, said museum spokesman members of the museum's board of outer office, which is used for large ceremonies and news Jersey drivers." The long line of guests included a few Walter Newkirk. trustees. conferences. Byrne again charged that the present system of insurance rates unfairly penalizes young drivers, men, single persons and those residing in the state's central cities. And he again called for reform of the state's no-fault insurance law. 21-year-old drinking age recommended Plea: Keep employment office TRENTON (AP) - Raising New Jersey's Jersey tp buy alcoholic beverages. drug use, " Zazzali said. But Zazzali s white paper also noted that drinking age back to 21 to reduce the number Both drug and alcohol use is "closely "a highly sophisticated and most effective TRENTON - Assemblyman John O. Bennett III, R Zazzali s report issued yesterday cites of fatal automobile accidents is advocated in related to other major problems such as approach " would include "not raising the Monmouth, has asked incoming Gov. Thomas H. Kean, a substantial increases in the number of young a report by outgoing Attorney General James juvenile crime." he continued. drinking age." fellow Republican, to give the Freehold Unemployment Office drinkers involved in fatal auto wrecks since R. Zazzali. Zazzali stressed the auto safety benefits Young drinkers "enjoy widespread peer a reprieve. the state dropped the legal age from 21 to 18 The change from the current legal drink- in 1973. of raising the age limit. State figures cover- support and even tacit approval from the The office has been ordered closed as of Feb. 14 by state ing age of 19 also is supported by Attorney ing the past six years show drivers aged 18 to mainstream of adult society," Zazzali rea- Labor and Industry Commissioner John Horn. The Legislature raised the legal age to 19 General-designate Irwin Kimmelman, who two years ago as figures showed increasing 20 comprised 7 percent of the stales motor- soned. Bennett delivered to Kean approximately 2,000 letters was to replace Zazzali today, said Thomas alcohol consumption by young adults. ists, but they have been involved in 14 percent As an alternative to raising the drinking protesting the announced closing. The Monmouth as- Cannon, a Department of Law and Public Although the report recommends raising each of reportable and injury-producing acci- age. he proposed stiffening the penalties for semblyman charged the shutdown would save the state little Safety spokesman. dents and 18 percent of all traffic fatalities. drunken driving for ages 19 to 21 and man- money and was an act of "pure theatrics" by Horn. the age. the Rumson resident cited "reser- The minimum drinking age among neigh- vations." "Based on the data we have before us, datory alcohol abuse education programs as Bennett said-he was asking Kean to cancel the closing boring states is 18 in New York. 20 in Dela- While "significant benefits" are ex- the logical conclusion appears to be that a condition for young adults getting licenses. pending further review because "this Uth-bour closing is the ware and 21 in Pennsylvania. Authorities in raising the drinking age to 21 will result in State police and the divisions of criminal only one like it in the state," and would force western pected, the results will not be a cure-all Pennsylvania and Delaware have expressed because drinking "is interrelated with a fewer accidents and fewer fatalities for all justice, alcoholic beverage control and motor Monmouth residents to travel to Perth Amboy to file applica- concern about teen-agers crossing into New who use our roadways,'' the report said. vehicles helped compile the report. tions for unemployment compensation benefits. number of serious social problems, including The weather Lawyers plan appeal on parole delay ruling OUR NEW The Weather Elsewhere TRENTON (AP) - In- ole law, Hough added. mates' lawyers will appeal a Haburay filed a lawsuit on IRA UNOVKXJAl RETIREMENT ACCOUNT I HI Lo Prc Otlk Loulivlll* M OS rn ruling that officials can set behalf of Leesburg State Albany 1 — ii cdv Memphis . . 0 3} 11 Tn Prison inmate1 James Byrne, Albuqut 1 H cdv Miami 74 44 clr back the parole dates of long- IS NOW AVAILABLE! Amarlllo | n clr 17-01 01 sn term repeat offenders 42, of Lodi, who was sen- MCUBERFDK Anchorage l 01 clr MplS-St.P II 0* .02 cdv Athevllla i 09 cdv Nashvill* 3' 02 without telling the convicts tenced^ April 1976 to 15 to 17 Atlanta 4 21 .02 cdv New Orlaani 74 M cdv why, according to the public years after an armed robbery Allanlc CIV 0 03 »n N*w Vork 14 00 cdv CENTRAL JERSEY BANK Baltimore 7-OS M Norfolk It Birmirtghm 14 M advocate's office. conviction 0* Cdy n 22 clr Id I.OMVtNtNI Of IK IS • MOTXfSO • MONMOUTH a iKI Bltmarck 2— 1) Oh la City cdv Omaha S3 20 cdv "There's no doubt about BotM W 31 34 .01 sn Orlando 44 Boston 4—02 in 74 it. we're going lo the state Drown* v He 12 41 cdv Phlladpnia 14 UJ sn Buffalo I 03 M sn Phoanlit 70 43 cdv Supreme Court with this," Charltln SC 9 33 cdv Pittsburgh 1* -03 .03 cdv Assistant Deputy Public De- Charliln WV I M cdy Plland. M* 12-10 cdv Zhevennt Mi 21 cdv, Plland, Ort 44 40 .10 rn Vender Jane Ellen Haburay NAIIONtl WIMHIt liaVICI. Ihlcaoo 1 04 .03 cdv Rapid Ctly It 21 sr AUTO NO»A, U.I O«W •! C»««l>. Cincinnati 1 02 cdv Reno 4J 34 said yesterday after a de Cleveland 01 .03 cdv Richmond 31 11 n Columbus J OJ .02 cdv Salt Lake 41 33 cision by the Appellate Dal-FI Wth n 30 clr San Olevo y 52 cdv Division of Superior Court. Denver i n cdv San Fran M SO OS rn Jersey Shore Dtt Motnci 0 14 cdv Seattle 41 3t .04 rn The decision allows sen- Detroit 4 - 01 .03 in St Louis H Of cdv tencing judges and prose- Some light snow likely today, but changing to freezing Jululh J —It .02 cdv SI P Tampa 73 44 clr El Paio J Jl clr SI St* Marie 02—11 .01 tn cutors to keep prisoners rain later. Some rain possible tonight. High today in the Fairbankt — -M .01 cdv Spokane 3S 2/ Ifl Hartford 01 M Tucson ;t 40 cdv locked up before 1979 behind low 30s. Steady or slowly rising temperatures tonight. Helena M 15 .01 in Tulsa 4* 20 clr bars for a longer terms than Partly cloudy tomorrow. High in the upper 30s lo low 40s. Honolulu ; a* .0* cdv Waihingtn IS 07 • tn Houtlon 0 it cdv Wichita 41 17 cdv called for under parole re- Precipitation probability 60 percent today, and 30 Indnaplis i 01 cdv JacksnvJI* 1 X clr Temperatures Indical* high and forms initiated two years percent tonight. Winds easterly at 5 to 15 miles per hour Juneau 5 01 cdv low for ytstardav to 7 p.m. EST. It cdy Prc—Precipitation lor 2 ago, explained Deputy At- Wednesday Kant Cilv noun today. Ocean water temperatures are in the low 30s. Lat Vega* 4 31 cdv ending 1 P.m. EST eiterdav torney General Lyle P. Long-range: MosUy cloudy Thursday. Rain possible Little Rock i IS cdv Ollk—Sky condition 1 out DO* for Lot Angelts * i Ml cdv lodav. Hough Jr. Thursday night and Friday. Colder Friday night and What prisoners want is Saturday. Lows around 30 Thursday, in the 30s Friday, "further rights," Judge and in the 20s Saturday. Highs in the mid 30s to low 40s Morton I. Greenberg said in Thursday, in the 40s Friday, and in the 20s Saturday. Tide* an opinion for a three-judge panel. "We decline to do so, es- Marine Forecast Saady Hook For Red Bank and pecially in the face of our TOIMY — High 3:35 Rumson bridge, add two Watch Hill, R.I., to Montauk Point toManssqua n view that ... the punitive p.m. and low 9:55p.m. hours; Sea Bright, deduct Winds east to southeasterly at 10 to 20 knots today, aspects of a sentence can and variable at 5 to 10 knots tonight. Mostly cloudy today TOMORROW - High 10 minutes; Long Branch, never be fulfilled If the parole with some snow likely.then changing to sleet and freez- 4:14 a.m. and 4:35 p.m. deduct 15 minutes. High- eligibility datfcis advanced." ing rain before becoming rain tonight. arid low 10:33 a.m. and lands bridge, add 40 But the inmates, all repeat Visibility 1 to 3 miles In precipitation today and 1043 p.m. minutes. offenders, still will be tonight. Average wave heights 2 to 4 feet. eligible for release in less time than under previous par- 4 The Daily Register SHREWSBURY, NJ TUESDAY. JANUARY 19.1982 Obituaries An ice tree blossoms in Holmdel > IIIIIIIIMII I IIIIMIII (continued) supply. To save the township the expense and trouble of drilling E.H. Busse Jr., 44; holes to warm the pipes each winter, Artelll said, he and Ms family agreed to monitor the water flow several years ago, by means of a garden hose connected to their house. was airlines pilot But after seeing the water trickle out of the hose and into the ground by a backyard ptream, Artelli began to wonder if CARVERSVILLE, Pa. - and Oregon National Guard Edward Harry Busse Jr., 44, maybe he couldn't find a better use for the water. since 1961. It being the dead of winter, crop irrigation was not really died Sunday at his home here. He was a communicant of A former resident of At- an option, Artelli decided. But, as a part-time landscaper for the Church of Our Lady of St. Joseph's Church in Matawan, Artelli has an eye for lantic Highlands, N.J., Mr. Mount Camel, Doylestown, Busse was born in Oak Park, aesthetic detail. Seeing the hose water pool and freeze on the where he sang in the men's III., and lived here for the ground made him wonder what it might look Uke if it froie in past six years. choir, and was a member of the air. Mr. Busse was a graduate St. Joseph's Society. So, three years ago, Artelli first climbed a tree with the of the University of Portland, Surviving are his wife, hose and watched the water drip and freeze around the limbs. Ore., and became publicity Mary Ann Busse; two chil- The effect pleased him, so much so that this year he decided director for several Portland dren, Edward H. Busse III to go for the big effects. radio stations and media and Elizabeth Ann Busse, He tied a rope around the end of the hose and threw it sixty salesman for the Portland both at home, and his mother, feet aloft, until it hung from the uppermost branches of a Oregonian. Magdalene Weigel Gross. young oak tree. He was a pilot with Ameri- The Reed and Steinbach And then, as the bitter cold settled over Holmdel, the state can Airlines since 1887 and Funeral Home, Doylestown, and the nation last week, Artelli sat back and watched the served in the Pennsylvania is in charge of arrangements. shape the water made as it turned to crystal ice. "One layer rose on top of another," he said of his "ice glacier," which he estimates is 40 feet high and 15 feet across. Brother Berard O'Leary "You don't know how it got there." Artelli said that people driving along Route K have MIDULETOWN - taught at Manhattan College stopped to ogle, to take pictures, and to examine the wintry Brother Berard O'Leary, 80, from 1958 until his retire- shape with their children. of Newman Springs Road, ment. The township, which is grateful for the assistance, Is not died yesterday at De La Salle He was a graduate of charging anyone for the water dripping from the hose, Artelli Hall. Manhattan College and held a said. And, he added, they have no complaints about the ice He was bom in New York -master's degree in sculpture he has created. City and resided here for two EMPTY BOARDWAK — The snow covered boardwalk weather doesn't make the boardwalk such a pleasant mathematics from New York "The township says I can do whatever I want as long as I months. don't make money off of it," he said. in Asbury Park is a lonely place these days. The frigid place to stroll. Brother O'Leary entered University. the Christian Brotherhood in Surviving is a brother, i»li and was a teacher and John O'Leary, of Riveredge. administrator for New York The John E. Day Funeral area Christian Brothers Home, Red Bank, is in charge More rugged weather in store for nation schools since 1918. He last of arrangements. By The Associated Press moving," Mike Caudill of the Tennessee believe at least IS people died there. said it is "imperative" that the fruit be A parting bunt of freezing rain left can Emergency Management Agency said after It only drizzled Sunday night, but more processed as quickly as possible, because James E. Evans Jr. and trucks skidding off Southern highways five fuel tankers overturned on icy roads, rain pelted Northern California yesterday, fruit that has been frozen rots quickly. today as the worst cold wave of the century eight tractor-trailer rigs crashed in one mostly in San Francisco and eastward, and IIKIi BANK - James E. most recently, for the West- receded, while a West Coast storm that massive pileup and a Knoxville thoroughfare not In the heavily damaged areas south of the In Maine, National Guard helicopter, bat- Evans Jr . 63, of Hudson Ave- inghouse Corporation in Co- threatened more mudslides covered the was strewn with can from a dozen-vehicle city. tled 80 mph winds to lift nine people from nue, died yesterday at Riv- lumbia, Md. Sierra Nevada with a layer of snow. accident. "Anything that's moving is going Snow began falling yesterday in the Sierra Baxter State Park after the park was dosed erview Hospital. Surviving are a son, Highways were covered with ice from into a ditch," be said. Nevada, and the National Weather Service yesterday because of the cold, and another Mr. Kvan.s was born in James C. Evans III of Will- Virginia to Alabama, forcing many schools to About 50 people moved out of their houses forecast heavy snow for today and tomorrow. man was rescued by sled. Another 13 people West Virginia and had lived ingboro; a daughter, Barbara remain shut, although after a week of sub- in Pacifica, Calif., Sunday night and eight The storm that caused the mudslides around in two groups were left behind la the park, in this area since 1977. Joyce Crist of West Virginia; zero cold temperatures were easing across families vacated their homes in I.agunltas San Francisco dumped several feet of snow but officials said they were in no immediate He was an Army Air his mother, Mrs. Lilith Evans the Eastern United States. because of predictions of rain. Three children in the mountains. danger, despite sub-zero temperatures, be- Force veteran of the World of Parkton, Md.; two The 11-day cold wave, which has left 283 in Pacifica died when a section of a hillside The numbing cold weather that has held cause they had found shelter in cabins. War II and a 1952 graduate of brothers, Thomas and John, dead nationwide, was moving off the East collapsed during heavy rains Jan. 3-5. They much of the nation in its grip for more than a Four of those rescued were hospitalized the Milwaukee School of En- both of West Virginia; two were among at least 31 people who died in Coast, but the National Weather Service said week prompted Gov. Bob Graham to declare suffering frostbite. gineering. sisters, Mrs. Sally Fleming, yesterday the Midwest and Northeast can mudslides and heavy rain in northern Califor- an emergency in the citrus industry In cen- He had worked as a techni- also of Parkton, and Mrs expect more of the same. nia. tral and south Florida. The polar air mass that tint pushed Into cal writer for Boland and Marjory Fuentus of West Vir- The service's 30-day forecast calls for Earlier in the weekend, about 50 residents He issued an executive order yesterday the country on Jan. 9 dealt cities Midi as Boyci' in Madison, RCA ginia, and two grandchildren below-normal temperatures for the eastern of Ben Lomond were evacuated not far from that would get citrus to processing plants Chicago, Milwaukee and Akron, Ohio, theii AstroKlei'tronic Division in The John E. Day Funeral two-thirds of the nation. an area where mudslides in the remote Love more quickly. The order allows higher weight coldest temperatures since the weather ser- Princeton. RCA Service Com- Home, Red Bank, is in charge "In upper East Tennessee, nothing ts Creek inundated eight houses. Authorities allowances for trucks hauling citrus. Graham vice began keeping track. pany in Cherry Hill, and, of arrangements. Henry J. Arning Fire destroys Freehold home PUBLIC AUCTION NEPTUNE CITY - Hen- Ascension, Bradley Beach, ry J. Arning, 71, of 804 Fourth and belonged to the Mon- Wad., Jan. 20,6:30 to 10 P.M. Ave.. died yesterday at Jer- mouth County Widowers' Cervino Restaurant sey Shore Medical Center in Cub. as occupants escape unharmed
NEW SPEED READING COURSE • Manage Your SCHEDULED FOR MONMOUTH & OCEAN COUNTIES Budget New Jersey Reading Institute of Trenton Tlnton Falls. Exit 1OS Q.8.P. Thure., • Track will be ottering the world famous "HRC Jan. 21, 7 p.m. (sharp) In the Federal Investments Accelerated Reading" program to a limited Rm. B. of Molty Pttctt#f Inn. 05 Rlv* number of qualified people In the greater erskJe Ave., Red Bank, bdt 109 Q.8.P. • Games for Monmouth & Ocean County. atm.M. The Family This course can train the average per- Those under 17 should be accom- panied by a parent. • Learn to son to read 7-10 times faster. (1000-2000 At this Iree lesson you will learn enough words per minute) and with greatly Im- Program to eventually double your reading efficien- proved comprehension. cy. 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J#n. 20t 7 p.m. free booklet to help them improve im- ESTIMATES * DIVISION OF TANDV CORPORATION OR PARTICIPATING DEALER fff ff? WWW KlnltWw wvlwvfvllOv mediately. There is no cost or obligation, so at the HINon Ian, 700 Hep* Re)., be sure lo attend. 291-0200 PRICES MAV VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES AND OEALERS The Daily Register FBI cloaked Abscam perjury Established in 1878 - Published by The Red Bank Register By JACK ANDERSON federal agents helped them crate the up perjured testimony given television and stereo equip- ARTHUR 2 KAMIN WILLIAM BLOCK, JR WASHINGTON - A WASHINGTON to various Abscam juries by ment when the Wei-bergs President and Editor Publisher diminutive blond housewife is their ex-con setup man, Wein- moved to Florida in July 1»78 telling a story that could blow berg Though he should no Yet prosecutor Pucdo ac- longer merit their protection, Herbert H. Thorpe. Jr.. AuliUnt Editor; Charles C Triblehorn. Sunday Editor; Riuaell P. Ranch, the Abfcam convictions out SCENE cepted Weinbergs denials - Night Editor; Jane Foderaro, City Editor; Doris Kulman. Editorial Page Editor of the courts She Is Marie they now have their own skins which were supported by to consider. "" Weinberg, Wife of the COO IIIMIIMIIII Good and Amoroso - about Pat N. Him. Controller; Richard D. McKean. Advertising Director; Kenneth L Van Dalai. man who masterminded the Weinberg denied under the other items without ques- Circulation Director; Frank J. Allocca. Production Manager. Abscam "sting" operation. and three photographers to oath - before a grand Jury tion. and Abscam trial juries - She nil sworn that FBI take pictures of the evidence. ANDERSON When defense attorneys I had warned the Justice that he had ever received ex- 6 TUESDAY, JANUARY 19,1982 agents and Abscam prose- husband removed the serial tried to question FBI wit- Department not to permit the pensive gifts from potential cutors covered up perjured number plat* from the oven nesses in court to determine FBI to investigate itself. Yet targets of the sting operation testimony. I have submitted With • screwdriver and bid whether any of them had ac- Badhwar and Bast reached An FBI Investigation of her allegations to the Justice oven with a neighbor tually seen the gift Items in Marie Weinberg just a few charges that he had •started Department, which has I the allegations about Weinberg's home, Puccio 'I never thought they'd go this far in the cold launched a major investiga- hours before FBI agents de- the gifts concluded there was the "gifts" first surfaced in raised objections - and was tion. scended upon her house. Four no truth to the allegations In 1M0 He then had bis wife sustained by the Judge war' The FBI was supposed to agents showed up at mid- court, chief prosecutor drive him to a department be supervising and directing night, Jan. S, to see Mrs. Thomas Pucclo backed up the Footnote: Mel Weinberg. her husband, Mel Weinberg, Weinberg. But my associate FBI's whitewash, and said store in West Patan Beach, who is no longer living with who lured members of Con- and Bast were interviewing that Weinberg had produced a where be got the receipt be Marie, has threatened to re- gress into committing her at a nearby hotel; they receipt for one of the alleged showed to the FBI. Subse- tallate against her if she con- crimes. But according to brought her home at S a.m. gifts, showing that he had quently, he brought the in- tinues cooperating with my Marie's account, Weinberg They returned at 7 the next bought it. criminating oven back tohi s reporters. Marie's lawyer, was manipulating the FBI morning to take the in- But photographic evidence house It Is still there criminal attorney Michael agents instead of the other criminating photographs of — which played such a What makes the micro- Dennis, has waned Mel that way around. Weinberg's Abscam loot. crucial role in conviction of wave oven so said that registration doesn't war as a way to solve our ocaust in which we would all a talented and interested cil, stated that shore area "foreshadow a return toth e economic woes. Dally news be losers. staff member. residents have many fine cul- draft," registration puts the reports are also laden with Soon after he took office, David A. Squires, Ph.D. tural opportunities in the vis- Wrestling with your income tax? bers of Congress can deduct $75 a day for nation closer to a draft, and a any number of international President Reagan pledged to Supervisor ual and performing arts right Peeling that you are paying taxes Washington living expenses for 241 days draft accustoms people toth e Curriculum and Crises ... that have the poten- help the All Volunteer Forces here In Monmouth County. a year, including days they are not in possibility of a war. Staff Development through the nose? Take comfort — Con- tial of Involving the U.S. in obtain the financial resources With advance releases and armed conflict. But there is Public Schools gress isn't unsympathetic to the tax- Washington or Congress isn't in session. Because wan in toe past it needed. And thin s where critical reviews The Dally have helped put people back grave danger in trying tore - of Red Bank payers' plight. The members of Con- And, unlike their constitutents, our sena- the monies should go that are Register records for future to work and boost the econo- vive a war mentality. In- gress, after all, are taxpayers, too. And tors and representatives can claim that being earmarked for this reg- generations the history of the my, some of our nation's volvement in a war today istration push. With the prop- they believe it's time the taxpayer got a $75-a-day deduction without presenting Civic Chorus shore area including the de- er support, the AVF can more any substantiation to the IRS; It's theirs velopment of the arts. break. And so they recently voted them- effectively serve this coun- Ocean selves one — a big, fat tax break that will just for the asking. If a member of To The Editor: With your Interest and try. support the Monmouth Civic make at least one-third of their $60,662 Congress owns a home in the Washington Also, if sexism were On behalf of the member- ship, executive committee, Chorus, a member of the annual salaries tax deductible. In some area, he can pass up that $75-a-day de- eliminated in the military, Monmouth Arts Council, and duction and choose instead to deduct $50 the AVF would have an ade- and our music director, Wil- cases, our representatives in Washington liam R. Shoppell, Jr., I would other performing arts groups might be able to deduct their entire a day, plus the interest and property quate labor pool that could be have made and will continue quickly mobilized during a like to express our apprecia- Congressional salaries. taxes on that home. Or a member of tion for your fine coverage of to make a significant con- national emergency. Because tribution to the enrichment of While it was cutting food stamps and Congress can deduct actual living ex- women are discriminated the musical activities of the Monmouth Civic Chorus. our local musical heritage. maternal and child health programs and penses, no matter how high. No one can against in the military, some In keeping with our unique We are now hi oar Hid con- accuse the U.S. Congress of being stingy of the best skilled and most other social service programs that bene- programming, we are now in cert season. Thank you! with benefits for itself. talented people are excluded fit the old, the poor and the ill, Congress rehearsal for our annual Marian Mearns last year sneaked through a law that Sen. William Proxmire, a Wisconsin from fuU participation in the spring stage production. On AVF. Women and our country Publicity Chairman permits its members to deduct the entire Democrat, has said he will Introduce suffer from such discrimina- cost of maintaining a second home in legislation to repeal his colleagues' ex- tion. Washington; previously,-they had been tremely generous present to themselves. President Reagan would Today in history limited to a $3,000-a-year deduction for a We wish him luck. We will be waiting — do this country a greater ser- Washington residence. and watching how New Jersey's delega- vice if be would support the By The Associated Press Ten yean ago, President Here is how it will work now. Mem- tion on Capitol Hill votes. Equal Rights Amendment, Nixon said the United States which would help eliminate Today is Tuesday, Jan. 1», would get tough with foreign sexism in the military, and the IBth day of 1M2. There are governments which ex- uphold bis earlier promise of 341 days left In the year. propriated private American Building a firehouse not supporting registration One year ago today, the holdings and a draft. United States and' Iran Five yean ago, in his final Tinton Falls Fire Company No. 1 It is impressive that in addition to Nancy Hoffman, Co-Chair reached final agreement on day as the nation's 38th presi- the release of U Americans needs a new firehouse — and so itdonatins g their time and skills to protect Women and the dent, Gerald Ford issued a held for more than IS months pardon to a Chicago woman, members are building it. their neighbors against fire, the volun- Military Task Force by Iranian militants. National Organization Iva Togurl D' Aquino, who had Members of the volunteer fire com- teer firemen alto are contributing their On this date: been World War H's "Tokyo pany are doing all the work themselves, for Women In KM, the Bolsheviks dis- Rose." time and talents to construct housing for New Jersey with the exception of the masonry and solved the Russian Constitu- Today's birthdays: Singer the fire trucks and other equipment. But the site work. The $100,000 building at tional Assembly in Petrograd. Dolly Parton is St. Baseball Connolly In 19M, Gen. Francisco Tinton and Sycamore Avenues, which they will have to look to the community player Jon MaUack is St. for some of the money necessary for the Red Bank Franco's Nationalist Air Thought For Today: Don't will replace a century-old and energy To the Editor: Force bombed the Spanish marry for money; you can inefficient structure, is expected to benew firehouse. We are certain the com- I would like to take this cities of Barcelona and Valen- borrow It cheaper. — Scottish ready for occupancy next autumn. munity wilt respond generously. opportunity to compliment cia, killing 700 people.
•4, SHREWSBURY, N.J. TUE80AY, JANUARY 19.1882 Business The [>aily Register 7 N.Y. stock quotations Rulings that could cut your taxes
ul>M Z!2*lit£L.VS?"'''" tfSl','"ii Si 'A* IS* 'A*** * NMm""""l I Ii'ia»«w»«7 1IH » By SYLVIA PORTER mmmmmmmmmmmmmm schoolschools becauss because of elearnin of learning disabilitieg disabilities thast thaleadt I Y
1.3 Sybron 1.00 9 III loluHdlt » • 1751 II*. MM 16'. ( IC Ind 2.10 I 11 13- 33 Family wins a horse llnlllw ptoto » Urr» Ml The Norman Children tamilv of Ocean Ave, Sea Bright, won first prize in a sweepstakes competition sponsored by Appaloosa New Magazine. The prize, of course, was a horse — a $20,000 Appaloosa Ioal ol champion lines. Norman and his wife, Amy, right, say thev Plan to have the horse transported from California, where it is now grazing, to Kentucky, where their relatives have a horse farm. It was actually their daughter, Leslie, left, who filled out the contest entry. Salt Away Little Silver to get a Fortune police chief Monday I.ITTI.K S1LVKK - Seven months after delay was creating problems in the depart- lormer I'oliCC Chief John Foster announced ment." ins del I retirement intentions, the mayor The men aren't happy not having a .mil Burmi||h Council finally knuw who the police chief." I'arker said later. He said men iii'M |n>llfc t'hiel will be and women on the lorce need someone to OMK I hey re mil telling whom they can take their problems and grievances llavinh the leadership shared by \('i'iil'(lin|| In Mayor John A Marruh. the two men did not help. secret will be kepi until Monday, because Hie .ipiiiiiniiiu'iil was not on the agenda ol.last Technically. I have a person to go to, niithl - I'l'iiulur inoellng, That meeting has hut I'd leel a lot better going to one chief. " hi'en I'lintinuitl until Monday lor the sole Talker said. Retirement. |iiirpi>M' I>I milking that appointment Talker would not say whether dissention \l.HI.ill pnimiseil no surprises, the new existed umong the department members. i hid »iii he miner Deputy Uhicl Warren I'arker did say. however, that many WITH AN INDIVIDUAL Sie.uns 01 I apl James Ka^an. Stearns has btiruu||li residents have asked policemen not lii'eii with Ihr lorce 2ti years, and Kagun has only who the next duel would be but also RETIREMENT ACCOUNT servinl 2.1 yens. Marrah said whether personnel problems were holding up the appointment, i'arker said this sort of I'tmi In Martah s announcemenl. I'alrol- sllginu put an mil.HI burden on department AT iii.in It,in y I'arker, president ol the local ineiiihers. I'olict'in.iM s henetil Asssociation. urged the Its not lair to the two men involved MARINE VIEW SAVINGS. iiilini'll In in.ike I lie appointment as soon as iSlearns and Kigali I to keep them waiting possible I'arker told the council that the this long, either. " he added. START YOURS NOW! Driver charged after crash New, exRcrfided Individual Retirement Minimum opening deposit is $100 and Account (IRA) regulations now permit additions of $50 or more may be made at TINTON KALLS A Long Branch man is Shrewsbury l-irst Aid Squad. Information' \acinn .i drunk driving charge lollowing an aboul the extent of his injuries was not i every person who works to set sail to a "any time without extending the .iccidenl yesterday allernoon which caused a released last night by the hospital. richer retirement! (Even il you are maturity date 'large truck to overturn on Shrewsbury Ave- Koss was apparently uninjured in the ac- line liiitipn^ rush hour truffle lo a near iidenl. police Said currently participating in another For those who prefer a rate that varies tlumlslill pension plan, you're still eligible to start Tolice said Uohcrl (uprio ol t>7 Myrtle The overturned truck continued to snarl with prevailing market conditions, we \vr Him ulsn cluirged With driving while his 11.ill ii lor at least an hour as police arranged an IRA at Marine View Savings.) also offer a FLOATING RATE PLAN. Here, H in-' «.i~ revoked and with reckless dnv in have it tnwned away. The accident oc- i iirred on the border with Shrewsbury. Single persons can contribute up to $2,000 a variable rate changes monthly based i',i|iiiu repiiitedh was Irving til make a .The Shrewsbury police, who also re- ol annual income each year. Married upon the 6-Month Money Market nil Iu111 mi Shrewsbury Avenue Inini the sponded tn the accident, arranged for Tay- couples, with one working spouse, can Certificate rate that is available on the first i inle I'hevKilel driveway at H41 Shrewsbury lor s Towing, lied Bank, one of the few places Vw .11 J|I|HU\IIII,IICIV 4 :ll) p in when his CM in the area with equipment large enough to contribute a maximum of $2,250 and a day ol each month. Interest is mi iiu' truck driven by Kundy KUKH, in low the truck, to clear it off the road. married couple where both husband compounded daily and credited lleinciit Ave . Teaneek. which was travelling The truck was reportedly owned by and wile work can "salt away" up to monthly. The minimum opening deposit is niu ill mi Shrewsbury Avenue. Hossway. t'upriu, injured in the aeeidenl. was taken l>atro|man Albert Koma is investigating $4,000 annually. $100 and additions of $50 or more can be in Itivei'view Hospital Ked Bank, by the the accident. All deposits are tax-deductible. And all made at any time without extending the 'JIII iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiii'iii! iiiniiiiiihhiiihii iiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiniiiihhiiiiMiiiuiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii earnings are tax-deferred until maturity date. retirement. So you save now and save Choose the tax-deferred plan that's these 1 inns hnvmj! been sold, this announcement later. And build a nice little retirement appears as ,i mailer of record only. best lor you and chart TOUT course to nest egg in between. riches right now! January 8.1982 Choose lrom two IRA plans that can help STARTING RETIREMENT AGE GREAT you salt away a small lortune lor a much AGE 60 65 ' 70 AMERICAN richer retirement: Our ANCHORED RATE PLAN features an 25 SI.216.040 $2,248700 $4,145,900 RECREATION, INC. 18-Month Savings Certilicate with a 35 347.990 653,950 1.216,040 guaranteed and lixed rate that remains 45 90,810 181.460 347,990 3,850 Units constant for the duration of the term. The 55 14.618 41.470 90.810 at $1,000 per Unit (RetirementEarnings based upon contributions of $2,000 interest rate is 12% a year and is annually at 12* per annum Interest, compounded dally Federal regulations permit withdrawals as early as age compounded dally and credited 59 1/2 Premature withdrawals may result In a penally monthly. and lots ol fax delerred status) For More Details and Currant Bat* Quotes Call or Visit our Nearest Oificel MARINE VIEW First Jersey Securities, Inc. SO Broadway. New York. NY. 10004 SAVINGS Offices mpuncipal cilic" MIDDLETOWN • ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS • LINCBOFT PHONE NUMBER FOH ALL OFFICES C71-14OO Mwnbtr F1UC RlHWHHIHM iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii I mm INIHIIII i mmum R SPORTS. 10 The Daily Register LIFESTYLE 14 CLASSIFIED 17 SHREWSBURY, N.J. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19,1982 News Two Bitter Middletown chill cuts repairs breaks from budget By KATHY SEUGMAN A lew degrees Fahrenheit made • By DAN BREEN big difference to Monmouth County residents yesterday as the long- MIDDLETOWN - Indicating a com- uwdited break in the cold snap finally mitment to the complete renovation of came. High School North, the Board of Educa- Ycslciday s low of -4 degrees, tion has removed from its proposed measured shortly before 3 a.m., was 1982-83 budget $500,000 for repairs to the one of the coldest temperatures for school. the date on record, according to Paul Voters go to the polls today to decide ('rod. The Register's weather ob- the fate of a proposed |S.S million reno- server. vation ot the high school. Polls are open By mid-afternoon the tem- from 2 to 9 p.m. perature climbed to 13 degrees, and The (500,000 cut from the budget last it's expected to reach into the 30s night represented money to be spent for today. repairs if today's referendum fails. Due to the extreme cold, New Board member Dr. Frank Paoni, Jersey Natural (jas Co. interrupted who joined six other board members in sales to several industrial customers a straw vote eliminating the proposed for the second time this season. appropriation, called the move "a dem- Edward Anthony, public relations onstration of the board's good intentions officer for the utility, said yesterday and its commitment to renovating (High was the highest sendout day on re- School) North." t'ord. An unparalleled 3.2 million But that proved the only time Paoni therms of natural gas were sent out and the majority of the board concurred by the company. The previous high Rtfllllor photo by JintM J. CMMIIV on the budget. He proposed increasing was on Jan. 10. with 3.1 million SNOW JOB — The Winter of '82 hasn't been a king-size snowman in the yard of their Beltord the 1982-83 budget by 111 million, »3 therms sent out; Anthony said. wonderland for many folks, but the li win children home. Shown with it are George, 11, in the fore- million less than the administration-pro- Therms are units used to measure managed to find a silver lining —or rather, a white ground, and Sandra, 14, left, and Tracy, 13, in the posed budget considered by the board natural gas transmission. one — in the snow and bitter cold. They fashioned a rear. Their big sister Judy Ann, 16, also helped. last night. International Flavors and Fra- The administration's budget totaled grancni Inc.. Union Beach, and Mid- 135,411,086, which translates into a uction. He said operations were pro- lems at their residences. Mary De- hours, she said. land (ilass Co.. Aberdeen — two cus- Ridder, assistant administrative su- "I hope it (the cold spell) ends school tax rate of $3.66 per $100 of ceeding using propane. tomers which have "interruptable" pervisor of income maintenance, soon." she added. If this continues assessed valuation, up $.52 over the cur- "There are no major effects," he RICHARD R. ANDERSON contracts with the gas company — said approximately 30 persons called we may have some pretty bad situ- rent rate of $3.14. were affected by the limitation on said. "We still have the shops run- in with complaints about frozen or ations " The administration's proposed sales yesterday. Anthony said! To get ning." broken pipes, or shortage of fuel. Fortunately for county residents, budget, before the board began discuss- feated, however, and the board decided only to eliminate the $500,000 for the swh a contract, he added, customers Anthony said that despite the high She said the agency issued several the bone-chilling cold should end to- ing it, exceeded estimates of the state- must have an alternate fuel system renovation of the high school. demand yesterday, the gas company emergency fuel payments, and added day, at least for the time being. mandated budget "cap" by almost available This would reduce the possible tax expects no problems in supplying its no serious problems were reported The National Weather Service $200,000. William Miners, director of ex- 230,000 customers. predicts gradually rising tem- Keeping the budget within-the esti- rates by about 9 cents, according to arranging for repairs or emergency Bennett, but McKulla oposed the cut ternal affairs for Midland Glass, said The Monmouth County Board of assistance. peratures today through tomorrow, mated state limit would mean a budget Social Services yesterday reported a with some light snow possible today of $35,219,094 and a tax rate of $3.63. an before the outcome of the referendum the Interrupted sales of natural gas Emergency fuel payments can, in vote is learned. had a "negligible" effect on prod- number of clients with heating prob- most cases, be arranged within 24 turning to rain tonight. increase of $.49 over the current rate. Neither of these tax rates reflects "It's stupid," she said, the only dis- the elimination of the $500,000, but senter among the eight members in at- neither do they consider the effect of the tendance. "It just doesn't make sense if referendum if it passes. the referendum is defeated." 4v, Next Monday, the board must for- The other member! said the$500,000, mally approve a budget to be submitted and even more, could be restored to the. to the county superintendent of schools proposed budget if the referendum falls. and to be publicized prior to a public Board President Alexandra hearing. A public vote on the budget will Rosspmondo expressed a quiet op- take place April 6. timism that voters would approve the So that the board has a working referendum, which will provide $5.5 mil- model in time, board secretary Paul lion for extensive renovation of the 29- Bennett will provide the members with year-old structure. a 90 percent complete budget, leaving 10 Among the items on the list to be percent for them to decide. redone are windows, doors, classrooms, The 10 percent, approximately lockers, the heating system, and facil- $900,000, is mostly in new programs. It ities for the handicapped. includes the $200,000 by which the pro- In addition, new physical education posed budget exceeds the state-man- and music facilities will be constructed. dated limit on spending increases A previous, more ambitious $6 mil- In addition, Superintendent lion referendum was defeated by a 2-1 Bernhard Schneider will outline what margin two years ago. effect each $100,000 budget reduction will have, so that board members can get an idea of what would have to be eliminated from the proposal. Paoni's proposed budget total, which he called a "further sign of good faith," would be approximately $2.8 million un- der cap. Board member Richard H An- ' < Bulitor ptotoi bv Jimti J. CMMIIV derson, arguing to reduce the proposed PALL GUY — Bobby Bieiinski of Middletown is a novice at Ice skating, but he isn't budget to meet the state limit, said the letting his shortcoming^ on the freezy skid stuff get him down —at least not tor long. effect on the tax rate will be minimized by the addition of new ratables to the tax rolls, such as the Bell Labs complex under construction. That complex should be on the rolls by mid-year, Anderson said. In addition, Bennett pointed out, a record number of building permits were issued by the township in 1981. "What you're proposing is not enough to provide a thorough and effi- cient education under the law," An- derson told Paoni. The majority of the board members seemed to take a position between the two extremes, saying they needed more information about reductions in the pro- posal before making a final decision. Board member Mary McKulla pro- posed putting a freeze on hiring addi- tional personnel for new programs and cutting another $500,000 from the pro- posal, for a total of $700,000 below the state-mandated limit. This was de- FRANK PAONI Regional animal control plan proposed Jargowsky said he anticipated mu- By MARK GRAVEN The remaining towns would than gested the county get into the Unlimited were Asbury Park, Atlantic and using private veterinarians' offices nicipalites would have little difficulty in group together under local service dogcatcher business. Highlands. Avon, Brielle, Deal, English- for kennels. finding animal catchers. When the posi- IIOWKL1. - Since Dec. 31. when agreements to pay for wardens to do the Jargowsky said state statutes don't town, Farmingdale, Freehold, Freehold Fox said some communities are just tion was advertised several weeks ago, Animals Unlimited Inc.. went out of leg work. make any reference to a county running Township, Holmdel, Interlaken, letting stray dogs run loose. he said, 50 persons applied, many with business, 33 Monmmouth County com- Representatives from the 33 Mon- a dog pound, but admitted "if all else Keansburg, Keyport, Loch Arbour, Long According to county and state in- experience. Branch, Manalapan, Manasquan, munities have been in need of a animal mouth County communities and several failed" the Board of Freeholders might spectors, Jargowsky said, the Animals Officials said private business might control service. Ocean County communities have been consider putting on the dog. Millstone, Neptune City, Neptune, Unlimited facilities will need only mi- Ocean, Roosevelt, Sea Bright, Sea Girt, take over Animals Unlimited. A plan being considered by township invited to a meeting scheduled for 8 "The problem should be resolved at nor renovations. He estimated the facil- Shrewsbury, Shrewsbury Township, Many municipalities are served by of fit-lain may end the shaggy dog story. p.m. Friday at township Hall on Pre- the local-regional level if at all pos- ities would cost $100,000 a year to oper- sible, " he said. South Belmar, Spring Lake, Spring Lake the Associated Human Societies of New Under the plan — proposed by Mon- ventorium Road. ate. Jersey, while Middletown gets its ser- Animals Unlimited reportedly closed Heights, Wall and West Long Branch. inouth County Health Officer Lester Jargowsky says he asked Howell of- The facilities include a kennel with vice from the Society for the Prevention because several municipalites had Jargowsky said many municipalities Jurgowsky — Howell Would lease the ficals to run the pound because the site 104 cages, a euthanasia room, a cat of Cruelty to Animals, Jargowsky said. failed to pay their bills. The Smiths have devised stopgap measures to deal Animals Unlimited pound at 272 Megill is in the township, and because many of room with 13 cages, and a quarantine The Humane Societies reportedly 8.000 animals that went to the pound last could not be reached for comment on with stray dogs and animals in their Koud from its owners James and Betty room with three cages, according to charges more than Animals Unlimited year were/rom Howell. the situation yesterday. towns, including having police and pub- Smith.'and then charge the other 32 township officials. had traditionally charged. municipalities lor use of the facility. Committeewoman Sally Fox sug- Municipalities served by lAlAnimialn s lic works employees act as wardens. \ 10 Sports SHREWSBURY. N.J TUE3DAV. JANUARY IS. 1982 Bengals' Gregg lays down law to media PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -Cincinnati Coach in which the players can be Interviewed ... tor, told NFL official, before the team left full of ice cream." He did it primarily through the draft, two of Forrest Gregg, in a test of wills with the That was my understanding coming in here. So Cincinnati that he had been assured Gran •nd The «en arrived Sunday night Walsh the biggest picks being quarterback Joe Mon- National Football League, refused yesterday I'm playing by the rules that were set down for several players would attend a news con- wanted Us team here as soon as possible In tana, his third-round pick in 1979, and wide to permit his Bengals to attend an impromptu me." ference. But when the team arrived, Gregg order to adapt to the three-hour time change receiver Dwight Clark, the loth round setse- news conference with Super Bowl media. He acknowledged the league officials had rejected the league request. from the West Coast. Uon that year. The tension and displeasure clearly etched asked for several players to be present. "I Gregg attended a brief press session, then Walsh got here even earlier, arriving Sun- This year they were the National Con- on his face when he was surrounded by nearly told them it would be me because they (his left before being called back when toe larger day morning from Washington, D.C., where ference's leading passer and receiver, respec- 100 newsmen at the Bengals' hotel, Gregg said players) have obligations and I have obliga- contingent, which had been at the tters' hotel, he'd received an award from the Touchdown tively And, of course, It was Montana's des- he has been asked by NFL officials to provide tions. arrived. Despite about IS minutes of nego- Club. When the «ers stepped off the bus at peration «-yard pass to the leaping Clark in the several players for the media, which had ar- tiations with league officials, Gregg held firm their hotel here, they were met by Walsh, final minute that gave the Wen the NFC title rived after a 40-minute bus ride following "I told them (the Bengals) they would and refused to allow his players to be ques- dressed as a doorman. Walsh likes his litUe with a V-Z7 victory over Dallas. interviews with San Francisco Coach Bill have three major press conferences — one tioned jokes. Some of his players didn't even recog- Developing young quarterbacks Into super Walsh and selected 49ers tomorrow (Tuesday) during the photo session, nise him. passers is not new to Walsh. When he was an one on Wednesday and one on Thursday," He denied he was distressed by the two assistant (1867-75) under Coach Paul Brown In "When I talked to league people, when Gregg said. "I also told them when I would be news conferences. "I've learned how to roll ltd be hard to i nix I as the Cincinnati, be molded Ken Anderson Into a they set the schedule for us, they told us there involved, but I've already lied to 'em. I've had with the punches," he drawled. But added, same team he took over In 19TO. They were, the two-time passing champion. Anderson won the would be specific times for interviews," said two press conferences in the last 20 minutes. "My dinner's gettin' cold." year before that, the losingest team in the passing title again In INI. . (iregg, a by-the-book coach who learned his So my schedule is off already." When it was mentioned that Gregg had said NFL. And they were that again in Us first year And when Brown stepped asm after the craft under the late Vince Lombard! and, like The 49ers arrived Sunday, a day earlier he enjoyed the added press attention the as their bead coach and general manager. 1975 season and handed the coaching reins to Lombardi. has been compared to a Marine than usual, and when they became available Bengals were receiving now that they were "This is one of the. greatest epics in the BUI Johnson, the bitterly disappointed Walsh drill sergeant. for Interviews yesterday, the Bengals were winners, Gregg replied: "Y'know, I love ice league, a team coming from M4 all the way to moved on to an assistant's job for a year In San "Now, we have work to do as a football asked by the league to be available briefly, too. cream. But If I had to eat Ice cream every day the Super Bowl In just two years," he ex- Diego, where he helped in the development of team and I have set aside those specific times Al Heim, the Bengals' public relations direc- I probably wouldn't like it anymore. I'm about claimed. Dan Fouts. Braves Turner: We want Reggie ATLANTA (AP) - Free agent Reggie Jack- Turner told the Journal on Saturday that Jack- out of the picture, Jackson said, "No, to my son, who is considering contract offers from the son "hasn't had as much fun with any other knowledge, they haven't." Atlanta Braves and at least two other teams, says owner as he's had with me. The other night when Turner said he offered Jackson "the bluest he may make a decision on his baseball future by we met, we were toughing, giggling, singing, contract in the history of sports" - $100 million, tomorrow. having cocktails, having a great time. It was like adding, 'I told him I'd have to defer some of it. I "It could be two days. It could be 20 minutes. college recruiting." told him I'd give him f 1 a year for 100 million It could be four or five days. I guess it could be 40 Turner, a millionaire sportsman and owner of years. Or maybe $10 a year for 10 million yean." days," Jackson told The Atlanta Journal. "But I Cable News Network, said he would be talking Turner said the Braves, with Jackson, would hope it will be by Wednesday." with Jackson again. be "the most awesome home run hitting team In The former New York Yankee slugger said be "I don't know what'U happen, but I'U be baseball." would like to make a decision by tomorrow "be- talking to Reggie again real soon. Real soon," "ltd be fun for the fans, for the TV viewers, cause I've got some other commitments starting Turner said. "I'm going to try like hell to pull it for the writers, for our pitchers, for me, for then that are going to take a lot of my time the off. I haven't made my tost offer yet." management, for the ticket sellers, for the peanut next two weeks." Jackson, who also is being pursued by the vendors. We'd put them on commission," Turner Jackson, who met in New York last week with Baltimore Orioles and the California Angels, said, said. Braves owner Ted Turner, said little about the •All things will not be equal, but if everything "If Reggie decides he wants to come here, I meeting. "I had a damn good time with Ted were equal, I still don't know which team I'd like told him, 'Reggie, we'll get down and bale nay Turner last week," Jackson ssid. "I have no idea to play for." and cut cotton and work it out.' I want him," he who's the favorite." Asked if the Yankees have taken themselves added. Maple Leafs shell Rangers TORONTO (AP) - Hockey fans at Maple Leaf Gardens, who only weeks ago were sitting on their hands, are back to jumping up and down and cheering again. The Toronto Maple Leafs are looking good. Two days after beating the high-flying Edmonton Oilers 7-1. the Leafs shelled the red-hot New York Rangers $-2 in the lone National Hockey League game last night. It was the Leafs' fourth straight home triumph. It was grind-it-out, dig-in-the-corners hockey, the type Coach Mike Nykoluk says will put the Leafs in the playoffs. "I'm encouraged because the guys are really working hard." Nykoluk said. "That's all I'm asking from them — to work hard - and I'm getting it so they'll get no beefs from me." Consecutive second-period goals by Rick Valve, bis 30th of the season. Terry Martin and Bill Derlago, who added his 20th in the final period, broke a 1-1 tie and sent the Leafs on to their AGGIES W AN T HIM — Texas A&M University, still looking for a football coach and fourth victory - they've also tied two — In their last eight athletic director, will discuss opportunities at the school with Pitt's head football games. coach Jackie Sherill. Don Luce, with a short-handed goal in the first period, and Normand Aubin also scored for the Leafs. Right wing Rene Robert had four assists. "We seem to score a goal when we need it," said Derlago. Pitt's Sherrill may Things seem to be going our way right now." Don Maloney and Ron Greschner scored for the Rangers, who had their unbeaten streak halted at five games. "We're playing well," said Robert. "As long as we keep turn to Texas A&M playing together, as a team, we'll be fine. DUCUAY DOWN — Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Borie Salmlng hauls down PITTSBURGH (AP) - Pitt football meet with Sherrill. They reportedly flew Steve Weeks faced 30 shots in the Rangers' nets, while Coach Jackie Sherrill reportedly was in Col- back to College Station yesterday. Bunny Larocque, who many say is responsible for the Leafs' New York Rangers Ron Duguay in last night's NHL game at Maple Leaf Gardens in lege Station. Texas, yesterday, amid pub- On Sunday night, Sherrill received Pit- revival, faced 28. Toronto. lished reports he may be seeking a 10-year, S3 tsburgh's "Man of the Year" in sports million contract to become athletic director award. He led Pitt to its second consecutive mil coach at Texas A&M 11-1 season last year and the No. 4 final The Texas school is considering Sherrill ranking Final NBA Ail-Star game voting is a possible candidate for the dual post after After the awards banquet; Sherrill de- Having been turned down by Michigan's Bob clined comment on the Texas A&M matter. NEW YORK (AP) - The final totals in fan Dawkins, Philadelphia, 245,124; 3, Bob Lanier, Bernard King, Golden State, 186,213. Schembeohler, who reportedly was offered a But Pitt Athletic Director Casimir Mys- voting for the East and West squads in the 1962 Milwaukee, 152,512; 4, Tree Rollins, Atlanta, Centers 10-year deal worth $2 25 million. linski confirmed Monday that Texas A&M National Basketball Association All-Star Game, 128,939; S, Steve Hawes, Atlanta, 102,287. 1, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Los Angeles, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, quoting an had asked his permission to talk with Sher- to be played Sunday, Jan. SI at the Byrne Guards 283,821; 2, Moses Malone, Houston, 216,602; 3, unnamed I'm source, reported Sherrill would rill. He said Sherrill had earlier told him he Meadowlands Arena: 1, Isiah Thomas, Detroit, 367.969; 2, Nate Jack Sikma, Seattle, 215,447; 4, Alvan Adams, seek a guaranteed $3 million pact with a list would meet with the Texas A&M officials. EASTERN CONFERENCE Archibald, Boston, 253,282; 3, Reggie Theus, Chi- Phoenix, 134,441; 5, George Johnson, San Antonio, of other requirements covering scholarships, Myslinski was asked about speculation Forwards cago, 235,586; 4, Sidney Moncrief, Milwaukee, 121,136. housing, facilities and other related matters. that Sherrill's departure from Pitt was immi- 1, Julius Erving, Philadelphia, 4)2,230; 2, 215,065; 5, John Lang, Detroit, 167,066. - ShemU's base salary at Pitt reportedly is nent. Larry Bird, Boston, 380,485; 3, John Drew, Atlan- WESTERN CONFERENCE Guards J6O.0OO and he has four years left on a five- "I hope it's just a rumor, but 1 have to ta. 207,483; 4, Dan Roundfield, Atlanta, 194,187; 5, Forwards 1, George Gervin, San Antonio, 343,977; 2, Gus year contract. take it more seriously because Jackie Sher- Kent Benson, Detroit. 148,646. 1, Adrian Dantley, Utah, 237,272; 2, Lonnie Williams, SeatUe, 245,373; 3, Fred Brown, Seat- Kill McKenzle, a member of the Texas rill is undoubtedly one of the best coaches in Centers Shelton, SeatUe, 234,330; 3, Elvin Hayes, Houston, Ue, 222,957; 4, Dennis Johnson, Phoenix, 220,(14; \&M board of regents, flew here Saturday to the country right now," said Myslinski. 1. Artis Gilmore, Chicago, 270,313; 2, Darryl 194.443; 4, Mark Aqulrre. Dallas. 189.0U: S. 5, Magic Johnson, Los Angeles, 212,518. Former Celtic Cowens turns attention to kids Dave Cowens once took out a taxi Having suprisingly retired oh Oct. 1, important is that they get a chance to throws." driver's license so he could drive a cab 1980, his fierce drive slowed by the pain compete, to be with other kids in a The former Celtic star, who served a around Boston. He's worked in an an- of a multitude of injuries, be turned his challenging program and, in the case of brief spell as player-coach, said one can tique shop, grown Christmas trees and interests in a new direction. the survivors, to travel." get tremendous enjoyment by fantasiz- raised beef catUe while pursuing a 10- Not taxicabs. Not Christmas trees. Cowens said there was no other sport ing that it is a critical spot in a real year basketball career with the Boston Not catUe. WILL which offered such a wide opportunity to game. Celtics "Kids," he said, "I'm trying to get youngsters. No restrictive qualification "You imagine that your team is be- A standout performer, seven times a kids interested in basketball. For procedures. Everybody starts out equal. hind by a point and there's a minute on member of the National Basketball As- starters, we have three million of "If you want to play a game of the clock," be said. "The crowd is yell- ing and you have the ball. You fake, you sociation's All-Star team, he never them."- GRIMSLEY baseball or football, you've got to round sought the spotlight or attempted to twist, then you leap — swish! — you've The towering Kentuckian was in New up a bunch of other kids and find a commercialize on his fame. vacant lot," Cowens said. "Tennis and won the game." York over the weekend pushing a project "The only thing I ever endorsed golf both require expensive equipment which he called the "Elks' Hoop Shoot." Cowens' retirement 16 months ago were things like shoes and stuff I actual- and facilities are not all that available. was his second in Us NBA career. He ly use," he said. "Never anything like "The actual name of It the Elks' "Bat basketball? Look around you. quit Nov. 6, 1976, declaring be bad lost cologne or pantyhose." National Free Throw Contest," he said. You see hoops in every schoolyard and his incentive He rejoined the team Jan. He got a reputation of being a free "It's very simple Just as basketball Is gym, on every slab of concrete In the 12,1977. spirit — but never a kook. simple. It's sponsored by Elks lodges hit the most win the championships and ghetto neighborhoods and, in the more /"I've sprained my ankle at least M "I don't think anybody ever called throughout the country for boys and girls have their names Inscribed on plaques at affluent areas, hoops hanging on garage times," be said. "I've broken both legs me a kook," said the 6 foot, 8Vi inch between the ages of 8 and 13. the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall doors. and fractured a foot. BaslcaUly, I played redhead from Newport, Ky. "If I had to of Fame in Springfield, Mass. "You need only one other person to on one leg." describe myself it would be that I was "There are three age groups r- 8-", "This Is heady stuff for kids." have a matchup or, if you're alone, you Now about that Boston cab. the hero of the blue-collar worker. 10-11,12-13. They start at the local level, Cowens' official title is "Pro- can always do free throws to your "It was just a lark," Cowens said "I played hard. I appealed to those progress through state and regional fessional Consultant." He loves It. heart's content. sheepishly. "A friend phoned he was poor guys on the assembly line and in the eliminations and come down to the finals "It's a million to one shot that any of "Our country is fortunate in this coming to town. 1 got a hack license - hard hats who have to sweat to make a at Indianapolis March 19-20. these kids make the NBA," he said, respect. In Japan, you have to reserve a anybody can do It - hired a cab and Dave I'owrns living. They enjoyed the way I played." "They get 25 free throws. Those who "but that is Immaterial. What is very practice place if you want to shoot free showed Urn the sights." •\ Sports in brief SHREWSBURY. NJ TUESDAY, JANUARY 19,1962 The Drily Regfeter 11 Tar Heels just miss unamimous vote By The AIMCUU4 Presi of six spots, Texas moved up from 19th to ville, Tulsa, Texas and Virginia Tech. and Wichita State stopped Crdghlon before seventh and Idaho jumped from 14th to Virginia finished with 1,115 points, De- losing toTulane . The North Carolina Tar Heels and Mis- eighth. Paul 99Z and Minnesota 857 souri's Tigers continued to dominate The Iowa, fifth a week ago, dropped one spot Tha Top Twenty teams in The Associated Preti' college Associated Press college basketball poll u to sixth, Kentucky fell from sixth tonint h and North Carolina beat North Carolina State basketball poll, with first-place voles In parentheses, this season's record and total points Poinli baud on » If- II- ff. Minnesota, Texas and Idaho made the big Tulsa. 18th last week, moved into the No. 10 and Duke last week, while Missouri beat moves this week. spot. l Norlh Carolina (Ml 144 I.It* Oklahoma State, Nebraska and Louisville. I Missouri (1) .... US I.lift North Carolina got 80 first-place votes, Wichita State and Virginia Tech fell out of Virginia won four games, downing Maryland J. vnynia III i.m one short of being unanimous, in the balloting 4. OePaul Ml the Top Twenty, being replaced by Kansas in overtime before stopping Wagner, Georgia VMtnnesata iilnl 111 by a nationawide panel of sports writers and t. lewa n i •II State and Tennessee. Tech and Clemson. 7. I.Ml, no m broadcasters, finishing with 1,219 points. . I. Idaho , ISO no Missouri again got the other first-place ballot The Second Ten, in order, are San Fran- Texas' advance came after the Longhoma I Kenluckv '. It). TutM '. ui 101 and received 1,128 points. cisco. Oregon State, Georgetown, North Car- toppled Houston, Arkansas and Texas Chris- It San Francisco ISl olina State, Arkansas. Alabama, Louisville, 12 Oregon ii ill Virginia and DePaul remained in third tian. Idaho won twice last week, against 1) Georgelown. DC in 5n?o Kansas State, Houston and Tennessee 14. North Carolina Si HI •11 and fourth place, respectively, while Minne- Idaho State and Weber State, while Minne- n Arkansas... 111 404 sota, Texas and Idaho made huge jumps in Last week's Second Ten was, In order, sota beat Iowa and Michigan. 14. Alabama 114 17 Louisville V, III the rankings announced today. Minnesota. North Carolina State, Alabama, Virginia Tech lost twice, to Florida State II Kansas SI 111 IH Minnesota advanced to fifth place, a jump Idaho, Oregon State, Wichita State, Louis- and Memphis State, while beating Tulane, 1*... 111 » r II1 IS Hot Red Bank climbs in Register poll Red Bank Regional High School was among the few crushed Wall, 82-40, and AUentown, 82-40. This enabled the it seven in a row this week when they entertain Shore changes in The Daily Register's Top 10 after last week's snow- Blue Bishops tokee p their No.l rating for the second straight Conference "B" Division South rivals Manasquan and Point abbreviated activity. week. Pleasant Boro. Asbury Park (9-2) managed to get in two games and The Bishops, winners of five straight, are favored to make HIGHEST PAID? - The Edmunton Oilers are Remains in 2nd expected to announce that they have signed Wayne St. John Vianney (11-1) holds on toth e ninnerup spot. The Gretzky tomorrow, making him the highest paid Lancers ran their win streak to nine Tuesday when they NHL hockey player in the history of the league. rallied to defeat Long Branch, 55-48 St. Rose defeats Ocean The Lancers, second in the Shore Conference "B" Division North with a 4-1 record, have two tough games this BELMAR - St. Rose grabbed a IM first quarter lead and Rich Barry led all scorers with 22 points for St. Rote (7-4). week. Tonight they travel toOcea n Township and then they Cheerleader held off Ocean Township for a 55-49 non-conference boys Jason Hutzley led Ocean (7-5) with M have a key conference game Friday when they host Red Bank basketball victory last night. Regional, 54 in the league and the only team to beat the Hoffman 52, Keaasburg 46 Ocean, trailing 38-32 after three periods, made a late rally Lancers this year. KEANSBURG - Keansburg opened up a 29-M halfUme but never got any closer than the final two-point difference. Neptune (8-2) slays in third place after winning twice last lead on Hoffman, but couldn't bold it and dropped its eighth week, but the Scarlet Fliers had to overcome slowdown game of the season. injury halts tactics before defeating St. Rose, 29-18, and Middletown Ron Brown and Joe Scniavino handled most of the Hoff- South, 37-29 The Fliers have only one game this week, that man scoring with 21 and IS points, respectively. Steve Douglas IVITI Oil against "A" North foe Marlboro tonight had 16 and Pete Lenich 1210 for Keansburg. Red Bank (8-2), one of the Shore's hottest teams, moves up Orange stunt HOLMDEL - Don Mullan (140), Tony Noweski (169) and Ranney School SI, Covenant Christian 43 one place to fourth. The Buccaneers rolled to easy victories Mike Carducci (187) upped their unbeaten records to 10-0 as CRANFORD — Trailing 1746 early in the seoend second over Red Bank Catholic, Monmouth, Shore and Long Branch SYRACUSE, NY. (AP) - While a cheerleader re- Holmdel trimmed Mater Dei, 48-15, In scholastic wrestling quarter, Ranney School outpointed Covenent Christian, 154, since losing to Woodbridge in the Casey Holiday Festival. covers from a 10-foot (all which fractured her skull, the yesterday. the remainder of the half and never looked back. Red Bank has two interesting "B" North games this future of stunts by Syracuse University pep squads is up Mullan and Carducci won the easy way with forfeits while Mike Davis Me Lain scored 16 and Jim 14 for Ranney week, facing arch-rival Red Bank Catholic tonight and then in the air. Noweski had a pin. SI. John Vianney Friday in their showdown game. The accident Sunday hospitalized Michelle Munn, 21, Also scoring pins were for Holmdel were Matt Lie Bravei Dip of Sayre, Pa., a captain and popular member bf the 18- ciardello (100), Tony Murrello (121), and Joe Crisanti (128). Rannav School III) Manalapan (9-2), in a bit of a slump after losing two of its person group. Joe LaBianca (114) had a pin for Mater Dei. McLaln *•] 14. Oavit Ml*. Funt 4-3-lt, Elttfitttln MS, Maoullllns 14-1. Posmck II 1. TOTALS?! • SI last three games, fell to fifth after its setback toSt . John "I think the fans identified with her because she was H«maal«4. Malar Dill} Covenant Chrlillan 1411 100-Mall LttclarOallolHIp Snaun Katnav 1 1] LawtlM S. MaMr ••! 13, Oat hard Jo*. Champion 0 I I. Brown 4O«. TOTALS Saturday. so little and she had such spirit," said Syracuse lawyer l!.f-41 101 ChrliLaoratquafHtw Joa Blaffalt XI I Mater Dei (8-2) continues to set the pace in the "C" Ann Glavin, who attends all of Syracuse's home basket- 114 — Joe LaBianca (Mtp BIIIKrall IS Ranr.1. S By HUBERT WRIGHT Wednesday, at which it was planned to receive a final review, creases, a large Increase In the cost of health Insurance was was canceled because of heavy snow. responsible for some of the budgetary growth. Carolyn SalUbart of Colts Neck replied that the board had Also, said Crespy. there was a $110,010 Increase In state- HOWELL - Local taxes supporting the Freehold Regional spent five or six workshop sessions on the budget, and that mandated programs, such as compensatory education and School District will go up an average of 14.t percent if the each account had been addressed In detail. "I don't think It's bilingual education. Although the district will eventually be tentative budget introduced at last nigbt'i Board of Education fair to say that (the budget was Inadequately reviewed) at reimbursed for these programs, he said, they must be in- ' meeting is passed. this time," she said. cluded as expenditures in the budget. However, nearly half of that Increase — a 6.} percent Louis Goselin, representing Freehold Township, said the Bloom, when asked where he would like to see budgetary average tax hike — will pay for debt service on bonds proposed budget received "more committee work, more cuts, suggested a possible reduction In the number of teach previously approved in a referendum. That portion of the input" than in past years. en. "Class sixes have to be looked at very carefully," he budget will not go before the public for approval. Bloom agreed that each account had been .extensively said. The current expense and capital outlay portions of toe reviewed, but said that, because of the canceled meeting, all A public bearing on the budget will be held March 6. On budget, which will go separately before the public for ap- reviews had taken place before the accounts were added up to Feb. 28, the budget's details will be advertised In local proval in March, would result in average tax increases of 6.4 reach a tentative total budget figure. "A budget means newspapers and a budget brochure will be seat to taxpayers percent and 2.1 percent, respectively. nothing unless you look at the whole picture," he uld. explaining, among other things, the budgets tax impact The tax Increases would differ among the district's mem- The proposed total budget is $30,710,4*2, U percent larger Rucci said toe board can still change the budget before ber municipalities — Colts Neck, Freehold, Freehold Town- than last year's f27,171,»40. submitting it for public approval. ship, Manalapan, Marlboro, Howell, Englishtown and Farm- The proposed current expenses budget is $28,522,473, up Last night's meeting was held at Howell High School so ingdale — depending on the number of students living in the, 10.9 percent from last year's $23,926,451. Of the $J6.5 million, that the school's recently added areas - totaling K,0M square municipality and the municipality's total assessed property $13,484,632 would be raised through local taxes, a figure 6.4 feet - could be formally dedicated. value. percent larger than last year's $12,5*3,548. The additions Include a new gymnasium, 10 new The proposed capital outlay budget Is $908,550, as com- Superintendent of Schools H. Victor Crespy said exact tax classrooms, an expanded cafeteria, and a library that was H.Victor Crespy rates in each municipality cannot yet be predicted with, pared to last year's $563,100. Much of the Increase is due to more than doubled In size. confidence, but added that tentative projections Indicate that extensive roof repairs and the addition of roof Insulation at taxes might decrease in three of the district's eight munici- Howell and Marlboro High Schools. palities The proposed debt service budget is $3,107,400, as com- Norbert H. Kenick, district business administrator, said pared to last year's $2,662,389 his projections suggest that under the proposed budget the Kenick attributed much of the growth in debt service costs amount of revenue raised by taxation would decline In three to a state law requiring payment on principal to begin within municipalities: Freehold, Farmingdale and Englishtown. three years of the issuance of bonds. A large number of the The budget was introduced by a 5-1 vote, with Theodore district's outstanding bonds were Issued three years ago, be said. Bloom of Marlboro voting against it. A paid directory of coming events for non-profit JANUARY a Board President Norman Rucci said the new budget Bloom said the budget is too large to win public approval organizations. Rates $3.50 for three lines for one day, ' St Paul in the City of Rhodes, a one man play will includes "few, if any, significant new programs." Among the Ui the prevailing economic climate. "We're living in a $1.00 each additional line; $450 for two days.fl.lt each be presented by Tom Donahue of Hazlet at The New major sources of budget increases, be said, was the Increased recession," he said. "There are programs being cut all over additional line; $6.50 for three to five days, $1.50 each York Town Hall, 123 West 43 Street, New York City, at need for supplies, maintenance and utilities caused by the the state. And yet we're doing business as usual." additional line; $7 for four days, $1.75 each additional 7:10 P.M. Tickets can be purchased at the box office or recently completed expansion of several district schools. He said the budget did not receive sufficient review by the line; $7 50 for five days, $2 each additional line; $8 for 10 by calling 2tVN46. Tickets are $11 board, noting that the workshop meeting scheduled for Crespy said that, in addition to inflation and wage in- days, $2.25 each additional line. Deadline noon two days JANUARY a before publication. Call The Daily Register, 542-4000, Quinn Chapel A.M.E. Church 3rd Annual Luncheon ask for the Date Secretary. benefit of Women* Day, Sat, Jan. 30, 19*2, 12 P.M. Shore Casino, Simon Dr., Atlantic Highlands. Guest Hornik does not seek speaker: Gil Noble of Channel 7 Eyewitness News and "Like It is." A wonderful speaker! Donation: $18.00. JANUARY It For tickets, 291-0229,222-1890. Chinese Auction, sponsored by the Beers St. School P.T.O. January 19, 7 p.m., Buck Smith's, Palmer Ave , Smorgasbord sponsored by The Little Falcons Pop cap waiver in Marlboro E. Keansburg. Admission $2 00. Warner Booster Club, 5 P.M. at the Shrewsbury Recrea- tion Center, Crawford St., Shrewsbury. Adults $6.00, Sr The Monmouth Civic Chorus will hold open audi- Citizens and children $3.00 By MAIlk (.IIAVliN members. They are expected to discuss endum to exceed the cap. tions for chorus members for a 100th anniversary it at meetings tonight and tommorow. Policemen urged approval of toe performance of Gilbert It Sullivan's comic opera JANUARY II MARLBORO - Mayor Saul G Under the township's "strong mayor" switch, saying they would receive supe- "Iolantne" on Tues., Jan. 12, at the Embury Methodist Bus trip to N.Y.C. to see Ice Capades, excellent Hornik has presented a proposed 1063 form of government, four of five council rior benefits under the police and Church, Church St., Little Silver, at 7:15 P.M. Per- , sponsored by the Open Door of the Bayshore budget to the Township Council that — votes are required to Increase budget firemen's plan. Township Democratic formance will be on May 14, IS at the Monmouth Art Area. $17.50 per person. 1:30 PM. showtime. Bus leaves counter to his previous predictions — line items, while three votes are re- leaders endorsed the pension plan Center & will be a fully staged presentation with Red Bank * Hazlet Call 739-3963 or 495 2471 , will not require a public referendum to quired for decreases, officials said. switch. costumes, orchestra, Chorography 4 sets. J.T. Perkins exceed the a state imposed 5 percent Hornik said the budget he is propo- FEBRUARY 4 The one new program provided for In is stage director & W.R. Shoppell is music director. For limit on spending increases. sing will keep the tax rate this year at 72 THE KIBBUTZ CHAMBER ORCHESTRA OF the budget Is a "drop-In center" de- information call Roxie Seiple at 531-5233 or Jayne Kirby Hornik had said previously that cents per $100 of assessed valuation. ISRAEL, I P.M. Thurs , 2/4, Monmouth Arts Center, 99 signed to provide township youngsters at 774-5270. there was a strong possibility that the Increased revenues from fees and Monmouth St ., Red Bank. 36 outstanding musicians, with "an alternative to drugs and alco- township government would have to ex- investments are expected to pay for the Parents Without Partners Chapter (44 cocktail "one of the finest chamber groups before the public." hol." The proposed budget includes ceed the budget cap by approximately increase in operating expenses. party Club Bene, Rt. 36, SayreviUe. Orientation 1:30 Tickets a. l», $14.10% discount to seniors, students, $7,500 for this program. $88,000 — the amount needed this year to Hornik said that he plans to allow p.m. Members $3. Prospective members $5.871-2777. groups. Call Box Office, 842 9002 pay for a change in police pension plans normal attrition to keep the operating The budget also includes an addi- JANUARY tt. 27 FEBRUARY 4 and tt approved by voters in last November's staff at an "effective minimum" and to tional $1,500 for toe Friendship Senior You are Invited to join us In a "Celebration of Broadway Shows and bus, "Dancing" $34.00 "The election. keep overtime at "an absolute low In Citizens Club, bringing its allocation to America" to be presented by Two Rivers Opera, Westslde Waltz" $40.00. "Chorus Line" $3400 and But Hornik said last night that his every department." $6,500. formerly Opera-Operetta Society, on May 1, INI at administration was able to avert going "Woman Of The Year" $34.00. Leaving Middletown Hornik said the bulk of the Impact of Another budget Item expect to In- Monmouth Arts Center, Red Bank. All American favor- to a cap waiver referendum by trim- 5:45, Haslet 6 P.M. 717-4*21,548-3812. Sponsored by Mid the pension plan switch will be felt next crease Is insurance premiums. ites arranged by Hank Levy, sung by soloists* a chorus ming other areas of the budget to pay Atlantic. year, although be did not specify how The proposed budget calls for a that could Include you. CaU 747-9035 or 842-4829 for the pension plan switch. much money this will entail. $10,000 Increase for group health Insur- FEBRUARY I The operating portion of the budget During last year's election cam- ance to $92,000, and an Increase of JANUARY tl Valentine Luncheon dance at Buck Smith's. Live is slightly more than $3 million and it paign, Hornik and other township Re- $24,000 for other kinds of insurance to Chamber Music Series Presents Helen Benham, music, special attention to senior citizens. Sponsored by comes in under the cap by $27. publican leaders did not take a stand on $154,000. harpsichordist with New York Kammermusiker, 1:10 at the Open Door, Baysbore area. Cost $10. CaU 73B-J96S, it's a very tight budget," said a proposal to allow policemen to switch The budget calls for only $21,000 in First Presbyterian Church, Rumson. Tickets $8, stu- 4J6-2471. Hornik "Almost every program was from the Public Employees Retirement capital Improvements, down from dents $4 at door. cut down to get the budget within the Fund System to a Police and Firemen's $75,000 last year. Municipal dept service FEBRUARY It cap; thebudgetwascuttopieces.'' Retirement Fund System, but they will remain about the same at about QUEST - Weekly forum for single, divorced * Bus trip to "Woman Of The Year" (orchestra Copies of the mayor's proposed warned the public that approval of the $632,000. These two areas are not sub- widowed adults. Discussion, refreshments, dancing, seats), Wed. Feb. 10, dinner at China Peace Restaurant budget have been presented to council switch would probably result in a refer- ject to the cap. Unitarian Church, 1475 W. Front St., Uncroft, 7:45 P.M. Bus leaves Center 4 P.M. sharp. Show, dinner k Admission limited to first 100 people. Donation: $1.00. transportation $49 00 non-refundable First come, first serve basis. Call for reservations 717-6655, sponsored by JANUARY 21 THRU FEBRUARY 11 Keansburg Recreation Commission. PLANNING YOUR FUTURE, this 4-week course Bus commuter group makes uses a self assessment process to evaluate your in- FEBRUARY II terest, skills Jj abilities You will be better prepared to Bus trip to NYC to tee Bugs Bunny. Sponsored by find the best path for volunteer work, a career or the Open Door of Bayshore area. Cost $16. Bus leaves personal growth, given by the Junior League of Mon- Red Bank k Hazlet CaU 73S-3863,496-2471 mouth County. Fee: $6.00. Held at Junior League Ernston Road top priority Pre-St Valentine's Eve In Atlantic City. Family Headquarters, Center St., Rumson. To register please call 531-6555 or 741-1317 Resource Associates Inc. sponsors bus trip to the New FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - In an effort begin for months. , Troplcana Casino. "Enjoy a Monte Carlo Carnival." to shorten commuters' rides to and from New Sadow said he will meet with the project's JANUARYtt Hors d'oeuvres, champagne cocktail, buffet dinner, York, the Central New Jersey Transportation chief engineer Friday to try to expedite the Monmouth County Right To Life has arranged for dancing and show. All for $20 per person. CaU 747-6110. Board will press the state Department of project. buses to be leaving for Washington, D.C. on Fri Jan 22 Reservations required by Jan. 20, lie. Proceeds will Transportation to accelerate construction Participants will take part In the Annual Man* For benefit young disabled children. Buses leave Shop Rite, The board also agreed to seek help from work on Route 9 at Ernston Road. Life Cost of trip $10.00 per person l> $25.00 per family. Shrewsbury at 5 p.m. and return 1 a.m. new Governor Thomas H. Kean's office In For reservations call 741-2174, or 446-7580 or 787-4450 In drawing up its l»S2 priority list at its securing cooperation from New Jersey Turn- FEBRUARY II monthly meeting last night, the commuter pike and Garden State Parkway officials. JANUARY n, a* M Chinese Auction at Buck Smith's in East activist group decided to make its top priori- Theater Dance Group presents GODSPEIX at the Keansburg, 7:10-11:10 P.M., admission $2.50, re- ty the elimination of the "bottleneck" Sadow said the officials have resisted the Monmouth Arts Center. A musical baaed on the gospel, freshments For tickets call Clair Belford, 291-5546 or created by the lto-year-old construction board's requests for toll booths reserved for It's great for family L kids, tt, $7, January 22 it 23, $6 Lli Garrison, ai-4B2. commuter buses. "If the buses could move project, according to Jack Sadow of Free- adults, $4 children January 24 matinee. Tickets avail- hold, chairman of the board. rapidly through bottlenecks," be said, "that FEBRUARY a would be an Incentive to ride mass transit." able at the Red Bank Theater * Dance Center, 25 Broad St., 530-9340 20% discount on groups over 25. Great fund Bus trip to Hunterdon Hills Playhouse to see "A "That's no way to start the day — sitting _ , . . . , „ Pretty Girl, A Pretty Tune, An August Moon." Includes 8 uberMtori l raiser. 20 minutes on a bus waiting to«et inrollgtK ^D "* « « c«mp«l|D. Kein lunch, show, and bus. Cost $21. Sponsored by The Open Ernston " said Sadow -»/—•»" \eBdDr»ed a list of commuters' demands pre- JANUARY a Door of Bayshore Area. Bus leaves Had Bank and C pared by the board The Mental Health Association is sponsoring a bus Haslet. CaU 739-3963,495-2471 Sadow said the segment of Route » north' The board also seated two representatives trip to New York's Chinatown on Sat. Jan. a, to of the Ernston Road bridge has been celebrate Chinese New Year. This will include a ban- from Old Bridge, which previously was not widened, but that the bridge has not. Work quet dinner and chance to visits shops. For info or FEBRUARY 27 has been halted for winter, said Sadow, so represented on the board: Ellen Belfer and . reservations call 142-7077. Bus trip to NYC to set West Side Waltz ($36) * Jack Sadow construction on the bridge is not scheduled to Myrna Lau. Chorus Line ($43.50). Sponsored by the Open Doer of JANUARY a Bayshore area. Bus leaves Red Bank k Hazlet The 3rd Annual Barn Dance sponsored by the Matinee CaU 73t-3983,495-2471 Hazlet Italian-American Ladies Auxiliary to be held at Colossal Flea Market North Centerville Fin- j Freehold considers purchasing the North Centerville Fire House, Middle Rd., Haslet. house, Middle Road, Haslet. Sat., Feb. 27, t a.m. to 4 Hot and cold buffet-BYOB. Donation: $12.00. For p.m. Information call 264-2062 Sponsored by North tickets call Cora Forcella, 264-6027. Centerville Fire House. five more computer terminals JANUARY 27, FEB. 3, It. IT "You * Your Aging Parent!" 4 week seminar co- APRIL t FREEHOLD - The Borough Council ceipl of a letter from the state Depart- Borough attorney J. Wesley sponsored by the Junior League of Monmouth County at EASTER SHOW at Radio City, dinner at Arthur's, last night introduced an amendment to ment of Transportation granting the Geiselman assured several citizens that The Department of Continuing Education, Monmouth bus leaves Center 4 P.M. sharp, show, dinner * trans- its computer ordinance that would borough permission to postpone until he would continue to press the Realty College. Jan. 27, Feb. 1, 10, 17, I P.M. Wilson Hall, portation $25.00 non-refundable. RessinUons matt be enable it to increase the number of June the state-funded work at the in- Appraisal Co. for responses to all resi- Monmouth College. $2.50 per session. Register at the made as soon as possible. 717-6666. Sponsored by computer terminals at Borough Hall tersection of Court and Lafayette dents who have complained about tbeii door or in advance 741-1117. Keansburg Recreation Commission. recently completed revaluations. from two to seven. streets. The amendment would also allow the JANUARY tl Bus trip to N.Y.C. to see Ice Capades, excellent APRIL U-a purchase of a used computer disc to 9 Bermuda Cruise on Votendam, April 11-25. Spon- increase the borough's computer's in- seats. Sponsored by the Open Door of the Baysbore Area, $16.50 per person. 2 P.M. showtime. Bos leaves sored by Agape of Red Bank Presbyterian Church. CaU formation storage space. 'Living History program Red Bank It Hazlet. CaU 73»-St6S. or 496-1471. 741-446* or 741-SI71. The terminals will allow the water and sewer department, the tax collec- Special Needs Association of Parents and Pro- APRIL ZM* tor's office and other borough depart- planned at Craig House fesstonals In Holmdel will bold a meeting for all parents Bos trip to Washington, D.C. ments to make greater use of the com- FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - Jerry ryday chores that John Craig and his and teachers on Jan. 27 at t p.m. la the Holmdel by the OpenDoorof the Bayshore Area. Cost $146 per puter, according to council member K English, state commissioner of En- family performed more than 200 years Intermediate school library. Our topics will be legisla- for double Include* sallslghts i ' _ HuachandK Lynn Reich. vironmental Protection, has announced ago. tion and curriculum. Call 73t-3t63 or 416-2471 leases from Red Bank and The purchases, if approved, will be that the historic Craig House, located at This program will be held every Haslet. financed through bonding, according to Monmouth Battlefield Slate Park, is third weekend of the month. Craft* will JANUARY a The St. Joseph School PTA will sponsor its 5th Reich. hosting its first "Living History" pro- be demonstrated from 10 a.m. to 4:30 Annual Chinese Auction, Jan. a, at 7:30 P.M. la the OCTOBER lt-17 In other business, the council reap- gram. p.m. on Saturdays, and noon to 4 p.m. on school auditorium. Maple PI., Keyport Refreshments But trip to World's Fair (Knoxvtlle, Teuneatee), pointed Councilman Ralph G. Musgrave The Craig House interpreter, along Sunday. will be served. Tickets $2.00 can be purchased by calling the Grand OleOpry Sponsored by the Open Door of the to a five-year term on the Manasquan with the members of the 2nd Regiment, January's program will Include dem- 56*4014. BhFrf(^7It3m River Regional Sewerage Authority. Middlesex County Militia, will be in 18th onstrations of quilting, tinsmithlng and The council also acknowledged re. century-style dress, performing the eve- gunsmithing. SHREWSBURY, N.J TUESDAY, JANUARY 19.1982 The Arts The Mly Register 13 Assemblage of talent Chamber music ?ails to breathe any life ensemble plays nto Dam Site musical with Benham RUMSON —' Helen Benham, harpsichordist and pianist, By ROB RUN ALD A will appear with the New York Kammermusiker, a unique double-reed chamber ensemble, in a concert Thursday night. T1NTON FALLS - The real myitery at The Dam Theater The concert, sponsored by the Chamber Music Society of Site Dinner Theater is not "whodunit?" but rather the Monmouth Arts Foundation, will take place at 8:30 p.m. at hflw can so much talent be so collectively awful?" the First Presbyterian Church, 4 East River Road. eccentric nor clever enough, and has trouble dancing '.'Something's Afoot" concerns a series of deaths Benham will be featured performing on her harpischord in without bumping into live people or kicking dead ones'. and murder* at the English estate of Lord Dudley solo and chamber pieces. She's obviously winded when mixing song and dance. The New York Kammermusiker is an internationally Kantour. with the(demise of Rancour himself to get things rolling. Included are dark ladies, three servants Jerman's Germanic French accent is neither known ensemble. This group, under the and an uninvited'guest. It is billed as "a murder phony nor convincing enough, and leaves us doubting direction of llonna Pederson, has per- mystery musical comedy," but is more like a comedy the actress, not the character. Jerman's operatic formed throughout Europe, the United mystery and a musical murder. voice, a plus, cannot save "Carry On," one of several States, South America, Australia and torturous musical numbers In the snow. New Zealand. Their repertoire includes As in the musical number "Suspicious," there are works from the Renaissance through several theories about the death of this production, Stansbury and Jerman have a common alibi — modern periods. and several suspects. they were badly miscast on the night in question First, there is a possible conspiracy by James The victims (not necessarily In the script) include Benham is a graduate of Oberlin McDonald, David Vos and Robert Gerlach, who wrote Brian Fuorry as Flint, the caretaker, who Joins with College, the Oberlin Conservatory of Mu- the book, music and lyrics. The banal plot does not Edie Mandell as the maid Lettie in performing the sic, and the Juilliard School. She taught twist and turn, but simply veers over a cliff. The show's musical and comic highlight, "Dinghy." for many years at the Diller-Quaile School of Music and in the Preparatory excruciatingly contrived and incomplete solution re- Fuorry brings with him a subtle burst of energy with School at Mannes College of Music in Benham quires a stage gimmick to mask its many, flaws. each turn on stage. New York. She also has taught on the faculty of Brookdalc The music is about as interesting as the tuba vamp John Pierce as Geoffrey and Mary Anne Matthews Community College, Lincroft. for a polka. Lyrics, similarly, are so memorable that as Hope Langdon are fine and fresh as the sighing love She has played chamber and solo concerts throughout the even the cast has trouble remembering them. interest. eastern United States and in Europe, as well as on radio and Music is executed by Sister Rose Marie DiCamillo. As the lord's nephew, David Meenan (who also television. Next, we have director Don T. Gretxinger, who choreographs) is vital and sinister, singing and danc- She has performed with the New York Kammermusiker fails to stylize the characters and their actions. The ing with a great deal of style. BiU Hagen as Col. on numerous previous occasions, such as the 1979 Salzburg lun of the spoof aspect is missing; Gretzinger fails to Gillweather is affable and droll. In the role of Dr. Festival in Austria. Currently on the roster of Albert Kay provide any fresh air, and the show suffocates. Pacing Grayburn, Derek Smlth-Wlnnes is nicely neutral. Associates, Concert Artists Manage is so slow, dinner patrons have time to order drinks Jim Norwood, as Cllve the butler, dies early, to his between cues... and have them delivered. Management, she offers unusual programs combining good fortune. harpsichord and piano music. Also suspect is producer Kathy Reed, who as stage Final ruling: a suicide. The harpsichord was built in Boston by Eric Herz in 1980 manager misses numerous sound cues, requiring ac- FOOTLIGHTS — Charge Bob Thompson with defa- It is a nine-foot instrument noted by experts for its excep- tors to say "I think I hear the telephone," before it mation of special effects and set fraud — he tries to tional beauty of tone and for its wide variety of registration will ring. Such a gaffe is frowned upon in high school pass off prefab tacky for English Tudor. Ed McGuire's possibilities. It will be heard in both chamber and solo works theater, and taboo in professional. lighting is equally good. on this program. Accomplices in the cast (perhaps it's an inside job) Performances continue through Feb. 14, Wednes- anlii" enete av Carl Ferine This concert is partially funded by a grant from the are Kay Stansbury as Mitt Tweed and Lucille Jerman day, Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings at 8:30; YOUNG LOVERS — Mary Anne Matthews as Hope and John Pierce National Endowment for the Arts. Tickets will be available at as Lady Grace Manley-Prowe. Stansbury is neither dinner at 6:30 p. m. with reservations required. as Geoffrey spoon in "Something's Afoot" at The Dam Site. the door Thursday night HIS MOUNTAIN 0 MOGANS HEROES • INDEPENDENT Television today NETWORK NEWS 0 24HORAS Movie timetable 0 BOB NEWHART NK1* JERSEY Ball Dance of Good and Evil, 8:30 Ott LAVERNE ANO SHOW (VHF) WNET IS; (UHF) SHIRLEVSh.ftay.ihoirih.d 0 I REREFLECTIONF S OF Information for tha movla time- CINEMA II RID BANK MPAA RATINOS KnighlaoflheRaundTabteare THE THIRD REICH The table II provided bv theater opera Abiente of Malice IPGI 7 00. RIDSANKMOVIIil — O-Oeneral audience 23,50,52,5» (all listed as 52). Chimpt.TheManWhuLivede La v*rn« anangad for h«r It torj Since movlet trt ftubltct to »:ll Reetlme IPG) 1:00 PO — All aaas. I Parental eul Devll'eOeneral' RIDBANKMOVIIIII — eance lueeetted) It Under chanee It It recommended that HOWILL NEW YORK with • furrror. (Ctatad 1086 readers call Ihe Iheattr to confirm Ticket To Heaven (PG) 7:10, 910 R — Restricted. IPersoni undei (UVH) WCBS2, WNBC4, a OMNI: THE NEW Caplionajd. U S A ) 11:00 correct tlmet. ""den of the Lott Ark IPG) SHREWSBURY 17 net admitted unlett accemaanlef FRONTIER O EL SHOW DE IRIS MONMOUTH COUNTV 7 IS. 9 IS SHREWSBURY PLAZA CINIMA I by parent ar adultauaraienl WNEW 5, WABC 7, WOR », NEWWS COUNTRY- RedllPGII 00 X Aduliionlv O ENTERTAINMENT ABSHOIIN TOWNSHIP WPIX11; (UHF) 31. 0 M>M>.S.H. . CINIMAM — Arthur IPGI 7 10,1 IS SHREWSBURY PLAZA CINIMA II TONIGHT Ho.li Dime 9:00 mm CBS TUESDAY 0 BENNY HILL Saturday the 14th IPG) m,tM KIVPORT Absence of Malice (PG) 7:30. 0 0 STRAND- PHILADELPHIA Whallay. Ron Hendren Randi NIGHT MOVIE Mar.an SHOW STRATHMORI CINIMA I — 9 41 t Children Raldart ol Ihe 1 oil Ark IPCI Woman in Love (XXX) II 03. SHREWSBURY PLAZA CINIMA . \» ADULTS U.M (VHF) KYW 3, WPVI, Oakta ol 'CHIPS' latka about HuiiWhit*' 1962 Stan 0 HONEYMOONERS 1 X. 7 IS. 9 JO. Feellngl IXXX) I 10. a JO III — ON BAT. NIOHTI hartell end her romance with Nancy Cartwrighl.Charlat 1 IS, I 30 The Boooani IPGI 7:30,1:30 WCAV10; ilIHF) 17, 29, 48 0 DICK CAVETT STRATHMOftS CINIMA II —. CINEMA I Gregory Harnaon of 'Trapper Nriahbort IR) '.10.1:10 LONG BRANCH MIDDLESEX COUNTY Aidman. Ruth Stlvaifa True SHOW LONG BRANCH MOVIIS I — Raiders ol John MO.' AtSURY PARK • DltON • lory ol a normal girl who, • PEOPLE'S COURT NSW 4TN AVS. TMIATIR - Absence of Malice IPG) Ml. MINLO PARK CINEMA I The Lost Ark IPO) NEWt bfjrCauM of har poor ayaaight 9 » TepilPGll 00, 4 IS. I IS. 1 41 4 0 CLOCK MOVIES 0 INFORMADOR 47 LONG IRANCH MOVIKII — every everUna MACNEIL-UHRER anduny aually Wgh tptritt. wat O SATURDAY NIGHT 10 00. Virgin and Lover (KXXI • 4S MINLO PARK CINIMA II — Mlindt:a ^wJntique carrlagecirawn by M- Ifour horses makes its way to the front R««llt*r IUM MMlot by Larr» Ptrna door of Drumthwacket, carrying Gov- PRETTY AS A PICTURE — Persons in period dress new governor's mansion in Princeton, to set the mood ernor and Mrs. Brendan T. Byrne and participate in a re-enactment of a Revolutionary War for a pre inaugural New Jersey State Historical Society Governor-elector and Mrs. Thomas H. encampment on the front law of Drumthwacket, the gala. Kean. Drumthwacket debut is a kean place for Kean By MARGUERITE HENDERSON PRINCETON - Not a glow in any of Drumthwacket's 14 fireplaces, but several campfires burning out front. It was there that a Revolutionary War re-enactment (tents, fires, costumes, et. al.) set the historical theme for the pre- inaugural party played out, Saturday, by and for the New Jersey Historical Society. The organization has set as Its lofty goal the renaissance of Drumthwacket (purchased along with almost 12 acres for $250,000 in 1967) into the new governor's mansion, and the modification of Morven, the present gov- ernor's home, into a historic house museum. The cost thereof has been tagged at $4-million, all of which is being funded by individuals, corporations and foundations. Many of these major contributors came across with $1,000 a couple (and there were about 225 couples in all) to add to the home conversion coffers and enjoy an elegant evening while so- STATELY FOURSOME — Meeting the press at the Robert B. Meyner, Gov. Brendan T. Byrne, Gov.-elect doing. Drumthwacket party are, left to right, former Gov. Thomas H. Kean and former Gov. William T. Cahill. Sure it was icy and snowy outside. But the frigid winds didn't hit until all the guests were assembled warmly behind Oriental red quilted jacket. Smiling Betty Cahjjl wore gown serve such as shrimp, salads, and sliced tenderloin with Drumthwacket's impressive Ionic columns. Governor and and jacket in bold print of aqua, black and brown. And Bemaise and horseradish sauce. The gifts for guests were Mrs. Brendan T. Byrne and Governor-elect and Mrs. Thomas outgoing Helen Meyner wore a black gown with lots of gold Cybis porcelain roses. II Kean arrived first, tootled in by a fife and drum corps, and jewelry. Missing from the parade ware former Governor Adding immeasurably to the event ware the groupings of sitting so high on an antique horse-drawn carriage that all had (also Chief Justice) and Mrs. Richard J. Hughes; the unhappy ferns and other greens in every empty corner and flower to bend low to miss being "thwacked" and "drummed-out" news is that Betty Hughes is hospitalized in Florida. arrangements by Susan Feld and Edward Mochel of Flower of the action by the metal braces of the blue and white striped The good news is that Drumthwacket (Scottish for wooded Fair, Livingston. Red roses and sprays of tiny white den- marquee! hill) is looking better by the minute. The renovation work was drobium orchids were used in small centerprices. Virtually Descending from the coach (that the couples rode in only originally geared toward an inaugural finish; then the date every mantel bore a fan-shaped arrangement incorporating from the closest corner on Stockton Street) was no easy was reset to March 1, due to delays in arrival of equipment. the most exotic and unseasonable flowers: purple anemone, matter, either. One had to wonder if the Keans and the Brynes Now it looks like the Keans will linger a while longer at the birds of paradise, wax flowers, daffodils, gladiolas, fiji might have come just as gladly in heated limousines, as did family compound in Livingston and won't move in until school mums, carnations, bright red and orange tulips. former Governors William Cahill and Robert Meyner, with concludes. They seem open-ended and relaxed about their Urns filled with greens even graced the front steps and smiling wives in tow. actual date of residence in the mansion, which now in- were situated on both sides of a broad red carpet that lead corporates "public rooms" downstairs and "private quar- from arriving cars to foyer. Lined up there were a throng of FIRST LADIES — Debby Kean, second from left, wife Governors' gals ters" above. Princeton fellows, looking more like "Gentlemen's Quarter- of Gov.-elect Thomas H. Kean, gets some friendly ly' ' than car jockeys. They proved It, too, when one stalled out encouragement for her first lady role from former first The governors' gals looked most attractive. Dainty Debby Kean wore a mauve crystal pleated elongated tunic and Dinner in the bedroom three times before maneuvering the car toward the parking ladies, left to right, Helen Meyner, Betty Cahill and area and another pushed a wrong button and popped a guest's Jean Byrne. matching full-length underskirt trimmed in narrow gold braid at hem and wrist and complemented by a short necklace of The whole place was opened, however, for Saturday's hood. Also his eyes! gold leaves linked together. The lovely, enigmatic Jean Byrne gala. Round tables accommodating as few as four and as Popping everybody's eyes was the long gray limousine wore black silk straight-legged evening pajamas with an many as eight were situated everywhere, even in the master with darkened windows and the Playboy emblem etched bedroom suite! Designer Percy Leach, a personal friend df subtly on the driver's door. From It stepped a man in tuxedo I 'i the Keans and orchestrator of inaugural activities, decreed and a blonde in a silvery gray knee-length evening ensemble. that floor-touching tablecloths be of white silk. The gilt chairs Could it be this was Playboy founder Hugh Hefner and his had green velvet seat cushions. There were votive candles on friend Shannon Tweed, sidekick during hearings in Law- every table and silver candelabrum on buffet tables. A string renceville last week regarding his firm's application for a ensemble from the New Jersey Symphony performed in the plenary casino license for its Playboy Hotel and Casino in wood-panelled library and there was music to dance to by Don Atlantic City? No, it was not. It was Arnold Fleischman, Anderson. Princeton Caterers used first floor cooling and president and managing director of the Atlantic City opera- warming facilities and second floor "family kitchen" to tion, and Mrs. Fleischman. RUMSON GROUP — Mak- ing their arrival at pre-in- augural party are Rumson residents Mr. and Mrs. John L. Kraft and Mrs. Kevork S. Hovnanian, whose husband is rust out of camera range. awrence Bathgate II, Howell, a chairman of Inaugural Committee '82, and his wife, Pamela, are among HI THERE! — Mr. and Mrs. Chet Apy, Little Silver, some 450 guests at Drum- step UP to New Jersey Historical Society happening. thwacket gala. AT LARGE Storm and crash are part of collective experience By I I.I.KN GOODMAN It's been an anxious day. Even now, the entry to the subway. It was a temporary victims out of that Icy river. disease, too. How many of us will try to build BOSTON r- We are all, finally, accounted grizzly news from the Potomac* River, the human shelter set up on this prime piece of Now I wondered: Why is It that one hu- high walls of reassurance, comforting for. My plane, the last shuttle to leave the endless pictures of horrors and heroism, real estate by some urban squatter. man catastrophe engages our emotions, ourselves with the idea that our companies, snowbound New York airport, has arrived. rivet our attention. Everything seems This was home for the night for at least rivets our attention, while another, slower, our Jobs, are okay? Will we separate My friend, flying in from Washington on this heightened: my sense of safety in this cozy one of the 30,000 homeless whom we are told human disaster turns us off. Must we be ourselves from those who have lost work and luckless day, is safe in my living room. private place, my sense of vulnerability in now exist in that city. One of the 30,000 forced to break through our shields of blind- lost bold as long as "ours" are safe? By 7 p.m. the rest of my family is at the world. These mixed feelings rub against confused, weak, self destructive, or hapless. ness to identify with plane-crash victims? I wonder if half of us will learn, like the home. An hour later, my friend's children, each other until they create sparks. The sight of this box made me huddle There but for the grace of God go I? Do we people in Calcutta, how not to see the other stuck in it> (.i(iit(.i:siu:i:iiAN them. Their diabetes can be conttrolled by non- If you are a diabetic taking insulin a change with a similar core city group of 500 Boston Being chronically unemployed often has more usually before 3-5 years of age. The Kinsey pharmacological means. There is almost no youths who had been remanded to reform to do with chronic depression and emotional study agrees in this ... that sexual preference in your diet may be all you need to reduce your excuse for an obese diabetic to be locked into insulin dosage by two-thirds or even be able to school. The average I.Q., ethnic background, instability than with prior training and ability. is usually established before adolescence. The medication. A diagnosis of diabetes should not discontinue it completely. Dr. James An- residence and school were the same (or both At the same time psychiatrists and psy- main markers were 1) gender non-conformity; derson, of the University of Kentucky College automatically mean drugs or insulin. The the deliquenU and the study group. chologists must realize that work plays a cen- and 2) gratification with childhood homosexual of Medicine, Louisville, did just that for 36 non- fault, it is true, is in the ones. We are born Valiants' data supports the following con- tral role in one's life. Work, a dangerous topic encounters. obese diabetics by placing them on a high with this tendency to diabetes. But the course clusions: 1) The capacity to work in adult life in scientific discourse, has much to do with I am inclined to agree with the Kinsey fiber, high complex-carbohydrate, low fat diet. the disease takes is up to/the individual. measured by income. Job satisfaction and abil- mental health and is probably essential to the report. If only because you'll never lose money The proportions of calories were 70 percent Exercise is generally! associated with phys- ity to remain employed, is highly correlated to good life as well. betting against psychiatrists. Their focus on carbohydrate, It percent protein, and 11 ical rehabilitation {But it also brings about a mental heath, maturity and capacity to love. the psyche has blinded them to the influence of percent fat. The diet had 65 grams of plain or metabolic rehabilitationN^at, carbohydrate !) The capacity to work in childhood can HOMOSEXUALITY, INHERITED OR AC- . the soma on the patient's illness. plant fiber each day. and protein metabolism, are Improved... and powerfully predict adult mental health. 3) QUIRED?: Homosexuality may develop as a The soma may not be decisive in homosex- simultaneously, the metabolic orders that ac- The composition of the diet included whole Such childhood competence is more closely a result of yet unknown biological factors, and uality, but it may play a vital role. This is now company diabetes. function of ego strength than it is I.Q.; mem- not solely because of early parental and en- becoming evident in a number of other condi- grains and garden vegetables with only a lim- ••• -ited quaintity of fruit, because they are high in bership in a family with multiple problems, or vironmental influences according to a study by tions where Pharmaceuticals are replacing WORK AS A PREDICTOR OF MENTAL parent's social class. the Kinsey Institute for Sex Research. The talk sessions, and blood tests and nuclear simple carbohydrates. No changes in blood HEALTH- Over the past few yean Dr. levels for vitamins and minerals were ob- survey was done on 979 homosexual and 477 scans have given evidence of pathological and George Valiant of the Harvard Medical School In defining childhood work Valiant uses heterosexual men and women in the San Fran- physiological aberrations. served. However the levels of zinc and other has been studying the natural history of male Erikson's description of the crisis at this peri- trace metals were not measured. cisco Bay area. It seems to me that homosexuality is one psychological health. A good deal of his work is od of life; the crisis between industry and Following interviews with these subjects, area where studies of identical twins sepa- This diet appears to be a safe, inexpensive, to found in "Adaptation to Life." However his inferiority. The dominant virtue of that age, the investigators concluded that sexual prefer- rated at birth would provide interesting in- effective way to help control the diabetic state! continuing research on male mental health according to Erlkson, is competence. "In- ence is not consistently linked to early rela- formation. In fact, it might provide evidence Unfortunately low fat diets are usually not continues to appear from time to time in the dustrlousness involves doing things/besides tionships with mother, father, siblings or peers that would lead to the acceptance of this new palatable and patient compliance becomes a medical literature and with others," writes Erikson/^'a first . . . as has been argued for yean by other Kinsey Report. problem. The introduction of daily exercise Once recent Valiant report is on work as a sense of the division of labor. Competence, researches. "Homosexuality may arise," they may then be equally beneficial, and, at the predictor of positive mental health. The sub- then is the free exercise of dexterity and say in their book Sexual Preference: Its De- READERS ARE WELCOME to write Dr. same time, allow the diabetic patient much intelligence in the completion of tasks." jects were 456 inner city men prospective^ velopment in Men and Women,' "from Sheehan in care of The Register. P.O. Box WO. more leeway in choice of foods. A five mile run followed from age 14 until age 47. Valiant was These findings should offer a lesson to both biological precursers that parents cannot con- Red Bank, N.J. 07701. The specific references alone can replace a daily dose of insulin. testing the hypothesis that capacity to work social workers and to mental health workers. trol." from which these item sin the column were In any case many diabetics who are on corralates highly with both mental health and Vocational rehabilitation may need far more Some psychiatrists believe that homosex- obtained are available on request. Please drugs or on low doses of insulin may not need the capacity to love. So he matched this group psychological input than it has received as yet. uality occurs as a developmental deviation enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. ASK DR. BROTHERS HINTS FROM HELOISE Don't live with guilt Coffeemoker cleaning By DR. JOYCE BROTHERS helped your son more but turning him we should cancel the family celebra- Dear Heloise: My husband baked I suppose they gossip a lot, bul Ihe in than you would if you'd done nothing DEAR HELOISE: tion this year and pretead we kave 1 have an automatic drip cof- biscuits the other day and accidentally chain reaction is most positive, in my Dear Dr. Brothers: I'm the mother and waited until be committed more something else to do. — W.D. rolled Ihe dough too thin. So, he just strong opinion. — Harold Staley serious crimes, or until he himself was feemaker which requires a brew of up ol live children and I feel I've failed Dear W.D.: Why cater to your to 10 cups of vinegar once a month to folded il over into two thicknesses, cut killed. COOLER HOT CHOCOLATE •n% lamily because my two oldest boys cousin's neurosis? Unless there are ex- remove the lime buildup. the biscuits out and baked them. The important thing now is to focus Dear Heloise: To cool hoi chocolate •re in jail. They ran with a bad gang tenuating circumstances you haven't Can this vinegar be used more than They pulled apart easily after bak- and nothing I did or said would stop on the family that is still in your home. mentioned, It seems to me that he is ing into two exact halves, were (especially al breakfast lime when ac- Try to learn from errors you may have one lime? - Dorothy Wert liviiies are so lime-oriented I spoon in a Ihem. They gol into drugs and stole and reacting in a very childish manner. Sure can, but I would add one slight smooth, and il was so easy to spread iiMiiniiiii'd other crimes to support made in the past, so they won't be Often, when parents remarry, sons and buller and honey on them. bit of vanilla or chocolate Ice cream. repeated, but don't take on all the qualification... More nutritious and flavorful lhan ilit-ir lialiii I finally turned my eldest daughters, even fully grown, feel Use a filter and line the basket just Boy! What a great mistake! We are MIII in because I knew he was guilty and burden. threatened because they see the remar- going to do this every time from now plain ice. — Reader Keep in close touch with all the as you do when making coffee. I .v.iinrd to protect the resl of my riage as a disloyalty to the other pa- This will catch the lime deposits as on. — Joyce Towns QUILTINU KNOWHOW i.iiniK irom what I was afraid he problems of the three Youngsters who rent. WRINKLES AWAY are home. Encourage them to talk they are dislodged from the cof- Dear Heloise: Recently, someone would do to us. This has caused me If your cousins's father died very Dear Heloise: Wash-and-wear asked about markiag quill blocks so Ihe about their feelings about their feemaker. thus keeping the vinegar great puin. I not only feel guilty about recently, there might be some grounds clothing which has had wrinkles set by marks wouldn't show after the quilt brothers, help them to achieve in free of gunk. tailing them as a mother, but about for his feelings but I suspect this isn't a session in a loo-hot dryer can be was quilted. Here's what I do: school and let them know you care and You may have to change the filter ImniH to go against my own son and the case. restored by dampening Ihe garments, Draw Ihe pattern on a piece of are proud of them. more than once, as you should run the turn him in. — C.C. vinegar through the coffeemaker sev- placing them in the freeier for a few heavy brown paper, the slie of Ihe quill Dear Dr. Brothers: My 65-year old As far as the difference in age*. UUs eral times until the lime is no longer hours, then pressing. blocks. Stack the blocks three deep and aunt just surprised and shocked her is relatively unimportant. Because of Dear C.C.: You can't live with guilt visible on the filter. The fabric usually returns to its pin the brown paper over them. children and their children by marry- lingering sexist attitudes, it's usually over something that's past. You may Once you are finished with the original smoothness. — Florence ing a man 12 years younger than she is. much easier to accept the marriage of be taking on guilt over something that vinegar, pour it into a clean jar, label llankinson With a rather large, unthreaded' Her son can't accept this and has a younger woman to an older man. doesn't belong on your shoulders. Pa- it, and store until the next time. Do not CHECK-UP BY PHONE needle in your sewing machine, siitrh threatened not to attend our annual Actually, it makes much more sense rents often assume the entire responsi- use it for any purpose other than to Dear Heloise: Kvery member ol over the pattern. The needle leaves family gathering. I feel very uncom- biologically for women to be with bility for their children's lives when clean the coffeemaker or other clean- my elderly mother's church group has liny holes outlining Ihe design. The fortable about this because I don't want younger men. This is a personal matter they really don't have that much ing chores. developed a system whereby they call holes will stay in for a long time. to hurt his feelings. We've always been and each couple has a right to his or her power. A child's friends and what they one another in Ihe morning (not loo Once. I quilted a quill that had been close friends, but on the other hand, I own choice. Basically, age has little to While vinegar is relatively inex- think are frequently much more impor- early I and visit by telephone, which pul away tor two years and the needle fail to see that his mother's dene any- do with the capacity to love and be pensive, waste not, want not is still a tant in determining his behavior than also serves the purpose of seeing lhal holes were still quite visible. — Alma thing wrong. My husband thinks maybe loved, especially later in life. good adage to remember and practice, what his parents say. You may have and perhaps even more so these days. everyone is O.K. Provides welcome Malek - Heloise company too. Smart! Smart! Smart! — Heloise YOUR HEALTH ANN LANDERS Value of annual checkup Disappointing counselors B\ LKSTKK L. COLKMAN, M.D. produce symptoms or cause annual physical examination. Dear Ann Landers: You Some clergymen are "too I was at Ihe home ol my I shall be aware thai a take distress. Sixteen percent had There are some doctors frequently advise your busy," no doubt. But they. nailer's relatives last week, smile can be easily spoiled, I huve been taking u year- that the yearly examination high blood pressure. Eight who believe that the statistics readers to go to Iheir school too, are valuable safety meeting many oi Ihem lor Ihe and 1 shall be much more I) fvuniinulion Irom Ihe lime is of great value. There are percent had coronary artery would be even better if pa- counselor and Ihe clergy for valves and can be a godsend first lime. His t«u daughters relaxed when I am among I joined my company ii years others who think that they disease. Ten percent had tients presented themselves help. As Ihe mother of three in time of stress. Irom a previous marriage friends. - The Seattle DUO. Sometimes I think that are entirely unnecessary. cancer. These are significant at their doctor's offices when sons I can nil you neither our 1 would appreciate it if you were Ihere. iThey are lour Cheshire Cat these examinations are en- While these "trench-to- statistics and cannot be de- any symptom persisted for sons nor I have had any suc- readers who have asked for and live years of age. I Final- Dear Chessie: "From the lirt'l\ unnecessary and lhal trench" battles are going on, nied. any length of time. "Any cess when we followed that help from either (or both) pf ly one of the girls turned lo mouths of babes ..." lhc\ can be dispensed with. I patients remain in the active How can one deny the im- length of time" varies with suggestion. The clergy and these sources would drop a her daddy and asked (refer- •eel ihc) ure •< waste ot lime. line of fire for trouble. In a portance of recognizing, the stoicism of Ihe individual. school counselors are always card and say, "Yes, I was ring lo me), "How come she - Mr. N.C., N.Y. study of 568 executives who treating and controlling a sin- There are some who will seek "too otjsy." helped by a school counselor smiles all the time for noth- Dear Mr. C: were given 2,000 annual phys- gle serious illness Certainly help immediately. There are Will you please ask your or clergyman" or "No help ing?" The battle plans are icals, it was found that 83 that one patient will become others who will wait, hoping readers lo tell you Iheir find- was given." Suddenly I realiied I was carefully laid out. There are percent of these had some the greatest protagonist of that the symptoms will disap- ings? Po/sibly il will en Dear Ann Landers: Some- trying so hard to look pleas- those physicians who believe abnormality which did not the concept of the value of the pear. Ihe schools and thing happened recently lhal ant (or maybe pleasing) lhal How long does one wait? chunrfies lo lake a closer look made me shudder al firtl, my Jaws were aching from Is a week, or a month reason- at;memselves. then il caused me lo lake a Ihe phony smile pasted on my good look al myself — I mean able when a distressii Maybe Ibis problem exists face. AT WirS END symptom is present? only In Ihe southeastern Unit- really look. And finally I de- ed Slates. Or maybe it's a cided il was worth sharing I learned a valuable lesson Physicians have changed national problem. Or maybe with your readers. from lhal child. From now on Gupola their attitude toward physi- it's not a problem at all, and tor ttnlor clllitnt invitts you cal examinations at yearly in- my liming has been un- Dog joggers tervals. Certainly the "an- to lint In iht grand fortunate. Thanks. — nual" is not as important at manner to which you'va Smyrna, Georgia, Reader Of baan accusiomtd SO or 40 as it is at 80 or 60. The The Atlanta Journal "annual" certainly has more Dear Reader: Tight mon- It you n ustO to tht Mil you II hit the wall significance In a patient who . want lo consaMf tht Cupola Iht ey and budget cuts undoub- MM in stnw cilutn living has a prior Illness that de- tedly have reduced the serves such constant super- All suitts ait pnvalt |tra indivM- By KRMA BOMBKl'K same problems as runners: sore feet, shin number of counselors In uais or coupltt). tach wim splints, beat prostration, lacerated foot vision. many schools. This is ex- kuchtfltnt and ivaiuwt un- Alter years of being married to a man pads, arthritic hip conditions and heart prob- It is most naive to believe tremely unfortunate because lurntihtd or turnishtd to sun your own pwtonal Usit who sits around all day Sunday and watches lems. They even suffer from attacks from that doctors use the annual economic hardship in- other dogs. Besides that, dogs don't sweat only as a means of sup- Ftatuitd ait 3 lupnti mtais a animal documentaries, I have gotten used to tensifies ordinary family day tram a divtnl«M mtmi. people giving animals human emotions. like people. (Did you ever see a deodorant plementing their income. If problems, and young people mwd stren. pUnnM actnriMt. I've heard Martin Perkins tell when an fordop?) such a thought occurs to you, need someone to talk to. I Ihtalrt. card & gtmt looms. TO alligator is "bored." William Conrad de- I watched a marathon once at San Diego find yourself another doctor, hope those in authority will nrm Ortigtillul grttnhoutt scribe an elephant plowing through an entire where a runner came in with his dog on the for you don't deserve the consider this personal plea All lot ont modtralt monthly ttt leash. Both had gone over 26 miles of a faith and dedication of the |VouiMvnDuyttMng')AMo village as "playful" and Lome Greene and cut somewhere else. availawt lit gilt baiott* diagnose a penguin who won't go into the grueling course. Both had hit the wall. Both one you have. btauly shops, and a lulty stttM water as "crabby and sluggish." had drawn from their reserves for every bit inlirmaiy Eicadtnt shopping I don't know how they do it. I'm probably of energy they possessed to keep their bodies Converts existing doors Into tnermallzed right ntarby the only person in the world who cant tell moving. Find Out How a Lawyer unit. Waathorstrlpped with high density, So com* maki your nt«t yaws tht vtry btsl ytacs ot yow Ml when a dog is smiling. I answered the phone The one in the shorts with two legs got a Should Help You . . . silicon* treated wool throughout. Inter- T-shirt and a can of beer. The one in the fur locking barn* at meeting rail. Adjustable at Tht Cupola once wearing only a hair dryer and I thought Fn» milial Contultmtlon I heard a giggle, but I couldn't be sure. coat with four legs wandered around con- Mvfi H^Sl Vw^sj al siW ff V^vX fused with a tree wish. DIVORCE $275 -JSJSSiB^rv Mount... Thai's why J was Interested to read a 8 A.M. to 5:30 f.M. iRCMuimr story about dogs whose masters were into There must be a way for non-running UnooM—ml default 18 BANKHUPTCY dogs to let you know if they want to run or month MpwaHon no fauN Unconlesled Proceeding Mm. H Sat running. You see 'em all over the place .. . Fri. Til 9 PM. joggers flapping along, five, ten miles a day not. Luckily, we have a dog that com- municates. If you aay to him, "Croon, boy, Husband »WHe MO and beside them t ball of fur on a leash 1 we're going running!" be crawls under the Hm far other dtvorot* ""J" " tMm- • ttWOWLWWUMt panting to keep up. wM very wWi eacti earn. UnconteMM MM How do they know dogs enjoy running? dryer with a MargueriU and looks at you w% km Irani III I m. in Isn't it possible some dogs are bom who with a disgusted look that says, "I'm not moving until you call a cab." •wamisXj.OTSU don't like to chase cars, return sticks or bite BROAD STREET (tSI) Ml SIM- mailmen? Maybe they Just didn't know how He could be the smartest dog in the x 1(32 Bf 741-7500 to tell you. world. Or he could have picked up that trick RED BANK Ironically, vets say dogs develop the from me.' ID i Muppets Dennis the Menace SHREWSBURY, N.j. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19.1962 The DMty fegfeter 16 Dear STILL' io cooking for a BI6 USt Leftovers? What's a Crossword puzzle ftmily, but no* the. Still Cookhy 1EFT0VER? ACROSS 23Corrlaaacorrfaaa 46 iJoajiaslan laCUyon kick art from up- Ug (Mitt 2SSM1SA rh*Lotn» • Twain, lo 2ST.k.iood 47 High not* 17CsMe Mama 29 Compoaar, 4toihaa« 9 Aunts?. Erik WOpanup- 21 WkMMan 12CH»on MLath ofoorma 23 WKtowrod Portugal's 11 Uamlaaed II 52 24 Thing* to. DouroMnr 32Evi MArtHufC. aata 11 Numerical CnMtMnM Oarte'a 2tASaD|l M AitlnnMtK 27A»aa. 14 Singular ramark mm 11 Hmiumm 15 "HMhuaalah MttMA) •nd at A "•uoa" D«ad. MSaeMA HSaaSSA UFrtaMan aaWOanmrin 37 Staging S7Agad 33 Zodiac sign Snuffy Smith (tfthttA) UErrlartalrwf II "tka«ohas" L— 34 "WhlthM- 3>S**tnh(ll« SgSaatlA VEP--VORE NEW AN HOW VORENEW 18Vwy:Fr. aH« 80 Draft HOT IS PLUMB HAT IS 20Monysua 40Ptantsaad kiHIala 351 DOVOU M "-ot PURTV, LOW€EZy PLUMB marriadhar 41 Baata II Aetstnt LIKE MV Khar Larcany" PURTV. 17--Magnon DR69S? LOWEEZV DOWN MDaparl Ynttrday's Puuto Sotvtd: 1 Lawn shrub 40FWidlanaa 2 Truthful 4iOaom«Mcal mi iiJ mi HIII IIUMI. . 3 IrrHatas cutting F II II in mm in ii'iiii'. 4 -dagrM Eg HI II IIII IIII 111!.IllflU Hill 5 Francticoln i ii mm in iiriiiM urm I Chavron 43 L.ndow«k« i II ii ii i \\w\\ 7 Vicinity 45 VOWM III IMI 1 Illilll I.IIIIIIJII a LOOS* 41 NlgMbMs MUM i mi II i i ir.ii.'ii II,IM blouse soCnrlalng *W U. WILSON. HE'S RETURNING THE CALL I'lMlltl llllll.il NllOU'lHIl I Th«rt 51 Eastam IJMIlUllH rIMIIII I1I1II ought- Hilnkar, LAST : 10 Wtddlng -Tn ill II41111 HM I riunu 52 Tavern 111 II IM Illitll I 11 Carp«ntry I'll II I I Illilll UHI1UIJII MOutnwded: OHfX'LL B€ HAPPY TO AS A CHILD, JOHN HAP A The Family Grew* Irnptormnt abbr. 6X-I&HT---AH-- I IIIIJMIII4l.il II II'IIII IIJItM VOUCH FDR THE 12 "Tha Mill 55 Ach.il ASIDE FROM A SIMILARITY OF VOICES, FELLOW! I'M MENTAL TOOBtfM! i ii IIIII >Mi ii III in; ii i — Floas" JOHN CARPENTER AND I HAVE BUT THAT'S I.ILIUM llllHHii I1MIJU Mary VERY LITTLE IN COMMON, » ALL 6EHIND II 111 1 MRS. WORTH! „ / BUT HEOKV* HIM! GIVE ME YOU* s M NAME AS A F REFERENCE! 5" fi 1 M 51 wTr The Wizard of Id S n L • ——iff But he hit me bock first!" 1 s 1 Andy Capp Your horoscope, birthday TUESDAY, Jan. 18 cial mainstay of a number of a new line of endeavor. ful about it. WHEN TUAT BLOKE Born today, you possess a artistic organizations and ARIESIMarch 21-Aprll VIRGO(Aug. 23-8«pt. 22) SCORED - OW VDU calm exterior that belles the enterprises, for that is It) - You would do well to - It is necessary to keep ALL RUSHEb OVEf? tremendous amount of ner- where your main interest lie low for the moment. abreast of the basics if you AN' KISSEb 'IM vous energy tha| keeps you lies There are self-styled ene- are to progress to more going longer and stronger Alao born on Ihla data mies waiting for you to fall. complex things. Remain than most people. You are a ar«: John Foraytha, actor; TAURUS(Aprll 20-May humble. purposeful Individual. You Edgar Allan Poa, poat, 20) - Make an effort to LIBRA(S.pt. 23 Oct. 22)- approach life and its prob- author; Robart E. Ltf, Con- become informed about new - A person of dynamic per- lems with no wasted, ladarate ganaral. procedures. Past methods of sonality helps you to see motions, no unusable To see what Is in store for operation may not suffice. things the way they really thoughts. You neither you tomorrow, find your GEMINIfMay 21-Juna 20) are today. Follow the leader. encourage nor enjoy sur- birthday star and read the - Take care not to over- SCORPIOIOct. 23-Nov. prises and will do your corresponding paragraph extend yourself in terms of 21) - Know your rights in utmost to keep the unexpect- Let your birthday star be credit. What you charge, you terms of the law before you ed from Interfering with your daily guide. , must later pay. are intimidated into giving Blondie your plans. Such an attitude away more than you need to. enables you to make sure WEDNESDAY, JAN. 20 CANCER! June 21 July SAGITTARIUSINov. 22- PRICES KKPGOIN6 UP/RXJCi OH, YEAH? and rapid progress toward AQUARIUSUan. 20-F.b. 22) - A day of fun-and- Dac. 21) - Take the first CLOTHES.. .EVBJVTWING'5 NOT \ WELL, NAME your goals - but it may also 18) - A broken promise may games'that could, If you're step in transforming ideas GONG EVEBVTMING, WTMJNG keep you from much that is cause you considerable hear- unwise, turn ugly late in the into plans, plans into activi- exciting tache today -- whether you evening. Keep things light. ties. A good day for gain. Careful with money, you or another is at fault. LEOIJuly 23-Aug. 22) - CAPRICORN(O»c. 22- are nevertheless generous PISCES(F«b. 19-Mareh You may be able to Jan. 10) - You should be toward any who are in need. 20) - Focus on a newly- maneuver yourself into a headed in the right direction During your middle years, developed talent. Concern favorable position on the now. Keep to plans well- you may become the finan- yourself with progress along employment scene. Be tact- made. Sheinwold's bridge advice West dealer Both sides vulnerable By Alfred Shelnwold aually discarded a spade, ANSWER: Pass. If the NORTH trying to look like a man Doonesbury You could easily make opening bid were one club who didn't have the queen • A65 today's hand, Just as U.S. you would bid one diamond, AK32 PSST./WARCIE.'THE SORRV, MARCIE! WAKE UP! ', MA'AAO RI6HT NOW, I'P SAY TEACHER JUST CAUEP SHE'S THE MAYOR YOUR NAME! J)F "ZONK CITY"! a 7T Beetle Bailey rWX.,RIDB I OO AWAY, KIPS. LOOK AT TMEM U9.,.BLE- 11 DON'T WANT TO.,, IT IS <5r?£AT GATHERIKJ6 AROLJNP THAT I DEPICATE TO ADMIRE IT THIS 6TATU SHREWSBURY. NJ TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1982 The Daily Refffcter 17 Classified Ad vortlsini? T°" FrM> 8:3°AM '"5:3 ° PM" Mlddletown area- 671-9300: Matawan area, 566-8100. 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE ON THE ACTION LINE, 542-1700. CLASSIFICATIONS » ContltucliooEquip DEADLINES CANCELLATIONS FAMILY PLAN HATES HOURS DAILY FRONT PAOE READERS M IDS WSoadarrleadl 4 30pm demekn 0M.Y UK SUMMT. 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FILES — Tablet, chairs, TORP.Y,M8.~ YOU IN eu/INOr 4OM6 elusive Monmouth County listings ol Red (Unit Daily-Sunday adding machine*, typewriter*., t4- FOUR SEASONS REALTORS, If/ ShrvwUmrv Ave. Ml 1449 tite equipment, etc al bargain fr*V0KMNtaw 471 SIM Drier) New or uteri. A.A.C. DESK ANDERSEN WIDOWS t DOORS OUTLET, 1709 Rl. 33. Oahhunt NEW I BEDROOM RANCH - I Any wit t iivit Wo diuounl REGISTER bath. Pkwv. E«ll 74. many eaugj. hVmdatwiieud*. i KO i» *li)J vlnvl clllklird typo sldlno. MM EXERCISE EQUIPMENT — And down. UM a month. In 7 vn. you'll 1M Boats* ANTIQUES - m- . oil, Toy BOB Classified Ads weights Call after J:M, own It. No Inleretted. Altar S, Cun oddity. AcrfM ( i-nti-i. rt*r, KOmi Accessories Hivrr Rend, Ctlf M*ven titUti as low as OCIAN TOWNJMIP - WaytHO ANTIQUE CENTER ol Rtd B«nh FENCING DISTRIBUTOR - Hai Wood, i Lena view village. Ngs> 11 FT. PENNYAN IW — Saart l\l Weil Frenl Slrttl 53 cents surplus ol green vinyl clad chain link Mmot Irons tMSJM.IIWIi. f_l- Fishermen on dttgttv ft tor tale at J Duildinu>1» d*«lerk442 4])4 per line, per day trin inQ at S9centkaW ft. complete gaga No points, no net. UI-iJBl. I trim txjuvjhl, «U for Guy Miplecrest Lincoln Mercury. Union. (bawd on non tommer Iv installed. Term.. Call warehouse H.J. CaH Marly SUvlt. vat/WBI. . IO-dav insertion) direct. HIM*' il £ I)ROOM SET — Blond WATERFRONT LENTZE MARINA — Far Rerlten iiMfwnnny, tuple dre>ter, ih**,. FIREWOOD Treed acre tot. 1 Mdroam ranch In Bay Boating. In out berlhlng service ivoOfcCglW toed, 1 night UblPV. »J» For FAST RESULTS Mixed hardwoods Una location Sulkheeded Deep wa- for power and tall boats. II to M'. >u, ;tk,t AT LOW COST 1*7 9H4. ter. Prlvgle culda-tac street Re- Used boat talet. 717 im du<*d lo Slb3 000 r IHI woo.) - 3 cordi hall Oak. 71 Merchandise 1*1 Apartments 100 Commarclal phone half Pine. JUS You cut, I deliver 77 Pets and Livestock LITTLE SILVER REALTY SAILS AWEIGH Call 14* 1231 evet. For Salt Rantals R.allor 741OV) Now Jersey's only HUNTER Dealer FIREWOOD - Seasoned oak Split BEAUTIFUL - Black 4 tan male, RED BANK - Luxury Htalt-rtM. 2 STARTER HOME — Law taut. Mt BOXES CORRUGATED REGISTER "B*n|l" type dog, found as a stray RED BANK — Centrally located he«. slt.tM Whelen Reeltv Group. Sailboat Specialists logs GUITAR el AMP - If" GUnon SG oeorV4H• • •, M vat*^p> w#aui• • ui VBBJTBJ. 71 pet owned, new hii Moving 4 Stof*oe. «nd lor In 94*4323 or 94* 4)33 walnut. 2 Dlmarfto't. Ptavs and In All. Highland!, now for adoption. CHI balwun 11-1t a.m.. A 1-7 p.m., tvavroom office suite. Rant nega- Realtors, all 7SU. •Jutlrv A complete ltneolpack«oing Very »weet, friendly, well man- Classified Ads look* fantastic With herd.Ml. caie, 1414841 te. 741 47M TWO-STORY OLDER HOME — 7 Ml MantoMklng Rd.. Brkk Town supplwt 4*2 44;2 or HJ 409* FIREWOOD - Oak, deliverd * $400 Alto Sunn Beta lead amp. lOOw nered. 747 i»U dumped, one halt cord, $110. Ham BED BANK — Beaulltul lu«ury one COMMERCIAL/PROFESSIONAL rooms, basement, largo tot, a«c. IMI) 477 Mil CASTAWAY' - E«tontowr> Thrilt wllh two ti" speakers. Ilk* ntw. SPACE — On first floor al charming location tth ft Holly. Watt 542-1700 mond Landscape Service, 411 144* MOO call s*3-mr FREE TO GOOD HOME -4 month bedraom. on to MM Mut utllltlei Shop, n M*in SI . front & re«r Old Shepherd/Coin* mi«, house 74UIS» buMdSng In hlslor k OWe Fair Haven. Keontburg. By owner. 717)174. Toll-Free from Matawan Area »4t.e«o. . IM Recreational entrance, perk in re«v. NtKt to FIREWOOD— Buy green wood now HUGE HOUSE SALE — Neduied broken, very good dog, loves chil- Call t4110U. 747-1711. •Voltolt's Consignment ohov Open tor neat year at HOS a cord. All oak, prices. '* Harding Rd . Red Bank. dren. Pleas* call RED BANK — Lovely one gg«raim Vehicles 566-8100 split * delivered 9M 2O». with rofl ft skyllghi. UK atyt utlll EATONTOWN — I Offices far rent WE GUARANTEE — More money II J m d*(IV M4 0222 Jan. 17, 23 A 24. Furniture, china, selling or buying a home thrown the smelt tlems. /4i ;ou eves. HORSE - For Ml*. I vr. oWties. 741 im oood area, canter a) town. Call COLONIAL - Dining rooni table Toll-free- Irom Middle town Area FIREWOOD — Mined hardwood.. chestnut mar*, hunter. $1500. Call 5411404 Reel Estate professionals Jaottan ft "M • •••« i li.iir-. CMC < 'Hill C«ll Call afler • p.m., 73* 4740 after I P.m. RED BANK - Centre! I kldrssml, Jootten. Realtors, num. Hi 49BI atler ,t p.m 671-9300 291 0»9 IBM TYPEWRITERS 1 batfn. living room, dlnlno room. EATONTOWN - 1 office, for rent, 1«71 17' FULLY SELF-CONTAINED PEDIGREE PITBULL PUPPY - oatln kitchen, baaomant, ante. To- goad area, canter of town. Call Whan considering Buying or Selling — Ford Condor motor homo, not RENTAL $22-128 per mo. r l Call a member of The ____— a«» • b\ • • e »**• 10 weeks old. $tfl Ullv radgcaratad. Walk la schools, S41-MB4. r Rent with option to buy I,TO327 Call 172-014* anytime churches, ft Mam. Off street park MaMnouth County generaitK. sleeps e. new irafn. JEEPS — Government Surplus. Ing. tin XM utilities ft security. HOLMDEL — OlFlce space, Im Multiple Listing Service III.OM 717-ntV . Listed lor HIM. sold lor |44. For SCOTTISH TERRIER — Beautiful references Suitable far 1 couples. medlele occupancy Hwv. IS, (l« MOTOR HOMES FOR RENT into call 1)12) «1 1HI, Ext. II*; pure bred male, need* QOOd home praiaiilanal. or commercial gtflCM. gar ma. 141 WU morns 1441441 Chock our anhtalehll REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONES Exceiiem companion lor adult Call No pels, call 7«1 1117 or ratlin. avat. 132 Condominiums low ratet and compare, m-0471 KINDLING WOOD t*1 H74 lor term*. RUMSON — a buraiiiis. IM Bath, MATAVMN — On Rt. 14, small of Town Mouses tl tO Red Bank Lumber, t Wall SI . SHEPHERD PUPPIES - Long Iko, arXHo.lmelely lei to It. Ample Red Bank. HISSOQ. hair, Huikv. mixed, 1 weeks old unfurnished Pleeie call til By BOB BRAMLEY grade and must have achieved a score in the 97th percentile or deferred for further discussion by the transportation commit- better in national norms of an acceptable standardized test. tee. The bus was to be used for the transportation of gifted and KATONTOWN - The school system's gifted and talented talented students. program, directed by Ruth Zahn, is off to an excellent start, it The board adopted a resolution authorizing Palmisano and was revealed at last night's Board of Education meeting. , Dr. Anthony Moro, curriculum coordinator, to attend the convention of the American Association of School Adminis- Commenting on the new gifted and talented classroom on trators in New Orleans Feb. 26 through March 1 at a cost not Youth sought in holdup the first floor of the Steeltnan School, Anthony F. I'almisanu, to exceed $2,000. The two administrators promised to bring TINTON FALLS - A borough woman was robbed at superintendent, described the sessions there as "a sight to back information which will be useful to the school system. see." knifepoint last night as she got into her car parked in the driveway of her Shrewsbury Avenue residence. Also adopted was a resolution awarding a contract to IBM The room has been renovated and decorated in keeping According to police, the woman started her car to warm it Corp. to supply computer equipment to be used in conjunction up shortly before 8 p.m. and then left it running when she went with its new use and has been received with enthusiasm by the with equipment at Monmouth Regional High School at a cost gitted and talented students, who are bused there from the back into her house. When she returned, she told police, a man of $16,715. The equipment will enable the district to comply wielding a knife had climbed into the car. system's various schools. Typical of activities there is tomor- with a pending state requirement for program oriented budg- row morning's demonstration of computer techniques by a eting and to pursue its policy of curriculum development. "Don't move," the victim reported him as saying. "This team from the Radio Shack in Shrewsbury, a program which is a holdup or I'm going to kill you." will be repeated Friday. Kugene Blasko, a custodian at Meadowbrook School, was The man then reportedly grabbed her purse and fled north appointed to permanent status at a salary of $10,525 yearly. on Shrewsbury Avenue. 1'almisano also reported that seventh grade students in The woman pursued him until he dropped her purse, she the academically gifted program are participating in the 1982 Heather Hauser and Paul Caliendo were appointed sub- stitute teachers for the remainder of the current school year. told police. talent search sponsored by Johns Hopkins University. The Police said the suspect is described as a black male, 17 to students will take the College Hoard Scholastic Aptitude Test A resolution to purchase a used school bus from Helfrich 18-years-old, five feet, eight inches tall, with a slim build. this month. To be eligible, students must be in the seventh and Sons Inc. of West Keansburg at a cost of 19,990 was Patrolman Gerald Turning is investigating the incident. You can become SHAW HONORED — Freeholder Frank A. Self, left, mayor of Middletown presents a certificate of recognition to David C. Shaw, right, after Shaw was honored for 20 years of distinguished service by the New Jersey Shade Tree Federation. Shaw, who Is the superintendent of the County Shade Tree Com- mission, was the first employee of the commission when it was formed in the early 1960s. a millionair$ 59 e for School budget under 5 a day. up $386,151 When you open a new Individual Retirement Account (IRA) at Fidelity Union, two marvelous things happen: in Keyport 1. You cut your tax bill now. 2. You could end up being a millionaire. Imagine! Now you can save for retirement while saving on taxes. And, depending on how much you deposit, you could someday be worth a million dollars or more! MOV 1'OUT The Board of Education unanimously in- Undue-eil i $4.tt:U,32l school budget last night, an increase of Open an IRA—if you work/ you're eligible! Ml 1.451 over the current budget of $4,521,870. but $47,000 Thanks to a new change in the law, effective January 1,1982, everyone who's employed under the slate budget cap. according to Board Secretary can open an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) of their own—even those with a company I ionium- .1 AuttrrU. ' pension plan! You can contribute up to 52,000 annually (thafs less than $5.50 a day!) if you're Tlic tentative budget is expected to raise the school tax rate j)> U >< cents per $111(1 ol assessed valuation. sjngle-$2,25O if you have a non-working spouse (filing jointly)-$4,000 if you're a working Tlii* current expense section of the budget is $4,680,150. married couple. cumpatcd with M.283.B99 in this year's budget. The increase You defer taxes if you open an IRA- you could pay more taxes if you don't! It's that simple! ill £188.151 - will he used for teacher salaries and hospi- Lefs say you contribute $2,000 every year to your IRA at Fidelity Union. When the time i.ili/.iiiiin insurance, AccfTfl said. I'apitul outlay is expected to be $130,000, as opposed to comes to figure your taxes, deduct the $2,000 from your gross income. It comes right off the Slim tMHI las] yi.ir Acerra said capital outlay funds are top—no ifs, ands, or buts! eai iii.iikill Ioi electrical work and renovations to the heating 1 But suppose you don't have an IRA? Without the $2,000 deduction, you'll pay the full tax s> slew IN tlic ini' ! school. rate on that income. If you're in a 50% bracket, this means you'll give Uncle Sam $1,000 in taxes. lichi service on the Central School and the High School addition m expected to be $123,171 this year, as opposed to Why in the world do that? Taktf that $1,000 in tax money, put it with an additional $1,000 and 1127.871 in last year's budget Debt service costs decrease by you've got your $2,000 annual IRA contribution. Now that makes sense! $4.7(111 yearly. Acerra said, computed from debt service in- 1 Compound interest: ifs like a snowball. terest rah ol 4.7 percent. Remember when you were a kid and you started rolling a snowball around in the snow? V CIT.I said the board expects to raise the following Soon, the snowball got bigger. And bigger. And bigger. Eventually, you had a big, fat snowball! amounts through local taxation: Compounding the interest on your IRA Koi current expense. $1,842,524: capital outlay, $ 99,576; Deposit S2.Q0O Retire at Retire .it Retire .it Mr with b5" with:. 70' with: deposit works exactly the same way, Your iml debl service. Jii4.l4li. iinmhilly .it iiu,e: Ihi' wnou.nl to he raised by taxation is $2,006,246, Acerra 25 $1,216,042 $2,248,707 $4,145,8')') account starts out small, but eventually you S.llll 15 J47,9% 653,950 1,21(i,O42 may have a big. fat, wonderful retirement In ihi' current budget, the amount to be raised by taxation account! (By the way, you don't pay taxes on 45 40.815 181.462 ' J47,')9h is $1 '.iTii.f»!i:i. v^i.iiii.t less than proposed for the new bugdet. either the principal or interest until you retire, Taxes accounted lor $1,805,356 in current expenditures; 55 I4,b18 41.475 'K),815 "ihcM'iimin's art'iiMumtngti l^inuvcftl r.iir.v.uiutl rnmi when your tax bracket will probably be lower.) MINI mill in capital outlay; and $71,237 in debt service in the 1 Him 82budget. .i.Hiini . ,lm' ID ri'lirrmonl agp. Inlcrt-M Mil's i annul 1" Good news for the self-employed. Ku.H.mien! fur Ittr lull term <>l ,tn IKA. hdti.il rc^nl,Ui< in*. rr<|Uirr Whether you're a doctor, lawyer, or con- Tin'tentative budget now goes to County Superintendent of ,1 sul)sl.inli,il mlt'rrsl |wn.ilty tni wilhilr.iw.il Ml luiulsliuiiidn Ik A Schools Milton (J Hughes lor his approval, Acerra said. prior til .i»;r W/l, tractor, if you're self-employed, the new law A public hearing on the tentative budget will be held has something for you too. The maximum yearly contribution to a Keogh Plan has been Mai ill III at II p m Acerra said. doubled. Which means you can contribute up to 15% of your income, or a maximum of Ann.i noted that state aid to the school system is expei'li'il in incn.'UKO by SlIiW.UOu. The total anticipated state $15,000. And remember, your tax advantage also doubles! In addition to your Keogh Plan, you .tut in IIM r.>!•;.! »:t budget is $I.H70.O;IH, he said, as compared can open an IRA as well, and get an even bigger tax advantage. with fl ..'(17.24:1 in stale ,inl in the 1981-82 budget. Talk to an IRA specialist. It's simple to open an IRA account But getting answers to your questions isn't always as simple. Thafs why we have our own IRA specialists ready to help you. The/ll answer your Man charged in burglary questions and explain all the benefits, including how ybu can select from a fixed-rate or variable-rate investment plan. And the/ll show you that when it comes to saving for retirement MATAWAN — A borough man was arrested yesterday &£ afternoon and charged with burglary and criminal mischief, while you save on taxes, you can't beat a Fidelity Union IRA police said, alter he was caught fleeing from a house he To open your account, stop in at any Fidelity Union branch. And if you want to talk to one allegedly broke into on Broad Street. of our specialists, call the office nearest you. Todd Jones, ol B Spring St. was arrested by Aberdeen I'ti ol man Harry Stark around 4:30 p.m. You'll get advice that could be worth a fortune. Junes was originally sighted by borough police responding Bergen, Hudson, Sussex, Warren counties; 368-7183. Essex, Middlesex, Passaic, Union counties: to a report ol suspicious activity at the Broad Street house. 430-4446. Mercer, Monmouth, Ocean counties: 741-1000 x248. Morris county: 538-3601. Hi' was seen coming out, was confronted, but fled back • - ^ into IIH itructure. police said, only to escape through a huHcJHe.nl window Mi- wits Intel apprehended when Aberdeen police came into town lo assist, police added. licsidcs the burglary and criminal mischief charges, he f) FIDEMTsf UNION HANK •ilso faces attempted theft at a residence charge. Jones was sent to the county jail after failing to post bail set by Municipal Court judge Hichard Heuser Jr. ( Fidemy Union (tank; Fidelity Union Bank NA, Garden State; Fidelity Union Bank. N A; Fidelity Union Trml Company, £A Patrolmen I'aul Callamaras and George Magnenat, and Detective Arthur Knoeller were the investigating officers. Members of FDIC Deposits insured lo SKX).(XX) »• 94»— WittgE.ltOS 443 HollyCp 1 MAPCOIJ0 I 531 144. 214S+ '• I 171 1141 * 20**— Wcvcrhri WI3 1330 •1t>uorr2.2l— MarUll 111 1910 21 2t4l+ •'• REASON #12: The changing tax laws. Hutkvg .11— 15J I'I '•• • ''4 MIIMIFI.MI MQ 31'. 34'-. •• MarMldl.ll 1 34* Whirlpl I.M 7 214 IllluOllUl 4U_ 33 11'. 1 3i'/i ll'i+ *» im— M4rript 1011 140 tUMU 7 4IJ 13J 3 '• 2 MarlMH.92 * Ml 3I'« 31*. The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 affects ' • M. 7tt> 7 141 tlllul Illl __ ll« 1- 3' ) 3fk + IV, l»- "• Ma*co .7*12 70 i*m1.Z0 4 2024 every taxpayer, regardless of income. Your H&R InlUkni 13 175 4'. *• t>'*— MaxvF 14- VI 13'. 1 1 •• _ Ml Kirbvl 31 MdvDS DH 2.1* 1 1* IB.. 21''. »4*»- 4« Block tax preparer can show you how the new tax law 1 1^ I 70 * 101 Ml II Htl 13 103 14't '* MUvlg Winnboo 19 4IS 341 341— '1 14*— la t IU helps you save money on your 1981 taxes, and point MIO H% 10 Mt Dm Wolwlh 1 MIS 12(4 UV, II 4 "4 l-lt H+1 1* I M t 174 uarndq 41 >» McDnld rvnn, M • 12 11'/. H'» out changes that could affect your taxes in 1982. ll-l 14*. 1*»«-t '•% McOnDI 0*11 I0 17 79*1 10 11 11 + MiGEdl.OO I 71 MediaG t2 1 1 34'.'. It'. 34'^ + '. MtGrH I Mil 290 Xerox 1 1 'tot 3t'.4 374. 3t • ',) Unjoin _ 11 !'• in Mead 2 1 144 17 reasons. One smart decision. Mclftgb 1 2 44 11 l.'/i IS — Mvlvillel 04 I 153 Meick 2*015 999 Mlthlk .24 / 606 17.4 1/''. 1/'. laltCo 1.24 J tl 20 lt+4 20 MarrLyl M * Ills 13 1 1* |.»_ ZinithN 3010 111 1|<. 11 }Vt* '• MlMPl Mil 111* NtPalnt — 104 (.. I4i J'.^ COOH'OM Oy Tlia Auoclatad Prm 1102 MidSUI I.M 5 Oil 14 7'i Nl'rot .'3a 7 !*•— MMM 111 ISO! 3 141 I'M 1''4j — '/• H*R BLOCK NolDI 31 MmPL 2 12 * 111 41 lltfe NANovi .30 7 Moblls 1 4 MI4 livi 24', t '• Mod Active Stocks NoCdOfl — 191 15'• 21') MdMor .1022 II* THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE Nuinacg 20— 11 20^ MM 20>»t n MonkOI 14 Ilk NEWVORK (API-Salt*, 4 p.m. prlct OOhKfP — noo 33 33 33 — MonianlJO I 590 and n.1 cnanot ol lha Illlaan moil active urarkA lie 4116 1, •41' MnlDU 2 • M N«w york liotk CKhanoa limit. Had Bank, 10 West Front at.. 741 -2600 l'ufcplW2 1/— 3 II'J MM .*'• '.* MonPo 2 41 I 1*7 Iradimi nailorvally al mora than II , FrMhoM, 611 Route 33.462-5526 F.IIK.R 42lT 41 It'r »V| + Moruanl.40 * Mt DM I.3M.I0O 41O tlv. 17 1 PLCP 1« > I*! 2 _ MorNorl.13 • II pninnp.l 111,300 40V4 +I4t Mlddlatown, 1109 Highway 35,671 -9314 / 114. 1141 Molroial M t 1497 PlllM«I.UI $!•*•— M £.»on> 731.300 30 __ tuiJSiri" 100 Route 36.264-6966 11 33