8 - Red Bank Register Archive
Transcripción
8 - Red Bank Register Archive
The Daily Register Fire ruins Vogel building SUNNY COD VOL. 100 NO. 190 SHREWSBURY, N. J. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1978 15 CENTS Recently purchased by Nadler Furniture By ANN BRENOFF LONG BRANCH - A city landmark, the former VogeTs Department Store, was ravaged by a spectacular fire early today which fire officials have called "highly sus The 72-year-old department store at Third Avenue and Broadway, which closed Us doors in 1975, was sold last week to Allen Nadler. It was slated to reopen as the Nadler furniture chain's main retail center. The Nadler chain had operated another large store in Red Bank until that was destroyed by a massive fire in February 1170. That fire, also suspected arson, was the subject of an int e n s i v e , a l t h o u g h inconclusive, investigation. Mr. Nadler could not be reached tor comment early this morning As Long Branch firemen, assisted by firefighters from six other municipalities, battled the dense black smoke and leaping flames, a crowd gathered to watch the demise of the building. Flaming embers, carried by thp wind, threatened neighboring buildings. The huge flames lit up Broadway and could be seen from all quarters of the city. A lone figure huddled in the shadows of the blaze, standing on the comer of Third Avenue and Broadway. Tears brimmed in his eyes. He was identified by several Broadway store owners as George Vogel, former owner and operator of the store for 30 years. "I can't comment now," Mr. Vogel said s o f t l y . "Please. It's a part of me," he said of the burning store." As he spoke, firemen broke through still another section of roof to ventilate what Fire Chief Ray Cook called "nothing short of a furnace," referring to the inside of the four-story brick building. Mr. Vogel Just turned away. Leaping flames shot from the roof as the holes were axed. The front doors, long since boarded up, w e r e yanked (ree by firemen to further ventilate the building. SPECTACULAR FIRE — Smoke and flames pour out all sides of the four-story former Vo. gel's Department Store In Long Branch, early today as firemen try to contain spectacular blaze and save neighboring businesses, such as Opholstery shop (foreground top photo). At right, firemen train hoses on door In anticipation of. flames burstIng through. Photos by Register staffer Carl Forlno. Monmouth crawls back from storm Conrail and the two area bus lines, Asbury Park-New Venturesome county resi- York Transit Co. and New dents pulled on their boots York-Keansburg-Long Branch and buttoned-up their over- Bus co. said they would recoats as they headed out to sume their regular schedules work, school and shopping today. Conrail ran Its Saturday today, after a two-day holiday schedule yesterday, while the imposed by Old Man Winter. Most schools, businesses, bus companies ran part-time and government offices were schedules. One supermarket manager closed down yesterday, and many expected to be closed reported that customers were down again today, as area buying "basics, like bread, residents attempted to dig out potatoes, milk, and rock salt, from under the worst snow which no one had, and snow shovels, which everyone was storm In more than 30 years. By DAVID TURNER The Inside Story THE WEATHER S u i y aid c*M M a y aid i M i m w , Complete repnt M page t. Mart! Grai parties feus are eeaauUeal Mam KO'i heal tparU date... BrMgeAaMce a ™ -a C n m r t Pmle Efltariak C JB « Lifestyle. Hate A Date 4 Zri-n II 14 17 DAILY REGISTER PHONE NUMBERS Mail Office Taal Free .171-HM C U M H M Dept.. .J4J-17M Clmtattai Dept. MkUkttm Bweaa .171 m» FimhaW Banal .431-J1B Laag Snack Bireai ..tn-ttll StatckMte Bareai MMM-HM running out of." He said that customers were generally in good spirits despite the storm. "Normally they're very grouchy and moody, but toaay they were happy," he said. The president of Colonial First National Bank, Barry Blank of Rutnson, said that banks were closed all day yesterday, because of the limited state of emergency declared by the governor. "It's very unusual. I have a feeling that it's been many, many years since the banks 1 were closed. We're obligated by law to be open every business day," he said. The county coordinator of Civil Defense and Disaster Control, Bernard Koch, was on duty from 4 a.m. Monday on, to provide any possible assistance to area municipalities. Along with N a t i o n a l Guardsmen, the county assisted In the evacuation of residents of Sea Bright, Monmouth Beach, Long .Branch, and Avon during flood conditions. The county provided cots and blankets for emergency shelters In several towns, and for the staff of snowed-in Freehold Area Hospital. High-wheeled county vehicles provided transportation for the staffs of Monmouth Medical Center, Long Branch, and the Jersey Shore Medical Center, Neptune. Hospitals throughout the county met the snow emer- gency with a burst of volunteer help and employee loyalty mixed with the cameraderie of a shared experience. Michelle Demko, nursing supervisor at Bayshore Community Hospital in Holmdel, said most of the hospital's employees were at work yesterday, and the hospital sent out their van to pick up nurses stranded by the snow. At Riverview Hospital, Red Bank, many employees slept at the hospital with cots placed in the auditorium and beds available on the sixth floor. Police and volunteers aided In bringing employees to the faculty. Roy Ettlinger, executive director of Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital, said the hospital was able to provide minimal coverage for its patients, during the storm. About 25 to 30 employees slept on the grounds, unable to reach their homes, and rooms at the facility were set aside for this purpose. Jane Hollander, director of public information at Monmouth Medical Center, said volunteers walked into the hospital to offer assistance. while nursing personnel in some cases worked three and four shifts. The hospital security personnel operated a shuttle service town-by-town along a prescribed route toil bring in the staff. In Shrewsbury Township the mayor and two councilmen directed their own See MMmMiia, page 3 The Register prints fall press run The weather was horrendous.. .but The Daily Register ran its full press runs on Monday and Tuesday With the safety of Its people of paramount Importance, The Register managed to make deliveries to stores and to the great majority of its home delivery subscribers. Many readers have called The Register's main office in Shrewsbury expressing surprise at receiving the paper — but thankful for the opportunity to know what is happening locally in the snow emergency. Arthur Z. Kamln, The Register's president and editor, had the highest praise for The Register people who — often under severe hardship — made it into work to produce and distribute the paper. "We've never missed an edition," he said, "and I hope we never will. The devotion of our people to gel out a newspaper was inspiring to all of us. They rendered a great public service at a time when accurate, current and complete information was needed so badly in the county. I am proud of all of our great and dedicated people " If, because of bad road conditions, you were unable to receive the Monday and Tuesday editions of The Reg-, ister — please call our Circulation Department and those copies will be delivered to you. Call M2-4000 and ask for Circulation. Dense smoke, carried by southeasterly winds, menaced other shops along Broadway. Firemen, fearrul that the roof might collapse, were unable to enter the flaming structure. Flocks of pigeons who had long called the awnings of the old Vogel building "home" found their quiet dwelling In utter turmoil last night. They fluttered In confusion onto neighboring rooftops, firetrucks and into the arms of several onlookers "I've called for a second alarm," said Chief Cook after the magnitude of the blaze combined with the icy roads to make the task of getting to the fire a difficult one for the city's volunteer fire force The Initial alarm was sounded at approximately 1:45 a.m., said the chief. Aerial ladders from Oakhurst, Red Bank and West Long Branch were dispatched to help. Monmouth Beach, Deal and Oceanport units were also at the scene. "We've got about 200 or more men out here," said Chief Cook, "but we can't get inside the building " The second alarm, he said, See Fire, page 3 FIRE REFUGEE - Charles Williams of Grant Court, Long Branch, holds one of the hundreds of stunned pigeons that were forced from their perch atop the former Vogels Department Store. I Sea Bright story: People thankful borough homes — after the water left, that is. "Just look at this," moaned SEA BRIGHT - Sea Bright residents were "just damn a woman as she hauled a thankful to be here" yes- ruined carpet from her home terday as they assessed mil- on the ocean. "I've never seen anything lions of dollars in damages to their homes, cars and town in like it," said Chief Carmody. "I've seen (Hurricanes) the wake of Monday's ravagEsther, Donna and Belle — ing storm. High tides flooded the en- but nothing like this," he contire borough with waters in tinued. excess of four feet, forcing the e v a c u a t i o n of many Picture, page 3 borough residents. As they returned to their flooded apartments and ."I figured that we wouldn't homes, they marveled at the have to worry anymore about extent of damage "just plain having to put an inlet to the water" can cause. ocean In (for boats). The "There were waves coming whole borough was an inlet," down my street," exclaimed a said the chief. shocked resident of Sandpiper The Monmouth Beach BathLane. Her car had been floated several feet before ing Pavilion sustained extencoming to rest w r a p p e d sive damage to its beach, fencing, parking lot and pool. around a fallen mailbox. It's parking lot was strewn Residents of the north end with rocks, sand and debris. of Sea Bright were hit the Stone fences on the west hardest by the storm. The side of Ocean Avenue in Monstate Department of Trans- mouth Beach were ripped in portation ordered shut the pieces and littered the main portion of Ocean Avenue be- thoroughfare. tween the Rumson Bridge and The Monmouth County Red the Highlands Bridge. Cross coordinator, William Police Chief John Carmody Murray, said that the Sea said that the road would be Bright recreation center reclosed "for as long as the mained open through last state orders it so" and noted night as an evacuation post. that huge chunks of the sea The facility serviced apwall remain strewn through- proximately 80 people on, out the roadway. Monday night and was still Debris from the ocean, In- the temporary home for about cluding timber and garbage a dozen residents yesterday. had washed onto the roadway See Tkaakfal, page > also. Barucle Bill Mud was perhaps the most unwanted guest in many Open for lunch and dinner, seven days a week. 747-9810. 1 RBC PTA I ed to First St., Rumson. Tues., Feb. 14.872-1021 AUeatiM RealUrs Special Love -0-Gram Don't miss«ur monthly Pafor your loved one. You may rade of Homes, Sun., Feb. 12. win "Dinner for Two." Call Deadline Wed., Feb. 8. Call the Love Dept. tor details. Classified Display for your re542-1700. servation. 542-4000 By ANN BRENOFF SHREWSBURY. N J WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8. 1978 Yesterday was the day you got to meet your neighbors By ANN BIENOFF Yesterday was the day you got to meet your neighbors You know - those people who have lived next door since May and who you saw for the first time last month when you asked to borrow a shovel. A sense of comradeship surfaced yesterday, as does always when common disaster strikes And with it came strangers providing strangers with the extra push for that Hailed car or that much needed ride to the grocery store for emergency supplies of milk and bread. Even the face of crime changed yesterday, as area police had lets call to investigate armed robberies and more requests to bail out stranded motorists. Not all was pleasant, to be sure, but as many noted. every cloud has a silver lining and the silver lining in this was the warmth shared by strangers facing the plight Take John-the-dog's story from West Long Branch for example. The last thing that John wanted to do was trouble the already busy borough police, but what was one poor (and wet) doggie to do when the ice proved too thin to skate on on Franklin Lake. Police Lieutenant raice Lieutenant Herbert Herbert Van Van Note Note reported reported that that the the initially wanted to sleep on river ice which fronts his wet and shivering pup was rescued and brought to police headquarters where he was fed hot chicken soup and a sandwich ("Well, why not? " said the lieutenant) John, who survived the 10-degree waters, was later claimed by his owner. And John wasn't the only dog who found himself swimming yesterday. house But Horn and Dad vetoed this plan and a compromise was reached — the front lawn The three, who are all members of Boy Scout Troop IB of Fair Haven and have participated in scout-sponsored Klondike Derbies, pitched a tent and dined on a beef stew dinner prepared in the "vestibule" of the canvas "home." All in the heart of the blowing, biting, windwhipping storm. After a healthy 11-hour deep in the tent, while around them the streets flooded, power lines were felled and emergency rescues were made, the trio awoke to a hefty scrambled eggs and bacon breakfast. The boys were equipped with down-filled sleeping geST-,4 coleman stove and ground pads • ••*• For two Long Branch girls wanting to help out someone In need, the storm proved a bit frustrating. R. Barry Kamm, the city's civil, defense leader, opened an emergency evacuation center at (he West End School when flooding during high tide appeared to threaten several homes In the north end of this city "But most of the people who were evacuated went to stay with friends and relatives, he noted Two teenagers contacted Mr. Kamm to offer their asin the evacuation center. sistance In For one Little Silver resident, letting the dog out for a walk turned into a rather splashy affair. A Saint Bernard, put out in the early morning by an unidentified resident! failed to negotiate the walk around the snow-covered swimming pool. He fell through the ice. His master, not wanting to lose his best friend, dived in after the 260-pound pooch Police were called in to rescue both dog and man. The man was treated and released at Riverview Hospital. The dog was reported uninjured • •••• Why do you climb Mount Everest? "Because it's there," of course. And "because it was challenging" is why a 16-yearold Fair Haven youth pitched a tent on his front yard — amidst a raging storm and atop a couple of feet of snow Richard Hartung of 18 Timber Court and two friends "But 1 didn't have anything for them to do," Mr. Kamm commented sadly He tried, however, and assured them that be would have been very lonely If he had had to sit in the empty school alone until 11 p.m "Every time the phone rang, the girls would get excited hoping that someone was asking for shelter. But we just had no takers," he observed. • ••• • Several local police noted that they were called upon to transport emergency personnel, such at doctors, to area hospitals "But that's almost obvious." commented one dispatcher who asked that his name and municipality be kept anonymous. "We've even helped out when people needed transport to clinics and doctors offices today. This storm hits a lot of elderly people harder than you can imagine. They become prisoners in their own homes," he said. "Why don't you do them all a favor and write in the paper that If you have an elderly relative or neighbor — you should go over there and see if they need groceries or something from the drugstore," he urged. "If everyone who read that would call or go check on a senior citizen, there would be a lot of happier people out there," he said. Consider u it none. done. consider A few trains but passengers stayed away in droves By MARK MAGYAR unrall ran a Saturday Conrail schedule on its North Jersey Coast Line yesterday, but Monmouth County commuters, leery of the service even on sunny days, stayed away in droves. William McKeman of Little Silver never even considered going in to Ms New York City Job. "I'm a little insane, but not that bad," he noted. It was a wise decision, as Conrail reported "problems of a rather major nature" with the first two trains to leave for New York City yesterday 'morning. The two trains were each an hour-and-ahalf late. "The number of people who managed to get to trains (yesterday) Is a very small fractlon of what it Is normally," a Conrall spokesman said. A lone black Volkswagen stood sentinel In the Little Sil ver station lot, while only a (ew cars, sat In the Middletown station lot yesterday, commuters said. The Conrall spokesman reported problems with snow blowing Into switches yesterday, but said he anticipated no problems when Conrall returned to its normal Monday-to-Friday commuter schedule today. "One problem we have during the winter Is that people tend to cluster In stations, and be very careful going up step*," he said. "You lose a minute or two and before you know It, you're 20 minutes be behind." Commuter hesitancy while boarding trains was not the problem In Newark Monday afternoon, though, asserted Mr. McKernan and K. Edward Jacobi, former Little Silver councilman. "We all left work early and there were hundreds of commuters on the platform waiting for the 12:20 out of Newark," Mr. Jacobi related. "The train usually has six cars on it, but Monday It had just three and Conrall had a near-riot on Its hands. "People were yelling and Sunny and cold today and tomorrow with highs SO to IS or zero celilus. Clear and vary cold tonight with lows in (he teens. Precipitation probability near zero per cent through tomorrow. Winds, northerly 10-20 mph tonight. Ocean water temperatures are In the low to mid 30s. Coastal forecast, winds, north to northwest 10-20 knots tonight and northerly 10-15 TIDES SaadyHMk TODAY - High 8:15 p.m. and low 2:33 p.m. TOMORROW - High 8:56 a.m. and 1:22 p.m. and low 1:53 a.m. and 3:18 p.m. For Red Bank and Rumson bridge, add two hours; Sea Bright, deduct 10 minutes; Long Branch, deduct 15 minutes; Highlands bridge, add 4* minutes then it took »0 80 minutes for them to run another train while empty trains sat in a railroad yard less than a mile away." Train service from New York City wasn't any better Monday afternoon, said William Placek of Little Silver. "I took the 6:46 a.m. Monday morning and it zipped right In — only a half hour late, which Is good (or Conrail," Mr. Placek said. "But I caught the 12:05 back and didn't get in until 4:00 "At Rahway, the Shore line switches off from the main line, but the switch wouldn't close because of the snow," he said. "That's what Conrail told us. We were laid over for an hour and 40 minutes until they managed to unfreeze the switch." Mr. Placek and Mr. Jacobi didn't consider going in to work yesterday. William Salway of Middletown, Councilman John A. Mortensen of Little Silver and Councilman John S. McCarthy of Fair Haven didn't go In Monday either. "I had business Monday afternoon in Red Bank and I couldn't depend on Conrail to get me back in time," Mr. Salway never considered going into work on Monday, but Mr. Mortensen was just a step away. "I was down there at the normal time, but I wasn't in the mood for any 'Conrall surprises'," Mr. Mortensen said. "I said to myself if the train is not within, five minutes of being on time, I'll leave. I asked the stationmaster and he didn't know If the trains were running on time. "I had one foot on the train and one foot off when I saw a conductor I knew very well," he said. "He didn't know if the trains were on time ei- ther. I thought the chances for a big 'Conrall surprise' were pretty good, so I turned around and left. I was lucky." Every commuter surveyed A two-day vacation in the snow was to end today for many New Jerseyans as state offices, businesses and some schools prepared to open for the first time since the Blizzard of '78. Rail and bus transportation was expected to run on nearnormal schedules for the morntag rush hour, said spokesmen for Conrail, AmIrak, PATH and Transport of New Jersey, the state's largest bus company. Newark International Airport scheduled a 10 a.m. opening today. The alrpo/t had been closed since shortly after noon Monday. Only Teterboro Airport In Bergen County resumed operations knots tomorrow. Visibility better than five miles. Average wave heights, 2-4 feet tonight WASHINGTON (API - National Waatfcer iff Viet reaart af meilmiim tanpanrtarai Mr ll-aaar perled, mil * • * » It-kMT aarM he W W M M m the governor Tuesday took a helicopter tour of the shore areas. "It's the worst storm I've ever seen along the coast," he said. "It was discouraging seeing all the damage." About 500 coastal residents in Monmouth and Ocean counties returned to their homes Tuesday after being evacuated in the face of a vicious storm tide. Damage e s t i m a t e s in the c o u n t y ranged from $2.5 million in Bradley Beach to 11 million to replace H4 miles of boardwalk uprooted at Lavalette. "Everything was ripped up completely," said Lavalette police dispatcher Walter LaClcero. "We had eight pavillions that were moved around a Uttle bit." The storm flooded shore areas, stranded motorists and dumped about two feet of snow in Ocean and Monmouth counties, 18 inches in Newark, 16 Inches In Trenton and a foot in Atlantic City. The National Weather Ser- Hazlet Democrats are all tangled-up % ?J 3 fl J! ,. far a«t ll-aaar aariad. Hut M n AUony Amorlllo AiOevlll. Allonlo .. Blrrnlngtiom lltmorck •on. aotton Burlington Chorltilon. S.C Chorlotif. - . Tuesday. At least nine New Jerseyans died in various stormrelated incidents. Gov. Brendan T. Byrne declared a state of emergency early Tuesday and then lifted it later in the day, noting that state residents had complied with requests that they stay off the roads. "We've had great c o o p e r a t i o n from people," theigovernor said. The New Jersey Turnpike, Garden State Parkway and major arteries were open Tuesday. Officials predicted conditions today would be better than they were early Monday when a turnpike toll collector said, "You have to be out of your mind to be driving on a morning like this. No job is worth it." About 5,000 Gloucester County residents were without power for two hours Tuesday after a switch failed, but utility spokesmen said it was the only significant power outage In the state. The state's coastline was hit hardest by the storm and Pall M-ari planned to to go go in in to to woi work by planned expressed train today, and all expr hopes that the trains would run on time — that Is, less than one half hour late. United States, will stop in Rome as part of his international tour to explain to various governments Two-day snow vacation ends today Weather: Sunny At H e Register's weather • U U M , yesterday's high tern •cralare was M degrees aid Ike U « » . It was SI at I > • . , aid Ike •veralgkt tow mil W. Ttday'i 1:11 a.m. teapcntutwasXl. Tfcere was H lack •( satw (ar M law* melted) la Ike 14 •Mrs eadlig at 6:11 a.m. May. screaming, and trying to climb aboard the engine bebe cause the cars were full," he said. "Policemen were called In to fend off the mobs. Finally, Conrail announced a special train would take off 10 minutes later, and people calmed down." The special train didn't show up for an hour-and-ahalf, then took two hours to make the usual one hour trip to Little Silver. "Conrail never has any contingency plans," Mr. Jacobi said. "Putting a short train on in a situation like that is completely inexcusable. And vice u i d temperatures would Conditions around the state remain below freezing but no ranged from "horrible'' in Atmore snow was predicted be- lantic City to "rough" in fore Saturday. Falrview, hazardous in Camden The service was watching a and "atrocious" in Fort Lee. "We've got some strange developing low pressure system In Texas. "We do have white stuff down here that Gall Fisher the threat of another system we're not familiar with," said A c t r e s s Gall f i s h e r moving into this area that Cape May County Civil Dehas pleaded innocent to could cause concern," said fense Coordinator Leland NWS specialist Michael Ya- Stanford. "It's got us pretty i charges of possessing coj caine and using a so-called well tied up." nolko , "blue box" to evade longFiremen In Atlantic City The storm was one of the 10 distance telephone charges. most brutal in the state since had to plow through drifts The 42-year-old actress, the National Service began and avoid abandoned cars to who played an office secrekeeping records, Yanolko fight several fires Tuesday tary in the television series, that left one man dead and said. "Mannlx," was ordered to In South Jersey, the bliz- nine Boardwalk businesses * appear for a preliminary gutted zard was the worst since DeI hearing March 10 in Los Hospitals coped with the I Angeles Municipal Court. cember 1860 when 16.6 inches were dumped on the area, he storm by setting up cots for ' Miss F i s h e r , w h o ' w a s said. Accumulations in North snowbound doctors and nursbooked under her married Jersey were the worst since 'es, many of whom worked •' name of Gail Fisher Levy, December 1847 when 26.4 in- overtime to replace co-work- I was arrested last Jan. 18 afers stranded at home. The ches of snow (ell. ter officers searched her But weather experts say it National Guard was sumBenedict Canyon home. The didn't compare to the Bliz- moned to transport hospital officers said they found a workers In Somerset, Morris zard of'88. vial of cocaine in her kitch"I laugh when I think of and other counties. About 600 state plows, aided people calling this storm a blizzard, said Mrs. Lemian by 1,000 private trucks and Egyptian President AaBachman of the Summit scores of county and municiwar Sadat will call on Pope Nursing Home in Lakewood pal road crews worked to who Just turned 100. "I re- clear arteries, many of which I Paul VI next Monday, Vatlmember the Blizzard of '88 still had ice and snow from k can officials said yesterday. very well . . . Nobody could the major storm less than I Sadat, currently In the three weeks ago. go anywhere." Egypt's stand'on negotiations with Israel. Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan met Pope Paul In a 55-mlnute audience on Jan. 12. At that meeting the pontiff called for International guarantees for access to Jerusalem and its holy places and also for participation by all Interested parties In Middle East peace talks. ••• . J » l a D e a l s a y s Fred .Fielding was not Deep Throat. Once former President Nixon's staff counsel and later a witness against his administration, Dean told a Tennessee Tech audience Monday night In Cookevllle: "There Is no way Fred Fielding could have been Deep Throat. I worked very closely with Fielding. I hired him, I brought him to the White House. I don't think Fielding knew some of the things th at Deep Throat knew." H.R. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of staff until his resignation in the midst of the scandal, has written a book detailing events surrounding the Watergate affair. ••* Taft, a small eastern Oklahoma town, still doesn't want Red F M X as its police chief. On its second vote In two weeks, the Town Council voted 2-1, with two members abstaining, to fire the comedian from the post. A week ago the vote was 5-0 with all council members voting- W M L H L Pr. cd » « Jl i» SI cd 31 II » IS 03 cd u « 33 u pc 34 U 35 U PC PC PC CO PC • PC PC 41 « II 33 30 I S ' 21 14 41 22 II II 44 24 13 II 71 OS II 10 S3 30 27 20 40 40 )3 IS « 20 IS 04 22 I! II 03 Cincinnati CltvlMnd Columbvt Dtnvtr cd 41 10 49 3A OtsMoiwi OM cd 17 03 14 0] Otiroit ci a OJ f i 04 DuMh PC IS -01 I) 01 Honolulu cl 13 U 13 60 Houtton rn 40 M 31 35 J t IndlonopolH PC II 03 IS OS JochKxivlllt. 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N J. 07721 779 Broadway. Long Bronch. N J. 0774* H o M W H . Trenlon, N J OMIS Mamoir ol m t Aiiocloted P m v Th* Attocloted P r r u li entitled e«CK/tlv»ly to me trt« ol oil tlw loco) ntwi printed In the ntwipoptr 01 writ us all AP I H W I ond dlipolchet AWnUMf of Iht Amarlcon Ntwspaotr Putolltrwn Attoclotion. tnt Audit Burtou of Orcutollom. t h * Ntw Jtrttv P r e n Aitoclotlon. stcond'CHnt poiloot paid ot Had Bonk. N.J 07701 ond at Middle m n . H.J. 07741 PUMIlhM Sundoy through Friday Moll lutncrlptioni T«rm Dolly Dally ond Only Only Sunday OroVaar US* I I S 00 ISO OO Horn* delivery by Carrier — Dolly ond Sunday .90 centi o week. I M ( M copy •< Counter - Dolly IS n u l l ; Sunday 25 centi By JULIE WOLF HAZLET - ft was Democrat versus Democrats at last night's Township Committee meeting. Former Mayors Herbert i. Kupfer and Stephen J. Filardi tangled with Mayor Gilbert W Bennett and the two other Democractic Commltteemen in relation to an incident in the treasurer's office, this week, which resulted in the loss ot approximately $1,500 to the township. The two groups accused each other of polltlking during the public section of the meeting. During the meeting, Mayor Bennett said 11.470,000 had remained In the township's checking account for a little over a week without being invested, causing the loss of interest to the township. The mayor said that some confusion on the part of Walter Barnes, newly appointed treasurer, and former treasurer Patricia Frank caused the problem. Mr. Kupfer, h o w e v e r charged that Mr. Barnes had been appointed as treasurer In a political move to oust Mrs. Frank, who-had supported former Mayor Filardi during last November's election. "Mr. Barnes had no qualifications for the job, while Mrs. Frank has been to Rutgers and taken special courses . She was much more qualified," said Mr. Kupfer. Mayor Bennett countered that Mrs. Frank knew about the procedure and should have notified Mr. Barnes. The mayor said Mr. Kupfer and Mr. Filardi were using the incident to score p o l i t i c a l points. Republican Commltteeman John Pierce agreed. "1 think politics are being played and the township is the loser," he said. After the meeting, the former mayors, who split with Democratic party leadership over the question of multifamily housing last year, announced the formation of a new Democratic club, called the Peoples Democratic Club of Hazlet. Mr. Filardi accused the "so-called" Democratic leaders of appointing only members of the Democratic executive committee to township i posts. Mr. Filardi read off a list of Democratic executive committee members, naming the positions they hold. The former mayor lost his bid for reelection to the township committee when be ran as an Independent after falling to get the endorsement of the Democrats. Mr. Filardi also denied that he and Mr. Kupfer had been notified of the tax problem by Mn. Frank. He said Mr. Kupfer found out that the township funds had not been invested, because he works in a bank which handles transactions by the township. Checkbook II. It looks like a checkbook and works like a loan. With Checkbook II. you can write yourself a loan anytime, anywhere. It's not a checking account but .it's just as easy to use! Borrow up to $5500 (depending on your preapproved personal credit line) simply by writing a check from your special Checkbook II account. Pay nothing until you use it. A low interest rate when you do. Come into our nearest office today and pick up an application for Checkbook II. Then when you need money, you won't have to come to the bank Just reach for Checkbook II. It looks like a checkbook and works like a loan! .TONAL AFdeMyOrunBarcoTporatoiBank . Mantar FOC <j Byrne inspects battered shore My MARK CRAVEN seawall hi Long Branch and shook hands with area resiLONG BRANCH - Gov. dent*, then helicoptered over Brendan T. Byrne (lew to the Sea Bright and Monmouth battered Itonmouth County Beach to inspect the destrucshore yesterday to make sure tion left by Monday's heavy It doesn't become "mother flooding Buffalo'' 'It's calm and serene up "Buffalo was turned down there but It sure i s rough for federal aid because It down here," the governor didn't have documentation," said. " It's the worst storm the governor said. "We have I've e v e r s e e n a l o n g t h e to evaluate costi carefully coast. It was discouraging and document them before seeing all the damage." declaring this a disaster area. The governor will evaluate T h e r e ' ! no a d v a n t a g e in the damage (or at least two speed" days before deciding whether The governor inspected the to vtk federal disaster funds or to hack an emergency appropriations measure in the stale Legislature to channel funds to the stricken area. The White House i s expecting Gov. Byrne to apply (or federal disaster funds, the governor's office said. The governor's blue and white helicopter, (ishtailing in the gusting winds, landed at a makeshift pad marked off by police barricades on Ocean Avenue In front of the Long Branch pier. The governor emerged from the copter, which was escorted by a national guard chopper, wearing a duck-cloth parka, desert boots and a green-and-white stocking cap. He was greeted by local officials, and then packed into a state patrol car (or a quick sortie down Ocean Ave . disembarking at Ocean Terrace by a "no trespassing, no swimming or surfing" sign on the sea wall. "Why aren't you wearing a Giants stocking cap?" a local youth asked the governor. "I thought the people here were Jets fans," he replied, pulling up the hood of his parka. W\ SHREWSBURY. N j WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY a. 1976 Officials pointed out damage to the govarnor, noting that the ocean was up about a 100 feet and that residents could be in (or some more trouble "It's a combination of the wind and snow, isn't it," said the governor "The breakers are gone and the jetties are shot," reported Sal J. Prexioso. city business administrator. "The roads are buckling and we are going to need help," Richard Traversa, council president, told the governor. "We can't do it alone." The governor was informed that the public works department was making damage estimates that could run well over f 1 million. "This pothole wasn't here before," said the governor as he kicked at some chunks of blacktop. "1 like to jog along here and this place sure looks different, agreed one resident The governor got back in | the patrol car andreturnedto W | M D his helicopter, where reportLONG BRANCH TOUR - Gov. Brendan T. Byrne, left, talks with Mrs. ers and a crowd of over S00 Jean Marie Cioffi, wife of Long Branch Mayor Henry R. Cloffl. about had gathered. After making an official s t a t e m e n t , the g o v e r n o r shook hands as he worked his way to the copter door. He greeted Mrs. Henry Cioffi, the mayor's wife, putting his arm around her. The mayor was still reported to be out of town on vacation. r MM) PM> ti DOT L«r« RIDING OUT OF TOWN - Two Sea Bright young- safest way to get around the borough, yesterday sters ride out of town In a small rowboat down morning, one resident observed. Center Street. Travel by boat was the easiest and Kelly warns N.J. WASHINGTON ( A P ) Clarence M. Kelley, who is about to retire i s head of the FBI, said yesterday officials in New Jersey should be wary of allowing the mob to move Holmdel waives HOLHDEL - The township committee last night said it would ask Municipal Judge Kenneth Smith to waive parking tickets given to 13 residents during Sunday night's storm. these thieves all the time. It should be all-out war." Kelley told a luncheon at the National Press Club that he believes the agency's credibility with the American people has been restored. "I think that we're well acceptparking tickets ed throughout the country.". Although p a r k i n g o n The Senate Judiciary Comtownship streets Is normally mittee recommended 15-0 banned during early morning Tuesday that the Senate aphours, the committee said prove the appointment of Wilthat the special conditions of liam H. Webster, a federal the storm should allow a wai- appeals court judge ol St. Louis, to become FBI direcver for residents ticketed this tor. week. into Atlantic City where caslno gambling has been legal ized. Organized crime was still "definitely a threat," Kelley said. "You've got to watch Fire ruins Vogel's (Continued) was pulled to get more (Iremen on the scene. Chief Cook, who is assisted by Anthony Mellna and Alfred Guzzi, said that the (Ire would be investigated thoroughly beginning later today. "It appears that it started in the north west corner of the top floor." said the chief. who added that the building was supposedly boarded up and unoccupied at the time. "All the floors are gone," he reported shortly after 5 a.m. when the (ire was declared under control but the building still involved in flames. The Vogel's Department Store was originally opened as a (ur store, shortly after World War II. Prior to that, the U.S. government used the building as an employment office. Many Long Branch residents regarded the closing of the store in 1975 as a major blow to the economy of the city's downtown business area. Navesink house burned NAVESINK - v A fi[e early this morning destroyed the attic of a house on Stearns Avenue, Middletown, police reported. They said there was no one in the house at the time. The fire, which began at 1:20 a.m., was brought under control a little over an hour later, police said. The home was described as a two-story red and white frame house. The Navesink and Leonardo Fir* Companies, Leonardo First Aid and the assistant (Ire chiefs were called to the scene, police said. Thankful (Continued) "A lot of people led the' center to see if their homes were habitable,"'noted Mr Murray earlier yesterday. Mr. Murray said that some were expected to return last night The shelter o((ered a cot, breakfast and supper to its evacuees. Some SO persons were sheltered in a similar center in Monmouth Beach. Police moved the crowd back with a bullhorn and the governor took off (or another stop in Lavellette to inspect damage there. . T^~ Mayor Ceceile Norton of Sea Bright and Mayor Sydney Johnson of Monmouth Beach had sent telegrams to the governor alerting him of the emergency situation in their boroughs. Mrs. Norton estimated damage to the seawall and jetties at about 12 million after a cursory examination, and called on the governor to declare the borough a disaster area. Mayor Johnson estimated damages of 1500,000 between public works and private facilities, citing damage to the bathing pavilion, beach clubs, and roads, especially Ocean Avenue, which was flooded' with four feet of water. "Thank God for the seawall," said Mayor Johnson "There were no breaches but the water came over the top like Niagara Falls." The mayor jilted that federal assistance could provide grants to rebuild public works and low-interest loans to homeowners with property damage. Dr. Prezloso said there were two things Long Branch could do, if federal and state assistance was not granted to the city. "We can issue bonds to help us rebuild, which would be very tough. Or we could take a piecemeal approach, which would mean cutting off some of the beaches." Dr. Prezioso noted that a "cap" of $150,000 on the budget made the situation very difficult. Hold pair forB&E ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — In the midst of Monday' night's snow storm, police ar. rested two juveniles, who allegedly were breaking into a storage garage on Ocean Police car in accident UNION BEACH - A borough police car was damaged and an Ocean Township man hospitalized as the result of a two-car crash early today, police reported. Albert Johnson, 51, of 2150 Aldrin Road, Ocean, was admitted to the Bayshore Community Hospital, Holmdel, for observation following the 1:S2 a.m. accident. Police said a patrol car driven by Patrolman Joseph Nappi Jr. skidded on the ice on Rose Lane into Route M, where Mr. Johnson's car was struck as he was driving through the intersection. DIAMONDS JEWELRY APPRAISED BMfB-WUUNa txrans ON nuusis JEWELERS Ml Pump uater on flame* from atop ladder Boulevard, police said. The two boys, ages 17 and 15, were charged with breaking and entering and released to the custody of their parents, police said. The boys were in the process of breaking through the garage door, when caught, at 8:40 p.m., police said. Recovered at the scene according to police were tools believed to have been used by the youths in the attempt to break into the building. Investigating officers were Sgt. Michael K. Katz and Officer Arthur Gallagher. . Postpone meeting RED BANK - The meeting of the Monmouth County Audubon Society scheduled for tonight at the Trinity Episcopal Church, has been postponed and will be rescheduled, i storm damage In the city during the governor's tour yesterday of the shore. New England hurt By DAVID WVSOCKI Associated Press Writer Mountainous snowfalls, hurricane-force winds, floods, a blackout in Boston, looters in the streets. New Englanders today dig out rrom one of their worst blizzards in history and wait for help from federal troops. Crews worked furiously to clear airport runways of drifted snow to allow Army troops and snow-moving machinery to arrive. Officials predicted that some troops would reach stricken areas today. President Carter's declaratlon of Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts as federal disaster areas Tuesday also authorized mobilization of soldiers at Fort M e a d e , Md.; Fort Bragg, N.C.; Fort Dlx, N.J.; Fort Hood, Texas; and Fort Benning, Ga Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut counted at least 27 deaths in the storm, including a man who drowned when flood waters burst into his basement and a 8-year-old girl who drowned when a (ire department rescue boat capsized. Five men were (eared lost' on board a pilot boat sent to aid a,grounded oil tanker o(( Salem, Mass. The dollar toll has not been calculated, but officials say it will total tens of millions of dollars. In Massachusetts, Gov. Michael Dukakis' ban on nonemergency travel was continued Indefinitely. People were told to stay home except (or emergencies, and anyone w«*'ng or driving on a state highway faced arrest for trespass A similar ban was expected to be lifted In Connecticut today Parts of Boston remained Without electricity (rom a major power outage which began at 3 a.m. Tuesday. The problems — created when roof, debris slammed Into a Boston Edison Co. switching station and frozen ocean spray shorted out other transformers — were located in underground terminals, and repair crews were hampered by huge snow drifts, officials said The entire state of New Hampshire and the two southern-most counties in Maine were declared state disaster areas by Govs. Meldrim Thomson and James Longley. High tides and wind-driven waves (looded coastal communities (rom New York to Maine. Houses were washed out to sea (rom Fire Island., N.Y., and Scituate, Mass. Thousands were (orced to flee their homes. In the Boston suburb of Revere, people were evacuated in the scoops of front-end loaders. After the residents left, the looters moved in, prompting extra police and National Guard patrols in Boston, New Hampshire, Maine and Rhode island About 40 persons were arrested (or looting in Boston and Providence, R.I . police said. Monmouth crawls (Continued) and that was during high tide snow removal strategy by in- Monday night Intersections there, as well structing all residents to park their cars simultaneously In as in Rumson, posed problems with piles of snow rea cleared baseball field. With the estimated 700 cars maining in the intersections out of the way, Mayor Step- when snow p l o w s c r i s s hen Cluney gave the go-ahead crossed. to a snow removal team inRumson police reported cluding an earth mover and some minor flooding on Watwo dump trucks. The three terman and Ward Aves. durvehicles, hired for $1,500-2,000, ing high tide Monday night, transported and piled the but police said the water resnow from the township roads ceded quickly, and there was to a more convenient loca- no major damage. tion. The snowstorm was equally Mayor Gabriel Spector of as frustrating for Ocean Tlnton F a l l s said t h e Township's public works emborough's road crew, working ployees as for residents, Maywith only seven pieces of or Joseph A. Palaia noted. equipment, did a "good Job." The township had 30 men in "The last stbrm cost us II plows, not to mention 17,000 to (8,000, and I expect front-end loaders, working all that this one will cost us at day Monday and yesterday, least as much I think our the mayor said Working 24 hours straight road crews did a good job since Monday morning, West considering the amount of Long Branch's six public snow. I had fewer calls than I works employees, aided by did last time." he said. Little Silver Mayor Anthony five volunteer firemen, manBruno said thai he w a s aged to do a "fantastic job" "sure" that the borough with the two plows at their would be back to normal by disposal, Mr. Sorrentino said. As of II p.m. yesterday, evthis morning. Mayor W. R. "Ed" Kiely of ery road in the borough was Fair Haven, said the borough passable in both directions, was (orced to rent snow re- he said. Marlboro Mayor Arthur moving equipment when its three plows broke down dur- Goldzweig estimated that the ing snow removal efforts storm would cost the township 125,000 to 130.000 in extra Monday Mayor Kiely said last night equipment, manpower, and he could not estimate what overtime (or snow removal. "As usual, our snow removthe cost o( renting the equipment yesterday will be. But al operations were superb I he said he e x p e c t s t h e just finished a complete tour borough's own equipment will of the town, and our roads be repaired and operational are in excellent shape. Our road crews will be out most shortly. Mayor Clement V. Som- o( the night, to touch up mers Jr. of OceanporMsaid roads, push snow back more, that only one family had |o be and clear all the way down to evacuated from their home the road." he said last night The mayor of Freehold Township, James Mayor, said that the township road department had "really done well" in Its snow removal operations. Mayor Mayor said that "the first storm cost us about $18,500, and this one cost us about the same." George Handzo, the municipal clerk in Colts Neck, estimated the township's snow removal costs this week at $25,000 Local snow crews had difficulty keeping open the town's main roads because of heavy drifting in the many open spaces here. It was a different story in the county seat of Freehold where Mayor Roger Kane was delighted with the cooperation of residents who moved their cars off the borough streets Monday, to allow all roads to be plowed curb-to-curb. Manalapan Township Mayor George Spodak claimed that all township roads were "passable" by 10 p.m. last night and said that there were many (ewer complaints about snow removal during this storm than there were during the storm on January 20. "The big difference was that we put in new motors in two of our trucks. The equipment held up better, and we immediately called In outside contractors. There w e r e breakdowns, but they weren't major breakdowns, like last time," he said. He estimated that the winter's two major snow storms would cost the township between $20,000 and $90,000 for overtime, outside labor, and requisitions. A H C AUTO REPAIR CENTER Your troubles away.. . • when youput your trust COLLISION AND BODYWORK 00 in our Trust Department. CENTRAL JERSEY BANK HMD - g « J T COMIWIV /•WH.NMU11I O N IMK MEMftE* FOC CARS PAINTED from'125 Free! W Body Work with complete paint fob. 4 Win GAIfKID AVL, ATUNTK HMHUMM 291-3849 SHREWSBURY N J •iiinniiniiiiHuiiiiiiiiiHmiiiiiiiiiiiiiHHniiMiiiiMliiii WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 6. 1978 Obituaries Mrs. Eva Stolburg EATONTOWN - Mrs Eva A Stolburg, 74, of 48 Cypress Drive, died yesterday at MonHMHWIlHIiHIIIHItlllllllllllllllllUWHIIIIIillliillitllimillMIIIIIIIIII mouth Medical Center. Long Branch. Born in Mineola. N Y , she had lived here for the past 25 years. RED BANK - Dominic F She was the widow of Alton Girnito, (8. of 69 Oakland SI Stolburg. who died in 1970 here, died y e s t e r d a y , at She was a member of the home. ' United Methodist Church. EaHe was born in Agatha, tontown Italy He has lived here (or 60 She was past president of years since he moved from the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Brooklyn Veterans of Foreign Wars, He was a tailor for Benmax Long Branch Post Clothing, Asbury Park, and She was a member of the was a communicant of St. AnWomen's Club of Eatontown. thony's Roman Catholic and past treasurer of the Eachurch, here tontown Leisure Club Mr. Garruto was a past Surviving are one i o n , president of the Garabaldi SoGeorge Heliker of Philaciety, here, and a member of delphia; one daughter, Mrs the Red Bank Elks. June Errickson of West Long He was a member of the Branch; four brothers, Lewis, Holy Name Society of St. AnEarl and Alfred Tobie. all or Dtmlnlr Garrito thony's and president of St. Westbury, NY., and Rober) Vincent de Paul Society. Tobie of Florida; three sisdy of Alexandria. Va and Mr. Garruto also was a fourth ters, Mrs. Emma Loughlin of Mrs. Thomas E Archer of degree member of the K of C, Norfolk. Va., Miss Grace Oceanport; a brother Frank here, and he was the past Ganruto of Latrobe, Pa and a Tobie of Westbury N Y , and grand commander at the Or- sister Mrs, Lucille Day or Mrs. Jeanne Helsun, of Conn; der of Alhambra, Keansburg. and four grandchildren; and Sunland. Calif.. 10 grandSurviving are his widow. children and two great-grand- 10 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Antlonette Garruto, two children. The Flock Funeral Home, sons Dominic P. Garruto Jr. Long Branch, Is in charge of of Point Pleasant and AnArrangements are under arrangements. thony M. Garruto, here: two the direction of the Anderson Mr*. Daniel daughters Mrs John J Hud & Cutaio Funeral Home Dominic Garuto, was retired tailor Mr*. Mablc Strickland PLAZA - Mrs 1MB, Delay Laetrile guidelines Alalsa* iiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiii. RED BANK - L o u i s Alatsas. U. of 148 Spring St.. died Monday at Riverview Hospital here Born in Ansonia. Conn., he lived in South River and Perth Amboy before moving here 30 years ago He retired three years ago from his chef's position at Old Orchard Country Club in Eatontown He had previously been employed as a chef in the Strand Restaurant in Red Bank and the Shadowbrook Restaurant in Shrewsbury An Army veteran of World War I I . he was a commu- nicant of St James Roman Catholic Church here, a member of American Legion Post 168 here, and a member of the Disabled American Veterans Surviving are his widow. Mrs Stephanie Alatsas; two daughters, Mrs Stephanie Collins ol High Bridge and Miss Louise Alatsas. at home; three sisters. Mrs Katharine Kacutis of Astoria. N Y , Mrs Nicky Christodoulou of Perth Amboy. and Mrs Helen Millakosof Jamaica, N Y : and six grandchildren The John E. Day Funeral Home here is in charge of arrangements TRENTON (AP) - The re lease of state guidelines (or prescribing and administering Laetrile, the controversial substance used (or cancer treatment, has been delayed a week, the state medical ex- aminer said Monday. Dr Edwin H Alba no said the snowstorm that blanketed New Jersey this week bas caused today's meeting of the state Board of Medical Examiners to be postponed one The board must approve the guidelines before they are FREEHOLD - John C, issued, although legislation leBonnell of Allenlown. was re- galizing Laetrile was signed cently reflected as chairman in early January by Gov of the Monmoulh County Brendan T Byrne "The guidelines are being Shade Tree Commission at the commission's organization circulated among the board meeting Margaret Crooks nf members now." Albano said Sea Girt was reelected vice "On the 15th of February, chairman and Neal Munch re- they will be ready." New Jersey Is the 14th state elected secretary Reeled Bonnell to approve the use and manufacture of Laetrile. a substance made from apricot pits and other fruits. The new law requires doctors to warn patients tiiat the substance has no known medical value The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has banned Laetrile Irom interstate shipment lottery winner* TRENTON - The winning number yesterday in the New Jersey Pick-It Lottery was 761. The straight bet paid 1291.50 The box bet paid MM 50 and the pairs paid 129 Child Tortoriello EAST KEANSBURG RIVER Mrs. Mabel Tortoriello. 77, of Mable Strickland. 73. of HarMrs. Strickland was a com- 21 Dakota Ave., died Monday bor Green Circle, died Mon- municant of St. Joseph's Ro- at Brookdale Nursing Home, day in the Emery Manor man Catholic Church, Key- Hazlet Nursing Home, Old Bridge. port. She was a member of Born In Newark, she had She was born in Bradevelt, the Catholic Daughters of been an area resident for IS and had lived in Matawan America, and the church's Al- years. tar Rosary Society. She also and here for many years. Surviving are her husband, She was the widow of Har- was a member of the Senior Daniel Tortoriello ; one son, old J. Strickland who died in Citizens Club, here. Vincent Tortoriello , here; She Is survived by a son one brother, Harold Franks of Mr**. Gertrude Frank John C Glvens. h e r e ; a East Orange; three sisters, MATAWAN - Mrs. Ger- brother Mr. Raymond J. Fal- Mrs. Catherine Batchelder of trude Frank, 78, of Edgemere Ion of Bouton Beach, Fla.; Brick Township, Mrs. MargaDrive, died Monday at the two sisters Mrs. James C. ret Cressbuer and Mrs Ellen Emery Manor Nursing Home, Day of Keyport and Mrs. Engelhardt, both or Union Frank Scanlon of Rockville. Beach; four grandchildren, Old Bridge Md. and t h r e e g r e a t - g r a n d She was bom In Cincinnati The Day Funeral Home. children. and lived in Roseland, NY., The Laurel Funeral Home, most of her life She moved to Keyport, Is in charge of serWest Keansburg, is In charge Matawan about three years vices. ol •go . Miss Monica Montoya arrangements She w a s t h e widow of Mrs. Eleanor FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP Thomas Frank who died in Miss Monica J. Montoya, 21, Whitledge 1972. Mrs. Frank Is survived by a or (2 Sycamore Ave., died MIDDLETOWN - Mrs. yesterday at Freehold Area son Thomas B. Frank, here; Eleanor L. Whitledge. 9'.t. of a brother, Carl Herminghau- Hospital 744 W. Front St. died Monday She w a s born in Albusen of Bloomfleld Mich.; a In the Naveslnk House Nurssister, Mrs. Anne Holcomb of querque, N.M., and had re- ing Unit, Red Bank. CUKinam, six grandchildren. sided here tour years. She Mrs. Whitledge was born in was a second-year student at and one great-grandchild. Morganfleld, Ky , and moved The Bedle Funeral Home is Brookdale Community Col- here 20 years ago from San lege, Lincroft. In charge of arrangements. Miss Montoya was a mem- Antonio, Texas. She was a member of the ber ef St. Robert Bellarmin* Joseph F. Balkay Roman Cathulic Church, Church of Christ, Tinton MARLBORO - Joseph F • here. She also was a member F a l l s , and t h e w i d o w ol Batkay, 81. of Route 34, died of the Epilepsy Foundation of Thomas Whitledge. Surviving are a daughter, yesterday at Bayshore Com- , America. munity Hospital, Holmdel. Surviving are her parents. Mrs. George A. Hogan of Rad He was born in Danbury. Mr. and Mrs Joseph Mon- Bank; three grandchildren; Conn., and lived here 45 toya; a brother, Joseph J. six great-grandchildren, and years. He was formerly of the Montoya, at home; three sis- a great-great-grandchild. Mrs.Whitledge was preBronx, NY ters, Mrs. Frieda Booth and Mr. Batkay was an elec- Mrs. Catherine Broltman, deceased by two sons, Orvllle trical draftsman and he had both of Freehold, and Miss and Orion Whitledge. The John E. Day Funeral worked for Memco, New Pamela Montoya, at home; York City. Marlboro Tool paternal grandparents, Mr. Home, Red Bank, is in charge Company, Matawan, and Su- and Mrs. Adriano Montoya, of arrangements. berb Metal Products, Keans- Albuquerque, N M, and maburg ternal grandmother. Mrs. Ani- Mrs. Virginia McNally He was a Navy veteran of ta Alires. Canoga Park, Calif. MIDDLETOWN - Mrs. World War I. The Wiggins Memorial Virginia V. McNally, 71, or He is survived by a daugh- Home, Freehold, is in charge 189 Rutledge Drive died yester-in-law, Mrs. Robert Bat- of arrangements. terday in Monmouth Medical , kay or Pittsburgh, Pa., three Center, Long Branch. grandchildren, three neph- Mrs. William Daniels Mrs. McNally was born in . ews, and one niece. LONG BRANCH - Mrs. Hoboken and moved here 20 The Day Funeral Home, Lillian L. Daniels, 56, of DO years ago from Keansburg. Keyport, is in charge of ser- Pleasure Bay Apartments. She retired in 1952 after vices died yesterday at Bayshore working as a secretary in the Community Hospital in Holm- Intelligence office at Ft. MonRobert J. Skinner del. mouth. A lifelong resident, she had She was a communicant of RED BANK - Robert J. Skinner of 8 Leighton Ave, been employed at Gibbs Hall St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church, New Monmouth, a died Sunday in Riverview at Ft. Monmouth for 10 years. She was a former member member of the Riverview Hospital Mr. Skinner was born in of the Second Baptist Church Hospital Auxiliary. Red Bank, Littleton, N.C., and lived in here, a member of the Junior and the National Association New Jersey for the past 50 Usher Boards and a member of Retired Federal Employof the Order of the Eastern ees. years. He was a World War II Star. Surviving are her husband, Surviving are her husband, Hubert S. McNally, and a Army veteran and was employed by the Garden State William Daniels; her mother, brother. Matthew Berckman Parkway maintenance de- Mrs. Lillian Jackson Jones; of Keansburg. five brothers, James L., John The John E. Day Funeral partment for many years. He is survived by three P., Robert M . Frank, and Home, Red Bank, Is in charge cousins in this area, Mrs. William' A. Jones, all here, and of arrangements Martha Vandergeer of Asbury a sister, Mrs. Lavinia WallMr*. Leatha Park, and Mable Cain and ace, also here. The Flock Funeral Home Raymond Williams, both Malfatone here, and several cousins in here Is in charge of arrangeEATONTOWN - M r s . ments. Newark. Leatha Malfatone, 73, of 202 The Childs Funeral Home, Mrs. John Mannix Broad St., died Monday at here, is in charge of arrangeMARLBORO - Mrs. Rita Monmouth Medical Center, ments. Harrington Mannix, 6], of 7 Long Branch. Quincy Road, died Monday at Born In Mlllville, she had in. p«om Notice* Freehold Area Hospital, Free- lived here 15 years. GARRUTO — Dominic F. Sr.. hold. Township She was a machine operU, of « Ooklond St., Red Bonk, on She was born in New York ator (or the Long Branch ftb 1. l»;i, ol hom«. Devoid huibond of ArtlloneHe M Delouldlcc. Loving to City and lived in Brooklyn be- Manufacturing Co. before her ffwr o' Dominic F Jr . Polnl Pleoionl Anthony M-i Rt* *onh. Mri. Jalin J. fore moving here five years retirement in 1975 Rutty, AltKontfrlo. v o . Mri Thomoi E. Arctm, Octonporl, bclovrd broth ago. Mrs. Mannix had been Surviving are three daughtr ol Fronk. LcHrobe, Po, and M n . Lu CIIH Day. Sunlond. Calif.. 10 grandemployed in the personnel de- ters, Miss Gladys Nelson of cMUrm and hro grwt-orcMOiridran grwtorcMOiridran partment at the Hotel Astor Long Branch, Mrs. Thelma R e M v n and frl<nd> orl reuecrlullr Mvrtta* to offend tfw tunerol from SI in New York City. Cherare of Freehold, and Antrwny I R.C Crwrcn. M e tank, on Friday. F r t . 10, ol 10 o.m viewing She was a communicant of Mrs. Mildred Ficalora of hours Wed and Thwri. 7-4 ond 7-f ol tftt Anderion 1 Cufoio Funeral Hem*. St. Gabriel's Roman Catholic Oceanport; one sister, Mrs. IT) flrood St., Red Bonk, lnlermen.1 . Ml. Olivet Cemetery. Mtdritetown Elsie Bryan of Long Branch; Church. Surviving are her husband, one brother, Leslie Bennett of S K I N N E R — Rosen ) . . o i l Utanton Ave.. Red 101111. on Feb. I . John J. Mannix; one son, Carneys Point;, five grand> * W l Fond coulln of Mri Marino Von John G. Mannix of Croston, children and one g r e a t -'dergeer, M r i . Movie Coin ond Ray r'mond W l l l l a m l . Funeral l e r v l c e grandchild. Md.; and one grandson. •'ThurWoy, » » . m . . at CMIdt Funerol "'Home. )•< Snrewiburv Aye.. R i d The Robert A. Braun Home The Waitt Funeral Home, Bonk Rev. William C. Fuller offlcl aura. Intermenl Union Bopllit Cnwch Morganville, is in charge of for Funerals Is In charge of Cerrattry. Frlemh moy coil of me luarrangements. nerot heme Thurtdoy evening,S V p.m. arrangements. USE OUH FBEE LAYAWAY FLAM! Welsh Swivel Stroller Welsh Playard OUR REG. 24.87 SAVE $6 OUR REG. 24.87 Swivel wheel stroller with canopy. Adjustable back and footreit Fully collap •lilt. Complete with bat- SAVE $6 Featuring dou We drop ildti. chrome »Mel legi and removable pad Fully collapilUt. Welsh Welsh Travel Tyke Stroller High Chair $16 87 $18 OUR REG. 21.87 87 OUR REG. 24.87 SAVE $5 SAVE $6 AH »loel tram* with front »wivel wheel Removable nylon •eal Lightweight corutruc tlon Fully collapsible Combination high chair and youth chair. All tteel chroma tram*. With ovartlnd wrap around tray. Fisher Price Fisher Price Music Boi Mobile Fisfcer Price Xylo Drum Piny Gym Snaplock Beads Flouting Family 99 OUR REG. 13.87 Revolving farm flgurti •nd 10 minute muiic box. Mount* tecurely to crib ran. $399 OUR REG. 4.97 2 muikal toys In 1! X drum on 1 tWe and a xylophone on the othtr side $599 OUR REG. 7.87 A fun way lor baby to •«• •relit! With an ad|uitable itrap attachment. Fisher Price Chime Bull and Lolly Doll Your $ < 2 9 9 OUR REG. 4.87 and 4.97 Fisfcer Price $][39 OUR REG. 1.87 IS brightly colored, plattic btadt In 3 thapei that map toftthtr. Fisfcer Price $499 OUR REG. 6.87 A baby-uft toy lor bathtlnw or playtime! Salt lor teeth- Fisher Price Teethers and Battles Tow Q Q C Choice 9 ^ OUR REG. 1.59 EATONTOWN HAZLET IT. 3S - OKU PUZA HON.-SAT.10 AJR.-9 M L IT. JS/ACIOH ROM K-MART M0N.-MT. 10 AJH.-9 PJL . 197s The EMy Rrgteter For 60 or so, council's sorry • y ANN BRENOFF LONG BRANCH - Think yon everybody who moved their ctr so thai the snow plows could get through And (or the M or so can that were towed away by the city, the council is sorry. Council members last night credited a revised snow removal plan and "remarkable cooperation" from residents who obeyed the ordinance requiring them to keep their cars oYl snow s t r e e t s s o IMt Uie plows could do their Job. And then there were the cast* of the nat-socooperaUve residents "We have towed more than •• cars oft city streets lor violating the snow ordinances," said Dr Sal J. Prezloso, city business administrator, in a snow removal repart made to council last night The owners of the towed cars were also Issued a summons and will have to "bear the cost of the towing, he noted. Council members agreed that the towing was necessary for proper snow clearance, although at least one member anticipated a barrage of angry phone calls. "Uh, have any of you fellows gotten calls on this one yet?," asked Richard G Traversa, city council president, with hesitancy creeping in his voice. "Wen I know for sure that we all got calls on the last clean-up job (the January snowstorm)," noted Councilman Howard II Woolley Jr. Cars were not towed by the city during that storm, a factor which many city officials blame hindered the clean-up. Council members concluded | that towing of cars is a necessary evil and advised residents w h o s e cars w e r e | claimed that "we're sorry'." Dr. Prezioso said that attempts were made by police | to notify the cars' owners before the vehicles were towed. hahne thursday, friday, Saturday president's Freehold expecting 8-cent rate boost By JOAN KAHN 1 . FREEHOLD - An eightcent Increase in the municipal tax rate, from $1.21 cents per $100 of assessed valuation to 11.9 cents was presented last night in the introduction of toe 1078 municipal budget of $2,966,662, an increase of $645,888 over last year. A public hearing on the budget will be held March 20. Mayor Roger Kane and Councilman John McGackin, finance chairman, attributed the tax rise to increased salaries, the addition of 11 Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA) employees to the municipal payroll, and large increases In insurance costs. About 100 borough employees are negotiating for salary increases, while the police department is now in the second year of a two-year contract. Mr. McGackin said the borough budget came in $3,100 under the state imposed cap limits mandated by the state. This year's tax collection rate was set at 97 6 percent, with the reserve for uncol lected taxes at $200,000. Federal anti-recession funds of $61,200 will be used to pay salaries in the streets and road departments, while $116,000, of a $122,024 federal revenue sharing allocation will be used to pay for trash and garbage collection. In other action, the council received a 904-signature peti-* tlon from Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor, 13 Kiawah Avenue, who are leading the opposition to the conversion Of the Freehold Borough High School into a county vocational school. The council will meet with Freehold Township officials on March 21 at Freehold Township High School, to discuss the proposed school change with members of the Freehold Regional Board of | Education. Gty Council juggles but costs same LONG BRANCH - City council did a bit of Internal juggling, but the 1878 municipal budget it introduced last night still totals $8,641,160. and will decrease the municipal tax rate by 30 cents per $100 assessed valuation. Public hearing on the budget will be held on March 7. The budget, introduced by Mayor Henry R. Cioffi on Jan. 16, will lower the municipal tax rate from $1.18 to 88 cents per $100 assessed valuation A projected seven cent decrease in the school tax rate Is also projected. The 1978 municipal budget is down $1,091,347 from last year. The total amount to be raised by taxation for local purposes is down $1,128,165, to $2,860,000. An increase in tax collections, from 90 to 91 percent, allowed a reduction in the reserve for uncollecled taxes of $221,476 to $1,026,810. The budget stays within the 5 percent state budget cap, but gave council virtually no room for any additions. Surplus funds of $800,000 were applied to the 1978 budget, and the Increased tax collection along with $200,000 in cancelled purchase orders helped lower the tax rate, according to the mayor. The budget also provides for a S percent cost-of-llving raise for all city employees. jLong Branch is seeking $100,000 for snow costs By ANN BRENOFF LONG BRANCH - The City Council Is expected to seek $100,000 in emergency appropriations to foot the bill (or snow removal operations in 1*78 The council will seek state approval of an ordinance appropriating emergency funding to finance this week's snowstorm and any (uture snowstorms which hit the city in this budget year. If an ordinance is approved by the state, the emergency Freeholders meet tomorrow night FREEHOLD-The county Board of Freeholders meeting which had been scheduled for last Tuesday evening has been rescheduled for tomorrow evening. The freeholders will meet at I p.m. In the Hall of Records here. Theywtll have a workshop session at 2 p.m. Desert hour set for tomorrow ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — A desert hour tomorrow at 7 p.m. will precede the business meeting of Calvary Chapel la the Navesink Methodist Church. Additional information Is available from the Calvary Chapel pastor, the Rev. Richard L. Sbaw, 144 Seventh Ave., Atlantic Highlands. appropriations will be excluded from the state imposed budgetary cap in the 1979 municipal budget K state approval is not forthcoming, the council can still appropriate the emergency monies by a council resolution. If the resolution is used, however, the money must be included in the next year's budget cap. No money from the emergency funds can be used for purposes other than those related to snow removal. And all unused funds must be cancelled at the end of the year According to Dr. Sal J. Prezioso. the storm thus far has cost the city $50,000-$60,000. If snow is to be carted from the streets, this figure could jump another $40,000 All of the $50,000 budgeted In the 1978 municipal budget designated for snow removal was spent in January for the clean-up of that storm. Or. Prezioso said that additional plows were leased and overtime costs of employees drove the costs of this snowstorm up. Candidates night RUMSON - A candidates night for five candidates for the Rumson Board of Education, originally scheduled for last night, has been rescheduled for tomorrow at 8 p.m.' in Forrestdale School. The public Is invited a save 30% to 50% on martex luxor towel irregulars -"Ms./ *4 Stock up on thick, absorbent towels at exceptional savings! All cotton terry pile with cotton/polyester backings and shrink-proof borders ^> in pink, blue, green, yellow, brown or white. Slight imperfections will not effect wear. Bath, if perfect 9.75 4.75 Hand, if perfect 5.50 3.00 Face, if perfect 2.15 1.50 • save 20% to 44% on springmaid snowy special purchase! red label polyester fiberfill pillows white percale irregulars Take advantage of first-time savingso n our snowy white no-iron percales of polyester/combed cotton. 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Coordinating napkins are also available. give your windows a lift with curtain savings! 20% off french boutique curtains of easy care Tergal- polyester. etoile voil panels are 59" wide in white, eggshell, banana, gold, blue, peach, green, brown or rust. 63", reg. 12.50 ea. 10.00 ea. 84", reg. 14.50 ea...-. 11.50 ea. elyssees boucle panels are 59" wide in white, eggshell, gold, wheat, green, pumpkin or blue. 20% off sheer elegance curtains 63", reg. 17.50 ea :. .14.00 ea. tailored of easy care Ninon- polyester in white or eggshell. 82" wide 84", reg. 21.50 ea 17.00 ea. panels: Vienna austrian panels in white. 50x45", reg. 21.00 ea 16.75 ea. 24", reg. 5.00 pr 4.00 pr. 50x63", reg. 28.00 ea 22.25 ea. 30", reg. 5.50 pr 4.25 pr. 50x84", reg. 36.00 ea 28.75 ea. 36", reg. 6.00 pr 4.75 pr. 70x63", reg. 40.00 ea 32.00 ea. 45", reg. 7.00 pr 5.50 pr. 70x84", reg. 52.00 ea 41.50 ea. 54'\reg. 7.50 pr 6.00 pr. 63", reg. 8.00 pr 6.25 pr. 100x63", reg. 57.00 ea 45.50 ea. 72", reg. 9.00 pr 7.00 pr. 100x84", reg. 75.00 ea....60.00 ea. celeste seamless white prlsclllas 81", reg. 9.50 pr 7.50 pr. 30.00 pr.. 24.00 pr. 104x45", valance, reg. 3.50 ea 2.75 ea. 32.00 pr.. 25.50 pr. 104x54", 120" wide panels: 34.00 pr.. 27.00 pr. 104x63", 36", reg. 9.00 pr 7.00 pr. 38.00 pr.. 30.25 pr. 45", reg. 10.00 pr. «...8.00 pr. ' 104x84", 48.00 pr... 38.75 pr. 150x83", 54", reg. 11.00 pr 8.75 pr. 65.00 pr.. 52.00 pr. 150x84", 63", reg. 12.00 pr 9.50 pr. 65.00 pr.. 52.00 pr. 196x63", 72", reg. 13.00 pr 10.25 pr. 75.00 pr.. 60.00 pr. 196x84", 81", reg. 13.50 pr 10.75 pr. 100.00 pr. 80.00 pr. 280x63", I i 280x84", reg 112.00 pr. 89.60 pr. our colonial heritage curtains are country-look ruffled tiebacks in easy care polyester/rayon. White or eggshell. 54", reg. 22.00 pr 18.00 pr. 63", reg. 24.00 pr 20.00 pr. 72", reg. 26.00 pr 22.00 pr. 81", reg. 27.00 pr 23.00 pr. Please allow 2 weeks tor delivery of French boutique curtains. SHOP 6 NIGHTS 'TIL 9:30 AT MONMOUTH MALL The Daily Register IH7M - 1'uliliilu-d by The Red Bank Register ARTHUR Z. KAMIN President and Editor Thomas J. Bly, Executive Kditor I William F. Saiidford. Associate Editor WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1976 Credit card holders beware diagnosed as having gocourse, is to keep your on-thenorrhea but was not treated spot receipts and read the for this disease for more than fine print? two months A 10-ye»r-old boy HEALTH COSTS: Presiwas found to have normal dent Carter has sought to resugar tolerance but was diagduce medical costs for the avnosed as a diabetic. One clinerage American by promoting ic's floppy record* showed health maintenance organizaIHIIIIlll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIthat a 5-year-old child had untions, known in medical cirdergone surgery for a cysi In cles simply as HMOs. His 1K8, years before be was plained the legalese dream of cheaper health care ANDERSON horn One sentence, under the may be jeopardized, however, heading "Important Informastringent government restric- More than half the govtion," went on for 178 words, by fraud, profiteering and tions that could stifle the ernment funds for s o m e malpractice. contained four parentheses, growth of the HMO programs HMOs went to administrative HMOs provide various kinds six comas and six "qualiThe Senate investigators costs and profits Money that fication words " The bewil- of preventive medical care concentrated on the HMO should have gone into medical dered professor also com- for a prepaid fee. They fre- program in California. care was diverted for bureauplained about "washed-out quently offer better care at Here are the highlights cratic expenses and profits of gray lettering" used on the lower cost because their doc— Some clinics used fraudu- up to S3 percent. A message notification The fine prim, he tors are aware that a healthy lent door-to-door techniques on the blackboard of one Calitold investigators, "was vis- patient requires less ex- to peddle their services. Highfornia clinic read: "Do a s ually repelling and designed pensive care and less of their pressure salesmen signed up little as you possibly c m for to discourage anyone from attention All too many priresidents by telling them they the patient." vate doctors have the attitude were buying tickets for chickreading it " that the sicker the patient, en dinners, Biblereadingso f Many other outrages were Citibank tried to add a uncovered, both medical and the more they can charge. the Los Angeles Rams footmonthly service fee of 50 financial, which need Clearing cents'on c u s t o m e r s even The Carter administration, ball game. Once they had un- up. At stake is whether milthough they had paid their therefore, wants to increase wittingly signed up, these lions of Americans will be balances in full In this case the federal subsidies for residents (ound it impossible able to turn (rom the pay-asthe charge was rescinded be- HMOs from $18 million to f JO to resign (rom the clinics.' you-go medical estab— Some HMOs in California cause of complaints. But the million a year. But a forthlishments to preventatlve House memo c o m m e n t s : coming report by the Senate offered substandard health health care clinics. "Perhaps bankers are just Permanent Investigations care. Investigators found that Footnote: Insiders at the trying to see how much they Subcommittee will disclose a a doctor at one clinic had opcan squeeze the lemon before rash of abuses that occurred erated on two patients at the Health, Education and Welit refuses to give " In some HMO clinics same time. At another, an ad- fare Department concede they have done little to comSen. Sam Nunn. D-Ga., ministrator without medical Footnote: A spokesman for bat HMO fraud. "We're awthe American Bankers Associ- (ears that the same frauds t r a i n i n g w a s found pre- are of the need to beef it up," ation blamed federal regu- and abuses could crop up on a scribing drugs for a patient. said a spokesman. He noted lations for the legalistic lan- national scale unless strict Many patients were given exthat the California HMOs guage used in informing cus- federal safeguards are im- cessive doses or the wrong were not required to meet tomers of new charges. The posed. But Sen. Ted Kennedy, drug entirely. — One female patient was federal standards. best sensible a d v i c e , of D-Mass, is averse to overly By MCE ANDERSON imiiiiiiMMiimiiiiiiiiiiHiHmiiimimHiiHi Credit card holders should witch out (or the calculated complexities In their monthly billings. An obtuse phrase, a carefully placed coma or a pair of parenthesesxtHild hide a legalistic-Mute that could coat more money. WASHINGTON SCENE A secret congressional staff report claims the obfuscation by credit card operators is sometimes deliberate. One banker boasted in a taped conversation how language in his firm's disclosure statement had been do distorted that customers failed to recognize new charges had been added The staff memo, prepared for Rep. Frank Annunzio, D111., alleges: "Bankers have not only begun using methods which (are) difficult to understand. They have taken pride in designing disclosure statements that will confuse." The taped bank official, for example, smugly remarked that "our attorneys did a good job structuring the notice. We had other attorneys call in and say, 'What the hell (are) you talking about?" Even a university professor, specializing in techniques of language manipulation, was unable to fathom how his own bank computed charges on credit card billings until a congressional expert ex- Big John's liquid cure-all By JIM BISHOP lilllllliiill IIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII THE REPORTER of a spastic nervous collapse, he drank it. "What Is this.' he asked pleasantly. "A Russian drink?" Kelly nodded He put on his fake smile. "Nothing to it," he said. "1 can't taste a thing. How do you pronounce it?" Kelly. He would go to the mat with me, on any subject at any time, but whatever mental pedestal he reserved for ladies of quality, Kelly was standing on it' Big John was 80 when we flew him to Florida. He was down to two moods: grouchy and hilarious. In the plane he whispered to the stewardess: "Tired," he said. "God, am "Make It a double rye and a llllHlilltMilMHliiiHiimiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiii I tired." It was 8:30 p.m. I s p l a s h of g i n g e r , if you old man was unhappy. "I kissed him goodnight. "PleasI pronounced it. "The Rusplease." He tapped his heart. have two beds and you know sians have weird words." he ant dreams," I said. He nod"The altitude, you know." ded and shuffled off to his I can't sleep lying down," he said pleasantly. "They say da BISHOP room, a righteous, self-anHe had two suitcases. At said. The unspoken accusa- when they mean yes. I once He dozed over the news- nointed saint. Kelly and I Miami Airport, Kelly tried to tion was the same: I had for- got into an argument with paper in the porch glider. He played cards until midnight. lift one. "What Is in this gotten his afflictions. They Jim about a, channel swimlooked funny sleeping beone?" she said. He put on his were several: arthritis, which mer. She left Cap Gris-Nez. I In the morning there was tween two beds. "They have remote dignity. "My medi- he referred to as Arthur His; called it grizz-nezz. He insistsome h a n d s o m e l o o k i n g that miraculous warm suncine, it you're interested." auricular flbrilation; edema; ed it was gree-nay. I told him Over angry protest by teachers it was not my fault if the come necessary to resort to split or maids here," he said when he shine, those sparkling waves, "What the heck have they got and chronic nervousness damn French couldn't speak awakened. Handsome was his that scrubbed look peculiar to and parents, the Hazlet Board of you on-iron?" she said. staggered sessions, as are planned We paid little attention, to English." word for any woman who was the Gold Coast. I put a robe Education has adopted a 1978-79 for the high school. T h e Hazlet He was slower of foot and the first three. The nervousstout, which translates to dev- .on and tiptoed in to awaken budget which will require eliminaschools have made notable educaswifter of mind. Big John was ness worried him because he He had one more. He want- astating. "Just say hello," I Big John for breakfast. The tion of 17 teaching jobs in the townin an "1-want" world. No had been a cop and had been ed a newspaper. The bellman said sternly. tional progress in recent years and deep snore which shortened my mother's life was in anship's elementary school system. Acit would be most disheartening to matter what the subject un- in a lot of tight spots and had knocked on Big John's room. der discussion, he had to ask fought a couple o( gun battles My old man was an appre- dante. cording to Roman Cabrera, superinBy the time he shuffled to it, see a reversal of the trend. himself what he wanted out of without leaping out o( his the man was at our door. I ciative diner. He could eat I decided he needed the tendent, the move is being made not The board action has generated it. He wore his age as a grant skin and, at the same time, warble good solid sleep. Kelly and I sent the man back. My old because of lack of funds or budget considerable ill feeling among teachof immunity. like a bird about the roast ordered breakfast. The waiter man was now in our room. It The Diplomat housekeeper crunch under the s t a t e - i m p o s e d ers and parents, with approximately We took a limousine to the beef, the a s p a r a g u s , the was too cheerful. He trilled a was a silent ballet de deux. funding limit — or " c a p " — re- 200 protesters a s s e m b l e d at the Diplomat Hotel and Big John sent him a purch glider. He He gave the man a buck tip mashed potatoes and the good morning as he wheeled a accepted it as though he had bent a mattress on it and a on a pension of $37.50 a week. gravy. To say nothing of his table full of eggs into our quirements, but because of falling meeting in which the board gave the not racked up 140,000 miles on sheet. Then he unpacked his poetry about apple pie. room. enrollment in the kindergartenbudget its approval. A new anxiety an old Hupmobile. He strode medicines. There were botHe returned In his carpet "No wine with dinner?" he "How did your rather like through-eighth-grade sector. has been injected by uncertainty as through the ornate lobby tles, pills, potions, tablets ev- slippers. "Aren't you going to said softly. Kelly said no. the vodka?" he said I said: smiling at chandeliers and erywhere. There were elixers the dining room for dinner?" "You had \ double on the Jet "What vodka?" "The fifth I to what the Hazlet Teachers AssociActually, the budget the board ation might elect to do in its an- bellmen and saluting the as- to make you go and some to I said. His blue eyes were and you had two vodkas in delivered after dinner," he will submit to the district's voters sistant manager by touching make you slop. sparkling' "What for?" he the hotel. The doctor says you said. "He ordered it." nounced plan to continue the fight his hat. , next Tuesday will be about $154,000 I ordered vodka and tonic said. "Let them bring it up should have two a day. No I tiptoed back in his room. against the cutback. The union remore.' There were two rooms and all around. Big John was a here." I looked at my wife. under the "cap" figure and its effect He looked like a Christmas portedly will consider the possibility a rich view of the ocean. The rye drinker Under the threat She said. "I'll order." He refused to argue with tree. will be to cut the school tax rate by of job action, although Gary Schlen21 cents per $100 of assessment. ker, HTA president, said last weekend no plan for such an action has But the faculty reduction can yet been made. only be viewed as a drastic step. We can only hope it will not be so drasWe hope that, too, will not come tic as to affect the quality of educato pass. While the board appears to tion in the t o w n s h i p ' s s c h o o l s . be moving too far too fast, further By NICHOLAS VM HOFFMAN IIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII redly is, to sympathize with compensation and protection. their cause, however. It The National Right to Work Teachers spokesmen say that even disruption of the system's operation The unions wanted to keep sticks in many people's craw people called the other day to that area of the economy in if the projected enrollment drop of through a teacher slowdown or other that one should be forced to arrange to have a special the private sector so they 230 elementary students occurs, that negative action could only aggravate join a union to hold a job. messenger drop a press recould strike a better bargain represents only 6.5 percent of the an unhappy situation. We trust any lease off. Only therichestorand have more control. Nevertheless, the whole ganizations can afford to have student population while the reducaction by the teachers will be kept They failed and are still iMiiiiiimiiimmmmmiiimiimiiiiuimii right-to-work Issue is beginthe routine, mimeographed tion in teacher staff 'now planned at a highly professional level and in failing in many Industries like ning to have the smell of a trash that Washington circuwould amount to 12 percent. the best interest of the students who cotton textiles. The attempts cause won and re-won somelates around in Itself delivand M. Stantnn Evans from to organize the Southern what more often than necesstand to be the real victims of any ered by hand Board members have said class having to belong to the union plants are so marginally and sary. Infuriating as It is to adult errors committed here. sizes will not be significantly affectVM HOFFMAN so minimally successful only This particular set of re- in order to appear on the air. have to pay union dues to ed by the cutback and promised The situation here demands that lieving their own arguments a union pork chopper, to use leases were celebrating the You don't have to be an inmake one's dally crust of there will be none with more than 30 any action be cool, calm and carecourt victory that freed reacabout the power of unions, at- the ancient term for someone veterate right wing defender bread, the number of workers students. We hope that it will not betionary b r o a d c a s t comtributed government inter- on a union payroll, can beof the interests of therich,as who actually are in this bind fully considered. mentators William F. Buckley vention on workers' behalf to lieve in the eventual success this preadamite pair assuis so infinitesimally small union lobbying and electoral of the effort. The corpothat, while their predicament agitation. rations in the industry, motimay be an infringement on Now, surprise,, surprise, the v a t e d by a r e s e n t m e n t some individuals' rights. It unions are broken, but there against having outsiders like can't be regarded as a nationAt a forum sponsored by the flicted. While Ocean, too, has had its are more government regu- unions have a say in the busial problem. lations and inspectors having ness, have been obdurately League of Women voters to assess problems, it seems to have weathIf there is a national probto do with employees than militant in defeating the orOcean Township's present nonparti- ered them well and achieved enlem, it may be that working ever. Wages, pensions and ganizing attempts. san form of government, there was viable progress in the process. people are without any orgaworking conditions are preThis may In some part be considerable discussion of possible nized economic representaAs pointed out during the forum, scribed by many levels of owing to years and years of tion just at the moment In our government in ways unthin- anti-union sentiment In the advantages of a change to a politi- the party political system so useful history when survival without kable a generation ago when mass media. On the air and in cally partisan system. That comes in the election of county, state and regular employment has beunions were much stronger. the papers for 10 y e a n or as something of a surprise. We have national officers can have definite come next to impossible. The The reason Is that the govern- more all we've heard is that s e e n no e v i d e n c e of a n e e d for disadvantages at the local level percentage of women whose ment is moving in to fill the unions are a) corrupt, b) dicchange. husbands' income is large where decisions do not demand and vacuum. The stultifying and tatorial, c) dedicated to fightenough to let them be fuUUme bureaucratically maddening ing labor-saving technology, Under its present government, may be hindered by party-line conwives, mothers and homeintervention In the boss's d) anti-black and aati-ChlOcean has gone through a period of siderations. makers is dropping to an in- business isn't the result of cano, e) anti-women and f) rapid growth, a condition which has Ocean Township seems to have a consequential fraction o'f the union strength but union pro-communist. At one time brought almost unbearable "growing good thing going under its present female population. Almost no weakness. or another an of theje statepains" to many municipalities so af- system. Why change it? families are left with enough ments have been true, but Earlier in ouricentury farm land to grow their way American trade union leaders when they are all that is said even partially out of the job- were antagonistic toward about unions, the conclusion connected, cash economy. even such elemental protecreaders and viewers must draw is that unions are bad • Even millions of teenagers, tions as workmen's comarc an unmitigated evil and people whom official social pensation laws. It's not that Today Christians around the which precede the joyous Easter they didn't want the men that is not true. policy prefers to see spend world observe Ash Wednesday and season are dedicated to repentance As Buckley and E v a n s their time at school and in compensated but they didn't the beginning of Lent, a season of 40 of past misdeeds and contemplation want the government admin- should see, an America with a recreation, must have work. istering the compensation. snapped and broken trade weekdays commemorating the 40- of a more spiritual life in the future. As w o r k e r s they a r e They feared the companies unionism has brought not a day fast,Jesus Christ observed beunorganized and therefore un- would manipulate governIt is a solemn seastfh in wmch the new birth of Individual liberty fore His death and resurrection, the represented In any direct ment intervention in the field but further subservience of many branches e(f the Christian events which established Christenfashion. The government does of health and safety to lower the citizens to the mondo corchurch reflect on the reason for represent them, however. standards am) deprive injured dom. poration and the mega govtheir existence. 'Help! I'm in danger of being run down.' Many anti-union people, be- workers of a lust level of ernment. For the faithful, t h e s e d a y s Hazlet teacher cuts The right-to-work debate THE LIBERAL SIDE Ocean's government Ash Wednesday SHREWSBURY N J Begin probe of Shrewsbury fire By WARREN RICH tY The house was sold for about S2M.M0 and was to be SHREWSBURY - County renovated into the corporate and local fire officials will be- headquarters of Williamsburg gin an Investigation today Estates, headed by Domenic into the cause of yesterday'! Martelli early morning blaie that gutThe house was unoccupied ted the former McCue family during the fire. some here. It was the second Firemen were concerned at fire to begin in. the cellar of the time f f the blaze that one the 100-year-old Victorian of McCue's sons, Peter, was home in 55 years. sleeping in the house. Vincent McCue S r , who It was learned later that lived for M years in the home Peter had changed his plans at 746 Broad St., recalled that and decided not to spend the until last night the only other night on a cot in the cellar of fire in the house occurred 55 the house. years ago at I a.m. on Easter "We aU liked to go there," Sunday. Mr. McCue said, explaining He u l d the Easter Sunday his son's plans. "We just fire, which began and was bated to leave it. As shabby quickly extinguished in the and battered as it was from cellar, was caused by defec- all the renovation we Just like tive wiring. Mr. HcCue added to go back there." that firemen at the time said Mr. McCue said the house the large wooden beams sup- was empty except'for" the cot porting the two-story house and renovation supplies and confined the fire to the cellar. tools. "It was the only home I Mr McCue s a i d t h e house, which was sold Dec. ever had," he said, "and the M 1(77 to a Colts Neck con- only home my children ever tractor, was rewired 35 years had." Mr. Martelli said he bought ago. Studentsface lengthened school year By ROBIN GOLDSTEIN Add county schoolchildren to the list of the snowbound, cabin-fever-stricken — almost all of them didn't have to get up t o go to school today. In contending with the record amounts of snow the winter has brought, many school districts are racking up r e c o r d n u m b e r s of "snow days". School officials have a hard time remembering the last time the elements caused schools to close three days in a row. Unfortunately, students may find themselves paying for the bonanza of snow days with shortened spring vacations and lengthened school years. School closings due to this most recent snowstorm pushed many schools over their quota of "snow days." And, no matter what the weather is, public school students have to put in their IN days. It is up to each district's board of education to decide when the extra school days will be made up — whether tacked on to the end of school or cut out of the spring break. Neither alternative pleases anyone. It's just that some people hate one plan even more than the other. At Shore Regional High School, in West Long Branch, today's school closing left students and teachers with four days to make up. "The teachers have indicated they'd rather make up the time at the end of the year, but it's getting to be an awful lot of time," John Kolibas, acting superintendent of Shore Regional High School, noted. "We were pretty well set — until one of our plows broke down," Mr. Kolibas added. "We expect to be open on Thursday." Among Shore Regional High-School's four sending districts were two of the hardest-hit municipalities in the county — Monmouth Beach and Sea Bright. Other regional school districts closed again today include Freehold , Red Bank, Rumson-Fair Haven, and Henry Hudson Regional In most cases, elementary schools in the sending districts were also closed. However, Atlantic Highlands elementary school was one of few in the entire county which, last nlght^expected to be open today'according to borough police. Public schools in Long Branch and Middletown were also closed today. Middletown schools will have to add at least two days to their calendars, as will Rumson and F a i r Haven schools, RumsonFair Haven Regional High School, Ocean Township schools, and Long Branch schools, all of which went even further over their quota of snow days with closings today. The 7,200 students in the Freehold Regional High School district will have at least three days to make up, as will Colts Neck students. Little Silver students will be adding four — warmer — school d a y s somewhere in its calendar. the house because it blended in with toe company image. Williamsburg Estates has constructed ov«r 4411 colonialtype houses in Mlddletown Township Mr Martelli said he was shocked when he learned of the fire and said when he saw the gutted building he was sick to his stomach. "There are people who like paintings and there are people who like racing cars, I happen to like old buildings." he said. "You can't put a price on it, it's like an old painting." he said of the house Mr Martelli said he spent about 11,000 on the renovations that were then underway. He said he was prepared to spend an additional $10,00020,000 for lurther renewal. Fire Chief James D Martin said the cause of yesterday's blare has not been determined He said when firemen arrived at the scene shortly after 2 a m the fire was "fully involved in the cellar, and It went right up." T^Z. k^Mi Till LASl WO«D IN WAI'I C.OVIH1NG '4.99 L»I $ 5.99b.x Country Rustic.. box corns flv* to all •quart foot arta BUILDING CENTER Al Clark. Shrewsbury lire marshal said the boiler, which was operating prior to the fire, is located in the eel- tar "I'm not going to rule out anything," Mr. Clark said. "There were utilities in there and of course the heat was on but I don't know if it had anything to do with ( t h e fire," he said County Fire Marshal. Fred Leggett was unable to be al the scene of the fire yesterday morning because of poor road conditions He is expected to assist in today's investigation The house, one of the oldest in the borough, burned fpr nearly three hours in the gusty wind and snow before firemen brought the blaze under control. Firemen remained on the scene until 9 a.m. Chief Martin said firemen were called back to the scene at 12:30 p . m . when a borough fireman walking past the gutted building noticed the remains were smoldering 1 WHITING • LING FLOUNDER •HERRING MONDAY tssawianzee DAY j A 0 / 19 Ground Round t r , 1 •ONfLE«i«HHH0UlO«« LOOK FOR THE ACTION PRICES SIGNS AT A&P! »1 Sliced Bacon KLIINM U P IS A VARIETY MEAT SHOP COUNTRY fARM PORK SHOP J.29 PorkLoinRoasl , 1 . 6 9 Shoulder Steak PODK LOIN BEEF HOUND HOUND TMiN THIN SLICED SLICED Turbol Fillet PAN READ* m ri\ 1 f)f% 139 U G OF PORK 2;;-89c X54C Smoked Pork ButtsJ 6 9 IKUOCWIP U P ISA FISH t SEAFOOD SHOP Pork Back Ribs Fresh Mackerel , 1 5 9 Cod Fillets 2 29 Shrimp Cocktail 3 1.69 Fresh Ham RicV-A-Ro^i Facial Tissues 2g • • • 2 " London Bref « A A Boneless Braciole 1 . 3 3 Cubed Steak 189 BONELESS BltF ROUND m t%fl Sirloin Tip Boast fwE PICK THE BEST IN FRESH PRODUCE Window Cleaner Lysol Bowl Cleaner .1.79 J.oa I FDUITCMIT Apple Juice i. 1.71 HeckerTFIour WMVUCTMU Wesson Oil Tartar Sauce Ronzoni Sauce w& *£ 2.19 K7Green Peas 1.15 Velwea Cheese £ S'49C ...1 10 REGUlARor CRINKLE CUT A&P French Fries I ^ALIFOWMA SUPER JUMBO 4« SIM Navel Oranges e Pink Salmon 1.69 *2 85W 16 CKISP CRUNCHY-BY THE PIECE OOC Green Peppers ,„ 39C Carrots Goldenxr ADOFLAWMTOMIVIUAI.U.l.fi-i fei.00 j » * » A TAKOYRID Yellow Onions 5 J 8 C ALLPUBP0SEU8.fi e ^QQE Potatoes 5.99' WASH. STATE EXTRA FANCY X 59* CoTombo Yogurt Gorton Fish N" Chips n Radishes * Pascal Celery *» 39 TtMPltFUU OF JUICI 3&1 .00 Oranges ^ _ « _ aiO-89 Spaghetti Sauce .'• ,32-01. IN STORES WITH DELI Breyers Ice Cream Slices DOMESTIC Boiled Ham Chicken Roll C Si ~ Z S I C U VBL 0 Waffle Syrup &89 GratidChNsexi.39 Macaronis 4^99° Grated Cheese s i . 39 Cinnamon ^ 8 9 ( Flounder Fillet ~ 1 . 5 9 Saltine Crackers 4 5 Campbell s Snow Crop Orange Juice Pork & Beans 2 79 JANE PARKER MARCAL-12S SHEETS Hamburger Rolls 1 0 9 Sofpac I Towels r 89° Baby Powder 89°P 1.49 ^VsffiesTFranks . J i5i8TKf&y 2^89 NOW FEATURING 59;39 TfNOCR SMOKED WATER A D M O fiSEi/. RIGHT OFF OUR BOATS Beef •— O 7 99 Cornish Hens Tenderloin C ib H Smoke Hams ALL NATURAL CATCHTHEM WMEYOUCAM WHOLIUNTRIMMED S TO 7-LB. AVQ VJ I I V L L V n i mwwmwnw.1* w i w i ~ v ^ w w SHANK PORTION (WATER ADDED) Ched-O-Bit RBHBTRSH MltftfEJ. All that's left of historic Shrewsbury house stands out in mow Each of these advertised ilems it required lo be readi ly available lor tale at or be low the advertised price in each AAP Store, except at specifically noted in this ad. 777 SHKWSMY AVI. BQfORD SEAFOOD COOP 7 ACTION PRICES! Henry Hudson Regional School students are getting off f a i r l y e a s y - w i t h today's closing, they are only one day over quota. ^Z-BRICK WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY a. i9?8 T h e D t o f l y R e g f c t e r 59 x 9 9 ( Kaiser Rolls 39' s69 SnTwabs ( S S Loti o n r l . 1 9 Sal t Free Bread * 59 C C ^69 Bai'sSpoo ,1.09 fhinlretzels ~49 " Store Cooked " = 2 J: jANt PARKf HCOOftit Sandwich Cremes Roast Beef Beautiful porcelain enamel cookware at fantastic savings! Now you can own SorrwiloCoohwtrtby MONETA of MILAN, hityl I. Ann Page . Beans Red. Kidney, Bottonoi 2ND WEEK'S FEATURE 8" OPEN SKILLET H i MOM MPlAt RM BCTAU K«T* Bm • * , F«6.11* In A»P tktnm In COTM. Northtni, M.J. Rockland • Ottng. C«w*«. (»««»X N K * IHghHII^ Mnhmrkln * m. 1 Mwcw MA H J.) SHREWSBURY. N J State park fees reduced WIEONESOAY. FEBRUARY B. »978 TRENTON - A reduction in weekday and weekend fees at all New Jersey state parks has been announced by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). The new rates are already in effect Summer parking rates, from Memorial Day through Labor Day. have been reduced a dollar. For example, the weekday parking rate at Island Beach Slate Park is now 13 per car instead* of 14. and the holiday and weekend rate is 14 instead of 15 At Round Valley and Spruce Run recreation areas the weekday rate dropped to $2 Alfred T Xluido. acting director of DEP'J Division ot Parks and Forestry, said the weekday park fees were reduced lo encourage greater us« of the state's recreation f a c i l i t i e s from Monday through Friday For example, the weekday parking fee at seven state parks — Allaire. Belleplain. Cheesequake. Lebanon. Ringwood. Skylands. Slokes (Stony Lake) and Wawayanda — is now only |1 Motorcycle parking fees have been lowered to SI Hoped parking fee. II Daily launching fees have been reduced to fl a boat at Hopai cong. Spruce Run and Wharton (Crowley Landing) Annual boat launching permits have been reduced to 110. Boat launching fees have been eliminated at Bass River. Belleplain. Bull's Island. High Point. Parvin. Stokes and Worthington Walk-in charges have been eliminated in 15 areas A 50cent walk-in fee for those age 12 and over will remain at Barnegat Lighthouse. Bass River State Forest. Lake Ho patcong State Park. Round Valley. Spruce Run. Swartswood and Parvin. There Is no parking fee at Parvin No fee U charged for New Jersey residents age IS or over or for totally disabled persons (applications for Senior Citizen Park Pass and Totally Disabled Person Park Pass are available from DEP. Bureau of Parks. Box 1420. Trenton 08625). No fee is charged for bicyclists. Overnight camping and cabin fees are not affeded by the new schedule Last years overnight fees remain unchanged. Sharing funds hearing Feb. 14 FREEHOLD - Theodore J. Narozanlck. Honmouth County Administrator, will conduct a public hearing Feb 14 at 10:30 a.m. on the proposed use of federal revenue sharing funds in the 1078 county budget. ASH W E D N E S D A Y R I T E - In observance of Ash Wednesday, start of the 40-day penitential period of Lent, the Rev. Canon Charles H. Best, rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, Red Bank, uses ashes to mark the sign of the cross on the foreheaa ot his wife. Waiting for ashes are Mrs. Gloria Copeland of Little Silver and Robert Tledeman of Red Bank. Forty days of Lent begin The 40 penitential days of Lent, which lead to the joy of Easter Sunday, begin today, Ash Wednesday. Clergymen of Roman Catholic and Episcopal churches have conducted the ritual of burning and blessing palms irom tne previous Palm Sunday and are using the ashes to mark the sign of the cross on foreheads of the faithful. The ashes serve as a reminder that the body came from dust and to dust will return. Lent, which li observed by Christians throughout the world, Is a period for personal assessments, penance for past misdeeds, and the setting of goals for human betterment. Although most denominations of the Protestant church do not partake in the ritual of the ashes, they do observe Ash Wednesday and take notice of its significance as the start of Lent, which commemorates Christ's 40-day fast in the desert before His passion, death, and resurrection. • Easter, which is regarded ) by many as the most joyous feast on the Christian calendar, will be celebrated this year on March 28. The hearing will be held in the Freeholders' Meeting Room, Hall of Records, Main Street, Freehold. Mr. Narozanick urged the public, especially senior citizens and minority groups to attend and participate In the hearing Hundreds of fantastic values Monmouth County will be entitled to $3,282,301 in revenue sharing funds in 1978. The comments of the hearing will be evaluated and will be taken into consideration for the allotment of funds. in The Sunday Register on 1977 TAX DEDUCTION . . . "Th» deadline tor filing up tor an Individual Retirement Account »nd getting the deduction tor 1977 Is Fob. 14, 1$7$.". FEBRUARY 19th FOR INFORMATION AND A88ISTANCE CALL Ksarvf Estate Planning Services Co. 45 Main St. YOUI COTY A I Y O U NEWSSTAND NOW 0* CAU S42-40O0 FM HOME DHNBY Holmdel 946-4975 Budget Shop allfirstquality fashions for ^ ^ Misses, Juniors and Women Dr. Rtger M. J e m Dr. Nkfcetas Arcennio Dr. Jerez head of medical staff LONG BRANCH - Dr. Roger li. Jerez has been elected president of the Medical Staff of Monmouth Medical Center, succeeding Dr. James C. Kirby who has held the post for three terms. Dr. Nicholas J. Arcomarto was elected the new Medical Staff secretary. ' Re-elected to their posts were Dr. Cyril S. Arvanitis, vice president, and Dr. Jay Alan Kern, treasurer. Dr. Jerez, who received his medical degree from the University of Valencia Medical School in Spain, served his Internship at MMC. This was followed by a general surgery residency and in 1*83 a term as chief resident in surgery, both at MMC. He later held a residency in urology at the Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia Dr. Jerez is an associate clinical professor at Hahnemann Medical College, Philadelphia, for which MMC serves as a teaching affiliate. He is a Diplomate of the American Board of Urology and a member of the Monmouth County Medical Society and the American College of Surgeons. B Dr. Arcomano, an attending physician in medicine, has been a member of the MMC Medical Staff for 25 years After attending St. Peter's College in his native Jersey City, he received his medical degree from Georgetown University Medical School, Washington. He Is an associate clinical professor of medicine at Hah nemann. He has held residencies in Internal medicine at Boston City Hospital and Georgetown Medical Center, followed by a cardiology residency during which he was chief resident and a Fellow In cardiology. Dr. Arcomano served three years with the U.S. Army in Europe during World War II. ' He Is president of the Monmouth County Heart Association and a longtime member of its board of trustees. His memberships Include the American Medical Association, and the Monmouth County and New Jersey medical societies. Jeans, shirts and sweaters Prewashed jeans • Prewashed blue cotton denim • Assorted fashionable styles • Siies5/6tol5/16 Plaid shirts • Woven plaid of polyester and cotton • Long sleeves • Colorful plaids • White collar, placket • 8-18 Bulky sweaters • Warm bulky acrylic knit • Toggle wrap or cardigan styles • Natural color • Easy-care • S,M,L Knee-highs He and his wife, the former Ella Hicks, have five children and l i v e In West Long Branch. 4pair99C Scars regular low price RUDA'S MEAT MARKET 109 LEONARD ST., RED BANK PHONE 741-3435 WHOLE FILET MIGNONS. HMTCUTUM OKXEN UGS t TWGHS.. x i $ 45 1 « 79V HAN GROUND CHUCK 9 9 ' • Sheer nylon • Sanditont, loan • One site WWII quantHtn loil Sale prices in affect until a/13/78 Ask About Sean Credit Styles shown are offered only as representative of Sears assortment. Savings based on regular price off??* same or comparable merchandise of many Sears stores. lltmi In thli Ad available at Sean brow (torn belew .xc.pl - DOVHt and WMMMSKMT Sat ill action Guaranteed or Your Money Back [Sears -Larger Sears Stores • ALLENTOWN. PA. • HARRISBURG, PA. • LANCASTER, PA. • OCEAN N.J • PLEASANTVILLE, N J •READING. PA. •8CRANTON. PA. • CAMP HILL PA. • CHAMBERSBURG. PA. •DOVER. DEL • MIDDLETOWN. N.J. • HAGERSTOWN, MD. • HANOVER. PA. * LEBANON. PA. • POTTSTOWN. PA. • POTTSVILLE. PA. 'SALISBURY. MD. - T O M S RIVER. N.J. •VINELAND. N.J. • WILKES-BARRE. PA. »WILLIAM6PQRT, PA. 'YORK, PA. SHREWSBURY N J WEONESOAY FEBRUARY 8, 1976 T h e P X ) I f f fllafcl 9 Gallup Youth Survey Teen-agersdoubtful about quality of life in 10 years By GEORGE GALLUP We will have thousands and economic background. In fact, thousands of cars but no gas to pessimism is the prevailing PRINCETON, NJ.-Although sentiment in every such group, put in them." our own country is in pretty with the single exception of "Maybe in 10 years time non-whites. good shape rifht now, most of there will be an effort to clean the other nations of the world up our dirty atmosphere. The Indeed, non-white teen agers face serious problems-what air pollution is pitiful now. was the only group studied in with overcrowding not enough When I wait for the school bus which positive views of the food, insufficient energy supin the morning, so many world in 10 years' time outplies and so on. I'd say the trucks pass by that exhaust is number negative views. With world is pretty badly off now our big problem. If we start the unemployment rate for and will probably get worse." cleaning up now, we would at non-white teens hovering stubThis gloomy prediction by an least be one step ahead of the bornly around the 40 percent 18-year-old senior high school level, it is possible to speculate game in 1987. girl, while perhaps more pesthat for these young boys and simistic than most, is shared by "A span of 10 years will give girls, anything would be an a S3 percent majority of Amermanufacturers a chance to rec- improvement over the present. ican teen-agers In the latest ognize the problems and make Gallup Youth Survey. They changes. If this is done, I'm Perhaps a black 15-year-old wf re asked sure the world will be a better bay had this in mind when he place to live in." told a Gallup interviewer, " I f " D * you think the world will you can't hope for the future, be a better place to live in, in However, the overall down- what can you hope for?" 10 years, or not?" beat prediction is shared by Among other groups, boys Despite a pessimistic major- cause we once helped them most subgroups of teenagers when responses to the ques- and girls share a negative atity, about one-third (34 per- when they were in need." tion are analyzed by socio- titude to about the same degree. cent) of teen-agers have a But another teenager offered basically positive outlook toward \ the future quality of a fatalistic opinion about life in life. The balance, 13 percent, the future. This 16-year-old either f*«l the world will be boy said: "We have managed to about the same 10 years from survive for generation after now or don't offer an opinion. generation; I think we'll make T R E N T O N - The state DeYouth Conservation Corps A guardedly optimistic point it Tor another 10 years." Whether they are optimistic partment of Environmental ( Y C C ) p r o g r a m , w h i c h is of view was expressed by this or pessimistic about the future, Protection ( D E P ) has begun being expanded again this 14-year-old boy: "Even though we're running the focus of many teens in the recruitment for New Jersey's year to accommodate 290 short of fuel supplies, I think survey seems to be on environ youngsters at 31 state-operPresident Carter's efforts to mental problems such as air ated camps. maintain peace and friendship and water pollution as well as The p r o g r a m is open to between our nation and others the depletion of energy reboys and girls, age 15 through will be beneficial. When the sources. Here is a sampling of IK, who live in New Jersey. FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP time comes that we run out opinion in this regard: completely, maybe one of these "In 10 years, we will be in a Music of the T w e n t i e s , a The camps will open In early countries will help us out be- .complete state of confusion. choral and instrumental musi- July and operate for eight NJ. conservation corps plans youth work camps Musical program set for Feb. 25 WORLD A BETTER PLACE IN 10 YEARS? Better 34% 34 34 NATIONWIDE Boys . -. Girli Both Sexes 13-15 vein old .36 16-18 years old 31 White* .,31 Nor, whim '...45 Academic Standing Above average 32 Average or Below. . . . 3 6 White-collar 31 B l u e - c o l l a r . . . . . . . . . 34 flthir's education College or more 32 High school or leu . . . 33 East 34 Midwest 33 South 35 West 32 Worie ' 53% 52 54 51* 56 66 42 Same ~W 6 5 6 5 6 3 56 6 61 — 4 — 57 6 53 5. 56 54 64 55 49 57 6 5 3 5 8 6 No Opinion 9 7 7 10 cal program, will be presented Feb. 29, at 8 p.m. al Freehold High School, on Elton Adelphia Road. The program will be sponsored by the Battleground Arts Center. weeks Each youngster will receive 12.65 per hour or a salary of 1636 for the summer, less $14 per week for room and board at residential camps Featured in the program will be the Elysium Chorale, the Sinfonia Pro Musica, the Dorothy Pons Dance Company and the Brookdale Community College Dance department. An additional 164 youngsters will be selected to attend six other YCC camps operated by the federal government, including one non-residential camp al Sandy Hook Interested young people On the program will be pia- should contact t h e i r riigh nist Deborah Chun, a Manala- school guidance department pan High School student, Dan or l o c a l ' e m p l o y m e n t and Keller, a trumpeter, and voc- community action agencies al soloists Rila Kris, Carol for information and appliDunbar and Frank Mortimer. cations. Deadline for filing The production will be con- • applications Is March 17 ducted by Julian Livingston, Applications also are availand the accompanist will be able by writing to Alfred T . pianist Lillian Livingston. Guido. YCC slate recruiter. Additional information on Department nf Environmenthe p r o g r a m m a y be h a d tal Protection. P.O. Box 1420, through the Battleground Arts Trenton 08625 Center. Younger teens (13-to 15-year Whether a t w m g e r comes olds) of both sexes are slightly from a white-collar or a blurcollar family or whether a teen more disposed to have an optimistic outlook 136 percent of ager's father has had some col this group fe«l the world will lege education or not does not b* a better place to live in 10 seem to have an important years from now I than are their bearing on his or her attitudes 16-to 18 year-old counterparts toward the future of the world. Neither are major differences 131 percent). found b\ the region of the avenge grades. Here are the principal statiscounm in which the teen ager lives. tical findings Curiously, young people who These findings are based on are doing well in school are telephone interviews with a slightly less likely to see therepresentative nationwide samfuture world "through rose ple of 1.087 teen-agers during colored classes" than are young- the period October 17-30, sters with average or below 1977, REGULAR SAVINGS ACCOUNT that Earns the Highest Interest Rate Allowed by Law. 1 5 /4% = 5.47 •Effective Animal Yield When Priiuipnl & Interest Remain on Deposit lor a Year. Interest from Day of Deposit to Day of Withdrawal. Compounded Daily—Paid Monthly. /Vr.i itli,l a M u m i "/ s .5 on H I I I K I I I ' i\ l,u in tin HI , mini until tin- , n , l tH lit? nmnilih />./«></ " Ifocequlor monthly Income 6OUND6GOOD men * e have just what you need a SATURDAY BANKING ALL OFFICES OPEN 9 A.M. 10 12:30 P.M. WALK-UP & DRIVE IN BANKING hr DEPOSITORS ... FREE PERSONAL CHECKING LOANS NO Minimum Balance NO Service Charge . . . and Your Checks Are Absolutely FREE L.vv Rates Available OFF £ p Harmonia ot °Jfo 0 e paid BothWe by Hormonia for foil P ° " k l j l C OUR LOW DISCOUNT PRICE! TIME SAVING ACCOUNTS with Interest Credited and Compounded Quarterly EVERY FALL & WINTER ITEM N THE STORE! A YEAR TIME ACCOUNTS OF 4 YEARS Minimum Deposit $ 1,000. 6%% A YEAR A YEAR 6V4°/< / A O YEAR TIME ACCOUNTS of 3 YEARS TIME ACCOUNTS of 2 YEARS TIME ACCOUNTS of 1 YEAR Minimum Deposit $500 Minimum Deposit $500. Minimum Deposit $500. Federal law and regulation prohibit the payment or time deposit prior to maturity unless three months o f the interest thereon is forfeited and interest on the amount withdrawn is reduced to the regular passbook rite. The Family Savings Bank where you » m t rrwyitay on twnr Hwn for mtn. woman ind children MATAWAN: Rt. 34, (2 mills South ol Rl. 9 inlenection) • (201) 583-1506 PRINCETON: JunetiOrfWf Rt. 27 A 518 (5 mi. North ol Princeton) • (201) 297-6000 BANKAMERICARD 4 MASTER CHARGE accepted In ABERDEEN: 342 LLOYD ROAD — 566-2323 In MIDDLETOWN: 1 HARMONY ROAD — 671-2500 In ELIZABETH: 1 UNION SQUARE ft 540 MORRIS AVE. — 289-0800 In SCOTCH PLAINS: NORTH AVE. ft CRESTWOOD RD. — 654-4622 In TRENTON: 1700 KU8ER ROAD — (609) 585-0800 In TOMS RIVER: 993 FISCHER BOULEVARD - 349-2500 Member F.D.I. WINGS INSURED TO $40,000 10 T h e D a i r y Register SHREWSBURY N J WEDNESDAY.FEBRUARYS. i9?B The disaster areas of Sea Bright and Monmouth Beach Ocean Avenue entrance to private beach in Monmouth Beach. 'Rescued' residents rough it in Sea Bright Recreation Center VALENTINE Potholes along Ocean Avenue in Monmouth Beach SCHRAFFT'S RED FOIL HEART SCHRAFFT'S SILHOUETTE HEART WHITMAN RED FOIL HEART Nt. wt. 7 oz. Nt. wt. 14 oz. Nt. wt. 8 oz. BABE SPRAY COLOGNE JOVAN MUSK SPRAY MIST CHARLIE COLOGNE SPRAY WHITMAN RED FOIL HEART Bright Police Dept. knows about snow WINDMERE NAIL CARE | thenalcenter - CENTER Puna l i t * cnitslng iron for t h * gal on thi go- FIRST ALERT SMOKE DETECTOR '' J *r l OUR OWN BRAND M O-TVt COTTON SWAM COLGATE TOOTHPASTE FABERGE ORGANICS SHAMPOOO CONDITION 16fl.oz. /'• Military to the rescue in Sea Bright Photos by Don Lordi and Carl Forino BITUSSIN D M COUGH FORMULA 4fl.oz. TREASURY DANDRUFF SHAMPOO B* HIT* Mid »k» »dvanon* of the »p«dfl.r»b«» X CONTAC COLD CAPSULES WINDMERE SLIPSTIK THRIFT DRUG the AY 35. MIDDLETQWN UMFT 2 wrro COUPON OfFEH EXPIRES 2-11-71 »perts< WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY a. 1978 T h e D > i y R i g l r t r i 11 Horrible Hagar: Now is the hour for Viking power »J HUGH A. MULLIGAN l g(AP) H "Hagar the Horrible" is the name Browne's kids called him when he used to rough house with them back in the day* when he was working as an artist for the advertising agencies, drawing the Campbell soup kids and Chiquita bananas. The hapless Viking was the booty of his long quest for a universal comic character who "needed no footnote or elaborate explanation Everyone knows what a Viking looks like. I never met anyone who didn't like a Viking Even the people they used to rape and loot go around telling everyone they must have a little Viking blood if they have even a tint of blond hair." Hagar, a thoroughly domesticated Viking with the everyday problems of bringing home the loot to a bossy wife and a son who doesn't shape up as a novice plunderer and a daughter who wants to be a warrior-maiden, fits Browne's definition of "comedy as second cousin lu tragedy." "Turn 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' inside oul and you have Andy Capp," he explains. "Life goes on When Rome fell, some guy had to take oul the garbage and change the wheel on his chariot." lh Z ^K, - " 8 " « H-nible; U» adominable Viking with two horns sticking out 01 nil Miimt and the double umlaut over the first "a •• has come South Jo ravage and pillage for the winter and to celebrate his 5th birthday Cartoonist Dik Browne, who dropped the "c" out of hii (to* nametolong before hendblessed Hagar with an urnto0k m o r e .,',.?.' ^ * m o r e l l k e h l s Incarnation of Viking power, with long flowing hair, long flowing betrd and a paunch to match. Brown*, a gentle Irishman born in New York's Yorkvine section, was hunched over his drawing board in a rented Florida house working up a panel that had Hagar offering to play hopscotch with some Nordic tots and then crashing through the sidewalk on the first hop "How do you lay out a hopscotch court?" he Implored everyone within earshot with all the helplessness of Hagar trying to figure out how the tiller works on a slave galley. Hagar lit up Browne's imagination during one of the darkest years of my life. "My brother had just died My sister had a complete breakdown. My wife's father died. Her mother lost an eye to cancer. And I suffered a detached retina while driving through southern New Jersey in a blizzard at the height of gas rationing That led to glaucoma I thought some Russian novelist had taken over writing my life." But Browne clung to Hagar, his lifeline, "writing gags with my son taking them down all the way back in the ambulance." Now the vexed but never vicious Viking appears in (10 newspapers around the world and. ranks j p t behind Blondie, Peanuts and Beetle Bailey in best selling cartoon strips County pay offer is defended By WILLIAM J.ZAORSKI FREEHOLD - Freeholder Director Harry Larrison Jr. said yesterday Monmouth County government can only offer its employees a 7.S percent increase because of the state mandated five percent cap law. "If I could give them sub stantially more money without Increasing the burden to Monmouth County taxpayers I would," said Mr. Larrison In his first public statement regarding the recent demonstrations by various county employee groups for greater salary increases. "I can say that because we have the greatest group of county employees in the state and the most devoted and efficient boards and agencies," he said. Mr. Larrison said a prime example of this was the response of the county highways employees who gave 100 percent to meet the snow emergency during difficult contract negotiations. "I am happy and proud of them. "But we taxpayers elected by taxpayers are faced with certain hard facts of life," he continued. "One hard fact is that the buck stops with us and we must evaluate the needs of county government and determine how they can be met while working under moral and statutory restraints." and the taxpayers should than 2,000 employees. "We have offered a 7.5 per- know our side. I refuse to cent increase because that is make outlandish statements the highest we feel we can in response to equally outlandish statements. As long go," said Mr. Larrison The freeholder director said as I am director, this board other counties In the state are will continue to operate in an faced with the same problem. efficient and orderly manner He added that many munici- for the good of all the taxpalities in the county are also payers of Monmouth County," offering their employees a 7.5 he said. Five Monmouth County percent Increase "because that Is the reality imposed by Blue dollar Workers groups had Joined the county jail the five percent cap.* Mr. Larrison said that in guards last Saturday in pickaddition to salary increases, eting the Hall of Records here many governmental costs for to protest the county's refusal this will increase over which to negotiate its 7.5 percent the freeholders have no con- salary increase offered all county employees. The countrol ty Jail guards had picketed "The recent two snow the Hall of Records and the storms mean extensive overHarry Larrtsea Jr. time for employees of the highway department, in addiThe freeholder director said tion to work time lost because that this year is the second county offices were closed," time the freeholders are he said. "In addition, costs faced with the five percent for utilities, Insurance and cap limitation imposed by the mandated charges have instate legislature. He ex- creased substantially." plained that this cap means . All of this must come out of that the freeholders cannot a $3 million cap Increase, said increase the amount to be Mr. Larrison, noting that the raised by taxation to support overall county budget last their budget more than five year was more than $66 milpercent over last year. lion. "The amount raised by tax"As long as I am on the ation last y e a r w a s »44,892,ooo," he said. "That board, I will do my best to see to it that the county tax means our cap this year is M7,I2«,OOO. The increases, rate remains stable," pledged therefore, must be limited to the freeholder director. "I besome $3 million," he said, not- lieve that we can accomplish ing that the county has more that this year." Mr. Larrison said that he feels that the freeholders must maintain the high level al Office of the U.S. Army of services county governCorps of Engineers to request ment offers its taxpayers for a survey of beach erosion and their tax dollars. "In many wash-outs resulting from cases I want to further ImMonday's storm and other prove the services. This costs recent storms this winter. money. The taxpayers are enThe Corps agreed to send a titled to these services," he survey team to Monmouth said, adding that Monmouth and Ocean counties tomor- County government must never become stagnant. row. Concerning the recent dem"I have received many calls from constituents and onstrations by various county municipal officials detailing employee groups, Mr. Larrithe extend- of the damage son said he respects the right from Sandy Hook through of county employees to voice Ocean County," Mr. Howard their needs. "This is an important part of our democratsaid. He said it Is up to the gov- ic system. "However, there are alernor of a state to request a ways two sides to every story disaster declaration. county jail last week during their oft duty hours to protest the salary impasse With regard to the Saturday demonstration, George DeVito, president of Policemen's Benevolent Association Local 240 which represents 108 county jail guards, said that his statement was Incorrectly reported He said the MonmouthOcean Counties conference of PBA's had given Gov. Brendan T. Bryne $2,500 in his reelection campaign and that it was not local 240. Mr. DeVito also said that local 240 never pledged to give Democratic candidates $2,500 for their re-election campaign. Browne surted out in life with a dream of "becoming Willing Scoop, the boy reporter In those days, just before World War II, to own a police card and wear a raincoat was the grandest thing this side of Zorro " He got a job as a copy boy in the art department of the New York Journal, began doodling around with pen sketches and wound up drawing maps and charts for Newsweek. In the Army, assigned lo an engineering outfit, he worked up a poster gag about camouflaging that became a classic: "All right. Lieutenant, where the hell are the airplanes?" He gravitated into ad work after the war and then suddenly was contacted by King Features to do the, art work for a new cartoon that Mort Walker, creator of "Beetle Bailey." was working up The result, now appearing in some 600 newspapers, was "Hi and Lois " with Walker supplying the ideas and Browne the cartoon figures "We've been together 24 years and have never had a written cqntract." Browne's work-a-day world consists of turning out two cartoon strips seven days a week. 52 weeks out of the year, with no lime out for illness or vacations, plus an swering the mail MONMOUTH MEATS 110 MONMOUTH ST. I 13 MAIN ST. I 90 OCEANPORT AVE. RED BANK I EATONTOWN I LITTLE SILVER >41-52»2 I 542-0743 741-5350 ZGR0 JND CHUCK 99,: ARMOUR STAR BEEF LIVER HOT OR SWEET ITALIAN SAUSAGE 99! M DUBUQUE BACON 09 29 Ib. Howard seeks disaster aid WASHINGTON - Rep James J. Howard, D-N.J., has urged President Carter to declare New Jersey a disaster area for purposes of obtaining federal disaster assistance for repair of private and public property damaged by Monday's severe winter storm. Mr. Howard has also asked Les Lane, executive director of the Federal Highway Administration, to make an immediate survey of New Jersey highways damaged by the snow storm, with particular attention to coastal roads damaged by flooding. Mr. Howard said he contacted the New York Region is eon CMHurracss MTOMTK UMiMmblMl Tales of childhood come back to roost By EBMA BOMBECK I overheard my children arguing the other night over — of all things — my child- food. UNHtOUR snouts SWhMll The oldest said, "Mama told me they weren't rich, but they always had a UtUe food on the table and a roof over their The middle child said, "That's funny She told me they were dirt poor and would have given their eye teeth to have half of the food I wasted." The baby said, "They were destitute. She told me they were so poor they had to buy parents — on time." The oldest child said, "All I know is she had to walk eight blocks to school every day, rain or shine." The middle child said, "It was three miles in a winter with three blizzards and a spring with two floods." The baby said, "Would you belleva-she waked eight miles a day . . . and came home for lunch .'. • with long underwear tacked under her feet for socks?" The firstborn said, "Once when I told a be she told me Grandma took a branch off a tree and switched her legs with It." The second-bom said, "I heard that story and It wasn't a tree limb, it was a tree The baby said, "You got it wrong. She was tied to the tree trunk for three days to bleach in the sun." The oldest said. "How long was she in labor with you? She told me I took 11 ,hoars to be born." "She told me three day»," said the KMMM middle one. The baby said, "She told me the other day she still gets cramps when she looks in my bedroom." "All I know," said the oldest, "is she wasn't allowed to drive a car until she was zl ." "She told me 24." "You get all the breaks. She wanis me to vulcanize my feet." "This Is weird," said the oldest child. "Are we talking about the same Mom? The thin, bright-eyed, dark-haired girl who used to read me .stories, bake cookies, paste my baby pictures in the album and giggle a lot?" The middle child said, "The somberlooking blonde who used to put me to bed at 6 JO and bought me a dog to save on napkins?" The baby said, "The grayish lady who falls asleep during the six-o'clock news and Is going to show me my baby pictures when we finish shooting the roll at my graduation?" I knew I should have raised 'em in separate part* of the house. Cwilai Ilkl • htndtug Q 7 I . 4 HUME F ( ' FEEMKfl TOUT TRMMERl toys Si us WORLD'S BIGGEST TOY SELECTION! MON-FRI 10 AM-9PM, SAT 10 AM-7PM (Paramos Til 9) SUN NOON-S PM (Paratnus Closed) FREE APPLIANCES! [PRESTO) CLAIROL PROCTOR- S«_EX and WaterPik HERES HOW IT WORKS: t PtBk up t apaoai Tip* Sa*a* Ertvatapa ai yom Acma/Supai S * v * onacfcoui 2 E»*My Urn* you mop Acma. *ava you' ipaciai fltikl i*gui.>r l a p * * t f l f « " Tap* Savai Envaiopa 3 A* toon at you va n v M up anougft upas 'oi th# houaaftok) o< b*auiy appiianta you warn t>onQ you' Envtlopa to Ina CouMaty Wndo* i t Ida manag* • o*c« to> vaMalion 4 Tftan. titcftenga you. valtdalad EnvMop* lw your FREE appManc*) (aiaia . Clanol C r a n Curl Presto Fry Baby Sleam Styling Wand Electric Deep Fryer 5 And that a M l «N Ww (*« luMpon Mvmg Acnw goU tag-iiat Apm22 t»7t Foi»»chfHtE apo*i*"c» you want vOunsM* o*'700wortnol Acm«goit]i«g>«l«' iap» Jult Mh Iw ad<Mion«l Tap* Sav»« Envelop** ai you' Acma/Supar Sava* CouflMy CanUH 6 H»yi»i#( lapaa a'* '•o'Mniabi* m m i f oKotving counii«> only Richmond. Batgan. Eaaaa. Hudaon. Mtddtaaai. Monmoum Utyr.i Paiawc. Bomartat, Suua* Union and m Via following communitiat ooly MAiihingion. 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Sliced Roast Beef. * AMIHICAN O N E G A L L O N BTL O F SPEEDUP BLEACH LANCASTER BRAND BEEF CHUCK BONE-IN LANCASTER BRAND BEEF CHUCK BONE N 99 ONE GALLON BTL OF Frozen Seafood Savingsl LANCASTER BRAND BEEF CHUCK UNDER BLADE c , 53 C Chicken Quarters s s Fresh Hams NKCU7 (Quartered or Split •> 49C) ss-^/it^tar Un\ on. p« lamly > u u Ratom Fab 5 m™ n. 1971 Mardi Gras parties usher in Lenten season •y MAKGUER1TE HENDERSON The Meat Original Couple were Jean and Bob Irwin who came as Vikings (Shades of Hagar the Horrible?) The nth annual Mardi Gras of St. Dorothea's Roman Catholic Church, Eatontown, had two things it hadn't had in tat UK II years or so: A King and a Queen Funniest Single was Bea Camerota (a hobo) and Prettiest Single was Ann Gehle (flapper ) I But our hat is off to Walter Mull Sr., the Most Original Single, who was completely encased - almost to his knees in a giant green hat. The couple so-crowned were Mr and Mrs. Gerald Taranloio, chairmen of Saturday's gala in the parish's Family Center. Their honor was a surprise administered late in the evening by those persons Involved in the "Memories" group, one of two groups labeled as Best Theme. Participants (costumed to tie-In with all themes of Mardi Gras past) included Larry and Jean Kirk, Ronnie and Leon Bouchard, Peg Try on, Edith and John Crowley, Mary Jane and Dick Maloney, Peg Buckley Peggy Kast and Rita and Jim Finucane. Off to the slopes Before Dr. and Mrs. James C. Kirby, Rumson, took lo the Vermont slopes Sunday ... they took to the annual Skidmore College Club cocktail party Saturday, hosted by Mrs. Dorothy Blakelock, Little Silver The other Best Theme winners (all in red, white and blue ki tribute to the Bicentennial year once-removed) were Ann and Casey Clarke, Marilyn and Harry Smith, Ruth and Ernest Fargo, Pat and SUn Homa, Sheila and Joe Varady, Marge and Joe Kovacs, Anita and Harold Earle and Nadlne and Jim Shanahan. Carol Kirby, you see, is president of the graduates' group; so she had to be there to show her college colors. Among alumni, friends, parents, etc. were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Trent and Mr. and Mrs. George Drawbaugh, Little Silver, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owen, Mr. and Mrs Donald Hembling and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith, Rumson; Mr. and Mrs. Vlto Predale, Mr. and Mrs. John Jacoby, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jaasma and Mr and Mrs. Jared Reid, Colts Neck; Mrs. Campbell Rudner, Lincroft, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ryan, West Long Branch, and - all the way from Princeton Junction, Mr. and Mrs. James Moore-Russell, showing what you might call more-spirit COUNTY FARE The Most Original group dwelt on "Reflections" and were handsomely turned-out as an elderly couple looking back on their lives to the strains of "The Way We Were " Gulp. More Mardi Gras Among the participants (attired to portray babyhood onward) were Renee and Chuck Vlncelette, Jackie and Joe Cost, Diane and Ray Mattson, Rory and Paul Undauer, Pat and Ed Tognola and Julie and Hank Frantzen. John Berth as Marc Anthony and Carol Maloney as a haram girl were voted, respectively, King of Fools and Queen of the Second Annual Mardi Gras at St. Catherine's School, East Keansburg. Judged Prettiest Group were The Mummers. Among But everyone sort of agreed that Mrs. John Treola (whose those who scuffled along to a mummers beat were Ann and BUI Scavuzzo, Judy and BID Scavuzzo Jr., Mary and John major costume part was her apron) was definitely Queen of the Kitchen. She headed the staff that served up the hot and Reuter and Bob Lammerding. cold buffet. The Funniest Group revolved around Bat Man and Robin, with persons dressed up not only as stars of the show, but also Bernadette and John O'Connor, East Keansburg, and Sue as their character chums like the Cat Woman, The Joker, and Ed Corbliss, Port Monmouth, were chairmen of the parEgghead, et. al. In the parade were Al Murashko, Lou Torres, ty that attracted well over a hundred persons. Band members Pat and Sue Hammond, Charlene and Glen Anthony, Fran were put into play to choose the best costumed guy (Larry and Mike Mini and Scott and Kathy Johansen. Martin as Mickey Mouse) and gal (Isabella Berth as Cleopatra) *«n Who constituted the Most Artistic group? Why Cathy and Norm Taupeka, Rita and Joe Kernan and Tony and Carol Bud Brehtn, East Keansburg, came as Pinocchio. Nosing Anne Campl. around, ahem, we discovered that Maureen Brehm came as The Yellow Fairy, in lieu of blue, simply because she had a The Prettiest Couple were Caroline and Nick Sergio, gown of jonquil hue. Now that makes sense. dressed respectively as an angelic angel and a devilish devil. DEVIL STRIKES Nick Sergio, Oceanport, raises his pitchfork In lest to spear Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Tarantolo, Eatontown, while Mrs. Sergio gives out with an angelic smile. Mr. and Mrs. Ta- COLORFUL CLOWNS - Clowning around for the cameraman at the 20th Mardi Gras of St. Dorothea's parish, Eatontown, are, left to right, Nancy and Larry Souvllle, and Lorraine and Germano Govonl, Oceanport. Lifestyle SHREWSBURY. N J rantolo, chairmen of Saturday's 20th annual Mardi Gras at St. Dorothea's, Eatontown, were crowned King and Queen of the gala. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1978 13 PLAIN AND FANCY - Costumes, an option for the Mardi Gras of St. Dorothea's, Eatontown, were donned by Luis Torres and Susan Hammond, Long Branch, left, and shunned by Audrey and Robert Hlrsch, Oceanport, chairmen of the Mardi Gras program book. Register staff photos r THE BEAUTIFUL P E O P L E - J o h n Berth, standing right, and Ca- rol Maloney, seated NUTRI* SYSTEM 2000. The Space-Age Solution To Rapid, Safe, Hunger-Free, Decision-Free Mifekiht-Lost! second from right, both of East Keansburg, costumed respectively as Marc Anthony and a harem g i r l , were voted King of Fools and Queen of the St. Catherine's M a r d i Gras. Other well-dressed partygoers a r e , l e f t to right, Jean and John W e r n e r , P o r t Monmouth, as Bo Peep and Little Boy B l u e ; Isabella B e r t h , East Keansburg, as Cleopatra, and Bud Brehm, East Keansburg, as Pinocchio. y _ Mire pantos, see page II COHEN'S CATERING WINTER CLEARANCE STtU. M PROORE88 M A breakthrough! 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Try Cohan'sJorftyh jrnaata • 0 LEONAAD A VF 2 lay kn. I7M1S4 , wetgtit#toss medical centers MULLANEY REALTY BUILDING 1000 RT.35. MIDDLETOWN. N J . 6714940 14 SHREWSBURY N J WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1978 Annual Mardi Gras CHAIRMEN'S CHECKPOINT - Collecting votes cost for King of Fools and Queen of the Second Annual Mardi Gras at St. Catherine's School, East Keansburg, are, left to right, Bernadette and John O'Connor, East Keansburg, and Ed and Sue Corbllss, Port Monmouth. The couples were chairmen of the event, attended by more than 100 persons. Plea for thoughtfulness Dear Ann Landers: Will you please say something in your column about children (and childlike adults) and their altitude and behavior toward handicapped people? I am a young woman. 24. and have been plagued with cyst acne for many years Only recently have I been able to get it under control The thoughtless remarks, rude questions, and just plain getting stared at were enough to mike a recluse out of anyone Yet my case was mild compared to others who are more severely handicapped, and trying to live a normal life. Why don't people realize that being handicapped is in itself a difficult cross to bear? If the so-called "normal" people would make no references and ask no questions, it would be very much appreciated — Been There and Hated It ANN LANDERS Dear B T and III I'm glad you wrote. It gives me the opportunity to suggest that parents teach their children at an early age not lo stare at people who are "different" and never to ask them questions about missing arms, legs, scars, skin problems, or anything else. It Is natural for children to be curious but they can (and should) be taught to be considerate of the feelings of others This is clearly the job of parents. Teachers can help, too. In fact, I hope this topic will be discussed in a few hundred school rooms today. Dear Ann: To heck with the toilet paper How do the sheets g o ' The gal with whom I'm living says the fancy sheet with the pattern goes design-side down so she can see the pattern when she kicks off the sheets I say the design should be sunny-side up so It can be seen when one opens the bed - especially if it's warm and the blankets are not used Will you contact an authority and settle the matter? She And Me Dear Both of You: I don't need an authority I know the answer to this one The printed sheet should be pattern side up. I might add that the instructions are not one of the ten commandments and anyone who wants to do it another way can. Dear Ann: I am one of thousands of people who work in the Chicago Loop and I use public transportation to and from work six days a week. There Is nothing more aggravating than to have a standing passenger read a newspaper over your head. I wouldn't gomplain but the fibers have a tendency to fall on the seated passenger's head, shoulders and wherever else they happen to drop. Please print this letter because I'm sure the guilty ones don't nave any Idea of what they are doing, - Flakey In The Windy City Dear Flakey: Here's your letter. And now a word Jo til passengers who are reading this column while standing up and holding the paper over somebody's head. Dear Friend: Some papers are flakier than others. Ask the person over whose head you are reading if the paper Is shedding on him or her. U the answer is "yes." apolo8, gize and shake the paper behind y o u . and I hope it doesn't land on someone's blue serge coat. Beans are economical Skidmore College Club plan to soak the beans overnight, it's a good idea to start with a brief boil, as It will help to keep them from souring. Add salt and other flavoring only after soaking, as the During lent we welcome the versatile bean as a meat substitute because its nutritive value is first rate. All the vari- salt tends to toughen the surface and Increase cooking time. To keep down the foam which forms when cooking beans, eties offer us protein, calcium, iron, three B vitamins and potassium — this last to replace what we use In jogging or other try adding a tablespoon of butter or drippings. It is not necessary to skim as the foam will cook its way into the beans. exercise, or what we lose through diuretic medicines. Beans expand when cooking. Remember that one cup of And speaking of beans, they're an economy measure in whatever color or dish, and right now they're plentiful. What dried beans yields 2 to 2% cups of cooked beans, depending on the kind of bean. more could we ask? Beans freeze well. You can cook once and eat twice. They're relatively easy to prepare but do require time in cooking. Dry beans are exceptionally good food bargains. Always known for their high vegetable protein content, once combined with meat, poultry or fish they become a complete and We're talking about dry beans . . . pinks, whites, reds, more perfectly balanced protein. great northerns, pintos, kidneys, blackeyes, black turtle soup Dry white beans are the traditional French accombeans, and navy beans. Each class of bean has its own dis- paniment to roast or braised lamb. The French touch given to tinctive size, color, taste, and use. roast lamb, leg or boned rolled shoulder, add to the goodness For example, let's start with the most plentiful — pinto of the tender plump white beans. beans, They're easily recognized by their beige color and Scented with rosemary, brushed with lemon juice and butspeckled skin. They're especially good in salads and chills. ter, with silvers of garlic slipped Into it, the lamb is cooked to FOOD LINE — Mrs. Edward H. Smith Jr., Rum- Navy beans, including great northerns, are small white beans a delicate pinkness of flesh and juices (the meat thermometer son, right, serves.guests at the annual Skidmore and are used frequently in the traditional baked bean recipes. says ISO degrees F., the oven 325 degrees) with liberal basCollege Club party, left to right, Mrs. Vlto A. PreKidney beans are red and much larger, and, of course, tings of white wine, chicken or lamb stock to keep It moist. dole, Colts Neck; Mr. Smith and Richard and Peg kidney-shaped. They are most popular for chill dishes, in salTo fix the white beans French style use a large heavy Owen, Rumson. ads, and in many Mexican dishes, Red and pink beans are re- kettle or Dutch oven. Add 2 cups large white great northern lated to kidney beans but have a little more delicate flavor. beans, washed, and 5 cups water. Rapidly bring water to the Black beans are used In thick soups and In Oriental and boiling point, boil 2 minutes. Remove from heat, add % teaspoon soda to soften the water. Cover. Let stand 1 hour. Or Mediterranean dishes. To prepare any of the dry beans to briig out their best in cover beans with cold water, add soda. Allow to stand overflavor and goodness, use these guidelines: All beans need night in a cool place. soaking to return the moisture lost in drying and to cut down Add to beans and soaking water 1 teaspoon sugar with 1 on cooking time. Start with a two-minute boil. Even if you tablespoon butter to cut down the foam. Bring to boiling point rapidly Reduce heat to simmer: cover and cook until tender, ELIZABETH - "A Woman with self-awareness, self-asSCHOLARSHIP LUNCHEON about I hour. This may be done in the morning with beans reAlone, Her Lifestyle" is the s e s s m e n t , c a r e e r develtopic of a seminar sponsored opment and personal financial LITTLE SILVER - Mon- a.m. Chicken crepes will be frigerated until needed. by the Jersey Region of B'nal management. mouth-Ocean Chapter of Cen- served as entree. ReservaBEANS IN THE POT: Cut 1 medium onion in thin slices. Brith Women Sunday, March Registration fee for the tenary College Alumnae Asso- tions may be made by con- Cook In 2 tablespoons butter until tender but not browned. 5, here In the Holiday Inn Jet- seminar includes lunch. For ciation will have a scholar- tacting Mrs. J. F. Tartaglla. Mix the buttered onions with the beans. Ladle into a bean pot port, Routes I and 9. or casserole. Cover and place in oven with lamb 1 hour before Information about the semi- ship luncheon Feb. 14 In St. Monroe Ave. According to Alice Welns- nar, contact the B'nai Brith John's Episcopal Church, it is done. After 30 minutes baste the beans with some of the tein, chairman of the Jersey Women's office, 7 Glenwood Little Silver Point Road. The LUNCHEON RESCHEDULED lamb drippings, avoiding the fat if possible; again Just before Regional Board of B'nai Brith Ave., East Orange. RED BANK —The Red serving. Serve the beans with the roast lamb which has been wine, social hour starts at 11 Women, the day-long semiBank Catholic High School garnished with a bouquet of fresh mint or parsley, or add a nar, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., will PTA luncheon, originally sprig to each serving of beans and piping hot thin-sliced meat. feature speakers and displanned to take place yes- The lamb Is juicier if allowed to stand 15 to 20 minutes In cussion sessions of interest to terday In Shore Casino, Atlan- warm place. Have handy coarse-grind black pepper and all women, especially single tic Highlands, has been res- snipped parsley for an added touch to the beans. Makes 10 women. Included in the proOCEAN TOWNSHIP - A special creative cooking sescheduled for next Tuesday at servings. gram are sessions dealing sion, "Fondue, Anyone?," using the new Godlva chocolate noon. Fashions will be by The Sylvia F. Grlffli Is a professor of Cook College awl Extenbars, will be presented in The Market on the upper level at Boutique, Fair Haven. sion Home Economist for Monmouth Couity. Steinbach. Seaview Square here Friday, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Christine Fowler, of the Godlva Chocolate Company, will present the program to which the public Is Invited at no charge. Using fresh fruits from the market, which are Imported COCKTAIL PARTY from throughout the world. Ms. Fowler will create a chocoNEW MONMOUTH - late fondue, dipping the pre-cut fruits Into it and passing out Court Fulgens Corona, Catho- samples to those who attend. She will explore the many poslic .Daughters of America will sible ways of incorporating fondue into special occasion enterhave its 4th Annual Cocktail taining and will have recipes to hand out at the Steinbach speParty in the home of the re- cial event. gent, Dolores Dunzello, Feb. 26 from 3 to 6 p.m. Proceeds will benefit St. Mary's School Scholarship Fund. By SYLVIA GRIFFIN CONSUMER ADVICE Seminar sponsored by B'nai Brith unit BIG ENTRANCE - M r s . Dorothy Blakelock, Little Silver, right, hostess for the annual Skidmore College Club cocktail party, welcomes George and Gall Drawbaugh, also of Little Silver, to the event. Fondue, anyone? MEETING MEMOS DINNER MEETING LALKCHE RED BANK - The Lenape LEAGUE Business and Professional KEANSBURG - The HazWomen's Club will meet let Mlddletown group of LaLeche League will meet tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. for a tomorrow at 8 p.m. here in dinner meeting in Molly Pitcher Inn.•Eugene Malif'f the home of Pamm Studney, and Raymond Licata of the 21 Mason Place. Any exMonmouth Family Center, pectant woman, nursing will speak on "Child Abuse mother as well as nursing inand Neglect. Their Psyfants and interested grandchology, Effect and Treatmothers, are welcome to atment." tend. Contact Mrs. Madeline Dwyer, JJ Lafayette Drive, Hazlet TENNIS PARTY NEWCOMERS MATAWAN - The MataMEET wan Junior Woman's Club is HOLMDEL - The New- sponsoring a Tennis Party comers Club of Colts Neck Friday from 9 p. m. to 1 a.m. and Holmdel will m e e t here in the Matawan Indoor tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. here in Tennis Club. A cold buffet Fellowship Hall of the United will be served. Proceeds will Church of C h r i s t , Main benefit the National Bum Vic Street. Featured will be a Urn Foundation, a project of White Elephant Sale. Tables the federated Junior Woman's are available for the sale of Clubs in the stale. members' items. All newcomers to the area who are residents for less than two years are welcome to attend. ROSE KENNEDY L1NCROFT - Mrs. Ernest Schaflin, 10 Rose St., will be hostess for Tuesday's 8 p.m. meeting of Xi Alpha Sigma chapter of Beta Sigma Phi sorority. Mrs. Ban- QUIST. Locust, and Mrs. Frank Darby, Oceinport. will present a program on Mrs. Rose Kennedy. Mrs. Schaflin will discuss Rachel Carson's books "Silent Spring" and "Since Silent Spring" and their effect upon our concern for the environment. TRAVELOG LINCROFT - The Lincrofl Woman's Club will meet at 7:45 p.m. Feb. 15 in the community room of The Register. Shrewsbury. Mrs. Richard Sohan will present a travelog on Germany. Czechoslovakia and Austria. Persons interested in applying for club membershtp. may contact Mrs. Leslie Cross. Mlddletown. membership chairman, or Mrs. Donald Whittom. Lincroft. club president. JEWELRY COl NSEL^R Hcnssilli's" qualified experts H ill but, redfxigii or appruiite diamond- and oilier precioutt jewelri f<»r private OHiierti, hanks & enlaleo. ATTEND OUR OPEN SEmiNRR THURS. FER 9th 7:00 p.m. at Buy the whole slick with the usual discount Cut any size 20COFF 40C OFF pound price ReR. pound price and find out why COURT REPORTERS PRE IN DEfnflND .. .the need for court reporters Is so great that our placement service has had a 100% record lor the last 7 years. COURT REPORTERS CfiLL (201) EfiRN fl HIGH INCOfTlE Most court reporters earn as much 548-8798 as, and In many coses more than, for Reservations college graduates. SWEET-HOI MUSTARD j SAVE 10c?° " FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION MAIL COUPON TO: RB The Cttone School 1697 Oak Tree Rood Edbon.NJ. 06617 JEUSSILLESS -wry REVOLUTIONARY VALUES BEEF STICK Name_ Address, -SWe. -Phone. .Age_ — Zip. Hickory farms. OF OHIO MONMOUTH MAU Bt 15 Eatontown Ckcto OCEAN COMITY MAU HoofNrAw. To*. Mm SEAVKW SQUAK RLJSARLM T THE SUPER CHEESE MARKET M SHREWSBURY. N J WEDNESDAY FEBRUARYS. 1978 IS Flooding on Front Street in Union Beach Bayshore is hit hard By JULIE WOLF nue in Sea Bright, although fi BOBBRAMLEY access to Sandy Hook is still Host Bayshore. residents permitted, Chief Brey went spent yesterday getting rea- on. He explained that 40-foot qualnled with their sump waves came over the top or pumps and snow shovels in an the seawall along Ocean Aveeffort to put Monday's near- nue, depositing sand and boulders that will take days to blizzard behind them. Conditions in the area clear and washing away the ranged from "horrible" to yards of a number of Ocean "pretty good," according to Avenue dwellings. The road will remain closed until the officials and police. However, shore commu- clean-up has been accomnities were spared the com- plished, he said. plete flooding suffered by Sea Eugene J. Bedell, KeansBright, Monmouth Beach and burg borough manager, reother towns along the south ported the borough "in pretty shore. good shape" at 1 p.m. yesHighlands Police Chief terday. Howard Brey described con"Every street in Keansburg ditions In the borough, where is passable now," he said. flooding was reported in the "The guys were out for 30 Water Witch area, as "hor- hours. We've been able to rible." Equipment failures stay with the storm this time; plaqued efforts of the road it didn't get ahead of us. And department to clear streets of I got some compliments from snow and flooding made plow- the citizens this morning -^H ing Impossible in some lower big contrast to the last time," lying throughfares, the police the borough manager continchief reported. ued. He'added that Bay Avenue, According to Mr. Bedell, the main s t r e e t of t h e Mayor Eugene Connelly sumborough, and Linden Avenue, med up the borough's snow which approaches it from lit effort. "The snow beat Mayor 36, have been declared snow Lindsay, but it ain't gonna streets under a borough ordi- beat me!" the mayor said. nance. With these streets Mayor Connelly was referrcleared, there Is clear sailing ing, of course to New York's for traffic entering and leav- Mayor John V. Lindsay, who ing Highlands, Chief Brey was roundly criticized for his said. alleged inept handling of a Secondary streets in the blizzard in the late IMO's. Mr. BedeU pointed out that borough remain rough, however, with many of them still Mayor Connelly suited his actions to his words. unplowcd. The Highlands Bridge has "He was out driving a truck been blocked off by a Civil himself in the storm. A lot of Defense vehicle to prevent people don't know, they got cars getting onto Ocean Ave- their cars pushed out of snow Make A Date A paid directory of coming events for non-profit organizations. Rates: 12.00 for 3 lines for one day. (1.00 each additional line; S3 DO for two days, (1.25 each additional line; iS for three to five days, $1.50 each additional line; $6.00 lor W days, $2.00 each additional line. Deadline noon 2; days before publication. Call The Dally Register, 542-4000, ask for the Date Secretary. FEBRUARYJ Free public meetings on President Carter's Welfare Reform Plan, Civic Auditorium, Monmouth Mall, Eatontown. 9:30 to 11:30 A.M., 7-9:30 P.M. All citizens are invited to express their views. QUEST, weekly forum for single adults. Unitarian Church. 1475 W. Front St., Lincroft. 8 P.M. No sermons, but lots of no holds-barred-discussion of subjects of interest to single, separated, divorced persons. Nominal dona tion of S3, includes convivial glass of wine and simple eats. You may even get a chance to dance. For sure, you'll get out of your shell. FEBRUARY II The Holmdel High School Band is sponsoring an Indoor Flea Market, Feb. II, at the High School on Crawfords Comer Rd., from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Proceeds to benefit the Holmdel To Harrogate Fund. Spaghetti Dinner sponsored by (he Soldiers ol Christ. Bayshore Community Church. 5-7 p.m. Donation will be $2 50 adults. SI.25 for children (Cancelled from Jan. 21). FEBRUARY 12 St. Agnes PTA will hold a Champagne Party & Fashion Show in the school cafeteria. 55 South Ave.. Atlantic Highlands, from 3-5 P.M. Hors d'oeuvres and non-alcoholic punch will also be served. Tickets: $3.50 at door or call Mrs. V Shea. 281-3944 f~> FEBRUARY H Monmouth-Ocean Chapter Centenary Alumnae Association Scholarship Luncheon. 11:30 A.M. Crepe Demonstration, St. John's Church. Little Silver. Donation: $6 Remittances to Mrs. J. F. Tartaglia, Monroe Ave.. Little Silvery Parents Without Partners No. 644 Meeting, Don Quixote, Rt. 34, Matawan, 8:30. "New Tax Setup For Single People." Dancing follows. Live music. 5M-O170. FF,BRUARY IS Peace Inc. of Monmouth County Nursery School is sponsoring their Annual Chinese Auction on Wed., Feb. lJTat 7:30 p.m.. at Buck Smith's Restaurant, East Keansburg Refreshments served Tickets: $1.50, available at the door. FEBRUARY II The Leonardo PTA is having an Indoor Flea Market 4 Arts * Craft Show, at Leonardo School, Hosford Ave.. Leonardo, W p.m. IS per table. For spaces, 872-0353. FEBRUARY I! Parents Without Partners No. (44 Cocktail Party It Dance, The Hideaway Lounge, 2 Fearey PI., Morgan, 8:30 P.M. Live music Members $1. guests. $4 5M4170. drifts by the mayor," Mr. Bedell said. Mr. Bedell added that he hasn't "enough bouquets" for Hugh R. Bowers, superintendent of the road department, and his men, as well as for the members of the police and fire departments and the First Aid Squad, who worked throughout the storm. "And I feel warm about the people. We all got together this time. The people came out and offered coffee and drinks to the truck and plow drivers. I'm very pleased," Mr. BedeU said. The borough manager also had a good word for the employes of the Hazlet-Keansburg-Mlddletown Joint Flood Control Commission, who stayed on duty all Monday nick when access lo their puVnpin* station was cut off jSysnovjTdrifts. Under the direction of Joseph Pelusio, their superintendent, the flood control men were able to close their 40-ton flood control gate against two 8-foot high tides, preventing inundation of the lowlands protected by the gate and its associated dike system. The closings were made in spite of mechanical difficulties arising from design defects in the gate mechanism, Mr. Bedell emphasized. "We had minor flooding because of the unusually high tides, but the gate was closed and the system held up pretty well. Joe Pelusio can be proud of his men," Mr Bedell said. Union Beach, where 12 families were evacuated Monday night because of flooding, suffered worse than normal flooding because of the storm. "I was flooded in, I couldn't get out of my house," said Mayor Fred Varlese. He said the water lines in his home on Fourth Street froze. There is often flooding on Union Avenue and Front Street during rain and snow storms, but according to police the flooded streets Monday night included Florence Avenue, Pine Street, Edmunds, Bay and Harris Avenues. Front Street was passable yesterday, "but I wouldn't take a chance on it," according to Police Captain Michael Ennis. He said police were caUed to help extract a number of cars attempting to drive through the water on Front Street. In Keyport police reported fair conditions. "The situation is as good as can be expected, the main problem is i t ' s nearly impossible to move a lot of the cars," said the police dispatcher. She said there were still problems on some of the borough's streets. The borough, also along the shore, suffered from sftjne minor flooding on American Legion Drive, W. Front Street and Division Street, police, said. In Middletown Joseph R. Vuzzo, township administrator, reported all major roads open and 75 percent of secondary roads and streets cleared early yesterday afternoon. He added that some 28 plow trucks were scheduled to work through the night in four areas into which the township has been divided to finish clearing of the subsidiary thoroughfares. The administrator said the snow emergency was handled better this time because the township had many more contractors on standby to pitch in and help. "They came in when the snow reached 3 inches. And for some reason we got preferential treatment from them. Our biggest problem was the continuing fall; you'd get one road all plowed out and then come back later and find you had to do it over again," Mr. Vuzzo reported. The administrator reported none of the crank and sometimes obscene telephone calls which plagued township officials and hampered the efforts of all in combatting the first storm of the season. "We got several calls this time from people in town donating their services as drivers or to answer phones. They said since they were home from work anyway, they'd like to help out This didn't happen last time," Mr Vuzzo said. ' The administrator praised the efforts of the road department employes, under John McGowan, superintendent of public works, the members of the police and fire departments both on and off duly who did all they could to help and the Flood Control Commission for getting the flood gate closed and preventing serious flooding in lowlying parts of the township. "The gate helped. We're always worried about flooding in crises like this," he explained. Even so, four families in Port Monmouth had to be evacuated because of flood water. They were housed temporarily in the Port Monmouth Fire Co. firehouse, the administrator said. Fire Chief Charles Widmaier Bald home owners were being asked to remove snow from fire hydrants near their properties so that the hydrants will be accessible In case of fire. In Atlantic Highlands police reported all streets except one cleared by early yesterday afternoon. A front-end loader was reported working on drifts which still blocked a portion of Bayside Drive, the road which runs along the bayfront in Highlands. Hazlet Mayor Gilbert Bennett commended the public works department on the clearing of township streets. Speaking at last night's council meeting. Mayor Bennett joked, " that's why we could have our meeting tonight, the roads are in such great condition." Hazlet police reported that major roads were cleared yesterday and that the sanders were out. Holmdel police said main roads were in "excellent condition" by last night and said they had no reports of accidents. A beach house w a s destroyed because of flooding in the Gateway National Park, Sandy Hook, officials said. Aberdeen police reported good conditions, with no major accidents yesterday, as did Matawan Borough police S*e Prawn's for Combination Storm Doors The boardwalk in Keantbufff it painted white with tnow it could be lough on ice cream and corn-on-the-cob An Important Message from Jersey Central Power & Light Company Coal Supplies Dwindle Conservation by Everyone Is Important The strike by coal miners has caused a shortage of vital coal supplies at electric generating stations in Pennsylvania. The strike, coupled with a greater than normal demand for electricity as a result of the severe weather conditions in recent weeks, could result in coal shortages. Shortages of electricity could follow. Although Jersey Central Power & Light Company burns no coal in New Jersey, we do own a share of a large coal-burning generating station in western Pennsylvania. Also, from time to time, due to generating shortages in our own system in New Jersey, we do import electricity from that state. Coal shortages could mean we would have to rely more heavily on generating stations that burn expensive fuel oil. Coal supplies have dwindled and it will take a while to restore them to their normal levels at the many generating stations in Pennsylvania which burn coal. Therefore, it is essential that we all conserve electricity whenever and wherever possible. Electricity is important to all of us. While we should have enough to go around, your efforts in conserving electricity are particularly important at this time. JCP&L j n n Camrai fn««i t u«M mmaimiiM aim* PM*C u a m Suu SHREWSBURY. N J Business ABCs of cutting your tax bill New York stock quotations wSmm n MI i ACT II I W t Mil JI JO*3 0 * II 17 I t * 17 17 Wt « *» * « '4 - tt * M JI * * 14 . * II* 4 1 ' * * * J I JflJ Hi S I * 13 S I * . Unit III 71 14* IIU.I l k 4- AatnoUl.il | IIS JJ IIH AMtnf Jill 117 14% II Alrct I J I t IU 4111 1JII1 171 • AlSbl I I a . * I II II* It » MM 73* 17 ItV, I t * It IMt H tI I * . 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JJ** M » r m is.il in is nit t i l t * M •rowk JI I m 14* II 14M+ M !»'.-> * •Wt-r JI 7 111 IIM I I H I 11477 SM 33Hn « t - M 7 Tt I I M I I *IIM •tlndl-IO 7 IS 8 M a l l * »M . •urlNo IJO 7 I M « I I M m t « H • u c t g t H l ttll HO 44 43M 44 «1M * 41 IMFlov Soil MHorvl.10 1 1 7 ] IMMIn 1 60 1 16 IrttPoplf 2 1 j y i IMTT 1 717; lowoBI SO 5 61 ItooPSl.tl I Tl l-l - 14 3IH II* ItH 20* IIH ISM I7H 1 7 * a 37% 59'. 17 H MM it1* 30 11'* J»'.« * II** * 17M— * S»H. I't lift • M aM* * MM— M 5** M 14*— . Ill'/, * I '/i 10 14*— M II* 17ft* i H* ISM* M 7M . II** M 17*— M I) 16* * * II*— M atucn MI» i Jin n * n * - M MortlM .40 I KMIyCp * ttm£X mu HMkyO J I • InvOII .Ho I IMktyt MNMu* I IroOvA . « • 1 tMMnUJk UTvM LMCrO .71 I i T H l i 10* IIM I W . M Ut 1M Ilk* ft Toi aM a i t » M * I M M MM M * 14V,. * I 1 7 * 17M I7M . H 15 14 IS II IS II . I! M M IM II I I * W t a i t — M JJ 4 * 4 * 4* t l 5 * 5ft 5 * . * It MM 1 4 * 1 4 * - M » 7 4M 1 • M 10 ft I I I ! ft s i nft n * IJM* M » HI 1ft IVk 1ft* M U I I J » 7ft Tit 7*— * J i l l 17 lift » f t II - ft Ai guidance, first, whether your return will be selected will be based on w h e l h e r you've claimed unusual or large deductions. The IRS also makes random checks of returns, but the odds against your being picked for this audit are comfortably high. If you file Form 1M0A for '77 with under 110,000 of adjusted gross income, the chances that you'll be picked for audit a r e a n exceedingly low 7 out of 1,000 ( t t out of every 100 returns). PntlpD 6049 177 19 PhllMr 11511 J77 W , PhllPtt I.M 9 570 » " . PltntyB PorlGEI 7011 101 I I * Pro<tG 71013 1)1 79'., PSvCol I 4611 204 17". PSvEGIM I 41 2 1 * M * '., W M M % '* '. M % 11'/, ISH MH 141. 1 4 * L •iii 2V 39* 19'. ?l'-> 71* 71 B J6*. '« 11* + * 26* • 10* 16** v. 1SV.« 17'/, • V. S 7 * . ' '.-. 3 5 * - If 27% . 260* . 2% 21*. 19* « 39* 19'1 * 79. + 79'. . I M * * Knlomo 110 » J S * 3 S 35* * Koppr> 1.10 I 17 n 3 1 * II • • Krofl 160 I 40 I I M ISMI K K M Kiogor 1.60 I 140 17M 1 6 * 17M. * — L-L — I'*— M LTV 131 4 * 6% If you are a non-business individual with an adjusted gross income of 150,000 or over, your odds on an audit are a very high 1 out of 8 (12.43 of every 100 returns in this class). If you own a small incorporated business, the odds are based on the size of your corporation's assets. For a non-business individual, with an Income under 110.000, taking standard deductions, the odds on an audit are 0.61 per 100 returns; but Itemizing deductions raises the odds to 4.30 per 100 returns. For those with an income of 110,000 but under $50,000, the odds are 2.46 per 100, but for those with an income of $50,000 o r over the odds are 12.43 per 100 returns. PgSPL 140 9 XI II Pullmn 1.40 I 25 15". Purti 100 I 67 It OuokO 104 11296 j r . OuokSIOWO IS 1 1 ' . « « RCA l . » I 521 15M nollPur 5010 I t n 14'/. llomod Ittll 331 Ift Honto I 04 I I INI Roytnn 19 RrodBol I 7 RllchCh .74 I R.pSII 110 9 RtlvOII 1411 105 31 46 J I M 16 14". 41 2 3 * 192 1 3 * Union 1.1014 119 I) Rlynlr.150 7 141 i t ' ,55'/* RiyMII I SO t 171 »•. 19 RlltAld 32 9 117 17ft17 Roblm 1710 SI 1 0 * Rockwl 1 70 7 M 7 9 * RWiil.ul IS 14 I * •orir 6611 .125 u» RoyCCol I I 7 II RoylD 4 15f 5 1173 •y«rS 5CM For the Individually owned business with an Income under (10,000, the odds on an audit are IK per 100 returns; with an Income of $10,000 but under $30,000, the odds are only 2.10 per 100 returns; but with an income of $30,000 or over, the odds on an audit are 7.85 per 100 returns. S4'« 40 S 12 II I S 17 17*k I7VB Sofiwy 1.2010 35 » H 3IM SJoMn 44 V, 27 I 30 I SILSoF I 50 6 13 IIM S I R H J P I 72 I 97 » 41'to 2 7 * Somboi .60 9 901 I7M The odds on an audit for corporations with assets under $50,000 are 3 39 per 100 returns; It'. SFlInd 120 t 63 34'/k It SFllnl to 7 251 17* 17. 5chrPl0l.il 9 363 J I M Scnlmb I 1014 717 6 9 H ScoMP By JOHN ( I I N N I H SCrEG I t l I H5 ll'/i lift SoCalE 1 24 7 1002 It". 11'. Soult.Col.54 9 446 17 I t * SoNRMl 05 7 62 II'* II* ! SIBrnd I 111 I SIOIICI 1.40 t SlOInd I W 7 SIOIIO(ll36lt IIM 02 76'» 15M ! 413 M ' . 31 366 4 4 * 46M 53 1 7 " . 17>t < LSI 5 IS* IIH 14* 471% 13 ]7Vj t.J7' • — T-T 1.60 7209 HI'. 1 20 9 4 1 i»Vi 7 m i)'. TRW IJjmpE Ixuly 42 Tondyctt 7 Itchncr .40 4 TrKlrni a i l 41 Ttlidn 1.451 4 4 / V Ttlprml 20 71 n 79'. 17* 17'* u im 10' 1 10 >!'. 64'. MMtEal .UK i II BHftl * 17 B JIM » • t a 7 I 11 IW IIM I I M - M UM .4010 17 IIM IIM itH I t * IIM— M 111 M0 U M 13HUM I I * II I I * * M MorOS I.M 7 15 13 1 1 * » * IIM I W UM— M MoytalJOoll I t » ' / , » * »H . lift It lift * M MeO*rml I 2SI I S * U M2S*» * 1ft 1 * 1ft* M McDnla .3014 399 4IM 4SMI 4 M . I M JJ'-t- % McptnDJO 7 I M U M 23M IS McGCOIJO 7 I IS 25 ti#m MM its ii ait tut* MMcOrH I t 14 17H 17H» " . . * Svtlfng a U I I * IIM I I M - M MwdCp I S N 19* I t M IHt 4. * TMMCM I I JM 1 * I M 2SM» M MHvlM.ltlO t ISM 2SM T«n»C » 7 17 I * I » - \ » Wlrctl 1.7015 S37 SIM SS* SSH« M uvinowi B nt 1 * )ft* * MurLy . U l l 330 14'** 1 3 *I I M - H imtroot a va i n JJKIJJ Mni4*lU0IS 147 17H 3 1 3 *7*. I * utnnr JI t M lift DM I M * ftMOM I.Moll 37 a * 34%a M - M UnMI* J > ( > MM I H t IIM* ft MMSUI 1.44 7 779 UM U M UM . IM IM IM* M MMM 1.7011 JM 47* 47M47M— % DWraCatJI 14 4M 4M 4M MlnPL IJ4 I 41 1 1 * 2 1I*I * • M C l M MoMI 4.30 I » »<t 5 t *SV',» M ass? nmn •n 740 SO 13 1711 17% II 73* 13* 41% 143 4 1 * 344 I t * IU, 137 36 IS* 17 14 I t 1 4 * 71'.. 41 w* nv> SO** I7M* '.. . IJ* 4 1 * - * aM— * M 11* » * ISM* % -H-N364 IW 376 36 51 75 M t 107 13 •n 41 63 103 tl IS? 33 117 114 a 171 41'* 16 21 40',. 11* 11* 4V* I4rt IIM 21* »'* IS* 11% 30 J4M 21* 22* 17* ISM 27M 41* • 1 II 11* Alt* * 14MII* » * 21H» M ISH ISH IIH* 30** * II • U IIH OH n1 7 **. 17** % ISH 1S*» M ITH 2 7 * * '4 15ft <OSH 2511* II im 1 0 * 10* 1 1 * J7M I7H424 IS* 22 21* 22 » '* 49'J. I4H 16* 21* 15* IS* II* » * 37 a - During the same period, 4.5 years from 1973 through 1977, the average fell nearly 10 percent, giving those old-fashioned investors with their musty Ideas an advantage of more than 60 percent. Each month the National Association of Investment Clubs picks a stock it feels should be considered for study and possible investment. The guide It uses emphasizes three things: 1. Sales increase over the previous 10 years; 2. per share earnings increase for the same years; 3. price history in relation to past per share earnings to determine if stock can be bought at a fair price. Those who followed the recommendations Just put the shares away. They didn't trade in and out. They didn't try to outgupss the market. They didn't, said Tom O'Hara, chairman, attempt to finagle In any way. Instead, they let their profits accumulate. In- . 30 1 ** •/> I I H - •* 17'.. . 13 * '/. IO'/i4 '1 ItH f,V, IS'.. '* 69'.. I r. I*- '. j>» 1'1. H I 3M 7V>. 7 1 ' . 7 9 ' . . '.. 2 7 I 7** Tworo 117 7'* 4 M Tl.oco 3 1 114 261** '-* 47'/, • I H T K E l l 2 10 1 111 a 1 4 1 ' . 70H • t t IlallltllMII 771 «r . I V . • ', 10', II Tumi 13 19/ 11 JI'.. * 1..OG1 » 1 I M 40',. M T.PcLdllel? 6 n*" » 4 '» T . K U I I I 1.40 1 791 70 IV. I t . t g l t 1 3014 91 1 7 " . Tcilronl 40 7 e l j*'. 71' * * H Thlokol 1.20 7 3 it • »'*< . V, TKrlllv .52 9 41 7»* tlotrlnl SO 7374 UI7 17 * H TlnviM 1 9 52 n1 > Tlmkn7 20o I 31 4 1 ' . 46'. 46'. TWA 3 71J I I ' . IIH* M 14 U'. Tronun K S II'*- . Ironicol 10 7131 19'/* II'. It1* * . J I M 77 7 6 > . Trovlnl.21 5 /•'*• '• IIH Trlcon2.20* IIH* ' . 7 1 H IJ twtnCn 70 4 »»• H TMl Itnnca M 111 tm M IIU UU IUH im / < • ' . IMt tm- '•* IIU BO H M data The averages above do NOT ENTITLE YOU to deduct the totals no matter what your own personal outlays. You may deduct only amounts you actually paid for contributions, Interest, taxes and medical expenses — and if audited, the IRS may require you to prove your claims in the form of receipts, canceled checks, supporting vouchers, etc. Temarraw: Social Security. 1015 4i*t 4 117 I 210 14ft 49". ,4'. 7* ANALYSIS eluding dividends, Dart Industries rose 90 percent since It was chosen in December 1973. Bausch 4 Lomb, chosen In January, rose 60 percent. They weren't t h e leaders by a n y means. Great Lakes Chemical, recommended In May 1973 at $8, closed 1977 at $33.25, a 316 percent price appreciation that becomes 330 percent, with divi- , dends included. National Detroit showed a 30 percent gain, price appreciation and dividends combined. IU International fell 30 percent on t h e s a m e basis. Franklin Electric showed a gain of 48 percent. Guardian Industries, chosen in June 1973, declined 14 percent. Scott It Fetzer, chosen the following month, rose 13 percent, and Wetterau, chosen In August, closed 1977 showing an increase of 10 percent. Royal Crown Cola w a s a disappointment. Cho- Establish investment parameters 1' • V4 SOH 4 IV. I S V , - V. 7 * - Ml Unlroyol SO UnBrond 7 57 7«» 7V, IVt* H . I IN.i' I I 201 7 II 21' j t * n . «* USGypil 60 9 73 13H 13H 1 3 H * ' . . USlnd SI I 154 7 * 7V, 7 * t <«, USSt*«ll.tO17 941 21 17". I I . '» UnTlch 3 t UnlTel I.M I 1040 IS'/* 14", )S'/.< * Uplohn I Ml]272 UH IIH II", . USLIFE .51 1139 34V. J I M 14Vt* '•• 10 1 4 " , ItH IIM — v-v 4010 40 17'., 17". 17'.i* '.-. I E P W I J4 7 117 14". I I 14 itnltKR I I I 57 1 3 ' , 1 3 H 1 ) 1 4 * Copyright b y The A t l o c i o l e d P r c i . 1971 Bond* NEW VOHKIAPI . Twiaay n e l n l e d N.w Yott Slot. E >cluingi bond a, k t t SahTJ .1000 Hlgti Low Cluie Chg ATT6HII 10 79'« WM .T9H coiuG<nSii2 BUSINESS sen In September at $27.75, it closed 1977 at $18.75, a 32 percent price decline reduced to only 19 percent by dividends paid in the 4-plus years. The choices for October, November and December tared better. Standard Thompson showed an overall Investment appreciation of 32 percent. American Telephone it Telegraph returned 59 percent, Dart Industries 90. O'Hara notes that the average 50.8 percent increase over original investment prices was far in excess of inflation during the period, puncturing statements that it couldn't be done. Making the NAIC techniques even more Inter- . esting are that they save on commissions and nervous energy. The association is founded on the assumption that it i s foolhardy t o a t t e m p t outguessing the market. Instead, says O'Hara, Individual investors and clubs too should seek out companies that have been growing faster than the industries of which they are a part, hold them for an extended period, and reinvest dividends. Over any such period it is likely that a stock will have its ups and downs, no matter its merits. But if the decision to buy was wise in the first place, he says, it remains wise during the down periods, too. Rather than submit to panic, the owner of well chosen shares will simply let them accumulate dust, confident that when the time comes to sell they will have accumulated profits as well. IIM - u u • UAL JO t 370 »>* UMC I.M I ItH It' , UVInd 1 5 SI 19 IIH I I * * ' . UnCorblW 6 a s » M JI'. 39H. * UnElec 1.16 V 101 is . UnOCalJ.20 6 IIS SOH HIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIHIINIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIi They can. They have. They bought their stocks In 1973 and simply let them gather dust in the ensuing months and years, while paper profits accumulated to more than 50 percent - W-W LtorSg 60 S 111 I I M 13*II • 1* Wgcltav .60 I t 16* It'/, lift* '/. Lltimn .74* 69 t M 9';. Ht- M WollJml 40 6 »'/, a'/. M'/i* '/i , LnlllF 301 I 17 I3H 2 3 *1 ) ' . • '•* WrnCom.K 7 I I ' . lift l i f t * H 1 7 * * * LOf 3O » 3t 37H 3 6 * WamrLI 1011 2S0 17* 17H 17ft* '/I 27 U g t H 7 SO I 31 I 7 H 37 WihWl I MIO / / ' . IJ". II", * Vt llllyEIII.4013 SIS 4 0 * 3 1 4*0 * * , I1* WnAIrL .40 7 a 75 7H 7 * * Vt Litton .31110 155 I I * U HI I * WnBct I 70 t 71 SOH) 0 * 30",« 'A WUnlonl 40 7 64 It' , UckM I 301 I I * 13 I J * • * ItH I t H - '<* WlltgEI .97 t 413 1 1 ' / . Leran 1.30 I i t 14* 33*3 4 * « K II II Wlytrhr JOIO 195 14 Vk UStor 1.30 7 10 IIM II'* I I ' * - M 74'.. ' . 23'. WhttIF IdlO 34 aVi IIM LILCo IJ3 7 lot IIM I I H iiv. a 1 .*- '<* Whlrlpl I.M 7 IH . L O L O M I . 3 0 I 104 22 3 1 I* 304 II »* WWItMl 7 LOPOC .«b I 300 14* II 14*+ ' * 102 I * . r»- H LuckvS 74O 9 57 I3H UM UH • M Wt.lltakr.20 7 196 I H 7i". 7H. M ". Wllllomt 1 7 LykM » M It 4H« M 12 UV,II IIH 4 tt WlnnD 16411 .Iltlll m II UM.IH _M_M»26 3 7 37 < Vk 3 1 ' . WlnnDgo 21 MIPom< B I I I IIM I0M I I • M MOIC SO I SIS ISH I S * ISM IS 1 " . 3'* 3 % NPnx J t t * 14 «k W H t . Mocmlll Ml m I0H IOMI0H • % Wolwth 1.40 I ISt 11% II IIM.* Vt Mtu 19 a Xt 1ft I H * M Holy ISO 7 110 a M 3 6 36H * mCOO I 44 I 7M I * * iVKHFO I t t H I2'A II1* I I * . M -X-y-j. COaHA.lIt 4 a )M Jft JM MaglcCI [1.40 1 • I H IM Itt . 1.60 9 461 * t " « 4 5 ' / . 4 6 W . 1 PPIM a I 15 11 IS 14— I I I MAPC01II-2OII 112. ISM 3 1 *JSH* '* XtTOK ZolcCp .93 t 35 I t " * I t ' / . I t ' * PEC|> Jill * JJ IV, 1ft lit . •toraKDJO I n l P 4 2 * 4 1 *47", 4 <t PHUWIJ4M i l l 14 DM M » ft MorMlll 14 H I 41 MM I J * piimi j no » * n * ioft* * torla .1110 103 I I M 10HII M M 7 5-11 HI 514-111 MortM I 60 I 394 13H 33%21*« M gross income, a s prepared by the Research Institute of America. Average deductions on adjusted gross income (AGI) of $9,000 to $10,000 - for medical $833, for taxes $873, for contributions $382, for Interest $1,1(4; on AGIs of $10,000 to $15,000 - for medical $570, for taxes $1,068, for contributions $405, for interest $1,274; on AGIs of $15,000 to $20,000 - for medical $506, for taxes $1,446; for contributions $469. tor interest $1,540. NEW YORK (AP) - Can ordinary people using old-faiDiioned investment techniques make money for a four- or five-year period In which the Dow Jones Industrial average declines? 1 4 0 I 117 1 1 ' . 1 1 ' . 1 4 0 7 13 49'/. 4 1 * I 12 7 175 3 4 ' . 33M I 4010 73 7 4 ' . 13' i Saulbb 1.0111 114 II rlon WORTH Ordinary people can beat Dow Smtkln 1.1316 241 U'. a . SonyCp .07*12 741 ' ' . 7«k UPOEC YOUR MONEY'S JI « ' . SlmpPalSOlJ 207 l l ' i II") Slngir tO 5 60 19'. 19' • Skyllnt .4011 41 I I * 13'/. SouPoc SouRy SprryR SquorD Average deductions on adjusted gross income (AGI) of $»,0M to $25,000 - medical $43$, for taxes $1,793, for contributions $5J4, for interest $1,679; on AGIs of $25,640 to $30,000 - medical $300, for taxes $2,215, for contributions $683, for Interest 11,849; on AGIs of $30,000 to $50,000 - for medical $499. for U x e s $2,171, for contributions $930, for interest $2,369; on AGIs of $50,000 to $100,000 — for medical $687, for taxes $5,164, for contributions $2,007, for interest $3,941; average deductions on AGIs of $100,000 and up - for •IIIMI1HI •HIMIIIIHMnilllUNIHIIMIUU' medical f 1,058, for taxes $13,002, for contributions $10,538, for interest $10,445. with assets of $50,000 but under $100,000 the odds Of course, you are not "average"; no one la. are 6 43 per 100 returns; with assets of $100,000 but under $250,000 the odds are 7 92 per 100 re- That word is merely a statistical convenience. And even the averages vary from state to state. turns; with assets of $250,000 but under $500,000 the odds of an audit Increase to 14.55 per 100 re- In New York, for instance, at the $10,000 $15,000 turns, and for corporations with a s s e t s of level medical expenses average less but taxes $500,000 but under $1 million, the odds of an au- more In California, at the same Income level, dit are 18.92 per 100 returns contributions average less than the national totals but interest more. In weighing your own odds, a crucial point is But these totals are a signal to you to be how your deductions compare with the averages sure you have documents t o back you up If of deductions by other taxpayers In your brackyou're way above average. And be sure, too, ets. While the formula by which the IRS computthat you're not overlooking proper c l a i m s If er selects returns for audit is a closely guarded you're way below. secret, It's merely logical to recognize that if WARNING: These tables cannot be used your return shows substantially higher-than-average deductions in relation to your particular like the sales tax deduction tables which are of' income bracket, the chances that your return ficial IRS tables and which give you the totals will be picked for an audit climb sharply. that you generally may deduct on your return without fear of challenge or without having to Here are the latest available national averprove that you actually paid the amounts you age deductions, based on classes of adjusted 74 9 171 IMt IIM SmOCL) JO S 19 14' , 14V. S t o r l t G 5211 176 13 1 2 * Storl .91 9 1154 7 t ] * 2 5 ' / , StxIIOIIIJO t 304 2 9 * 2 9 " , IMIIT I I I -S I I P ' . 37'a Shrwln I . M II »'. IS* Signal 1.36 t SI 7 1 ' / . 21ft SunCo IH 32*— ', 14* 4 '. m 14 1 7 74 I I * Pltllln I H I 170 U • Pmtimo 1 S I I 17'. Polorold MIO 199 25". 60'** FlyOtoO t » J I * t l * I t * - M KUIogOl M i l I t 21'/, 2 2 *13M PMMA J I 7 ttk I * lit * M Kwnct JOII07137 2JM 2 3 *IIM GUI JtU J 4* 4M 4MK i r r M I 75 t 74 I I M 4 1 *II'* OalVMI.IStlt l « lift IIM lift* M KlmbCllJO 7 IS4 4ltt - 41 v, I I * - % OlWlUK 17 15 11 I ! 14 It-U . C4k1dl«t II Ht IM ! * - M aHMllP I t 117 M IM IM ir you're i t all typical, even before you start on your 77 tax return you're wondering about your chances of being audited — and perhaps being caught by the IRS without proof of some claims 1.40 I 133 14",14* 3 I I45J 1 1 * »v> I ID 7 S9 M*k70'. I JOIO 154 I I M »' I 40 7 25 17 I J97 b't 1.60 7 SI 4 0 * I 41 9 S3! 14". I 92 7 114 ?J . SloulChl.H 7 12 I t ' . SlirlDg 7010 >I99 I4H IS** M Slivinjl » 5 21 IS 14 - If I) • M SluWor I . M 5 167 49*» ?•'. «'.. 64'-. 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Auoclotid P r n i 1971 ITOCKI III TMIIPOTLIOHT By DAVID R. SARGENT iinniniiniii iiiiiiiinii m n SUCCESSFUL INVESTING Q - My wife aid I, age 54, have 12,Ml U l i v e s l a i d would like ytir advice. We Hold Ike Ullcwlag (11*1 ea elesed) Ii IM share blacks. MiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiMHiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii P.V., Nebraska are sufficiently flexible to enA — Before investing your compass such a mix. But at additional cash, you should any rate, it might be prudent e s t a b l i s h a s p e c i f i c in- to at least determine what vestment objective. Your cur- sort of stock you now want to rent holdings run the gamut add to your list. Do you wish from ultraconservatlve to out- increased income, or are you right speculation. Perhaps willing to forego a high curyour investment parameters rent yield in favor of longer Cleveland Electric (NYSE) Is certainly a quality income vehicle with good dividend growth potential. The company recently boosted its annual dividend rate to $1.84 from $1.76, making 1977 the 20th successive year of plumper payments. Holiday Inns Market logs strong gain NEW YORK (AP) - The trading yesterday at 11 a.m. stock market rolled up its EST, an hour later than'usubest gain In nearly three al. months yesterday, undeterred Given the delayed opening by a snowstorm that delayed in New York and the absence the start of trading in New of many investors because of York. the weather, analysts were Analysts said the rally was reluctant to draw any sweepinspired by favorable reports ing conclusions about the from several leading com- market's mood from yespanies and hopes that a com- terday's showing. promise agreement might be But they said those traders looming in Washington on who were active seemed to be energy legislation. seeking to build up their hold- V, series of favorite corporate developments since the start of the week: Real Estate — General Motors' report of a 17 percent rise In fourth quarter profits; — Sears Roebuck's decision to increase its quarterly dividend from 24 to 28 cents a share, and to declare a IScent special payout; — An increase in Xerox Corp.'s quarterly dividend The Dow Jones average of ings of stocks on the belief from 40 to 50 cents a share; P«nlCo HMO » 30 industrials jumped 10.23 to that agreement on an energy — A statement from Du JaponFM 344.600 IV* HowrdJotin 301.300 I I H * '* 778.85 for Its sharpest adbill might come in the next Pont Co. that It expected imowing ItlJOO I f H * l KolllnPut proved sales and earnings for 149,100 UVk 4 Vk vance since last Nov. 10, few days, providing a stimuPocC E 145.300 1 3 * « Vt when it climbed 14.12. lus for the market. itself and the chemical InColgPolm 140,000 111* - Vt Gainers outpaced losers by OtuMoton '31,500 S9H .IV* Brokers also pointed to a dustry as a whole this year. Tyltffofp IUJJM I I H t I t better than a 1-1 margin Ouok.rOol 119,400 II • • SionRt. 12S.M0 16V, 4 H among New York Stock ExDoyolDut II7J00 SI - VI Citicorp 101.100 TOM- * •* change-listed issues. The BtrktvPno 101,100 SM • v t NYSE's composite Index of UnllTtch 104,000 IS". * >> •D Its listed common stocks DOWJONIIAVtltAeEl rose .44 to 60.08. Ntw York(AP) FlnolDow-Jomiavtrogt! ITOCKI Volume on the Big Board Optn High Low Cloie Cfto came to 14.73 million shares Mind 7M64 rW33 761 62 77115*10.23 lOTm 111 41 3 1 1 I I 31161 213.41* 1 12 against 11.63 million the day ISUII I0S4I 10*15 104 97 101 i l « O.M USIk 770 91 37311 77017 273 12* 2JS before. Indul 1,141,300 Tran 317,100 The NYSE and the AmeriWill 131,700 ean Stock Exchange, both of 1.714.000 which cioaed two hours early B7O-0Ot Monday after the snowstorm ' 10 PuMIc Ulllllln 91,05-0 I I 10 IndmlfHIl IS 34-0 05 hit New York City, began CommodllyfulurcilndtK 33406.007 NEW YORK I API- Soltl, I p.m. prlci ond ntl thong, ol tht rifittn moil ocllvt N.w York Stock 6.change I s l u n . trodlno nttllonollv al mori than I I . i see no reason for changes in your remaining three holdIngs. All provide at least moderate yields, are of reasonably good quality, and have average capital appreciation potential. With your additionTWA ( a l s o on t h e B i g al money, If you wish to inBoard) has been benefiting vest in another Income verecently from a pickup in hicle, you might consider traffic, higher fares and an improved financial condition. Southern Pacific, a well situIt is Important to realize, ated rail. For conservative however, that the airline in- growth, Kmart would be an dustry i s marked by ex-appropriate addition. And for tremely erratic operating re- the chance-taker, Ethan Allen sults, generally with occasion- (OTC), a furniture maker, al deficit years. Therefore, all might prove rewarding This stocks In the group are suit- latter issue Is selling at a reaable for therisk-orientedin-sonable P/E and at 25 percent below book value. vestor only. (NYSE) is attractive for longer term growth. Future earnings should be enhanced by controlled expansion as well as by the upgrading of existing facilities. term capital appreciation? Do you want a relatively safe stock, or is this money with which you can afford to take a chance? Before tossing out some general suggestions, let's look at your current list. By ANTHONY J . CAMASSA TAX VK mm YOU BUY REAL ESTATE H a IOU buyra*lH M , rut f ViniWa Mart a—n**^F*jrJ»i-W»jW«il-ai. t^^iaBBiatTfr IM>1V WW VIO 6 - Tjjiiji ti cute taiM a n pro-raM M D H K tjapo^a — w MuMtWI. II Ni lh» Hu»w and MCW to t u . awpureh purchm prtc* at *m rad •aen paya hi* •ach hit raaptttlv* r»p«cti«* MM* • ! attar*. In son* localltUt ^ . M r dueiloj.1. w ™fcring• » jr*ar tha tain at* actually Tin <*m M—Hunt nducllMo, howfttr. noil ol then can b« add** «olh» COM w I N IVM oMHt wnvn l M l «. Thi t*K* wa h« r r an. It k m /• anytVng m an do to Mp I W In * • thk) ol n»V ^•^alwj ^^9w99 poOOv Vw OFOfl fn . . . mt'n h»n to hUpl CAMA33A AOBHCY. 1$, Ocfinporf Aft., W. Long ftane*. moat ttMf M m * ftrktt Art., unit Hint, p*or*nT4tu (Editor's Note: Realtor Camassa is a Past President of fh* Monmouth County Board ot Realtors and was named HWa l«v of the Year lor 1976 by the New Jersey Assoc t W I fOfS) SHREWSBURY N J WEDNESDAY FEBRUARYS. 197B T h e DtaVy R e g i s t e r 17 Cavaliers get hotin cold coliseum B) Tfcr Associated I'ress The Cleveland Cavaliers had a little supnse for the New Orleans Jan, but Mother Nature and the Chicago Bulls had an even bigger one waiting (or the Philadelphia 76ers. The Cavaliers had the unenvieable task of trying to lake a little (Ire out of the red-hot Jan, who had won 10 straight. They did even better — they took the steam out of the Jazz, literally. The game was played in the Richfield Coliseum where a combination of zero-degree temperatures outside and a court set over the Coliseum ice created a frigid effect. The end result was that It was so cold that players for both teams were provided with hot water bottles to keep their hands warm The bottles seemed to work wonders for Cleveland and one little used guard, Terry Furlow Tin glad they had them (hot water bottles), because without them maybe this wouldn't have happened," Furlow said after scoring a career-high 22 points in leading Cleveland to a 122-99 victory. Philadelphia wasn't as lucky as the Cavaliers. Not only did they have the cold weather to brave, but a hectic bus trip from Philadelphia to Washington for a plane ride to Chicago for the game. "I got up at 6: IS this morning," 7ters Coach Billy Cunlngham said, "but I couldn't get a yes or no answer from the Bulls on whether the game would be played. I didn't know whether or not to tell my players to shovel their driveways or else meet to take the bus." The 7ters did not arrive at the court until game time and the start of the contest was delayed 75 minutes. Despite the trip, Philadelphia held a Upolnt lead in the third quarter only to see Chicago reel off a 164 spurt and eventually go on to score a 106-106 victory over the 76ers. "I'm very proud of our team after all the adversity on what must have seemed a harrowing experience," Cunningham said. "But we simply ran out of steam. But for me, this 18 hours has been the longest of my life. I'll never forget that bus ride through ghost towns and all those abandoned vehicles." In other NBA action, Los Angeles bested Buffalo 132-105, Boston edged Indiana 92-89, Golden State trimmed Washington 105 102 and Portland at New York and New Jersey at San Antonio were snowed out Furlow hit 10 consecutive free throws to spark a secondperiod surge that carried Cleveland to its thler third consecutive victory and moved them past the Jazz into third place in the NBA Central Division. Balls 1H, 7fcn I N Artis Gilmore scored six points in the fourth quarter before fouling out with less than two minutes to play, and Chicago hung on to defeat Philadelphia. GAIL FORCE - Gall Goodrich (25) of the New Or- fin Carr of the Cleveland Cavaliers, leans Jazz drives past Jim Chones, right, and Aus- Philadelphia had its threegame winning streak stopped as the Bulls defeated the 7(ers for the third time this season Laken IB, Braves IN Lou Hudson and Adrian Dantley combined for 53 points to lead Los Angeles as the Lakers handed Buffalo its ninth consecutive loss — the team's longest losing streak since they dropped the final II games of the 1972-73 season. Hudson and Dantley each had 10 points in the opening quarter as the Lakers jumped to a 3719 lead and never looked back (eWcstt, Pacers » Sidney Wicks and Dave Cowens each sank two free throws in the final minute as Boston won its fourth straight game - the team's longest winnning streak this season. The Pacers, who trailed by 16 with 4 0 6 left in the third quarter, rallied to tie it at 88 on Ron Behagen's layup with 1 07 left in the game. Wicks made two free throws with 44 seconds left and Behagen went to the free throw line three seconds later, but missed his second shot to give Boston a 90-89 advantage. Cowens, who led Boston with 18. then hit two free throws with 36 seconds left to lock up the Celtics' victory., Wanton IN, BiuVts I d Rookie Rickey Green hit a field goal with 14 seconds to play to break a 102102 tie as Golden State defeated Washington. The Warriors had taken a 100-06 lead with a little more than two minutes to play on a pair of free throws by Sonny Parker and another on a technical foul made by Rick Barry. The Bullets tied the score on consecutive field goals by Kevin Grevey and Klvin Hayes, who led all scorers with 25 points. NBA standings U I T U N CONF X I NCf MMMIC Olvllle* 1 Philodelphk. J4 19 « • • York M « Ballon II 10 Buffalo It 31 Newjeney CeMrel O l v l i M Son Antonio 11 It WmhlngKn M 14 N«.Orltooi M » Cleveland 35 34 Allonto 34 17 Houtton II II WIITIKN COMF E MNCf MMhml DMMM 440 II 1S1 B CMcooo Milwaukee Detroit D 17 t II KonmClry II H n it »v a HO 510 SIO </l Portland Pnoenli Seattle Golden Hole LolAngelei U i Angelei i n . outtolo IDS Clevelond I n , New Orltont w Chlcogo tot, PhUodelpMo 106 Botton n. Indloro I t Golden Stall 105. Woihinalon 103 Portland at New York, ppd, inow New Jerwy at San Antonio, pad .wow mmimi 0*»m m m 0* » Indiana at New JtfMy. 1:09 p.m. New Orleoniot Philadelphia,1:05pm. Bo«on at Koniot City. I 15 p m PXlltC DI>IUM 40 I M II 77 77 34 » 75 M II IS", lift B left Bufiolo ot Mllwokee. I : » p . m . Lot Angela* at Detroit. t:0Sp.m. Chicago ot Houilon. t M p m Atlanta at Denver, » JS p.m. waihlngton ot Seattle, I I p.m. m ' O mnenl Owel Indiana ot New York. 7 X p m Portland ot Cleveland, 1:09 p.m. Houston at San Antonio. • » p m Atlanta at Phoenln, t : H p.m. Denver ot Golden Slnte, 10:10pm. f Creighton chokes over Marquette's BLT' By The Associated Press The Creighton Bluejays got a bad case of indigestion when a "BLT" was shoved down their throats at the Milwaukee Arena. "BLT," in this case, was not a bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwich but a giant-sized helping of "Butch Lee Time" — an expression former Marquette Coach Al HcGuire coined for the Warriors guard who feasted on the Bluejay Plate Special Tuesday night. Whitehead scored two baskets each to give the Warriors an 82 lead before Creighton pulled even. Lee added eight points in a 12-point run that gave Marquette a 20-8 lead that was challenged only slightly. The Bluejays alternated defenses in the first half, which ended with Marquette ahead 3424. But Apke kept his charges In man-to-man coverage after intermission and that played right into Lee's hands. Lee collected 30 points in the third-ranked Warriors' 82-57 joyride over Creighton, helping Marquette improve its record to 18-2. "I can handle the ball good and I'm quick," said Lee. "I can create a lot more situations against a man-to-man. Those situations are not there against a zone. "We tried any number of players and defenses on Lee and we couldn't even slow him down," marvelled Bluejays Coach Tom Apke after Lee had pulled within a point of his career-high performance. "Then, when you're able to do those things, you get wanned up and the adrenalin gets going. Then everything starts going for you." "I'm not sure that the only player who could stop Butch Lee one-on-one Isn't Butch Lee himself, by getting in foul trouble or losing his concentration or somethig like that," said Apke. "We had it down to eight with a chance to cut It to six, and then - to quote an old friend (HcGuire) - it was 'BLT.'" But it had been BLT virtually from the start. Lee and Jerome Meanwhile, there wasn't much happening for Creighton. "We felt that by playing man-for-man in the second half we wouldn't shut them down completely but we'd move better offensively," said Apke. "But that's a two-edged sword. If I had it to do over again, I'd play more zone." But Apke doesn't have it do do over, and he didn't sound overly upset about that. "Marquette is an awesome team," he said. "If (top-ranked) Kentucky is any better than that, I'm just glad we don't play them." If it was any consolation to Coach Apke, Rick Apke led 12-7 Creighton with 17 points. Eight of those points pulled the Bluejays within 48-40 early in the second half. College basketball Elsewhere, No. I Louisville hammered Tulane 11506, llthranked DePaul downed Duquesne 83-58; No. 12 Texas toppled Rice 102-86 and No. 18 Syracuse lost 97-83 in an exhibition game against Athletes in Action. 4 Tulane was way behind by halftime, when the Cardinals led 47-33 and cruised to their 15th victory in 18 games to improve their conference conference slate to 6-1. The Green Wave, topped by Mark Fletcher's 22 points, staggered to 318 and 0 9 in conference play. William Disc came off the bench to score 22 points and lift 19-2 DePaul over Duquesne. .Gary Garland managed 14 points for Duquesne, which committed 27 turnovers and sagged to 8-11 as a result. A 36-point performance by Jim Krivacs paced the 19-3 Longhorns past the Rice Owls, who got 24 points from Alan Reynolds but dropped to 4-17 and 2-9 in the Southwest Conference. Texas is 11-1 in sectional play. Ricky Gallon and Darren Griffith each scored 22 points to carry the Cardinals past outmanned Tulane in a Metro-7 conference clash. Forward Tim Hall scored 24 points, center Ralph Drollinger added 21 and Brad Hoffman collected 13 assists as Athletes in Action surprised Syracuse. Marty Byrnes scored 34 points for the Orangemen. "Let's face it, Louisville is a better ball club,".admitted Green Wave Coach Roy Danforth. "Once we get way behind a club like that, we can't catch up." Meanwhile, Bradley beat Butler 98-82 behind 27 points by Roger Phegley and John Lowenhaupt scored 21 points to carry William & Mary past Navy 70-62. Red Wings given boost in bid for playoffs By Tie Associated Press Thanks to the National Hockey League's new playoff format, a team's position in the standings isn't as important as the number of points it accumulates. A victory by one team might affect two or three others, just as it did Tuesday night when the Detroit Red Wings defeated the Los Angeles Kings. After Reed Larson and Rick Bowness led Detroit to a 2-1 triumph over Los Angeles, Red Wings Coach Bobby Kromm explained the game's significance. "We're concerned with beating out Pittsburgh and the (New York) Rangers for a playoff spot," he said after the triumph gave the Red Wings a two-point edge over the Rangers in the battle for the final "wild card" position. Detroit has played two fewer games. Left wing Dan Maloney was a bit more to the point about the significance of the victory. "We're sick and tired of not making the playoffs," he snapped after helping beat his former Kings teammates. Detroit has not made the playoffs since 1970 and "we're working hard In that direction this year," said Maloney. "We're aggressive and we're winning the battle in the corners." . Peagilas 4, RtKkies 2 Pittsburgh goalie Denis Herron wandered a bit from his net Televised sports WEDNESDAY HOCKEY - New Ytrk Islaiders vs. Chicago Black Hawks, l . » p.m. CiaaaeU THURSDAY BASKETBALL - Rutgers vs. Matsach.selts, » p.m., Chanel H but made 42 saves to help the Penguins extend Colorado's, winless streak to five games. "I thought we were going to have to tie him to the cage," said Pittsburgh Coach Johnny Wilson after Herron once ranged 30 feet out of his crease to parry a breakaway by the Rockies' Wilf Paiement. Rick Kehoe scored twice (or Pittsburgh, giving him seven goals in the last six games and 22 for the season. J ean Pronovost added his 31st to keep Pittsburgh a point ahead of Detroit in the wildcard struggle. Nelson Pyatt scored twice for the Rockies. Flames 4, Cancks 1 Enc Vail, Bob MacMillan, Guy Chouinard and John Gould scored the first-period goals that carried Atlanta past Vancouver. NHL standings WAL«1CONFIKINCE N*rrtt DtvlHen • L I ntF W Montreal JS 7 I 71 110 113 LolAjvgetet B I t 10 54 1U I O Plthourgh II B II 47 175 W Detroit » a I U 147 lei 1 t II II It lit Me MamDMlten g it 7 n M m S M 11 71 IK Itf H U M 41 I N U I It 31 S 41 IM lOt Ptmpuron 4. Colorado 1 Atlanta 4. Vancouver 1 Detroit 3. Lo> Anoelei I M l m a o t a o t New York liMnaeri. ppd., CUVIILl C O W I U K I NTlK* MtMM NYltfonoen I II I 73 31. in PMMelpMo > I] 10 70 MS 111 Atlanta Jl » 11 X l«4 171 NYRongeri 17 75 Id 41 171 I M Chicago Vancouver Cotorooo W bnytke Divltle* I I 17 11 J4 I M 171 14 14 U 41 151 in II > II 14 lit IM ii a 7 it in in Butloloat Cleveland. I:OSp.m. New York lUondtn ot Chicago. I p.m. New York Mtonnoto at New York Ronoeri. 7: JS "2. LouKot Toronto. I B p.m. II H i 77 ! • Itl totgm at Buflolo. I 05 Vancouver at PnltadelDhla. 1:05 p.m. Boiton at Detroit. 1:09 p.m. Chicago ot Monlnol. 1:15 p.m. AttantootLoiAnoelev 11:05 p.m. HOCKEY - New Ytrt Raigers vs. Buffalo Sabres, I p.m. Cbaiaell SATURDAY BASKETBALL - Syraease v s . West Vlrglila, 2 : « p.m., ChaaaeH BOWLING - Ditch Masters Opea, > : » p.m., Caaaiel 7 BOXING - WBC Wetterwelgat Ckampbashlp, Carln PaltThe local sports scene came to a screeching halt as a re• a * vs. Ryi Ssrlmachl, 4:11 p.m., Cfeauel 4 ICE SKATING - NaOwul Flgire Skatlag Ciimpl.isilp, i sult of the snowstorm that dumped 17 Inches of the white stuff. Yesterday's entire sports schedule was wiped out, but »,•., Chanel 7 HOCKEY - New Yerk Raagert vs. Ttr.it* Maple Leafs, I seven of the boys basketball games have been reset. Hie Long Branch-Neptune, Shore-Keyport, Middletown , SUNDAY North-Raritan and ManasquanRumson-Fair Haven games BASKETBALL - Nerti Carallaa vs. FravMa.ee, 1 p.m., have been rescheduled for Monday while the Southern-Central game will be played tonight. Q M M H ( a r t s vs. Nets, 1:45 p.m., Chanel I The Toms River North at Jackson game will be played Deaver N.ggett vs. Pwtlaad Trall.laiers, 4 p.m., Chauel I Saturday. BOXING - tailed States vs. Cika, M S p.m., Chaaiel 7 No new dates have been set for the Wall-Middletown GOLF - Bt* Htft Desert Classic, 4 p.m., Ckaaael 4 South, Ocean-Matawan, lakewood-Brick, Howell-Toms River SOCCER - Hamhwj Sptrt Ctah vs. Stattgar. SMHI Clih, 7 South, Asbury Park-Marlboro, Monmouth-Freehold Township, Point Pleasant Boro-Manalapan, Red Bank-Holmdel, Point BOCKEY - I s t u d e n vs. ClevetMd B a m s , I p.m., Chanel Pleasant Beach-Freehold, Henry Hudson-Keansburg, St. Peter's, S.I.-Red Bank Catholic and St. John Vtanney-M.ter Del I BLOCKED OUT — Los Angeles Kings defenseman Randy Monery (2) blocks out Detroit Red Wings center Dale McCourt, left, from a possible rebound play yesterday In Los Angeles. Kings goalie Rogle Vachon (30) begins his move for the save as Kings Dave Hutchlnson (4) reaches for the puck. Mother Nature wipes out sports slate contests. was to host Delaware Valley. Freehold and the Meadowlands racetracks were closed St. Peter's basketball game at Iona College in New Rochfor the second day in a row due to accumulations on the elle, N.Y., was postponed until Feb. 20, said Linda Bruno of the Iona athletic department. ovals. Not all sportsmen minded being snowbound. Rutgers' Scarlet Knights basketball game against the University of Massachusetts was posponed until Feb.. J.at 8 p.m., "We have a moderate crowd today, but in accordance according to Rutgers spokesman Bob Smith. with the governor's wishes of keeping traffic off the road, we Upsala CoUege postponed its game against Medgar Evers are closing down at 8:00 tonight," said Debbie Dowden, who works at Great Gorge ski resort. College until further notice. In the New Jersey State CoUege Basketball Conference, Cralgmeur opened its slopes in the early afternoon, more the game between the Southern Division's first ranked Ke«n than four hours late. Owners there were offering an all-day and Jersey City State, ranked first in the Northern Division, ticket at a savings of IS, so that those who did make it over the roadt were able to ski until 10 p.m. was postponed until Wednesday night at 8 p.m. Falrieigh Dickinson's campuses In Teaneck and Madison "It looks like Aspen. Colo., with the names," said a depostponed their games, according to campus security. Tea- Ughted Dkk Murray, owner of Craigmeur. "We're pretty well neck was scheduled, t o take on Sienna at home and MadUon plowed out." 18 TheCMyRcgtetcr SHREWSBURY, N J WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY a 1978 Namath: Television teacher in the making NEW YORK (AP) - Hey. all you hero worshipers, the next time you see Joe Namath he probably will be standing in front of a classroom with chalk in hand or in a gym blowing a whistle at a bunch of scampering kids. Can you visualize pro f o o t b a l l ' s most c e l e b r a t e d quarteback, the swinger with the full-length mink coat and lama rugs as a high school teacher and high school coach1 WILL GRIMSLEY That he confides, is his propsective next step now that he has retired from football But it's not for real. It's something that can be found in the head of one of those Hollywood producers. " I ' m making a pilot for a television series," Joe explained "Shooting starts next week The script calls for me to be a teacher and a coach. I've always thought 1 would like to be a teacher " It's what they call In the trade a sit-com. or situation comedy I f it clicks, Broadway Joe will be seen in one of those weekly half-hour series He will become a rival of I "Welcome Back Kotter" and Fonzle in "Happy D a y s " This is the sort of priceless information one gets when he is snowbound by the fiercest blizzard to strike the East Coast in SO years Tum a TV knob and there is Sal Marchiano, one of Roone Arlidge's crack sports corps at ABC. interviewing the former Super Bowl Hero in his Los Angeles Ipartment Namath, besides telling of his Immediate plans, reiterated his aim to make It in show business "There are so many people who can act better than I can," he admitted, "but I will work hard " Marchiano asked Namath when he actually decided that he will not play any more after the 1177 season. "About six weeks into the season." said the 11-year veteran who lost his quarteback job to Pat Haden I was standing around at practice doing nothing. I wasn't contributing anything." "What will you miss most?" the sportscaster asked. "The people — I will miss the people I've been around," Namath replied "What will you miss the least?" "The press," Joe said sourly. He gave the Impression he wanted to spit Aw, c'mon Joe that's a disillusioning legacy to leave us. "What do you mean, press?" — every guy who crowded around your locker during those glory years with the Jets, every guy,who dared ask a question, ridiculous or legitimate? You paint with a broad bush the jet-set but it behooves an athlete who is hoisted to fame and fortune through public exposure^ Of the hundreds of sports greats down through he years only a handful had been unable lo cope with this Important (actor in thftr careers i Some have been arrogant, spoiled by quick succ ess . T h e y don't need the press They can look down their notes at it There have been those with tough beginnings who became introverted and suspicious Then there have been the j u « plain nasty. Most mellowed with age. Arnold Palmer, the goiter, should open a school on press relations for athletes His credo: respect and understanding^ To him. there is no general "press" - just individuals each to be treated as a person ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Area boxers make mark The Middletown PBA submitted six entries and came away with three winners In the first annual Junior Olympics held at Indian Hills High School in Oakland. Pat Trollan displayed a devastating left hook in shaking Curtis Peterson of the Trenton PAL and taking a unanimous three-round decision. Mark Shopp. competing in the intermediate class, got a three-round decision over Shawn Brown of the Trenton PAL. Scott Carbone made a successful debut by decisloning Arthur Hall of the Irvingtnn PAI. BASEBALL New York Yankees' Mickey Rivers, Willie Randolph. Roy White, Gene Michaels and Chris Chambliss will be among the featured baseball players who will play a charity basketball game at 6 p.m. on Sunday at Ocean Township High School County SportsWorld REACHING FOR A SPAR - World heavyweight champion Muhammad All donned a plastic sweat suit to help shed some pounds as he sparred for- mer heavyweight contender Jimmy Ellis. All defends his title against Leon Splnks on Feb. 15. Kiilm attempts to free A's Baseball Ctmmlssloaer Bawle Kaha has launched a new attempt to free the Oakland A's of their Oakland Coliseum contract so the American League baseball club can move to Denver. "The rommisstoner feels very strongly we're heading into a real catastrophe" if the A's remain in Oakland and the National League Giants remain in San Francisco. Coliseum President Robert T. Nahas said. The OMW-delayed, I . M t m i l e bicycle odyssey or Philadelphia Phillies' relief pitcher Tug McGraw and four other athletes began, one day after a major storm dumped 14 inches of snow on the Philadelphia area. The bike trip between Veterans Stadium here and the Phillies' spring training base at Clearwater. Flu., to benefit muscular dystrophy had been scheduled to get under way Monday McGraw was toined on the jaunt by the Phillies' two best pitchers, Steve Carlton, the National League's Cy Young Award winner, and 18-game winner, Larry Christenson; utility outfielder Jerry Martin; and unemployed pro quarterback Roman Gabriel. Eddie B » k s f i t t e r of Hall of Fame baseball player Erale died in Dallas, Texas, a spokesman for the Chicago Cubs said. Sports briefs The elder Banks, who was 83, died of pneumonia Funeral services were incomplete. The younger Banks, a former Chicago star, is in the front office of the Cubs' organization. T i e Seattle Mariaers have signed a three-year agreement with the city of Tempe, Ariz., for the use of Tempe Stadium as the site of the American League team's spring training and winter instructional programs, a team spokesman says. The T m i U Btae Jays might be one of the richest teams in major league baseball, but so far two of its most respected chatels have been unable to crack the vault. Neither Dave Lemanczyk, their outstanding pitcher, nor infielder outfielder and rookie of the year Bob Bailor have come to terms after prolonged negotiations with the secondyear American League team. In other action, third-seeded Betty Stove of the Netherlands beat 17-year-old Caroline Stoll of Livingston, fy>J . 6-4, 62 and JoAnne Russell of Naples, Fla., downed Mona Guerrant of Scottsdale. Ariz.. 8-1.6-1 in rirst-round matches Fifth-seeded Wendy Turnbull of Australia advanced to the quarter-finals of the week-long tournament with a 8-3,7-6 victory over Nancy Richey of San Angelo. Tex In a doubles match, Stove trammed with Kathy Harter of Culver City, Calif., to beat Mariana Simonescu of Romania and Ruta Gerulaitas of Kings Pount. N Y . . 1-6, 6-2, 6-3 FOOTBALL Firmer Kansas All American John Hadl will join the Jayhawk football coaching staff next week, the Wichita Beacon said The 37-year-old Lawrence, Kan., native played his 16th season in the National Football League last year with the Houston Oilers. versus an all-star men's team from the Monmouth Jewish Community Center league. The major leaguers will be available for autographs at halftimc Tickets for the event are available at the Center. TRACK Monmouth County was well represented at an indoor track meet at Widener College recently. John Marshall of Long Branch, running for Lincoln University, set a new school mark in the 300 in a time of 32.7. John Blanton, another former Brancher, had a 32.5 time in the event but was disqualified. Blanton. also a student at Lincoln, copped a second in the 60-yard dash First place in the dash was wan by JoeTaylor, a former Manalapan star Taylor, a student at Glassboro State College, won the dash in a time of 6 39 Terry Richardson and Vinme Snell of Asbury Park and Long Branch, respectively, finished second and third in the 440-yard dash. BASKETBALL Asbury Park's 28th annual Garden State Elementary School Basketball Tournament will be held from March 1 to March 12 at Convention Hall. The tournament, sponsored by the Parks Recreation and Conservation Department, will be divided into three divisions, one for girls and two boys. Trophies will be given to the tourney champions and to the second place teams in each division. The tourney is open to all schools throughout the state. Applications should be mailed to Sam Addeo of the Department of Parks at Convention Hall. HORSE RACING Tours of Freehold Raceway will be given on Tuesday and Friday mornings for Interested school and scouting groups. The tour features a film about the history of harness racing and a visit to the barn area where the groups can meet with trainers and blacksmiths. Tours run from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Teachers and scouting leaders may reserve a date by contacting the raceway. GOOD/TEAR Polyester^ New low monthly payments... Leader Compare: The Great Tire Drive Of78 Enjoy Goodyear Quality today With Smooth-Riding Polyester $ TENNIS Third-seeded Betty Slave of The Netherlands defeated 17year-old Caroline Stoll of Livingston, N.J.. 6-4, 6-2 in a firstround match Tuesday at a $100,000 women's professional tennis tournament at Center Arena. In other opening round action, JoAnne Russell of Naples. Fla., downed Mona Guerrant of Scottsdale. Ariz.. 61,6-1. Tap-seeded Hirold Solomon of Sliver Sprlag. Md , breezed through an opening round match in the 175.000 Springfield International Tennis Classic, as he posted a 6-1, 6-4 victory over Sweden's Douglas Palm. There were no surprises during the second day of competition with sixth-seeded Marty Riessen of Boca Raton. Fla.. ousting Jiri Granat of Czechoslovakia 6-2. 4 4 . 74. He won Ihe third-set tiebreaker 11-9, but was brought to match point twice by the unseeded Granat. In other first round matches. Roger Taylor of Britain beat Ismail El Shafei of Egypt 6-3, 7-5 and Ross Cass of Australia eliminated Pat DuPre of LaJoUa. Calif.. 6-4. 2-6, 6-3. SecMd-seeded Eddie Dlbbs overpowered Spain's Jose Higueras but fifth-seeded Raul Ramirez was forced to default ! during first round action Tuesday in the $175,000 St. Louis Classic, a World Championship Tennis tour event. The 26-year-old Dibbs smashed Hiqueras 6-0. 6-3 as Raml- res, who last week won the Mexican Open, came up second . best against an ailing back and tour newcomer Chris Lewis of New Zealand. Other first-round winners were Poland's Wojtek Flbak. who toppled P e n ' s Hans Gildemeister 6-3, 6-1 and Sandy Meyer, who outbattled Chile's Jaime Fillol 7-6, 6-7, 6-2 in a marathon match. l a a pairing of tour oMtimers, South Africa's balding Bob Hewitt mastered local tennis pro Earl "Butch" Buccholz Jr. ' M , M . Hewitt is 38 and Buccholz 37. Reset Rkaards * f Newport B e a t i , Calif. defeated Pam - Teegoarden (-2. 74 for her second straight victory in the . f M M M women's professional tennis tournament at Center :knm. Right Now! You can borrow against the equity in your home to: • Pay off accumulated bills! Take care of tuition expenses! • Renovate your home! • Use in business or any worthwhile purpose! CALL US for quick confidential service on secondary mortgage loans! No pre-payment penalty! • No search fee! X 20 AII-Weather78' Size B78-13 blackwall plus RAIN CHECK - II we sell out$1.72F.E.T. ol your size we will issue and old tire you a rain check, assuring future delivery at the advertised pries. GAS SAWteGOCCYEAR R A D I A L S HandBna,V*ar,Etonomyl .far LOAN AMOUNT MONTHLY PAYMENT ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE $ 5.000. $ 56.81 12'/2% 20 Years $10,000 113.62 12'/i%' 20 Years $20,000. 227.23 12Vi% 20 Years $30,000. 340.85 12'/?% 20 Years TERM . 542-7775 • Crystal Brook Profwutonal Building, Rout* 36, Eatontown, NJ 07724 255-4400 In tfw Toms Rrvw Area HORIZON Creditcorp JustSay'Chargelt' Uli any ol th«M 7 oltiir n y t to t>u>: Out O n Cntonwr Credit Pirn • tUtlti Clurn • BinkAmtrkinj • «m<iic«« Eipieu On) • Carta Slandn Cluti • Caatl uu J«t tour IndtMndint Dulir For Hli M e t mi Cndll Tairov Pncit As Shown ill Coodytar Sarvtcf Slum In Ml Comma- nittii strv,d in m i l Naaseatxr. Santos Not Available At Stitrtd locations. 1030 HIGHWAY 35 MIDDLETOWN PHONE 671-2415 Horizon Creditcorp Is a wholly ownad subsidiary of Horizon Bancorp LJcansttl undax ths provisions ol the Secondary Mortgag* Act. Chapter 205. P L WTO SHREWSBURY N J WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 8 1976 T h e D t f f y RcgfctCr 1 9 Phillies have soft spot for disadvantaged Moat athletes who hive been around for a few years are pretty well paid, and baseball players are no exception. As an indication of their payroll, the Philadelphia Phillies have to draw over l.S million lans to break even. ans Stadium His unselfish action won him the Mrs Joan Payson Memorial Award for his contributions to baseball on and off the field at the recent dinner of the New York Baseball Writers Association Garry tladdox is not an outspoken individual, but the However, the Phillies' players have been doing things to repay the fans and the community for the loyalty shown to suck centerfielder also has a soft spot for kids He had a habit of dropping into hospitals and schools on his own, and then the team. one day he visited the Philadelphia Child Guidance Clinic SUrt wttli Greg Luzinski, who looks like an escapee from That visit kicked off a fund-raising campaign which evena proteMtonal football camp but is actually a pussycat when tually embraced other members of the team Maddnx. shorthe doesn't have to face National League pitchers Luzinski stop Larry Bowa and third baseman Mike Schmidt formed a bought a large block of tickets last season for disadvantaged committee of city and business leaders and drafted many of youngsters and has continued the practice this year Philadelphia's other athletes to help His largesse is caUed the Bull Ring, and the seats are loThe group just concluded a week-long fund drive that incated not very far from where he plays in left field at Veter- cluded Disco dances, a preview of a molion picture, appear- ances by the players at unlikely places, a celebrity basketball game and foul shooting contest at the Spectrum, a celebrity bowling tournament in Cherry Hill and a radiothon on WWDBFM Enter another unlikely soul, free-spirited Tug McGraw Nobody thinks too much about it when McGraw comes up with a "flakey" idea, but this time he is letting his legs do the talking McGraw organized a bike caravan for the purpose of helping this year's Muscular Dystrophy Drive He and fellow pitchers Steve Cartton and Larry Christenson are peddling from Veterans Stadium to the Phillies' spring training camp at Clearwater, Fla McGraw figures the 1.200 mile Inp will lake 17 days Naturally, in these days of sexual equality, the players' Yankees open 53rd season versus Chisox JL NEW YORK - The World Champion New York Yankees open defense of their crown at Yankee Stadium on Thursday, ' April 13 with the Chicago White Sox as the opposition. It will start the Mrd season of Yankee baseball in Yankee Stadium on the 75th anniversary of the New York Yankees. The Yankees home schedule this year finds them playing 81 games on 78 dates at the Stadium. The Yanks have 51 games under the lights. There three scheduled doubleheaders, two on Sundays and a Labor Day twin bill with the Tigers on Monday, September 4th. The Yanks' chief Eastern Division rivals, the Boston Red Sox, will make three appearances at the Stadium. They are in for night games, Monday and Tuesday, June 26 and 27 and Wednesday and Thursday, August 2 and 3. Their final trip will be a big weekend series in September — Friday, Saturday and Sunday, September 15,18 and 17. The Western Division champion Kansas City Royals will make their first appearance at the Stadium for three night games, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, May 1, 2 and 3. Their only other Stadium appearance will be a weekend series July 15,16 and 17, featuring a Saturday night game on the 16th Special days of note on the schedule are Jacket Day on Saturday, May 27 against the Blue Jays, Old Timers Day on July n against the Twins and Fan Appreciation Day on September JO with the Indians in town. More special gift days will be announced later. Night games at the Stadium will begin at 8:00 p.m., day games at 2:00 p.m. and doubleheaders at one o'clock. The Yankees home game schedule follows: April U, IS, 1« Chicago April 17 (N), 18 Baltimore April 21 (N), 22, 23 Milwaukee May 1 (N), 2(N), 3(N) Kansas City May 5 (N),«, 7 Texas May8(N),9(N) Minnesota May 2J (N), 24 (N), 25 (N) Cleveland May 2« (N), 27,28 (2) '. Toronto MaySl(N), Junel Baltimore June 12 (N), IS (N) Oakland June 14 (N), 15 (N) ...„, „ Seattle June Id (N). 17 (N), 18 California June 26 (N), 27 (N) Boston June 30 (N), July 1,2 (2) Detroit Freehold tomorrow ' Tfrrli BODV IBoruKu Booby O IMcGee) Shirley Dean IMolMyev) Valerie Hanover I Mororiel Chonphli Chlnny (Huebichl F » - P t » l MPDrwIl.TM C M * . lana Knlohl (Gltmour) 3-1 Gcorgano Ooncer IPoiolatil 3-1 Snoopy Cranon IRIuo) 4 1 Molari Honoyer (Bun.Ill SI Lbcky Horry (lovlne) JMDon IBIecuml II 1 JMDonlBle Slick N (Olln) 15-1 Chellow Son IDekovltch) 15-1 M-ProlMPmtlt.nl Move Aheodl Butler I 1-1 Moleitlc Imo (Kelly) > J Betty B Butler (Sutler) ...I-J Aovonce Copy (Upon) 6-1 BoldBay (Pellaiolo) 6-1 Ardeno Flame INDI 6-1 Sto Venture I Boumonnl 151 Rosei Christine (Breinohon) 15-1 ' M l— PactlMPlarMSMMCIm Beau Yankee ILoorteyl ..2-1 Arron Electro (Kelly! 5-7 Homeilretch Eve (Fllion) 4-1 Pottyi Adloi IBeochy) 11 Gallant Skipper (Fllion) 121 nit* Might (DtlliSnnlii .31 Mentor (Corolll) M l ...7-2 ySnopfBuller) Mario Creed IPoquel] M l Ml ilobu iFulkerion) 41 Cttlnco Hocktl (Poulln) M l tm-PtxtlMPmtlMM K*«f>*lond iDelMSonlO * 1 Robert Fulton IBreinohonl J-l RoyolilSohbra (ND) .6-1 Annear A IDonctrl M GW T Ti e (Friedman) I? I E B Time (Candtll) 1.1 Returnee (Br Returnee (BrofMou) 30-1 Rockvllle Wlco (Rlchordion) 97 D W Rum (Flllon) 6 1 m - PtM I M P n n . l l M t C M * . H Goyttmt (Palloiolo) I 1 2-1 Ark Mood Mood ((NO) ) Burwood Debbie (Fllion) 10 1 40 Dill ( M Dillon (MorrMI M I FulloCoin (Upon) JO.I ••? Trut Special (Brluonl II l i f t - Pexe I M P I I T H II.4M Clm«. Mtrrydell Dandy IPaquet] l-l Umono (Kelly) 3 1 Our Duly l Fool lor one) Worm Wind ILooney) ..!•} Ntrelvo (Fllion) I-) RedLyti(Poquet) 4-1 FllGlJFIII FulloGlogi 10-1 Su»onMocN(Llroil| 1 J Mlgtily Hal 20-1 Air Roce IRodrlBueil 6-1 U kP - aalMPtpTMtlJM GomeChorleilMorrnl l-l Polge P l T Tr*L Lody (Boumoni!) 1-1 Double Coir, )Moranol 10 I TrvtVon (Roilno) M TrutRalarmogti (Kovionl 30-1 Luc«y Rhyme (Kellyl t-2 Untie Bumpy (Poullnl IJolly CnorllKNDI Oavlol Joan (RodoeriI _li. I --I Boron C Direct I DIBtneottlol NIC* Velvtl Sno« IConioll II FtoeLondy IPuntollllol 10 1 AttonGo (Plianl) IS I Mr Fimlv IKavoltff) ....ml H» - Pact I *» P i t ilMt M I I I I M Herbors Ayn (FlllonJ 5-2 Doctor John 0 1 R i M l ?1 . . . jr J o h n O I I - - icoltn Coper iMcOttl 41 Seal Jock I Sutler! ••$ VIoleIG Haven (icolbt) »-l Motive Royal (Bretnohonl 101 AnonGtronlmollnokall I}Steady Jane ILtooott) .'0 1 jr.-P«c«IMP.r,.ll.M«Cli!H Slorlloht JeMSperenal) S3 Randy M (Kelly) M Machlnloy IRoogtn) .4-1 Gltn Edward (Spertnal) 9-2 Tory Kairi ILeoooil) SI GaMtNMxiMltochyl 10Scoull Gal {Organ) 201 Mill Conception IFreck) July 13,14 (N) July 15 (N>. 16,17(N) July 26 (N), 27 July28(N), 28, SO July 31 (N), August 1 (N) August 2 (N), 3 (N) August 4 (N), 5 (N), 6 August 8 (N), » (N), 10 (N) ImncK Short at Red Ban Monmoutn ot Albury Pork Chrlitlon Brolherj v i . St Jo&eph I , Mttuchen at Rutotri Alhleilc Center Monmoulh ot Atbury Park Mlodlelo«rn South ol Mljdletown Norlh Point Pltatant Sara at Keyoort Motawon ol Neptune Keonttxxg 01 Freehold Southern at Central Marlboro ot Rumton Folr Hovtn Monmoulh ol Freehold TooniMp Tern Rlvtr South ol Torn! River North Ocean ot Rorlton Holmdel at Shore Manchester ol CBA Trenton al SI. John Mater Df i ot Point Pleatont Beocn Tnck l IS... FEBRUARY 14th • I Henry Mudion ol Shore Freettotd ot Monchtnttr K t t t H l d l • MilKH C(MM( ol Rumton Fair Ho North Carolina at at RuTofr RuTofri (AT Uodiion Mrgtn County O m m Assorted 1 Ib. box 16 ounce I Our Regular 3.75 MAYFAIR CINNAMON HEARTS BRACH'S CONVERSATION HEARTS MAYFAIR JELLY HEARTS CHILDREN'S BOXED Valentine Cards 2 size candies 10 ounce bags ASSORTED STYLES VICKS FORMULA 44 EFFECTIVE STRENGTH COUGH MIXTURE GILLETTE TRAC SHAVING CARTRIDGES ORALB SOFT TOOTH/GUM BRUSH ol Artury Port ot Marlboro CDMUtl 18 ounce COMPARE TO: Walla Biliim Hilr CondHlmr 16 oz. al 1.74 CONTAC DECONGESTANT CAPSULES ARRID EXTRA DRY CREAM ANTIPERSPIRANT 1 ounce BIUT CASHMERE BOUQUET SOAP BRECK SHAMPOO 4 pack 5 ounce bars All Typos 15 ounce FOR Our Regular 80* ea VICTORS COUGH DROPS Your Favorite Scent Sale Regular or Cherry IN A BAG JOVAN SPRAY COLOGNE BRECK CREME RINSE Regular or With Body 15 ounce Lily ol the Valley or Oriental Flower 3 ounce Our Regular 1 99 BABE GIFT SET r« v oun PHOTO DEPARTMENT •SilCCS .PRINTS tflLM •ENUnOEUCNTS •SPECIAL mOCESSWeO 2 oz Cologne 5/16 oz Perfume CHARLIE SPRAY COLOGNE BY REVLON 0 5 ounce not SI- J M * p h H T B I Imfi » • > • » • » Rtd Bonk Catholic i olC Christian Brothers Norn Oomtot I t John CVS BALSAM PLUS PROTEIN HAIR CONDITIONER 6 ounce Short ol SI. ROM Joseph i ot Southern 5 I JOM Howcll joOional al Southern Brick si T T « M Hlvtf South O l I tT'JWfHorlh QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST' DERAN ANGEL HEART CHOCOLATES i Holmdel 01 Chrlilian Brolhtfl Oceonot R M l a i Fair Hovtn Wan at Manasquon SI. John at Keyport Cenrrol ot Monmoum Brick ol MMMIrtom South Red Oonk Catholic at Long Branch Frwriold at Alltntowm MoMlaparl ot Shore jaason ot Neprtme Southern, SI Joseph i al Toms Rlvtr South Howttl Ol Rorllon HtWTlM Canterttic* Chomplonthlpl (At ? SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11th I WHITMAN'S SAMPLER CHOCOLATES I sstsss. CMiiM SALE TODAY THRU I Maitr Oft at R « l Sank Catholic St RoicotChflilian Broihen Middinown Norm at Won Rorlton ot Mlddlctown South Ocean ot Long Branch Matowon at Neptune Atotrtk Howeli ot Lohtwood Tomt River South at Brick Twm River North ot Centra! Southern at Jockton • OMl Point Pieoiant Boro at Atbury Pork M n o t M q Oakland California ..Seattle Detroil • Boston ¥ 'Milwaukee Toronto , Cleveland I Sports Schedule • m l t S J ^ August 25 (N).2«(N). 27 August » ( N ) . M ( N ) September 1(N),-2(N) 3 September 4 (2) H , 5 ( N ) , 6 ( N ) September 15 (N), 16,17 September 18 (N). 19 (N) September 26 (N). 27 (N). 28 (N) September 29 (N), 30, October 1 FALK wives won't sit around watching their husbands Sinre 1074. the Phillies' wives have selected a charity lo aid each year Their bake sales and fund-raising dinner enriched the Delaware Foundation for Retarded Children by 121.200 in their lasl effort ' It Is easy to malign the well-paid, temperamental professional athlete, and many of them let themselves in for it by showing no humanity to anybody. It is hard for a community to relate to an athlete who demands to be traded or screams to have his contract renegotiated The Phillies are certainly not the only team to be so involved in the community, but they are somewhat unusual because so many of them make the Philadelphia area their year-round home That's the other side of sports - the way it should be all the time. Health & Beauty Aids At Discount Prices DRUGSTORES SELECTIONS 1 - Hade Bumpy, Jolly Ckarlle, Davids Joan t - Scat Jack, Violet G Haven, Doctor John O S - Rawly, Glei Edward, Tory Kash 4 - Kewlaid, Lady Snap, Mamies Might 5 - Ark MMd, Dillon, Merrydell Dandy I - Trie Vaa, Licky Rhyme, Paige The Lady 7 - Suppy Gratua, I»«a Knight, Getrgaia Dancer 8 - Advance Copy, Move Ahead, Bold Bay » - keai Yakkee, Alton Electra, Gallant Skipper II - Birweod Debbie, RtckvlUe Wlco, Robert Fullon 11 - Red Lyss, U m i n , Warm Wild BEST-Ark Mood Monmouttiot Gkmtoro Chicago Kansas City Cleveland Minnesota Texas Boston Baltimore Milwaukee 2 JONNI SHREWSBURY Shrewsbury Plaza Broad St 542-7333 NEUTROGENA HAND CREAM 20 SHREWSBURY. N J WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8 1978 CBS airs another view of Oswald tonight By JAV SHARBITT LOS ANGELES (AP) Last fall. ABC aired "The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald." Tonight. CBS airs "Ruby and Oswald." Both re-created the slaying of President John F Kennedy In Dallas on Nov. 28. The program mixes — in Forrest's work as Oswald, what strikes me a responsible the laconic loner, is passable manner — old news clips with But it lacks the subtle shadre-enactments to effectively ings that John P l e s h e t t e evoke the feel of that sad brought to the role in ABC's chapter in American history "Trial of Lee Harvey OsThe father-andson scriptw- wald " riling team of John and Mi- The best acting in CBS' chael McGreevey uses a show comes from Lou Frizsimple pattern to let the story zell. who quietly steals every But CBS' docu-drama is in- unfold. scene he's in as homespun J. finitely better than ABC's They start with the day of Will Fritz, the police captain what-if drama about what Nov. 21. 1063 and offer a who interrogated Oswald afmight have been had Oswald quick scene of how Oswald ter the latters capture in not been slain by Dallas began that day. then a news Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby clip of J F K h e a d i n g for The show's fine direction is and been tried for JFK's as- Texas, then show Ruby going by Mel Stuart, who made a sassination, about his business that morn- JFK assassination documenUnlike that murky, hypothe- Ing tary in IMS. "Four Days in tical show, the CBS effort November" That's the storytelling doesn't offer a barrage of His expertise obviously technique, going from' Oswald conspiracy theories, doesn't ask viewers for a "verdict" to Kennedy to Ruby and back ^helps CBS' program, which on O s w a l d ' s guilt or In- again, gradually tying their avoids conspiracy-dabbling nocence in the Kennedy kill- unrelated stories together into and covers only documented the tragedy that was to occur aspects of the assassination ing. and four days in the lives ol It's simply a crisp, straight- in downtown Dallas Usually, it works well But Ruby and Oswald. forward re-creation of the lives of Ruby and Oswald dur- at times it gets monotonous, Alas, for all its expertise in ing a four-day period preced- particularly in the depiction re-creating history. "Ruby ing, during and following the of Ruby as an occasionally and Oswald" seems oddly unviolent, tormented man and death of Kennedy. Frederic. Forrest plays Os- unabashed admirer of John F. Mujlc Makwt wald and Michael Lerner Kennedy. Thcatrat plays Ruby in tonight's threeLerner's portrayal of Ruby MONMOUTH hour show, which starts by Is okay. But the script, in notARTS I I ,HI MM claiming every scene is based ing the man's torment, does it CENTER on "sworn testimony" In the too often and loses Impact Kennedy assassination. satisfying Its story is too familiar. The show comes across aa just I well-executed rehash offering nothing new It's a decent program, but I hope it's the last of its kind m. RE-CREATION — Frederic Forrest plays Lee Harvey Owald and Lanna Sounders portrays Marina Oswald in "Ruby and Oswald," a three hour recreation of authenticated events that trace the lives ot President John F. Kennedy, Jack Ruby and Lee Harvey Oswald during the four days preceding and following the assassination. AIRS TONIGHT — Michael Lerner portrays Jack Ruby In "Ruby and Oswald" starting at 8:30 tonight on the CBS television network. The threehour show Is directed by Mel Stuart who made a JFK assosslnaMftn documentary in 1965. Crosby son names record after mother By JACK O'BRIAN NEW YORK -Blng's son Phil Crosby Just recorded four songs (by Rusty Adams) for a label named after his mother, "Dixie Lee," due this month. One's titled "Talk to Her Memory"... Delia Reese, who turned surprisingly stylish TV actress in "Chico 4 the Man," is the latest Instant-success to want more network money or else... Gay saloons downtown sport bartenders duded out in cops and firemen's uniforms; latest • • Miami gay spot Is Hurricane Anita; next gay protest is headed for Bryant Park... The penultimate punkrockers "Kiss" will take a year off . concert travesties for a shot ; ' a t movies and TV specials; ; that's almost long enough. ' ; • ! ; ' Sums of (1,000 to (20,000 "Cold Storage" will nail his caricature onto Sardi's Wall went to the Martin Luther King Jr. General Hospital. of Fame; welcome to the club, Len... Kathryn Crosby's American Legion's charities, bus-truck tour in " S a m e several California colleges Time, Next Year" is a huge and universities, the Motion Picture-TV Fund and others. hit. .•III MMIIII mini imitiii Loaves & Fishes? When the "Chorus Line" creator Minext annual report of the H'wood Canteen finished its chael Bennett's pursuing Omaha Power Co.... "Close wartime dogface-stroking in stage rights to TV's richly Encounters" already has or- IMS. some 1450,000 was left in touching "Queen of the Starbited an astronomical triple fllmville's generously en- dust Ballroom" for a Bdwy profit (It cost 118,000,000)... dowed GI hangout's coffers. Top Dally News cartoonist Its chairman Jules Stein, BUI Gallo fractured one rib founder of MCA and a fiscal and cracked two o t h e r s ; genius, and his board of slipped on the ice (How'd he trustees turned It into a founget his foot in a highball dation which took the 1450,000 RED BANK - The show finement. and Invested It and over the went on last night at the Mon- "It was nice to get out to glass!). mouth Arts Center. see this show," said one Colts Age of Icccchhh: New Brit- decades disbursed to lofty It wasn't the usual fillnl In- Neck woman. " I ' m glad ish punk rockers call them- causes 11,700,000 - and the capacity 1,500 Monmouth Arts we're here tonight." selves "The Moors Murder- fund still has 11,200,000 in its Foundation audience. Instead, "A wonderful evening," ers," a sickly christening: af- treasury! The last (80,000 it was a weather-weary but ter the couple who recorded went to veterans, educational, enthusiastic 700 patrons who said a Rumson man. "It was one of the best productions in Prizefight (ilm producers the screams and whimpering TV and films' related chari- cheered and clapped to a one the theater series." Bill Cayton and Jim Jacobs of children they tortured to ties. night performance of "The Dr. Feinswog praised the While the H'wood commu- Robber Bridegroom." took over the Waldorf Roof death years ago. "hearty souls" who came out Feb. 14 to match greatest Fabled London Terrace, the nity is shamed by the dis"We had no choice but to to see the performance. "We graceful "Begelman Affair" modern pocket b i l l i a r d s huge W. 23rd St. completesome hesitation about gochamp Willie Mosconi against block apartment house - big scandal in the dirty backwash put on this production," said had ahead with the show," he Minnesota Fats Bet on Will- architectural news at the of the confessed tycoon's Dr. Bertram Feinswog. chair- Ing said "Rut after I heard all ie... "Side by Side by Son- time — is being sold to a syn- frauds and forgeries, let's man of the foundation's thedheim" producer Hil Prince dicate of dozens of investors honor Jules Stein and his Im- ater arts series. "If we didn't, dealt another 10 percent slice of Manhattan and exurbs... maculate caretaking and In- we would have lost the proof "Fiddler on the Roof" to The huge 290 Park Ave. office crease in the funds of the duction." b a c k e r s : 137,000; it cost skyscraper also Is changing H'wood Canteen fortune since The cast came here from W70.000 originally and this hands. Richard Bernstein is It closed In 1(45. Detroit for the performance. has Fiddler scraping up a to- the big macher in this major There's no way this latest From here, they go on to tal (10,072,500; half of that is mldtown deal. frowsy fraud now can be ig- Pennsylvania and Ohio. FAIR HAVEN - The Shore Hal Prince's producers' slice "The Robber Bridegroom" Idl Amln invited Redd Foxx nored by local and federal (It's now earned 2,686 per- to Uganda for a few laughs prosecutors as H'wood's own is a country-western musical Music Educators Associcent!). but Redd didn't think it funny Cinemagate adds to the sor- version of " T h e High- ation's meeting Friday at 9:45 a.m. h e r e In t h e C h r i s t Dong Kingman can't stop and most diplomatically said did history of showbiz; the wayman," an epic poem. And it went over well with Church Methodist, Ridge painting profits: his latest sorry... After a lot of Bdwy. Jules Stein-fiscal miracles are Road, will feature Edith electrifying assignment is to shows, fine a c t o r Len needed to offset accusations an audience tired of snow, icy Cornfield, pianist. She will weather, and home conwatercolor the cover of the Cariou's great reviews in of total H'wood cupidity. give a lecture recital "Passionate and Tempestuous, or Reflective Dreamer," about .composer Robert Schumann. She will discuss Schumann's Papillon Op. 2 and other shorter works. TW V 1. fM 1_ (% 4 ff -• i\ I I 1Q1' » New York Channels — 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13 Mrs. Cornfield has a BS de- VOICE OF BROADWAY Television Today 10:00 i ' ' MOVIE Pal Joey Part HI too Ml MOVIE The 39 Steps ( r MOVIE B.flgw Than ttfu 400 '(»! MOVIE W* Success Spoil Rock Hunter'' 430 It! MOVIE Gnl Happy Lerner FredericForresl Adramalic fe-crealion drawn Irom authenticated events that retrace the hves olJack Huhy and Lee Haf vej Oswald over a tour-day span preceding and lollowing the assassination ol President John F Kennedy 13 his I 000 i i 4 »,:» tWNEWS ! BRADY BUNCH • CONCENTRATION 11 STAR TREK The Menagerie Pail I a 11 W ZOOM MO • I LOVE LUCY • ABC NEWS • JOKER'S WILD « CBS NEWS tt TODAY IN DELAWARE ' I OVER EASY 700 I CBS NEWS « NBC NEWS • BRADY BUNCH • TO TELL THE TRUTH ' ABC NEWS • : BOWLING FOR DOLLARS ; « NEWLYWED GAME 111) OOO COUPLE >« « U MACNEIL LEHRER REPORT : « DANIEL FOSTER. MO Medical Hypnosis Guest Dr Harold Cras*wck University ol Tunas Health Science Cenlei at MM 7:30 .»$2S.000 PYRAMID !«.) FAMILY FEUO it) WHEN HAVOC STRUCK Lite at the Lmf .#) PRICE IS RIGHT If) THAT'S HOLLYWOOD The Song and Danes People i t ) NEWLYWED OAME in) A NEWS •HI MACNEVLEHRER REPORT 800 (I) M DRAMA SPECIAL Ruoy and Oswald Michael (13) MEAT • rafOMMNCfS Loi Angtlts ZwbinMthto EXXON (4) HIUH1OUS • HUINKS EVENING H; MATINEE SUN 1 P,M If*. THR CHUINTI.ET CINEMA M l HINKV WINKLER uiu FIELD Braille The show went on the compliments, I feel better and know we did the right thing." He cited Sheila McKenna, assistant to the director, and Jack Burke, theater manager, who got the arts center ready for the production. "It was no easy task with all that snow," Dr. Feinswog said. •MCtfwl mountain GWZZtT ADAJM 11(4) THE LIFE AND TIMES OF GRIZZLY ADAMS ' The Littlest Greenhorn Adams befriends a retired sea caplam and his mischievous pet chimp, men teaches them the importance ol friendship between man and' heasl I CROSS WITS I ' EIGHT IS ENOUGH I ncouraged by the success ol Its Itiends David trades m his hard •Ml lor a newSJnan s pad • THE WAY IT WAS II LET'S MAKE A DEAL 1J 11 NOVA The Business ol Eduction 8:30 I' MERV GRIFFIN I HOCKEY Chicago Blacknawks vs New York Islanders II DINAH 8:67 4! NBC NEWS UPDATE »:OO ! • ! « ' LAUGH IN Joan Rivets Marlm Mui Gore Vidal Henry Fonda James Garner Sen Barry GoKJwalc Kareem ADdm Jabbar Rich Little Roger Moore and Frank Sinatra are among the celebrities who wit make cameo appearances I I * ! CHARLIE'S ANGELS Angels in the r*ghl Stunned by the mysterious death ol his favorite lot-rock smger. Charke sends Kely Kris and Sabrma to I n ] everyone who spent time with Ine wclim the nghl she died '2 II M GREAT PERFORMANCES 8 58 • ' ABC Nt-WSBHIEF 10:00 > 111 POLICE WOMAN Sixth Sense Crowtfiy fumes when ,i legal technicality trees a wealthy architect whom he and Peppei know lo be a psychopathic slaver ol young women picked up m singles bars Juliet Mills and Barbara McNa< guest star . 1 ' H U M NEWS (7) STAKSKY t • HUTCH HIT lYSATANBTS^ I t ) l»! STARSKY AND HUTCH Satan s Witches Slarsky and Hutch s mountain vacation becomes a nrghlrnare when they learn ol a local girl s peril at the hands ol a demonic cult and are thwarled m then attempt to help 10:30 ( I t TO TILL THE TRUTH 1100 i J: (11 (i) ( I ) IT) ® NEWS I D FOREVER FERNWOOD It) HOLLYWOOD CONNECTION IK 0 0 0 COUPLE H » W DICK CAVETT SHOW Parl One ol a panel on ngmq n America Guests Maggie Kuhnnl the Grey Panthers Rep Claude D Pepper iO-Fla I and Dr Robert Butter author 11:30 I THE CBS LATE MOVIE Hawai Five-0 McOarrell su specls a young woman and her lather ol the rfturder ol two people Kotak The Condemned A prue tighlet goes berserk when he Imds hjs wite murdered |R) ». .4 THE TONIGHT SHOW Ho&l Johnny. Carson Guesta Charles Nelson Reilly Norman I ell « MOVIE Possessed 1947 Joan Ciawtord Van Hethn Study ol woman whnsr subtle mental problems ruin her Me 12 hrs I • r POLICE STORY. MYSTERY OF THE WEEK POLICE S T O R Y V i c . 24 Horn' Vice squad officwi arratl enme khgpin L C Maddan only to have h»n mme<*al«ty rateaMd MYSTERY OP THE WEEK- A Mdaummar Nightmare' A young woman's knowledge of the Bard hatpi her solve a five-year old murder, (R) Semi TougiMBI ! Is. 9 10 MALL I I The Goodbye Girl (PG) 1 M. 9 JS MALL I I I Tht Turning Point IPGI 1:10, » « MAILIT PLAZAWhtch Way liup?<Rl MO. 9 K(*N>SUItO COLONIALStofihlp Invailont IPGI 7 30. 9 LONG•RANCH MOVIES I— 1 1 Oh God if] MOVIE The Purple Mask Tony Curtis Colleen MiHei In Pans 1803 a .masked nobleman bla/es a trait ni adventure and romance defying Napoleon s might as he rescues the Aristocracy from the guillotine and wins freedom for the I Rovaksls 11 nr 46 mm I l i t HONEYMOONERS 12:00 (fl) TWH.IOHT 7ONE (ID MOVIE Drums m the Deep South I9bt Guy Madison James Craig 11 hi 30 m i l 1:00 ( V 1 9 TOMORROW Host Tom Snydei Guest Mark McCormack the I'st agent to Show professional athletes how to become mtonaires IIS ( I ) JOE FRANKLIN SHOW 1:30 ||) UNANNOUNCED PROGRAM 1:48 (I) MOVIE Ha* the Conquering Hero 1944 Edcke Bracken. Ela Raines 2:00 (I) MOVIE The Valley ol Decmon 1945 Qreer Garson Gregory Peck |2 hrs 22 mm) i n m> NEWS lilMOVC gree from the Juilllard School of Music and an MA degree from Teachers College Columbia University. She is on the faculty of the College of Mount Saint Vincent and Sara Lawrence College, New York. She also is president of the piano teachers council of New Rochelle, N.Y., and has given recitals throughout the United States. All music teachers are welcome to attend. Coffee will be served at 9:30 a.m. At the movies ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS ATLANTIC C I N t M A The World s Greatest Lover (PG) 7.9 •ATONTOWN COMMUNITY I SemrTouohlRl 71S. o M COMMUNITY I I — SoturOoy Nlghl Fever ( R l t:X. 9 4S FHKHOLO yti.fi , MOVIES I I Tne Goodbye Girl IPGI 1.10 Two piano concert set MM M l l f Ml "VIRGIN SNOW" The next production in the theater series will be April 12 when Kathy Crosby stars in "Same Time Next Year." Pianist will appear in a lecture-recital DAYTIME MOVIES WITH Rob*r1 Vaughn Chrtatoptttr L«« CUNT EASTWOOD THEOJUINTI.ET musical. It's a lovely TV film, by a few recent years as one beautifully, poignantly acted of nonagenarian Bdwy.-direcby Maureen Stapleton and tor George Abbott's constant Charles Durnlng... Charley delights dancing at Rosewas most credible acting, of land... Maureen's first danccourse, but the grace of his ing date with Mr. Abbott endancing startled millions: In ded at the Russian Tea Room his slimmer, scrambling where she asked George his youth Charles earned his opinion of her dancing. He spare keep as a dance in- never looked up from his structor. Maureen's most shishkabob: "You're adecredible terping was polished quate," he hedged. MHIIIIIMIItHIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIHMIIIHIIIIIIIlll ARSHIP INVASIONS" MADISON CINL.-Storship Invasions (PGI 7 70; Grease. Llownlno(PGI9 MADISON CINEMA I I TneOooo»veOtrl IPOI 7:IS.•!» MATAWAN STRATHMORE CINEMA I TneGountletlR) 7.9 STRATHMORE CINEMA I I Tne World's Greotest Lover IPGI 7 IS. 9:15 CINEMA M — Looking For Mr Goodaar I let 7. 9: JO OCEAN TOWNSHIP MIDDLEEROOK MOVIES I— SlarsMp Invasions IPG) 7.IS. 10; Harold and Maude IPG) 1:45 MIObLEBROOK MOVIES I I TheGounllellRI7 » . « X REO1ANK MONMOUTH ARTS CENTER— The Gauntlet IRI7IS.9 » MOVIES I l l Close Encounters of the Third Kind IPGI 7:15,9:30 MOVIES I V TheGoodoveGlrllPail.lO MPAA RATINGS G-Otneral awaleitces. PO-AII oaes. (Partntal fuldonct tvt- if 2:00-4:30-7:30-10 CLOSE (ENCOUNTERS O f TH6 THIRD KIND 2:00-7:30-9:45 NOPAS8E8I TheTuming point m it 7:10 "STARSHIP INVASIONS" til "GREASED LIGHTNING" I P Q * 2:00-7:30-t:30 EXCIUBIV County Engtgtmtnt "OUTRAGEOUS" [RJ EXCLUSIVE RUN! STARTS FRIDAY 2 / 1 0 ENTER OUR COLORING CONTEST GRAND PRIZE! A Trip For 2 to DISNEY WORLD WOODBRIDGE DOUTI m i r,n«f,i iviNui I KORViTK CINHB 616- im l*Reitrlc!M (Persons unaer 17 M l ad itufied unless occemponled bv parent er Mttwdlonl MARLBORO — A two piano •xiwh Mi concert featuring Lillian Livingston and Ingrid Clarfield will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. ATLANTIC HGHLANDS at Marlboro High School on qNEMAWI-0141'1.50 Bt. 79. The pianists will provide a narration of the music. A dance demonstration of the different rhythms will be done by Linda Lucuski and Mary Milewski Ms. Lucuski, a dance major at-Doublass College in New Brunswick, is the lead dancer for the Kasle Academy and Cultural Arts Center in Pennsylvania. Ms. Milewski, also a Douglass dance major, teaches ballet, tap and creative dance. The program will be sponsored by the Battleground Arts Center in association with Brookdale College. 'A WACKY, WILDLY FUNNY MOVIE." - KalMn-n Carroll. Niw York Daily N « « BDRT KRIS REYNOLDS KRISTOFFERSON JILLCLATBURGR "SEMI-TOUGH" SHRBMSBURY. 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DIETARY AIDES - Apply In paru>n from 10 4, Arnold Wofitr Hurting Horna, 133 S Lourtl Avt., Hoikt floni wtcktndt. Apply In ptrion: YtlloM Cab Co, 101 Oakland St., Rod Bank. DRIVER — Tractor I r a l l t r , « i ptf Itnttd. Good pay. Immadlatt optniftg 7* 7UA or S4Vfr?3 EXPERIENCED 3 Tructt* ond Trolltri Intorlor. good. Aiklng IIISO Coll roar H ott vory v "3575 COOKS — Kltchtn htlp, full lime, dayt or nlehtt. Apply In ptnon bt twt«n I S p.m at Tfit Pour H O U M , MO Shftwibury Ave . Tlnton Foil* No ahant col Ii, pieoi* Froo Ouotot Ry Phono ITORain UloHl TRUCK INSURANCE Frto quolti and Undon by phono. Coll toll troo WATTS-IIno, KooJl »roj U houn, Hvon doyt a woo* - WoT ttrt/wallrMtti/ anhltr and hoitiii (M/F), Apply In ptrton, Rtd Ook Din TfnRraSHQllt EXPERIENCED AUDITOR * In person Hwy. IS, Hallet E X P E R I E N C E D AUTO BOOV Uttlt Sliver or*a Flv* doyi P»K W M . , IS p.m. 741 7H7, oik for Ktn FRY COOK - Two-ytort titptrltnct rtajulrtd Ytoi round poiltlon. Apply In ptrion. Long John'i Ltd , I I Btoch HOMEAAAKERSM/W LIVE-INS JERSEY'S # 1 VOLVO-TRIUMPH DEALER SHORE MOTORS offers: 1. Free 5 year 50,000 mi. warranty! ! 2. Over 100 preowned cars! j*>o»^W» • - . _ - • - „ O. * - —^ — JB- - n * — ^ . 3 . Complete body & wrecker service! MARINE MECHANIC EXPERIENCED TOP DOLLAR 4. 3 floors of factory parts! GASOLINE/DIESEL Rt.M Soyrovllk. N. J. 7T7-HM 5. 14 factory schooled mechanics! 6. BankAmericord & Master Chwge! MEDICAL ASSISTANT - Full-tlmt. txptrltftctd, with r t f t r t n c t i Mm( hovt cor ond typt. SH-lStS. WE BUY CARS 7. Wild trade-in allowances! I . 5 professional auto salemen! 9. Free 5 day vacation upon car purchase! 10. Up to 60 mos. bank financing! TOM'S 264-1600 WE BUY USED CARS AND TRUCKS SCHWARTZ CHRYSLER Pt-YMOUTM Roe Bank. 74JJ7I7 11. All models & colors in stock! 12. Glass, upholstery work on all cars! SHORE NATIONALLY ADVERTISED — Soroh C4fvofill f (•wtlfy ho* Immodlott nln* f l l or part Mmt opvnlno*. full Mmt, trolnlng ond M f n iquipnKrrt ttm. Earn whllt you Itorn. Mutt b« I I . Own tram- rRUCKS WC NEED USED CARS To. dollar BOM. MULLER CHEVRO LET, Hwy. K M m « U H . SoMOM. HW,.* 528-7300 NEED A J O * - T H E NAVY HAS GOOD JOIS WITH EXCELLENT TRAINING AVAILABLE FOR THOSE UK I HUIC WHO QUALIFY IN OVER " REER FIELDS. FOR MO . _ T A I L S C A L L YOUR NAVY CRUITERIN AVY R»RED BANK 74im» HAZLET-aU-MSS FREEHOLD-no-loTO EAST BRUNSWICK Z»S!M MX it !OAHEXTR, K INCOME? s i Army Re •Itmelobsye roaecioilt. 51. Help Wonted ASSISTANT MANAGER TRAINEE ttwii m o n f « . h r e . man and warnan emt. or wlttv - CoonrryludoorC»rWo»li MOTORS Ott or Pol. AUTO MECHANIC - Chui A, hilly oiporloncod. M i n t ha»o vmt tooli. Wort In •ITheui oct» you dan1 Inter ee* m Cat? Dapjry Carter a! M l S7MIS. Foil Mrvlcol Secondary mortgpai toonil MAJESTIC FINANCE CORP.. » « I I , Hawaii. Art lor Mr. Lowlt CALL US TOLL FREE: gmxjr*mt~ 1OOD HOMES - Found lor does :osnpejieror pups COLLEGE PET IHOP tnVloM. O l «M1 LABRADOR PUPPIES - 10 weeks might bt lurprl.td at Iht amount aru\ ovallaUt to you. 71 Merchandise For Sale A N T I Q U E OAK F U R N I T U R E Arm's largest and finest selection. 371 Squonkum Yellowbrook Rd . Form. Ingdole, ne«t lo Howolt Park. MCLAIN.OJM37I I7ooyil BUNK BEDS — Complete with mat SALESPERSON - E n p t r l o n c o d . M H t a for m m s m o . mop tloigo wim out" in aresser ana ciosei, men cholnl locating InSoavlow Moll tress and bunkle complMe, U S 741 Ploaso sond rosumt lo R. Moiplca. tin PO Bo> I d . Maspo*. N Y 11171 CHAIN LINK FENCING — Suralut SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS - oaacM I I flril ouollly, vlnvl clod. M u l l sacric«ni« rooulrod. Contoct Int Mlodlo fice. (SO sg ft. Installed Terms orranged X M M 7 . SECRETARY - Admlnlstrotlv.. porttlmo Good typist, light Iltno. votary optn Rumson otflct. Roply 10 P.O. Bon JSJ. Rod Bank SECRETARY - PWI-tlmo In Rool Es lott orrico In Fair Havon. Coll Rogor Coiom. 741 Tito SECRETARY - Typing, bookknolng and tolophono txporlonci osstntlaf. Call 3»l OJOf. botwoon I - S . Man through Frl. 52 Baby Sitting Child Care BABYSITTER - For M o schoologe girls, weekdays. I M M . Salary com mensurole with omounl of house, keeping responsibility. Phone eves, ol CHILD CARE — Mother's helper. Mon., Tues. ond Thurs. Excellent sak> ry. Own transportation and references required. Call between 10 o.m.4 p m., Daily-Sunday REGISTER Classified Ads as low as 41 cents per line, per day (based on IKtay Insertion! For FAST RESULTS at LOW COST phone REGISTER Classified Ads 542-1700 Toll Fret from Matowon Area 566-8100 TMl Free tram Middletown Area 671-9300 DESKS. FILES - ToMei. choirs, adding machines, typewriters, office equipment, etc. a] bargain prices. New or used A A C OESlTOUTLET. I 7 » Rl JS. Oakhurst g i l P H I DOO KENNELS - Custom made, tour units. Price reasonable 471 SJBotter 4 p m . FAAAILYAD 3 LINES 53 Domettlc Htlp CLEANING PERSON — E«perlenceo. Three hours a day, thrae Hoys a weak, HOUSEKEEPER - Steep In or out, at MkUtetown reiMence, owned by bachelor. Chores Include aenerol cleaning, tome cooking, lounoerlno ond over. t e e i n g o p e r a t i o n of Ihe h o u s e . Man/wltl team will be considered. References necessary. (Jill 443 !ll7. WILL BABYSIT - In my home tor working mother. Allantlc Hlghlandi area Coll I t ! SB47. an. can so-en. SALES ANO SERVICE - 7. tuneup on your machine, regular SIS, this week only, U . H SINGER SEWING CEN TER. M Broad SI.. Red Bonk 747 M M DAYS $3 I DO HANDYMAN JOBS — Garage doors, ceramic tile, Hiding doors, winajws, sash chains, sills repaired. Coll Bob. 747-1MS. OFFSET PRESSMAN — Two years Msartanca In tnutttsrab press, wet and dry offset Colltoi SHo - STONE FRONT WEATHERMAN - Meteorological TecteHclon. IS years antwlonce. Call 14 HOUR SERVICE FIREWOOD — O l per card, full cord 'tn-easartn-ani KSitutfloiM wanted Mole/Finole The USED FURNITURE CENTER 107 Shrewsbury Ave., Red Bank Boons, Hoi been and Why Nots TIRES — Never uses, FTtxM. Super lu>, belted, XVmonth warranty, i l l ! for five or 130 each 171474] days. IWO SETS - Terln bed mutli e n e i and box springs, u s o set Chandel crystal. Capper, OS. 717 es« TWO SNOW TIRES — Belted. F-7III4. mounted on E.T. moos, excellent con dman Asking m Cell 717 0141. TWO WOODEN WALL PHONET One HO train set ond table, lampi shades - ilolned glass Ye Olde Pepper House, t u River Rd . Fair Hoven. UNPAINTED FURNITURE Largest stock an the Jersey Shore MATAWAN - None modem eeerl menl O i l boariem kllchen, living room, betk, I n months security Aamt S «J, J no pes t R Rl e u Jeeescy Call S CB RADIOS - Power mlkoi ond Four A I sots Call MATAWAN — Twiaarawn asaii I. CB 40 CHANNEL - Model Ha). Lo adulti pr eh> r eO No pets One rnanRV I toyetle base with Turner f l u . } power security Inautri at Reepns Shoe Repair Shop, m v t MaM St.. Malewon mile and SO won Llneor S&C Sojl407 MATAWAH - Two bedroom, half dupu< house AJMts preterred Celt Hr emliilinel s S w s i 84. Merchandise Wanted AAAAAA — LIQUIDATE UNWANTED ANTIQUES. JEWELRY. HUGS. FOR CASH. INTERNATIONAL GALLERIES MIDDLETOWN EAST K E A N U U R O - Four rooms whti beat and hoi water m s Coll 71S-4H7 or * > 7 « H MIDDLETOWN - One mile north of Red Bank Three-room unfurnliheel. All ulllltlei poM UlS per month. Coll 747-4I7S or 74Tj.ll. More Cloislfled on Next Page T U R N YOUR D I A M O N D S I N T O DOLLARS - Convert Old Jewelry to Coin DON PON S JEWELERS Will Buy from private owners and estates. ANTIQUE CLOCKS REPAIRED AND JEWELRY DESIGNED. 7O0 River Ro , Fair Hoven, N J U3-41S7 REAL ESTATE ,„ RENTALS 101 Aportmtnti • I I ANTIC HIGHLANDS - Capri Aportments. one ond two bedroom den apartmenlt now available. I, hot water Included In rent. Call tor more Information. I t I 0004 No pets. BELVEDERE HOTEL KEANSUUBO - lVs-foom apartment, 1170, oil utlll His Included 717 M»l EATONTOWN - Newly remodeled upstairs two*edroom aportmenl. heat New, whan you prow eHGISTER Oosiifitti Ad for 3 or Mora doys, i m l ^ n g Sundoy, yow gel CM extra day HKtl EATONTOWN - Two bedroami. hoot free. coWe TV. o«lros. oso STATE RENTALS Bkr. 747 M M HIGHLANDS - Cando. Two*edroom. IVi-both, modern kllchen. laundry room, ocean view, use of lossnli court ond pool, fully carpeted, 1490 monthly Call » l HOC HIGHLANDS - One end two beoroem > For appointment •lJ*Hera*-le» WCBTDt Adi coil os Htik as 414 per lit*, per day, based on S I M M , 10 deys instrtion. HIGHLANDS - 0ne4>odroom apartment, one month security required. 1150 per month plus electric. 7»l 4)11 HIGHLANDS - T< franl. olnlna room, closets galore, no pets, lleo » l 1371 Fast Ktsulls, Low Cost - Now an eitra Day. mone WASHERrDRYER - Westlnghouie ltock. One year Moving, mutt sell. HIGHLANDS - T^iSidroorn aport" Originally ISM, will tote I W . 141 merit, living roam, kitchen, bath, I I M a monlh plus electric. 191-4171. » WEDDING GOWNS - Veils Fomoui HIGHLANOS - Two bedrooms, corpet, kMto.k.. only 1100. STATE DENTALS Bkr. 747 S4J4 WOOD-BURNING STOVES coal stoves, large selection on display dlsi staves, targa at Tlnton Foil. General Store. Syco more Ave., so |7W HIGHLANOS - Three large r o o m l , across tram beoch No pels. Security required S1T0 Cull 171OW1 71 Ooroge/Yard Sales OARAGE SALE — Moving away. Fur ntrure, pictures, ski e n j u l f l MIOOLETOWN - Sat. at 1} Huston St., Mi mile from Hwy IS. on Oak Hill Rd. Everything mull go. 77 Pets And Livestock JRJ±EJ&\SS&* nadton and American Champion, Ton t r u m i , Trad Lod g r a n d c h i l d r e n . Health guaranteed Pat and show, uso ond up. t o i l mrot $42-1700. I M frtw Mat aw on AIM-S«6-I100 ' HIGHLANDS — « Bay Ave . eltl clcncv. suitable tor one person, 1170 a month Includes all utilities plus one month's security ond references » 1 TolFne KEANSBURG - Corr Ave . throe bed- , rooms, living room, large kitchen. HAS o month utilities not Included Call 717 OM4 or 717 es.1 betseeen M p.m *7l-11tfl KEANSBURG - New one bedroom I unfurnished apartment, formica kltch B en. tiled bath, carpeted bedroom ond f living roam, off ilreet parking, IKK i per month plus utllllles Security re [ KEANSBURG — TWO* roams, hoot. hot water supplied. 1130 per month Coll 7l7OSIirTl no answer, coll H 4 REGISTER CLASSIFIED Dally * Sunday bpree Pea. I I . ten mi. CLASSIFIE BUSINESS DIRECTORY A DAILY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR NEEDS ADDING MACHINES TYPEWRITERS ADDERS — Typewriters. Calculators soh). traded, repaired. DISCOUNT Prices SERPICOS 747 PLUMBING g. HEATINO CARPENTER — Will do smolTjobT ipore time, lo supplement Incom Free estimate! 170 BIO CARPENTRY — Complete remade Ing, Interior exterior, additions, alas llfllnodoors,etc Nick. »l4)ejl CERAMIC T I L E C O N T R A C T O R ^ Bathrooms, kllchen noort. ootlgi, " James Arthurs for tree estlmoti FORMICA KITCHEN ADO VANITY TOPS - Buy M e w stere and contract price, we ataa make eesk and table HOME I M P D O V E M E N T S - Add t o g . laale Mawfacturlng Co., 1S5- Mont, aormeri, ooroge conversion nnlsned boeenwiifi. repairs. Free est POUR irtAR-OLD - at" oeramk L » otter I p.m. n. CBs, Electronics HIGHLANOS - Twooedroom duple« with porch, dining area, no pell 11)0 mwiidly W l iJJl HIGHLANOS - Three rooms, suitable tor adulti. I I M a m t h l tiliti security required 19 WALK-IN BOX I . I . very good condition 177 Use CARPENTRY - Mosonry. polntln and Insulation work Call Jotsn B u c t o m . Sr.. 747SO1I - r n* . Sy co^nn^Se.' S B f " *Open " " t*o" tTnuSeTlsTlrl. C I XHJ . Entire house only IMS Rock lei Granular Stone Foce Panels. Price Includes labor ond material Special cut stone. Permo Slate. Flew Stone, left over. Installed ot trade prlcei Bun, while, grey only. Coll Monte, col led. day or evening. »7147g. Soil merchandise you no longer need or USE with a low cost Family Plan PLUMBING »ND HEATING — ReAdi pairs ond Injloltatlons Prompt ter Available for Merchandise For Sole vlce.N«»7S Only. Article must originate from a household and may not enceed a sole or ke of 1110.00 per article. ADDITIONS. - Roofing, siding, ce Price MUST Be Advertised. Each od- ramie tile Complete line of remade dlrlonol line I I . No copy cnonges may ng Call Rich Malmberg, 717 3S41 be made and no discounts or returns Serving Monmouth County 13 years will be mode If ad Is cancelled before IUILOING ALTERATIONS - Add Item ond repairs Flnanc Bay Head qomtrucllon c TO PLACE YOUR DAILY REGISTER CARPENTER — All types of work FAMILY AD, CALL... Quollty workmomhlp. All work guo onteed Free estimates. 747 ow) 542-1700 HEAD - Three piece ski outfit. man'] small, used one season ISO Orond Prl. ski boots, lire I and I I . >IS 747 AAA RENTAL SERVICE - New rentSIX-PIECE - Mediterranean living oil dolly, never a toe for tenant Fur room set velvet convertible sofa, lihed ond unrurnlthed home! ond choir with hassock, slate top coffee o n mint. T E I C H E R A G E N C Y . table and two end lablel. MOO SI) ALTORS, 117 Oceanporl Ave , Slot. ' MI-1M ALTERATIONS 55 Situations Wanted Malt PACKER AND tTQRE CLERK Floor models Klmboll Baby Grands, studio spinels and consoles reduced. Unlimited rentals from 17 10 per month Klmboll spinets Irom I 7 * i F m organ lessons. FREEHOLD MUSIC CENTER Call tor appointment UltlX BUSINESS DIRECTORY DOLLARS 54 Situations Wanted Female PROFESSIONAL B A R T E N D r R Froo lance h 5 I I . Sports Equlpmtnt M-lei EIOHT PIECE - SU-strand nalurol FAST RESULTS AT LOW COST MATIkWAN CRESTWOOO VILLAGE Aaailiiiaiili I r a n U N . h e x mctudsd i T E i l t l i t se*4IM OLD FURNITURE - Anlleues, ihlno. otasiorare. art oblects and brtc-o-broc. Immodlole cash tor anything ond ov> ervtMng Ruscll's. 13 Easl Front SI.. r in n \j n n u w sv Company tonsolt I liw.Mo.Mot PIANOtvORGANS 0 PORTABLE MAYTAG - Washer and dryer win, stand. Kceiienl condlllon. MERCHANDISE BED — Full i l i t . with m a t t r t . i and DOR lprlng. In good condition. ISO 14} 3437. LUXURY - T eeeeme-cor NTIQUES - Anything eld Form ure, china, ataet. dolls, lewelry. ruas MINK AND LEATHER CAR COAT ap cash paM Mary Jane RoeseveH Like new. worn once Was m o , now OlE. River Rd., Rumson M l 11» 117! Call 171-0171. ANTIQUES - GATEWAY AN MOVING - Selling Oil custom drop T10UEI. Rl Hand1 Homeileod Ave. erles and rods Bedspreads, aueon-ilio Loanardo l»i-ns« headboard, maple bunk bed, living NAN JOHNSON •UYS AND BUYS From an entire household lo a llngle Item Anttue furniture, lewelry. silver. Immediate cash. Tap dollar. MONEY PROBLEMS? &ALESPER.VON — Rctpontlblt, * n Ihuiloittc parion lo t » l l camping •qulpmffnt. Muit be olio t u w l f n c M wllti lodln' bathing mill ApplV Inper wn lo M r . Plnsltv <" Killing, I E. Front St., R M Bonk LONG (RANCH - T i n a 1 free utilities, first near, family e.k.. Dig STATE RENTALS SHu 747 » LUXURY HIGH RISE ON RIVER — TwiSedrooms. tens bats. M i l 141 MATAWAN — Kan Gardens. Bej lew and l a . h i * I T a j a l n n I I startup ol u a Cerpotlna MrluMieut Air con emonlng Late ei parking SwMvntag peel assd Teemls Courts Your very MEDITERRANEAN STYLE - Pecan dWng room table with m chairs, peaeilol table . . l i n e n lo 71" with two I I " leaves Eicellenl condition 747 (800) 822-8989 BABY CRIB — 110. Wooden high J J 10 Wanted Automotive 43 Monty To Loon LOAN BY PHONE! SALES H E L P - F o r I t l m o . oa priloncod Llnoni ond custom wlnoo. lr«atmonti. Coll 741 * m otttr« p.m. 6 Auto Rent/Lease • • * IBM TYPEWRITERS Swartiel. 7 » 1570, Hailet S Auto Services/Port* LEGAL SECRETARY - Prnnald otAUTO INSURANCE flot. Root Oltato •xporlonco prtlorrod F«o ouoroi and btndori oy pfiono. Call Solory commomuratt with oblllly. toll trot WATTS-llnt. K » f o fm 14 C<HI*JI-O11, hour \. otvon dayi a work. LEGAL SECRETARY - Rod Bonk R A T I S R E D U C E D FOR MANY DRIVERS - Chock our aUcounti ami Exporhmco In otnorol practice. Coll Ml-OOI. POW uQWn UUVI'PMIII. p f t t QUOTv. am30I7, P t m n l . ftroluraot. 45 Mwy. M, MANAGER A N D ASSISTANT MAN Ktyport ACER - lEKPorloncod) qooootf tor mon'i ihoo inos (largo chain) locating III Soovlow Mail. PlaaM Mm) r n m lo R. Mowl<o, P.O. Bo« i n . Moiptth, N.Y. I I J * INK CARS UBO WEEKLY POSSIBLE — Moiling Clrculori No Gimmicks. Froo Dttalll Guarontood. HABCO. Bo> o » C . Lirl kin. T u a i T S « l . February SoecMT Eligible employee! with uniform allowance) Hanover style C U U I uniform OKtords, with olr cushioned Innersole ond guoronleed sale. Regular U t . K . sole MS « PlooHcoll47l-«.M JANITORIAL MAINTENANCE EMPLOYEES LAOIES-MEN - Work 01 horn, on Ih. ptaM. asm SIS-SSO wookly lorvlclng our cuilomori. M4-3144. WANTED — Establlthod roal t»tolt oftlca. will rontkkr any aroa Roftly BOM D i l l . Th« D o l l y R o a l l t o r . Shrowibury, N.J.C7ni. RM — Full t i m e . M l : JO i n I U for chorgt poiltlon In i k l l l t d n u n l n g homt in F r t t h o l d orto A l t t r n a t t wMkanda. Coll for Initrvltw.tilS l » OLSTEN Froo Quota l y F LowRatti d-lrtlfV n St. and corner ol Mattlsan Ave. Successful Businessman ATTENTION Postal Employees 4 Motorcycles 7 Auto Insurance WOMAN'S D R E I I A P P A R E L BroooM locution. Ittd Bonk »IS,000 MICHAEL G.PRUNZI ASSOCIATES 4J11BW REGISTERED NURSE - For rtllaf work, H 7 . tt74 CHEVROLET H-TON PICKUP Powor stoorlng. tlrrod whool, olr con dltlonod. ttntoTgloN, dualtank..Hid Immtdlatt oulonmvnfi. You dtcid* SECRETARY Inowlndow, porwlod cop. SSJOO mlloi. whtn and wtttrt to work. No f t * no colltclloni.. no probltmt. You a n To plant manager Monmouth County manulocturlng company rtqulrit on paid toch * N k . An toiy way to tarn mporlincod Individual possiistng txtra monty Visit vt tomorrow. good typing and sttno skllli Plaovont Folophona porsonallty plus Initiative o CYCLE CLE" INSURANCE mml Coll Mr Maade, S U W tor at> Froo ouotn and blndori by phono Call polntmonl M l troo WATTS-IIno. a * * J »TO » MIDLAND GLASS CO.. INC. houri. tovon days a wotk. Cllrrwood.N.J. An equal opportunity employer YAMAHA J i i R CYCLE SERVICE, INC. SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR - For union 4 Vd. Avo.-Lona Srench—Btnight work 117 a.m. lhllt Full or pOT-tlirw. Longtwrm. Coll 741-4343 YAMAHA YII0OD - Throo monlhf TYPIST - Port Mm* position, for m t old. CRCollonl condition. Roil oHor. hours ot t o.m to I 3 p . m . , M o n . a n i i J l S7U ftvough Frl Call m 5377. brtwttn tt»t houri of 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. t « l KAWASAKI FII-IW - Encollinl condition, only IMO mlloi. 4*5 IO»4 D. WAITERS/WAITRESSES - Full lime, Day or ovonlng work (pro I a.m. days or nlghlt Appty In person be Full or Part tlmo Iweon 3-S p.m. ot The Pour House, o40 Shrewsbury Ave.. Tlnton F o l d . No Coll brtwoon »5 phone colli. pl< ( M i l Ho-SlS] MUNCIE - Feur speed. M i l YARD PERSON - For marine ser Equal opportunity omployor M/F vice cantor. Must be lomlllor with fork truck operation and moving of boats Musi be willing lo work. Good opKEYPUNCH EXPERIENCED portunity ond cnance tor ooVoncomant L.J. OONZER ASSOCIATES IS} Broad SI.. Rod Bank M2 Mr? In year-round lob. Coll Service MonRENT A VAN — Low. low rates. oger, FlagsMp Marine, Jtl IMO. | Call Larry, TOM'S FORD, Hwy IS. KITCHEN AIDE - I lo 4 p.m . llvi days o woo*. Apply In porion. Gordon Slat* Manor Nunlng Homt, 14 Von Bracklo Road, Hobndol. ii« Of Asbury Park HUGE PIANO SALE . WHEELS - Ten Cragor Super Hock Farmuso I, S7S Call SO-aW afters p.m. iTiffi No Co-Mahen — No Gimmicks on the Spot Approval If Qualified __JKTAIL LOUNGE COCKTAII Boautlfully dtcorottd builntni am) Boautlu bltdl * pockagt or loung* only bultdlna. Locking H W y DUWMU • * owntri r*> •^^-tntr far umatady not RIV «aaraarwr5sa!; « a a w 5 s 'HOMEOWNER SPECIAL" UP TO 84 MONTHS IF QUALIFIED HAMMOND ORGAN tocaHon. Rod Bonk. 130A AUTQAAOBILE GET RE-ESTABLISHED UP TO 48 MONTHS TO PAY A FREE PUPPIES Shop herd/Retrlever ml., illentekl a U . Call I»l 1447 between S i p m 41 Business Opportuinltlts 51. Htlp Wonted SI Htlp Wanted NEED A CAR? & FURNITURE - Made by The Bunk House Furniture, Hwy 14 Pine table with aae leal, » " » a r . with benches hutch, excellent condition. ISM 0 . 1 . WASHER - And electric dryer. excellent condition Three-years-old. 117) tor the pair. O t . , IS cu ft re h-laeratar, no-frost, II7S. Moving. 747 2. Aulot For Sale 566-6102 DOBERMAN P I N I C H E I — Pup Mala. AKC roalttered B a n Dae. Men, 1177 O S Coir I'll I t * otter t p m OINERATOR - Winco. goi u _. 7 up., electric start, m / I I S volts. M KW, autensstlc MM, U7S 747 H u i •quo) opportunity #n»loyi OFFICE MANAOER/ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT — Full charojt bookkttplng and MERCEDES I H I W O DIESEL strong typing iklln ntctstory. Ptrion ERporlorKod Mloipirion In auto Fourmood, looki. runt mcillont. n P O N T I A C G U A N O A M - l»7 wonted tto aril L o a M . oacMlont conaWon. WUO ilnew and dused d cars. Ee- will mptrvlM vnall offtct. Four to ilx d e n t s . l a w t i n MI < n cellenl opportunity lo get In on Ihe ytori MMrltnct Houri M , Good Ml CalllnVDa MERCURY MONTECO MX 1*74 around floor to make money on the ary and btntflh Sand rnumt and rtfToo door hordlep, oulomotlc. olr PONTIAC \m - Four-door Cotollno. new revolutionary mesel Rabbit, also artnen to Unlttd Way of Monmoutti stereo, full power (ISM. 171 I*M vinyl lop, air conditioning, power Ihe spring Mod oar season |ust around County. *OI Bong* A v t , Albury Pork. oroVffi, power t t t i r l n g . oulomolU she comer. Coll Joe Rom for appoint NJ. d n i l . An iquol opportunity tmIrammliilon. ExcolUnl conalllon. ment, 717-1100. Llppln Motor Cor C o . MUSTANO 1*70 MARK I — Coll«< lor'i Ittm. Cor oil orlglnol. now on- Mow cortotorrlvod. Flril ofttr ov*f Rl. 15. Soyrevllle, i f J PART TIME glno. now t l r n . body and Intorlor • » •Hat bun •omoono a groat cor. 147 IDEAL FOR HOMEMAKERS colloiK. Aoklno i l sat Coll 741-M*. • lo Showlno ond wHIna up handbag dlt • : > only, a r t lor Andy Roaoa. «E SUCCESSFDL I N SALES M I I I T - "Yau'M aot to drlvo It to ptoyi In your arto Call for furthtr In WITHOUT EXPERIENCE bollovi rl." SH«EWS«U«Y MOTORS, brmotlon, 714 3IM Avon M o o moko It luntoryou lo run your own bullnooi. You lot your own PERSON - To work In offlct. phont fiouri. loo Find out about rhli ordtn ond Invtntory control. Apply Marlboro G I M I Olftrllwlori. Ttmtnt RCD SANK. 711 I Rd, Morgonvlilt. » l 1400. kITTENHOUSE POSITIONS OPEN - For itcrttorv. 5U-S2I1. or M n . Archtr. 2?» 4S3I LINCOLN MERCURY Inc. full chorat bookkotptr. ociountoni. today. WJO HWY IS 77S-DM OCEAN TWP BARMAID M/W - Part-tlma nlahd. Jr. ond 5f Cltrk typist, tuptrltnct ittatfy work. Coll b«for« S X with computtr ttrmlnoli or willing to SEE A "KUUELL MAN" - For your bt trained S*nd r n u m t with ulary •wrl mm or uood car. IIUUELL OMt rtqulrtmtntt to P.O. Box 313, Lin mobllt Codllloc Co , I K Niwmon •ARTENDER - ( M / F ) , full-tlmt, croft, N J . 0 7 7 * l l M Red H Ban*. t * 711-gTU HKII Springs Rd., days or nlgtift Apply In parton b* tw«an 1-S p.m. at Tht Pour HOUW. 441 REAL ESTATE SALES - Bright, ogSHORE MOTORS Shrawibury A v * . , Tlnton Falli No grttiivt ouoclott nttdad lor odivt Verve-Triumph Dealer phon* co.lt, plrat*. multlplt lilting offlct. Grta) trolnlng Hwy IS. Monosjuon. Jl« 7VJO and odvtrf lilng pragromi BOOKKEEPER - Full tlma for buty STEIN CADILLAC PONTIAC MELMED REALTY. INC. 471 SAM o l l l c * . Minimum ol o m - y t o r • ASBURY AVE-, A U U R Y PARK ltfKt with AOP payroll, union and REAL ESTATE SALESPERSONS — 77S-M0 pltalliatlon deduction, account, Wt art looking for two M I M OMOCIt T R A U I IUICK - OPEL payabtt and otttar otnoral off let work. Ottl, txptrltnct p r t f t r r t d , but will NINE ACRES ol How and U«d Con Snd rtMNfM to: Bon C-in, Tht Dally train. J. MAFARA AGENCY. M t Hwy Hwy IS aU4Ma Koyport Raajittr, Shrtw^bury, N.J., 07701 U, Mlddlvtown. 747-MO. THE FINEST SELECTION - Of now COOK — ExptfItnttd bfolltr ptrtoo RECEPTIONIST — Chiropractic of ond utod car* In Monmouth County. for wafood rntaurant, ytar round po tlct, part-tlmt nlghli Light typing Ov*r lat olr-condlrlanod now carl In tHIon. EKC«lltnf pay. Apply In ptrion. Strtd dttalltd rtiumt to Boa Em. ttock. McGlOIN RUICK OPEL INC . tong John't L T D . I I Btach Blvd., Tht Dally Rtgliltr. Shrtwibory, N.J. Shrowioufy Avt., Now Shrowiaury. Htghlondt. ^ _ _ _ _ _ 07701. Call Mr. Banks KEYPORiT - KIYPORT GARDENS. One-oeetroom trom I I M ; two b e * roam, 1 * 1 Meol supplied Call Hi O i l or MO M i l DOS TRAINING NG - Bavshero Com 6 E ELECTRIC - Amerlcona Range Double even, coppertone. eicellenl conemen llts FIAT 114 1*71 - Convertible En ELJtCTRA W74 - Peur-eW. cellem running cenanier ler, tlarae, tnWirt lap, air, en and m Ma. Call 74l-eSe7 M U M O J K 4»TI4*4 FORD - I ^ •UICK Hee Ca««aY.»4Hin CADILLAC LIMOUSINE 1171 - Mull be MM. B o j l m m i m has arrived Coll Mr. lameri. 747 Bill eoton 4 p.m. lOI.AffaitlWtlitt DACHSHUND - AKC FURNISHING ON A LOW BUDGET? - Check Ihe USED F U R N I T U R E CENTER OF RED BANK Fine turnl i n lor Has. IW Shrewsbury Ave nfi BITTER INC. ~ .YMOUTH 77. Pelt And Livestock FRANKLIN STOVE - M " , wllti oc- freen CaHftaesaaPanfN A T t i S M M b U _ _ fastst!" DINNER FOR TWO AT call AAA I TRANSPORTATION C A M - ALPINE 0 1 * 1 - 21 1978 WIN A FREE LOVE-O-GRAM CREDIT PROBLEMS' No casht I I you're working. help to get you financed- "9 ; eY "" 2 AirtM For Salt WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8 "Income Tax' Service FEDERAL AND STATE RETURNS Personal ond business Year-end booh keepln, ¥O ond payroll tones. Mor aery Trovoto, over l i yeori In Middle town Call for oppotnlmenl. 671 l l t f ROOFING «, SIDING BOOriNG" ANO SiDINO F>.» eill motes Olson Roofing & siding Co Call Sll-IPH Evenings 747.Sol4 Esl IP03 PACKAGING SUPPLIES CORRUGATED BOXES - Pocking Supplies tor Industry and Moving and Slorage Call 747-4M or 4»-4o71 PAINTING t . DECORATING PAINTING $. DECORATING PAPERHAMOINO - Pointing. Interlor. exterior, sheet rocking, taping ond pknterlng Work guaranteed. flUtV MO VI NG H A U LI NG MOVE WITH NICK - For Mrll Free estimate!. Senior rotes, also will trov t l - V^piV V M | r • I f l v t I S4eV Tr 1 rm MOVING AND HAULING - Near or tar Reasonable rotes. S7IIS1I TRUCKftAUTO RENTAL FORD RENT-A-CAR FAIRWAY FORD Oolh/-- AVIS INTERIOR SPECIALIST - Wallpaper and painting After I p.m.. Bol-lMi or 471-5447. Recommendations upon request W t TRY H l B O f B OFF SEASON SALE Three rooms for the price et two EKBert craftsman WALLYS PAINTING 171 llet 747-030C PAINTING AND DECORATING Carl B. Jones Fully Insured For free estimates call m J i l t PAINTINO - Interior, exterior Very reasonable Coll tor free estimate 741 ' PAINT PAPERING SPECIAL VINYL IS PER ROLL CALL eve't., RICHY en-itn Itnt • Car tr V M 842-6800 22 TheMyRcgkfcr SHREWSBURY N J 101. Aportmtwtt It*. Furnished Rooms MDOUTOWMMT HE'PORT - Lorae. tunuehad room - UMUtlltC Fai* i m M Mai MW •ar U K Coll 71WM7 ar MODEM APARTMENT - Prlvol* heme. threa room* Nter Irani •arMllar, •W-Xlt. tall lima H a t CmcMncr M M I H RENT WEEKLY asmu Hare in I woJUWa ImraKHHl! No p n Iw OCEAN G R O V E - Seoclovl Iwtdllrat-oadroom aparlmanl UJS aar men*, loOuaat all ulllltwt Call 471 in ONE lEOROOM - Full oflk. Karl II. Ho roam. MX U h M . all utllHWi paid by landlord II7S per month. One marrlhi m x v » O M K I U JO,- mi»«». Lam >r«»ci». N.J, a m o RED 1ANK - Daklaa ana Mar gam, lurmuwd, carMtad, utllltlei | ] » . IOOM—JwootV. ><!«>» a i m «. RED «AHK - uawry n _ „ aat In kfkKan, dHli«M«ai. caraatino. •Mo Tananl pan all ulllrtlai tlUHS RED RANK - NIoMv aacorotaa two room*, tacurtry and rtfarancaf. Call afMrtp.m.. H l - i m RED RANK - Ona-aagraam aaarl man), convenient location. Rtatona w o » l 741-OI anar i a m RED SANK - Thrta-raom aaartmanl m i par mom* wltt, no utllilSi. Sacu rlty required No pall 7 « lael. I t • RIVERSIDE AVE LUXURY HIGH RISE" OvarlooUng the Novatlni Rlirar \ / 4 0 0 0 I , POP. BUT I PE-EL 5ORT / DON'T WO8leY I OOT A OP LOW )\ pneftCRiPno, TH/TU. TOPAY. J MIODLETOWN - W i l l l u r . l i l . i l room In nKa ar*o. naar h a anl roll rood Uotlon Call 171 5W onor 5 MODERN GARDEN APARTMENTS - Illn Includod Ha MOirlry Central olr and haol, o n cooking, bol comet. M-hour doorman. TV ttcurlty, nrlmrrring pool, touno. morlno. olio underground parking. Rental office SCENIC RUSTIC RETREAT - In the as S r * v " M A M I G H T - DatllMr turnlihtd •tu«o and aaacutlva w l l t i Horbour Point. 1«1 Ocaan Ava. 747HS] THRIE LARGE ROOMS - With III In kHchan, Call M o r i noon, m Ills, ot tarSR.m.,717'7141. WALL TWP - Unury Garden apart maidi. Full corprllng. tomt winVnViptocet. NnnU court, iwlmmwia pool, club haoM. UnturMMM. Storlliig oi U4S. Saolng I I believing 44t M40 WEST END - }V>. fvrnttltaa. imfvrrlihed. Kill kltctttnatta. olr Pool, tor rota S1UI0SI7S ttMDS. 101 Houses For Rtnt A-l RENTALS - PvrnMkad and untur I M M hMhai and aMrliiunri. No to« n> Monti. CAMAUAAOEHCV, Rail, tori, 55 Oteanport Ava., W. Long •loncti. )»4100 FAIR HAVEN — Spocteui four .bed r u m Colonial d a i l i m d tor con vanllnci. locotld on tht p r i t t l t i t •trial. Scraanad pordi, itudy, fire rot badroorm. din 747MU HI0HLAND1 - Imall hvat room col toot, uHtoMe odurh. I m per month ajui uttlltlat. Security raaulrtd. H I HIGHLANDS - iV, room cotloge. —•Iliprelerred Security required rnim LITTLE IILVER - R«a roomt. two bedroom!, full bowment arid aorooe. Occupancy In two wattu. B " X ARMSTRONG AGENCY. Reolion, sis Protflact Ava.. LHfta illvar. 74t-4aoo. wlboUlfotVH - Fow HHrtomt on four a c r t l . forage, kldt, pet> «.k.. STATE RiNTALl M f . 747W* TOWN HOLMDEL AREA I home and area, t l i room*. wan dining roan, ftraptoce. bait It. recreation home. Hot water garden, RED BANK DUTCH COLONIAL — Living room, rtreotoce. dining room, dtn. three bedroomi. aorooe Small vord vtrvconvenlarrl. Immediate oc IIODLETOWN - Four bedroomi. ttM. family amily roam, room, goraga. gorog*. Mid "* bothi. l i w u Soutti. Immodlotl occupancy Alklng SOS. Call Jack McOowanror anpolntmant, C E N T U R Y 21 McGOWAN RYAN AGENCY, 747RUMSON - Ont badroom cottagi on nlott montn to month, UX plinutlll- *0'' °*k"" ** m' TINTON FALLS - SW Shriwibury A » . Thru bodroorm. kllchtn, dining room, living room, lull boumoni, i, go 103 Rental. To Share M A L E T i A C H E R — I n J O ' i , will thor« furnithcd twe-btdroom hom« AHonMc Hlgrvkwh I t 1-1714. **'•*< • • * • - • • • • rw• urviruwia. I i|fi HJigj^j ill MUMfliowi., \Vt mllti from Red Bonk. WOULD YOU SHARE YOUR HOME? 104 Winter Rental. MlWI — MM 0O*i\ Upvlvii prlvoto b u d club, hmmi courti, toll couria Wookmdl. waakly. monthly OCEANFRONT - Two-bodroom coi: logo, nlctly turnlthid. Corpatid. AwlfcMi March to Jww. StMat). SEA (RIGHT - Cmclancy ond motal urUH. Wookly and monltily rokn. mold u n t o , u t l l l W TV. No M O M . Trodo WWdl MOW - Morlno M l i m 10* Furnlihtd Roonw HOTEL-KEANMURG CLIFFWOOD — Frlvall intranet, la parking,towrtnt. Hwy. X. In tS 10 Noirt to Clinwoad Form EATONTOWN AREA — Furnlihod room, krhMn prlvllton. Ktounablt. Coll batwaon »4 p.m.,Tn-IIIS. K6ANSRURG - Furnlihto roorm ond f i d t 51. Help Wanted ^ U offll^H t 1 I ^ v~—^ e S ' 'Li SINGLE OR DOURLE ROOMS Wookly or monrhly I M and tlS p t . 137 Lot! And Acreooe lot Commercial Rental? YORK AVE - P o r l M o n m o u l h 7SKIN Pirmll guorontiod III.OOC ATLANTIC HIOHLANOS - For Itcn. Cornor Hwy » Mlddlflown T a x up to WO u) ft In building US.oK oik Ing. n^S.%Ti8."" QtWy>w ' t °" ATTRACTIVE OFFICE SFACE - A(^ pronlmotlly tog la. It. Law rmtolt Will dlnot to lulM Hoot and air con dmonlng Incluood. Cjll 17} IM4 MATAWAN - Thraa modarn otTlcn LacaM an Rl. 14. Prlvotl antronct. ampU parking I I X par ottlco monln ly- plui u t l l n l i i Immidlolt occuFoncvCoMUMtlt. MIODliTOWN - Hwv. I t Mara lor rmt. Lacolad In ntoWlihad ihopping cantor. Idool for proftttlonal oftlct or rotoll builntu 10S0 10 h Call 27? Wlhwi Avt.. Port Monmouth SfimOO Pirmll guoranlood M.SOOoiklng Mlddltlpwn Llbory Llbo a r i a . O m a c r i plui 111.UO rt art Ing plui 111UO I York Avt . Port Monmoulh. 71algg Pirmll guorontaad 110.500 oUlng. Cormr Wllllorm Avt . E Ktontburg 100KI06 Pirmlt guoranlttd M . t M alklng Ralford 75ilOO Pirmlt guorontttd IIO.OOOoU.lng OFFICE SfACE AVAILARLE - Ntw building, Xta tg. ft , will dlvldt to lull, "-- and olr conditioning Includod ' N J CoUITMuT PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SUITE Ground lloor ultablt lor doctor or • M i l l ol m Rrood SI, Rid Rank MJ 173>. tp.m. toSp.m. THREE ROOM OFFICE - Llncrolt Noor Ilia Forkwoy. Modtm builrllna Coll Rogor Coimi. Roallor, ol 741 > "•Vnwjwni ™.rf. l^ojnil BJr f tn'saOookl1' » * > • « • . 'tody to go. IRRR 131 Mobile Homtt GARDEN PARK MOSILE HOMES Bethony Rd , Hoilet Adult pork. Wolh „ 139 Cemetery Lott FOUR GRAVES Shoreland Mttr.or.al 131 Houtet For Sale GOOD HOUSES NEEOED One family unlh Irom 70 . to M i In Northern Monmouth Courtly. M-day •ervlce, w i pay oath. MEUMCO REALTY INC. RIRDS HUDDLED TOGETHER OutiWi my window. IhWtrlng In IM mow and cold wind thli morning brought forth from mt ttilt llmltrkf A bird sat up In a tree; It's notes sold, "please feed me; I'll Sing In the spring, for t h e food you now bring; thank you; AA»N!.teE.ra.. yoar In Roal Eilolt. Ea ROY OR SELL - Your homo througr an otnikrtt ot mt largoil roal oitatt company In ma world-Cintury 31 Co Itni Rtoltor. 74I-74W Multlplf lilt ELLEN S. HAIELTON, REALTOR Mrmbtr Root Eilott Eichongt JUST LISTED M M condition ColorHol split Laval or. gorgoout Irtod lot. ofttrlng brook one privacy. Hanoiomi norm with brick and clapboard M t i r l a r , ipocloui roomi throughout, llriplact, will oqulppod kllchln and largt lomllt room. A lint valut ot iu.ftu. WHE LAN REALTY GROUP, REALTORS IWWB.MldoWown.SO.7Si5, KEANSRURG SJt.ftl - T h r u bid roamtancn. Ry owtwr -Fiocldot«uno LITTLE SILVER POINT ROAD Four bodroorm. I t . t . both., on rlvii with dock, compiottly rodocorotod. Ir topCTndltloaFffrWonirSp.rn. LITTLE SILVER - T h r u four bid room Copt, lorgi lot, Ijicilltnl condl USTINGS OF BETTtH HOAAtS lo K«*i.burp Mlddttiown Hoil«1 Holm (ttl. THE SMOLKO AGENCV. Ill 0)23 SELLING VOUPt NOMET - We're In. I t t n t N In buying nomn rflrtit. Call Mr. C r n i y ot WEBER REALTY, M4fOOO RECRF ATIONAL 152 Boats And Acceuorle. ALL MARINE ELECTRONICS - W I Mvt you mort. Shop around. Him call Booting ElKtronlci Hot Lint lor trtt prlet quoit CLASS O ICEROAT PARTI - Runnar plonk. Morconl loll, moil, two toti runntri, Illlir ond itnrlng yoke All or port Antro:»p m , WV4S7S LYMAN - MAKO, Morquli. Sabrr Duronoutlc. BMIon Wholtr. Johnion. OMC, EZ Loodir, luqpllti Bry'i Morlni, Ntptunt 775-7M4 I I ' WOOD R O A T ^ And trallir. N n d i work 40 H P Johnion, IRcillInt U50. l .... tRANCH Five roi room, two btdroom, fwoltorv home with full botamant. situated or MOrtaotrori, u l m n i M t M I D D L E T O W N - S i n d far our "Hamai For Living" brocnuri. plcl dticrlptlom. p r l c t l on avollabli n mtJXiass!^t MIODLETOWN - Bill buy In Oot Hill. Five-bedroom rolled ranch, rt. batht. Proletilonolly landfcoptd or hott-ocrt. Fireplace In family room Central air. Two-car garage. Near Khoolt, RR and convenient to Pork way. H U . m HERB READ A H O C 5 Reoltor, Tit 2100. NEW HOMES - ix down financing From U4,«ao Ntw locotloni and over isgjnVi^T.wat!^"1'' OCEAN TOWNSHIP — W o v t l d l Woodi and Long Vltw Vlllooe, Eleoon' ntw homtl from HATO Call O.-5K. I REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE Lilt and buy with a member ot Mon mouth County'i lor gelt realty group. * one year warranty available on or homei Ilittd and lold by a member ol the Red! Eitote EkChanQt. Reoltorl C K - Ulmor.modi, mv- 1S4 Recreational Vehicle. tor Alritroom Trodtl. Alritriam by Anotll Inc.. Rh. 31114. Colllngtwood ClrcU, Formlngdalt. JOO RUMSON AREA - Sond for •Homti For I M n g " brocnurt. plci. dncrlp Horn, prlctl on ovollaUt homtl AP FLERnOOK REALTORS. I l l Avt Two Htvon, Rumum, S41HU. RUMSON VALUE - All-ytor round Ir. I N ! flv»*adroom Colonlol In l u n u n Tht kllctwn It the htort of the homi ond opart! to the parents- den ond thi l e p a r o l t c h i l d r e n ' ! playroom Screened porch to cotch the river breem. Juit five mlnutti to oceor and troln ifotlon. On* ot o kind at c reolntlc HJe.XO Coll today CENTURV } l COZENS, Rtoltor •'Independently Owned" I I I River Rd. Fair Haven MHW THINKING OF - Silling or buying? lotl TRANS EXECUTIVE REALTY O7IS*» WALKER AND WALKER REALTORS Shrowlbury Offlco 7415}!]' MMdwtownmolmdtl tllljll RREATHTAKING VIEW - W ocoon. NavaiM Rlvor and Sandy Hook Boy. Irom this coiy ont-biaraom condominium, toocttd with mtrm, MO.fW CoHITMOII. 13) Income Property RED RANK-INCOME PROFERTY Two ont-bodroom aportmmti, lovtly Oroo. amslo parking, wolklng dUkmci to o w n and inopplna. t».5D0. Call ownor ortor S p.m., 5J147N. Call 747IMI for appolrdmont oftor i p.m. Our raptdry expanding oraaniulkvi has challenging positions available in electronic training overseas Positions require graduate ol accredited electronic school with minimum one year teaching experience. Experience m PRC-VHC Communication System required PoaMons otter excelenl salary and benefit package Please send resume and salary history to: •«P)VIC«R) DIVISION lOtplU •TO. • « > 41 MO C1ne«nrw., OWo 45241 a taaaf ajaarfat* aavltao Minn All e s t i - SPECIAL NOTICES 110 Lot! And Found LOST - Irlth Sttttf. temolt. (Mil, WiM collor. "SurvMt", Colts N*ck Frttnd ly R t w d . CoU M W 211 Special Noticet ANY PLAYER OR TEAM - Inttr Mttd In lolnlno. o womm'i loftball IMMW plMU amtod Sf I H t l or 1U O E r t . M I ~ _ THE HAPPY DAYS - Stringftondof Monmoutii County I i looking for a bats taxophoflf ond/or p«rion who plavi boi. MKophont. Coll t h i director at ? • JM4 aftflr S p.m. THE HAPPY DAYS STfti N& BAHtl — Ot Monmoutti County \% avaliatHt lo group* and orgonliaflon. tor concert Mrformonc*! Why not hovt jom« thine d K f t r t n l in • n t i r t o l n m t n t at your m x l offoIrT Sing olong ond ttrui (o ttili tlvtly muak plovtd In ttw Irodl lion ot tht PhllcxMlphla U u m m i r t l For mor« IntormoHon, call ttvt dirtttofOHW-SmofttfSpm 213 Instruction A TWO WEEK — Morning, Real Ellatt Licensing COUTM, Feb ,13 7*. MJ I'LJBI IC N01ICFS 216 Aberdeen Twp. R l SOLUTION 71 D WHEREAS, (here exlit. the nnd tor continuity In atttndonce QI meellnai ol in* Zoryng Board ol Ad|u>tm«nl ol Ihc Town.h.p ot Aberdeen, and WHEREAS, the Zoning Board hoi been requested to supply the Mayor suttlcitnf standards tor matnlenancr ot status o\ a "member in good siond NOW. THEREFORE. BE IT RE SOLVED tuai Ihc Chairman ol the JonIng Board ot Ad,u.lment shall recommend lo Ihe Mayor the removal from fTwjmt*rihtp on the Zoning Board Ol Adiusiment any such member who shall miss three consecutive mtttings or ony lour meettnai during a calendar year without juslltloble excuse ADELAIDE BERNHARDT. Secretary. Zoning Board ot Ad|uslmenl Ftb-liifll TOWn.h,pot Aberdeen HOTICk TO BIODEHt Sealed bids tor ihe following utieo iu< ptus equipment will be received by the Aberdeen Townstiip Municipal Olih lies Authority at its office ot M Nobtc Place. Aberdeen, New Jersey uni.i 10 3 0 a m prevailing lime on Frbiuaiy 16. 1V7I and Ihen at told pioce publicly opened ond read oiowd, 1 — 1970 Fora Dump Truck, mile ooe 41,142 S. with snow plow atJoctitTven! Several baichei at master keyed padlocks This equipment c«fc b * vieweo al Ihe Authority s (acuities a l )0 Noble Place, Aberdeen. New-Jeney from •Mo'" t o l Q . I S a m on February I * . 1971 and at oitier lime, by appoint mem. The Aberdeen Township Municipal Utilities Authority reserve* me right lo waive ony informalities in or to re [eel ony or oil bids ABERDEEN TOWNSHIP MUNICIPAL UTILITIES STANLEY . I T T N E T & V n F t t l , 1971 VU TSOLU 0 i , A BE IT RESOLVED bv the Zoning Board ot Adlustmenl ot the Town,hip of Aberdeen ond Norman B. Kouft. be and he hereby is appointed as Zoning Boord ot Adjustment Oltorney tor a term Of one ( I I year lo emilre an Ja nuory !5. ItTt. BC IT FURTHER RESOLVED that ihe annual retainer ot said Zoning Boord of Adjustment Attorney shall be the sum ol W,700 00 subject lo Ihe approval ot the Moyor and Council, lor which nlolnef he shall attend the regular ond coucui monthly meetings of The Board, prepare such Resolulions that may be deemed necessary and render incidental legal advice ond opinions to the ChoUmon ond mem ben of ihe Board nol rtai'irtng research ol ihe Low; provided, vowever. that in oddliton to told annual retainer the Zoning Board of Adlustmtnt Attorney snail be paid such l e e . . charges, and expenses as may be deemed reasonable by the 2onlng Boord ot Adjustment for all other pro frtsionoi urvlcet rendered by him on its beholl ADELAIDE BERNHARDT, Secretory, Zoning Boord at Adjustment Township of Aberdeen F « I. 1971 U ,4 Monday night, and more were moceonport RESOLUTION WHEREAS, there exists o need tor municipal attorney, ond WHEREAS, funds ore ovailobic lo this purpose, ond WHEREAS the Local Public Cor tracrt Law ( N J S A 40 I I I el teq requires thof the resolution author uing the award ot conlrocls tor Pro tesiionoi Service* without com petittvt bids must be publicly odver Filed N O W , T H E R E F O R E , BE IT RE SOLVED by Ihe Borough Council o me Borough ot OceonpoH as follows 1 The services o t G S T E P H E N IN CRAM ore hereby recoaniied o l an eicephon lo ihe Local Public Con tracts Low at defined within N J S A 40 A I I 5 3 This contract | | awarded withou competitive bidding as contemplated within N j 5 A 40A i l l and N J S A 40A I I 1 et seq because the services required ore Of a special technical no lure and '•> ol Ihe governing body hove duly concurred Herein. 3 A copy of this resolution sholl be published in Ihe Doily Reamer os re quired by law within 10 days ot it* pas f UftLIC N O T t C i At a Reeular Meeting ot Ihe Zoning Boord ol Adiuttmenl. Township ot Aberdeen. H J.. held on ttve istrt day of January, 1WI, Ihe loMowing Reiolu lion tvai moved ana voted upon No 1)» - Waller A Acker man. j r . M l Sherwood Or , AM'r)««i,N J NOW. T H E R E F O R E . BE IT RE SOLVED, that the Zoning Board 0' Ad luilnvent ot Ihe Tumnthtp ol Aberdeen findi thai the applicant. WALTER ACKERMAN jR . be granted o wort once to conilruct a goroge upon Block )M lot 1]. on Itte Of'icioi Tan Map ol ihe Towmnip ot Aberdeen ond that oil relief reques'ed at »el fprth in the ret oiution. be groniea IO me applicant ADELAIDE BEHNHARDT Secretary, Zoning Board of Adluitment Townthip ot Aberdeen _ • • S O L U T I O N 71 • BE IT RESOLVED by Ihe Zoning Board ot Adlutlmenl ol the Township ot Aberdeen, that In compliance with ihe provisions of the Open Public Meeting* Act ol the Slale pi New Jet tev, notice Is hereby given os to ihe regularly scheduled meetings ol the Zoning Boord of Adjustment ol the .Township ol Aberdeen tor the year 1971, to be held ot Ihe Municipal Build ing. 147 Lower Main Street. Aberdeen. New Jersey 1 Regular meetings shall be held on Ihe fourth Wednesday of each month ol I 00 P M , excepl when said meeting night lolls on a legal holiday, soid meeting shall be held on Ihe Tuesday mgni tallowing soid holiday unless Spe clai notice is provided scheduling said meeting until another dole 2 Caucus meetings shall be held on the second Wednesday of each month ot I 00 P M . except whet, said meet ing falls on a legal holiday, sold meet ing .hail then be held on the Tuesday niohl tolluwlng soid holiday • BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that notice of changes to the aforesaid schedule shod sc made public pursuont to the provisions of the atoresoid HP ••SOLUTION WHEREAS, (here eiltlt a need (or o municipal engineer, and WHEREAS. The funds are r available lor this purpose; and WHEREAS, the local public con tracts Law IN J S A 40A.ll I el sea ) requires thai tht resolutions author Uing Ihe award ol conlrodi lor Pro lessionol Services without Competitive bids must be publicly odver tiied. NOW. THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Borough Council ot the Borough of Oceonporl os lollowt: 1, The services o' RICHARD M. SCHUL2 ore hereby recognlied a i an exception lo Ihe Local Public Can tracts Low os defined within N J S A flA.11! }, This contract is awarded without rompelitive bidding os Conttmplaied within N J S.A J0A4-S6 and N.J I.A. *0A u I el seq becouse ihe services required ore of o special technical nolure ond >t of the governing body have duty concurred herein 1. A copy ot ihis resolution shall be published m the Daily Register as required by law within 10 days ol its pot soge i, Patricia L vorca. Act ing Borough Clerk of (he Borough of Oceonport nereoy certify the above to be a true copy ot resol tin f layer and Coui.. . Mayo Boiough ot Oceanporl ol a regular meeting held on Tf'J% PATRICIA L VARCA ...or . I PATRICIA L. VARCA Acting Borough Clerk Feb.#.197l 242 Shrewsbury Borough )ugh NOTICE NOTl Pursuant lo section 703 i (Al O l Ot ihe Federal Reserve Boards Regulation C. notice is hereby given thai Ihe Shrewsbury State Bonk w i l l make available lo the public al its main office ol 46S Broad St Shrewsbury, N.J Ihe required disclosure statements In compliance with the Home Mortgage Disclosure Acl ot 1974." E Wayne Kavalek A**J v P Inttailmcni Loan Dept Jan. I I , F e b . ! ~ ,;n 233 Marlboro NOTICE Boord ot Fire Comrmt.iontr Dlttrict NO 1 Marlboro T o w n i M p . New Jeney Proposed Budget for Itrl Building t> Fire Equipment IS.OOOOO Rentol . Mo.e & Equipment Rcptacemenl J.500.00 Iniuronce 11,000 00 Training 4.000 00 Siationery soooo Copilai improvemenl S. 000.00 Bond Poymenl 6.000 00 Truth Mumlniijm r 5,000 00 Cioltilrtg Allowance S. 000 00 Contingency Fund 1.000 00 Fire Prevention Bureau. .. . 2,40000 Legal & Audi" 3.000.00 salon*. & ENpemti 4.100.00 Signol System. ... 1. SOOOO Hydrant Rental 11.000 00 NOTICE The Board of Adlustmenl of the Borough ol Shrewsbury at Us meeting on February 1, 19/1 denied a variance application by Raymond W. Solm, Jr. ond James Gordon at premises located In Block 71, Lot 2 on the To* Map of the Borough ot Shrewsbury. This Retolulion Is on (lie In the official records ol the Board at 419 Sycamore Avenue, Shrew ibgry MARV LOU MARTIN Clerk. Shrewsbury H$ Monmouth County W.000 00 ol ntw Hydrontt iu,0oo M Tw ,ooo oo Amount to be raised tar curreni Iiicai W I L L I A M R FOX 23t Mlddletown MOTICt Pleeie toh» notice that the under ttgned hat opptied lo the Board bf Ad hfiimvni of the Townthip ot Middletown to. o variance Irom Ihe provlWorn « Article I t I Section ( t l ) E of the ZMtino Ordinance to at to permit apeiiconl to requett vononce lo uie houM troiter at a living quarter until lire domaoed rtsldenct It repaired and mode nabttoble. Thli it o request to comply with Ordinance No. I t ) , ot the Townttup ol Middletown. on prem Itet lotoled at IS Nedtrtlre Drive, Mid dletown, otto known at Block I D Lot J on mt Ta* Man A copy at the application hat been tiled in Ihe Office of the Townthip Clerk ond may be Inspected. Trte public hearing will be held on Monday evening, the 20 day ot FEBRUARY. 1971. ol 1:00 P M. ol Townthip Hall, Mlddletown. New Jersey, at which time you may appear either In person or by agent or attorney and present ony objection which you may have to granting this application W I L L I A M D. SENN 15 Ntdthlfe Drive 233 Marlboro tn.,1 NOTICK TO B I D O I R S Notice l i hereby given thot staled bids will be received by The Mon mouth County. Board of Recreation Commissioners at the Monmouth County Pork S y s t e m A O M I N I S TRATIVE OFFICES. Thompson Pork Newman Springs Rd., Ltncrotl. New Jersey, until 10:00 a m , prevailing lime on MONDAY, FEBRUARY JO, 1971 ond Ihen publicly opened and read aloud for the following INTERIOR PAINTING BLDG NO 1401 DEEP CUT PARK RED HILL ROAD. MIDDLETOWN TWP Bid Documents, including Instructions, to Bidders, Proposal Forms, and complete Plons ana Specifications may be obtained by qualified bidders al the A D M I N I S T R A T I V E OFFICES ot lite MONMOUTH COUNT* PARK SYSTEM, located In Thompson Park. Newman Springs Rood. Llncroft. New Jersey, between ihe hours ol v.oo a m and 4 JO p m., Monday through Friday A I I bids must be submitted on the stondard proposul forms ifl the manner designated ond required by the specifications, and must be enclosed I n sealed envelopes bearing the name ond oddress ot ihe bidder and the title of ihe bid on the outside, and addressed lo The Monmoulh County Board of Recreation Commissioners. P O Box 13*. Llncroft. N . j . 0/731 A l l bids must be accompanied by the toilow- on with Road Superin- tendent Raymond England and the snow removal crewi. "We're catching up with the snow cause of the problems they cars parked in the streets, caused with snow removal op- and i t s holding up the oper- Were finding « lot of erations, according to a road ation If we get the coopera- department official. tion of the citizens we'll have James McGoldrick said that it a l l cleaned up by tomorrow." he said. equipment was "holding up" Mr. McKenna said that pri- laat night, even though much vate contractors were also ot it is more than 20 years causing problems by plowing old. snow from private driveways "Our only problem Is aban- Into public streets, after the tax rates here and in Fair streets had been cleared by doned vehicles and traffic. Haven as the resull of the Our snow equipment is tnthe road department. Haven good shape," he said A new borough ordinance, Regional school budget has to ban the dumping of snow In Police Capl. Robert Scotl been announced by Joseph borough streets, may be necsaid that any vehicles parked Seaman. Rumson-Falr Haven essary, the councilman said. on borough streets after I I 1978-79 Rumson-Falr Regional High School Board p.m. last night w o u l d be of Education auditor. lowed at owner's expense. According lo Mr Seaman, Mr. McKenna declined to estimate how much the storm A snow emergency was de- would cost the borough. and based on figures fur- clared by Mayor Daniel J . nished by officials in the state O'Hern Department of Education, the urged everyone lo use car our welders and mechanics effect « f the $3.2 million re- pools or public transportation going all day, keeping our gional high school budget on in the borough. the tax rate here will be a yesterday, and "We had the usual breakhedowns of equipment We had plows in repair. I ' m quite The mayor said that the sure that w e ' l l be able t o "proliferation of the automo- handle it within our S percent tax rate for regional school bile in American society" was budget cap," he said. purposes was $1.11 per (100 of contributing to snow removal assessed valuation, while this problems in the borough. one-cent increase. The 1977 year's rate is set at 11.12 per $100 of assessed valuation. In Fair Haven a 25-cent reduction for support of the re- The "harnesses or halters" which hold the plow blades to "We'll have to tow a lot of the trucks, were the cause of abandoned cars. Thirty years most of t h e road d e p a r t ago we didn't have all these ment's equipment troubles, cars on the street." he said. Mr. McGoldrick said. that He reported that four of the pated. The 1977 rate of 11,99 parked and abandoned cars presented the "biggest probper 1100 of assessed valuation harnesses had broken by late gional school budget is antici- Mr. O'Hern said yesterday afternoon, and that is expected to drop to $1 74 lem" for the borough snow removal crews. valu- suffered " a couple" of flat ation, Mr. Seaman said. tires during the storm. per 1100 of assessed "Frank McKenna has been out riding the plows all'day. Safety Council picks Loigman MIDDLETOWN Loigman has been He's o u rc o u n c i l m a n In road department trucks had "Our boys performed in a superior manner," he said. charge, and he's doing a per- "Most of them have been in sonal Job. We feel we're in the business for many years, pretty good shape. We're now Larry S. and they know what we want attacking the parking lots and elected to do, and how to do i t . " the train station," he said late chairman of the Mlddletown yesterday. Mary Stevenson was elect- include Donna Braun of Leonardo. Richard Gough of Port Monmouth. Thomas Kedersha of New Monmouth and Shiela La Barbera of Mlddletown. The council meets the sec- " R e d Bank is clean as a whistle," he added Safety Council for 1878. Freehold Twp. — sees no rate hike By DAVID TURNER crease. Our past philosophy ond Thursday of each month FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP - at 8 p.m. in the conference The Township Committee last volume," Mayor Mayor said. room of Township Hall. Meet- night introduced a $4 2 million ings are open lo the public municipal budget, which May- The new minimum rate will be $12 per quarter, down from $12.50. or James Mayor said will not was declining rates for higher 248 M o n m o u t h C o u n t y Increase the local property "The water utility has to be than ttn percent 110*.) of Ittt totax rate. tal amount ol Ihe bid, but not to self-supoporting, so this will exceed twenty thoutond dollar. "The assessed valuation of raise more revenue because it HJO.OOO 001 the township has risen to AND—• . had been operating at a slight B Certificate ol Surely from a repu $222,633,850 for 1978, so the table Insurance company c»r deficit," the mayor noted. (trying to the fact thai ll trt» bid net effect is that the tax rate der i i awarded a conlroct. a SuThe committee also unanirety Bond will be filed lor the per will remain at 42 cents per formance of thol contract mously passed approved a Bids must be delivered ol Ihe plac* hundred dollars. This is the ond before Irve hour mentioned above $950,000 bond Issue for the eighth straight y e a r that The luccesilul bidder will be required to tur niiii a Surety Bond In the proposed municipal swim pool we've been at 42 cents, and full amount of Ittt comroci The bond complex, pending approval by ing company ihall be outhorlied to Iswe're pretty proud of that," sue bonds m the Slate ol New Jersey the s t a t e L o c a l F i n a n c e and shall be approved by The Mon he said. mouth County Boord of Recreation Board. Commiiiioners Last year's budget totalled During the performance of this The complex will include an $3.8 million, according to Mr. contract, all contractors arc required lo comply with the requirement, ol Olympic-size swimming pool, Mayor. P L \9fil 127 The Monmouth County Board ot an Olympic diving pool, and a He said that the largest Recreation Com m I S.I oner t reserve. the ngtii lo waive any Informallflet In. children's pool, in addition to or lo r*|ect any or all bids, ond to single segment of the budget award contracts tn whole or in pan It bathhouses, parking lots, and would be "General Governdeemed In the best interest ol the Boord lotto so a snack bar. ment,'" or admistrative and No bidder may withdraw nit Did operations costs for the townwithin thirty (30) doyi following the The complex will be located dole of bid opening ship at $906,450, or 21.8 perThe Monmouth County Board ol In the center of Manasquan Recreation Commlstiontri shall recent of the budget. River Park off Georgia Road. serve ihe right to hold bidi for sixty (tf I days prior to award ol contract* The second largest segment Mr. Mayor said that the 15 By order of Tht Board ol Recreation Com m m i oner i of Ihf County of Won will be public safety, with 20 year bond issue will be paid mould VICTOR E GROSSINCER. percent of the budget, or off by the users of the pool. Chairman $830,600. JAMES J. TRUNCER. There will be an annual memSecretory-Director The reserve for uncollected bership fee of $175 for famiFttt.1.1|7| » H 70 taxes will total $706,500, and l i e s t h a t wish t o b e c o m e MOTICI Of RESCHEDULED MEETING expenditures for the road demembers, he said. MONMOUTH COUNTY BOARD Of KtCMIATION COMMISSION* H S partment will total $747,465. "We hope that the pool will PUFASE TAKE NOTICE (hot Ihe regular scheduled meeting of Ihe Debt service w i l l t o t a l also be used by the municiBoord ol Rtcreoiion Commissioner* ^ "ONDAY EVENING, F " BTu $514,500. pality for swimming instruct,Ltr,wt T Q t 'l plm •h « **•" r " c h « The budget also Includes tion and the summer recrea! l u > v « l « i * t EVENING, FEB, R U * R Y T i 9 l a , i p m i ol the board* $177,200 for sanitation, health tion program. Local schools « » m ot the Atfrniniilrollve office* al Thompson ParK, Newmon S p r l n a i and welfare, $173,600 for rec- will also probably use I t , " Mr. good, Lincroft, New Jersey. By oroer of the Monmouth County word of Recreation C o m m i S d S i S_ _ _!« J ? "ILL NOTICE in occo'donce with the provision*o f Iht Locol Heollh Services Act. PL I97S. Chapter 379, the Board of Chosen Freeholders ol the County or Mon mouth win hold a public hearing, on Feb. 73. l?71, at 1 p.m. in the board i meeting roam, second floor, Hall ot Records, Main St . Freehold. N J . icrlaintng to ihe establishment of a County Board of Health. Boord ot Chosen FreeholdeYi. County ot Monmouth, Theodore J Narotomcfc. I County Administrator i reation, $94,057 for emergency employment, and $7,300 tor capital Improvements. In other business, the coun- The council also introduced a new police s a l a r y structure, which will take ef- men. fect immediately. "We're happy with it, and so are they," he said. The new starting salary for a patrolman will be $11,100, whili the top salary for a patrolman will be $16,400 " T h i s changes t h e r a t e structure so that minimum rate users will experience a slight decrease, but the big Other Public Notices FOIJT WCSOETH LIO»L tmvicis n o a i w OfflcaalMaMalMaaai/Uvacat. U l A n i f ItoCrrMtfa C a K M 233 Marlboro ASSETS Coil s D m Irom MorlDoro Townihlp Daltrrtd Otoron lo Fulurt Truollon FunoXi Otc.Jl.ialt 114,301 M I5.6SO.0O M ) * 1U.0M.90 11.01} JO U5,«O7.tO LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCE Copiroi HTmrgvement Reserve Thlt molltr btlrtg opened lo t h t :eurt by Ifit Fart Monmoufh Ltool Sarvlcat Program, attorneys for I m plolrrllfl. Jomet Mlcl»tl Mobley tar o udomant lo oiiume ortolhir nornt ond or enlry ol on order fining o dolt for me htorlno tnereol; It I t on m i l J0lh doy ot January, tn. O R D E R E D thol Ihe 3d daw o l Morch, l « l . ol • ocloclc In t l » tort noon, or as toon thereafter n courrHl may be heard, ond I h t Monmoulh U.45SW County Court HOUM In the Sorougr, of UAM.M I1AHM 31.116 4? ' US.407.rtl lU.tn.ll 1)94000 Jl.m.tt HI,035 40 Thli summary ol audit lor Ihe yaor andM DKtmotr 31, Wl, ol Ihf Boord bl Flra CommlMlonerl. Fire Ol»lrlcl Number Two. Marlboro TownIhlp. NawJrrMv.lt Pubtilhtd IwlCfOl n q u l r r t by R.& 40:1S1-3' Mlcfoal Moulfr TTIOaatM Fab. 1.1 tMot Freehold, New Jeriey. be IktdoTthe ime and place for Ihe haorlng ol tuch appUcmion ond of any oblectloni mat may M moo. mtrels; and It It FURTHER ORDERED thai r». 1 " Z L t u c £ "W|l<:""on be pukllihttf In the Ootly Rtgliltr, a nawtpoptr prlnl. e<J In Monmouth County. Ntw Jeriay, once, at lent Iwo w t r t i txecadlng the dole ot Ihe naorlno WILLIAM T. WICHMANH. JCC »i. v ordi- nance, which the mayor said cil unanimously passed a re- would provide raises of about vision in the water utility rate 6 percent for township police- volume users will have an in» Mayor noted. A Certified Check OR Cashiers Check OR Bid Bond drawn lo the order ol The Monmoulh County Board ol Recreation Commissigners In on omoun* ol not lets F I H DltTR DUTHICT NUMIEK TWO TOWNIMIF O> M M L i a i O COUNTY OF MONMOUTH" STATI OF NIK J I M I V COMPAIUTIVI IALANCI 1HIIT OamHarll, 1W7 JWI IUI pgnu. am to be towed last night, be- the borough's snow removal RUMSON - The impact on bers welcomed to the council • •SOLUTION WHEREAS, there exists a need tor a municipal auditor, ond WHEREAS, The funds Ore available tor (his purpose: and , WHEREAS, the Local Public Con /rocls Law N J S A 40 I I 1 el leq re 'quires thai Ihe resolution aulhorliina ihe award ol contracts.for Professional Services ' without competitive bids must be publicly advertised NOW. T H E R E F O R E . B E IT RESOLVED by the Borough Council at the Borough of Oceonpon as lollows I The services of ARMOUR S HUL SART AND COMPANY are hereby recoanued as an eMception I D the Lo col Public Contracts Low as defined within N J S A 40A 11 i 1. This contract I i awarded without competitive bidding os contemplated within N.J S.A 40A 4 So and N J U 40A 111 el seq because tht services required are ot a special technical no lure ond *i ot Ihe governing body hove duly concurred herein I, A copy of fnis reiolutifln tfibil be published In the Daily Register as re quired by low within 10 days ot Us pas sooe i. Patricia L Varca, Acl ing Borough Clerk of the Borough ot O c e o n p o r t hereby certify the above lo be o true copy of resolution R7I-77 adopted by the Mayor and Council of Ihe Borough ol Oceonport at a regular meeting held on ship Planning Board ot Its regular meeting held February I, I 9 ' l adopted a resolution disapproving Minor Subdi vision Application No 396, proposed subdivision ot Holmdel Tan Mop Block SO, Lot 79 1 into Iwo lots (propose lo convey 0 3S oc to Wesl Keansburg yvoter Company) located on Windswept Road, Submitted by LHio L Nero, applicant ond owner, and (hot a copy Ot the deter mi notion, together with per tinenl documentation relating lo Ihis matter, has been tiled in ihe office of Ihe Township Clerk ond Is avoilable lor inspection during regular business hours. HOLMDEL TOWNSHIP PLANNING BOARD MARGUERITE M P e S E U X . decretory Feb I . I97B Xi.17 Reveals taxrate impart ed vice chairman. New mem- **...»>• 228 Holmdel ITIVI PATRICIA L VARCA Acting Borough Clerh H I 70 Feb 1.19/1 K inyiivoj I. Potncio L Vorco, Act ing Borough Clerk of the Borough ol O c e o n p o n ntrtOy certify ihe above to be a true copy ot resolution R-71-70 adopted by the Mayor ond Council ot the Borough ot Oceonporl ot a regla e t h«~ 71 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that ttve within schedule ot meetings lor the year 197g shall be forthwith mailed lo (he Dally Register. Tht News Tribune ond the Albury Park Press, and shall be posted on Ihe bulletin board located at the main entrance ol the Admims trotive Wing ot the Muniooal Building. 14? Lower M o m Street. Aberdeen Township, New Jersey, ond shall remain there throuftioul Ihe year and sholl remain on Hie In Ihe office ol Ihe Township Clerk. ADELAIDE BERNHARDT, Secretary. Zoning Board of Adjustment Township ot Aberdeen Feb 1,1971 I I J 26 RISOLUTION7IC BE IT RESOLVED by the Zoning Board ol Ad|uitrrtent of the Township ot Aberdeen, tr.nl tor the purpose ot complying with the Notice' provi sionsof ihe Open public rVteelmgi A d ol the Slate of New Jersey, Ihe follow ing procedures ond requirements ore hereby established ond adopted, i I . The following newspapers ore hereby designated os those In which Zoning Board ot Adjustment Meeting Nollces will appear la) The Asbury Park Press Ibt The Dolly Readier <a TheNewi Tribune i. The costs tor mailing written nollces ot scheduled meetings lo any In dlwlduol requesting that service In writing Irom the Zoning Board ol Ad luslment of the Township ol Aberdeen secretory shall be ISO 00 per annum, or llon thereof, poyable In advance to Clerk of ihe Township of Aberdeen 1 Ttve bulletin board located al Ihe main en I ranee of the Administrative Wing ot Ihe Municipal Building 147 Lower Moln Street, Aberdeen Town ship, New Jersey, is hereby designated as ihe location at which notices shall be posted lor the required information concerning Z o n i g Boord ot A d j t ment meetings 4. All required notices shall be on file ond open lor inspection at ihe of lice of Ihe Township Clerk i Copies ol compiele seis ol M'nules lor all meetings win be available al Ihe Township Hall lo individuals upon request, at o cost ol . 50 Dei page ADELAIDE BERNHARDT. Secretory. Zoning Board of Adlustmrnl Townshib of Aberdeen ' e b l . 1971 «n.96 i ima were towed from borough streets 311 Aberdeen Twp, Coll MonmouRi Imiliutt. 741-0779 ELECTRONIC INSTRUCTORS OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES Muei-tal H 140 Real ettote Wonted A FANTASTIC BROCHURE ol homti In MwanatfWl Countyl I I I youri II yoi wrlH or coll Bally Dou Agmcy. I I ) Rt. 15. Kiyporl. N J 07715 Phont SI. Help Wanted •MTIKMATIONAL U>4 TRAILER - Central nmt, two air condltlontft, retrloeroior and itove, recently cwpefeO f l 7 » y m i wr Al FSTATE FOH SAl t LEGAL Required lor Red Bank ollice with a minimum of 5 years experience. Salary $200 per week plus substantial benelils. including Hospitalizatlon. Major Medical and Lite Insurance. Reply to BoiE-HO The Dally R w U - w 9hi»w«bunr, N.J. 07701 HbMETf6~lfn^-"Cteie to itwuplng ond transportation Two bedrooms Muit be teen to be appreciated. « j ATTENTION - SocM Sorvlci Agmcy nudi rontali for lorgi tilt fomlllti coil doiiy. u m n i i i i H RENTALS WANTED - Ytorly or wMor. Coll 4114017 Monday throve* Frldcry. No lot i l l Condominiums Town Houses SECRETARY R E D BANK - mated 15 to 40 cars HOLIDAY INN Hwv » , W a i Long Bioncft 110 Wonted To Rent Mill. Lorgi dack wltti beautiful oc spent the entire day from 4 7 M I W Mr. McKenna said that he By DAVID TURNER nhhai roorm. IndiaM mold nrvict Indlvlduol cantrMi ol hooting and air oooOIOnmg, FTlvota botn. color TV Ptiont urvlci Pwnty K parking Ulll w« want m i T i hata ut kata rantt occupancy wa art aftactlvaly kaaatng renll down StudlBI Itorllng at IISO one bedroomt ttorllng ot I l l s , two bedroorm Horltng ot U » three bed rootmolto Cars hamper plowing work WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 8. 1978 GROUNDED - Planes sit on the , 0 Eastern Airlines terminal at MnnJdy Alrwrt New York yesterday otter being grounded i blizzard which left an estimated " I on the area. All three airports nj.« ' York area were closed. Snuffy Smith Dennis the Menace [A GIT OUT THAR, OL' BULLET DON'T FER61T, LOWEEZV-TfiTER CflNT HAVE NO VISITORS WHAT HE'S GOT IS M KETCHIW Crossword puzzle ACROSS 1 Inexperienced one 6 Transcribed 10 Particular 14 Century plant 15 Award 16 Porter of aong 17 Weapon that SEE?MR. TMURSTON MARKED THE SPOT/ CHEER UP, LITTLE BIRDIE. I JUST SAW A SIGN OFSPRINS. * I f M Y M/AS FARKJTS,>OU COULD PULL A QfiG OVER THEIR CA6E AN' THEY'D 6 0 T O SLEEP! • Mary Worth I HAVE AN AFTERNOON H.LEP WITH CONFIRMED APPOINTMENTS, MRS, WORTH BUT-POR W e STERLING SAXON, I CAN SURELY FIND T I M E ' - 49 Laplander GO Young equine 52 RicafWd 64 Singular SB Tinge 66 Pool money 69 Tie 62 Indiana 22 Sprightly 23 Floating icemaei 24 Atid* 25 Not in the toast 26 Irritates 36 AGerahwin 27 "-mindit 37 Hold dear I do" 63 In the bag 38 Informed 28 Store, of 64 Devoid of 40 Sheltered a kind 41 Compaas 30 Growing out 66 Raveknge point Wetl 31 Craaa 42 Satirical 66 Diacuaaion 19 _ boyl 32 Keen sketch 20 Animal 34 Ceuaas 67 Sorrow for 43 Shrink encloaura 38 All embrec another 21 Choir member 46 Duperaae mg inslren22 Throbbed 40 Leave hurDOWN liad manner 23Onona'» 1 Oparavoice riedry 48 Light beam 2 Diamounted 42 Brisk Yesterday'! Puzil« Solvad: 44 Actreas 3 Squariah Tany 4 Word of nn»in iiHi:ini.i uuu 46 Timoroue agreement LILJUU UUUUUU ULJU 5 Unaevered 47 Rara UllUUDLIlllilJLJLJlHJlOU 6 Sports fan 61 Bay window 1)111/ UWM1 I.IMHHM 7 Aware of 62 Anka llli'.IM I'llJUU Before hokt 63 Oneoppoaad HUlllilll'l UHUfJIJUHH 8 or dance 64 Downfall nnnnn IJHI:IMH EIUU 66 Msta r.ii:inii HUH IH'IDU 9 Slip up 66 Single 10 Frozen riMM I I I I I I I I M HMI1HH pendant 67 Vorten nnnrannnn un.nni.in 69 Beau Brum11 Superia lively meH.tor one 12 If not tii.ni IIMIIHI.IH MUUU 13 Fermented 60 T h r a e honey drink match Dllll MUIJUI) IILJIIH 18 Seraglio 61 Chance nnnn nnun By Bil keane nnnnn nnnn nnn nnnnnnnnnnnnnnn The Family Circus SOOP.' I'LL 1 I IT'S MNO OF YOU V/ I'M BRWS HIM M, | I D SEE ME ON SUCH II HONORED, DOCTOR.' j l ! SHOKT MOTICE, A MR. OR' ^ _ \ SAXON.' 24 Chikkati, InokJagt 26 Ransack am rob 29T«atimonal 33Oialecta 36 Sea force MY OWN HEART IS BEATING SO HARD THAT B t r W I l N THKCHUKH AN11HE > SEE WHAT WON TME 1WO -THIRTY AT WWMARKtT It's addressed to PJ. He's on his first mailing list." _L_ Your horoscope, birthday The Wiurd of Id rp. X3SO Blond i. I TRIE) TO C A L L V O U * " ^ FROM THE OPPICE TOCW, BUT THE LINE WAS BUSY EVERY TIME I I F ASK ME A QUESTION ABOUT ANTYBOCY WE KNOW.' WELL, I ONLY ^ MADE O J E CALLTD MELBA SAL.TAREU.I By Alfred Shelnwold Doonesbury > OH, 10 BfSokse POLfTiAL REPRESSION IN IRAN' you could go through that fortune in short order, leaving you later as much in need of lucrative enterprise as when you started. THURSDAY, FEBRUARYS AQUARIUS' Jan.20FpblRl - Indulge your speculative streak. Choose wisely iind investments should pay handsomely. PISCES! Feb. 19-March 20) - Cleverness with finances make you valuable to friends in an economic bind. Give an opinion. ARIES( March 21-April 19) - Don't be surprised at financial reverses today. Friends of friends bring pect another to share profit new hope at evening. TAURUSIAprll 20-May if you haven't shared work. LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22 ) 20) - You can save much of what you recently earned, Your knack of seeing a if you know when to say no. good business venture beDon't be persuaded unwill- neath an unassuming facade should stand you in ingly. GEMINKMay201 -Seek good stead. SCORPIO! O c t . 2 3 the truest, best-meant advice. Loved ones may be Nov.21) - Seek personal as too involved to be objec- well as intellectual knowledge of another, or you tive. CANCERUune 21-July cannot expect gain. SAGITTARIUSlNov 2222) - Rose colored glasses may be worn safely today. Dec.21) - A partnership Is extremely successful You know what is real without having to look at it. today, especially if you LEOUuly 23-Aug.22) - take a personal approach You should get along well to problems. CAPRICORNlDec.22with a partner. Don't propose too many unusual no- Jan.19) - Your ambition should prevent your easing tions about the future. VIRGO! Aug.23-Sept.22) your effort at the wrong - There should be no cause time. Keep to a moderate for fear todav. Don't ex- approach. SheinwokTs bridge advice 26 SmcH!ir$ WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8 Born today, you have good business sense, though your interests may not complement it. You may dislike business involvements and look forwnrd to activities that employ your artistic talents. You are instinctively very creative. You may rebel (gainst training that would channel your creativity •long profitable lines, which is at odds with your business sense, but you will satisfy yourself through intuitive application of the creative urge. Your aptitude for finances should lying you a, small fortune by your middle years, but with your penchant for life's luxuries ON mm mms! BUT CON- emus /WE MUCH loose eooopom, BARNEY, SIR! ITIS 60, HOT! KEePfT PEACEFUL! EARLY SPADE PLAY "You may use this hand from my files," said my favorite Beverly Hills psychiatrist. The patient was an actor who "couldn't pick the right time to make a play for a blonde. Our actor friend if&k the king of clubs, drew trumps and tried a diamond to the ace and another diamond for a finesse with the jack. He took no bows for this play since he lost a diamond to the queen and three spade tricks later on. ITFEEL5 ITSrkxJLPBE. IT USEP TO 0BA SHARP TO MB 6-FOOT SWORD/ "You must not ignore your brunette when you are interested in a blonde," the psychiatrist told him. "Work with the queen of spades before you make a play for the queen of diamonds." ALL RI6HT, TROOPS.. TDTW I'M GOINGTOGIVE A LESSON IN SURVIVAL.. After taking the king of clubSj S o u t h s h o u | d d r a w t w o trumps, take the ace of clubs and ruff a club. Then he enters dummy with a trump and leads a spade to finesse with the nine. The defenders take three spades but must then lead diamonds since a club or spade return would let declarer ruff in dummy and discard a diamond from his hand. If West leads the first diamond, South gets a free finesse. If East leads the first diamond, South plays low and West's queen is trapped under dummy's ace-nine. Even if West has the ten of diamonds to force out dummy's ace, declaLET'S SAY WERE L05T IN THE 0JOOD5 WHAT DO U)E DO ABOUT FOOP? rer can then try a finesse with the jack of diamonds. North dealer Both sides vulnerable DAILY QUESTION NORTH Partner opens with 1 NT (16 to 18 points), and the next player passes. You hold: • A 7 5 2 ^ 2 0 10 7 6 3 * 9 8 7 2. What do you say? WEST • 86 3 ^ A J 85 OA92 • AK3 EAST • KJ 4 • A752 ANSWER: Pass. D o n ' t < 7 7 6 4 <?2 scream until you're in trouble, o Q 8 5 0 10 7 6 3 Let your partner play the hand A Q i in R 49872 at 1 NT undoubled. Time * SOUTH enough to think about a rescue • Q109 if one opponent doubles and VKQ1093 the other opponent passes the 0KJ4 double • 54 (A POCKET GUIDE TO BRIDGE written by Alfred North Eut South West Shelnwold is available. Get INT Pass 3<? Pass your copy by sending 91.25 to All Pass th« Red Bank Register, .p.0. Box 1000. Los Angeles, Calif. Opening lead - • Q 90053.) SHOOT A MOOSE? d i m MM N u n ftp**, »«• V WHERE? \ f SHHH THEY DON'T 6M0WON TREES.' I'M TIREP, SAR6E. CAN I 6LEEP LATE THISvMORNING? ZERO, WHAT WOULP HAPPEN IF THE ARMY LETEVEWOMf SlKPJUST BECAUSE THEY TIREP?; ENLISTMENTS WOULP DOUBLE, RI6HT1 IECK Many sal* Items from the MldwMt arrlvad b«for*1 th* Blizzard of 78. Many othar Items are from local ] sourc»s...so, all in all, tha outlook Is sunny. Thara's ampla stock on most things., but If you don't »•• what you want...us* our Snowchack, and sava up a , •torml Pick ona up at our courtasy countar. CENTER CUT. HIB CUT PORK CHOPS The Produce Place LOIN PORTION, EQUIVALENT TO RIB US .1 IDAHO BAKING POTATOES I77 Pork Roast Sirloin Tip Round Steak London Broil Cube Steak Chuck Steak rsr Rib Steak -gjs&r Sirloin Steak Beef for Ste I Short Ribs o ^ s , BONELESS LOIN RIB END BEEF ROUND STEAK I 89 BEEF TOP f RIB PORK CHOPS A TENDER JUICY TREATI ib. 5 TO 4 POUNDS AVIRAOI MAINE INURIDIINT • LOIN PORK CHOPS PORK RIB END LOIN FOR BAA B-OUE PORK CHOP COMBO BONELESS ROASTS CHICKEN LEGS Ib. Ib. $219 BUNCH OR RADISHES 6-OZ. BAG ** FRESH NUTRITIOUS PILLSBUHV STREUSEL ALL VARIETIES Mb. 11Vi 01. boi CHERRY COMSTOCK OR LUCKY LEAF 89 C Mb. 5 SOLID PACK STARKIST IN WATER S0UD PfCK STAR KIST 7< won OR WATER A GREAT TREAT FOR YOUR PETS! CHOCOLATE ALL VARS. " CM 20-or bag 99 Health & Beauty Aids #%al%A 2 LB. POTATOES £79* Orange Juice Grapefruit MINUTE MAID 99< T99' "Hot" Bake Shop AT IM0MIIS WIIM IN I1OII IAM IH0F1 ONIY CHOCOLATE WHIPPED CREAM PIE Swiss Cheese FINLAND IMPORTED (STORE SLICED) ivib. 8" 24-oz The Fish Market Turbot Fillet INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN ShopRite of RED BANK Highway 35 — Shrewsbury '1.29J $417 Vi-|al. JUICE TROPKANA HARD ROLLS MUFFINS MRMUFI HOT CROSS BUNS I.J-O! IOUI MUM •4.38 •4.99 •3.99 •1.39 — M c THREE KINGS 16"X26' THERAGRAN 100 . 30 FREE THERAGRAH-M ,00 30 FREE STRESSTABS-600 BTL. OFM NOVANISTINE ELIXIR •**. ijlFRIN NASAL SPRAY ^ ^ (SERVE A FAMILY OF S FOR 14.17 LESS THAN .64C PER SERVINO) WEEK §2 The Family Pharmacy — 2 KRAFT VELVEETA M O lojvti JsJ ONE W I T H EACH $5.00 P U R C H A S E 54-01. $ O 7 9 IhWFHW FKOULAK 0« C»IN«H CUT The Non-Foods Place HAND TOWEL — — — "Shopmu DINNER FOR 5" The Dairy Place TA$TY MEAL IDEA! The Snacks Place The Froien Foods Place FRENCH GREEN BEAN^V 6 9 ° JOY DISH DETERGENT WHIT BACO "ECSTASY" Each ItopM+t -OBAOI A" CUT OH The ke Cream Place CANNON' MONTICILLO' BATH ENSEMBLE THICK. AB8ORBENT COTTON AND P0LYE8TER TOWELS, AVAILABLE IN THE FOLLOWING COLOR8: MOCHA BROWN, MELON, MIMOSA YELLOW, HYDRANQA BLUE, PETAL PINK OR WHITE. 19 3'A" POT FRIED CHICKEN LIQUID ShopHlld CRACKED. 100% WHOLE WHEAT UK Ml L.ULAH WHEAT NO PRES ADDED WHEAT BREAD White Bread 3S." The Plant Place • AMOUET -FULLY COOKtO" t AMILV tlZE 5oz. bat The Deli Place The Bakery Place FRESH CHINESE CABBAGE GARDENIAS IN BUD & BLOOM •oz. can GORTONS LIGHT BATTER MUSHROOM , CHINESE NEW Y f A R - Bird Seed Cadbury Bar 89 16oz.$ Pkl. 2lb. stalk U.S. §1 Ti ina iuna AUTOMATIC DISH DETERGENT (TWIN PACK I ICMliSl MOdlOtll f AWL» Sin • 10-or. CHINESE SWISSCHARD BOLD LAUNDRY DETERGENT GORTONS LIGHT BATTER Pint "30 SIZE" KB QREAT ECONO-MEAL MENU IDEAI TASTY WASHED CLEAN CHICKEN WITH THIGHS PHO«PHATEB/NQ, PHOSPHATES OR SOLE ShopRitt JUICY 165 2O0 SIZE- OVEN ROASTER Swirl Cake Pie Filling Light Tuna Cottage Cheese American Cheese p » > i£ $ l 49 49 Flounder Fillet $J39 Scallops $J39 Fish Portions Macaroni 99« Celeste Pizza 89^ SWEET, JUICY TEMPLE FROZEN TRIMMED The Grocery Place- SEALTEST FLORIDA JUICY "100 SIZE" ShopRile GOVT GRADE "A' THE MAINE INGREDIENT1 What's For Lent? SomeTHIN LITE YOGURT U.S. FANCY HONEYCOMB FROZEN BEEF BOTTOM ROUND. SHOULDER OR CHUCK POT PLUS A LOT MORE FOR A LITTLE LESS! aiouss -to sin- WAftHINOTON DELICIOUS RIO "125'Sin 001DIN 1 6 - 1 2 0 * SIS FR07IN PLAIN OR BREADED A FAMILY FAVORITEI Grapefruit Apples Anjou Pears Oranges Oranges Lemons Cherry Tomatoes Fresh Spinach Pascal Celery Scallions Yellow Onions Bean Sprouts Bok Choy Nappa INDIAN HIVIR WHIM n o i n IKMIID ANO OfHWlO. IAYH fAC« t TO 11 CHOPS. CUT FROM LOIN PORTION NQ •OHIUH. MMLIII MUFICT FM CUTltTI j smitM OOVT wuor. -»- END CUT BEEF CHUCK CUT Chicken Breast Chicken Breast Oven Roaster Drumsticks s Turkey Wings ™n Beef Liver Veal Steaks Smoked Butt Beef Ox Tails Trii WITH RIB CAQE END C U T ShopRite of OAKHURST ShopRite of HAZLET Highway 36 - HAZLET Highway 35 & W. Park Ave. — Oakhursl 49 12 ,.,99* fir 2 5 * 6 ..r75< ShopRite of FREEHOLD Soulh St ~ FREEHOLD ShopRite of MIDDLETOWN Highway 35 A Harmony Rd. ShopRite of ABERDEEN TOWNSHIP ShopRite of WEST LONG BRANCH Llod Rd. * Hwy. 34 Highway 36 — West Long Branch "to ordtr to o w n * • MfUclant supply of M M llmw for all of our euitomari, wi muit rtMrv* tl» rlghl to limit U M purchM* ol M l m Io unlit ol 4 ol any ««l« Item, «xc»pt « h * n otlMnrtaa no«»d." Not mpoiuibl* for typogriphk:*! •rrort. Prices •H*ellvtlhni Sat., N b . I t , 1(71. Nona I O M to othtr ralallart or whotwatara. Copyright WAKEFERN FOOD CORPORATION 1071.
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