Today's Issue: Your Weekend Magazine
Showers Likely Showers likely today. Clear- ing, mild tonight. Sunny and THEVMLY cooler tomorrow and Sunday. 1 KedjBank, Freehold" V^ FINAL / Long Branch ___/ EDITION Monnioutli County's Home Newspaper for 92 Years VOL. 93 NO. 193 RED BAISK, N. J., FRIDAY, APRIL 2,1971 TEN CENTS Most Welfare Cases Are Found Qualified By DORIS KULMAN He said that as a result of the federal Department of there was a 2.1 per ceni error categorical assistance cases TRENTON - Continual this study, three per cent of Health, Education and Wel- in eligibility. But the payment in New Jersey will come un- quality control shows that at the cases reviewed have been fare, said. errors totaled 21.7 per cent, der scrutiny this year, the least 97 per cent of New Jer- referred to county prose- The state's quality control with 13.1 per cent being over- quality control unit spokes- sey welfare recipients legi- cutors' offices for in- unit uncovers errors in pay- paid an average of $16.90 a man said. That's a little more timately qualify for public as- vestigation for possible fraud. ment as well as in eligibility. month while 8.6 per cent were than 4 per cent. sistance, spokesmen for the Of the cases referred for in- There are a far greater num- receiving an average of $9.88 The probe includes a study state Division of Public Wel- vestigation, 1.2 per cent are ber of errors in payment than a month less than welfare of the case record and book- fare said yesterday. convicted, he said. in eligibility, a spokesman regulations entitled them to. keeping records; a visit to the A random sampling of wel- Continual quality control of said. Sometimes, recipients That would be considerably client to substantiate that in- fare cases is selected on a the welfare rolls on a monthly are found to be receiving less less if extended to all formation, pick up additional statewide basis each month basis, with a full field in- than the mandated grant. recipients in those cate- information and gather leads for.ah in-depth review which vestigation of the'sampling, is Errors Found gories," the spokesman said. for further investigation; and includes visits to the clients' a federal requirement. Of the 92 cases receiving All of the 132 cases in the interviews with clients' land- homes, a spokesman for the "The statistical sample is old age or disability assis- Aid to Families with Depend- lords, legally responsible rela- quality control section of the valid within one or two per- tance or aid to the blind in- •ent Children category re- tives and others who would Bureau of Local Operation centage points for the sample vestigated during the last six viewed during that same six- have pertinent information, said. population," a spokesman for months of 19p9, for example, month period met the eligibi- the spokesman said. lity requirements, he said. Then follows statistical ana- But 6.8 per cent were being lysis of the accumulated infor- overpaid an average of ?22.44 mation. a month while 5.3 per cent The spokesman said specif- were receiving an average of ic corrective action is in- $33 a month less than welfare itiated if eligibility errors ex- regulations entitled them to. ceed 3 per cent or payment Projection of the prelimi- errors exceed 5 per cent. nary tabulation of cases in- There is a follow-up and addi- vestigated last October in- tional reviews in all cases dicate overpayments total where corrective action is about $5.11 a month and un- necessary, he said. derpayments $5.10 a month, In addition, AFDC cases the spokesman said. are scrutinized by both the About 6,000 of the 140,000 (See Welfare, Page 2) Veterans Oppose Calley Decision MIDDLETOWN - Veterans of Foreign Wars in this borough strongly protested the "Calley Decision" and urged all private citizens to write to their congressmen or to the • .•-• • • .:.-.'.. : . '..-•.. • APWirepnoig Whit© House expressing protest. . . : "' ,: CAULEY RELEASED FROM STOCKADE — A smiling Lf. William Calley In a statement released yesterday, Alfred Carver,: com- Jr. of Miami, Fla., out of the post stockade at Fort Benning, Ga., after mander of VFW Post 2179, Middletown, said, "If premeditated murder is the basis for the conviction of Lt. William L. Calley President Nixon ordered his release. Calley was convicted of the murder Jr., then pilots dropping a bomb for former President Truman, of Vietnamese civilians at My Lai three years ago and was sentenced to when he approved the dropping of the atom bomb on Hiro- life imprisonment. Nixon ordered his release to his quarters witti a guard. shima, are guilty of the same charge. Called 'Travesty' "This trial," Mr. Carver said, "has been a travesty of jus- tice since it tried the individual and not the system — a sys- ; r "••' ' AP Wlrephotp Grilman Says He'll tem, incidentally, which has won every war it was ever in- CALLEY PROTEST — Demonstrators marched outside an armed forces volved in." recruiting office in Trenton yesterday to protest the conviction of Lt. Wil- Korea and Vietnam, Mr. Carver said, have been de- liam L. Calley. . scribed as undeclared wars, and the element of risk and rate of casualties has been higher than ever before.* Not Stay in Post "Public opinion has been tried to the point where families state medical examiner will of servicemen are frustrated and even looking for ways to By HALLIE SCHRAEGER six- throughout the count: y as —avoid the draft. This decision has also caused many veterans y _c on tinue-to-^come-to-Mo n' — autopsy^eehters:— • ^~ Suspect in Murder ^ EREEHQLDC mouth County to perform all • to send the medals they won in combat back to Washington. .dical Examiner C. Malcolm He said he will also contact Letters of protest are pouring into the Pentagon and President B. Gilman last night repu- autopsies in homicides and the hospitals to pave the way Nixon's office. diated official statements that questionable or suspicious .for more and bettecuse of he will stay on as a deputy deaths. their facilities. Slogans Noted All other autopsies will be Mr. Tomaino will be in the Calls Accuser Liar "If premeditated murder is the basis for charges, trials medical examiner after a reorganization of his depart- performed by Dr. Gilman. • , county two or three days a and convictions such as this one, what about the slogans of- "Dr. Albano said he would week during the reorganiza- By WILLIAM J. ZAORSKI more surrounded Nichols. ey he had collected from cus- ment. past wars such as praise the Lord and pass the ammunition; "I wouldn't stay one hour endeavor to find us a medical tion - expected to take about FREEHOLD - Lawrence There were no more out- tomers on a newspaper route. shoot anything that moves; shoot first and ask questions af- examiner," said Mr. Irwin. three months, "but don't hold G. Nichols, 21, of Keyport, bursts. The defense, while conceding as deputy medical examiner - terward; get them before they get you; it's you against the not with my experience," Dr. "The new man would be theus to it" - using the medical briefly disrupted his murder Superior Court Judge Wal- that Nichols killed the boy, enemy; and, the price of failure is your life. chief, with Dr. Gilman under examiner's office in the court- trial yesterday, charging that ter H. Conklin quickly ex- denies that it was pre- Gilman declared. "I think the' a county detective who was "How then do you justify this conviction? Calley is a sca- freeholders know that.'' him as deputy." house as his headquarters. cused the jury and told Nich- meditated or that it occurred "Dr^Gilman was agreeable Mr. Tpmaino has been as- testifying was not telling the ols he was getting a fair trial during a robbery. pegoat and the veterans of past wars and the public will not The plan to reorganize the truth. stand for this farce. office of the county medical to that," said Dr. Albano. He signed to "set up procedures and had a good lawyer. Mr. Manigrasso said police said' that the new man would . and see that the office is well Nichols sat passively when Warning Is Stern made a superficial search of "The anguish, mental strain and public embarrassment of examiner, and to replace Dr. Gilman as headman, was an- have to be a pathologist who equipped," the officials said. County Detective John Mani- "Unless you behave," the house where Nichols re- this officer of our armed services is a travesty of justice and lives in the county, but that he grasso said Nichols admitted said the judge, "I will have to sided in the morning of Jan. our enemies must be laughing up their sleeves at this ridi- nounced at a. press conference Dr. Gilman was relieved by yesterday by Freeholder Di- has no one in mind yet. The Dr. Albano last week of all au- killing Thomas Murphy, 11, of use extreme measures," ex- 25 but found nothing. Nichols culous display of so-called American justice. .appointment would be made 78 Second St., Keyport, Jan 22 plaining he either could have then told police, the boy had rector Joseph C. Irwin and topsies in sudden and sus- "Remember, 'war is hell' to begin with. We therefore state Medical Examiner Ed- by the Freeholders. picious deaths. and hiding the body in the at- Nichols gagged and chained been there but had left, he urge all private citizens to write either to their congressmen Still up in the air, aside tic of 195 Osborn St.", Keyport, or placed in the detention cell said, adding that Nichols re- win H. Albano. He was superseded during a or to the White House," he said. Both said that Dr. Gilman from the question of how murder trial in which three where Nichols resided. in the basement. Nichols said ported that someone had much longer Dr. Oilman will But Nichols apparently be- he did not want either. pulled down some ceiling tiles had offered his full coopera- pathologists, including Dr. Al- came angry when Mr. Mani- in the house and he wanted tion, including his agreement stay on, are the questions of ban^, disputed the cause of "Keep it cool,"-advised the salary for the new man and death he gave. grasso testified he had asked judge, "Do you feel all police to check to see if some- to stay on as county medical him, "Did you kill this little one had broken into the house. examiner, in a limited capa- how many assistants he will Body Exhumed right?" have. The body of Samuel Einaldi white boy because you When the jury was brought Later that night, police re- Petitions Started city, untii the reorganization thought he was better than is complete. They said he had Dr. .Albano said a county of Lincroft,,was exhumed in back into the courtroom, the turned to the house which was medical examiner's salary of an unusual procedure and a you?" He said Nichols looked judge instructed them to dis- owned by Madison Medler, agreed to then-.remain as a him straight in the face and continued Mr. Manigrasso, deputy. $18,000 to $20,000 is about av- second autopsy performed by regard any statements which To Free Calley The shake-up comes on the erage for a county of this size Dr. Albano. replied, "yeah." were not under oath and to got Nichols' permission again "Why don't you tell the to search the premises and heels of disputed testimony and Mr. Irwin said the .free- The trial ended in acquittal dispel the outburst from their By ED WALSH he ordered the atom bomb over the cause of death in a holders would expect to pay for Joseph J. Vena Jr. of Hol- truth," said Nichols, inter- minds. conducted a more thorough MIDDLETOWN - Alarmed dropped in World War II cost- rupting Mr. Manigrasso's tes- search. He went into the attic murder trial here last week, that. Dr. Oilman's salary is mdel, and Anthony G. Burlew Mr. Manigrasso was one of at what he terms "a gross ing thousands of innocent but the officials were careful ?15,S0O a year, and he "has of Cliffwood Beach, accused timony. five persons who testified that of the bungalow, he said, and miscarriage of justice," lives. three deputies. Jumping to his feet, Nichols after moving some boxes, dis- not to fault Mr. Oilman too of cauing Mr. Kinaldi's death Nichols admitted killing the Township Clerk Charles V. "I just can't sit back and much for that. Expect Changes by striking him. continued. "Don't stand there Murphy boy. covered the bbdy. Carroll has leaped to the de- take this decision," Mr. Car- Dr. Albano said the reorga- and lie about something." He Nichols initially denied the Age Cited Defense attorney Charles The state, which is seeking fense of Army Lt. William L. roll said. "It strips this man "Dr. Gilman is 73 years nization would carry' with it Frankel, who pointed up in- quickly loosened his necktie. the death penalty, maintains charge but later admitted kill- Calley Jr. by starting a mass of all his honor and dignity." some policy changes. Instead Within seconds, county cor- ing the boy, he continued, ad- old," Mr. Irwin said. "We consistencies in..Dr._ Oilman's that the murde'r was pre- petition drive seeking a rever- Mr. Carroll said he for- need a younger man to carry of using many funeral homes, testimony" during the trial, rection officers and County meditated and that Nichols ding that Keyport Police De- sal of the guilty verdict hand- warded a telegram to Lt. Cal- the medical examiner's office Investigator Reginald Wil- tectives Frank Criscillo and a heavier part of the load." said it was the first time in his robbed the boy of $4.25, mon- ed down by a court martial ley yesterday afternoon stat- "It's too much responsi- will designate no more than 43 years as an attorney that Al Wucstcvelt were there at board Monday. ing his intentions Concerning the time. bility for one individual," said .he had seen the state reject, Mr. Carroll, who started the the petition drive. Dr. Albano of the county me- the testimony of its own me-' Attack Described campaign from his accounting "I told him to hang in there, The county detective said dical examiner's post. "We Boy Attempts dical examiner. office'on Rt. 35, yesterday and signed it a fellow Ameri- have reached the point where '"Dr. Oilman has been a Nichols admitted inviting the said he received 170 phone can," he said. The Inside Story • boy into the house and telling he (Dr. Oilman) needs help." • Bank Heist very busy, enthusiastic, and Ked Bank Antiques Show is readying .T....Pagc 8 calls throughout the day from Opposes Trial The reorganization plan hard working medical exam- him he couldn't pay for the persons who had heard his "I don't think he should FRKKIIOLD - A 13-year- Shoppers with experience know way around Page 9 newspaper because he did not was announced after Dr. Al- iner," Mr. Irwin said yes- Knlcks pluck final Hawk feather Page 14 message broadcast over a lo- have brought, to trial in the bano and his administrative old boy walked into the office terday. "If there have been order it. The boy made a cal radio station. first place," Mr. Carroll con- of the Monmouth County Na- Casey, Lion, Mustang nines win Page 15 sound like "huh," he contin- assistant, Frank .1. Tomaino tional Bank yesterday with a (Sec Oilman, Page 2) Schoolboy, golf, track roundups Page 15 "I took out seven spots tinued. "But seeing that he of Morristown, met for more ued, which Nichols said ang- today," Mr. Carroll said last was I felt he should have been toy pistol and his coat collar Friday Lenten Special ered him. Nichols then struck than an hour yesterday with ENJOYMENT, YOUR DAILY REGISTER night, "and I have seven more tried by his peers in Vietnam. Mr. Irwin, Freeholders Albert pulled up to Ins nose. Seafood buffet, 5 to 8. Longo's. WEEKEND MAGAZINE PHONE NUMBERS the boy and continued to going today." I am sure he would have been "Give me $500." the boy re- Sea Bright, $3.?5.(Ady.) strike him even after he fell to E. Allen and Axel B. Carlson Television Listings Main Office 741-0010 "I hope this drive mush- acquitted over there," he Jr., and County Counsel John 'porledly told a cashier. Movie Schedule Classified Ads 741-6900 the floor, he said. * rooms all over the state," Mr. said. "Sonny, you better-go home Deal Tennis Courts During his search of the M. Pillsbury. Bridge Advice 21 Legal Adv. 741-0010 Carroll, a-Navy veteran of Even though his firm is Dr. Gilman, who had to tes- and stop playing jokes," the &Pro Shop, Ocean Ave., open. premises, continued the detec- World War II, stated. busy preparing tax forms he cashier replied. 531-9874. Church News 11 Display Adv. 741-0010 tive, he found blood and mat- tify in the Lawrence G. Nich- The boy turned around and Classified 16-20 Circulation Dcpt. 741-3,130 Upset by Verdict said his entire office staff olas murder trial yesterday ted hair in the utility room "I have been upset by the spent the day yesterday pre- started to walk out, but. a Comics 21 Sports Dept. 741-0017 where the entrance to the at- afternoon, did not arrive until bank official stopped him and Notice to Little Silver Women's News 741-0010 verdict ever since it was an- paring petitions and answer- 3:07 p.m., nearly an hour af- residents. Little Silver emer- Crossword Puzzle 21 tic is and blood in the kitchen nounced," the 44-year-old' ing the numerous calls. called police. Editorials : .6 Accounts Payable ' 7410010 (See Murder, Page 2) "'Everybody should be be- ter the meeting stalled. He "As far as we can tell." gency telephone number 747- Acct's Receivable 741-0010 clerk continued. "This is a stayed about 20 minutes and 5900. Due to error in pt'inting Horoscope 21 hell of a reward for a person (Scc Petitions, Page 3) .said Patrolman Louis Carote- Obituaries 4 Mlddletown Bureau 671-2250 Passover Wine left before the press confer- nulo,, "it was just an,, April of the Little Silver Guide, the Freehold Bureau 462-2121 sent over there to do his ence began. incorrect emergency number Sports...... 14,15 Champagne, liquors, gifts. duty." Uniform Sale in progress. Also Plan Outlined Fool's prank." Women's News 8,9 Long Branch Bureau 222-0010 Tucker's Liquors, Broadway, "Look at, Truman, (former pants suits. Shirley Shop, The police are still in- was printed. Correct number- Under the plan outlined by appears above. (Adv.) Long Branch. 222-0160. (Adv.) President Harry S. Truman), Broad St.. Ked Bank. (Adv) Dr. Albano and Mr. Irwin, the vestigating the incident. 2 The »«ily Rf P*fT>B<^ BatiU-W1>imr1«>» n. N. J.. Friday. April 2, 1 'J71 Welfare Eligibility Found High result;dropped 3,000 HKrtheii (Continued) eluding seven supervisors, 30 evaluation group independent of the Division of Public Wel- and children from the welfart. federal Department of Health, reviewers and one clerk. ,. rolls. A federal court judgs Education and Welfare, ana The reviewers are trained fare and the Department of Institutions and Agencies of has just ordered.them all re- the federal General Account- as investigators and must which it - and the Bureau of stored, citing procedural irre- ing Office, which conduct pe- have two years of college or gularities. HEW is inquiring riodic field audits. Local Operations - is a part. equivalent college credits or The Cahill administration, into the situation (here. Review Cases two years of investigatory ex- In calling for the audit, Mr.v HEW and the GAO also re- which wants some outside perience. '••'•, agency "to take a good hard Kennedy also cited what he View a subsample of the quali- "It is true tha'tno one said is poor record keeping by ty control unit's work, and look at the value of our wel- knows the precise extent of fare programs" isn't out of the state public welfare divi- that unit also reports quarter- fraud," the unit spokesman sion. ly to HKW's regional head- sympathy with Mr. Kennedy's acknowledged. But projection suggestion, a spokesman for "They don't even know the quarters in ^ew York, the of its studies gives "a pretty number of people on wel- spokesman said. Ovv. William T. Cahill said, good estimate, one we have but he gulped hard when he fare," he said, "they only Brian T. Kennedy, a Bel- confidence in . ._. _ heard that Mr. Kennedy was know the number of checks tnar'atlorney and a •member "You know, quaiity'control calling for a house-to-house they issue." of the Governor's Welfare really works," he said. "If visit of every welfare ""He must be kidding," a di- Study Commission, has said you want to test light bulbs or recipient. vision spokesman said, "As of he will ask that group at its bullets you don't have to test last month, there were 515,000 April 2(i meeting to recom- each one. You do a random "1 don't think we could hire people enough to do that," he persons receiving public assis- mend to the governor com- sampling ..." tance of some kind." plete audit of the welfare sys- And qualitv control "is the said. Cites Survey Welfare costs this year are JUNK CARS AFLAME — Six Middletown Township fire companies responded yesterday afternoon tem, including a home visit to only fiscally responsible about $340 million, the spokes- every welfare recipient, to un- In offering the suggestion, when a grass fire went out of control and spread through a junk yard on Harmony Ave. in East Keans- way," he said "and whether Mr. Kennedy said such an au- man said. The money comes burg. More than 30 cars were on fire during the second major fire in the township yesterday. cover fraud or abuse._ it's done by us or another 40 per cent from the federal MrT'Kennedy said the in- dit in Nevada had uncovered agency is immaterial." 22 per cent fraud. government, 45 per cent from vestigation should bo under- One of the Welfare Study the state, 13 per cent from the taken "as quickly as pos- The Nevada public welfare Commission's priority recom- division did a 100 per cent au- counties and 2 per cent from sible," should include the wel- mendations is for estab- municipalities. Fires Hit Home, Junk Yard fare administration, should be- lishment of a research and dit of AFDC cases, and as a done by trained investigators, MIDDLETOWN - Township firemen bat- was smoke and water damage on the first and should be conducted by a Ucd two major fires yesterday which gutted a floor. Chief Henley said no one was injured. He state or federal agency which section of a Harmony Road home and another is continuing an investigation into the cause of 'hasn't any connection with Gilman to Bow Out which swept through a junk yard in East the blaze. the public welfare agencies. (Continued) Mr. Irwin said this was the "probably have retired at the Keansburg. The East Keansbnrg, Port Monmouth, Mr. Kennedy said that he any errors of judgment as far first official complaint he had end of his five-year term next, Belford Independent Ore companies and Port Bas discussed the proposal as the court is concerned it had about Dr. Gilman but that year, anyway. He said he Fire Chief Joseph Henley said there was Monmouth First Aid Squad responded. with several other commis- could be due to over- there had been '"innuendo be- plans a "partial slowdown" approximately $10,000 damage at the Alfred F. At 3:45 p.m., firemen were called out to' sion jnembers "and they enthusiasm and his many fore." his private practice. .Kate home at 257 Harmony Eoad. The fire was agree with me." tours of duty ... We don't . Monmouth County Prose- battle a grass fire on Harmony Ave., in East Has No Data •reported at 8:?1 a.m. by Mrs. Katz, who was at Keansburg. The blaze quickly spread through want to hurt Dr. Gilman." cutor Vincent P. Kcuper, who home with her children. Mr. Katz is the son of. Mr. Kennedy said he hasn't Dr. Albano acknowledged had not been in contact with Sprin^ g^ Arriyesi the Harold Snyder junk yard and set more any information that leads 1 Alfred F. Katz, Atlantic Highlands coun- than 30 junked cars on fire. that Dr. Gilman's trouble had the freeholders, said he could A . "VAW \. cilman. him to suspect wide-spread started with the Rinaldi trial, not answer a question about J\X I ITIAJA- The blaze was fought for 2& hours by six welfare fraud or abuse. but he declined to call it a how many criminal cases he RED BANK - ... The blaze began in an upstairs bedroom and companies which responded. No injuries were "But the problem seems to question of competence. has in which Dr. Gilman will ics, In Half-Time" forth* gutted the two rooms and a hallway. There reported. • • be that no one kifows for sure Cites Examination bfi called to testify. Three man or woman who needs ex- the extent of abuse, fraud, or However, he said at one more murder trials are sched- ercise, but at a. fairly slow, welfare cheats," he said, point that Dr. Gilman's post uled in the next few weeks. pace, is the title of a new "The professional welfare mortem examination of Mr. Mr. Keuper said no one has course to be offered at the worker states that abuses are Hinaldi has not been complete sought to reopen previous Community YMCA on Maple Murder Suspect Attacks Accuser . minimal. The working man is and "left much to be desir- cases in which Dr. Gilman Ave. •convinced they are prevalent. ed." testified, and he commented: Billed for those who are "a (Continued) Capt. Manning said Nichols newspaper route. At 11 p.m. that her son had been there I say let's find out..." Dr. Albano cited last year's "Dr. Gilman's testimony with- step slower than the you of and in Nichols' bedroom. He admitted striking and choking that day, she notified police but left. Mr. Kennedy said he statistics to show the quantity •stood the rigors of cross ex- yesteryear," the class will added that he found the boy's the boy in the living room of that be was missing, she said. George D. Creed, 76, of 220 doesn't have any idea how of work left for Dr. Gilman amination before. If he did consist'of calisthenics at a re- newspaper carrier bag in the the house. Making a house-to-house Atlantic St., Keyport, whose long such an audit would take under the new arrangement: make a mistake, it doesn't duced rale for a hall-hour fol- garbage can on the back ' "He (the boy) mumbled canvass of the houses on her property abuts the Medler or how much it would cost. of 1,277 cases of death in- mean he made mistakes be- lowed by a swim in the Y porch. something and I hit him," he son's route, she said she spoke tract, said he found the boy's However, allowing an aver- vestigated in 1970, said he, 232 fore." pool. It will begin today, and reported Nichols as saying. "I to Nichols who informed her red and white bicycle by his age of one hour for in- were autopsied - about 50 to Dr. Gilman, who was grad- will run for 10 weeks. Not In Report vestigation of each of the Under cross examination hit him with my hand on the rear fence Jan. 23 and called <>0 per cent Of them homicides uated from Cornell Medical Registration is being ac- side of the neck. He fell and I the police. 140,000 categorical welfare or suspicious deaths. College in 1927 and who has cepted at the Y and other Deputy Public Defender 'Wil- Two Numbers cases, and figuring a 40-hour liam J. Gearty, Mr. Mani- got scared and I hit him a Mr. Medler, who now re- Dr. Gilman's case does not practiced in Monmouth Coun- adult programs to be offered couple of more times." Nich- sides on Shrewsbury Ave., work week and a 50-week set a precedent. Dr. Albano ty for 29 years, was appointed this spring. « • - grasso conceded that the Are Lucky work year, that would be 70 statement about Nichols kill- ols also said he hid the body in Red Bank, said Nichols admit- said he had replaced the me- county physician in 1965 and A nursery class for pre- the attic, covering it with a SHORT HILLS - The win- ted killing the boy but didn't working years, one observer dical examiner in Camden medical examiner in January ing the boy because he was noted. school children of mothers en- white was not in his official coat and hiding it behind ning number in this week's know why he did it County last yfear because "he 1968, after the post was estab- rolled in morning courses is in report. However, Detective some boxes. New Jersey lottery is 631409, County Medical Examiner To conduct its in- wasn't performing his lished by law. session daily from 9:38 to Nichols said that while he and the winning number in Dr. C. Malcolm B. Gilman vestigations, the quality con- duties." He said last night he would 11:45 a.m. Criscillo and Wuestevelt testi- was looking for a place to hide the elimination drawing for testified that the boy died of ' trol unit has a staff of 38, in- fied they had heard parts of the body, his foot went the millionaire drawing is 798. asphyxia due to strangulation* the statement in the kitchen. through the floor, continued The holders of tickets with He added that there also was County Captain of Detec- Capt. Manning, adding that 631409 in the correct order win a cerebral hemorrhage, dis- ^ tives Andrew B. Manning tes- Nichols said he took the mon- $50,000, those with the last placement of the neck and HARD-TO-GET tified that Nichols gave a vol- ey from the boy's pockets in five numbers, $4,000; four bruises on the boy's face and untary statement admitting the attic. numbers, $400, and three num-. neck. 2nd the murder. He noted that Mrs. Patricia Murphy, the bers, ?40. Tickets with the last Assistant County Prose- Nichols had an 11th grade boy's, mother, testified that two numbers become eligible cutor Thomas J. Smith Jr., MORTGAGES education and was an unem- Thomas failed to return home for the million dollar lottery. who is presenting the state's for ployed machine operator at Jan. 22 after he went on his There are six $50,000 winners case, is expected to call as his the'time. this week. final witness today someone , Hornet and Buiinett * Approved over Phont Persons who have millio- from the state police labora- Monmouth County Investment Corp. naire lottery tickets oh which, tories, Trenton. 24.HOUR the last (hree digits of the se- The jury of 10 men and four PHONE rial number match the 798 women is being sequestered f Get him some bright new duds af Naielsorts. winning number qualify for during the trial. Births thu millionaire's drawing i gj April 21. Their minimum prize at that time will be $500. Mil- RIVERVIEW HOSPITAL MONMOUTH MEDICAL lionaire lottery ticket holders deal Red Bank Long Branch with the last two digits win Mr. and Mrs. John La- Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Gal- $100, and all others do not Bruno (nee Arlease Wilhelm), loway, (nee Terry Perkins), qualify for any prizes. This year the big $»ow is at your 101 Hudson Ave., East Keans- 3317 Washington Ave., Asbury burg, boy, yesterday. Park, daughter, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Peter Adr- ' Science Students Stavitskie (nee Leocardia Kaczmarz), 28-Kentucky-Av&, - agna (nee Cosima Gambino), Hear Naturalist American Motors dealers _ East Keansbnrg, boy, yes- KED BANK —Leonard Lee wood Beach, daughter, Rue 3d, Blairstown naturalist, terday. Wednesday. . Mr. and Mrs. Barry Han- photographer, and writer, re- Mr. and Mrs. James, Fit- cently addressed science stu- cock (nee Patricia Kirby), 12 zpatrick (nee Louise 'Ver- 00 Hau'g St., Union Beach, twins, dents at Red Bank-Regional chot), 14 Peachtree Road, High School. An outdoorsman,. boy and girl, yesterday. Oakliurst, son, yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sta- Mr. Rue has guided ex- Mr. and Mrs. Kichard Bon- peditions through wilderness vola (nee Carol Hilbert), nello (nee Sarah Grosen), 238 190 Chapel Hill Road, At- t areas of Canada, Africa and $175 Hollywood Ave., daughter, the United States. lantic Highlands, boy, yes- yesterday. terday. Mr. Rue presented the Dr. and Mrs. Alberto Doode school library three of his • Mr. and Mrs, Richard Tail- (nee Goergian Newbrwok)^ son (nee Holly Koehler), 23 books, "New Jersey Oout of ,337 Third Ave., Long Branch, Doors," "The Sportsman's Conover Place, Red Bank, daughter, yesterday. girl, yesterday. Guide to the Game Mammals Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ci- of North-America," and "Pio riacn (nee Barbara Caruso), 9 JERSEY SHORE MEDICAL tonal Guide to the Game Oakland Court, Matawan, Neptune Mammals of North America." boy, yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Norwood Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fa- Water Main Cone (nee Shirley Whintney), gan (nee Mary Stewart), 78 8SA Linden Place, Red Bank, Strathford Drive, English- town, daughter, yesterday. Break Fixed boy, yesterday. MDNffiOUTH BEACH - . Mr. and Mrs. Barry O'Brien During early morning hours, (nee Karen Delaney), 1604 repairs were made on a water Webb St., Asbury Park, girl, IIEIDHLBURG main which reportedly broke . yesterday. Germany at 3:11 a.m. today. Mr. and Mrs. Lauren Tal- Spec. 5 and Mrs. Harold E. A county radio spokesman madge (nee Lillian Earhart), Heaton (nee Joyce Sawicki), said the difficulty at Ocean 596 Jacques St., Pertti Amboy, Karlsruhe, Germany, son, Avenue and Sunset Lane was twin girls, yesterday. Feb. 15. cleared up before 8 a.m. Weather: Showers Likely i Mostly cloudy today with Arctic cold rolled eastward' the edge of the cold front. scattered .showers and iso- across the nation today, eras- Twisters touched down late lated thunder showers likely ing the milder sings of spring.. yesterday in two Mississippi this afternoon. Mild and be- Temperatures in the Great towns-Collings and Kps- coming windy in afternoon, Plains were as much as 40 de- ciusco-causSfag" limited prop*:- high 55-110. Showers ending grees below the previous crty damage. Hail and high tonight followed by partial day's readings yesterday. winds struck other parts of clearing. Windy and cooler to- Winds of 511 to (iO miles an the state. —sliding sun roofs morrow, high in upper 40s.- hour blasted snow across the New Orleans was swept by Sunday's outlook fair and upper Mississippi Valley and 67-inlle-an-hour winds in the -merchandise coupon books cool. Ilic western Great Lakes. , predawn hours. Ahead of the In Long Branch, yes- An inch of new snow blan- front the weather remained -win a week in Bermuda terday's high was 4H and the keted parts of Wisconsin. In mild alpng the East Coast. FREE low was 2K. It was 4:t at 11 p.m. North Dakota, sturm-whipped Skies were clear in the Kar The overnight low was 41 and snow and dust brought visibil- West. the temperature at 7 this ity down to half a mile. Temperatures before dawn morning was 52. There was a Heavy rain, thunderstorms ranged from 12 at Inter- Now you can save $175.00 on special Plus these other free goodies. When you trace of rain. and tornadoes broke out at national Falls, Minn., to 72 at 4-passenger Gremlins, 2-dr. Hornets and Key West, Kla. come in we'll give you a book of coupons TIDES Sportaboutwagons. Just in time forspring that can save you big money on portable . Sandy Hook and summer driving, we're featuring these INCOME TAX Today- High 1:11} p.m. and radios, luggage, tents and other fun-in- low 7::>4 p.m. . .,t models with sliding sun roofs—the only the-sun merchandise. And you'll get a PREPARED BY Tomorrow - High l-W a.m. sliding sun roofs on any American-made compact or chance to win a free week-in-the-sun for two in beau- and 2:'M p.m. ;ind Jow Hy'i a m. and 8::ili p.m. sub-compact. The sliding sun roof should cost $175.00 tiful Bermuda—airplane fare, hotel, mealSysightseeingf Sunday - High 2:42 a.m. extra but you get it free while the supply lasts. So come Get the full details at your local dealer. Drawing will b& EDWARD E. THORPE and :i:24 p.m. and low 9:24 a.m. and (I:.'Hi p.m. in now and put some sunshine into your driving. It's free. held April 30, so come in now and enter. &co. For Hod Hank and Humson bridge, ;i(ld t.wo hours; vSoa Have fun in the sun at your local participating New York/New Jersey 157 Broad St. Red Bank Bright, deduct 111 minutes; Open 9 to 9 - Six Days Per Week Long Branch, deduct la min- utes; Highlands bridge, add 49 fret Parking- hi. 741-8683 niinntns. American Motors Dealers Fl • Thr Dflllv Register, Bed BanJt-MJiWletown,N. J., Friday, A.pril 2,1971 of tlieNews Marlboro^s Industrial v
TRENTfM- A bill giving ex-convicts in New Jersey the right to. vote regardless of what type of crime they were im- prisoned for has passed the assembly and been sent to the sen- Ratables to Double MARLBORO - The Plan- imum of three acres per lot as ' kind, stating that the reason ate,- ning Board's approval of $1.5 required by township ordi- behind the gift was due to the,, The action came yesterday, along with these other legisla- million in applications last nance. fact that the land included in; tive developments: night almost doubles the mon- Mr. O'Hern, representing the park would be used only' T^The senate voted to ask President Nixon to expedite a ju- etary amount of industrial ra- Silverton Marine Corp., also by industry. The donation-is: dicial review of the conviction of Lt. William Calley on murder tables on township tax rolls: was granted .silo plan approv- not required under township' charges stemming from the My Lai massacre, shortly before In addition, the Recreation al for a. 50,0110-square-foot as- ordinance. • - Nixon announced that he had ordered Calley released pending Commission came into a sur- sembly plant to be erected nn Mr. O'Hern also indicated review of the case. prise windfall when one appli- one of tho lots in the industrial that the industrial park would; cant presented a $2,000 check park. work closely in the future A resolution asking xfor clemency for Calley was in- The Toms River-based troduced in the assembly but is not in position yet for a vote. to Mayor Morton Salkind for with the Industrial Commit recreational use. firm, which manufactures sion in screening applicants.; .*. - The Assembly Committee on Revision and Amendment The largest application was pleasure boats, is expected to Plan Approved ' of Laws released for a vote next Monday a resolution ratifying for a subdivision and site plan begin construction May l, The board granted site plan an amendment to the U.S. Constitution lowering the voting age approval involving Marlboro with October as the expected approval to Carl F. Zcllerf^j to 18. Industrial Park on Boundary completion date. Mr. O'Hern a professional building on'lit: The senate has already approved the resolution and the Road. Red Bank Mayor Dan- said that the plant, with an es- 79 in Marlboro Village. Mr':- assembly is expected to concur with that action. iel J. O'Hern, representing timated value of $1 million, Zeller plans to construct a the park, was granted approv- would employ 125 workers. two-story, 8,064-square-foot al for the subdivision of (iO Mr. O'Hern then presented building*with a colonial fa- ONE MORE TIME — Miss Inez Higgins, Freehold Township, right Is acres into 15 lots, with a min- the $2,000 check to Mayor Sal- cade. He estimated that con- Green Acres Bonds Planned sworn in as special deputy surrogate, a post she has held since 1964, by struction on the $120,000 build- TRENTON - A bill calling for a November referendum Mbnmouth.County Judge Alton V Evans. Miss Higgins, who has served ing would begin 60 days after on a proposed $80 million "Green Acres" bond issue was in- under five surrogates, recently became the first Monmouth County wom- final approval is given by troduced by the Republican Senate leadership yesterday. an to serve as acting surrogate holding the title between the adminis- Petitions Started Township Council. The figure is a, compromise between the $60 million Site plan approval was giv- amount previously agreed to by legislative leaders and a $100 trations of Monmouth County Court Judge Louis R. Aikins and the new en to Dcli-Silverplate Inc. for million recommendation by the State Open Space Policy Com- surrogate, S. Thomas Gagliano.. Hqlding the bible is Miss Higgins' aunt, construction of a $200,000 mission. ' Miss Lorretta Foy, Freehold,' whose April 1 retirement marked 52 years of To Free Calley warehouse on four acres bor- Senate Majority Leader Harry L. Sears, R-Morris, and service in the surrogate's office. dering on Dutch Lane Road (Continued) some of Pat Keelen's buses near School Road East. The Senate President Raymond H. Bateman, R-Somerset, said the "(Keelen's Auto Sales, Keans- firm, based in California, compromise amount would permit the state to accomplish a hind this man," he said. "And burg) and go down to Wash- would use tlje building-for the good deal in acquiring and preserving recreational land. Garbage Collection Woes I mean everybody. ington and try to present the storage of silverplate and cut "I just hope this thing petitions4o the President per- glass items. catches fire," Mr. Carroll con- sonally " he concluded. The board received an ap- Oppose Pennsylvania Tax Are Aired in Middletown tinued, "and I am pretty sure The heading of the petitions plication from Harvey Hol- it will. in part asks President Rich- land for site plan approval of By ED WALSH asked. "I hear you can rent a Most of the residents in at- Cites Enthusiasm TRENTON - The New Jersey Legislature yesterday MIDDLETOWN - Three truck for $300 a week. Why, ard M Nixon iri his role of a*Par 3, "chip and putt" golf passed resolutions opposing imposition of the new Pennsylva- tendance last night pay appro- "One of the people who Commander and Chief of the course and private recreation- things came out of an infor- we have 600 families in our ximately ?5 per month to have called me is a former com- nia income tax on New Jerseyans who work in Pennsylvania. mal hearing of the Township area alone that you could U.S. Armed Forces to rescind al club between Dutch Lane back door pickup. Mr. Roselle mander of a local disabled Road and School Road East. ,*"'. A senate resolution singled out the Pennsylvania tax as Committee last night. probably pickup from." will supply curbside picku'p veterans organization and he the verdict. being discriminatory. • - . • -After a thorough in- "Its not just the cost of ren- for 53.50 per month. said he is taking a petition to Mayor Salkind said that it ' * But an assembly* resolution called on the legislatures of vestigation by the Police De- ting a truck," Mr. Fisher an- would be the first such facility Many residents questioned New York. With enthusiasm to locate in the otnwship. all surrounding states to apply their income taxes only to their partment it has Ijeen deter- swered. "There is labor and whether the contractor could like this I am sure it will go Construction own residents and not to New Jerseyans who work in those mined that no criminal acts the fact that some of the arbitrarily raise the collection over." states. were committed when Elihue people on the route don'-t pay price or would he be subject Police Chief Joseph M. Pacts Let .Assemblyman James Turner. R-Gloucester. singled out Fisher of Powell Ave., Hill- when they should. It might be to Public Utilities hearings McCarthy nailed the clerk's Pennsylvania and the City of Wilmington, Del., as govermen- side, turned his private gar- true that I could rent equip- under a new statute. initiative last night. bage collection route over to ment if the money came in on Man Is tal bodies causing a "great hardship" on New Jersey residents 1 "You know Charlie, he is In Holmdel the Roselle Stavola Co. Inc. of time. ' According to Mr. Roselle, red, white and blue, and I subject to toe taxes. Neptune. HOLMDEL - Rodon Inc. of "There might be something any attempt by his firm to think it is just great that he Newark will be the general Arrested On -As far as the Police De- wrong with your billing proce- raise costs must meet PUC would take this upon himself contractor for a 10-room addi- partment can determine no dure," Mr. Simmons stated. guidelines. A to do this," the chief said. tion to the Village School. Its Armellino Admits 'Payoff anti-trust laws were broken. "If someone doesn't pay you "Everyone is fed up with winning bid totaled $233,000. Drug Count < - -Residents of the Oak Hill why don't you drop them after "Until we have an inter- this and that and I think a de- MOUNT HOLLY - Former West New York Mayor John and Deepdale sections of the a certain time." pretation of the. PUC law, ( The steel and iron work will MIDDLETOWN - A Free- ft. Armellino. admits that he accepted money from Joseph cision like this is going to be performed by Hudson hold man charged with being- community who have enjoyed "Then you not only.lose the can't the Township Com- wake America up," he stated. "Joe Bayonne" Zicarelli to "ignore gambling" in his town. mittee make the collector pro- Structural Iron Works Inc., of under the influence of narcot- back door pickup of garbage customer you also lose the "Here's a guy doing his Jersey City, which submitted The disclosure came while ArmeUino was testifying for will now have to place their money that is owed to you/' a vide the same service as the ics is being held in lieu of the prosecution yesterday at Zicarelli's trial. previous collector?" a resi- duty and he gets bounced a bid of $21,100. Frank C. Gib- $5,000 bail. garbage receptacles at the former employe of Mr. Fisher around for it," the chief con- son Inc. of Freehold was But,he refused to admit under questioning by Deputy .curb until an agreement can said. dent asked. According to Detective tinued. "Why we have some' awarded the plumbing con- Capt. Robert M. Letts. Gre- State Atty. Gen. Richard B. McGlynn that he took any af- be reached with another con- "I don't plan on going into draft dodgers running around tract at a cost of $29,124 and firmative action to protect Zicarelli's gambling operations.- tractor. •debt so I am getting out of the "I don't think we can," gory T. DeVeaux, 24, of 89 Township Committeeman Jo- blowing pot and it sec- ••<; they also the contract for heating, Throckmorton St. was Armellino also said he used his older brother Michael to The garbage dilemma came business," Mr. Fisher said. usually get a six me sus- to light last week when sev- seph Malavet, who chaired ventilating and air condi- stopped on New Monmouth pick-up the money so as to "insulate" himself from the rack- "How can the present con- the session, answered. "He is pended sentence," i. con-tioning for $84,680. Road by Detective Joseph eteers. eral residents complained to tractor' mafie tho'ney If'this cluded. the committee of the service providing pickup at curbside. A local firm, Middletown Shaffery for a motor vehicle The former mayor admitted he had not declared any of man can't?" a resident que- I don't think we can regulate Mr. Carroll said he hopes to Electric Inc., was awarded violation yesterday afternoon. cutback. ried. have the petitions saturating the money on his income tax returns. Wilford Wisner of 18 Alicia beyond that." the electrical work contract After a closer investigation Gives Reasons Possible Solution the area very shortly. at $38,955. Detective Shaffery arrested Court, asked the committee to "There are several rea- Going to Capital investigate whether Mr. Fish- - When Mr. Roselle an- The total for construction the suspect on the drug sons," Mr. Koselle answered. nounced his firm would sit "I don't know how many and related work bids is charge. er was being forced out of the "First of all we have the signatures we will get, it Teachers' Strike Nears End area. down with any group to ex- $407,049. The budgeted A separate complaint of re- present contract in the town- ploro the possibility of back would be hard to estimate. amount is $437,000. • sisting arrest has been filed NEWARK - Newark's nine weeks old teachers strike ap- Police Chief Joseph M. ship and can just expand our But I hope to have all the peti- • geared near settlement last night. • • -\ McGarthy said his depart*-,* door pickup, Mr. Malavet Bids were also discussed against the defendant by De- 'ttperation. Secondly we are stated, "well here is one pos- tions collected by April 23 and and awarded by the Board of tective Robert McNair who A spokesman for the Newark Teachers Union said the merit has through ift" specialists In the business." then we are going to take Education for school equip- union's chief negotiator had been informed by the mayor's of- iVestigation determined thati lMr.v Edwards told the gath- sibility to the solution." • aided in the apprehension. Mr. Fisher and Dock Edwards"1'1 His words were barely spo- ment and furniture for the ad- fice that the ^oard of Education had voted to accept the pro-' ering he will be expanding his ken when Mr. Wisner jumped dition. pusais of a state mediator made a week ago. 'of Gillville Lane, a private business within the near fu- "contractor presently doing to his feet and asked, "are Herbert L. Farkas Co. will The union had agreed to the proposals of .a state mediator ture and will be able to pro- vou asking these people to en- supply classroom furniture, Open House Jonas Silver for ending the strike at the time they were an- business in the area, never vide back door service for the Artco-Bell Line, for $9,172. were intimidated by an out- most residents who seek it. Eage in a monopolistic Naturalists nounced. side force. garbage collection?" The Farkas firm will also in- • Silver recommended the teachers be relieved of non- Mr. Roselle said hi,s firm- "That statement is in- stall ?459 worth of office furni- Is Set At "I'm satisfied with the facts couldn't at the present time Set Talks ture. Atkins and Co. Inc., professional $io£es. that a panel of four arbitrators be set up ' the way they have been supply the same service be- correct," Mr. Malavet, visi- to handle all •contraclual grievances and that no reprisals be-' bily irritated after almost 2>2 -Summit, received a contract presented," the chief stated. cause of labor. RED BANK - Naturalists Sewer Plant taken against striking teachers. He said these were the three Mr. Fisher, who along with hours of questions and an- for classroom cabinets with However, he left tne door swers, shot back. "These of the Monmouth County Park its Ebco line for a total of MIDDLETOWN - A guided main areas of disagreement between the rival parties. Mr. Edwards and Crescent J. open when he told the 73 resi- System will present two talks tour for all interested resi- : Roselle (of Roselle Stavpla1) people came here for help and Agreement on salaries was reached last month shortly af- dents he would sit down with suggestions. We are not sug- on successive days in the Red Various audio-visual equip- dents is on the agenda tomor- ter the City Council proposed a $4 million pay package last werd in .attendance last night group leaders and could dis- Bank Public Library 84 W. row when the Sewerage An- said he disbanded his own pri- gesting they accept this offer— ment contracts totaling $3,923 ' jnofith"; "'•" '"•"•" cuss the back door service if nor are we advocating a mo- Front St. during NatioiiaTTf" . were awarded. tliority plays~host at an open vate collection business be- the group could promise 100 brary Week this month; house at its nearly completed cause of economics. nopolistic practice. All we are Classroom equipment and per cent subscription in the doing is trying to help them to Wednesday night, April 21, furniture purchases total treatment plant. Mayor's Father Is Mugged Cites Reason area. Gerald Savitz Jr. will speak $27,000, the identical amount According to Walter J. 7Az- ''My two trucks were Approximately two-thirds of get relief from their' prob- NEWARK - William Gibsont father of Newark Mayor lem." •on the county's wild flowers. budgeted. The audio-visual ick. authority executive direc- breaking down and there just the township is serviced by On the following afternoon', equipment was not a referen- tor the plant located off Cen- Kenneth A. Gibson, was injured 1n ari assault by five young isn't any more fixing I can do the Roselle Stavola firm Until a solution is reached, boys last night in an apparent robbery attempt, police said. residents' will continue to pay Nicholas Fiorillo will talk to dum item. ter Ave. in Belford will, be to them," he said. "Why through a municipal contract. children and others about open for inspection from i) Gibson, who drove off his attackers, was taken to Beth Is- don't you rent equipment?" The remainder of the town ?3.50 per month and carry The total amount antici- their garbage receptacles to snakes and other reptiles. pated for expenditure on the a.m. until 12 noon and trained ' rael Hospital. The hospital said he suffered a bump on the Robert Simmons president of pays a monthly fee to a pri- personnel will be on hand to head but the injury appeared to be minor. He was being held the curb. Some flowers now appear- addition to the Village School the Oak Hill Civic Association vate hauler. ing around the county are is $512,000. Architects' fees (6 explain the functions of the - overnight for observation. v • easy to recognize and others per cent of total costs,) land- equipment. V The attack occurred outside a doctor's office on Clinton-'"* are not. Mr. Savitz, an expert, scaping and incidental The plant, erected at a cost Avenue, police said, when Gibson was about to ask directions Atlantic Highlands Complex will discuss the character- charges remain to be charged' of $6.5 million, is expected to while making a condolence call. istics of various spring to the budgeted figure. be in operation by the middle Gibson was knocked down but rose up and drove off bis blooms, and tell how to avoid of next month. attackers. He is about 60 years old. Stalled by Technicalities contact with poison ivy. His ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - John O'Mara, attorney for catidn with correct maps?" talk will be illustrated with The Planning Board has been the corporatiomsaid at he asked. Mr. O'Mara apolo- slides. Questions will be in- Rocket Caused Forest Fire unable yet to decide whether Thursday night's meeting; that gized and. said that without' vited. The talk will start at CHECK BASS RIVER - The State Forest Fire Service 'says afire ' ownership of the old Central the state has notified the any funds, "we had no money 7:45 p.m. in the meeting which destroyed 3,000 acres of forest land nearthis Turlington Railroad right-of-way by the group it has $72,000 set aside to get the proper plats." room. TERMITE DAM AGE Senior Citizens Residence, for the purchase of the land, Ruling Is Awaited In his afternoon talk in the County community was caused by a rocket wJUch missed a but planning Board action As a result, the board Every year at this lime, homeowners find winged insects that military target practice area,; ., .:; • Inc., should come before the Children's Room Mr. Fiorillo granting of variances and sub-'must be in hand before tjie agreed to give tentative ap- will discuss the habits of suddenly fly out and then drop their wings and crawl all A Forest Fire Service .sppkcsman said yesterday a rocket around. These little insects are TERMITES and indicate that 1 divisions needed to build a 48- money is turned over. proval to subdivide the 1,525- snakes and other related ani- fired by the 177th Tactical Fighter Qroup of the Air. National unit complex for the aged on Time Is Factor foot strip of land into parcels mals. He will show live speci- there are still thousands of other termites still eating the Guard set off the blaze When it missed the nearby Warren the property. Mr. O'Mara and the state of 889 and 635 feet, subject to mens, including local turtles. house, causing further destruction to the wood of the house. Grove target area. . The problem is this: Last announced the award last a ruling by its attorney Sam- Col. Ralph Buchanan, tho fighter group's information offi- month, Borough Council voted week, but indicated action uel Carotenuto that the corpo- THE COST OF REPAIRS FAR EXCEEDS THE cer, said it "appears" the rocket caused the blaze. In- to accept the bid of the corpo- must be taken locally as soon ration was a qualified appli- Body Found Preserved- COST OF TREATMENT AND GOES HIGHER ration for the strip of land.be- as possible or the state funds cant and subject to a zoning WITH DELAY! - vestigation has not yet shown whether the rocket malfunc- TOKYO (AP) - The per- tioned or was misfired, he said. tween Bay Ave. and High- will be exhausted and the cor- variance for use. The land is lands Ave. for $65,000 with a poration would have to wait in a light industrial zone. fectly preserved body of a one-year option to purchase. another year to be fun- On April IS, Borough Coun- Japanese woman buried 244 CALL US FOR A FREE INSPECTION Reapportionment Is Challenged Council stipulated however, ded. Member John Phair cil is expected to formally years ago has been discovered OF YOUR HOME. that before the corporation was most critical of the proce- vote to accept the bid of the in a grave beneath an under- ., NEWARK - A suit challenging a new plan for realigning could buy outright, it must re- dure, questioning the legality corporation, convey the land ground spring that kept tho We fprcinfizr etrfmii r tiile control. Our ipecialtzi-fi the-state legislature was filed yesterday by the New Jersey ceive necessary subdivision of the subdivision without and lift the moratorium on the body cool and dry, scientists ablet (is fir tin a hvthr
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The luxury personal car for $1,000"less. celebrate 105 BROAD STREET, RED BANK 10 MAPLE STREET, SUMMIT th i OPEN WEDNESDAYS. FRIDAY TIL 9! • OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAYV'TIL9 ! 60 Nixon's Health Care Plan Established in 1878 - Published by The Ked Bank Register By ROBERT* S. ALltSN The Social Security study and JOHN A. GOLDSMITH shows that 157 million persons M. HAROLD KELLY, Publisher WASHINGTON - That new — slightly more than three- health care program boinj; INSIDE fourths of the civilian popu- formulated by the adminis- lation — now have some pro- Arthur Z. Kamin, Editor tration will offer greatly ex- WASHINGTON tection to cope with hospital panded services to the elderly and surgical costs. Thomas J. Bly, Executive Editor William F. Sandford, Associate Editor — but at a cost considerably Two-thirds of the population higher than the present % buy insurance to pay for in- Friday, April 2, 1971 - monthly Medicare charge. helping to pay ever-soaring hospital visits by doctors. •Under the plan shortly to be hospital bills. Number Gains submitted to Congress, Medi- Of that number, 9.5 million The report also discloses ALLEN MTU care and Medicaid partici- also buy insurance to cover that the number of persons 65 pants could choose to be. eli- surgical costs; around 8 mil- and over buying supplemental visits; 45 per cent for pre- Group business paid out 94 gible for comprehensive me- lion have coverage for visits health insurance increased scription durgs; 45 per cent per cent of premium income :. dical services from groups of by doctors. X-ray and labora- steadily until 1965. But by the for private nurses; 50 per cent in benefits, as against only SI physicians to be organized tory charges; 3 million have end of 1966, the year Medicare for visiting nurses; 14 per per cent for individual pol- throughout the country. For insurance for prescription went into effect, the number cent for nursing home>uro,. ities. Operating expenses . this enlarged health care, the drugs; another 3.1 million for dropped by 18 per cent. It de- and 4 per cent for dental ser- 'amounted to $859 million in in- cost would be about the same private nurses; and about 4 creased again in 1!)67. vices. dividual business and $750 mil- as that now generally paid by million insurance to .supple- In 1968 and 1969, however, Blue Cross-Blue Shield pol- lion for groups. the elderly who purchase .sup- ment Medicare nursing liomS private insurance purchases icies are held by 73 million, The study also shows that ; plemental insurance to meet benefits. rose - apparently as a result with 121.5 million having pol- in 1969 -Blue Cross-Blue expenditures not covered by Under the still tentative of the realization that Medi- icies with private insurance Shield paid an average of Medicare. new health care program, all care did inot cover all high companies. $56.76 per person enrolled for ;, Some 10 million persons or most of these services' health costs. By 1969 the num- Throughout the country, hospital care, while insurance ' over 65 now buy such supple- would he provided by group- ber of elderly with supplemen- Blue Cross-Blue Shield, savs companies paid $31.63.- To in- mental insurance. practice organizations the el- tal insurance had gone back the report, had a total sub- dividual policy holders, the According to a little-noticed derly could join. to about the same level as be- scription income in 1969 of $6.2 companies paid an average of study published by the Social The government would pay fore Medicare. , billion and paid out $5.9 billion only $15.77. -, Security Administration, the difference between the According to the study, 125 in benefits and $500 million for For that year the net cost to • these elderly constitute about larger fees collected from the million persons-6Z per cent operating costs. Americans of all ages for all half the total in this age elderly and the costs of the of the population - are now Insurance companies had a private health insurance was f group. The supplemental in- physician groups. As yet, no covered for X-ray and labora- premium income of $716 bij- $1.6 billion. That is the differ- '{ surance. purchasedJ)y the'10 information is available on tory services; 43 per cent for lion - three-fourths of it from ence between premium In- million is for the purpose of how much that might be. physicians' office and home grasp policies. come and benefits paid out. ••>• r Want a Job Overseas? By SYLVIA PORTER t hunting. Rather, warns Curtis Study the U.S. Civil Service A record 1,000,000 Ameri- W. Casewit in a new paper- Commission's pamphlet, Fed- cans are now living and work- back, "How To Get a Job eral Jobs Overseas, for clues ing outside the U.S. — not in- YOUR MONEY'S Overseas" (Avco Publishing on U.S. Government jobs cluding hundreds of thousands Co., $1.45), line up and assure abroad. of U.S. Government employ- your foreign job IN THE U.S. Matching Jobs es, military servicemen and WORTH before you go. In fact, your Investigate private employ- women. In mounting'num- best route may be first get- ment agencies which special- bers, Americans are fleeing ting a job with a multinational ize in matching overseas jobs or threatening to flee our bor- the explosion of-multinational corporation in the U.S., then with stateside job seekers. ders - and for reasons which corporations and U.S. com- angling for reassignment But steer clear of the agency go far beyond their deep dis- panies which are bringing overseas. which tries to charge you a illusionment with our frantic U.S. workers overseas as they Among promising occupa- steep "registration fee" of PORTKK pace of life, our problems of establish and expand their tional areas for overseas jobs hundreds of dollars — before pollution, crime, urban decay. branches and sales operations now are: teaching; the travel- the job hunt even begins..The To illustrate, a not so in other lands. tourism industry; manage- more usual arrangement is a fore you leave and who Will spectacular but potentially And certainly a third basic ment consulting; advertising; charge to you of a flat com- pay for this instruction? much more important factor factor is the normal curiosity U.S. Government jobs in engi- mission once a suitable job Will you get a special hous- is a developing reversal in the of many young Americans neering, math, physics, medi- has been found - perhaps a ing allowance if rents are "brain drain." Whereas only a about life* and jobs overseas cine, agricultural services, percentage of your first much higher in the area't* few years ago. the drain was and their normal, desire to volunteer service, electronics; month's pay. which you are going? , luring large numbers of for-find reasonably gracious liv- United Nations agencies such Make sure you have an- Will your employer arrange eign scientists, teachers, phy- ing at lower costs than here. as the World Health Organiza- swers in all these questions to secure a work permit for sicians and engineers to our Are YOU among the Ameri- tion, UNICEF. before you accept an overseas you? Will you get a paid vaca- shores, now the reverse drain cans thinking of job-hunting Follow up these very broad job: .; tion? How much? When? is luring these numbers of overseas? Are yon searching areas by cheeking the want YVill your employer pay the Where? OUR scientists, electronics for guidance on how to go ad sections of trade publica- . entire cost of transporting you Of course, there is an 'ad- c^VtCttya S\»«-- specialists, engineers, etc.. to about it? Then... _ turns in your field, nationally and your possessions to and venture and excitement to foreign stores. Start Boutins circulated newspapers, over- from your new location? working overseas. But to as- Again, not so newsworthy, DONT get on a plane, flyseas English language news- Will you be required to take sure both for yourself, be TAKE M HIGH RoAt> Artt> lU Ml M W tut more significant has been across the ocean and start papers. special language courses be- completely prepared. Calley Case: Everyone Loses Audience OlltgreW the Idiot BOX Lt. William L. Calley Jr. has been ones. When it comes to deciding what's convicted of war crimes at My Lai and fair in war, we are still far from any real By JIM BISHOP SSBii the same messages, the same smile. I don't know why. Sci- It is 25 years since tele- sentenced to life imprisonment. Appeal is and specific answers. slogans, the same incredible ence-fiction consists of blue Vision left the saloons and promises. arcs in the laboratory and automatic, and the case is far from ended. Tiien what does the conviction of Lt moved into the homes. All of THE Recently, these abysmal at- slimy, creatures emerging But the furor that the verdict ignited may Calley accomplish? Some say acquittal us have watched it, eyeball to tacks have become "cute"; from the deep. Or we are in a eyeball, and no medium of en- REPORTER well be without precedent in our nation's •would have made hypocritical our claims they amuse while they sell. space craft approaching Sa- tertainment and edification They are advertising, but no turn and a fight develops be- history. to a national sense of morality. But con- has required so long to gorw one calls them that. The com- tween two pointed beads over That furor, if it prompts some deep viction, under the circumstances, has up. Never, iri the history of dependent stations, you see, mercials are: "And now a one round girl. man, have so many execu- and meaningful national soul-searching, evoked the same charges. And the accu- use the air at the pleasure of word ...."" Time out Sex Innuendo' tives done so little with so the Federal Communications for station identification.." "The Newlywed Game" is could bn the only positive aspect of a case sers seem, at least in this early view, to be much. Commission. The government "and now, this message... It sexy innuendo. Personalities BISHOP which lias been, to date, a painful ordeal a significant majority of our own citizenry. And yet it has its fine - owns the air and regulates its is none of those things. like Danny Thomas, Ed Sulli- nay, grand - moments. The use, whether yo'u want to fly for^everyone concerned - the principals, The interest that the Calley trial at- The fare suffered unto us van, Bing Crosby, Andy Griff- because his ego is abrasive. death and burial of President in it or send pictures through between commercial advertis- ith, and yes, Walter Cronkite Dean Martin may not be< the Army, the entire nation. tracted seems to be born of a growing fear Job* P. Kennedy represents it. We are still permitted to ing is puerile. Old motion pic- and Lucille Ball, beldng to the drunk, but he'd be more en- -^he-questions-that-AI-y-tai-has-raised—7-that-our-national-sense-of-morality has de- -the-mostpoignantXQverage jof. _ breathe it without license -tures-are groundandregr- ^IARliiD tertaining if we were, — — a story I have known. At an g come piling one. on another, and some are teriorated. And that a nation should be Profit Use ound. Doris Day has had her anyone believe that "Hogan's All of which Is master- inauguration, I have been as The owners of T.V. stations sweet virtue assailed - un- minded by countless ex- basic and-deserving of firmer answers thus concerned is in itself admirable. But close to the President as his Heroes" always outwit Ger- use government _air for per- successfully, worse luck - man officers in a prison pensive exccuiives, super-im-' than have yet been written into the rules we cannot assuage the national conscience wife. In football, in golf, no sonal profit. This is not venal; since as far back as I can re- posed on producers and stars. written report approaches the camp? of war. - we cannot restore any sense of morality it is good for them and good member. Lome Greene still The FBI Is merely a group The news shows and docu- moment-by-moment drama of for us because, to make a solves every crisis on "Bo- mentaries are administered How carefully must a soldier, trained - with action that hints of another kind of watching it happen. of "Untouchables" with badg- profit, tliey must attract an nanza" by doing all the think- es. They pliiy off each other. by an assortment of in- to kill and sent in the name of his country immorality. We cannot erase our errors The television set has ever-expanding audience or ing for his stupid sons. The Carson, Cavett, Frost, tellectual eunuchs who feel to fight under extraordinary stresses of a by making scapegoats of a few. brought into my home the face the loss of advertising. The medical films induce Griffin couch shows are sat- that mother knows best. The world's greatest actors. It has Lose the advertising — los"e sheer hysteria in operating commentators are neither ao-' strange and ruthless war, discriminate in Neither can we restore opr image, ires of guests trying to relearn etched the noble and dismal the station. rooms among doctors who the art of conversation at pub- tors nor performers: they arc his killing? \ even in our own mirror, by pointing out moments of history on the ret- The immaturity and im- cannot make a correct diag- readers. They come equipped ina of my eye and I have seen lic expense, "Time Odd The answer, says the Army, is *§s? that we are at a disadvantage in Vietnam pertinence of television lies in nosis, nurses who have a Couple" was a good play; a with reasonable diction and the slow lilting steps of men its fixation that all of us out burning yen for the new resi- untrippable tongues. ..-•. •• ciplinc: a soldier is expected to fight undiftC crude sports-writer versus an 1 in that our enemy knows no such scruples walking the surface of the there in never-never land are dent physician, or patients impeccable sissy. But when A century from now, lt is- principles that prohibit slaughter of non- as we claim; that we must, on occasion, moon. Like a vivacious child, 12 years old. We must be spo- who plot to kill everybody. the premise is reiterated 39 probable that researchers -will, * it has seemed to be beyond its ken down to. To sell a deter- The world of medicine, as find that T.V.'s greatest'ac«;g. combatants. abandon principle and fight dirty too. years attimes, then it-lapses' times, it dies 38. . gent, a food or an appliance, seen by television, is one long Joey Bishop was a funny complishmeitts were that ijt *J The question that leaves unanswered One of Lt. Calley's comments, while into giggles and sticks its the station engineer must turn sickening malpractice suit. made Campus Unrest, Martin » thumb in its mouth. man until he got hfs own is how the soldier determines — before the possibly not entirely accurate, touches the the sound up, and our «ars Carol Burnett yanks on her show. Jerry Lewis couldn't Luther King and Spiro Agnew. prospective target shows its belligerence basic problerti - the question we would The networks and all the in- and eyes are hammered with ear and ten million watchers make it if he owned & network Defense rests by killing him first - the good guys from hope My Lai will raise. "No one," he said, the bad while fighting an enemy which has "has yet tried to analyze the problems, to no scruples about involving women, chil- my knowledge, that caused not only My Would Probe Pond Oil dren and aging civilians in its cause. Lai, but the war in Vietnam itself." 48 Lakq Ave, And how does that noncombatants' Actually, most of us have tried. No hawk Pond in Red Bank re- states that "probably an fish, Jersey and all states should *e divided and put Into Shad-» FairHavenJN. J. veals to all of us that we need turtles and frogs perished" as do likewise! rule apply to. aircraft crews whose bombs one, to our knowledge, has yet succeeded. ow Lake and their local wa- To theEditor: some real state and local in- a result of this oil seepage. Little Mohawk Pond meant ters, along with the regular cannot discriminate? Are they less guilty Everyone, at this point, seems to have Heading today's article re- vestigation into occurrences Why not cap the pipe? If this much fun for hundreds of lo- allocations of fish because they cannot see their victims lost in the Calley case. If it can lead to the garding the oil leak into Mo- of this kind. Your article isn't possible, check the cal youngsters — and oldsters Let's also find out from. 1 while the infantrymen can? t kind of thinking that will produce answers - in trout season and fishing -Trenton what Is happening to The answers to these questions did contests. Now this is over - monies "extracted" from the on the fundamental questions - Like why at least for some time. marine gasoline taxes!. not come out of Nuremberg. And it could Vietnam? And why our involvement in it? FROM OUR Ocean County boat liveryy bo that snme of the answers that did come And why My Lai? - it could still return Now for you, Mr. Editor. I and• marina operator' s have out of the trials may not have been right some real measure of value. believe you and The Register t formed a strong group who READERS are'in a prime position to' are holding successful meet- start the ball rolling on this ings regarding the ridiculous matter. One most important bills which are in process m drainage pipe plans - some- point is that soon our fresh Trenton. Monmouth County body here must know the waters will be stocked with marina operators would do Iroiiy in Middletown makeup of these. trout from Hackettstown well to get together on a I and many of my close Hatchery. We trust that Tren- sound basis to straighten our ton and the hatchery will not It's more than a little ironic that the friends in this locality and ill-advised politicians in Tren- week, the committee responded to the ap-t around the country are ar- put more trout — to perish in ton. Speak up!! Middletown Board of Education is being peal for compromise with a hardnosed dent, dedicated fishermen. Mohawk Pond, They should Russell W. Drewes told by municipal government that it must stand. "The board will have to live with Any of us would quickly re- bear the-burden of problems born of the the cut," Mayor Harold H. Foulks an- port any type of pollution - air or water - no matter who errors of municipal government. nounced. •. . j it offended. Imagine if this Corps' Story The. county's largest municipality has happens to other local waters, not experienced a balanced and -orderly The fact that the memberships of the our reservoirs, streams, Shad- 20 Riverside Ave. been active,in Red Bank for growth. The Township Committee and the boards involved have changed.over the ow Lake, etc. Red Bank, N.J. 40 years and more, t bellevo, To the Editor: Planning Hoard, unable to woo the in- years mitigates the irony only a little. Not Recently in New York and it bears an excellent rep- only the board but Middletown's children State an ordinance was Your reporter, Mary Beth utation, but we fully, under- b dustry and commerce necessary for bal- Allen, produced a beautiful are being asked to take the punishment for passed making it a definite stand that thip reputation ance, also failed to stem the residential violation for gas stations to story for the Salvation Army must be sustained and burn- growth that, poured new thousands of pu- the "sins of their fathers." dump oil and grease in storm on page 3 of your Issue of ished by tasteful publicity. pils into the schools. Now the committee drains. A substantial fine is March 23. Your staff handled the impor- We would hope that the board ex- imposed for a first offense - Your photographer who tant matter of the Murdoch has ruled the township cannot afford the ercises its privilege of appeal. More than possible prison for a second took the important photo on retirement with sensitive funds (he board says are needed to oper- that, we hope it wins it, and that author- offense. This is as it should the night of Brigadier Mur- good taste and all of us are ate the .school system. ities in other municipalities facing growtli be. doch's retirement, March 22, most appreciative. was most patient and ca- This year, the committee lopped problems will note the consequences of New York has formed Sincerely yours, pable. William A. Fluhr |300,000 from the board's estimate. This careless planning. «
hot pants C BROOKDALE COMMUNITY COLLEGE furore... Take the new short cut to fash- B ion, groovy panne boucle top and little pants are terrific for. waring under midLs wilh. SPRING TERM panty hose and high boots. Beige, white or Mack, plus Ar- MAYS, 1971-JUNE 21, 1971 nel prints. Sizes 3 to 13. By My 171 FIRST AVENUE • ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS, N. J. TningscfOalifornia LLEG i: CREDIT COURSES' The traditional Easter Egg becomes a treasured classic DAY AND EVENING CLASSES $22 when encased in Plexiglas®. These fabulous eggs, rang- SEVERAL LOCATIONS ing in |jric"e from $5 to $15, are perfect Easter gifts or THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY could be the start of your own superb collection! See these 813.50 PER CREDIT and many other artistic and practical gifts appropriate for i FOR COLNTY RESIDENTS all occasions. 1 • •"' . i 7 '• ' ' ' ' Visit the Craft Corner and get acquainted with tha wonderful world of acrylics that offers fascinatin0, new- Mail Registration April 5 - 239 1971 challenges for the hobbyistl Phone'br write for a schedule of class offerings and aifj admissions packet which contains all I lie informalioii and forms necessary for complete registra- .v.. of course you can charge it! tion by mail - BO^T ACCESSORIES • CUSTOM MADE FURNITURE
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• 'Admissions and Records Office: Brookdole Community College HOURS: MONDAY THRUSATURD AY 10A.M.-5 P.M. ' RED BANK: 30 Broad Street 765 Newman Springs Road .FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9:dp.f» M;. 842-1900, ext. 271 or 272 Lincroft, New Jersey 07738 ' ASBURY PARK: 600 Cookman Ave. J t 10 'flue Daily Regislrr, Knl liaiik-.Mi(l(Jli-ton'n,T J., Friday, April 2, 1».. Lanoil To Address Mental Health Unit Long-Term Performer: SHREWSBURY - Julius wood Manor, Matawan. bers include Mrs. Alfred L. search and education there each of the last three years. annually to over 40,000 In 1965? Lanoil, associate director of Mrs. Mary Chiara, chair- "Barrett, Little Silver, Mrs. He said it was the first and Earnings for the year ended In November, a subsidtyJT" Fountain House, New York man-of the dinner committee, Marie Berrien, Long Branch, currently the largest social December increased to 70 was scheduled to complete-an' City, will be the featured announced the plans at a com- and Mrs. Leon Hayes, Mata- club for psychiatric patients SUCCESSFUL cents a share from 60 cents in Autovan network; which:;* speaker at the Monmouth mittee meeting last week at wan. ' in the country. Fountain 1969, despite a 41 per cent will operate under contract"* County Mental Health Associ- the association offices, 1121 Mr. Lanoil's theme will be House, at 425 West 47th St. is INVESTING jump in the number of shares the Department of Defensi ation annual dinner, Monday, Broad St. "Return to the Community," a day care center for men- outstanding. Total revenues for 10 years. Shares have al May 17 at -8 p.m., in Button- Dinner Committee mem- focusing on the issues and tally ill persons who have By ROGER E. SPEAR gained 32 per cent to $7.5 mil- most doubled from the 197 trends of after-care and re- been hospitalized. Q- Would you advise hold- lion. The number of tele- low and should be held fo; habilitation for mentally ill Mr. Lanoil is 32, and holds a wer margin of profit but the continued growth. ing Warner-Lambert for usual problems associated jhones in service has risen persons. masters degree from Brook- growth? Its dividend is not Mi^ Lanoil, who has beeF lyn College. He and his wife* with integrating two huge en- very high.-F.S. tities. Taking a longer view, with Fountain House sevet and one child live in Old Tap- A- Although the recently years, is also director of re pan, N.J. however, the. merged com- completed merger with pany appears to have unusu- Parke, Davis diluted Warner- ally strong growth character- LAWN-SEED Lambert's 1970 earnings istics. Sales for 1970 were, de- slightly, profits rose 4.5 per rived from four major areas: Grubman Reelected cent to $2.57 a share on a 9 per one-third from ethical drugs, cent gain in sales. Further- 28 per cent from proprietary more, earnings this year will products and cosmetics, 20 By Progressive Life probably continue to reflect per cent optical and scientific & not only Parke,.Davis' narro- RED BANK - The board of Leavy, Long Branch, assis- instruments with the remain- directors of Progressive Life tant secretary; Miss Lillian ing 19 per cent from candy, Insurance Company reelected Gulotta, Long Branch, assis- Bottle Drive gum and miscellaneous items. Lester II. Grubman as presi- tant secretary; .lames W. Also, Warner's strong Inter- dent and chief executive offi- Bush, Camden, regional vice Has Results national Group has been bol- president; LeRoy S. Hunley, stered by the merger. Al- cer. Melvin J. Kohn, director, RUMSON - The first though yielding a modest 1.6 20$ off who moved the election of Mr. Clifton, regional vice presi- monthly bottle collection FERTILIZER Grubman, stated: "Since his dent; Sidney II. Brown, Balti- per cent, the dividend has in- sponsored jointly by the Little more, regional vice president; creased annually for 18 years election to the presidency in Silver, Fair Haven, and Rum- and now stands at 30 cents two famous July, 1966, Mr. Grubmanlnas Peter Piazza, Newark, region- son Conservation Commis- al vice president, and Howard quarterly. An increase again personally guided Progressive sions brought in seven tons of this year appears probable Life to new records, year af- C. Wharton, Trenton, regional bottles for recycling. lawn fertilizers vice president. since the current payou| is (Quality Products) ter year. The growth of the The bottles, collected last well below the 50 per cent av- company has been fantastic. Saturday behind Rumson Straight fertilizer. Scotts The many job opportunities eraged in the last five years. Borough Hall, were trundled Earnings have also moved TURF BUILDER is America's created have been filled with Foodarama to the Midland Glass Com- ahead with remarkable regu- men who want to work. The pany, Cliffwood, in trucks larity, 1970 marking the 15th favorite fertilizer for devel- directors are proud of these supplied by the three oping thick green lawns. achievements." Sales Up, gain in net in 16 years. Some- • scons 20% off boroughs. what sluggish, near-term ac- Spread it on your lawn in Mr. Grubman thanked the Roger I. Wilkinson of Rum- tion should be followed by an board for their confidence in Saker Says son, chairman of the Tri-Boro above-average longer-term early spring to make your his programs and asked that Bottle Recycling Committee, performance. ' grass bounce back faster • GREENFIELD (Sale) the officers who are part of FREEHOLD - Foodarama said that even the paper con- the team be reelected." tainers from the bottles, the Q- Would you care to pass from the rigors of winter. The board accepted the rec- Supermarkets Inc., a member an opinion on Telephone Utili- of the Shop-Kite group, has packing boxes, shopping bags Keeps grass greener longer, • AGWAY ommendation and renamed and grocery bags, were in ties, an unlisted issue? I am George G. Fleming, Middle- reported operating results for 75 and hold 250 shares.-W.B. too, thanks- to its prolonged the 13 weeks ended Jan. 31. turn bundled up and trans- town, executive vice presi- ported to a paper recycling A- This telephone holding feeding action. • HOLLYTONE dent; Milton Grubman, Inter- Joseph J. Saker, chairman depot in Long Branch. company serves the north- laken, financial vice president and president, at the com- western area of the United and treasurer; John P. Heg- pany's annual shareholders' States. Although no cash divi- Save $3 15,000 sq ft (60 lbs) 1ZS5 10.95 gie, New Shrewsbury, vice meeting here, reported that San Francisco Bay is bounded dends are paid, 3 per cent in Save $2 10,000 sq ft (40 lbs)SSS 7.95 • BOVUNG president-agency; Albert H. sales for the 13 weeks in- by 300 miles of shoreline. stock has been distributed in Kirms, Rumson, corporate creased 4.89 per cent to •Save $1.10 5,000 sq ft (20 lbs)^45' 4.35 secretary; Charles J. Yakow, $77,208,264 from $73,603,244 in • ORTHO (Chemicals) Red Bank, assistant actuary; the corresponding period of LOCAL SECURITIES Alexander Cohen. Hillside, as- 1970. Net income, rose 5.89 per Representatives Inter-dealer quotations at Approximately 3:00 p.m. yesterday sistant vice president; James cent to $664,460, or 42 cents from NASD. Prices do not Include retail mark-up, mark-down or commission. Combination fertilizer. per share, from $627,482, or 39 • MILORGANITE Spencer, South Belmar, assi- BANKS HALTS PLUS combines the tant vice president; Philip J. cents per share, in the corre- DIV. Bid sponding period of 1970. Per Bclmar-Woll National (split 2 for 1) 1.00 V 60 full greening power of. Scotts Bretz, Red Bank, assistant Central Jersey Bank (x) (xx) , .50 !5'/< secretary-auditor; George F. share earnings are computed Farmers & Merchants (x) (xx) .04 11 Turf Builder with positive • PEATMOSS of 1,599,597 average shares First Merchants National Bank (x) (xx) :... M crabgrass prevention. Spread outstanding in,the 1971 period 1st National Bank of Toms River (x) (xx).. 41 Squad Offering First Slate Ocean County (x) (xx) .... IS and on 1,598,597 shares out- KeansBurg-Mlddletown 55 i(t on yourlawn in late winter standing in the 1970 quarter. Bonk of Manalapan...... ' 25 • • LIME 15 or early spring, and it forms First Aid Class Mlddletown Banking Co. (10% Stock DIv.l.X 17 Mr. Saker also reported to Monmouth County National (x) (xx) (xxx) an invisible barrier that MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - shareholders that Food- New Jersey National Bank (x) ISO 34 The South Matawan Township arama's first discount drug Ocean County National (x) (xx) 2.00 75 knocks off crabgrass as it • SPREADERS Peoples National Bank, Lakewood (x) (xx) 6.00 150 . First Aid Squad is offering a department store is expected Trust Co. of Ocean County (x) (xx) .50 47 sprouts.. While your fertil- free five-session American (x) Dividend (xx) Plus Stock (xxx) Declared or Paid to open mid-June in Phila- ized lawn grows thicker, Red Cross standard first aid delphia. "The store will be an INDUSTRIAL • REDBARK & PINE BARK course Mondays and 8,000 square foot unit," he Bid Asked sturdier and greener. Thursdays from 8 to 10 p.m. in Aerologicqt Research »... said, "with a full prescription Alkon Industries squad headquarters, Church department." It will adjoin Atlantic Appliance Co., Inc St. Foodarama's new Shop-Rite Brockway 37% Save $3 5,000 sq ft (22 lbs) 1A&5 11.95 Buck Engineering 12 13 Those successfully com- supermarket which is ex- Electronic Associates , 6% Save $1,60 2,500 sq 'ft (11 lbs)JJ95 6.35 pleting the program, which pected to open about the same Electronic Assistance 6 began Monday, will receive time. Foodarama HANCE & DAVIS Interdata , 26 Shrewsbury Ave., Red Bank first aid cards and will be eli- "Foodarama's first Shop- International Components Corp..... gible for the advanced course Rite gasoline station, which King James Extended Care IVJ Laird ..• ., LITTLE SILVER 1747-0103 Mon.-Sat. 7-5 to follow. opened in December, 1970, in Metallurgical' International :. S'A Fuurther information may Neptune," said Mr. Saker, Monmoufh Airlines be had from Harvey Zibulsky, "has produced encouraging Monmouth Capital,. chief instructor. results and we are proceeding Monmouth Electric Monmouth Park , HVi LUMBER to build additional stations." N.J. Natural Gas The next two are scheduled 19'A Rowan Controller.. MASTER CHARGE • UNI-CARD for Pennsylvania and New Servomation Jersey and should be ready Southern Container Corp „, 15 SYCAMORE AVE. LITTLE SILVER for business within a few Spiral Metal „... ALUMINUM U.S. Homes months, he added. United Telecontrol Electronics... 2Vi FREE DELIVERY r-741-7800 Foodarama, the largest Walter Reade-Sterllng 3'/4 OPEN MON-FRI 7:30-5:00—SAT 7:30-3: ( member of the Shop-Rite food WlnsloW Tel... Hi WINDOW cooperative organization, op- DON'T erates 72 supermarkets in Gloves Hold Hashish New Jersey, New York, Con- LONDON (AP) - Customs necticut, Pennsylvania and officers at London Airport dis- CONFUSE Maryland. Seven new Shop- covered 30 pounds of hashish Rites are scheduled to be sown into the linings of hock- THIS 11 T it opened by the end of fiscal ey gloves shipped from Pakis- HEAVY 1971. tan. Spring brings out DUTY WINDOW See MUSCLE'S the best in WITH STANDARD For All Your.. your lawn. FLIMSY WINDOWS! EASTER NEEDS Let your Auto-Lawn Doctor
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Conover ItimBrehn,, SOS Middle Lane, was called to the scene of the Jesus Christ, Superstar' Moving Opera IjaqBon Township, who lost accident, which happened at Icflhtroloihis car and struck a 6:05 a.m. By LESTER KINSOLVING place Bach's St. Matthew Pas- of falling in love with a priest ic theatrical art form, there never have heart of thia So* The record's title itself sion — despite Trans- who is loyally devoted to celi- should be some reason for perstar had it not been for ag- seems something of a gro- continental Music Company's bacy: such significant remembrance nostics like Thomas Didymus tesque grabber: "Jesus Eastern Division buyer RELIGION "I don't know how to love — particularly in consid- ("Doubting Thomas") exam- Christ, Superstar." Woody Howard. Woody waxed him .... Should I bring him eration of Anafole Franco's ining Crucifixion wounds and And if this sobriquet does ape in writing: "The secular TODAY down? Should 1 scream and poignant story of Pontius Pi- then, for no material or noli- NEW LAWN GRASS not appear sufficiently blas- works of Bach, Beethoven, shout? Should I speak of love late in retirement. When tical gain, bearing witness to SPROUTS INTO DENSE LAWN! phemous, consider the for- Handel and other composers — let my feelings out? .... asked if he remembers Jesus the Resurrection, at the cost mat: The Passion of Jesus suddenly become relegated to He scares me so .... I want whom he crucified. Pilate re- of Iheir lives — this during the Christ -i in rock and roll. the class of mundane com- Come on, King of The him so.... I love him so ... plies: age of the original Skeptics This initial reaction, plus position." Jews!" u "There were so many cruci- (such as Saducees) and 300 the timid piousity of some Nor will the classic beauty Love Song, What is particularly re- fixions." years after Aristotle, the fa- S-321/MERION commercial electronic media, of the King James Version of The other pinnacle is the markable is this Passion Play For Webber and Rice would ther of science. , (PERENNlAl RYEGRASS) (KENTUCKY BLUEGRASS) apparently motivated the Ital- The Bible ever be superseded hauntingly beautiful love song ending with the death of Jesus ian broadcasting company, by any of the current rash of of Mary Magdalene—utterly — there is not even a hint of RIA, to judge this recording new translations — however devoid of the cheap sensuous- Resurrection. This serves to as "too irreverent in tone." valuably they modernize the ness often accompanying the change the Gospel ("the good Grows in 7 Days! But it was subsequently Holy Scriptures. "Superstar," titillating theme of divine se- news") into a one-act tra- played on Vatican Radio — not being bound to the manu- duction. Rather it is akin to gedy: a Superstar that wcht Now there is a true turf-type perennial rye grass just as it is being played in scripts, is able to modernize generations of women who out; the light that failed. churches throughout the U.S. even further—in what can be suffered the emotional agony And while tragedy is a bas- strain which blends beautifully with Merion Ken- It is not irreverent It is im- recognized as a legitimate ef- tucky bluegrass. TheS-321.'Merion lawn seed mix- mensely moving; an elo- fort at a 20th Century version. ture combines the best characteristics of both quently serious rock opera by For example: two young Britishers, Andrew • Caiaphas to Judas": "This these popular grasses. Germination comes quickly Webber and Tim Rice, which isn't blood money — it's a fee, Institute Scheduled in 7-10 days. Itgrows rapidly and fills in fast, main- achieved a gold record (ono nothing more." (Crowd: million sold) within two "Gondola Judas!") taining a high degree of tillering (i.e., makes basal months of its being issued in • Pilate to Jesus: "Yon're On Church Music vegetative growth so a better turf results). Un- the States. in deep trouble friend; how RED BANK - Starting. to participate. A small regis- And in what appears to this can someone in your state be April 19 at 7:30 p.m. and con- tration fee is charged. doubtedly, the least affected by autumn and winter writer to be a thoroughly sin- so cool about his fate?" tinuing for six Mondays, the The staff of the institute burn, S-321/Merion remains green v/ell into the cere and respectful effort to * Jesus (in some intriguing third annual Church Music In- has had international musical express The Passion narra* and valuable exegesis by the stitute will be staged at the experience and its members winter period. tive in (very) modern idioin, lyricist): "Save tomorrow for United Methodist Church. are engaged in the leadership This premium lawn seed mixture produces an "Jesus Christ, Superstar*' tomorrow, think about today Co-sponsored by the music of church music programs in two famous seems no more irreverent the state. Father Kelty, who attractive and permanent lawn of bright medium- instead.... Surely you're not committee of the Southern than translating the Gospels saying we have the resources New Jersey Conference of the has presented program: s in dark color*. Its popularity is growing and is currently into English (for which men to save the poor from their Methodist Church and the Of- contemporary music on chan- lawn fertilizers In wide use !n the suburban New York/New Jersey were once burned at the lot?.... For all you care this fice of the Directory of Music nels 5 and 11, will combine stake.) ' wine could be my blood — this of the Catholic diocese of with Father Gall, director of Straight fertilizer. Scotts area, where it has demonstrated drought resist- Not Quite Bach bread could be my body." Trenton, the institute will music of the Trenton diocese, This opera will hardly dis- One high point of the opera present courses of use to any- to teach the classes of con- TURF BUILDER is America's ance and disease resistance. In addition, S-321/ temporary music. favorite fertilizer for devel- 1 is the characterization of He- one involved in church music. Merion crowds but weeds, takes traffic , and con- rod, whose jaded and biting The institute will offer in- Miss Winifred Widencr, a oping thick green lawns. tains no annual rye grass. A special mixture is also mockery comes alive in an in* struction in basic organ ser- Student of Martha Graham imitable rag: vice playing, theory, choral and dance teacher in Paris Spread it on your lawn in available for shady areas. CONNECTIONS "So you are the Christ, conducting, organ mechanics and other European cities, early spring' to make your S-321/Merion is a product of Garf ietd Williamson, you're the great Jesus Christ! and registration, contempo- will involve students in the grass bounce back faster rary music in worship, music practical aspects of sacred Inc. of Jersey City, N. J., the makers of "Wonder- BELLVALE * *Prove to me that you're no for the Christian education dance. from the rigors of winter. lawn" Lawn Seed mixtures. Get the best for less; fool: walk across my swim* programs, singing diction, Theory and choral con- Keeps grass greener longer EXCAVATORS,INC mingpool! and the use of contemporary ducting will be taught by Rob- 2,250 sq. ft. lawn coverage, only Success too, thanks- to its prolonged L0WRATES-$4.25rt.tmdUp Prove to me that yon're di- dance in worship. Choir mem* ert Spencer, director of mu- guaranteed. LICENSED PLUMBER vine: change my water into bers, choir directors, mem* sie, Rumson Presbyterian feeding action. AND EXCAVATORS wine!... bers of churca music com- Church. AVAILABLE AT ALL WONDERLAWN DEALERS OurRepmsautafinwibtHt Feed my household with mittees, organists, and inter- Organ mechanics will be Save $3 15,000 sq ft (60 lbs) 12ST 10.95 ttw area fbrttcmtfSimaks; this bread - you can do it on ested laymen are encouraged taught by Donald Curry, or- CALL 747-4966 you're head!... gan consultant. Save $2 10,000 sq ft (40 ]bs)2&f 7.95 P.O.Box543RwlBorfoNJ. 07701 European recitalist and in- Save $1.10 5,000 sq ft (20 lbs)54? 4.35 BatMitzvah structor at church music in- stitutes in New Jersey and thq Set Tomorrow Caribbean Islands, Herbert Burtis will teach singing dic- Combination fertilizer. GREEN ACRE RUMS0N - Ellen Leslie tion. BECKER'S Simels, daughter of Mr. anit, Mrs. Eleanor Linley, organ- HALTS PLUS combines the Mrs. Alan Simels, will cele- ist and choirmaster at Christ full greening power of Scotts LAWN SERVICE brate her Bat Mitzvah tomor- Episcopal Church, Shrews- Turf Builder with positive row. She will chant a Hafto- bury, will teach basic organ PRESENTS rah in honor of the occasion. playing. crabgrassprevention. Spread Ellen is a seventh grade Mrs. Ann Rowell, chairman it on your lawn in late winter V student in the Bayshore Ju- of the music committee of the nior High School, Middletown, or early spring, and it forms "SUNDAY SEED • SEEDLING MATURE GRASS PUNT Southern New Jersey Confer- They are at rest, now, in your lawn. As the and the B'nai Israel Hebrew ence, will teach music in an Invisible barrier that sun becomes increasingly brighter and the School. Ellen has received Christian Education. knocks off crabgrass as it earth becomes warmer; however, their col- awards for academic ex- Brochures and registration cellence and attendance in forms may be obtained from sprouts. While your fertil- or will change, and their life cycle will be her Hebrew School studies.. renewed again -giving you a healthier more Miss Donna Nilson, registrar. ized lawn grows thicket, Mr. and Mrs. Simels invite Registration deadline is April sturdier and greener. SPECIAL" attractive environment around your home. the congregation to the Oneg 15,1971. Prepare now to care for this very valuable Shabbat which they will spon- asset. Call the Green Acre turf specialist in sor in honor of their daughter. Save $3 5,000 sq ft (22 lbs) JAS5 TL9S your area TODAY for a FREE consultation Plan Palm Sunday Save $L60 2^00 sq ft (11 lbs) JSS 635 \ or ESTIMATE., Allaire Plans Program By Choirs SPRING INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL Easter Events FAIR HAVEN - At Christ ALLAIRE - The regular Church United Methodist, spe- OPEN MON.-SAT. 7-5 • Povrar Aantion Easter activities will be held cial music for Palm Sunday • F«rtiHi«tion. Supply Is limited! LAWN CLINIC limit 3 Packages to a Customer SATURDAY, APRIL 3rd Price Is Effective, Sun. April 4th Mr. Minetti, a Scotts Representative/will be in our store to help solve your lawn problems. If L3-,vii-A-I.!n! doMti't, «;? r'.nrJ: We do rr.uih more than REGISTER IN FREE DRAWING INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL ffirtilire. We s-jppfy aH cced ivtd nwieriah. Tfan our.exclusive LASTWEEKEND • fctittiaitnn • Power Auction Id'.vn machine j:i.jn::; ihrj :.enJ, (lu.'.t-r IQHS and aerates, and OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY WIN SCOTTS LAWN PROGRAM (32-7-5] '.V/ - Seedino H Ib. TO SAVE20% MaMutiicnis per 1.COO sq. If.) $24.95 $[)ftails tfte cxaci a,i;:'.;rii of i:!ie:nicals evenly and imilorralf OPEN SUNDAYS 8:30-4:00 - CLOSED TUESDAYS for 5000 Sq. It. including... • Vawti Rolling oviif your Idivn. 1 Turf Builder Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, friday and Saturday 8:30-6:00 ScoH'sStainlessSteelSpreader Lawn-A-Mal provides a Ml service for about ilia same as fU 5000Sq. Ft. Turf Builder Super Turf Builder pay for materials alone, and WE GUARANKE RESULTS. Halts Plus FULL YEAR'S PROGRAM t IIf / A PER GUARANTEE: Lawfi-A-Mugic* premium lawn products art 2-2500 Sq. Ft. Bags Fungidd* with Fertilizer Turf Builder + 2 GREENS-KEEPER CARE 72 V so. guaMriieed 10 be of Tie finest reality. If wii^n ihxce MveeVs afiet . 4,000 sq.FT. applicdlfon performed in aruriliut: 'A:*'i laxn-A-Mai directives, "helping pcopft with lawn protJemr for over 70 years" 2 Blend 70 Seed Blend 70 Seed lawn Service 4 Times a Year yinir I.i.vn laJls 10 lum yvew .r.ii n..vi< br.njiifjl, Lawn-A-Mal " Blend 35 Seed SPUING: EARLY SUMMED: FALL: will te^dce tie ni.nwi.iii ;nJ .<: j-v u p;t;" "if YOU ARE INVITED TO VISIT TURNER BROS. NURSERY'S ALL DAY SATURDAY iiilfttftsii m LAWN CUNIC mm GET THE RIGHT n This year INFORMATION FROM • THE RIGHT MAN Ml pi Here to help you .„.' • Mr, Marvin Clark, former somebody Monmouth County Agricultur- al Agent ....••. • Representatives from Agrico, Greenfield, and Ortho . who knows. • Your friendly, higfily-trained Turner Bros, personnel . Don't waste any more of your valuable time "muddling thru" with your lawn this year. Get started on the right foot! Before you start fertilizing and seed- ing, visit the Turner Bros. LAWN CLINIC Talk to the.experfs. TREE SOIL TEST Bring in a sample BRING IN A tAWN SAMPLE of soil for analy- mt. sis. Our experts Dig out a one foot square of your Jawn (you can replace it later will reJI you ifiY . . .) including both good & poor grass. Bring it to Turner Bros. needs lime (most & let our experts examine it. Mo charge for this service, of soi/s in this area course. do!) '•••;; Ask for our FREE brochures on Lawn Care ENJOY A GREENER LAWN IN ONLY 10 DAYS! AGRICO ORTHO GREENFIELD AGRICO CRABGRASS GRASS FOOD :OBTHO SPREADERS High nitrogen content. CONTROL Controlled slow release, Crab Prevents Crab Grass from $ Grass germinating. Reseed same 5-000 sq.ft. bag. t .Cnntrof day: Feeds grass f oo. Buy I 5 OFF Reg. 5.45 mQc bagatreg.prue:Cet»cand GRASS lor half price! NOW 4 •2.500 so. ft.boj. ROTARY , EASTER PLANTS .' Chrysanthemums, Hy- acinths, Tulips, Cineraria, Lilies . . . These, and all your favorites, available for fl(fc Easter giving. Remember NURSIRY1HC. those you love. >.. * w rian Keeps Busy By FLORENCEBRUDER tion that she's a native of New York City and, tion to.the directorship by the board of RED BAN.K - A garden may be a "love- after high school graduation, went to work in trustees. ' some thing," as the poet once said — but Mrs. the New York Public Library as an assistant. "I'm taking care of administrative details Frances Sweer is out to prove a library can be . Then came marriage (husband John is a now," she says modestly. But every corner ,., just as appealing. professor of physics at Monmouth College, and crevice of the library is her baliwick. • She's1 newly-appointed director of the Red West Long Branch) and the raising of a fami- ly, (son Christopher, who lives near Some- She's enthusiastic and knowledgeable Bank Public Library and her considerable about each facet of the operation: energies are directed toward making the rville, is married and the father of the Sweer's three grandchildren, sons Andrew of Pitts- "We hope, as the public realizes the large greenlandscaped building at 84 W. Front St. "a collection of books (25,821 for adults and young hub to serve the many needs of the commu- burgh and Christopher are computer analysts, and daughter Margaret, a Monmouth College people and 8,115 for juveniles) we have, plus nity." • • ' the records (456, classical, popular, poetry and "I consider this a community library in graduate, lives in Neptune and works at the Shadow Lawn Savings and Loan Co., Long readings, all snug in a second floor room with every sense," said Mrs. Sweer. (It's an exempt two record players with earphones) filmstrips, member of the Monmouth County Library, Branch.) As the children grew, "an anxious ieeling" developed. our registration of borrowers will increase." It residents having yoted not to join. It's main- has, according to last year's annual report. tained by taxes raised in the borough.) Mrs. Sweer was in New Jersey by then "Our job is to tell what the library's doing and had "never lost my interest In libraries. I The children are important: "We have and what services it's providing," she added. decided to go back to work." story hours with games and short films three Media chosen are exhibits, programs, pub- She approached it realistically: studied at times a week for 70 pre-schoolers and special licity-all aimed at attracting the public, from Rutgers and received a bachelor's degree in film programs alternate Saturdays for older smallest tots to senior citizens. 1963 and a master's in library service in 1968. children. The little ones are learning to be at Mrs. Sweer's pride in the library makes it "I wanted to go into the field properly pre- home in the library." difficult for one to find out about herself. A pared" - she accomplished her purpose. Senior citizens "come to read our news- trim, tiny, greyhaired woman, she lights up at She's held positions in the Somerville Pub- papers and periodicals and enjoy the view of the mention of two programs scheduled for lic Library and the Guggenheim Memorial Li- the river." National Library Week (April 18-24) but is re- brary at Monmouth College. She joined the As for the in-betweens: "Our adult pro- luctant to speak of her own career. staff here in 1968 as a reference librarian. grams are highly successful; we'll expand Obviously, she's a doer. She's clearly in live_ with her work and them. And our new collection of paperbacks is was adult services librarian before her eleva- practically diminished because of the demand ,. And a little prodding elicited the talorma* by teenagers." THEM!!! i f .'' Register staff Photos RED BAIVK, N.J., FRIDAY, APRIL 2,1971 13 BROWSING — Mrs. Frances Sweer, a new direc- tor of the Red Bank Public Library, peruses priceless old pictures of early Red Bank residents in the comfortable New Jersey Room. CSC Parley Theme: Settle School Issue Can We Afford Future? On National Anthem - Ah article by ested lay people after the Registrars, hostesses and RED BANK - In a joint Council developed the ques- William C. Stolk, chairman of workshops. recorders will be volunteers statement, David IS'atelson, tionnaire after it passed a mo- the Committee for Economic Co-chairmen of the event from the American National •Red Bank Regional High ,tion to table the petition call- Development, in' a recent is- are Mrs. Henry K. Berman, Red Cross, Monmouth Comity School Student Council presi- ing for reinstating the Nation- sue of The Saturday Review, Little Silver, and Mrs. John A. Chapter; the National Council dent, and Harold C. Schaible, al Anthem. The council in- inspired the theme of the 14tta Howard, Rumson. Mrs. Rem- of Jewish Women, Greater superintendent of the high vestigating committee circu- annual conference of the bert Stokes, Middletown, and Red Bank Section; the Junior school, announced that the is- lated the questionnaire and Community Services Council Mrs. Norma Klein, director of League of Monmouth and the sue of playing the National tabulated the results. for Monmouth County to be Community education, Brook- American Association of Uni- Anthem has been resolved, Mr. Schaible took action to held Monday, April 19, at- dale Community College, Lin- versity Women, Northern i In a compromise solution discontinue the playing of the Gibbs Hall, Ft. Monmouth. croft, are co-chairmen of Monmouth County Chapter. worked out by the Student National Anthem as part of ,"Can We Afford Tomor- -workshops. Council based on results of a the daily routine when he ob- row?" the author's question Past CSC conferences have student questionnaire circu- served too many students dis- about national social and eco- Other committee members examined county problems of ' lated by a council in- regarding the school's rules nomic issues, will be the are: exhibits, Mrs. Joseph drug, alcohol and cigarette vestigating committee, the on the playing of the anthem. springboard for a similar Lucarelli, Rumson; publicity, addiction, employment, hous- student spokesman and the Mr. Natelson commented evaluation of county concerns Mrs. Frank A. Contey, Lo- ing, welfare, health services, school's administrative head that the Student Council took at four morning workshops cust; planning, Mrs. Berman, .transportation, population, reached the decision to play the action of voting to dis- starting at 10 a.m. The con- Mrs. Howard, Mrs. Stokes, "ecology, urbanization, youth, the National Anthem only at approve the petition "in the current sessions, staffed by Mrs. Klein and Mrs. Contey, suicide, municipal and county special times, such as assem- interest of keeping the Nation- panels of experts, will deal Mrs. Allan B. Wallace* Mid- planning and foundation fund- bly programs, com- al Anthem in its deserved es- with "Needs-Priorities-Re- dletown, Mrs. Warren F. ing. memorative events, and other teem." He continued, "Stu- sources" of Monmouth Coun- Beer, Rumson, Richard B. Registration forms may be special occasions. dent Council'feels that the ty. A luncheon speaker, to be Blass, Deal and Arthur Z> Ka- obtained by writing CSC, 16 The questionnaire was cir- opinions expressed in the announced, will address social min, editor of The Daily Eeg« Spring St., Bed Bank. Regis- culated during homeroom pe- questionnaire support Mr. agency delegates and inter- ister, Red Bank. tration closes April 15. riod when the maximum num- Schaible's original reasons for ber of students could be the discontinuation." reached. Out of 1,387 students Selective playing of the Na- enrolled in the school, 929 an- tional Anthem was seen by swered the three-question both as a means of restoring County Added to High questionnaire. The Student proper significance to it. Unemployment List SevenPleadlnnocent TRENTON - Monmouth an area with an unemploy- ence in their area for certain and Hunterdon Counties have ment rate of from 6. to 8.9 per federal contract awards under Of Offenses by Mail been added to New Jersey's cent, which is anticipated to the Defense Manpower policy. FREEHOLD - Anne Marie ing them access to alcoholic '-'substantial unemployment continue during tho following Second preference is ex- Dixon ~ a 33-yearT)ld~Hazlet —beverages andmarijuana^ area" list by the U.S. Depart- two months. tended to firms in the areas of housewife, pleaded innocent John McCain, Lippincott ment of Labor, and now quali- The Department of Labor "substantial unemployment," this morning to charges of ex- Ave., Long Branch, denied PAUSING — Mrs. Sweer straightens a shelf in bright building as she pre-1 fy for special federal contract also announced that Atlantic which agree to hire at least 15 tortion and.carrying a dan- possession and sale of heroin pares two programs for National Library Week, April 18 to 24. "Spring procurement consideration. and Hudson Counties have per cent of their newly hired gerous weapon. . Aug. 7 in Asbury Park. Wild Flowers" will be presented for adults April 21 at 7:45 p.m. and This classification, Com- been added to the list for aid each month from among dis- Charles T. Wall Jr., Gar- "Snakes and Other Reptiles" is on tap for children April 22 at 3:30 p.m. missioner Charles Serraino of under Title 1, Public Works advantaged workers. Mrs. Dixon of 71 Fleetwood field Court Apartments, Long the N.J. Department of Labor and Economic Development The present list of "sub- Drive, Hazlet, is accused of Branch, denied possession and and Industry explained, Act. stantial unemployment" areas threatening a supermarket sale of heroin July 24 in Long means that these areas, be- Preferential List in New Jersey, in addition to manager last Sept. 2 that she Branch. cause of their unemployment Commissioner Serraino said Monmouth and Hunterdon would place a bomb in his • Wall also denied aiding and rate, are now entitled to pref- companies in areas on tho Counties, includes Atlantic store unless she was .given Council Bars Nixon ?20,000. abetting Harry Williams of erential treatment in the "substantial unemployment" and Hudson Counties, the Pa- Ellis St., Long Branch, in the awarding of certain federal list which agree to employ at terson-Clifton-Passaic labor Her innocent plea, entered •sale of heroin July 15 in Long contracts. The "substantial least 25 per cent of their new- area, the Perth Amboy-New by mail, was accepted this Branch. unemployment" listing, as ly hired workers each month Brunswick labor area and the morning by Superior Court Williams denied the posses- Protest Over Calley designated by "the U.S. De- from among disadvantaged Vineland-Millville-Bridgeton Judge M. Raymond sion and sale of heroin July 15 partment of Labor, signifies residents, receive first prefer- area (Cumberland County). McGowan. in Long Branch. i :NEW SHREWSBURY - his motion .to condemn each ors in general and Mr. Henck Pascal L. Fcderici Jr., Hol- Strong, divided opinions on. and every one who condoned Mrs. Dixon denied threat- in particular for publishing ening Joseph Rosatto, man- lywood Ave., West Long whether Borough Council the situation ifi which Calley municipal "newsletters" in Branch, denied possession of should, officially protest to was implicated, "including all ager of the Shop Rite of Haz- their effort to keep their citi- let. She also denied carrying a marijuana in that borough President Nixon against the of us here." He said he would zens informed. Red Bank Liquor Permit last July 21. He also denied Lieut. William L. Calley, Jr., accept the resolution if this knife. The editorial said that such contributing to the delin- verdict;focused withdrawal of were added. Six Other Pleas quency of a minor by alle- a motion by Councilman Ed- "We all have personal.feel- newsletters are inadequate and that citizens can read of In:other innocent pleas en- gedly encouraging him to pos- Ward F. Stashak. ings on whether Calley was Transfer OK'd by State tered by mail: sess marijuana. Mr. Stashak asked for offi- guilty or not guilty," said what is happening in the local press. Mayor Henck said that John, B. Peterkin, 23, of cial action on the "basis that Mayor Robert F. Henck, clos- were actually 16 blocks. that Luigi's would not sub- Bloomfield, denied possession Lieut Calley was singled out ing the discusgion. "As indi- the New Shrewsbury news- NEWARK - The state Divi- letter is published at the sion of Alcoholic Beverage Mr. Murphy testified that stantially add to it. of marijuana in Matawan Monmouth for punishment as an individ- viduals," he added, "we Control has upheld the action the new restaurant would add In denying the appeal, state Aug. 15. ual. If he is guilty," he said, should'take personal action, request of the citizens, is not ABC Director Richard C. designed to compete with the of the Red Bank Borough to the already heavy traffic Eobert Joseph Liming, 19, "then the whole of the U.S.A. but I question whether we, as Council in transferring the li- flow, would cause congestion, McDonough said that Mr. Alumni Unit is equaHy guilty." a council, should take such of- local press and is informative. Murphy had failed to prove of Paul Ave., Eatontown, de- He also recalled that it is quor license of Luigi's from 21 and that the restaurant lacked nied possession of marijuana Councilman Thomas Ru- ficial action." White St. to 244 W. Front St. adequate parking facilities. that the action of the council zicka, stated at the outset he Councilman Kirk pointed nearly 2>£ years since the was unreasonable or that it Dec. 4 in Shrewsbury and de- Forum Set Sentinel covered the " Plan Disclosed nied contributing to the delin- woUld vote against the motion out that legislative bodies The transfer approval was constituted an abuse of its dis- WEST LONG BRANCH - because, he said, "if an atro- throughout the nation are ex- borough's affairs with a rep- One of the owners of cretionary powers. quency of a 16-year-old The Monmouth College resentative. appealed by Danny Murphy, Luigi's, Louis Acerra, said Shrewsbury Township boy, a city was committed and he, pressing official, points of owner of Danny's Italian Res- The director, however, Alumni Association will get a was found guilty, we have no view, but Mr. Stashak with- Police Chief James A. Her- that he planned to establish a 15-year-old Eatontown girl first-hand report of the ring was authorized by coun- taurant, Bridge Ave., who ob- restaurant with about 10 ta- ruled that Luigi's must oper- and a 17-year-old East Keans- right to interfere with the pro- drew his motion "since there jected on the grounds |th?t ate the restaurant in strict ac- "crisis" in higher education cess of justice. are divided feelings. I hoped cil to investigate alleged vio- bles, and create a 25-car park- burg girl by allegedly allow- this month from an ex- lations of local ordinance by there was no need for ad'di- ing lot next door. cord with its proposed plans, "If the nation as a whole is for unanimous support on the tional liquor license in the and that it must be operated pert-who also happens to be a guilty, then we must consider proposal," he said, "but now mining operators, who contin- Deputy Police Chief Wil- Monmouth College alumnus. ue to stockpile sand and area, and that the location liam F. Patterson Jr., testi- as a "bona fide" restaurant Story Hours this individually in our own I'd rather let individuals ex- with provisions for seated pa- Mrs. Mariagnes Lattimer, a press their own personal gravel. lacked suitable parking.' i fied that there was traffic conscience. The fact that Cal- congestion in the area, but trons. Set at Library 1966 Monmouth graduate and ley was caught up in a series views." Probationary Patrolmen Luigi's, also an Italian res- assistant dean of the Gradu- of circumstances, does not Permits. Approved Ladine I). White, Donald H. taurant, is located in a former MATAWAN-Miss Janice ate School of Education at cancel the fact that he was in Four applications for solio- Miller and Louis D. Vitale, lampshade studio, less than a Antczak, director of children's Rutgers University, will complete command of his fac- itation permits \yere approved were promoted to patrolmen block from Danny's Italian Middletown Bank services, has announced the speak at the first Alumni As- ulties." by council with one dissenting third class for satisfactory Restaurant. dates for the spring story sociation luncheon forum, Bars Interference vote in each case from Mr. completion of their probation- hour. The Tuesday group will Tuesday, April 27. Mrs. Latti- Mr. Ruzicka agreed with Kirk. Applications were from ary service. meet through May 18. mer will focus on issues and Mr. Stashakthat Calley the American Field Service; Council prohibited any use Congestion Told Permit Rule Upheld opportunities in today's Testimony in the appeal be- variance allowing bank use The Friday session is April should not have been singled Project Concern; the Ameri- of the borough land fill area fore an ABC hearing exam- FREEHOLD - Superior educational climate. out as an individual but added can Cancer Society and Shiloh by vehicles not equipped with Court Judge Elvin R. Simmill was denied by the zoning 2 through May 28. The pro- The luncheon is scheduled iner, included that of William board Oct. 20,1969. that "the court's decision was Day Camp. special permits. These only Mari, president of the Mon- yesterday upheld the Middle- grams include stories, songs, for 12:30 p.m. at West End based on facts and evidence "I am up to my head with will be be available to oper- mouth County Package Stores' town Board of Adjustment in Reasons Unproved and films for tho pre-school Manor, Long Branch. which we do not fully. know solicitations, and I know ators contracted to the its denial of a variance for a The bank contended that children enrolled. Mrs. Margot A. Bolich, a Association, who said the the board had found no facts and, therefore, I feel we many residents of this borough, borough residents, transfer was made into an branch office' of the Middle- A publication of interest to 1961 Monmouth graduate, is should not interfere with court borough are fed up with such or businessmen conducting town Banking Co., Rt. 35, Mid- to support its denial, but chairing the luncheon pro- area already too congested ' Judge Simmill disagreed, school employes has been ac- processes!" continuous solicitations. Per- business here. with taverns and liquor dletown. quired by the'library. It is Re- gram. She said many Mon- Strong opinions by mem- sonally I will oppose on prin- Grady Smith, Edwin E." stores. The bank wanted to estab- saying the bank had failed to mouth College alumni haye sustain the burden of proving search Bulletin A70-S, "Sala- bers of council, led to mention ciple every such request, un- Breiden'bach, John Cotting- lish a branch in an office ries and Salary Guides of expressed an interest in of the Nuremberg and Tokyo less the organization is a harti. and William Leonard, Mr. Mari testified that building in a residential zone special reasons existed for the "some kind of informal, week- variance. Full-Time Special Services trials, which Councilman member of the Community were appointed members of there were already 12 liquor on Half Mile Road, Lincroft. Personnel 1H7O-UI71." The ref- day forum for the exchange of Lawrence Kirk termed "atro- Appeal or the United Fund." the Fire Prevention Bureau. licenses within a four-block (A variance had previously V. David Shaheen of Mid- ideas and insight." dletown represented Middle- erence tool "reports salaires cities in themselves which Editorial Attacked A request by the Recreation avea of the Luigi location. been approved for the office and salary guides for 5,500 Monmoulh alumni and their should not be allowed to per- Mayor Henck condemned Commission for an increase in The hearing examiner, how- building itself, owned by John town Banking Co. and 1 guests are invited to attend. Thomas T. Warshaw of Red full-time special services per- petrate" • • an editorial entitled "Frustra- its membership, was referred ever, said that under cross ex- L. Fitzgerald of Black Point sonnel" throughout the state Mrs. Bolich said Stephen Al- Councilman Irving Cohen ted Editors!' in the Eatontown to the appropriate council amination, Mr. Man admitted Boad, Rumson.) Bank represented the zoning len, alumni coordinator is at board. and is published by New Jer- asked Mr. Stashak to amend Sentinel which attacked may- committee for study. the four blocks he mentioned The bank's application for a sey Education Association. the college for reservations. 14 Th«D«lty RegWter.'ftt-d XJ., Friday. April 2,1971 Knicks Wrap IirUp:ifa':Tilte "Defense was the differ- left and. the Knlcto ahead 1(W- By MIKE RECHT champions came alive again I've played against as a pro. ciation playoffs. was a little farther out than I Ellis let'fly with a 40-footer wanted to be. but we had ence," Frazier said."We ap- 102. ' ';: ' ..'.-. Associated Press Writer in the final minutes to beat They road each other's minds plied the pressure and waited "At the start of the last the Hawks 111-107 and dike out there." that turned an apparent 11M- nothing to lose." ' . "' ' They all blamed themselves 103 defeat into a 106-104 vic- Philadelphia shaded Balti- (or them to make mistaken quarter It looked bad for the out their best-of-seven K™» Bridges might well have They lost all four games in for the defeat, particularly home team," Walt Krazier playoff series four games to been wondering if the Knicks tory for the Warriors last more 104-103 and Los Angeles Maravich. said again. He was beginning also read the Hawks' minds, night and kept them al.ive in. routed Chicago. 115-89 in the the final five minutes." one. the Western Conference semi- other playoff game yes- "We're up by six bf sevfcri • to sound like a broken record. "We had them on the ropes the way they swiped the ball The mistakes this time Frazier has been saying continually during the series, finals. gcrday. and they score a couple of •: every night," said a downcast The basket from near the C'ome From Behind were a missed layup and free baskets and 20,000 people are things looked bad in the Lou Hudson of the Hawks a particularly in the closing throw by Pete Maravlch, who fourth quarter for the Knicks minutes when all five games center of the floor put the In the wrapup, which sent screaming. If we come back few minutes after his season Warriors ahead 105-104. A the Knicks into the Eastern had shot the Hawks into their and hit a basket *>r two those. in four previous playoff ended, despite his 29 points. were decided. nine-point spread with all of games against the Atlanta Warriors Stop Bucks technical foul then was called Conference final against the 20,000 would have t.h.ekr Experience Tells on the Bucks for taking an ex- his 31 points, and then failed Hawks, and four times out of "It's that world champion- A lucky long shot by Joe Baltimore-Philadelphia win- tongues lying pn thoseats, ' tra time out and Jeff Mullins ner, New York came from, to score the final 10 minutes. he said_ , thinking toback to his five everything turned out ship experience," added Kllis in the last second kept And Bill Bridges threw away just great for the Knicks. the Milwaukee Bucks from sank the free throw for the fi- nine down 91-82 to beat the missed"shoteirt The final min- teammate Bill Bridges in an- nal point. an in bounds pass down the The final time came last other corner. making a four-game sweep of Hawks as Walt Frazier led the utes. "We had to shut theht . "It was a lucky shot," Ellis charge with nine points from stretch. Hudson hit only l-of-2 up, and we didn't." , night when the defending Na- "I think as a team, the the San Francisco Warriors in free throws with one mtouto tional Basketball Association Knicks are the finest team the National Basketball Asso- said. "I had to let it go. "I that point. Ernie Banks Lee Grabs Leads; Player Cards 75,:: back from ail extended vaca- The talkative TrftVino On Sick List GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) hasn't won thia year but «f« By KEN BAPPOPORT this spring during limited - Lee Trevind charged U ° That's golf" said Player, beea beaten-,& total ] Associated Press Writer Cactus League service. He through late afternoon shad- three strakes " ows with a 67 and gained a xuu nave, some good rounds Just like money in the bank, had 11 hits in 27 at-bats for and you have to-nave some, weeks as r the Chicago Cubs never wor- .407. share of the firstround lead ties in .th8 t- -.^..-^ ried about one starter for 17 After coming off the dis- yesterday in the $190,000 bad rounds. No one ever 4 ir played the -game who didn't-, viilc and Natloi}il> ^ Opening Days. abled list last season, Banks Greater Greensboro Open. Opens. But this year will be differ- batted .216 in 18 games and Golf .Tournament while Gary have isornetjadrpHnds.^',,...; .., ent - this year Ernie Banks appeared-recovered from the Player's dreams of a third will be missing. arthritic1 condition. He fin- consecutive) triumph took a The spirit is willing, but the ished with a .252 average, way • severe jolt,: • . ' • knees aren't, doctors said yes- below his life-time mark. Flayer, the toiigh little • terday as the Cubs put their Banks was the National South African who won the gilt-edge slugger on the 21:day League's most valuable play- last two tour events and' the disabled list. er in 1958 and 1959 and had a defending champion here. The 40-year-old Banks, tor- career total of 509 home runs. struggled in with a lour-over* tured by arthritic knees, Paring on Down par 75 and was far back In the Trade hasn't responded as expected Teams continued to pare field. to treatment and workouts down for Opening Day, in- • Trevino, onfe of the last to TRENTON (AP) -The Republican leadership lathe «B- inis spring. cluding the Montreal Expos finish in the gathering dusfc, ate announced introduction yesterday of bills that will in- Gratitude Told , who sold infielder Marv was tied at four-under-par crease the state's take on pari-mutuel betting at New Jersey "I'm grateful to the Cubs Staehle to Atlanta for an un- •with New Zealand left-hander for making it possible for me disclosed sum. The Expos also Bob Charles, and paunchy racetracks. to extend the conditioning of said that outfielder Adolpho veteran Miller Barber. The bills would also provide more funds for thoroughbred • my knees without putting Phillips would be left behind Five more were just one prize-winning purses and for standardised breeders. pressure on them that would when the club broke camp. stroke of f the pace at 68. The measures arc supported by Senate President Bay- be necessary in regular sea- They are Australian Bruce wond H. Bateman, R.-Somerset, and Senate Majority Leadejr son games," said Banks, the Crampton, former Masters Harry L. Sears, R-Morris, who announced their introduction. all-time Mr. Cub. "There was champ Art Wajl, Pete Brown, The bills affecting the state's three thoroughbred bucks the chance they would be Nationals Pave Elchelberger and tour would Increase the take out from pari-mutuel betting from 15 strained and I would be out sophomore Jack Lewis. per cent to 17 per cent. •••' '•'••' • • •; "-'-iv even longer. National Amateur cham- It would place New Jersey on a par with New York and "I feel, however, that ray Beckoning pion Lanny Wadkins headed a knees are stronger now and Pennsylvania, Bateman said. big group at 69. Of the additional two per cent, the state would keep half, that if I keep up my exercises, Xacklin Slips I can build them up so that I Mat Duo U.S. Open champion Tony or $3,2 million, and the rest would be split between the tracks, will be of some value to the Jacklin had a chance for a which would get $2.1 million, and purses, which would be fat* team later on." At least one local winner in teneU by $1.1 million/. - - last week's N.J. Wrestling spot among the leaders but : Banks said his main con-. took a double bogey seven on The proposed legislation affecting the state's two harness • cern was "not to hurt the Federation Junior Tourna- ment is headed for the Nation- the 18th hole and finished at - tracks would increase the take out front 16 per cent to 17 per club. I don't want to embar- 70, three strokes back. cent. ••/"•' '• . v rass the team, making it look al Tournament at Bakersfield, AP Wlrephoto Calif., next week, and there is ALL HANDS ALOFT — New York Knickerbockers' Dave DeBusschere The discouraged Player hit The additional point would be divided equally between the as if the Cubs were playing one out of bounds, once found someone who is hurt." a good chance that both area (22) goes up to snag a rebound in the first period of last night's NBA play- slate treasury and the breeders, wjth each receiving 1430,000.., champs will be there. the water and three-putted Pari-mutuel betting is a system of betting, hi which those (ieneral Manager John Hol- off clincher against the Atlanta Hawks at Madison Square Garden. Dave four times en route to the 75 land approached Banks with .lack Dibble. V.iti-pounder D. finds plenty of company—Hawks Walt Bellamy (8), Pete Maravich (44) who bet on the winners of the first three places share the lotpl from Christian Brothers Aca- that tied him with Masters the idea of removing him and Bill Bridges (32)—when it comes to tiands on the ball. The Knicks champion Billy Casper, just stakes minus a percentage for the management, A from the aclive roster and the deiry who won at John P. Ste- ousted.Atlanta, Jll-107. •• •" Cubs' great first sacker vens High School last week- agreed it was best. Holland end, said last night that he said BanJcg would be restored will definitely be heading for to active duty April 21. the opening of the Bakersfield Despite liis painful knees, tournament next Wednesday. Ali to Be Heard especially the left one. Banks Dibble's CBA schoolmates was able to hit for average . collected enough money to ' send him on the trip and keep him there for the tournament By Supreme Court which ends next Saturday. Choice* A similar effort is under WASHINGTON (AP) - The hearing. The time will be di- way at Red Bank Regional to Supreme Court will listen vided between Ali's lawyers finance heavyweight John April li) to arguments by la- ami attorneys for the justice l.ce's way to the tournament. wyrs for Muhammad Ali that department. The collection started yes- the former heavyweight terday and is expected to con- The court is expected to champion's Musjim religion rule on the draft evasion con- tinue until the $400 or so Jiuurcd-liim. Jmt_oivly.-(roi rieeae3 is in. tction t)f-Alh also-known as fighting in Vietnam but also Cassius Clay, before the end Winners of the Nationals in from taking part in any war Bakersfield arc eligible to of its current term sometime that did not have Allah's in June. compete in the World Cham- blessing. ROOF pionships which will be held in' The high court set the dale Ali was convicted nearly feed grass in one Tokyo, Japan. You'll like this 3V2 hp, 21" cut vesterday for the one-hour four years ago of refusing in- Roof push-type power mower. duction into the armed ser- It rolls easy on big 8" steel vices. As he battled through wheels with ball bearings, the. courts, he also stayed out runs quietly, mows evenly. Winter Loop Golfers .of tjies ring until lust October Make your choice the Roof 'wheT* he.fought Jerry (juarry. JIo then fought Oscar Bon a- "21". Fits nicely In car trunkl 1 easy step Vena.'. • Electric or Vertical-pull Start Set for Crown Play • Individual Wheel Height And on March 8, he took on Adjusters LIXCROFT - The Jersey Mike Finerty, Ft. Mon- the recognized heavyweight • Grass Catcher Shore Winter Golf League wiil moiilh. placed fourth in the champion Joe Frazier and It's as easy as 1-2-3 when you use Agrico l»2-3. In one (standard on «tectrle rnodftl) complete its season here next pro ranks with his 36-41-77. dropped a 15-round decision, simple application ... selective, pre-emergence chem- • Fold-down Handle Thursday with the champion- Housen was closest to the his first loss in 31 fights. It • Special Alloy Cast Deck ships at the Bamm Hollow pin on the 150-yard 13th hole, earned him $1.5 iiiillion. icals stop crabgrass before it starts... lull root feeding • Wash-out Ports Country Club here. lie hit an 'eight-iron four feet 1 A rematch has been di<- insects and give rich nutrition to your lawn to make it Recoil Start, $101.10 Golfers must have com- 11 and one half inches from cussed but no dale has been a thick, plush carpet of grass. ; (gross catchercflro) peted.in at least five tourneys tlie pin. set. ' • ' . • Electric Start, 1162.00 during the league's season. With Agrico 1-2-3, there's no need to buy two or; Tee off is slated for 11 a.m. Get Yours. Today at... Golfers are asked to be on three different products to get your lawn off to a fast, hand a half hour before toe-off MOTORHOME & healthy start this Spring. • • : if'. time. . Registration And, Agrico delivers a full pound of nitrogen per The Winter Leaguers com- pleted their regular season at TRUCK-CAMPER 1,000 square feet of lawn. There's no richer formula. A Red Bank Mower Ilnpewell Valley Country Club Scheduled : £ne lawn enhances your home. You have a head' start in Hopewell yesterday. INSURANCE 53 Morford PI. Roy Faber, Colonia, cap- with Agrico. No gimmicks, You simply get the best Red Bank, N.J. tured the prize among the In MYGAL fertilizer possible. '" i •" ' Phone: 741-2300 pros with a two under par 'Mi- MIDDLETO\y.\ - Final from Wholosaln Distributor: M-70. while Bob Housen. Ln- Softball registrations for girls GAROEN STATE FARM kewood, garnered his fifth of the Middletown Girls Ath- SPECIAL: *7.95 SUPPLY CO., INC. straight victory among'the letic Leagues will lake place Reg: $9.95 Bclvrdere, N.J. amateurs with a 36-35-71. Friday evening and Saturday at the Middletown Community Agrico Gnu Food Covers 2,500 sq. ft. INSURANCE COMPANV contains more Center, and the Middletown actual feeding Youth A.A. Fieldhouse, Bod- unit* than most man Park. Friday's time is Covers your liability plus brands. Feed* TREES, SHRUBS DESIGNING between 7 and 9 p.m., while the value of your unit and lawn gently, ..-.:.. EVERGREENS HAILROADTIE evenly. Saturday girls may sign up equipment. SEEDING. SODDING CONSTRUCTION between'10 a.m. and 2 p.m. SPRINKLER SYSTEMS BRICK PATIOS Girls, aged 10 to Hi, as r>F July HI, 1971, are eligible to play. They must be residents GROSSINGER of the Township, including I he Agrico Weed Control with Fairview, Port Monmoulh, & HELLER Fertilizer. Wallops Kast Kcansburg, New Jllon- AGENCY dandelions, broad- mouth, Uncroft, River Plaza, leaf weeds. Leonardo, Belford, Navesink, BROAD & MECHANIC Fertilize;, loo. Agrico Division and Middletown Village sec- RED BANK - Continental Oil Company (wjoeS) '••' tions. 741-2100 AGRICO PRODUCTS AVAILABLE AT THE FOLLOWING DEALERS H. P. Hammond, 111 Nursery Betker's Hardware lowwtoolCo. SwiMt Farm Market 197Shr«mburyAv».. RadBank INvar Rd., Fair Haven and Landscape. Sarrice 747-0465 1Z1O Sunasl Aiie.-, Waiwmuut 7*7-1039 ' 772-4029 ' VISIT OUR NUIISICICY Hendricksoti's Old Wagon Farm Swaitzel'sFann t Garden Supply HICYCRS MILL RU., COI.T.S M-CK Rt. 35 & Laural Ai/o., Holmdal 671-0294 SBto£ :t'.',itt,v •71-1060; ' ltiil' flit,?,'•' j|^M ' WEEKS SPECIALS Holland g McChesney Warehouse TitrnervrM. Nursery CRB Yards, freehold mrtiRd.. WeelLong tren* WHITE PINE M ft - 86.00 4B2-O967 32«2Mr Myron Koii Ay & Allot. Pbrttr's Garden Center ThtViflage-Gretfl APPLE TREES is-n I. - '. $30.00 45 Rt. 35, Eitomown Are. of Two Rlvtrs, Itunwan 10t1Ht.38, ONCRETE AND PRICK WORK-* BEE Established 1925 onsfruetion. Patios. House VtMcer. WALL iveways. Foundations. 67M653L SALES: URNITURE MOVING —AttlCS mi Cel 264-0198 SERVICE: 264-9090 SHREWSBURY, N.J. -• cleaned. Free estimates . Coll 747-3002 Shrewsbury Ave., At Sycamore 3290 HIGHWAY 35, HAZLET 747-5400 (More Classified on Next Page) |{ank-!MiHHlHn*n.Y J.. Friday. April 2. 1971 HELP WANTED MALE HELP WANTED BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FOR SALE FOR SALE Jtf I In-lh.il> H..j£MFr.K« COMPLETE PHOTOGRAPHY SETUP - MALE OR FEMALE MQHMOUTH COUNTY — Tavern. Coi Yothkrj Mot comero, enloroer, o se oil HELP WANTED FEMALE I HELP WANTED FEMALE MEN WANTED venlent location. Family type. l&5,0fi< BL'hJNF/SN NOTICES Sterling McCarvn Real Eslofe {Broker darkroom oecettorles. %M firm, 2>l-2i»t. GENERAL OFFICE WQPKEP — Book- McDonald's Drive-In EASTER PLANTS W.OVIHG-MUST SELL — Mediterranean keeping background heipf'jl. Free hotpi- y/RO'i 0*i"'Ol.s •- Free ci'"n''j 25 Hwy 35 Mlddieto* living room, ill pieces. Best oiler. T tqlizot'on, paid vacation. S'eody potllion We need lull or pori-tlme workers for PRODUCTION .ITALIAN HOT DOG BUSINESS — Work C.'i-t '}"<•< i i, m /4 ?U'J | mum. Executive Apply STAR CLEANERS, I32 Myrtle evenings, Must be at least 18 yegrs old. hours weekly. Grots *250< Hoil«t area WINDOW WASHING Ave., Long Branch. Asking tSOOO, Coll Ui-3711 after 3 p.m. Wholesale & Retaij TWIN METAL BEDS — Complete with HOMES APARTMENTS-STORES COLLEGE STUDENTS (MALE) WORKERS mirrored dresser, M0. Kite}•; "binjf. RN ANO LPN — Full or part-time. Sve- S3.50PER HR. PART-TIME For frcf estimates call AAA Window glasi front, 4 drawer!, $15. Mornings 78T Washing Service. 54M630- Secretary nlngs and nights. Apply In person. Green Any 15 hours. Neat dresser. Also tull-tii^e .Core Stringers J6I0. _____ Grove Convalescent Center, Green Grove work. Car necessary. Coll for Interview, .Assemblers Harmonv Floral Shoppe COMPLETE LAWN SERVICE We ore seeking an efficient secreiory Rd. ond Rt. 66, Neptune. 747-4030. INSTRUCTION _Wlrcrs/Harne5s/Coble 564 Palmer Ave. East Keansburg' BEDROOM SET — Danish modern, solid ,5 cutlmq hpdqo clipping, lert.lizmg to work with one of our key execu- .Inspectors walnul, by John Stuart. S250. Call ' connote caM 54? 1630 tives, Any previous legal experience MANAGER — Snack bar. Good starting DRIVER — Welding supply truck. Over Computer Careers 671-4100 ' would be helpful but not essential. salary. Days. Monmouth Shopping Center. 25. Five-day week, two weeks vacation (n business, industry ond governmen 787-0947 i VAN WITH DRIVER - Available Satui Good steno and lyping required. \n ad- Wrile Box B-120, The Daily Register, Red medical Insurance. Reply Box C-107, The WEDDING RING — Plallnum, 21 lauarr Bank. Daily Register, Red Bank. start with ECPI training. Day and eve days. Bayshore orea dilion, must be able fo handle and or- ninas. Call ECPI ot 542-2800 or vii« cut diamonds, value $1200. Platinum Call 671-9130 ganize many details. This is on ex- Small company friend- WAITRESS — Part-time, five-day week SERVICE MANAGER — Chrysler ex- ECPI, ?65 Monmouth Park Hwy., West ESTATE SALE watch, 60 round cut 3-polnt diamonds. cellent opportunity for a career-mind- J1400. Offers accepted. Write Box B-117, LAWN YE RViCE - Lawn cutting mainl ed person Good starting salary bosed Apply in person, no phone colls, Matawan perience. Familiarity with warranty work liness, big company sa- Long Branch. ______nonce 5tar1 now. Free estimates. Reaso Diner, Hwy 34, Matawan a must. Contact J.B. ot 291-9300, between FRENCH STUDENT WILLTUTOR Furniture includes: The Dally Register. Red Bonk. on background, plus comprehensive lary, working condi- TAMBOUR DESK GATELEG TABLE oblc Call NJ.Lepre. 2W-8418, atterS:30 benefits including company cafeteria. 10-2 p.m. German or French In your home. MATURE WOMAN WANTED tions and benefit pack- 842-7622 TEAWAGON tmohogony wilh qloss travl LAWN MAINTENANCE Clerk, full time. DELIVERY BOYS - Apply in person at ORIENTAL RUG COFFEE TABLES MACHINERY FOR SALE Uwns cut ond maintained Call or apply in person: ter 7 p.m. Lulni's Famous Pizza, 473 age, i and much more! ONE INTERNATIONAL BACKHOE Call 741-7931 Mr.A.Trooskin 636-3000 Middle Rd.,HaiTet. MERCHANDISE Bric-a-broc China Crystal LOADER — One Ford Dump Truck. One SALESLADY — FuM time. Apply Mr. White Tractor. Coll 787-1436. SPRING CLEAN-UP — Yards cleaned HESSOIL& Hebeier, 8 to II, Frown's. 32 Broad St., DRIVER-STOCKMAN — Apply In person, Interviews in person FOR SALE APRIL 3and 4 Liming, fertilizinq and reseedlng. Alsc Red Bank. CENTRAL MARINE SUPPLY, Hwy 35, siiiubbery trimmed. Call 747-3011. Chemical Division Saturday, Sunday Hrj. 12-4 p.m. only Laurence Harbor. Sat. Apr. 3, from: 9 PAINT YOUR HOUSE— Nice 'n' easy. 37 Applelree Dr. Malawon MERCHANDISE WANTED Amerada Hess Corporation . WAITRESSESWANTED Borrow sprayers, ladders, drop cloths, ALL TYPES MASON WORK — InCludlm 1 LAKERIDGE (oil Rt. 516) 1 Hess Plaza Woodbridge, N.J Apply in person CALIFORNIA CONSTRUCTION OP- a.m. to 12 noon. Week- any kind ot pro equipment you need Irom ANTIOUE JEWELRY - Top Cain pma. foundations and fireplaces. An equal opportunity employer PORTUNITY — Complete taper and fin- Call 671-2032. Rex Diner, 117 W. Front SI., Red Bank A TO Z Rental Center, 181 Newman LES DEUX & DON PONS, 7»» River Rd. isher. Best of pay ond opportunity for days 9-11 a.m., 2-4 p.m.Springs Rd., Shrewsbury. 741-O040. FOR QUALITY FURNITURE—AN- _ir Haven. Tues.-Sol. lt-5. 741-4337 or CARPENTER — Will remodel your home. PART-TIME — Attractive, vivacious girls qualified man. For information, 264-2799 for deportment store cosmetic promoliort (N.J.) 842-6J57. Paneling, finisti basements. Reasonable GUNS— New and used. Buy, self TIQUES, art oblects, rare china, glass- HOSTESS (New York and New Jersey). No selling trade. MANNY AND MARY^s SPORTS COLLECTOR PAYS TOP CASH FOR Coll 671-4766. 54 per hour. Call collect (212) 258-6700. TWO MEN — Part or full time. Lawn and INTERDATA : SHOP Rt. 36, East'Kcansburq. 787-0508. ware, pointings, old clocks, Jewelry, fire- maintenance work. S2 per hour. GLD TRAINS or will trade HO., 027, O or CASHIER 2 Crescent Place Oceanport, N.J standard gouges, 774-3710. _j •SEWING MACHINE MECHANIC — A BABYSITTER WANTED- For three Call67t-2610 t>'E5KS 515 up. FILES, tables, chairs, cd mokes of home sewing machines. Singer (Directly behind Hojlday Inn building) place equipment . . . Visit RUSCIL'S year old. Tuesdays and Fridays. 10:30 ding machines, typewriters, ollice equip- NAN JOHNSON Specialty. Coll 842-20B6. WAITRESSES "ROUTEMAN WANTED — For long estab- An equal opportunity employer ni/f through 1:30. Own transportation. Refer- ment, etc., ot bargain prices. New oi SYCAMORE GREENS, Sycamor* Ave., BUYS AND BUYS • EVENING POSITIONS ences. Lincroft. 842-5523. lished laundry and dry cleaning route. Ex- used. AAC DESK OUTLET, Rt. 35, Oak from on entire household to a >lr«l» Item, perience not necessary, some sales ablll- CLEANERS hurst. 531-3990. YARD CLEANING WEEKDAYS & WEEKENDS WOMEN WANTED — Full or port-lime. les desirable. Earnings about $9000 Lillle Silver. 741-8506. . furniture, antiques, lewelry, silver. Im- 264-7303 Appl/ tn person to Rapid advancement. Experience not nec- /early. Blue Cross, vacation with pay, paid & WAXERS WHITE TRIPLE TRACK - Aluminum mediate cosh. You get lop dollar for y_our essary. Apply in person. Fabric Depr.# At' holidays. Apply Star Cleaners and Laun- combination storm and screen windows FIVE-PIECE — Modern bedroom set, things. 741-5331. LIGHT HAULING — Furniture moving, Port-time office building cleaning ond mahogany, double bed. Custom made. cicon yards, gorage, attics ond cellars, Mr. Stradley, Mgr. lontlc Superoma, New Shrewsbury. derers, 132 Myrtle Ave., Long Branch, waxing in Clltfwood Beach area and Am- $13.99. Free measuring service ond deliv- ANTIQUES — Tiffany items. toy» furni- ery. Installation S2 per window if desired. Original cost SI500. Sale price S150. Coll Call 74) 6762. ______boy orea Steady work. Convenient hours. 741-3347. ture, china, paintings, statuary, coins.. GRAND PATIO WAITRE55ES— Experienced only. Apply COLLEGE GRADS — Engineers S25.000- Retired or semi-retired workers welcome. D. W. Borr Home Improvements. 842- lighting finlures. Cofved oak dlnlna room PAINTING. GUTTERS. ROOFING in person. Martini's Diner, Hwy36, Keons- per year potential. Let your education Call between 9 a.m. ond 5 p.m. 622-1699. 2053. TIRES — Two G-60-15 Fiberglass belted pieces Copper Keltle Antiques, OaKhurst. Immediate service. Work guaranteed burg. vork lor you in a simitar business. I need 531-1699 or 329-0892. 1 RESTAURANT SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEES — tires mounted on chrome rims. Will fit 566-0261 ierp In my expanding business. No in- SYCAMORE SHADE TREES - Dig your Chrsyler. Ford, American Motors. S100 CLERK-TYPIST — High school graduate. 'estmenr. Call 842-6350 between4-7 p.m. Are you Interested in a career with unlim- 10 SOUTH ST. 40 w.p.m. Many company benefits. Five- own. Save dollars. Dearborn Fruit Farms/ lor pair. Coll 787-8432. WANTED ited earnings? Salary 512,000 per year, If Hwy 35, Holmdel. 264-0356. Used Oriental Rugs day week. Also FILE CLERK, same ben- AN WANTED — Full time. Mechanically qualified. Call 264-9107. Ask for Miss BABY STROLLER — 110. 20" 2-speed Chinese and Persian EMPLOYMENT EATONTOWN, N.J. efits. Call 842-780O. inded, to learn repair and maintenance Strand. An equal opportunity employer window fan, 17.50. 130 National Geogra- Also Walt Tapestries >f photographic equipment* Liberal ben- FRIEDMAN GALLERIET5 774-3143 1IKI.P WANTED-FEMALE IN5URANCE POLICY WRITER CLEAN ING WOMAN — Middletown area. itlts. Call 741-1123. LIFEGUARDS — Experienced. Must have phic magazlnes^llCK^Tl-lTSO. Work 1or maximum remuneration In 1he HAMMOND PERMANENT AND TEMPORARY One day a week. Must have own trans- Senior Lite Saving Certificate. Send re- COIN COLLECTIONS •— Gold and silver, Industry If you are experienced In this portation. References. Call 671-2607 be- MAN — Steady. Driving and selling. Apply 11,000 BTU COLDSPOT AIR CONDI- ACE EMPLOYMENT AGENCY sume to Middletown Swim and Tennis TIONER — One year old. Used one month. coins, war nickels..Will-pay top current field. For full particulars write 50 Stale ween 3-5. In person, Marine Lumber Co.* 1139 Ocean. Club, 140 Harmony Rd.* Middletown. 2(1 Thomas Ave. 747-3J94 Shrewsbury Agency, Deal Rd., Oakhurst, N. J. Cost 1279, will sell for $175. 787-4021. market. Example: silver dollars 12 ond ,vc.,Sca Bright, N.J. ORGAN up. Mr. Romeo, 7I7-59M WO\AEN — Sen 17 1 1 H" • • 241 1 1 iHnM I 1 • • 2•6 27• IH 30 ai 32 28 33 36 39 ypf] 11 y^ sTfae Wizard of Id 42 |43] | p ••"] | | ^^ • • 48 49 1 ••io 52 93 54 (••S5 [5^ 1 58 ^•7• 7 j 1 I : 61 Your Horoscope, Birthday •rff > Nubbin FRIDAY, APRIL 2 - Born latter Is concerned, you might quiring an outlay of cash as pensatory. today, you possess exeuctive develop more understanding. rapidly as possible. You must SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) I HAVB RSASON TO BBWBVP MY I IT 16 AU60 MY OPINION 11*6 <300P TO ability far beyond the ordi- Self-confidence will never get things underway before —Torn your attention to unex- IS PAR ANP AWAY HISHgR THAN THAT I'M RATHgR ®ll*Tgl?- VIEWS g nary and could well become a be lacking in your make-up. the wind changes. pected joys the young can IT COV»gS TO V0OK3 OCCA9I0NAU.V. power in the \vorld of com- Your belief in yourself can (iKMINI (May 22-June 21) bring. Children pose problems ANP g merce. It may be, however, sometimes be a drawback, - It is the Gemini with a sci- —and offer solutions you have : ASRBg, THAM* however, for it at times ,X igq,tHAfl>^.' ."ji THIR ttat your talents along these entific bent who is especially i:: lines will be surh that a posi- makes it almost impossible favored these days. Don't at SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc. tion behind the scenes will for you to discontinue your in- low yourself to fall behind. 22) - Conclude your plans for suit yott, best; in which case, volvement in a project ob. CANCEtt (June 22-July 23) the Immediate future without there Will he few other than viously doomed to failure. — A good time for beginning further delay. A good day to . yourself who will know of the Your faith in your own ability any journey — any distance, repay social obligations long high degree of your success. to "pull it out of the fire" is at any length of time. Seek out owed. Your natural instinct for tact such times misplaced and it situations that will add to CAPRICOBJV (Dec. 2Wan. will serve you extremely well would be better if you recog- your store of knowledge. 20) - Give young people every as you pursue your career, nized that fact. LEO (July 24-Aug. 23) - opportunity to express them- and your ability to listen will To find wbat is in store for Prospects for social success selves freely on family plans, reinforce every effort. you tomorrow, select your are excellent. Allow children difficulties, and rules, -,- Ainly €upp Although you do not show birthday and read the corre- their say in plans for the fu- AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. your emotions quickly - in- sponding paragraph. Let your ture; consider feelings of your 19) - Be on guard against the deed, you are inclined to be birthday star be your daily spouse. stranger who talks too much, somwhat of a "slow burner" guide. VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept 23)- the friend who refuses to talk — you have been known to ex- Saturday, April 3 Routine chores present haz- at all Seek the full story at its plode unexpectedly in the face ARIES (March 22-April 20) ards you have hitherto failed source. of stupidity or ignorance. You *• Business has it all over ro- to consider. Keep eyes and PISCES (Feb. 20-21) - A have little tolerance for those mance today. Don't press ears open to new ideas. day which particularly favors around you who refuse to your luck insofar as social ac- ' LIBRA "(Sepi: 24-Oct. 23)- the elderly. Long experience learn the best method for per- tivities are concerned; keep A Saturday which may have pays off in handsome profits. forming any given task-and to legal gains. to be given over to business Listen to those "in the know." very little more for those who TAURUS (April 21-May 21) matters. Don't be too dis- (Copyright, 1971, by United are unable to learn. Where the «• Begin to move projects re- tressed; gains are com- Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Sheiiiwold's Bridge Advice By ALFRED SETEINWOLP Opponents he would have of diamonds and returned a How good are you at vibra- known that a diamond finesse diamond. South would be out tions? Can you look an oppo- would work. ot diamonds and could safely Kortkietkr But the defenders didn't try a finesse with dummy's loth tide* vulnerable we«ypi« HUWMO£EES THIS, WHEN HE SEES THE PWCE X^ nent in the eye and tell from UTTLE HElt SCREAM AT THE w L the vibrations that a finesse is flinch, and South knew no ten. If East produced the Jack NORTH TOP OF US going to work? If you have a more after the inspection than of diamonds, South could • AKQ Built-in Geiger counter, you he had known before. Decid- ruff, lead a trump to dummy, V KQ43 cunss don't have to read about ing to rely on the clubs, de- ruff the king of diamonds, and <>JC107 today's hand. But if you some- clarer put up dummy's king of then lead a club. • AI02 times go wrong in these eye- diamonds, ruffed a diamond In the actual hand, the dia- WEST EAST to-cye situations, you may and led a low club to try a fi- mond finesse would work, and * 9542 A J1063 profit from South's mistake. nesse with dummy's ten. This South would be borne. V 65 OA7 East took the first trick play would work if either op- DAILY QUESTION O AJ64 O 9852 with the ace of hearts and re- ponent had both club honors Partner opens with 2-NT • S.S4 *Q87 turned a heart. South ran the or if either opponent had the (roughly 22 to 24 points), and SOUTH spades discarding a club from singleton king or queen. the llext player passes. Yott • 87 his hand, and led a diamond None of these chances hold:S-J106 3H-A7D-9 85 2 tf J10982 from dummy to the queen in worked for South. East won C-Q 8 7. What do you say? OQ3 his hand. with the queen of clubs and Answer: Bid three clubs, • J653 West won with the ace of returned a club. South had U> the Stayiran Convention, ask- diamonds and returned tho six lose a second club trick and ing partner to bid a major suit North Cast Smtffl V/ttl of diamonds without a quiver. was down one. of four or more cards. If part- 2 NT Pass 3 C? Pass South looked West over very South should have dis- ner bids three spades, you will 4 C All Pass carefully and then turned to carded the three of diamonds raise to four spades. If he bids Opening lead —06 look at East. If South had on dummy's extra spade. anything else, you will bid 3- been flawless at inspecting When West next took the ace NT. Beetle Bailey Hey/LEAVE VeAM, MA/MA/ HI, COOKIE/ SOME PIE I'WOULDN'T WHAT'S WERE ON FOP. DINNER. WANT TO MISS COOKING? A PET, /W PESSERT The Phantom CAVES WITH IRON BARS - SOMETHING HSY GUARD' THAR AINTTHAT INSIDE -ANIMALS? IVHATS GOING MUCH MONEY IW TH'WHOLE WIDE WORLD Slavs Draw7nterest Fiance Is Seized The DtByEejSrter.feedBenlc-MiddletorwnJf.J, Friday, April 2,1971/22' BELGRADE, Yugoslavia NAPLES, Italy (AP) Police (AP) - The government says Experimental Sewer arrested bartender Eodrigo the International Bank for Re- Pagnozzi • and charged him construction and Devel- with stealing the furniture opment has shown an interest from the apartment his fi- in investing in the Yugoslav nancee had prepared for their marriage. "It seemed the only 0ONO KONG clothing industry. Plan to Be Revived way to avoid the marriage," CUSTOM TAILORS (For Men and Women) By GLADYS RIPS sludge without resultant air period, Mr. Harper said. they quoted him. For 4 Days Only - Today, Tomorrow, NURSING HOME FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - pollution. The plan, as originally in- Sun. and Mon., • 24-Hour C»rj_ A plan to build an ex- Unlike the original plan, in troduced in January, is for ONE SHIRT •I'BW on duly all thnaa : which the townsnip would Levitt to build the treatment Open All Day Sunday Special • Msdicara Approval! perimental se\yage treatment Horseback Riding FREE have spent $460,000 to buy 36.5 plant with a grant from the SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES plant here will be revived WITH EVERY NAVESINK HOUSE Monday night at a special acres and sewer pipes, the federal government at no cost, Be Measured For Before NOW Offer .44 RIVERSIDE AVE. RED BANK meeting of the Township new plan calls for construc- to the township. As a pilot ex- SUIT ORDER Italian Silt/Mohair Suit $83.50 $69.50 M2-3400 Committee. tion of the plaht on two lots, perimental project, the plant Terylene Wool Suit $85.00 $59.00 Men's or one acre, on Woodgate could either be moved or be Silk/Wool Suit.. '. * 78.00 162.00 The purpose of the meeting English Worsted $88.00 $68.00 is to authorize Mayor Harry • South/the Levitt development incorporated into the regional SIZE OR Wardrobe that it will serve, Mr. Harper Silk/Mohair/Wool Suit $68.00 $55.00 D. Harper to sign an agree- authority system that is being SHAPE Ladies' Raw Silk Suit $58.00 $52.00 ment with Levitt and Sons, said yesterday. . planned for this area. NO PROBLEM * Ladies Thai Silk Dress $42.00 $37.50 2 SUITS Inc., who would build the Anotner change in the plan . What's in it for the parties VK FIT All Silk/Wool Dress & Jacket.... $78.00 $59.?5 plant within the shell of one is in the location of the plant. concerned? Mayor Harper SIZES Men's & Women's Vicuna 2 SHIRTS of the 128 houses the devel- Originally, the new facility • thought that, with national Topcoat $ 185.00 $155.00 50 was to be built east of Custom Made Shirts $7.50 $4.95 oper plans to build. and international "interest 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. for Ml 9 The experimental plant, the Georgia Road,where it could and concern over clean water- also have hooked into the two ways," Levitt, as a subsidiary- For Appointment same as the proposal voted wits or same mat Plus Air Mall and Custom Duly of $7 to 510 new schools under construc- of it might come up with "a Ploase Ask for down Feb. 8 because of public • Ofmtitti 4ty • Riding iNluctitni PAUL MOTI JET-SPEED OELIVE RY IN 4 WEEKS opposition, would use a phy- tion of Elton-Adelphia Road. marketable process." Full. Satisfaction Guaranteed-Also on Display, Knit Suits, * tnjliik n Wnltrn • HfiustwM Howard Johnson's Beaded Evening Dresses and Pant Suits. Gardiner Marek Agency, INC. sical-chemical instead of a Instead, the plant will be on As for the' township, "It Motor Lodge 135 First Avenue the most southeasterly lot in Hwy. #35 Also BIG SAVINGS ON MANY GIFT ITEMS biological process to produce would be a' feather in our cap Checsequake Farm Stables Such as beaded sweaters, beaded gloves, beaded bogs, etc. Atlantic Highlands. New Jersey . the development, near the MtrrislownRd.alflr.34 MIDDLETOWN Tel. 291-0477 a highly potable effluent fol- if Freehold Township gets the PHONE 671-3400 BUY NOW IF YOU REALLY WANT TO SAVE! lowed by rapid incineration of Manasquan River, "Mr. Har- opportunity to participate in •y Chimiiuokl Stall Park per said. this program," he said. MoJii.nT.wnihip 566-7334 ^ Although the mayor refused to divulge the cost of oper- ating the plant, he did outline some of the terrns-of the TTteSewerSystem agreement being drawn up be- tween the township and the developer. Hook-iqpLoaiL*. After a year or two, the township would take over ownership of the plant and property on which it is lo- cated. Since the plant is ex- and fart* front us pected to have a surplus capa- city of 5a homes in addition to Says tine, trouble, money. the original 128, the township Finance your book-up costs would then work out agree- at «r low bank rates. ments with future builders in the area to extend the system. ' According to the agreed ment, the township will col- lect-sewer-fees from the be- guning, and rebate a specific percentage to Levitt anal the : property is transferred. The. township win lake over wittl a five-year agreement guaran- teeing no more than a 25 per cent escalation in mainte- nance costs over a five-year TtatbwikiM look* eat for yea 10 Drivers Penalized, • HOLMDEI. - Municipal Court Judge Seymour R. Kleinberg has fined Guiseppe Valente, Union City, $30 and revoked his driver license for . 45 days on a speeding charge. Termites? Also assessed on speeding charges were Diane Folscher, :•: Cair > _ '1272 Rt. 36. Hazlet, $25. and William Wentworth. West Or- ange, $20. Terminix Fined $40 each were John Sadowski. Brick Township, • Homeowners, call for your free termite Inspection. If you don't charges of speeding and have a termite problem, we'll gladly tell you so. If you do have delinquent return of sum- termites, Terminix cart give your home safe, sure, quick treat- i menu Either way—whether your house Is new or old or under mons; Mildred Gonzalez, Pa- construction—you get our low-cost protection. terson, charges of failing to You gat peace of mind, too, because our plan guarantees keep to the right and your house and Its contents against tormfls damage up to delinquent return of sum- $25,000 on qualified buildings. This exclusive guarantee 7s mons, and James Caine, Included In our small fee for your annual reinspoctlon. Kearny, charges of careless Terminix Is ths only nationwide termite control service. Over driving and delinquent return 1,000,000 buildings protected. ; • '•'•• of summons. Assed $20 each on careless FOR PROTECTION AGAINST TERMITES, driving charges- were Steven FOR PEST CONTROL-CALL THE PROFESSIONALS Markulin, 53 Highland Blvd.. Keansburg. and Brian F. Red Bank: ' 741-3838 Perth Amboy 442-2141 Weiss, Rt. 34, Fined $15 each were Bruce AsburyPafk 7754H1 New Brunswick 247-9000 Robertson, Paterson, careless Freehold 462-1660 driving charge, and Frank: Hodroski Jr., Woodbridge, charge of crossing the center line. . Peter Scelsi, Brick Town- ship, received a suspended $10 Oeekycgr TeRnr Fag««for tha mmlwriif your loul Tiralih office fine on a careless driving Tktra't OM near you. charge. He paid $10 court costs. UNCROFT ASSOCIATES - TAX SERVICE 745 HIGHWAY 35 (opp. Two Guys) MIDDLETQWN. N. J. HAVE PROFESSIONAL PERSONNEL PREPARE YOUR TAX RETURN WE MAINTAIN A PERMANENT OFFICE AND A COMPUTE TAX RLE FOR OUR CLIENTS OPEN SEVEN DAYS, ,9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. Weekday Evenings Until 10 p.m. — Call 671-5333 Spring Is Here! RESTAURANT- The old-fashioned the CLAM HUT COCKTAIL LOUNGE charm of the New, HAS RE-OPENED Longer Quilts Wear them to simple gatherings ... and the most sophisticated ones as well! Charming, ro- mantic mpodmakers as young and pretty as spring- time. Better^Dresses. Left: Beautifully shaped cotton Weekends quilted skirt in vivid red and white, falling from a red bubble-knir*t*blyester top. Sizes 8 to 18. 42.00. iRight: Long sleeve white Arnel triacetate top with a gracefully draped neckline, attached to a quilted cotton voile skirt. Sash it.with a long, fringed tie. White and brown, 8 to 16. 42.00 SAT. 12-10 fool of Arioatfs U. «ff lar AVMM HIGHLANDS — 872-9753 Steinbach Shopaaibury park //5-4O0O • red banK 741-4000,10-5:30 dally, watt.. M. to B p.m. •brick lown,477-400010-9 dally, ait. to5:30, lun., noon to 5:3S FRIDAY, APRILS, 1971 • Television • Books • Movies • Theater • Dining Ont ' • Comment • Hobbies • Music •r •'•* <••* :+$ • - • * By CYNTHIA that a recipe for-a hit is "Ray- wide as he is"1all and chews Paul Hevere, confused about NEW YORK (AP) -€ood, mond Burr in anything.'! candy compulsively. what he should do on his ride. gruff Chief Robert Ironside "Perry Mason." lasted nine CBS is showing three pilots There was the world's richest was being as efficient as usual years and "Ironside" will Television for upcoming series in sucees- * man switching jobs with a u 'on NBC last night, catching move into its fourth season sion. Last week it was "Gan- plumber to find happiness, the muggers who snatched an with no signs of waning popu- Comment non." and on and on. old lady's purse that contain- larity. O'Hara Preview Set Amidst the laughs there ed jewels worth $200,000. It even appears that "Iron- Tonight there will be a iwo- was something of a mystery: . The mugging was, of side" is'starting a new vogue Next season, ABC in- hour preview of "O'Hara: How can Cbnway be so funny in police action stories. The on other people's shows when 2 course, just the beginning. troduces "Longstreet" with U.S. Treasury," This series Ironside also caught a killer gimmick of the show is that James Franciscus playing an will bring David Janssen back, he has such troubles with his ' and saved the old lady from the detective has a physical investigator who is blind. to television,* his first in- own. Conway seems to be one being dragged through com- handicap-he is paralyzed be- "Cannon," starring William volvement since "The Fugi- of those born to be a guest petancy proceedings. low the waist and works effi- Conrad on CBS, is tough pri- tive" found the real killer. star. ciently from a wheel chair. Another of Flip's guests Somebody once observed vate eye who is almost as Next Friday it will be Rod was "Laugh In's" Johnny.... Taylor in "Powdevkeg," spun Brown, a pretty good impres- off into a series but not titled. sionist, but he should retire Since both Janssen and Tay- his Ed Sullivan bit for a long lor are young and handsome, rest. Sandy Duncan, who will Lavishness Given Up their problems probably, will star in CBS's situation come* be girls. Flip Wilson, In his last show dy "Funny Face" next'sea- * By BOB THOMAS and 900-foot canoe run. before starting reruns, had son; had practically nothing to £ HOLLYWOOD (AP) - The Movie stars once vied with - do, but her big moment came ^ donation by the late Harold each other for grandness of Hollywood Tim Cotiway as one jof jiis by chance: She happened to a, Lloyd of his Beverly Hills living quarters. No more. guest stars last night. The be the anonymous star of one g mansion for public use will With rare exceptions, today's hour was full of Flip!s way out of the midshow commercials. give Americans a chance to ' film personalities are eschew- but gentle humor. There was see the lavish style in which ing the manorial homes with ness is in such bad shape, you film figures have lived, it is a platoons of servants. The life- feel you should cut down on style that is fast disappearing. style of the star has under- expenses. gone a thorough change. "I realized I was living in a Lloyd's place is a French house that required five ser- Renaissance palace. In its Burt Lancaster is an ex- vants and cost me $70,000 a heyday it was staffed by 30 ample. year to maintain, including servants. It is surrounded by Economy Exercised taxes. All that for two peoplel 15.iandscaped acres reflecting "I'm a rich, man-I could "So I sold the house and the comic's interests: nine- live* very comfortably for the now I'm renting a house at hole golf course, . Handball next 10 years without work- the beach. It's not cheap- EASTER DINNER FAVORITE court, 100-foot waterfall, ing," he says. "But in times $3,000 a month- But 1 can Olympic-size swimming pool like these, when the film busi- manage with only one ser- Vou curve the turkey-take home the rest vant." Lancaster is not alone. FOR A FAMILY OF SIX OR MORE Kay Spreckels Gable, the WEEKLY SPECIALS widow of Clark Gable, has ADULTSi $5.00 CHILDREN $3.00 placed her estate up for sale. It is valuable property-seven Everything from soup to nuts Monday acres amid expensive homes in Encino-and sKe hopes to RESERVATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED find a buyer who will not sub- CHICKEN FRY divide it. Once the horse ranch of Clark Gable, the 1.69 place is too big for her now, she says, explaining that only Wednesday she and son John Clark Gable now occupy it. FISH FRY Other stars have given up their/ local homes to live else- 1.49 where. Dfck Van Dyke sold his Encino estate and moved to a ranch near Phoenix, WOUJAUD Ariz., where he will film his COBBLESTONES new television series. [Route 35. Middletown, 1 mile no. of Rod Bank*741-8344] Bill Cosby is disposing of his Beverly Hills home to move to Massachusetts, Joun*on'5 where he intends to pursue an- education to become a teach- ROUTE 35 er. Merle Oberqn recently sold Join Us for MIDDLETOWN her Beverly Hills mansion for $670,000. She had used it in- frequently and now intends to spend most of her timo in Acapulco, where she and her 'JACK BAKER'S financier husband Bruno Pag- liai own a large home. Beverly Hills realtor Mike Silverman says movie people "don't see the need for big LOBSTER SHANTY houses any more. Nobody gives big parties. When they entertain, they generally go "* SHANTY PUB out to a restaurant." CLUB MEETING COME NEW SHREWSBURY - Guest speakers at Thursday's meeting of the Woman^s Club ENJOY of New Shrewsbury at 8:15 p.m. in Sycamore School, will YOURSELF be Miss Nancy Colby, hostess to Miss Lynette Dunn, current IN M SHANTY PUB American Field Service stu- SUNDAY BRUNCH A great favorite event is fo celebrate Sunday In the dent attending Monmouth Re- Shanty Pub enjoying your choice of steak and eggs and the dishes you like . . . and eat all you want. Served horn 10 a.m. to 3'p.m. Only $2.95 for gional High School from Eng- Treat the family to an Easter outing that all can adults. $2.25 for children. land, and Miss Page Morgen- enjoy. Dine out ••. . . together . . . here. Be sure to thal of New Shrewsbury, who make your reservations with us now. Family IN THE LOBSTER SHANTY under the auspices of AFS menus and children's portions available. went to Africa two years ago. DAILY SEAFOOD BUFFET Lunch in the Lobster Shanty Is always a Slides will be shown. The club special meal when you enjoy the seafood buflet. You can make dozens of donated $100 to AFS and also choices from thB lavish board. Served from noon to 3 p.m. is conducting a fund raising For Reservations Call project for the benefit of , IN THE SHANTY PUB Teendezvous Lounge building DAILY LUNCHEON BUFFET The table is spread with delfcious fund. 264-4600 choices for lunch jn the Pub, and llio menu offers wide selections of popular sandwiches. The Pub is a favorite with businessmen for a fine luncheon, Served ftom noon to 3 p.m. MARKS 3RD BIRTHDAY UNION BEACH- Carl OLMDEL MOTOR INN CHANNEL DRIVE Clapp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Al- exander Robertson, cele- RESTAURANT • COCKTAIL tOUNGE POINT PLEASANT BEACH, N.J. brated his third birthday at a HIGHWAY 35 HOLMDEL TEL.IL 899-6700 party given by his parents. Driv: e on Litter .•'• ' MIDDLETOWN - "Don't cal slogans, will share first Just Stand Around - Get the prize in the contest, Mrs. Gor- f Litter7 off the Ground" is the suchsays. theme of a Girl Scout cleanup The cleanup campaign will 'a Campaign scheduled today, start at about 4 p.m. More reports Mrs. Dorothy Gor- than 500 Girl Scouts, oper- such, Shade Tree Commission ating from their troop heigh* chairman. borhoods, will assemble along The winning slogan was Rt. 35 from Cooper's Bridge picked from entries submitted to Palmer Ave. They will then by Girl Scouts from all troops police the verges of the high- I in the township. Dana Fit- way, removing bottles, cans tante and Dana Steadman, and other trash. Bagged by both of Fairview's Troop 101, the girls and left by the road- I. who submitted nearly identl- side, the debris will be picked s- up by township road depart*, Soviet Elections Set ment and police department MOSCOW (AP) - Elections vehicles. of representatives to the Su- The Scout cleanup cam* SETTING UP SHOT — Holmdel Klwanls Club president Archfe R. Price preme Soviet and local so- pafgn is only one manifesta- gives pool pointers to Holmdel Teen Club member Susan Pehlert at one of I Vlets-councils-will be held tion of the Shade Tree Com* fwo billiard tables donated by Klwanians to teen unit. Looking on are mission's continuing program Paul Fuslck of Teen Club/ left/ and Frank Cuslak, outgoing Kiwanis presi- June 13, the official news of beautlfication in the town* s agency Tass reported. dent. Teen CJub center/ located In basement of township library/ each ship, Mrs. Gorsucb explains. -Tuesday evening features PIng-Pong, dancing and refreshments for local high school students. Program Is sponsored by Board of Recreation Com- Originale Cucina Italiana missioners, with Mrs. Frank Cuslak as adult supervisor. Some Exotic Dinners rJ Verf Long Branch SORRENTINO Arbor Day Is Take the family to Promoted Feltachint LONG BRANCH - City Rclaurant nnd f\ ** Carbonara Council vice president Samuel Cocktail Lounge \J and many Telcher asks the entire com- PALM SUNDAY munity to become involved in , olncr* Arbor Pay which will be ob- tnpy the fincat in Continental Dining in a warm relaxing served April 30. Mr. Telcher, •atmosphere. Poatllfpo la truly the place where your memo- chairman of the Long Branch ries of excellence arc not soon forpotten ; Where waiter* are Shade Tree Commission, asks ready to cater loyourevery Jcalrc. that all schools plan programs for that day. lamer Second Ave. & Main St. Atbury Park • 7 71-5819 He said that Mayor Henry T T atthe tf i »••••• • » »».».»••» »•+*»< B. GloHi will sign a proclama- tion designating April 30 as Arbor Day, a nationwide ob- servance. Homestead •'Long before Earth Day and our recent attention to GOLF CLUB RESTAURANT 'S the need of restoring our envi- ronment, Arbor Day was set SUNDAY APRIL 4th apart to focus on the value of WEST END MANOR trees and shrubs in making FOR RESERVATIONS - 449-7474 our environment more com* Give your family a special dinner treat on fortable and aesthetically Palm Sunday! Full family dinners are priced iNM OUR FAMOUS pleasing," Teicher said. from only $4.75 to $6.50 with children's dinners The council vice president one dollar less than menu listing. They will all VEAL CORDON BLEU added: "we should be grateful enjoy the superb cuisine, the elegant setting Cor trees for the oxygen they and the friendly service! BROILED SEAFOOD PLATTER produce." An example of how efficient an oxygen-producer a tree Is comes from the fact Menu SHRIMP PARMAGIANA that for each ton of wood pro- CHILLED TOMATO JUICE • FRESH FLORIDA duced, there is also a ton of STEAK PIZZAIOLA oxygen produced, he said. FRUIT COCKTAIL • ICEO MELON Telcher urged residents to CHERRYSTONE CLAMS ON HALF SHELL , .90 656 OCEAN AVE. 229-2000 WEST END Improve their properties by CHOPPED CHICKEN LIVERS • EGGS A*LA RUSSE lanting trees and said that KEY WEST SHRIMP COCKTAIL 1.25 ' AenMFramftMShoraDiyCamp SIs Shade Tree Commission would be glad to supply infor- PASCAL CELERY ROSE RADISHES RIPE AND QUEEN 1 ..••' mation free of charge. OLIVES CREAM OF FRESH MUSHROOMS- March Drier9 FRENCH ONION AU CROUTONS flJul A Bit Cooler LONG BRANCH - March* BAKED VIRGINIA HAM. HAWAIIAN 4.75 was a bit drier and a shade ROASTLEG OF SPRING LAMB, MINT JELLY 5.25 cooler this year than it usual- FRESH SEAFOOD NEWBURG EN CASSEROLE 5.7S ly is. ROAST PRIME RIBS OF BEEF AU JUS y 6.50 of Wilbur Lafaye, the weather ROAST VERMONT TURKEY. observer, placed total melted ORESS1NG, GIBLET GRAVY 5.00 precipitation at 3.60 inches, in- POTATOES AND VEGETABLES DU JOUR Hazlet eluding 3.1 inches of snow. Htyh way 3 5 The normal accumulation Is 4.47 Inches. SALAD MIMOSA The month's average tern* 264-2400 perature of 39 degrees com- CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM CAKE ROLL ITALIAN SPUMONI A pares with a 39.8-degree nor- rq HANGUP I FACILITIES mal. It got up to 70 degrees on EASTER RAINBOW PARFAIT FROZEN ECLAIR March 16 and down to 22 on ASSORTED ICE CREAMS FRESH FRUIT PIE March 10. STRAWBERRY SUNDAE SHERBET There were measurable amounts of precipitation on FASHION SHOWS nine days, Mr, Lafaye said. COFFEE TEA MILK SANKA AFTER DINNER MINTS On March 4, there was a 1.2- inch downpour. On the 23rd, there was a two-inch snowfall, John Duffy, The CHUCKLES' TITLE ROLE- Manager NEW YORK (AP) — Marlon Brando will portray the title role ! of "The Godfather," U was re- OMM-mncowti ii, il,,- LOUNGE -3 K' rr ' -> J cently announced by Paramount leSTAUtANTCOUF FINE FOOD SERVED EVERY NHE TIL 10 Pictures. m MISTPROGERS1 NEIGHBORHOOp TN6 ANDY WILUAW$ SHOW © SPECIAL: MORE SPECIAL THAN OTHERS ':'* 0 ^tH \VORLD OF DISNEY (CSV eats: Llberace, Ike aha Tina Turner, Billy Dan- A report about transractel Adoptions. "Operation Undersea." The behind the scen-es story ©MEET THE PRESS The f frequently worked at the cir- SAT. — When Dtnotaurs Ruled the BRICK PLAZA- 842-0205 culation desk and assumed Earth J: 15; 7:45; 9:50 ~ i Tora, Toro 7:00; »:3J SUN. When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth •- Tora, Toro, Tora 2:00; 7:»#. other clerical responsibilities. 2:00; 4:10; 4:IS; 8:20 - UN. — Tora, Tora, Tora 2:00; 4:2Sj CWB RIB STEAK At the reorganization meet- ASBURY PARK • :00| 9:» CLUB BENE' - i ing the following board was CIRCLE- HALL CINEMA- Love Story 2:00; 7:30; 9-30 .. -ov« story 7:15; 9:20 DINNER THEATRE •4.75 presented: Mrs. Carl A. Bor- 1AT, -Live Story 2:00; 7:30; 0:4$ SA'i. — Kiddie Show: 2:00; Love Story Rt. 35, South Hmb«j MJ. geson, president; Mrs. Ro- 4:00; 4:00; 8:00; 10:20 i ,yM,. LOVB Story 2:00; 4;4S; 7:00| f SUN. — Kiddle Show: 2:00; Love Story LOBSTER NEWBURG dolfo A. Correa, vice presi- 4:00; 6:00; 9:00; 10:00 dent; Mrs. John Balkan, sec- LYRIC - TOMS RIVER 5 Husbands 7:05; 9:30 DOVER* s BROADWAY PLAYS retary; Mrs. David B. Jansky, SAT. — Husband* 2:30; 5:00; 7:30; 10:00 Toro/ Toro, Torn 7:05; 9:50 • • ., •5.95 treasurer; Mrs. RobertTE. SUN. — Husbands 2:00; 4:30; 7:00; 9:30 SAT. fc SUN. — Littlest Hobo 2:00; 5 ON STAGE! Thompson, publicity chair- TorOjToro* Tora 4:30; 7:05; V:50 SHAD ROE man; Anthony T. Bruno, rep- Derby Called NORTH OF RED BANK resentative from Borough ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS Wtd. thru Sun. ATLANTIC- •3.50 Council; Henry A. Pope Jr., Big Success FRI.BAT. & SUN. —Where's Poppa representative from the Little TlOOj iQi!5l The LandlordB;25 Now thru April 4 Silver Board of Education. LONG BRANCH - Col Dan MIDDLETOWN Enjoy an bars d'oeuyre Mrs. Walter Ingram Jr. was Straight, the Klondike Derby TOWN •• § served to you with governor for the first annual Tora, Tora, Tora 7:05; 9:50 "FIORELLO" electedto the board of BAT. — My Side of the Mountain 2:00; your favorkt totktail trustees from the Little Silver Klondike Derby to be held an- Tora.Tora, Tora 4;4o; T.W, IO:OO ' SUM. — My Side of the Mountain 2:00; RES. 727-3000 Friends of the Library Associ- nually by the Central District TorOiTora, Tora 4:30; 7:30; 9:30 - of Monmouth Council of Boy 1 Open avary day at 4:30 ation to replace Mrs. Philip HAZLET Branch, who resigned. Scouts, called the first derby 1 CLOSED TUESDAY a "smashing success." Tora< Toro, Tora 7:0O; 9:30 Scouts from all over trie Squad Dinner Central District, which con- Dinner »i Show I sists of the greater Lang DANCING Set April 3 Branch area, participated. WE GRACIOUS The winning team, Bat Pa- FRI. and SAT. KEANSBURG - The trol Troop 58 of Oceariport fin- c= Keansburg First Aid Squad ished the course in four hours DELIVER DINING will hold its annual dinner at 7 and 20 minutes. SOt'SKOZYBA* I p.m. April 3 at the Old Or- More than 130 scouts pulling chard Inn, Monmouth Road, Tamoui For... Over 40 Delicious 14 sled participated in this PIZZA tTAtMN-AMERICAM A La Carte Meal* Eatontown. year's derby, according to Dinner plans were com- TO SMORGASBORD For Choice statistician Don Watt. Keyport Matewan - pleted at the squad's monthly Col. Straight said the Derby meeting Wednesday. would not have been possible Hazlet Cliffwood Thomas Vennaro, publicity without the cooperation of Union Beach I Children'* Show chairman, said the squad an- Monmouth Park, which sup- Cliffwood Beach HOURS: swered 70 calls during Febru- plied the land, and of Mark | April 17 US *T« 10 Daily AStuuUy ary. He also reported that the Smith, Rob Kresge, Paul Som- W. Keansburg ( * To MldnHa fri, 4 fait. squad will begin its annual Holmdel | MARY POPPINS® mers, Frank Jenkins, Jay Pe- 5 ShowTlnw: fund drive within a month. terson and Ed Theune, who 5 S«t. 11A.M. It 2:30 P.M. ENmWNMNT served as the mayors of the 739*1878 E Sun. 2:30P.M. SMG-ALONfiWITH Children's Movie Set towns along the Derby trail. KEYPORT PIZZA JtM McPHEC At tlie PMNO I m MATAWAN - The Mata- Few Britons Drop Out 4 ACME PLAZA KEYPORT .^lilllllllllllllllltllllllllUllllllllllltlltllltltjJ wan Chapter of Deborah Hos- LONDON (AP) - An offU pital will sponsor a showing of THE cial report set the dropout the movie "Chitty-Chitty- rate from British universities RUMSON HOTE1 Bang-Bang" Thursday, April at 13.5 per cent and said it - 10 WATERMAN AVE. 8, at 1 p.m. in the Strand The- was one of the lowest in the At The S«a Bright Bridgt ater, Keyport. Tickets are world. ENTERTAINMENT Rumion 842-2000 available from Mrs. Martin Leder and Mrs. Robert Lo- CLOSED MONOAYS kuta, co-chairmen, and any You truly haven't tasted SEA chapter member. FOOD at its very best until you have eaten a BROILED 4 NITES A WEEK Sea Food Platter at DORIS 'AT ED'S. "Our Secret? Sure, we'll tell you. We are the Wed., Fri., Sat. Chefs! Does that make the dif- (Oeauiiful ference? You bet it doesl MM s LOBSTER LOVERS ; tKetirement TRY US!" EVERYONE "Come and -, get 'em alive** ENJOY AN EXCLUSIVE SECTION OF THE BERKELEY-CARTERET HOTEL IVIRY SUNDAY * SUPERB DECOR* HEALTH SPA* GOLF * ELEGANT FIREPROOF BUILDING * INDOOR H EATED SEAWATER POOL * OUTDOOR POOL AND CABANA CLUB "JAM SESSION" * CONGENIALCOMPANIONSHIP * NEAR OCEAN AND ALL CONVENIENCES * GOURMET CUISINE . * TEA BOOM Pick Your Own Lobstor Out HOTEL BERKELEY CARTERET of Our Lobster Tanksl Trade Winds RESERVATIONS • FIREPROOF ASBU R Y PAR K , Send For Details On Our DORIS INI'ED'S 7 Fro Gu F SEAFOOD RESTAURANT COCKTAIL LOUNGE Sf~&&V Z5r*?°P. , ° "t <" A Day "HOUSE OF GOURMET SEAFOOD" Slock Market Offica In Hotel m Program 36 ShoroDr., Hltrhl.mds -872-1565 OCEAN AVE. B42-3292 SEA BRIGHT Si ON THE BOARDWALK, ASBURY PARK. N,J. Closed ovary Man. & Tnej, 'ill April lit. c •• •4 H Musical ft © At RUMSON •- A three-fold by Barry Stein of Forrestdale musical evening will be and.Mr. Wayman is the dra- presented by Forrestdale matic director. School Wednesday, April 14, in The glee club concert will I the Rumson-Fair Haven Re- offer selections from the clas- gional High School audito- sics. American composers and rium. traditional folk songs. Simon r Glee club, band and a spe- and Garfunkel and contempo- cially assembled music-drama rary groups and shows will group will perform. also be represented. ; A musical play. "The The band will present a pro- Sneetches." based upon a Dr. gram ranging from the clas- 3 Seuss story, will be directed sics to "pop." by Felix Molzer, director of the Monmoulh Conservatory of Music and the MonmoutU Square Club Has Civic Chorus. Generals9 Night Ho wrote the. original music for the play. Participating will HIGHLANDS -The Ft. lie the Girls' Glee Club. Lloyd Monmouth Square Club's 22nd 1 Grosse of the high school Eng- annual Generals' Night was lish departnient and Robert held In Bahr's Restaurant. Wayman, director of the N.J. Honored guest and princip- Academy of Dramatic Art. al speaker was Maf. Gen. Fair Haven, as narrator. Walter E. Lotz Jr., command- Mrs. Harrison Rowe and ing general, U.S. Array Elec- Miss Pam Puth will accom- tronics Command and Ft pany on flute and guitar. See* Monmouth. He spoke on the • nery is designed and executed plans for a volunteer army* LEARNING -EfgMh grade students of the Central School, Marlboro Town- shfp/ who have been studying about hearing defects, made a recent field trip to Monmouth Medical Center, Long Branch/ to observe first-hand how those afflicted are helped in the Speech and Hearing Clinic of the hospital's Rehabilitation Department. Here, Mrs. Donald Lynch, speech and hearing therapist/ demonstrates equipment for/from left, Nancy Schiliro, teacher 2 ml. SOUTH JCT.RTE.35t 35 Aimoses Harris/and Mike Heftner. HAZLET 264-2200 Enter an age or unknown terrors* pagan worship and sacrifice... YouthGroup Schedules Bus Trip LONG BRANCH - Reser- vations for a bus outing to At- lantic City are being accepted by the Youth Council of the Block Stop, an organization at N. Broadway and Long I Branch Ave.; and directed by the city's recreation depart- ment. On April II, the buses will leave from the Block Stop at 3 p.m. and will leave Atlantic City that night at 11 o'clock, Douglas Gibson, chairman, 747-0333 CINEMA III said the reservations will re- main open until April 4. Re- WHITE STREET, RED BANK THEATRE servations may be made by calling the city recreation de- "Like nothing else in heaven partment at city hall. or earth... a picture that The Youth Council has do- seems to come from another nated $50 to Long Branch world .. . left audience breath- UNFAIR TO High School to help pay for less." ***# Daily News vandalism damage to the school cafeteria during the 2 MATINEES DAILY ORGANIZED LABOR unrest last month, Avan D. (Bobo) Reeves,, Block Stop supervisor, said other activities are being PROJECTIONIST planned by the youngsters that will be open to the public. UNION LOCAL 536 Youth Council members re- STRAND ART THEATRE cently painted the inside ot AFL&CIO their meeting place 6n Broad* KEYPORT,N.J. way and are making other im- provements. EXCLUSIVE AMlHD-BOGGUNGDISPlftY!" Belford Engine 2nd BIG WEEK -S.F. CHR0NJC1E Firemen Dine • BELFORD - Dominick Mullaney Sr., Jay White and , "SENSUALLY Al Smith were presented life .memberships at the annual dinner of Belford Engine Co, LIBERATED FEMALE" Line officers include Rich-, .. . Unbuttons The Sex ard colson, captain; Al Boyer, first lieutenant; Thomas Revolution — FEMALE Donovan, second second lieu- tenant; Kenneth Derrick, SEXUAL FREEDOM NOW! third lieutenant; Douglas Kenner, chief engineer; Rob- Now the amazing oxptrimerit from Denmark, wh