Woodbridge Area

Woodbridge Area

THE MIDDLESEX COUNTY -TOP COVERAGE ' Leader-Press and Leader Shopper xtm ^ -r-top circulation coverage la \ Woodbridge area. r Serving Woodbridge Township, Carteret and Edison tt*A M M rtnw Mifl P. O. Wmx)brkl««. N. J. Woodbridge, N. J., Wednesday, September 25, 1968 fttaiy TEN CENTS Lawrence DeMaio Named. To Rural Advisory Uroup TKKNTON — Lawrence R DeMain of Colonia and Arthur Freedoms Official .human of Monroeville were re irontly sworn in as new members I of tho Rural Advisory Council. The two were appointed by Gov- ernor Richard J. Hughes and ! will serve three-year terms. At the same session William A. Haffcrl, Jr., of Sea Isle i C 'it y, publisher of BusinessTo Be Main Speaker ]Fanning magazine, wes elected 'Council chairman for another one-year term. DeMaio is a buyer in the Pur i chasing and Transportation Di-j vision. Kearny Works, Western] jKleclric, with headquarters ati 1 Kearny. He is a member of the i Middlesex County Planning At U. S. Celebration i Board and a member of the South County Planning Advisory Committee. He is a past presi dent of the Citizens Advisory ; Committeet)f Woodbridge Town- ship. Active in other local and Four Judges Are Named For Art civic organizations, he is. also j a member of the Raritan Coun- 1 LADY "SKIPPER ' AT HELM Mrs. Marianne Jasper, a secretary in the Planning and Re- cil- Northeast District, Boy development Agency, takes over the wheel of the tug Shamokin and guides the Reading Rail- Sc°uts of America. road ship through the Jersey Centra! and Victory Bridges while officials get a first hand look ' The Rural Advisory Council, Show; Many Dignitaries Will at the township waterfront on the boat excursion last Thursday. Keeping a wary eye ahead is i a llnit of the New Jersey Depart CummiCaptain Aiil »»™»iiZarcmba. «o<f Sout««,.*hu »,•.,„River. men („£ Agriculture, was crea- I ted by State law' in 1959" In the cabin, Mrs. Marianne Jasper, a secretary in the plan- Take Part In Program Oct. 13 ning department, steered the Officials 250-ton tug through the Jersey Central bridge and the Victory WOODBRIDGE - W. C. "Tom" Sawyer, senior vice-president Bridge — after both were Beagle Again Cited and dean of education of the Freedom Foundation at Valley opened. Forge, notified the LEADER PRKSS today that he was honored Look Over »o be invited to the United Slates Day here on October 13 in At Woodbridge again, the old Woodbridge High School as the principal speaker of this second Jennings Boat Works were For Road Program annual event, that is expected to attract over 10,000 people. pointed out as an area, that "we'd like to clean up event- His subject will be "Patriotism Is Not Daad." Shoreline ually," Rosa said. WOODBRIDGE - The Town- ready been using methods dis-| Sponsors of this gigantic event, which will include a parade ship again received internation- covered and implemented in and art show, besides the program in the stadium are Wood- Out from the old Raritan Ar- al compliments on its excellent on senal dock, two sunken dry Woodbridge Township under bridge Township Business and Professional Women' Club, the road-paving program directed Beagle's direction," continued Cultural Sub-Committee of the Mayor's Commission on Youth Hide from }\ Raiding docks, their high walls marked by Municipal Engineer. Charles with slime, stood gray gulls fly- Mayor Barone, "and now, as with the Leader Press cooperatoing. To Raritan Arsenal ing over and throngh them. The "Duke" Beagle. you can readily see, his pro- Mr. Sawyer is a native of the State of Washington, was edu-J igrizzled captain said they'd "This time," said Mayor grams are also having an inter cated in the public schools of Colorado, Idaho, and California. WOOIHSRIDGK Woodbridge i torn loose years ago and had Ralph P. Barone, "the top ex- national impact." He holds a B .A. Degree from the University of Redlands, Cali- Township official:- through the been there ever since. ecutives of the Watanabe Gumi fornia. He received his Masters Degree from the University Co. Ltd., of Tokyo, Japan, told courtesy of the Heading Rail Another independent effort, of Chicago in the field of Educational Administration. road and the luy Shamokin, j us during their recent visit that Plan to Form Anoth&t he Keasbey Outboard Motor- He is by vocation a school administrator. He served in ad- took a first liahand look alt thee DMt Club sa Mr. Beagle's fame is of world- Mtrative positions in the schools of Montana and Arizona. Hveifron,.'it"Y r'-,t area "V7Vbord. ^ , ";el.! . , -' j^get nestle. d beneath wide renown and th# *-\h "Jeep * member of two graduate honor fraternities, find for K r iseo The offldalg lift" method of permanent luwn.luj. last rhurs.ij* aU k f . t f WOODBRIDGE — Mayor three summers was on the faculty of the Montana Stale College many were amazed to sesee what % ^^ ^ road-paving has almost revolu- Ralph P. Barone announced to- at Dillon. mmerit lt0o initiativ e anandd effort t . tionized the industry." time had recorded against the day through the combined ef- In World War I, he served in the Coast Artillery. days when fishing and swim Its bright lawn and trees and "Mr. Tadao Watanabe, Ex- forts of our municipal Recrea- During World War II, he directed the Educational activities miiij; in this town drew thous-iboat ramp u're one of the very ecutive Vice-President, and Mr. tion Department and the Wood- of the War Relocation Authority (Japanese ancestry concentra. amis from all ovei the metro- few bright spots along the Masatoshi Omadaka, Chief En- bridge Center on Aging, another Won) Project in Arizona. politan area. nearly heavly industrialized gineer, of the Watanabe Com- Senior Citizens Club will be/| They saw aginy piling, rotted shoreline. formed. This new club, lor Port In the American Legion, he was Arizona State Commander in pany, were both very excited 1935-36; National Vice-Commander in 1941-42. ship huks, decrepit piers, sun,- Making the trip were Council about meeting directly with Mr. Reading and Sewaren residents, ken barges, acres of cattails President Joseph Nemyo and Beagle in order to speak at will hold its first meeting Wed- Prior to coming to Freedoms Foundation in June, 1950, he and marsh lands. first-hand with the man whose nesday, October 2nd at 1:30 was for three years director of the American Legion's National Gene Tomasso, John Egan, John Americanism Commission, in which activity he had previously When the "Shamokin" left Hila, and William Kilgallen; road-paving methods and inno p. m. at the St. Anthony's the dock, a broad, thick oil vations had been written about Church basement on Port Read- been engaged for a decade as one of the national commissioners. Winfield Finn, industrial com- ing Avenue, Port Reading. slicJc wafted in toward the missioner, Buddy Freedman, in many technical periodicals Mr. Sawyer is senior vice-president of Freedom Foundation shoreline. the mayor's administrative as- with both American as well as John Zullo, Acting Director at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania in charge of American Freedom Councilman Gene Tomasso sistant; Robert Rosa, director of international circulation," said of The Center On Aging and Center Operations. reacted first: "How can any- planning and redevelopment; the Mayor. Frank Murphy, Recreation He was for 12 years secretary of the All-American Conference thing live in that," he asked. The Mayor also stated that Director stated that any resi- to Combat Communism, a conference of national organizations George Meholick, business ad- with programs to oppose Communism. Councilman John Hila remin- ministrator; Dan Pascoe and Mr. Watanabe advised him that dent of Sewaren or Port Read- W. C. "TOM" SAWYER" isced about his childhood days. Mrs. Marianne Jasper of the the Watanabe Coy^wilywilll use ing over fifty-five (55) years of ARTISTS SELECTED "We used to comq down heie Planning and Development Beagle'Bl s "deep lift^ methods in age is cordially invited to at- and swim and crab and dig their construction of the Tokyo- tend this initial public meeting. Four noted artists have agreed to Judge the patriotic and his "Thank you for inviting the Rutgers CoIonJa Guard to •net clams. Now, there's nothing," Agency, Jake Steimling, mana- ger of the Reading Railroad, and Nagoya Expressway which is to Refreshments will be served torical art show, according to Mrs. Audrey LaPenta, chairman again participate at the Second Annual United States Day Cele- he added, with a touch of re- be completed by next Spring. after the meeting and for fur of this event for the Business and Professional Women. bration. morse in his voice. other railroad officials, and John Samons, tax assessor. "More than 18 State Highway ther information concerning Heading the Ibt is Eva DeNagy, painter and sculptor of Eliz The Guard is now preparing a ten minute tatoo for this event. The powerful green and black Departments, as well as the this club — call the Center On abeth, wtio was born in Hungary and became a naturalized U. S.j We anticipate bringing at least 14 members, including our fife tug moved gently away from IT. S. Bureau of Roads, have al- Aging at 634-4500 — ext. 285. the dock. At the helm was Al Citizen. She is listed hi "Who's Who in American Art," Hungar and drum unit." William A. Byrne, plans officers, Rutgers Colo- Zamemba, a 30-year-veteran of ians in America" and "Who's Who of American Women." nial Guard. tug work. Open G.O.P. Miss DeNagy is the owner-director of the Eva DeNagy Art "It gives me great pleasure to attend such a patriotic celebra- Robert Rosa, director of plan- Gallery, Provincetown, Mass.

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