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VLCAP Board May Oust Inactive Members

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The Weather
Occasional rain through tomorrow morning. Low tonight about 40. Partly cloudy tomorrow afternoon, high in mid 50s.

FINAL EDITION
Monmouth County's Outstanding Home Newspaper
26 PAGES TEN CENTS
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VOL.95 .NO. 173


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RED BANK, N.J. WEDNESDAY,MARCH t; 1973

Oil Price Controls Imposed


WASHINGTON (AP) - The Nixon administration has taken a major step to show that its Phase 3 anti-inflation program has muscle by reimposing price controls on the oil industry. The 23 largest oil companies will be limited generally to price increases of 1 per cent for most petroleum products, on a weighted annual average, over the price in effect on Jan. 10,1973. Gasoline and home-heating oil are among products covered. A weighted annual average is the average price daring all of the year; prices could be higher at some times and lower at others. John T. Dunlop, director of the Cost of Living Council, said in announcing the controls yesterday that they are "designed to prevent increasing pressure for higher crudeoil and petroleum-product prices. from triggering inflationary price increases." He said it is "not a punitive measure" against the 23 companies, which account for approximately 95 per cent of gross sales of the oil industry. There are some exceptions to the 1-per-cent price-increase limit; increases up to 1.5 per cent would be allowed if justified by costs. But any increase above 1.5 per cent is subject to profitmargin limitations and to prenotification rules, the council said. That limitation restricts companies to the average profit for the best two of the previous four years. Dunlop said the controls are necessary because, of the oil industry's widespread impact on the economy and that the action is an attempt "to assure the American consumer an adequate supply of oil at reasonable prices." It is the first time controls have been reimposed on an industry since President Nixon announced on Jan. 11 that the compulsory controls of Phase 2 were replaced by voluntary self-administered guidelines in the third phase of the government's anti-inflation program. Only the construction, health and food industries remain subject to marketing controls. There has been criticism from some economists and politicians that the administration eased off too quickly on compulsory controls and that a new round of inflation could be touched off. But Nixon, in announcing the end of Phase 2, said there was a "stick in the closet" in Phase 3, and yesterday's action was seen as use of that stick. Dunlpp said the controls will "not interfere with the ability of oil companies to respond to seasonal variations in demand, market conditions both here and abroad, and individual company circumstances." The order applies to any company that annually sells at least {250 million worth of petroleum products, either manufactured or purchased for resale, or domestic and imported crude oil for resale. Exempt are such products as asphalts and chemicals. The council held hearings on oil-pricing policy on Feb. 79 after-many companies raised heating-oil prices in January. The spokesman said Tuesday that these increases were justified and would fall within the weighted-annualaverage-increase of 1 per cent.

Vietnamese End Dispute Over POWs


i AP WUephoto

LISTENING IN ON CONFERENCE - Newsmen sit and lie on the ground around the tepee at Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota In an effort to learn how negotiations between the militant members of AIM,and government officials are progressing.

Indians Want Removal Of Tribal Head


WOUNDED KNEE, S D . (AP) Militant Indians are demanding the ouster ol the Oglala Sioux tribal president as their takeover of Wounded Knee enters its second week: No shooting incidents were reported after the Indians called off a cease-fire at 8 p.m. EST yesterday. The town was occupied Feb. 27, ami guns were fired sporadically until the cease-fire was agreed to Saturday. Talks between representatives of the 200 Indians in Wounded Knee and officials of the Justice and Interior departments were scheduled to resume at noon EST today. Leaders of the American Indian Movement (AIM) say they will not give up Wounded Knee until the Interior Department revokes the 13,000member tribe's constitution and removes Richard Wilson as president. Some officials at Pine Ridge said they doubted the department would want to eliminate the constitution because that might be interpreted as a reversal of the government's policy to permit Indian self-government on reservations. Leaders of AIM also want the government to protect p e r s o n s i n v o l v e d in t h e Wounded Knee occupation, saying the militants fear retaliation from supporters of Wilson. The tribal president has threatened to lead an armed force of as many as 900 Oglalas into Wounded Knee. The group also wants two officials of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) on the Pine Ridge Reservation removed. Nearly 11,000 Oglalas live on the reservation, spread over four counties in southwestern South Dakota. AIM leaders also have demanded. Senate hearings on BIA management and AIM allegations of 371 violations of U.S.-Indian treaties. Ramon Roubideaux, AIM lawyer, said after meeting late yesterday with federal officials, "Nothing has changed." Uoubideaux said the Indians were trying to collect 1,100 petitions aimed at ousting Wilson. He said the petitions were signed weeks ago but are. spread throughout the reservation. , Charles G. Soller, assistant general counsel for the Interior Department, indicated to Roubideaux that his office might consider the Indians' demands if they could show proof of wide dissatisfaction with Wilson's administration.

SAIGON (AP) - The U.S. government apparently intervened today to help settle a dispute over the exchange of Vietnamese prisoners. The dispute threatened to delay the release of the 286 Americans still held in Communist camps and threatened the U.S. -Vietnamese peacekeeping commission with collapse. The Saigon government agreed1, after an eight-day impasse, to release 6,300 military prisoners or about onethird of the 19,734 it still holds in the second POW exchange. It released 7,000 in the first exchange but lowered the number to 3,000 for the second phase, contending the Communists-had not accounted for thousands of missing South Vietnamese troops. The Communist delegation threatened to boycott the U.S.-Vietnamese Joint Military Commission until Saigon agreed to free more men. They called on the United States, as a signer of the cease-fire agreement, to intervene. To Meet Deadline A U.S. spokesman said the Saigon government had assured the American; North Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegations that the repatriation of its military POWs would be completed by March 28 as stipulated in the cease-fire pact.

The Communists, who acknowledge holding less than 4,000 Vietnamese military prisoners, said they would release more than 1,000 in the second phase, having turned over l,000,earlier. The second exchange is expected to begin Thursday. The U.S. spokesman declined to spell out what part the United States played in ending the impasse. But he called attention to statements by Maj. Gen. Gilbert H. Woodward, the senior U.S. representative, at a meeting of the joint commission Monday. Woodward said the United States takes the position that the agreement on the exchange of prisoners must be strictly followed, the repatriation of military prisoners should be c o m p l e t e d by March 28 and they should be released in four groups of about the same number. Paris Lists "Vtfs consider the lists exchanged in Paris to form the basis for future exchanges," he added. This was the position the Communists took. " T h e United States explained its view . . . and ultimately the government of Vietnam decided to release a substantial amount of prisoners," the U.S. spokesman said. " I wouldn't want to characterize it beyond that."

HOMEBOUND Families of servicemen at Clark Air Base, Philippines, wave and large American flag flutters in the breeze as farewell is bid to the former POWs Inside the plane departing for the

U.S. today. The plane carries 20 of today's 80 relurnees who were among those released at Hanoi last Sunday.
AP Wireptiolo

Apy Won't Seek Reelection


LITTLE SILVER - MonMr. Apy is a partner in the mouth County Republican As- Red Bank law firm of Abrasemblyman Chester Apy will moff, Apy & O'Hern. not seek reelection. Mr. Apy, 41, said he intends "After serious consid- to complete the remainder of eration, I have decided not to his term which expires in Jabe a candidate for reelec- nuary. The entire legislature tion," he said, is up for election this Novem"Increasing demands on my ber. time," he said, "make it imThis is the fourth year Mr. possible for me to continue to Apy has served in the Assemrepresent my constituents as bly, but not consecutively. they are entitled to be repreHe was first elected in 1%7 sented and still fulfill my re- when he ran with now state sponsibilities to my family Sen. Joseph Azzolina. and my law practice." In 1969, the legislature was redistricted and Mr. Apy, as the county's junior assemblyman, lost his seal in the reapportionment. In 1971, when Monmouth County gained another assembly seat through another reapportionment, Mr. Apy was nominated by the GOP and was elected. In his statement announcing his retirement from the assembly, Mr. Apy said he has no political plans for the future. "I have pretty well'foreclosed public office by my giving up the legislature," he said, "but of course my interest in politics will continue." Mr. Apy said he will "do everything within my power to insure the reelection of Gov. William T. Cahill," and he urged all Monmouth .County Republicans to follow his lead. "Gov. Cahill's strong leadership lias helped turn New Jersey around and start us in the direction we must go if our citizens are to have the jobs, the education, and the places to live, work, and play that they deserve," he said.

Numairi Calls Slayings Intolerable'


KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) to trial for the killing of U.S. The SuSanese president Ambassador Cleo A. Noel Jr., called the slaying of three dip- U.S. Charge d'Affaires G. lomats by Palestinian ter- Curtis Moore and Belgian r o r i s t s an " i n t o l e r a b l e Charge d'Affaires Guy Eid. "I will leave justice to take crime," but one leading Khartoum lawyer doubts the killers its course," Numairi said. "I will be executed if they are have high confidence its judgment will be firm and its punconvicted. President Jaafar el Numairi ishment will be just." The eight Palestinians sursaid in a broadcast last night that the eight members of the rendered Sunday morning afBlack September terrorist or- ter failing to secure the reganization would be brought lease of a number of prisoners in various countries. No charges have been brought against them yet. Loop In Law The criminal code permits capital punishment for firstdegree murder, but a leading lawyer who asked not to be identified pointed out that Section 249 spells out extenuating circumstances, including "grave provocations." Conviction under this section could mean 21 years in prison, with about five years off for good behavior. The lawyer said defense attorneys could argue that the guerrillas are at war with Israel and the two slain Americans were officials of a government supplying arms to their enemy. If they were convicted of first-degree murder, the lawyer said, defense attorneys likely would ask the president for executive clemency. If they were convicted of first-degree murder for the. Belgian's death, the defense attorneys undoubtedly would ask for executive clemency, the lawyer continued. He said they could be expected to argue that the Black September guerrillas who confessed lo assassinating Jordanian Premier Wasfi Tell in Cairo were never s e n t e n c e d and the United States let the slayers of Sen Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. live Offer to Defend A number of Sudanese lawyers already have volunteered to defend the terrorists. It is expected that the presidents of the Algerian and Egyptian bar associations also will volunteer.

Chester Apy Mr. Apy said he assumed the governor will be a'candidate for reelection although the governor has not announced his intention to seek a second term. During most of his political career, Mr. Apy has been a controversial figure, and his strong backing of Gov. Cahill recalls an earlier break he See Won't, Page 2 .

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Hudson, Freehold and Wall advance Ocean Township respects Perth Amboy SuperSonics cure Knlcks' Ills County Fare rounds up some benefits Potluck docs some stockpiling;

Court Studies Local Rent The Inside Story Control Codes' Legality
Page 20 Page 2* Page 21 .Page 1 G Page 17 TRENTON (AP) - T h e State Supreme Court is considering the legality of municipal rent control ordinances. Arguments concluded yesterday with the key issue being whether the Legislature preempted the field by a 1953 statute enacted after federal rent controls imposed during World War 11 were removed. According to Ned J. Parsekian, attorney for the Borough of River Edge. "What was not delcgable in 1957 might be found delcgable now because conditions have changed." He said the present Supreme Court should not be bound by the 1957 decision, which held that the legislature could not delegate the power without express intent. I'arsekian said the lifting of federal price controls "has left the tenant bare" to rent gouging. He argued that the courts had the authority to do something about it. But Justice Nathan Jacobs retorted that it was up to the legislature to act. Chief Justice Joseph Wcintraub said. "You can't get the Legislature excited about a problem unless it is statewide. That's why you have home rule." Gerald Monahan. arguing for Fort lee, conceded his town could amend its rent control ordinance to make it fairer. The justices Monday indicated they thought the Kurt Lee and North Bergen ordinances were unfair to landlords. Richard K. Blumberg. representing the New Jersey Tenants Organization, said, "If the problem of rent gouging is statewide, it should be remedied by the Legislature. If it is local, it should be handled locally." He said his research showed the problem was local and was centralized in North Jersey.

Bennett and Mooney Are Foes No Longer


Quite a few seasons back, when Middlctown High School was Leonardo High School, Vernon 15. Bennett of Red Bank and Edgar B. Mooney Jr. of Kumsnn were foes on the football field. That was in the lalu I'JSJ's. Their rivalry didn't keep them from becoming friends, a relationship that's lasted through the years as they went llielr different ways in the business world. Now they're partners in the Little Silver Racquet Club, and they also are the subject of a story written by Bette Spcro of our Hud Bank Bureau. It will appear in tomorrow's editions. The nation's groatest.kilier will be described by Dr: Irwin J. Polk in his "Here's to Health" column. William F. Samlford describes sonie'M the plus-side arguments for the month of March in his "Outdoor World" contribution. Both columns are regular features of Thursday's Daily Register, Northern Monmouth County's largest newspaper and Monmouth County's most interesting newspaper. Spring Is Here The Clam Hut is now open weekends! (Adv.) Please, Honey, Come Home If you do, 1 promise to take you to t h e Alpine Manor Knday, for dinner. (Adv)

A 1957 decision by the State Supreme Court appeared to rule that the field had boon preempted. But several justices and attorneys said that nHiHiiiiiiiiiuiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinii case could also be interpreted Let Donna or Nellie Large Pbza He to mean the opposite. Get you on the right track. Mr. Pizza Slice. (Adv.) Alan Minton'P Caboose Bar, Butterflies Are Free Save $20 open Mon. thru Sat., 7:30 a.m. S p r i n g Lake C o m m u n i t y to 2 a.m. Sun., I p.m. to 2 a.m. On Jacobsen Mowers Becker House, Fri.. Sat:, on stage, M So. Bridge Ave., Red Bank. H a r d w a r e , Hwy 34 Colts 8:30 p.m.lnformation. 449(Adv.) 6990. Opposite train station. (Adv.) Neck. 7470465. (Adv.)

Bridge Advice 25 DAILY REGISTER Classllled 22-24 PHONE NUMBERS Comics 25 Main Office 7410010 Contemporary Lite..... 16-18 classified Ads..... 741-SMO Crossword Puzzle 25 Legal Adv 741-tOU Editorials 6 Display Adv 741-6010 Entertainment 12,13 circulation Dept 741-3J3O Financial 10 sports Dept 741-W17 Horsocope 25 Contemporary Lite.....741 0919 Innocent Bystander 24 Accounts Payable 741-MW Movies 12 Accounts Receivable...7410910 Obituaries 4 Mlddletown Bureau 871-MW Sports 20,21.24 Freehold Bureau ...4M2I21 Television 12 Long Branch Bureau...222-Mlt

The Olflcc Starting Mar 20. 197:t and the third Tues. of every month Is coming lo Oceanport. (Adv.) thereafter the public meeting, of the Northeast 'Monmouth Trade Winds County Regional Sewerage Authority will start at 8:30 Tonight, "Salvation." Ocean p.m. in the offices of the Au- Ave., Sea Bright, M2-3SBK. (Adv.) thority. (Adv.)

; i r H e D*8y KegJster, Red Bak-MMflettwi, S.I. Wtoesday, Mucb-7.1973

Case Asks for State Option on Superports


WASHINGTON ( A P ) Congress and the states involved should have the option of approving or vetoeing construction of superports. Sen. Clifford P. Case, R-N.J.. said yesterday. The governor of Louisiana, meanwhile, said his stale is eagerly seeking the offshore ports. Sen. Case told a Senate Commerce subcommittee the states should have a say because an accident involving a tanker carrying 2.2 million barrels of crude oil "could devastate the beaches of several states." A .secondary effect of offshore superports for tankers, he said, might be to lead the nation to increase its dependency on oil while ignoring development of other forms of energy. Sens. Ernest F. Hollings, D S.C.. and Harrison Williams, D-N.J . also have bills on the subject. The three agree the cconomic and environmental impact of the proposed facilities is staggering but disagree on the approach. Footrace on Gulf Hollings told the subcommittee hearing that considerable opposition to superports has surfaced in New Jersey and Delaware. But, he said, in the Gulf States "there is something of a footrace between local government and private enterprise to see who gets the first superport built." Gov. EdwmiW. ..Edwards of Louisiana told the committee that his state strongly favors development of offshore "superports" now. -' He said Loui.siauans will welcome development of an oil terminal and subsequently other types of facilities in the (iulf of Mexico off Louisiana's shore. "It is our opinion that the construction of an 01! terminal and its operation are logically the function of the private sector, either the oil companies themselves or terminal firms which have expertise" in this area." the governor told the Senate Commerce Committee. State Channels . The governor suggested that any authority from the. federal government for the construction and operation of such deepwatcr facilities should be channeled through the state off whose shores the facility is to be located. Kdwards said Louisiana "is willing to continue to expend state funds, with no federal assistance, to promote the development of a deepwater port off its coast because we can envision the enormous economic benefit to our state and region." He said the wide-based pub; lie support for a deep water terminal "is contingent upon the knowledge of many of our state's foremost environmentalists that the government of Louisiana is sincere in its determination to protect and maintain the integrity of our coastal environment." The committee is considering proposed legislation to protect the marine environment to prevent adverse impacts which could result from the construction and operation of off-shore facilities.

Hazlet to Seek Funds For Recreation Land


HAZLET Recreation 'commissioner Nicholas Mariolis was authorized by the Township Committee last night to apply to the commissioner of environmental protection for Green Acres Funds to purchase approximately 6'/, acres of land for recreational purposes.. Four tracts of land are involved in the purchase. One half of the purchase price will be paid by state Green Acres funds. The other ' half is expected to come from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development's Legacy of Parks program.. Applications will include requests for $7,370 lo purchase the Roman properly of three acres on Evergreen St.; $2,900 to acquire one third of an acre on Mercer. Hudson and Banks Sts. in West Keansburg, and (wo parcels of Cantor property-three acres on Annapolis Drive and one acre on Dartmouth Drive. The request for the Annapolis Drive parcel will be for $111,000, while the Dartmouth Drive request will be for $20,000. One-Half Cost These figures are one-half the actual costs. The only municipal expenditures for the purchases will be for administrative costs. The committee adopted a resolution to petition the gov-

City Hall Session Nets No Decision


By AL HORAY LONG BRANCH -Nodecision was made last night j>n the three controversial sites for the planned new city hall complex at a conference session of the City Council. George Hoffman, council president, declined to reveal the results of the conclave last night. He said, however, that the issue was discussed and that if has not been resolved. Mrs Gertrude Berman. a City Council member, also dedined lo spell out the results of last night'<: conference. Mrs. Berman said that there was nn information of the session authorized to be revealed Mr. Hoffman, confirmed, however, that the discussion centered on the two sites proposed by the administration and a group of downtown businessmen- The talks did not give much weight t" the oceanfrorit site selected by the citizens advisory committee, he said. Mayor Henry K. Cioffi is the sponsor of a move to construct ;i ne\v city complex at the site of the present city facility at Seventh Ave nod Broadway The downtown merchants proposed to build the new city

hall on Broadway, between Third and Rockwell Aves. The study committee last week proposed the site at S. Broadway and Ocean Ave., adjoining the Garfield Memorial Park. Asked about the mechanics of the proposal in the future, Mr. Hoffman said it is strictly up to a "council vote." An ordinance was adopted last year which would allow for the new city complex to be constructed at the site of the present city hall-library complex. A four-vote majority of the council, according to Mr. Hoffman, is now needed to revise that measure. "If we can agree on the present site." he said, "it would be approved. If we fail to agree," he added, "it will take four out of five votes to amend or kill the ordinance." Mayor Cioffi has said that the council must resolve the issue itself or he will impose his prerogative as the city's chief executive and enforce the existing ordinance. The governing body will meet Tuesday. It is expected here that the mayor will declare his intentions at that session unless council makes a public declaration of its sponsurship of a city hall site.

Weather: Light Rain


Occasional light rain or drizzle today, high in upper -40s. Showers likely tonight ;and tomorrow morning, ho3 coming partly cloudy tomorrow afternoon. Low tonight j around 40. High tomorrow* in imid.Ms Friday partly cloudy, little temperature change. J Tornadoes, rain and high Jwinds swept up the- Misjsissippi Valley today, causing iproperty damage, threatening iflash floods and cutting off electric power. Ttyrnadoes touched down in 'Mississippi near Cleveland, Ik'l/.oni and Independence, causing properly damage but no injuries. Power lines and tree limbs were reported down at various locations in the state Power failures were reported on Chicago's North Side and in the north and northwest suburbs due to heavy thunderstorms However, a flash-flood watch for Illinois and southern Wisconsin was canceled early today when the major storm activity moved out over Lake Michigan. Rainfall ranged up to l ^ in-

crimination through correcFT. MONMOUTH - A retive action." view of the equal opportunity A reply to Mr. Sperling program at the Electronics from James W. Bage, director Command (ECOM) is exof the employment policy and pected to be undertaken by grievance review staff in the representatives of the Army Army secretary's office, said Materiel Command before the the requested review would be end of the month as the result undertaken before the end of of complaints by a union offiMarch. cials. Mr. Jones countered that The review was requested by Anton E. Sperling, chair- numbers don't tell the whole man of the litigation com- story. "It's my opinion that mittee of Local 1W4. Ameri- the effectiveness of the equal can Federation of Govern- . opportunity program cannot* Willing to Build ment Employes (AFGE). in a be measured by the number Kdwards said certain big letter to the secretary of the of complaints," he said. He companies have indicated a Army which alleged imple- said many problems have GETTING CUED ON AMERICA - Foreign-exchange student from five willingness to build a supercountries were among those observing naturalization proceedings in Freementation of the equal op- been resolved by the informal port off Louisiana and he also hold when 68 persons became new citizens. County Judge John P. Arnone portunity program at Ft. Mon- counseling process available said that, if. necessary, state explains the proceedings to from left: Adelaide Cruz, Brazil; Diego Rochmouth "leaves much to be de- through his office. Mr. Sperling said his appeal funds could be used. inator, Argentina; Karin Gustafson, Sweden; Simone Forster, Germany, sired." and Johannes Kokenberg, the Netherlands. The governor nodded affirHe charged an effort is to the secretary of the Army matively when Sen. Russell B. made to keep the number of for a review was precipitated l.ong^ D-La . asked whether c o m p l a i n t s about dis- by a c a s e in which, he "all we need in Louisiana is crimination down in order to claimed, Mr. Jones had repripermission to go ahead?" make ECOM's record look manded a counselor in his of5 good, an accusation which is (ice for giving the union the Delaware has been opposed denied by Ermon K. Jones, full facts on a particular case to building a superport in the head of the equal opportunity being investigated. Atlantic Ocean off its shores. "His whole attitude is I office for ECOM at both Ft. Sen. Joseph R. Biden, Jr.. Itwant to look good statistiMonmouth and Philadelphia. Del., told Kdwards that "I welcome any kind of re- cally," Mr. Sperling said. "some in the East are not so UNION BEACH - The removing Mr. Schaap was im- leaving his post March 30 and view of the program," Mr. "Unfortunately the (U.S. Civil enthusiastic as you" about suBoard of Education last night proper," the board president will be replaced by Dr. Ed- Jones said when asked about Service) commission backs perports. him up on this." spent 90-minutes of its two- stated. ward W. Kilpatrick who has the pending probe. Edwards agreed with Biden hour session commenting, disMr. Jones said that when "If we didn't act the way served as Dr. Marburger's as"1 feel the command has that governors should have cussing and listening to public Mr. Sperling initially accused we did our attorney stated sistant. made progress in equal opthe veto power against build- opinion on its most, outspoken him of interfering with the that Mr. Schaap's legal action Mr. Vitrone in reply to a portunity," he added. ing a superport. "The people member, Adrian W. Schaap. might have resulted in a per- question from the audience Mr. Sperling, in his letter to work of the counselors he subof a state should have control The saga began early last manent injunction granted by said the board "has pushed the secretary of the Army, mitted a questionnaire to each of their destiny," he said. month when the board voted the court." the Schaap issue aside the charged that "discrimination of the 11 counselors here, asklo oust the two-year member Mr. Vitrone continued by past two weeks in order to re- is an accepted way of l i f e . . , ing whether they had been habecause of his alleged contin- saying the board will not act solve our budget. held in check through a sys- rassed or intimidated in their uous unexcused absences. on the matter until more in"I feel this is more impor- tem of reprisals against those work. "The result has been 100 per Mr. Schaap replied to his formation is received. tant than arguing about Mr. who complain and/or reprecent support of the guidance I critics by stating he was at"As an individual I have my Schaap," he stated. - sent complainants. tending .a course at Rutgers own feeling on the subject," Former board member The"Emphasis is placed almost have given them in their counUniversity in real property Mr. Vitrone said. "But as a odore P. Brunelli urged the entirely on developing a good seling activities," he said. which he alleges is only of- board member I feel we have board to pursue Mr. Schaap's statistical overview as conMr. Jones added that Mr. fered twice each year. a responsibility to the general ouster. trasted to an energetic and Sperling has lodged eight ernor and legislature to take He sought and was granted public for expenditures. Assails Schaap dynamic program to elimi- complaints of discrimination action this year taking the re- a temporary restraining order "Since the new board has "The money is important nate discrimination," he con- himself, alleging he has been sponsibility for local educa- from Superior Court Judge been seated we have bent but not as important as the tinued. "The command appar- intimidated and harassed betion funding from municipal- Merritt Lane Jr., but the or- over backwards trying to be kids that go to school here," ently condones the making of cause of his activities as a ities. der waB dismissed when the nice to Mr. Schaap but he has Mr. Brunelli said. "Mr. a good record instead of acti- union official representing The petition would seek to board at its reorganization replied with nothing but ani- Schaap has refused to per- vely working to eliminate dis- others complaining about discrimination. redistrict school funding meeting rescinded its earlier mosity toward us," he added. form his duties as a board 'His Own Board' throughout the state and action.' member and has always been Six of Mr. Sperling's personwould require an amendment al complaints have been disIn a letter read at last "Mr. Schaap sits on his own anti-school in his attitude. to the state Constitution. It night's session Mrs. Walter Board of Education," Peter missed as unfounded and the "We have been in touch would lift the local tax burden Eastmohd, Parent Teacher Sabo Jr., a board member with our legislators to see other two are still pending, for local education financing. Association liaison to the stated. Mr. Jones said. He said Mr. what can be done in a situSperling has taken one of the With a 31 vote, the com- board, questioned the legality Mrs. Ida Donnelly, board ation like this," Mr. Brunellli six complaints dismissed in mittee adopted a resolution of the board's action in acting member, asked Mr. Schaap if continued. "Mr. Schaap is a supporting Holmdel's zoning on the issue at its organiza- he would accept a ruling by lot of hot air and is just here the civil procedure into the (Continued) suit brought against that tion. the state Commissioner of to get a no vote against the public courts. township by Suburban Action Education. school budget and make had with the Monmouth CounAdvice of Attorney That suit presently in pendInstitute. ty Republican organization in In reply Pasquale F. Vit"He could only render an trouble." ing in U.S. District Court in The Institute seeks to over- rone, board president, said he opinion and 1 would still have "The message was given on 1969 when Gov. Cahill was Trenton. It alleges that Mr. turn local zoning regulations. could have called a special to have a hearing by the election day," Philip J. Hud- seeking the nomination. Leave to Courts meeting of the board to act on board," Mr. Schaap replied. die, a resident stated. "If he At that time there were five Sperling was denied a promoThe negative vote was cast the matter but on the advice "My action is up to my at- (Mr. Brunelli) thinks he is prominent Republicans, in- tion on his job in the Mainteby Commitleeman William F. of the board's attorney the torney. right let him run again next cluding Mr. Cahill, seeking nance Directorate where he presently is employed as techBourbeau. He contended the matter was added to the orga"By the way 1 have already year and this will save the the Republican gubernatorial nical manuals editor-elecnomination. final decision should be "left nization meeting's agenda been told by Dr. Marburger's taxpayers dollars." to the courts" and that other with the consent of board replacement Dr. Kilpatrick The Monmouth County Re- tronics. "Mr. Huddie has changed municipalities should not be- members. that my reason for missing his tune," Mrs. Donnelly said. publican organization, after Mr. Jones said a total of 33 come involved. "We also learned from Mr. board meeting's is valid," Mr. "He knocked us at our budget listening to all the candidates, complaints, alleging disdecided to remain uncom- crimination in job training Schaap added. A variance application by Garrison (Earl V. Garrison, hearing on our expenditures mitted and backed no one. Anthony Pesko to build a two- county superintendent of , State Commissioner of Edu- for the school. and advancements because of family dwelling at Holly Ave. schools) that our procedure in cation Carl L. Marburger is All except Mr. Apy, who ig- race, religion or sex, were "He also said that two forand Ninth St., West Keansmer members were voted off nored the Republican leaders brought to the counselors in burg, was approved by the the board because of Mr. and came out in support of his office between July 1.1971, committee. Mr. Cahill. who went on to and June 30, 1972. Of these, Schaap's issue." she said. A second variance appli"1 think we were elected by win. nine of the complainants cation, submitted by Carl J. Following the election, Gov. went on to file formal comthe people as individuals and Dolan of 592 S. Laurel Ave, to not on the Schaap issue." Har- Cahill offered Mr. Apy a. ma- plaints, when counseling could operate a TV repair shop in old Arnold. Jr., newly elected jor administration post which not solve the problem. Allegahis home, was denied. His Mr. Apy turned down. By ED WALSH gencies for operational sala- board member added. tions of discrimination were home is in an H-12 (residenMr. Apy said he "hoped the upheld in three of the cases. Robert T. Griffin of S UNION BEACH - Board of ries, $2,000 for contracted sertial) area \Republican) party will do a vices, $2,000 for salary of an Poole Ave. questioned Mr. A contract to supply an Education members were si- attendance officer (the duties Schaap as to his alleged ab- better job than they did last Mr. Sperling said that when lent last^night when apelectronic data processing a finding of discrimination is scences at board workshop time. proached on the subject of of this person will be assumed machine was awarded to De" I t would be a big mis- made, the identity of the from within the adminis- sessions as well as public benrich Corp of 56 Fulton their meeting with Borough tration), $1,000 from the legal meetings. take," Mr. Apy said, "if the guilty party and the disCouncil last Saturday mornPlace. The price JK.900, was Republicans do anything oth- ciplinary action taken against Contradltlons Hit fees account, $1,000 from apthe lower of two bids received ing. "I went to a few meetings er than enthusiastically en- that person should be made propriated expenditures for The bodies met in an effort late last month. dorse Gov. Cahill because public, another point on which to resolve an expected cut of board member's expenses and when the old board was here he's going to run, and he's go- Mr. Jones disagrees. If these $1,000 for expenditures to cov- and said things but was conSeek Bids the board's defeated $979,692 people don't "shape up," they er a possible cafeteria deficit. tradicted at public meetings," ing to win." Township Clerk John M. current expense budget. During Mr. Apy's first term should be gotten rid of The other five areas will be Mr. Schaap replied. Costigan was authorized to "We have met with council "When Mr. McKittrick (for- in the Assembly, he was one fired, whether civilian or miliadvertise for bids for pur- but have not come up with a cut from $200 to $800. mer board member and presi- of few people in the state to tary, Mr. Sperling added. chase of two-way radios and solution," Pasquale F. Vitdent James R. McKittrick) come out for the abolition of pool maintenance and repairs. rone, board president, said in was here it was a one-man capital punishment, at the Bids are to be received at a reply to a question from the board. It has changed now so time not a popular position for March '.'7 meeting. floor during the public portion 1 will attend caucus meet- an elected official to take. A public hearing on extend- of last night's-board session. Backed Tax Reform FREEHOLD - The county ings," he said. ing the building moratorium It has been learned by The Board of Freeholders yesFollowing his election in "All Mr. Schaap is doing is ABSURY PARK - Jerome from March 31 to May SI was Daily Register, however, that terday eulogized William trying to get his name in the 1871, Mr. Apy once again took Adams. 21, of 1002 Sewall called for March 27. Also board members are willing to an unpopular position. He was Ave., was arrested and Aberncthy Jr. of Rumson who paper." Mr. Vitrone said. scheduled to be heard the have the budget pared by died this year. "Di,dn't you say you the only Monmouth County charged with carrying a dansame dale is the 197.1 police $45,260. The freeholders noted in wouldn't attend a board legislator, and one of a few in gerous weapon. After his arsalary ordinance. At the session the board their resolution that Mr. Aberthe state, to publicalJy supThe salary schedule calls submitted a list of 14 areas nethv Jr. had served on the caucus without a policeman at port Gov. Cahill's tax reform raignment here, he will be your side two years ago,?" turned over to Neptune Townfur 14 per cent increases for that could be shaved "without Monmoulh County Mosquito package which included an in- ship,'where he has been patrolmen. 1(1 per cent in- having an effect on educa- Extermination Commission Mrs. Donnelly asked. come tax. charged with armed robbery. "That's right," Mr. .Schaap creases for sergeants and tion." from I!i9 to 107;!. having had replied. Mr. Apy argued on behalf of higher ranking officers, and The two largest items, followed the distinguished serAt 1.03 p.m. Monday, Spe"We worked hard on our the governor's plan in public an increase of ti per cent for which make up two-thirds of vices of his father. William budget at these meetings hearings, and on the floor of cial Officer James Cook obthose who have reached their the board's proposed cut, are Aberncthy Sr. W without Mr. Schaap and with- the Assembly during the de- served the suspect on the W maximum pay level. $18,000 appropriated for hiring Mr. Abernethy Jr also was out any comment from him bate. The package was over- block of Cookman Ave, police an assistant school principal a member in the Montnouth but he showed up at our pub- whelmingly defeated. said. Adams was allegedly and $15,260 for hiring an addi- County Family and Children's lic meetings and pulled the Mr. Apy said his decision carrying a gun, which was lattional physical education Service of Long Branch, noted budget apart," Mrs. Donnelly not to seek another two-year er found to be a toy pistol, and teacher. the freeholders added. term was not predicated on a six-inch knife. Other areas in which the ". . His activity within his ches from western Tennessee Mrs. Jean Brennan of Kt. any political pressure, or on He was pursued and arto Wisconsin, with the great- board feels it can "live with a home, community and in 36, presented the board with a any fear of being defeated beest measurements in central cut ' arc $3,(100 in contin- many fraternal organizations petition which she said can- cause of his sometimes un- rested by special officers Cook. Francis Sullivan and did earn him the respect of all tains the names of 50 resi- , popular stands. Illinois and south-central WisJames Bernard and Patrolllolimlcl. Maiiulapau who knew him. . ." said the d e n t s who s u p p o r t Mr. consin. "It was based on retrospect men John Sponlak ami Robert resolution. I .VIS I nils Fornii'il Schaap. TIDES Sandy Hook of the year past," he said, "I Villapiano. TODAY - High 9:34 p.m. and MATAWAN - Lawrence "With the exception of three have found Ihe responsibilities Rifkin. chairman of the FedTo Colled Hollies low 3:27 p'm. of the board members. Mr. are greater this time, and I TOMORROW - High 10:01 eration of Teen-Age RepubliHOLMDEL Township Schaap supported the other can anticipate they will grow Plan Ruinniuge Sale am and 10:23 p.m. and low can Clubs of Monmouth Coun- Girl Scouts will conduct a six and p u t t h e m on t h e bigger the longer I'm in ofWEST KEANSBURG - T h e ty, announced the formation bottle collection Saturday board," Mrs. Brennan con- fice." 4:01 a.m*and 4:08 p.m. Junior Unit of Bayshore ChapFor Red Bank and Rumson of TAR units in Holmdel and from 9 a.m. to noon next to cluded. He said his law practice has ter, Disabled American Veter"" bridge, add two hours; Sea Manalapan. the Township Hall Annex. "I hope this isn't true." Mr. been building and he felt that ans, wilt stage *a rummage Bright, deduct 10 minutes; "something had to partmy sale Thursday through SaturCounty teen-agers inter- Members of Senior Troop 88 Vitrone said. Long Branch, deduct 15 min- ested in joining TAR clubs in will assist with the unloading "But if it is why isn't Mr. practice, my family.* or the day, March 15-17, from 10 utes; Highlands bridge, add 40 their area should contact Mr. of bottles, which should have Schaap cooperating with us?" legislature, and I decided it a.m. to 4 p.m. in the port minutes. all metal rings removed. he concluded. had to be the legislature." Rifkm. home, Eighth Si.

Ft, Monmouth Job Prospect* Review Slated

Union Beach Meeting Bandies Schaap Issue

Won't Seek Reelection, Apy Says

Board Said Eyeing $45,000 Budget Cut

Abcrnelhy Gled By Freeholders

Man Facing Weapon Charge

nt Dally Register, Red Bank-MMdletowB, N.J, Wednesday, Mardt 7,1173 4

Airport Explosives Dismantled


NEW YORK - Police dismantled early today an elaborate network of explosives set to go off in the trunk of a car parked near the El A! Israel Airlines cargo terminal at Kennedy Airport. Bomb squad officers rushed to the terminal after police received a tip from the FBI. Police said the bomb experts forced open the trunk of a rented green sedan and found three five-gallon plastic containers'of gasoline, three 20-pound bottles of propane gas and two plastic bags of other explosives. > They said all the materials were attached to blasting caps and timing devices.

MCAP Board Ratifies! Removal ofBarnwellJ


LONG BRANCH - The Board of Trustees of the Monmouth Community Action Program (MCAP) last night, at its second meeting in as many days, ratified the removal of Charles D. Barnwell as board president and set into motion the mechanics for weeding out from the board those members who never attend meetings. The move toridthe board of deadwood was initiated to make it easier for the board to get a quorum at meetings, a task that has become increasingly difficult in recent months. HERE'S HOW Chef Hans Zbinden and Frank J . Monica, second left, . general manager of the Molly Pitcher Inn, Red Bank, explain food preparation techniques to members of the hotel-motel operations class of Ft. Monmouth's "Project Transition" during a recent field trip by the group. Students, left to right, are CSM Fred Lee, Sp6 Ralph Herrmann, SFC Rita Amblinger and SFC Ralph Ritter. At extreme right is Francis Cutler, director of the division of hotel-motel management instruction for the Monmouth Adult Education Commission, which has responsibility for administration of the course. A similar program .for civilians Is scheduled to begin April 9 at the commission's educational center. One (Wain Street, Eatontown. To do this, the board unanimously approved a motion to strictly enforce an MCAP bylaw providing for the dismissal of any board member who misses two consecutive meetings or three meetings in a year without a valid excuse. It directed the MCAP staff to check attendance records and mail letters of notification of dismissal this week to those found negligent.

Diplomats' Rites Today


WASHINGTON - Official Washington bids a simple and serene farewell today to two career diplomats shot down last Friday in an act of international terrorism. The coffins of Cleo A. Noel and G. Curtis Moore were placed side by side at the National Presbyterian Church for prayer and a brief reading of scriptures before an afternoon, burial on the hushed slopes of Arlington National Cemetery. There was to be no sermon, no eulogies and little pomp save for the solemn watch of an all-military honor guard as friends and fellow diplomats paid their last respects beneath a sweeping, modernistic altar. Secretary of State William P. Rogers was expected to lead the contingent of government officials at the funeral. A day earlier,- President Nixon honored the men in a State Department ceremony which added their names to the foreign service's roll of heroes. Nixon also ordered all flags flown at halfstaff today. (Related Story, page 1.)

The motion ratifying the ouster of Mr. Barnwell also was approved unanimously by CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines Eighty smiling former all 12 trustees present at the American prisoners of war left the Philippines in planeloads of meeting, the minimum needed 20 yesterday morning for the homeland some have not seen in for a quorum for the 23-memseven years. ber board. This action was The first of the four C141 flying hospitals took off at 8:02 taken to remove any cloud on a.m. and was due at Andrews Air Force Base, in Washington, the validity of the board's acEATONTOWN - Transition and women in our classes who motor hotel management. D.C., at 5:15 p.m. EST. for many persons is a trying are able' to apply their miliWhile the present class is tion Monday night when, it inThe second plane left two hours later for Scott Air Force experience. However, for 10 tary training to the many designed for pre-discharge Base, in Illinois, and a third took off just after noon for Kelly Field, in San Antonio, Tex. They were due at 4:10 p.m. and servicemen and women en- areas of expertise required and retiring military personrolled in the Hotel-Motel Man: for jobs in the hotel-motel nel, a complete course in ho5:30 p.m. local time. ^ The last plane cleared Clark Field at 2:01 p.m., with Trav- agement Program of the Mon- field, schools, hospitals, res- tel-motel operations and man' moutti Education is Air Force Base in California its destination and 2:30 p.m. its missionAdultchange fromCom- taurants and resorts," he agement will be offered to the mili- said. members of the general pub.arrival time. (See Photo, page 1.) tary to civilian jobs may be An important element of the lic beginning April 9 at MAEsomewhat eased. eight-week intensive program COM's Educational Center, The students are part of Ft. is first-hand observation at One Main S t r e e t , h e r e . Youijg Leads in Alaska Voting Savoy Theater, Asbury Park, staff was later ruled not obBy BETTE SPERO Classes, which are held daily Monmouth's "Project Transiscene by a state court. ANCHORAGE, Alaska A former riverboat skipper cam- tion," a U.S. Army program various commercial lodging, from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., KEYPORT - The closing recently. food and recreation estabMr. Carton, Prosecutor "I don't think there have paigning in his third U.S. House bid since last August surged are approved for veterans of the Strand Theater was designed to reorient military lishments. While most of the into the lead late last night as vote-counting continued slowly short-lived, for the West Front been any films that have James M. Coleman Jr., and benefits. skills and experiences toward field trips are in the Monin Alaska's special congressional election. Street movie will re- drawn the attention that two Monmouth County deteccivilian occupations in the ho- mouth County area, visits are Individuals who success- open tonight housebusiness, 'Deep Throat' has," Mr. Car- tives saw "Deep Throat" SunState Sen. Don Young, 39, of Fort Yukon, led Democrat for tel-motel industry. also scheduled to observe the fully complete the course reton said. "We're faced with day night. He said the deciEmil Notti with a little more than half the state's 433 far-flung Francis E. Cutler, director workings of a large New York ceive a certificate from the though "Deep Throat" is no widespread publicity among sion to seek a search warrant precincts reporting. of MAECOM's division of ho- City hotel and suburban coun- American Hotel-Motel Associ- longer the star of the show. He led Notti 26,180 to 23,853. In its stead will be a new the public, in newspapers and and confiscate the film falls tel-motel management in- try club. ation and are eligible for the "We're going to win it, we're going to win it," Young told twin bill, "Little Miss In- a widely known New York under the prosecutor's authorstruction and himself a re- Among the topics covered in association's job placement ity. That decision was made court decision." a cheering partisan crowd in his Anchorage hotel headquartired army officer, said the- the course, which was devel- service. In addition, gradu- nocence," and "Vice Or Verters. ,,, The prosecutor said he was by the prosecutors, he said, sa." students quickly find that serates may also be listed with based on what they saw in Nolti, the first Alaskan native to seek national office, as vice related knowledge may oped by the American Hotel- MAECOM's employment re"Deep Throat," the highly not aware of the X-rated fare expected took an early lead in Southeast Alaska as the coun- be applied to classroom situ- Motel Association are hotel- ferral service which is pro- publicized film that was ban- being shown at the Savoy and both films, "Deep Throat," motel law, food purchasing ting continued in stages over the state's four time zones. declined to comment on and its companion featurette, by a ations. and production, front office vided at no cost to either the ned last week being New York whether any action would be "Love For Sale." Young went ahead as votes poured in from Fairbanks and City court as pornogra"We have a number of men procedure, accounting and graduate or employer. The search warrant, sought Anchorage, Alaska's two largest cities and home for about phic, is at least temporarily taken against that theater. half of its 155,000 registered voters. Mr. Carton did not comment by county detectives who filed out of commission too in the Garden State after being con- on why no action was taken affidavits concerning what fiscated by the Monmouth against the Strand until they saw in the film Sunday, See,s Nixon-Congress in Draw County Prosecutor's office "Deep Throat," was in its was granted by Monmouth WASHINGTON A Republican congressional leader says County Court Judge Thomas eighth week. Monday night. President Nixon will lose about halt his fights with Congress Hp noted, however, that the L. Yaccarino. Edward N. Wilson, Strand over federal domestic spending. When asked why both films owner, is free in $5,000 person- last film confiscated from the However, Sen. John G. Tower told reporters yesterday, al bond pending a Municipal Strand about two and a half were confiscated, Mr. Carton Nixon may refuse to spend money even i Congress overrides f "Some very good sugges- cordance with the voters' de- Court hearing 7 p.m. March years ago, "Man And Wife," said, "because they're pretty MATAWAN A decision on the vetoes that are expected to greet more than a dozen bills. an extensive amendment to tions have been brought up cision of Feb. B. 28. Mr. Wilson is charged with by the previous prosecutor bad." The Senate, meanwhile, passed by lopsided margins two The funding for the Freneau exhibiting an obscene movie the traffic ordinance involving and we have noted them," veterans' benefits bills vetoed by Nixon last fall, bringing to parking was postponed at last Councilman Salvatore J. Mi- sewer system, which was ex- and maintaining a nuisance. six the number it has repassed in its challenge to the Presipected to be received through night's Borough Council meet- lazzo observed. Publicity Cited dent. A resolution was unani- the federal Department of ing. Malcolm V. Carton, MonThe House today was expected to pass overwhelmingly After a lengthy public hear- mously adopted cutting the Housing and Urban Devel- mouth County first assistant two of those six bills, dealing with'vocational rehabilitation ing, council noted suggestions Matawan Regional school opment (HUD), is no longer prosecutor ,who led the conand aid to the elderly, but with smaller price tags than the from businessmen and resi ; budget $145,000 in current ex- available because of the fed- fiscatory contingent, inversions written in the Senate last month. The vocational-redents affected by the change penses and (5,000 in capital eral spending freeze, Coun- dicated yesterday Mr. Wilson habilitation and aid-to-the-elderly bills are expected to be<B)e and decided to investigate outlay. After the public voted cilman Donald T. Day report- could reopen the theater as first two bills to reach Nixon's desk of the 12 vetoed last Octodown the budget on Feb. 6, ed. some of the alternatives. long as he did not show "Deep ber, after Congress had adjourned and was unable to do anyThe only other agency (or Throat." Of major concern is the the Borough and Township No minimum thing about it. south end of Main St. opposite Councils met with the school funding would be the Environ"There is no reason why he balance required the Matawan Deli, which un- board. Councilman Robert V. mental Protection Agency can't reopen," Mr. Carton der the amendment, would Simons Jr. said the talks en- (EPA), whose funds are com- said, "but there is nothing to Money Doctors Concoct Pills Service is our have no parking on the west ded abruptly, and the councils mitted until some time in 1975, stop us from going back up BRUSSELS, Belgium Bitter medicine for the United biggest asset then "removed the fat from Councilman Day continued. side. there again (to Keyport)." States and big pills for the Common Market were being conthe budget." "The council will proceed The Daily Register asked Businessmen affected by cocted today by the European monetary doctors to ease the with sewer plans anyway and what difference this change said they realize a pain of the international crisis. Councilman Simons also we hope to have a more com- Mr. Carton between "Deep traffic problem exists, but commented that the councils plete report by the next meet- there was The question was how much the patients would take. Throat" and other X-rated stated there is no alternative later restored $20,000 to the ing," he added. The palliatives nobody dared hope they would be cures movies that have been shown parking available and ex- budget and urged it be used to will be presented tomorrow to ministers of finance from the Can we help you? After lengthy discussion, at the Strand for the nearly pressed fears of a loss of in- continue busing over hazardnine Common Market countries. Next day the spotlight moves MEMStH OF f. D. I. C council adopted a resolution past three years and at the y\lsJD TRUST COMPANY come. to Paris. The ministers will be joined there by representatives ous routes and busing within a supporting Assembly Bill 656, of the United States, Japan, Canada, Sweden, Switzerland and two-mile limit for high school which will regulate and stabJoseph Sakowski, owner of Malaysia 15 countries in all. the Matawan Deli, said he is students during 1973-74. He ex- lize apartment rents in the Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz is expected to say if opposed to the change and plained the councils cannot state. he is ready to submit to any treatment at all. The European suggested limited time park- mandate this action be taken Some councilmen by the board of Education but agree fully with the did not ministers will make their own decisions at another meeting on ing instead. stipulastrongly recommended it. Sunday, back in Brussels. tions which would be placed voiced College Alumni Michael P. Kidus, a mem- on landlords. They also courts, fears that the county' Gray Corrects Testimony ber of Meets Tomorrow stated the Board of Education, swampedoverlorded, would be there will be a special already with cases. WASHINGTON - Acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray WEST LONG BRANCH - r e g i o n a l board m e e t i n g 3rd says he now finds that his initial invitation to speak in 320 HWY. 35, MIDDLETOWN SAT.. Mar. 10 to SAT. Mar. 17 Two bids were accepted for The Monmouth College tonight to introduce a resoluCleveland last August came from the White House, conAlumni Association will meet tion to appeal the budget cuts acquisition of a new fire tradicting his testimony last week before the Senate Judiciary Committee. tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the to the state Commissioner of truck. Imperial Fire Aparatus of Rancocas submitted a bid new board room of Woodrow Education. Some senators say the speech before the Cleveland City of $44^490. Mack Truck Inc. of Club was political, a contention Gray denies. Wilson Hall on campus. Edison was apparent low bid Sewer Funds Out The committee resumes hearings today on his nomination Members, who last SaturMr. Kirizus said he will vote der at $40,800. Council held to be permanent FBI director,. day staged a "Get Acquainted against the resolution in ac- the bids for review. In a document submitted yesterday to the committee, Day" for newly enrolled and Gray said: "In checking our records, 1 find that the initial inprospective students, will disOPENING SPECIAL vitation from the Cleveland City Club was contained in the cuss the possibility of repeatReg.S99.45Q 10-SPEED BIKES June 13,1972, memorandum from Mr. O'Donnell." ing the successful program. Last week, Gray told the committee he had already rePriced to GO Over 500 attended the initial NOW ONLY ceived an invitation from the club to make a speech before reFree Pepsi While it Lasts! open house, the first ever hos(Limited Number) ceiving a memorandum from White House aide Patrick E. ted by alumni who planned O'Donnall suggesting it would enhance President Nixon's rethe event to provide.newF R E E THIS COUPON GOOD FOR F R E E election campaign: comers an informal and comprehensive introduction to the iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitinii SPECIALLY MARKED GROUP college! 10-SPEED BIKES THEBAILY UP TO . Karl D. Gordinier Jr. of PLUS YOUR REGULAR STAMPS Oakhurst was program chairAll Bikes Backed By Complete Service when pmantod to MAIN OFFICE: man. Dr. Richard J. StonesiCHESTNUT ST., RED BANK, N.J. 07701 fer. Monmouth president, led BRANCH OFFICES: 7 RT. 15, MIDDLETOWN. N.J., 07741 the list of administrators and H EAST MAIN ST., FREEHOLD, N.J.. 01711 . OUR FIRST 100 1I> BROADWAY, LONG BRANCH. N.J.. 07)40 student leaders who in 10-minRT.35 Etlobllihed In 1171 by Jotin H. Cook and Henry Cloy ute talks briefed guests on exCUSTOMERS RECEIVE' PUBLISHED BY THE RED BANK REGISTER tra-curricular and student acKEYPORT, N J . Member ol Hie Auaclotcd PrewThe Associated P'ess Is cntillfd exAPPROVED 10-SPEEO REAR tivities, as well as on the ctuftlvely to the use forrepublfcottonol all the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches. school's academic program. REFLECTORS ' Second class postage paid at Red Bonk. N.J. 077OI and a l additional moiling offices. Published dally, Monday mroujh Friday. Mall subscripA reception, at which rePROVIDED A PURCHAH OF $2.00 OR MORI tions payable in advance. freshments were served, and I Week I Month 3 Monins o Months I Yeor IS MADE AT THE SAME TIME Also 384 OCEAN AVE. t.K .M M 1I-O US.0K a tour of the campus capped LONG BRANCH IIIIIT: t COUPON WH FAWLY Home Delivery by Carrier 10 Cents a week the program. Single copy ot counter, 10 Cents.

80 More POWs Homebound

Fort Troops Receive Civilian Job Training

Part of the strategy initially voted to remove Mr. cludes an appeal to the county Barnwell from office. At the time the board acted Board of Freeholders. Mr. Monday night, it consisted of Russell said he hoped to line eight trustees and four area up a meeting with them in a board members who were sit- week. ting in as alternates for ab- Board member Reinaldo sent trustees so as to con- Nazario said the board must stitute a quorum an ar- exhibit leadership in its dealrangement whose validity ings with the freeholders. might be contested. "We should tell the freeholMr. Barnwell was present ders if they don't want to at neither the meeting last ,meet with us, we will picket night nor Monday night. ' them," he said. "We have to go all o u t . . . to show the freeThe board last night also ra- holders we mean business." tified action Monday night auThe board also intends to thorizing Wilbert C. Russell to proceed with plans to present continue working at the nastatistics on MCAP programs tional level with Congressman and the people they serve to James J. Howard, D-N.J., municipal, county and state of- who represents the shore ficials in an effort to win their area, and U.S. Sen. Clifford/P. united support in MC^P's Case, a Republican, and Harbattle to prevent an end to an- rison A. Williams Jr., a Democrat, all of whom have extipoverty programs. pressed their support for a It also approved a volunteer continuance of all antipoverty committee made up of mem- programs. bers of both, the Board of No one was elected to reTrustees and area boards, which will accompany Mr. place Mr. Barnwell as board Russell in his presentations to president so J. Matthew Marattest to the board's backing. tin, vice president, will serve as the acting president for the The board also approved time being, according to Mr. several other recommenda- Russell. Mr. Martin, however, tions by Mr. Russell for prep- was absent last night along aration of a major campaign with Mr. Barnwell, so Mrs. to ensure the continued exis- Barbara Jacocks, secretary of tence of MCAP, now in jeop- the board, filled in as chairardy because of President man. Another special meeting of Nixon's, budget decisions, and for the possibility of phasing the MCAP board was called for 8 p.m. Monday. out the agency.

Keyport Strand to Open Again With Other Films

Matawan Postpones Action OnNewParkingRegulations

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. DANBV, Vt. (AP) - Pearl 4 Buck, author of "The Good -Jarth" and scores of other looks on a China she knew JJrsthand, died yesterday. The Jldbel and Pulitzer Prize-winauthor was 80. i Buck, who had been in Ruling health since last sum|per because of pleurisy and a sail bladder operation, died in aer Danby home less than a ' Seek after publication of her 1 SUt book, "All Under Heav"' $" The novel is about an 1 araierican diplomat forced to I aye Peking after the takeo er by Mao Tse-tung. < ivlfl Washington, President Jjixon described Miss Buck as " a human bridge between the Civilization of the East and ttie West." He said her writings had enabled millions "to .-lee the beauty of China and fts people at a time when direct personal contact was impossible." Miss Buck did not begin publishing until 1929, but within two years she had won the Pulitzer Prize for "The Good Earth," the story of a Chinese peasant's rise to power. . In 1938 she became the first American woman to win the fJobel Prize for Literature on the basis of six of her works on China. The award made special mention of two 1936 biographies of her missionary patents "The Exile" and "fighting Angel." Bom Peart Sydenstricker in HUlsboro, W. Va., on June 26, |882, Miss Buck went to China with her parents as an infant ami learned to speak Chinese before she spoke English.

Obituaries 'earl Buck Dies, Author Was 80

1,125 Sewer Aid Acceptedby SeaBright

Pearl S. Buck

She returned to America and Europe for schooling but spent most of her first 43 years in China, living in various villages. She was married to John Lossing Buck, an agricultural missionary, in 1917. The marriage ended in a divorce in 1935 and Miss Buck almost immediately married her publisher, Richard J. Walsh. He died in 1960. Miss Buck's writing career b r o u g h t h e r back to t h e United States virtually full time by 1940 and she eventually settled in Pennsylvania, setting up two homes-for orphaned children in the late 1940s. Saddened by the retardation of a daughter by her first marriage, she and her second husband adopted nine children.

' Frank.E. Maguirc


"' SOUTH ORANGE - Frank E. Maguire of 33 Fielding Court died Monday at home after a long illness. He was a long-time summer resident of Monmouth Beach. Mr. Maguire was born in Jersey City and moved here in 1928. He was retired vice prcsi; dent of J. P. Maguire Co., New York City, a firm he joined in 1934 and served 30 years. A communicant of Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church here, Mr. Maguire was a member of the Manhattan Club, New York City, and of the Monmouth Beach Bath and Tennis Club. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Frances De Paul Cagney Maguire; three sons, Frank J. Maguire of Rye, N.Y., James J. Maguire of Short Hills and The Rev. Paul S. Maguire, a Maryknoll missionary stationed in New Orleans, La.; six daughters, Mrs. J. Paul Carey Jr. of Rye, N.Y., Mrs. J a m e s S. McDonough of Short Hills, Mrs. Walter B. Schubert of Llewellyn Park, West Orange, Mrs. Richard J. Byrne and Mrs. Raymond M. Tierney Jr.. both of Shrewsbury and 'Mrs. Eugene M. McDonald of Little Silver; a brother, John P. Maguire of New York City; a sister, Mrs. Christopher E. Malone of Red Bank, and 46 grandchildren. The Joseph W. Preston Funeral Home. 153 South Orange "Ave., here, is in charge of arrangements. Deoth Notices

Thomas G. Miirabito
BELFORD - Thomas G. Murabito, 69, of 325 Church St., died yesterday in Monmouth Medical Center, Long Branch, after a long illness. Born in Italy, Mr. Murabito came to the United Stales 66 years ago. He lived in Woodbridge for most of his life, and moved here three years ago. Mr. Murabito was employed by Gerber Plumbing Fixtures of Woodbridge as a foreman for 15 years; He retired four years ago. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Lorraine A. Murabito; four s o n s . Paul P . a n d Thomas S. Murabito, both of Edison, Joseph Murabito of New Egypt, and Kenneth L. Murabito of LaPuente, Calif.; a sister, Mrs. Sarah Verone of Paterson, and nine grandchildren. The John F. Pfleger Funeral Home, New Monmouth, is in charge of arrangements.

Mrs. Cunvctta Caiola


LONG BRANCH - Mrs. Concetta Caiola, 84, of 11 Rose St. died Monday at home. She was born in Catanzaro, Italy, and lived here 20 years. The widow of Saverio Caiola, she was a communicant of Our Lady, Star of the Sea Catholic Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Ercole Di Paola and Mrs. Millie Donato, both here; a sister, in Italy; six grandchildren, and 10 greatgrandchildren. The D a m i a n o F u n e r a l Home is in charge of arrangements.

from an alternate to full SEA BRIGHT - The Board after taking into conmembership on the Zoning Borough Council passed a res- sideration their recommendaBoard of Adjustment. olution last night accepting tions." Councilman Salvatore Gatto $140,125 from the state DeThe council took the action partment of Environmental in response to a similar reso- reported that the installation Protection to construct inter- lution adopted by Manalapan of a heating system in the community center is comceptor lines which will be con- officials. plete. nected to the Northeast MonThe council appointed John mouth County Regional Sew- Dillon as a special police offiLOTTERY NUMBER erage Authority. cer and elevated Gregory Tncs., March 6:64*47 Department Of Housing and Harquail of 270 Ocean Ave., Urban Development funds also will be used for the sewer system construction. The governing body appointed Joseph X. Seaman, borough auditor, to audit H.UD funds for the construction prior to the project's completion. GIRL SCOUT WEEK Freeholder Albert E. Allen and officers of MonA resolution opposing a mouth Council of Girl Scouts examine material for a Board of Freeholstate Assembly bill which ders proclamation designating March 11-17 as Girl Scout Week. Shown would change the complexion third from left is Mrs. G. V. Kadenbach, Rumson, Council president. Othof Planning Boards from ers are, left to right, Mrs. Richard Owen, Rumson, secretary; Mrs. Mor"weak" to "strong" was also gan F. Larson, Middletown, first vice president, and Mrs. Elmer F. Godadopted by the council. win, Shrewsbury, third vice president. Monmouth, the largest rural counThe bill proposes that Plancil in the nation, serves some 19,000 Girl Scouts. ning Boards be able to act on major land subdivisions without having to submit such matters to local governing \bodies for final approval. TTanning boards are currently "weak" in the sense 1 Have extra cash in your bank that they must submit probalance when you need it. Open posed land subdivisions to mua Cash:0-Matic account with us. FREEHOLD - The county sidered. He added that the discussed with the freeholders nicipal governing bodies for final action. Board of Freeholders yes- guards received a 10 per cent the salary issue privately. "As elected officials diterday left up in the air the raise last year while all other Freeholder Ernest G. KavaFIRST question whether it would or county employes only re- lek noted that county Sheriff rectly responsible to the citizens of the borough," Mayor NATIONAL would not reconsider the pro- ceived 5.5 per cent. Paul Kiernan did not make Cecile F. Norton said, "we posed wage hikes slated for BANK Mr, McGovern conceded to any recommendations for sal- should retain the right to jail guards. a question from Freeholder ary increases for jail guards grant or deny approval of The bank thai looks out lor you "Will you reconsider your Albert E. Allen that he never in his budget requests. matters before the Planning position?" asked William D. McGovern of Freehold, representing the Monmouth County Correction Officers Association. "I am not going to answer," replied Freeholder Director Joseph C. Irwin. "We are not going to say yes or no. No comment." ol ATLANTIC SUPERAMA "Do you intend to answer Shrewsbury Avinu* at Roule 35 that question," persisted Mr NEW SHREWSBURY McGovern. WITH "No comment," answered COUPON BELOW Mr. Irwin. AND PURCHASE OF OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M., SUNDAYS 9 TO 6 P.M JUMBO The county jail guards have 2.50 OR MORE picketed the Hall of Records ROLL here last week to display their apparent dissatisfaction with the proposed pay raise they will receive of rom the 1973 county budget, At a press conference last week, the freeholders indicated that they will remain adamant in their decision not to budge from their position. Mr. McGovern yesterday told the freeholders that the situation is critical. He said the guards had picketed during their off duty hours to demonstrate this point. The salary is not adequate, said Mr. McGovern, noting that in 1971 a federal report recommended that the salaries should be raised so they could be competitive. Morale of the guards is "extremely low" said the attorney. mr MY $1.31 IB. UStWHlRl? Mr. McGovern said the WHY rAYSift u. wmmir state starting salary is 57,800 FRESH HOT OR SWEET a year and that in neighboring Ocean County jail guards receive a s t a r t i n g wage of ?7,500. Monmouth's salary is WHY nr w Bsumati 16,900, about $477 higher than OStHMUl last year's, he said.

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Freeholders Noncommittal On Jail Guards' Pay Plea

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"All the men want is a liva b l e w a g e , " s a i d Mr. McGovern, adding that he was not demanding anything from the freeholders yesterday but just wanted to know if they would reconsider their position. During his short talk, the attorney displayed various items such as a comb, a straight razor, a carved soap handgun, a piece of glass to illustrate the dangers the guards have to contend with daily. He maintained that these items were confiscated during shakedowns at the jail.

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MURABITO Thomas G , oof 6?. o! 325 Church St.. Btllord. N.J.. dlrd Mcich 6. .. Mrs. Anna 1973. BelDved husband ot Lorraine Arbo- "' HOLMDEl, reen. Devoted (other ot Poul P.. Thomos S.. Joseph and Kenneth L. Dear brother ot Schurr Harris, ti4, ol 7 Eagle Mrs. Soroh Verone. Funeral Friday ot 9:15 a.m. from the John F. Pfleger Funer- Hill Road, died yesterday in al Home. 115 Tlndalt Rood, New Mon- the Ivy Hill Nursing Home. mouth. Mass ot Ressurectlon ot 10 a.m. in St. Mary's Catholic Church. New Mon- Middletown. mouth. Interment In St. James Cemetery, Woodbrldge. Visiting Wednesday. 7-9 Mrs. Harris was the widow p.m., ond Thursday. 7-4 ond 7-9 p.m.

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Mr. Irwin said the freeholof George Harris. She was a ders always have the county former resident of Key port. employes under consideration Surviving are four grand- but that they also must be children, Walter Metzger of mindful of the taxpayers. Holmdel. Charles Metzger of There is a limit as to how far Keyport. Mrs. Carol Freiburg we can go in spending taxof Freehold, and Mrs. AUcin payers' money, he said. Sampieri of Atlantic HighThe freeholder director lands. Th|e Higgins Memorial added that the minimum Home of Freehold is lg charge ' wage for a guard in Monof arrangements. mouth would be about $7,250 if full hospitalization were con-

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FHEEHOLD - The county Board of Freeholders remained firm yesterday in its decision to buy only about two acres of land off Scenic Drive' in Highlands rather than acquire the entire tract. Freeholder Director Joseph C Irwin said the freeholders had discussed this a number of times and concluded that the county could only afford to acquire the 1.76 acres running in a 75-foot-wide strip along Scenic Drive in front of a 160-unit high rise apartment building being constructed by Snyder-Westerlind Devel opment Inc., Atlantic Highlands. . The county plans to buy the entire 5.4-acre tract off Scenic Drive in Atlantic Highlands. James R. Minogue of Middletown, representing Dr. Louise Fischer of 134 Ocean Blvd., Atlantic Highlands, who last month had urged the freeholders to acquire the entire Highlands tract, urged the freeholders to reconsider their decision concerning the Highlands acquisition., Mr. Minogue maintained that the costs of acquisition should not be as high as was stated by the corporation. Rejecting the low bid of 19,933 by Eddie Kalogridis Inc.. Edison, the freeholders awarded a $10,293 contract to Frank C. Gibson, Freehold, for furnishing and installing sewerage comminutor at the county jail. County Counsel John M. Pillsbury explained that the Kalogridis bid did not contain the requisite certificate of surety and therefore was not the lowest responsible bid. The freeholders also rejocted the high bid of $24,000 by Ecological Recovery- Associates, Oakland, because it did not have a certified check enclosed. The freeholders agreed to sign an a g r e e m e n t w i t h Oceanport concerning the construction of Oceanport Avenue, which is part of the borough's urban renewal program. Under the agreement, the county will construct a new . road link from Oceanport Avenue to Port-au-Peck Avenue and the borough will take back Oceanport Avenue. Harold A. Kink of Howell and Thomas R. Crane ol Loch Arbour were appointed as members of the Airport Advisory Committee for unspecified terms. Dr. James A. Fisher Jr. of 286 Park Ave., Ocean Township, was appointed to the Mosquito Extermination Commission to fill the unexpired term of the late William Abcrnethy Jr. of Rumson which expires Dec. 31,1974.

Freeholders Won't Purchase Additional Scenic Drive Land

TV DiJly Register, Red Baak-MkMIetews, NX Wttmtay, March 7,1973 5

"The Dependables"

buy now and save. mid-winter sale!


ANTI-DRUG EFFORT Oceaq Township Police Chief Neil A. Tantum, left, explains an exhibit of narcotics, drugs and paraphernalia now on display in the Sunset Ave. branch of the N.J. National Bank,,.there. Looking on are Ocean Township Mayor Joseph A. Palaia, right, and Robert Lisk, the bank branch manager. The display, including an infant's coffin filled with drugs, is labeled: Drugs the way to go. The anti-drug effort is part of the bank's "Matter of Pride" program and is cosponsored by the township Police Department. ,

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Marlboro Zoners Adjourn Garden Apartment Hearing


MARLBORO - A hearing on a garden apartment application continues before the Zoning Board of Adjustment, although it appears that regardless of the board's ruling on the variance request, the issue will end up in litigation. The board last night continued to April 9, a hearing on an application to build 392 garden apartments on a 35-acre site off Ryan a n d ' Robertsville Roads. The applicant is the Prime Feather and Down Co., New York. The tract is in an R-80C zone. The minimum lot size for residential dwellings is two acres, although homes can be built on smaller lots if the remaining land is donated to the municipality, There is no provision in the township's zoning ordinance for multi-family dwellings. If the board recommends approval of a variance by the Township Council, it is considered unlikely that it will be approved. Realtor Testifies Testifying for the applicant last night was John D. Lazarus, an Ocean Township real estate broker. Mr. Lazarus said that it would be unfeasible for the applicant to build homes on the site since it would cost approximately $57,000 to build a home which would sell for 165,000. The broker said that it would cost $13,624 to build each apartment unit. Of the 392 units, 80 per cent will have one bedroom, and the remainder will contain two-bedrooms. Mr. Lazarus said the one bedroom units, which would rent for appproximately $175 per month, would generate .037 school children. He said the two-bedroom units, which would rent for $225 per month, would generate .39 school children. lie said the assessed 'valuation of the t r a c t is now $11,898, and that the township receives $600 per year in taxes. He said the apartment complex would be a $4 million ratable, from which the municipality would receive $175,000 in taxes each year. Cites Market Mr. Lazarus said that according to the Monmoulh County Planning Board, the township's population from 1968 to 1985 is expected to increase from ,500 to 55,000. He said the average income in the county is $11,500 per year, and that approximately only five per cent of the county's population could afford to purchase a $65,000 home. On the other hand, he said, people with $9,000 per year incomeless than the averagecould afford to rent an apartment in the proposed complex. The project would be located across from the light industrial zone on Ryan Road. Mr. Lazarus said people hesitate to purchase homes across from industrial zones. Morton I). Cohan, a board member, asked the applicant's lawyer, Robert W. O'Hagan, Allenhurst, who owns the land in the industrial zone opposite from the proposed apartment complex. Mr. O'Hagan said that approximately 70 acres in the light industrial zone was owned by Prime Feather and Down. Mr. Cohan then asked who owned the land adjacent to the 70-acre tract. The lawyer said he didn't know who owned the land. Mr. Cohan said that according to a recent tax map, the 49acrc tract adjacent to the 70acre tract was also owned by the applicant..

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Delay Decision On Budget Cut


RKf) BANK - No decision on what the Borough Council will do with the Board of Education's defeated $1.8 million school budget will be made before Monday. A council committee headed by Council President Krank J. McKenna met with the board last night but arrived at no conclusions. Mr. McKonna said Ihe full council will meet in caikus Monday to discuss a r e a s where cuts could be made in the budget. He said the board told Ihe council committee areas where cuts could be made, but he declined to say what those a r e a s were or how much money might be sliced from the budget.

SALE ENDS SAT. MAR. 10

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I Second Grader I Wins Bake-Off


HAZLET - Lori Kennedy of Brownie Troop 217, in her first year of scouting, won' the Old Bridge Bake-Off Finals with her recipe of "Puerto Rican Butter Cookies." The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kennedy, Lori is a second grade student at St. Benedict's Catholic School. Sljeryl llirsch and Bonnie Wellman of Junior Girl Scout Troo|fr748 took part in a scout sabbath service at Temple Shalom, Matawan Township. Troop members will participate in Friday's Girl Scout Open House program at Rantan High School and Sunday's scout service In St. Benedict's Church.

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ARTHUR Z.KAMIN President and Editor Thomas J. Bly, Executive Editor fi William F. Sandford, Associate Editor

Wednesday, March 7,1973

Tough Place to Pitch a Tent!

ongoing investigations must the sales lot to the mobile be approved/' A spokesman home park. told us the directive was to One owner had such a feThe nation's booming. 13 WASHINGTON tended to protect the Tights of rocious air leak in his wall billion mobile home industry those under investigation. The that when he held sheeting up is plagued with sloppy workSCENE directive itself warned that to the hole, it flagged out horimanship, safety defects and unauthorized information zontally. buyer-be-damned sales pracIIMIIIIIIIIIWIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIBIUII "could prove devastating to Another new home had 37 tices. bureau goals." * This is the tentative con- Alabama manufacturers. separate defects. Yet many Memo to World Antipofirms refuse to do anything clusion ef the Center for Auto When this plastic and trim verty executioner Howard Safety, which is conducting an catches on fire, the results about the defects and safety Phillips has now issued what 18-month investigation of in- can be catastrophic. Highly complaints. There has been so ANDERSON he calls "A Memorandum to dustry abuses. The center, flammable wood paneling is little research in this area the World" to explain how he founded by Ralph Nader, will often used. Because of the fire that owners, caged in their present its findings in a vol- danger, the threat to occu- own jerrybuilt mobile homes, "trikes" on which they wheel is cancelling antipoverty programs. Phillips contends in around to visit friends. uminous report to be pub- pants of mobile homes is are human guinea pigs. The trade association, his memo that he won't aulished in the fall. Here are about three^, times greater The center's research some of its astonishing dis- than to those who live in con- also deals with mobile home which represents the mobile thorize the gutting of any ancoveries: ventional, one-unit homes. parks. Many are owned by the home industry, is also encour- tipoverty program "in ad Solid bolting is rare. same people who sell the trail- aging its members to set high- vance of a fair and thorough Warranties a r e often review of the merits." Meanworthless or extend only three More often, glue and in- ers. One park charges five er standards. while, he adds, grantees can Washington Whirl months. Thusj/a home bought adequate, air-driven nails are dollars extra for each child, Gag Order - John J . assure "that they are being in the spring or summer may used. Owners have com- while another assesses pets on have faulty insulation, which plained that two-by-three sup- a per-pound basis. Every Caulfield, one of the bigwigs extended at their present levwouldn't be discovered until ports are used instead of the park, apparently, has its own at the Bureau of Alcdhol, To- el of funding for an additional winter after the warranty was advertised two-by-fours. Then private laws. One requires bacco and Firearms, has is- 30 days." This means the offidead. One of the chapters in the cheaper construction is pizza deliverymen to pay a 35- sued stern orders to regional cial policy is to let the antipothe report will be called: papered over with "Alabama cent fee for each pizza deliv- directors to stop their people verty projects continue one ered. The surcharge, of from talking to newsmen. In a month at a time. "What the Mobile Home War- flash." course, is passed on to the memo that also wasn't supranty Delivers Best: High Living Four Marine Hot Seat Rurlaround." posed to reach newsmen, he Corps generals, stationed at Mobile home firms have customer. Most of the 600,000 mobile declared that "misguided re- Quantico, Va., live in such Finance charges often in- mistakenly hooked up their clude life, credit-risk and oth- hot water pipes to toilets, homes sold each year a r e l e a s e s of s e n s i t i v e . . . grand style that the post reer insurance. Combined with causing one injured owner to bought by elderly retired information will no long- cently raised money by perhigh interest rates, they may complain to Nader about "the couples or young married er be tolerated. Manage- mitting enlisted men's wives double the basic cost of a mo- scalding effect... when an- couples. They aren't always ment controls must be tight- to inspect the quarters at one cheated. Some are able to buy ened to safeguard against dollar per person. Tickets bile home from $5,000 to swering the call of nature." these occuranees." He di-were sold at the generals', 510,000. Onci? on cinder blocks in fine houses-on-wheels. And in some trailer parks, rected that "all releases of in- homes and a bus was detailed To make the huge homes a trailer park, mobile homes on wheels look gaudier, the have blown over and fallen senior citizens live happily formation relating to policy, to transport all the gawking m a k e r s u s e slick decors apart. Roofs have also caved and economically with procedures, investigative onlookers. Proceeds went to s u p p e r s , plans, manpower utilization support a retirement home for called "Alabama flash" be- in. Some homes bend out of the potluck cause they originated with shape while being towed from shuffleboards and huge- and comments concerning Marine Corps widows. By JACK ANDERSON

Nader Raps Mobile Homes

When the Saint Lied


government had no money, no tax structure, and depended on the 13 states to contribute. There is a great difference THE Welding the States between truth and the whole Most of them refused, or truth. It is truth, for example, REPORTER sent pittances. Rhode Island that George Washington was refused even to send a reprethe Father of his Country and, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii sentative to the Continental beyond argument, one of the Congress, it required two most noble humans in history. columns. four-year terms merely to He was first in war, first in Ralph K. Andrist, apparentweld the colonies into somepeace, and first in the hearts ly despairing of making G. thing like a "United" States. of; his countrymen. Washington exciting, edited "This, like every other matBeing buried today in Arlington Na- { .U.S. Secretary of State William P. Ro- He was also dull. He didn't the Founding Father's own The historians say that tional Cemetery are Ambassador Cleo A. gers said he hopes the death penalty will tell his father that he had letters arid dispatches for ter of private concern, with treated well, were lazy. All George Washington never Noel J r . , 54, a n d his deputy, G. Curtis be invoked against thfe assassins so that fu- chopped that cherry tree Harper & Row to make a bi- me, has been totally neg- his teeth had been drawn and lied. This makes him appear down. Historical research ography of sorts. Mr. Andris lected; but it is too much to be completely inhuman. He Moore, 50, who were slain Friday in the ture terrorists will be deterred from hi- shows no cut tree, and no is one of the few who learned while I am suffering in every the false ones were of varying lied at least once. He had sent Saudi Arabian Embassy in Khartoum, the jacking airplanes and kidnapings. He says questions asked. Nor did he that the first President had other way (and hardly able to sizes, colors and origins. a military expedition north of that protection of U.S. diplomats around throw a silver dollar across problems with his mother and keep my own Estate from Sudanese capital. Much of the time, he was a the Ohio to aid settlers who Citizens of the nation, rejoicing so re- the world is becoming increasingly diffi- the Potomac. George Wash- his brother Samuel. Money sale) to be saddled with all man in silent pain. Washing- were being raided and killed ington seldom had one to problems. On Jan. 16, 1783, he the expence of hers & not be ton did not want to be Presi- by hostile Indians. cently a t the return of our prisoners of cult. throw. wrote a painful note to his able to derive the smallest re- dent, but the electors made In a report to the Congress, war, thus are again shocked and grieving turn from i t . . . " The original story was not brother Jack: Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., him their unanimous choice. President Washington said he at the condition in world affairs which has At the time, he was trying He begged the new govern- had no idea "at the moment" and Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill., believe the Potomac; it was the Rap- " . . . In God's name how did permitted the Black September Palestipahannock. And it wasn't a my Brothr. Saml. contrive to to win American freedom whether the expeditionary that economic sanctions should be applied silver dollar; it was a stone. get himself so enormously in from England in battle. Sol- ment to call the capital city force had repelled the Innian guerrillas to maintain their reign of "Federal City," but they against any country which gives asylum to In later life, he said he had debt? Was it by purchases? diersespecially from New terror. called it Washington, to his dians. never tried to toss a stone By misfortunes? or shear in- Jerseywere deserting in embarrassment. terrorist groups or to airplane hijackers. As he uttered the words, he So long as incidents such as this, the dolence & inattention to busi- groups. To stop it he ordered had on his desk a week-old letThat is a suggestion that has been across a river. tijackings and. the downing of the Libyan There arc scores of quali- ness? . . . In the list of his his generals to round them up, The Continental Congress ter from Brigadier General made many times. Despite its reasonairliner continue, there can be little hope fied biographies of Washing- debts did it appear that I had find the ringleaders, and hang paid him in scrip; he lost Josiah Harmar, who led the ableness, however, precious little progress ton almost all of them diffi- a claim upon him for the pur- a few. money on the deal. He was al- expedition. It stated that he for a stable Middle East. has been made either through the United cult to write because he was chase money of the Land I His estate at Mount Vernon, most bankrupt as President, had been defeated by the In. A Armed with machine guns, grenades Nations or through the offices of the so virtuous, so noble. Bad sold Pendleton on Bullskin? I Virginia, was neglected and yet he asked " n o com- dians and had lost 180 men. and revolvers, the guerrillas invaded an guys make the front page. have never received a farth- weedy. Tenant farmers did pensation, just $25,000 a year It's much easier to love a world's superpowers. embassy reception Thursday night and deGood guys make the obituary ing for i t . . . not pay rent. Slaves, whom he as expenses." The federal human being tljpn a s a i n t . . . manded the release of Palestinian prisonNeither we nor any other nation ers held in various countries. In particu- should bow to the demands of Black Seplar, they demanded freedom for a guer- tember. Although we may appreciate the rilla leader who is condemned to die in expressions of outrage that have come Jordan. from most of the nation's .capitals, w e U.S. diplomats say the Sudanese a r e should expect those leaders to cooperate By ROBERT YOAKUM iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi according to Republicans, extremely law-abiding, but they have sup- in finding methods of keeping a small "S" is for Statistics, which, tend to be profligate with pubin the hands of an expert, can ported the Palestinian cause in order to group from causing such worldwide havoc. lic funds. When giving a party All right, grownups, it's, be used to prove that the cost ANOTHER maintain their standing in the Arab world. The Black Septembers describe them- time for a review of the alphaRepublicans measure drinks; of living at home has gone Their president, Jaafar al Numairi, also selves as revolutionaries. Their savage be- bet. Not everything is what it Democrats just pour. down and American prestige LOOK wants the friendship of the-United States, havior and their senseless demands, seems any more. For exabroad has gone up. "E" is for Easy Way the with which he resumed diplomatic rela- though, place them more in the classifica- ample: "T" is for Telephone Tap. iimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii way out of every tough prob"A" is for Amnesty, which Installed free of charge by the tions only last July, an act which we re- tion of lunatics. Their evil mission must be lem that President Nixon conies from the Greek word frontier by blaming newsgovernment for some of the warded with a $30 million donation. stopped. meaning "a forgetting," as in papers for the way they might courageously refuses to take, so-called better people in the even at great political cost. "amnesia." Amnesty will not report soaring food prices. media and intellectual circles. " F " is for Food Freak be granted to young Ameri- ("B" is also for Balanced ReYOAKUM "U" is for Unions, a few of someone who keeps on eating cans who opposed the war; it porting, which is any story the no matter how much it costs. phrase used by Vice President which are headed by honest lias been granted to the Kcd Administration likes.) Another name for Food Freak Agnew, aimed in part at New men working for the welfare State Education Commissioner Carl_L. it now must be looked upon as difficult and Chinese, the North Vietnam"C" is for "Crime, Commuof their members and the naYork Times columnists, ese, the Soviets, and loyal nism, and Corruption" the is Rich Person. Marburger is preparing to leave his postT" controversial. It may not be an easy as"G" is for Groceries, which ghostwritten by an aggressive tion. ("U" is also for Unan occurrence we still lament because he signment, but we hope the governor is Americans like Sen. Thomas 1952 campaign slogan used by now inflate fewer people be- alliterative Agnew aide who healthy, which is what one J. Dodd and Jimmy Hoffa. Sen. Nixon to indicate the can get very quickly by opposis doing it reluctantly and only because the. able to select someone who has the courhas just become a New York ing some other union leaders.) " B " is for Butz, Earl L.. evils which Republicans cause of their inflated prices. "H" is for Honor what Times columnist. state Senate refused to confirm his nomiage and determination that Dr.JMarbtirger Secretary of Agriculture, who would abolish if elected. "V" is for Violence, which nation for reappointmcnt to a second five- displayed. "O" is for Orphans, who, * took press criticism to a new "D" is for Democrats, who. the United States obtained peace with in Indochina, de- along with Widows, apparent- is America's Grossest Nationyear term. It may be a little, too much to expect, pending on one's definition of ly own most of the stock in al Product. "W" is for Watergate, headbut we hope our state senators employ "honor," "peace" and "In- U.S. corporations. According State Senate President Alfred N. quarters of the Democratic dochina." more statesmanship and less politics when to business groups, widows Beadleston, R-Monmouth, described that " I " is for Inflation, which, and orphans would suffer hid- Party, where, during the elecdecision by his colleagues as a disgusting they cast their votes for confirmation of along with crime, commu- eously if tax reforms Were tion campaign, wire were eithe governor's next nominee. ther crossed or tapped. victory of emotionalism over reason. nism, and corruption, the Re- voted by Congress. With education in New Jersey contin"X" is for X-rated, a way of publicans were going to elimi"P" is for Pollution, which, classifying sex films that have Gov. William T. Cahill says the state uing to be of vital importance, the new nate in 1952. And 1956. And along with inflation, crime, almost no good old American Board of Education, at his request, has in- commissioner should enjoy the freedom to 1%K. And 1972. communism, and corruption, terviewed a number of candidates to suc- direct it according to the dictates of his " J " is for Jail, which is Nixon was going to eliminate. violence. (See "V" above.) "Y" is for Youth, the people where all good reporters will ceed Dr. Marburger, but has not yet made conscience and of state and federal laws., " Q " is for Quarter, an end up unless they agree to American unit of currency who will soon be bothered and any recommendations. The final choice, of That's what Dr. Marburger tried to do bebewildered by the odd behavsqueal on their sources. formerly known as a dollar. course, will be up to the governor. fore partisan pressures brought about the "K" is for Kerner, Otto " R " is for Republicans, ior of their offspring. "Z" is for Zigzag - the Although the commissioner's job in sorry spectacle in which the state Senate Democrat, federal judge, for- who, according to Democrats, precious years was one of great prestige. rejected him. mer governor, and once tend to be stingy with public shortest distance between two points when moving upward known as "Mr. Clean of Il- services. (See "D" above.) in politics. linois," recently convicted of bribery, conspiracy, income tax evasion, mail fraud, and perjury which proves, if Even though our U.S. Sens. Clifford P. We believe the assemblyman's warnproof were needed, that the Case, R-N.J., and Harrison A. Williams Jr., ing should be heeded. There have been too By the Associated Press Ten years ago: Pope John Republicans have no monoD-N.J., a r e battling valiantly to keep the many "on again, off again" reports from XXIII received a prominent poly on financial hanky-panOn this date proposed deepwater port away from the Soviet official for the first our nation's capital and too many federal ky. In 1573, war between TurNew Jersey coast. Assemblyman Brian T , agencies are involved to expect a clear an"L" is for Loaf, which, ac- key and Venice was ended by time Izvestia Editor Alexel Adzhubel, who was the son-inKennedy, R-Monmouth, has warned councording to people who have the peace or Constantinople. swer to any question. law of Nikita Khruschev. jobs, is what people who don't ty residents "not to let their guard down." In 1850, Daniel Webster The nation may be facing an energy have jobs prefer to do. Also made a famous speech in the Five years ago: the United. crisis, but the thought of supertankers something into which meat U.S. S e n a t e u r g i n g pre- States and the Soviet Union Mr. Kennedy suggests that our senadocking off our shores and spilling oil that was'put in olden days. pledged to protect all weaker servation of the union. tors' arguments b e reinforced through letwould ruin our beaches and part of the At"M" is for Massage Parlors In 1926, the first successful nations from nuclear blackters sent to U.S. Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. places raided regularly in transatlantic radio-telephone mail and aggression. lantic Ocean is more frightening. Sen. BiFun City because they do not conversation took place beof Delaware, chairman of the subcomden and his committee should be told, a s One year ago: Sen, Edmund meet the high moral stan- tween New York and London. S. Muskie of Maine won the mittee of the Senate Public Works ComMr. Kennedy suggests, that "we in New dards of the New York police. In 1936. Adolf Hitler ordered Democratic presidential pri"I Was Afraid Those Awful Congressmen mittee that is still having hearings on the Jersey under no conditions want t h e "N" is for "Nattering Na-' his troops to march into the mary election in New Hampleepwater ports. Might Hurl Him" deepwater port." bobs of N e g a t i v i s m " a Rhineland. shire. By JIM BISHOP
iiiiiiiiiimMiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'

Worldwide Terror

"I have lately received a letter from my Mother in which she complains of the knavery of the Overseer at the little Falls Quarter-that She says she can get nothing from him. It is pretty evident, I believe, that I get nothing from thence, while I have the annual rent of between Eighty & an hundred pounds to pay ... '

Alphabet of theAbsurd

Marburger's Departure

Deepwater Port Warning

Today in History

Tfce DaOy Register, Red Brnk-MMdletown, NJ. Wednesday, Mareli 7, W7J

One-Acre Zoning and Suburban Action Institute


3J Heyward Hills Drive Holindel, N.J. 07733 To the Editor: Referenda is made to your editorial, "Zoning and Property Taxes," appearing 27 Feb., and previous articles concerning the recent Supreme Court, ruling on Freehold Township's one-acre zoning. It has been stated that the U.S. Supreme Court, by refusing to review the'New Jesey Supreme Court's ruling, in effect ruled that a one-acre zoning ordinance i s unconstitutional. That its "refusal to review" becomes-a stamp of approval of the state's ruling. This interpretation I disagree with, with some knowledge of what the Supreme Court's- "refusal to review" has meant in the past. The properties in question" in tbe leave'their families in order suit bad. certain characterto get welfare? And what istics about them which may about the men that are under have, and proably would the Emergency Employment have, made the price of large Act that' are s t a y i n g ? homes not justifiable, i.e. the Wouldn't this be considered proximity of. certain com- ummiiiiiiiiiiitiinmiiiiiimi uiiiiiiiiir discrimination, government? mercial enterprises. I am Will you be thinking of us probably using too much com- basis for decision. What re- tonight in your nice warm sults at the outcome of this mon sense, logic, but I feel home, Mr. State Official? the Supreme Court, in review- suit will be the precedent setHow about our constitution ter, assuming it will go to the ing what was presented to where we are guaranteed the Supreme Court. them, decided not to act beOne closing point. The SAI right for life, liberty, and the cause this was clearly a highpursuit of happiness? ly localized matter, a decision has stated it feels the only It is kind of hypocritical, on wnich could establish a way our cities can be saved is isn't it, when the state says dangerous zoning" precedent, through regional planning,- we are in violation of? How touching every part of the which would permit low and about our constitutional middle income families to country. move along with industry rights, state? Don't'you think The class action suit of the ' and business to the sub- our rights as citizesn have Suburban Action Institute urbs. It is indeed a noble goal been violated? How do you (SAI) is clearly a different to save our cities, but doesn't feel about this; a CLU? matter whose intent is similar it seem illogical that they beWilliam R. Biggin on the surface, but whose lieve this can only be done by scope broadens as one delves making it easier for more deeper into detail. At first people and business to move 3039 Emmons Ave. glance, the 27 Feb. editorial out. The " r e t u r n on inSheepshead Bay, N.Y., 11235 would lead the casual reader vestment" is obviously great- To the Editor:, to believe that all that re- er in building up the suburbs Farewell, Dr. Parker. mains of the legal battle be- than pumping the money diT h e g r a n d old maji of. tween the SAI and its five de- rectly into the cities to save Shrewsbury Ave. is gone, not fendant municipalities is a them. forgotten, or never will be. I "mopping up action," to knew Dr. Parker for 40 years. , I would like to suggest to break down our zoning ordiAs far as I knew, he never rethe SAI that if they wish In nances and open the doors to fused medical aid to any one save the cities they should the development profiteer. regardless of creed, color or support one-acre zoning or My fellow residents and tax- discourage people and in- finances. Dr., Parker treated payers, "Pon't YouBelieve dustry from moving out of the my mother, brother, sister: It." It is more important now cities, and that they pump arid me. Now he is gone. May than before to "keep the their resources directly into the Lord take him by the hand f a i t h " expressed at the the cities to encourage people and walk together in the garden of the promised land. League of Women Voters to move back. : My I send my best to the meeting. Consider that by the Making it easier to move U.S. Supreme Court not rul- out doesn't keep people in. .bereaved family. ing at this time, really shows Their action in this way would So long, Dr. Parker. You the matter is too loosely de- show that a private enterprise have gonep for a well earned fined for them to establish a can do what government rest with God. We will all couldn't and their return miss you. We will always would be far greater than any cherish the memory of you derived by interfering with while you were with us. ' May God take you and care : township affairs. for you as you have done for Very truly yours, so many. Thomas J. Kesolits.

FROM OUR READERS

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not political. The odor problem, which in my opinion is still npt resoived at Treatment Plant 3, is a very serious one and not, a political matter. The mayor and his companions who gave affirmative votes-to this all too important appointment pulled the biggest coup this community will ever see at this council meeting. Since it docs concern the community, I feel, as a participant at the meeting, the full community should be aw896 Greenwood Ave. are of the obvious trick that Cliffwood Beach, N.J. was pulled by the councilmen To the Editor: that voted in favor of this I would like to express my reappointment. feelings regarding the Matawan Township Council meetIn my last letter, I stated, ing of Feb. 5, of which a good or should I say, asked, for an portion related to the reap- open hearing before a decipointment of Frederick Alme- sion was made in this matter, rino as chairman of the Mata- which I believe would have wan Township Utilities Au- been beneficial, due to the thority. fact when I approached this As I stated at that meeting, council a few months ago. 1 in my opinion this is a politi- was told there is nothing they cal issue to certain members could do except have a meetof the council. To the resi- ing with the members of the dents of Cliffwood Beach it is authority, which I understand

was never held. This was the time for the council to help the residents, rather than hurt them, and they refused to do so. Obviously the mayor and his companions feel the interest of the people is well served by silence. 1 state this because the motion by Councilman Gumbs to have the public speak before a decision was made, was tabled by the four unconcerned politicians. Is this the type of government we want? As a concerned citizen, as I am sure all of you are, we ought to look into this matter more thoroughly. No one likes a slap in the face and, in rhy opinion, that is exactly what the residents of Cliffwood Beach received at this meeting. 1 am hoping that all con-' cerned citizens will realize ' what has happened and I am sure as taxpayers you will not stand for this form of govorn, ment. Let's get politics away from an issue that supposedly is not political. Tom DeGiglio

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Union Beach Police


524 Park Avc. Union Beach, N.J. 07735 To the Editor: I am writing this letter on behalf of six fellow human beings, but also for the many thousands of law-abiding, hard-working people throughout our country. The so-called backbone that has brought the corporations, communities and our country to its present state, which is the best on earth. The same people that go about their business working at jobs that are boring and physically tiring and receiving little financial compensation. They suffer many injustices and never utter a word of complaint. As far as myself and the six other men, we were dismissed from the Union Beach police department with five days' notice. Reason: we were not Civil Service. Our time and service was from three years to 13 years. The oldest of us being 55 years old. We were told that a Civil Service official ordered all non-civil service employes fired as of Feb. 28. I presume that if you are not certified then you are not qualified to do the job. All I can say on this matter is that Civil Service should check the qualifications and intelligence of some that remain who are certified. I know Union Beach is in Civil Service and 1 am not disputing the procedure that they took, but why didn't they enforce this violation five or 10 years ago? That way some of the men, mainly the one at age 55, could have started another life at an earlier age. Why couldn't they certify this man even though he's over the age when they do it in other communities through an act of legisation. I realize that non-Civil Service men would have to go in time but couldn't the state and officials find a humane way of doing this? I feel that is morally and criminally wrong to take men's jobs for the total of five days' notice without so much as one dollar of severance pay. Civil service and the state should thank God to get any man to do such work where the financial benefits are poor, a job where you are never with your family on holidays, where you are subjected to eight hours of verbal and physical abuse and a target for all society's ills, so state, you probably did these men a favor. Even a convicted criminal has the courtesy of having a pretrial investigation. Are we becoming a society that has more compassion for animals for when an animal is seriously ill or a horse breaks its leg we shoot it to relieve its pain. To me it is unbelievable for a human being to wield such power and I wonder if he thinks of these men. How about these men, state? How about their bills, rent, utilities and mortgages? Will they lose their homes? Will you support their families? Will you force them to

A. D. Martinsen Former Red Banker

Robert Colin
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Fire Elections Called a Farce in Matawan Township


MATAWAN TOWNSHIP Are the township'3 fire district elections nothing but a farce? Councilman Hans H. Froehlich thinks so. He expressed his belief at Monday night's Township Council meeting. George E. Smith, township manager, announced results of la$t month's elections in the township's two fire districts, when only about 40 voters turned out to elect fire commissioners and approve fire department budgets. "Those elections are a farce. Only about one-tenth of 1 per cent of the electorate Councilman Michael H. turned out to elect commis- Brodnitz scored the County sioners and approve a budget Board of Freeholders for toutthat runs $40,000 to $60,000. I ing a reduction in the county would like Mr. Russell to see tax rate he says is merely the if the fire election can be res- result of a change in the ascheduled to coincide with the sessment base. primary elections or the genTaking the change into aceral election or even the ' count, the county tax rate is school elections. Then more actually up 6 or 7 cents, not people would vote on these is- down. Mr. Brodnitz mainsues," Mr. Froehlich sug- tained. He also reported Jlw gested!; county budget total of $41 milWilliam E. Russell, town- lion is up one-third over last ship attorney, was directed to year's $31 million county look up the law on the point spending plan. He urged residents to question the budget and report back. at a public hearing at 2 p.m. Tuesday. March 13 in the freeholders' meeting room in the Hall of Records, Freehold. Mr. Brodnitz also scored the freeholders for withholding some $55,000 in Monmoutb Community Action Program (MCAP) funds - an act which will hamstring the township's Bayshore Recreation and Economic Development Corp. (BRED) program, he warned. Financed partly by MCAP money and partly by Neighborhood Youth Corps funds, BRED may not be too effective this summer, councilman Philip N. Gumbs added. "Idle kids on the streets lead to problems. The county should help the programs if they have the money." Mr. BRED in 1972. Gumbs stated. "I don't know why the eounJames Frederick, BRED director, agreed. He reported a i ty is withholding the. IK.000," total of about $32,000 spent by he commented. Adopted unanimously was a resolution approving a contract with the Teamsters union under which road department employes will receive a 25-cent hourly acrossthe-board wage increase. A contract to supply a sewer catch basin cleaner, which can also be used to pick up leaves, was awarded General GMC Sales Inc., Bradley Beach, low bidder at $41,068. Delivery is expected in 30 days. HERE'S THE BARGAIN BUY IN HEALTHFUL FOOD

Little Silver Tax Rate Shows 30-Cent Increase


LITTLK SILVER - The .Borough Council has adopted a $930,123 municipal budget which will cost residents an additional seven tents per J100 of assessed valuation. Thj* l o c a l t a x l e v y i s $486,879, an i n c r e a s e of 1432,653. and i n c l u d e s a $147,094 reserve for unco!lected taxes based on an estimated 95 per cent collection rate. Residents will pay a municipal tax rate of about 63 cents per $100 of assessed valuation compared to last year's rate of S cents. Councilman John P. Van Wagner estimated the total tax rate as J3.K3 per $100 of assessed valuation, up about 30 cents from last year. The council passed a resolution approving a\$5(),00O cut in the defeated Red Bank Regional High School budget. Under the resolution, a J25,(KMI increase will be added to the budget surplus raising the total of $75,000 which will be applied to operating expenses for 1973-74, lowering the amount to be raised by taxes. Another $25,000 reduction in the amount to be raised by taxes will be realized by cutting allocations for four accounts. JhCpubTicTeTaTibns account will be reduced by $5,000 to $1,600; engineering survey costs will be cut by $2,000 to $5,000; the textbooks account will be lowered by $5,000 to $17,500, and the substitute teachers, tutors, and bedside teachers account will be cut $13,000 to $1,323 million. Mayor Charles F. Rell said the regional school board told him the reductions will mean a two-cent reduction in the estimated regional school tax. As originally proposed the school budget meant a 17-cent in create, he said, but with the $50,000 cut, residents can eX' pect a 15-cent increase, ac cording to the board. The council adopted a .salary ordinance providing an inc r e a s e of a p p r o x i m a t e l y 14,000 in the total annual salaries paid to borough employes, raising the annual payroll to $336,974.N The ordinance includes funds for three new jobs, a borough mechanic at $8,500 and two crossing guards at a total of $2,500. Mr. Van Wagner, finance chairman, said increases did not represent a flat percentage increase but varied according to position. The mayor and councilmen receive no salaries. Patrolman- Gregory Strand was appointed as a regular member of the police department by the council after having completed a one year probationary period. Mayor Rell declared March 1 through April 22 as Easter Seal Month.

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SHAPING UP An Elaine Powers Figure Salon opened yesterday in new Shrewsbury Plaza shopping center, Shrewsbury. Liz Browning, left, of Little Silver, Is manager of the salon. Assisting her are Patricia Alvarado, second from left, Asbury Park; Mary Ann Schultz, Port Monmouth; Gladys Plant, Middletown, and Theresa Balina, Red Bank.

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ICV 1*01 XT HLt'ERACKKEl) salmon has: H Highest quality taste and flavor your family will love. ir High complete protein value. fa Excellent vitamin and mineral content. it Folyunsaturated natural fats ideal in low cholesterol diets. i( Low, low caloric count. if Easy digestibility. it Versatilitycat it in snacks, dips,main meal dishes or right out of the can. ii; Economical in money and preparation time, tno. Gets meals on the lahle faster for less.
Try lev POINT BLUEBACK RED SALMON right out of

Boys Arrested In Home Entry


MIDDLKTOWN - Two local boys, 13, and 14 years old. have been a r r e s t e d and charged with breaking, entering and larceny in a Hendrickson Ave. home. Detective Capt. Robert M. Letts said the boys are accused of breaking into the home of Donald C. Hays, 43 Hendrickson Ave., last Friday by forcing open a rear door. Police allege the teen-agers stole cash and coin collections totaling $151) in value. Capt. Letts said all of the stolen property was recovered. The boys were arrested by Patrolman .laities Murphy. They were released to their parents' custody pending a hearing in Juvenile Court, Freehold.
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Arrow Tribe Hears Coccora


LITTLK SILVER. - The Arrow Tribe of the Y-Indian (Juides, Shrewsbury Nation, hosted a former resident of an Indian reservation, CKuck t'occoraof Klberon. He spent 11 years of his early life with the Blackfoot Indians on their reservation in Idaho. He related his experiences to 10 Indian braves and their fathers at the home of Assemblyman and Mrs. Chester Apy.

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Agnes Egan's Solo Exhibition Is Worth Seeini


By MILTON BLOCU
"I start from an abstraction, working out spots and shapes, and then I work toward reality, toward light and shadow. I think think that's more complicated than the pure abstract." About five or six years ago, Agnes Egan, who had been painting representational paintings for some time, decided to tackle non-representational abstraction. "I was so traditional that I wanted to develop a sense of strong design in my work," said Mrs. Egan. So she studied design with Pratt Institute graduate Barry Martin for a year. She says of abstraction that she "didn't understand it at all" before," but now she "feels more confident in her work and stronger." Not many artists tread the path from the traditional to the abstract and then back again, but Agnes Egan always intended to get back to representational subjects. Her recent paintings are on exhibition at the Guild of Creative Art, 620 Broad St., Shrewsbury, until March 30. Life-Drawing Mrs. Egan has an art degree from the University of Wisconsin. She attended the Art Students League for three years and considers that intensive course the equivalent of a doctor's degree in studio art. She Had the good fortune, to work with Frank Vincent DuMond and George Bridgman. (Bridgman wrote the most well-known and widely1 used books on life-drawing). I sometimes pride myself in being able to walk through an exhibition and, after a little study, pretty well accurately decide the chronology of the paintings based on a progression of style. I confess that Mrs. Egan's work had me completely baffled in this respect. Not only does she return to earlier themes to reevaluate and explore them again, but she also summons up useful bits of earlier styles and attitudes as well. It is not an easy line of development to But representational artists and "Flying Saucers." Here a I would be delighted to see have pitfalls, too. They lie in very strong design cuts across Mrs. Egan capitalize on her the direction of overkill, the the canvas in an effective considerable talents in this too-slick surface and the manner and only "cute" over- . m e d i u m a n d a d d t o t h i s painting that somehow slips tones prevent them from group. > over into the purely ornamen- being decidedly powerful. There were three or four tal. "Still Life of "Fruit" was There were other paintings drawings in the exhibition, one painting that had definitewhich I will mention mo- some of which were studies tracebut it was fascinating ly crossed over that line. to try. mentarily, but first a word for earlier paintings. .The Diversified Material "Ambrosio's House," "At' about the sculpture. The sev- drawings are tightly and careEqually fascinating was the the Beach," "Early Morning" eral sculptures in the exhibi- fully made, but very self-condiversity of material on exlii-- and "Silver and Queen Anne's tion were made about two scious. They are most helpful bition. The paintings them- Lace" also were the object of years ago. I found two of in filling out the exhibition selves were quite various. For a little too much polish. In these to be most extraor- and making a more cominstance, "Tea Time" is a contrast, "Blue Flowers" idinary. "End of an Era," a prehensive evaluation of the large and competent, impres- seemed more ambitious, di- frolicking and imbibing wom- artist's work possible. sive still life centering upon a rect and vital, communicating an on one end of a Victorian New, Exciting silver tea service, in which more energy and vivacity. sofa, and "Live Wire" (a everything seems to work and 1 must confess that I have somewhat similar theme in Strong Design Cuts which ends up as a compelling Two paintings border on the wire) are original, insightful, been saving something imporpresence. surrealistic: "While Sleeping" fresh and delightful totalities. tant for last. Recently, Mrs.
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BRUSH WORK

Hazlet Board Weighs Flag Pledge at Meetings


HAZLET - Should Board of Education members pledge allegiance to the flag before conducting official business at public meetings? The question was brought up at Monday night's board meeting, and more discussion is slated for the April meeting, i, Police Sgt. Edward A.Schramm, newly elected quire passage with a two, board member, introduced a thirds vote. resolution whereby the pledge Board member Richard would be included on the Shergalis asked what purpose agenda at each meeting. would be served by the board's Because such a move, re- recitationof the pjettge of alquires a change in the board's legiance. He said he saw no by-laws, voting could not take benefit to the board by inplace Monday night. When cluding it on the agenda. voting does take place next Board members, Mr. Shermonth, the change will re- galis contended, exhibit patriotism simply by serving on the board. "We serve the community in the interests of education," he declared. A mere repetition of words, he said, does not mean a person is patriotic. Mr. Shergalis' statement received support from former board member and president Arnold Miller, present in the' audience. "I would prefer participation in the democratic process to saying words," Mr. Millerdeclared. "We should teach children by our examples,"^ said Mr. Shergalis. "Words'become meaningless in rote," he continued. Another board member, Mrs. Iris P. Meyer, believes pledging allegiance to the flag is a good idea. " I t doesn't make us .any more patriotic," she declared, "but it helps to set the tone of each meeting." Supporting the daily recitation of the pledge in district classrooms, Mrs. Meyer said, "I feel the children need to do it every day. It might fade away if it is not recited daily." Board president John T. Yannuzzi admitted "there was some serious conflict on the board regarding this" at a recent board, conference meeting. "I will vote yes," he said; "To do otherwise might be interpreted as being un-American. When we are sworn in as board members we swear under oath to uphold the U.S. and state constitutions, but it doesn't make us any more patriotic." Mr. Yannuzzi said he would rather have the pledge of allegiance recited "on more special occasions," and added, "There are many more things that we can and should do to show we are patriotic." Sgt. Schramm contended that since the U.S. flag is required in all school classrooms and because children are required to recite the pledge, "the Board of Education s h o u l d do t h e s a m e thing." As adult leaders of the community, Sgt. Schramm. said, board members should set an example.

Egan has produced some oils which strike out in a new and axciting direction. They can only be called biting social satire.'Correction: they can also be called delightful. "Cocktail Party" and "Boston Tea P a r t y " a r e two such paintings on view. They scorch the cocktail circuit in the same piercing way that Levine punctured the phony demeanor of the gangsters at a mock-solemn funeral. Here Mrs. Egan's skills seem to combine in perfect unison to produce a witty and biting statement carried by a deft hand.^ Although Mrs. Egan has had one-woman shows in the Virgin Islands and in Oklahoma and has shown with the National Arts Club and the Catharine Lorillard WolfeArt Club in New York, this is her first solo exhibition at the Guild of Creative Art. I believe that there will be few people attending this exhibition of the drawings, paintings and sculpture of Agnes Egan who will' not enjoy the visit.

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AH our warehouses that handle the meats and poultry for our stores are Federally inspected. In addition, w e maintain our own staff of inspectors at each warehouse os double assurance that all products meet Finast's high standards. We call that HONEST VALUE.

INSPECTION FRESHNESS
All our meat is cut right at the store to assure you of freshness a t all times. We realiie you store your meat purchases for use Ipter in the week, so you can see the importance of freshness controls. We call that HONEST VALUE.

Band's Dilemma A Colorful One


MIDDLETOWN Shamrock armbands? They may be the answer to a dilemma facing the Middletown Township High School Band. Invited to march in the annual SI. Patrick's Day parade in New York City, band members are worried because their basic black uniforms are trimmed in bright orange. The band was invited to march last year, but had to refused because of lack of funds. Its trip this.year is supported by the newly formed Band Booster Association. The orange problem is being worked on.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

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II The Dafy Register, Red Baik-MMOetewi, N J. Wetoesday, Harck 7,1*73

on Taxes
fy under the new favorable Treasury rule. It well may be that your A 1(72 Tax Court decision corporation pays a profeshighlighted a costly mistake sional counseling firm these that even informed employes dayS to advise you, an execuand businessmen among you keep making'on your travel IIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIUJiniHHHIU tive, 'on handling your personal financial affairs: inand ^entertainment expenses: namely, your failure to recog- subsistence travel allowance vestments, insurance, tax nize that the Internal Reve- for an employe of not more planning, retirement benefits,,, nue Code itself limits your de- than $36 a day automatically etc. This has become fashionductions for these expenses lo met certain accounting and able. If you're involved, the whatever amounts you can substantiation requiremefits Treasury now says that the support by specific written for travel expenses. Last year amount paid by the corpothe Treasury announced that ration for this advice is addirecords and receipts. As I reporied to you on if the federal government was tional taxable compensation Monday ( P a r t 6 in t h i s authorized to pay a higher per to you subject to withholdseries), the courts will allow a diem than $;)6>to its own em- ing and payroll taxes. But reasonable estimated deduc- ployes in any locality, it would while you must include this tion for such expenses as me- also accept that higher per amount in your income, you dical outlays and charitable diem for its own business arc allowed to deduct on your contributions under the Cohan travel expense rule. There arc 72 return that portion of the rule should you lack proof of quite a number of foreign lo- total which is allocable to any calities in which U.S. employ- tax advice you receive or tax the precise amounts. es get a higher per diem. In But no estimates are deduc- these areas, U.S. business em- returns that are prepared for tible for travel and entertain- ployes can also be given a per you. You also can deduct any ment expenses and this re- diem allowance up to that portion that covers advice quirement was rigidly applied higher amount and still quali- about, making or protecting vour investments. by the Tax Court last year in
By SYLVIA PORTER

Portfolio Changes,
By ROGER E. SPEAR Q I am 64, a widow and would like to know how to safely increase my income. My portfolio is enclosed.W.D. AYour assets, which consist of savings ($51,000) a mu- Equitable Gas 9%s of 1995, tural fund, bonds, common rated A and Southern Califorand preferred stock, has a nia Gas 8.85s of 1995 rated AA. current value of $102,500. Cur- IBM of the former and 15M of rently your holdings return the latter would pay $2,867 an$4,700 or 4.6 per cent in annual nually, or 8.3 per cent on that income, obviously this can be portion of your capital. Taken increased substantially. The as a whole, with the two new return on the Telephone con- bonds replacing the three vertible preferred is a gener- equity holdings, your annual ous 6.5 per cent. Because of jncome would be $6,871 or 6.7 the conversion feature, these per cent. shares will move in line with Readers interested in high the common. I would hold this issue, Exxon and General Mo- income bonds may send for tors as inflation hedges. The my list of three bond portmutual fund, GAC pfd. and folios. Tlie first portfolio proSun Oil should be sold and the vides monthly income of 8.1 money reinvested in high per cent. Please enclose a stamped self-addressed enveyield bonds. lope to Roger E. Spear, c/o Suitable bonds include: Red Bank Register, Box 1618

YOUR MONEY'S WORTH

SUCCESSFUL INVESTING

a case where circumstances indicated the taxpayer had indeed spent far more than his travel and enlerlai'nrneht records could prove. Clear Warning As an advertising executive with gross receipts totaling nearly $500,000 over the three years at issue, the taxpayer deducted a total of $23,701) for entertainment expenses and $4,400 for business travel. But the Treasury and the Tax" Court slashed his totaldeductions for the three years to a mere $600 for entertainment and $1,500 for travel, because these amounts were all that his records could support. The court said that it could not give him any relief from the statutory requirement. The warning is clear: collect and keep your records! On proving the amount'of travel expenses, the Treasury had a rule that a per diem

The Tax Court had good news in 1972 on deduction of employment counseling fees. The Treasury has insisted and still insists that employment agency or counseling fees are deductible only if they secure a job for the employe and the Tax Court previously had gone along with this view. But in a 1972 case, the Tax Court reversed its position by allowing an employe to deduct a $1,500 employment counseling fee that he paid in an unsuccessful effort to get a new position similar to the one in which he was then employed. H o w e v e r , be o n ' guard: this case left many unanswered questions, and there is at least one circuit court of appeals that has already barred a deduction in a case almost identical with the one in which the Tax Court allowed the $1,500 deduction. If1 the fee you paid for an unsuccessful job hunt was large enough, though, thefight for the deduction may be worth it. Also on fees: the Treasury said in 1972 that if you are completing your law school studies and taking your state bar exams, you cannot take' as an itemized deduction cither the cost of a bar review course or the fee you pay for taking the exam.

Grand Central Station, New York."N.Y. 10017. Q 1 am holding several thousand shares of Faberge, Inc. (NYSE) which is off 33 per cent from my cost. Is there a chance for recovery?-V.W. AAn erratic earnings pattern which has restrMed Faberge's market performance, shows signs of improvement. Year-to-year comparisons have been on the plus side for the last eight consecutive quarters. Disposal of several marginal product lines and a upturn in consumer spending have broadened profit margins. Further progress is looked for'in this ar^a this year. Another d e p r e s s a n t on

share price action is uncertainty over a stockholder class action suit against the company. Faberge shares should be held only if you are in a position to assume a high degree of risk. (To order your copy of Roger Spear's 52-page Guide to Successful Investing, send $1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear, Red Bank Register, Box 1618 Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.)

IEEE to Honor Bell Labs Man


MIDDLETOWN - Dr. Ru- been employed by Bell Teledolf Kompfner of 191 Holland phone Laboratories, where he Road will receive the Medal is associate executive director of Honor of the Institute of of t h e research-commuElectrical and Electronics nications sciences division in Engineers (IEEE) at the in- Holmdel. A fellow in IEEE and in the stitute's annual Intercon banquet March 27 in New York's London Physical Society, Dr. Kompfner is also a member of Hotel Americana. The award comprises a gold the National Academy of Enmedal, a c e r t i f i c a t e and gineering and the National $5,000. Established in 1917, it Academy of Sciences. He is awarded for a contribution holds honorary doctorates constituting " a clearly ex- from the Technische Hochceptional addition to the sci- schule of Vienna and Oxford ence and technology of con- University. cern to the institute." Central Jersey Bank The award goes t o Dr. Kompfner "for his major con- Hikes Cash Dividend FREEHOLD - Robert B. tribution to worldwide communication through the con- Barlow, president of The Cenception of the traveling wave tral Jersey Bank and Trust tube, embodying a new prin- Company, announced that the board of directors has raised ciple of amplification." Dr. Kompfner invented the the regular 12^-cent quartertraveling wave tube in 1943,ly cash dividend to 15 cents, when he was working under. per share payable April 2 to Prof. M. L. Oliphant in Bir- stockholders of record March mingham University in Eng- 20. land. In I960 he was honored Paper Drive Saturday for the invention by the IEEE with t h e David Sarnoff HOLMDEL - The monthly Award. Franklin Institute in curbside paper drive conPhiladelphia selected him to ducted by township Boy receive the Stuart Ballantine Scouts will be Saturday beginMedal. Dr. Kompfner has 55 ning at 10 a.m. The scouts patents in electronics and ra-. have collected more than 100 dio and has authored many tons of paper this school year. technical articles on micro-, wave techniques and satellite. and optical communications. From 1944 until 1951, he worked at Oxford University in England, where he received a doctor of philosophy degree. Since 1951, he has

Tomorrow: Income averaging.

PAHffflS
LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER SALE MAR. 8 THRU MAR. 10 ONLY J

12 OVERNIGHT PAMPERS

Thomas E. Klnlln

Dr. Joaqaii F. Vinals

HIGHEST

INTEREST

HAZLET The directors of Peoples National Bank of Monmouth County have pror motcd Richard H. Gaskill t o ' UNION BEACH - Thomas ber of the Keansburg Board of- assistant vice president and K. Kinlin of Seeley Ave., Health and the Keansburg Theodore M. Kest to assistant Keansburg, has been named Juvenile Conference and co- cashier. ALLOWED BY LAW Mr. Gaskill resides in Atlansupervisor of employe rela- chairman of the Keansburg On Regular tions in the Personnel Depart- 50th Anniversary Committee tic Highlands and was forment of International Flavors and the Keansburg High merly commercial credit suk Fragrances, and Dr. Joa- School Booster Club Athletic pervisor for the bank. He was Savings quin F . Vinals of Arthur Field Committee. He was the an assistant commercial bank Place, Ked Bank, has been as- 196!) recipient of the Jaycecs' officer with Marine Midland On One Year signed to the IFF Research, Distinguished Service Award. Bank in New York City before and Development Center as a, A native of Havana, Cuba, joining Peoples National last '0 Certificates Dr. Vinals earned his doctor year. research tobacco flavorist. of Deposit Mr. Kest, of Matawan, was Mr. Kinlin, who joined IKK of pharmacy degree from the in littiK as a research chemist, University qf Havana in 1957.accounting department superOnfwoYcoj graduated from Ked Bank and attended the University of visor at PNB. He was with / 4 7 O Ccrtilicotei Catholic High School and re- Richmond (Va.), pursuing a First New Jersey Bank in ceived a B S. degree in chem- master's degree in business Union as an assistant treasurcf Deposit istry in \WA from St. Anselm's administration. He is a mem- er and branch manager. Peoples National is one of 15 College, Manchester, N.H. He ber of the Institute of Kood ;o.cimih. 1.ii.t.c. served as a pilot with the U.S. Technology and the Flavor banks that comprise United Chemist Sdciety. Jersey Banks. Air Force. Past president of the Keanshurg Hoard of Kducation and past external vice president of Ir.l-.il n..... the ( i r e a t e r K e a n s b u r g lrtwttil tniuitiut ( "tp. Uavcecs, Mr. Kinlin is a mem-

Kinlin and Dr. Vinals Named^o IFF Posts

2 Promoted By Directors At Peoples

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Aluminum coping 3 s'ep m g'ound ladder 2 Mush irou'Hed woli summer* Directional Mow -nleli

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EXIT 117 O A I D I N STATE PARKWAY

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<il 148 Garden Slate Partway ol BloomMd A c . nue Proceed m l on B l o o m M d Ave appro. 2 : i .Tiles 10 Branch Brnol Co. Only I'.; m,lei | , o m Bloomfield Cily l.ne. I blocl Irom' Brunei, BrooV

HAZLET 787-6804

On Route 36 between Laurel and Union Avenues

NEWARK 484-0068

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Expect Funding For Recreation Trttct in Ocean


OCEAN TOWNSHIP - A | 1 million Green Acres program grant is expected to be set aside for participation in the township's plan to purchase the former Deal Test Site at Deal and Whalepond Roads [or use as a recreation area. Ronald Frano, township manager, h a s said that release of the funds is expected to be announced soon. ' Mayor Joseph A. Palaia said that the state grant will become available to the community on a matching basis. "If we can a p p r o p r i a t e $500,000," he said, "the state will match it with a similar amount." That figure, he added would purchase about half of the 208acre former Army facility. The program was started late last year. It was said then' that it was planned to "hopefully" gain additional funds toward the project from a federal source, Mayor Palaia said, however, that the federal Housing and Urban Development funds have "practically dried up." ... , He added that all possible avenues of available funding will be explored as a means to aid in funding for the program. Township Council also in-, troduced its revised zoning code and set March 19 as a hearing date on the measure. A revised code was introduced here at a special session Feb. 26. Several objections from local residents, however brought about a review of the planned code and about a half dozen new changes. The governing body also added a 15-day period to the April 1 deadline on the site plan moratorium here. That measure was extended to April 1 at the Feb. 26 meeting. Mayor Palaia said, however, that the extra 15 days was to insure that the control remains in effect until the new zoning code gets final approval. A personnel policy code introduced here Feb. 5 received the final approval of council last night. The "Boca" code, a measure which sets standards for construction and property maintenance, was also introduced. It will be discussed March 19. A special meeting was set for Monday at 8 p.m. to air the proposed $3,032,075 municipal purpose budget. The figure, which would boost the local purpose tax rate by onecent per ? 100, was introduced last month.

f i e DaflyRtgjrtcr, Bed BMk-MkWtetOT, N.J. Wedtesttoy, Hard. 7,1173 11

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Students Suggest Brick in the Tank


REP BANK - "A brick in your tank is worth a dollar in the bank." Well, maybe not a dollar, but it should save some money and some water according to a couple of River Street School students. The idea is to toss a brick in the water tank- of your toilet and thereby use less water everytime you flush the thing. The students Mark Sergeant of Fisher Place, and Michael Kopka of Highland Ave. - asked the Borough Council to endorse the idea of bricks in the toilet. The council said it appreciated the idea and referred the boy's letter to the public utility committee for review. The idea was first advanced' by a woman in Cherry Hill last year,as a means of conserving water. The boys also pointed out it would also help reduce a homeowners' water
bill.

Assorted & White Bathroom

The council introduced a bond Ordinance appropriating $27,000 to buy a new street sweeper. Bids will be received April 2. Also introduced was an ordinance making Bridge Ave. a through street at its interYou Save Mote section with Monmouth St. PURINA DOG CHOW and providing for a right turn You Sove More lane onto Grant Square from' 3 BALL DETERGENT Monmouth St. A third ordinance was in H I M Dishwoihing troduced lowering the age for SWEETHEART DETERGENT admission to the fire depart- Tank Cleaner ment to 18. Public hearings on SANIFLUSH all three o r d i n a n c e s a r e You Sove More scheduled for March 19. SCOTT'S LIQUID GOLD An ordinance making the Aluminum Foil borough's plumbing code comREYNOLDS WRAP * , , ply with s t a t e l a w wa-s adopted without comment. While & iisorled The council renewed its con; VIVA PAPER TOWELS t r a c t for using t h e New OiKolo'le Macaroon, Lemon, Blueotnv, a Fudge Nut IV/t-n. Shrewsbury landfill for one PILISBURY BUNDT CAKE MIXES toyear at a cost of ?27,500, a You Sove More 45.,, $1,500 increase. CRISCOOIL
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Holmdel Board Acts On Furnishings Bids


HOLMDEL Bids on furnishings for t h e new high school were approved by the Board of Education in a speciaj meeting. Successful bidders for classroom furniture orders were Longo Associates, at $4,628; H.L. Farkas, J6.312.1U; Virco Mfg., $13,464.62; Walter Braun. Co., $2,014,20; Dunkerley Engineering, J4.H89.25, and Colonial O f f i c e F u r n i t u r e , 12,869.51). Robert Brothers, bidding (125, and H.L. Farkas, $361, ivere awarded contracts for lurse's office equipment. The bid of Viewlex Inc. for 610,985 was accepted for the Planetarium, while Lyon Metil Products, Inc. received the contract for steel shelving at 55,457. Bids for office furniture ap>roved were from Dunkerley Engineering at $3,400.25, W.B. iVood for J4.120.4i), H.L. Farias at $878.10, Walter Braun > . for $843.90, and Valentine nc. at $6,591.1)1. Dunkerley Engineering was :hosen to provide the mill-

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work at $1,859. Bids accepted for auto care and repair equipment were from Brodhead-Garrett for $2,470, Nayler's Auto Parts for, $1,738, Parent Metal Co. at $2,075.50, and Snap-On Tools for $6,443.48. Power technology bids' accepted came from BrodheadGarrett for $5,901.80, Parent Metals at $1,023.01, John Matlack for $9.87, Paxton/Patterson at $631.66, Geat'or Associates for $7,050, and Buck Engineering at $13,400. Contracts for communications were awarded to Paxton/Patterson for $630, Zimmers Printers Supply Co. for $246, A.R.. Meeker for $12,548.40, Valentines, Inc. for $13.95, and Brodhcad-Garrett for $2,455.50.. Fabrication equipment orders went to John Matlack for $2,035.67, Brodhead-Garrett at $26,739.63, Warren-Balderston for $1,149.77, Parent Metals at $6,553.80, Krieg Distributors for $1,457.55, Oliver Machinery at $3,439, and Shop & Maintenance for $265.81.

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12 H e Diy Register, R&Bsfc-Mld<fleUwB,NJ. Wednesday, Man* 7,1WJ

Television Today
* NewYoiiCWnel-2,4^,7,9,ll,13
DAYTIME 1M O 140 0 O fi) 3:30 O 4:30 Q MOVIES . "Gidgt G O M H*in M "Mt(*y<" Udy" "Go W t Yo d " "Beriudltts of "Ten Till Mm" "The Ipcr.ii File"

Two Scores Are Barred

Translations of the Gettysburg Address into a languages ba?e been compile aa$ issued in a booklet by the l i brary of Congress.

m DRAGNET I A nun c i l a the poliet mi threatens t kin U a etf.

0SOUU

. 9:30

To the People - Thank You." This season's final prognia features the staff reading poetry and
letters from'viewers throughout Uie country.

EVENING
6:00 0 O B NEWS
0 THE FUNTSTONES "Baby Barney" O THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES "Jed, Incorporated" (0 GILLIGAN'S ISLAND "Bang! Bang! Bang!" IB HODGEPODGE LODGE 0 I LOVE LUCY
"Bonus Bucks"

10:00 0 CANNON

O DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE Kirk Douglas stars in a special dramatic musical yenrion of Robert Louii Stevenson's classic. O DRAGNET II A Ucn-age girl runs away from home to become a movie star.

4:30

O HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL 'The Outlaw" O BEAT THE CLOCK IB BOOK BEAT 7:00
"British SclfTaught" by Norman Echur.

10:30

Q CBS NEWS O NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 0 THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW "Three Wishes for Opie" O ABC NEWS WITH SMITH, REASONER O IT TAKES A THIEF "Ixicked In Ihe Cradle of the Keep"

11:00 '

ID I DREAM OF JEANNIE
7:30
Regliier Staff Photo

THE QUAY FOR PLEASURE The Quay has reopened with a new look incorporating directors' chairs surrounding brandy barrel tables, a bar made from a bowling alley lane, and a view of the Shrewsbury River within the hull of a barge. The exposed ceiling shows the barge's original pltfnking.

"One Jrannie Beat* Tour of a Kind" SB CAPITOL VIEWPOINT Q THE GOLDDIGGERS Guest Hoflt: Milton Berle. 0 WAIT 'TIL YOUR FATHER GETS HOME "Musio Tycoon" 6 THAT GIRL
"TIIP Shoplifter"

11:30

Unique Quay Lounge Was Railroad Barge


Doran pointed to the unique furnishings in the downstairs SEA.BRIGHT - T a k e one bar, which has recently old barge, mix well with a viv- opened. The bar top is made from a id imagination, slowly adding (200,000, and you have The bowling alley lane, which was Quay, a different concept in once in his home. Reproduccocktail lounge-restaurant at- tions of barge lanterns have mosphere. been imported from Holland Originally, The Quay (pro- to provide lighting. Directors' nounced "key") at 280 Ocean chairs surround brandy barrel Ave., ujed a converted beach tables topped with candles, house as its setting. A fire in and the entire room has a November, 1968, leveled the view of the Shrewsbury River. house leaving many habitues The upstairs restaurant distraught and owner David which Mr. Doran said will Doran with a reconstruction open in May, will retain the problem. barge's original flooring, and "I wanted something differ- he will have his office in the ent and exciting," he said. "I craft's captain's quarters went to Hoboken where I there. bought the barge for $50 from "We will probably have a the Seafarers' Union, hired a basic beef and seafood tug and brought it to Sea menu," he said, "and 1 will "Bright." rely heavily on my right hand Not being able to leave the man, Hans Falkenhagen." barge in the Shrewsbury RivNetherlands Line er, Mr. Doran said he had to Mr. Falkenhagen has' build a foundation on land for worked for the Royal Dutch the vessel. But before the Netherlands Steamship Line, barge could be land-based, the and in New York and Euhull had to be cut off. ropean hotels before joining Anticipating a total expense Mr. Doran's staff. > of (200.000 when The Quay is A dining deck extending completely refurbished, Mr. from the upstairs restaurant By GREG BORAK
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is also being planned to ac1:17 0 HOLLYWOOD'S FINEST I commodate the 300 capacity "Birth or the Blues" (1041) starring Bine, Crosby, Mary Martin. " bar and restaurant, Mr. Do1:30 0 THE LATE SHOW ran said. Entertainment is "Take Care of My Little Girl" (1851) starring Jeanne Crain, Dale Robertson. featured five nights a week at 1:40 O THE JOE FRANKLIN SHOW the piano bar and there is a 2:40 0 NEWS AND WEATHER possibility of outdoor enter2:45 O SERMONETTE 2:55 0 EVENING PRAYER tainment for the many boa3:00 0 HOLLYWOOD'S FINEST II ters who dock at The Quay. "The Remarkable Andrew" (1942) starring William "The barge's exterior will Holden, Brian Donlevy. conic as close to the original 3:2i) 0 THE LATE LATE SHOW "Johnny Dark" (1954) starring Tony Curtis, Piixr exterior as possible," Mr. DoLaurie. ran said. "We've traced 4:45 0 SEA HUNT lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllMIIIIIIIII records of the Pennsylvania 5:05 0 GIVE I S THIS DAY Railroad, which owned the barge originally, and found the paint color and railroad company number for it." are provided ASBURY PARK MIDDLETOWN When completed, the These schedules the times are by the theater and for SAVOY TOWN E A S T barge's number "442" and today only. Travels With My Aunt 7;TO; 9:10 Little Sisters 7:30; 9:00 "Pennsylvania Railroad" will RED BANK TOWN WEST ST. JAMES be painted on. its side. The CINEMA HI . Cabaret 7:25; ?:30 Avontl 2:W; 7:00; 0:30 The Quay's exterior has already 11:00 Getawoy 7:00; 9:00; Thr Bulcher LYRIC HAZLET Travels With My Aunt 7:30; 9:30 been aluminum-sided in red CARLTON PLAZA OCEAN TOWNSHIP Poseidon Adventure 7:30; 9:25 Jeremiah Johnson 7:15; 9:20 approximating the original CIRCLE RT. 35 DRIVE-IN EATONTOWN paint color. Across 110th St. 7:00; 11:48; Good. Youno Winston 2:00; SMS Bod and Ugly 8:57 "I'm determined to make ' COMMUNITY - 2:00; 7:20; 9:30 FREEHOLD Poseidon Adventure CINEMA 1 The Quay's reopening a suc- DRIVE-IN MALL 1 Emigrants 7:00; 9:40 Poseidon Adventure 7:20; 9:25 cess," Mr. Doran said. "It's Lost House on Ihe Lett 7:00; 10:20; Mori, of the Devil 8:45 CINEMA 2 MALL 2 become an extension of my The Getaway 7:15; 9:25 Getaway 7:15; 9:2$ ego. There have been so many BR1CKT0WN MATAWAN things working against me BRICK PLAZA CINEMA 34 The Getaway 7:15; 9:25 Young Winston 7:15; 9:30 since the fire that I have to MALL CINEMA 1 MENLO PARK see the project through or adPoseldon Adventure 7:15; 9:15 HOLMDKL - It had better CINEMA mit defeat, and 1 won't be deYoung Winston 2:00; 4:40; 7:25; 10:00 Mall Cinema 2 be cold Friday, March 23. feated." Young Winston 7:15; 9:30 That's the Friday the Board EAST BRUNSWICK NORTH OF RED BANK of Recreation Commissioners Singing Wheels have selected for an evening ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS TURNPIKE - INDOOR ATLANTIC C I N E M A Poseidon Adventure 7:40; 9:50 Roommoies 7:00; 9:4?; Class of 74 Seeks Members of ice skating in Warinanco 8:27 OUTDOOR Park, Elizabeth. Poseidon Adventure 7:00; 10:45; PruOrgan Society MIDDLETOWN - The dence and the Pill 9:10 The event is scheduled espeeels Singing Wheels Skating Club c j a l l v f o r H olmdel High M e e t s M o n d a V will have a membership drive S c n o o j s l u d e n t s . Registration lUUIlUdy meeting Friday at 8 p.m. in and transportation informaEAST KEANSBURG - Muthe Old Village firehouse hall, tion are available from the sic by Art Reines will be feaRt. 35. tured for a.meeting of the recreation office. There will-.be an inThe commission has sched- Monmouth Organ Society troduction of officers, music uled its annual Easter egg which is scheduled for 8 p.m. WHITE STREET and refreshments. hunt at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Monday at Buck Smith's, RED BANK Next skating outing will be April 14, on the Intermediate Palmer Ave. Wednesday, March 21, at the Schbol football field. Rain Mr. Reines, who currently South Amboy Arena. is appearing at the Old Farmdate is April 15. ingdale House, Farmingdal.e, is also organist for the Lutheran Church of the Atonement, Asbury Park. For the forthcoming program, focus will be on Irish favorites and tunes from the 30s and 40s. New officers will be elected. The public is invited to attend.

Q THE PARENT GAME 01 THE COURTSHIP OF EDDIE'S FATHER "When the Shoe ft On the Other Foot, It Doesn't (D THE SI if STATE 8:00 Q THE SONNY AND CHER SHOW Guest: John Byncr. CI ADAM 12 "Anatomy of a 41F)." Ths police receive several calli ' " thr B.ync home on a disturbing the peace complaint wliirh culminates in a tragedy for a family. 0 HOGAN'S HEROES "M.in's' Best Friend Is Not A Dog" O THE PAUL LYNDE SHOW "Togctiimiess." Paul's attempts to have a family day to bridge the communications gap turns out to W a disaster. O KNICKS BASKETBALL Knicks vs. Philadelphia. (D TWILIGHT ZONE "Kirk the Can" SB TO BE ANNOUNCED 8:30 F l THE BOB HOPE SPECIAL Oursts: Phi] Harris, Al Hirl. Pete Fountain. O THP MERV GRIFFIN SHOW O WEDNESDAY MOVIE OF THE WEEK The Six Million Dollar Man" starring Lee Majors, Dnrren McGavln. A test pilot, all t u t killed in a l. orasli. is "remade" through the science of bionics superman, superior to the flesh-and-blood inlo p , man he was befor before. e ID GET SMART 'Tequila Mockingbird" ffi HOW DO YOUR CHILDREN GROW? "What's A Mother, What's A Father, What's A Husband, What's A Wile?" 9:00 Q MEDICAL CENTER

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An admitted mass murderer hires Cannon to stop him before he commitB another crime. 0 CD NEWS 0 OWEN MARSHALL ' "Final Semester." A college basketball star is charged with the murder of a professor he found with his girlfriend. I D AMERICA 73 "Defense" 0 SPECIAL: THE EXtCON'OUTSIDE A look at ex-cons facing the attitudes of a hostile society. / I D NEWS PLUS / O O O NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS 0 ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS Kls-orr 0 BORIS KARLOFF PRESENTS "The Return of Andrew Bentley" PERRY MASON "The Case of the Hateful Hero" CD BEHIND THE LINES 0 THE CBS LATE MOVIE "Night Chase"' (1971) starring David Janssen, Yaphet Kotto. A man fleea from the scene of a shooting. 0 THE TONIGHT SHOW Guest: Bobby Goldsboro. 0 THE 11:30 MOVIE Twist of Fate" (1954) starring Ginger Rogera, Jacques Bergerac. An American actress becomes Involved in love, violence and intrigue on the Riviera. a JACK PAAR TONITE Guests: Liza Mlnnelli, David Nivert; GcnevleVe. SB THE 5lit STATE O MIDNIGHT MOVIE "Creature From the Black Lagoon" (1054) starring Richard Carlson, Julie Adams. O THE TWILIGHT ZONE ( D NIGHT FINAL O NEWS O THE ONE O'CLOCK MOVIE "Melody of Hate" (1062) starring Maria Perschy. Horst Frank. O THE GREAT GREAT SHOW "Wildcat" (1042) starring Buslsr Crabbe, Richard
Aden.

HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Music from "The Godfather" an* from "Superfly" won't be in contention for an Oscar, the Motion Picture Academy has ruled. First, the Academy discovered that one possibility, "Freddie's Dead" from "Superfly," (ailed to pass the musical test because no lyrics are sung in the film. Then the Academy learned last week that the big box office hit, "Godfather," had music that didn't qualify as "best original dramatic score." "Now we discover that the love theme in "The Godfather" was the same one he (Nina Rota) used in a picture called 'Fortunella' several years ago," Academy president Daniel Taradash said Monday. Those nominated for consideration as the best film song of 1972 were the title song of "Ben," by Walter Scharf and ' Don Black; "Come Follow, Follow Me" from "The Little Ark," Fred and Marsha Karlin; "Marmalade, Molasses and Honey" from "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean," Maurice Jarre and Marilyn and Alan Bergman; "The Morning After" from "The Poseidon Adventure," Al Kasha and Joel Hirschorn; and "Strange Are the Ways of Love," from "The Stepmother," Sammy Fain and Paul Francis Webster.

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tlBS! Withdraws The Pinetree Players ReturnedGIPlaya . vv butterflies'


NEW YORK ( A P ) - T h e CBS Television network said yesterday it is postponing the scheduled Friday broadcast of "Sticks and Bones," an award-winning Broadway play about the callous reception given an American GI returning home blinded from Vietnam war wounds. The network's action drew protests from the play's producer, Joseph Papp, and its author, David Rabe. CBS spokesmen said the postponement was ordered for two reasons. One was "that the timing is just awful witb all the American prisoners of war coming back from Vietnam," a spokesman said. Another factor, he said, is. that at least 69 of the 184 CBS network affiliates who nor- mally take the network's Friday night programs refused to carry it after seeing it on closed-circuit screenings. Robert C. Wood, the. network's president, notified all 206 CBS affiliates by telegram earlier yesterday of his decision.

H e DtflyRegister, Bed Baak-MlddJelwn, NJ. Wednesday, March 7,im

13

om

By BETTE SPKRO SPRING LAKE - Butterflies may be out of season, but you could never prove it by the Pinetree Players production of "Butterflies Are Free." For the Players, in a very energetic first night outing,

Children's TV Blurbs Are Flayed

' Alterations Complete/

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WASHINGTON (AP) - A national organization that wants to ban television advertising directed at children announced yesterday it is filing complaints against seven food firms and the Columbia Broadcasting Co. Peggy Chanrcn, president of Action for Children's Tele'/" Rte. 35 Middletown One mile north of Red Bank vision, said the complaints, to / ': ' - 741-8344- ' ' * ' be filed with the Federal Trade Commission, charge the companies promote "unfair and misleading" advertising to children, Charren disclosed the group's intentions at a hearing of the Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs which is investigating TV advertising of foods for children. Charren said the complaints also named WNAC-TV in Boston. The complaints cite: Kellogg's for Pop Tarts and Wenish-GoRounds snack foods FAMILY STYlf GET'T06mH EAT/AIG and Froot Loops cereal com, mercials, General Mills for Baron von Redberry and Sir Quick lunch -for txuihftt 4n4 worhuif people. , Grapefellow cereal commercials; General Foods Post Division for Fruity Pebbles , PHONE 211-3330 and Cocoa Pebbles cereal commercials, Quaker Oats Co. for Vanilly Crunch cereal commercials; Hershey for instant milk additive commercials, Curtis Manufacturing Co. for Baby Ruth, and Mars Manufacturing Co. for Milky Way. "The continual reinforcement of a taste far sweets in children through TV advertising presents several dangers to the health of children," said Charren.

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RED BANK - Red Bank Catholic High School will repeat its production of "Valley," an original play based on the late Pearl S. Buck's novel "Letter From Peking," Friday and Saturday at the high school, 10 Peters Place. Tickets are available at the high school for the evening performances. The cast is composed of Red Bank Catholic students. Anthony Polistina, music teacher, wrote, directed, and produced the play.

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showed Leonard Gershe's poi- done last month at Braokdate gnant comedy to truly be a College, Lincroft, to subdue play for all seasons. And, we his two leading players somewhat, lest "Butterflies" apmight add, for all stages. Mr. Gershe's play about a pear as exaggerated as an opblind, young man who strikes era. There are times when out on bis own in New York Miss Dombrowski especially, enjoyed much initial success and even Mr. Hill to a lesser on Broadway, succeeding fa- degree, are too dramatic to be vor on professional road believable. tours, and eventually became Perhaps Mr. Hart, while refilm fare as well. taining the splendid vivacity Now it has arrived in Shore of the production, could corral area, amateur drama circles, his characters' rambunctiousness on stage a bit. After all* fresher and fuller than ever. young people, even so-called, Production Enjoyable Even if you have seen the free-living ones, do occasionshow or the film, or especially ally speak softly and walk if you haven't you probably about unobtrusively, not makIN NEW MUSICAL Susan Hampshire (as Isabel Danvers) shares the will enjoy the Shore produc- ing every turn about the stage spotlight with Kirk, Douglas (shown as Dr. Jekyll) in "Timex Presents tion which will run again 8:30 an "entrance" or an "exit." Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," the new musical version of the Robert Louis p.m. Friday and Saturday at Sue Neary, of Spring Lake, Stevenson classic, which will be colorcast on the NBC Television toniaht the Spring Lake Community who has also appeared with at 9:30 o'clock. House, Third and Madison the Monmouth Players, added Aves. Most of the opening much needed balance to the right audience, which seemed show through her cool, crisp composed mainly of senior interpretation of Don's mothcitizens on one hand and teens er, Mrs; Baker, whose caustic on the other, responded well wit was somewhat akin to the HAZLET The Roman FRIDAY, MARCH 9 ONLY to the show. blasts of a. shotgun espe- Inn, Rt. 35, wUI hold its secStarring Part of that is due, of cially in its perfectly timed, ond annual Italian Festival course, to the excellent script nonstop delivery of dialogue. Italian American Comedian right Friday under the ausby Mr. Gershe Who wrote one Jeffrey Kamen, of Eaton- pices of Franco Grassi, a disk of those plays that will remain town, who also appeared in jockey at WRLB, Long very relevant for quite awhile the Wagon Wheel production Branch. andVincent Tesauro. and in the repertoire of drama of "Forty Carats," added a Mr. Grassi said the show groups, professional and ama- splendid bit of fun as Ralph will feature Italian-American Italy's Finest Singer teur. But part of, the credit Austin, one of those off, off, entertainers incfuding Sam goes to the Pinetree Players off, Broadway directors. Lombard!, of Jersey City, a for "electrifying" the producJanet Bickel, Colts Neck, comedian, and Gigi, a singer ADDED ATTRACTION: EXOTIC DANCER tion so with their enthusiasm. designed a cheerful set that is who hails from Italy but now DANCING 'TIL 2. ADMISSION $5. This drama group's mem- very faithful to but much lives in New York. bers hail from throughout more colorful than the origiOther entertainment will inMonmouth and Ocean Coun- nal Broadway one. There clude an exotic dancer and ties and many are familiar to were a few, occasional snafus ' dance music by an Italian 3153HWY.35 264-3777 HA2LET fans of the Monmouth Players such as doors that were hav- band, starting at S p.m. The ing a tough time staying shut, show is slated to start at 9:30 and Wagon Wheel Playhouse since they tend to traverse^ and a few fluffed lines, both p.m. each other's theater endea- of which were probably attributable to opening night nervors. -" Dual PTA Event The heretofore theatrical vousness. LEONARDO - The LeonAs evidence of that, it ardo Grade School PTA will experiences of Michael Hill, of Bricktown, shine through in should be noted all the players have a "Parents Night" and his portrayal of Don Baker, seemed to warm into their its annual covered dish supper roles as the show continued Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the the blind youth. and settled down into more school auditorium, Hosford Appeared With Coca Mr. Hill's credits include comfortable portrayals after Ave. working five years in summer their initial appearances onstock shows when he ap- stage. peared with Imogene Coca in You can certainly do a lot "The Time Of Your Life" as worse on a Friday or Saturwell as writing several plays day night than the Pinetree of his own, some of which' Players presentation of "ButServing were presented at his alma terflies Are Free," and it's mater, Webster College, St. my guess you would have to Louis, Mo. Those credits are go a long way this week in til 1 a . m . not at all surprising in light of Monmouth County to find any40th Yr. in Red Bank Mr. Hill's deft handling of the thing better. . Shrewsbury at Herbert illusions of blindness while onoff Sired Parking stage. Patty Dombrowski, of Ocean, who appeared earlier this season in Monmouth Players "Dirty Work at the (The exciting sound ol Billle Holiday) Crossroads" and Wagon Wheel Playhouse's "Forty Carats" is filled with her usual OCEAN AVE. 842-3292 SEA BRIGHT verve as Jill Tanner, the girl who lives next door and WEDNESDAY through SUNDAY ' APPEARING TONIGHT, FRI. & SAT. soon with Don. But we would caution Director Norman Hart, whose adaptation of the short opera "Death of A Hired Man" was

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NEW YORK (AP) - The National Broadcasting Co. is making major corporate changes in its news departments to put "all the newsgathering facilities of NBC under one command," Rich-; ard C. Wald, NBC News president, said yesterday. His announcement marked the second high-level change at NBC News since Jan. 10, when Wald succeeded Reuven Frank, president of NBC News since 1968. That shift was made at Frank's request. Wald said the latest corpo'rate change becomes effective immediately. He said these cbanges will be made: -Robert E. Mulholland, executive producer of the "NBC Nightly News" since last July, becomes a vice-president of NBC's television news department, in overall charge of all news-gathering activity. An NBC spokesman said no decision has been made on whether Mulholland's previous job will be filled. -Donald V. Meany, now vice president of NBC News, .will become vice president for television news programming. -Ueuven Frank becomes a senior executive producer, overseeing planned special news programs that include the "NBC Reports" series and "First Tuesday." - L e e Hanna, a general manager in charge of news operations at the five TV stations owned by NBC, continues in that capacity, but as a vice president. - J a m e s L. Holton, formerly director ol NBC news programming from Washington, D.C.. now becomes general manager for news at the NBC Radio network news department.

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Kawaida Meeting Achieves Little


NEWARK - The chief protagonists in the Kawaida Towers dispute have met here, but little progress was reported in the controversy that has stalled work on the $6.4 million housing project since November. Both Assemblymen Anthony Imperiale, leader at the vyhites who have been picketing the project, and Imamu Amiri Baraka, head of the Temple of Kawaida, a black nationalist group that is sponsoring the project, attended yesterday's meeting called by Mayor Kenneth A. Gibson. But Imperiale walked out after agreeing to press for faster action on court suits in the controversy, according to a Gibson spokesman. Meanwhile, minor work continued yesterday on the housing project. . . . The Gibson spokesman said Imperiale accused Gibson of calling ihe private meeting to smooth over the Kawaida Towers situation prior to his scheduled departure for Japan Friday.

Theft of 171-Year-OldHeadstone InMiddletownAngersResidents


ByBOBBRAMLEY MIDDLETOWN-The marker was carved in warm red New Jersey sandstone 171 years ago. The letters neatly chiseled into it by a long forgotten artisan are as sharp and clear as ever; unlike marble and granite, the sandstone seems never to weather. On its face is inscribed "In memory of James Patterson, who departed this life Novr. the 8th, 1802, aged 67 years, 4 months and'28 days." There's an oldfashioned look to the carefully drawn majuscules and minuscules, and a flourish in the numerals that is not seen today. The 4yrby-2i-foot headstone is not seen today, either not since last week, when Mrs. Howard P. Aronson of 70 Dwight Road discovered it had been stolen from the head of James Patterson's grave., A that remains to mark that H grave is a moss-lined hole in the soft earth where the foot of the stone was planted more than a century and a half ago. Rubbing on Paper And all that remains of the carefully chiseled inscription is its ghost,' in the form of a rubbing on paper taken by Richard R. Anderson of River Plaza before the headstone's theft. Mr. An(d|rson, a history buff, is a member of the Board of Education, which now owns the land on which James Patterson's grave and nine others lie in a small family graveyard. Why would anyone steal a sandstone grave marker? Perhaps,'suggested Mrs. Aronson, because such antique headstones bring prices like $350 or $400 from anu'quers in New York, where it has become fashionable to have them mounted on iron legs so they can be used as coffee tables..It seems it's "in" now to be served tea and cakes on the tombstone of someone's great-great-grandfather. James Patterson was the great-great-grandfather of the former Amy Llewellyn Patterson, now the wife of Dr. George S. Stevenson of 840 W. Front St. The Stevensons have been concerned about the little graveyard ever since 1969, when the Board of Education acquired it as part of an 80-acre tract purchased from Lovett Nurseries of Colts Neck. Police Investigation Also concerned, since the headstone was stolen, are Lt. William J. Halliday and Detective Ronald Ohnmaeht of the detective division of the Middletown Police Department. Detective Ohnmaeht said police are following several lines of investigation in a concerted effort to recover the stone. A photograph of Mr. Anderson's rubbing of the James Patterson stone,.made by Detective Allen Ford, police photographer, is being used in the investigation. Disturbed about "dreadful things" happening to historic gravesites in Middletown, Mrs, Aronson has urged that the Patterson burial ground and the many other family plots in the township be rescued from neglect, fenced off and designated historic monuments to be preserved in perpetuity. "I would personally -be in favor of leaving it where it is," Mr. Anderson said, speaking as a member of the Board of Education, But he warned that placement of the planned new high school on the site a building which will cover more than five acres leaves little chance that the graves can remain undisturbed. Grave Removal The board, which has obtained permission from the Patterson descendants to move the graves, has two options, Mr. Anderson said. It can move the graves to anoth-. er part of the high school tract, or it can move them to. Fair View Cemetery, where a number of the Patterson family's graves aready are. A court order is necessary to move the graves. Peter P. Kalac, board attorney, and James W. Davidheiser, board business administrator, are working out legal and financial data on which the board will base its decision, Mr. Anderson explained. .

Kickbacks Jury Charge Seen Today


CAMDEN The prosecution gets its final word in today at the extortion-conspiracy trial of four present and former Atlantic City officials before the case goes to a federal jury here, U.S. District Court Judge Mitchell H, Cohen is expected to charge the jury today after Asst. U.S. Atty. Jonathan Goldstein completes the summation he began yesterday. The four women and eight men on the jury will then retire to consider the testimony of 68 government and defense witnesses and more than 600 exhibits entered into evidence since the trial began Jan. 15. The defendants, former Mayor William Somers, 56, City Commissioner Arthur Ponzio, 48, his aide, Germaine Fisher, 59, and former City Commissioner Karlos La Sane, 39, are accused of taking $28,000 in kickbacks from contractors from 1960 to 1971. The defense ended summations yeaterday with pleas for acquittal of the four and an accusation from one defense attorney that the prosecution had hurled a "ton of manure" at the defendants in hopes of making "one pound" hit.

Educators Drive for Richardson


NEWARK A drive headed by prominent New Jersey educators, including the former presidents of Princeton and Rutgers Universities, is under way to make Dr. Thomas H. Richardson, retiring president of Montclair State College, the next state education commissioner. Richardson said yesterday that he was "flattered" by the support from the prestigious group, but added he would not "do any campaigning" for the state's top educational position. The five-member panel heading the group includes Mason ,W Gross, former president of Rutgers; Robert F. Goheen, former Princeton president, James H. Mullen, president of Jersey City State College, the Rev Victor R. Yanitelli, S.J., president of St Peter's College, Jersey City, and Thomas J. Stanton, president of the First Jersey National Bank. The group has sent a letter seeking support for: Richardson to 45 of what were called "leading public figures," including members of the Legislature. .

S T O L E N STONE Headstone 171 years old has been stolen f r o m grave of James Patterson, who died Nov. 8,1802, at t h e age of 67. Grave is in Patterson f a m i l y burial plot on site acquired by M i d mini iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

dletown Board of Education for new high school, This rubbing of missing stone was made by Richa r d R. Anderson, board member, shortly before theft. Midditt.wn*p<>n.piioto

In any event, he declared, iiiiiiiiiiiini the graves and stones will be handled with fitting dignity and will be preserved. Artist Travis Neidlinger of Leonardo, with his sister, Miss Gertrude Neidlinger, active in the Middletown Historical Society, suggested the township should have a historic monuments commission to protect family burial plots and other half-forgotten historic sites from vandalism, desecration or loss through neglect. Fenced Monuments "These places should be preserved as fenced historical monuments," the artist declared. He recalled that three similar family burial grounds the Walling family plot in Port Monmouth, the Dennis plot behind Thorne Junior High School and the Leonard plot in Leonardo have already been lost. The Dennis plot is a victim of vandalism and gross neglect and only one tombstone remains there; the other two burial grounds have been completely swallowed up by housing developments, Mr. Neidlinger said. The 50-foot square Patterson plot occupies a knoll which must once have been shaded by tall trees. Now overgrown by brambles and shattered locust trees, it is

THEDAILY

Red Bank-Mlddletown, !O. Wednesday, March 7,1973 15


covered with a deep soft blanket of leaf mold through which crocuses are already nosing green shoots. Patterson, born Feb. 9. 180S, and deceased Dec. 12,1853. Tenth Grave

Dinner Aids Newark Boys Chorus


NEWARK New Jersey's high society turned out in force last night at a black tie, JlOO-a-plate dinner for the benefit of the Newark Boys Cljorus School. Donald S, MacNaughton, the chairman of the board of Prudential Insurance Company of America, who was honored at the affair, said the presence of the numerous dignitaries ' was an indication that "the city of Newark is not a cultural wasteland" . About 80O persons attended the dinner, including Gov. William T Cahill, former Gov Robert B. Meyner, former Gov. Richard J Hughes, David (Sonny) A. Wcrblin, chairman of the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority and numerous business leaders. , MacNaughton^ said that "compared to other countries, government and business in America do little to support the cultural well being of the nation.','

Illegal Traffic Signs Reported


NEWARK Close to 30 per cent of all traffic signs in 19 municipalities surveyed by the state Department of Transportation were found to be illegal, the Newark Star-Ledger reported today ' A spokesman for the Office of Highway Safety said by the time all the municipalities in- the state are surveyed, it is expected the percentage will increase to at least 40 per cent. The spokesman said such an estimate is valid because the towns which have been surveyed thus far are, for the most part, suburban or rural communities. "The percentage will probably go up when the cities are ' in," he said. The survey is part of a ?25O,OO0 Office of Highway Safety program to replace old traffic signs with new, uniform instructional and traffic control markers. The spokesman said to date, 137 of the state's 567 municipalities have signed up for the program. According to the survey results, 11,000 signs were cheeked against municipal ordinances and state approvals, and 2,900 were found to lack either or both of the required procedural steps.
;

Behind the line of nine PatNine Plots Buried in nine graves side terson family graves is a 10th by side are the Elder James grave. Tucked under the roots Patterson; his wife, Rachel' of a wild cherry tree, it is Stout, whose sandstone mark- marked by a smaller version er was broken off near the of the elder James Patterground many years ago; a son's missing headstone. It is granddaughter of Jamfe Pat- carved of the same warm terson whose name cannot be New Jersey sandstone, and its read on her small marble carefully wrought letters are stone, but who died in 1815, still sharp and clear: aged 1 year, 10 months and 15 " I n memory of Joseph days; a son, James Patterson Ryer, who died August the the younger, who died in No- 5th, 1803, aged ,'i years, 1 vember, MM, aged 36 years, 9 month and 1 day." months and 5 days; Mary, the wife of James Patterson the Young Joseph is thought by younger, "who departed this some to be a Negro slave life Nov. 20th, AD 1833, aged child favored by the elder 45 years, 5 months and 8 days; .James Patterson; that he held "an unknown marked by a at least four slaves is known. broken marble stone; Re- Others believe the child may becca, daughter of James Pat- have been a nephew or some terson the younger, who died more remote relative. J a n . 26, 1836, aged 21 Whoever he was, his soul is years and K days; another un1 known marked only by a fool- held safe by an epitaph still clearly legible: stone, and Anna D. Gillespie, "Weep not for me, my parwife of Thomas M. Gillespie and daughter of James Pat- ents dear, "My spirit rests above all terson the younger and Mary fear."

Register stall Photo

Pipeline Proposal Is Pondered*-,.,


NEW BRUNSWICK - Officials in Middlesex County have expressed reservations about a proposal by the operator of the largest oil pipeline across Central Jersey to more than double its capacity. Before approving such an expansion, John Heiser, county engineer, said, the county should find out exactly what the pipeline would carry and determine the safety of its operation. Reiser also recommended that' the firm, Buckeye Pipeline Co., of Macungie, Pa., be required to submit an environmental impact study on the project, and that a public hearing be held. The Buckeye firm has proposed construction of a 20-inch pipeline to parallel its present, 16-inch line from Linden to Macungie, located just a few miles west of Allentown. About two-thirds of the 75-mile pipeline would lie in New Jersey, passing through Union, Middlesex, Somerset and Hunterdon counties. A spokesman for Buckeye said work on the proposal could begin as early as August, with possible completion coming by next January.

NEPHEW OR FAVORITE SLAVE? - Who was this little boy, Joseph Ryer, born, on July 4, 1880, and dead "3 years, 1 month and 1 day" later? No one knows for sure. Small grave is set apart behind nine graves of Patterson family in burial ground on site of Middletown's new high school. Residents ore asking that such graves and stones be protected as historic monuments.

Asbury Park Turning Green for the Irish


ASBURY PARK - It will be a big day for the Irish Sunday, March 18, when city officials will stage a unique celebration, memorializing Saint Patrick. . .The colorful festivities will be highlighted with the ocean being dyed a brilliant green, Irish lassies riding the boardwalk, distributing green lollipops to the youngsters, and a green traffic stripe marking the center of the boardwalk. The celebration is scheduled to start at 1 p.m. City Manager William Shiel, whose Irish ancestry makes him an authority'TJIjkthe subject, said the ocean surrounding Convention Hall will be dyed a brilliant green and '"depending on the currents, the sea should remain emerald for quite some time." He pointed out t h a t , paradoxically, the powder used in coloring the water is a bright orange in its original, dry state but turns brilliant green on contact with the water. He said the coloring material is not harmful to marine life. Beach Director Thomas Flanagan said that the green stripe to be painted down the center nf the boardwalk would run the length of the Beachfront Promenade from Ocean Grove northward to Loch Arbour. A Photo Contest will be held in conjunction with the festivities and awards will be made for winning color photos taken of the activities. Pictures for the contest should be sent to the Beach Department, Convention Hall, Asbury Park, with names and addresses of the contestants on back of the photos. None of the photos submitted can be returned. Members of the honorary committee for the celebration, include Mayor Joseph ' Maltice, City Manager Shiel, Councilmen Raymond Kramer, Dr. Henry J. Vaccaro, Edward R. English and Ascenzin R. Albarelli.

Pledge Dissidents Will Be Ejected


NEWARK City Council President Louis M. Turco says persons who attend council meetings here and fail to rise for the traditional Pledge of Allegiance and the playing of the Star-Spangled Banner will be ejected from city hall chambers. Turco said yesterday that those persons who remain seated will be asked to leave voluntarily. According to the council president, those refusing to depart from the meeting ; chambers will be arrested under ihe city's disorderly persons , ordinance. ; "The United States Supreme Court has declared that the constitutional rights of an individual are not abridged by having him stand in silence for the pledge and they playing of the National Anthem," Turco said. "Certainly a lack of respect on the part of certain audience members will not be permitted," he added.

Riglltir staff Pliolo

FAMILY-PLOT James Patterson's family burial ground, from which his headstone was stolen, is one of dozens in Mtddletown dating from 18th and 19th centuries. These graves are in way of new

high school planned on tract off Middletown:Lincroft Road. Graves will probably be moved, but history buffs urge such burial gounds be preserved as historic monuments by township.

II The Dally Register, fted Bttfc-Middfetw>, NJ. Wefeesfey, Marek 7,117)

Putting Their Eggs in the Same Benefit Basket


County Fare
By Margwrtte HmdereM

Another Set

LADIES BE SEATED - Performing their gentlemanly duties ore Brian AAcGrath, Middletown, left, assisting Miss Maria Messina, New York, and Michael McLaughlin, New Shrewsbury, seating his wife Joyce prior to the Hunt Ball dinner.

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Many minds with but a Meanwhile farther south on single thought: conquering 6/23 way down yonder in cancer. the Spring Lake Bath and ' That, we suppose, is how Tennis Club the Junior those involved (on a local lev- Committee to the Cancer Soel) with raising money for the ciety's county unit (which American Cancer Society staged its very first party-formanaged to schedule two ben- proceeds last August) will be efit parties on the very same dining and dancing to music night! by the Peter Duchin OrchesThat's June 23 just two tra. The tab for that will be days after summer starts so, lower and, as the "junior" inin verity, the $100 per person dicates, ages and wages may gala slated for the sumptuous be too. Little Silver bome of Mr. and Re those plans the girls Mrs. William F. Kelly shall be (and their guys) will get-tocalled the Summer Ball. It's a gether over cocktails March successor to the elegant eve- 24 at the Red Bank home of ning last June at the Middle- Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Popper. town residence of Mr. and The committee includes such Mrs. Harold B. Schlenger. enthusiasts as Mrs. Richard That party, in turn, succeeded Griffiths, Mrs. John Drum, many a money-making gala at Mrs. Ulo Valdur and Miss the Holmdel estate of Mr. and Judy Schnoor, Middletown; Mrs. Carl A. Twitchell. Mrs. Craig Brandt, Brick The Kelly home, "Loch- Township; Miss Dee Wilkens, mere," on Seven Bridge Road Sea Girt; Mrs. Charles Dois a gracious Georgian colo- remus, Mrs. Joao Aguiar and nial situated on 15 acres of Mrs. Peter Ricker, Red Bank; land bordering the Shrews- Mrs. Courtland Babcock, Fair bury River. In the past it has Haven, and from Holmdel been the scene of many a Mrs. Thomas Kcsolits, Mrs. great private party; but the Michael Keunne and Mrs. WuV June 23 event will have the liam G. Wrightson 3rd. added distinction of Mrs. William T. Cahill as honorary Foxy Frolic chairman. Mrs. Kelly is general chairA fox-by-day and foxtrot-byman of the special events night. That was the procommittee. Her advisory gramme Saturday for memgroup is Mrs. Twitchell, Mrs. b e r s of Hidden Hollow Schlenger, Mrs. Donald Dick- Hounds. son, Asbury Park, and Mrs. On their go-'round that Thomas McGce, Deal Park. morning at Stone Hill Farm, Their advice must have been Colts Neck estate of Mrs. Wilto limit the party to 40(1 be- liam Schweitzer, the hunters cause it is. got their first "kill" of the That night cocktails at 7 season. o'clock will be followed by a And while that may not Mayfair Farms catered din- make my eyes or yours light ner and dancing to the Mur- up like a toddler's on Christray Lehrer Orchestra. mas," it must certainly do Committee chairmen and something for those who plan aides include Mrs. Joseph R. their entire sporting season McMahon, Mrs. Charles Hen- around pursuit of the varmint derson, Mrs. Mark Handler," Reynard. Mrs. I. Ralph Fox, Mrs. FredMichael J. Torpey, Middleerick Gilman, Mrs. Evan Bak- town, is M a s t e r of Fox er. Mrs. Edward Murphy and Hounds. So he wore his huntMrs. Robert Beck. Rumson; ing pinks (which look disMrs. Richard R. Stout, West tinctly red) on horseback in Allenhurst; Mrs. Edgar Far- the a.m. and (in formal cutrington, Sea Bright; Mrs. Wil- away version) on the Molly liam Lynch, Middletown; Pitcher dance floor in the Mrs. Robert S. Eisner, Red p.m. He escorted the beauBark; Mrs. Vincent Hirsch teous Miss Augusta Rowe. and Mrs. Louise Moffit, Spring Lake; Mrs. George Ar-. Also among some 125 riders, vanitis. West Long Branch; abiders and chums were Mr. Mrs. Alex Webster, Sea Girt, and Mrs. Alfred Roberts (she and Mrs. Paul Hughes of was ball chairman) of Oakhurst) Mr. and Mrs. Roger Little Silver and London. Hollander, Marlboro; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitterman, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Mueller. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Ingham (he is THE MASTER'S CHOICE - Michael J. Torpey, p r e s i d e n t and h o n o r a r y Middletown, left, master of Hidden Hollow whipper-in) and Mr. and Mrs. Hounds, and Miss Augusta Rowe to his left, greet Fernand Gerin, Middletown; Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Feldman, New York, at Count and Countess Anatole Saturday's Hunt Ball in the Molly Pitcher Inn, Buxhoeveden, Rumson; Mr. Red Bank. and Mrs. Robert S. Eisner, Red Bank; Mr. and Mrs. John Bergmann, Eatontown, and of New York City - Mr. and 8 Mrs. Richard M. Feldman and if Semon Wolfe (V.P. and field ft master) and Mrs. Wolfe. il Also, Richard Wroncy of El- beron; Carl Bessette, Potters- | ville; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred if Truglia, Colts Neck; Dr. and f| Mrs. Fred Laycock and Mr. II and Mrs. Robert Segal, Deal. |.f Dr. George Whittle of Long | Branch and his bouncy wife- ! (who is not only Hidden Hoi- |f low Hounds whipper-in and |I treasurer, but also was vice j | chairman of the parjy); Mr. | . and Mrs. Jonni Falk, Mr. and j Mrs. Fred Schreiber and Mi- chael McLoughlin (hunt sec- U retary who also wields a | | whip) and Mrs. McLoughlin, p New Shrewsbury, and Mr. and 1 Mrs. Harry Dorward, Holm- | | del. . . f Also of Holmdel were land- ;.r owners over whose properties the Hidden Hollow Hounds :-. sniff. These included Miss j j | Laura Harding, Mr. and Mrs. fi Donald Gray and Edgar f: Rachlin. || Among some riding and din- if' ing g u e s t s were Roland ||s Stearns (he is M.F.H. of p Windy Hollow Hunt. Florida, S N.Y.), Mrs. Stearns. Miss 1 Bonnie Stearns and her escort | | Terry Lober. These were the | p guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tim- 0 othy Mullaly of New York 1$ City. i

PERFECT SCENE Grant Ingham, Middletown, president of Hidden Hollow Hounds, Mrs. George Whittle, Long Branch, left and Mrs. Alfred Roberts, Oakhurst, admire a photograph of the hunt in action. The women headed the committee for the second annual Hunt Ball.

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Identifyi(i a certain jewel with one of I lie twelve apostles was a common practice with curly Christians. This prohnhly grew out (if the rven earlier practice or assigning a gem to eaeh of the twelve trilies of Israel. T li e n [i in l> c r t w c I v c wa a powerful in uneicnl times. Then: were twelve jewels in Aaron's breastplate, twelve gem stones f u n n i n g the twelve foundations of (he Holy City anil gems were assigned to each of the twelve signs of tlic zodiac. Birthstones were an outgrowth of this lust practice. It wus in the early Christian era that llic gcnislonc aquamarine was identified with the Apostle, St. Thomas. This was lieeause the stone imitated the sea anil air anil the Saint "made long journeys hy sea, even to India, In preach salvation." 1 am very found of "aquas." To me, seeing them is like seeing the many colors of the lakes and oceans around the world. One is the color of Atlantic on a clear, lucid day, another may remind me of the Mcdili rruncan.in the morning,or one of our local lakes just hfli r u spring rain. The name su|unmarinc mr ins sea water anil <lescriptions of its color vary. It m.i\ lie called crystal hlue, pr< i nisli-liluc or limpid bluegreen. Actually, the gem dors occur in varied shades and clarity. Only one color i- the rarest and therefore the most highly prized. \(|iianiarine shares its place as the March hirthslonc with b l o o d s t o n e . Rloodslone is a variety of precious quartz, slightly less hard than aquamarine. An interesting and popular wny to display this stone is set in cuff link*nnil tie Inrs. ' i, pi-oml of our sell elion of colored stones and we would like to share our appreciation of them with you. Drop hy.

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MATAWAN - Area high sf school girls 14 to 18 are being | | invited to join the Matawan | | Junior Woman's Club. ii| Membership information i^ may be had from Mrs. John | | Howley. sub-junior adviser, l | and Mrs. John Bambrick, f| president. ' [" Mrs. Frank ONeil has do- t\ nor cards available for per- v sons wishing to donate their ;fjj kidneys to the Ruth Gottscho Kidney Foundation, Millbum. Alti-ny* r i m Quality Merchandise . . . /tinny* Firnf \umuy Jierem

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Tlw Dally Heglster, Bed BA-Ml<Wte^wB,NJ.Wtoesdiyt March 7,1*!J 17


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R9ller Staff Pholo

PUFFY SHELL Miss Eleanor Vieweg removes the bottom half of a dessert from oven at the first of this year's three WometVs Day cooking programs at Monmouth Shopping Center.

It's Easy as Pie The Viewig Way


EATONTOWN - Easy as pie is the way it hot bacon dressing. always looks when Miss Eleanor Vieweg, elecPuffed Shell Pastry tric living specialist {or Jersey Central Power The dessert was a puffed pastry shell filled and Light Co. turns on her range and her with spiced sour cream and fruit, dramatic, timers at the annual Women's Day programs visually, at least. Oohs. and ahs greeted the at Monmouth Shopping Center. shell when it came from the oven. Next Tuesday, "Something Spicy, or The 12th annual cook-around began yesterday with a full, as usual, house of ladies ob- Crunchy," or both, and the following week, serving the simultaneous preparation of a vari- "Something Colorful." There is no charge for ety of dishes that had special appeal for the the programs co-sponsored by the shopping cook who wants to pep up meals without undue Center's Merchants Association. Want to try the fruit-filled shell? Here's expense and trouble. Trouble-tree is the way Miss Vieweg how Miss Vieweg describes it: Preheat oven to makes it all look, though in truth we must say 450. Beat two eggs slightly, stir in '^ cup flour, that much of her measuring and combining '/. teaspoon salt and ]i cup milk. Beat until had been done in advance to assure a smooth smooth and stir in two tablespoons melted butrunning program. Perhaps Miss Vieweg's best ter or margarine. Pour into greased nine-inch cue" is the use of many timers to keep track of skill pan. Bake on bottom shelf of oven for 20 what's happening on her burners and in her minutes. oven a tip well worth copying. Fruit Filling Tuesday morning sessions this year, from Remove shell from oven; sprinkle with one 10 to noon in the civic auditorium, stress tablespoon lemon juice, then with con"Something Different," and yesterday's menu fectioner's sugar. Fill shell with 4-6 cups was on the hearty side. Sauerbraten, mari- drained fruit (fresh, frozen or canned). Top nated authentically for three days and re- each serving with a dab of sour cream mixture heatejlin.a sauce containing ginger snaps, was mix half cup cream with two tablespoons bolstered by red cabbage piqued with currant brown sugar and >4 teaspoon cinnamon. Serves jelly (grape is good too) and green beans in six. Margot Smith

There are no indications that food prices will reverse their upward trend, and it is time for a calculated,'concentrated anti-inflationary program on the home front.. If you have a couple of young ones in the household, you' will easily drop $2,500 in supermarkets this year. Holding the line, whatever yours is, will require change in buying and eating habits. Thert is a proliferation of helpful hints in the media, designed to help you budget better, get a more nutritional buy for your money, and hopefully, still enjoy the pleasures preparing and eating' tasty meals. ' There are positive and negative approaches. It is going to take a combination of both to come out solvent. Among the oft-repeated don'ts: Don't coddle yourself with convenience items. Don't submit to impulse buying. Don't let your children (and sometimes your husband) make the decisions. Don't shop in a hurry. On the positive side: Devise a plan that fits your family and, like a reducing diet, don't make it so inflexible that you will lose interest in a couple of weeks. The Smith plan for supermarketmanship initiated this week, offers a gamelike challenge, attempts to ring in some family-wide cooperation and is flexible enough to allow for our unpredic-

Potluck
table dining habits.

In our house, food is a necessity, a hobby and a business. We enjoy cooking "fancy" things for fun and entertain at dinner about once a month, so the strict weekly budget ploy doesn't work for us. On a big calendar in the kitchen, we record all food expenditures on the day spent, and add them up on Sundays. The game is to try and beat (or maintain) previous averages. The system puts a watchful eye on the two or three weekly shopping trips. I am not in favor of the once-a-week (don't be tempted into extras) philosophy. After studying ads and clipping coupons (only for goods we regularly use), 1 quantity-shop the best bargains in several different shops each week. A newly defined closet, separate from the daily larder, stockpiles the quantity purchases. Right now it leans heavily to canned tomato sauce (lu for SDc at the Acme last week) and tea, which was on sale somewhere else the week before. Supermarket people have a term, "blowing your brains out," which describes the super-sale lure that marks the opening of a new store. These must not be missed if you're going to play the game. They are worth a few extra miles of driving.

When the stockpile takes on shape and weight, it will be profitable to plan meals to best advantage. Of course, there will be the added advantage of having a choice between making a special trip out for one item, and utilizing something on hand. The meat department, which is the real budget-blower, can be handled the same way if you have a freezer. Quantity buying of bargain leaders is the only way to avoid a strictly chicken and hamburger diet. Stockpihng meat (date it and rotate it) turns out to be more economical than purchasing a hindquarter. It also gives you more variety. A large portion of the food budget is inedible. Leave room in the closet for paper goods, cleaning supplies and pet food, too.
Quantity Buying

Quantity buying at auctions and farm stands will add economies, especially when locally grown produce is in season. If you have a freezer, you can - cook ahead, saving time as well as money. By cooperating with friends, you may save on large quantity items such as sacks of potatoes and onions. And, speaking of onions, stake out a spot in the yard for a little garden, if you haven't already. Having just sent for our annual seed order, I figured that 53 tomatoes, at the going rate, will pay for all my beans, spinach and lettuce, onions, carrots, parsley, cucumbers and beets. And growing tomatoes is no trick at all in New Jersey!

Pants forSpring
HOMEMADE FASHIONS Modeling their own handmade fashions are Mrs. Jonet Perreault, Wall Township, left, in a three-piece slack set with plaid pants, and Mrs. Sue Faulkner, Eatontown, in a slack set with fleece jacket and knit cap. They were among local women modeling their homemade ensembles yesterday at the Necchi Sewing Center, Atlantic Superama, New Shrewsbury. Another group will model tonight at 7 o'clock.

Program Assistance Conference Slated for Federated Clubwomen


MATAWAN - Til? Fifth District of the New Jersey State Federation of Women's Clubs will have a Program Assistance Conference'March 12 in the Matawan Woman's clubhouse. Representatives of the district's 41 clubs and 1(1 Evening Membership Departments are exected to attend. Registration will begin at 9:30 a.m. and members of the Elegant Budget Supper Dish Wrap slices of turkey sandwich meat around cooked fresh asparagus spears and line up in baking dish. Pour canned cream of shrimp soup thinned with dry Vermouth or milk over rolls; sprinkle with chopped almonds: heat in Women's Club of Colts Neck, wiil serve as registrars. Mrs. William W. Thomas, Fifth District program assistance'chairman will preside. Among the special guests" will be Mrs. John W. SehvveST. PATRICK'S DAY FASHION, CARD PARTY ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS The Ladies Auxiliary of the Atlantic Highlands Fire Department will stage a St. Patrick's Day Card Party March 15 at H p.m. here in the Westside Memorial Field House, Ave. C. and West Washington -Ave. The Chapeaux Boutique of Sea Bright will present the fashions. There will be refreshments and gifts. Tickets may be purchased at the door. ser, Fifth District vice-president; Mrs. William L Griffin Jr., state program assistance chairman; Mrs. W. Irvin Atkinson, southern vice chairman program assistance; Mrs. William Harrison, northern vice chairman program assistance and Mrs. Alfonso L. Scerbo, Fifth District public relations chairman. Mrs. Frank Rispoli is chairman assisted by Mrs. John H. Kinney and Mrs. Ray Van Horn. WESTERN PUDDING . ^ It's easy to mash the vegetables needed for this recipe when you use a food mill. 2 medium carrots, cooked 1 small yam, cooked 1/4 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons firmly packed dark brown sugar 1/2 cup fine dry bread crumbs <_ 1 egg 1 1/4 cups milk Put carrots and yam through a food mill; add salt, sugar and bread crumbs; beat in egg and a little of the milk. Beat in remaining milk. Pour into a buttered 1-quart round glass casserole (6 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches) or similar utensil. Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven until a knife inserted in center comes out clean 45 to 60 minutes.

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Shift into Neutral


Dear Ann Landers: Every now and then you go off halfcocked and give some nutly advice. I don't mind when you dish out nonsense to teenagers who don't listen to you anyway or to fouled-up adults who are dumb enough to ask you what to do with their lives. But when you print advice that is dangerous, then 1 draw the line. Recently a reader wrote to say the best thing to do when driving a car and the accelerator gets stuck is to turn off the ignition. You published that letter and said. "Thanks for the tip." Don't you realize that if a car has power steering this would be suicidal? Turning off the ignition would lock the steering wheel and lose the braking power, as well. A person caught in such a dilemma should shift into neutral and brake the car to a stop. How come you didn't check with your vehicle authorities, Dummy? Indiana Dear In: Several readers wrote to criticize that advice which seemed perfectly logicinto a b i g f i g h t . I t h i n k maybe I'll go on strike for a while and not cook at all. Am I justified? Brow-Beaten Dear Brow: You don't say al to me. Herp is a letter irom make steering and braking how long you've been married the Chicago representative of hard work. Be ready for the but I'm sure you aren't newthe National Safety Council to stiffness and bear down. ly weds. By this time your huswhom I wrote for counsel af- Donald Lhotka. Manager, band should be accustomed fo your way of doing things and ter the roof fell in. Please Traffic Department read it carefully. Dummy Dear Ann'Landers: Please cured of his mama-methodoDear Ann Landers: A re- give your opinion. Am I wrong logy. Your husband is probtraction is not necessary or is my husband wrong? The ably mad at you for some-thing only a clarification, since answer will have to be a mat- e l s e . When you find o u t turning off the ignition in the ter of personal judgment be- what it is and get THAT probevent the accelerator sticks cause there is no precedent lem resolved, the pots and pans won't mean a thing. while the vehicle is in motion for it. and braking to a stop, might My husband came from a It's riot always easy to recbe hazardous in some in- family where his mother ruled ognize love, expecially the stances. the household like it was a first time around. Acquaint Here is specific instruc- monarchy. Before she sat down yourself with the guidelines. tions: If you're on the open to the dinner table every pot Read Ann Landers' booklet. highway and there's plenty of and pan and every dish or "Love Or Sex And How To room ahead, try to pull the piece of cutlery used to pre- Tell The Difference." For a pedal up with the toes of your pare the meal had to be wash- copy, mail .'i5c in coin and a shoe or have front seat passen- ed and put.away. In other :long, stamped, self-addressee1 ger do it. Don't reach down words, the kitchen had to be envelope with your request ti yourself and take your atten- spotless. Naturally this took this newspaper. ( tion from the road. anywhere from 15 to 3 minD If there isn't time, simply utes. By the time Mom sat turn off the ignition and brake down, the meal was half over. lo a stop. But remember, with My mother always left the power brakes and steering, pots and pans and even the turning off the engine will dishes until she felt like doing GUI them/She preferred to visit with the family and that's BIRTHRIGHT 922-9333 what she did. Usually I clean up most of the pots and pans and dishes, but last night I decided to let everything go till later. My husband threw a fit. He called me l a z y ! ! ! - and we got

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Advertise in The Register

Garden, Birds Are Topics


KAIR .HAVEN - "Snow and I c e " is the theme of today's arrangement competition for members of the Garden Club of Fair Haven. It will be staged here in the parish hall of the Church of the Holy Communion. Also,' a slide program on azaleas and rhododendrons will be presented by Mrs. R.L. Cummins, Colts Neck, member of the American Rhododendron Society and the American Hock Garden Society. Mrs. Cummins, a former member of Scotch Plains Garden Club and current m e m b e r of Garden Club R.F.D.. is employed as chief propagator for Shadow Lake Nursery. Mrs. Edward H. Balevre Jr., chairman of the club's Garden Center at the Fair Haven Library, has arranged for instructions to be available there this month on how to attract birds to your garden. Mrs. Balevre and Mrs. Waldron F. Kennison will be CARD PARTY ZONTA EVENT at the library Monday from HAZLET - Teachers will KED BANK - A scholar- 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. to give adbe among the models for the ship benefit card party will be vice and assistance on this fashion show at the Middle sponsored by the Zonta Club subject. Mrs. Kennison has Road School PTO card party of Monmouth County Friday' been bird banding for 15 years Thursday at 8 p.m. in Buck at S p.m. here in the club- and is a member of the EastSmith's Restaurant. East house of the Woman's Club of ern Bird Banding Association Keansburg. .Mrs ,1'ohn Do- Red Bank, Broad St. Mrs. and Audubon Society. She has nohue is in charge ot tickets Mary Ward, Rumson, is chair- banded and compiled statistical data for the ornithology man of the even!. for the event. department of New Jersey State Museum at Trenton.
Rtjiilir staff Pholo

TRUE VALUE MEAT DEPARTMENT"


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ANY SIZE
BONELESS CHUCK

TURKEYS
SHOP-RITE (WATER ADDED)

CALIF. STEAK OR ROAST

STEAK, ROAST OR CUT FOR STEW

STEAK OR CUT FOR LONDON BROIL

SHANKLESS SMOKED HAM

SAINTLY MATTER Mrs. Alfred Marino, Middletown, left, and Mrs. Robert Van Brunt, Eatonlown, head the committee for Saturday's dinner donee honoring St. Patrick and sponsored by St. Anthony's Church-St. Anthony's PTA, Red Bank. The party in tfie Old Orchard Inn Eatontown, will begin with cocktails at 7 o'clock.

SHORT RIBS ORFLANKEN

PORK CHOPS *. OR ROAST


CUT SHORT FOR BROILING

PORK LOIN -W1-

RIB STEAK or ROAST


ROAST IS OVEN READY CENTERCUT What's for Appetizer Savings?

CHUCK STEAKor ROAST


BEEF
. Produce Dept!.
INDIAN RIVER WHITE

What's for Wall-toWall Savings?

SEEDLESS

MakeA Date
A paid directory of coming events for non-profit organize lions Rales: 52 00 for 3 lines for one day, $1.00 each additional line, J3.00 for two days, $1 25 each additional line; $5.00 for three to five days, $1 50 each additional line; $6.00 for 1 days, $2.00 each additional line: $10.00 for 20 days, 0 $2.50 each additional line. Deadline noon day before publication. Call The Daily Register, T41-0010; ask for the Date Secretary MARCH9.10.il, "The Kantasticks." musical, featuring Pony Players, Rumson PTA. Forrestdale School, Forest Ave., Rumson, Mar. 9. K:3II, Mar. 1(1, 11. 2 p.m. Tickets on sale at school,' during lunch hour, week of Mar. 5. or at door. "(Jala AfterTheatre Party," Mar. 9. Fisherman's Wharf. $15 couple, includes tickets, unlimited drinks, hers d'oeuvres! MAHCII 11 1 "Vacation Auction'" Muldletuwn . l a s p e s lllh Ml "r'untastic" holidays to be sold at Buck- Smith's by B G. Coates. alter the .loy Shop's Fashion Show at 12:3U. "Early Spring Fiesta," benefit hisK Chapel's Women's Day, Sat., Mar. 10. 7 p.m., Willowbrook Inn, 7411 Uivor Rd., Fair Haven. Donation: $12. Reservations: 741-890-4. MARCH 11 Cesar Franck's oratorio, "The Beatitudes," in English, by the Monmouth Civic Chorus, Children's Choir and N..I. State Orchestra. Conductor: Felix Molzer. Sunday, March 11, 3 p.m. Ocean Township High School. $ general admission. $4 reserved secticjp. . MARCH 12 "Dessert-Card Party." given by Red Bank Chapter 7(1, Order of the Eastern Star, on Monday, Mar. 12 at 8 p.m. 152 Maple Ave.. Red Bank. Donation: $15(1. MARCH 1 7 Holy Cross PTA "St. Patrick's Day Luncheon and Fashion Show," Sat., Mar. 17,11:30 a.m., Old Orchard, Eatontown. Tickets: $5.50 Make reservations now-call H420336. The world famous "Columbus Boychoir." in concert, Monmouth Regional High School, Sat. Mar. 17. K p.m. Adults $2.51). students $1.25. For advance sales make checks payable to Meadowbrook PTO, P.p. Box 37. Eatontown.

March library arrangements will be provided by Mrs. Ralph W. Kroese, Mrs. John Matteo, Mrs. Ernest Geiger and Mrs. Willard T. Somerville, president of the Garden Club of New Jersey.-. Club members will altend the Philadelphia Flower Show March 14 and the Garden Club of New Jersey Flower Show March '12 in Morrislown. The annual plant sale will be May 12 from !) a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Fair Haven Firehouse.

Ham S '.,,69< Dog Food-?.;1OIt. Tuna Salad ^m ,, 29*C o l a CICR'I&^DIET ,&, 5 9 C T i s s u e


f\ WHY PAY MORE? r-S\A *

CHUNK . VAN CAMP AS-oi. ORSTAR.KIST " n all!

10 79
Chicory,
Potatoes
IDAHO . BAKING 5-It U.S. . 1 b.

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SHOP-RITE JEWISH RYE OR

What's for Frozen Food Timesavers?


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PUMPERNICKEL
2-lb. lool

59'
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ORSAUSEA COCKTAIL
* * *

LAYER CAKES
jor

Celery -<- .,, 29 Annies 29*


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Radishes sc8.Us2-19* Tomatoes'^ 3 c $ l 5


MACARONI AND CHEESE pi,,. AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES THAT NORMALLY CARRY PLANTS.

Physicians' Aides To Attend Luncheon


LONG BRANCH - Miss Charlene Vogt, Campbell A v e . . and Mrs. P a t r i c i a Coyne, Pleasure Bay Apartments, here, are among graduates of Eastern School for Physicians' Aides, New York, who will attend luncheon Saturday in Swiss Town House, Union City. The event marks the formation of the school's alumnae association. Officers will be elected. John J. McGarraghy. assistant director of Thomas A! Edison College, will be guest speaker. Almond Potatoes For Spring Lamb Saute diced potatoes, onion and apples together in margarine or bacon fat until potatoes are tender; mix in slivered almonds. Serve with broiled lamb chops or roast lamb.

Cake Bread

a-59* Cod 32* Shrimp

tt'69c Dinners 99* Fish

Y a m s * ,19< Plants* &. 3 , $ 1


What's for Budget Dinner?

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SHOP-RITE SLICED

What's for Seafood Lovers ?


COMMODORE RAW

What's for Dessert ?

A MER. CHEESE
YELLOW WHITE COMBO I;" Pk9
2 CHUNKCSEAMk ibl, 5

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General Merchandise!
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Open Mon thru Fri. 'til 10 p.m. Open Sat. 'til 9 p.m. Open Sunday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

VALUABLECOUPON
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Towards the purchase of the March Edition of

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C O U P O N C u o ,. .iyn,uii;:KuS,i^mUM. opn

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Prices effective thru Sit., March 10.-1973. Not responsible tor typographical errori. We reserve to limit quantities.

6 Arrested At Wedding Party Fight


KEANSBURG - Six. persons arrested as a result of a fight which broke out during a wedding reception are scheduled for hearings before Municipal Court Judge Ronald L. Horan on March 20. All have been released in their own recognizance. The incident took place at the West Side Boys Club, Main St. Three of the suspects were charged with assault and battery on a police officer, creating a disturbance, resisting arrest and being under the influence of alcohol. They were identified by police as L'armello Rosario, 44, and Peter' Rosario, 39, both of 20 Howard Ave., and Arthur Sotos, 3D, of 77 Shore ttlvd. Mrs. Elaine Rosario, 39, of 20 Howard Ave. was charged with creating a disturbance, assault on a police officer and resisting arrest. Charges of creating a disIrubance and being under the influence of ak-uhol were lodged against James Applegate, 24, of New York City. A complaint of assault and battery was signed by (ieorge McNulty of 24 Shore Blvd. against the three members of the Rosario family and Joyce Lavary, 45, of 45 Terrace Place. The arrests were made by Patrolmen Alton Bennett, Raymond O'Hare, Harry Ruhman and Cecil Truax. They were assisted by members of the Ilazlet police department.

The Daily Register, Red Bank-MMdJetown, N.J. Wednesday, March?, \m

it

SUPER SAVING DISC


YOU'RE GOING TO LIKE IT HERE!

SUPER SAVER g )
Prices effective March 4, thru March 10,1973 in New Jersey (Point Pleasant & North), in Staten Island and in Orange County, New York. Quantity rights reserved. Not responsible for typographical errors.

SHOULDER CUT OR BOTTOM ROUND

WHOLE, BUTT PORTION, OR SHANKLESS SHANK PORTION

A GREAT NEW ACME IS

NOW OPEN
All Acme & Super Saver Markets are celebrating the Grand Opening of the

Food Council Tries to Halt Retail Theft


TRENTON - "Food retailers are losing more through ' theft than they are earning in profits. 'Operation: Stop Thief has been designed to reverse this trend." That was the word from James M. Neilland, executive director of New Jersey Kood Council when he announced plans for an all-out food industry attack on retail theft. Kicking off the campaign will be an all-day industrywide conference, scheduled for Wednesday, March 21, in the Holiday Inn of Woodbridge. Topics under discussion will include shoplifting, vendor theft, employe dishonesty, drug abusers, bad checks and counterfeiting.

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Short Ribs of Beef... 89C Assorted Cold Cuts - - - . . 1 P 7 9 C C Cameco Corned Beef X75C Polish Sausage.. ..?....b 79 1.09 Pork Chops. "TKMK:, ,21.08 Smoked Beef Tongue C . - : - *.,.53C Fresh Pork Calas ,b 69 Beef Bologna $ Spare Ribs ;...S. b 1.08 DELICATESSEN & SEAFOOD! (Sold only in Markets with Delicatessen Depts Sau-Sea Cocktail 3 # 1.19 C Sliced Beef Liver ;..*. 78 Rich's Turkey Roll 85C C Case Sausage Meat Roll 79C Fresh Cole Slaw. b 33 Schickhaus Franks ^ &89C Bar-B-Que Chicken b 89C $ Sirloin Tip London Broil ,: 1.68Swiss Cheese . ,D79C e Liver Sausage * :,, 97 Flounder Fillet ..n..EN... 1.29 Top Round London Broil 1.78 Perch Fillet ^..N. , 99C Chub Liverwurst .^ b 65CHaddock Fillet : 1.19 C Chunk Liverwurst. .?.?.* ,. 79 Cod Fillet . ii.09
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Camping Films To Be Shown


FREEHOLD - "America Goes Camping" is the theme of an adult film program to be presented during March by the Monmouth County Library. Films of national parks from Quebec to Florida and Alaska will be shown in conjunction with information on making camping more enjoyable. The followi ng schedule has been announced for the shnwings.-all at.7:3B p.m.: Eastern Branch, Shrewsbury, tomorrow and March 15 and 22; Marlboro library, March. 16; Allcntown, March 23, and Holmdel, March 26.

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Lodge Plans Seoul Troop


HAZLET - Chancellor Commander Jack Wolfkind of John F. Kennedy Centennial Lodge, Knights of Pythias, has ahnounced the lodge will sponsor a new Boy Scout troop composed of physically handicapped boys. Organization meeting of the new unil will be today at 7 p.m. in Lloyd Road School, Majawan Township. The r troop will be open to handicapped boys 11 to 18 years old from the Matawan, Keyport, Hazlet, Keansburg, Holmdel, Midilletown, Colts Neck and surrounding areas. Inquiries may be sent to P.O. Box6, Hazlet, N.I. 07730.

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Mayor Proclaims Girl Scout Week


HOLMDEL - Mayor David Cohen has proclaimed March 11-17 as Girl Scout Week in the township. In his proclamation, the mayor cited the^ scouts for "their efforts to build better relationships among persons of all ages, religions, races and nationalities; their vital concern with improving the quality of our environment, and the emphasis they place with their membership and the community-at-large on keeping Girl Scouting a vital part of (he American heritage and the world of tomorrow."

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21 Tie Dally Register, Red Baik-MkktteUwn, N.J. Wednesday, Marefc 7,1973

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forCJHe
free throws in the final 57 seconds. Tyler, who, according to Crews "didn't hurt us all year," finished with a game high of 15 points on just 5 for 15 shooting from the field and 10 rebounds. Warner added 12 points and teammate Kevin Brennen (6-5) hauled in 15 rebounds. Keith Jones and Flynn combined for 24 of the losers' points. * Without taking anything away from Keyport's gritty effort, Kuhnert said his club may have been somewhat psychologically down after defeating the Keys three previous times, most recently by 17 points. The situation will be reversed in Friday night's sectional finale. Henry Hudson owns two regular season victories over the Colonials en route to its "D" Division crown.
Tyler Mockey Brontley Brennen Warner Thrckmrtn Totals Freehold Keyport Ktyport (3> FrMhold ( H I G F G F T| 1 0 5 5 IS | Mill 1 0 71 Flynn ! 11 2 2 I 51 Carter 2 I S 3 0 61 Jones 4 51 3 5 1 12|Tice 0 3 3 " 3 0 4 1 0 2|Burlew 1 8 42 Totals ? 8 1 3 12 12 1 I I 39 4 9-42 1 39

Admirals' Blitz Sinks Crusaders


By RICH NICOLETTI WOODBRIDGE - Henry Hudson Regional will face Freehold for the Central Jersey Group I crown at Rutgers U n i v e r s i t y Gym in New Brunswick Friday at 8 p.m. The Admirals' smooth-sailing vessel turned into a supercharged powerboat in the fourth quarter against Bound Brook at the Woodbridge High School Gym here last night and it roared to a 62-52 victory. Skein Wins II A 14-point streak, which ate up 4:20 of the fourth period, made it a shut case for Hudson (23-5). Freehold will be a familiar foe. The Admirals had to beat the Colonials twice en route to the Shore Conference "D" Division title. "As much as they (Bound Brook) dominated the offensive boards, I'm surprised we won," blurted a relieved Admiral coach, Bob Daadosz. The Crusaders (21-6) had things pretty much their own way throughout most of the first three periods, but still didn't have much luck putting the ball in the basket. Junior Bill Hungrecker kept Hudson in the game for the first three quarters with 20 of his 28 points. The Admirals scored 12 points at the foul line in those three sessions to keep up with the Crusaders. Hudson's defense, led by Bill Connell, Tom Masse and Charlie Lawler, kept Bound Brook from getting to the inside in the fourth period. That caused a mild panic by the losers, who began taking the long ones and missing by a mile. "I don't know what I would have done without those three boys," said Dziadosz. "They took the boards away from Bound Brook, and turned the game around." Hudson grabbed a 41-40 lead going into the fourth period, but Crusader Joe Dylcwski hit on a jump shot at 6:27 to reverse the margin. Then came the blitz. The Admirals struck for their 14 straight points and put the . game way out of reach. Crusaders Fatter At the same time. Bound Brook became ineffective from the field and missed 14 straight shots. They missed five in a row from right under the basket at one point. Masse opened the streak with a jump shot to give the Admirals the lead they were never to lose again. Lawler hit lor two from underneath and Hungrecker followed with a jump, giving the winners a five-point bulge. Larry Tango and Hungrecker came up with a pair of layups, Masse hit for two on a rebound and Hungrecker completed the skein with another jump shot. The drought lasted more than four minutes for the Crusaders too long lor any kind of comeback hopes. Hudson was 13 points in front and the clock showed 2:07. While Bound Brook looked the stronger of the two teams for the first 24 minutes of the game, Hudson stayed right in there with excellent shooting from the foul line. The Admirals wound up with IB for 20 from the line, while the Crusaders had a meager 2 for 6. Hudson had an almost impossible time trying to get to the inside early in the game. Masse, the 6-7 junior center was shut out in the first period, but the winners began to solve the tight man-to-man defense and Masse wound up with a 13-point performance. Had it not been for Hun-

HJMU

H ^ i l i i i Colonials Work for 4th Keyport KO


By CHUCK TRIBLEHORN Register Sports Editor SAYREVILLE - "Well take it," said Freehold coach Ed Kuhnert after sweating out his Colonials' 42-39 victory over a familiar foe, Keyport, to advance to Friday night's Central Jersey Group 1 championship game against Henry Hudson Regional, no stranger either. It was the losing Red Raiders' lourth chance this season to defeat Kuhnert's club before finally striking out in the N.J. State Interscholastic Athletic Association basketball tournament. Thanks to a tough Raider defense, Xhe Co' lonials' task wasn't easy. In fact, better accuracy at the Ed Kuhnert foul line might have enabled (21-18) prevailed thereafter as the Keys to hit a home run. the teams played on even Ties Them Up "We've had trouble against terms in each of the final two their defense all season," periods. The largest spread Kuhnert said. "I don't know was five points, twice on Colowhat they call it, but it's a nial field goals to start quarcombination that's as good as ters, and finally at 36-31. Then Keyport ran off five I've seen." Keyport coach John Crews consecutive points on Gil Burconcurred. " I t ' s a com- lew's jump shot, Ed Tice's bination matchup man and free throw and Klynn's tap-in. The Raiders sensed upset, zone," he said. "We're tough on defense, but we don't have the physical strength." As a result, the victorious Colonials, now 21-4 on the sea-. son, hit on just 35 per cent of its field goal attempts (17 of 49). Keyport, meanwhile, managed just 31 shots and hit on 14 for a commendable 45 per cent. PRINCETON (AP) - ConThe key to the Raiders' fourth failure against their spicuously absent from the Shore Conference "D" Divi- current New Jersey state high sion rivals was foul shooting. school basketball championThey connected on just 11 of ship play is one of the state's 21 charity chances; Freehold top teams, Princeton High School. was 8 for 11. Princeton which compiled The rebounding was virtually even (31-30 Freehold), an 18-4 record was suspended while Keyport had 14 turn- from the tournament following several fist fights at overs to the winners' 10. "We could have won it with Princeton's game with Ewing a few breaks at the foul line," High School at Ewing on Jan. said Crews, "but we have a 12. The New Jersey State Interyoung team, except for (Rich) Flynn and (Charley) Carter. I scholastic Athletic Association really didn't expect much NJSIAA voted Jan. 31 to put the Princeton team on probamore this season." The Raiders wound up with tion for one year, which automatically disqualified the a 15-10 overall record. Little Tigers from the state Gotten Better tournament. " T h e y ' v e lost 10, b u t The NJSIAA also censored they've gotten better," said Kuhnert. "Our kids played Princeton Coach Marvin Trotgood defense, too, and they do man for what it called "unsportsmanlike conduct" during the job when they have to." The Colonials faced such a the game. Coach Ejected "must" situation with 4:20 reTrotman was ejected from maining in the game after the Haiders rallied to tie the the contest for arguing with referees. The game, evenscore at 36-alI. Both teams had started tually won by Ewing 47-42, slowly, with Keyport on top, 9- was halted during the final 8 at the end of the first period. seconds of an overtime period Tyler's jumper at the outset when a fight broke out among of the second quarter put players after a personal foul Freehold out front for good, had been called. As referees untangled the but never comfortable. The three-point lead at halftime scuffling players, a bigger

John Crews but the Colonials wanted none of that, so they ran off on a six-point sew-up of their own on a pair of foul shots by Jack Warner, Tyler's layup and Ron Brantley's drive for a 4236' advantage with 2:4B Jeft to play. Miss Chances Keyport had several chances to come back, but it could cash in on only three of eight

Register Stan Photo

KEPT HUDSON ALIVE Bill Hungrecker (with ball), shown in a game earlier this season, was Henry Hudson Regional's mainstay last night in a Central Jersey, Group I semifinal contest against Bound Brook. Hungrecker's steady performance in the early part of the game kept his team alive until the fourth period when the Admirals rallied to win, 62-52.
grecker and the Admirals' nine points from the foul line. in the first half, the Crusaders would have built an insurmountable lead. Important Play A big play occurred in. the second period at 3:15 vvRen Hungrecker popped in a jumper to tie the game, 21-ail. At the same time, Masse was fouled. He promptly sank both charity shots, producing a four-point play. It was Hungrecker who gave Hudson a one-point lead going into the fourth period when he stole the ball from Crusader Dave Bafile at midcourt and scampered to the basket for an easy layup just before the buzzer sounded. The Admirals had only 8 of their total 23 field goals in the first half for a 24 per cent showing, but they hit the basket from the field nine times in the fourth period alone.
Henry Hudun R (U) sound Brook ( M l G F T G F , 7 0 14 Hungreckerll ffllOylewskl 6 0 1? Mouc 5 3 l3|Pokiuk Osborn 1 I 3 VMIO 4 0 8 Connell \ 3 5! Jones 3 0 4 I 1 3! Rlddlck 4 I 8 Tango Lower 4 3 ll| Totals 2 16 3 tfjTotalj Henry Hudson... 1 2 I] 1 6 Bound Brook.... 14 9 15 IS 1 52 21 42 12 52

Little Tightin' 'Tigers Lost Combat Rights


fight erupted in the audito- school district, has been rerium and police moved in to viewing/the case and he sajd a halt it. One teen-age girl was full report will be made to the injured and one man was ar- Board of Education March 27: rested during a 15-minute Norman Van Arsdalen, athmelee. letic director at Princeton The NJSIAA turned down High School, said, "We felt, an appeal of its January deci- and still do feel, that the sion by representatives of the NJSIAA should not have takPrinceton regional schools. en action against the students. The school representatives ar- We are not defending the gued that the decision was coach's actions and we dealth based on racial factors since with his situation in our own Trotman and four of the five manner." He didn't explain starting players on his team further, but Trotman still is are black. But the NJSIAA de- coach. nied that claim. The school representatives then sought a court injunction to lift the one-year ban. But on Feb. 21, Superior Court Judge Baruch S. Seidman rejected the school district's UNIONDALE, NY. (APj - " case and two days later the , Yvan Cournoycr, Frank Mastate Appellate Court upheld hovlich and rookie Murray his decision. Wilson bunched first period ' Dr. Philip MacPherson, su- goals less than nine minutes perintendent of the Princeton apart and the Montreal Canadiens made them stand up for a 3-2 National Hockey League Rosewell 62, Hanover Pork SI victory over the New York IsBoyonne 69, Possolc -Volley 64 landers last night. Morrlitown 75, Bloomfleld 59

Knights Eliminate Minutemen^ Parade to Group III Finals


LAKEWOOD - Wayne Szoke, Wall Township basketball coach, isn't particular about who his Knights play in the finals of the Central Jersey, Group III tournament. He has his reasons for wanting to meet both Ocean Town-, ship and Perth Amboy. Wall eliminated Bridgewater-Raritan East, 75-61, here last night and now will wait for the Ocean-Perth Amboy winner to emerge. "I'd like to see Ocean win Wall started the game off because I think it would be nice to have two Shore teams sluggishly, being topped by in the finals," said Szoke, the Minutemen, 14-13, in the "but I used to coach at Co- first quarter. The Knights did lonia, and we played Perth manage to oust 6-5 senior Amboy. I'd like another crack Mark Debes early in the first at them and maybe be able to period, inflicting an injurys prove that a Shore team can that kept him out for the remainder of the game. beat them." The Central Jersey chamThe Knights still did not pion will be crowned Sat. at capitalize until the fourth Rutgers Gym and earns the quarter. right to compete in the Group Wall, leading 53-47, scored III state semi-finals next the first 12 points of the period week. to ice the game and force the Minutemen to play catch up ball. Ernie Lattimer led the point parade with three baskets, Duke Madsen had two buckets and Mike Kachelreiss netted the other two points. The Minutemen 13-13 were thought to be too physical a team for Wall, but the absence of Debes gave t h e Knights a rebounding edge despite the fact that they were still outclassed in the height department. The Knights took the boards 29-27 and shot a blistering 3365 from the field and 9-12 from the line.
G 5 Prcybylwskl 5 Przybylw 12 Lotflmer 8 White 1 Rudewlcz 0 Henn 2 Kchlrlss

Canadiens Edge Isles

NJSIAA Scores

Patterson Eastslde 71, Possolc 70 Lincoln 77, Glenrock U Cllttslde Park 81, Enalewood 78 Dumont 53, Rlchtleld Park 50 Northern B u r l i n g t o n 78, Sterling 7S (overtime) Won 75, Brldgewoter East 61 Freehold 42, Keyport 19 Atlantic City 76. Triton 64 Vineland 4fl, Woodrow Wilson 39 Colllngswood S3. Mainland 37 Colonla 49, Plscataway 44 Henry Hudson 62, Bound Brook 32

Brian Spencer had given the Islanders the lead early in the opening period before Cournoyer tied it for Montreal. Then Mahovlich's power play goal and Wilson's score made it 3-1.

Ocean Tests Perth Amboy


By RICH NICOLETTI LINCROFT - Disappointment comes to evenone sooner or later, but for .Ocean Township and Perth Amboy, two of the state's winningest teams, the sad face of defeat has shown itself a total of only seven times in 53 games. Ocean (24:3), winner of the Shore Conference Championship and the annual Casey Holiday Festival, will be pitted against Perth Amboy (22-4). winner of two season tournaments, in the semifinals of the Central Jersey Group 111 draw at Brookdale Community College here tomorrow at 8 p.m. One thing is (or suredisappointment will pop up again. The winner of the contest will face Wall Townshp at Rutgers University on Saturday at 4 p.m. Ocean is a late swinger. The Spartans really came alive toward the end of the season to overhaul Lakewood for the Shore Conference " B " Division crown, and then went on to dump Neptune for the conference playoff title. Sarge of Simon One of the main reasons for the Spartans' climb is 6-8 senior Chuck Simon. Simon came into his own midway through the season and has been devasting under the boards. His coach, Ron Truex. rates him as the state's finest big man. "Perth Amboy'is just a super team," rates Truex. "I am particularly impressed with Blake Taylor." Taylor is a sensational sophomore, who recently scored his 1,000th career point. Most cagers don't hit thai mark until their senior year. He is from a family of exceptional athletes Brother Bruce plays for the San Francisco 49ers, while Brian is one of New Jersey's leading all-time high school scorers and is a standout rookie with the New York Nets. Much of Ocean's success against Perth Amboy depends upon guards Dave Boughrum and Jim Cassidy. Once they get the ball in to Simon, the problem is virtually over, but getting [he ball in will be the Spartans' prime objective. "They have a excellently controlled p r e s s , " noted Truex. They remind me of a combination of Lakewood and Nept'tmc. only better." Truex hasn't played against or seen a better team than the Panthers all season long. "They are bombers. They pass once and shool with tremendous accuracy. And their ability to crash the boards is something else." rie said. Truex feels his team's improvement this season stems from the confidence each player has in one another. "We've improved in every respect, especially al the foul line," he said. Another plus on Ocean's side of the board is the clutch performances of different individuals in each important game, but Simon's ability to put the ball in the basket has

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Rumson to Hold DiamondSignup


RUMSON - Registration for Rumson Little League Boys Baseball will be from 10 a.m. to noon on March 17 and 24 at Forrestdale School. Ron Truex Boys between 10 and 12 with turned the Spartan season into an overwhelming suc- birth dates prior to Aug. 1 are cess. He is bound for Rider encouraged to sign up. Parents are requested to acCollege on a full basketball company their boys: parental scholarship. "We have four players scor- signature is required. Tryouts ing in double figures. We ro- are scheduled for March 31 tate three players in the fifth and the- opening game is slot, and they have a com- slated for April 28. Automobile stickers publibined average of more than 10 cizing Rumson boys baseball points," said Truex. will be available at the regisOutside Threat Bruce Illatky, a 6-5 junior, tration for a nominal contribuwill provide Ocean with the tion. important outside shot. A successful night for illatky could help to neutralize the Panther's attack. Hlatky averages 18 points per game, and his strength isn't limited to jump shots. The Spartans have the advantage in size, but Perth Amboy's speed and agility around the basket is second to none. "Some of those kids can jump right through the ceiling," Truex said. . "As far as I'm concerned, this is the big game. If we win this one, our next game will seem almost anticUtnactic. That's my next problem if we winkeeping the boys up for the game at Rutgers." said the head Spartan.

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Sonics Cure Knicks Ills


By Tie Associated Press Bill Bradley. led New York to a 22-fi lead in the opening 7'/2 minutes and the Knicks went on to snap their first three-game losing streak of the National Basketball Association season by defeating the Seattle SuperSonics, 10694, last night. Bradley hit four baskets in the early New York spurt as Seattle shot just 26 per cent from the field in the opening period, which ended with the Knicks on top 28-15. The Sonics closed the gap to five points during the third quarter but could come no closer. Bradley finished, with 29 points to lead the Knicks while Walt Frazier added 27. Spencer Haywood led Seattle with 25 points even though he. picked up his fourth personal foul early in the second quarter. Fred Brown added 21 points for the Sonics. By winning, New York swept its National basketball Association season series from the Sonics, taking all four games. The Knicks limited Seattle to fewer than 100 points in each game. . New York played without all-star forward Dave DeBusschere, sidelined with a hip and back injury. The Sonics were without center Jim McDaniels, who is not with the team because of an illness in his family. The Boston Celtics and New York Knicks turned to their respective benches for help last night but the'Milwaukee Bucks, as usual, left it to their big guy and Kareem AbdulJ a b b a r proved too high a mountain for the Chicago Bulls. With the 7-foot-2 Abdul-Jabbar scoring 21 of his 31 points in the second half, the Bucks fought off a Chicago comeback for a key 96-88 victory and opened a four-game leadthree in the loss columnover the Bulls in the Midwest Division, the National Basketball Association's

closest race.
Meanwhile, subs Art "Hambone" Williams and Henry Kinkel helped the Celtics to a 127-112 triumph over Buffalo. Elsewhere, Los Angeles defeated Portland 114-102, Golden State trimmed Detroit 10B93 and Phoenix downed Cleveland 110-102. In the American Basketball Association, Carolina swamped San Diego 130-99, Kentucky trounced Memphis 131107 and Virginia 'turned back Dallas 121-105. Milwaukee squandered a 15point first-half lead against Chicago and fell behind by five in the thirg, period before Abdul-Jabbar took charge. With the Bucks leading by only two points, he canned a rebound with just under two minutes left and, rafter Chicago's Bob Love got a basket on a goaltending callagainst Abdul-Jabbar, natchthe big fellow converted a three-point play to make it 93-88 with one minute to go.

"We came back, sure," said Chicago Coach Dick Motta, "but you burn yourself out with those kind of rallies. This league is peaks and valleys and you can only climb so high a mountain. A team of this caliber will come back, but there's a fatigue factor." The Bucks got their early lead thanks to a 2O-'2 burst in the second period. Motta called the stretch "the biggest collapse my team has had all year." Milwaukee's Larry Costello said the turning point "was our running game. We had about 30 fast-break baskets, which is good for us, and if we can keep doing that we'll be in good shape." Bob Dandridge added 19 points (or the Bucks while Chet Walker had 27, Love 24 and Norm Van Lier 20 for Chicago. Boston's Williams and Dave Cowens led a fourth-quarter drive that carried the Celtics past Buffalo and kept them

six games ahead of New York in the Atlantic Division. It was Boston's 12th consecutive victory over the Braves in three seasons. Jo Jo White and John Havlieek topped the Celts with 25 points apiece but Cowens scored eight of his 24 in the final period and Williams came off the bench late in the third quarter to get Boston's fast break rolling. Williams hit all three floor shots and both free throws in his 10-minute stint and Coach Tom lleinsohn said his reserve guard "picked up the tempo for us when it was a close game'. "
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25-94

Twins' 10th Man Socks Bucs


ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) American League owners, . APWireptioio faced with dwindling fan inBUFFALO SANDWICH John Hummer (45) of the Buffalo Braves terest, created the "desigcomesdown between Paul Westphal, left, and Dave Cowens (18) of the nated hitter" to put more sock Boston Celtics last night in Buffalo. Elmore Smith of the Braves is behind into their game. Cowens. The Celts won, 127-112. . So far, it's working beautifully. Minnesota nominated big Larry Hisle for the DH role in yesterday's first exhibition' baseball game and the Twins' 10th man murdered Pittsburgh. Hisle hit two home runs off Pirates' right-hander John Lamb, one with the bases loaded, the other with two KOKT LAUDEKUALE, Fla training. discussing it at a nearby diner aboard, for seven runs batted (AP) " I believe the real in, as Minnesota won 12-4 un"After the movie we went in Fort Lee. test will come when they have out and had a pretty good "Fritz and I went in one car der a blazing Florida sun. to stand in the same club- time and I guess had a few and Mike and Marilyn went in It wasn't altogether fair. - house," said New York Yan- drinks," she related. "The the other car. Mike and MariPittsburgh didn't use a deskee outfielder Ron Swoboda. idea came up for the first lyn didn't show up for two and ignated hitter. The Pirates' "How they react will more or time. We laughed about it like a half hours. pitchers took their turns at less determine how the team a bunch of high school kids "We were going home with bat just as they have since . will take it." and thought it was a big joke opposite partners" for the Abner Doubleday supposedly Commenting on the ex- > "Nothing much came of it rest of the season. Mrs. Peter- invented the sport. Credits Son change of wives and families until we attended a party of son was unavailable for combetween teammates Fritz Pe- some friends in July.. None ment. "I owe it all to my little terson and Mike Kekich, Swo- of it was planned. It all She said when the season son," said Hisle, a 27-year-old boda added: "I guess it shows seemed to be an accident. ended the two couples went former Philadelphia outthat baseball players are now "We left the party together back to their own mates but fielder. "I was chasing him people. It's something be- and we sat in Fritz' car dis- continued to see each other around the house and stubbed tween t h e m s e l v e s four cussing the idea of going socially. The final com- my toe. I wasn't ready to play people looking for happiness." home with opposite partners. mitment was made in Decem- defense, so they made me the designated hitter." The consensus of Yankee We said we would continue ber, c ^ players felt it was a personal IIIIIIII1I Illlllllllllll IIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIII1IIIMIIII ' matter between the two pitchers and that it would not affect the club's performance. The Yanks have been named favorites to win the American League East Division baseball title. It was revealed Monday . that Peterson and Susannc Kekich are living together and plan to be married. However, Kekich and Marilyn Peterson separated after the Hayes Prothro switch in December. r "Everyone knows we're a bunch of crazy guys," said LOS ANGELES (AP) - Former Los AnHOUSTON (AP) - Houston Rijtkets coach c a t c h e r T h u r m a n Mungeles Ram football Coach Tommy Prothro son.". . .but everybody to Johnny Egan, hurting for an effective big man, said yesterday he would hot have traded cen- filed a $1.9-million breach of contract suit yestheir own life. It won't change ter Elvin Hayes if he had been head coach at terday against the National Football League my feeling for either player. the time. club. Fritz should be here with the Named as defendants in the Superior Court Hayes was traded to the Baltimore Bullets club working out. We need prior to this season for forward Jack Mann af- suit were the Los Angeles Rams Football Co., him." ter Hayes had several run-ins with former the Baltimore Football Club, Inc., which has Outfielder Bobby Murcer. Rockets coach Texas Winter. since acquired ownership of the Rams, and said: "I was really shocked. Egan replaced Winter as head coach dur- team owner Carroll Rosenbloom. When I first heard about it, I The suit charges knowing and willful conthought it was one of their ing the current season. Starting center Don Smith is out for the season with a knee injury spiracy to induce a breach of contract. gags. It won't hurt our club if and his replacement, Otto Moore, has not Prothro was fired by the Rams last Jan. 24 they just do their job." played to expectations after two seasons. He had three years remainWhile Kekich declined fur"No," Egan said when asked about Hayes. . ing on a contract which reportedly paid1 him ther comment, his wife told "I'm looking for a center who can block shots $90,000 a year. At that time, club officials said the New York Post that the and rebound and get the ball out for the easy the $90,000 figure was not correct. idea of trading partners startshot. Hayes can do this. General Manager Don Klosterman, told of ed as an offhand joke last sea"As far as Tex goes, Tex was a coach that the suit, said, "Well, we haven't been served son after the foursome had liked to work a certain offense. He needed a as yet. We have no statement on legal matters been to a movie during spring good passing center and Elvin Hayes wasn't a until our counsel has an opportunity to look at good passing center." it."

^Domestic Squabble' Concerns Yankees

Aging Twins slugger Harmon Killebrew, in town but still unsigned, is expected to be a hot candidate for the spot when the regular season begins. While the Twins were in (he field, Hisle tried to stay awake on the bench by making repeated trips to the water cooler. He had plenty of time to study the opposing pitcher. When Minnesota was batting, the Twins pitchers took a rest and Hisle replaced them on offense, batting in the leadoff position. ' It had been announced by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn

that the designated hitter would be used only when two American League clubs were playing during spring training. The American League begins a three-year trial of the DH rule in April while the National Leaguers continue by the old book. There will be no DH in the World Series or AilStar games. "It's not fair, playing nine men against 10," said Bill Virdon, manager of the Pirates. "But it doesn't really matter that much during spring training." It stills appears to be up in the air as to whether Ameri-

can Leaguers will use DH against opponents ffom the National League during future games this spring. No Plans "1 don't plan to allow it the next time we play an American League team," Virdon said. "That is, unless the National League votes to allow them to go ahead and do their thing against our teams." That means the first test could come today. The Pirati-s are scheduled to face the Detroit Tigers in Bradenton, Fla. A spokesman for the Twins said s e v e r a l A m e r i c a n ' League clubs had decided

theywould hot get a sufficient test of the DH gimmick this spring unless they employed it against some National League teams. He said the Twins planned to use it in all home games during the Grapefruit League season. Minnesota plays another American League club, the New York Yankees, in a game today at Tinker Field. "It's a great rule," said Hisle, his face bursting into a grin. "But, I don't really think I want the job full time. I enjoy playing defense almost as much as hitting. It's a little weird, sitting in the dugout while my teammates arc playing on defense." Hisle played two seasons as the Phillies' regular center fielder before being traded to Los Angeles. He played for the Dodgers' Triple A farm club at Albuquerque last summer, hitting .325 with 23 home runs and 91 RBI.
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Giants Explore Tigertown


PRINCETON (AP) - Representatives of the New York Giants football team explored yesterday the possibility of the Giants playing their h,omc games at Princeton University's Palmer Stadium during the next two seasons. They met with officials of the university,1 state officials and members of the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority, which is building a new stadium (or the Giants in the North Jersey Meadowlands. The Giants will move permanently to the new stadium in 1975. Meantime, they face eviction this fall from Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, New York City, because of renovations there. They have also investigated Yale. Bowl at New Haven, Conn., as a possible temporary playing field. Yale Bowl can seat 70,000 persons. Palmer can hold 50,000. A spokesman said no specific proposals were made at yesterday's meeting. University officials said discussions were frank and cordial. Those participating also met later with"reprcsentatives of the Princeton Township Committee and the Princeton Borough Council.

More Sporls On Page 24


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Briefly Speaking

Good for Business.


With the research knowledge of Bell Labs and the manufacturing know-how of Western Electric, you'd expect telephones that let you do more than just talk and listen. That's why we have all kinds of business phones. To meet all kinds of business needs and situations. They all feature reliable engineering. Innovative technology. And while they're as different as the people who use them, our equipment is always practical and functional. No far-out gadg'ets that you maybe use once or twice. Card Dialer. Eliminates dialing altogether. Frequently called numbers.are recorded.on plastic punch cards filed in the phone itself..To call, put the desired card in the slot and press a button Speakerphone. Three phones m one. Use it 'hands-free', as a conference telephone or as a regular phone The easy to operate Speaketphone clearly amplifies both sides of the conversation. Ideal for conference calls, sales meetings, training sessions. Portable Conference Telephone. Tin modern business phone amplifies the speak- jL er's voice for group listening. Two poitable microphones let Hsteneis ask questions or speak directly back. You conduct meetings without ever leaving the office. Reduces , travel time and expense.

Egan Ifs' Hayes

Prothro Sues Rams

StateTourney SF Peals Reliever CASA GRANDE, The San Schedule Francisco Giants dealtAriz. (AP)of- their holdaway one

Mays9 Knee Swollen

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) - Veteran star outfielder Willie Mays reported to a workTODAY outs Tuesday and indicated another may be on out yesterday with a swollen right knee, causCentral /ersey, Group II > his way to training camp. ing concern in the training camp of the New Relief pitcher Jerry Johnson was picked York Mets. Rumson-F.II. Regional vs. up by the Cleveland Indians on waivers for The 41-year-old slugger has said a decision Shore $20,000. Johnson, 29, led the National League in on whether he will play during the regular seaRegional at Freehold, H p.m. relief in 1971 with 12 wins but slipped to 8-6 last son will depend on the condition of his knees. South Jersey, Parochial "C" season. His earned run average also dropped St. Rose vs. Sacred Heart. from 2.97 to 4 44. "It is nothing to get alarmed about at this Vineland at Williamstown, 8 The deal left San Francisco with only sec- stage but is something you have to watch," p.m. ond baseman Tito Fuentes still unsigned, but said club physician Dr. Peter LaMotte after TOMORROW negotiator Jerry Donovan said he is expected examinging the outfielder. Central Jersey, Group III to arrive here by car today. Donovan said the The club spokesman said that. Mays and Giants and Fuentes are not too far apart on Rusty Staub, another outfielder, will not make Ocean Township vs. Perth salary terms. the trip to Lakeland, Fla., where the Mels enAmboy at Brookdale Commugage in their first exhibition game tomorrow nity College, 8 p.m. against Detroit. Sooth Jersey, Parochial "B" BEAVER, Pa. (AP) Norm Van Lier, Red Bank Catholic vs. St. star guard for the National Basketball AssociMary's "" ation's Chicago Bulls, has been indicted by a NEW YORK (AP) - Secretariat, the 1972 South Amboy at Keansburg, S grand jury here on charges of assault and batHorse of the Year and the early favorite to win tery, resisting arrest and inciting !o riot. p.m. Van Lier, 25, and his three brothers, were this year's Kentucky Derby, is among 187 FRIDAY three-year-olds nominated for the Belmont South Jersey, Parochial "A" among six defendants named in the indictment handed down Monday in Beaver County Court. Stakes. The Belmont, scheduled for June 9 at BelChristian Brothers Academy The action stems from an incident last vs. Camden Catholic at Lake- July 31 when the basketball player allegedly mont Park, is the final race in the Triple wood, 8 p.m." went to the police station in his hometown of Crown which includes the Derby and the Pre. Midland and accused police of linking him with akness. Central Jersey, Secretariat, who won seven of nine races local drug traffic. He allegedly struck an offiGroup I Finals Henry Hudson Regional vs. cer, left and returned with theVher defend- last year, will make his 3-year-old debut in the seven-furlong Bay Shore at Aqueduct. Freehold at Rutgers Univer- ants to continue the altercation. sity, 8 p.m. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim

Van Lier Indicted

Secretariat Nominated

For more information, phone your local Business Service Center.

New Jersey Be(l

fi T i e Dally Register, Red Bank-MWdletown, N.J. Wednesday, March 7.1573 mm itiffimtamiiimmpniir'''1"1!!"1"'1*"'"1 ' ^mumm""'*m

..

FREE
ANNOUNCEMENTS Lost and Found
POUND Bngle-typc lemalt, tricolor pink leoltitr coNor, In vicinity ot Reid' Hilt Ed,. Morflonvllle. Coll W-<9. L"O*5T Sat. e v e n i n g . B e l f o r d a r r a M wr rtr t bitch, V montfis, rred setter w bitch, ontfis, e REWARD Coll m l s s M r R E W A R D ! C l 78/-88. LOST PUPPY"" M t s s i n g I n R u m s o n Smoky black pup w i t h w h i t e j t r i p e s or " S u k k i " . REWHRO! Coll 747-957C o r 8 ivW I96i IMS 1%5 I9fc3 I9M

Yourself from unwanted or unneeded items by using REGISTER CLASSIFIED ADS ' CYOUR KEY4 1EXTRA?CASH *) ... a l l 7 TO - 6
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I C W ' f E6 AMVTHIM6 HAPPEN I W& l(IIIIIIIII(UlltlIIIIIHIlllllllllllllllllllllltllllIli|IIHilllllllllllilUllUIIUIItllUIIUIHIHaiUUHIHWI Help Wanted Help Wanted Male or Female Male or Female

iiiiimniiiiiiHmnminuiwiniflHHaiuiiiHHiiHiiHiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiuiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiimtniiiiiiuiiiauiiuuiiHBiii

UNDER$500"
Transportation Specials CHEVROLET..
PONTIAC 4-door I BUICK PONTIAC ?door PONTIAC 4 door . FOPO WAGON .. . CHEVROLET..

NOTICE
HELP WANTED READERS AND ADVERTISERS
In compliance w i t h the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination, all Help Wanted Advertising now appears under the combined "Help Wanted Male or Female" column. Relerence to age, sex or marital status may not be expressed, unless a bona tide occupation requirement exists. Information regarding positipns with possible bona fide occupational requirements or clarification of the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination may be obtained by calling the New Jersey Division on Civil Rights, (201) 648-2700, or by writing to 1100 Raymond Blvd., Newark, tJ.J. 07102. Business Notices SLIPCOVERS Help Wanted Male and Female MEDICAL/SURGICAL TECHNICIANS
Ideal opportunity In expanding community hospital. Fulltime, 7 A.M.-3 P.M. Previous orderly or A.M.3 . y i fd first o l d experience preferred. Good v*orklng conditions, liberal benefits. CONTACT PERSONNELDEPT.

Choose now ond save!

RASSAS
Public Notices SKILLED NURSING CARE Rates A l l Inclusive CALL (60V) 394-5181 PONTIAC 741 518. , 3 S Brood St. V Eves, until.*
194* CAMARO SS 191 - i 37 tvp H f o u r j p f f d , lour Craaod m a g i , Mo heoders, Posi reor. Very clean Best of 'er 6M-;3 or 671-2368 1965 RAMBLER Two-doer, very good condition. Call 74; ll/<t offer 6 p m. week doyi ond oil day Sol , Sun.

Autos For Sale

Autos For Sale

Autos For Saie


CADILLAC 1 A Coupe DeVille 9 3 4375. 26 Autumn La., Mlddletown. ___ v 671-0286. i967~NbVA CHEVY In good cond Wnitt. JAOO. '4 E. Highland Ave., Af Highlands. 791-0599.

Trucks for Sale


C H E V R O L E T HA L F T O N P I C K U P 1972 Cheyenne Super, like new. Many extras. Asking 1270O. Call 495 2673 after 5 p.m. 1952 P I C K U P TBUCK ton. Asking S150. Coll 787-9887. ask tor Eddie.

H L Y M O U T H S . 1547. 1968. I960 FORDS, 17. 1968. 1969 WANTED AUTO C R E D I T AUTO CREDIT Porty who needs IM'o financing, with n( Assume payments on any of 100 cars Assume payments on any of 100 cors ir Travel-Transportation money down, Dn o 1968 NOVA. Two dooi stock. C r e d i t a p p l i c a t i o n s a c c e p t e d b slock. Credit opplicohons accepted by phone Ail mokes ond models available. coupe. Power steering. JJ095. For cjjic phone. A l l makes o n d models o v a i l o b l FLORIDA B O U N D credit O K , call OASIS MOTORS at (201 Guorontted credi). For I hour service ci Guaftinteed credit. For l hour sen LARGE TRUCK G O I N G E M P T Y 721-7100. our credit desk now. call ouf credit desks now. INSURED! C A L L 787 IOv< _ I7O-1700 B C 1700 7 196? CHEVELLE MALIBU Twa-dooi lardtop, Gold, black vinyl top, powei CIRCLE1;HVROLT TOP TRADE ALLOWANCE Superb iteerlno., power brakes, air conditioning Red Boi AUTOMOTIVE Mte. DOWNtS PONTIAC, 62 Lowei ew brakes, new shock*. Asking $1600 325 Maple Ave. 741-3I30 n SI .Matawon S66 3299 Coll oiitr j L i l l . i l 6 . Autos For Sole T ^ i v l P E ldorad"o~mariogon' og F & H Motors Inc. ~ 9/0 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ES w i t h rnalchina l rnal hi d l t h e r 83 lop and leather. 8.3 Authorised Dealers, ' TATE WAGON - Very good conditi rnilev MA CADI-OLOS. 222-1234. WANTED MAC Dodge ond Dodge trucks four njfW tires. Call 264-8672 Porty who needs 100% financing, witu n( Hy O S Eo'onfown, N,J THE RNEST"SELECTYdN~^~OI~ne*"ani - money down, on o 1970 D U S T F R . Two 54?-l')ll A FJ-W 1972 MGS LEFT Hurry! A & G used rnr* in Monmouth Courtv. Over I d o o r h o r d l o p . 11095 F o r q u i c k c r e d i Motors, 82 S. Main St., AsDury Pork. 775' o l r - c o n d l t l o n e d n e w c a r s I n s t o c "" "KITSON CHEVROLET CO O K., c o l l 0 A S I 5 M O T O R S o t (201) }J) M c G L O I N B U I C K - O P E L I N C . . Shrew: Hwy 36 Eaiontowr 1493 7100. bury Ave.. New Shrewsbury. 741-6200 542 1000 MURPHY &DAVISON IVM'PONTIAC TEMPEST W A G O N MONMOUTH " , Mercedes Bern Sales and Service KROLL."MOTORS, "INCT Six-cylinder, Good transportation. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 27? Broadway Long Branch Hwy. 9 Freehold 442-53W Phone 747-1112, Hwy 36 Eotontown 547-5SC 177 3600 1971 I M P A L A Two-door, w i t h o i r cond VOLKSWAGEN 1969 - Blue bug. Mint R E D "BANK" V O L V O 1M6OLDSMOBILE LUXURY SEDAN loning. 26,000 m i l e s . S73OO. Coll after condition. Automatic, slick. Radio, heat Newmon Springs Rd. Red Bom Good condition. 1300. er, m o w l l r e s w i t h r i m s , s k i rock and i m, 717-0543. 741-5886 ? 7329e\y:nlngs. reor window defroster. Coll ottpr / p m 196t~V OL K~S W AGE;N~B 0G~^-~AuTomo I:t SEE A ~ " R U S S E L L " M A N P > ~ F " O Y the bes W-53W. uys. RUSSELL Oldsrnobile-Cadillai 967 JAGUAR XKE ROADSTER Very ransmljsion. A M / F M , snows. Looks and uns great. W50. After 5 p.m. 747-SOfcO. Co.. 100 Newman Springs R d . , Red Bonk 1970 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE - Dork clean. New top. 3 9 i . BA1LLY BRO^ 741-0910 NC. 19 E Newman Springs R d . , Red .preen. Air conditioned Fully eatipprd B U G E Y E SPRITE Excellent condition. 38.000 miles. $3400. Bonk. 74/0596. scEtmrcAR" SALE'S Excellent condition. Reosonoble. .Coll otter 5 p.m., 542-6638. Quality cors bought and sold. CARRYALL 1964 Dodge'l00 Sport Von Call 787-5602 19*5>~ONfTAC~~Nhe possenoer station Carpeting, cuttoms. Very good condition. Hwy 36 Highlands 872-02 VOUK'SWAG'EN CONVERTIBLEI9TY~woaon. Stondord shift, uoo. I V J. 291-0M7. __ SHREWSBURY MOTORS 8600 miles. One owner. Excellent ronrJt Coll 671-0545. Shrewsbury Ave. Shrewsbur $ i ; W . 671 0027. 1964 PONTIAC 80NNEVIL1.P 741-8500 1964 T H U N D E T R B T R D ~~Very ood condi- Engine ond transmission perfect. S D ?O 1969 VOLKSWAGEN We Buy Used Volkswogens tion. C'fom color. J5O0. m. 391O65/. Excellent condition. S900. Call & 7 JEEP SALES A N D SERVICE Calt 74).2663 1967 OPEL WAGON - ExcelVnj clutch Twin floro M o t o r s , Inc. ond 11 res. N epds mm of t r o n i m m i o n AAA AUTO CREDIT 131 E. Newman Springs Rd. Red Boi roke work. *300 lirm. 642 4SB1. Assume payments on any of 100 cars in Please coll 7J1-5881 after 4 p m . CA L L TOW 747004 " [iOW 7470040 1970 P L Y M O U T H F U R Y I I I Power stock. Credit applications accepted by O L J j S G E ^ r s O U A R " EBAC K 1 9 M ~ ~WALL""L I NCOL'ITM I R cu R Y " phone. All mokes and models available New paint job. tires, ond brakes. Radio, Makes, power steering, air conditioned, Shrewsbury Ave. at Sycamore inyl roof. Excellent condition. (1900. Col' Guaranteed credit. Coll for 1 hour ser whitewolls. Coll 747-1490 evenings. Shrewsbury, N.J. vice. Bayshore Chrysler-Plymouth. 71-3257 after 6. 747-5400 670-1700

Sofa, 540. Choir, J22. Vou supply the fabeH do the rest. Guaranteed workUll D i/er equip O \W> CHEVROLET , ton, plumber 5 monship. 671-2384. ment. 60,000 original >s. C01 iplete new t t A l h y INCOME TAX'RETURN'S ~Business and broke |ob. Asking 1600. 7B7-53O9 . Asking 11850. 566-4509: personal returns, payroll laxes, W-2, etc BuYCK^~)968~Skyiorii. Four-door hord Corporation and partnerships. Over 20 V O c u top. Air, automatic, power steering, viny yrs. Middletown area. AAorgery Trovato With camper, extros. Good buy! interior. $1200. Call 671-iS64 i/o Reliable Tax Service. Coll tor appointColl 2 9 H ment, 671 1209. r96T^RTN"6~PR"rx"^TKreilVnll"conB lion. All power and air conditioning. Bes FOiTo5D~JOBS AND"QUICK SERVICE ofier. 747-9119 Motorcycles Attics ond cellars cleaned. Junk re moved, light hauling. No 1963 CHEVROLET Automatic, six-cy iipMH/rDTYEiio&oT9n Coll 7417633 between 3 and job too small 7. inder. Mechanically sound. $250. HOLSCLAW trailer (two r o i l ) . Belt hel._ _ _ 495-1784 _ _ mel, full bore boots, tools, complete, $800. 66TJ JOBS - ^ Additions, pane Una. Al Call 264-1736 alter 1 p.m. ond all day Sat- types ot masonry. Driveways. Coll 495i w f C h f E V ROLET~C XPn\Q~^~\n~tx urday. 0189, 787-1608. cellent condition. Best offer. 747-106* i i O D A K A " T f i V 6n7y~4"82"mMes7 ' TOCA'L'MOVING" ~ ^ Estimates given. Reasonable. 1963 FOUR-DOOR V A L I A N T Good like new. CaM 542 4376 oiler 4 p.m. 842-4193 t i r e * and healer. Good transportation J200. 741-4530. R E M O D ~ E ' L I N G " ' - ' P a i n t i n g . " pane I ing YAMAHA sheetrock onrj taping, concrete biocn ond 1ile w o r k . Free' estimates. 787-3721. WANTED

892-1100 POINT PLEASANT HOSPITAL

SALES-PARTS-SERVICE

Autos For Sale

Autos For Sole

963 VOLKSWAGEN SEDAN Good con Iflon. 65 Von engine, |usl rebuilt. Best ot 'er, Calt 442-2376. 1968 G T O Red convertible. Good condition. S9S0. 675-0189 or 671-0375

DATSUN WASHINGTON'S AUTO SERVICE 570 Broad St. 264-1323 Keyporl AUTO CREDIT PROBLEMS OS NO CREDIT AT ALL? Coll 22V-4790

MONMOUTH MAZDA
Asbury Park Test drive the only ROTARY ENGINE car sold in the Country.

"ARTHUR M U R R A Y " 1969 RENAULT 16 t o w mileoge. 1973 expansion program starting now. Good condition. Reasonable. Tractors Help Wanted Openings for donee teachers, junior inter264-4358. Porty who needs 100o linoncinn, wilh n I N T E R N A T I O N A L T R A I L E R TRACTOR viewers, receptionist. Also telephone Male and Female money d o w n , on a 1969 B U I C K SK 968 PONTiA(f C A T A Y T N A Wagon! Ful Model R200. New engine. $1500. work available. Part-time evenings. No l7 BUICK LfSABRE CUSTOM Four- L A R K . Two-door h a r d t o p . A i r com power, air conditioned. Excellent condi Coll 367-2235 experience necessary. Salary plus bonus. l o o r s e d n n . P o w e r s t e e r i n g , p o w e r tionlng. $1495. For quick credit O.K., cal tion. 51250. 566JW11. This can be your opportunity to join largOASISMOTORSat (2011 721-7100. rakes, rodlo. air conditioning, new tires. est and fostest growing dance chain In the 1970 DAfSU"N 510 "wogon. Showroom Jses regular gas. Good condition. Call 1967 FALCON FUTURA WAGON Slai world. Apply In person, 1 to 10 p m. dolly, condiiion. Four-speed floor shitt Ask WontedftutomotWe "**>* _ 1 Brood 5t., Red Bank. /4I-5858. 2 dard transmission, six-cylinder, 22 mill J1475 or reasonable offer. 542-2961 ony per got. Excellent body and motor. Need: lime. SIRAUB BUICK-OPEL JUNK C A R S " clutch. $250. 495 0,679. NINE ACRES of New ond Used Cors 1965 DODGE 383 Power steering and 1 PICKEDUP f969"350"cAM AR"O wy3 ^ i 0 0 0 Drakes. Completely overhauled. J450. 671Twinbrook Auto Wrecking Good condition. S1595 (712. M i n i m u m 10 years experience. Call 787-1596 Wanted Automotive Also experienced carpenter's helper. Eatontown 542-2235 1969 I M P A L A "Autom~oticr~Four~-door. Alterations run complete job1967 V O L K 5 W A G E N With 1969 engine. Jood condition. Asking S1000. H i g h e s t p r i c e s p a i d f o r a l l used c a r s For local newspaper. Must Hang doors, t r i m , partitions. * Good transportation. (800. O v t R W H O L E S A L E ! Buyer on premises be accurate with figures and 536-3693 Coll 741-1144 ofter / p.m. Coll otter 6 p.m. only 787 471! ot a l l times. able to type well. 37V? hour 963~ T H \ J I ' N 6 E R B T R D J U S T I N TOWN S, COUNTRY DODGE "VOLKSWAGEN KARMANN~GYfiA"!963 BE A UT11Ci IAN PECTED. NEW BRAKE DRUMS, week, Monday through 566-6100 NEW B R I G H T O R A N G E P-AINT JOB. HOES. RUNS P E R F E C T . S25O. 7 * 1 only. Top salary. WE NEED USED CARS RUNS V E R Y GOOD. $350. 741-4243 Friday. Liberal fringe ben- Full time. Experienced 1872 Hwy 35, AA'ldI 9 6 5 T T N " C 0 L N " C O N T I N E N T A L 50.000 G E T ~ C A S H ~ F 6 V Y O U R F O R E I G N " Renown Beauty Solon, A N D S P O R T 5 CAR5 AT M O N M O U T H Exclusive Monmouth County Dealer. 1965 CORVAIR WE WILL PAY tes. N e w tires and brakes, S800. 642-8')8. MOTORS, I N C . , Hwy 35, Eotontown/542- e f i t s . Call M r s . Blaufus at dletown. 671-9869. $150 741-0010 between 8:30 and 5 ttoys or 222-3473. iANCE X J N D E T R W R T T E ^ " L a r g e 2*14 747 3W( otter 5 p m TOP PRICES commercial Insurance agency seeking Inp.m. "r966"'BUG""~EKceMcn dividual with experience in policy w r i t i n g ROVER SEDAN 1967 TC 2000' Hove y a y M5 ond r a t i n g . M a x i m u m salary a v a i l a b l e . use tor some. Musi sell. Price negotiable Autq_ PartsRepair Sunset A-.c . Asm,-,-Pairi.N J. 542-2040 Cor necessary fo ond f r o m work. Ptease "Ml 7447 coll Howard Prevllle at 531-5100. 776-6,7 I 9 7 1 C A M A R O R A L L Y E S P O R T A u t o - 426 H E M I 13.5 TRW pistons, bored .020 As|i.;r,|";i'k over, balanced, Cloyci t i m i n g gear, Isky matic, power steering, vinyl top,wide DE ~N~fAL"AS SIS TA," NT" C ho l~r side" Vx~ Autos For Sale Autos For Sale cam i h o l t and volve t r a i n . Hoods ported tires ith sport h l n o s E c l SECRETARY pcrlence preferred but not necessary. Red , C.C.'d, W i l o d o n pan, o i l pump and feed n. ondition. $2350. . 6711867. sysicm- chromed hooVer H coders, Weber Steno and typing skills should be strong, Bank area. Send resume to Box H-86, The 68FbRD S 6 U I H E W A G 6 N A i r , f u Flywheel, recurved distributor, two intoke a n d a b i l i t y t o h a n d l e f i n a n c i a l d a f o Dally Register, Red Bank, N.J. wer. E x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n . 11650. Call manifolds, rebuilt corburetors, valve cov needed. Fine benefits and delightful sur"BOO KKE~EPTR / CL'ERTCAT , w a t e r p u m p s , o l h e r s , e t c . AM (oi "Ountlings. 1-2555. We ore looking for someone with book. Coll 7B/-1 \!2. keeping and clerical experience to work ]965"VOLK~5WAG E N C O N V E R T I B L E In our Cosh Management Deparlmcnt. r Radio. New gcneralor, .brakes. S500. Call ~" MAGS U"xr W i l l h a n d l e cosh r e c e i p t s o n d d i s A-l EMPLOYMENT 842-8756 Call otter 5 p.m. bursements. Typing helpful- Ideal person 3?0 Brood 51. 741 1m Red Bonk 747-3529 Ml h a v e s o m e banK o p e r a t i o n e x WA NT E b~~ perlence. Call Mr. Thorne, Triangle InPART-TIME DRIVER dustries I r e , 946-8500. An equal opporlu'Orty w h o needs 100% financing, with no ilty employer. loney d o w n , Dn o 1968 V O L K S W A G E N Mon. thru F r i . 9 o,m. to 2 p.m. Auto Rentals 37,000 m i l e s . 5-995. For quick credit O.K. The Daily Register coll OASIS MOTORS at (2011 72,-M00. lircutaUon Dept. 741-3334 STORE" R6ty^HELPER7^-~Ba.niTio~o6 ""'TOM'S FORD" p.m. Must be alert, conscientious and be CicROWA"VE~T""ECH'"N'\"CYAN - E*" able to lift and move heavy boxes. Apply RENT A CAR 1967 C H E V E L L E SS 427 - 500 plus h p. perienced w i t h R F m e a s u r e m e n t tech- Personnel Dept., Jersey shore Medical D A I L Y ' RENTALS AND LEASING Hurst, L a k e w o o d , Edlebrock, Accel), 264-1600 KEYPORT niques. E l e c t r o I m p u l s e L a b , I n c . 116Center, Cor lies Ave., Neptune, weekdays Hooker, ond much m o r e . M n l condition. 200 HWY 35 Chestnut St.- Red Dank. A n E q u a l Op 12000 t i r m . 787-3232. io 2 p.m. Equal opportunity employer, portunlty Employer. i96'~C6Xl^G7AR 28? Four-speed Radio, E N E R A L M A I N T E N A N C E Day ".hilt. E L C TRONIC 1E C H N IC I A~N" ~ E 7 " BOATS AND icoter, 65.000 miles. Body l a i r . S575. Coll ttnenccd. Knowledge of power supplies Unron scole, paid vcicalion, paid holidays, rfter^A, 741-2924^ _ inri SCR's requifed. Paid vocation and hoACCESSORIES VOUWON'T pension and hnspitalnation. Apply Rollo idays. Apply in person, 8 o.m, to 4 p.m., " * ~ C O R V E T T E 1969 Two tnps. uckinq, 79S Broadway* Kt'ypoit, Aov. to F r i . Electronic Measurements Four-speed, 350 cu. in., 350 h.p. FIND A O F F I C l f W O R K E R For b o o k k e e p i n g no, 405 Essex Rd., Neptune New and Used Sailboats 431 1181 Seven foot t h r o u g h 26 l o o t on d i s p l a y ; deportment o( loco! concern. Musi be acBETTER DEAL 1964 JEEP With sno- plow Sunflower 11'. Koralle ST, Pintail U ' , DS curate with figures, neat, and able to type. PARTY PLAN - Earn extra cash' while 11500 . Siren 17', Typhoon 18', Enslnoda 2O1. Reply In own h o n d w n l i n t ) to Bo> A-133, iqhtinq w n t e r p o l l u t t o n Full t r a i n i n g , Reply ANYWHERE 2 loll Mon. through Fri., 4 Io 6 p.m., -291Hurley 20', DS 2! 1 , Tamer Call 291.-4249 evening's. The Dioily Register, Red Bank. /37. _ 23', Essex 26', ond many others. 7964 FORD GAL AX IE N F E O E D Mole sinners, ultos, tenors. M O N M O U T H 5 A I L I N G CENTER Onp owner. 34,000 ongiral r DF^IVFR - Apply in person. bosses. Cnnlocl M r . Smith at 51 1 Georcie'i West St., Monmouth Beoch, 222 3492 741-76S9 . Ben's Car Wash Church, 8420596. After -I p m., Si ) 9469. Rojte 35, Mlridletown C O M P L E T E RIGGING SERVICE IDEAL TRANSPORTATION MCCHANIC Chevrolet von. Good condition Best offer. REAL "ESfATE*SALES - Ucensed'prefSwoglng-N i copress Heavy equipment Contact Boh Anglrv. /41--131?. days (erred. Aggressive growing office reCall 5W-4I7D alter 6 p m. BOATMAN'S SHOP cpjlres o large stafl due to expansion pro: 9 6 9 * : R O A O R U N N E " R 383 ' - " A u t o m a l i r . New Jersey's Lorgeit RN -'-"weekends., 8 am.-4 [i.m Top s o l a ' prarn. Only interested in salespeople deMany e x t r a s Not stock. Needs body M f i r i n * Sunniv Hmnp> ous of earning nver S20.000 per year. ry. B A Y V I E W NURSING HOME work. S600 will take it this month. Call <i Wharf Ave. 7-11-5780 Red Bonk Office leads, extensive advertising natlrjnCall 291-0440 264-7937. al referral service. Member ol two MLS", training progran'. All replies field in stricOYOTA CORONA 1949. Automatic SPORTCRAFT Boston Whaler, O M C , 4 Dr., H I , Medium Green, Vinyl Interior, WAITRESS W.'W lostron Sea Craft, Jotinson, M c r c r u K c r test confidence, Send resume fo Box G77, transmission Four-door sedan, Excellcnl CASHIER. R E F E R E N C E S , . , . , Vinyl Rool, White Walls, Front & Rear Bumper Volvo Boot Trailers PRE SPRING O U T . The Dolly Register, Red Bank. -"JK.-condition. S750. 739-0071. M a r t i n i ' s Diner, Hwy 36. Kcansbura. Ginger Metal Glow Paint, 400 C.I.D. Engine, F I T T I N G S P E C I A L SALE M a r i n e Guards, Air Cond., Radio, Tinted Glass, Wheel MATURE PERSON _ > u i l or part-time. 6 R D ~ V A ~ N " 1964" "Windows' New" tn 25% oft, Coast Guard approved l i r e White Walls, Convenience Group, Front & Rear C H O O L B U S O H I V E R S - N o e x - Management career potential wilh o new Covers, 351 C.I.D. Engine, Stock No. N236, Was Paneling inside. Good condition. Must e x t i n g u i s h e r , r e g u l a r 19.95, sole 56 99. perience necessary Starling volrify 5? S O Bumper Guards, air Cond., Radio, Tinted sell S625 Call 747 9555. Also, life jackets, regular w.?5, sole S3 75, er hour. Apply in person to M r . Michael aggressive corporation. Coll 671-5352 or S4.809.44 634-2334 Ask for Mr. Chambers or Mr. } n y l o n r o p e 100 , 59.95. P A C K A G E D Glass. H.D. Battery, Deluxe Wheel Covers. 'Ormley, Administrative Assislant, Hai- Tharaldsen. OSOBLe 8 j DEALS. t Township Boord of Education, B2 BcihStock No. N281, Was S5.596.00 . Runs good Coll 264 8247 ariY R d . , Hattct, N.J JA"NTTd"R"W/W"-'B*rtobrt",~wttMDCoi FLAGSHIP MARINE cferences, l o t small office building. 967 RENAULT R 1 Automatic. Ex- M u n i c i p a l M a r i n e Basin, Atlantic H i g h 0 S3 TO SI5 PER HOUR Hours, 2 p rn. to 8 p.m., Nvt days. Reply rellent condition. Cruises ot 60 mph. Ap- lands. 291-2638. Positions open part or full time. Box A-126. The Ooily Register, Red Bonk. oximately 27 mile* to the gallon. Rad o For interview call 9-iA 447Q. 4' ALUAAI N U W T l O A T W i t h 25 h . p . REAL ESTATE SALES - - C o m m e r c i a l , es. Ayking W95 or reosonoble offer. 542 ohnson, end trailer, two years old S75O l d u s t r i a l , ond tdnd only, Locol estab:OOK Part-time, lamHIor with l l o l i o n 2961 any time. :a\\ 787-495^ _ shed tirm opening new oltice tor this :ooWino. W A I T R E S S or W A I T E R , part. Apply R i c h a r d ' s , 6^0 Shrewsbury purpose Must have license and some ex0' E G G H A R B O R 1956 SPORT P I S H perience Send resume Io Bo* K 2J, The , New Shrewsbury. 042-8546. WANTED R M A N F l y bridge, new twin ChrysDally Register, Red Bank ' 'arty who needs 100% financing., with no l e r s , o u t r i g g e r s . I m m a c u l a t e . A s k i n g HAVE F U N And corn S3.40 on hour ser 4 Dr^ H.T., 460 C.I.D Engine, Vinyl Root, White 4 Dr.. H.T., 460 C.I.D. Engine, Vinyl Roof, White loney down, on a 1970 FORD COUNTRY V45OO, Coll 542-4412. DENTAL ASSISTANT " " : " * vicing Fuller Brush customers near home Q U I R E W A G O N . Air conditioning. 51995. Walls, Convenience Group, Front & Rear Walls, Convenience Group, Front & Rear Experienced chair -.!de assistant wanted Nr31fRLIN~G ~~~fs" Warshofl cafboat :aH_264-3B22 or 583-1033 or quick c r e d i t O K . , call OASIS M O lor modern dental practice In Red Bonk copd'lion. GooO facing record. S39OO Bumper Guards, Air Cond,, Radio, Tinted Bumper Guards, ftir cond., Radio, Tinted ORS ot 12Q1) 721-7100. ! A r c you bored? Want to be w i t h area. Coll 842 3303 l 7470572 Glass, Medium, Copper Metallic, Stock No. Glass. Medium Blue Metallic, Stock No. N38, people o l your leisure ond earn extra cash 965 P L Y M O U T H F U R Y V E R Y ... L SKIFF - Enclosed hardtop, lool Coll now tor I n f o r m a t i o n . Call 56ft ~OFFEE~SHO~P WAFTRESS"M/W"-~6Ver L A N . J U S T I N S P E C T E D , R U N S N166, Was S5.227.82 Was S5.J27.82 09 Gray. A-l condition IB. Experienced. 5 p m to 2 a.m. jhlft. 3723, 787-5746 or 583-156/. O O D 5285 OR BEST OFFER 741 4243. 264-349S Apply In person, Short Point Inn, Hwy 3 i , 962 C H E V R O L E T WAGON 283 AutoU L L A N D P A R T - T I M E H E L P F o r lazlet. "\NOOD PUSSY - Fiberglov " c w 1 < 'nodern a u t o m a t a car wash. P a r t - t i m e D? nolle, power steering, PositracTion gears. o w s w i t h wheels. N e w shocks. Needs lano] soil, new mast, trailer. 1850. C a l ! hours, 9 to I, or I to 5 weekdays, a l l day COU NT E R " H E ' L P - D r y c Fe~on Iri g " e T Saturday, 8:30 to 1 Sunday. Apply In per- perience. i2 per hour. Betty Brlte Clea;houst system and tune up. 1170. 291-2040. W2-B23/ after 5:30 p m. - n , S c r u b - o D u b Car Wosh, C a m b r i d g e iers, 475 Hwy 35, Mlddletown, N.J. ~"~196>"PONTIAC~BON'NEV"ILL"E ive and Route 34, Motawan. . BIGGEST SAVINGS X"P E R I E NCE"D~dPE"RAT O R~s" "-"F^o r Wogon. A i r , full power. S800. women's sportswear. Apply Jonathan LoBUSINESS NOTICES E L E P H O N E ORDER CLERKS Part- jan, 1 Johnson Ave., Motawan. 566-9383. Call 671-1591 SALE OF THE YEAR! 19s 19o6 r^OR V AIR Oood transportoion 4 Dr., H.T.. 351 C.I.D. Engine, snd commissions, Work in Red Bank. P r i ICE SKATES More Classified 73 FORD PICKUPS Asking 1150. vate desk ond telephone, F o r i n t e r v i e w Vinyl Interior, Vtnyi Roof, White SHARPENED 2 Dr 2000 cc Engine, Cruisamatic Phone 671-2011. :ontact M r . Seal, 741-3334, ofler 5 p.m. on Next Page Little Silver Repair Center, 7470573 Walls, Front 8. Rear Bumper

BUHLER 1 BITTER 967 XKE JAGUAR ROADSTER RePLYMOUTH CHRYSLER entfy overhauled. New top, new brakes, Hoilet. 264 019 iew tires. A M / F M radio. Low mileage. 3290 Hwy 35, 'SOO. Must sell, moving. 747 4428. 1972 DART S W I N G E R B l u e . Powe 1968 BUICK LeSotore two-door hardtop. steering, air; automotlc, tinted windows Automatic transmission, power steering rodlo, healer. 12600. 73V-O5I9, evenings al ood condition, SW5. 671-5385 between 9 ler 6 p.m. ,m. - noon, Qnd weekends. 1964 RAMBLER AMBASSADOR ~ S200 Coll ?87-73

Party who needs 100% financing, with " Largest Stock o( money down, on a 19/0 MAVERICK, T Yamaha Ports In New Jersey door coupe. Automatic. J139S. For qu credit O.K , col! OASIS MOTORS at (301 J&R CYCLE SERVICE 7217100. __ R i d Bonk 8-0) t969 C H E V R O L E T CAPRICE Fou 171 W . F r o m St. door hordlop. Automatic, power and a H O D A K A 100-B-f E x t r o knobpiei tool kit. ond workshop manual. S300. Coll 842Good condition. J1500. Coim/-57B4. 1850. UE 1971 hT0NDA~cC356 ^ x c e l i e n f Relioble transportation. 3)25 condilion Extros. S6O0. Call 872-1104 Coll 671-3257 atler p ^ . V O L 1 : S W A G E " N ~ F A ' S T B T C K ~ - 197l7 Lik 1 9 6 I C U S T O M C H O P P E O H A R L E Y DA new condition. Fully automatic, air cond tioned, radio) many extroj. S2295. 671-1631 VIDSON $3000 or best ofter. Colt otter p.m. 946-8601. i 961"BUTC"KTPOR T"WAG O~N ^ ^ wKi F e with wood trim. Ajtomottc, power steer ing, A M / F M radio, electric tailgate win Mobjle Homes dow. Call ofter 5 p.m. 4621462. GA~RD~EN P A " R K ~ M O B T L E H O M E S l97O~CA"DT"LTAC iToTdToprsVdan Oe Bethany R d , . olf Hwy 35. H a l l e l . Walk t VtHe, fully equipped, 28,000 miles. Ex shopping areas. 2643911. cellenl condition. Phone 6710057. I^VJ^GTETRXLTE (T Tox55,7wo bed 1^brLLCETDORb6COU rooms, carpeting. Has every option Cadillac offers. BrewsColl 264 10341 ter green/beige lop. Coll 842-3052. 1968 C H E V R b r F r w T N p i 5 w " V A N ^ Ex l~969T2x70 T W b " B E b R O O ' M M O B I L E HOME Musi be moved f r o m lot. 14500. cellent condition. Six-cylinder engine. 7B7-9O60. Call 264-254?. BILE HOMF~~55'X]0'. two bedroom' t 9 6 9 C H E V R O t E T W A G O N - Grea Furnished. Very good condition. Stoys o shape. 27,000 miles. Power brakes on< the lot. $2500. 872-1484. steering. 11650. 671-4103.

I'LL^R^-ROOF YOUR HOUSE And to, no extra cost to you. I'll cover the roke moldings with white aluminum up to 100' 787-3542 e e i Call 7 2 evenings.

D I S A P P E A R I N G ATTIC STAIRS - Fur nl5hed and installed for only S44.95. To or Very high h o u r l y r a t e s . W o r k In your d,er, call 349-0863. area F E D E R A L , l i f A T E T C I TY "INCOM'E'~TAX Prepared In vour home.

STATISTICAL COPY DICTAPHONE

TYPISTS

ALTERATIONS
Dormers, porches, stoirs, additions, etc. Free estimates. Insured. Reasonable. I do the job my5elt. Call J i m , /76 87M. C A " R * P E N ' t E R " WI I f d o~aTt"e r o l l o n 5; remodeling, and paneling. Free estimates Call 671-4766. H A U L I N G Furniture moving. Attics, basements, cleaned, junk r e m o v e d . To( service. 495-1076 or 4%>-20?4 JOBBING R E P A I R S P A I N T I N G CALL 842-1979 U N W A N T E D FURNITWRE P I C K E D UP Free of charge. Prompt service. 49S 1076 or 495 2024

OLSTEN

TEMPORARIES 117 Rt. 35, Eatontown. W2-530O. (Vi mile north of the Monmouth Shopping Center) WE ALSO H A V E A P E R M A N E N T D E P T . ALL FEE PAIO POSITIONS.

~GUYS/VETS/GALS~ TRAVEL CALIF.


Neat, six high school grads, or betfer. Training ot company expense. Permanent. Free to travel Immediately. ColHornla, Florida ond return; osslst sales manager. Excellent salary, bonus ' o - i t a r t , transportation paid and company benefits. Earn JI78S325 weekly. For oppolntmeni coll Mr. Seger. 212-868 5342, 9;30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.

EMPLOYMENT

WANTED

SEMI ANNUAL

DEMO SALE
4 in stock

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE CLERK

"^ARPE"NTERT

"CASHPAi6"

MONMOUTH MAZDA

TO NTS FORD

73 FORDS at '72 PRICES

LTD ^COUNTRY SQUIRE

*4605 35

$397512

LTD BROUGHAM

LTD BROUGHAM

M299 26

>4309"

LTD

W.W... Radio, Accent Group, Rear Bumper Guards, Slock No. 370.

*2598

Guards, Air Cond., Radio, TmJcd Glass, Wheel Covers, Daik Grc.'n Metallic. Stock No. NU2. Was S4.809.44

3975

i967FORD'FAlRLANENeiirtv Good condition. W50 Cal! afler 4 p.m. 7,7-1353 71 OPEL V o d e f J l D . Autoniolic. Unr 12.0OQ m i l e s . Only S1.600. Call 471-158? R t c tahon. New sno lirss. I5O. Call 671 17 3 ?59 PORSCHE In excellent condition. lest offer. Coll 779-0385 H P Y l , L E R r N E W P b R f - W o g o n T 1963' 'ower, eight-track New t i r e s . Good l a p * . 1275 Call /4/-VGS6 66 V O L K S W A G E N 5unroof Radio ounfed studded snow tires plus extra set tires on r i m s . SS50 Coll 747-OC3B 196? PONT I AC, Very good condition. J30Q. Phone 747 9582 .

CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORY


A HANDY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR MANY NEEDS Adding Machines Typewriters
ADDIMf. MACHINES - T r p c w r l i t T l sold, renled. rccrairtd Strplco's. 101 Mon nvjyth S' , R^ Bonk. T7^M*5

GRAN TORINO
4 Dr., H.T., -560 C.I.D. Engine, Vinyl Roof, White Walls- Convenience Group, Front & Rear Bumper Guards, Air Cond., Radio, Tinted Glass., Medium Blue Metallic, Stock No. N38,
351 CID Engine, High Back BucKCt Seats, Vinyl Roof. Cruisamatic, W.W., P.S , Power Front Disc Brakes, Deluxe Bumper Group. Air Cond., Radio, Tinted Glass. Stock No. n List S4.43J.47 $

Generol Contractors

Painting & Decorating

C A R P E N T R Y Rernod7l[ro~,~p(jneHn0. 'CARL 6 JONES PolntTng"orvj"wahno c i o i r r t . doors, oddlllonj Odd | o b i R r o looorjlr rotes M3 *JI5

3975

12

3827

Landscaping
LAND6CAPING. LAWN CARE. I D E E WORK Over 2 yean experience. Coll 5

Alterations
A L T E R A T I O N S Additions, a l l Ivpes ot carpentry A Bruce Eigenrouch. Builder Coll M3-38M otter S p m .

- PAPER HANGING No lob too small FRANK E. W H I T I N G

U\Ktl

TOM'S1600 FORD 264


KIYPORT

rs, snow rires on r i m s . i395. Call 6 / 1 -

Hmouslne Service
ARROW L I M O U i l N E SERVICE CodMiocj ond C h r y i l e n tor all o c c o j l o n i f U 1 % 3 U

Pearl and Bead Rcstrlnglng


tlv on oroldW n v l i n . 11.50 o~Sfona

CIOCKS and

Watch Repair Trucks for Sale


73 F O R D ' j ton pickup V-8. outomot, traction lock reor, Ziebart ruitproofRodto. Like new, 2.000 miles. Many as. S27OO. 747-22BB. '7OTNT ERN ATIOVUL 'JTTON" P ICTUP" Encellent condition. 11700 or best otter. 1113*7-2235. J2 F A L C O N V A N F o r ports or whofer. Coll o f i t r 6 p m A71-036J
72 T O Y C T T " A ~ P 1 C:K U " P ~ ^ T P i o n T " E * K

Antique Clocks, watches, line (ewelry e pefilv oone Ooo Pons Jewelers. ?w River Rd . Fair Hoven t-i57

Odd Jobs
LIGHT M A U L I N G C e l l a r ! , a o r a f l r i c'wned up f-re n t l m o f e i ?41 2119 oner 3 p m '

Commercial Art
SIGM L * H G U G E - We m o l t slons. poiters. custom art ond livers Wot speoh *6f you. Coll 2W-AO9I or Ult1\I

Roofing, Siding * Insulation


OLSON CO. - ROOFING AND SIDING Installed ortd Quorantttd for 1 yon , H 0 0 O -iNI-54lft. 7S

LightTtouling and Moving Pointing A Decorating


INTERIOR PAINTING. PAPERING

UMfll

"Monmouth County's Live Wlrr Roartfi' SctclQIISIs - rttwfrs. Ihlnglt or>

i.W ROOFING

UhSii

Diamonds Bought or Restyled

Slip Covers
CUSTOM M A D E SLIP COVERS~^~zIoT

Hent c o n d i t i o n . Four speed t r o n j i i l o n . Block v i n y l i n t e r i o r . Tinted 'oss. Six-ploy Urn. Excellent deal. Call 17-1087 doyv 495-2604 otter 6 p m .

Brush ond sproy Also wall Let \n buy Ttte dlomondi you don't wear I P A I N T I N G 542-0779 ot it u i r u t y l e them for you p t r i o n o l l y popcrlng Call for fret estimate Sod ScXotllncr UMIM R e u i i l l l e V . 36 Brood St.

Help Wanted, Male of Female

TEMPORARY
ypUN
STfcNOS BOOKKEEPER: TVFIS1 DICTAPHOtll

4 W. Front 312 Moln

MANPOWER
Red Bank * Asbury Pork

S42-4341 776-557;

Hlp Wanted Help Wonted Male QndFemale Male and Female PHOTO TYPESETTING TOWN AND COUNTRY COMPANY FASHIONS INC. t . IN SHREWSBURY Are now I n this! area. W e ore seeklna NEEDS: PRINT OUT MA- nwnagers anH stylists ltou stK> *he b f i l !!5J '" a r l 1 ' CHINE OPERATORS for !| 2 jDj fi , > and thep most P w - Outstanding * hostess plan ! ? X s h l f t and night shift. ,'" '.business, assureliberalcommissions. nlgd BONUS! Start Immedlatfly. .PISTS, experienced. 55 1100 In FREE FASHIONS. No Quollly for experience, . daV shift and night no Investment, free wardrobe twice a Also, earn a tree trip to Vegas. - - - - P A R T - T I M E HOURS w a r .personal Interview ask tLos M a r g e For or ALSO AVAILABLE. CALL Glemia, Howard Johnson's. Rte 35 ot Asbury Tues., V r fOR APPOINTMENT FOR p.m.. circle on a r . 7, 9 oo. m. .6.12 noon to 9o Wed., M to 1 p.m. N INTERVIEW 747-5880. Phone calls please.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

By Bil Keane

H e Daily Register, Red Baak-MMffletown, N.J. Wednesday, March 7, W7J 23


Help Wanted Male and Female INSTRUCTION/
LEARN TO DRIVE Tractor trailer or operate heavy eoulpnenf. Coll JOI-534U'A. American Training Service, LEARM HYPNOSIS - Am) seK-hypnosll. New course forming. Intrcduciorv lesson offered (no charge). For Information coll 671*2600. SEWING CLASSES For beginners and intermediates. Morning or evening hourt. Call 747-2W. ADDITIONAL INSTRUCTION - E l perlenced teacher, master's degree, will tutor after school ond evenings. 7X1-6X6. CREATE YOUR OWN POTTERY On wheel. Evening classes. Children's dosses Saturday. To register, call 739-9427.

TELLER
Aitrt, ptrfonabte, good at rigurts. Banking, cashier, or similar experience meet Ing public preferred. Excellent location, Foil paid beneflls.

fbr Sale ITEMSYOU NO LOMGER NEED OR USE WILL. . .

A-l EMPLOYMENT
320 Brood St. 741-2232 Red Banl

Full time. Excellent opportunity (or oc vancement. Full benefits. Company dl] countj.

SALES

PERGAMENT
Hwy 35 ond Poole Ave. IMMEDIATE - Hazl CALL 291-15;

CAFETERIA HELP
S E C R E T A R Y - R E C E P T I O N I S T Ful l l m t i Typing, light stena, goad phoi voice. Small office. Call 842-SO90. NURSES' AIDES 7 lo 3 and II to 7 Fu time. Excellent benefits. Apply in perso 10 to 4 p . m . , A r n o l d - W a l l e r Nursln Home, 622 So. Lourel Ave., Hailel. NURSES' A I D E S A l l shifts. Emer Manor Nursing. Home, Matawon, N.J ~ MOO.

Top salary. All benefits. ,. CAPPLY IN PERSON M. SCHWARTZ & SONS 141 w . Front St., Red Barft
L w

AUTO AND/OR TRUCK MECHANIC

OBSTETRICS CHARGE NURSE


, I I P.M. TO 7 A . M . Previous labor-delivery room experience essential. Excellent personnel policy. Contoct Nursing Office, Rlvervlew Hospital, Red Bank. /Jl-2700, Ext. 227..

F u l l - t t m e l o b a v a l l o b l e as Supei visor/Administrator tor security firm. EJ perlence preferred. M00Q a year to start, plus auto or expenses. Call F I D E L I T Y LEARN TO ORIVE TRACTOR TRAILER 431-0700. OR OPERATE HEAVY EQUIPMENT CALL (2011 534-4455 WHOLESALE-RETAIL MANAGEMEN Part-time work. Commission plu bonus. Coll 671-56?9. CLEANING HELP WANTED - Two day: a week. Own transportation. Call $42-1460 atter A p.m. MEN OR WOMEN - Do you need to adc $300 to MOO o month to your present In come? This Is part-time, with you settinc the days ond hours. Training given. Co F. Smith, 5427345 or J. Austin, 542-8355.

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

WITH A QUICK ACTION LOW-COST DAILY REGISTER

SELL FAST

FAMILY AD
3 LINES-5 DAYS FOR JUST

MERCHANDISE

$2.00

"

*VO * V O N H E L P F I L L - Those Ions 1hl houle ' " ' e r dy f M h excitement and tun.
A 1 2," r a Wo

AVON
'

For Sale HAMMOND ORGAN


of Asbury Park Brand new organ with Rhythm

"

Women

"prejentotlve. < 442-1377, or

' " '"

Complete RESUME Service


Prepare, Revise, Advise, or Print FostServlce, reasonable prices Work bertormed bv n mm ih i v - reviewed, revised and written , thousands of resumes over the years.

Avoilcble for Merchandise.For Sale only. Article must orlginote Irom a household and may not exceed o sale price of ISO.00 per article. Price MUST be odvertised. Each additionol line 11.00. No copy change! may be made and no .discounts or returns will be ode it ad is canceled before expiration.

Opendally'tll? 5at.' DESKS, FILES, tables, choirs, adding mo chlnei, typewriters, office equipment, etc. l e RECOVERY ROOM RN J^wi'nT""'!t (u ," lamn - port-time, licensed ot bargain p r i c e s . New or used. AAC EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR I 0 M O N M O U T H ST. SJkli ! l n . 8 o ' ? r - * w ""> you've AHTOJUES PROtfTSANCE E X P E R I E N C E D R E C O V E R Y ROOIt * - "- -' " ...'he rest, comeIUIn IV We talk to the Steady year-round employment. Must ap' - >, m i n e I I I u i N IK ond Red Bank COUPLES - Interested In building a fu- DESK O U T L E T , 1709 Rt. 35, Oakhurst, ply In person after 4 p . m . H O W A R D FRESH SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED NURSE TO GROW W I T H EXPANDIN ture with fast-growing corporation. Work 531-3990. .' ^ V " 1 ! competent and ambitious JOHNSON'S MOJOR LODGE, Hwy 35. Holl clocks, buffets, dining room tables, D E P A R T M E N T . C A L L OR W R I T Pjjple Interested In earning a minimum ot together full or part-time. Call 469-7631 foi Mlddletown. ormolre. beds, curio coblnets, obat|our, 0 U T H AMBOY M E M O R I A L HOSP 3 opoolntment, 10 to 3. r S S 2 0 0 V i e o r . . a r S l n l u r n * o l " r com- DELIVERY WORKERS Part-time evebronzes, chandeliers, mlrjors. TAL, 72MO0O, EXT. 75. pany paid in depth training program, lib- nings. Need your own car. Apply In perKEYBOARD P L A Y E R OR R H Y T H . Used trade-Ins (rom $75. Warehouse for INTERNATIONAL GALLERIES eral drawing account. 40% commission. son, Lulgl's. 477 Middle Rd.. Hailel. K l m b l l , Conn, Y a m a h a . Checkering, E X P E R I 6 N C E D O N L Y OPERATO GUITARIST For established blues-rock Moog,a Synthesizers. Unlimited reniaTs 10 Riverside Ave., Red Bonk 741-7474. !. Pi" ' M s p e c a i r a n g e m e n t s ond FOR RUBBER TIRED TRACTOR - Wll band. Call Stu, 741-0273. from 17.50. Bring the family ond choose SMALL A P A R T M E N T SIZE R E F R I G WAITRESS M / W rront end loader and backhoe attached r - , P l u the opportunity tor managea planned program of exHELP WANTED In rug cleaning planl from over ISO urms. 9-9 dolly, Sat. until 6. ERATOR Hotpolnl electric rang* and Must be oble to operate and service equip, ment through not coll for a confidential Apply In person. Bow Knot Restaurant, 69 for general all-around work and to hel hood, all for u o . 5424197. . , menl. Call 71-28OO. I to 4:30 p.m., Won pansion, wliy talk to the company that Brood St., Red Bank. Interview ond corpet mechanft.Coll 493-3340. through Frl. only. CHEMICAL OPERATOR TRAINEE ' * a tioyse every doy. T H E KIRWAN 462-4730 OLD CHURCH PEWS J O . Realtors, 4 Airport Plaio, H a i l e l . Excellent opportunity for bright person SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES S FT -15 F T . CAREER OPPORTUNITY with Interests In biology or chemistry to With soles ability. Must be over 18 years Welfare ond people with credit problems. Call 747-1231 E X P A N D I N G M O N M O U T H COUNT loin production group with established life of age. Apply In person, CAMPBELL'S Instant credit. Immediate delivery. Coll REAL' ESTATE FIRM Seeks full tlmi JUNCTION E X X O N , Leonordvltle Rd., Mr. Grand, 373-461). STEREO. RADIO, BLACK/WHITE T V real estate salespeople for our new of CLERK TYPIST 10:30 o.m.-7:30 p.m.." fnces company. High school diploma nsary. Apply In person, Worthlngton Belford. Combination, Mognovox. 1135. flees. Licensed or unlicensed. It unli- Sunday through Thursday. Pleasant, alert ihemlcal Corp., Halls Mills R d , FreeColl 536 4671 censed- we will train and prepare through personality; accurate typist. Alia opening EXECUTIVE SECRETARY - E x FULLTIME our special school. Unlimited potential tor experienced c l e r i c a l workers on hold. Derienced individual wanted to be DersonExcellent opportunity for Qlack P A I N T I N G S F i v e , water c o l o n ond A completely new department featurlni 1I5.000-$20,000 first yeor, possible man- day/evening shifts, Apply In person, PerLABORATORY TECHNICIAN al secretary to general manager of a Seal In Charge Flremon In exoils. Artist: Martin Petersen. American. sonnel Office, MonmDuth Medical Center. r ogement In near future. Draw available High school chemistry, some college pre- top brands or high fidelity equipment. W< large retail operation. Individual mus ForTdBTe repalrTM. ponding community hospital on " WiW!) No dealers please. M3-4J55. . Coll Palace Realty Associates, 988-4400 or Long Branch. ferred. Will t r a i n . Apply S.W.S. S I L I - prefer six months to one year of expossess excellent ability In typing and the midnight-! A.M. shift. NEW FIREPLACE WOOD Seoioned. 264-5300. Ask tor Mr. Steam. CIVIL WAR PHOTOGRAPHIC HISTORY shorthand. Starling solary S54OC with a libC O L L E C T I O N S U P E R V I S O R E v e - CON ES. Division of Slouffer Chemical perience In the above field. Outstanding SALARY SCALE NOW IN EFLittle Silver Repair Center 110 volumes) Anecdotes ond Incidents, Co., 657 Line Rd., Motawan. An equal op- management potential, excellent starting eral fringe benefit package which Includes FECT. Excellent benefits Innings, part-time. Previous collection exsafory. Please contact our store manager TRAINEE Clean-cut, eager, oggrL 747-5573 . etc. 747-J547 vacation leove, sick leave, group Insurcluding Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Call M 775- portunity employer. ;lve. To J7000 to start. Unlimited poten perience 0 plus.betweenr ,9Wallace at 4:30 ance, retirement plan, nine paid holidays, N T K O S M O V I E C A M E R A ^"p"o"w mo|or medical, life insurance ond a.m. and B O X w b b b i B A R C A T N ! " 35 years old," tlal. Now Is the time to consider your tu< 3261 weekdays educational benefits, etc. Please forward loom; e to I, with I.S lens. 1250. free meals. PRESSER For dry cleaning store In p.m. An equal opportunity employer. two ft. high. You select and dig. SI0 each. .lure! Call Angle Sharp, 747-1 m , 5nelllnt a resume of your qualifications to Box JKeansburg-Keyport area. Good-pay, etc. M2-37O4 or 222-2274' By appointment. 671-0106. lend Snelllno, 54 Broad St., Red Bonk, D E S I G N D R A F T S M A N M / W - Three Vogue Cleaners, 240 Main St., Keansburg. 6fi, The Dally Register, Red Bonk. We arc Rte 35 and Twlnbraok Rd. CONTACT PERSONNEL OEPT. an equal employment opportunity employ' CLOSEOUT CARPET Mlddletown, N.J. MODERN~THRTE^P7ECE SECTIONAT ^ B X OPERATORS - 3 1 1,, 117 nigh years experience on electro-mechanical 11-7 assemblies. Apply Electro Impulse Labs.' er. SHOP AT HOME Fantastic discounts Matching coffee table ond table lamp. An Equal Opportunity Employer shifts. Including weekend openings.Ful Inc., 116 Chestnut St., Red Bank. An equal C O U N T E R S A L E S E X P E R I E N C E F i up to 50% off. Kodels, Acrllans, Shags. S15O. Coll 244-9251. ty part-time. Long term work. 74M7QO. P R E F E R R E D . APPLY IN P E R S O N , opportunity employer. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY F"OR~EX" 501 nylons, up to 270 sq. ft,, only $77. UnBOATMAN'S SHOP, 24 W H A R F A V E . , 35 mm KONICA AUTO-S2 CAMERA PERIENCED SALESMAN M/W To es- heara ot values! Coll United Carpet Co., SEWING M A C H I N E OPERATORS M E D I C A L E K G T E C H N I C I A N Full And accessories, $89. tablish and work with dealers of leisure (201) B99-S4I2. Financing available. On coots. Union shpp. Starting salary S3 time. Busy Internist's office. Excellent (ATMA.RINE PARK) RED BANK. Call arter 5:30, 741-6241 time equipment. Large protected terrion hour. Apply Wall Street Fashions, ; salary. Please call stating references. 741- DENTAL ASSISTANT Two evenings tory. Commission basis with continuing TYPEWRITERS. ADDING machines. All DINETTE SET - Oval Formica fable, six Wall SI., Red Bank. Riverfront and Osborn Ave. only. Will train. Mature person. mokes new or used. Guoronteed Low as This full time position, with a fast grow commissions from soles to established Point Pleasant, N.J, Call 2644333,717-0959 Ing local chain of ladles' sportswear, of dealers. Write Box H-89, The Daily Regis S25. Serplco's, 101 Monmouth St Nejit to chairs, block patent seats U 0 . Colt 5 M APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTtheater. 747-0485. 4405. 1 ter, Red BanK. ED For full time employment. Apply ot COUNTER/WAITRESS M / W - IS years (ers a good opportunity for advancement ANTIQUES Books, che7ry~pltter. shoe W. T. Grant Co., 531 Prospect Ave., Little or over. Apply In person to Superama Call Mrs. Stopleton, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Established men's speciality clothing DRIVER YARDMAN M/W For modlost, picture frames, tinware, small rockSilver. metfe. Shrewsbury. N.J. store seeks two full time salespeople ern lumber yard. Good future,.benefits. er, foot warmer, etc, 747-254; Call 542-8BU Experience not necessary. Ability to learn DENTAL ASSISTANT Dental or gener- WAITRESS M/W Short shift. 11:30 to one for our special shop for young marand deal with the public essential. Call DRAPES 10 pairs, 5O63,15 pair. Wed- MOVING Garage 30 yeors collection. al office experience preferred but not nec- 2:30. Monday through Saturday. Exrleds and young singles, one for boys. Reessary. 264-3865 or 254-4M5. RESUMES PREPARED perienced. Call Hearth, 747-0556. tail or related experience preferred. Cam- North wood Lumber Co., 462-8380 for ap- ding gown ond veil, size 12, asking S25 Antique saw S2, floor lamp SI0, sunburst 787-5170. electric clock 110, crystal gobleti (101 17. pony benefits, Immediate employee dis- pointment. AIDE Complete care of elderly handi- TECHNICAL ADMINISTRATIVE TRAINcount. Apply In person to M r . Sixer, o GENERAL OFFICE WORK Light typ- O V A L T A B L E C h e r r y w o o d , t h r e e oold rim glosses (12) V, large set dishes capped man. some light housekeeping ond EE High school graduate with mechan(never used) $10, Norltakl cream soups phone 74I-S3W for appointment. ing, no sleno. Red Bank. Part-time, 1 p.m. leavei, four choirs. Good condition. cooking, five days a week,.f-5. Own trans- ical aptitude to train as technical odmlnls- 157 Brood St., Red Bonk (10) $2 eoch, smalt Jomps, choirs, all site 842 350 $75. Call 747-5505. to 5 p.m. dally. For smotl office of criem portation, references. Send resume to Box fratlve assistant. Apply Electro Impulse tobies, frames, wooden ware, boskets, leal marketing company. Call offer i H-87. The Dolly Register, Red Bonk. Lab, 116 Chestnut S i . Red Bank. Equal HOUSEKEEPER Live In. Physician': brlC;O-broc. l e w e l r y 10c to $5. O P E N p.m., 8429248. Opportunity Employer. ONI.V FRI . SAT.. 10 lo 5. Nexf week. home. Ocean township. Two young chll MANAGER T R A I N E E MON.,TUES., WED . only, 10 lo 5. 55 PeBrood and Front Sts., Red Bank COLOR AND BLACKVWHITE TV'S dren. References. Call 922-1674 or 775 SALESPERSON Part-time evenings Position now open for expanding retail SALESMAN M/W Wanted for large 1177. ters P I . , Red Bank. ANDERSON'S Good working conditions. We will train. lewelry choln. If you're looking for o ca- new car GM dealer. Salary plus commisHAZLET Hourly rate plus commission. Appty Sing- RED BANK reer position with a great future, this Is sion, demonstrator, all fringe benefits. CASHIER Full lime. 747-0125 94o-a:3 20" BOYS BICYCLE Two months old. er Co., Monmauth Shopping Center, Eator you. Experience preferred. For Interview Selling because al traffic In areo JIB. Call High caliber key operator required lo tontown. Country Sudser Car Wash. CHOICE. RIV4TE COLU-CVION Of 495-22J9 phone 741-6200,9 o.m. to 5 p.m. day and evening shift by a smalt on< Hwy 35, Middletown. It you are ambitious, hard working, and growing computer f i r m . Must be e: E X P E R I E N C E D M E C H A N I C To U.S. coins. Entire collection or Individual BEAUTIFUL WEDDING GOWN While pieces. Most Items Unc. or Proof Sliver Ike to talk to people, we'll train you for DENTAL ASSISTANT - Chalrslde. Exceptlonolly fast and accurate, for May i work B to 4. Over 18. References required PEST CONTROL OPERATOR his career. Salary and Incentive while perienced preferred but will consider In- No experience necessary will train. In- August, 1973. Reply Box A-142, The Dal Apply C A M P B E L L ' S J U N C T I O N EX dollars. Liberty nickels, Indian Heads, velvet with pearl embroidery, empire Cpmmemoratlves. others. Write to Box L- waist slie 12 Two weeks old. SSO, 717XON, Leonordville Rd., Belford. training.' Felllgent, mature trainee. Full time. One teresting work, both Inside and out. Starl- Register, Red Bank. 40. The Dally Register, Red Bank 3037 evening. Write P.O. Box 323, Llncroft, ing rote 43.50 per hour, atter training -75 SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT No experience necessary, but If you are N.J. A Q U A R I U M - 22 gals, with stand ond acper hour plus many fringe beneflls. PerPermanent position. No night hours. Ap CONSOLE STEREOS Many models re- cessories, S25. now In retail sales, starting salary will re- PART-TIME To clean machinery and manent year-round posliion. No telling duced to our cost. ANDERSON'S TV AND Burdge flect this experience. Call 741-9195 after 4 p.m. equipment. Sot. 8 a.m. to I p.m. Air Mold- Must have car ond driver's license. Cal Experienced proofreaders wanted for ply l e Silver.s Garage, 597 Branch Ave. A P P L I A N C E , 30 Broad St , Red Bonk, W busy compositor. 7:30 a.m. to 4:15 p.m j f t ed Products, Phyllis ond Clark Sis., Hai- 671-5511. 747-0125. COLOR TV - Sylvonla 19". U 5 . Motofive days a week. Many benefits. Coll 74 This Is the career you've been waiting for. let. RN OR LPN 11 p.m. lo 1 o.m. Saturday HOSPITAL BED Electric,Onodern, rola. 21 . S.50 or best offer Both need 5880 for appointment for Interview. ' Apply to LITTMAN'S JEWELERS, Wonnights. Emery Manor Nursing Home, Rte with mattress. S395. Please call.264-3454 I I work 972-0910 WAITRESSES M/W HOUSEKEEPER T * o In tamily. Nice mouth Shopping Center, Eatontown. ASSISTANT Ex room. Live In. Good wages. State refer- ALSO CASHIER. Apply In person, Rex DENTAL preferred. Four Part-time. 8 tc 34, Wotowan. 566-MOO. o.m. lo 11 p.m. perlenced mornings, COMPLETE FIVE-PIECE - Modern bedAN OHIO OIL CO. - Offers opportunity ences. Write Box A-143. The Dally Regis- Olner, W. front St., Red Bapk, STOCK CLERK AND CASHIER 12, plus occasional extra. Some typing, 1971 VACATIONAIRE TRAVEL TRAIL- room set 11,000 BTU Carrier olr condifor high commission Income, PLUS cash ter, Red Bank. DRIVER For Red Bonk area liquor Red Bank a r e a . Reply Box A-144, The Apply in person. CBS Supermarket,36 ER - lo'/i TG type. Excellent condition. tioner Miscellaneous furnllure Call 264bonuses, convention trips and fringe benMain St., Keonsburg. Daily Register, Red Bank. 1193 efits, to mature salesperson In Red Bank TELEPHONING For health agency, re- store. 40 hour week. Storting salary 5100. J1700. Call 747-5561 alter 5 p.m. area. Regardless of experience, olr mall cruiting volunteers, eight weeks, morn- Reply Box A-U8, The Dally Register, Red PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST Wonted SALESMAN M / W Some experience CYBIS PURPLE IRIS Mint condition. GARAGE SALE Contents ot old Red S. I. Read, Pres.. American Lubricants .Ings or olternoons. Write Box J-65, The Bonk. for physician's office In Matawon area for necessary. Full t i m e . Goldin s Men's Early Boehm collection. Bank home Hutch table, Tiffany type DITy Register, Red Bonk. Shop, 25 Brood St., Red Bank. Co., Box 696, Dayton, Ohio 45401. HOUSEWORKER Five doys. Two In night and Sat. work. No experience neceslamp, wicker corrlage, carnival and dfpr Call 449-7435 ROUTEMAN M/W For Shore's leading family. Colts Neck. Own transportation sory. Write Box J - , The Dally Register, RN OR LPN Sundays, 7 a.m. to 3:30 esslon glass, tobies, choirs, k n e t h o l f Red Bank. laundry and dry cleaner. Paid vacations Cat! 462-8500 for appointment. p.m. Emery Manor Nursing Home, Rte 26' FIBERGLAS TRAVEL TRAILER desk, dough table, morble top dressing buCompetitive Wage Scale Heollte. Luxurious accommodations tor reau, and miscellaneous Items Wed . ond hospltaliiatlon. Apply STAR CLEA- B A N Q U E T S E T - U P P O R T E R M / W WANTED < 34, Matawan. 566-4400. Quarterly Waoe Review wo. Dual oxles. 591-16M or 591-9753. NERS & LAUNDERERS, 132 Myrlle Ave.. Full t i m e . Apply afternoons, M r Rob- canvassing Personable Individual lo d Thurs F r l . March 7 B, 9. 9 a m lo 1 and selling for young growlm OPPORTUNITY KNOCKINGAT YOUR Paid Vocation and Holiday! Long Branch. p.m 20 Falrvlew Ave Little Sliver, N J.. contracting business. Call M2-9O80. Paid Blue C r o i a / B l u o Shield erson, Molly Pitcher Inn, Red Bank. DOOR Porter for bowling center. Com M I D W I N T E R B A R G A I N N a t u r a l at end of Tlnton Ave., opposite Monmouth ranch mink locket. In excellent condition, with Rider J, PAINTERS pony benefits. Six nights. Good pay. Cal CASHIER - BECKER HARDWARE SALESPERSON Permanent position Animal Hospital 42-247 educed to 1MO. Slie 1>I4. 9422919. Proscription Plan Experienced, Steady work. Prefer person with knowledge of camping Call 747-0465, ask for M r . B. (Open Sun 747-5711. and Dental Plen Call 787-883?alter 6 p.m. COLOR TV STEREO COMBINATION and all sports. Apply In person to M r s . days, closed Tuesdays.) MEN OR WOMEN - Opportunity lo earn GRAVELY Model L, 7.6 h.p., with Sacrifice Chest of drawers with mirror, On the Job Training r Advancement Opportunities HOUSEKEEPER Two days. Must have Plnsley at Klslln s, B E . Front St., Red COUNSELOR For girls group home, J150 per week plus bonuses. For this op- mower, snow blade, ond sulky, 1350. 741- desk, skis boots, and poles, luggoge, livportunity call 741-2071 from 8 to 1. Equa 7217. own transportation and references. Call Bank.. WOO per month for two weekends a mont ing room and dining room droperles, mis 566-7390. LABORATORY TECHNOLOGISTS For plus weekday evenings from 5:30 to 1 opportunity employer. cellaneous accessories 3 6 G l e n m o r y Openings in several >.m. Must be stable and en|oy youn Ave., Mlddletown. y-S Frl Sol Sun CHAMBERMAIDS M/W L I N O T Y P E O P E R A T O R ( E x - evening and night, full time,, including x>ople. Write Box J-67, The Dally Regisot our production weekends. Appfy Jersey Shore Medical GARAGE SALE - Solo-bed drop-leaf Full time. Apply Mrs. Levin, Molly Pitchperienced), tor growing central New Jer- Center, Personnel Dept., 1945 Corlies ter, Red Bonk. Coll 741-2919 departments, Will er Inn, Red Bank. sey book publisher. Nights. All benefits, Ave., Neptune, weekdays, 9 to 2. An equo Apply In Person 24'x4' ROUND ABOVE-GROUND POOL table, chaise, chairs, sectional bookcase, be require d to work PART-TIME SALES fTade^newspaper SECRETARY For Saturday only. Local Two years old, all accessories, field morble colfee table modern sofa and Non-union. 636-2030. live day*. Mon. lo opportunity employer. advertising space. Personal ond phoni real estate office. Sleno and typing neces >stone look siding. Excellent condition chair, knee-hole desk artists materials Sun. & a.m.* p m picture frames, miscellaneous small apAsking S395. Call atter 4,4(2-9341. A M B I T I O U S P E O P L E * Concerned contact supplied, 25% commission to ex wry. For Interview, coll 671-23W. Good incenlive pay, pliances Coll 610 p.m 747-5649 about their future, who wont to earn mon perlenced people. P.O. Box 685, Sprint Qtltr short training BARBER Full time. Hazletareo. ~ STEREO SABA A M / F M . leok console, _ake. 449-8162. ey.in their spare time, call 264-2398. 20 warts per channel. Call M2-6354 after ) G A R A G E ~ S A L E " , 9, 10 March 9 to I period. Hospi Call days. 767-9694 PARTS DEPARTMENT HELPER - ExRecord players, furnllure, books, records, HOUSEKEEPER Experienced. Live-in p.m. loinotion, paid no Evenings, 542-16S2 COMMUTING EXECUTIVE ^ or out. Flve-day-week. References. Col perlence desirable, but not necessary. Apgtasswore, pictures, lamps, spreads .and h d a y s ond o t h e r MAGNA ACCORDION - 120 boss, used drapes, typewriter, many other Items 420 3ly In person, 8 o.m.-4:30 p.m., AAon. thru MEDICAL LABORATORY AIDE - T between 5 and 7 p.m. 747-3160. c WANTS OUT benefits available. r l . , Dowries Pontlac, 62 Lower Main St. assist with various lab procedures. Cleri- four months. Cost 1435, asking price S225 Nufswomp Rd., Mlddletowri EXPERIENCED SIDER In asbestos Matawan. cal experience helDful. WIN train. 40 hour Coll evenings, 264-5920, I Seeks local employment or local busl (oil me 520) ~ H O T P O I 5 T WASHER AND D R Y E R artdVor aluminum. Full time. Garden State week, f r i n g e b e n e f i t s . Solary comI ness opportunity. Strong background In SWIMMING POOL SACRIFICE B O O K K E E P E R P a r t - t i m e , for nev mensurate with qualifications. Rush LaboFive years old Reasonable Roaflng and Siding. 842-9275. Project Management, Product DevelWarehouse has a few brand new aboveHwy 35 2M-8OOO Keyport | oprnent-. company Must be e x p e r i e n c e d , wit 264-4358 ratories, 70 E. Front St., Red Bank. 741 ground family size swimming pools In knowledge of payroll. Flexible hours. Cal 0100. An Equal Opportunity Employer SALESGIRL M / W Wanted In Junior orlglnol factory cartons. Pick up for stor- STARCRAFT C A M P E R 1971 Sleeps and Misses weorlna opparel shop. Ex- Mrs. Heath at 264-7700. Please write Bpx A-HO, age bill. All equipment and extras includ- eight. Hard ends Many extras. Excellent SERVICE 5TATI0N ATTENDANT Ful jprlenced preferred. Apply in person SCHOOL BUS D R I V E R Must hav The Dqjly Register, Red Bonk. , ime d a y s . U n i f o r m s s u p p l i e d . Ex- ed. Atl priced below S600, oil accessories condition. J17S0. 747-51J1. DONNA'S. 93 Brood St., Red Bank. school bus driver's license and patience. .jerlenced preferred, with a willingness to Included^ Coll Tony 739-7000. DRYER " E l e c t r i c . Clean. Coll 291-O0S6 between 9:30 and 11:30, or work. Apply In person, Lincroft Exxcn TWO A I R C O N D I T I O N E R S Phljco Excellent condition. 165. :30 and 3:30. Newman Springs Rd., Lincroft. 9,000 B T U and Welbullt 4,200 flTU, exColl^47J752 EXPERIENCED RECEPTIONIST Foi BABYSITTER Wonted occasional eve cellent condition, JtSO for both. One Sing doctor's office. References required nings. Hilton Park area. 291-4058. Must er sewing machine, Touch-and-Sew Zip- W U R T I TZE8rELECTRfC~Pi ANO 117J. Zag, $125. Two whltewall snow tires, H76x Portable Leslie for guitar or orgon, SI 15. Reply Box A-146, The Dolly Register, Rec hove own transportation. Call 747-9056. _ 15, SJO. Two months old. 671-9395. Bonk^ EVENINGS - PART-TIME TWO 15" W H E E L S With snow tires, COUNTER"H.ELP W A N T E D Jerry 7 S3.75PER HOUR 315. Sllvertone portable stereo record Colonial Inn, 41 Newman Springs, Re &-9:30 p.m., three nights. 18 years or oldplayer, good condition. S35. Two pole Now is your chance to secuce a good future, with pdy, with a lastBank. 747-9803. . Coll for appointment, 747-4030. amps, u ond SI2. 291-2274 offer 4 p.m. BOAT TRAILER WANTED - Pay cosh. growing quality restaurant chain. We have over 340 shops operLPN WANTED - For Saturday and Sun. A D M I N I S T R A T I V E ASS7ST~ANt~-~to Buy as Is, utility trailer, cement mixer, day. Beech view K">st Home: Business Administrator. Matawan Realon parden tractor, used equipment, etc. What ating in 13 states (rom Maine to Virginia. Coll 7B/-S1QQ al School District Board of Educotlon hove you? 787-6110^ Business administration training or exWe need aggressive, self-disciplined and sell-motivating people to SECRETARY Reol Estate ofUceTTvp- perience required. Salary commensurate Plastic ond fabric. Coll direct to factory RIVATE COLLECTOR Will pay top serving New Jersey. Eliminate middleIng. light sleno, general office work. Ver dollar for Lionel Trains " O " gouge. Any enter our development prograrrTwhich is 12-18 months in length. with experience. Send or bring resume to man. Coll Mr. Tup*, B42-G319. pleasant office. 842-3933. oge, any condition. 347-1445. Mr. Edward J. Scullion, Office of the SecEarn $140 - $170 per week-while you learn the basics of good retory, Broad and South Sts,, Motawan, CONSOLE O P E R A T O R 6 n e to tw CASH FOR O L D T O Y T R A I N S A n y management and take part in our excellent fringe benelit proyears experience I B M 360/30 DOS multl NJ. Complete set of Quaker Maid U-shaped make or condition or will trode HO, 02/, >rogrammlng e n v i r o n m e n t . Rototln kitchen coblnets, Mediterranean oak. The O or wide gouge. 774-3710^ gram. You will also be able to train in nearby locations. Relocation REAL ESTATE SALES shifts. Excellent growth potential withi. 16000, can bi will become necessary at some future date with all costs being as- operation. 370/135 on order. Excellen Must have license and experience. Call finest In cabinets, costing see to appre- 'OLD F U R N I T U R E Antlqu'esTcltlna. bought for S2990.' You must 1 ge benefits. For a p p l i c a t i o n cot Howard Dexter A s s o c 747-2r*0) tor ap- ciate. Someone's toss, your coin. Also gfossworc. art oblects and brfc-o-broc sumed by FRIENDLY ICE CREAM. _ _ikdale Community College, 84M90T pointment. several other displays for sale at greet Immediate cosh for anything ond evcryYou need only three basics to apply: you must be a high school Ext. 230. An equal opportunity employer. CUSTODTANWANTED~*Steody'w"o7^ s a v i n g s . Con be seen at Cabinet In- ming. Rusclls, 25 Eoit Front SI 7411691. COMPANION For elderly wornarTTn Will accept couple. Hours flexible, indoor dustries, Hwy 36 and PooleAve., Hazlet. graduate, own a car and be over 21. Although not required, some Rumson area..Wonted six nights a week, tennis club. 566-5200. . COMBINATION SAFE - Floor model, college and some restaurant experience would be to your advanused Give full detolls Islie. weight, price, no days necessary. Call 842-0306 Tues, r e . ) Write Box R-UO, The Dolly Register, Wed., Thurs., between 9:30 a . m . ond CONSTRUCTION (Heavy) Labore tage. experienced In carpentry, masonry, welRed Bank. Regulation stie. Coll 74I-3W3. p.m. Our managers run their pperations without :he normal risk of ownding. Driver's license. Call after 7 p.m LARGE WALNUT DESK S . Kitchen __ _ _ set, 125. Two V l k o chairs and corner _ TOY TRAINS WANTED cu STODI A if TOR" SCHOOL'"~FL M~ tfm 222-9400^ AN AFFIRMATIVE ACTION ership and are earning between $12,000 and $20,000 per year steady job. 3 to 11 p.m. Call M r , Jones table, $25 (Ideal for summer home). Call Any model or condition Will pay cash or ~ T T A T C E I T D R T V E R R oaid" wor k * with many over $20,000. _ Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Rumson Board of Education, 842-0354. 787-9508. . 'rode HO. Coll 531-1386. Flatbed experience a must. If you live wilhin reasonable traveling distance to our shops in 4BS-O0SO betweenS:30 o^d^Mp.mWO E78-U BELTED WHITEWALLS SECRETARY Port-time. Doctor's of ANTIQUES URGENTLY N E E D E D S30. Two F76-14 snow tires, white, 125. : u r n l t u r e , p o i n t i n g s , cut g l a s s , o r t . (Ice. Experience desired. Send resume 1 MASON N E E D E D - Report to Shoi _ Malawan, Shrewsbury, Englishtown or Brickto'wn, we would like to ~ O , Box 616, New Mon mouth, N.J. >ronzes, clocks, porcelain, rugs. Jewelry. Loke, Front St., Red Bank, 8 to 4. Ask tor Call 291-3449. talk with you. NAME YOUR PRICE c b LOR~~G7E7T v "WO BARMAIDS M/W Experienced o anyone doing masonry work or call 609 INTERNATIONAL GALLERIES 150 inexperienced. Ironside Tavern, 300 Union 395-6078. 10 Riverside Ave., Red Bonk 741-7474 Coll 787-7198 Ave., Union Beach, N.,1. A R T - T I M E D A Y S 9 to 1. Deliveries Fairlleld, NJ.. Monday thru Friday, between 9 and 5 p.m. WANTED CLEANING H E L P ONE DAY A WEEK. ond general stockroom work. Pteose op- L ^ Triple dresseFTMSHwiiv ily. in person, Sun Ray Drugs, Mlddletown sized matching bed, mattress, box spring, Used Oriental Rugs OWN TRANSPORTATION. .hopping Center, Mlddletown. Chinese ond Persian Call 671-2167 UP. Coll 291-OS70. Also Won Topestries The Growth Electronics Company DO Y O I T H T V E t M A G f N A T T O N A N D TYPIST DESK Oak wdod.double pe- : 'ART-TIME SCHOOL BU5 DRIVERS - FLAIR? Then we could use you! Inter- destal, approximately 5' x VW- SAO. Coll 9 RIEDMAN G A L L E R I E S 7 7 4 - 3 1 4 3 Will train. Call Bennett Brothers Corp, esting position In building company. En i.m. to noon. 747-0437. _^ ^ 787-3360. nils merchandising, advertising, and F u r n i t u r e , p a i n t i n g s , cut g l a s s , a r t , \ An Equal Opportunity Employer _ ^ E X E C U T I V E SECRETARY - In quiet, jme knowledge of soles and rentals. 741- GORDON L A U G H E A D U P R I G H T PI- ironies, docks, porcelain, rugs. Jewelry. 6955, NAME YOUR PRICE pleasant church office In Mlddletown. A N O Excellent condition. Best offer. INTERNATIONAL GALLERIES 'ORTEH M/W For Induslrlat cafeteria Call S42-9AI1. Must be discreet, dependable. IBM Execu 10 RIVERSIDE AVE t i v e t y p e w r i t e r a n d G e s t e t n e r mim- in Halmrjel- 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Coll 264 2 V O L U M E C O L U M B I A E N C Y C L O RED BANK 741-7474 eograph. Hospitallzatlon, vacation. Nc 9000 or 767-6160 atter 4:40. PEOIA With bookcase, SI9.95. steno. Good job for imaginative, responNA"N~J^H^5OM 542-1819. sible person. Write to Box L-42, The Dal I BUYS ANO BUYS Register, Red Bonk. From on entire household to a single FOR DEN OR SPARE ROOM ealy studio bed on legs, 36", and mat- item Antique furniture, lewelry. silver PROGRAMMER -ANALYST ress, very good buy, 165. Below discount, Immediate cosh. Top dollar. 741-5331. ientor position requires college degree, never used, nine-piece cutlery set, 516 95, ANTIQUE^JEWELRY Top cash paid. three years proaromminQ experience in _...To CARE M y home. Days, weekly ind mixer, three-speed, U.50, electric RPG ond COBOL. Systems design, and ot hourly. Hoilet near Lily-Tulip. Col! 7fl7* j f f e e makers, 6-6 and B10 cups, 16.50 L E V D E U X . 4 DON PONS. 7 River Rd., Implementation. Must hove project leader Fair H a n 842-6257 or 741-4337. _' eoch. 747-2998. __ ability. Submit resume with salory history BOOKKEEPER f / C , Moture woman, BEFORE O R A F T E R _~You~ho7e your to Personnel Director. County of Moi xperienced, reliable, depcndoble. Reply GARAGE SALE Miscellaneous items, oaroge sale, give me o coll. I may buy evmouth, Holl of Records, Freehold, N J . io A-I4S. THE Dolly Register, Red Bonk, oustrtold tools, clothes, rummage. No erything you hove. 495-1076, 495-2024 CENTRAL STERILE SUPPLY AIDES antiques. 36 Glenmary Ave,, Mlddletown, Full time days. We will train. Steady, all WILL BABYSIT In my home weekday? 5 Fri., Sat. ond Sun. year round position for rlQht Individual. 'or child 3 to 5 years old. Port Monmoulh 7i7J5B7 HISTOR Y ~ M O N M 0 U f H* COUNTY "" By Apply Personnel Dept., Jersey Shore MeEiltv Cover fair, contents excellent. Best Collector will pay top dollar for old Gerdical Center, Corlies A v e . , Neptune, man beer stems. Coll 842 7781. offer above 175. W-2S47. _ _. weekdays, v to 2 p.m. An equal opportunity employer^ MOVING Sofa, buffet, eorpeling, chan AUTO MECHANIC EjipYriencetToniy! deliers, elc. Call 9886990 after 5 p.m. and Immediate opening ovollobte for new cor all doy Sundoy. a g e n c y . F i v e - d a y - w e e k , paid hospi BEAUTY SALON SACRIFICE faltiatlon and vocation. Top pay plan foi Must sell. Asking US0O. B ' E * I G E " " B U C T " ~ iV>iTy\~uJedI in" formal qualified people. Coll for Interview, 741 Boyshoreareo. 364-2640. FOR RENT living room, 1100, Includes steps ond hall. BOX STALL A U N D R O M A T Four yeors old.40 M1-61B) CALL 241-2312 LEGAL SECRETARIES With a T i e washers, 20 dryers. Call otter 5, 494-0630 A L L N E V E R USED Three *leel and three years experience. Excellent skill or 531-3621. glass etageres ot US each, two steel ond P E D I G R E E D G E R M A N S H E P H E R D squired. Pleosant working conditions s tobies. 110 ond 130. One wood hong- PUPPIES Reasonable. Solary open. Call Mrs. St. Peter, T u n . , HOT ITEM - Notional AAA compony ho! ing I Coll 717.4013 bar, US- 566-4970 before 10 o.m. ond ma|or T^ campaign plan ready to go. offer 8 p.m. Wed., or Thurj., 741-3900. fer t"0y"POODLE P JPS"-" Apricot."AKC Must be oble to supervise people. For all SCHOOL TWO D E S K S l?S~each'. One storage registered, male ond female, four weeks :ne facts, call Mr. Oavld, 440-3730. not licensed. Top pay. Need not be rejl XPANDING NeecTleaders to help tobinef, 110. TxS' steel tiles (31, J5 eoch. )la. Good disposition and blood lints. Coll dent of Holmdel. Write M r . A. Bailey iulld N J. Olvislon. Couples, veterans. Call 741-oroo. '41-9374. Holmdel Twp. Board of Education,751 HG Thinkers. Port, full time. 739-0539 D $5oT"Choirs Vfeach. As- POODLE PUPS Stondard AKC regisblmdel Rd., Hazier. N.J. 07730. sortea giasses'ond ice cream bowls and tered Females, excellent dispositions. XPANbTNG"6RC5infAT"f6N "NEEDS dishes, from 20c to SI eoch. 843-9616. INSURANCE O F F I C E H E L P Intei Block. 5 . 7J7-9543 0^495 01B9, estlng diversified dutie) lor person wlih CF* P E O P L E Port, full time. WE MATE COLUE"5eve"n wVeks. HA ROMAN 8. P E C K V A B Y GRAND PIInsurance office background. Send resume oln. Call 534-J767. ANO Good condition US0 Tricolor. AKC. to Box 336, Holmdel, 07733. WAMTEiffdX/RCHASE 671-96B6 (or appointment. Coll 739-0275 CONSTRUCTION BUSINESS - Musi be ONEL TRAIN SET Complete. Metol BASSET HOUND AKC registered, six currently enqooed in communications, woSECURITY POSITIONS Immediate;.full time ond part-time guard ter. gas, e l e c t r t c , u n d e r g r o u n d in- engine, tunnel, track, transformer,- six months, tjlly housebroken. Reosonobte. n 17-9563 or 495-0189. positions available. Excellent salary. .tollotlom, etc. Replies held In strict con- cars. 150. 495-1076 or 49S-J0J4. Idence Send all Information ta Box AHours flexible. Uniforms supplied'by us K E " N E W C A R ' P E T '-'"With podding*, TWO BEAGLES M a l e and I t m q l f , Applicants muir b* bondoble. Openings in 47, The Dally Register. Red Bank. S'x12', olive green. 1135. Call atter 6 p.m. three years old. Best offer. East Brunswick, Mlddletown, Mount Hoi .71-3371. _ _Coin87-5780. ', Falrless Hills. For Immediate Inter lew coll 376-6412. MOVING Phdco console CDlor TV, Zen- 6E"R~SArSHE~PH!RD"pUPS Pure CHANNEL COMPANIES INC. _ jutfll, lorge office? desk, baby carnage White German Shepherd stud, lee 1)00. jr>d accessories, household Hems, six ft. 739V262. ound red rug. 787-5243. PUREBREDGERMAM SHIiPHERO 1AN0 Stelnwoy ebon/. Model M. Fine PUP - Three months old. ISO. Coll 3Mondllion. 113 otter 4 p.m. 747-2049

RN's OR L P N ' S - 3 pirn, "to I I p.m.TEvery weekend off. Emery Monor Nursing Home, Motawan, N.J. SM-6400. 14 West Front St.. Red Bank

CAREER MARKETING

SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT 11 Immediate delivery. Bench, music and years or older. Wanted for full or port lessons Included. time to work night shift, 11 p.m. to 7 a.m Apply Hess Station, Rte 9, Marlboro. MEN, WOMEN, COUPLES - Exciting business opportunity. Start Immediately Earn while you train.Far appointment coll 870-3737 office, 229-3815 evenings, 74' 1397 evenings.

U95

To Place Your Daily Register FAMILY AD, CALL. . .

775-9300

741-6900
24-Hour Service LARGE PIZZA-99c

DESK CLERKS

"Wait till I grow up! I'll ride all the way down the street'to the McCormicks'maybe even to the Pooles'maybe even across Woodland Road!" Help Wanted Male and Female Help Wanted Male and Female

PIANOS-ORGANS

Freehold Music Center

AUDIO SALES

FIREMEN

I B M TYPEWRITERS Rental $15 per mo,

TWO GUYS

892-1100

SALESGIRL M/W
EXPERIENCED

POINT PLEASANT HOSPITAL

Help Wanted Male or Female

MEN'S/BOYS

SALES

842-2022

USED KIRBY FOR SALE

BOAT BUILDING EXPERIENCE ONLY

d/r Personnel

NATLESONS

CLEARANCE

KEY OPERATOR

Woodworkers Carpenters Millworkers

PROOFREADERS

Apply at:

The Luhrs Co.

Benefits include:

Help Wanted Male and Female

FACTORY JOBS

FIREWOOD-WOOD CHIPS

Mon. thru Fri.

Situations Wanted Male

THE LUHRS CO.


BOUNDARY RD. MARLBORO, N.J.

WELDER

Help Wanted Male or Female

Help Wanted Male or Female

(Night Shift) Immediate opening for.experienced Welder with emphasis on welding steel using wire feed equip- ment. Previous aluminum heliarc work a big plus, but not required.

Management Trainees

Merchandise Wanted

SLIPCOVERS
CABINETS

Position offers attractive compensation and liberal fringe benefits, in addition to considerable potential for advancement. APPLY 8:30-11:00 A.M. MRS. B. WALSH, EMPLOYMENT

or call 229-1100, ext. 683

POOL TABLE

Ell

Electronic Associates, Inc., West Long Branch, New Jersey 07764

FOR A PERSONAL INTERVIEW CALL (201)227-5497

FRIENDLY ICE CREAM CORP.

P.O. BOX 8

CLEMENTON, N.J. 08021

mmmmSSk ~

SHEET METAL WORKERS MACHINE OPERATORS

Set up and operate punch press, wales, press brake. Must be experienced.

(4:30-1.00 A.M.) Perform operations of etching, plating, sanding,

PLATER

Situations Wanted Female

(Midnight-8:00 A.M.) Read prints, assemble card files. Operate semiautomatic wire wrap machine. Some experience preferred.

PC BOARD INSPECTORS

"BTE E RTTEFI Nis"

PRINTED CIRCUIT ASSEMBLERS

(Night and Day Shifts) Inspect in-process PC boards and artwork. Perform rework (such as drilling and soldering) on completed boards.

FINANCIAL

Business Opportunities

PETS AND LIVESTOCK

Assemble, solder and wire small components from wiring diagrams. PC experience highly desirable.

COMPOSITOR

HARNESS & CABLE MAKERS


Wiring soldering and lacing experience required. Assemble, solder, pot, label units and sub-assemblies Basic knowledge of hardware, tools a must.

MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS

Perform typesetting assignments on cold type composition equipment. Applicants must be capable of operating at input and output consoles. Previous training on IBM Magnetic Tape Selectric Composer System or MTST System a definite requirement for this position.

SR. DRAFTSMEN

SILK SCREEN TECHNICIAN

Ell
Jill

(4:30-1:00 A.M.) . . Set up and perform silk screening on laminated panels. Electronic Associates. Inc.. West Long Branch, New Jersey 07764 The Growth Electronics Company

Perform varied duties involving layout of mechanical and electrical units. Prepare complexdrawings of assemblies, piece parts, schematics, wiring diagrams. Applicants should possess a minimum of 4 years' previous work experience.

Business Opportunities

APPLY 8:30-11:00 A.M. MRS. B. WALSH, EMPLOYMENT


AN AFFIRMATIVE ACTION Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

FOR LEASE
Thrac-bay Srvlc Station R*d Bank, NJ. Paid Training

SECONDARY MORTGAGE LOANS TO $10,000 OR MORE

Call 842-54//

Sorrow on the equity In vour home. Use the eitra cosh for anything you wort or wed. Call or visit. AVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES. INC. iMMoln st,. Matawon 566-1500 319 Moln St.. Ktontburg 7I7-M00

~RALEYGHVO-SPEED BICYCLE 2'7 V M M old J7S, Call 4/1-5580 after S p.m. foblet ~ tile tops, antique chair, Vitlgr flctrola. 3&4-O615 : O N T E M P O R A R Y P R I N T SOFA :holr, cocktail table, two floor lamps. 1130. CaHM2-3l37,5to8p.m.

AKC SIBERTAN~HUSKY^ Seven months, female, 150. Coll 767-5448 DACMA~TTA~N~ Four mont'hs, femaUT Coll between 9 ond 6 74I-47M

Catl687-1550.Ext.72

More Classified on Next Page

24 H e Daly Register, Red Bsiak-MUUBetewa, N J. Wednesday, March 1,1J7J


Peti and Livestock
TWQ>TEALO G E K r L E M i N AKC ST. t E U H M I D O n i r t t lifetime IMy cwn eonlon Ot+ftl marriage. MusTbe a M I i , llt<WTilly lilt and ctHTdnm. t " < a j AKC PUPPIES - PtmheneTUiMO Apfo, Joponew spaniels, one toy poodle. Or* fem o l * Lhosa Apso* M7S or breeder's Urm>. Private breeder. 77OT. AKC REGISTERED - 3'.1-yeor-old mole wire hair fox terrier for sale reasonably to OOod Rome. Must self for heolth reaM m . Coll 142-2035 orler t

Houses for Sole


OCEANPORT

Houses For Sole


CAPE COD -~ Immaculate condition. Four bedrooms, fireplace, Imo full tottn. vioiklobntichooti.

Apartments

Furnished Rooms

AKC POODLE PUP$~-^~We~ore Winners to everything, price, bockground, personollry, etc. Call 264-5*90. priv e entrance S140 i c d e s ivate ies. SIAMESE K I T T E N S ^ B T U epo'ini'and ties. Year-round. B42-9009 between 12 noon and TO p.m. Sealpolnt, moles. Coll 42 9587 evenlnai frJiVnToc'c u P A N ^ " F O V I rooms. Encellent condition.Convenient . C reni! Adorable minis. Moles. Block. 575, Choco Oreo 1210 monthly includtno utilities Idle. Coll evenings. Wl-4943. _ Leose r e q u i r e d . E A A R M S T R O N G AGENCY, Reoltors. 5S5 Prospect Ave . SPRINGER S P A N I E T ~ ~ M o l e T l w e 7 and Little Silver 741-4500. white. 4Vj months. KEfANSBlJRG Holt o t o duple". Two Coll otter 3:30, Ml-237*. smatl bedrooms. Suitable for odulti 1150 plus 1"3 months security. Avoiloble March 16. 6M-4609.

HIGHLANP5 One-bedroom furnished FURNISHED BOOM - I n frtwHt home." apartmtfil ort Route 'ib. All utilities tncii/d. MtOdsrlowr.. lullacae for womon. Call U\ efl, f i t s a moniri. One month security required Ho pets K l ) l oner 5 p m . ROOMS - lu,lat>l< for OUf students in KEYPOffT Brond-new four looms, home owned ond lived intoycolltgr tiu centrally oir conditioned. Wolk 1o every- dents. Red Bank. 42-H44 thing. Adults preferred. No pets. U2S 2 4 A MIDDLETOWN - Good furnished room 2117 or 671-1140 offer S p.m. In prtvofe home. Coll 717-9510 ofler 5 p.m. LONG BRANCH - Three rooms. Newly poneled. Two bedrooms, living room. ROOMS FOR RENT No cooking. New gas stove and refrigerator, new me Men only. floor. Sultoble for couple with small baby. Coll 747-3233 Coll after $ : . 22-09!.

WARM AND COZY

LAvety older typt homt In good condition BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED Three hos oil the niceties Ihot motet a'house a torp bdooms with oter vie*. Vermont home. Two corner cupoMftft in oinioi room. Holurol beamtn Ulchen celling. Mantel In Hying room o*r farge Hre place, ond mare. Toxes lust UX and ask NEW SPLIT-LEVEL - Four bedrooms. Kg |ust U2.5OD. Fireplace In gomeroom. WZSOO.

BOATING IS FUN
And Jus? minutes owoy from thli lovelt ranch home. .Three bedrooms with two full boths. Cozy paneled family room. Only the trees are old. Blue chip real estate investment has aft the features thai moke living, comfortable. Two-car garage, sun deck, and fenced teoT yard. Enjoy yourself. Asking 1*8,500. CALL MARTIN HOWARD, Assoc. MLS Realtor 462-9190

Rtoltor lot e. Kir Rd., Rumton

McAlister Agency
MMIM

Parents Query Board On MRHS Sessions


NEW SHREWSBURY Several parents questioned the Monmouth Regional High School Board of Education last night about a possible plan to end the staggered schedule at the school and reduce the school day from eight to seven class periods. They expressed a fear that this would deprive the most academically -inclined students of carrying as full a course load as they do now and reduce the range of courses available to them. For several years, about half the students at the high school have begun their first class at 7:20 a.m. while the other half starts an hour later. Most of the first group similarly gets out of school an hour earlier than the other. Dr. Frank A. Volpe, superintendent of the school, told the parents no decision had been reached as yet on whether the switch to a seven-period day would be made. He said it was being considered, however, because the present schedule left little opportunity for the teachers to work and plan together. that they need to take only a few courses as seniors and can leave school by 1 p.m. daily. "The vast majority of students would benefit by a

VIEW FANTASTIC
Riverfront ranch on the NovMlnk River. Distant views over the water. Built by a fine builder for his own use. this ranch has four bedrooms and three boths, two fireplace*. Only seven years old. Most unusual ond solid value. W.SOQ.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE Houses for Sale FAIR HAVEN JUST LISTED!
T H R E E BEDROOMS. LIVING ROOM WITH F I R E P L A C E , LARGE FAMILY ROOM, F E N C E D Y A R D . GAS GRILL, GAS L I G H T . R O O M FOR FOURTH BEDROOM. CALL US TO S E E T H I S C H A R M I N G HOME. IN M I N T CONDITION. WONT LAST LONG AT. . .

REAL ESTATE 'FOR RENT Apartments

W. Long Branch Rancher -$39,900


Just lilted, this ranch in mint condWon. IV living room, 15' dining room, three illy bedrooms, ]'i baths, 21' foi ro >r 139,900. "two-car garoge. Great buy for $39,

Borus Agency
REALTORS WJORIvtr Rd., Fair Hoven 747453 icy. Great value! Immediate occupanc Three-bedroom, mint condition ranci . ich. Trees, cellar, den. Excellent location. Won't lost! We're open seven days.

LI NCROFT$45,500

RED BAN* Large VrtreeTiovr. tlveroom apartments available with a RIVER VIEW. Near shopping ond tronlporlotion. Coll Superintendent, 741-3691.

BRADLEY BEACH

Brand ntw luxury apartment! for imme- O F F T C E ' - S H O W R O ' O M ' - S H O P -"2ID6"iq~ diate occupancy One-bedroom opart- It. ovollable. Heot. oir conditioned ond ments storting at 1170 per month. Wall-to- tittHties Included. 12.W per sq. It. In Red woU cor pel t no, GE appliances, security Bonk. 747-4451 intercom systems, off street parking. ''J block from the ocean. Model open doily between 10 o.m. ond 4 p.m. Call 9M-M39 V 233-7772 One-story building. 10,250 so tt. Ample COASTAL TOWERS APARTMENTS parking. Three overhead doors. Con.OBBr.nley Ave. venient topuollc transportation. Attractive price. Brokers protected. 747-1100

NOW RENTING

Commercial Rentals

PAUL BRAGAR
79-1 Broad i t . Agency ' Shrewsbury

$38,900 ALLAIRE-FARROW
Realtor 794 Brood St., Red Batik

ADAMS
AGENCY-REALTORS Open 7 days, 24 hour service

747-0221
RAMBLING RANCH $43,500

842-5098
110 Ave. of 2 Rivers Rumson HOLMDEL NEW, NEW, NEW! Large Colonial featuring four bedrooms, Vh t>oths, full dining room, 10' family room with fireplace, and attached two-car garoge. All utilities. Including city sewers. Convenient location, near shopping, transportation, and schools. Call us to see tftii home and others. Priced right, 167,500.

EXCELLENT MANUFACTURING SPACE

FIVE SPACIOUS BEDROOMS SCIENCE EAT-IN KITCHEN WE LIST RESIDENTIAL HOMES AT 6^i B04 River Rd. Fair Haven MAJOR APPLIANCES LITTLE SILVER COLONIAL LARGE TREED LOT Top residential area. Three bedrooms, 2Vi MEIJMED REALTORS 7l-5l bams, living room with fireplace, dining room, eat-in kitchen, den overlooking well LONG BRANCH Four-bedroom, twoiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiii londscoped reor yard, basement, double 1.119,500. garoge, air conditioned, j55,000. * RED BA~Nl<~ffiree rooms, furnished Coll J29M32 spoce. Leose required. Call tor details ond or unfurnished. Flrsl floor. COLONIAL CARRIAGE HOUSE Two Inspection. E.A. ARMSTRONG AGENCY, 30 Rldgc Rd. Coll 5M-4S62 RED BANK COLONIAL houses Irom Ihe river on lovely tree-lined Reoltors, 55S Prospect Ave., Little Silvei Four bedrooms, both, large dining room, street. Center hell, living room with tlreTWO-BEDROOM W A T E R F R O N T 741-4SOO. ' living r o o m w i t h f i r e p l a c e , screened ploce, formal dining room, eat-in kitchen. APARTMENT J165 a month, plus secuporch, basement, garoge- Walk to town. Faroe gomeroom. Five bedrooms, 2'/i rlly.ond utilities. 2l-31'4. baths. Rear patio overlooking large lot. GARAGE A P A R T M E N f - ^ F a i r Haven An exceptionally lovely home ottered at Newly decorated. Two bedrooms. Private 564,900. Call us today to Inspect. E.A. ~li2S to S350 Per Monlh ARMSTRONG AGENCY*. Realtors. 555 THE BERG AGENCY McCUE, INC. Prospect Ave., Little Silver. 74M5OO. dB I Linden PI. Mlddletown 30 Rldfle Rd. M2-276O ?S5? Eves. Sun. 747-4088 6)1-1000 Exciting, Ireed acre on hill. Colonial five- '47-0397 LARGE FOUR-BEDROOM Center hall ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS Four rooms. MONMOUTH BEACH Adorable new bedroom and den> plus fomily room, Colonial. 21/? boths, family room with fireWoll-to-woll corpet. all utilities. No pets. five-room iov^n house. Water view, tennis, beamed ceiling, pegged floor. Brick and place. Desirable area of Mlddletown, Suitable Tor couple. J200 monthly. Secu- pool, washer-dryer, bulk heading. Bolcony. cedor. Most unusual built-in solid oak Chormlng four-bedroom Colonial. !3' x 18' close to schools and train. Asking &S9.S0O. rlly. Leose. 29I-4J13 kitchen, 19' x 13', with beamed ceiling. dining room, centrol oir conditioning, four Call weekdays after t p.m. or a l l day From 1)20 lo UK monlh. 741-7748. Formol dining room. Professional land- large bedrooms. Immediate occupancy. weekends, 671-2267. RED BANK 2','i-room furnished elll- WIDE SELECTION OF RENTALS Fur- scoping. Three baths. Living room has New, ond plenty ot room for good living, clency. Neor transportation, shopping. nished and unlurnlshed. Immediate occuat 189,900. LEONARDO Four bedroom, full baseWHI monnered couple. 137.SO weekly. 741- poncy. SAMUEL T E I C H E R AGENCY, gorgeous fireplace with rosewood wall ment Cope Cod. Excellent condition. Nice and flanked by planters. Finished full Oceanport Ave., Oceonpori. 542-3500. area, three blocks f r o m school. Being basement, 45* x 28'. By'owner. Mid 8O's. transferred. 8 y oppolntment 291-0072. 'HIGHLANDS ON THE HILL Garden Call (201) 671-0941. Close to N.Y. bus line. oportment. One bedroom. Total electric. RfeD BANK Immediate occupancy. Three-bedroom house. References, lease,; SPOOKY SLEEPY HOLLOW LIKE SETAGENCY-REALTORS Air conditioning. Near buses. 172-1646. KEANSBURG Ranch type home. Four ond security required. 1250 per month. TING For over three acres with lake Open 7 days, 24 hour service bedrooms, living room, dining room, eotKEANSBURG One ond'two-bedroom CaM otterjip.m., M2-1773. ond arty old house. 174,900. apartments. Far Information, In Kitchen, modern bath, above ground M A R I E H I S OCCUPANCY - Asbury Pork. O L D E R F O U R B E D R O O M H O U S E - 110 Ave. of 2 Rivers ; coll 717.(94) pool. By o w n e r . Asking S31.000. ConFfrjt ond second tioor, 6 rooms. Washer, venllonal buyer. 787-3940. if needed. Near ocean ond school. Good With rental cottage and possible subdivi- OCEANPORT TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT LINCROFT Three-bfdroom ronch. Two References and security. neighborhood. Reference. Coll 776-7063 or sion. J54.000. baths, centrol air conditioning, 21x21 fomApply IS Borberie Ave.. Highlands 796-1263. '__ F O U R - B E D R O O M V I C T O R I A N - On ity room. Large, well landscaped lot. Coll RUMSON Two rooms and bath, portly EXECUTIVE HOME - Nine-room horned beautiful waterfronl. Barbecue on beach. 7/1-338.1. njrnlihed. Private. All utilities Near two-car garoge. and screened summer VS7.8OO. NOTICE OCEAN TOWNSHIP One ot Wayside's but. Ideal for one person. 7 Lafayette St. house In Locust estate area. 1500 per Take notice that George Rahtb, tradmonth plus utilities. Lease and references FOUR B E D R O O M Two both, lovely Charm! Charm! Across from river. Beau finest traditional homes. Three years new. ing as George's Liquor and Dell, has opSEA BRIGHT Studio "efficiency. 6^e retjulred. M2-4231. home in best location. 148.500. tlful lot, 15O228. Trees. 4 5 bedrooms, two Central a i r , fireplace, all appliances.plfed to the Near parkway, scnool, and shoppin shopping. Exthe Mayor and Council of the Co person. All utilities. Furnished. Wall-tobottis, stone fireplote, J55.000. T h i f Sh cellent condition, owner, 493-" Township of Shrewsbury. N.J. for a wall carpet. $130 month plus security. No RE D BAN k ~ ^Three-bedrVom". J250 Brood C license for premises l t d ot located t month. L*me," security and references re70's. pets. M2-W07or??t-2375. 74 Crawford Street. Shrewsbury TownRealtor MODERN APARTMN f "-T"HearTrans- quired. Coif 74) 2?75 between 9 ond 5. Do HAZLET Cope on over V* ocre. F Four sMp, N.J. 109 E. River Rd., Rumson 842-1894 portotion. Keonsborg Best lime to coll not call otter S p.m. Agency bedrooms, t o f l baths b e d r s two fulll baths, attached ga g directions. If any, should be mode im before noon 495-04)6. 794 Broad SI. Shrewsbury rage, large fenced yard. $36,900. BOB RIVER PLAZA Three-bedroom home. GRIMM AGENCY. Reallor, Hwy 35, Key- mediately In writing to Anne C. Swltek, Excellent condition. 1300 per month. Townihlp Cleric o f Shrewsbury TownR ED~BA~f7k t N J 5668400 Leose, references and security required. LUXURY H I RISE ship. Immediate occupancy. Call M r . Ryan, Riverview Towers M A T A W A N T O W N S H I P F i v e bedGEORGE RAHEB A rare combination. Over three acres of McGOWAN-RVAN, Realtors, 747-3000. 7t Riverside Ave., Red Bonk roorm, three bathi, carpeting, fireplace, 11 Nebraska Drive orgeous nature. Long river frontage, Overlooking the Naves,nk River, Spocious GIRLS WANTED - To share six-bedfomily room plus lorge recreation room. Jackson, New Jersey hree bedrooms, two baths, huge stone 1? bedroom aportments. Centrol oir con- room house with some. Oceon view on Rt. fireplace In living room, conversation a l Principals only. 157,900. 566-7076^ Feb. 21 March 7 U.00 Three bedrooms, IV'i boths, with ditioning. 24-hour doorman, Indoor pork- 36, Highlands. U 0 a month includes uliit- cove. Beautiful river views from most dressing room, spacious living MIDDLETOWN Three-bedroom ronch Ing, swim poa!, marina. TV security, ter- fle rooms. A low maintenance home. Asking room, dining room, kitchen, and LEGAL NOTICE i-JlL 2 i??i--.__ on '/i acre. Aluminum sldtng. partly furroces. Mr. Prlem (201) 74I-U32. 190,000. den. In excellent condition on TAKE NOTICE that on Thursday. SHR~EvV5BURY Four-bedroom houseT nished, carpeted. Near shopping, schools, over Vj ocre. Priced to sell ot tWO-ROOlvrRiRNrSNED - UtIMtVtZTn- MSOplus utilities. ond buses 10 W.Y. Immediate occupancy. March ), )973, the Borough of Fair 143,900 Haven by Resolution granted a variance eluded. No pets. Suitable (or business genColl 741-5600 or 741 5195. 139,500. 671-57. lo A. Sheffield ond Debra Tulp to erec tleman. Inquire 218 Monmouth St., Red REALTORS RED BANK Three b e d r o o m s , t w o MIDDLETOWN - Beoutllul southern Coan odd Hi on to the existing residence a Bonk. 600 River Rd.. Foir Haven lofiiol. Air conditioned. Unfurnished. Five boths, formal dining room, eat-In kitchen, 14 Gronae Wolk. Fair Haven, as shown REALTOR RED BANK Penthouse with balcony bedrooms, 2'/J baths, lormal dining room, 7474532 333 Brood St. Red Bonk basement, garage. Walk to shopping. on plani filed with Board and to continue overlooking ihe Naveslnk. Twobedrooim, enormous recreation room wMh fireplace. 131,900. 741-3656. location of existing garage. The deter MOVE R I G H T IN two baths, full dining room, carpeting ond Many extras. Excellent Mlddletown area. This four-bedroom, two-bath Colonial LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! - mlnotlon of the Board Is contained in Lease plus security. $550 month. Available olrcondlMonlng.BODAAANARMS that Is tastefully dec rough FAIR HAVEN'S FINEST The three most important words In real the Minutes and Is a v a i l a b l e tor Ina s t a s t e u y decorated throughout APARTMENTS. 74I-C516, V-noon ond eveililimiiniiimiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiii mi spection at the office of the Munlclpo Delightful heated Florida room with An- This large Colonial was built by on ex- estate. P r i m e L i t t l e Sliver location. JU nings. dersen windows, plus fomily room with acting b u i l d e r . River r i g h t s , t e r r i f i c Beamed ceilings, family room with wide Clerk. d id l fil LABRECQUE,PARSONS t o g - b u r n i n g f i r e p l a c e , c e n t e r rial 1, neighbors. Four lorge bedrooms, 2Vj pegged floors, slate center halt, fireplace, RED BANK - Unturn^rh~ed~GreTnTree Realtor & BA5SLEP spacious living ond dining rooms, well baths, paneled den. This is a rare opportu- three bio bedrooms, Vh tiled boths. cheerAporimtn's, 239 Spring St. Two bedroom 2?4 Broad St., Red Bank ful kitchen, and fully treed grounds. E.A. Attorneys for Applicants planned kitchen with dishwasher, disposal nity. Asking 181,000. available Immediately. Call for oppolntARMSTRONG A G E N C Y , Reoltors, S55 By THEODORE D. PARSONS JR. ond breakfast area, finished basement, ment. 7<1-3?S3, Prospect Ave., Little Silver. 741-4500. two-car gorqoe. Fair Hoven-Rumson High For the Firm iiiiiniiiiitiMiuiitimiiiiiiiiiimiiinilmimiiii Coll Anytime KEANSBURG Three-bedroom oporlSchool too! Transferred owner's sacrifice March 7 M 75 Astfior M r i . Scales. ment. Nfw two fomily house. S260 per Of 9,900. * REALTORS montti plus security. Call 787-0393. NEWSVtREW^SBURY Two bedroom 600 River Rd,, Fair Haven ranch. Fireplace, dinina room, iun porch, NOTICE UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY Rent opoM- lull basement, garage. JW) monthly plus WATERFRONT LOT In Rumjon. NewPROPOSAL Reoltors /nert. Buy moOel turniiure A deiorator's utilities. Relerences. One month's seculy bulkheoded. 210' x 75'. S21.0OO. Notice Is hereby given that sealed bids Hwy. 35 7*1-5212 Shrewsbury dream, luih ond plush Move m todav. ity, immediate occupancy. Coll 747 2461. Coll 843-0193 will be received In the Reception Room Yocht Horbor, 138? Oceon Ave. Seo of the Division ot Purchase and ProperNEW LISTING - Charming entrance foyAPRTITI O C C U P A i i c U n u r e d Bright. B<3-MI8, 741-1200-^ _ ly, 4th Hoar, State House, Trenton. New er with slate floor sets the mood. Formal three bedrooms, den, fireplace, screened Jersey 06625, on March 13, 1973 ot 2:00 living room with fireplace coiy poneled OAKHURST Two bedroom garden porch ond garage. 1275 monthly plus utiliP.M. and will be opened ond read Im* den with bullt-lns ond fireplace. Four' Magnificent lot with large trees and beauapartment. Balcony, living room, dinette, ties Lease required. E.A. ARMSTRONG PROFESSIONAL-AREA' mediately thereafter, for the following: lorge bedrooms, 2'-'z beautiful bolhs. A tiful landscaping. Privacy afforded by paneled kitchen, front ond rear entrances, AGENCY, Reoltors, 555 Prospect A v c , Cold Type Composer fine home in a prestige area. 173,500. large well maintained_prlvet hedges. Reample parking, swim dub. Heat and hot Little Silver. 741-4500. FAIR H A V E N ideally located four bedColltrter quires no site work. Bring your builder %oier supplied. 1230 o monlh. Coll 493room, S'/j-both home an large corner lot 17 Brood St. Shrewsbury and proceed with construction. Sewer con- Communications Equipment 296^ with two-car gorage. hot woter oil heat, ^ nection already in. Minutes to oceon on Doto Communications Equipment fult basement. Also included Is a threeDofo Procmlng Equipment OCEANPORT Two-bedroom apartvery privote lane. Principals only. Cad afroom cottage that rents for 1125 monthly. Eggs, fresh, liquid ment, Sponlsh style house by water. S22S WE N E E D Five or six, 2-3 bedroom Reduced to sell quickly. Asking 154,000. ter 6. 8^2-4835. Electronic Microscope plus utilities. 232-2314 after 7:30 p.m. ond Rental Homes, furnished or unfurnished PRIME LOT Red Bonk, near river. Ac- Graphic Arts Equipment weekends Available April 1. from 185 to 1350 per manlh (or Incoming Just reduced! This young four-bedroom, proxlmately 100" x 2 \ askina $22,000. Keypunching Services KEANSBURG Five rooms, new home. personnel. THE BERG AGENCY, Rt. 542-0740 Eatonlown l'Vbatri custom home features a huge Write to lot owner. P.O. Box ;jOA. Red Paper Cutter 21 Broad St. 21x16 living room, 16x17 eat-In kitchen, Bonk, N.J,/or contact your agent. Corpefed- t2S0 plus u'Mlfles ond security. MJddJelown. 471-1000. __^ Printing: Forms, Booklets lorge den ond family room, one for you CollW-OHl. _ _ _ COUPLE Needs unfurnished four or Annual Report ond one (or the kids. Your children will P I T R T T A ON M O U T H 1 OOxTooTNea r Decalcomonlas WATERPRONT APARTMENTS Fur- five rooms (or May 1 or sooner. Preler Attractive four-bedroom Cape Colonial, also en|oy the pool, patio and fenced-ln schools; transportation and shopping, nlthetf three-room apartment, all utilities, fireplace. Coll 291-2302. Air conditioned. Impeccable condition. yard. A "must see" home ot Ml,500. KIR- S10.Q00. 787-7052. Scientific Equipment Weekly, monthly, seasonal. No lease, RESPONSIBLE F A M I L Y Needs triree- Fireplace. Unparalleled volue at price. WAN CO.. Realtors, Airport Plozo, HazSound Motion Picture Equipment 1 let, N.J. 264-7200. NoutllUS Apartments. 84?-0S05. bfdroom home or oportmenl. Coll M r . A. Coll lodoy! Spectrophotometer Trafflcones 1 0 N G BRANCH Four rooms, ^miHF- after S, 7B7-M89. RED B A N K - R U M 5 O N A N D M I L E S Tratllc Point rtlihed. Private entrance, Leose, security AROUND Multiple Listings. Send tor UM$ON Commercial property, onTf Video Equipment F A M I L Y HOUSING _ . _. -required. Coll 222-7469 ofter 5 p . m . ^ free catalog of modest homes, forms, pa- j I Id Ings, approximately vh acres. Call service agency seeking renfal housing for Specifications ond the form of bid, canLONG BRANCH OceonfronlT~Pur its clientele. It you hove apartments or latial Rumson estates, waterfronts, ocrc20674. AGENCY -REALTORS tract ond bond for the proposed work nisried. Of* and two-bedroom oporlments. houses for rent, please call Mrs. Carolyn oge, lots, business opportunities. Open / days, 24 hour service ore on tile In the Office at me Director Heot ond water supplied. No peti. Call Kucharsfci, S42-BCXW, Exf. ?4B, Mon. tftrv ond may be secured by prospective bidFri. No commission Involved. ..__ l W 1 5 S 3 ders during office hours. Bids must be 110 Ave. of 2 Rivers Rumson (1) mode on a standard proposal form, E^TONTOVV FurnishedonV- bedroom COUPLE Wishes house, or apartment MIDDLETOWN Hwy 35. 23x23 office, (2) enclosed In the special addressed enooortment, modern kitchen, wall-lo-wall with space, for s u m m e r , Near trons- DEAL AREA-OAKHURST OWer home, Our 54th Year' lus stucco Shrewsbury 741-8600 Ivlng room,two-bedroom house with 12x23 velope, |3I accompanied by a certified carpeting, utilities Included. Close to Ft. irtotion it possible. Contact Bricmont, 50 bright, light, hoppy charm a new home 648 Hwy. 35 formal dining room, kitchen, check drawn to the order of the Treanever seems to nave. Five bedrooms, Monmoulti. SKfl month. Coll 542-UW. w. 72 St.. Apt 511. NYC 10033. ond full high ond dry basement. Area In surer of Ihe State of New Jersey for not three b a t h s , ond e x t r a r o o m s . O n l y front for parking. Only 354,900. SEA BRIG>Tf Furnished oporlment less than 10 percent of the amount of the 164,500. TWO YEARS YOUNG WVodern two rooms, air conditioned. Utill bid, unless otherwise specified, (In lieu BUILDERS CUSTOM RANCH ties Included. J l f t i / C y ond A r t s . 1050 thereof an annual bid bond may be on Realtor REALTOR Oceon Avc. B420O8B THREE SPACIOUS BEDROOMS file with the Division of Purchase and I ] W , River Rd., Rumson 842-3200 Hwy 35 ond Laurel Avc. P r o p e r t y ) , and (4) delivered at the ATTACHED GARAGE Member tnter-City Relocation Service FOUR-ROOM - burnished apartment Hotmdel, N.J. above place on or before the hour MINT CONDITION Second floor. Near hospifol ond train sloOpen 7 doys. named as no bfd wilt be accepted after 671-5650 20M7J-44J4 T R A N S F E R R E D , OR J U S T O U T MELMEO REALTORS tion. No pets. M* M o r r i s Ave . Long Motel and Hotel- Hiqhlqnds. B72-W73 Hotel Ihe hour specified. Bids not so sub" ~HIGHWAY~35 rooms, doily mold service, 120 and 125 per G R O W I N G YOUR H O M E ? Call o r OAK HILL A new listing for your ImBronch. mitted will be considered Informol and BUSINESS PROPERTY week Motel rooms, p/ivale bath, T V , write for your complimentary copy ot Ap- mediate Inspection. Center hatl Colonial will be relected. The Director reserves KEANSBURG Gcrden apartments. One oceanfront, doily mold service, 540 perpleBrook's monthly Homes for Living with tour bedrooms, 2'/i baths. Living CALL OWNER, 842-2205 the right to relect any ond all bids and bedroom. Heot ond hot wotfr included. wceit. . magoilne. Offers pictures, prices, de- room with fireplace. Den. Dining room. to award the contract In part or whole If scriptions. APPLEBROOK AGENCY >]&5.COII 7B7-9SEB. Eot-ln kitchen. A lovely setting in this SEA GIRT Business property with InRealtors, 950 Hwy. 35, Middletown. 671 prestigious community. See (t today. Ask- come. Air conditioned Colonial building, deemed lo the M i l Interest of the Slate to do so. The successful bidder will be T H R E E L A R G E ROOMS In upper ing 155,500. ROGER F. COZENS, Realtor. on desirable thoroughfare, lends Itself to required to furnish surety bond as speciHighlands. SI B month, oil utilities includ- Year round living for Golden Agers. Nice O 813 River Road, Fair Haven, N.J. 741 7686. professional offices or exclusive shops. fied of a company authorized to do busied. Available Moy 1. 791 --H3S. rooms oceort view, three homecooked AUTHENTIC CENTER HALLWAY CO- Multiple Listings. Formerly gift and boutique. 1600 sq. ft. ness In the State of New Jersey. main oreo plus office and storage space. OAKHU RST Four-room l u r n t s h f d meals d o i l / , 24 hr. love ond ottentlon. LONIAL Our lovely home. Ideally loSTATE OF NEW JERSEY ooortment. Ground floor In house. Con- You're not "|ust o name" here, tn Asbury cated In Long Branch, has recently been LINCROFT RANCH Three bedrooms, Second floor, two-bedroom apartment comp'*IHy deroroted. It features a living two barns, firepllace, finished bas Park call 7ft-MM_ DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY venient location. Call 531 06?S fireplace, basement, with seporofe entrance. On/off street room with fireplace, dining room, wile de- porch, ^ cre. Mi 40's. 747-3643. parking. Low faxes. Principals only. OwnFURNISHED ROOMS Cooking priviDivision of Purchase and Property Mid 3643 id signed kitchen opening onto a flagstone MIDDLETOWN - 51 w o o m lurnisned leges. 115, JIB- and 120 per week. er. 531-3225. RONALD A.ENGELHARDT porch, 1W baths, and two bedrcoms, one FAIR HAVEN Charm personified. Imapartment wllh ad utilittes Prlvote enActing Director opening onto a glassed-in sunporch. maculate Cape Cod surrounded by holly tronce. Security required. Couples preo a glo: Feb. 28 Mor. 7 131.00 ferred. Fo( Intormotion. call 7*1-4105 otter EATONTOWN AREA Furnished room 136,500. Call 229-3037 after 6 p.m. week- and oak trees. This Is an excellent starter Coll between 6 ond 9 p.m. home f o r under ( 4 0 , 0 0 0 . C A M A S S A S p.m. days, any time weekends. 972 1818 10-405 AGENCV. Realtor. 4 Parker Ave., Little SHERIFF'S SALE TWO-BEDROOM APARTMENT - AvailCALL K R O L For your real e i t o l e Sliver. 741-6336, L I S T I N G S O r - B E T T E R H O M E S - In SUPERIOR COURT able March 15th. S!70 including all utih- W I N T E R RENTALS Rooms with pri- needs. Stephen J. Krol, Realtor, Hwy 35, Keonsburg-MlddietownHaiiet-Hotmdei. vate bath and weekly maid service, 135 Hotmdel, N.J., 671-4616. M I D O L E T O W N TOWNSHIP - Three THE SMOLKO AGENCY. 787-0123. OF NEW JERSEY tlei. One month lenuf ily. 7B7-5O40. per week. Windjammer, 344 Ocean Ave,, rooms, both, hot woter heot. Near all CHANCERY DIVISION' WE BUY HOUSES FOR TOP DOLLAR Sea Bright. 842 3084 or 787-9655. M A T A W A N B O R O U G H - C U S T O M transportation. Call 787-3429. KEANSBURG - Tv MONMOUTH COUNTY In any condition, RANCH DINING ROOM. FIREPLACE, apartment. S20O ptuDocklt No. F14IS-71 KEYP 6 R i f Centrafly located. SuTtable W A L L - T O - W A L L C A R P E T I N G , G A - SHORE CRE~ST~fhf3 new IJsiing Is Phone 257-7838 UNDERWOOD MORTGAGE 4 TITLE tor mature gentlemon pocked with volue for the dollar. "Tip RAGE. $36,350. CO., a New Jersey corporation, PlainColl 842-9347 lop" condition inside ond out. Dining We Have Buyers! tiff vs: RONALD LEESER, el als.. DeCUSTOM SPLIT SPARKLING THREE room plus an eat-In kitchen. Four bea^ Listings urgently needed In the oreos of fendants WfcD BANK Modern two large rooms B E D R O O M S , I 1 ) 8 A T H S , D I N I N G rooms. Two baths. Den. Basement. Hot Hatlet, Mlddlelown, Belford, Leonardo, By virtue of a writ ol execution In the with privote kitchenette, balh. Suitable for R O O M . F A M I L Y R O O M , G A R A G E . water heat. Lots of little playmates in this etc. Coll George A. DeLorme, Realtor, above stated action to me directed, I one oduff. 229-3010 Quality Realty Associates U4,900. STERLING McCANN, REAL ES- conventional Middlelown area. Asking shall expose for sale of public vendue, 542,000. Coll any time. ROGER F. CO- , Member Multiple Listing Services at the Court House In the Borough of TATE BROKER. 544-9644. Z E N S , Realtor, 813 River Road, Fair Freehold, County of Monmouth, New preferred. $72 per week. FAIR HAVEN Restored Colonlol with Hoven, N.J. 741-7686. Multiple Listings. Jersey, on M o n d a y , the 2nd day of Coit 787-0M9 river view ond original charm. Asking In COLTS NECK Four-bedroom, 2Vi-bath April, 1973, at 2 o'clock, P . M . PreOUR LISTINGS SELL vailing Time. 50's. Principals only. 842-4331. KEANSBURG Colonlot on beautifully wooded tot. CenALL Ihot tract or parcel of land, situRoom for rpnf Ample parking. M l ^ A W A t T f o W N S H T p ' FouY toed- tral// air conditioned. Fireplace in farge ge ate, lying and being In the Borough of ,?200 $q t! Heai air c o n j i U v .->g Call 787-8163 roorm, eat-In kitchen, woll-to-woll carpet- carpeted living room; second fireplace In BROOK AGENCY Highlands, County of Monmouth and Ing. Full basemen). Close to schools ond meled, carpeted family room. First Muoi janitorial ser^ce. D - ^ V pa> r >^ on Stole of New Jersey: laundry; finished basement. Patio with _ . _ _ shopping. Call 566-6179 before 7:30 p.m. B E I N G known as Lot 48 on M a p of paved pa^..ng Jot Con,p'..pn! to #\ qas arill. All aDotiances. Many custom Sea Side ot Highlands of Naveslnk. New features. S79.900. Principals only C1-0833. public JranspoMuiion ;Vi,i reanarige Jersey, doted 1872 ond tiled in Ihe Monmouth County Clerk's Office July 31, offices to tenants teq-j ^PT-.PI''. AtRED BANK 71 E. Bergen P I . Three 1874, Case No. 40-14, and more partlcuJ NOTICE bedrooms. Two cor brick veneer garoge. tractive price Brokers p'oieciej lorly described as follows: I MOl Fireplace, recreation room. P i baths. Swimming pool in ground (20"x40) Princi' SHERIFF'S SALE BEGINNING at a point In the northCcnlrally locot"ct en Broad St.. this 7-17-2: SUPERIOR COURT eosterly line ol Second Street, which pals only. S42.000. ; -22B3. three room otftcc. completely recJecoOF NEW JERSEY point is distant 70.0 feet southeasterly i d l e d , would surely suit trip profes-bedroom Colonial FOUR-BEDROOM CAPE - Mlddlelown Irom the Infersecflon ot the southCHANCERY DIVISION sional. Wpil to kvtill installed to t e n - ' ofeo. Lorge kitchen and dining orea. ga5.OC0? Well, *t hae |uit -hal you easterly line ot Valley Avenue ond the MONMOUTHCOUNTY Qnfs color d r s i r o . .Two year lease. roge, ond cyclone fenced yard. 534,500. bfen looting I c . Don't hrnlntr. coll northeasterly line of Second street, and Dsckt.1 No. F-U7-71 No utilities. S260 per month. Principals only. Coll 787-6910. running ! We don't p<eiue you o<xl tfint'i a U N I T E D C O U N T I E S TRUST COMihence (1) North 45 degrees 05 minutes ATLANTIC RlGHLANDS^HIgho"n~o~hiii PANY, o body corporate of Ihe State ol New Jersey, Successor ond Rloht Tllle. East 100 Oftet t o o point; wtlti a pretty view ot Ihe valley, this 7 days 24 tirs. 74I-5I0O Cotoniat (s orcaf lor (he Jorge family.older Interest to Keonsburg-Mlddletown No- Ihence (21 South 44 degrees 55 minutes Six tional Bonk, ond Union County Trust Eost 2S teet to a point; bedrooms, the living room and den have Company, Plaintiff v s : M A R L E N E Ihence 13) South 45 degrees 05 minutes fireplaces. The kitchen is large and has WEBB ond T H E CENTRAL JERSEY West 100.0 leet to a point In the northrecently been remodeled. Dining room BANK & TRUST CO., Defendants easterly line ol Second Street; Ooitment. Ntarlv an ocre of lond will vour own tennis court. Asking 5B,900 By virtue of a writ of execution In the thence 14) North 44 degrees 55 minutes west olang Ihe northeasterly line of SecCoil todoy. ROGER F, COZENS, Realtor, above stated octlon to me directed, I ond Street, 25 feet fo the point or place Bt3 River Rood, Fair Hoven, N.J. 741-7686 shall expose for sole of public vendue, of BEGINNING. Multiple Llsiings. ot the Court House In the Borough of Freehold, County ot Monmouttw New The above description being In accorFAIR HAVEN Older tnree-bearoom, Jersey, on Monday, the 26th day of dance with Survey by Thomas A. Flnnemodern kitchen, 10" beamed ceilings, walk March, 1973, al 2 o'clock, p.m. pre- gan, Land Surveyor, Beltord, N.J. Lie. up attic, full basement, rosewood pone I- vailing time. No. 10624, dated October 9, 1969. The Mg. Compfefely renovated. Mint condiobove premises also being known as Lot Alt that certain tract or parcel ot land tion. Convenient to everything. Principals and premises, hereinafter particularly No. 20 In Block No. 59 on the Tax Map only. Ut,000. Call 843-37Q5. described, situate, lying ond being In the of Borough of Highlands, Manmouth County. New Jersey. Borough ot Red Bonk, In Ihe County ot OCEANPORT Spacious Iwo-Dedrooi Monmouth ond State of New Jersey: C O M M O N L Y known as 24 Secpnd Cope on beautiful shrubbed and shoded BEING lot number twenty nine (79) at Street, Borough ot Highlands, New Jercorner. Attractive living room, formal West west dining room, carpeted kitchen, dry base- Side, Side as shown on solo lots ofC.E. mode by George O. Cooper, It Is Intended to describe Ihe some ment, attached garage. J39.900. Principals Jonuory 25th, 1JO0, ond tiled In the AAonpremises conveyed to Ronald Leeser only. 542-M28. mouth County Clerk's Office In Case No. ond Darlene E. Leeser, his wife, by 31-9. Deed dated March 1, 1972 and recorded MARLBORO "CbUKjfS V" 4.45 ACRES Room tor onimols. ImSold premises are also known as Lot Morch 6, 1972 in Book 3771 of Deeds for maculate three-bedroom ranch. Three-car 10 In Block 84 as shown on the Ta> Map Monmouth County, poge 690. ie with heavy duty wiring. Ashing of 1ttt Borough of Red Bank. The approximate omounf of the ludgSold premises are further known as 64 ment to be satisfied by sold sale Is the EDNA M . NETTER. REALTOR Newman Springs Rood, Red Bonk, New sum of Slt.972.00 together with the costs Jersey. ot this sole. Dutch Lone Rood Marlboro. 462-4151 The approximate amount of the ludgThe Sheriff hereby reserves the right mem to be satisfied by said sale Is the to odlourn this sale without further noLITTLE SILVER sum ol 114.570 0O together wllh Ihe c w f j tice of Publication. pplebrook Agency Charming home on nice grounds with cir- ol this sale. PAUL KIERNAN, cular d r i v e w a y . Three bedrooms, t ' i PAUL K I E R N A N , Sheriff Sheriff Realtors baths, living room, dining room, linlshed Dated: January 21. 1173 Dated: January 31, 1773 Realtors basement. Eot-ln kitchen with dishwasher, 112 A*. of Two Rivera Realtors Zucker, Goldberg I Weiss Roberts, Madden. Holoblnko and self-cleaning range, wall-lo-wall carMaUwan Attys. 56B-7600 Runwxi , . M2-2900 Atryl. 950 Hwy 35. M kM let own 671-230O peting. Walk to train and school. 144,SCO Mar. 7.14.2I.21 s)7.00 Coll fi:-5j!7lv Feb. 3 March 7. 14, 21 U0 00

L O N C T B R A N C H FromT~70 per Tq.~it" All utilities ond services included. Imrne? Greengrove Ave. Keyport, N.J. dloTe occupancy. 272-30O01-beoroom SI7S A f L A N T I C t i l G H"L A N O S F u I I "y 3 bedroom J22S equipped restourant. Seats 100. Includes M o t , hot woter, oir conditioner Coll 741-1144 a f t e r j p.m. 2 blocks eosf ftf. 3 ond M Udle Rd I900 S O ^ F T ^~Prune offlcjvspace. SuiT Phone 264-1846, Mgr. Api. 72 dividoble. IIS sq ft. net. Thompson Agency, HIGHLANDS Small three-room cot- 74I-O7OO. _ _ ^ _ toae. Suitable adults. S10O o month.. Secu RED BANK Hove only a lew choice lorlfy required, 291-2I44. ._ cations available for retail stores, bouT H R E E B E D R O O M W A T E R F R O N T tiques, chains, etc- Shopping Moll, two VIEW S275 a month, heat Included. levels. Climate controlled, prime area. Brokers protected. Coll 142-4S72. Security required. 291-3174

GREENGROVE GARDENS

We're ot o loss for words to describe this lovely home with three big bedrooms, two full baths, ond huge fomily room. The condition is perfect, the landscaping is THREE-BEDROOM RANCH in excellent beouflfuf and the price is right. One in a Little Silver location. Mint condition. Cen illllon. tral air. Many extras'. 149,500.

741-3450
Call Anyilme

"NEW LISTINGS"

T H R E E - B E D R O O M B I - L E V E L with o perfect in-law setup thai has one bed room, bath, kitchen. living room downstairs. Lovely home In High View Estates, Mlddletown. S54.9OO.

VAN-HORN
AGENCY- REALTORS Open J days. Call 74 hours a day.

WALKER & WALKER


Hwy 35 Realiors *71-3311 AAWdletown

HAZLET

$28,900

747-4100

TsTL^^MO^irut

AAcGUE
MIDDLETOWN Exclusive Area DEEPDALE

had resulted from a meeting two weeks ago at which one group of students was told of the possibility of a switch to a seven-period day. Was Pilot Project change to a single session," In response to a question, he said. board member Norman J. The parents said they Field said the staggered feared a loss of some of the schedule had been initiated as electives available for the stu- "something of a pilot project" dents and complained because a few years ago when the their children had been told to board felt growth in the area sign up for only six courses was such that the district next year instead of seven. would eventually either have Mrs. Betty Sehulman, of New to go into a building program Shrewsbury, said that be- or go to double sessions. cause of this the adminisHe said the staggered starttration will turn around and ing hours were set up as "the justify dropping a time period first step, as a lead in", to by saying there was no de- double sessions so as to make mand for a seven-period day. the transition to double ses"little easier" should Dr. Volpe said that as far as he knew there had been no that become necessary. As change in the advice coun- they knew, he told the parselors have always given stu- ents, school populations' have dents about the number of since leveled off and the courses to select. He said feared problem never masome confusion apparently terialized.
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SCHANCK AGENCY
REALTOR

RUMSON WATERVIEW!

ADAMS
842-5098

PORT-AU-PECK

English Cottage

McAlister Agency RIVERFRONT PLUS PRIVACY

PAUL BRAGAR
747-0221

n*m. 1

New Shrewsbury Ranch Beautifully Landscaped

Borus Agency

Harry Drazin Agency

SUPER L O C A T I O N "

Few Take Advantage He said most students already were on a seven-period day and that fewer than 100 of the 1,430 students in the school actually take advantage of the By GEORGE SIIEEHAN overlapping schedule. Many of the students, he added, If the common man has erred in this century, it is in his have used the existing setup failure to realize the importance of play. The aristocracy nevto pack their schedules as er made that mistake. Aristocrats know that work is a luxury sophomores and juniors so and play is a necessity of life. When money and position give the freedom to pursue the good life, work is seen to be a diverLEGAL NOTICE sion, a distraction from the most basic and the most, to use Maslow's word, actualizing human activity, play. Sec Truth We are slowly awakening to this truth. Teachers now see the ideal learning environment as the environment of children at play. Physical education is being revived by bringing play back into it's curriculum. Health and fitness, every medical journal is telling us, comes only to those who play hard and often. And finally the theologians, always the last to learn; are starting to ask themselves if play might not be the primary aclivity of man. Theologian Gabriel Moran has called play, "one of the most intriguing and potentially fruitful interests of contemporary theology." Certainly, as Chesterton said, a case can be made that the true object of life is play. Nor was the idea new to him.
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Life: Great New Game

ALLAI RE-FAR ROW


741-3450

Borus Agency

The Innocent Bystander


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WALKER & WALKER ESTATE SALE

Lots ond Acreage RUMSON

OAITHI ILTCOLOiN i A L

BECHT&CO., Realtors
842-3933

Wanted to Rent

Ted McGinness, Realtor

CUPID'S CHALET '

FAIR HAVEN$41,000

ADAMS
842-5098

Commercial Property

RAYSTILLMAN Realtor

Business Property

Furnished Rooms ALPINE MANOR

ELLEN S. HAZELTON

MIDDLETOWN $32,900

STEPHEN J . KROL

ANEW IDEA! "

Real Estate Wanted

Commercial Rentals

CHOICE OFFICE SPACE

TRY US

Commercial Rentals
OFFICE SPACE SHREWSBURY

Houses For Sale


Broad St., Shrewsbury

LEGAL NOTICE

Curley Agency

CALL 747-1100

Curley Agency

741-5100 |

Houses For Sale

Houses For Sale

pplebrook Agency

pplebrook Agency

I23ARLM

Plate spoke of man as "God's plaything" and urged everyone whether man or woman to "make the noblest games the real content of their lives." And in Proverbs we read, "His delight was in playing with the children of men." We have missed the point of all this because we have not understood play. It is not, as we believed, simply a method of relieving tension and providing relaxation. Nor is it a service activity preparing us for the more serious and important every day world, the real world. Most Important Play, as the true player knows, is the most important, most serious, most real thing that he does. Indeed one must play with a passionate involvement, play as if hislife depended on it, if play is to mean anything at all. Play requires that sort of immersion of self which Henry Hazlitt found in the inscription over a London Fives-Court (handball court), "Who enters here, forgets himself, his country, and his friends." Only then in this total committment will the player bring to his sport those qualities cited by Hugo Rahner in "Man at Play", "a lightness and freedom of the spirit, an instinctively unerring command of the body, a certain neatness and graceful nimbleness of mind and movement." One man's-play can, of course, be another man's boredom. Any one reading the Lawrence Shainberg article on Frank Shorter in the New York Times Magazine two Sundays back would realize that. Shorter's idea~of play is running twenty miles a day at a six minutes per mile clip, occasionally interspersing these tortures with a series of agonizing interval quarter mile runs. And the whole joyful routine end's in a marathon where he has to "redline" (maintain as long as possible the fastest pace one's body can bear) and "go it on mind alone" (the task that confronts a runner when he has superseded the normal limits of his body). Yet there can be no doubt this mixture of pain and pleasure is play. It exists of and by itself and serves no utilitarian purpose. Why does he do it? "There's always the feeling of getting stronger"^Shorter told Shainberg, "1 think that's what keeps me going." That explanation may be inadequate for some, but for me it contains enouglil theological implications for a doctoral thesis. Strong is Anglo-Saxon for what the Romans called virtus and from this Latin root comes man and virtue. The growing strength that Shorter feels is obviously as spiritual and intellectual as it is physical. > Shorter belongs to that group of people that William ,/ames said resent confusion and must have in purity, consistency and simplicity. Just as others need a life and play that has superabundance, over-pressure, stimulation, and lots of superficial relationships. ("When I go out on the football field," said semi-pro defensive tackle and bartender Vinnie Sheridan, "I'm up against people my size and if I can lake them right there, head up, not really hurUhem but just wipe them out, then I know I've done something.") And still others require ease, elegance, tributes of affection and social recognition (The only thing worth winning, said Belloc, was laughter and the love of friends.) Strange Person The marathoner is by most standards a peculiar guy. He has found freedom through the acceptance of rales; has cured his loneliness with solitude; and has discovered the peace inside of pain. He is a blood brother to another peculiar guy, Henry David Thoreau who spoke of his play (walking) in this way: "If you are ready to leave father and mother, and brother and sister, and wife and children and friends, and never see them again - if you have paid your debts and made your will and settled all your affairs and are a free man, then you are ready fora walk." There is more, you see, to play than any of us dreamed of Comedy and tragedy; laughter and tears. Kazantzakis saw in play the moment civilization began, when life no longer had to struggle for preservation. And.in that play, he saw the development of the qualities of the free man; a serene bearing, passion that is perfectly disciplined, and a beautiful athletic form. Even for the free man life is a dangerous and difficult game. Man, the player, must train long and hard before he can move through life with the simple, certain, leisurely grace of the expert, with what Rahner called spiritual elegance. Still, as the man said, it's the only game in town.

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25 We Dfly Itegtster, Red BuMUddfetow, NJ. Wedtesday, MaKk7,117: SuulTy Smith \


TH9RMiNTOM
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Crossword Puzzle
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55

Your Horoscope, Birthday


WEDNESDAY, Mareh 7 - plement your own experience Born today, you are one of with that of others, real or those persons undeniably gif- otherwise. ted when it comes to recognizNever dull in conversation, ing, working with, and draw- drab in appearance, or doltish ing conclusions from details. in manner, you present an apWith a tremendous appitude pearance of near-perfection to for scientific research you the outside world. Within turn your attention to the min- yourself, however, you may utest of aspects and elements suffer from the kind of turof any given thing, taking in moil that is brought on by not only that aspect or ele- being overanxious about your ment but also noting with relations with other people. great care precisely how it af- You needn't suffer so, for fects related parts and, ul- there are few who know you timately, what bearing it.has who do not admire you and upon the whole. With sta- wish the best for you. mina, self-control, thought, To find what is in store for and great seriousness of pur- you tomorrow, select your pose, you undertake every birthday and read the corretask and you succeed. sponding paragraph. Let your At the same time that you birthday star be your daily are exceedingly realistic and guide. scientifically oriented, you THURSDAY, MARCH 8 are also one who loves advenPISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ture and romance. Perhaps Use the advantages given because there may never be you by nature to overcome quite enough of these things in any gains made recently by your actual life, you will be the opposition. You can beat e s p e c i a l l y fond of them t h e ' e n e m y at its own through books, films, plays, > game! and so on. You are not adverse ARIES (March 21to experiencing things for April ID) The powers of othyourself but you like to sup- ers can be used to your own ends this morning. Parents lend your support in other, and children become involved less obvious ways. Try. in special concerns vital to LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) their relationship. Live and learn! The sooner TAURUS (April 20-May 20) you are able to take that atti Imagination and versati- tude and be happy with it, the lity: with these you can over- sooner you will make the come any obstacle the day > kinds of gains you have in might put before your ambi- mind. tion. Be casual in approaching SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) old friends. Maturity of vision is needed GEMINI (May 21-June 20) this morning if you are not to " Your sympathy should be make the same mistake of enough! to make another feel those who have been shortbetter about his lot. You may sighted in their turn. not be able to help materially SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22but you can lend moral sup- Dec. 21) A tendency to say port! too much at the wrong time CANCER June 21-July 22) could cause you considerable Deal wisely with a financial difficulty this morning. You problem involving others and Can rectify things in afternoon you will gain the admiration if you try. of many,. Be careful about CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. companions at evening. 19) Overcome any tendency LEO (July 23-Aug. H) - A to judge others harshly on lovely day with an added at- little or no evidence. A wish to traction in late afternoon. put yourself forward is norTake care that you are not mal but don't overdo it. late to your own celebration AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 18) - or what symbolizes one. Sympathy for your present VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) difficulty comes from an unThough you may not take an expected and little-heard-from active part in a cause your comer of your world. Yield to friends are joining, you can group pressure; apologize.

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SORRY-THATS THE WRONG NUMBER 7 YOU PAY ' THE CHECK I'M SURE UNLUCKYEVERY TIME WE PLAY THAT SAME,

By Alfred Shelnwold It is normal to play as low a card as possible when you're not trying to win a trick. This fact sometimes gives the opponents information or misinformation, as the dase may be. You are not under oath to tell the truth with every card that you play. West opened the king of dubs,' and South played the eight of clubs without seeming to give the matter any thought. Actually, South had sized up the whole situation. He knew that his best chance was to make a second club trick. Now note the effect of that eight of clubs on poor West. Apparently, South had played LETS 5 NOW.. I "HAVE
TOO LETTERS OF

I LOSE.' .

The Wizard of Id _
THE HUMS /tWV

his lowest club. In that case. South held very few clubs. For this reason, West continued by leading the queen of clubs at the second trick. " This was all that South needed. He pounced on the second club with his ace and led a third club. Shift Too Late West won with the ten of clubs and shifted to the jack of spades, but it was too late. South won with the ace of spades and led a fourth club. Now declarer was in position to take his last club, and game was assured with two club tricks, two spades, two hearts and three diamonds. There would be a different story to tell if South took the first club with the ace and re-

turned a club. West would win a contract of three hearts will the second trick and would then be reasonable. see the danger when East, failed to follow suit. West South dealer North-South vulnerable would shift to the jack of NORTH spades, and the defenders 4 K43 would get two spade tricks and three clubs in time to de0 KJ10 feat the contract. + 653 DAILY QUESTION EAST Partner opens with 1-NT (16 WEST 4 085 1097 to 18 points), and the next + J103 C QJ972 > V player passes. You hold: S-Q 8 0 8 5 2 0 7 64 3 5 H-Q J 9 7 2 D-7 6 4 3 C-4 + K Q J I 0 4 What do you say? SOUTH Answer: Bid two hearts. ^ A62 You expect partner to pass, in (? K4 which case you should be sa0 AQ9 A9872 fer at two hearts than partner would be at 1-NT. If your South West North Cast partner does raise hearts, he 1 NT Pass "3 NT Pass will have excellent heart sup- Pass Pass port with 17 or 18 points; and Opening lead K

I HAVE ONE FKOMTHAT ROUNP-HEADE0 KIP AW ONE FROM THAT 5TUPID W WITH THE BLANKET... I NEED THREE MORE..

The Phantom
TESTS SHOW THE BUUE7 HIT 5T0NE WAS FROM YOUR GUM.
UNDERSTAND. I WAS A FIGHT IM

Beetle Bailey
WELL V I 7 H C U W VOU &*ID LET IT Y TrlERE WAS NO ROOV1 6O, I FOP JNEFFIClENCy IN THIS
WE'LL BUILD AN A N N E *

GO OH. _ ^ T O E RWIK WfTH THOSE ROBBERS.

STONE IS.. WEJUOPV/

TV Dally Register, n BMk-MMteteira, NJ. Wedaesaty, Much.?

Comment On Study Deferred


LONG BRANCH - A spokesman (or Monmouth Medical Center said the hospital c a n - n o t " r e s p o n d intettigently" to newspaper accounts concerning a report tbat Medicaid hospital expenditures have soared without analyzing the document. The two-year study, prepared by Medicaid's research staff, notes New Jersey hospital payroll costs increased after the Medicaid program began in January 1970, but not because qf the need for more employes:' "Rather," the study says, "Medicaid dollar payments apparently became a convenient vehicle by which to increase administrative and staff salaries." The report shows Monmouth Medical Center with a staff of 1,371 and a payroll totalling $7.9 million in 1970. The study says one year later, the hospital staff increased by 17 and had a payroll of $9.6 million, an approximate one per cent personnel increase to a 21 per cent salary increase. "Monmouth Medical Center has not received a copy of the r e p o r t on t h e Medicaid study," the hospital spokesman said. "Without the opportunity of reading the report and digesting its contents, especially in the area of complaints it appears to make against hospitals, it is not possible to respond intelligently to newspaper accounts concerning the report." The report cites over expansion-and expensive equipment, as major sources of increased hospital costs. Adding on and maintaining empty beds, the report says, means a higher rate per day the hospital can charge its patients. Purchasing high cost "quality care" equipment that is used infrequently also contributes to increased hospital bills,,the report says. It dies a national study showing 30 per cent of 777 hospitals equipped for open h e a r t surgery did not perform such operations during the study year. Based on the current reimbursement system, the report found there is "little incentive lor a hospital administrator to operate efficiently, that is, to provide care at the point where bis average cost is lower." "Unless more positive governmental action is forthcoming in restricting the entire medical care delivery system or additional restraints are placed on costs," the report concludes, "per diems can only be expected to continue their soaring upward march."

CONVINCE YOURSELF

OUR TRIM IS BETTER" HONEST I


SWEET TASTY
SNOW WHITE

CARROTS 2 . 3 5 MUSHROOMS
FLORIDA SEEDLESS
SHORTCUT

48 SIZE

DINNER PLATES

RIB STEAK

GRAPEFRUITS
FRESH FLORIDA JUICE

59CI
(
CRISP AIRE MclNTOSH

BAGGED

Oranges 1 8 ^ S 5 9 Apples 3

EKJCWUPAIRY

DEPARTMENT
y**s

"OUR TRIM IS BETTER"


CENTER CUT

'OUR TRIM IS BETTER'

Royal Dairy

tb.79

Cottage Cheese
Creamed or Chunky

Kraft Grapefruit Juice


Glass C o n '

CHUCK STEAK

FIRST CUT

Ib.

69'
,
(FOR POTTING) "OUR TRIM IS BETTER

POT ROAST
Ib.

CALIF. CHUCK

Ib.

"OUR TRIM IS BETTER"

BEEFSIART =
THICKCUT
SHOULDER

Beef Liver London Broil LB. Bottom Round Roast Shoulder Steak B0NE 69 Top Round Roast Cube Steak Ib Cfuqd Frozen Food Dept. Silver Tip Roast c Mrs. Smith b79 Pork Chops Fresh H a m " " 89 Green Giont Golden Deluxe Niblets Corn or Medium Fresh or Smoked Picnic > 75' Spare Ribs C.TVCUT 8 E T Peas m M f\^ Apple 7 Q ( Smoked Ham HyGrade's Franks Butter Sauri 1 C Sliced Cold Cuts 2 X 89 HyGrade's Franks
LESS LEANS, TENDER

65
/

99' CUBES

OUR TRIM IS BETTER LEAN FOR STEW

1
USD A CHOICE

19

STEER SLICED

'OUR TRIM IS BETTER" 1 (.a U S D A CHOICE Ib

,75' I 55 ,bV
Ib

"OUR TRIM IS BETTER" U S D A CHOICE

169

9-11 CHOPS ENDS & CENTERS

4 99
San-Sea

109 Ib I 109 Ib I

BUTT PORT

SKINLESS ALL BEEF SKINLESS ALL MEAT

,89' 85'

Shrimp Cocktail
3-Pack

Jeno's
2

3 89'
SPECIAL
Automatic Bawl Cloanar 9 ounctt. Long tasting biod d b l c .dtgradtobl me. 5tt in.

Cheese' ,!Pack

PORK CHOP SALE GERMAN BOLOGNA


A&B
% Ib.

HIP CHOPS

99'

CENTER CUT
RICH'S All While Meat

149
READY TO EAT

SHOULDER CHOPS

89'

APPETIZING DIPT.

AMER STYLE

Pizza

24

<.

49'

TURKEY ROLL IMPORTED PORK LOIN


- I N OUR SNACK BAR-

y.ib.79c

IMPORTED FINLAND CHEESE n n C


WHITE OR YELLOW Ib

v,,b79c

WEEKLY

TWO GUVS TRADING STAMP

FRESH 'N'BLUE

Hawaiian Ham Dole Pineapple/ Grapefruit Drink


Pink or Regular
Steak w/Potatoes &V(g.

119

ONE 1OOK SPECIAL

2?79<

wm * rocc rotcuu or a mm ou>twm or.

3
Larry Finkelstcln

79

-lb. Luau Burger


IN OUR FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT

69'
Pinsapph. Orange, Pirisappla Grapefruit & Hawaiian Pirwappli

LUXJAINUTE MINDER KITCHEN TIMER


Portablt pocket n Loud iingl* ding signal Noutral color

ton r 5JJc
innuiitn

Dole Pineapple
SLICED, CHUNKS, OR CRUSHED IN JUICE OR SYRUP 20oz. COM

Dole Pineapple CHUNKS

"Jure Cj~cup}
Maxwell House COFFEE
l-lb. con 79c w/ coupon
GOOD ONLY AT TWO GUTS On* tewpon per cutunr. Good Ihiu Sol.. Maxh 10. 1971 Ml>. GIHI*L fOODS COUP

L->3 - 99
2 c D,r45 C
1102.

100 Ft Roll
GOOD ONLY AT TWO GUTS Ono coupon pr cwitm*r Good Ihru Sol March 10 197] MFD COlBMt-PAlMOUVI CO

Child Care Group Gets PR Director


MIDDLETOO - Larry Finkelstein has been appointed public relations director for the Monmmiih County Community Coordinated Child Care Group, known nationally as 4-C, by Mrs. .lean Beer, chairman of the 4-C program. Mr. Finkelstein is advertising and public relations director for Sterling Thompson & Associates, one of the leading real estate and insurance companies in Central.New Jersey. The purpose of 4-C is to survey the need for child care from infancy through 18 years of age, including day care, foster a n d g r o u p homes, emergency shelters, after school care, and recreational needs on-a county wide basis. The committee is composed of a general membership drawn from public agencies, non-profit private agencies, private profit making organizations, parents and interested individuals.

ORANGE, GRAPE FRUIT, BLENDED JUICE #%#\

TOMATO SOUP

50 OFF LABEL

10< OFF LABEL BISQUICK


60-OZ BOX
GOOD ONLY AT TWO OUYS On* coupon por cuilomor Good Ihu Sot Moh 10. 1973 MFD CINERAL MILLS

39 110 99
Slutjio Prini Jumbo-l35Sh
Ronioni Wid, Madium, Fin*

1 0 ' 2 oz CANS

Bold Ivory Liquid Detergent C 19 10 Ib.

Tswani lh purcKel* of

4 cans HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE


15-OZ. can
OOOO ONLY AT TWO OUYS On* coupon p*rcwttmr. Good Ihru Sol Mcxh 10. 171 MHI. HUNI-WISSON

Pancake Syrup Lipton Tea Bags Coronet Towels Crisco Oil Egg Noodles

.39

89 :...29C 19 Ga ,2 399C
100'.

Spaghetti Sauce Palmolive Liquid Fabric Softener Crisco Shortening


i

Tc-ward lh pgrchaia ol

4 BARS BATH SIZE LUX BEAUTY SOAP


w/COUPON '

GOOD OHLY AT TWO GUYS

I I
|

On* coupon oor cutlomti. M Good lh.u Sol Morch 10, 1 9 7 1 1

M HV1RHQS F

VALUABLE

COUPON VALUABLE

COUPON1

Toword th* purchais ol

GOOD ONLY AT TWO GUYS

BinVllfl^L^LB

Una cupenpf cuil**iir.

Coconut Custard Pie : 4 9 Chocolate Donuts ^ 49C


retzel Thins if^-> i*.39
OPEN DAILY 9:30 A.M.'Til 10 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M. Til 6 P.M.
HWlMliH

One 4-Pack Hunt Snack Pack


Pudding & Fruit S 01. G o l.m So.. Morch 10. 17I od
GOOD ONLY AT TWO GUYS On* coupon por cullm*r.

HiiS^H
BBMBMB

C^.hn.Jat.Mo^iO. .973 I
MFR MADIIO DIGEST 61I

tmBMmt^tl
mmm

"'* NUNT-WISSON

I
1

mmm an>Hta aaaiB >

IVC
rdop

MIDDLETOWN Rt. 35

We raiarva the right to limit quantitiai. Not respomible (or typographical errora.

.Prices effective thru Sat., March 10, 1973

'*

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