County Drug Abuse Drive Ke?p SKE STORY PAGE 13
. Warm FINAL wa«p. today., to- • p again on Sunday, rMiddletoicn-BayshoreJ C'lrarandmiMer-tonight. EDITION Monmouth County'$ Home Newspaper for 92 Years VOL 93 NO. 252 RED BANK, N.J., FRIDAY, JUNK 25.1971 TEN CENTS
4 ,- • State Rejects Hook Inlet Plan , By SHERRY FIGDORE ting any further development decrease safety. feel will be negligible," con- vironmental protection ty groups, including the Mon- oceanfront communities di- the ocean. of the study. But even before that letter tinued Mr. Maisel. "The agency to "resolve a mutually mouth County Council League rectly involved. Disappointed but undaunted TRENTON - As far as the In that letter, Commission- reached the New York Dis- League of Women Voters agreeable' course of action" of Women Voters, the Ameri- The county would have had by the state's decision, County State Department of Environ- er Sullivan said that: trict of the ACE, army engi- raised the question of prior- on the inlet proposal, or an af- can Littoral Society, the Mid- to pick up an additional $5 to Freeholder Director Joseph mental Protection is con- Answers Lacking neers had already ceased- ities. They said other needs firmation of the March state- dletown Conservation Com- $6 million for a bridge to span C Irwin last night predicted cerned, the proposed Sandy -Answers to questions work on the hydraulic, sali- were more pressing. ments. mission, and the Baymen's the inlet. At that public ses- that "eventually they'll dig it Hook Inlet is dead. ' about secondary effect caused nity, and pollution tests they "We can't answer questions The reaffirmation fs what Association came out against sion, the ACE-estimated (the channel) through." Discussed for more than 35 by the proposed Inlet have not were conducting at the corps' like that," he said. "That's a the ACE will get, according to tile proposal. maintenance costs would run Mr. Irwin, who as a freehol- years, and under serious fea- been made available. elaborate model in Vkksburg, political decision." Mr. O'Neill. "They (the ACE) • Plans outlined at that meetr about $250,009 annually. This der called for the first feasibi- sibility study for the/last five —•Yearly maintenance costs, Miss. After the corps received can do all the studies they ing called for a 17-foot deep, figure would include regular lity study on the project in years, the proposed ^channel which would include the And no requests for further Commissioner Sullivan's anti- want. They can't build unless 200-foot long channel to be cut trucking of sand deposited at 1»36, said: "If ever we had a has been declared "contrary trucking of more than 200,000 funding of the ACE study for inlet letter in March, Mr. Mai- we say so." through the Sandy Hook spit the jetty south of the inlet's chance to have something to good environmental policy" cubic yards of sand annually, fiscal 1973 have been made to sel said,-it furnished the de- In the first public meeting about 3,000 feet north of the mouth to form new feeder times over the years," Mr. Ir- by state environmentalists. are too high. . , - Congress. partment with a complete set on the inlet, in more than a Highlands Bridge. beaches north of the jetty. win recalled. "We even bad .Within the next; several [ -Cutting the channel in- Stanley MaiseJ,. Chief of the of correspondence, between- decade, held last August by Half of the project's cost, Questions were raised at funds allocated." The director days, according to Thomas M. yolves too large an ex- Planning Branch, New York " the ACE and groups or indi- Citizens Against tyater Pollu- which has now, through "nor- the meeting about possible in- said a major change would O'Neill, "administrative assis- penditure for the benefit of District, ACE, said yesterday viduals for or against the tion, fin and shellfishermen mal escalation of 10 per cent a trusion of heavily polluted have to be made In the SO per tant to Commissioner Richard power boat owners, who that as studies progressed last project and conservationists opposed year1' according to Mr. Mai- Raritan Bay waters Into the. cent county and local funding J. sullivan, the environmental would benefit most from the winter, "subsequent things "And we sent another letter to the channel pitted their fig- sel, risen to $11.6 million, clean Sandy Hook Bay; ef- it the project ever surfaced protection department will short cut between Haritan came up." •with a lot more information, ures against those of engi- would be federally funded. fects of salinity and current again. send a letter to the Army Bay and the Atlantic, neers, boatmen, and others in Forty percent of the re- changes on clams in the bay, The county, he said, was v "The shellfishermen liked certain things we'd looked up COrps of Engineers-'reaffirm-: r.:.:rUsdnJet,:rinstead;of in- the status quo. Questions were in answer to the list of corre- favor of the cut before nearly maining cost would have to both adults and spat; and in- not in a position to fund feder- ing four major objections to creasing boat safety in the raised on currents-yes, there spondents," he said. 300 people at Monmouth Col- come from Monmouth County, creased boat traffic generated ally controlled navigable wa-, the inlet it made in a letter to Shrewsbury River-Sandy will be a new current-and The ACE also requested ei- lege. and the remaining 10 per cent by this new shortcut for boa- terways. "We have too many the ACE last March, and hal- Hook Bay area will probably salinity changes, which we ther a conference with the en- Since then,, numerous coun- from the bay, river and ters between Raritan Bay and other priorities," he said. Shoots Cop, Man Sought ByALHORAY obscene telephone call to a The suspect abandoned his Police said Mr, Thomas city woman, Mr. Buffin said. car and fled Into the alley, ac- was arrested here Wednesday LONG BRANCH - An in- Patrolman Tomaini, cruis- cording to police, and dis- on a charge of threatening the tensive police search contin- ing nearby on plain-clothes appeared. life of George Hunter, Sixth ues today for Lawrence duty, responded to the call to Mr. Buffin also said it was Ave. He was released in $100 •Thomas Jr., 39, of Asbury back up his fellow officer, po- fortunate that the policeman bail Wednesday and then, ac- Park, who has been charged lice said. had loaded his gun, a .357 cording to a complaint by with Jhe shooting last night of As he approached the offi- magnum, with standard .38 Mrs. Emma Brewster, called Patrolman James G. Turner, cer's patrol car he noticed a caliber bullets. The magnum her and made threats against 24, at Union Ave. and Liberty scuffle taking place and bullets are capable of break- tier life... walked up behind the suspect ing an automobile engine Mrs; Brewster signed a sec- Patrolman Turner is listed "He1 has my gun!" Patrol- block. ond complaint against the sus- as being in fair condition man Turner shouted. . i. Nearly all of the city's 57 pect, Mr, Buffin said. That today in Monmouth Medical The suspect turned to face police officers turned out to. was the complaint, he said, Center where he was admit* Patrolman Tomaini, who join the search, the police di- that Patrolman Turner was ted last night after a .38 cali- grabbed his wrist and pushed" rector said, as well as reserve attempting toarrest him for. ber Bullet lore ftrougli his his annwas the pistol fired. police, county detectives and • Meanwhile. Mr. Hunter, 32, shoulder at 7:20 p.m. "Mr. BuffiKSaid Mr. Thomas a State Police detective. of Union Ave., is lodged in the A dragnet of .Asbury Park broke away from the officer, Nearby police officials of- city jail, where he asked to be 'police and local detectives backed away toward a nearby fered to send men from their, placed for protective custody. this morning also combed that alley and opened fire at the departments to aid in the city- Lt. Michael Irene heads the tityfor the suspect after re- policemen. One of the four wide search and Asbury Park search, aided by Sgt. William ceiving information that he shots struck Patrolman Turn- police immediately-searched Walling and Detectives John Rwlsfcr Staff Photo may havebeen taken there by er, he said, and three missed the suspect's haunts in that Perri, Herbert Cofer. James . Lawrence Thomas Jr. WHEN FRIENDS MEET— Exchanging greetings before yesterday's con- a relative.. ' : their marks. city. • ' '•'. ••' '•••-• • See Man, Page 2 vention of the N.J. Council of Senior Citizens in Asbury Park are, from ' John Mi Buffin,- city public the left, former Essex County District Court Judge Felix Forlenza, Asbury safety director, said the sus- Park; William R. Hutton, executive director, National Council1 of Senior pect fired four shots at Patrol- Citizens, Washington; William E. Kayes,Clementon, who declined reelec-.- men Turner and James To- tlon as president ofthe state organization; Al Richtley, United Auto maini wita Patrolman Turn- Wockers, Detroit, one of the convention speakers, and Jack Volosin, er's gun. McCorkle Post Union, executive director of the state group. • Patrolman Tomaini fired one, fired one shot at the flee- TRENTON - Lloyd W. partment which would give ress under his leadership in 411 direct authority to name ing suspect, Mr. Buffin said, McCorkle, commissioner of him the power to appoint the making out state's institutions Commissioner McCorkle's but he apparently missed his Institutions and Agencies commissioner, who is now the very best in the nation.". successor. County Elders Pledge target. since 1963, has resigned effec- named by the Board of Con- Mr. McCorkle said his deci- The commissioner of the I The sidewalk drama un- tive Sept. 1, the office of Gov. trol of Institutions and sion after serving since 1947 in & A, the largest department folded, according to police, William T. Cahill announced Agencies. the department he now heads in state government, now is when Patrolman Turner yesterday. Mr. McCorkle is leaving his "is strictly a personal one appointed by the Board of Big Effort in Election stopped Mr. Thomas' car and McCorkle's department has post to accept the job of vis- based on negotiations with Control. radioed the car's description been under fire since Cahill iting professor of criminology representatives of the' Asian "I hope Commissioner By DORIS KULMAN : The delegates, many sport- you can't earn more than to Patrolman John Tobia took office in January 1970 for with the Asian and" Far East Institute for the past eight or McCorkle's successor will pe ing buttons proclaiming "se- $1,680 a year. I retired only a working at the police station lack of administrative vigor. Institute in Tokyo. nine months." more aware of the problems- ASBURY PARK- The nior power" and,"I'm proud few months ago, and my desk. And Cahill himself, while In accepting Mr. Anthony T. Bruno, a Red of the mentally•• ill' and more God!... if I don't eat the over-65 citizen'will be a pow- to be a senior citizen" Patrolman Tobia told the stating that he had confidence McCorkle's resignation, Cahill Bank attorney and president geared toward the prevention eful voting bloc in this year's adopted .resolutions on health same amount today as I did in Mr. McCorkle personally, said, '.'I have enjoyed ex- of the N.J. Mental Health As- of mental illness," Mr. Bruno "when I was working..." Tries police officer to hold the driv- 1 state elections and next year's care, housing, transportation er due to an outstanding war- called in his annual message cellent cooperation from the sociation, said last night that said. "I would hope the new Presidential contest, the N.J.' and income. $1,680 hereferred to is ' to the legislature for a sweep*' commissioner, and I ant satis-' the resignation- of Mr. commissioner Would be a psy- the maximum which a social rant for his arrest on a charge Council of Senior Citizens Among those urging sup- of making a threatening and ing reorganization of the de- fied that we have made prog* McCorkle makes it of great chiatrist, along the lines sug- vowed yesterday. port for the resolution calling security recipient can earn importance that the state leg- gested by the American Psy- Some 1,500 members of the for a 25 per cent increase in without a decrease -in social, islature enact the Hagedorn chiatric Association." social security benefits and security benefits. bill. state organization, assembled : The N.J. Mental Health As- in Convention Hall for its automatic cost-of-living ad- There was sustained ap- Enactment of the bill, in- sociation has long been criti- ninth annual convention, en- justments was a white-haired, plause for Edward J. Carlson, troduced by state Sen. Garret! cal of Commissioner : thusiastically applauded .husky, man from Rpselle. His director of the community Kamin Named President W. Hagedorn, R-Bergen, and McCorkle's leadership of the speakers who lambasted the .voice,came through the floor services and retired workers still in committee, would abol- department, which includes . health insurance plans pro- .mike strong .and clear. And- department of the Inter- ish the state Board of Control the Division of Mental Health posed by President Nixon and ' the words he spoke were plain national Union of Elec- and give Gov. William T. Cah- See McCorkle, Page 1 the American Medical Associ- words..'. unemotional... tricians, AFL-CIO, Washing- ation. "It seems to me," he said, ton, when he declared: Of The Daily Register , They called for enactment "there's a time when you're 'The Largest Group* of the National Health Secu- too old to work and too young "Senior citizens are the RED BANK - Arthur Z. public service and public af- At the same time, Mr. Ka- rity program advocated by to die. Is it a crime to reach largest group of registered Kamin, 40, editor of The Daily fairs reporting, interpretation min praised the entire Regis- Service Clubs-Are U.S. Sen. Edward M. Ken- 65 and still have the same voters. Congress recognizes Register, today was' named and opinion. "The Daily Reg- ter team which daily produces nedy, D-Mass. and Rep. Mar- skills today as you had 40 this but never worried about the newspaper's president. He ister always has had a strong the newspaper. "They are a tha W. Griffiths, D-Mich. years ago? But they tell you it because it was felt you will retain the title of editor. sense of social responsibility,", talented group of profes- wouldn't vote as a bloc. Well, The action was taken at a he added. "And it is our hope sionals," he said. "They know They Relevant? we're going to let the politi- meeting of the Board qf Di- to continue and expand this and understand our vibrant vital area." and growing county and are Service clubs long have been a part of the Monmouth cians know it's different rectors of The Red Bank Reg- County scene. now... ister. responsible for mirroring the changes that are taking place They are an integral part of almost every municipality - To 'Feel Weight' Mr. Kamin assumes the and their record of service and accomplishment is well known. The Inside Story "In 1972, for the first time duties held by the late M. here." Started As Reporter But what about then* future? in the history of this country, Harold Kelly, who had served Are such organizations as the Rotary, the Kiwanls, the |8t nuTDon Parkway improvement plan told...... Page 3 every politician will feel the as The Register's president Mr. Kamin joined The Reg- Brave tot with sickle cell anemia...... Page 10 and publisher. Mr. Kelly died ister in 1956 when it was the Lions and the Jaycees really valuable assets to their munici- weight of the organized vote palities or are they closed corporations of special interest? - GOP reveals plans for Governor's Ball...... Page 11 of the senior citizens... and April 28. Mr. Kamin has been nation's largest weekly news- Mets rebound on Seavcrt home ran ...™.....«.»...... Pagc M we're going to vote on behalf in charge of the newspaper's paper. He served as a report- Are they attracting the young men of the community to Trotting champ's name kept alive .Page IS of all the citizens of this coun- operations since that time. er, copy editor, associate edi- their ranks? Weekend fishing forcast terrific. •• Page IS Are they serving as a positive social influence in the areas try..." The new president said the tor and was advanced to the ENJOYMENT, YOUR DAILY REGISTER editorship six years ago. they serve? See Elders, Page 2 policies of The Daily Register, The Red Bank Rotary Club, the Matawan Jaycees'and the WEEKEND MAGAZINE PHONE NUMBERS which have made it the larg- Mr. Kamin long has been Television Listings active in community affairs in Middletown Lions and Kiwanls Clubs will be highlighted In a Mala Office 741-0010 Ladles'-Men's Tennis Clinic, 10 est newspaper in Northern special five-part series beginning Monday in The Daily Regis- Movie Schedule Classified Ads 741-6900 sessions $20. 531-9874 (Adv.) Monmouth County, would be Monmouth County. Bridge Advice '. 23 maintained. He is president of the Com-, ter. Legal Adv. 741(010 The histories, the alms and the activities of these groups Church News 8 Display Adv. 741-8010 Wicker set, $100. Crystal chan- "We have an important ob- munity Services Council for Classified— 1MJ Monmouth County and is a and their national organizational structures will be explored in - Circulation Dept. 741-33)0 delier, ?50. Other specials. Rare ligation to carry out an educa- terms of their relevancy today. Sports Dept. 741-M17 Bird, 795 River Rd. Fair Haven. tional role," Mr. Kamin said. . member of the United Fund Cmswstd Puule ...... 23 Board of Directors. Ho also The Daily Register sent Staff Reporter Linda Ellis out on Women's News 741-8010 842-9870. (Adv.) "It is our purpose to help en- this special assignment - and the information she came back Editorials.. I Accounts Payable 7414010 lighten the public so they can serves on the Board of Direc- Financial. U Acct's Receivable 7414010 Jimmy - Meet me in the make sound decisions." tors of the Community YMCA, with will prove enlightening and fascinating. Horoteopc W Mlddletown Bureau I71-22M. cheese department at Inter- the Multiple Sclerosis Society You wont want to miss this series of articles - another national Pantry, Red Bank Mr. Kamin said there would reason why The rjatty Register is not only Northern Mon- Sports ...... 14,15 FicdnUBmreaa 46MM1 be continued emphasis on See Kamin, Page 2 LongBnuchBareau m-MM Mall, Your loving Margot. Arthur Z. Kamin 'wnon'i News...... l»,U (Adv.) ty's most intending ttwtpoptr. 2 HM IJ»SvKtgitfrr,RedRuk-MiMleb»»iOt. J.,FrUi;,June23,1971 Marlboro Land Plan Hit ByJIMMcCORMlCK acres for a recreational site. tain 75 per cent funding of the "we are not committed to the over because it does not come The state is expected to pay estimated $65,000 cost of the $3,700 price - it is just an op- up to their specifications." MARLBORO-The Recrea- $105,000 of the cost, with the land from HUD. He said that tion price." Merritt Warwick, Lloyd tion Commission will try to county paying $100,000, and HUD approval must be ob- Mayor Morton SaBcind then Road, asked that heavy traf- .- block a grant from the federal the township paying the re- tained before the project suggested that if the land was fic be barred from, his street. department of Housing and' mainder. could go ahead. necessary for the.project, The mayor agreed, stating Urban Development which Explains Plan Mr. Bauman said that his then "why not condemn it." that "the heavy trucks trav- would enable this township to Carl Wheeler, representing commission is opposed to the He then asked council "if I eling the road are tearing it buy 13.9 acres of land in con- Leon S. Avakian, township en- project because it wants all present an appraisal of $2,000 up." junction with the Lloyd Road gineer^ explained that the the proposed recreational at the next meeting, would reconstruction project. Mr. Minogue said that ap- road would be widened and sites funded by HID at the you revise this option price." proval must be obtained from • Commission Chairman Stan reconstructed, from the Mata- same time. He said that coun- Councilman" Joirn' Williams Matawan Township and the Bauman said that council "ig- wan Township border to cil should wait until the recre- state Department of Motor nored our authority" with its Route 79. He said that pur- ation master plan, subsidized said that "if you can ascertain that it is worth less, and that Vehicles before the restriction decision to use the 13.9 acres chase of the 13 acres at the in- in most part by state funds, is could be placed on the road. for a recreational site.- He tersection of Lloyd and Nolan made public. we can condemn it, then I am said that the commission is Roads would save the town- in favor of condemning it." Mayor Salkind said that in opposed to the plan, and will ship over $200,000 in funds. Councilman Richard Her- The mayor asked why the the meantime, a 25-mile-an- man said that if the park site township should enter into hour speed limit will be en- write HUD to protest the ac- Mr. Wheeler said that by tion. was not on the list of priorities such extensive road repairs if/ forced on the road. purchasing the land, a drain- in the master plan, he would the county master plan in- McLaughlin closed the pub- Opposition to the Lloyd -age culvert and stream would lic hearing, but said that he Road project was aired dur- "be opposed to the use of dicates that it will take over Rfgliter Staff Photo not have to be redirected at a HUD funds for the project." the road and connect it with would re-open it on July 8 at, 8 ing over five hours of a public cost of $200,000. He said that p.m. at Marlboro Elementary GATEWAY DISCUSSION - Local, county, federal and state officials met hearing held last night. the township would not only the proposed Rt. 3 just north yesterday In Middletown to talk over proposed Gateway Nat ona Recrea- Council President John J. of Rt. 79 and Tennent Road. School, School Road West, to d L a u The hearing dealt with save the money, but could McLaughlin said that the hear a special report from tion Area, which would include Sandy Hook. From left f7i*°" '"9'n n n : an ordinance authorizing the also use the site for recrea- quoted price per acre is Council President Mayor Salkind. The report, rence Schmidt of the state Department of Environmental Protection and issuance of $465.00 to pay for tional purposes. $3,700. Mr. Minogue said that McLaughlin said that "the which ties in with Lloyd Road, Middletown Committeeman Edward P. Makely; seated, from left.are the $490,000 estimated cost of Township Attorney James the appraised value of the county will take over the road deals with obtaining more in- Jack Hauptman of the U.S. Department of the Interior, Middletown May- the road's reconstruction, and R. Minogue said that the land, owned by Lexington if it tomes up to their specifi- formation on the proposed Rt. or Harold H. Fouiks and Middletown Committeeman Thomas J. Lyncn. ' the acquisition of the 13.9 township might be able to ob- Agency Corp. is $3,000 per cations ... we had the same 3, and with researching the acre. problem with Route safety history of all township Elders in County The attorney added that- 520... they will not take it roads. Area Officials Cite Set Election Effort Plan Railroad Repairs TRENTON - The state said JL * (Continued) Other resolutions adopted, yesterday it will spend $1 mil- Mayor O'Hern said he interlaken - Grasmere Gateway Traffic Woes emanating from the three mil- lion by the end of the year to would support repairs if "That's right. That's what lion-member National Council Asbury Park - Sunset Ave., ByBOBBRAMLEY of the national park system, people drive all the way to improve grade crossings, needed for safety reasons, but Fifth Ave., Second Ave., Mun- > should be done!" Mrs. Dora of Senior Citizens conference tracks, and station platforms rather than make unneces- he said. Belford, why not ferry.them Mazur, a delegate from the. in Washington last week or roe Ave., and Summerfield MIDDLETOWN - The Where the shoe pinches from Port Newa.rk or. along the. New York & Long sary'repairs would rather see Ave. Kretchmcr Senior Citizen some of the state organiza- Branch right of way between the money spent for the question was: "What's in it Middletown's foot is in the Kearny?" CQmmjtteeman Center, Newark, agreed tion's 248 affiliated clubs-and Perth Amboy and Bradley planned relocation of railroad for Middletown?" matter of access to the pro- William C. Johnson Jr« que- loudly from her chair. all adopted without demur- Beach. stations. 8 Penalized And the only answer posed Sandy Hook park. Mr. ried. • . "We're going to send copies rer-call for: Mr. Mazza noted that seemed to be bigger and bet- Hauptman said plans now call Ferry Terminal -Immediate improvements The money will come from ter traffic jams on Rt. 36. of the resolutions we adopt the state transportation bond "early this year" he had re- "17 f\£?£ for a sort of staging area in Henry P. Engelbrecht, who here to every candidate for in Medicare-Medicaid. q Township officials met yes- fund and will be used to make quested the railroad to make J? HAZLEOV T - A Wes\JIlCHSeSt Keans- Belford, where a ferry termin- heads Ocean Environmental the state legislature this -Congressional in- the planned repairs and had terday in special session with al would accept 3,000 or so Engineering Co. of Middle- vestigation of the "nursing repairs aimed at providing been told that the state was purg man has been fined $60 representatives of county, year we want to know more comfortable and better and has had his driving privi- passengers each on two ferry town and New York City, sug- how they stand on them be- home industry." expected to help out in financ- state and federal govern- boats plying between Belford gested the ferry terminal service for the thousands of ing the improvements. lege suspended for six months ments to discuss expected im- fore we go Into the voting -Legislation regulating Jersey Shore commuters. after being found guilty my and the Hook. should be in Great Kills on booth..." declared Jack Vol- physicians' fees. A spokesman for the Com- pact of the proposed Gateway Bottleneck Feared Staten Island. Great Kills has Robert A. Day, director of muter Operating Agency, a Municipal Court Judge Vin- National Recreation (Area, osin, executive director of the -A five-year housing pro- the Commuter Operating cent J. Agresti of driving The ferry boat service been eliminated from Ga- N.J. Council and an inter- gram for the, elderly, begin- policy making branch of the which would include Sandy Agency, which approved the Department of Trans- while impaired. would relieve the traffic bot- teway plans, but could easily national representative with ning with release of $928 mil- H6ok, on the affairs on the tleneck in Highlands on the be reinstated, he said. plans, denied the repairs are portation, said repairs would The defendant, Robert E. township. the community services and lion for housing" authorized being made because of safety bridge at the base of Sandy retired workers department of and appropriated by Congress be made at the following Kelly of 16 Newman St., was 3-Unlt Plan To all these suggestions, reasons. grade crossings in Monmouth also assessed $10 for failing to Hook, Mr. Hauptman ex- the United Auto Workers. The but impounded by the admin- Plans for the project were • plained. But he had no sugges- Mr. Hauptman answered that statement got loud applause. istration ..." The railroad, he said, is County: yield at an intersection and. the ferry service must be de- safe despite published reports $25 for using loud and abusive outlined by Jack Hauptman, tions on what to do about a -State rent control legisla- Matawan - MainSt., and representative of. the Bureau signed for the greatest capaci- of rotted ties, loose and miss- Atlantic Ave. language. He was cleared of a still bigger bottleneck local of- tion. of Outdoor Recreation of the ficials feel will form between ty and the shortest haul to be ing spikes. Middletown - Nutswamp charge of leaving the scene of economically feasible. - l -A national pension pro- an accident. U.S. Department of the Interi- Perth Amboy and Belford as 965321 Wins - gram for workers not covered A spokesman for the rail- Road. or. Sandy Hook, he explained, For this reason, he ex- road said that conditions often Red Bank - Oakland St., the thousands of would-be fer- ; ATLANTIC CITY (AP) - by private pension plans. David J. Brower of 71 Com- is one unit of the latest three- ry passengers attempt to tra- plained, the federal govern The winning number in this Reduced Fares look worse than they really Chestnut St., Shrewsbury pton Ave., Port Monmouth, unit plan for federal recrea- ment is keeping its eye, on are. He said scheduled Ave., Monmouth St., Bridge was fined ?50 after pleading verse already overloaded week's New Jersey lottery is -Reduced bus, plane and tion areas on the New Jersey highways to get to the ferry Belford. It would cost only 60 maintenance insures that the Ave., and W. Bergen Place. guilty to a malicious mischief and New. York sides of Ran- 965321. train fares for senior citizens roadbed is safe. terminal. cents per person per round Holders of tickets with all " so they can visit children and Shrewsbury - White Road. count and an additional $25 tan and Lower New York trip to run a ferry service The scheduled repairs in- Little Silver — Sycamore for fighting. Local officials agreed that six numbers in the correct or- grandchildren despite cur- Bays. the Belford ferry terminal can from Belford to the Hook, he der win $50,000; with the last tailed incomes. clude renovations to the state -Ave. Lucy McBride of 27 Briscoe Since most of the Hook has estimated. : platforms in Middletown, Red Long Branch - Chelsea • Ten, 'was fined $50 for shop- bring nothing but additional five numbers $4,000; the last -Adoption of the "no-fault" or will be declared surplus by traffic headaches.to Rt. 36 "On any longer run, the four |400, and the last three system of automobile insur- Bank, Little Silver, Long Ave., Westwood Ave., and lifting an article of clothing the Department~of Defense, : costs would.be much higher," Branch, Elberon, Allenhurst, Brighton Ave. valued at $2.99 from the J.M. and the Garden State Park- $40. ance to remove the "threat of there is considerable support way, where summer week- he stated. unwarranted policy cancella- North Asbury Park, Asbury Oceanport - Leonard Ave., Fields Department Store, Rt.' among New Jersey legislators Park arid Bradley Beach. Branchport Ave., and Joline 35. ends already bring.mammoth Mr. Hauptman did not.com- tion" senior citizens face. and others on the federal level and. often motionless traffic -Federal financing of all Reaction to the state's Ave. In traffic matters Judge for acquiring it as part of the ment on a suggestion by As- ^ Walter Reade plans was varied, with Red Ocean Township — Roose- Agresti fined Richard Gam- tieups. semblyman Joseph Azzolina, public schools to provide "uni- national park system, Mr. "Why not use Keyport for itwDtres ' .formity of education, save the Bank Mayor DanierJ. O'Hern velt Ave. bon of Manasquan $15 for Hauptman went on. R-Monmouth, to provide ac- calling it "a waste of money." the ferry terminal instead of cess to the Hook via the,Bay- city school systems from fi- Deal — Grant Ave., Sher- speeding; David T. Miller of As part of the Gateway Na- On the other hand, Long man Ave., Roseld Ave., and Monmouth Junction $210 for Belford, thus clearing up'the shore railway spur from Carlton nancial collapse, relieve the tional Recreation Area, Sandy traffic all along Rt. 36?" senior citizen homeowner Branch Business Adminis- Drummond Ave. diving while on the revoked Matawan, which might be Btd B»nW41 9600 trator Vincent J. Mazza said Hook would afford a seashore asked Mayor Harold 11 from oppressive school tax." Allenhurst - Spier Ave., list; Ernesto Delvale of Jer- playground for many resi- connected to the Navy rail- he "was very grateful." Corlies Ave., and Allen Ave. sey City $15 for failing to obey Fouiks. road to allow cars to run out "TEN -Free admission to all na- dents of New Jersey and New "Rather than have the tional and state parks; with a traffic signal; Dan Jones of York and would be saved to the Navy's finger pier at RILLINGTON free fishing licens- Carteret $25 for speeding; and from residential or industrial Arthur E. Scla Leonardo. From there, Mr.- PLACE" es-including trout fishing James R. Mulhern of 12 Berry developers who would swiftly t Azzolina would run a cau- stamps-after the age of 62. Kamiii Appointed St., Keansburg, $18 for speed- • move in if the tract were KEYPORT - Arthur E. seway to Sandy Hook, where ing and $10 for failing to pos- Seta, 72, of Bethany Manor, the old military railroad track Joseph A. Rightley, a UAW sess a driver license. thrown on the market, the Town international representative federal representative contin- died Wednesday in Riverview might be used to establish, from Detroit and one of the Register President ued. Hospital, Red Bank, of an several stops for recreation- Eatontown convention speakers, declared Man Sought Ecology, Beauty apparent heart attack. ers along the length of the that the Kennedy-Griffiths (Continued) American Newspaper Publi- In the bargain, the natural Mr. Seta was born in New Hook's beaches. National Health Security pro- of Monmouth County and the shers Association. He is a past beauty and ecological values York City and lived there and BARONET gram would be less expensive Monmouth County Mental president of the New Jersey In Shooting of the Hook can and will be in Staten Island most of his Ralph Kaplan, 4th Avt. Atbuiy Parir. to the employer and hardly Health Association. He is a Associated Press and is a for- preserved it it becomes part life. He lived in Avon prior to 7754112 more expensive to the em- member of the Fair Haven mer chairman of the AP's Of Policeman moving here one year ago. ' ploye than what he termed Community Appeal's Advisory Continuing Study Committee. He was a machinist with Kx-Druggist " LOVE "the present non-system" of Board. He is also a member of the (Continued) the Farberware Inc., of the Appleby, Albert Tyler and McCorkle prepaid health insurance. Mr. Kamin is active in the New Jersey Press Associ- Bronx, N.Y>, for 14 years be- PERTH AMBOY - Ralph ation's News-Editorial Com- James Jones. fore retiring in 1963. Mr. Seta Kaplan, 74, of 10 Harbor Ter- STORY The NHS plan would cost alumni affairs of Rutgers Col- The massive hunt was Quits Post the employer 3^4 per cent'of lege, New Brunswick, from mittee. was a World War I army vet- race, here, father, of Jack 'TRUE GRIT' coordinated last night by • ' (Continued), eran and a member of the Kaplan of Rumson, died yes- payroll, compared to the 8 per which he was graduated in Mr. Kamin was born in Capt. C. Carroll Green and cent they contribute toward 1954. He is a member of the South River and was gradu- and responsibility for the Staten Island Barracks #2524 terday in Perth Amboy Gener- Capt. John Foy. state's psychiatric hospitals, Veterans of World War I. al Hospital. workers' health insurance un- Rutgers Alumni Association ated from South River High Patrolman Turner will cele- der collective bargaining Executive Committee and is School. and has urged a separate De- Surviving are his widow, Mr. Kaplan was born in Community brate his 25th birthday Satur- partment of Mental Health. llUMom MZ-4201 * agreements now and would chairman of its Publications College Honors Mrs. Gladys Slater Seta; two New York City and had lived day. He is married and the fa- That was the recommenda- brothers, Ernest Seta of cost employes 1 per cent of Committee, which publishes While an undergraduate at ther of one child. here the past 16 years. He was Mayfair 1 payroll compared to the .8 per the Rutgers Alumni Maga- Rutgers, he was editor-in- tion, too, of the APA, which Staten Island and Egidio Seta a retired druggist. Mr. and Mrs. Turner live at was asked by the legislature of the Bronx, N.Y., and two • He was an Army veteran of cent they pay now, Mr. Right- zine. chief of the Rutgers Daily 367 Westwood Ave, He has ley said. This year he is serving as Targum, president of the to study the problem in New sisters, Mrs, Dlga Ferrante of World War I. . been a city police officer 15 Jersey after a scandal in- the Bronx and Mrs. Matilda , Surviving in addition to his "ANDROMEDA Hot Issue Eyed general chairman of The Rut- Scarlet Barbarians, the inde- months. pendent students' organiza- volving sexual abuse of child Femenlla of Fort Meyers son are his widow, Mrs. He predicted that a national gers Fund which is in the pro- The last police officer shot 1 STRAIN" health plan "will be the hot- cess of raising $500,000 to ben- tion, and rowed on the junior patients at Greystone State 'Beach, Ma. Emma Brock Kaplan a varsity crew. He was elected here, a city spokesman said, Hospital. The John W. Mehlenbeck daughter, Mrs. Harriet Bern- test issue in the 1972 Presiden- efit the university. He is a was Patrolman Herman 1 tial election" unless we're still past president and member of to Cap and Skull, senior hon- I & A also includes the Divi- Funeral Home, Hazlet, is in stein of Philadelphia, Pa'.; Circle "Honey" Kmmons, who was three sisters, Mrs..Fay m. 66 si Asbury Pk.Ci'tl* involved in a shooting war in the Monmouth County Rut- orary society, and to Who's sion of Public Welfare. Mon- charge of arrangements. Ocun Townihif>775 6810 shot and killed at Broadway Schneider of Port Washington, Vietnam. gers Alumni Club. Who in American Colleges and Third Ave. more than 40 mouth County Welfare Direc- William R. Hutlon, execu- and Universities. tor Robert C Wells said the DEATH NOTICE N.Y. and Mrs. Ida Goldstein "ESCAPE FROM Special Committee years ago. and Mrs. Anna Minsky, both tive director of the National Two years ago he was Also as an undergraduate, resignation "offers the gover- KAPLAN — Ralph, 10 Horbor Terrace. The officer's killer was ar- Perth Amboy on June 24. 1971. Beloved of New York City, and four Council of Senior Citizens, named to a special committee Mr. Kamin was a member of nor an opportunity to show husband of Efnmo Brock Kaplan. Devoted THE PLANET rested and prosecuted, the father of Mrs. Harriet Bernstein and Jack grandchildren. Washington, declared the or- to select a new dean for the the Reserve Officers Training spokesman said. concern for high quality ser- Kaplon. Devoted breiher of Mrs. Foy Schneider. Mrs. Ida Goldstein and Mrs. . The Flynn and Son Funeral OF THE APES" ganization is working for a 20 Rutgers School of Journalism. Corps and was a cadet lieu- The suspect in last night's vice by appointing a person Anna AAiflsky. Funeral this afternoon 1:30 p.m. Flynn & San Funeral Home, 424 Eait Home, Perth Amboy, is in per cent Social Security in- For service to his alma ma- tenant colonel. He was gradu- shooting, police said, lives at with the appropriate profes- Ave., Perth Amboy. Interment Beth Israel PARAMOUNT crease by January, He said it ter, Mr. Kamin was presented ated as a distinguished mili- 1125 Summerfield Ave., As- sional qualifications." Cemetery Woodbrldf/". charge of arrangements. on th* BMrdmRc was instrumental in the 30 per a Loyal Son of Rutgers tary student Albury P«fc -77S-8M0_ bury Park. He is described as cent increase achieved within award. He also received the • Mr. Kamin served on acrjve being 39 years old, 160 pounds "RED SKY the past two years. Class of 1931 cup, presented in duty with the Army from 1954 and has a cast in his right Ernest Aldeh, Bloomfield, 1964 as the outstanding 10- to 1956 as a Signal Corps lieu- eye. He is also bearded. Weather: Sunny, Warm AT was elected president of the year graduate of the college. tenant at Ft. Monmouth. He Police early this morning Sunny and warm today, Two years ago Mr. Kamin continued in the active Re- high in the mid to upper 80s. jured when a violent thun- MORNING" state organization. Others theorized that "one of his derstorm ripped Rochester, . Mich, to 95 at Needles, Claif. . elected were: Hugh Maguire, received the Brotherhood serves for six years, attaining cronies" smuggled him out of Mostly clear tonight, low in Award presented by the Mon- the rank of captain. the 60s. Tomorrow and Sun- Minn., yesterday. Winds up tq Hamilton Township, Joseph the city. The intensive search 80 miles an hour blew roofs Lyric Walsh, Cranford, and the Rev. mouth-Oeean chapter of the Mr. Kamin is married to here, it was said, should have day warm with highs again in TIDES National Conference of Chris- theSUs. off three aparemtne buildings Sandy Hook Kelmo Porter, Newark, vice the former Virginia Dorothy uncovered the suspect if he and damaged several other presidents; Mrs. Mary John- tians and Jews. A plaque, for Palew of Teaneck, a graduate was still in Long Branch. In Long Branch, yes- TODAY - High 10:30 p.m. "SUMMERTREE" his service to the cause of structures. and low 4:24 p.m. son, Jersey Cityf secretary; of Douglass College, New "I'm getting tired of craw- terday's high was 79 degrees Gusts up to 75 m.p.h. also PLUS Mrs. Violet Roslin, 1'lainfield, brotherhood, was presented to Brunswick, and a first grade and the low was 65. It was 75 TOMORROW - High 11:1.2 "THINGS OF LIFE" him at Shadowbrook, Shrews- ling through attics and eel* lashed portions of wostern %m: and 11:18 p.m. and low treasurer; and Mrs. Kitty teacher at the Knollwood lars," an officer said last at 6 p.m. The overnight low Wisconsin during the night, Taylor, Newark, Joseph bury. School, Fair Haven. They was 67 and the temperature at 5:06 a.m. and 5:12 p.m. 1 night. "He must have skipped leaving several communities, Worthington, Franklinville Mr. Kamin is a member of have two children, Blair 7 th>s morning was 69. SUNDAY - High midnight town." . without electric power and and 12:01 p.m. and low 5:48 and Harold Dayes, Toms Riv- Congregation B'nai Israel, Douglass, who will enter "We. think he is in Asbury Warm, sticky'weather toppling scores of trees. er, trustees. Rumson-Fair Haven Regional a.m. and 5:54 p.m. Rumson, and serves on its Park," an investigator said. clung to much of the nation Rain also battered the Pa- BUITIN HOFfUAM There were 54 clubs official- Board of Trustees and Com- High School in the fall, and today in the wake of scattered For Red Bank and Rumson Brooke Judith, Who will enter "And we know he still has the cific Northwest and gale bridge, add two hours; Sea ly registered at the con- munity Affairs Committee. gun." thunderstorms that soaked warnings were posted for the vention. . There were none Mr. Kamin is a member of the fourth grade at Knollwood sections of the Midwest, Gulf Bright, deduct 10 minutes; "UTTIEBIGWAN" School. The Kamins live at 15 "Let him run," another po- Oregon coast. Long Branch, deduct 15 mln-. from lionmouth County the American Society of liceman observed. "We'll get Coast and Rocky Mountains. Newspaper Editors and the Grange Walk, Fair Haven. Temperatures before dawn utes; Highlands bridge, add 40 among them. him." Several persons were in- ranged from 47 at Hancock, minutes. Top of the News Matawan §cEool Area 8AYBEVILLE - An explosion ripped through a ware- tt-ef Hercules Inc., here last night, causing a general alarm fire whose flames lit up the sky for at least 20 miles. There was a report a fireman was injured. Fire companies from surrounding Middlesex County com- Seizure Held Unlikely munities was well Sayrevflle fought the blaze. Traffic was jarained In an directions. MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - partment would probably against (the teachers action The probability of a state seiz- handle any audit, if the court The plant is located in the Farlin section here on heavily in Union Beach) said teacberi ure of the Regional School ruled so. "The Department of traveled Bordentown Ave. are free to criticize and to District as catted for by the, >. Education handles such audits publicize that criticism. wWch Fire companies kept calling for more water. Tank trucks Matawan Hegtopl Teachers and maintains fflntrel over is our intent," he added, > raced to the scene. Association is negligible, but The teachers association The fire began about 10:45 p.m. gg, them, but it will Uke a court order to decide if one should win confer with its attorney, Hercules manufactures polyolefin, used in plastic films the state Department of Edu- cation may launch an in- be held," he said. < Emfl Oxfeld, Newark, on the and fibres. It was not immediately known what was stored in court action this week. Mr. the warehouse. .':''., vestigation into practices The question of compelling here. ' the board to accept the fac- Oxfeld said yesterday he was The MRTA has called for tfinder's report would be set- not at liberty to discuss the Extortion Try is Reported the state seizure and in- tled hi the court which has developments, but would meet vestigation as well as an- jurisdiction over appeals of on a course of action shortly. GARY,-tad. - The FBI said today an attempt had been Reglitrr Stuff Phota nouncing it will seek a court the state Public Employes Re- made to extort f30,000 from publisher Walter T. Ridder and DR. JOHN P. KINNEY JR. - Dr. Kihney, Superintendent of Rumson Fair order to have an impartial au- lations Commission, which ap- Money To#Swe ,that FBI agents critically wounded a former employe of Rid- Haven Regional High School, Rumson, for the past 17 years, stands before dit conducted of district fi- pointed the factfinder. The board and teachers are ' rter's newspaper during a gunfight in the course of a payoff. construction material of the school's new senior wing which, in a surprise nances,? seek a show cause or- However, Mr. Leib se- mainly disputing the ainount — FBI Agent James T. Neagle said the attempt to extort the move, yesterdqyr, was dedicated to him during the school's com- der requiring the Regional riously questioned the pro- of money available to pay money from Bidder, publisher of the Gary Post Tribune and mencement exercises. Board of Education to explain priety of the sanctions called teachers' salaries. Although vice president of Ridder Publications, had been made tinder why it will not accept a state for by the MRTA. there is a two-year contract, threat of a bomb allegedly placed in the press room of the factfinder's report on a con- "The sanctions may be ille- five reopener-clauses, in- newspaper offices. tract settlement and has de- gal and I really can't conceive cluding salary and nurses' in- Authorities said no bomb was found. dared a sanctions alert. that the NJEA (New Jersey clusion in the teacher pay A letter received Wednesday by Ridder said that if the R-FHR Board Honors ' The action was taken Education Association) would scale, have been in negotia- bomb was found, the children Of associate publisher C. Darrow Wednesday night after a fruit- impose sanctions hi the face tion for 10 months. "Duke" TuUy would be shot by a sniper. .less negotiating session be- of the abundance of teachers MRTA president, Miss The FBI identified the man shot during the payoff as John tween the board and MRTA this year," he said.' Marie Panos contends that £. Ward, 57, of Gary. He was wounded in the chest No one over a 1971-72 teacher con- No Conflict Seen the association has com- else, was hurt . School Superintendent tract. promised on the salary issue The sanctions alert, John Molloy, NJEA representative and the cost would be only By LONIA EFTHYVOULOU explained is not illegal and $40,000 above the amount pre- at the right tune. The honor belongs to my as- Meyner Testifies at Trial _ . will not conflict with the Nov. viously included hi the budget ; NEWARK - Former Gov. Robert B. Meynei- has ap- - In a surprise move, and to the sistant superintendents Al Lous, Donald Trot- 25, 1968, ruling by the State However, the board nego- applause of hundreds of spectators at yes- peared as a character witness for William A. Sternkopf at the ter and Jjewton Beron, who really built up the C1 de Lelb ial assis. Supreme Court which upheld tiating team head, Eugene trial of Sterftkopf and'seven other Hudson County figures on terday's, commencement exercises at Rumson- school. I will cherish the honor, and I thank tant to Carl L Marburger a lower court decision forbid- Coppola, contends the cost to charges of conspiracy and extortion. Fair Haven Regional High School,' the new se- y0°f^\SjWS^dent ^commissionestate commissioner of educeducaa . ding sanctions taken by Union accept factfinder Henry nior wing was dedicated to Superintendent tion agreed with Mr. Flynn's Beach teachers in 1967. Schumann's May 12 report Meyner, now silver-haired, who served as Democratic Dr. John F. Kinney Jr. "is not easy at best," Mr. Greene underlined governor from 1953 to 1961 said he appointed Sternkopf to the assessment, adding, "nor "Our form of sanctions will would be $100,000 more- than that during Dr. Kinney'S 17 years at the school, New Jersey Turnpike Authority in 1961 after a detailed in- Making the surprise announcement, would our department consid- be to publicize exactly what is the board has available. •' '.'• "he made it grow from a country school of 400 vestigation of Stemkopf's character. ' James Greene, president of the R-FHRHS er seizure. We experienced a happening in the district so The impasse has provoked Board of Education, said, "In acknowledging students, grades 7 through 12 in 1954, to one of Asked who recommended Sternkopf for the Turnpike job, similar request during the that teachers throughout the the call for the audit, but Mr/ the debt of the community for his 17 years of the most highly esteemed schools hi the east Meyner replied, "It may have been the Hudson County organi- Newark dispute and there are state will be aware of the con- Coppola claimed, "the MRTA service, the Board of Education resolved to with 1,300 students, grades 9 through 12." zation and it very well may have been John V. Kenny." all kinds of opinions on the ditions here," Mr. Malloy ex- can have any facts and fig- have a bronze plaque placed In the new wing. Mr. Greene also' praised Dr. Kinney'S pic- Kenny, the Democratic boss of Hudson County, was a de- propriety of a takeover." plained. ures that are public informa- "This," he said, "win bear an inscription 'neering innovations at the school which have fendant hi the case until two weeks ago when his case was sev- " Mr. Leib said that his de- "The court decision, while tion simply on their request which will read something like this: To Dr. brought him recognition as a leader in educa- ered because of ill health. John F. Kenny Jr., the Board of Education and tion. "He has had several opportunities to Sternkopf, who is a member of the Port of New York Au- the citizens of Rumson and Fair Haven, give leave the school for better positions and more thority, is accused with the other defendants of extorting thanks for many years of- faithful service. We money," Mr. Greene added, "but he has $182,800 from contractors doing work for Jersey City and Hud- $2,088,000 in U.S. Aid wish him well, now and in the days to come." son County. The defendants include present and former offi- stayed. He is disappointed at what has not yet cials of Jersey City and the county. . Expressing bis surprise at the dedication, been accomplished here, but we are grateful to Dr. Kinney replied, "I am not worthy of this Mm." • Heroin Test Called Success Set for Water, Sewers WASHINGTON - The new heroin detection test now ad- WASHINGTON - The of- the existing sewer in the cen- clusion." ministered to all GIs leaving Vietnam has already proven it- Million in Parkway fice of Sen. Harrison A. Wil- ter of the town approximately Mr. Reed also expressed self an effective, hard-to-beat means of finding hard drug' liams Jr., D-N.J., announced from the Rumson bridge south the community's thanks by users, its developers say. that water and sewer facil- to the Colonial Arms, west of saying, "It's been a long and The test, pioneered by a civilian laboratory in the nation's ities grants totalling $2,088,000 • Ocean Ave. The borough's to- complicated application to Projects Placed on Tap were approved for two.Mon- tal sewer costs are $1,875,000. capital, was described yesterday by its developers as 100 prepare. We an feel rewarded month County communities "I am very happy with the by the federal committment"' times more sensitive than previous methods. WOODBRIDGE - Take the 'is $89 million. The overall master project It can reliably detect heroin up to five days after a user Engineering contracts for calls for widening to five by flie Department of Housing announcement," said Mayor New Jersey Highway Author- and Urban Development Robert Henck of New Shrews- Mayor Cecile F. Norton of has had a "fix," they say. ity's projects for the next five $40 million of the proposed lanes each direction of the Sea Bright said, "I am tre- The test is the key to "a revolutionary mass screening projects were let yesterday by parkway south of the Radian New Shrewsbury will re- bury. "On behalf of the resi- years, including expansion of dents of the borough and for mendously pleased because technique for the detection of narcotics in the body on a scale authority members meeting in Toll Plaza to the Asbury Park ceive $1.5 million and Sea the Garden State Parkway, myself, I acknowledge with the grant will help defray the .never before achieved," said officials of the Washington Ref- and add them all up. The total monthly public session. Toll Plaza. Bright will get $588,000 to as- cost We an worked hard to Successful engineering pro- sist in their sewer construc- sincere gratitude the efforts erence Laboratory. of Jerome S. Reed, borough get the grant and in order to posals submitted Include tion projects. keep the costs to a minimum. High Court Hearing Appeals pavement overlay; guardrail New Shrewsbury's grant administrator,,and Milton A. improvements; widening of will go toward payment of the Mausner, borough attorney, This win be of great benefit to ' The Supreme Court considered today appeals by the gov- Name Hospital the Kt 22 area as well as the collector system for the north- who shepharded the appli- the whole of Sea Bright and ernment and The New York Times that it step into the conflict dualization of the roadway ern section of the borough, to cation to a successful con- its taxpayers." over a series of articles on the secret Pentagon history of the south of the Raritan River. be served by the Northeast Vietnam war. * Span Pact Let Monmouth Sewer Authority. 1 Immediately ahead loomed a 6 p.m. deadline. Unless the An $8.3 million award yes- Grant Sought Justices act before then The Washington Post will be able to Administrator terday to the Peter Kiewit Co. The borough, which faces a Dig they must... publish what it wants. But The Times will be free to resume RED BANK - At a regular of Tenafly for construction of $5.6 million total cost for sew- publication in Saturday editions only of material the Justice meeting of the board of gover- a new bridge across Great er construction has also filed Department considers safe for public consumption. nors of Riverview Hospital Egg Harbor is also part of the application with the Federal Pay we will! Unlike The Post, The Times will be barred from using any last night, -announcement was $80 million project which will Water Quality Administration of the items hi the 47 volume war study the Justice Depart- made by its president, Frank be bonded over a 40 year peri- for a grant hi aid, to help pay ment, feels should be kept secret in the interest of national F. Blaisdell, of the appoint- od. ' for its trunk system. security. ment by the board of John K. Under the-improvement Sea Blight's grant will go The Tunes' told the court in a petition yesterday that the Pawlowski as administrator project, the new span win car-, toward payment for con- restraint, imposed by the U.S. circuit court in New York City, of the hospital, and William F. ry northbound parkway traf- tracts, three and four, fox the "imposes an insupportable burden on a free press." Maher to the position of asso- fic in two lanes while the complete sewering of the ciate administrator. ' existing bridge across the bay North Beach section - along GRASS Mr. Pawlowski has served will be refurbished for ex- Ocean Ave., from Rumson SCEO j Rail Link Kill Is Signed as acting administrator for clusive use by southbound bridge to' the Highlands Kin>en, TRENTON - New Jersey Gov. William T. Cahill signed the past several months since travelers. bridge, including side roads. •Into law yesterday a bill permitting the Port of New York Au- the death of William V. Gill, In discussing the overall State Aid Asked thority to build a rail link between Penn Station in Newark and Mr. Maher is the hospi- construction package Philip The borough has also made and Newark Airport. tal's controller, having served May, chief engineer for the application with state author- The bill also permits the authority to build a line between in that capacity for the past 10 authority, said the authority ities for grant in aid for con- •New York's Penn Station and John F. Kennedy Airport. years. intends to construct, using the tracts 1,1A and 2 for the sew- Wi$6*» Finance your sewer system Identical legislation was signed by New York's Gov. Nel- In accepting the appoint- center median, five lanes, ering of the South Beach sec- son A. Rockefeller on June 17. ment Mr. Pawlowski said, "I which win include an express tion, from Rumson bridge, hookup costs through us Thifnew law represents a victory for Cahill hi his fight to am very grateful for the con- lane "down the middle." south, including side roads. on our special low terms get the Port Authority to involve itself more in commuter fidence you, the members of William F. Maher "We dont anticipate having This includes a gravity sewer transportation projects in northern New Jersey. the board, have shown hi me. to buy much' more additional on a share-cost basis with I have worked with John Dan- Rumson; as wen as repairs to ^ property," Mr. May said. "We •UMiiriOFF. D.I.C. CEDTBAL JEBSE1T BANK iels and William Gill (former will utilize what we have. War Anniversary Is Today administrators)," he contin- Namely the median. SEOUL - Twenty-one years ago today North Korea invaded ued, "and feel that I am fa- Express Lane Eyed South Korea and started the Korean War. Occasional clashes miliar with the philosophy "In explanation, what we still interrupt the uneasy peace along the 151-mile frontier be- they both held with regard to intend to do is provide for an Service Clubs - tween the two nations. Riverview Hospital and its express lane down the center A 600,000 man South Korean force equipped with U.S. jet growth and expansion through of the roadway, where, if you fighter-bombers, missiles, tanks and artillery stands guard the years. I intend to direct get on at Asbury Park for in- are they still relevant? along and below the demilitarized zone set by the 1953 armi- all my energies toward contin- stance, you cant get off be- stice. uing this fine tradition for fore the (Garden State) Arts Service Clubs are an Integral part of almost every mu- U.S. soldiers protected 18 miles of the DMZ front until Riverview." Center." niclpality-and thair record of service and accom- March, when they were pulled back prior to the reductiono f Mr. Maher echoed these The proposed project is plishment is wen known. U.S. forces in South Korea from 62,000 to 42,000 by July 1. sentiments and also expressed similar to the New Jersey his gratitude to Mr. Blaisdell Turnpike express lanes where but what of their future? and the board members. only cars are allowed to trav- Since 1965 el. Are such organizations rosily valuable assets to their THEMILY Mr. Pawlowski came to The Great Egg Harbor municipalities or sre they closed corporationa of spe- Riverview Hospital in 1965 as Bridge project is expected to cial interest? Main Office: director of purchasing and be completed in time for the CMitnut St., Red Bank, NJ. W701 Branch Offices: served as assistant adminis- summer traffic in 1972 while IT* m. 15. Mlddlelown, N.J. 19 Bolt Main St., Freehold, N.J. trator from 1067 until this the entire expansion project Are they attracting the'young man of the community V) Broodwoy, Long Branch, N.J. spring. As director of pur- John K. Pawlowski .has a 1974 target date. to their ranks? EitoMllhtd In 1171 by John H. Cotit old Henry Pay chasing he established a cen- The authority rejected bids FuDllitwd by The Red Bonk Register .,., . tralized system which af- and resides in Fair Haven. for maintaining and repairing Mtmber of the Associated Pre>s-The Associated Pnn Is entitled e* forded the hospital consid- duilvtly to the use for repuMlcallon ol all the local news printed In this newspaper Originally from Brooklyn, collection equipment and Are they serving as a positivs social Influence In the Oft well pi all AP news dUpotchei. erable savings with increased Mr. Maher moved to the shore voted to continue at the cost i they serve? .A Second clos) postao.1 paid at Red Dank. N.J. 0*701 and at additional malllra efficiency. All purchases for of 110,830 per month an exist- OlllIcei ? Publlshej'dolly?!Monday through Friday. Moll subscriptions payable In o
C. SIDUN, Director 747-0332
• ' HI Ml Price is effective Sunday, June 27 only Worden Funeral Home SUPPLY IS LIMITED 60 E. FRONT ST. OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY OPEN SUNDAYS 8:30 - 4:00 - CLOSED TUESDAYS Day and Night Phone. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, fridayand Saturday 8:30-6:00 747-0557 Clark Foster Mgr. "helping people with lawn problems for ov«r 70 years' it's a secret, but watch St ACME your paper for something. MONUMENTS BARCLAY HENDERSON PROP. great at Steinbach!
DISTINCTIVE MEMORIALS CEMETERY , LETTERING Red Bonk 197 1« STATE HWY. HO, 3S 1747-48871 watch this newspaper for details Phone 747-0465 Shrewsbury Ave. Photo Taking Restrained Open city The D&jSejibBt, Bed toMfMrffowraJf. J, Frid*y, Jone 25,1971 5 V] Rabbi Weiner To Be Israel Tr|p Leader MATAWAN TOWMSH1P - duded in the group are two of of Israel and to visit and have fed' the Bible lugtnte At Drug School in City ^™^ Rabbi Henry M. Weiner, spiri- Temple Shalom's 1971 con- study the historic sites men- tour, bat they wm be accom- >. LONG BRANCH - If The It was announced last week Tuesday, Mr. Maknta held a tual leader of Temple Shalom, firmation class, Frandne Ru- tioned in the Bible. It also LONG BRANCH-The de- the Reform congregation, doff, of Lincroft, and Candy helps to cement a bond be- panted tins year by a senior | Daily Register observes the that Mr. Makuta would start a. class session on the front partment of recreaflon, parks, rabbinical student as wen as a J proper protocol and receives class of 11 trainees in the for- lawn. and conservation announces here, wOI depart Tuesday on! Grodon, here, who were tween the youth of this coun- a seven-week tour of Israel. awarded partial scholarships try and the young nation of Is- native Israeli guide. I the sanction of the state De- mer academy Monday. The On Wednesday, the class IS supervised summer play- ' Rabbi Weiner notes that | partment'of Institutions and 'classes would take place this was held in a hallway in the grounds will open Monday as' Both Rabbi and Mrs. Wei- for the trip by the temple. rael by person to person con- Agencies, Its readers soon week from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., it former school. part of its summer program. ner will be the leaders of a The primary aim of the tact many alumni of previous I may possibly be privileged to was said. Meanwhile, the governor's Two new mobile units will National Bible Institute tour, tour, according to Babbi Wei- This will be the third time tours have returned to Israel | see a plcture'of the initial The training sessions got off sponsored by the Union of ner, is to see the ancient land that Rabbi and Mrs. Weiner anti-drug program has started travel around the city, provid- American Hebrew Congrega- as exchange students or even ' state drug program trainees to a poor start, however, with this class designed to ing teen centers, a skate-mo- settlers to subsequent yean. In the former Star of the Sea when thetlass appeared at produce summer workers for bite, sports centers, and street tions. Forty-one teenagers Long Branch Art Academy, Chelsea Ave. the'site Monday and found programs to kick off his over- dances. from all parts of the United there was no water for sani- States will make the pilgri- Festival Opens July 1 After attempting to contact all drug fight Feature films will be shown mage to Israel this year. In- Edward Makuta, the pro- tary faculties and no chairs to Mayor Cioffi continues to Thursday nights at the Morris LONG BRANCH - Plans gram's instructor, for two accommodate the class. threaten legal action to halt Avenue School and Friday have been made by the board days, be was located at the Mayor Henry B. Cioffl has the chief executive's plan to nights at the Gregory School of directors of the Long new learning center by Begis- condemned the state's pur- treat youthful drug users at -from July 1 through Aug. 20 at Branch Historical Museum for ter Chief Photographer Son chase of the former Catholic the Chelsea Ave. site. 9 p.m. BarMitzvahSet the Long Branch Art Festival ffiwss Lordi. girls' school at a $150,000 price City officials and residents Special events, such as For Joel Panzer July 1 to 5 on the museum WE WILL FINANCE COMPLETE JOB • LOW. To no avail, however. tag and a plan by Gov. Wil- are keeping a watchful eye on trips, clinics, street hockey, NEW SHREWSBURY - grounds, 1260 Ocean Ave. MONTHLY PAYMENTS • NO INTEREST Mr. Makuta told the photo- liam T. CahlU to spend an the use of the school, fearful it tournaments, shows, basket- Joel Panzer, son of Dr. and The judging will take place 1 grapher that he couldn't allow added $300,000 to refurbish the- will graduate into a thera- ball and softball, are planned. Mrs. Milford Panzer of Marl- Saturday, July 3, starting at 1 MIDDLESEX PIPELINE CO. 'pictures of his class of train- facility. peutic drug treatment center. The supervised playgrounds boro, celebrates his Bar, Mit- p.m. Awards will be made Monday, July 5, at 2 p.m. FIELD OFFICE: RT. 35, MIDDLETOWM ees without the approval of Due to the lack of chairs, used will be the Broadway, zvah tomorrow at Sabbath DIAL 671-4194 his (Mr. Hakuta's) superiors. and the balmy weather Farewell Party Church Street, Elberon, Gar- morning services at Mon- field, Gregory, Lenna Con- mouth Reform Temple at 10 For Pastor row, Morris Avenue, and West o'clock. FAIR HAVEN-The youth End Schools; Woodrow Wilson Joel is a seventh grader at fellowship, church members Homes, Garfield Court, Grant Marlboro Central School, and friends gave a farewell Court, Sea View Manor, Jerry where bis favorite subjects surprise party for the Rev. Morgan Park, Van Court are reading and gymnastics. Charles G, Hankins, Us wife, Park, Branchport Park, and Nancy, and their three chil- Atlantic Ave. Park.; dren, Peter, Ruth and Phillip. High Interest A presentation of "This Is Your Lite In Six Years" was Land Award portrayed by the yoata fellow- and Flexibility ship and ajso presented in book form to the Hankins Set by Jury family. COMPLETE Other gifts included a draw- ing depicting the activities the At $65,000 for ALL you can eat at JOLLY TROLL • 40 delicious foods including Rev. Mr. Hankins and his FREEHOLD - A jury ASPHALT family were involved hi over has .awarded f 65,000 to Mr. dessert and beverage! Bring the kids - only 17 cents a year up to age the past six years, a cande- 'and Mrs. John P. Tergis, Gor- PAVING labra engraved with "Good dons Corner-Wickatunk Road, 10! Informal dining and casual attire at the Shore's greatest smorgas- Luck for the Future" and a Marlboro, for two tracts of color television set. land needed for highway con- bord! And there's always plenty of FREE parking. PARKING LOIS Mayor Robert Matthews at- struction in Marlboro north of tended the party and spoke of Gordons Corner Road. 1 DRIVEWAYS his association with the Rev. The unanimous verdict was Stop in this weekend . TENNIS COURTS Mr. Hankins and their work hi against the state Commission- AND the community. er of Transportation. The Rev. Richard L. Wilson The state had offered Rt. 35, HAZLET SEAL COATING of Pout Pleasant will succeed $35,550 for the land, which in- the Rev. Mr. Hapfrftii, who is cludes 7.18 acres needed for Hazlet Plaza Shopping Center moving toMerchantville . the Rt. 18 freeway and .165 (Pky. Exit 117) acre needed for the widening A SMOIGASKMD OP KX» AN» Daily 11 A.MJ-2 P.M., 4-» P.M. of Gordons Corner Road. WN KM THE WHOIE rAMIU CALL Kcator IMtnl Bcnm Teitttl Sunday 11 A.M.-9 P.M. . 542-8606 Barn Blaze A condemnation commis- Oe»wU bonne* Co*. ' FOR ' If NO ANSWER CAll 1 sion awarded ?62,500 last Jan. ESTIMATES 291-2727 ._ Is Pat Out SHREWSBURY - Members Vincent J. Jennings of Bed of the fire company ex- Bank represented Mr. and tinguished a barn fire which Mrs. tergis and Deputy At- reportedly broke out at about torney General Gary Roettger OTTINGER & SON INC 9:36 a.m. Tuesday on the Igoe appeared for the state. The MIDDLETOWN BANKING CO. Estate, Sycamore Ave. two-day trial was before Supe- P.O. BOX 154 RED BANK Police Chief Raymond Mass rior Court Judge Andrew A. ft says minor damage was done Salvest to a carriage shed room. CONTINUES TO PAY Two Towns Get Grants TRENTON - The Depart- nent of Housing and Urban Development has announced approval of aid to the Boroughs of New Shrewsbury and Sea Bright under the Wa- ter and Sewers Facilities grant to help them with sewer construction projects. New Shrewsbury will get 11,500,000 for the construction of force mains, lateral and collection sewers in the north- ern portion of the borough. Sea Bright will get $588,000 for construction of force mains within the borough and a gravity sewer in conjunction with the Borough of Rumson. AsburyPark Grant Approved WASHINGTON - U.S. Sen. Chffoni P. Case, B-N.J., an- nounced yesterday that As- bury Park has had the final $870^54 of a 13.804,958 Housing and Urban Development grant approved. A spokesman for the sena- tor's office said the money is to be used to redevelop about 50 acres on the westside along SpringwoodAve. FROM Asbury Park must have specific proposals approved by HUD before the city ac- tuaDy receives the money, be DAY OF Per Annum ISAGREATWAYOFUFE said. Compounded GET IN ON IT! Tool Possession Quarterly Guilt Is Found DEPOSIT FOB ONLY $ FREEHOLD - John Salvio Condominium apartment living* is tomor- of Long Island was found guilty by a jury of possession row's way of life ... here for you today. ON GOLDEN of burglar tools Aug. 28 in WITHDRAWALS PERMITTED AFTER ... private club, swimming pool, your own Matawan Township. 90 DAYS DURING FIRST 10 DAYS OF ' private balcony or terrace . . . plus the 158* Salvio was charged with ANY CALENDAR QUARTER MINIMUM luxury of elegant apartment home living: possession of assorted tools, various vending machine keys PASS BOOK INITIAL DEPOSIT $1,000 equal YOUR BEST INVESTMENT .... per month and lock picks. . Invest in the f nn AND In the savings... County Court Judge Patrick NO SERVICE CHARGE CHECKING AC- J. McGann Jr. set Aug. 6 for high on a hiD in Lakewood, the real heart 3V2 8,4% room ACCOUNTS COUNTS AVAILABLE WITH SAVINGS Apartment Homes from ACCOUNTS OF * 1,000 OR OVERI of Ocean County's play land! Only $15,990 Assistant County Prose- fcuys yon the High Point way of life ... $15,990 to $21,240. cutor Joseph Regan 3rd -11600 down... and from then on you build presented the state's case in equity in your own home! A great buy... the one-day trial Bonald Sage of Freehold represented Sal- for all ages. vio. • You need only 10% down. Typical Fiiunclng MIDDLETOWN BANKING COMPANY Termi: Cuh price of 1 bedroom Executive •pvl- Honor Student ment $15,990. Cuh down Myment $1600. m mortms of $14390. 360 eqml piymwtl W 3TLAKEWO0D BED BANK-In the list of $too!69 over 30 yean tnctadw ntadpil lad Prospect St, UtawoiHU.08701 River Street School pupils 100 Highway 35 Interest, plui EiL 157.07 par month Red Ettita presented certificates for out- 1250 Highway 35 Tn and «n woman nuluUiiuw* dmjw. dify 10 to dusk. Monty tif(L standing scholarship' at the At Hand* Knr Road DIRECTIONS: Oardtfi SUt« torkwiy to Exit 91. CoatiDM on M» 549 ippcM 1 mill to 111 traffic HfM school Honorarium's nipper- it Mt 81 (OHM AW). Turn rl|M to «U 9. Turn hit IK»O< M milt b 2nd traffic llfftt at Pmpict dance, the name of Joanne Open Saturday Till Noon at Navesink River Office St (Paul Kiratull Kospftil), turn riffrt to preptrty. Mi fitrte Slit* hftww to bit 123 «>to RU » Caruso, an eighth grader, was • Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation »«l cootliiimi ibovt. '• . inadvertently omitted in yes- HHOTHCT me COUWIMITY if AWMIOIU* w wiiowaMo UM TECHMum awoMTiOMKmicw amoamm. terday's DaUy Register. - 1ESE5BEGISTER Mail to POWs Slackens peace group* in urging an im- U W^ Published by Thi!Re(IE*nk RegtsUr JOm A. GOLDSMITH mediate withdrawal geared to a Hanoi promise of POW re- ARTHUR Z.KAMIN Release of U.S. prisoners INSIDE lease. The concerted pressure President and Editor lias developed into a pivotal has been removed and, if the issue in the nation's dis- WASHINGTON mail is any index, any gains in . Bly, Executive Editor William F. Sandford, Associate Editor engagement from Vietnam, _ the treatment of POWs have but the controversy is viewed been eroded. as a mixed blessing by some The continuing controversy Fridav,June2s, 1971 mail as an index (since that is POW families. a factor which can be mea- over prisoner release also has When POW families joined sured) the situation did im- Upstaged other efforts made to form the National League prove. on behalf of the prisoners. ALLEN SMITH of Families of American Pris' Much Discussion 'There is, for example, the un- oners and Missing in South: Now President Nixon and usual petition filed in the Radio Hanoi and the clandes- hire. east Asia, the idea was to, his aides have made it clear United Nations earlier this tine Communist radio in South In June, 1970, however, bring concerted public pres- that release of the prisoners is month by Mrs. Wilmer N. Vietnam had broadcast propa- Grubb's name was not includ- sure to bear and thus improve a sine qua nontfor any final Grubb of Colonial Heights, ganda statements allegedly ed on a supposedly complete the lot of the prisoners - look- U.S. withdrawal from Viet- Va. made by Grubb. list of "US. prisoners secured by one of the peace groups. ing, of course, to their even- nam. The prisoner issue has Mrs. Grubb's husband, fly- On Feb. 10, more than two On the supposedly official list, tual release. The initial em- been extensively discussed at ing an unarmed reconnais- weeks after his capture, phais was on securing the sance plane, was shot * down North Vietnam's news agency made public last December, the stalemated peace talks in Grubb was listed as "dead." treatment guaranteed by the Paris, but the mail has been over Quang Binh Province in announced that. Grubb was a Geneva convention. Vietnam on Jan. 26,1966. The prisoner. On that same day a North Vietnamese officials dropping off again. later reported that Grubb had While no one believes the New China News Agency re- Japanese source released a Recently, of course, the died only a week after his effort was wholly successful, ported the capture of a photograph of Grubb being united family front has start- capture - and before any of some gains were noted. Using treated for a minor injury by ed to fragment. Some POW downed U.S. pilot the follow- the pictures were released! the volume of incoming POW families have joined with ing day, and by Feb. 7 both a nurse at the time of his cap- Technology and You By SYLVIA POSTER the space program. Tech- payoff for the average man, i nology, therefore, is at the or that technology can ever Q - How much of a payoff very core of our economic so- solve our population prob- will our multi-billion dollar YOUR MONEY'S ciety and is either a great lems. space program have for the contributor or a vicious threat The Dangers average person? A-Only a WORTH to our lives - or maybe both. Q - What are the greatest minority will benefit - and Which would you say? Com- dangers of technology? A - about one in 10 will actually We have become too depend- pare your attitudes with PORTER be harmed by this program. zens in the Boston area, both these: ent on machines. The pace of Q - Who then benefits most young and old, and from a Q - What have been the modern life does not permit are fairly heavily conceit from our advancing tech- wide variety of occupations greatest contributions of tech- time enough for people to re- trated in the upper in- nology? A - Primarily busi- and income levels. The study nology? A — Machines have late tq each other. Factory as- telligence brackets, nearly nessmen and scientists, not is part of a 10-year Harvard made our lives easier, TV sembly lines destroy interest half of those in the lowest edu- average workers. project on Technology and So- makes people more aware of in work. cated brackets also would go Q - But will technology be ciety to be completed in 1974, what's happening around Q - Who should pay the along. able to solve our national pol- examining virtually every im- them, computers make busi- high cost of fighting pollution? We as a nation are ob- lution problem? A - Yes. portant aspect of the impact ness more efficient, automa- A— A significant 75 per cent viously not going to base These are sample opinions of technology on us as individ- tion creates better working reported they would accept a budget and other decisions on of a cross-section of U.S. citi- uals. conditions. In sum, an over- tax hike of $50 a year to help, any cross-section of American jens disclosed in a fascinating Friend or Foe? whelming majority believes stop water pollution and seven opinions. But if you agree study by a team of Harvard Technology, most of you technology does more good out of 10 are convinced that with most of these findings, Social Systems Analysts head- would define quickly, is "ma- than harm- However, only a driving in our inner cities you are quietly screaming ed by David Armor. The in- chines" and modern tech- minority thinks the dis- must eventually be banned. how crazily out of line are so tensive. study, which I re- nology is computers, engi- coveries from our space pro- While those favoring tax hikes many of our projects and pri- cently obtained, covered citi- neering, science, research, gram will have much of a and moratoriums on driving orities. \ Storytellers and Dreamers "PUSH!"- Hy JIM BISHOP dorf-Astoria to listen to a thologist identified it as a fe- noted millionaire discuss male of uncertain age. Two Some columnists are great "The Successful Formula for dentists positively identified "idea" men. Others strive .to THE Better Business." The in-, their work and the husband perfect a sytle of Writing. A vitation went into the basket, was arrested. Another Rail Crisis few achieve one or the other. REPORTER and was retrieved. Along the He was convicted and given The rest fail in varying de- back he wrote: "Guy is crook. 20 years to life. He served 18 The borough of Freehold and the The 12.09 miles of track involved may grees. Walter Winchell, who Does time. When free, latches of them and was freed. He comity Planning Board deserve support seem insignificant to the federal govern- was always hustling his in time, the poverty-strick- onto poor inventor, gives him • was a gray-haired bum with a friends for "items," was nei- en formed queue lines down peanuts for his discovery. Be- walking stick. One day he saw from all Monmouth residents in the oppo- ment, but their disappearance would be a ther a writer nor an idea man. the stairs of the stable. The comes highly successful. Last his wife on a shopping street, sition they are raising to the request of BISHOP catastrophe to the four municipalities And yet, for a couple of dec- people trusted Doctor Brown line he's invited tp make "I sure put one over on you," wood together and take the Jersey Central Railroad to abandon its which need them. ades, he was the greatest of as no other man of medicine. speech on 'The Success For- she said happily. The old man joint apart. ^You're a writer; Matawan to Freehold branch line. Justifiably fearful that the ICC may them all. One day he was found dead mula for Better Business.'" beat her to death with his I'm an idea* man. Ml do the One of the points raised by the county grant the railroad's request, Freehold is Ironically, the thing I re- behind the rolltop desk he A third writer, then on Park cane. The question was: talking. You da the writing. member best about WW is not kept upstairs. The poor Could the authorities try the planners was that the loss of freight ser- asking Freehold Township, Marlboro and Row, saw a small item about We split down the middle." an item; it's a short story. He chipped in their dimes and a man who served half his life man and convict him twice vice would seriously affect about 20 in- • Matawan to join it in a cooperative effort I couldn't help laughing. told about a well-known doc- quarters to giye Doc a decent in prison for killing his wife, for the same crime? Here stood a cipher with noth- dustries that employ about 670 people. The that would find the municipalities purchas- tor who was intoxicated while burial. The hearse was follow- then located her alive and All columnists had assis- ing asking me to quit a good immediate damage, if the Interstate Com-. ing the railroad right-of-way that rests in treating a patient. When the ed by hundreds of people. At well when he attained his tants. I was one with Mark job paying $80 a week. merce Commission grants the railroad's those municipalities. man died, the doctor's career the cemetery, someone freedom. This writer opened Hellinger. One day a kid on "Nothing doing," I said. He ended. Overnight he dis- moaned: "We forgot to chip in request, would be the loss of jobs in an Freehold Mayor J. William Boyle his yarn by painting a portrait the "Graphic" phoned me to appeared to be weary. appeared. for a headstone." He ran all of a neighborhood which has meet him at the old Park Cen- urea that already is classified as one of says he doesn't want those towns to go "Maybe you're right," he On New York's Lower East the way back to the East Side. not seen a certain lady in tral Hotel. I did. "What's on said, "buf we could make mil- 'Substantial unemployment. into the railroad business, but does want to Side, there was an empty 'Upstairs' weeks. The husband, when your mind?" I said. He lions together." I shook hands It also would mean reduced municipal make certain that the right-of-way isn't stable and a hayloft. An aging • When he returned, the poor questioned, says gruffly that walked up and down a thin and left. A down payment was taxes and more gloom in the dismal pic- purchased by private enterprise. man rented it and stuck his were still mumbling prayers. "she's gone to visit some rela- rug with his hand on his head. put on a house. On Saturdays name on a cross in the grass. A piece of wood was stuck in tives in the west and good rid- "1 had this little column going ture of the county's overall economy. With all of the complications that sur- I took the girls to the matinee It read:,"Doctor Brown - Up- the ground. It read: "Doctor dance." on radio and I put the rap in around the corner. Every- Beyond that, the abandonment would round dealings with the Jersey Central, stairs." For years, Doctor Brown - Upstairs." In time, the neighbors tell on Walter Winchell. So they thing was great until the throw a real roadblock in the path of many negotiations to keep the freight line run- Brown treated the poor. If Another columnist, a good ' the police. The cops question fired me." name, two stories high, came municipalities in western Monmouth Coun- ning will be difficult It will not be impos- they had some coins to give idea man, was tossing mail the husband. No one knew I expressed proper sorrow up on the screen: "Produced ty which nave based their lures to industri- sible, though, if Freehold's pleas for help .him, he accepted with thanks. into a basket One was an in- where his wife was. Men with and asked what this meant to by Jerry Wald." If they had nothing, the treat- al firms on the availability of railroad ' are answered by Gov. Cahill and our state vitation requesting him to at- shovels dug up the backyard me. "You and I," he said sol- It gave me instantaneous ment cost nothing. tend a luncheon at the Wal- and found a skeleton. A pa- emnly, "are going to Holly- transportation. legislators. •heartburn... Neighborhood Parks Vets' Law Needs Amendment 133 Second St until now. As a temporary sop jobs? How many will stay World War II and Korean Keyport, N.J. Red Bank is making a good move in emphasis on borough-sponsored recrea- to the pressures exerted by with those jobs and take ad- vets. Yet we are making ex- JTo the Editor: establishing neighborhood parks. The first tional activities that are designed to at- the American Legion for ac- vantage of pension benefits 20 tra money on the state lot-' Recently, Governor Cahill FROM OUR one-to be at Hudson Ave. and Elm tract the whole community. These enjoy- tion on the bill, Gov. Cahill or 30 years from now? tery, which was first sug- signed a bill claiming to ex- made a concession that re-, The state will still have to gested as a source of revenue- Place-will be small, but it will be used, able events for young and old undoubtedly tend Civil Service benefits to READERS duced the time a vet would be fill jobs these vets might be for a bonus. With surplus for the most part, by small fry who cannot do much to instill the residents' pride in Vietnam Era veterans, known required to serve in the Viet- appointee) to, and at the same gained from the lottery, it; their home town, and that is a commodity as S-607. The fine'print on this easily get to the borough's major parks. nam geographical area* from salaries as non-vets. The only seems to me the state can af-; bill has not been brought to was passed by the Senate and The concept is a good one, with im- which should never be in short supply. 180 days to 90 days. difference is that the vet ford to give a minimum $100 the attention of the public and' Assembly over four years It means: Only those New might get the job before the oonus to veterans of all thiw portant social consequences. Councilman We've heard a great deal from Wash- many veterans. Lest they be ago, but has lain on the desks' Jersey veterans serving in the non-vet by a 5 per cent differ- conflicts. What is happening Edward Minear, who heads the parks ington about bringing "parks to the misled, -please note this bill of Govs. Hughes and_Cahill. physical and geographical ence, but at no additional cost in this proud state of New Jer- and recreation committee, says plans are people," and it's pleasant to know that area of Southeast Asia (Viet- to the state. Where is the sey? The veteran is certainly in the works to dot the borough with these Red Bank continues its good planning nam), not Cambodia or In-. state putting out any extra asked to take a back seat For money? Pretty ridiculous, mini parks. practices by taking advantage of the fed- I dochina, may receive a 5 per shame! Let's do something isn't it? What is the answer? In recent years, Red Bank has placed eral funds preferred. cent Civil Service preference about it! Now!. and the right to accrue pen- This bill, already passed, Elizabeth N. Dierto sion benefits. What about the can be amended. How? All veterans who were disrupted veterans and all the citizens from their homes, torn from who care about the future of- Moral Obligation their loved ones, sacrificed se- MiddletoWs Folk Festival our veterans should write 8 Galloping Hill Road niority in jobs, and lost out on their legislators, and all veter- Hoimdel,N.J. college studies, but served ans' organizations should pass The Middletown Folk Festival opens a this year through the efforts of Joan Luck- To the Editor: elsewhere? They, too, have resolutions to be sent to Tren- It was distressing to read two-performance stand tonight at 7:30 in hardt of Shrewsbury, silversmith and art- served when demanded of ton stating that this bill is dis- ist. recently a side effect of the Bodman Park, off Navesink River Road, them. They have suffered the criminatory, capricious and tragedy in Vietnam. The re- with a concert featuring folk singers and The festival originated in 1968 because same losses as those who not in the best interests of the port said that there were so*, New Jersey_ veterans as a> instrumentalists from all parts of the na- a couple of folk music afficionados, Dr. come home now and can use proximately 200,000 unwanted .this bill to help seek employ- tion, some of them with national reputa- and Mrs. Richard Levine, were willing to whole. Don't just complain; mixed American-Vietnamese ment. suggest the solution that all children born anee the con- conduct a folk music workshop. Skillful v> tions gained through television and radio The act of the U.S. Con- Vietnam vets, no matter flict began. performances: performers in their own right-known as .gress extending all benefits to where they served and in ac- When we read tte daily cas- The Townfolk-they arid the Recreation men serving in the Vietnam cordance with the provisions ualty list, we shouMleBliaB It will be the fourth annual presenta- Commission were pleasantly surprised at Era does not exclude those of the U.S. Congress, be in- that it is far from being com- tion by Middletown's Recreation Commis- the enthusiasm the show generated. who served in Korea, Ger- cluded in the amendment. I'm plete. These children, ah many, Japan or even in the surprised that the bill hasn't sion. The first three were so impressive Musicians, dancers, woodcarvers, pot- though alive, are also casu- United States. Why should S- been declared uncon- alties. They are unwanted in that toe state Department of Fine Arts ters, silversmiths, weavers, glass workers, 607 exclude them? It certainly stitutional or even that the their own country, lacking a tUs ywr provided a ?1,000 grant to encour- candlemakers and .stitchers and sewers won't cost the taxpayers any Civil Liberties Union hasn't home and love. They abjogo age their continuance. will be among those who will be on hand more money! started action. unnoticed by our government ' The program tomorrow will start at for the festival, which is appropriately I have heard the excuse, Remember, New Jersey we are constantly told that used that it is not economic- » am. with a special workshop in Irish named because of its appeal to folks of all ranks fifth overall in prestige, a "moral obligation" keeps us ...jll, ,Vieiliini ,IlonJM»»Sils« '& which will be followed by a variety types and ages, people whose appreciation adyantflawiiragress eJMto** w w 'It's A Devilish Idea — Pretty Soon They'll Go ogyriif . we are one of only three have a -moral obligation" to A <*raft intMh. oi it have niade it a high point in summer Vietnam vets in the state. states of 50 who have never Nnls Trying f o Get Repairs, Same As Us" these children? ^ ^ " which fat greatly expanded events in the area. How many win apply for state passed a state bonus for Bernice and Bernard Seemu , Jane 25,1971 7 Eatontown Aidmen Get More Insurance Coverage 4th celebrations wflj .(tut game, sing along, and o$er w8fc a Iris pjn. parade fcwa •&tmt* xtjttfe purfc Vbeworks EATtWTOlWIVW0I •-" iBCrttSeIncreased tOtZXXN, r . faiingr tfw(tin contracMotMAtt dowrln»n» tIno. "wlUwllBI bIwei adde >
yraduated Hcts en owl pool poet b« proud to own fedptoaU It ntCon el 11" Uww. mdm twitn urtm «kh a knritM »" MW dwlur lue, arpMid Mint oroond Hi. mtk, pod AJuminunt bow th thot wool ml a l i r«l.B in tmf comfort souua • lo GAua vrMrenno VIKTI UNR w«TttiaoviiiYiuifflr. .. . YOU CAN ifAVI THIS POOL U» e 20 CJIUCE WIMTERIZED VINYL LINER, THIS POOL CAN BE LEFT UP ALL YEA*. CAN BE LETT UP *U rUI. MartOfftiyo • Maintenance free aluminum wall, painted in luxurious sky blue PamttoWctrman Mldiae! Goldstein • Wollis foctory pre-dosed for fast.easier installation UtBeSBvtr Tomtffiver row i rout POOU Atbuyftik . »OOl • Locked wall top and bottom (or added strength and rigidity Heather Kftnban James PrttentfH fiiut FtLTEK Peter Ank* 5 KWt 4 Him wild •/> HP KOTO* POOL 4 FILTH urilh V. HP MOTH nint DMl BridtTown 24'iU" POOL NtptUM 399 t MCKWASH 101 lASIIt CUAWIK. 4 IACXW.SH F0I IASIH CLIAMIHC '219 NandBeeglt JaekKrittzman James Rownbloom *399 PltlKESS OVAL POOLS Mitmo Irrtsrtjken 24' Long. U' Wide ; Branch Brook tells tatabkM, • •Witt" RSWOOB SIT-ON and 4' Deep foOL k flini it like it is on... Roderick Benwn Robin Lamb lynneRosibach MO( AROOW ERTIK POOL 535. AttatfcHttMatdf fr«<
Register Staff Photo SUBJECT OF STUDY —AAichele Brown, four-year-old daughter of Mrs. Michael Brown, background, has a combination of diseases, so rare that Quarrel May be Usefu numerous doctors reportedly studied her cose. The child suffers from tha- lassemia, a form of anemia found to occur especially in children,of Medi- terranean parents, and sickle cell anemia, which affects the black race al- most exclusively. By DB. JAMES M. LONG. strengthening the marriage or LONG Today, more than ever, the in the'interest of the chil- between his parents his own average marriage is based on dren's development. basis for identification is his work and understanding. In Family Disagreement Useful own thoughts and feelings' he CDA Court Marian Lists Slate such a dose relationship it is master degree at Temple Uni- regent's pin to retiring regent Certainly a bitter quarrel in has experienced in his quar- COLTS NECK - Sister realistic to .expect that differ- Mary Francesca of the Eng- versity. Mrs. Paul Foumier. Counselor marriage is not a good thing. rels. If his parents have ences wOl occur between hus- People say and do things in learned the "art" of con- lish department of Red Bank New officers of Court Ma- A check for $500 for the new band and wife. The way in rian for the two-year term in- church building fund was anger that can damage any frontation and subsequent re- Catholic High School, was which problems are resolved tioned various answers are guest speaker at the annual clude Mrs. John Mayerski, re- presented to the Rev. Ray- relationship, sometimes per- solvement of their argument can become a new growth ex- given for their reluctance to Mother-Daughter Communion gent; Mrs. Stephen Zwolinski mond Griffin, pastor of St manently. However, a dis- the child will come to learn perience for the couple, and engage each other in an argu- Breakfast of Court Marian, and Mrs. Emory 'JDedalis, vice Mary's Church. This repre- agreement between marriage that adults can argue but'^e for their children. ment From their own family Catholic Daughters of Amer- regents; Mrs. George Curiey, sents proceeds of a recent partners can actually be con- able to resolve their diff|r- In countless marriages, experience as children they ica. Members attended Mass financial secretary; Mrs. fund-raising event, under the structive and useful. For chil- . ences Without physical ctifi- claims, have been made by cite the absence of conflict be- in St Mary's Church, here, Thomas Gerstenberg, record- chairmanship of Mrs. Four- dren, the observation of a tact Or continued bickering; couples that "there has never tween their parents as suf- and bad breakfast in the Elk's ing secretary; Mrs. Ray Ro- nier and Mrs. Ferdinand quarrel between their parents Clears The Air :*:? been a cross word spoken be- ficient reason for their rejec- Club, Freehold. gers, treasurer; Mrs. Theo- John. A new church is in the can be a valuable growth ex- Later, during their own tween them." Unfortunately tion of such behavior. Others dore Damen, lecturer; Mrs. planning stages and will be perience. marriage, the children will be" Sister Francesca, who many couples have a fear of feel that their children should Joseph Hand, monitor, and built on a site at the corner of In his daily contact with his better prepared to engage spoke about understanding direct confrontation because a be protected from awareness, Mrs. John Bajcar, Mrs. Fred Bt. 34 and Phalanx Road. playmates the young child is their spouses in a healthy ar- today's youth, was graduated verbal battle is repulsive to of any possible conflict be- Perrotti, and Mrs. Paul Four- Special guests at the break- confronted with many in- gument which clears the air. with highest honors from them. The reason for their tween the parents. The rea- Georgian Court College, nier, trustees. fast included Mrs. Rosa Ser- cidents which lead to fights. They will not have to bottle up avoidance of a heated argu- sons or motives which prevent Lakewood, and is pursuing a Mrs. Mayerski presented a rano and her daughter Isa- His reaction to the situation their feelings because of fear ment may be related to a mis- a couple from entering into a bella, Colts Neck, Cuban ex- can reach the heights of blind of their own feelings or ths conception of their marital or lively discussion may not be iles. They were entertained by rage and hatred. Therefore, violent reaction of their parental roles. When ques- in the best interest of a youthful musical group, di- when he witnesses a quarrel spouse. '.; rected by Mrs. Peter Blake. Chairman of the breakfast, (Peautifui Mrs. Theodore Damen, greeted state court officers, Retirement Mrs. John Galvin, Jersey City, treasurer, and Mrs. Changing Chit for Chatter ^facilities Granville LeMeune Jr., Colts Neck, monitor. Also greeted Dear Ann Landers: I start- realize they have no relation- of a sick person without feel- grammar-or they re-read a were Miss Helen Lang, Red ed a tetter to you a couple of ship with their children. ing hurt or resentful. You ob- letter after having written it* ENJOYANEXOUSiVESECnONOFTHE Bank, Court Marian's past hours ago. I left it on my desk Dear Ann Landers: Should viously cannot handle it, and and it sounds dumb, or illiter- BERKELfY-CARTERfTHOTEl district deputy, and Mrs. Jo- after witting only a few lines. Ann I continue to remain friendly you should not try. ate, so they decide no letter at i'SUPERB DECOR* HEALTH SPA* GOLF > seph Arcoleo, Freehold, My dad walked by and saw it with a person who is hi des- Dear Arm Landers: Please all would be better than what * EUOANTFIREPROOF BUILDING present district deputy. * INDOOR HEATED SEAWATER POOL He said in a half-kidding way, perate need of professional tell me what is wrong with they've written. Reserve •* OUTDOOR FOOL AN D CABANA CLUB "I see you are writing to Ann Landers help—even though the rela- people who do not answer let- judgment honey, because you *CONGENIALCOMPANIONSHIP RUMMAGE SALE Landers. 1 can't imagine what tionship is threatening my ters. I have called friends never know why people don't *HEAR OCEAN AND ALLCONVENIENCES MIDDLETOWN - Fairview *,G,OURMET CUISINE *TEAHOOM you have to complain about" things-and more things. I'd own emotional balance? This long distance after extended write. . •; First Aid Squad will sponsor a I didn't answer. At the "dinner gladly give up an the things if person keeps me on the phone periods of silence, just to see HOTEL BERKELEY CARTE RET rummage sale tomorrow Give in or lose him.. .when my parents would only treat for hours and the conversa- if they are all right. On the starting at 9 a.m. in the Head- table he started again-"Don't a guy gives you this line, look RESERVATIONS . •FIREPROOF me like an adult I can't recall tions usually end with her •phone they say, "I'll put a let- - ASBURYPARK Send For Details On Our dens Comer firehouse, RL 35, forget when you criticize your out! For tips on how to handle ever having had a real con- screaming and hanging up on ter in the mail today"-but one light north of Coopers parents to Ann Landers, be the super sex salesman, check versation with either of them. they don't. Bridge, Red Bank. Household sure to tell her you have your me. Ann Landers. Read her book- I guess this is my problem, items will be included in the own telephone, that we remo- I feel sorry for her, but I This has happened to me so let, "Necking And Pet- Ann Landers. What's the solu- sale. deled your bedroom and put fear for my own mental many times I have just about ting-What Are The Limits?" L (201) 775-500 Free Guest For A Day in a stereo. Be sure to men- tion?-^ Much And Too health. Sometimes, after a - lost my faith in people. I en- Send your request to Ann Stock Maritet Office in Hotel . Program tion that we promised you at- Little particularly stormy session, it joy writing letters. To me, it's Landers in care of your news- ON THE BOARDWALK, ASBURY PARK, NJ. rip to Europe next summer Dear Too: 1 gather you are takes days before I am able to the next best thing to conver- paper, enclosing 50 cents in after graduation." about 17-and this is pretty regain my sense of balance. sation. I can't understand coin and a long, stamped en- "It's funny, I was going to late to try to initiate your first If, in your opinion, I should why, at this very moment, at velope. BALLET ART SCHOOI L mention all those things-in a real, conversation with your -discontinue the relationship, least 15 people owe me let- parents. From you father's re- Directed by different context My whole please tell me how to show ters. Why are so many people PARTY HOSTS marks, I assume you two are slobs?-A Mystery Wrapped life seems to be things, things, this person I wish her RED BANK-Dr. and Mrs. HELA SLAVINSKA operating on different well.-A.T.H. hi An Enigma. formerly of the Ballet Russe Do Monto Carlo wavelengths. Herman Wiley, 326 Shrews- * BRIGHTEN THE * Dear A.T.H.: You can best Dear Wrapped: Not all de- bury Ave., were hosts at din- Parents who believe a ster- help your friend by suggesting relict correspondents are ner here in Bahrs Restaurant eo and a trip to Europe are the names of two or three doc- sfobs. Some" are., rather nice Highlands. Guests were Mr. where it's at are a sad lot Un- tors who have helped others. folks who are unsure of their and Mrs. Gary Lewis, 1402 ANNUAL fortunately, they become sad- Only an extremely stable spelling, their penmanship, or Rustic Place, Oakhurst DORM der as time goes on and they person can tolerate the abuse WITH A 493-4022 RECITAL BEDSPREAD or 2113 Rt. 35, OAKHURST : •— FREE ESTIMATES •DESIGN 8 P.M., SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1971 STUDIO COVER DRAWINGS From en- itUctiea of pUM, ttripM •nd Mi . . . AJio Hollywood V13T FACTORY A 5H0WR00M tfntit and M-rinr ceren. wtdgt *-»Wtd.»Fri. Middletown Twp. High School Auditorium bobttr csvtra I* mrtelu Tuftti AND ON TINDALL ROAD, MIDDLETOWN for qimt rotmt »nd int. too. PATIO COVERS CKlTCHENiltMAgTEBSJ SUMMER CLASSES IN SESSION Order now before summer. Complete selection of styles and color combinations. All work guaranteed. • 645 KITCHENS ARE BEHER AT KM • Ballet • Toe Here are 3 Reasons... • Character • AAodern • Carved Solid Wood Core CAU 741-5688 FOR FREE ESTIMATES • Hand Rubbed Oil Finishes SHHWStURY •ring Out Qnin-.NMunlB.wtY 18 BROAD STREET RED BANK 4M KtOAD ST. e Alt-Vinyl Interim Inc. Shelves 747-2507 - HOME 741-9592 —STUDIO Cat 747-4121 ALHOWEU ALUMINUM SALES >Wleets Agtfcnt Duet, Suha. REDBANK Into Action ByELEAKOBHABKO through dandng to Lester La- The ban win be staged, u (WmartNcm Editor} njn aid his Orchestra. A can- in other years, on the grounds SPRING LAKE-The dlelight dinner win be catered of the governor's summer guest ol honor, whisked in by by the Chanticler of Millburn. mansion in Sea Girt. helicopter, greeted the 125 No budget-saving event, it Gov. and Mrs. Cahill will be nootMlay luncheon guests in will cost $125 per person for guests of honor. Invited an informal receiving line - tickets. pests will include Republican and tfaen whisked out again by Wives of members of the leaders Sen. and Mrs. Clifford helicopter for another ap- state cabinet will be working P. Case, state chairman Joha pointment in New York. on the committees. Those who E. Dimon and Mrs. Dimon, Guest of honor was wife of were at the head table at yes-, the GOP congressional dele- the governor, Mrs. William T. terday's luncheon were Mrs. gation, members of the gover- Cahill, yesterday here in the William R. Sharp, wife of the nor's cabinet, state legislators Monmouth Hotel, where plans chief of staff, Department of and officials from throughout continued for the July 17 Gov- Defense; Mrs. Phillip Aiampi, the state. ernor's Golden Dome Ball in wife of Secretary of Agricul- Mrs. J. Bassett Winmill,' Sea Girt. ture; Mrs. James R. Cowan, Bay Head, president of the The New Jersey Republican wife of Commissioner of New Jersey State Federation Finance Committee, of which Health; Mrs. Edmund T. of Republican, Women, co- Edward K. N. Douglass is Hume, wife of Commissioner chaired yesterday's ladies* chairman, is sponsoring the of Community Affairs; Mrs. event with former state feder- black tie event, and was host James C. Brady Jr., wife of ation president, Mrs. Anne D. to Republican women Commissioner of Banking; Flynn, Deal. Among the Mon- throughout the state at the in- Mrs. Paul J. Sherwin, wife of mouth County women who troductory luncheon yes- Secretary of State; Mrs. Rich- were at yesterday's luncheon terday. ard J. Sullivan, wife of Com- and who will be hostesses, sell Mrs. Cahill's secretary, missioner of Environmental tickets and work on various Mrs. Elinor Wright, extended Protection; Mrs. William B. committees are Mrs. Harry for her boss, who could not Ozzard (formerly of Rumson), Seaman, Holmdel, who is stay for the hot roast beef wife of the president of the president of the Monmouth luncheon, the invitation to the state Public Utilities Commis- County Republican Women, • v .';'••.• Register Stair Phetot committee of workers to sion; Mrs. James A. Alloway, Mrs. Arthur S. Joice, Mrs. bUEST OF HONOR - Mrs. William T. GREETINGS — Wife of the governor, Mrs. Wllliqm T. Cahill, third from "Come to the ball," which wife of president of Civil Ser- Robert Maxwell, Mrs. Ben- center, chats with Mrs. Anne D. Flynn/ Dead left is greeted yesterday In the A/tonmoiith Hotel/ Spring Lake, at a lunch- promises an evening of festi- vice Commission, and Mrs. jamin Danskin, wife of the right, and tier daughter, Mrs. Hal L. Knox, Inter- eon setting plons lor the July 1?, Golden Dome, Ball by, left to right, Mrs. vities beginning with cocktails John C. Kohl, wife of the state County Clerk and GOP county token, at yesterday's pre-gala luncheon co- at 7p.m. fa a special recep- chairman; and Mrs. Joseph Benjamin Ht JJanskin, Wall Township; Mrs. Vincent P. Lamb, Llncroft, commissioner of trans- choired by ;tflrs. Flynn, and Mrs. J. Bassett Win- and Mrs. William |3. Ozzarrd, formerly.of Rurnson, wife of the president of tion tent and will continue portation. Azzolina. -nill of Bay Head, and attended by 125 Republican state Public Utilities Commission.- women from throughout the state. AAUW Branch Under New Leadership 1 T.TNfTHOFIQ T -— MrsMrS.. JOhJohn ServinCnmiingn wit..tllthi \Kt-r-Mrs. PavelkTlAimllran _ _ ^^ "7 IT. . * cationt**kt\r\f\, MrsMpC . Pavelk'P'lValtra tolirrhtaughtf Committed,PfltTllTliHArl *"* wil111*1l1 deaflnnll itiitlwith. resolution_u.n*.1.. *!*.„*•.s '„*.,and! othe-1L.1r businesU..~l~~s .Pavelka of X'eedsville Drive, on the branch's board of di- elementary school in Maple- how citizens can be effective that will determine the associ- was elected president of the rectors are first vice presi- wood and Chatham Township. in environmental work. ation's program for the next Northern Monmouth County dent, Mrs. Robert Bruno, Mid- Mrs. Pavelka resides here Delegates will act on a pro- two years, and elect naional Branch of the American Asso- dletown; second vice presi- with her husband and three posed legislative program, officers. ciation of University Women dent, Mrs. Elbert Redford, daughters. Before becoming . Jor the 1971 to 1973 biennium. Shrewsbury; third vice presi- president, Mrs. Pavelka During her term in office the dent, Mrs. Robert Patton, served as fellowships and branch will continue its stutjy Middletown; fourth vice presi- membership chairman. Miss Ellis Miss Bade* of the problems of "This dent, Mrs. Roger H. Bohl, One of her first duties as Beleaguered Earth" and em- Holmdel; recording secre- president will be to attend the bark upon the current and vi- tary, Mrs. Ronald Goff, Little •National Convention of the tal problems of "Dollar's Silver; treasurer, Mrs. Joseph AAUW which will be held in Worth," a study of consumer G. Kappel, Middletown; com- Dallas, Tex., during the week Engaged interests. munity problems, Mrs. John of June,27. Speakers will be Gabbe, Little Silver; cultural Aline Saarinen, NBC news Tennant-Ellis interests, Mrs. Larry Gilboy, correspondent and art critic, dical Center, Long Branch. Holmdel; education, Mrs. RUMSON - Dr. and Mrs. who will speak on '"The Creat- She is the granddaughter of, Richard Grantges, River William C. Ellis, 8 Sailers , ive Woman"; Keynoter Dr. the late Mr. and Mrs. John M. Plaza; world problems, Mrs. Way, announce the engage-v Harvey Wheeler, senior fellow Ellis of Rumson and Bethle- Philip Schuhmann, Holmdel; ment of his daughter, Miss at the Center for the Study of hem, Pa., and of Mrs. Para- 'bulletin, Mrs. Thomas Gibson, Charlotte Hall Ellis, to Democratic Institutions, will menter Toadvine, Cape Coral, Holmdel; hospitality, Mrs. Mrs. John Pavelka Thomas Ralph Tennant, son speak on the cbnvention Fla. and the late Stephen P. Edmund Gaunt, Red Bank; of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence S. theme, "Reform, Revolution, Toadvine Jr. of' Syracuse, irnolementation, Mrs. Robert information, Mrs. Philip Tennant of Fort Smith, Ark. Status Quo?;" Dr. Luther N.Y. Aelson, Englishtown and Mrs. Chippas, Lincroft. The couple plan to be married Gerlach, associate professor Mr. Tennant is a graduate Walter Smyth, Middletown; A graduate of New Jersey Aug. 14. of anthropology at the Univer- of The Hill School, Pottstown, parliamentarian, Mrs. Marc State College in Newark, The bride-elect, daughter sity of Minnesota, whose ad- Pa., and Dartmouth College, Leon, Middletown, and public where she also received her also of Mrs. Hall Ellis, Gover- master degree in special edu- dress, "Many Concerned, Few nor's Harbour, Eleuthera, Ba- Hanover, N.H., where he was hamas, was graduated from a member of Kappa Sigma Rumson Country Day School fraternity. His grandparents and Stoneleigh-Burnham are the late Mr. and Mrs. Student Receives Grant School, Greenfield, Mass. She Thomas R. Tennant, Ham- attended Skidmore College, mond, Inr}., and the late Mr. LINCROFT - The Lincroft town Township High School. A president of the Future Saratoga Springs, N.Y., and is and Mrs. Harry P. Dailey, Woman's Club awarded its scholarship of $500 was grant- Teachers Club. Rtaltltr Staff Photo employed at Monmouth Me- Fort Smith, Ark. 11th annual scholarship at the ed to Miss Wendy Kaplan, She is temporarily em- WEDDING GUEST- Keith M. Smykal, right. Miss Wendy Kaplan awards ceremony in Middle- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ployed as a receptionist by West Long Branch, and his bride, the former Mrs. Giordcmo-Beaulieu Mickey Kaplan, 5 Rodger Dr. Martin Greenwald of Haz- Marion Gilbert of Fair Haven, talk with Zenon C. Ave., here. . let. R. Hansen, chairman and president of Mack HAZLET - Announcement dano, Port Reading. Miss Kaplan will attend Trucks, Inc., who was best man at their Wednes- is made by Mr. and Mrs. Miss Beaulieu is a senior She is temporarily em- Bowling Green (Ohio) State day evening wedding. Francis J. Beaulieu, 10 Stan- year nursing student at ployed as a receptionist by University School of Educa- ford Drive, of the engagement Charles E. Gregory School of Dr. Martin Greenwald of Haz- tion, majoring in special edu- of their daughter, Miss Carol Nursing, Perth Amboy. Her let. cation for the emotionally dis- Untermeyer-Hill Nuptials Beaulieu, to Albert Giordano fiance is an alumnus of Wood- Scholarship selection was turbed child. Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Gior- bridge Senior High School. In high school Miss Kaplan made by three judges, under BOCA RATON, Fla. - Mrs. attendant, and Guy Fry, Ber- outicpe was on the student council the chairmanship of Mrs. Karel Fry Hill, Kingston, wyn, Pa. and yearbook staff and was Raymond E. Lenartowicz. N.Y., and Milton F. Unter- 759 RIVER ROAD FAIR HAVEN, N. J. meyer. Plaza Court, Eiberon, Mr. Untermeyer, a former N.J. were married here June mayor of Long Branch, is 11 in Mr. Untermeyer's home.' president of Untermeyer and RUMSON READING INSTITUTE Mrs. Gilbert Is Wed Palm Beach County Court Carton, Asbury Park broker- SUMMER Judge Kenneth' Dix officiated. age firm. He is a member of (a ftanney tchuol) To Keith M. Smykal The bride is the daughter of the Governor's Advisory Com- WEST LONG BRANCH - Syracuse, N.Y. Mrs. Emma Truitt, Chadd's mittee on Transportation for Announce* SATURDAY HOURS Mrs. Marion Gilbert, 137 Lake Zenon C. R. Hansen, chair- Ford, Fa., who was the only New Jersey. Supplementary Countex in baric skill* for Ave., Pair Haven, and Keith man and president of Hack greater meeeni in aehool and eolkge M. Smykal were married here Trucks, Inc., with headquar- 9:30 Till 2 P.M. Wednesday at a 7:30 p.m. cer- ters in Allentown, Pa. was emony performed by Mayor Mr. Smykal's best man. The Henry J. Shaheen at the home bridegroom is president of the of the bridegroom, 178 Locust Keith Smykal Co., 197 Wall 20th Summer Session July 6-Aug. 27 Ave. 0FF St., here, a world supplier of Attending the bride were emblems, including the Alack DURING THESE HOURS her daughters, Mrs. Charles Truck bulldog. 1. BEADING, WRITING, STUDY SKILLS C. Kababick, Silverton, and SILVER WEDDING Two 3-hour sessions each week, day or evening. Mrs. Wallace S. Moreland of This is the basic course of Rumson Reading Institute and Is of- RED BANK- Mr. and Mrs. fered at all levels from 7th grade through college. Students an Anthony Vaccarelli, 41 Spring grouped according to ability. This course helps students Ter., celebrated their 25th • to read with speed and comprehension wedding anniversary June 13 • to write grammatically and logically Now in RED BANK • to increase their knowledge of vocabulary at a dinner in Olde Union This course is very popular with serious students who are anx- House. ious to improve their school grades and to obtain maximum The world-famous preparation (or college board and prep school exams.
ANNUAL RECITAL 1 MATHEMATICS Barbizon School of Modeling Dorothy Toland Courses at all levels from arithmetic to calculus DANCE STUDIO All courses are planned to develop A SURE BET! • a logical approach to problem solving • facility in applying maUiematical processes logically Now, you don't have to travel to study professional modeling. BARBIZON has established a new 3. RANNEY SCHOOL COURSES branch school right here with the same facilities • in advanced chemistry and advanced biology and teaching techniques as the New York School. 4. LANGUAGES Three 2-hour sessions weekly We have graduated thousands of girls into brilliant modeling careers and given countless 5. ELEMENTARY COURSES Reading-Three 2-hour sessions others "The Look" that hclpsany career. Arithmetic-Three 1-hour sessions weekly
If you're a girl 14 years of age or older, send for our Thoroughbred cufflinks in I4K [sold. Horses head sculpted and inlaid whhin Black Onyx, free, 32 page book to helpyou decide if you qualify. 583.00. Noobligation, of course. Fill out and mail thiacoupon OR PHONE 842-6161 $3300 All Counet under the supervision of How can you lose? RUSSELL 6. RANNEY Sunday, June 27th THE BARBIZON SCHOOL OF MODELING 1 2:30 P.M. 188 East Bergen PI. Red Bank NJ. 07701 RB I Middtelown Township RUMSON READING INSTITUTE High School 6/25 I Tindall Road, Middletown 235 Hope Road, New Shrewsbury, N.J.
TICKETS AT BOX OFFICE 542-4777 OR STUDIO: 201 E. B«rgen Place TnasporUUoa available f ramsom e areas •dr. 741-2208 Rumson-Fair Haven -Junes Greene, bach, Hi-Mosic Sponsors Inc.; Margaret Davison, Tte Car- Iflgh School ney Petfllo Memorial; Penny 23 June 28th-Jdy 4th H was theBecker, PhylH* Suborn and j M. Wntlan. Jeltrey G. While, Itoni #t Lha A. WelneriVManley J. Willwrns, WHO'S THERE? wd presented Maureen Moleltan, Home and < Aim K. wither, Am J. Witman, Mary- MOV, iwFolni N?imltR M»ctien'sI» Robert Uiioer; WOMX Vajlls, Jo- ll Wodi. Frances E. Wrublewskl, totto «8 graduates School Association; Joan fn?3er,.*obert B.Jpe/Miw, Kevin j. ImoM. VanBUfcem, Pool Van Dam. Bradley, Bumson Woman's The Banana Spffis-June28tfi. •t the «duol stadium yes- Club; Bob Sparling and Scott One Step Beyond-June^u tertay. Beaton, Bumson Pop Warner; The Stonemans--Juno29lli _ The dsss was presented by Betsy Button and Cecil Can- DOWN-SEA SWIM CLUB ; tteaujwtateadent of schools, non, superintendent's recogni- The Dottie West Show-June 30ft. Dr. John F. Kinney Jr. In- tion. OLYMPIC SIZE POOL Dan Fleenor's Hurricane Hell Dnvere- motion and benediction were Making the awards and pre- OCEAN AVE. SEA BRIGHT offered by Babbi Jack M. Ho-sentations were Mrs. Stanley QuMMUIbofHIgMi • th« Shrnnbury Rivet) Julyi8L2nd. soff, Congregation B'nai Is- Zelek, H. Earle Thompson, 291-2375-842-9807 FrankFontaine-JulyardeAth. rael. Elizabeth Holton was Mrs, Joan Upton, Thomas J, ralntttorian and Mary C. FEATURING Bobby Duvalle and the Brass Overture- BottJ, Jr., George J. Giffin, • Olympic siza pool • kiddie pool • snackbar Strohm, valedictorian. The Floyd De Nicola, Miss Jande • moul • cocktail lounge • boat dip* - - July 3rd, 4th. mantle oration was by Tyndall, Richard C. Devine, • •undacka • parking for 200 can... Thomas Kelly 2nd, and recep- Harry R. Carter, Kenneth All shows free. tion of the mantle by John Walters, Paul Grammer, Alan * FAMILY WHATS HAPPENING? Watson, class of 1972. TheLyster, Robert Berberich, Plentyl There1* a mi*imv. And daUy y^J^^l And l» llveatock ahow. A pattinfl zoo. And torfiton class gift was presented by OF FOUR 11 1 1 Mrs. Susan Grazlano, Mrs; attom. ExciJing exhaite. H»meM "e **™ . ?? J™ Richard Stout Comments on Franklin Reed, Mrs. R.N. cram demonstrations. Hu* the Chevy show. And ttre- the class were by Anthony Shanley, Mrs. Albert Desmet, * FAMILY workj July 4th. Libretti, senior class coor- Roy Mulford, David Warner, OF THREE HOW MUCH AND WHERE? dinator. Mrs. Evan H. Baker, Mrs. Ed- 1 Admi»stoni»»lJ0»Ofadull«and5Offorchlldren.The * FAMILY $ At an awards assembly yes- ward Ellison, David Maltz- grandstand shows are free. The parking * free. terday morning, Dr. Kinney man,Joseph Kovensky, OF TWO The place isFreeholdRae«w»y.Whereroutea9andM Thomas Bond, Mrs. John meet Fair hours: 2-10 PM. Grandttand showi are at 4 announced the following end 8 PM. swards: Frank, Ales Koharski, Mrs. Edward Costigan, Louis Mary Owen Borden Foun- Dell'Omo, Jerome Drew and OPEN DAILY dation Scholarship of $2,500 a. Dr. Kinney. 10A.M.-10P.M. year for four years to Henry Evening Swimming Handler, president of the Stu- Graduating were: Advertise in The Register dent Coimcfl, member of the National Honor Society, Rum- AlbertT Stephanie J. Altai, William ft. An* K Scott Bwton Alison 0 Gonian sports editor, member of the French Spanish Honor -Bennett, Carol A. Bergman, Robin A. Society and captain of the Bernhard. Linda A. Bickett, Samuel Bird, Clarence Bfanton Jr., Percy G. varsity tennis team. Bollch III. Mildred L. Bouk, Jeanne C Bradley, Rlchord H. BraaMr, Susan O. The best way to appreciate Header's Digest Certificate, Brings. Peter E. Brlttoln. Anthony B. Britten, Charles B. Broder. Ells* Mary Strohm; business BroWrldc Diane M. Brorem ^ondra award, Linda Hughes; Eng- lish, Gideon Strich; foreign Id I. Conn. Stephen F. Calarato. a newMercedes'Benz languages, Thehna Schwarz; Rlctiard j. Comoonella, Cecil B. Can- non. Jill R. aSnuvwy, Carycnrlitlm- mathematics, Mary Strohm; sen, Robert Clark, Susan J; Collins, Miy E. Connor. Robert L. Cook, Dan- science, Gilberte Frey, and iel M. Cornelius, Timothy C Costello, social studies, Constance David 0. Crelghton, Unda A. Creiohton, Undo G. Cremhaw. Cuthbert A. Erich- is to test drive an old Mercedes-Benz, Thatcher. low Jr., John F. Crott Jr.. Wetidl A. Crulkjhank. Judith A. Curchln, JoAnn Daly, Mark A. Oonociko^ary A. Da- Special academic awards vidson, Barbara G. _ went to Maureen McLellan, Davlson, Philippe de __ tie J. Dell'Omo/Domlnlck A. _. art; Paul McCauley and Al- DyarawE. Dewls, Sally S. Deleter, C. Oey, Warren S. Dlpglns, Joseph J. bert J. Lome, economics; Bar- Dfgnan III. Patricia T. Dlimt, Reglno ry WadTey, Peter Brittain and E. Dispenslere, Debra A. Dlttmer, Ge- rard J. Dooley, Thomas F. Doron, Ke- Bobert Becker, industrial vin M. Dunn, Georae A. Ebert. James J. Falotlco, Sletanla Fdrrntl. arts; Mary Strohm, Robert A. Margot Forrlngton, Deborah L. Feeny, Money Jo Flnkel, Arthur J. Flanagan, Abramoff Award; Thelma Jr., Robert P. Heckles. Douglas J. Fos- : ter. Gilberte W. Frey, Ellen t_ Galling. AtMercedes-Benz,we'renotarraidof' Starting from die inside Schwarz, French Spanish; Gi John S. Ganther, Jeffrey A. Gaucn, deon Strich, Spanish; Jeanne John l_ Gerweck, Richard B. Gillette. what one of our old cars will say about Douglas N. Graham, Pout O. Grammer, When you finish your test drive, walk Bradley, instrumental music; Dorothy R. Grant, Upward S.. Grant* ournewcars. Cheryl A. Greene, Mary O. Greene. around the car and look at the finish. Paul 0. Grammer 3rd, vocal Laura E. Guarlno, Charles A. Hatbotti, So before you buy a new Mercedes- Robert E. Holllgan, Susan C HoUowell. To keep the outside looking new, we music; Neil Ribe, mathemat- Laurie A. Haltom, Joan E. Hammonn, Benz, we invite you to test drive anold start protecting it from the inside. ics, and Karl Zipf, science. Henry B. Handler, Susan L. Harkless, Jeltrey K. Harris, Alison E. Harvey. Mercedes-Benz. ' • v^ Bodies are submerged in • Service awards went to Mi- Nancy V. HemleD, Henry j. Hllmer, Laura A. Hilton, LucyS. Hilton. Findingacar to test is really no prob- riam Boss and Nancy Ko- Geoffrey E. Hoffman, Canals B. Hlort- rust-proofer. They emerge lond, John P. Hollowoy. III. Eltzabetti lem. Aneighbororafriendmayownone. walsky, Triskelion; Nancy A. Holton. Robert W. Horre, Unda G. 24 pounds heavier. Shaw, Rumsonian; Mary Hughes, Pamela J. Hume, Eileen M. (Your dealer probably has several on ' But that's not hand.) But we urge you to be selective. Strohm, Betsy Uulton and Karen P. Jonnarone. Lourette H. enough for Mercedes- Jockson, Robert C. Jakes, Steven P. Pick one with a substantial accumulation Don Lang, Tower; Stefania Jakubowlcs, Edward W. Johnson, Step- Motor's conclusion about a veteran of Benz. The inside of hen C Jones, Morcla A. Judge, Susan of miles. llOftOO mites; "Apart from some loss of Farneti and Bo Persson, R. Kodenboch, Oebra L. Kaplan, John body panels that American Field Service; S. KorlnlQ' Thomas H. Kavookllan, Helpful hint: If you spotaMercedes- edge at the top end this otie felt quiet, Thomas B. Kelly II, Lynn K. Klely. fiexibleandfreeof rattles and the oil were welded air- Bnthann Whalen, business Charles T. King, Peter Kinney, David J. Benz with one of the badges shown be- Kotoed. Susan L. Kollmer, Undo Kon- pressure needle was always hard on the stop" tight were painted drup, Nancy A. Kowalsky, Carol J. low on the radiator, you've found an ex- Krouse, Deborah L. Krueger, Thomos before welding. D. Krugttr> Frances A. ICushwaro, ceptionally promising candidate to test, Outside,aMercedes- Honorary awards went to James cjta Ban Jr., William J. La- We even designed a special suspen- longevity. So they are sliced in half and Fleur. Ksfnryn A. Lancton, Mark J. We award them to a Mercedes-Benz Benz is protected by four Robert Trotter and John Wat- Loiwoit, Christine A. Lain, Donald G. sion system for the exhaust system. Rub- analyzed by infrared spectography. Ling, JeffryM. Lopln, Leslie A. Laufer, after 100,000,200,000 and 500,000 kilome- 1 coats of paint and primer. son, Boys State recognition; Francis A. Lawrence, Robert L. Lay- ber "doughnuts ' hold it under tension. A bum. Richard K. Layton, Ghlslalne A. ters. (The European equivalent of 62,500, A revolutionary old car The front gets an extra coat Jeff Lapin and Sve Hallowell, Le Drezen, Michael S. Lennen, Janet A. rubber bumper is stationed at every point Hi-Music Sponsors Inc.; TomLevy. Shelly A. Lobdell, Margaret E. 125,000and312,000miles.) of chip-resistant enamel. Loder, Janef.E. Looney. Alberf J.Loux ofcontact. Today an old Mercedes-Benz bristles Kayookjian, Roy Mutford Me- Jr., Santiago Lugones, Pomelo M. Lu z, with features that still seem revolutionary We even insulate Evatbody panels that an WllllomTVUikemanT welded airtight can morial; David McCormick, Edward H. Mackln III, Glenn K. Ma- Theonesttresignofageina An intriguing contest : : compared to the '71 cars of other makers. the side trim from Peter Warner Memorial; loney, Marilyn A. Manning, John R. Ma- Mercedes-Benz, Radiator badges ccrrodcinsidcSo befor* son, Frances U Mastrfa, Douglas W.* 1 Accelerate onto a highway. The reason is simple. Our engineer- the body with a strip wtweld,we spray them Lynn Peak and Tom Kelly, Maxwell, Gary A. Mazzaroppl, Warren awarded at the 100,000,200,000 & J. McAllister, Paul A. McCouley. Susan 500,000 kilometer milestones. Thesign Notice how nevy and tight the engine, ing decisions are made by engineers. Not of rubber. And sheath with tine oxide. And paint Bertram Borden Memorial; • E. McDonnell, Margaret E. McGough, vital areas by hand. William P. Mcllwaln, Maureen B. of an owner's "age," a gold lapel pin. drivetrain and suspension feel. cost accountants. When they find a way to the clips that attach it Mary Strohm and Cecil Can- McLellan, Lisa A'. Meany. Laurence R. Meeker, Jcmes A. Alelilsh, David S. Recently in the Road & Track series make an improvement, they make it. with plastic grommets, so that metal can nonJp.A.R. Good Citizenship. Mernlck, Eileen M. Michael, Dean J. Michaels, Wayne Mlesen, Kathryn E. "After The New Wears Off," the engineer- Without waiting until it can be made as never bite through paint and start rust ' Scholarships were awarded Mllano, Jack V. Miller, Judith K. Mill- er, Richard J. Miller, Jerome W. Mind- ing editor summed up 35,000 miles in his cheaply as what it replaces. to Sheila Vowinkel, Fair nlch, Elizabeth L. Mlnnlg, Susan J. The "average" MoooV, Thomos B. Morrison. John P. Mercedes-Benz by saying simply, "The Haven Education Association; Moster, Michael M. Mullane, John E. Take an old Mercedes-Benz through Mulroy, Stephen K. Murphy, Timothy C car is more impressive than when new." Mercedes-Benz: $8,000 Cassandra Robinson, Rumsori Murphy. some curves. Unless it's a pre-1930 model, Education Association; Eliza- Henry R. Nooe III. Frank J. Orlo, To keep our "new" from wearing you'll discover the nimble reflexes that There's nothing "average" about a Barbara E. OrndDrff, Robert C. Os- line of automobiles with an average sell- beth Pardi, Terry Trent Me- bome, Loretto A. Pace, Cynthia F. Pa- off, we engineer the run- come from fully indepen- lumbo, Elizabeth Pardl, Carolyn J. ing price of $8,000. morial; Eileen Michael and Peak, Bo L. Persson, Deborah A. Petru- ning gear to last as long. dent suspension. An in- celll, Edwin U Pomphrey, William P. Michael Muuane, Fair Haven Potter, Patricia J. Ready. Elizabeth E. as the foody. A lengthy' novation yet to be discov- Building automobiles you can appre- lions Club; Susan Kaden- Reed, Margaret D. Rehme, Peter A. but intriguing contest ered by domestic sedans. ciate when they're "old" cars has'made indeed. Look at the model- our new cars more expensive than most To male sure it will, nameplate. If you spot an There are ten Mercedes-Benz models Manalapan Restricted vital mechanisms must "E," the car has some- priced from $5,312 to I8,492t-withoutop.' pass thousands of tests. thing no American car tions. And six limited editions, largely We consume more Rubler"doughnuts"suspend has, an einspritzsystem handcrafted, from J12.886 to |30,120». tailpipes and mufflers under tension, To One Liquor Store than 40,000 gallons of rubber bumpers isolate them from (German for fuel injec- The coupon willbringafuil-colorbro- fuelamonthtestingevery the body. The exhaust system may tion).Developed for Mer- chure of the new Mercedes-Benz models, : MANALAPAN - This town- agreement between the deveL engine before installa- never rattle. In the meantime, be sure and test' ship will only have one liquor opment company and town- cedes-Benz grand prix store until the population in- ship engineer James P.' Ko- tion. Some for as long as five hours. cars, it provides a substantial increase in drive an "old" Mercedes-Benz. And, just creases by 51 people. vacs as to how the roads are After nine successive applications at pbwer with no sacrifice in economy. for comparison, an old anything else. Township Attorney Marvin to be constructed. A "suspension system" for 135 mph in a "destruction" test, disc Apply the brakes. Mercedes-Benz be- After all, you live most of your life E. Schaefer has ruled that in Parley Set the exhaust system brakes turn fiery red. They must endure lieves the brakes should be the most pow- with an old car! So you should know what your next car will be like after the "new" line with a recently enacted Mr. Kovacs will meet this Take your test car down a potholed this torture fifty different times—and suf- erful part of any, car. So we introduced wears off. state law, this township can week with H. Thomas Carr, road and listen for audible protests of age. fer no damage. disc brakes in 1961. Put them on all four issue one plenary retail liquor the engineer representing Even seemingly unimportant items wheels in 1968. No domestic sedan today distribution license per 7,500 A journalist from Motor recently put Nottingham Estates, to confer an eight-year-old Mercedes-Benz roadster like dashboard knobs must prove their offers four disc brakes, even as an option. people. The Township Com- on the street construction. .pom.sUteMdlocilta to the test. "What impressed me most,"' Copyritht WI.Mcrades-Bcra of North America I mittee last month intended to However, the major problems give out a second license, and appear to be in the finished he concluded, "was the solidity of the One of our new cars. The 250 this action triggered a bar- Nottingham Estates devel- body—not a squeak or rattle to be heard." a five-passenger sedan willi Meroedcs.Beaz of North America, Inc. performance features rage of applications. opment. We'reflattered.ButiiotsurpriserlBe- Department BMY2Z yotfll still appreciate Ciiflsi
The Daily Register, Friday, June 25,1971 13 Gallagher, Lewis Debate Programming
ByJANEFODEEARO classical and popular alike," it would be self-sustaining. In thought they were tre- the conductor said. (Mr, the year 1969-70 the loss was mendous at the benefit per- HOLMDEL - A debate is Lewis came to New Jersey about $350,000." (Mr. Gallag- formance before opening Council Backs developing between the N.J. three years ago from his na- her, a Republican, made sev- night," he said. Symphony and the N.J. High- tive Los Angeles where he eral political references to the "But," he continued, "I O V"| O "| fVfl way Authority - though there was associate conductor of birth of the amphitheater on don't think that he can look to appears to be little commu- tbe Los Angeles Symphony or- Telegraph Hill that was con- us for financing." Mr. Gallag- nication between the two. , chestra.) ceived by and built under the her noted that other sym- .*; ByLONIAEFTHYVOULOU At issue is programming at Moreover, Mr. Lewis would direction of a Democrat D. phony orchestras with sum- the Garden State Arts like to see his orchestra "in Louis Tonti, former head of mer facilities, such as the one itUMSON - Borough Council, last night, strongly and Center. residence" here each sum- the Garden State Parkway, in Saratoga, N.Y., are backed Unanimously endowed the Rumson Board of Education pro- Henry Lewis, conductor of iher. "As a resident orches- who was ousted from his post by "angels like tbe Rockefel- posal for school expansion. * the state's symphony orches- tra,' we also could provide mu- last year.) lers." In a referendum called for June 29, the board will seek tra, calls for more classical sicians for popular programs. The highway authority "We have problems above voter approval for acquisition of approximately 17 acres of programs presented on a As it is, some of our musi- chairman said that popular cultural considerations. Many land from the Lovett Tract on Ridge Road, for construction of regular basis in HolmdeL He cians will be playing for Hen- programs are "by far more in people feel we should be more a school to house 400 seventh and eighth grade students, for a claims an "arts-oriented" ry Mancini this year any- demand" by New Jersey resi- interested in roads than in total cost of $2,540,000. center can make money. way." dents. "It is much more diffi- shows," he said. Urging all voters "to come out and vote," Mayor John O. On the other hand, John P. Moreover, Mr. Lewis points cult to get response to the Mr. Lewis couldn't agree Teeter, said, "I'd like to go on record, that after meeting with Gallagher, chairman of the out that the weekly payroll of classical," he continued. more. He thinks tbe highway the Board of Education, and after a careful review of the pro- highway authority which runs the N.J. Symphony is less pro- Mr. Gallagher said that the commissioners should concen- posal, council gives its full approval to the plan. the center, says popular pro- portionately than the fee for a authority "inherited a strong trate on roads... and that F "I can assure you," Mayor Teeter added, "that all of us grams draw the biggest John P. Gallagher ••one-shot" performance. "We contract with Niederlander" Henry Lewis they should hire "an arts clearly saw tbe difficult situation at Forrestdale School. If this crowds and thereby make the may get nine to ten thousand that provides few options. He man" to run the Garden State Is not corrected now, we shall be faced with an even more crit- most money. Above all, he popular programs. I just feel dollars for a single perform- said he personally works bring broad-based programm- Arts Center. ical and much more costly situation." wants the center to be self- that classical programs ance," he says. "But, if we closely with the agents. ing to this installation," he ? Councilman Francis E. P. McCarter stated, "If different sustaining. Losses last year should be presented regularly, were assured of a full week's "When the contract expires says. "Certainly, they should set proposals and school budgets had not been repeatedly de- ran to $350,000, he reports. so that the public can count work, tbe cost would be only in 1972, I think there will be "lso in order to get stars, the money conditions," he feated hi the near past, we would have saved ourselves $1 mil- Mr. Lewis recently opened on concerts, say, every Mon- $15 or $20,000." some changes - whether Nie- you have to book them for a says. But we need artistic di- Reached at his business of- full week," he adds. He said . If we turn this one down too, its going to cost us. a great the debate to the public with day night." derlander is retained or not," rection," he says. "If you fice in New York City, Mr. that, while matinee perform- 1 of money for temporary and completely inadequate facil- criticism of programming Mr. Lewis was most critical be said. don't have it, you might as practices at the center. How- of current booking procedures Gallagher said he was "look- He added that he is aiming ances of "1776" are now sell- well take the 'arts' out of arts , 3-" ever, he and the symphony's in Holmdel. "You realize that ing very closely at classical for more family-oriented en- ing tickets, afternoon pro- center." h In November 1969, voters in Rumson and Fair Haven re- board of trustees reportedly the booking agent (Niederlan- programming at the Garden grams of the Stuttgart Ballet, jected a Regional Board of Education proposal for a junior tertainment and, this year, have been unhappy since last der Associates, New York State Arts Center," especially of the classical series, are not "I'm not saying that classi- high school, planned to ease congestion both in the regional sought more matinee book- winter when they were of- City) split the profits with the at receipts from perform- selling well at ail. high school, and in the elementary school districts of the two ings so that children can at- cal programs will draw 15,000 arts center and get a sizable ances that opened the 1971 "I've never been a great feeder communities. fered only five slots on the tend with their parents. people - like the rock festi- summer schedule in Holmdcl. share. season, namely two all- "You know, we have to classical man myself," Mr. vals. But we have drawn four r; : Wing Is Started . f That proposal would have cost the two communities $4 Last summer, the orchestra "It really doesn't have to be Beethoven programs by the worry about the teeny-bop- Gallagher said. But he ac- and five thousand people. million, of which Rumson taxpayers would have, had to pay appeared here six times. that way. At the Hollywood N.J. Symphony. pers ("David Cassidy is sell- knowledged that he has seen a That's one and a half times a - $£.4 million. In the interim the high school has gone into con- Working at the symphony Bowl, the general manager of "The arts center is not ing like hot cakes.") and the "remarkable difference - Carnegie Hall..." struction of a $1.3 million senior wing to House 300 seniors, office in Newark yesterday, the symphony is also general making money," Mr. Gallager people who like Fred Waring. much for the better" since Then he laughs and says, Kjimson's share of this cost is $800,000. Mr. Lewis said, "Don't misun- manager of the bowl. He said. "It was sold to the pub- They're all entitled to see Mr. Lewis took over the N.J. "if we don't say these things, Symphony Orchstra. "I •' If the referendum is approved, Rumson will pay $2,540,000 derstand. I am not against books all the performances, lic originally on the basis that what they bice. We've tried to nobody else will." ftjr a new elementary school. It will also have to pay $800,000 fdr a senior wing to the high, school, for a total of $3,340,000 for two separate facilities, with separate maintenance costs. The defeated junior high proposal, for one facility, would have cost Humson $2.4 million. • y , i' "We are all taxpayers," Councilman Lawrence R. Malone Retiring Van Note Takes Look Back slid, "and we must understand that if we do not approve the proposal it will be more costly for us.'As taxpayers we must WEST LONG BRANCH - 197O's will not only experience sort of life experience, that is, ed more of the same. Today, of youth. And, by youth, I'm . courage those who do have realize this must be done if we are to save in face of spiralling Serving as college president is even more growth in higher working out in tbe field in in- however, young people are including the range from in- expertise in the various areas. •/uture costs." a "tremendous privilege" but education but that the existing dustry, offices, welfare activi- challenging that 'same,'" Dr. fancy to the secondary school "He must work for their Councilmen Alan L. Duke, W. Dinsmore Banks and Wil- increasingly a "tremendous patterns of education will be ties, for which college credit Van Note said. age. They are, the family, the benefit to find the equipment, liam J. Miners agreed in their support for the proposal. burden," according to Dr. changed. may be given toward the bac- "Now, they're thinking that church, and education." the money,the time, the class • 'Far Better Now' William G. Van Note, retiring "The word 'relevance' has calaureate, degree? What it is not relevant" he noted. 'Whatever the varying opin- rooms, the laboratories where . Councilman John H. Dill said, "There's no question about as Monmouth College presi- been so over used it's worn about independent study': But there is real reason still ions may be among different they can do their thing. Their the type of facility we shall get by voting yes. It is far better dent Wednesday, June 30. . threadbare," he grimaced, These are questions that are for recognizing that relevance people, there has been, in the 'thing' being that in which to vote yes now, to save costs. Furthermore we must bear in Dr. Van Note is completing "but it still takes cognizance being asked over and over should be challenged. minds of many, some loss of they are experts. He cannot mind that the deadline for expansion at Forrestdale is far a career that spanned some 20 of a real uneasiness and ques- again," the white-haired Dr. "It's a change in the kind of the influence of the family. dictate in this area because gone." years in president's posts. He tioning on the part of youth as Van Note said. education that's going to rear Even more, you read about he doesn't know it, and yet, Mayor Teeter reiterating' council's stand, strongly spent 10. years as president of to why they should have to Recalling the years imme- its very interesting bead in the loss of the influence of the he's got to try to pull together stressed the statements of Mr. McCarter and Mr. Dill and Clarkson College, Potsdam, study certain subjects. diately after World War II, the 70's in contrast to the 60's, church, and this means that at the top, all of these various said, "If we don't act now, we'll all regret it." N. Y., before accepting the "I don't think the students Dr. Van Note said "we had 12 50's, 40's, and earlier," he ob- more, inevitably more, has segments, all of which want Explaining the proposal at a public hearing, Herbert Zyd- Monmouth post in Feb. 1962. . are too well-equipped to solve million young men and wom- served. been thrown on education, about 65 per cent of the total ney, chairman of the board's faculties committee, said sharply "In my first 16 years," Dr. this problem of relevance, but en in the war and they came Dr. Van Note feels a college and this is the way it's going resources available to the rising enrollment in the borough's elementary schools created Van Note explained, "I was I think they have every right back hi a fantastic force to president should possess a to be. whole institution," he said. overcrowding, which the board sought to ease by renting tem- more impressed by the op- to raise it and I think they colleges. What they wanted number of qualities including "I know that both the fami- "This can't be, so he has to porary classrooms. portunities I had, that allowed challenge, the estab- was conformity and security. the ability "to be able to walk ly and the church will contin- compromise, using his best "These temporary classrooms," he said, "house one in ev- me to try and give some lead- lishment-that is the educa- "They made a remarkably on water." ue to have a fundamental and judgment," he observed. "Of ery four of Rumson's elementary-school schildren." ership to education. But, be- tional establishment-to try to fine record when they re- "I suppose there's got to be strong influence-on molding course, lie .doesn't make too, , Study Conducted cause of the unrest in the justify what the establishment, turned home', and under the a balance of realism, of ideal- youth, encouraging, stimu- many friends in the matter of He added that over the past year the board had in- country-not only student un- says they should be studying. G. I. Bill, entered college, in ism; the capacity to lead lating, and inspiring our compromising. But that's part vestigated various ways in which the school system could ex- rest, but unrest in all seg- This is one of the real prob- jiumbers far beyond anything without trying to dictate; and young people," Dr. Van Note of being an educational ad- pand in an economical and feasible manner. ments of society: the war, the lems ahead of us," he said. before in the history of Ameri- a sense of judgment of what said. "But a very fundamen- ministrator." k Acquisition of the 17 acre tract and construction of a racial problem, the Women's Dr. Van Note believes the can education," the president can and cannot be. He'd bet- tal unit in the inspiration and Dr. Van Note said a college school, there, he indicated, was the cheapest, alternative. Oth- Lib movement, and the ten; format of higher education said. ter have some idea of the val- guidance of youth has been, president answers, in varying er alternatives included the addition of classrooms and central Eions caused by inflation, all may change in the 1970's. "In fact," he continued, "it ue of a dollar. He has to have and is, definitely education, degrees, to the institution's facilities to the Forrcstdalc/Deane Porter site at a cost of of which have caused prob- "Questions have been changed the face of American a strong commitment to the and anyone entering into ad- board of trustees, the faculty, &S70,000; and the purchase of property on Bingham Avenue, lems in educatlon-I have raised increasingly: Why education. It was the first real belief that education is ab- ministration in educa- students, parents, and the thereby taking 14 homes at a total.cost of $2,910,000. spent more time thinking and should it be four years for a demand for mass education of solutely fundamental to our tion-becoming an educational general public, groups that Mr. Zydney, urging approval of the proposal, also pointed trying to-if not totally resolve baccalaureate degree? Why quality." society and believe you me, it administrator-has got to be- the "president always has to out that each time proposed expansion had been turned down these problems,-at least keep not three, or five? What do "The big thing though, was Is," he said. lieve this. be simultaneously thinking of, In the past through a referendum, it had cost the taxpayers them within bounds so that you mean by learning'ex- that it was demand for the There are three areas, the "He must also realize that and who may, simultaneously, money, He concluded that off site expansion now would perron/ the educational process can perience? Should college cred- kind of education that existed president continued, that are he cannot do it himself," the potpressures onhim thatiwr future expansion, and was the most ewiomical and practical go forward." it be gained only by being hi prior to the war. They knew "generally considered to have president continued. "He's got diametrically opposite to one wty to tackle the current problem. ••.,-. Dr. Van Note feels the tbe class room? Is there some what they wanted. They want- an Impact on the development to use his best judgment to ea- another." ft i.
Homers to Win and two singJef, good for fora- Moat pitchers like to talk he explained, describing the was sent to the minors." month, and has been taking home date, trouncing St. by the Cardinals under the about the home runs they hit eighth inning blow. "I don't This one, however, came treatments for a stiff shoul- Louis 11-4 with a sunburst of lights, bounced-back to take runs batted in. "Now I can When, and if, they hit them. know if it was a curve or a sli- off Bill Stoneman, who is lead- der. 14 hits, the finale of the tnre*game have dinner at home and re- Tom Seaver of toe New der, he said. ing the National League in Seaver gave up a run to the In the only other game on set before an afternoon crowd lax." ; ., York Mete is do exception. "1 got a pretty good recep- strikeouts with 134, and who Expos in the second inning on - the National League schedule, of 19,281 , Seaver kit tte second home tion on the bench too," he de- fanned eight Mets. "It's a a double by Bob Bailey and a Philadelphia shaded Cincin- • "Not bad for a mid-week run of his major league ca- clared. "The last time I hit a feather in your cap, but single by John Bateman, and nati 3-1 on a two-run single by game," said a dub official. reer last night, breaking a 1-1 homer, itjmade the score 7-1 doesn't mean much else," then slammed the door. The rookie Roger Freed in the It was the only midweek tie and giving the Metis a 2-1 and there wasn't a soul in Seaver said. Mets tied the game in the lOthtanmg. . day game scheduled this sea- victory over the Expos. sight." "You're paid for the figures' fourth on a single and a stolen In the American 'League, son for Los Angeles, where Even though he had hotted That homer also came in the left-hand column which base by Jorgensen and an Milwaukee trimmed Califor- the Dodgers played ex- a five-hitter and had struck against the Expos. "I'm two- reads''W-L*. •- RBI singled by Ed Kranepool,. nia 6-0; Baltimore whipped clusively at night last year ex- out nine Expos, Seaver talked for-two in homers against Seaver has been less than setting the stage for Seaver's' Washington 6-1 and Detroit cept on weekends. mostly fibout his home run af- them," he said. happy with the way he has blast. blanked Cleveland 3-0. Oak- "I like it," said Jim Le- ter the game. The last guy 1 hit a homer pitched recently. He said he Dodgers Found Away land and Minnesota were rain-' febvre, who broke out of a "My homer- came off a off, Rich Nye, got a cortisone hasn't pitched "the way I The Dodgers made the most edout. two-week slump to pace the «y, Boiwell. breaking ball on the inside," shot the next day and then think I can pitch" for about a of an infrequent matinee The Dodgers, beaten twice . Dodgers' attack with a homer jorgenMM. How They Ashe Eliminated, Predicts Stand NATIONAL LCkGUE Eori Olvblwt W L Pet. G> Laver or Newcombe Win Pittsburgh ..... 45 » .434 - darkness the previous night' WIMBLEDON, England done as a. youngster in 1954 But the little Australian left- i&*!£™~~: » 35 SJ 7 The defeat of Taylor, jeyery Sff"" ~ 34 35 .493 10 (AP) - Arthur Ashe, elimi- and 1956. hander was still good enough to crush another of the United British fan's hero, caused gen- »&£==WestDtelsle. Sa ,8:81s* nated from the Wimbledon Ash, of Gum Spring, Va., ^ 41 2S .451 ~- States hopes, Clark Graebner eral dismay. The news even "'" 3> 32 .549 8 Tennis Tournament, predicted was seeded fifth but was up- 33 3- — — tefday that Rod Laver or John set yesterday by Marty. Ries- of New York City, 9-8,6-2,7-5. *i interrupted the Riessen-Ashe 32 t Newcombe will win the title.' sen, of Evanston, ill., 61, 9-8, Smith, Riessdn, Tom Gor- match. ,.-.•:- ;,-;;• .is ..•/,» Vmpire Laurie MqCal\um "But Stan Smith is right 8-9,6-4. • •>•./•'•-> -•••••• man of Seattle, Wash;, and: LM Angeles 11. a. Loul»4 announced with characteristic Nn» York 3. Montreal 1 there behind them," Ashe Ashe didn't include Riessen, Jeff Borowiak of Berkeley, PMkKMpMo J. Cincinnati 1,10 liming. said. 'Stan has a good chance his dose friend, among his Calif., are aH in the last-16. English decorum? ."With aU tips for the title. But he com- A fifth.American, Cliff: due respect to,the two dis- Hem York (Ryon M and Sadeckl 2-2) because he's playing better at Montreal (Brltton 0-2 and Slrolunoftr than he has ever done be- mented: "Marty is certainly Richey of Sarasota, Fla., can :tinguished American players elwl**l(in(H», J e-lwl**l(in(H», J fore." • playing well. I hadn't lost to join them by defeating Adr- -on this court, I.am sony. to if) at Attorhj (JSSro $-7 end KeVln £ him for about five years until have to tell you that Richey Smith, of Pasadena, Calif., iano.Panatta of Italy today. 1 Pittsburgh (Blast 1-3) at Philadelphia •who is seeded fourth, moved this match.'" Richey yesterday finished has beaten Taylor.' , "sSHRrandKo (Perry S-SI at Houston easily into the last 18 ; One of the talking points of off Roger Taylor of Britain in The fans groaned, Riessen CMOSMTHUKIS M) at St. Louli (Son- Thursday by defeating An- the tournament is Laver's ser- less than 30 minutes. The and Ashe didn't bat an eyelid, terinl Oo) ? and the tennis started up Son Diaga (Norman 0-1) at US Angel- drew Apatttson of Rhodsla 6-3, vice, which doesn't appear as match had been called at 7-7 6-4,7-5. The tall fair-Haired devastating as it used to be. in the final se,t because of •again. . ;••• '••: ,-,,•, L P* Gl California is on extended Boramore—— 44 23 .457 — OttronuT....- 3» 31 .557 «Vi leave from the U.S. Army. Braton.....~ 37 30 .553 7 NfwYork. 32 37 .464 13 Ashe said: "Laver and Cltvrtond.... 31 37 .454 13V, Kewcombe, both previous Wmhlnoton.. 224 43 .358 JO wwntt DivisioDiii n champions, must be favorites Carner, Gaponi Share Oakland. 44 23 Ml - Kansas City 35 30 .531 » to win. I think Ken Rosewall's KKSotO..." 35 35 .500 ll» chance gets a little slimmer 8S5fc S £2& each year. Milwaukee &, California 0 "I would put Newcombe a Baltimore t, Washington! Women's Open Lead little ahead of Smith at the Detroit 3, Cleveland 5 «P Vlrnhola Oakland «* Minnesota, roln moment, but only because he Only gamo scheduled SAPE-IN6 FACE — There's not a face In the action as Dave Maye of the ERIE, Pa. (AP) - Long Last year was Mrs. Car- Amateur Jan Bastanchury Tontohl's Comes has more experience. Re- ball hitting Joanne Carner ner's first year on the pro tour of Whittier, Calif, and a 1970 Boltlmore (Oobton 5-4) ot Boston Milwaukee Brewers, left, Is flattened sliding safely Into home In the fifth (Lonboro N) Inning yesterday. California Angels catcher Jeff Torborg, former Rutgers member that Stan has never and Donna Caponi, bidding and she won f 14,550. member of the Curtis Cup Washington (Broberg 0-0) at New York (Kline 5-4) University All-Amerlcan, is unable to come up with the ball, seemingly yet won a major title." for an unprecedented third Miss Caponi admitted she team - the women's equiva- Cleveland (Dunning «-4) at Detroit perched on top of Maye's head to the right, left of Torborg's mitt. The rul- Laver, now 32, won the consecutive U.S. Women's was nervous until she drove lent of the Walker Cup - shot Colltornla (Murphy 4-1) at Chicago Wimbledon crown .in 1961, (HorlenM) ing arm of the umpire Is at top. The Brewers staggered the Angels Open title, both fired two-un- off the first tee in her bid to an even par 72. throughout the game, 6-0. 1962,1968 and 1969. Newcombe der par 70s yesterday to share win the Open again. She got a At 73 were Kathy won it last year for the second the first round lead at the . bogey on No. 1. Whitworth, Kathy Cornelius,, time. Kahkwa Club Golf course. She got her first birdie on four-tune open winner Mickey Rosewall is 36. He reached Their 70s matched a course the par four eighth hole then Wright and amateur Lida"Fee the final last year-as he had record set by Mary Lena sank three birdie putts and Matthews of Portsmouth, Faulke in the 1959 Western got a bogey on the back nine. Ohio. Freehold, firemen Score Women's Open. , At 18, she hit a six-iron to Miss Caponi has not won a Miss Caponi had sole pos- the green and calmly sank the tournament since the Open ~ Freehold won its fourth Colt Car Wash Lincroft and was relieved by 0 lead in the top of the sixth to third and scored on the session of the lead until the uphill putt to take the lead last yeay r while Mrs. Carner "game against one loss in the RIVER PLAZA - The Riv- Kevin Deehan. when Neptune broke the scor- front end of a successful husky Mrs. Carne. r_ birdied that stood most of the day. un_.- has only one victory, pother fl American West Division of the er Plaza ;CoIts baseball team Jim Carroll went the first ing famine on his double and double steal. '/ two of the last ax holes and til Mrs. Carner pulled up. .f^credit, a playoff win from | Ed Carleton Memorial Base- will conduct a fund raising seven for the Wildcats, and Bill Rochelle's single. The tie resulted when Ayers. missed a birdie on 18 by an "I left theball short on a lot' Marilynn Smith In the. Wen- j ball League by whipping Ma- car wash tomorrow at the 1 i; Phil Valese finished up. But Little Silver got one of again singled and came all inch. of birdie putts, ' said Miss Ca deliWest Open last yea*/' •; nalapan, 8-7, last night. south end of the parking lot at Lincroft is now 2-3-1. The its own in the bottom half and the way.home on a three-base She went out in 35 and poni, "but;I'was putting "Th e field o'•'"-f 134 'women golf- I Bill McCarty fanned eight the Shop Rite Supermarket, tie was the first blot on the broke up Doyle's no-hitter in outfield error before darkness matched it with another 35 Well." ers will be cut to the low 50 I and allowed six hits while get- 1200 Rt. 35, Middletown. Wildcats record in six games. the process. Pete McHeffy set in. coming in. She took a bogey on the scores and ties after the sec- ! ttag the win. Steve Guinter, In the National North, was hit by a pitch and Proceeds from the project On the 18th, Mrs. Carner, a tough 16th when her drive aid round today at this scenic . Dennis Walling and Tom Little Silver and Neptune also promptly stole second. He Doyle finished with a three- will be used to purchase strawberry blonde from La- went into the tangled, rough on course along the Presque Isle • Childs each had two hits. battled to a 2-2, 'eight-inning came around on Rich Ayers' hitter. He walked only one equipment for the River Plaza kenorth, Fla., hit a 280-yard the left. Bay in northwestern Pennsyl- : Shrewsbury J & R Tire tie, featuring a pitching duel one-out hit, his team's first. and struck out five. Sakowitz Boys Club. Coaches Frank drive then put her second shot One stroke back with a one- vania. '" . > scored four runs in the sixth between Phil Sakowitz and Neptune again gained the was touched for seven safeties LoPresti and Carl Montana™ about 12 feet from the pin. under 71 was Lesley Holbert, | inning to win from Matawan, Terry Doyle. advantage hi the eighth when and gave up two bases on arranged for the use of the fa- Her putt went just to the left a' six-year professional from 8-7. Doyle staked himself to a 1- Bill Libby singled, advanced balls. He fanned seven. cilities and will supervise. of the cup. Hialeah, Fla. I Rich Pratt went the first six J and one-third innings to get Besseil Wins s the win. Pete Hayes relieved • Pratt and got the last two Dan Sikes (64) Breaks Cleveland Log Jam • outs. CAPEMAY-JoeBesselpf ! Lincroft and the Middle- CLEVELAND (AP) - Dan Trevino missed on seven round of 30-34-64. on the next hole. 12 feet there, chipped to three the New York Athletic Club ; town "Wildcats played to a 2-2 Sikes, a 40-year-old tour veter- putts of 10 feet or less. "I had a pretty good chance He saved par on the 16th, feet on the next one and laced won the Eastern Masters ! tie in a game that was called an, broke a massive log jam Australian Bruce Devlin, to have a 29 on the front where he drove into the trees ,a four iron to within five feet Two-mile Championship in a ; after eight innings. with a 64 and took a two- the defending title-holder, also nine," he said. "I'd like to and had to chip back to the 'on the next one. race, run on the promenade j Lincroft scored in the third stroke lead in the first round had his problems,. matching have had it, just to say I had fairway. •* Stockton put on an amazing here yesterday. L on a walk and an error on Bil- of the $150,000 Cleveland Open par 71. . . . a 29. I missed from, about "I got a little lucky there, exhibition in shooting his 66. Bessel turned in a new ^-ly Marsella's grounder, and Golf Tournament yesterday. Tom Ulozas, former Bamm eight feet on the last hole." but it takes some hick when He hit only five fairways, record for this event, 10:14, to jf again in the fourth on a walk Lee Trevino, the newly- Hollow Country Club pro in The golfing attorney, a con- you shoot 64," Sikes said. missed the green six times - beat Joe Burns of Bogota by 4 to Doug Springsteen and Tom crowned U.S. Open champion his first year on the pro tour, sistent money-maker but a It was the only green he, but compensated with some 10 seconds and 50 yards. ' j§ Joyce's single. and the pretourney favorite doesn't figure to make the cut non-winner since 1968, played missed. deadly putting. He needed George Sheehan of JUun- ? The Wildcats tied the game for the $30,000 first prize here, after today's second .round. the back nine first and birdied He birdied the first from 12 only 25 putts, counting 11 one- son, the Register's "Innocent. £ in the last of the seventh on had a'70, putting him well Ulozas had a 37-37-74, near the his first two holes. feet, missed from five feet on putt greens. . Bystander," finished fifth *' singles by Rich Bertoncin, back in the field. bottom of the pack, 10 strokes The long-hitter, winner of the next and canned a 15 foot- With a time of 11:07, off the pace. •t Paul Nichols and Mike Cheva- "I was hitting the ball pret- six tour .events, reached the er on the next "That's fun," he said. The race was hosted by the £ Her, and Kenny Hallgring's ty good," Trevino said. "1 had Sikes, an 11-year tour veter- 508-yard, par five 10th with .Then he made his big move, "That's the way I used to- Cape May Kiwanis Club and jj» groundout. it close all day, but I just had an who also is a member of two wood shots and two-put- reeling off a string of three play. To heck with this busi- Bob Kite, owner of the Colo- ?. Buddy Kooistra pitched the a lot of trouble with these the Florida bar, had seven ted for a birdie, then wedged consecutive birdies starting, ness of hitting 14 fairways and nial Hotel, who finished sev- s first six and one-thirds for bent grass greens." birdies and no bpgeys jn his to 12 feet and made the putt on the fifth. He made it from 18 greens and shooting 72." enth in the event. Prestige? For The Birds!
Looking fEm Over
ByJONNIFALK sume that New York will fight hard to retain its lands turn into another Ozymandias - a desolate' prestige of having the Giants in the city. If the Yan- ruin. ) kees should ultimately decide to also bolt the world's Everytime somebody says I'm crazy for oppos: So the pleasure dome will probably be bom, and ing the proposed sports complex in the Meadow- largest displaced persons camp, it would be a crippl- it will bring prestige to the state. Rutgers may get to lands, he brings up the matter of prestige for the ing blow to a city that has already lost two baseball play a few games there, and maybe even Army may slate. teams (the Brooklyn Dodgers and the N.Y. Giants) be lured down for a date or two. I suppose they do have a point There is a lot of and two football teams (the Brooklyn Dodgers and Of course, Rutgers still won't have a decent the N.Y. Yanks). prestige in being able to offer 60,000 or 75,000 seats to field house, and the state basketball tournament will the Giants' football games to those who, ride the ex- -And all that happened in a place that was continue to be nomadic unless Atlantic City reclaims pense account gravy boat and those who can afford bought for 21 dollars. The Meadowlands copiplex it. • • • ... season passes. could go as high as 200 million. And in little towns like New Shrewsbury, kids It will also be nice to offer them express dual So 60,000 or more pot-bellied, middle-aged foot- will still jeopardize their jaws everytime they try (n highways to the stadium and lush parking when they ball freaks will be able to get their kicks in more field a ground ball on the undulating rock piles that get there. comfort. A few of them may even have passes for are used for baseball fields. - One can only assume that the Giants will retain their kids. ,, . i Prestige or no prestige; I still think the whole their present season ticket list and will also be able But where do the rest of the kids in the state thing is for the birds. And I don't mean the birds who to take care of the well-to-do people on their waiting stand? will be looking for a new home when they are chased list. You can also assume that the Giants will get From what I have seen and heard -and I work out of the Meadowlands. some sort of preferential deal on rental, etc. in order with young people everyday - the kids aren't turned to be "persuaded" to cross the river. on at all by the complex. QUICK BURSTS Just how mucfi that preferential treatment will Prestige is not as important to them as it is to Jim Vosk, who signed a bonus contract with the cut into the state's anticipated revenue may remain those on the other side of the money gap. They are Red Sox Monday night, left Wednesday morning to a mystery forever. tired of hearing the word prestige and its many sy- join the Williamsport team In the NYP League In nonyms. They connect it with Vietnam and this couji- We can only hope that the state.won'tmakfllhe ojtl.tfl,.,N.yNy j ,, ,....;,.„„.. ,„ ,..,W same mistake New York made when it "gave" Shea try's postureGround the world. " ,_-,.. Cass Legan.'of Long Branch, g Stadium to the Mels. By the time this generation grows up, it might to Pompano Beach, the Mets' team in toe Florida Prestige is an important thing, and one can as- be willing to let the pleasure dome in the Meadow-' State (Class "A") League. 'fc&V-'rf' ••• * '// ve BjALYCELATHBOP known Middletown Cup race until recently, was George M. Road, Marlboro, it's George the margin, one knows that Tallman driving. Ham- was run in "fair open coun- Patchen, foaled in Pleasant M. Patcben, the horse. He the yellow stub told it like it bletonian clocked 2:48% to MARLBORO - Monmoutb try" as early as 16W at Mid- Valley, Marlboro Township, in knows all about him: howwas. And one knows the race AbdeUah Chiefs 2:55% in his County, known as "horse dletown. Today, horse racing 1849, the same year the fa- many hands high - 16 plus; has been run again and again; one and only race. Patchen's country" since the first in- and breeding are big business. mous Hambletonlan was what color - dark brown, no many a drink bought over it, great daughter, Lucy, said to dictnjent Was banded up in But in years by-gone, breed- foaled in Orange County, white; where and when he and many another race rerun be buried in the Trenton Fair 1689 charging "horse racing ing of fine horse flesh was the N.Y., and one year aftec rated, what times he made, over it> grimy, dog-eared, Grounds next to her rival, and playing at nyne pins on ye avocation of the great and the Marlboro became a township. who handled the reins, and and worn. ' , Goldsmith Maid, clocked Sabbath Day," is today a near great in state and nation Both were harness horses, the what trotters he nosed out, or •Harness racing was more' 2:18% and was able totro t far horse breeding center of the and through the decades Mon- former a great campaigner, once in awhile didn't nose out, for fun in the old days, it below her record had she state, and headquarters for mouth County sent her share sire, and world record setter in and at what tracks. would seem, and dividends been allowed to. All race both standardbred and thor- of record breakers and record 1860, the latter a famous sire He doesn't know much were added: "The Deer will times have been considerably oughbred breeders' associ- holders into the Halls of who raced but once to prove about George M. Patchen, the be Liberated at 2 p.m." says a lowered through the years. ations. Fame. Among them was his owner's pride. . man for whom the great stal- banner headling on one race The Hall of Fame of the Regret (Whitney Stables, Some men get caught up lion was named, except that card, while another with a Trotters at Goshen, N.Y., Horse racing, long the sport $150 purse says, "This race of kings, was enthusiastically 1915), only filly ever towi n with clipper ships, some with he was a New York publisher, shows records that George M. the Kentucky Derby. firearms or chess, but with perhaps a newspaper publi-. will start at these grounds and Patchen also sired Godfrey enjoyed by the early settlers finish at McChesney's Ice of New Jersey. The well- "Lost in the mists of time, Joseph H. Rowan, Conover sher. Patchen, who in turn sired, 'Mr. Rowan wants the Mon- Cream Parlor, where you can refresh yourselves wjth de- Hopeful. These three harness mouth-bred trotting stalMort's licious ice cream and famous horses, captured in Currier Si homeland marked with a tee cream soda water..?'Ives prints, may be seen in plaque commemorating this Add away we go! Off the the American Hotel, Free- world record setter and, track, down the center of hold, property of August Weekend Forecast: though short-lived, famous town, past Freehold's many Daesener. George M. Patchen sire. According to Mr. Rowan, saloons, to get' some ice Jr., California, foaled at Mt. George M. Patcben was cream soda water. Holly, was also memorialized owned by Carman-Longstreet, Patchen Track by Currier & Ives and hangs and bred by W.R. Sickles in the main dining room of the Good for Anglers whose farms appear (1873 It was lit the early 1900 the hotel. Atlas map) to be a part of the track became known as The Prints Shown The weekend fishing fore- while his wife, Bernice, is great complex later acquired George M, Patchen Track. These four rare prints to- cast along the Bayshore and proud of her 18-pounder - the by Peter F. Collier, founder of The -purses were lipped to gether with a Currier & Ives down to the Sandy Hook-Sea first bass She has ever caught. the Monmouth County Hunt, 11,000, and hqrse and driver of George M. Patchen in a a Surf, Field Rtjuttr Staff Phott Brigb( &re couldn't be much If the stripers don't turn now the property of the Con- came from as far away as race he didn't win, owned by you on, there's always fluke HIS HOBBY, HORSES - Joseph H. Rowan of ! vent of the Good Shepherd, West Virginia. It, was still The Henry D. Cross 3rd of Colts "If it keeps going the way it And Stream fishing and it promises to hold Wickatunk. George M. Patchen'Track in Neck, through the courtesy of Marlboro, who has revived the memory of a fa- strong over the weekend, ei- mous homebred harness horse of the past, George has been this week, it should 1 ,lir. Rowan has succeeded 1937... perhaps longer. Free- their owners, were on loan re- be terrific," summed up one ther by boat or from the surf, in having Freehold Raceway hold Raceway has no records. cently to the Marlboro Town- M. Patchen, poses with a friend, Requlzlt, at angler who Is close to where pounder while several others the latter technique report- name a race for George M. The illustrious trotting stal- ship Historical Committee for Chester Horse Farm, Wickatunk. "Quiz" shared the action Is. joined the striped brigade: edly "very good." Fluke and Patchen, starting in th,e 1971 lion for whom the track was a one-night exhibit at Marl- pasture at the farm with Mr. Rowan's own racer. What has it been like this Frank Muscle Jr. of Atlantic weakfish are the fare in theracing season, and he will named, can be found in the boro Central School, where Broadway, until the latter's death at a ripe old week? Well, Julian's Sport Highlands (40%), Alex Maciu- eyenings inside the Sea Bright award the winner a nice blue Monmouth County Historical Mr. Rowan spoke further on age three years ago. Shop in Atlantic Highlands re- lewicz of New Monmouth strip. and gold blanket. On Sept. 25 Association at Freehold, his hobby, the horse. ported yesterday that 99 (34i/;), Roger McCann of New Most bait shops are closing - Pleasant Valley Day at the painted in oil by Charles The 1960s social renais- wholesome striped bass had Shrewsbury (32ft), Walter out their June contest Sunday,, track - the feature event will Humphreys, Just to the left of sance in coaching supported been weighed in at the Rt 36 Curry of Atlantic Highlands and the City of Long Branch be the George M. Patchen the entrance over a tall chest by such well knowns as Jamie chop since Saturday. Surely (33%), Roger Bremekamp of is beating the drum for its trot. And why not? Wasn't the with ginger jars and vases on Fillies Eye Wyeth, son of Artist,Andrew that century mark was Middletown (30&), Sid Mor-seventh annual striped bass track once called The George it. This oval painting at Sus- Wyeth, and member of Mon- cracked shortly after. gan of Leonardo (29%) andfishing tourney which runs M. Patchen Track? No one sex County Race Track is be- mouth Museum's board of di- The Sandy Hook area is the Leonard Palmer of Holmdel through Oct. 31. there today remembers it, but lieved to be one of the first to rectors, James Cagney; Jack place, and bunker is the bait, (25V4). The tourney.limited to surf a column weaver of Free- bear the legend of Currier & Seabrooke of Salem County, so weekend anglers are ex- anglers this year, carries with Deb Stakes The "catch" to the story is hold's history, who signed his Ives in its gallery of lith- and some well-known Mon- pected to break par around virtually the same out of Gig- it monthly prizes as well as a work "MCK," discovered it in ograph prints. mouth County driving ex- OCEANPORT - Racing seven of 13 starts and earning the Golf Ball, lie's Bait and Tackle Shop in grand award. Directed by the the most likely of places - George M. Patchen was > perts, has renewed interest in Secretary Kenneth Lennox $268,194 in 1970, when she was How big is big? Jerry Sa- Sea Bright - with a couple of Long Branch Sportsmen's Moore's Inn, West Freehold, sired by Cassius M. Clay and the harness horse for pleasure anticipates both quantity and 2-year-old champion filly. banskas of Leonardo lugged a variations to the theme: . Club and arranged for the city founded about 1793 and gath- an un-named dam and was and these famous horses of a quality for tomorrow's $25,000- Eggy, winner of the richest SSU-pounder into Julian's, by itsjummer festival com- added Post Deb Stakes, with prize for 2-year-old fillies last Rumson's Bob Hensler u ering place of harness and not raced until lie was about bygone era whose blood lines early yesterday morning, and checked in with a 37-pound .mlttee. sulky folk ever since. six years old, as was the cus- carry on today. more than two dozen 3-year- year, the Gardenia, hasn't earlier this week two Middle- striper, and right behind was• K(sh must be weighed at Rewarding Study tom then, according to Mr. Pleasant Valley takes pride old fillies considered possible started since beating Rose- town residents, Frank Petillo his teen-age (laughter with a one of five locations: Mon- Researching in Moore's Inn Rowan. in having produced the origi- starters. . mont Bow and Forward Gal In and Bill Hall, scored between 28-pounder. , mouth Bait and Tackle, 496 is different than research in a Record Time nal George M. Patchen, and As far as quality, the one that 1 l/16.-mile race. How- 47 and 48 pounds. Bud Kruse hauled in four Ocean Ave.; Steve's Tackle library - more, rewarding. After four times lowering in Joseph H. Rowan, former mile .and 70-yard stepping ever, she has been working Sabanskas also hooked a 30- fish weighing up to 33 pounds, Shop, 63 Brighton Ave.; Sal's The racing programs aren't the world's trotting record for: owner-trainer-driver, but for stone to the {50,000-added regularly here under the su- Tackle Shop, 24 Ocean Ave.; neat and tidy, but tell a rich sex, he left it at 2:23%, which whose sharp and enthusiastic Monmouth Oaks on July 5 is pervision of trainer Oscar Frank's Bait and Tackle on story. Marked with round, Mr. Rowan states was in 1858 historic recall this horse expected to draw three of last White. the boardwalk, and the Long black figures right down the on the Union Course, Queens would be buried in the sands year's outstanding 2-year-old Branch Fishing Pier. line, with the winner's time in County, N.V., with Darius of time. fUlies-Aisco Stable's Forward Gal, Walter M. Jeffords, Jr.' Eggy and George D. Widen- GOLF er's Patelin. Twin Brook Golf In addition to that trio, Les- Center on lie Combs II's Kentucky Oaks Monmouth Park Today winner Silent Beauty arrived Jumping Brook Road from Liberty Bell early this week and is awaiting the 1 Post-Deb. Entries Selections Other probable starters in- ENJOY .. ?ffi.T!S*!lKn- .. Rofflt owl Jar «1M> Slum _.j By REGGIE STER clude Cyamome, Rosemont lit-SUM; dan; 4 4 not if. Taskmaster (Hi) Thombwj ...Mi GOOD GOLF Eoglt's Pasture (111) Ko Boy. *T Kino Barb OIS) Hlnolaa „ ,...».1W Bow, Isafloridan, Tanzanite, Slim1* Prldt 1CM NaralM ..-..J-I MlslvMoglc HIM Hole— .. «-l 1-Noble Ellen, Sllm's Pride; AT A MODERN Java square (111) Mktll.... «M Surahln. Andy (112) Ho8ay.«™-.-™._.J-l For No Reason, Hard and Huglta Indian (119) Kollal-....._.«....».12-1 Snook Pro (116) Mostliv...... —M«-....J-2 JtvaSqnare .Fast, Alma North, Sentimen- Sand to Win (HI) Aitoroo...™ ,M N»o>rbov"
Briarwood $5.99 t2.il Amzn. Roaewd tl 1.50 $5.t» AUTO RACING T««KwoodBl. 6!JO J.»» Bichd.Oak 13.00 (.«• Yesterday's Results TOMORROW WT! 7:30 Snowdrift 8.20 3.?» Pink Mist"' 13.50 '«.»•• 'Mink Walnut 9.&0 3" MMMNdnwllWtr. «•*> «*. . m - UMtl elwj I» * fl I •»• 7» T*. _ STOCK CAR* Can. Yellow" u.00 7.t»' Auhrnin Prlnw IRIvtro)..I.OO 3.40 a.0O 3.00 'Am. Birch li.eo 4.'9» Wy Birch •'" 14.40' 7.t» 4th-tUte; dnuM «««»;»I. sacaiisis J£SEr:::^.i^ AAXD.CMBCEX T RACKS tad - M4M; clmg; Jjr» Red Hickory n.»' ~4.if Goldn. Birch ~ 14.60 in 70 yn Arctic Alra(Mleell).."'.r"-'"....;.....j^» S.if Sir Omni (Rlwo) 5.M JJO J.» Hlrtlopolll (Rlv.ro) 1.40 3.M 3.W (inda a •» Will 12RA0I CAREFREE WATERFRONT KortnH. (Frwilnl ~..».00 5.W Foom (Solomon.)...—. MO MO Gold. Spray' "19.80 5.55 Col. Oak 17.00 WHIM Ul Dorlhi (Aitoroo)...... J.6O Hork mt Lark (Grimm) ...... _4.» m - UM»l <*»tl * lft>J mlyrl torn O*M» tt •*} m.m Mldniflht Elm 11.00 io.»» LIVING AT ITS BEST! M- tiJUj cwti;» »• mdiuj IV, I. Craraer-Lutz Team Ft Kln» IPHTll-.. IS.* 7.10 4.J0 .Antique BirtiT" Y*A5~¥M WftWtTlll Mylli.i (••tlolt) ..—M» "2 HolrPiKt (Midi) «... — ...,4M Wins at Tomahawk X ilndTThor'nwood'iSf.so* • i.'fl Winch. Walnut 24.00 H.I5 • MODULAR DOCKS _~^~ „„..„!-...... J.40 S.W Count tor Mori (Lovoto) .....'M ruBy AtMmW«f lehra thlpment LINCROFT - Mrs. William 4Hi - MJWtlrji/ » * « ytjSwKliI 4 f. Cramer and Mrs. Jack Lutz • PRE-ENGINEERED RAFTS CMM (8orr.ro) ...... 4*) 3.00 J.40•teamed up to win the mem- Offtrlng (beater ItebMty ntatrti ber-guest tournament at Lima Tombovrlin (B'clol.) 3.40 • BUUf HEADING IM - ¥MH Rough Sawn Redwood Redwood Fluted Columni. 'OLEN BOCK LUMBER V lehathi. »crtn . . Rea. 112.80' •*'•.«»•» •"• MARINE LUMBER CO. 477-4600 OCEANPORT.NJ. f»Wliwll IH NllflW IIJHFNIIIIJ In nrUUlvlrlu • up EXACTAWAQEfllNQ bqwd UU of Controrton Op«iD»»y7A.ll.toll:i6P.M. •»rt.7*.M.»ll'.ll, POST 2 PM • Daily Double 1:50 PM ATTINT1ON BOATM1NI OPEN SUN.t to NOON aiW,pwt^n|; n • ». .-. IT'S AN OLD-FASHIONED CELEBRATION AT MONMOUTH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH — WITH GO0D OLD-FASHIONED LOW PRICES.AND 3 DAYS OF SAVINGS. SAVE ON BRAND NEW 1971 CHRYS- LERS & PLYMOUTHS AND SAVE ON 1971 DEMONSTRATORS, TOO! THE LARGEST SELECTION OF USED CARS IN THE SHORE AREA WlU BE ON SALE TOO, SO COME ON DOWN AND SAVE! 3-DAY FRIDAY-SATURDAY. 1971 1971 PLYMOUTH AIR-CONDITIONED FURY 2-Door, HardtopSfyling, AIR-CONDITIONED AUTOMATIC, 318, V4, pnm staring; POWBt JUSC 8RAKB, RA- DIO. Vinyl t«f, d«lox« wfctel covtts, 3- wri fir* deck, banptr garb, Bghfpod- AirrOMATICTRANS.;225EN- Excluding FrtigM $ Preparation | GINE, AND All STANDARD FACTORY EQUIPMENT. OVER 500 Excluding Freight & Preparation CARS AVAILABLE AT ALL TIMES! LARGEST SELECTION OF USED CARS IN MONMOUTH COUNTY WE SELl MORE, YOU SAVE MORE! LOWEST USED CAR PRICES IN THE AREA! HURRY IN FOR BEST SELECTION.', •67 CHEVY S/S '1597 f X3CRYSLER. 68B01CKH.T '1597 ..... '2997 Newport, radio, heater, automatic, Impala Super Sport convertible, auto- BKIRICKITCHK LeSabre4-do«r hardtop, air-condi- and Prix, aircomJitioned, vinyl roof, power steering. matic on console, power steering, ra- WUWUBOUQIMT. dio, heater, bucket seats. tioncdi powBr, etc* etc MCflWUAC Con*.....'1197 '670L0SH.T. '1597 '68 PLYMOUTH Wgn..^ 1597 '69 CADILLAC. .MM75 Air-conditioned, full power. Coupe DeVille, air-conditioned, full '88'4-door hardtop, radio, heater,' Custom suburban wagon, radio, auto- power equipmenLLite new. 850LDSF-85 '597 automatic power steering. matic power steering. WJLK 4-door, radio, heater, etc '67T0R0HAD0. '1597 70 MAVERICK - '1797, '65 BUICK H.T '797 Fully power equipped, vinyl roof. Scout includes plow. Radkt, heater, stick shift, etc. RADIO Skylark 2-dr. hardtop, radio, heater, '68 CHEVY 4-Dr. '1197 '68 PLYMOUTH Wgo..,J2097 70 VOLKSWAGEN _ *1897 automatic, power steering. EARLY Biscayne, radio, heater, automatic, Sport suburban wagon, air-condi- Radio, heater, etc Real economy. WILL 65CHEVEILE '1097 powersteering. tioned, radio, heater, automatic, pow- 70 DDSTER ——™»'2397 2-door hardtop, radio, automatic, '68 FORD 4-Dr.- '1497 ersteering, Radio & heater, automatic, power power steering, etc BIRD BROADCAST Galarie '500', radio, heater, automat- steering, eta 65T0RD4-Docr '1097 ic, power steering. '68D0D6EWO. '2197 RIGHT Monaco, air-conditioned, automatic, 70BARRACUDA ...... '2697 Galaxie '500', radio, heater, automat- '68F0RDH.T. '1497 Radio and heater, power steering. Galaxie'500' 2-door hardtop, radio, power steering, etc SPECIALS! ic, power steering. FROM heater, automatic, power steering, '69 VOLKSWAGEN™.'1597 70 MUSTANG —'2697 A 66VAUAHt.~ -p-JS-7 etc. COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION! Radio, heater, etc Economical Radio, heater, automatic etc OUR 2-door, radio, heater, stick shift. 70 DODGE Dart PARTIAL I '64CHEme!Air_ »97 1 '69 RAMBLER W?n.».'1697 '2997 iSHOWROOM '66 VOLKSWAGEN '897 •65.'66-'67. 68 4-door, air-conditioned, radio, auto- USTING! I > Radio and heater, etc Very economi- VOLHSWACENS 440 station wagon, radio, heater, matic, power steering. | 640LDS4-Dtor '197 cal. ALL PRICED TO Sal automatic, etc. • ON '69MDSTAHGMichl_'2297 70 PLYMOUTH Wgn._'2997 '62 CHRYSLER Kewp«rt.-_'297 '66 MUSTANG --^97 Radb&heater.automatlc on console, Sport suburban wagon, radio, heater, CRHHT | '65 BUICK Bineri '397 FRIDAY! Radio &heater,stick shift, etc '68 PLYMOUTH '1497 power steering, bucket seats, very automaticpower. •67HiflrainM.ru .'597 Sport Fury 2-door hardtop, radio, sharp. TERMS 4-door. radio, heater, automatic very '66 CHRYSLER Input—'497 Z£L economical. heater, automatic, power steering. '69 PLYMOUTH COBV..'2297 70 DODGE POLAR A RAM l'64CHEVYtepAeiw.-_'4S7. BDAMEITiSED •67 CHEVY 4-Dr.~~~ '1197 Fury 111, convertible, radio & heater, 4-DOOR HARDTOP eutomaticpowersteering. AlfWONDITlONEp TO •66P0NTIACl«. «_'497 Biscayne, radio, heater, automatic. Automatic powersteering, - C %mmi FREE PRIZES! '67 DODGE Dirt '69F0RDWp, '2697 radio, neater, etc |'65P0NTIAClHKTtif^.M97 LTD Squire, air-conditioned, power sum FREE 4-door, radio, heater, automatic. steering, power brakes, etc •1997 ;65P0IHIAC2*.l^_'597 REFMSME||TS! /iJ| f UAMD NEW I I 1971 TOYOTA CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH TOYOTA 17981 7OO RT. 36, EATONTOWN 542-55OO MOMKS mfnou AUm FOIL HUE ANNOUNCEMENTS LUST AND FOUND AUTOS FOE BALE FridayJaae 25, l»7t 17 MWTAWP FOUND MALE «UX»: IHASCY POOCLE - w*«IEO -< I* if . Man: AUTOSFOR8ALE teggffl' (fcetmwt- **>»4. cm Ml- GET the BEST SIDE WEEDED - Te PlMMaoav IH m MuUMowk between UiWeja. <&* W- . tfirt snllt, 1I.»M miles Very CaN74t-O» JtOWJtOAT KHJHO - Mrif) in Rumson t»«ottef5pjn. • - • »I«S. SAIU.V BROS. INC., Hi- «J>ro»« ownership end soy lor this IMS CHEVROLET IMPALA — FORD — 1M1 FalrlaM Koaoo. VI. tide- for less at dord. Nrw motor tab. tcK. AUSTIN AMERICA — Two-door, lour AUTOMOTIVE speed. SISTLP.OJE. UgMry Maker win LOST — Large block NEW DODGE COLT! >IAIIII CADODGR E ftU24 it MuuifKturar's Suuuted Retail MM for DdCltadHhJItdrfit HIGHWAY 36 NOW! Ntt Included are state and'local taw, **UaaU«n EATONTOWN PRICES tharfet, or other Dulw-astabUibaddiariM, If atqrdor BOVE 542*1129 DMltr-liutalladoviIpaMBtorMntot. ' N.J.D.A.A. AiVTOirOISAtE 18 ft«D^fe^,*H0ftia^^ AUTOS FOB8AtE (*C C*T«4.I«* — I»W *our-ooor «.'(, (tGt OI — IIMM milts. Glue, ExceMerif condition. Coil otter t:3G, AM. ri/,, Iwo-nxttt overdrive. S2IM. Ul- Krofl Motors Inc. IO 3539 111 p.m. avcekdoyi. Vt Broadway ' Long Branch, NJ, MJ-JMO JJM MDGE CONVERTIBLE - Custom 1967 TR-IA - New top. AMFM rodlo, ant ]«9 TOYOTA COROLLA — E*Cellent condition. Two-door sedan. Best^olter. JEEP SALES AND SERVICE . |9>t DATSUri — Sedan, t"""!"':,?!? ML Fodarv Mr, radio, tieater. good CM- more. RED FORD — IMS Gated* SO. SWndard .with black Vinyl Interior. Asking SUM SStm55Vlrm! Coll oiler S, 787*5)1,1. Phone 787-3610 Twin Bora Motors, Inc. Coll 7 Call JM-5S5? shin. Eicellenl condition. New tire*. (4JS. I4J VOLKSWAGEN — Hew engine 717-0111. ISKBT?' ^ Ill Newman Springs Sd., Red Bank 19M BUICK RIVIERA - While, block vi im VOLKSWAGEN - 51650 or best oi- Coll 717-2023. utch.broluB. $3»5. dork MM OLOSMOBIL6 443 - Encdlcnl con- CALL NOW 747-OMO MUSTANG 1961 - Convertible, 2B», V*DATSUN 1947 — eaHon. 4BQ co. In. engine. Power steering. nyt lop. air conditioning, oil power, buck ler. Con be seen at 887 Palmer Ave.. Mid- IMi FORD CORTINA — Two-door auto- Call 142-4114 r e et seats. Excelieni condition. $71-5143 dieto«n. KITSOH CHEVROLET CO. 3-ipeed stick, power top. P»«'* "'A Air coneJHontno. Nmd money for school. matic One owner. S925 or best off er. S5 OLDSMOBILE — Excellent condl- DrtXes. Mlctwlln tlrel. W9-34S2 or S«3- Atler4p.rru,ciiltJl-tHW, JU9S. Eves. MI-3362. 170-1925 Hwy34 • . ' • Cotcnkmri 1970 MUSTANG — Moch I. Power steer- 542-lMo on. Power farrjkeiy steering* radio, heat. ng, power brakes, air. Must sell. S2400. Must sell. aKiiv. • \m IMPALA — Custom com. Air condi- 1S64 GTO — Convertible with oir. 1M3 FORD GALAXIE - Automatic trans- U70 XUOA 140 - »S h.p. HursMWal Asking WOO. Ptione 73S-O750. tioning, power steering, AM/FM ttereo mission. Good running condition. S30O. FIK Motors Inc. 45 POHTIAC CATAUNA - Four-door Posh-ear. Power steering. VMW mlttrt rodlo. Vinyl roof. SXJD0.7I74U1. 842-314? oflcr 5 p.m. IV68 CHEVbLLt Call 7I7-W39 otter 7 pjti. Authorized Dealers Best oil er. Coll otter 6 pun. m-iMl • SS 396. 4speed, buckets.mags. - Dodge and Dodge trucks 1961 PONTIAC — 389. Three deuces, new- tfwy 35 Eotonlown, N.J. Wt OPEL RMXVE — five AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOft SALE Call 495-1649 194» PONTIAC - Catallna shttlon wonw. AM/FM rodl.. EnclUnt'-— ly painted, new interior, radio, heater, six 54J-1I11 m BUICK L6 SABRE — Convertible, 1963 VOLKSWAGEN — Good engine. S300. good tires. Excellent running condition. Power steering ond brakes. Radio, heater, Call 741-5473. utormiilc fronsmlsslon. Needs muffler. new tires. J775. Call ofter 5,741^403. Call after 7 p.m. '-' $300 firm. Must be seen to be appreciated. DATSUN 10. 264-M52. 741-35)2 364-2110 after 5 p.m. 1M7 «GB - Excellent condition. WASHINGTON'S AUTO SERVICE lt«7 SIMCA 1W0- Standard shift, four, For dtlolls call 1548 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE - Two- 370 Brood St. 364-1323 Keyport 170 BUICK ELECTRA — 225. Custom. door sedan. Very good condition. 14501 or »l17iT AUTOS FOR SALE w mileage, full power. Air conditioning, best offer. Weekdays «:3O-9:3O p.m. 946- door, v-8, standard shift. Power steering CHEVROLETS - BRAND NEW 'hltewalls, vinyl roof, mint condition. CLEARANCE fFIJES plus extras. Selling due to health. SI ISO or 9781. Itier extras. 2M-2M4. best offer. 59I-92W; 1W0 LEFTOVERS —.Demo's and execu- tive's at greatly reduced prices. 161 STUDEBAKER — Goad condition COUGAR — 1967. Black vinyl top, llml VOLKSWAGEN 1966 — Good condition. ween body. Air conditioning, power ond 1969 VOUCSWAGEN..S 1395 1966 BUICK .$1195 Widard shift. $95. Wt BUCK RAMBLER — ,._.. New wiring, front end. Needs some engine 7I7-W23. lilt steering. Console. Wire wheels. Moke 2-door. 4-soeed, radio, heater, LeSabre, 2-door. air conditioning. ACTION work. 1750. May be seen at Sea Bright TOWNE CHEVROLET offer. 842-I0I7. . door. GoodJIrw. Hydromotlc, | 1st Ave., Atlantic Highlands 391-1101 Chevron station. '64 GRAND PRIX — Three-speed stick steering. Best otter. Ui-IOlt, in«o w!,As n , 19« GALAXIE -Blue. KARrViANN GHIA — 1N7 crjnvartlbwZExI 1966 MERCURY. .$1150 MOVING, MUST SELL — 1970 Spitfire. DOREMLSFORO fl S! 8 r 1967 VOIKSWAGEH....5995 90 Monmouth St. Call allent condition. HMO. *f. Park Lane. 4-door SALE!! Like new. S2600. Speakers and snow tires. 741-9D92 between 9 o.m.-12 noon. Call 546-9445. , ' 2-door, 4-speed, radio, heater. Socritlce. Best offer over 41795. Call 741- 74I-6OOD 962 CADILLAC - Two-door coupe. 1300. 1966 FORD ^ $875 0522. CIRCLE CHEVROLET Call I!S5 PLYMOUTH Custom 4-doog, air conditioning.' 2M-2088 1967MONZA $795 1971 1965 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE - Runs good. 325 Maple Ave. Red Bonk 2-door, slick shilt. 1350. Automatic Uansmission. 1966 MUSTANG .$995 &4W. Call after 5 p.m. 741-3130 67 CADILLAC — Hordtop tedon, De- Call 244-9785 542-8397. 'ille. leather interior, vinyl roof. Stereo. Six cylinder, automatic transmission, MUHPHY & DAVISON 1945 CORVETTE — Stingray hardtop Mercedes-Bern Sales ond Service ix-way seat. Excellent condition. Must More Classified 1967 OPE..... $925 radio, tieater 1959 BONNEV1LLE — One owner. Good ell. Make offer. 264-9100, Mrs. CassUy, 9 coupe. Excellent condillog. SI850. Coll af- DODGE mechanical condition. 1125. Call 787-4958 H»/y 9 Freehold 462-5300 Station Wagon, 4-speed transmission Afler 6 and weekends, 222-3589. ler 5,872-1250. _, on Next Pay v after 7 p.m. 1965 CHEVRtttET i$750 STRAUB BUICK - OPEL 1966M6NZA .....$795 Super Sport automatic; tiansmission. POLARA 1966 VOLKSWAGEN — New paint |ob. NINE ACRLS of Nc* and Used Cars AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE 4-speed transmission. Good whilewall tires. S7)5. 291-3044 or 741- WV^3<> 264 4000 . Keypor' AIR CONDITIONED 7664. 1965 OPEL $595 SEE A "RUSSELL MAN" — For the best 1966(MDSMOBttE.._$1350 Station wagon. Custom hardtop, factory air, tin- cor buys. RUSSELL Oldsmobile CADIL- ted glass. V-8 engine, automatic AUTOS FOR SALE LAC Co., 100 Newman Springs Rd., Red Vista station* wagon, 9 passenger, air 1965 rMCON $750. transmission, power steering, Bonk. 7414910. conditioning. Convertible, automatic tremission, it>~ I radio and heater, white walls, 1968 PONTIAC GTO — Hardtop. Green * whBel covers, bumper guards metallic with light green vinyl top. New 1966 BUICK .$1295 paint, mag wheels, wide ovals. AM/FM, ITS YOUR MOVE 1965 DART"GT" $775 plus all standard factory equip- Sport wanon, 9 pa&sengei. power steering, brakes, 4-speed, factory Standard transmission ment. olr. Wired for stereo tape, speakers in- cluded. SU95 or best otter. 747-0344. Original list Price $4729 1971 PINTO — 3 months old, S1800 out- right, or take over monthly payments to TO A BETTER USED CAR NOW qualified buyer. No down payment. 229.- <-qdb 908a cHer 8 p.m. 41 •O520 $595 1968 FORD GALAXIE 500 — Hardtop. '67 GALAXIE "500" tat aUtia noon*. •ccsuorin piui Four-door, eight cylinder automatic. Ex- iir conditioning cellent condition. $1500. 671-5685 after 5 ... aid we've got the BEST! and pa#i»t door p.m. $2999 lock*. It ii worth 1969 DODGE 1970 FIAT 1968 VALIANT | your Iniptclfon 1968 BUICK WILDCAT — Convertible. thii wotk ai tha Power steering, brakes and windows. "124S", 4-door seden. 4-speed MONACO 4-Door, Maroon, V-8 V-100, 4-door sedan, '.fteyty TOWN & COUNTRY •paci.Jpric.oF Factory oir conditioning. New tires. automatic transmission/power.Blear- SCENIC CAR SALES transmission, AM-FM radio. Blue. automatic transmission. iaMtev' Chrome wheels. 52,500. Must sell. 747-5208. $4495 15,000 original miles. ing, power brakes, air condition and DODGE 1965 MUSTANG - Six cylinder automatic. matching vinyl roof ^ . HWY 36 & SCENIC DRIVE, HIGHLANDS CIMUtMHlUNMU Goad for parts. Engine and transmission $1395 60 MAIN ST. MATAWAN BROADVUAyAT4Trl In good condition. Best offer. 583-3845. $1695 1222-1234 Ung Branch $2475 872-0221 1966 CHRYSLER 566-6100 AUTOS FOB SALE 1970 PLYMOUTH 1969 VOLKSWAGEN New Yorker, V-8. automatic trans- Fury HI sedan. Turquoise, V-S. auto- mission, ppower steering and power Squareback, automatic transmission, matic transmission, power steering, brakes, Grei factory air conditionin radio, Tan. _ $1450 $2175 1970 DODGE 1965 AUSTIN Pobra, 2-door hardtop. Brown, V-8, Sprite Roadster, 4-sptiad tnh«v automatic transmission, power steer- 1969SIMCA ing, power brake*. Factory air condi- 4-door aedan, automatic trans- Western Days tion. mission, Economical with rear load- h $3250 $1475 1966 PLYMOUTH 1968 PLYMOUTH Satellite, 2-door hardtop, automate,- tranamiuion, and power steerina* FURY III. Convertible. Red, 1970 MUSTANG 31B V-8 automatic 8 2-door hardtop, 6-cylinder, power and power steering " $1095- steering, automatic transmission, at G $1695 $2550 1966 PONTIAC : _- 1969CHEVELLE 1968 DODGE Catalini, stttion wagon, V-8, auto- t * malic transmission, power staerinot Meiibu. 2-door ha.dlop, V-8, Auto- Charger, V-8, automatic trans- brakes and windows. Air cofhw matic transmission, power steering, mission, power, steering, Beautiful tkmod, While. yellow with Mack vinyl top. Blue. $1575 TOMS FORD $2775 $1950 DAILY RENTALS AND LEASING i bucking prices on Mavericks, lassoing savings on Pinto's and rounding up bargainst on mustangs, so come on in before the stampede for some mighty big values. Buhler & Bitter Brand New 1971 Brand New 1971 MAVERICK CHRYSLER & PLYMOUTH MUSTANG 2 dr., G cyl., std. trans., radio, accent group. MG Z dr., 6 cyl,, 3 speed. I AUSTIN M fe«l LAND ROVER I $2672 SALES: 264-0198 Established 1925 SERVICE: 264-0090 $2195 3290HWY.35,HAZLET - NOCARGETC tnv COME IN AND RIDE (test drive ONE OF OUR PONIES) -mis MARK- Proof Positive Brand New F97I P/NTO THESE BUYS 2 door, 4 cylinder, of Full Value 4 speed. Will §9 1970 "MAVERICK $J9i9 Sport coupe, six cylinder, AM-FM " i".". • plus deafer prep. KNOCK YOUR & trans. radio, tinted glass. New trim, 3- HE A fi " speed economy. I 999. HAT OFF! 1970 "HORNET" IT EARNS IT! Coupe, six cylinder, heater, stan- OUR SPECIAL "ROUND-UP TIME" dard shift, 14,000 miles. New cat 1 theWagonmaster value at a used car pricel 11 9 9 1971 COUNTRY SQUIRE, | SAVINGS ON FORDS/, LTDs, TORINOS, dull facing rear seats, 400 •C.I.D. engine, crulsamatic, w/w, visibility group, deluxe luggagg rack, air cond., radio, THUNDERBIRDS AND TRUCKS tinted glass & PS. List Prlco 1969 NOVA ....H695 1968BELAIR...... M695 $5291. Sedan, six cylinder, radio, heater, whitewalls, etd Wagon,V-8, automatic, power, radio, whitewalls. IPIUS 1968 NOVA ...M495 1966 CAPRICE...... *! 395, FREE Coupe, six cylinder, automatic, vinyl trim, radio. _ Wagon, 9 passenger, automatic, and power, radio*' During Western Days 1968 NOVA ...M295 1967 BELAIR...... 13^1 COWBOY HATS Coupe, six cylinder, stick, radio, nsw whitewalls. Wagon; sixi.automatic, power steering, whitewalls,^ With A Demonstration Ride list price $5291 1968 PLYMOUTH .,.:...>ii9i NOW 1967 BUICK *1295 Sporp t Fury,;V-8, buckets,-lull power, radio, i ; $4349 "Special," V-8, vinyl top, automatid, powar, ate. ' walls.walls , j ' ' 1967 MUSTANG .M295 1968 iKLAIR. ...„..., Coups, V-8, automatic, power, radio, whitewalls. V-8, automatic, radio, ono owner, EXECUTIVE CARS 1967IMPALA.. 1967 MUSTANG '1195 Sedan, V-8, automatic, radio, ono owner. '*•• Coupe, six, standard, radio, one owner. 7F1TD 1966 PONTIAC M095 2 d. hdtp., medi 2 dr. hdtp., medium grMn. vinyl saaatt i 4 1966 "WlLDCAf"...... '!095 Sedan, air conditionsd, full power, whitewalli, TJh roott , ClumallcWwCrulumallc , Vlilblllty GrGrouo pp, PS, 7J County Squire 71 Galaxy 500 •ir^cond.. AM ffjl; tinted glauglau, wni.1 Coups, Vfl, automatic, power, vinyl trim. dio, 7J A4 **«.r . AM4)00I /••PCIID I fV-a • .uni WWt .D PSC .c t ui.wauy ...... po . * ... STOCK * M*D. dalun lujipag* racK. air cond., tu 2 dr. hdtp., yallow, black «lnyt roof, vinyl >Mn mil, crulumitlc, ww, K, air cond., radio, n no 11B tap* *y* - MM radio, tinted gnu, po 4 dr. hdtp.. 400 CIO V-8, bluB with black $3877 1965 LESABRE '1095 tinted glau, wtiMl covers. ./inyl foof, auto., optional axi*, ww, 1965 "GRAND PRIX" *895 VliTblllty Group, PS, 6 way Hit, power Ssdan, vinyl top, automatic, power, etc. Coupe, bucket seaw, full power, radio. - ^ "STOCK # STOCK w door locki, bumper guards, door edg* 144 $4428 25 $37SS guardi, air corid., electric r*ir window 71 LTD defroster, dull rtir seat ipeaktrs, dalux* 2 dr. hdtp., llorit ojeen,400 CID V-«. vinyl •tat belts, tlnUd glass, heavy duty battery. roof, Crulsanutlc, WW, visibility Groun. re. bumper ouaros, air COM., radio, Dotty tin. 1965 "SKYLARK" *895 1966 "FUTURA"URA . . molding, tint.rj glass, wheel covers. 71 LTD '71 LTD Coupe, six, automatic, power steering, etc, Coupe, six, automatic, vinyl roof, radio. 4 dr. hdtn 4 dr. hdtp., m«t>liic biu«, 390 CIO «ngln«, STOCK * Itp., Grty gold, vinyl KJII & roar, black vinyl roof, auto., WW, PS, ilr cond,, auto.•uto., WW 208 wh*«f rw. PS, air cond,, radio, tinted gnu, radio, tlnitd fllns, whwl covori. $4509 STOCK # 189 $397i 1968 AMERICAN :. STOCK - STOCK 1965 "LEMANS" 795 $3886 20 Coupe, six cylinder, stick, economical $3897 Convertible, V-8, buckets, 3-speod, radio, etc. portetion. 1965 "BARRACUDA" ...... 795 m0CHEVR0Ln...... *395 Coupe, V-8. 4-ep»ed, radio, heater, whitawalls, disc*. FORD CIRCLE HB^ TOM'S FORD "TWO NAMES YOU CAN TRUST" .200 HIGHWAY 35 KEYPORT 325 MAPU AVI. 741-3130 RED BANK 264-1600—— TRUCK f OB SALE TTOCPFfltfiAUS MffKTtJlfrCUCS T*w OHIA.Contrtble. JgfJ CHEVROLET AERIAL 3T LADDER I9WHOHQATRAIL W - Excaant OOO- * top. Rodlo. took, like IMMS OLOSMOtlLOLOSMOBILE 441 - «-»5MJ-l« TWICIC. Ruiv Gaod^re^Mote otter. nmnSnp. ondltlon, U9S. •71- ^ anat-m wro - we PAV TOP s FOK MARIME HAIUtOAD — M0B09ewl USED CARS. CALL MR. VIM- and winch, AIR CONDITIONED — IMJ tour-door MOTORCYCLES pobl« jrandflna it cylinder, oil power, auto- MOBILE H0HB8 ent condition. CPU 717-1205 or 787-UM MCYUN6 -IWL Cutjeraipii*. Terta U- WOOD SKIFF - WW) OX*, la wafer. btdroems, &*W. Full birch AUTOPABTS-BEPA1R8 Washer 34' ELCO — Good foil. ChryMer Crown ELJCONA —10 X SS. fully turnfcJied. Won-' m IHHt mort.«» or bat o* to-woll corpetlno. Coll offer e p.m. J42- EMSINE - «»«5 lUkllew em. IM tfmlMiABn. Wolfeiy tanlHoii. (HM tnxi* far nttonpdX; WWBBT WANTED AUTOMOTIVE OET CASH FOR YOUR FOREIOrt - *NO SPORTS CARS AT «ON«jUTH AUTO RENTALS MOTORS INC H*y ii Etlo TOM'S FORD AUTO FOB SALE AUTOS FOB SALE JUNK CARS PICKED UP RENT A CAR Twinbrook Auto Wrecking HwyB w-itw • Eotontown 542-2235 BOATS AND ANTED — Choice used cars, with eertl- IW CELEBRITY SLOOP--TI id mlleog*. Contact Ed Slgler. ACCESSORIES dacron toll., P^jM^J" AA. SCHWARTZ i>U-If'THOMPSON -'InSoard-oilt- CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH , MADE TO ORD6R" boord. Boa) and trailer SUoUCaU 1W. Front S»- Red Bo* 7<7-C787 . Boot cushions. Canvas woe*. IC-2SO5, 71741)2 McGLOIN BUICK-OPEL Inc AUTOS FOB BALE AUTOS FOB SALE AtrrOSFOE8ALE 211 TROJAN —105 Cray marine «0ta> «9CllflS 1945 BOSTON -lOOh.p. Ml Hew extra prop, ondwne9f,aow IdiIng decSk and' mooring canvavo ANNIVERSARY SALE two seats, console control, pontljl BREAK FROM ter and compass. New two 12-gol. tanks, six new life preserver a new 71 amp. 12-volt battery, new tinoulsher, new fuel line, oncfioro.- .^^. Very good condition. Wlfh rjfjraoee».' Due to Illness. Affertp.in.gMBM. CONTINUES WITH GREAT SUCCESS" THE BEACH »• FLEETCRAFT — Fit*. hotl, wide beam, perfid 1 open deck area. 75 tip. J( Our showroom is air condi- condHlpn, raady for water, 1 tioned and so are most of our seen at A & B Boat Sales, I POR SALE - IMS IS' Chrysler Mattana. cars « h*Jm Hollywood Ave., Long Bfcncft. 222-2778. . . 16' FIBERSLAS — Inboard/outboard, la Get ready fo buy watar. Berth for Mason. Excellent eoexU- 230 BUICKS & OPELS IN tlon.»l»S.e71-1M5. •• & We're going to sell COMTESSA — Fast W Custom K/C» aaM- if !»«* <£»!!»« ••?»R '»»• »««W «xtn». Only 127 AND MORE ON THE WAY! 1971 Mercury s TWO WOOOEH OUTBOARUT D MOTOR fefff If you're ready to buy... we're ready fo sell. Coll 1971 MONTEGO 1971 MONTEGO BUSINESS NOTICES TEST DRIVE ANY BUICK . MX 4-door «adm. VB, Ught P»w MX, 2-door harttop, V-8, gray 1971 COLONY PARK t buck vinyl roof* Mtoct thfft' gold. Hack vinyl roof; aalsct shift Station wagon, medium blue, lug- istifo po tori luiamhrioiv powar (tewing, air gage carrier, air conditioner, AM iiionByi oondnonaf. radio. Wn*416S WM«604O OR OPEL OF YOUR CHOICE "^1S $ DbeaMMIlD Discounted to .'35W 4999 'MoreClassmed 1971 MONTIREY 1971 MARQUIS ., ; on Next Page * 1971 MARQUIS 4-door hardtop, speed control, Station wagon, maroon, black vi- 2-doc* hardtop, dark green, dark JUST A SAMPLE gnan vinyl roof, retort shift trans- AM-FM stereo, power seats, pow- WANTED AUTOMOTIVE nyl foof* kftgsgft csnw# k V er door locks, medium blue, white tionar.AMdb tioermks*in. , powar •tearing, air condi- «to«66S WMM86i 8 vinyl roof. Va»«nd YatMnd Was»5637 AIR CONDITIONED DEMounwIw)*4699 Year-end Summer la HEREI. AIR CONDITIONED M099 Discounted to • c" ond we need 100 U ted Can hrew$bur Hwy.JS 2M-W00 Keypori We will trade or buy out W A L L? y'N J. right — Coll or come In TOM'S FORD Shrewsbury Ave., at Sycamore 747-5400 IMMIMIJIMIJIMMHMIIMIM AUTOS FOE SALE Stock #5520 Fully equipped Stock #5469 Fully equipped SKYLARK 2-DOOR COUPE LE SABRE 2-DOORHARDTOP $ $ Even Sqys. 3565 DWVERED PLUS TAX 4175 DELMKD PLUS TAX AIR CONDITIONED AIR CONDITIONED wow 9 ACRES °< AU USED CARS COME WITH 1969 BUICK Skylark, 2-door hardtop, V-8, automatic transmission, power Stock #5569 Fully equipped Stock #5611 Fully equipped steering and fac- tory air condition. LE SABRE 4-DOORHARDTOP ESTATE WAGON GUARANTEE 1970 PONTIAC Grand Prix, V-8, automatic trans- LATE MODEL "OVER 500 CARS Ifi STOCK" mission, power steering, power DtLNMDHUSUX 4650 DEllVmt>PW57AX SPECIALS wlndowa, vinyl M320 roof, factory air. $3695 1970 PLYMOUTH Only AIR CONDITIONED AIR CONDITIONED Satellite, automatic transmission, 1970 OLDSMOBILE powsr steering, JA *l AP Vista Cruiser, 9 passenger station radio, heater. A 17 J wagon, V-8, automatic trans- mission, power steering :and ONLY AT brakes, wood- • STRAUB dacal and factory 1970 Chevy Nova air conditioning. 'Automatic trans- mission, radio, $1/ft|" heater. * I 07 J 1969 CHEVROLET 1970CHRYSLIR Impala, 2-door hardtop, V-3, auto- 300 hardtop, V-8, automatic matic transmission, power steering transmission, power steering, [ 1970 RIVIERA . and factory air condition. power brakes, vi- nyl roof, factory Stock #5362 Fully equipped "GS". Fully equipped including $ Stock #5391 Fully equipped factory air oondl- «__ ifcs 2395 tion. power win- SAiiQC '*v» ELECTR A 2-DOOR HARDTOP ELECTRA 4-DOOR HARDTOP dows and seats. H*t¥iJ • Foreign & Sport SPECIALS $ $ 1969 BUICK 70 OPEL " mN*M> OFFICE Sf AC - Matawan, RI. 34, Ap- 872-000! pro»)m«ltly. ia. II, Immediate occu, 747-3668 or 747-9411 pancy.i -for d.lalU. BOUflEg FOB SALE HOU8E8POB8A1E n Frtiav, Junf 2S, 1971 I BOUSES FOtSAtg HOUSES FOB SALE 35 MfOPliETOWN Sludge Disposal . . . . 4>B€l>RO0M RANCH Excellent condition. One HAZLET $49,900 ; acre, beautifully land- $36,500 RIVER PLAZA AREA BeatingTuesddy scaped. Three full baths. BUMSON — Prlmt residential local*, oocloui modem Colonial, uving mm, Paneled library, paneled FLEETWOOD PARK formal lining room, kitchen, poneledden VITH FOUR BEDROOMS AND MANY THENTON - The Clean various sludge disposal meifl- with flrtploce, gome room. Flvt bed- APPLIANCES INCLUINCtUOEO D BOASTS IT..S. . ' billiard room, enclosed FOUR-BEDROOM, TWO-BATH SPLIT rooms, 1'A baths. Hot air gos-flrtd heal. >WN DOCK AND BOATHOUSE. IN AB- Water Council, citizen adviso- ods now used. •' LEVEL ON V. ACRE LOT, WITH EVERY Air conditioned. Attached twe-cor garage. .OLUTlf "MOVE-IN" CONDITION, IT WILL LEAVE YOU PLENTY OF TIME COZENS sun room. Central air- IMAGINABLE EXTRA, THIS HOME IS Approximately IVi acres. J74J00. Agency, Realtor ry agency to the State Com- "It is widely acknowledged conditioning. Flagstone WHAT WE WOULD CALLA TRUE ~ VJ ON YOUR Vt ACRE GRC (FormerlA y HalRll Bros.t ) "CREAM PUFF' RUMSON — Centrally situated Colonial. RLOOKING SHADOW LAKE. 813 River Rd. 74I-74U - Fair Haven missioner of Environmental that sludge disposal today is a patio. Near Brookdale :irtploce In living room, dining room, Member Multiple Lilting AREADY FHA APPRAISED FOR A electric kitchen. Four bedrooms, one DON'T MISS THIS RARE OPPORTU- Protection in matters of water matter of critical importance College, Christian Broth- FAST CLOSING'... DON'T DELAVI Kith. Full basement. Hot water oil heat. NITY. pollution control, will hold a because of our growing con- Detached one car oarage. Right of way to ers Academy and Lin- rivtr. (27400. A.W.O.L. A World of Living Is what you will find In public hearing Tuesday on the cern over what happens to Ihe croft Schools. A good buy his air conditioned four-bedroom, 2'A- treatment and disposal of ocean and because of the SPENCER SPENCER bath home. Family room, living room, at,.. Dennis K. Byrne dining room, science kitchen, screened sludge wastes. growing shortage of space REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE porch, tiled basement. On one acre. Con- $64,500 REALTOR-INSURDR venient to oil transportation. Only S42,900. The hearing will be held in here in New Jersey where- ELLEN S. 8 West River Road, Rumson WcALISTER AGENCY, Rtallor, 109 E. 671-4880 Phone 842-1150 671-4880 River Rd., Rumson. 842-1W4. Edison Hall, Theater No. 1, these wastes can be dumped," Hwy 3i ond Laurel Ave., Holmdel . Hwy 35 and Laurel Ave., Holmdel HAZLET - 134.500. Three bedrooms, 1'1r said Landis. , - Other offices In Cranford, Clark, MEMBER MULTIPLE Othtr offices In Cranlord, Clark, Watch- bbathst . SpiltSlt . Large corner propertyt . Monmouth College, West HAZELTON Watchung, West fie Id and Union, LISTING una, WwHIeld ond Union. Privately fenced.in vard. Walk to train, Long Branch, commencing at schools and stores. Call 244.7584. Princi- "There is an obligation, to 842-3200 PAUL R. STRYKER BRAND NEW OLDE CAPE COD l l 10 a.m. find a means of sludge dis- MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE REALTOR APPLEBROOK RANCH - Three bed- The hearing will consider posal that will best protect.aU Hwy 34 I Holmdel LISTING $22,900 rooms, large paneled den. Beautifully Realtor See It now . . . Four-bedroom, two-bath landscaped lot. Owner. 671-2773. the matter of sludge disposal 946-4U4 home on beautiful proptrty in convenient -potless three-bedroom the environment-land, sea West River Road Rumson ocotlon. Excellent floor plan includes home. Large paneled living WEST LONG BRANCH - "OLDE DEAL from municipal wastewater and air," he said. Outstanding Homes screened porch, family room and recreo- room. Bright, modern kitch- HOMES." Palmer Ave., west of Mon- HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE lon room. $55,000. moulh Rrf Hew 2-slory Colonials*ana Ran- treatment plants, from in- "Under the Clean Ocean HOLMDEL — Tastefully remodeled six- Ray en. All tile bath. Large en- ches from 142,500. Century Builders. 531- room farmhouse. 1.7 acres. Cedor paneled OSO! or 222-32B8. * dustry and from all other :oun1ry kitchen. Three large bedrooms, closed porch. Basement. Act recently signed by the COLTS NECK VALUE! me bald, two Vi boths. Also o charmlno Tree shaded lot. City sew- JUST OFFERED — Applebrook Ranch. sources. It will hear testi- governor, the commissioner :ottooe and barn with hayloft. VAN HORN irs. Best VA or FHA terms. Three bedrooms, two baths. Paneled den, PIEDMONT FARMS SECURITY! Realtor living room with fireplace, wall-to-wall mony on the scope of the of environmental protection Model Open Dally PRIVACY! Open 7 days. Call 34 hours a day. . $22,900. carpet, dlshwosher, other extros. A-1 con- sludge disposal problem COLTS NECK — Five-bedroom, three dition. Principals only. has broad powers to control Colonials and Ranches This 11-room custom built home bath expanded ranch. New wall-to-wail 747-4100 cannot be duplicated at Ihls 471-3392 today, and the' methods and ocean dumping. We hope to be From $57,900 price. Your investment in "the lold shag carpeting SS8.500 04 River Rd. Fair Haven McGOWAN, RYAN Immediate Occupancy flood life" is assured by the Rum- techniques used in sludge able to give him, helpful ad- son address. The homesite has MEMBER MULTIPLE LISTING Realtors LOTS AND ACREAGE Rl. 34 Wmlte south or RL520, right on OPEN 7 DAYS RUMSON ESTATE management and disposal: Clover Hill Rd.. Lett on Tulip Lone. been professionally planted to en- Nearly three ocres of privacy sur- 258 NEWAAAN SPRINGS RD. vice in this area." Model Home 94M560 Eves. 583 KM hance the natural privacy. Five MILLSTONE TOWNSHIP bedrooms, in-ground healed pool, Bonllo Smollwood round this custom Colonial. 1ft RED BANK 747-3000 Edwin C. Landis Jr., chair- a truVshowplace. Asking 1131,000. Associates: Hozel LoMura years old and in superb condition. FRESH AIR Hear Experts Evelyn Rasmussen 10 rooms, (our master bedrooms. man of the council, said it was HOUSES KOK SALfc ROGER F. "12 lor dinner" dining room. RUMSON $29,900 The council, said Mr. Land- Screened porch. Sun deck off mas- ROOM TO ROAM hoped testimony would be of- ter bedroom. Country klichen. This charmlna Capt Is wilhln walking oij- is, will hear from scientists MONMOUTH Maid's room ond bath. Basement. tonce to ffne Kumson school!. Both orce* It) acres of woodectproperty wllh a fered on some of the more in- FOR REAL SERVICE Large terrace. An Impressive ztway and ottached garoge with large ex- ifreom. Excellent frontage. 117,000. and experts associated with COZENS BEACH pansion aillc.'All on a beautiful treed lot novative methods of sludge IN REAL ESTATE (Formerly Hall Bros.) home. Asking $115,000. 813 River Rd. 741-7684 Fair Haven $23,500 ROGER F. and In excellent condition. Coll us now. disposal other than ocean researching the problem of Consult a Member Multiple Listing It's our best buy of the weik. DENISE : sludge wastes. Among them Member of ive bedrooms, two baths, living room, ASSOCIATES - REALTORS dumping or incineration. lining room, plus huge kitchen, make this HWY J at FREEHOLD CIRCLE are Dr. Charles Reed, Ro- Red Bank Area AN IMPOSSIBLE DREAM 'ear-round home an exceptional buy. MUtA^TI Seeks Effects ;iose to the beach, COZENS gers University; Dr. Robert MLS mL COULD COME TRUE Agency. Realtor - 462-1444 Mr. Landis said the council F you buy this tour-bedroom, Z'/j-bath (Formerly Hell Bros.) MAKES IT HAPPEN WATERFRONT LOT — On South Shrews- Erb, of the. Franklin Institute, home with large paneled den and lolou- HICKEY >} River Rd. 74I-76M Fair Haven OPEN 7 DAYS bury River, 130' new bulkheadlng. Splen- Is interested in learning more >led porch situated on a pond. All this plus Member Multiple Listing Realtors-tnsuron did location for boatman. Asking JU,000.. a consultant to the Phila- a fabulous three-room oportment. 177,000. REAL ESTATE Member of Multiple Listing Service .lry*15,000. about the effects, of sludge RUSSELL M. BORUS 24 Riverside Ave. dumping at sea and the eco- delphia Water Department; AGENCY LIVE A LITTLE! Ray Stillman, Realtor Dr. James H. Carpenter, pro- COUPli WANTED Sulkheaded riverfront with boat slip. U, 747-9300 ."Our 53rd Year" REALTORS r 648 Hwy 35 Shrewsbury 741-MOt) nomic consequences of the 600 River Rd., Fair Haven REALTORS limited ocean view. Riparian rights. Art FAIR HAVEN fessor of oceanography at I0R RUMSON 747,4532 • pnd antique gallery permitted us* with 10 ACRES - Available sewer line. Call 222-4087 anytime luxurious living faculties situated In arl Reasonable. LEGAL NOTICE John Hopkins University; This ranch is ideal-spotless, very SOUTH SHREWSBURY %4K DOWN, M'DAY CLOSING conscious Sea Bright. Fresh olr, fun and Are you o "do It yourMll" person? This 671-1518 treed property, 2 bedrooms, largo RIVERFRONT good business too. Asking U5.OO0 NOTICE Benjamin Sossewitz, general Tour bedrooms, 2>/j baths. Two-slory RUMSON RARITY older home with nice yard offers great po- SO' X 100' RESIDENTIAL living room, eat-in kitchen, ex- house. Den and ottached garage. Creo- tential. No closing fees. Assume mort' MONMOUTH COUNTY location or year round home In excellent RUSSELL M. BORUS Near Marina. Boy view. SURROGATE'S COURT superintendent of the Mebfo- pansion attic, a dolt house. soled bulkhead. City sewers. Perfect loca- :ondltlon. Stone's throw from Naveslnk gage. Owner soys "sell Immediately." Ion tor boatman. Reduced to 945,500. Call after 4 p.m. 291-9334. ESTATE OF FRANCES NOE MANNING, 629,900. River. Perfect for small family. Only REALTORS Deceosed ' politan Sewerage Authority, . 528,000. 600 River Rd, Fair Haven FIVE ACRES — Prime residential proper- Ray Stillman, Realtor Ray 747-4532 RED BANK ty. Write President, Monmouth Reform Pursuant to the order of S. Thomas Gag- Chicago, and Albert A. Frali- Temple, 332 Hance Ave., New Shrews- llono, Surrogate of the County ot Mon- "Our 53rd Year" REEHOLD $18/950 nger Jr., director of the De- 618 Hwy 35 Shrewsbury 741-860O bury. HJ. 07724.' mouth. this day mode, on the application 4 BEDROOMS 1850 DOWN FH& NO DOWN VA of the undersigned, Albert T. Berlch Sole partment of Public Works, VAN HORN Top valui. Call to set this huso older COLTS NECK — Wt acre wooded lot. Executor of the estate of the laid Frances ALLENTOWN Realtor horn* with large rooms, featuring three high and dry, Jli.000. ILLMENSEE Noe Manning deceased, notice Is hereby Bridgeton, which this year 2 BATHS Open 7 days. Call 24 hours a day. DESIGNED bedrooms. Quiet street, large grounds ASENCY. Realtor, Rt. 34. Colts Neck. olven to the creditors of said deceased to (Monmouth County) 804 River Rd. Fair Haven Owner may consider paying pan of clos- present to Ihe said Sole Executor their halted sludge dumping at sea. $33,900 20-acre horse farm. Four-bedroom, 2Vi ing costs, • . claims under oath within six months from nth farmhouse. 22 box stalls. Fencing. MONMOUTH BEACH — Building lot. Just listed—large living room, formal 747-4100 ' . LUXURY Near the ocean. 17,000. Good selection of Ihls dote. 3rool(. Very nice location. $86,000. IC- Dated: June 21st, 1971 dining room, 19' paneled den with .MENSEE AGENCY, Realtor, Rt. 34, WATERFRONT I-DEAL REALTY lots Including-some waterfront. Hlckey Is this three-bedroom home with three full Brokers/Realtors 741-5253 Agency. Realtor. Coll 232-4087 any time. ALBERT T.BERICH, carpeting, full basement, hot water Colts Neck. 442-3172. baths* lorgt living room, formal dining 45 Llpplncott Rood, Remodeled and expanded room, eat-in kitchen, 35' family room with heat. See it now! MATAWAN-STRATHMORE — Beautiful LINCROFT Little Silver, New Jersey 07739 Fort Slates 1 fireplace, over-sized master bedroom, I5 hree-bedroom Colonial In excellent loca- Carriage House. CEMETERY LOTS Executor •our bedrooms, two baths. Sun deck off central olr conditioning, two-car garage Three-bedroom split level, tion with attached hobby room and garden , , ...... 140*900 Albert T. Berlch, Esq., equipment storage. Air conditioning, car- 0x20 living room. 125' of bulkhead.'Ex- V/i baths, wooded corner lol FOR SALE — Two cemetery lots In Rose- ol Monmouth Road, letlng, all appliances, under-ground as included. Asking 555,000. dole Cemetery, Linden. (250. Call 787-7294 Red Bonk, New Jersey 07701 COLONIAL ON with fenced patio. Offered at between 2 ona 7 p.m. 300 Jobs sprinkler, electric garage door end much ALFRED J. HASSINGER AGENCY $35,900. Attorney THE SHREWSBURY nore. Asking *37,500. Must jell.. 583-1844 Realtor DENISE June 25. July 2 S12.5O ifter 8 p.m. or weekends. OS E. River Rd., Rumson 842-5180 ASSOCIATES-REALTORS REAL ESTATE WANTED How would you like to have built for HWY 9 at FREEHOLD CIRCLE NEMETH & NOTICE For Youth you en executive colonial? 4-5 bed- .ITTLE SILVER — Four bedrooms, 2'/i Colts Neck — Holmdel MONMOUTH COUNTY laths, on naif acre. Beautifully shaded. RUMSON 462-1444 SURROGATE'S COURT rooms, 2'/J tile baths, paneled den Jeer waterfront. Central air conditioning, Walking distance to all schools, two-story NICOLETTI We have ready qualified buyers, so tor FT. MONMOUTH•- OfUhe fast efficient service, call J. D. Roche, ESTATE OF CATHERINE HATHAWAY, with fireplace, Anderson windows, wo-car garage. Large family room. Own- Colonial, brick front. Four bedrooms, two COLTS NECK Deceased. / , 63,000 young people being 2-zons heating system, 120' bulk- •r relocating out of state. SoXooo. Call 842- lull both!, finished cellar, 16x20 cathedral Realtor, Rt. 34, Colls Neck. 442-2741. celling den. Centrally air conditioned, Four-bedroom completely remodelec AGENCY Member Multiple Listing Service. Pursuant to the order ot S. Thomas Gag- headed lot on the Shrewsbury River. i761. ranch. New electrical service and plumb- Realtors lano. Surrogate of the County of Mon* hired this summer throughout Mognlflcent condition. All downstairs car- mouth, this day made, on the application To be completed by August. peted. Included also, draperies, in dining Ing and heating systems. Also new dish washer, dryer, domes washer, wall oven, 102 W. Front St. LISTINGS OF BETTER HOMES - In or the undersigned, Catherine V. spanler, the country under President: $59,900. room, living room and den. Owner. HOUSES FOR SALE 559,900.842-3328 for appointment. range, refrigerator and freeier Included. Red Bank Keonsburg-Mlddletown-Hoilel-Holmdel. Sole Executrix of the estate of the said Nixon's 1971 Summer Employ- Iver two acres with outbuildings. Low The Smolko Agency. 787-0123. Catherine Hothaway deceased, notice Is 741-2240 hereby alven to the creditors of sold de- ED BANK - RUMSON AND MILES axes* good schools. Presently used.as ment Program for Youth, 300 nursery, located In horse farm area. LOOKING FOR A HOUSE — In Mon- ceased to present to the sold Sole Execu- SHOWCASE HOME ROUND — Multiple Listings. Send for MONMOUTH BEACH mouth County. 530,000 to (40,000. No bro- trix their claims under oath within six will get vacation-time jobs at c-e catalog of modest homes, farms, pa- 47,900. ILLMENSEE AGENCY, Realtor, kers. Call 222-7784. Evei., 2M-9245. months from this date. db latial Rumson estates, waterfronts, acre- Rt. 34, COltS Neck. 462-3172. NEW HOME-$44,900 Dated: June 10th. 1971 the Army Electronics Com- It's a pleasure to show such an age, lots, business opportunities. How would you like to have built for you l WE BUY HOUSES FOR TOP DOLLAR CATHERINE V. SPANJER, inviting home. Centrally air con- NEW LISTING a four-b«lroom, 2 /2-botn home oft a pri- mand. Ray Stillman, Realtor vate lone surrounded by many trees) very In any condition. 18 Cllnlon Avenue, ditioned Colonial with all the Phone 257-7828 Eatonlown, New Jersey 07724 BEAUTIFUL4 BEDROOM targe living room, formal dining room, Executrix About 220 of the youth will most wanted features. Large MBHwyss Little Silver. Top condition, with trees, spacious eat-ln kltthen, paneled dtn with Messrs. Parsons, Canzona, fireplace, two-cor garoae. Your choice of be employed here, the re- family room with fireplace, cen- center hall, living room with fireplace* TALK TO THE PROS - List your home Blair & Warren, ARE YOU separate formal dining room, big kitchen color ond Interior stlecflon with usl We're on Investment, not an ex- 18 Wallace Street, mainder at ECOM in Phila- ter hall, four big bedrooms, 2Vi with eating area. Two baths, recreation PAUL BRAGAR pense! Roger F. Cozens Agency. 741-7484. Red Bonk, New Jersey 07701 baths. Gorgeous trees. Mint INTERESTED? room ond two-car oarage. Quiet, no trot- REALTOR Member of Multiple Listing Service. Attorneys delphia. tic area. Asking $55000, 794 Broad St. Shrewsbury condition. $62,500. 'e lust may have the key to your perfect June 18,25 $13.00 PAUL dream house. Prices range from mid S2u's ALLAIRE FARROW 747-0221 The Federal Summer Em- Agency BUILDING LOTS WANTED NOTICE to S600.0OO. We have pictures. Call up. . . Monmouth County area. Realtors APPLE PIE ORDER.. MONMOUTH COUNTY SURROGATE'S ployment Program for Youth, McALISTER AGENCY, Realtor, )0» E. 294 Broad St., Red Bank 741-3450 Coll 291-2044 or 2910577. BRAGAR AGENCY "Iver Rd.. Rumson. 842-1894. This home you will have to lee to believe. COURT which aims to provide !8 27 28 1 I 1 15" It S3 13 'The Wizard of Id; sr1 a 39- ZPr~ •rl 1 1 1IH*11 oLUW THE, 43 NORTH SWR! iH 1 1 1 iH 4*1 1 Is" !H r IB" • 19 . .•" 1 1 5* SB ••(0 1 1 «r |: 11^•" 1 «YVNnJbbin Your Horoscope, Birthday FRIDAY, JUNE 25 - Born guide. ing for a long time. Listen! solutions. today, you are a person in- SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) PISCES (Feb. 20,March 21) clined to two distinct person- Saturday, June 26 - Psychic forces bring rare - Persistence pays off hand- alities, one of which you dem- CANCER (June 22-July 23) insight to the Scorpio who somely today. Keep your eyes onstrate to the world at large, -Your artistic temperament makes a genuine effort to upon your goal and you can the other you hold In reserve- takes a merry turn today as keep attuned to them. Don't hardly miss out on achieving for your own family and close you enjoy enterprises with be sidetracked. it. friends. Uncritical and gener- members of your own family. SAGITTARIUS. (Nov. 23- ARIES (March 22-Aprfl 20) ally undemanding when in LEO (July 24-Aug. 23) - An Dec. 22) - Serve others today - Take care that a foolish ex- your own domestic circle, you, inclination toward pessimism and you will yourself be penditure of money does not are perhaps even top easy-go- must be ignored this morning. served in future.. This is no find you short when the time, ing at home in the midst of Optimism is the key to a Sat- time for sitting idly by while comes for evening enjoyment" loved ones. Your policy of live urday of accomplishment and others struggle. success. TAURUS (April 21-May 21) and let live in your private CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. - It will take a strong, ca- life may at times cause mis- VIKGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 23)- 20) - A keen active mind is pable Taurus to bring himself takes to be .made by others Though you may be called the iirst prerequisite for and loved ones through this which could have been stubborn by some, your todays.success. Keep your- day without some moments of *!"'*! avoided had you been more unyielding attitude today may self in preparation for a quick fear or hardship. ^WEUs/OW ABOUT THE . well be what saves the day for TRSRGETTBEH forceful. decision. GEMINI (May ,22-June 21) eyCK'ERE BV EIGHTH ME ANNIVERSARY PRESENT l) To find what Is to store for others. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. -as v 1 1 - Don't alloy any study of tile MOTHERS COMIN -NOr NEVER SOT-AN THE ^ -AN 'OWABOUT THE you tomorrow, select your LiBRAjSept. 24-Oct. 23)- , 19) - You can surmount any occult to cloud your mind an) WP PROMISE TIME NER GOT &RUNK AT TIME... birthday and read the corre- The assimilation of "another's of the day's difficulties if you make it impossible for yon to ME SISTER'S - sponding paragraph. Let your thoughts may lead you to are patient and decisive. rightly assess the day's real REIA%\NMAN AN'THE TIMES birthday star be your'daily knowledge you've been seek- Don't expect to be handed any issues. TU9TGIVEME ONE INSTANCE NER'OBE'OME , si * WHEN I'VE - BEFDREMIbN!GHT-jl Sheinwold's Bridge Advice tETNEROOWN C'Tl By ALFRED SHEINWOLD ' hearts at the first trick, and would work. If West had all (A Pocket Guide to Bridge declarer won with the ace. He four diamonds, South would is available. Get your copy by Everybody knows how to cashed his high spades, en- take the ace and king of clubs. sending 50 cents to Bed Bank handle the diamonds in tered dummy with the king of West would have to save the Register, Box 3318, Grand today's hand. The "book" clubs, and discarded the jack queen of hearts and three dia- Central Station, New York, 4 play is to win the first dia- of hearts on the ace of spades. monds as his last four cards. N.Y. 10017.) -Jiff Blondie mond trick with the ace or East discarded a club, and Declarer would then lead South dealer king. If East fails to follow West parted with the six of the ten of hearts from dummy Both sides vulnerable hearts. 'suit, you can take a guaran- to put West on lead. West NORTH TRIMMING IT teed finesse with dummy's Hazen did some more think- would have to return a dia- « A987 ALL CROOKED ten. If West fails to follow ing and then made the key mond, thus losing ail chance O 109 suit, you are entitled to SO sec- play of leading dummy's for a diamond trick. OQ1054 onds of griping about your queen of diamonds. When \ DAILY QUESTION *KQJ bard luck. Either way you get'West showed out, the slam Partner opens with one WEST BAST some sort of satisfaction. was assured. Declarer led a heart, and the next player 4k 643 + 1052 diamond from dummy, cap- passes. You hold: S-6 4 3 When today's hand was turing East's nine with the H-Q865 3 2D-NoneC-108. 9 Q86S32 1 II His i I1 I1t mi 1 The Phantom 1 •eetle Bailey^ MAJOfc g vwt am. IET3 QUICK/ OUT TELL BEIIA RRST. THE WlNPOW// FRIDAY, JUNE 25,1971 • Television Books • Movies Theater • Dining Out Comment Your Weekend Magazine • Hobbies Music Opens FREEHOLD - The second show and the rides and attrac- Entertainment for the rest der the direction of The Free- Garden State Stakes Fair As- annual Great Monmouth tions of The Amusements of of the week stars The Stone- hold Art Society, demonstra- sociation and United States Fair at Freehold Raceway, America. \- mans (Tuesday), folk music tions in handicraft and plas- Trotting Association. Monday through July 4, is ex- Frankie Fontaine heads up and comedy, interspersed tics, firefighting.by the Free- The track mett will bring pected to'attract upward of the entertainment fare. He with an aerial exhibition vof hold Fire Department and a 100,000 visitors. •<•• was a featured star of the parachute diving under the di- patriotic program oh the July together top competitors in. Joseph V. McLoOne, fair Jackie Gleason television rection of Len Potts, a mem- 4 finale climaxed by a gigan- the East who will compete in general manager, has lined up show for many years. He also .ber of the 1966-67 U.S. Para- tic fireworks display. Tne middle distance events over I YRIC— SAT.-A New Leof 2:00; 4M5; 10:20; Glmmt Shelter 2:25; 7:25; 9:30 . Freoks 11:00 \ Thlngi of Life 7:00; 10:00; 5om- LlTllft Faust ond Big Holiey B:40 SAT., SUN.-Gimme Shelter 2:051 mertret B*3O •* SUN.—A New Leor 2:00; 5:30; 9:05; 4:OS;#nojl;10;»:lJ See Movies Page 7 EATONTOWN SAT., SUN.—Summertree 2:30; 5:30; * Liftl* Fauu aid Big Hol»y 3:45; 7:30 COMMUNITY- 8:30; Things of Lite 4:00; 7:00; 10:00 Andromeda Strain 2:00; 5:45; 6:00; BKIELLE 10:15 ' SAT. & SUN.-Andromeda 1:30; 3:40; MAYFAIR- 5:50; 8:05; 10:20 Andromeda Strain 2:00; 7:20; 9:40 DR1VE-IN- SAT., SUN.-Andromeda Strain 2:25; FRl., SAT.—Cartoon 9:05; Mosh 9:15; DRIVE IN- 4:50; 7:30; 10:00 FRI., SAT.-Cartoons »;00; Love Sto- ry 9:45; 1:45; True Grit 11:40 Red Sky at Morning 2:00; 7:30; 9:30 SUN.—Love Story 9:00; 1:10; True SAT,, SUN.—Red SKy ot Morning •'• LAKEWOOD -••• Grit 11:10 2:00; 4:00; 6:00; 8:05; JOilO COUNTRY- FREEHOLD ST. JAMES- Love Story 7:20; 9:30 Llttle Big Man 2:00; 7:tO; 9:50 SAT.-Love Story2:O0; 7:35; 9M5 MALLI- SAT.. SUN.-Little Big Man 2:00; SUN.-Uve Story 2:00; 3:45; 5:35; FRI.—Escape from Ihe Planet of the 7:25) 9:30 Ape* 7:35; 9:40 4:30; 7;10; 10:00 SAT.-tEscope from the Planet ot the SAVOY- . TOWN- Apes 2:00: 7-50; »:S5 Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge 7:30; A New Leaf 7:15; 9:20 • SUN,—Escape -from the Planet of the 9:05; Fear of Love 7:55; 9:35 SAT.—A New Leof 2:15; 7:30; 9:40 Apes 2:00; 4:00; 6:30; *:30 SAT,—Occurrence at Owl Creek SUN.-A New Leof 2M: 5:00; 7:20; Bridge 8:10; 7:45; Feor of Love 7:00; 9:15 - 6:35; 10:15 SUN.—Occurrence at Owl Creek BRICK Bridge 2:00; 7:30; 9:05 BRICK PLAZA- i BRADLEY BEACH Andromeda Strain 7:05; 9:30 SAT,—Andromeda Strain 2:00; 7:10; PALACE- 9:35 FRI., SAT., SUN.-Potton 2:00; 7:00; SUN.—Andromeda Strain 2:00;- 4:35; Mash 10:00 7:00; 9:20 FARMINGDALE MALL CINEMA- ^ SHORE DRIVE IN- Little BlaMon 7:00; 9:20 SAT.-Lmie Big Man 2:00; 7:00; 9l35 Claras W1 the Half Shell, SOUQ du Jour, Gold«l. Fried Shrimp, Scallops, FRI.. SAT.—Cartoons 9:05; Andro- SUN.—Little Big Man 2:00; 4:25; meda Strain 9:35; 1:35; Colossus 12:O0 6:50; 9:25 \r^ Filet of Fjo^ndfer, Stuffed Clam, French Fried Potatoes, SUN.—Andromeda Strain'9:10; Co- lossus 11:40 LAURELTON ^ Salad; Dessert, Coffee. Wagon Wheel NEPTUNE DR1VE-IN- Cartoons 9:00; Red Sky at Morntna NEPTUNE CITY- ':35J 1:30; Monte Walsh 11:40. " COBBLESTONES A New Leaf 2:00; 7:30; Rosemary's SAT,—Cartoons 9:00; Red Sky at Baby 9:15 Morning 9:35; Monte Wolsh 11:40 RESTAURANT SAT,, SUN.-A New Leaf 4:20; 8:30; SUN.-Rcd Sky at Morning 9:05; 1:00; Playhouse Rosemary's Baby 2:00; 4:10) 10:20 MonleWalih 11:15 ROUTE 35 • MIDDLETOWN, NEW JERSEY • 741-8344 Presents AHORIGIUAl . For your ENTERTAINMENT > ADAPTATION "APOLLO" For your ENJOYMENT FUN FOR ALL AGES Plus For your PLEASURE One Act From MONDAY - JUNE 28 ' un^sT "LOVERS and 'JACKIE HILL" THROUGH ^IK' Jr* OTHER STRANGERS" at the Piano Jane 24-2S-26 mmms . SATURDAY - JULY 3 WXJI at 8:30 P.M. THE BARN HARRY'S Ave. of 2 Rivers, Rumson LOBSTER HOUSE TICKETS: $1.50-$2.50 RESERVATIONS: 264-6578^ Sea Bright ST. GATHER IN E'S^Ql^ CARNIVAL' 'X THE MIDDLETOWN CHURCH GROUNDS > RECREATION COMMISSION BRAY & SHORE ACRES AVE. With Hw support of tht New Jers«y Staft Coundl on the Arts EAST KEANSBURG PREStNTS The 1971 Middletown Folk Festival * RIDES * ENTERTAINMENT * GAMES FOLK MUSK - FOLK CRAFTS - FOLK DANCING EVENING CONCERTS ^ FOOD * BEVERAGES FRIDAY NIGHT, JUNE 25 7:30 P.Ku SATURDAY NIGHT, JUNE 26... 7:00 P.M. | SPECIAL NIGHTS | DAYTIME EVENTS TUESDAY, JUNE 29 SATURDAY, JUNE 26 Fireman's & First Aid Squads Night . 11:00 AJL iPKUL WORKSHOP ON WSH MUSK 12:15 M.-1:30PJH. WORKSHOPS ON DUOMEJt MNJO, GUTM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30 12:45 tM ^PROGRAM TOR (MUSH Seniof Gthens Night - Entertainment t Prizes '1:45 PJK.; .AFTERNOON CONCERT 2:45 P.M. .ROUND ROMN CONCERT THURSDAY, JULY 1 4:00 tM...... FOLK DANCHG H Fim Night OOWIM* free Ballooni Vam tODMAN PARK IN MIDDLETOWN •'.••"«.•• •* • : •. . ' V! (OFF THE NAVESINK RIVER ROAD) ADMISSION: Daytime Events: Adults: $1.00 (allnnclusive) Children: .25 (under 12) Evening Concerts: $1.25 Refreshments by Middletown Kiwanh RAIN DATE FOR DAYTIME EVENTS: SUNDAY, JUNE 27 Drug Addiction Problem? Call 888-8333 For Help Day or. Night ; •.••..--." V ' You truly haven't lasted SEA FOOD at Us very best until Next at Museitm you have eaten a BROILED RED BANK - "Pleasure es, George Blair, Frank F. Sea Food Platter at DORIS Boating on the Jersey Shore" Blaisdell, Mr. and Mrs: Wil- 'lit* ED'S* "Our Secret? Sure, will be the subject of the exhi- liam Buff II, William Burling, we'll tell you. We a/e the bition opening at the Mon- William Cornell, Mrs. James Chefsl Does that make the dif- mouth Museum Gallery, 21 M. Fox Jr., Mrs. William J. ference? You bet it does! White St., Tuesday. It will run Haryey Jr., Raymond Hoag- LOBSTER LOVERS through Saturday, Sept. 4. land, Dr. Anson G. Hoyt, Rob- All types of year-round, ert Masseyl Douglas McNitt, boating, except commercial Miss June Methot, George H. "Come and' endeavors, will be explored, Moss Jr., Mrs. Allen B, Kend- get 'em alive" with the emphasis placed on all/William Robinson, Mrs. the Jersey Shore and its his- Anna Louise Rudner, Harold torical contribution. Actual Scott, Mrs. Francis. M. Tay- small craft, models, paint- lor, Mrs. Frederick Tomktns, ings, photographs, old boating Mr. and Mrs. George Vogt, hardware, Instruments, Marshall Van Winkle/ Mrs. charts, blueprints and historic William Westerfield, Roger I. memorabilia will be dis- Wilkinson and John F. Willets. played. The exhibit is being de- Pick Your Own Lobster Out Honorary chairmen for this signed and Installed by Mrs. of Our Lobster Tanks! exhibit are Mr. and Mrs. Hen- Arthur Loebel, Mrs. Herbert ry Mercer. Rabinowitz and Mrs. Lester DORIS' M' CD'S Mrs. Niels Johnsen is chair- Simon. SEAFOOD RESTAURANT man of the advisory com- The benefit opening of the DESIGNERS — Mrs. Arthur Loebel of Rumsoiv "HOUSE OF GOURMET SEAFOOD- SB Shan Dr., HleMandi .872.1665 mittee whose members In- exhibit will lye Sunday at the upper left/ Mrs. Lester Simon of Red Bank/ left/ clude Mrs. D. Mclntire Barn- gallery, to be followed by din- and Mrs. Herbert Rablnowftz of Shrewsbury put ner in Olde Union House. finishing touches on the new Mojnrjiputh Museum Reservations and informa- exhibit "Pleasure Boating on the Jersey Shore." tion may be obtained by tele- They are co-designers of the exhibit. NOW APPEARING phoning the museum. Set Middletcvwn a ixlen State Swim Classes Arts Center MIDDLETOWN - The Rec- .it Toli'pr.ipfi Hitl Pmk on tin? Garden State Parkway • Dtit 116 with LEON TRENT reation Commission has an- TONIGHT & TOM'W nounced expanded two-week "Ths ttran spectacutsrly hsndtomt end glorious dancs organizaiion In learn-to-swim programs for trtit countryl' WED., FRIv SAT., and SUN. township youngsters 7 to 12. .Byron Belt, Newark Star Ledger The free lesson sessions will begin June 28, July 12 and 26 and Aug. 9 at Ideal Beach, ALVIN AILEY and July 12 and 26 at the AMERICAN DANCE THEATER STARTING JUNE 30th PROGRAM: Tonight "Tlma.Oul Of Mind", "Flower*1'. "Revel* Leonardo Beach and the «on»". Tomorrow, "Btuw.Suite". "Cry". "Choral OanMs". "Rowla Camp Hope pool. tions". Hie Sensational Rock Group Some 3,000 children have participated In the program during the past 10 years. One MON. JUNE 28 through SAT. JULY 3 of the former students Is Miss BURT BACHARACH Cathy McLoughlin, now wa- and ORANGE COLORED SKY "CHAPTER SIX" terfront instructor at Ideal Spwlal Added Family Perf. July 3 at 5 PM ALVIN AILEY PfllCES: »7.6.76,4.6O.3.6O. Son Se»tt »7.60. Uwrt (formerly of % and the Techniques) Beach. * Seating Wed. & Thun. *2. Ffi_. & Sat, (2.60. SPECIAL STUDENT Further information may DISCOUNT TICKETS: *2.00. BUftT BACHARACH PRICES: «8.SO.7.S0.6.50.6.50. Bo« Seat* be had from the Ideal Beach • 8.60. Lawn Sealing Mon. thru Thur»- »3.6O, Fri. -Ssi. at 9 PM-M, • office or Camp Hope. Bat, at G PM »3.60. DANCE ^ FOR INFORMATION CALL (201) 264-0200 Trade Winds Opantad by Uio Naw Janey Highway Authority HKOT5TOWN COUNTRY ClUB Every Sat. - Two Bartdt Gmtfnuoui COCKTAIL LOUNGE Andv Wells 10 Po. Band and Mucha Band. Every Wed. for Fo!k» 25 & OCEAN AVE, 842-3292 SEA BRIGHT over. 1.60. Always fun whether aloraorooupto, •SHANNON'S |LA tFM A AA UIIT RESTMRANT- V1" INN SEA FOOD IOVERS... SPECIAU FOR JUNE/ YES! WE'RE OPEN 7 DAYS -noun > snuiMV mi mow 5-i« PJL- (OPEN FRIDAY FOR LUNCH) I « Large Lobsters Available This Weekend SPAGHETTI & SAUSAGE...... M...... 1.40 MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 4-10 «»...•..•.••»**»**.•••**•..*.*• I FRIDAY FRIED RSH PIATTtR ..*••*»».*• *•».«...1.35 12 Noon To 10:30 SHRIMP IN THE BASKn_t.,«.,™««0... 1.50 SATURDAY SPlCIAl WICK FOR CWlDRfN 12 Noon To 10:30 PLUS OUR REO. MENU IF YOU LIKE r • SUNDAY Don't Forget - We have late Nile Sandwiches 12 Noon To 10:00 Every Nile Till 2A.M. LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Adjacent to HfcNanda Lobtttr Poond FRI. & SAT. NITE feet of Atlantic St. off lav Avemi* 640 SHREWSBURY AYL MEW SHREWSBURY HIGHLANDS » 8729753 NEXT TO AHtrOIIT 0 LOVE^AMERICAN STYLE (C) 0 SATURDAY AFTERNOON AT THE MOVIES "Love and the Dating Computer'; "Love and th« "I Cover the War" (1937) •tarring John Wayne, Busy Husband"; "Love and the Watchdog" (R) Don Barclay. 10:30 0 U.S. OPEN GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP (C) "Green Hell" (1940) starring Douglas Falrbflnki Television (8 THIRTY MINUTES WITH (C) Jr., Vincent Price. 10:45 O KINER'S KORNER (C) ID JIM THOMAS OUTDOORS (C) with Ralph Kiner A look at tarpon fishing, mallard duck hunting and FRIDAY 11:00 0 O O NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS (C) salmon fishing. © ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS 2:00 O THE GENE LONDON SHOW (C) . "The Matched Pearl" June 25,197! O THE LATE MOVIE "Hans Christian Andersen" "My Little Chickadee" (1940) starring Mae West, Q MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL (C) DAYTIME MOVIES W. C. Fields. A woman tries to snare a wealthy 0 TALES OF WELLS FARGO 9:30 O "At War with the Army" husband, but still looks fondly on a certain masked "Trading Post" 10:00 0 "Remarkable Andrew" bandit. , O LIKE IT IS (C) ' 12:30 fD "King of Chinatown" ID CHANNEL 11 FILM FESTIVAL Hosts: Gil Noble, Geraldo Rivera 1:00 0 "Blood and Sand" "Ride the Pink Horse" (1947) starring Robert ©BASEBALL (C) 0 "Hired Wife" Montgomery, Wanda Hendrix. A hoodlum, seeking Senators vs. Yankees 1 vengeance and blackmail, is helped by a Mexican 4:30 O "The Street with No Name' girl. 2:30 Q MAGIC PEOPLE (C) 0 "My Pal G«" 11:30 0 THE MERV GRIFFIN SHOW (C) Guests: Muddle Puppets, Diane Moran Q "Man-Made Monster" O THE TONIGHT SHOW (C) 0 COMBAT (C) Guests: Jackie Kahane, Bobby Goldsboro "The Brothers" EVENING 0 11:30 MOVIE 3:00 O BLACK LETTERS (C) ' 6:00 0OO NEWS (C) "Run Silent, Run Deep" (1958) starring Clark Gable, Burt Lancaster. Submarine warfare off the "That She Would Dance No More"; "Miss Luester 0 THE MOTHERS-IN-LAW (C) coast of Japan reveals heroism, cowardice and the Gives a Party" (R) "Bye, Bye Blackmailer" sense of responsibility. 0 CELEBRITY BOWLING (C) OISPY(CO() ) 'Trial Ivy Treehouse" 0 THE DICK CAVETT SHOW (C) 3:30 0 CAVEAT VENDITOR (C) 03 PLEASE DON'T EAT THE DAISIES (C) Host: David Steinberg * • GueBt: Commissioner Bess' Meyerson. "None So Righteous" 12:30 © NIGHT FINAL (C) 0 DAKTARI (C) > ffl WHAT'S NEW? (C) with Roy Whitfieid "Killer Lion" "The Cave" 1:00 OONEWS (C) 6:30 0 THE ONE O'CLOCK MOVIE (C> €» MOVIE MATINEE 0 PETTICOAT JUNCTION (C) "Quebec" (1951) starring John Barrymore, Barbara "Dementia 13" (1963) starring William Campbell, "Don't Call Us" Rush. Luana Anders. A strange family dings to the mem- ory of a dead Bister. - CD BEAT THE CLOCK (C) Q THE JOE FRANKLIN SHOW (C) 4:00 O REPERTOIRE WORKSHOP (C) Guest: Tiny Tim Experiments devoted to new talent in the arts. 7:00 CD BLACK PERSPECTIVE ON THE NEWS (C) SATURDAY © JUST JAZZ (C) 0 CBS- NEWS WITH WALTER CRONKlTE (C) Music by Gene Ammons (R) O NBC. NIGHTLY NEWS (C) 4:30 0 THE EARLY SHOW with Brinkely, McGee. Chancellor MORNING "Tip on a Dead Jockey" (1957) starring Robert 0 I LOVE LUCY Taylor, Dorothy Malone. A pilot trying to raise "Lucy Cries Wolf" 9:00 0 SABRINA AND THE GROOVIE GOOLIES (C) money unknownlngly becomea Involved with a O EVENING NEWS WITH SMITH, REASONER O WOODY WOODPECKER SHOW (C) smuggling ring. © WHAT'S MY LINE? (C) O LANCELOT LINK, SECRET CHIMP HOUR (C) & UNTAMED WORLD (C) Host: Wally Brunei: Q THIS WORLD OF WATERS (C) "Galapagos I" CD I DREAM OF JEANNIE (C) fD IT IS WRITTEN (C) "Around the World in 80 Blinks" 0 THE REAL McCOYS 9:30 Q THE BUGALOOS (C) "Meeting Hassle's Friends" ©, U.S.A.: PHOTOGRAPHY (C) 0 THE THREE STOOGES (C) 7:30 "Daybooks of Edward Weston" (R) © ABBOTT AND COSTELLO 0 THE INTERNS (C) Q RIGHT NOW (C) "Private Bye" . A playboy takes the blame for a fatal hit-run auto ID APRENDA INGLES (C) © FIRING LINE (C) crash and Dr. Pettit is the only one who Juiowa it 9:56 0 IN THE KNOW (C) with William F. Buckley, Jr. (R) was the playboy's brother who is really to blame. 5:00 O MOVIE FOUR • • O THE HIGH CHAPARRAL (C) 10:00 Q JOSIE AND THE PUSSYCATS (C) - "Shaggy" (1948) starring Robert Shayne, Brenda "A Good Sound Profit." Despite his family's Objec- Q SPECIAL: JONATHAN WINTERS* (C) Joyce. The comradeship shared by a father, son and tions, John decides to reap a financial windfall by 0 MY FAVORITE MARTIAN (C) a dog is threatened when the father remarries, selling guns to a band of Mexican rebels. (R) 0 THE REAL JERRY LEWIS (C) 01 SECRET AGENT. 0 TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES (C) "ubiquitous Mr. Lovegrove" Host: Bob Earlier • ... Q ROLLER DERBY (C) : Q ABC'S WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (C) 0 THE,fiRADY BUNCH (C) Bay Bombers va. Northeast Braves P. A. Cup Soccer Championships; Walker Cup GoM /'Confessions, Confessions." All' the other Brady ID CONTINENTAL MINIATURES (C) ' Championships 'children confess to breaking a vase that Peter 0 MILLION DOLLAR MOVIE broke. 10:30 ©THE HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS (C) "The Bandit of Sherwood Forest" (1946) fltarrlng Q 7:30 P.M. REPORT (C) ' 0 MR. ED Cornel Wilde, Anita Louise. The son of Robin Hood with Bill Ryan Wk HERE COME THE DOUBLEDECKERS (C) attempts to free his Imprisoned king, (D FATHER KNOWS BEST ID INSIGHT (C) ID MOVIE AT FIVE "Second Best" - ,' 10:56 0 IN THE KNOW (C) "The Dartc Corner" (1946) starring Lucille Ball, © NEW JERSEY SPEAKS Mark Stevens. A secretary attempts to clear a de- 8:00 11:00 Q ARCHIE'S FUNHOUSE (C) tective who has been neatly 'framed for murder. "Catch the Whale Act While You Can" (R) Q HR. PUFNSTUFF (C) 0 TO TELL THE TRUTH (C) 5:30 © OUR VANISHING WILDERNESS (C) 0. EASTSIDE COMEDY Host: Gary Moore. "Will the Gator Glades Survive 7" O NANNY AND THE PROFESSOR (C) - "Crazy over Horses'? (1951) starring the Bowery "The Prodigy." A 12-year-old university freshman, Boys. The Boys are introduced to racing.1 EVENING spending a weekend with the Everett family, has O HOT WHEELS (C) 6;00 Q IT'S ACADEMIC (C) a depressing affect on Hal. (B) 0 BASEBALL (C) 0 THE KATHRYN KUHLMAN SHOW Schools: New Roche!!, St. John the Baptist, Staples -Mets vs. Expos Guest: Barbara Tal Sing , . \ f 0 THE MOTHERS-IN-LAW (C) ID BASEBALL (C) ID THE GREEN THUMB (C) "The, Wig Story" Senators vs. Yankees 11:30 0 HERE COMES THE GRUMP (C) CD REALITIES (C) W SAN FRANCISCO MIX (C) Q SKY HAWKS (C) "The Triumph of Christy Brown" (R) 8:30 6:30 0 THE SIX THIRTY REPORT (C) "Loving" (R) ©CAR AND TRACK (C) ID ABBOTT AND COSTELLO O NBC NIGHTLY NEWS (C) m HEADMASTER (C) with Brlnkley, McGee, Chancellor And^s glee club, denied permission to update its "Car Trouble" classical repertoire, decides to make Bach as groovy 11:56 0 PETTICOAT JUNCTION (CJ 0 IN THE KNOW (C) "Ijtey Look Me Over" Oas THrockE. NAM(K) E OF THE GAME (C) "The Glory Shouter." Farrell investigates the fi- AFTERNOON 0EYEWITNESS NEWS (C) nancial affairs of a well-known evangelist who Is 12:00 0 SCOOBY-DOO, WHERE ARE YOU? (C) with Aylward, Johnson considered a saint by some and a huckster by Q HOT DOG (C) •'• 7:00 0 CBS EVENING NEWS (C) • others. (R) , - "Cardboard Bpxes" (R) with Roger Mudd Q THE DAVID FROST SHOW Q...,"Th • I,THe, .,..>'.SilveE MAGNIFICEN: r Chalice' • • • ".; ".. (1055••. T MOVI) starrin. • ;. E, (C•>•g Pau). l •Newman, Gettin ..• if; to travel anil study lit before Don't be like the Indian If on paved roads,' backs into a and after arriving at your who insisted he wasn't lost - stall and proceeds to enjoy all campsite. it was bis tepee that was lost. I the comforts of home with a swimming pool, hot showers, CAMPING flush toilets, nearby super- f markets and recreation spas. ft* ByALHORAY . The latter, howev.er, some- 1 t Aside from tne several vari-^ times thinks of the remote and don't ' items to remem- KEELfN'S STOCK HOUSE ations of camping — tents, area camper as perhaps hav- ber. For example, do take bedrolls, wheel camping and ing failed sandbox in kinder* plenty of staple foods Into the BAR and RESTAURANT plush travel trailers - there garten. "Why go into the deep deep woods, but don't over- are two views by outdoor-liv- woods and battle insects?" load your rig with cases of ing advocates on where to go they ponder. "Why chug up a canned goods. 2nd ANNIVERSARY to satisfy their individual mountain road In low gear or Shop for needed items at opinions on how to "get away - worse yet - walk up to home or before you leave the Celebrating Iridgy with from it all." camp away from civ- last town on your trek, but Many rugged Individuals ilization?" keep the weight down. Put THE ROOM-MATES scorn the "parking lot" camp- Fortunately, aside from the coffee, sugar and other dry er who rolls to his campsite hard-core devotees of either foods In plastic bags, and Saturday and Sunday side of the question, there are scrap the jars and cans. Buy ATLANTIC families which enjoy .some of small disposable,containers of KING JAMES and his COURT CINEMA- 291-0148 each type of camping. They salt and pepper and forget ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS often visit modern campsites your table set. Every ounce BUFFET EVERY NITE on some outings and trek to counts. 60 Beachway 787-S732 Keaniburg the outposts on other ven- Plastic bags are handy for HOW-THRU TUESDAY tures. a multitude of uses, but don't MAnNEE5AT.-JUN.AT2 Despite the recent rash of litter the woods with them. new camping fans, there are Bury your garbage when you always Ideal sites available leave or you may be the cause 20th Century-fix presents somewhere for the type of of campers being prohibited LOCK STOCK & BARRE camping you may desire. from using the area in the fu- Most states have a private ture. msms campground operators' orga* When you bury your trash, nization which mails free in- remember to bury it deep TlMMcLOON formation to prospective trav- enough to keep prowling ani- elers. mals from digging it up. A Piano • Guitar - couple of logs or rocks on top , All states have conservation 11 or forestry divisions which of the camp "dump also will Every Wed., Tbiir., Sat. Nile also furnish free brochures in help. 9:30 Till 2 A.M. reply to a six^cent, "penny" A good thing to keep in postcard. Many large corpor- mind by those who really get OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ations, such as lumber and back In the-woods Is that paper companies, allow camp- black bears can smell food LUNCH-S AND WICHES ers, hunters and fishermen to from the next county. Nor- • use sections ol their forests, mally shy, the American' 11:30 Till? N PWS-2ndBIGM bruin Is unpredictable. PAUL NEWMAN with restrictions as to camp- Dinner - Sandwiches** ROBERT REDFORD fires and littering. A very important "do** for "BUTCH CASSIDY AND If you are going to try neophyte and old-hand camp- 5:30-1A.M. ers alike is to get a compass. WE SUNDANCE KID" camping in the hinterlands, there are some important "do Preferably one for the car and a pocket compass for PRIME RIBS 4.25 each person in the party. „ ..... ; ._. ..'_!. j Back this up with a copy of a 121 Fair Haven Rd. 741-9776 THAR SHE BLOWS U.S. Coast and Geodetic Sur- ENTERTAINMENT vey map of the area you plan fRI.-SAT. NIGHTS ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS LITTLE FIRE DEPARTMENT ANGIE and THE HI-UTES" ANNUAL FOOT OP HODMAN PI (Y REDBA.NK Wwiwonrf Ivncheon Spetiah HAPPY HOUR ttY4PJLTo7fcM SUN.2PJM.TO7PJH. RUMSON-FAIR HAVEN REGIONAL SUMMER HIGH SCHOOL RUMSON, N.J. JUNE 28-JULY 3 JUIY 5 - AUGUST 6, 1971 Remedial Enrichment * . COWGOS Courses GAMES* English I, II, (It, IV Auto Mechanics U.S1 Histoiy I & II Behind-The-Wheei Driving College Board Review • Math - Eng World History Developmental Reading . ' Business Subjects Eighth Grade Review - Math - Eng. Gen. Math J&JI Mechanical Drawing Algebra I & It Music Workshop Personal Typing Geometry Trigonometry General Science TORINO Biology WINI Chemistry AIR COND/T/ONfD Earth Science Summer School Hours - 8:00 • 12:45 P.M ft 1115 Physics Instructors: High School Staff Director: Mr. Newton Beron French I, If & III Tel. No. • 842-1697 - Ext. 16 .Registration; 3:00-3:00 P.M. Daily ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS MARINA Uty Expanding Uige rrogram / LONG BRANCtf - Three from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. at =r basketball leagues will be op- these locations: c erated this summer by the Schools - Broadway, £. ISLAND HEIGHTS HAZLET ' -. PERTH AMBOY city's Department of Recrea- Church Street, Elberon, Gar- *<" ~ AN- PLAZA- j. AMBOYSDRIVE-IN- Lov« Story 1^5/ 12;38i Th« Sterll* tion, Parks and Conservation field, Lenna Conrow, Morris ? Escow From tht Ptanef of Hw Apes <* 1040 (RePaCo). Avenue and West End. «, SAT.,' SUN .~c4&i» Fr«m tht Plonet t Registrations will lie held A\§9 Wo.odrow Wilson « MENLOPARK KEYPORT June 28-30 at 16 locations with Homes, Garfield Court, Grant. * SEASIDE STRAND ART- , CINEMA- a playground director at each Court, Sea View Manor, Jerry » 8TRAND- FRI.,5AT.,SUN.-.ThtUnd«r- Tht Andromeda Strain 1:00; 3:20; Morgan Park, Van Court Av- •• rotJwfo 7:oO; |:3Q| 10:00 '3AT.'-The Daring Gam* lfrnoon: The site. Intermediates, juniors 0B : FBI., SAT.-Mcnh 3:00; jgs; Potton Andromeda Sfrofn 3:10; S:40; 1:00; • °iuN.-The Andromeda Strain VMt and seniors will compete. enue Part:, Branchport Park g ?8pN.--Moih 2:W; 6:55; Potton 4:00; KEANSBURG 3:»,S;40;*;00;lC;lS Registrations will be held and Atlantic Avenue Park. T COLONIAL- I NORTH OF RED BANK : FRI., SAT.*4» MATTISON OFF MAIN ST. ^^^P A HUUUil IIIwli PRODUCTION i«i.S9UTtt>CT.ftTE.35i% HAZLET 264-2200 thenBeneath.now... COLOM.-IL ^HDROM=DA STRAIN KFANSBURG. /87O3OO A UNIVERSAL PICTURE'TECHNICOLOir PANAVISIOM' FFOO SnioKiny Sociioii NOW THRU SAT. Canton Mayfair EVERY TUESDATJ TONYCURTIS SUN. MON, TUES. THE BOSTON STRANGLER "PRETTY MAIDS IN A ROW" And Elvis Presley CK STRAND ART "THAT'S THE WAY If IS" KEYPORT, N.J. HELD OVER - 2nd SMASH WEEK ||[ THE PLAZA A True and IIE. M AT WDWE ID. MZlfT K4-44M the (FREEHOLD MALL thousands of dollars ndergradug L SH0WN8 torn, am 9 tu-m in cash prizes! NOW SHOWING Demonstration RODDY McDOWALL •A Walter Reade Theatre KIM HUNTER in love Making MM TOWNI ESCAPE 1 MIDDLETOWN 7 P.M. 8:30 P.M. 10:00 P.M. From The 67M020 NOW SHOWING PLANET of the AREA PREMIERE APES" WHITE STREET. f REEHOLD MALI flED BANK 747-0333 WED. THURS. FRI. SAT. COUNTRY BOGART-LORRE -GREENSTREET! mmt 9, mum mm tswm 1». NOW SHOWING THE AUMocGRAW MALTESE RYAN O'NEAL ^ > FALCON" "LOVE fSUN. MON. TUES. STORY" rSUN. THRU THURS.S 11 P.M. - FRLwid SAT.: MIDNIT5 TOWN AliMuBriw tod browning's NOW SHOWING WALTER MATTHAU (1992) uncut 35mm version ElAINiMAY GREATEST HORROR MOVIE OF ALL TIME | VINCENT CANBY, N.Y. TIMES "A NEW LEAF'*