60
POST lliiiridijf, Ipmary 2L 1982 Vol. 25. No. 3 30 cents A winter spill Tracy Koch of Deans, age 5, comes up smiling during an afternoon romp in the snow at West New Road Community Park. (Trilla Ramage, photo) Board seeks on Master Plan input by BrcM Slw rtr WrHM- South ftninswick Planning Boanl f'hair- miin Hcrnaril Indik announced the dates and locations of resolving public mcci- mgs on the Master Plan update. Municipal government, professional planners and interested residents have been working on the plan for 18 months. The four meetings arc designed to give local residents a eh.nice to learn about, react to. and make suggestions coneern' ing the Master Plan proposals. The meetings w ill be held on March I . March 22. March .'^0 and April 5. The lour UK'alions around town where they will be held are; the Kingston f irehouse, the Dayton (irangc. the Hrunswiek Acres School and the Cambridge School in Kemlall Park. The exact nialch-up ol dates and locations has yet to he de- termined. In other business, developer Stanley Reider and the board had a concept discussion on a preliminary subdivision request for a development of up to M An international flare School board Budget scale tipped $0.22 single-family homes behind the Fresh impressions development in Monmouth Junction. M r R e ite was instructed to ition and a and the planning staff for the proposed development called Lakeside Manor. The Planning Board wanted to to make sure that properties downstream along Heathcole Bnx>k w ill not have water problems as a result (►! the new development. A related issue diseus.sed was the legrading' of the site. Mr. Rcider in- dicated that his firm would mt)ve the tons ul topsoil that the Depadment of Tnv ironmcntal Protection (DEP) de- termined to be encroaching the Heath- eote Bnxik Hood plain. Chairman Indik reiterated the po.sition of both the bi'aid and the DEP saying." the site must be ‘regraded' to where it was." Mr Reider said that this would be done. During di.scussion of the developer s plans to regulate drainage via a detention pond, board member Bruce Jones e.x- pressed his concern that the ptmd not become an "eyesore." Mr. Rcider as- sured M r Jones that the p<md would be designed to avoid this pxTssibilily. This photo by Ronald J. Platt, of Dayton, Is included in the 1981 Kodak International Newspaper Snapshot Awards display at the Equitable Gallery in New York City, Jan. 19 — Feb. 19. by Pgfpv NoHIfig Spcctel Writer South Brunswick property owners face yel another tax increase, with the 1982 school tax rate likely to rise 22 cents per $100 of asscs.scd property, according to tentative figures released by Board of Education Secretary Frank Brennan. The tax rate is based on a preliminary 1982-83 budget projected to be $15,504,911.00. That preliminary budget was adopted last week by the Board of Education and was submitted to the Middlesex County Superintendent of Schools on ian. 15. The sch(X)l lax rate w ill rise from $3.07 to approximately $3.29 per SKX) of assessed property. For the owner of a home with an assessed value of $50.(KK) this will mean an additional $ ii() per year RaCables in South Brunswick — the taxable real estate, land and buildings — were up $18 million, assessed at approx- imately $363.553.104.(X). The board may decide to offset the tax rate with monies from the budget's free appropriations balance, as they did lust year, according to Mr, Brennan How- ever. the final decision on use of free appropriations has not been made, he said Monday's .school board meeting dealt in pan with use of free appropriations. Board members discussed a prnptJsal to tag $5(X),()00 ol the free appropriation's $9(X).(XX) for pay o ff debt outstanding on the district admimsiralivc offices Bond anticipation notes on the offices eomc due in December 1982. requiring the district to pay off the debt or to pnKced to pi rnm yK bonding to cover the debt. Mr. ^ennan recommended clearing it comes due This m o v e a iB M H P % ^ school district over the . next Budget Committee Chairman Joseph Hcfbst supported this recommenJafion. arguing that clearing that debt could help stabilize the lax rale over the long term. He and Mr. Brennan agreed, ihough. that the initial impact ol the move to clear the debt on the administrative offices would have miniit.a! impact on the lax rate in 1982-198.^. Mr Brennan al.so recommended part of the free appropriations balance be u.sed for investmenf in equipment tor the ncwly-renovatcd high sctiool. Mr Herbsl, in explaining his suppon o! the recommendation, noted that-the healing and ventilating units in the high schtx)l need improvement. If improved, the units would be miTre energy-cffieicnl and "more maintainable."Mr. Herbsl said. The remainder ol the free appropria- tions money w-tnild was not earmarked m Mr. Brennan's recommendation, bunds not used to clear the debt on the admini.strativc offices or for high school equipment would be i n - vcstcd"lhroughout the district or as the board sees fit. " said Mr. Herbst While most members seemed to favor the rceomiiientlatiori lor use t>l liec appropriations, board member John Nicolay did not. contending the pro- jected savings of $750.(MX) over 20 years resulting from pay-off of the debt im the administrative offices would mu make much difference to the taxpayer. The $5(X).IX)0 propo.scd for pay-off o( the debt should be used " to address (he more immediate and forceful needs of the district."he said. The bt)ard decided to table the free appropriations discussion, until a com- plete list of possible u.scs hx the Iree appropriations funds could he as- sembled, In other business.the board discussed issues stemming from its recent decision to close GrccnbriX>k elementary school Also discussed was what form a response to a recent editorial in the Cen'ral Post .should lake. The board w ill establish criteria lor transferring district teachers, affecting teacher assignments district-wide. The discussi<m w ill be held, however, [xmd- ing discussion of the issue by the dis- triel's Admini.strativc Council The Administrative Council will al.so be asked by the board to consider the educational i.ssucs involved in a |X)ssiblc move of some sixth graders to Crossroads. The board has been asked by parents of Greenbrook fifth-graders to consider moving next year’s sixth graders to Crossroads. The parents were concerned that this year’s fifth-graders would face adjustment to a new sch(x>l two years in a row unless they are m<wed directly to Crossroads middle schixil next year Crossroads currently ac- comrxlatcs seventh and eighth graders, and Superintendent James Kimpic stated it could not acconxxJatc all district sixth graders. Under consideration as well is renova- tion of the Cambridge 'p<xl—an annex to that elementary schtxd--thal would allow loi tl'ic liH.aik>ri there ^pccial piv»grari*s such as art. music and science, freeing classrmim space in the main building to acci)nfuxlate students to be moved from GreenbrcH>k Angered by a Jan. 7 editorial in the Central Post questioning board policy on press access to its members, the boani discussed (he best way to resp<.nKl A letter U) the editor defending the policy was composed. The letter will appear in the Jan. 21 edition of the Central l‘i>st. Board member Eileen Rostjord sug- gested a meeting be held between mem- bers o f the press and the board to help clarify the prcs.s policy. The board agreed to extend the inMUilitni to the Central Post and the Home News. rik editOiial khuiued tluil the Ixiaid > policy did not permit c(>mpleie access lt> boaid members by the press and that this policy hindered (he clarify the press policy. The Ixnud agreed to extend the invitation to the Central Post and the Home Nows. The editorial charged that the board's policy did not permit complete access to hoard m.embcrs by the press and that this policy hindered the questioning of board members on issues under discussion. Board members denied this, slating ihe\ were free to express their opinions, and (hat the press ptihcy could m no way be considered a'gug rule.' One board meiTibcM charged angrih that the Central Post editorial complicated the board’s alteiiipl to lies, open comrnimicLMion" wi'h the commumtv. Town waives denial: apartments, on track by rrillti Ramage Managing Editor A proposed Route I garden apartment complex won fownship Committee ap- proval Tuesday night after extensive court action. Eldcir Realty made a successful bid during a second hearing of a Zomng Board of Adjustment denial of the pro- ject in more than a year. Tentatively propv)scd is an 8(X) unit complex of garden apartments off Route 1 between Blackhorsc and Deans lanes. Fought by both township boards and area residents, the devcIopnKnt was denied in January 1981. ptvelopeir Solomon Reider and his last April and lost, under the conn's stipulated rules of review. Challenging (he denial in conn, the Reiders suc- cessfully won a remand of the ca.se back to the Township C ommittee for a second hearing before Feb. I I this year. A New Jersey Superior C'oun judge remanded the case back after a change in ea.se law. changing the rules of review In April the Township (?ommit(ec re- viewed the appeal to determine it the Ztming Board of Adjustment had acted in an arbittary and capricous manner. Tuesday, (he Township C'ommittcc weighed the appeal on the merits of the argument presented bclorc the Zoning Board of Adjustment m January 1980. A split vote of threc-to-two by (he Township Cornmittce sw ung approval of the Reidcr's request for a re/onmg of the site fn)m light industrial to residential. The parcel of land in question had previously been approved tor a mobile home park of 410 units. Oakdale II. Frederick Mc/.ey, attorney for Eldcir Really, argued the criterion of "sjKcial rca.sons" had been met with the icsii mony before the committee, M r Mc/.cy argued special reasons as; 1) the need for the type of housing proposed; 2) the area cited being particularly suited for the type of housing planned; and 3) the housing proposed would be the only area of development in the town- ship that would not place a demand on secondary roads, ^ith access directly onto Route I , The concerns of drainage, trallic impact and potable water availabililv. Mr. Mezey argued are problems to he solved at the final site plan stage of (he proposed development. At that point in (he planning process, the number of the units capable of being supported by the land w ill be addressed, said township officials. Residents in the area hired legal rep- resentation for more than 10 hearings on (he proposed complex. Their concerns about traffic impact and drainage were argued by attorney Charles Rcnda. "M aybe the days of I3cans Lane being a quaint country lane arc long gt>ne. but mmcthclcss. it is a quaint country road with no shoulder." stated msident W il- liam Klimowicz. He raised the issue of pt)or drainage in the area. The question of density wav fielded by Mr, Me/cy. The proposed 8(K) units would mean a density of eight unit.s per acre on the site, according to Mr Mcz.ey, Township Planner David Engel .said, however, (hat the nurnlx'r of units allowed will be iletcrmined in part by the critical areas drainage and v\aicr maps overlapping with (he site. Mr. Mezey admitted that the proposetl garden apartments wtxild not necessarily be low-and-nxiucratc income housing a dearly defined "special reason" by the courts. It was made clear, however, that private d^vckipers catrnot economically buiW such housing withtmi govemmeBt Thia . therefore. wiU be priced competivelv to the going market rate when o|vncd Tlie figures ut»ed at Tuesday’s meeting ranged from $400 for a onc-bcdnxnn. $500 for a two-bcdrcHnn and $.‘>80-5590 tor a (hrec-bedroom apariinent. .Approving the variance rcqucsi. the Township (.'ommiltce will .send (he ap- plication to the Planning Htiard loi final site plan review ,Af (lui( stage, township offieial.s stated, the developer can be required (o make the aparhiicrils avail able as "least ct)sl iiou.sing The Keielcrs argued ihat in then ingh-density planned resKiendai areas t*i Davlon C'emcr and Dayltxi Square, tiie number ol lownhiuise applicants who apply are double (hose who quality tii make the monelary investment ncccssars lor a downpayment and monthly pay ments at the high miercst. Apartment dwellers, on the other hand, arc onK asked for a month and a ha!! sccuriis deposit Committee member Ted Ciicnv voted for the zoning variance, stating; "Hesi dents w ill have a golden oppcMluniiy to improve the zoning ol the area bclorc the Planning Board. " He also staled flic final site plan approval should not her granted unless the developer is willing (ti make l»ist-v;osi housing ayailabic to renters. •Adding her luxl of approval, eornmil- (cc member Carolyn MeC'allum assured residents that the final site plan review "w ill not an easy tiling" (or the de- veloper "N o one can keep a jxrrson from developing their properly," she said. This will provide tilher revenues for us. " suilcil cnmimuce member Robert l-aber with his ajipruv mg vote. The type of housing and a broader ratable base arc both needed in the township, he argued. Mayor Paul Munay voted Hgaiiisi the propvisal. along w ith committee member Howard Bclltzio Both argued the need for zoning changes vif such a large scope to be made by the appropriate board: the «ow<»all^> Piafumtg Board. “ It comes to the question of whether there is a s(>cciat need to pul this v>n this piece of land, " Mayor Murray com- mentecl "I think thni if a zoning change IS apprnpiiatc. there is a nieliiod lor that, and it IS a hetfei method ifian spot zoning." lie argued The aigumenis ol holh Mayor Murray .irul Mr Bellizio were jxirt ol (he January 198t) reasons (tii denial by (he Zoning Hoan) o( Ai}|Us(inenl 1he four major points maile hy that hoard’s rejeedon were 1) Despite (he speual need (or low and moderate inuime housing in (ills township." (he pro|cc( would provide "altordahle housing lor primar- ily middle income pei'sons 2) 1he proieel has ■serious and suhsiiiniial i,|Ucsiions'' concerning its iinpaol on flic township’s p(>tahtc water supply M 1he development would eompete with the Master Plan's planned I’eslden- tiai development and tiic 'Town ('enter jifoiect. dlTlie scope ot impact and intensity of the development presented "m ajirr |x»l- ley questions ol rezomng which shtniid be hamiled bv the Township (Nanning Boaol. School Board to honor long-term employees 'Thirty-nine principals, teachers and sup p(->rl people and I ^ redred employees ot the South Brunswick Board of h.diiealioi! will be honored at a meeting of the Ihiard ol Education on Monday. Jun 25 A plaque nanumr and honoring tliose who have served the school Llistrici (or 20 years or more will be unveiled during the meeting, ll will (lien lx* hung in the lobby of the Board of (ulucation nffiee Individ uai plaques w ill als<i be presented to those being honored Those named on the plaque arc Kathryn Bach. Brian Bieniullcr. Santo Bonlilio. Chrishne Brenner. Jean I rant/, ('liuimc^ > Chattan. Wittiam Klimowicz. Dolores Kramp. James MAcFariand. h'eiix ITM (iford, Patricia Keid. Ernest .Shoemun. John lierie. Alan Halcomb, Kenneth BIsliop. John Bossert, William Caraeci. Robert (’hopick. Charlotte Cioodwni, Rob- cil Kt'chell. Marshall l.ogan, Frederick Nadier. I homas Queenan. Dorothy Renk. Ruth Small. Ihttmas V.alsh, Carl Ben mngiioll. Steven Bodnarcliuk. Frank Bren- nan l.ynda Carlisle. F.lhel Denniston, I’.dw.siil Kaiilci. Ruth KtirnbhiH. NiclK.ilas I’azinko f ln:rrK.e i ouiisbiiry. Mane (tMailev. F.ari Retd. Ii't'nc Shields. F.dwina iarahelt. I^Mer Warner, (jloria Hr.ibsuii Doris Curran. Fiizabelh Duffy. Slildretl landis. F.dna Otiendorfer. Beafnec Ketik, Carlton Ktisc. Woneva Seals. F.lhci Smilit. Rutfi Spaiaro. Louis Spriggs,.rnd Rulh Hink A reception w ill follow- the presentation. Inside this week 3 sections, 62 pages KKROSbNE HKA'I is sale accord- ing to South Brunswick’s tire in- spector. hut he's not reconunending them as an allcrnativc to eui healing costs, bind oul wh> on page .bA MbRMAIDS, UNICORNS and monsters o f mythology may scell have their roots in reality. See an article of contention, page I3A. HUMANISTIC JUDAISM is separ- ate from the other known branches of Judaism: Reform. Conservative and Orthodox This one emphasizes freedom and dignity" says one member. See story, page 7A ^TlnE O f f • For women lodging in Manhattan, the YWCA in midtown is hard to beat for convenience, price and inter- national ambiance But by spring, the hotel will be rubble to be replaced by a new skyscraper See page 3 • McCarter opened a new - and original -- musical last week, while the George Street Theatre debuted its own premiere play For reviews of bsHh. see the On Stage section, pages g-lb • What’s a third less filling and has a third fewer calories? Why. new wines, of course See page 18. See page 1 5 of Time Off Index classifieds 18A, 1-16B community calendar 8A honors 11A michael’s kitchen 10A ob'*uaries 6A police blotter GA public notices 6A religious calendar 5A school tnenue 16A sports 15-17A townforum 4A

Budget scale tipped $0.22 Town waives denial - DigiFind-It

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POSTl l i i i r i d i j f , Ip m a ry 2 L 1982 Vol. 25. No. 3 30 cents

A w in ter spillTracy Koch of Deans, age 5, comes up smiling during an afternoon romp in the snow at West New Road Community Park.

(Trilla Ramage, photo)

Board seeks on Master Plan

inputby B rcM Slw r t r

W rHM -

South ftn inswick Planning Boanl f'ha ir- miin Hcrnaril Ind ik announced the dates and locations o f reso lv ing public mcci- mgs on the Master Plan update.

M unicipa l governm ent, professional planners and interested residents have been w orking on the plan fo r 18 months. The four meetings arc designed to give local residents a eh.nice to learn about, react to. and make suggestions coneern' ing the Master Plan proposals.

The meetings w i ll be held on March I . March 22. March .' 0 and A p ril 5. The lour UK'alions around town where they w ill be held are; the K ingston f irehouse, the Dayton (irangc. the Hrunswiek Acres School and the Cambridge School in Kemlall Park. The exact n ia lch-up ol dates and locations has yet to he de­termined.

In other business, developer Stanley Reider and the board had a concept discussion on a pre lim inary subdivision request for a development o f up to M

A n international flare

School board

Budget scale tipped $0.22

single-family homes behind the Fresh impressions development in Monmouth Junction. M r R e ite was instructed to

ition and a

and the planning staff for the proposed development called Lakeside Manor.

The Planning Board wanted to to make sure that properties downstream along Heathcole Bnx>k w ill not have water problems as a result (►! the new development.

A related issue diseus.sed was the legrad ing ' o f the site. M r. Rcider in ­

dicated that his firm would mt)ve the tons ul topsoil that the Depadment o f Tnv ironm cntal Protection (DEP) de­termined to be encroaching the Heath- eote B nx ik Hood plain. Chairman Indik reiterated the po.sition o f both the b i'a id and the DEP sa y in g ." the site must be ‘ regraded' to where it w a s ." M r Reider said that this would be done.

During di.scussion o f the developer s plans to regulate drainage via a detention pond, board member Bruce Jones e.x- pressed his concern that the ptmd not become an "e ye so re ." M r. Rcider as­sured M r Jones that the p<md would be designed to avoid this pxTssibilily.

This photo by Ronald J. Platt, of Dayton, Is included in the 1981 Kodak International Newspaper Snapshot Awards display at the Equitable Gallery in New York City, Jan. 19 — Feb. 19.

by Pgfpv NoHIfig Spcctel Writer

South Brunswick property owners face yel another tax increase, w ith the 1982 school tax rate likely to rise 22 cents per $100 o f asscs.scd property, according to tentative figures released by Board o f Education Secretary Frank Brennan.

The tax rate is based on a preliminary 1982-83 b u d g e t p ro je c te d to be $ 1 5 ,50 4 ,91 1 .00 . That p re lim in a ry budget was adopted last week by the Board o f Education and was submitted to the Middlesex County Superintendent of Schools on ian. 15.

The sch(X)l lax rate w ill rise from $3.07 to approximately $3.29 per SKX) of assessed property. For the owner o f a home with an assessed value o f $50.(KK) this w ill mean an additional $ i i ( ) per year

RaCables in South Brunswick — the taxable real estate, land and buildings — were up $18 m illion, assessed at approx­imately $363.553.104.(X).

The board may decide to offset the tax rate w ith monies from the budget's free appropriations balance, as they did lust year, according to M r, Brennan H ow ­ever. the final decision on use o f free appropriations has not been made, he said

M onday's .school board meeting dealt in pan w ith use o f free appropriations. Board members discussed a prnptJsal to tag $5(X),()00 ol the free appropria tion's $9(X).(XX) fo r pay o f f debt outstanding on the d istrict adm im sira livc o ffices

Bond antic ipation notes on the o ffices eomc due in December 1982. requiring the d istrict to pay o ff the debt or to pnKced to pi rn m y K bonding to cover the debt. M r. ^ e n n a n recommended clearing it comes dueThis m o v e a iB M H P % ^ school district

over the . next

Budget Committee Chairman Joseph Hcfbst supported this recom m enJafion. arguing that clearing that debt could help stabilize the lax rale over the long term. He and Mr. Brennan agreed, ihough. that the in itia l impact o l the move to clear the debt on the adm inistrative offices would have m in iit.a ! impact on the lax rate in 1982-198.^.

M r Brennan al.so recommended part o f the free appropriations balance be u.sed for investmenf in equipm ent to r the n c w ly - re n o v a tc d h ig h s c tio o l. M r Herbsl, in expla in ing his suppon o! the recommendation, noted that-the healing and ventilating units in the high schtx)l need improvement. I f im proved, the units would be miTre energy-cffie icn l and "m ore m a in ta in ab le ."M r. Herbsl said.

The remainder ol the free appropria­tions money w-tnild was not earmarked m M r. Brennan's recommendation, bunds not used to clear the debt on the admini.strativc o ffices or for high school e q u ip m e n t w o u ld be i n - vcstcd"lh roughout the d istrict or as the board sees f it . " said M r. Herbst

W hile most members seemed to favor the rceom iiientlatiori lo r use t>l liec appropriations, board member John N icolay d id not. contending the pro­jected savings o f $750.(MX) over 20 years resulting from pay-o ff o f the debt im the adm inistrative o ffices would mu make much difference to the taxpayer. The $5(X).IX)0 propo.scd fo r pay-o ff o( the debt should be used " to address (he more immediate and forceful needs o f the d is tr ic t."h e said.

The bt)ard decided to table the free appropriations discussion, until a com ­plete list o f possible u.scs h x the Iree a p p ro p r ia t io n s fu n d s c o u ld he as­sembled,

In other business.the board discussed issues stemming from its recent decision to close GrccnbriX>k elementary school A lso discussed was what form a response to a recent editoria l in the Cen'ra l Post .should lake.

The board w ill establish criteria lo r transferring d is tric t teachers, affecting teacher assignments d is tric t-w ide. The discussi<m w il l be held, however, [xmd- ing discussion o f the issue by the dis- tr ie l's Adm ini.strativc Council

The Adm in is tra tive Council w il l al.so be asked by the board to consider the educational i.ssucs involved in a |X)ssiblc m o v e o f s o m e s ix th g ra d e rs to

Crossroads. The board has been asked by parents o f Greenbrook fifth-graders to consider moving next year’s sixth graders to Crossroads. The parents were concerned that this year’s fifth-graders would face adjustment to a new sch(x>l two years in a row unless they are m<wed directly to Crossroads middle schixil next year Crossroads currently ac- comrxlatcs seventh and eighth graders, and Superintendent James Kimpic stated it could not acconxxJatc all district sixth graders.

Under consideration as w ell is renova­tion o f the Cambridge 'p<xl— an annex to that elementary schtxd--thal would allow lo i tl'ic liH.aik>ri there ^pccial piv»grari*s such as art. music and science, freeing

classrmim space in the main build ing to acci)nfuxlate students to be moved from GreenbrcH>k

Angered by a Jan. 7 editorial in the Central Post questioning board policy on press access to its members, the boani discussed (he best way to resp<.nKl A letter U) the editor defending the policy was composed. The letter w ill appear in the Jan. 21 edition o f the Central l ‘i>st.

Board member Eileen Rostjord sug­gested a meeting be held between mem­bers o f the press and the board to help c la rify the prcs.s policy. The board agreed to extend the inMUilitni to the Central Post and the Home News.

r ik editO iial khuiued tluil the Ix ia id > policy d id not perm it c(>mpleie access lt>

boaid members by the press and that this policy hindered (he clarify the press policy. The Ixnud agreed to extend the invita tion to the Central Post and the Home Nows.

The editoria l charged that the board's policy did not permit complete access to hoard m.embcrs by the press and that this policy hindered the questioning o f board members on issues under discussion.

Board members denied this, slating ihe\ were free to express their opinions, and (hat the press ptihcy could m no way be considered a'gug ru le .' One board meiTibcM charged angrih that the Central Post editoria l complicated the board’s a lte iiip l to lie s , open comrnimicLMion" w i'h the commumtv.

Town waives denial: apartments, on track

by r r i l l t i Ramage Managing E d ito r

A proposed Route I garden apartment complex won fow nsh ip Com m ittee ap­proval Tuesday night after extensive court action.

E ldcir Realty made a successful bid during a second hearing o f a Zomng Board o f Adjustment denial o f the pro­ject in more than a year.

Tentatively propv)scd is an 8(X) unit complex o f garden apartments o ff Route 1 between Blackhorsc and Deans lanes. Fought by both township boards and area residents, the devcIopnKnt was denied in January 1981.

ptvelopeir Solomon Reider and his

lastA pril and lost, under the conn 's stipulated rules o f review. Challenging(he denial in conn, the Reiders suc­cessfully won a remand o f the ca.se back to the Tow nship C om m ittee fo r a second hearing before Feb. I I this year.

A New Jersey Superior C'oun judge remanded the case back after a change in ea.se law. changing the rules o f review In A p ril the Tow nship (?ommit(ec re­viewed the appeal to determine it the Ztm ing Board o f Adjustment had acted in an arbittary and capricous manner. T u e sd ay , (he To w nsh ip C 'om m ittcc weighed the appeal on the merits o f the argument presented bclorc the Zoning Board o f Adjustment m January 1980.

A split vote o f threc-to-tw o by (he Township Cornm ittce sw ung approval of the Reidcr's request fo r a re /onm g o f the site fn)m light industrial to residential. The parcel o f land in question had previously been approved to r a mobile home park o f 410 units. Oakdale II.

Frederick Mc/.ey, attorney fo r E ldcir Really, argued the crite rion o f "s jK c ia l rca.sons" had been met w ith the icsii mony before the committee, M r Mc/.cy argued special reasons as;

1) the need for the type o f housing proposed;

2) the area cited being particu larly suited for the type o f housing planned; and

3) the housing proposed would be the only area o f development in the tow n­ship that would not place a demand on secondary roads, ^ i th access d irectly onto Route I ,

The concerns o f drainage, tra llic impact and potable water ava ilab ililv . M r. Mezey argued are problems to he solved at the final site plan stage o f (he proposed development. A t that point in (he planning process, the number o f the units capable o f being supported by the land w ill be addressed, said township o ffic ia ls .

Residents in the area hired legal rep­resentation for more than 10 hearings on (he proposed complex. Their concerns about tra ffic impact and drainage were argued by attorney Charles Rcnda.

"M a yb e the days o f I3cans Lane being a quaint country lane arc long gt>ne. but mmcthclcss. it is a quaint country road w ith no shou lder." stated msident W il­liam K lim o w icz . He raised the issue o f

pt)or drainage in the area.The question o f density wav fielded by

M r, M e /cy . The proposed 8(K) units w ould mean a density o f eight unit.s per acre on the site, according to M r Mcz.ey, Township Planner David Engel .said, however, (hat the nurnlx'r o f units a llowed w ill be iletcrm ined in part by the critica l areas drainage and v\aicr maps overlapping w ith (he site.

M r. Mezey admitted that the proposetl garden apartments w tx ild not necessarily be low -and-nxiucratc income housing a dearly defined "special reason" by the courts. It was made clear, however, th a t p r iv a te d ^ v c k ip e rs ca trn o t economically buiW such housing withtmi govemmeBt

Thia . therefore. w iUbe priced competivelv to the going market rate when o|vncd Tlie figures ut»ed at Tuesday’s meeting ranged from $400 fo r a onc-bcdnxnn. $500 for a two-bcdrcHnn and $.‘>80-5590 tor a (hrec-bedroom apariinent.

.A pproving the variance rcqucsi. the Township (.'om m iltce w ill .send (he ap­p lication to the Planning Htiard lo i final site plan review ,Af (lui( stage, township offieial.s stated, the developer can be required (o make the aparhiicrils avail able as "least ct)sl iiou.sing

The Keielcrs argued ihat in then ingh-density planned resKiendai areas t*i Davlon C'emcr and D ayltx i Square, tiie number o l lownhiuise applicants who apply are double (hose who qua lity tii make the monelary investment ncccssars lo r a downpayment and m onthly pay ments at the high miercst. Apartment dwellers, on the other hand, arc onK asked for a month and a ha!! sccuriis deposit

Committee member Ted C iicnv voted for the zoning variance, stating; "Hesi dents w ill have a golden oppcMluniiy to improve the zoning ol the area bclorc the Planning Board. " He also staled flic final site plan approval should not her granted unless the developer is w illin g (ti make l»ist-v;osi housing ayailabic to renters.

•Adding her luxl o f approval, eornmil- (cc member Carolyn MeC'allum assured residents that the final site plan review " w i l l not an easy t i l in g " (or the de­veloper " N o one can keep a jxrrson from developing their p rop e rly ," she said.

■ This w ill provide tilher revenues for us. " suilcil cnm im uce member Robert l-aber w ith his ajipruv mg vote. The type o f housing and a broader ratable base arc both needed in the township, he argued.

Mayor Paul Munay voted Hgaiiisi the propvisal. along w ith committee member Howard Bclltzio Both argued the need for zoning changes vif such a large scope to be made by the appropriate board: the «ow<»all^> Piafumtg Board.

“ I t comes to the question o f whether there is a s(>cciat need to pul this v>n thispiece o f land, " M ayor M urray com-mentecl " I th ink thni i f a zoning change IS apprnpiia tc. there is a n ie liiod lo r that, and it IS a hetfei method ifian spot z o n in g ." lie argued

The aigumenis ol holh M ayor M urray .irul Mr B e lliz io were jx irt ol (he January 198t) reasons (tii denial by (he Zoning Hoan) o( Ai}|Us(inenl 1 he four major points maile hy that hoard’s rejeedon were

1) Despite (he speual need (or low and moderate inu im e housing in (ills to w n sh ip ." (he pro|cc( would provide "a lto rd a h le housing lo r p rim ar­ily m iddle income pei'sons

2) 1 he proieel has ■serious and suhsiiiniial i,|Ucsiions'' concerning its iinpaol on flic tow nsh ip ’ s p(>tahtc water supply

M 1 he development would eompete w ith the Master Plan's planned I’eslden- tia i development and tiic 'Town ('enter jifoiect.

d lT lie scope ot impact and intensity of the development presented "m a jirr |x»l- ley questions ol rezomng which shtniid be hamiled bv the Township (Nanning Boaol.

School Board to honor long-term employees

'Thirty-nine principals, teachers and sup p(->rl people and I redred employees ot the South Brunswick Board of h.diiealioi! w ill be honored at a meeting o f the Ihiard ol Education on Monday. Jun 25

A plaque nanumr and honoring tliose who have served the school Llistrici (or 20 years or more w ill be unveiled during the meeting, ll w ill (lien lx* hung in the lobby of the Board o f (ulucation nffiee Individ uai plaques w ill als<i be presented to those being honored

Those named on the plaque arc Kathryn Bach. Brian Bieniullcr. Santo Bonlilio . Chrishne Brenner. Jean I rant/, ('liuimc^ > Chattan. Wittiam Klim owicz. Dolores Kramp. James MAcFariand. h'eiix ITM (iford, Patricia Keid. Ernest .Shoemun.

John lierie. Alan Halcomb, Kenneth BIsliop. John Bossert, W illiam Caraeci. Robert ( ’hopick. Charlotte Cioodwni, Rob- c il Kt'chell. Marshall l.ogan, Frederick Nadier. I homas Queenan. Dorothy Renk. Ruth Small. Ihttmas V.alsh, Carl Ben m ngiioll. Steven Bodnarcliuk. Frank Bren­nan l.ynda Carlisle. F.lhel Denniston, I ’.dw.siil Ka iilc i. Ruth KtirnbhiH. NiclK.ilas I’azinko f ln:rrK.e i o u iis b iiry . M ane ( tM a ile v . F.ari Retd. Ii't'nc Shields. F.dwina iarahelt. I^Mer Warner, (jlo ria Hr.ibsuii Doris Curran. Fiizabelh Duffy. S lild re t l la n d is . F.dna O tie n d o r fe r . Beafnec Ketik, Carlton Ktisc. Woneva Seals. F.lhci Smilit. Rutfi Spaiaro. Louis Spriggs,.rnd Rulh Hink

A reception w ill follow- the presentation.

Inside th is week 3 sections, 62 pages

KKROSbNE H K A 'I is sale accord­ing to South B ru n s w ic k ’ s tire in ­spector. hut he 's not reconunending them as an a llc rn a tivc to eui healing costs, b ind o u l wh> on page .bA

M b R M A ID S , U N IC O R N S and monsters o f m y th o lo g y may scell

have their roots in reality. See an article o f contention, page I3A .

H U M A N IS T IC JU D AISM is separ­ate from the other know n branches o f Judaism: Reform. Conservative and Orthodox This one emphasizes ■ freedom and d ig n ity " says one member. See story, page 7A

^TlnE O ff• For women lodging in Manhattan, the YW CA in midtown is hard to beat for convenience, price and inter­national ambiance But by spring, the hotel w ill be rubble to be replaced by a new skyscraper See page 3

• McCarter opened a new - and original -- musical last week, while

the George Street Theatre debuted its own premiere play For reviews o f bsHh. see the On Stage section, pages g - lb

• What’s a third less filling and has a third fewer calories? Why. new wines, o f course See page 18.

See page 15 o f T im e O ff

Indexclassifieds 18A, 1-16B community calendar 8A honors 11A michael’s k itchen 10A ob'*uaries 6A police b lo tter GA public no tices 6A religious calendar 5A school tnenue 16A sports 15-17A townforum 4A

2-A THE CENTM L POST niurtdjy, Jmiuiry 21.

Ground water seminar setThe New Jersey Section o f the

Amencan Water Restnirces Association and the United States Geological Survey has announced their Symposium on Ground Water Contamination,

The conference w ill be held Feb. 3 at (he Italian-American vSpt>rlsman Club on Kuser Road in Hamilton Township near Trenton

Grv>und water contamination is an envimnmenial tha'at throughout the na non. Due to its urban-industrial charac­ter New Jersey .s particularly prone to ground water contamination In recent years cases o f contamination have K*cn

found in every part o f the state.The Feb 3 symposium w ill focus on

the extent o f the problem arni the preven­tion o f contamination. Speakers include high level technical experts from state and federal agencies and persons from the environmental, engineering and local government arena.s having direct ex­perience with ground water amtamina- tion.

For further information contact Mrs. Peggy McNeil, president o f the NewJersey Section at 609-921-7424 or Di.>n VaupcI. district chief. New Jersey Dis- tncl-USG S at 609-989-2162,

Hadassah w ill explore impact o f aging on famiiy

PhrKcton Chapter o f Hadassah w ill hold its Am encan A ffa irs meeting on Thursday. Jan. 28, at 8; 15 p m. in the Princeton Jewish Center The program w ill deal w ith “ The Impact o f Ag ing on Family R ela tionsh ips."

Rose M o v iich . s ix ia i w orker and con­sultant m gerontology and facu lty mem- bci o f Rutgers Graduate Sch^x-’ l o f Scxial W ork and Rutgers Institute on A g ing , w ill speak about the common issues cxpencnccd by us all in dealing w ith the aging pnxess and or an aging fam ily member.

Small group discussions w ill follow to further explore the topic, led by Ruth Besser. Harriet Bogdonoff. Maxine Fanner. Carol Horowitz.Jeanne t^eiman. Linda M e ise l. Renee M ille r.R hona P orte r. A d rie n n e S nyderm an and Barbara Vilkomerson j j |

Refreshments w ill be served and rides to the meeting are available by calling Marsha Freeman at 924-8167.

A get together for new and prospective members w ill precede the meeting at7:30 D.m.

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Holiday dressing

Winter's approach dressed this church's walkway with a fine snowy laca(Trilla Ramage, photo).

The doctor says

Safety first for skaters

H A M L T O N J E W E L E R S

LAWRENCEVtLLE Route 1 at Texas Avenue. 609-771-9400• n d t t T R E N T O N in<3 P A L M B E A C H . F L O R ID A

by M a rv in H erring, M .l) .

(D r. Herring is assistant professor o f fam ily practice at the New Jersev School o f Osteopathic M edicine o f the ('o l)ege o f Medicine and Dentistry o f New- Jersey and con.sultant to amateur ice skating organi/aton.

They fly through the air w ith the greatest o f ease, these world-class tigure skaters that wc find so graceful and beautiful to watch .And every so often— in the midst o f a breathtaking per- fomiance — one infin itesim al misstep w ill bring a skater tum bling to the icc. shattering a dream o f g lory and some­times adding an in ju r) lo the insult.

Ice skating is one o f the most popular w inter sports, and nowhere is it more obvious than in the d tx io r 's o ffice where, every year, countless skaters o f all ages are treated for the ankle, knee, leg back and hip injuries so common lo the spiTrt In a high percentage ot these cases, some preparation and education— in other words, prevention -- could have saved a d iK 'tor’ s b ill.

THERE ARE TW O main avenues to self-protection in icc skating: physical p rep a ra tio n and e qu ip m en t. These, together w ith some common sense, should make fo r a safe season o f skating.

Warm-up exercises arc as n.itura] for the skater as they are for the jogger. Ten minutes o f stretching and lim bering cx-

ercuscs w il l go far to protect against the muscle pulls and assorted kinks and pains com m only experienced by the weekend skater. Once on the icc. start slow and go through the motions awhile, to turther prepare the muscles and jo in ts for more strenuous activ ity.

Another w-ord to the wise is; beware of fatigue. T ired skaters are more prone to m |ury. W'cekenders should take frequent breaks, especially i f they have not skated for a lim e. For tl ■' more cxpericned. those attempting d if fic u lt maneuvers should do so early when they are fresh. Tired skaters tend to fa ll more, and tend to “ keep try in g ." making fo r more serious injuries.

For those who fumble their “ A x e !" spin or m istime that double-jump and w ind up prone on the ice and hurting - there arc also sensible approaches to speedy recovery. For starters, avoid skating “ h u r t ." In most cases, this only w ill aggravate a condition and ultim ately serve to keep you o ff the icc longer I f the pain is severe, see a doctor. During recovery pcriix is. I advise my patients to continue to exercise the rest o f the U x ly while resting the injured part.

PROPER EQ U IPM EN T is also cs senlial fo r m aximum enjoyment and m inim um risk. Professionally honed blades, fo r instance, can le.sscn the tw is t -a n d - tu rn fo rc e s o f s k a t in g , particu larly (hose exerted on the knees.

W e ll-f itting btxMs w ill protect the ankles It should be noted that long-lcnn wearing o f such fin n fitting fcHTtwear is associated w ith pressure sores, bcine bruises, tendinitis and bursitis prob leins that a skater can protect against sim ply bv not overdoing.

F i i ia l iy . 1 re com m e n d th ree a c ­cessories that should be a part o f every skater’ s equipment bag. They am hip pads, which aren't too attractive but are protective; leg wanners, which arc com­fortable and afford some protection against m inor spills; and an ice bag which, when applied to humps and bnnscs. m inim izes pain, swelling and disability.

Icc skating injuies are very common, p a r t ic u la r ly to the Icss-cxpcrienced whose only preparation is (he pureha.se o f expensive equipment and the time spent observing the champions. M y years o f work w ith skaters at all levels ol pcribrmance have shown that by fo llo w ­ing these simple precautions the icc skating season can bi‘ a safe and en­joyable one.

(This column is made possible by support from the Hunterdon Health Fund to the College o f M edicine and IX :nlis lry o f New Jersey. Inquiries to the column may be made to this newspaper.)

D ayton man^s photo show n in N .Y . gaKery

An award-winning picture, taken by Ronald J. Platt, H-10 Quincy Circle. Dayton, w ill be on display in the Equitable Gallery in New York Cily. Jan. 19 — Feb. 19. as part o f a presentation o f nearly 1,000 finalists in the Kodak International News­paper Snapshot Awards (KINSA). It won a $100 Special Merit Award.

The exhibit includes the winners of local summer contests conducted by 175 news­papers in the United Stales. Canada and Mexico with more than 385,000 entries.

Mr Platt, employed by the Plainfield Board of Education, is represented by a color picture of a neighbor's child and his own daughter He explained that he took the picture because o f the ' 'interaction between the children and the expression on their faces." It was a winner in the New Brunswick Home News' summer snapshot contest and as such was submitted lo the international competition.

The Equitable Gallery is at 1285 Avenue of the Americas and is open to lh<- public, free o f charge, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday ii w ill be dosed Feb. 15. the date of the official observance of Washington's birthday.

Kids & snow can be fun

W inter days arc fun fo r ch ildren but the numerous in.s and outs o t w inter outerwear can be fm slra ling fo r a busy parent o r child-carc person Here are a few hints lo help case the tensions.

•P las tic bags (bread hags w ork w ell) over shtKs make slipp ing bixXs on and ofT easy.

•R unn ing a pencil along a metal zipper w ill let it glide easily.

• A chair near the em ry door is handy j fo r s itting to rcm<»ve and put on boots,

• A hanger w ith snap clothes pins makes a gOLxl d ry ing rack fo r mittens and caps.

•H(K>ks fo r outerwear should he lar enough apail to allow air c ircu la tion tor drying.

• A plastic drop cloth or o ld table elolh near the entry door can catch ta iling snow from a toddler

•M itte n s attached to a cord arc less apt lo be lost on a snow pile,

•Ela.stic attached to side scams o f slacks or snow pants and slipped under the sole o f shoes w il! keep pants iLickcd nieel) into N hiIs,

• L ’riK'hctcd or kniUeci cuffs attached inside lackct sleeves keep cold air out

•P lay ing in the snow is tun lo r parents as well as ch ildren!

S k a te -A -T h o n to ra ise fu n d s

A S k a ic - A - r iu m to r H a d a ssa h Medical Organization w ill take place at the Kendall Park Roller Rink on Sunday. Jan. 31.from 4 to 7 p.m,sponsored by Princeton Hada.ssah C'ali Marsha l-rcc- man at 924-8167. no later than Jan. 24 lo reserve skates and/or obtain additional forms.

•All ages arc welcome to p iin a threc-pcrs(ni loam. Each member o f the team pledges lo his five sponsors to skate a total o f three hours for the entire team. Prizes w ill be awarded lo the teams raising the most money.

EIRE H V D R A M ACC ESS

The South Brunswick Fire Services request township property owners to clear the area around fire hydrants in front o f their property to insure access.

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Sibling preparation is ‘hands on’ class

The Family Resource Infant Center announces the opening o f a new. two-part vSibling Preparation class on Feb. 2. The first cla.ss has been sched­uled from 7:30 to 9 p.m.

The first part o f the class is a parent discussion on one evening o f ways to involve the ch ild before and after the

» baby is bom. ways lo create a sense o f fam ily, and ways to realize what it w ill be like to have a new' baby.

The second part o f the class, to be held on Saturday. Feb. 9. from 10 to 11:30 a m ., is a child participation class during

which (he ch ild is lam ilianzcd w ith the way a baby ItKiks. behaves and is cared

and m aking a nametag f(u the baby's hospital bed

The Fam ily Resource lr.f.;rii Center. I(x:aied in the United M cth ix lis t Church o f Princeton, is a non-profit parent education and fam ily support center.

CiassCvS. guest speakers, discussion groups, and creative play scssitms arc offered as a service lo rncrribcrs o f the Center. For further inform ation, parents are invited lo come in o r call (609) 924-2167.

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Thiiwday, January 21,1982 TH E CENTR AL POST 3 -A

Grade schoolers publish work in special journals

DETECTIVE ED SILSKY looks on while Officer Phil talks to Cambridge Elementary School youngsters Susan Hanpstead and Rahul Pasarnikar.

B yrne m akes req u est

1-95 link should stay missingb> Pam Hersh StatT W r ite r

Cm>\. ih'ondan Bvrnc on his Iasi o l- fic ia l day as govcnn^r, acted to make the “ missing l in k " p<'rtion ol Inicrstaie a jx'nnanciu missing link

The construction o f the 26 m ile sec­tion ol' 1-95. connecting Interstate 295 in .Mercer C'lmniy (H opcw cii I ' o sk nship) w ith Interstate 2S7 in Somersci Coutuv (Franklin 'row ns iup i. became extremely untike ly. when Cj o \ , Byrne on Jan. IS

form ally requested the Federa! Highway Adm inistration (f-H.A) dedesignate the road from the interstate highway system.

The FHA w ill consider the governor's w ithdrawal request o f the 1S2.M) miMitm project and then w ill make a recommen­dation about (he project to the LhS. Secretary o f Transpoila iion. The u l­timate decision about (he road rests w ith the transportatum secretary.

“ It looks as though the F95 link is dead, although until the iranspt)rtatn>n secretary actually approves the de- desiiznation. the issue is s till \'cry much alive, because it is so ct'ntroversia! A few communities (iTunk iin lo w nship and H illsborough Township) favor the 1-95 link as strongly as the communities (Princeitm and Hopewell aiitl M ontgom ­ery) oppose the lin k , said Dennis Keek, assistant to the New Jersey Depu­ty Commission ol Transportation.

The g iw e rm 'r re com m e n d ed d e ­designation beeause social, environm en­tal and economic studies completed by the New Jersey Depanmcni o f Transpor lation indicated that this segment of roadway would be a lia b ility , rather than an asset, to the interstate and regional tra ffic systems, according to a press release from the gtwernor s o tiice .

The New Jersey Department o f Trans- jx)i1a!ion is “ lio p c tu l’ that the state w ill receive a large portion of ihe federal funds allocated for the i 95 missing link project - funds which w ill he used towards substitute transportation pro- lecls. M r Keek said.

“ But there arc no guarantees that thefederal government w ill release any o f ihc money, although most state o ffie ia is are very optim istic about getting the monies in order to complete t)lher pres.s- ing transii prtfjcets in the 1-95 a rea." said Sam H am ill. d irector o f (he M iddle- scx-Somerset-Mcrcer ( M S M ) Regional Study Council.

-A prime candidate for a substitute project would be the duali/.ation and in ipnnem em o f Route 206 between Ih'inccion and Som erviite. Cj o v . Byrne said m hts w ithdrawal request. The stale deparlmcnl o f iransjHinatKm ha.s to sub­m il to the FHA a list o f substitute projects by September 1985. The list ha.s to be “ feasible, buildabie projects, meaning projects on which the en- virom nenlal work already has been com ­p le te d ." M r. H am ill said.

T he M SM director said the governor's action is a very sign ificant move — one which M SM is very pleased about. This con lnnersy ha.s been hanging over the region fo r .several decades and has ob­scured more in ipo ilant decisions about various road and transit projects. Exam­ples are the improvement o f Route 206, Route 1. Route 27 and the construction o f the Route 92 FTeewav. Routes 206. 27

YW C A sponsors tr ip fo r 'Sophisticated Cadies'

The Y M C A o f Central Jersey. 51 Livingston Avenue. New Brunsw ick, w ill sponsor a bus trip to the Broadway show “ Sophisticated Lad ies" in New York C ity on A p ril IS. The cost is $40 for Y W C A members and $42 for non-members and includes transpor­tation and orchestra scats. The bus w ill leave Scars back lot at I I a.m Return time w ill be 6 p.m . Dcfx>sit o f one hall is required w ith reservations. For further informativin call 545-6622

Recycle tKis newspaper

and ! are partic irla ri\ p it'sslng problems.because in a ileeade, these roadvvass w ill Ix' impassable.”

The l y.'s link o rig ina lly was planned m 1^47 as pan ol the interstalc road system, east ot and parallel to Route I. In ly.Sb. the I ‘).s route was moved into the Hopewell V .dley The enviro iim enla l impact studies were completed in 147'). aiid the tirst puhiie meeting on the proieet oeeurred on Vlas l,m H (l One year later. New Jersey Commissioner o l’ Iransponation, Louts J, Ciambaeeini. recommended i.iede.signalKni ot tlie I b.'s lin k . T lie two .Metropolitan i ’ lanmng O rgan i/a lions. which report to Ihe l-H.A and are authorized tti studs the iiro jee l. also oppo.sed the eonstruclion o f the roadssay. Tlie Delaware N'altes Regional Planning C’ommission iD k ’RP) came out against the projeel in December ol 19K I . and the Tri-.Stale Planning Com m ision (T.SPC) Iasi week voted by a vole ol I I -5 to dedesignate the 1-9? link.

Helikon Comer, the interRtommumty newspaper written by and for children age 6-14, w ill soon be publishing the second issue o f four sch^u led for the 1981-82 school year. Young writers and artists from the IMnceton elementary and middle schools, the Constable School in South Brunswick, the Grant School in Trenton and the two elementry schools in Holmdel w ill again be sharing their news and views; their poetry and fiction, puzzles and cartoons, with each other and with teachers and parents in five counties.

This year, in an effort to publish more youngsters' work. Community Park, L it- llebrook and Riverside Schools in Princeton ate pooling their efforts to publish a Princeton Regional Journal. Helikon associate Janet Jones has been working with a student editorial staff to publish this special news journal. This intra-community newspaper w ill publish its first issue in January with the aid o f Riverside student staff The next issue w ill be published by Community Park staff, and the final issue in the spring

‘Officer Phil’houndsstudents

A canine friend. O ffice r Phil, greeted South Brunswick elcmentarv’ studems this week.

Part o f the South B u insw ick Police Juvenile Bureau's outreach program. K-4 students met O ffice r Phil - a mechanical dog - - and discussed snow, sled and skating safety. A lso hroughi up was a talk on whal to do when there is a fire in the home.

Detective Ld S lisky made the rounds o f seven clcmcnlary schools this week w ith O ffice r Phil. T'ogeihcr (he\ cover seasonal safetv tips and spoke to children about how to deal w ith strangers.

The (w’o-ycar old program is funded through donation.s from township busi­nesses. O ffice r Phil, a s ix-foot ta ll hound dog is clo lhcd in plaid pants, hovwn shtx::s and a trench coat w ith educational buttons.

The program, explains Sgl. Jvx; Duea to "deve lop a bctler rapport between the kids and the p o lic e ." A fte r meeting O ffice r Phil and D etective Slisicy. ehiV-' dren arc more apt tiv feei p*>iice friends, contends Sgt. Duca

C r e a t iv e .S a fe ( \ ' f ’ ro d u c i.s in Hackensack operate O ffice r IT iii and fXher crim e-catching characters ' The program they o ffe r comes complete vs ith a progressive workbook senes ihrough the grades K 4,

Police in North Ifran ford . Conn, a(- tnhule to thwart ehiid abduEtmns direel- h to the O lfie e r Phi! program, saying the ehildrcn were alert enough to he warv and to m em j)n/e the lieense plates of the offenders' \ehieles

C h i ld r e n . sa>s C re a t iv e .Safety Products represeniative. w ill tell O fficer Phil or the etrmpanv's ta lking V \V heefic things they haven't mentioned to anadult.

Sami Augustine's. Creenbrook. .Mon­mouth Junelum. Deans. Cambridge and C'onslahle sciiools were visited this week hv O lfic c r Phil and his South Brunswick

w ill be edited with the aid o f Littlebrook students.

EDUCATORS ARE more and more aware that student publications arc an incentive to better writing. The Con­stable School is also sponsoring a stu­dent news magazine with the aid of Helikon's Freda Hepner.

W ith similar goals in mind, the East Windsor School District has already published the first o f three issues of Windsor Works, a literary journal mod­eled on Helikon Comer. The five elementary schools in the district have all contributed varied material ranging from group stories written by K -1 classes to rather sophisticated poetry and car­tooning from the 7th graders. Windsor Works mailbags are hanging in all classroom and library areas in each o f the schools. The first editorial staff were Kreps School students who met after school to leam some o f the aspects o f newspaper work; i.e. how to poll student

opinion and assess the results fa irly , interviewing techniques, etc. Linda Mohl o f the Gram Unit coordinated the project with Freda Hepner o f Helikon. The next issue's editorial staff w ill be students at the Rogers School. Melanie Litt o f the Kerekes Unit w ill work with Freda in coordinating the Project.

The enthusiasm generated by .seeing one’s work in print is heightened by kno w in g tha t ch ild re n and adu lts throughout the area are reading one's work. This, in turn, encourages more writing by more children.

TH E C H ILD R E N ’S Newspaper Pro­ject is made possible by a grant from the N. J. Stale Council on the Arts, the Princeton Youth Fund and support o f local businesses Helikon is a non-profit organization o f writers and teachers who sponsor writing workshops and publica­tions for people o f all ages.

For a d d itio n a l in fo rm a tio n , ca ll 609-448-4344.

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town forum4A Thunday, January 21, 1982

editorial

A stiff test for Rea-Keanomics

This ueek Thomas kean begins Ins first term in o ffice as governor o f New Jersey s till apparently com m itted to the notion that less w ll become more — that fewer taxes, especialh on business, w ill translate into more jobs, more general prosperitv , more m one\ in the long run to pay the State's b ills .

He has been a high priest from the pu lp it ol Reaganomics, a true believer who has sought to chase the money changers from the temple ‘ ' f sircial spending excess hack to the board rooms from w hence Ihev can trickle dow n their pieces til silver to a needs m iddle class. VS'ho kno w s ’ Maybe it w ill work. Someday.

It was a popular ph itlo rm on which to run last ta ll, nearly as much so as in the fall o f HJ80 when President Reagan rode it into the W hite I louse Hut nationw ide vxe are s till w a iting lo r the magic. Recent figures show industrial production at very low lex'cls and unemployment regaining its stature as isublic enenn No. 1. .-X CBS poll aired .Monday indicated the public IS g o in g the Reagan adm inistration fa iling marks so far in its battle to cure the economic malaise.

Now .New Jersex awaits the details o f its own version ot the bitter medicine, fhe state, like the nation, wants to be cured and want^ to believe in the doctor.

Hut It remains to be seen i f it m looking up to that pu lp it at a phvsicia ii or a faith healer.

RINGING POWM Trie CURTAIN

pam ’s world by pam hersh

Let them eat cheese — and quicheThe federal gokernmonl in (he past

lew weck.s has exhibited acts ol ex­traordinary generosilx acts uh iehshould be emulated bx local govern- mcnis ihroughi'u t the CffuiUrv.

1'he first act concerns Nanev Reagan's clothes. 'I'he W hite Htjuso announced that Mrs Reagan agreed to accept .American dcsignei clothes at no cost [o her or the ITesulent lake a true m artyr. Mrs. Reagan w ill bear the torture o f V,caring exjvnsixe designer dresses and sports outfits , in order to p uh lic i/c the American fashion industry .And alter the clothes lose lavor w ith Nancy, she w ill m cm oria !i/e the items b> donating them to appropriate Am erican niuseimis

The tree clothes lo r Nancy Reagan ma\ not be so Iree to the .American consumer, xxho max pa\ higher clothing prices m order to subsidi/.e the 1-irst la d x 's noble deeds But White House o ftic ia ls assure us that in the long run. the gratis clothes w ill be a boost lo r the .American economy

O i k i.O C V I, governments should not miss the tipporluniiy to lo ilow the Nancs Reagan style Our local o lfic iaN should pass ordinances to I • designate one person as O ltic ia ! Clothes Ifearcr (O C B l. and 2 establish the Local Ciiithes .Museum. Ira d itio n and history conscious residents would be estatic.

1 w ouki like to nominate m yself as the one to bear the cross ot being Miss iM rs lO C H o l WS2 1 pledge to borrow clothes onlx from local stores and wear

the clothes label and store o l purchase label on the outside o f the outfit, in addition. I would place a picture ol n n s e lf wearing the outfit ot the week in ex cry edition ol the local newspaper.

A lte r 1 got sick and tired ot wearing the 1/od and Ralph Lauren clothes. 1 would gixe the items to the museum, where the little men p laying polo could figh t of! the alligatob'

Local residents would have the honor o f know ing that Pam Hersh on Jan. 20. 1RH2. w-ore an fzod jogg ing suit at her .son's birthday party. The costume would be gix'en to the mu.scum au nalurcl w ith ice cream, cake and M & M candy slams. A clean ou tfit would rum the historical significance o f the donation.

It the niu.seum is really lucky, the o u t li l also would have remnants o f the g rilled cheese sandwiches made for the horde oi birthday eclcbrants. .And the cheese sandwich brings me to the second act o f generosity on the pan ol the Reagan administration.

M O N T H the President an­nounced he would release fo r d istribu­tion to Am erica's poor .^0 m illion pounds out o\ .S60 m illion pounds ot processed American cheese held in storage. The excess cheese is the result ol' a farm law that assures dairy farmers m inim um prices fo r their products.

The distribution and storage ot tree cheese to the poor w ill cost New York .Slate S24.(MK) for one month and S50.(KK) for three months. This cost

inexitab lv w ill be passed on to the p ix ir taxpayers, but at least the ir tummic.s w ilt be filled w ith cheese, so perhaps the increase in taxes w'on't be as upsetting.

Other local governments would miss u great opportunity i f they fa iled to accept the free portion o f American cheese. The governments could set up the Say ( ’ heew to r ( 'ha rity C’ «MTiirutteo<SC’CC'l. which would study the most appropriate way to pay lo r and distribute chcc.se to needy fam ilies.

But the committee should add a local touch to the program, by recruiting a group o f the area's celebrated gourmet cooks, who. as volunteers, would make Am erican cheese quiche out ot the tree cheese. Why should the piHir be de­prived o f the elegance o f life',’ Let them eat quiche while they ooh and aah at the stylish attire o f Mrs. (X 'B .

I would like to dedicate this column to the late Bob K e lly , the Packet group's form er executive editor, whose in ­telligence and humanity made him an ombudsman o f the people — and whose unfa iling sense o f humor no doubt w'ould have created a much funnier critique of the government's not so intelligent and not so humane activities.

Pam Hersh is a s in ti w r/fer fo r The Pnncclon Packet.

the doctor says by claudewell thomas, m.d.

What makes people kill?H )r Ih i'm as is p roksso i and k.hair

man o l the Department ot Psx».hiatrx at the New Jersi-x Medical S«.hoo! ol the C tjllcge 1)1 M edisine and f)en listrx ot New lersex )

What makes people k i l l . ' (Jbxiously. ihiR IS a proxoeatixc question aiui one With m ain ram iiieations Hut il wc '•:( aside those whose m otixa lio iis are ap parent perM*ns wh(' k ill lo r p ro tit and tht'se who k ill on behalt j*f tlie ir goxein- ments. as in war then xxe are dealing w ith (wo basil, groups

'I'he lirs t group inetuklcs those in- d ixiduais who haxe a pharmacological link-up. users o l alcohol or drugs The use ol both ean lead to x ioicnt behavior and this behaxioi tan include murder and suicide

The second group, lewer m numbers but still eommon, mehidcs those persons sutlering Irom rep.essed h o s ii li lx . .Some (hmg max have happened to (hem at a xerx early age lo which they were moved to lea tl xmlemlx tu aggiessixe lv. but they were ['H'werless to do so 1 heretore.

THE CESTRJL POSTpLbiiCQhon No USPS 557-660

Serving South Brunswick TownshipPublished every Thursday at

300 Witherspoon St Pnneeion. N J 08540

Business Office PO 80* 5056 Hub Building, Room 207. 3530 Lincoln Htghwoy Kendall Pork N J 08824 Telephone (201) 297-3434 Tnllo Romoge Manogmg EditorGloria Holpern fomily interest EditorCarol Henderson Advertising ManagerDolores (Dee) Donsky Office ManagerSubscription rotes One year $12 ($25 outside Mercer Middlesex, Somerset Hunl- erdon Monmouth Crjuntiesj Special rates for two yeor suDscr ptions, senior citizens Q.id students Newsstand price 30c

Second class postage paid al Kendoll Pork, N J 08824

THE PRINCETON PACKET INC Publisher

Telephone 609 924-3244

Central office, production plant and corpor­ate headquarters, 300 Witherspoon SI . Princeton, N J 085&0

Mory L Kilgore Beilmon Boord Choiimon James B Kilgore General MonogerRoslyn Denard Asst Gen ManagerRichord Witlevei Executive EditorChristopher A Chianese Business ManagerJohn E O'Rourke Advertising DirectorJack Brink Production ManagerWllliom Bennett Circulation Manager

they repressed their anger, only to haxe It resurtace years later when something reminds their subeonseious ot this earlier event

I H L C .A I.L .A situation which took place alter W orld W ar If m Japan .A young .American soldier h.ad murdered a Japanese bar g irl w ith no apparent provocation and was so reniorseful after the event that he was quite w illin g to let a Japanese court sentence h im to hie in prison, or even execute him He had no idea what had caused him to ilo this deed, which was quite contrary lo his style o f pt.“rso iia lity .

On p s y c h ia tr ic e x a m in a tio n , th is young man was able lo recapture a long-torgotten bedroom svcne m xoh ing his mother and a man other than his father which he had wiinc'-sed from another room He recalled the expression on his mother's lace as she asked him. then a little boy. tor a drink o! water. As fate w'ould have it. the Japanese bar g irl assumed the same posture as his mother had so long ago and then she. too. made the same request ol him

I he sim ilanty ol the meidonls was such that il prxHiueed what is commonly known as 'Ted rage" in the soldier. He struck out and killed the bar g ir l. When contronted w ith this psychiatric evidence which would serve to save him from a miscTable fate, the soldier was so

ashamed that he d id n 't want his defense team to use il.

T H IS S T O R Y demonstrates how per- .sons to whom k ilt in g is repugnant can. in tact, k ill because o f unconlro iiab ic anger triggered by the suiTaeing o f a powerful repressed emotion.

W hile we like to believe that we walk around making decisions on a conscious level and arc quite c iv ilized in our actions, this tiling called the unconscious can break through and tltXKl us with s o c ia l ly u n a c c e p ta b le d e s ire s and behavior. These triggering events, o f course, must be close to the orig inal trauma and should this exist m com bina­tion w ith extreme early repression, then vio lent and ulmosl automatic behavior ean be set in motion

A lthough this premi.se is applicable to both sexes, it i.s more common among men. This Is probably because the an­drogen link-up between gender and ag­gression (male sex hormones) is ex­tremely important. Certainly the .sexual urge and the need for acquisition of sexual partners w ith a tie in lo tcr- n lo n a iity is a strong force in extra speciie aggression,

it's imeresling to note from the .statistics that as our culture becomes more sophisticated, the phylogenetic, or evolu tionary, link to androgen is becom­

ing on ly s ligh tly less c ritica l. The rate ot females imprisoned has incrca.sed !i0 percent over the past 10 years, for white females and close to KK) percent for non whiles. However, the jxirceniage o f w om e n p r is o n e rs in c a rc e ra te d fu r murder is still ab<-ut the same as it always was. indicating that women are less prone lo murder and more prone lo other kinds o f crimes

T H IS M E C H A N IS M o f repression which the young soldier displayed .so v iv id ly is more frequent in those persons who d on 't have the capacity lo look al themselves. Also exem plify ing this mechanism at w'ork are the numerous w ife and ch ild abuse cases w hich come to light. More often than not, the abuser has been the v ic tim o f abuse earlier in his or her life . When children arc abu.sed they arc re latively powerless and cannot afford to display hostility fo r fear o f further abuse.

As parents, wc should remember that repression is very dangerous and that when trauma e>ccurs, particu larly to c h il­dren. it should be identified and talked about lo lessen the possib ility o f built-up hostility .

(Thi.s column is made possible by suppon Irom the Hunterdon Health Fund lo the College o f Medicine and Dentistry o f New Jersey. Inquiries to the column may be made lo this newspaper.)

the state w e ’re inby david moore

Clean Air Act facing

extinctionBy this time there can 't be too many

people who are unaware both that pow erfu l forces are at w ork in W ashing­ton to revise or otherwise m aim the federal Clean A ir A c t. and that a lot o f us are afraid many years o f hard-won environmental advances w il l go up the federal flue along w ith stronger ptdlu- tants

Here in New Jersey, home o f the firs t statewide a t om otivc air-em ission pro­gram and other laudable advances in environmental protection, a lot o f people are ju s tif ia b ly alarmed Th is was shown recently through a public hearing spon­sored by the American Lung As.sociation o f New Jersey and the .state League o f Women Voters,

O f the 32 statements received, four were from industry, and the rest came from private citizens, cnvironm enla lis ls, government, d(X'tors and com m unity groups. Not surpris ing ly, 16 o f the statements addressed acid rain problems lo one degree or another

IF A N Y T H IN G is surprising, it 's that more New Jersey persons are not up in amis about what acid rain is doing to this and other nearby slates, plus eastern Canada, it is destroying marble and limestone architecture and monuments, damaging paint on our homes, hurting farm and garden crops, determratmg t\>resi grow th and. especially, k illin g aquatic life in our freshwater lakes.

Compounds o f su lfur and nitrogen in (he atmosphere combine w ith ra infall and snow to create these conditions. Why'.’ Because icxt little heed has already been paid lo the sources o f these com ­pounds,

M a in ly , they come from automotive and airplane jc l emissions, and especial­ly from coal-burning smokestacks at electric generating stations and heavy industries. The atmospheric equivalent o f sweeping d irt under the rug has led to build ing higher and higher smokestacks lo dispei.>c the compounds away from their points o f orig in.

The dispersal system works ju.st line, but It causes the acid rain to fa ll where tiic compj.-)unds are directed by weather patterns. Thus New Jersey and the Norlhea.st inherit tltc winds from m id- western industrialized regions.

W H IL E M A N Y o f us want to sec this situation 'cured, (he auto and energy industries arc spending money to in- tluencc the Reagan adm inistration lo relax the existing air quality colrols. Translation; D on ’ t do anything until a lew more years have passed while ■■proof” is obtained. Other (scopic arc demanding more study about damages to the ozone layer while scientists increas­ing ly warn that our climate is changing under our no.scs due to po llu tion damage in the upper atmosphere.

A ctiv is t groups, such a.s (he Sierra C lub, arc urging the public everywhere to write to the ir congres.spcrson.s and senators to supfsort a continued strong Clean .Air A ct and not lo be intiucnccd to favor any o f a number o f b ills aimed at weakening il.

Study is surely the order o f the day in this complex w orld , so it's not surprising that this dollar-orienicd society weighs aesthetic, health, ,S(x:ial and environm en­tal needs in monetary terms. For many, the mere facts that il rams acid and the sky isn ’ t as blue anymore are not enough The result is that wc arc trying to analyze our destruction instead o f fighting It,

Recent years have brought a Rku s on human and environmental health, but this is being undone now by ihOvSC who capitalize on our obsession w ith scien­t if ic details. Cost-benefit ratios are aimed al short-term impacts on d irty air and various basics, but seldom at long-term damage to trees and crops, works o f art. build ings, bridges, w ild life or human health.

To .some, I suppose d irty air smells like money.

D avid M ayre is the executive director o t the N ew Jersey Conservation Foun~ dation in M orris tow n.

•niufiday. Jmiiary 21.1982 t h e c e n t r a l p o s t 5-A

letters to the editorE ditoria l ‘m is re p re s e n ts ’ b o ard po licyTo the editor:

This letter is to c la r ify the concerns raised in your editoria l o f Jan. 7. “ Board Policy Comes Too Close to Gag Rule. ”

The in form al po licy referred to in the d itoria l is a misrepresentation o f a prx)- ccss by which successive boards have sought to m onitor themselves to prevent any abuse o f position o r v io la tion o f the N .J .S .B .A . Code o f Ethics fo r board members.

W c. too. the members o f the South Brunswick Board o f Education believe absolutely in the right o f the public and the press to have board members express themselves ind iv idua lly .

The process in question has never been applied to the righ t o f the public to contact board members. A ll board mem­bers welcome and indeed encourage this personal contact. When such interaction does occur it is considered a private matter between the ind iv idua ls con­cerned and is in no way n ionitored by the board.

The single spokesperson concept evo l­ved to avoid confusion and to ensure confidentia lity in sensitive areas such as negotiations. The actual application o f the fH^licy always has been applied in a relaxed manner. For exantple. the press js nom ia lly referred to committee heads to answer specific questions. In recent weeks, it was p ub lic ly announced t)n two (Kcasions that board members should feel free to answer all c la rify in g ques- ti(»ns on the ir posjtions put to them by the press.

The editor o f the Central Post recently telephoned the president o f the Board o f Education to discuss the board priKess. During the discussion it was agreed that the issue was a valid one that the hoard should leexamine as .s<xin as possible in order to elim inate any public confusion. 'Fhe d ito r asked to be inform ed when the matter was agendt/ed and was assured that the board would do so.

However, the Centra! Post editoria l appeared prio r to the next hoard meeting and om itted any mention o f this d is­cussion. The issue raised w il l be d is­cussed by the fu ll btiard m the proper forum — as an agenda item at a public board meeting,

G a il Barccio Herbert Gopstein

JcMicph Heihta ■John N icolay

Eileen Rosfjord G a il RotlsKCiler Daniel Wacker

Barbara VilkcmKTsmi, President

C ro s s ro a d s ’ p o sitio n n e e d e dTo the editor;

The South Brunswick Board o f Educa­tion has eliminated a position in addition to those listed in the Jan. 14 edition of The Central Post It is a position for which Crossroads School was com­mended by a Middle School Evaluation Committee appointed by the Middlesex County Superintendent in its November 1980 report. It is a position that by design provides the time necessary to. among other things, teach adolescents self-discipline and how to deal with the daily problems they face. The position to which I refer is the Student Affairs Coordinator at Crossroads School.

The procedure used by the board for this budget cut was unique. Rather than seeking input from the building principal to determine the effects o f a decision on the e d uca tion p rocess, the board bypassed this step and made their de­cision without consulting the principal

It IS my understanding that the pos­ition was abolished due to the number o f non-teaching personnel at Crossroads. It seems that the b tw d feels that they cannot justify what they consider to be a significant number to the people they were elected to serve.

The age group that we have the privilege to w ork w ith is exc iting yet tumultuous. Due to these extremes in their behavior, it requires a s ign ificant amount o f time to help our students deal w ith and solve their da ily problems.

It is my b e lie f that the decision to abolish the position o f Student A ffa irs Coordinator w ill have a detrimental e f­fect on the student body. It is my concern that the students who w ill attend Crossroad.s beginning w ith the 1982-83 sch<.K)i year w ill not receive the in ­dividualized attention that they need and deserve because lim e w ill not a llow it.

The Board o f Education's decision is one that they believe serves the best interests o f the com m unity. I cannot help but question the va lid ity o f that decision.

Eortunately, the South Brunswick Board o f Education encourages the members o f the com m unity it serves to voice their opinions, h is important that (he citizens o f South Brunsw ick express their feelings regarding the e lim ina tion o f the Student A ffa irs C m ird ina lo r pos­ition and the effect it w il l have on the future students c f Crossroads ScIkk)1.

Adolescence is an exc iting yet fr ig h t­ening experience. Adolescents require special care and attention. Le t's .ensure that (he adokst^enu. o f South B n m sw ick receive that care and the attention that they de.^rve.

V incent R [>cLucia Student A ffa irs Coord inator

Crossroad.s Sch(X>)

Vietnam vets have benefits extendedJames K. Purdy. D irec lo r o! the N cu-

ark Veieran.s Adm in istra tion Regional O ffice, announced today (hat reeenlh signed legislation extends the autlio rity for Pederal agencies to make Vietnam Era N'eieranv Read just n icni ,‘\pp<nnl- ments.

O rg ina llv established by lixceutive Order on March 26. 1970. the VRA

(Veterans Read|iis(mcnt .Appointments) provides improved Federal employmeni opportunmes along \xith tra ining or education lo r the returning Vietnam Era veterans

The previous authority F ir makng V R A uppoiniments ended on .Sept. 30. 1981. M r. I ’urdv said the new legislation extends auth iirity from Oct. 1. 1981 through Sept. 30. 1984.

r e l i g i o u s c a l e n d a r

K R ID A V , ,|A N . 22

Sisterhood o f Congregation B 'nai T ikvah w ill conduct Shahhat Services at 9 Stanworth Rttad. Kendall Park. 8 p m A dairy Oneg Shahhat w ill fo llow services.

S A T U R D A V ,J A N . 2J

C o n g re g a t io n B 'n a i l i k v a h . 9 Stanworth Koad. Kendall Park, Sis- terhCKxi Shahhat. 9 a .tn .. lo ilow ed by a luncheon; Shahhat M inchah Services. 4:30 p.m.

St, Augustine's K .( '. Church. Hen­derson Road, Franklin Park. Ma.sses .3 p.tn. (school) and 7:,h) p.m (church).

S U N D A Y , JA N . 24

Christ the K ing l.utheran Church, 3330 Route 27. Kendall Park (across frtrm Franklin Convalcscctrt Center). Pastor Elizabeth W aid. H oly C om m u­nion 8:30 a m .. Church School 9:1.3 a m ., Service o f the W ord 11:00 a.m.

C om m unity Presbyterian Church ot Sand H ills . K C uylcr Road, Kendall Park. W orship Service 9:30 a m /, Fel­lowship and coffee 10:30 a .m .. Church School fo r all ag( s. 11 a m.

First Presbytcr.an Church, Georges Road Church school for persons 3 years old to adults 9:30 a m .; Celebration o f worship 11 a.m. Youth fe llow ship for tumor high school (7th and 8th grades), 7 p .m .; Youth fellow !,hip tor senior high school (9th-12th grades), 7 p.m .

Kendall Park Baptist Church, Route 27 (across from the Kendatl Park Center), B ible High Schrxil fo r a ll ages 9:45 a m ., M orning worship I I a m.

Evening Fellowship 6:30 p.m.Kingston Presbyterian Church. Mam

St, K ingston. Church Sch(x>l fo r ail ages (3 years to adult) 9:30 a.m .. Sunday morning w'orship .service I ! a.rn.. nur- .scry provided from 9:15 a .m .-12:15 p.m . The Taiwanese American Presby­terian Church holds Sunday worship service 3 p.m .

Kingston United M ethodist Church. Church Street, morning service 9 am. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.

M ille r M em oria l Pre.-ihytenan Church, Ridge and West New Road, Sunday Schtx)! 9;.30 a.m .; worship service 11 a.m.

St. Augustine's R.C. Church. Hen­derson Road. Franklin Park. Masses 8 and 9 a.m. and 5 p.m . (church) 9:30 and 11 a m. and 12:30 p.m , (school). Babysitting services available during 9:30 a.m. Mass.

S ix -M ile Run Reformed Church. Route 27, Franklin Park, Sunday School 3 yrN old to high sch(K)l and Fam ily W orship, 10 a m .; fe llow sh ip hour, 11:15 a.m.

Tw in County Bapti.st Church, 107 Sand H ills Road. Kendall Park. Sunday Sch(X)l fo r all ages 9:45 a .m ,, Morning w orship 11 a.m. Evening worship 7 p.m.

M O N D A Y , JAN . 25

KadimaStanworthp.m.

meeting. B 'nai Road. Kendal!

T ikvah, 9 Park. 7:30

TU ESD AY, JAN . 26

St. Augustine ’ s A lta r Rosary Society. Henderson Road. Franklin Park, 8 p.m .

SUPER SAVINGS BULLETIN! SPECIAL COLLECTION OF HOME BASICS NOW AT

EPSTEIN'S PRINCETON ONLY

\ \ O l d F a s h io n e d

W h i t e S a l e "ENDS SUNDAY, JAN. 24th

P O TP O U R R I O F PERCALE SHEETS

TWIN SIZE, ORIGINAL VALUES TO 11.00 3.99 SAVE 5 0 % O N TH E H E A T SHEET! «

S lip one un d e r the m attress cover an d y o u r b o d y te m p e ra tu re does the rest.

FULL, O R IG . VALUES TO 1 4 .0 0 ............6.99 Q U E E N , O R IG . VALUES TO 1 9 .0 0 ......8.99S T A N D A R D CASES, O R IG , VALUES TO 1 0 .0 0 .....................................................................4.99 Pair

T W IN , 3 6 x 6 0 ” , O R IG . 4 .0 0 ....................1.99 FU LL/O U E E N , 5 2 x 6 0 " , O R IG . 6 .0 0 ....2.99

S N U G S A V IN G S O N W A R M T H R O W S

SAVE 50%ANIMAL PRINT ORIGINALLY 40.00 . 19 .99

9.99FRINGED PLAID LAP THROW ORIGINALLY 20.00.....................C u d d ly a c ry lic th ro w s in w a n te d a n im a l p rin ts o r s p o rty p la id s ! M a ch ine w a sh a b le

1 0 0 % W O O L B LAN KET B O N A N Z A

SAVE 50%Tw in, o r ig , 5 0 0 0 -6 0 .0 0 ........24.99-29.99 Q ueen, o r ig . 7 5 .0 0 8 5 .0 0 . .36.99-4 1.99Full, o r ig , 6 5 .0 0 -7 5 .0 0 31 .99-36.99 King, o r ig . 9 0 ,0 0 -9 5 .0 0 44.99-46.99

C hoose fro m solids a n d a p la id in lu xu rious , n a tu ra lly w a rm p u re w o o l.

TERRY & VELOUR TO W E L VALUES

3.99Bath, comp, volue 7.00-13.00

H and . co m p , va lue 6 .0 0 - 7 .5 0 ..........1.99VYash a n d F in ge rtip , c o m p a ra tiv e va lue 2 .7 5 -3 .0 0 9 9 '

U nm a tched co lo rs , some irre g u la rs .

FIELDCREST® C H A R IS M A TO W ELS

SAVE 50%B ath, o r ig . 1 9 .5 0 ....................................9.69H a n d , o r ig . 1 0 .5 0 ...................................5.19W ash & F in g e rt ip , o r ig . 3 75 ............ 1 .89

First q u a lity , some m a tched co lo rs .

MORRISTOWN 10:00-5:30, WED. 8. FRI. 1 0 :0a9 00, SUN. 12:00-5:00 SOMERVILLE CIRCLE 10:00-9:00, SAT 10 00-6:00, SUN. 12:0CF5:00

PRINCETON SHOPPING CENTER, N. HARRISON ST OFF RTS 1 i 206, 10:00-6=00, FRI 10:00-9:00, SUN, 12:00-5:00

6* A THE CENTM L POST Th»wd«y, Jwtuaor 21,1982

police b lotter

On Jan. I I , Gene F, Hcmianski o f Englishlown wa.s arrested hy I^ l Harry DelGado and charged w ith driv ing while under the influence ot alct>hol

Mr. Hermanski was s lop |vd alter observed speeding and driv ing eareieN>- ly. according to p».>lice.

Tractor tra iler tires and rim.s. \ aiucJ at S I200, were rejx'rted stolen from the Continental Coffee, Hlaekhorse Lane

.Accoiding to plant manager George Saigh. the tires and nms were removed from two trailers parked on the propertv o f Conlinenla! Coffee between 6 3 0 p .m .. Jan S and 2 p m . Jan

Over SUXX) m eleemcal eLjuipmem was repv>rted missing from a conslrue- (lon tra iler at the sue ol Castle ck Cfnik. Route 32 and H em xi . according to pKihce

Between 4 30 p m . Jan S and H a m . Jan 4 a construction trailer was broken into and approvim.itelv S I, 145 in dec (nca! equipment was taken. pvdivC said. Among the items rejXHled missing were, a lx>x o f assoned circuit breakers. 5(M» feel o f Romev cable and a piopane heater.

The Items were the pri'pertv ol I-.lev tneon. a bon L.ee hnn

A North Bninsw lek contempt o f court w a rra n t was served to F re d e ric k O'Roukc o f Barrett Garden Apartments, Kendall Park by PtI Hugh M cN eil.

M r O 'R oukc, according to police, was unable to pn si bail and was turned over to North Brunswick's ptvlicc depart­ment for detainment.

Police and M onm outh Junction vo lu n ­teer Fire Ifepartment resjxmdcd to a F lint Ink. Com Road fire . Jan, 14

.According to police, an e lectrical fire was refK>rtcd by F lin t Ink. The fire was confined to ih». carNm conveyor tunnel, ^xdicc said.

Jim C ullen o f F lin t Ink reptu lcd no damage sustained to equipn^cnt o r the buiid iiu :.

.A Route i . M onm outh Junction resi­dent reported the theft o f jewels and a tdesis ion from his home on Jan 17 between 1 I a m. and 7 p m.

.According to police, someone broke into the house after smashing in the rear door o f the residence.

C'onsidcrabio damage was caused by the cold weather, police said, v^ith pipes in the hou.se frec/’ ing and bursting ,An estimated cost o f damages is unknow n u this rime

State Department of Transportation workers have removed the eastbound lane deck portion of the Route 518 bridge over the D arid R Canal just east of Rocky Hill as they proceed with their upgrading project, slowed down somewhat by the cold and snowy weather.

Monmouth Junction School visited by ‘Slim Goodbody’

Meanwhile, just west of this wooden span, the proposed replacement of the Millstone River bridge is developing into an issue between the county and the borough, which wants the bridge reconstructed, not replaced.

(Yury Tarnavskyj photo)

o b itu a r ie sMonmi'uth Junction School student'-

were delighted w ith a recent v is it bv ' Slim Ciootlbodv. ' {v rtt'rm ed b \ B ill .Strong. The enure schth'l attended the as.semblv. and M r Strong soon had evervone clapping and smging ah>ng with him Mans ot the children were alrcadv lam ilia r vMih the (ic»*>dbtKlv character, which has been teatured on the pt'pular ‘ ■('apiain Kangati-o" l ' \

' vhov.

.Attired m a bodvsuit picturing the various organs and muscles n| the N 'd v . ■■.Slim" encouraged his listeners to st.o. health) bv eating the right tm-ds. erasing, and getting enough rest W ith the help ot a talking computer and a hand

puppet named " H a ir v . " he perlormed stings and skits lo illustrate his messiigc. “ N u trition 's his mis>ion. gotid health''- his goal

M r Strong is a former (Cvtchcr who rcallv kiuwv-x how to talk to children w ith t'u l ta lking down to them Iho students i>! M onm outh Junction Schoid have tibviouslv learned an im poilam k-sMin while having a great deal o f tun.

F l . l - F H V M \ K L M M \ ( ; F S A I.K

The y w c 'A I't I'em ra l Jersev w ill ht>ld a W hile l.lephanl and Rummage sale on Saturdav . beb !3 . U fiK ia .m lo 4 00 p m at the L iv ingston Avenue laviiitv l.u iK h and retreshments w ill be so ld b t ir tu r tb e r i iB o rm a iio n ..a ll 545-6ti22

Sean S. TerhuneSean Scott rcrlum c. 11. o\ .Mor-

n sv illc . Pa., grandson ol M r and Mrs .Arthur Terhune o f Monmouth Junction, was dead on arrival brida> at Lower Bucks Hospital. Bristo l. lAi.. i>l s iiljoca- tion after a snow fo ri m which he was plaving collapsed

Born in .New Brunsw ick, he was a fifth grade student at Manor f-.lementarv School. M o i t i s m I I c

Surviving arc his parents. Mrs Helmut (ioerncr w ith whom he li\e d and John Jerhunc ot Bensalem. a brother. Neil Warren Terhune at home: three Stepbrothers. W 'lllian i C'i*'cater ot Now

.Hampshire. John Goemer ol f-lorida. and Richard G iK 'rncr o f Lcv ilto w n . lAi,. and a stepsister. Carol .Ann Gariiv ot Horsham, his maiemal grandmother. .Mrs Warren Davison o f Jamesburg and his paternal grandparents. .Mr and Mrs. Terhune

Services were held Wednesdav in the Bcek-O 'Neill-S trouse buneral D irectors. Levittown. Pa,

Burial w il l be m O ld Tennenl C'em eterv. NLinalapan.

M em orial con inhu lions may be made lo the Singles ( 'hns tian bc llow sh ip . c o H ightstown T’reshytenan ('h u rch . 320 N ■Mam !S ;..^hg iU i4ow ;i, 1869!.

» - t * * « - _________________ ___

.Appraisal Services

For on o u t h o r i l o l i v e and up-to-daU) assessment o f vou r f ine

j e w e l r y and s i lver. . . l.et l.u \ ake's reg is te red je w e le rs

p ro v id e a c o m p le t e w r i t t e n

d e s c r i p t i o n . . , w h e t h e r fo r a s in g le p iece o r an en t i re

co l lec t ion .

\ | r ‘m li( 'is III I h i' .X m i 'i i i - i r i r . i ,n i S m :n 'hContad Nancy SpiUer

je < ^ e e rs a n a S i‘ v e r s m i ih s S m e o 'S 7 7 54 N a t t a u S l f t a l P r in c a to r i , N a w J a r t a y 0 9 5 4 0

(6 0 9 ) 9 2 4 -0 6 2 4

Tbu'tday and F>iO>y Un(H I 30 OM

Lillian J. M enghiLillian J. Menghi. 80. o f Charleston

Place in Kendall Park, died Jan, 14 at the Medical Center at Princeton

B<irn in Hrtxiklvn. N . she had resided in Kendall Park lor the past 10 years, .Mrs Menghi had been employed by the Cjray Envelope Compans ot New 'I'ork ('ii> frir 15 years before retiring.

Her husband. W illiam I-.. .Menghi. died in 1980,

Surviving arc a son. Ron h of Kendall Park and two grandsons.

Serv ices were held Sunda> at (he Kimble i-unera! Home. I Hamilton .Ave . Pnnec tun

.A private burial was in GieenwoodCemeterv. Brooklyn

Menuirial eoniributions may be made to the Kendall Park iurt .Aid and Rescue Squad.

Francis Endresbuneral services for Francis J lindrcs.

79. o f Stockon Road. K c iu la ll Park, were held Satuiday. from (he M J Murphv Funeral Home. R itlgc and West .New Roads, .Monmouth Juncliun .A Mass ol C'hristian Buna! fo llow ed at S( .Augustine o f Canterbury R C. ('hurch . Franklin Park

Interment was in Holy C'ross Cem eterv. South Brunswick

\ i r . (-julres died Jan. 13 at the Medical ('enter at l^nncelon.

Born in B rooklyn . N . he had resided in MeUichen before m oving to Kendall Park live years ago. M r, baulres had been a printer for 43 years, retiring m 1963. .Alter re tiring, he was a scvunty g u a rd w ith the O a k i le ( 'o r p o l Metuchen.

His son. Gerald b.ndivs. died m 1973 Surviving are his w ile . i.!i/.abeth ( '

Lndres; a daughter. G loria Burger ot (jriggstow n and three grandchildren.

M em orial contnhutions mav he made lo (he A n icrica ii Heart Association.

DouglasSedelm eyer

[JoLiglas B Sedcln icyt'r. 38. ot New Road. Kcndali I’ ark died Sunday at 1 he Medical Center at P riiKclon

Born in hast (.'levcland. Ohm. tie was a graduate ot C lescland Cmsersity w ith a B A. degree in 197-U. He livei.1 m Kenilworth and Princeton before m oving to South Brunsw ick lou r years ago.

M r Sedelmeyer v\as an assistant to the vice president ot Union College. Cranford, aiui tor the last two years he was a sales manager lo r Media Systems Ine , New York C ity.

He was a Navy veteran ot the Vietnam W ar.

Surviving are h u w ile , (ieorg ia Huber Sedelmeyer. his lather. R iibe il L . ol Jacksonville Beach. Fia.. his mother. Jean Sedelmeyer o f Lakeland, Fla : two brtuhers. Bruce I o f .lacksnnvillc Beach. Fla : and Robert !. Jr. ol Pair view Park. O hio, and two sisters. Star Charvai o f ik iy V illage. ( )hio. and Laura Dornback *if rw m shurg. Ohio

Services were hciil Jan 20 at the Mather Tludgc laincral Home. 40 Van doventer A ve.. Princeton

Burial w i ll be in I’ rmcelon (.'em etory. IVinceton

('on iribu tions may be inude to the .American Heart .Association . 19)8 S Broad St . 'J'renlon. 08610

public notices

’’ISYOURIM DOING Alirr SHOULD BE DOING FORYOUrA i l IR A s a re n o t a l ik e l i t l a u . t l ie ie a re as m a n y l i i t le r c m In d iv id u a l i f e l i r e r n e m A c e o u n ts as th e r e a re w a y s to in ve s t y i 'u r rn o n e v in th e m

.M a v h e v o u r I K A is n ’ i y ie ld i i i j i i is l u l l e a r n in g jx n e m ia l. O r [K -rh a p s II s h o u l i l h e p r o v k lm g Vvnj w i t h s t r o n g e r l a j i i i a l g r o w ih o p p o r tu m iK - s

A c I a t i m . ik e s u re v o u r ID S in v i- s im e n t is gearex! l o v o u r s p e u h e I see, .11 iH S w e o U e r a w i i l c r ra n g e t>t in v e s tm e m s

th a n v o u l o u l d g e i f r o m a b a n k , a s a v in g s a n d lo a n a.s.soc ia t io n o r an m s i i r 'n e e to n ip a n y \X 'e ' l! h c l j i y o u lTio o m .- t r o m an e v ie i is iv e l is l o l m u tu a l a n d in o i ie s m a r k e l lu n d s . a n n u m e s , a n d in v e s tm e n t e e r t i lK a le s

( l ie la w , IR A s a re a m o r e a n r a c t iv e I h a v e n ’ t e h a n g e d v o u r IR A

SPECIAL SALEiv<m size sets

Special Edition Beauty Rest by Simmons

reg $399. SALE $199. a set

1 HOTEL MAXIPEDIC 11 by Siminons 1 1 Twin Sale $99 ea piece 1 1 Full SALE $139 ea piece 1 1 Queen SALE $399 a set |

SPECIAL ASSORTMENTof Love Seats in various

styles and fabrics reg sold for up to $799

SALE $269, each

Nassau Interiors'CONTEMPORARY FURNITURE

M o n tg o m e ry S hopp ing C en te r - R oute 206, Rocky H ill, N . J.Monday, Thursday 10-6 1 Friday 10-7 Saturday 10-5 609 921-6696

W'llh die recent changes in investmeni ih.in ever It yoi investmeni in this calend.ir year, you can vto so now. No\i. IS (he time lo nuke sure vour IRA invesiincnt pays oil Am] IDS is the place ( .all or send in our coujKm lociav for more inlormation

(IDS nntAs 1 o HKij- wx'^ M.\]\|At*M(TNf:Y

Yes, I ct itKe more information a&oul alleinafive investments for my IRA

1 (2U.L 201 329-6128I Lester Seidenstein Boi 371, Georges Rd., Dejrton, N.i. OS810

t Name ' Address1 City -------------------i btale

1 Zip PhoneI

O R O M AM C E # 1 82AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G AN D S U P P L E M E N T IN G T H E R E V IS E D G E N E R A L O R D IN A N C E S O F THE T O W N S H IP O F S O U T H B R U N S ­W ICK. 1975, S P EC iF iC ALLY C H A P ­TER XV, M U N IC IP A L FAC IL IT IE S . M UN IC IPAL DISPOSAL AREA

BE IT O R D AIN ED by the Tow nship C om m ittee of the Tow nship of South BrunswicK, County of MicWlese*, State of N ew Jersey, that the Revised G ener­al O rdinances of the T ow nship of South Brunsw ick, 1975. specifically. Chapter XV. M un icipal Fao liftes, M unicipal D is­posal Area, be arvj is hereby am ended and supplem enied as follows

T h e f o l l o w in g s u b s e c t io n is am ended to C ha p le t XV, M un icipal Facilities, M un icipal D isposal Area

(1) The present Fee Schedule set fo rth under Section 15 -3 .7(d) is de leted

12) The new Fee Schedule shall bo as follows

FEE SC H ED U LENon Com pacted W aste Material 1 P ick-up truck ton, 4 17 cu yds ,

S6 12 per load or part thereof,2. Oipen body frx>ck over W ion. 5 56

cu yds . S0.17 per load Or pah th ereo f, 3 Open body truck o ve r 2 tons. 6 94

cu, yds . $ f0 20 per load Of part thereof, 4. Open body truck o ve r 3 tons, 8 33

cu, yds , $12.25 per load or pah thereof5 Open body truck o ve r 4 tons. 9 72

cu yds ,$ 14 .30 per toad o t pah thereot.6 O pen bo dy truck ove r 5 tons,

11.11 cu yds . $16 33 per load or pah thereof.

7. O pen bo dy truck ove r 6 tons. 12 50 cu. yds . $18 38 pe r toad or pah thereof

8 O pen body truck over 7 tons in- cludiriQ tandem s and tractor trailers. 12.50 cu yds ptus 1 39 cu yds (per

'»or or ove tj, $18 36 per load or pah thereo l, plus $0 90 per ton or fraction thereo t over 7 tons

9 Open body truck ove r 7 ion s in- c iud irw tandem s srtd tractor-tra ile r with ro ll on conta iners (1 47 pa r cu yd.)20 cu yds , $29 40 per conta iner30 cu. yds , $44 10 per conta iner 35 cu. yds.. $51 45 per conta iner.40 cu. yds . $56 60 per conta iner

10 Tank truck per load or pa ri thereot, p e r 20 56 cu yds $ 1 8 .5 0 ; g a llo n capacity ove r 1,000 galtons or fraction thereof $4 95 per cu. yd

If s ides are added on any o f the a b o v e tru c k s , th e re b y m c ie a s in a capacity of truck, the above lees will apply based on the new capacity ol vo lum e ot the veh ic le w ith *he addrtkx>al srdes at the rate o f $ t 47 per cu. yd

Theae ad iue ted rates a re in accord- attoe w i9i the R ecycling A ct Public Law o t 198U. Chapter 27B and the sannary Landfill Facility C losure and ContKiQen- cy Fur>d Act o f P u b ic Law of l M i .

Chapter 306 a n j are oflective January I 1962 The rate increases thorelo re are e 'so e fteclive January 1. 1982 as au thoru x j by the Board o l Public Utility Com m iss. oners

C om pacted W aste M aterial $1 47 pe. cubic yard or pah thereof The toes shall be payable on a ticket

basis Surxh lK,..ats shall be purchased in advance from Township ClerV at the Mur>icipat B u ild iiig or from such other source as may be o c ’ erm ined by the Township C om m ittee and posted at the M un icipal D isposal Area and on the bulletin board o l the M unicipal BuikJtng

The above o rd in a n ce w as in tro ­duced and passed on first reading at a regular rrweting ol the Tov^dS.hip Com mrttee o f the ‘i ownship ot South Bruns wick held on January 19, 196? and will be con s ide re d on second and tinal reading and final passage at a regular m eeting ot the Tow nship C om m ittee ol the Tow nship o t South B runsw ick, to be held at the M unicipal Build ing, Mon m o u th J u n c tio n , S o u th B ru n s w ic k Township, New Jersey at 8 00 p.m on Feb 2 t at which time and place any person having an interest therem w ill be g iven an opporluntfy to be heard

Kathleen A ThorpeC P 1-21-82 It Fee $26.52

NOTXXPUBUC HEARMG YXoponad Um at

f\menu» Shartrw Fund*Sou#i Arurwnicit lownatito

O r M oriday, February 1. i96 2 . at 7 :00 P M . in th e S outh B runsw ick T ow n sh ip M un ic ip e l Buildir>g, mem m eeting room, a hearing on General Revenue S hanng w ill be heid The pub­lic hes the nght ana is encoureged to proviOe ora l end w ritten com m ents. esA gueehons and otherw ise parUcipete in the budget adoption proceee m d u d ir^ the re lationsh ip o f c W w ra i Revenue S h aring F un ds to se«3 budget The Townsh<) aspects to receive G a n e r^ R e v e n u e S n a r in g F u n d s to ta ll in g $247,2®4 - - EnMIam eni Penod TX*'-- lae n th A lloca tion — and asp ects to appropriate sa m e w i is Current Fund appropnattons tor 1962

Jerry A Brttner Munacipal Administrator

CP 1 14-82 21 Fee $12 46

TAKE N OTICE THAT, at US reorgamza- Hon inaeting held on January 12. 1982. tha South B-unsWN^ Tow nship Plan- nmg Board took the loHowino achons a la c te d B a rry in d ik as C n a irm a n . e le c te d B r u c e J o n e . i a s V ic e -

C ha irm an, appointed Linda Peters re ­cord ing socre la ry, appointed Beatnca B C icch ino sen io f secretary, appo inted Barry C B roct-m an P lann ing Board a t lo rn e y . a p p ro v e d 1982 m e e iin g da tes: ad op te d P la nn in g Board By- Law s, a p p o in te d m in o r S u od iv is io n C o m m itte e . C a p ita l Im p ro v e m e n ts C o m m itte e and A lfo rd ab le H ousing C om m ittee All e lections and a p po in t­ments are lo r the year 1982 Further adopted reso lu tion ot approval lo r sign variance tor J. L W illiam s Co and re- solOtion o f denia l w ithout pre judice for Dayton C enter, Section 8

Beatrice B C icchino Secre tary

C P : 1-21-82 11 Fee SS 46

R ESO LU TIO NW HEREAS, there exists a need tor

legal services for the Planning Eioard ot the Tow nship o l South B runsw ick tor tha year 1982; and

W HE RE AS, lunds are ava ilable tor this purpose, and

W HE RE AS, the Local Public C on­tracts Law (N J .S .A 40.11-1 ef seq.) requires that the reso lu tion authorizing the award o f contracts for ' Professtonal S e rv ice s ' w ith o u t co m p e titive b ids must be publiciv advertised.

N O W . T H E R E F O R E , BE IT R E ­SO LVED, on this 12th day ot January, 1962, by the P lann ing Board o t the Tow nship ot South Brunsw ick, as fo l­lows.

1 The C ha irm an o f the P lann ing Board is hereby authorized to execute sn agreem ent w ith Barry C Brechm an, Esquire, tor pro fessiona l services lor the year 19B2.

2. This contract is awarded wrthoui com petitive brcWing as a Professtonal Service ' urtder tne provrstons of the Local Public C ontract L aw , b ecause it is a recogn ized pro fession licensed and regulated by law and rt is r*ot possib le to oo ta in c o m p e tlive btds

3 This reso lu tton is sub iect to co n ­firm ation by the Township C om m ittee o l South Brunsw ick Township, accord­ing to law

4 A copy o l this lesotutron shall, if required, be published int he CentralPost w ith in ten days ot i s passage

This IS to certify that the loregom o is at true copy of a reso lu tion approved bythe South Brunsw ick Tow nship P lan­ning Board at As reorganizabon maet- mg held on the l2 th day of January, 1962

Beatrice B C icchino Sacretary

C .P 1-21-82 11Fee $11 70

Thufiday, jM —iy 21,1982 THE CENTM L POST 7-A

Hum anistic Judaism

A new path to old traditionsby David Salowitz

Stair WriterP LA IN S B O R O — A t a lim e when

relig ious fundamentalists > arc on the march in the worlds o f C hris tian ity . Islam , and Judaism, the voice o f libera l­ism can sound as lonely as a w ailing pft>phet lost in the desert.

W hether the righteous le ft arm o f G(xl is Jerry F a lw c ll, the Ayato llah K ho­m eini. o r the somberly-garbed Hasidim o f B rook lyn , the deeply orthodox direct the ir wrath at Secular Humanists — a loosely-kn it group o f intellectuals and p r o g r e s s iv e t h e o lo g ia n s , a n d free-thinkers who have doubts about ‘ that o ld lim e re lig io n " and its c r it i­

cisms o f mt>dcm lifePhyllis Spiegel, a Princeton Meadows

resident and a public relations ac- countoteculive at the Keyes M artin Agency in .Springfield, is a member ot the Society o f Hum anistic Judaism, a group o f Jews that has broken away from the three main branches o f the ir religion— Reform. Conservative, and Or;h(»dox— and forged their own path

“ We just th ink human beings arc important and they should have certain free cho ices ." said Ms. Spiegel in her company’ s Law renccvilic o ffice Wc arc fo r freedom and human J ig n ity ."

Last October, along w ith 43 other members o f the society. Ms, Spiegel

journeyed to l.^rac! to aticntl the first intcrnatioal conlerence of secular and humanistic Jews. The g-oup met w ith Israel s President Yitzhalc Navonand ac- compli.shcd its goal o f encouraging the growth o f Humanistic Judaism in Israel, a Jewish theocracy that is not in iinunc to the the latest strains of fundamentalism.

“ WE RETURNED from Israel con­cerned w ith the increasing power o f re lig ion over governm ent.'’ said Rabbi Sherwin W ine, who founded the m ove­ment in 1963 “They have the ir own M oral M a jo rity there and the phrase secular humanism has become the d irtiest phrase o f the M ora l M a jo rity both here and in Is rae l."

A suburban Detroit rabbi who presides over the Birm ingham Tem ple. Rabbi W ine said the society has 12 affilia ted chapters in major U .S, c ities, and is appealing to increasing numbers o f alienated Jews. A lthough the ideas in Hum anistic Judaism have been around for KX) years. Rabbi W inewas the first person to fonna lly promote the idea o f humanism as the fourth alternative, or branch o f Judai.sm,

He described the movement as a “ com bination o f philosophy and cu l­tu re ."th a t is “ not G(xJ-oricnlcd but peop le-orien ted ." An atheist, agnostic, o r even an non-Jew can jo in the sexiety as long as he appreciates Judaism as a great cultural phenomenon — a rich m atrix o f traditional music, dance, language, and humor — and not as a re lig ion.

“ W c don ’ t use prayers because it im plies ta lk ing to G o d ." .said Rabbi W ine, “ instead we concentrate on the (XK'try. philosophy and song, both in Hebrew and Fnglish. A holiday such as Passover is treated as spring festival and historical e ven t."

When asked i f the absence o f God from his services is a bit like taking the Christ out o f Christmas. Rabbi W'ine said he values human reason and courage o v e r th e s u p e r n a tu r a l , o r th e , authoritarian image o f a “ papa-CH>d."

"W e represent a fa ir ly large segment o f the Jewish people that has been alienated from current Jewish conven­tions and wants to keep its in te g r ity ," he added.

For M s. Spiegel, humanistic Judaism enabled her to " fe e l most com fo rtab le " w ith her ancient re lig ion. W hen, as a ch ild , she questioned her grandparents about Jewish rituals, she was to ld " i t was always done this w a y ." Thanks to the society, she is no longer disen­franchised from her own re lig ion.

" I feel that now I can be a Jew when in the past I cou ldn ’ t . " she said. " I t ’s a way I can celebrate my Judaism w ith like-m inded peop le ,"

Though there is only a sprink ling o f Humanistic Jews in New Jersey and no congregations closer than W estport. Conn, or Long Island, Ms. Spiegel celebrates the Jewish holidays at home w ith her children according to human­istic rules, w ithout any reverberations from her grandparents’ ghosts. Perhaps her mentor and friend. Rabbi W ine pul the humanistic philosophy best in his b o o k ■ 'H u m a n is t ic J u d a is m ’ ’ (Prometheus B<X)ks):

“ T H E M O S T interesting Jews o f the last hundred years never jo ined a syn­agogue. They never prayed. They were disinterested in God They paid no attention to the Torah lifesty le . They found bourgeois reform as partKhial as traditional orthodoxy. They preferred w riting new hooks to w orry ing abt^ul the meaning o f old btx)ks. They had names like A lbert Einstein. Sigmund Freud, and Theodore H e rz l."

Public relations executive and Piainsboro resident Phyllis Spiegel

recently returned from an international conference in Israel.

(Mark Czajkowski photo)

■Cradie C rier

Your m entai heaith

Survivors suffer traumaby G eorge Vf. W ilso n , M .D .

The last o f the Nazi concentration camps and exenn ina tion camps were liberated some 35 years ago. and the remaining survivors freed But fo r .some o f these survivors, the horror remains, burned deeph in the ir psyche, a llow ing them no peac; o f m ind and leaving them subject to a host o f psychological and psychiatric cjsorders.

M any o f these survivors come for p tychuttric he lp and so we are able to learn aboutfhe special k ind o f emotional trauma fro n w hich they arc su ffering. It is not on ly they who arc traumatized, but also the ir th ild ren . and quite a num ber o f these. to«. have been com ing fo r psy­chiatric treatment The ailm ent has by this time become so distinguishable, that we have been able to give it a name — "th e suA'ivors' syndrome. ”

T H E T Y P IC A L P IC T U R E wc see when a surv ivor comes fo r treatment is this; The patient is depressed, w orried, unhapay. insecure, unable to draw much satisfaction from life o r work o r fam ily . He or she feels alienated from the rest o f society, d iffe rent and separated from everyone else. There arc chronic sleep­ing problems; sleep d ix s not come easily, and when it d (xs it is troubled by bad dreams; also there is frequent awak­ening The patient is very like ly to be overweight from overeating. There arc chronic bowel problems and other varied gastrointestinal disorders.

One w ould hope that, after 35 years, they could put some o f the trauma behind them, but they cannot. W hat is ever more remarkable is that it is not so much the ir own suffering that keeps coming back to them, but rather the suffering, and especially the death, o f loved ones — w ife or husband, parents, ch ildren, brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles and cousins.

W H A T IS M O S T d iff ic u lt fo r them to bear is the fact that they themselves survived w hile the ir relatives were an­nihilated. Though there is no realistic basis fo r their feeling whatever, they feel that somehow they were responsible for the death o f their relatives, that it was

they w ho. somehow, cheated the ir re­latives out o f life .

If is not at a ll uncommon fo r someone who has lost a fam ily member to feel gu ilty about having quarreled w ith that person, o r fo r not having been as kind and patient as one m ight have been But the gu ilt w hich the concentration camp survivors feel is much more intense, and d ifferent. They feel gu ilty about being alive w hile a ch ild or parent o r male is dead

AS IF T O C O M P E N S A T E fo r th is gu ilt, o r to ju s t ify the ir own suriv ia l and existence, they throw themselves into their w ork, business, profession and strive as hard as they can fo r success. It IS remarkable how people who have been through what these survivors have been through are able to muster the ir emo­tional, mental and physical resources toward the end o f achieving success, but they do. and mo.st do succeed. Y et. this does no! free them o f their distress and their psychia tiic problems, and when they do come fo r treatment the ir con­d ition is quite d if fic u lt to treat.

But the problem dtics not stop there. A large part o f it is passed on to the children. The children o f survivors pres­ent a special kind o f psychiatric prob­lem. W hile the parents, in most cases avoid speaking about their concentration camp exfxncnces and about the death o f (heir relatives, it is not something that can be easily effaced.

When the children ask about relatives who are not a live, the parents have to tell them when and how they died. And the parents do not have to express the ir guilt openly fo r the ir children to know it. It communicates itse lf w ithout words.

in that way. the complex o f guilt passes from parents to children, and the children react in much the same manner as their parent — w ith depression, insecurity, alienation, psychosomatic disorders, as well as mistrust and suspi­cion o f others and d if ficu lty in making close relationships. They, also, like their parents, find themselves driven 6y the need to succeed and to prove themselves in order to overcome their in.security and gu ilt and to ju s tify their parents' survival and existence.

This colum n is provided by the Carrier Foundation in Belle Mead, where in ­quiries may be addressed.

The Cradle C rie r, a special 13-issuc newletter series on ch ild development is offered by Somerset County Extension Home Economics. The Cradle C rie r is designed to provide inform ation w hich w ill make the job o f parenting m^ire satisfying and fu lf i l l in g . Especially he lp ­fu l fo r parents o f newborns, each issue deals. In o rderly sequence, w ith a .separ­ate month o f the in fan t’ s grow th and development. Included in the scries w ill be physical, socia l, em otional and language development.

To register for this free newletter .series, call Extension Home Economics

at 526-6295 or Jn^p a line to Dianna Nurezyk, Extension Home Economist. 310 M iilo w n Rd,, Bridgewater. N.I 0K807.

Subscribers may choose to receive (he regular ncw'slctlcr or be enrolled in a self-study series. The sell-study .senes w-ill include com pleting a quiz o f 10 questions enclosed v\ith each unit The quiz w ill be conocted and returned to the subscriber. Three issues o f Cradle C rier w ill be mailed at a time w ith the final mailing o f four issues. The first m ailing w ill be in m id-Januarv.

P an e l to d is c u s s read in g p ro g ra m s

A panel discussion, "R ead ing and your ch ild , ” w il l be held on Tuesday evening. Jan. 25, 8 p .m , at the Crossroads School L ib ra ry , as part o f the three-day school bKx>k fa ir.

The panel w ill include W ilia Spicer, D irector o f C urricu lum fo r South Bruns­w ick , who w il l discuss reading assess­ment scores and curricu lum goals fo r the d istrict; D r Fred Nadler, Principal o f Crossroads, who w il l explain the reading program at the m iddle sch(K)l; C laudia H om oki, South Brunsw ick L ib rarian , who w il l discuss the program o f "Y o u n g People " books at the lib rary; Sonia Y urcis in , a reading teacher, w il l explain how the program is implemented in the classrtxim .and Ada KIcss. Crossroads Librarian, w ill suggest b ixiks your ^'hild shoud be encouraged to read.

The Crossroads lib ra ry , at the same tim e, w ill be holding the PTA Book Fair for the students; M onday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan 25, 26 and 27

Come and bring your questions and your thoughts as wc help our children get more out o f sch^xil.

Refreshments w ill he served.

C o u n try W e s te rn ‘N ite ’ s c h e d u le d

The Kingston Eire Company Ladies A u x ilia ry w ill have a Country Western N iic at the firehouse on Saturday. Feb. 6. Dancing and music w ill be featured from 9 p.m. until I a.m C ountiy music w ill lx: provided by the “ C'ountry M usic Gents."

Refreshment-s w ill be served and set-ups w ill be provided. 'Ihe cost per person is S6. and tickets w ill be sold only bv reservation.

AM reservations must be made' by February ! by ca lling 924-1362 or purchasing tickets at L o u ’ s Barber Shop on Mam Street in K ingston. This event is f'.ir the benefit o f the Kingston Fire Company l.adics A u x ilia ry .

The public is invited to jo in in for some real etmntry western lun. Table reservations o f eight or iTuxe are also welcome. ________

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Anyone between the ages ot I I and 18 who wishes to register may cal! Jr>e 1 aniasi at 921-7485 between 7 and 9 p.m. Parental jxnn iss ion is required.

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The Princeton area chapter ol the National Organization fo r W 'lm en w ilm e e t W e d n e s d a y . Jan. 20. at 7:.W pm. atthe home o f Hazel Staats-Westover. .TH Philip D rive. Princeton

The meeting w ill feature a bric ting session fo r action on behalf o f the [equal Rights Amendment. entitled :"The ERA

Is S till A l iv e ." Aeliviiic.s w ill include letter w riting to petition the president to ap(>eal to the Supreme Court fo r re lid from what the New York l im e s calls "Judge Canister's i ll advised dec is ion" regarding the ERA ra tification period. Action on com m unication networking and fundraising w ill also be planned.

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Wellness is more than just your golden tan

D O N A L D A R D E L L n o t o n ly p re a c h e s th e b e n e fits o f w e lln e s s , he live s th a t w ay . M r. A rd e ll f in is h e d f irs t in h is age g ro u p in th e m o s t re c e n t B o s to n fy la ra thon .

by David Salowitz Staff Writer

WEST WINDSOR — The teeth are whiter than white, the complexion ra­diant. The words — a disarming blend o f psychobabble and institutional jargon — are important too. but who’s listening?

The medium is the message in the health business, especially when the medium is a lanky, sun-kissed C alifor­nian who would look equally at home tossing a beach ball or lecturing a group of three-piece suits.

Tall, distinguished — a John Lindsay double at home in the hot tubs o f Marin County — Donald Ardell is a leading guru of the "w ellness" movement, a 4.1-year-old gulden boy bringing his mes.sage to the wilderness o f cellulite and junk food.

Last Wednesday M r. A rde ll was the star attraction at a conference entitled "H ea lth Promotion in the W o rkse ttin g ," held at the Center fo r Health A ffa irs on Alexander Road He worked the crowd like a pro. speaking w ith the hreezy in form ality o f a ski jn s lru c to r addressing a bunch o f nervous beginners.

.AND THE PEOPLE in the audience — health education professionals, co r­p o ra te e x e c u t is 'c s . h o s p i ta l a d ­m in is t r a to r s . in s u ra n c e c o m p a n y representatives were lapping it up. The.se were his people, eager acolytes who had heard The W ord — and the word was "w e lln e s s ."

Loosening up a b it, M r. A rde ll joked about the people who are N O T in the fo ld — the "in e b ria te d , overweight v a l iu m s a le s m e n ' ' w h o h a u n t chain-sm oking com ic Rodney Danger- fie ld 's n ightclub. No wonder Rodneydoesn't get any respect -... he hasn'tcultivated the sine i/ua non tra it o f the wellness groupie, said M r. .Ardell "h ig h self-esteem, "

Directory of Religious Services and Events

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST PRINCETON. 16 Bavat' lane Se'vi-“ s ;0 ■ 3 & -5 ’ 0 0 rri Sun‘ - - ,0 30 afTi Wso Ete Meeting 8 \b o reading Rm Nassau S t, 609' 924-0919 Mofi-Sat 9 30-S

To be listed in this Directory of Religious Services and Events

contact Pat Undmann 609.'924-324'

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Business Directory community calendar

rm . i \ \ . 2t.Municipal C’tTun. Puhik Sa!cl\ ITuilJ-

in^. M onm tuith Junctitm . 7 p ni Lnvirtm m cnta! CnminisMon. .Mu ii il i-

pal Butidm g. .Monnimith JuiKtnHi. 8 p m

l.ibrarv Buard ol 'IrustCL"'. .South [Trunsvilck I’ ub lk l.ibrar> . Kituzston Lane. .Monimuith Junelion. X p m

South Brunsw ick .\th lc tic .-Nssocia- lion. Hfuird o\ I)irectf>rs, M unicipa l B u ild ing. M onnuiuth Junetnm. K;.3() p.m.

Chamber o\ C'omineree u! Sfiulhern Middlesex ( \H in l \ , general memberslnp m e e t in g . F-orsgate C o u n trx C lu b .Jamesburg. nofvn

M O M ) . .(AN , 25 South B runsw kk fLiatal i.ducation,

StudN Se.sNion. i I ’Aecutive D rive . M o n ­mouth Juru tion, X p m

M unieipal C'ourt. Public Salelv Bu ild mg. M onm outh .iunetion. 1 p.m.

Township ('om m ittee . W<irk Scsm oii.M unicipal B u ild ing . M o iin o u th lu ik lion. X p.m

n .Sftulh Brunsw ick

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W K D N K S D W . .IA N . 27Board ot Health. .Municipal B u ild ing .

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“ People must take responsibility for themselves." warned Mr. Ardell in his steady, low-keyed voice. “ But i t ’s not easy to go against the grain o f a society with so many bad habits and be wet!. It w ill wear you down. ”‘ Nevcrtheles.s. M r Ardell and other

wellness experts urge out-of-shape folks to fight the good battle in the war against sloth. The tactics arc presented in his books. “ High Level Wellness” and “ 14 Days to a Wellness Lifestyle,“ at San Francisco’s Golden Gale University where he teaches, on his frequent lecture tours, and at several hospitals and cor­porations where he Is a amsullant.

And the means to the persona! nirvana o f physical, emotional, mental and yes, spiritual health, is deceptively simple, M r Ardell advises people to take charge o f their lives, eat nutritious meals, become physically fit. learn to manage stress, and avoid man-made evils o f the environment. Financially and physically in the black. M r. Ardell obviously practices what he preaches,

“ W ELLNESS IS much more than s im ply not being sick, and the ind iv idual must lake the responsibiiity to decide for h im se lf what it means to bo healthy. ” he to ld tlie assemhiage. “ HLnvever. sup- p<Ttive environments can help people'' sustain well-be ing. Our counirv' spends ncarlv m ith ing fo r health enrichment. Most money is spent after disease oc­curs.' '

Comparing the current health-care sys­tem to an un lim ited credit card for physicians and patients that is subsidized b> private insurance companies. Mr. A rde ll said there is "n o incentive in health priigrams lo r people to improve the ir hea lth ,” It was fo r this reason, along w ith the "p o w e r pkililics and general n e g a tiv ity ." th a t M r.A rd e ll quit his position as the d irccu ir o f a large health planning agency in .San Francisco

■'i'he medical center there d id n 't have much to do w ith health, it had to do w ith treating disease,” he said,

i^ iil the increasingly {xipular gospel that wellness is an ine.x|x:nsivc alterna­tive to drugs and doctors is beginning to find converts at hospital adm inistalive offices and on W all Street.

.According to M r.A rd e ll. 4.7 American liospila ls have Lipened wellness centers to promote better health m their com- mumUes and help cm ircaim onl costs. He said the best ot these programs arc ■ 'w e l l - c o o rd in a te d . s tru c tu re d , and shaped bv em ployees.” The workers

hired by hospitals should also be “ friendly to the concept o f wellness. ” recommended Mr. Ardell.

“ I don’t think there is any place on a hospital staff for people who are b ig - s m o k e rs and h e a v i ly in to self-abuse." he added.

CORPORATE BIGWIGS insulated in their executive suites are also falling under the spell o f ever-youthful Donald Ardell and his crusade. Many companies are convinced that wellness programs improve employee morale, work ca­pacity. and lessen the need for medical services. To sweeten the poi. Mr. Ardell suggested that businesses and hospitals pay extra money to employees who panicipaie in these preventive programs, using cash not spent in traditional health insurance programs.

For M r, A rde ll. a bachelor who .shuns women who suck down cigarette smoke, rails against candy and red meat, and fin ished first for his age group in the 1981 Boston Marathon, wellness is the path toward personal salvation that w ill also " le a d to a belter socie ty.”

" I t 's a richer way to be a live ."sa id M r, A rde ll. whose tan face w ill .soon be seen on an ABC network news show abtiut the wellness gosfxd acording to the prophet Ardcl!,

" A n enormous consciousnc.s.s and awarencs o f the processes that shape a total wellness iifi's ty lc has ar.sen during just the past low years. It )us[ has more highs and fewer lows, and people are uttracted to i t . ”

N c \ l week in pun iw o o/D/i/.s senes. Dus id Sulo '^it/. wiH report on locul vKelIncss proemms sponsored h\ hospi- nils und businesses \is w ell us w ith pcrsonul wellness plun>

C ard Parly

The Card Party sponsored by Si. .Augustine o f Canterbury Sth^xtl m Frank­lin Park orig inally scheduUd for Jan. 15 ha.s been postponed to Jan. ^ at 8:00 p.m. Please bring whatever gamck you wish to play. Refreshments w ill h< served and many di>or prizes will be dMnbutcd To pLirchase uckcls or to reserve : table please call Sherry Campbell 545- I I6<. Maiy- Ann Pogoda 2 9 7 - f Y . 5 2 K o r I . in ia F .ltison 2S)7-65(y2. Tiekets arc S4 tX) cjeh

l.aVakerequesLs the pleii.sure o f

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PNGSHIF5l O ,LYiOlH (.ms (■OM *«Ol;Nt) IHt WO«ll

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TTiuraday, J— uary 2 1 ,1 9 8 2 TH E CENTJUIL PO ST 9-A

Kerosene heat: safe, but not recommended

On the w ay...The bridge for pedestrians on Route 2' below New Road seems an inviting scene from another era a winter snowland backdrop.

(Robert Vena, photo)

1981 IRS tax forms changedThe federal income tax packages sent

to over 3,0(K).(XX) residents oi New Jersey contain the 19 8 1 tax forms and instructions for f il in g . The IKS advises taxpayers to take a close look at the 19 8 1 forms w ith particular attention to the changes

The most sign ificant changes involve revised tax tables, changes in c la im ing the $i{HK) [XTsonai exem ption, the tax rale reduction, reporting A ll Savers Certificate interest, c la im ing an in ­creased exclusion fo r taxable interest and dividend income, and being able to file the simpler horm 1040A even though taxable interest or d iv idend income is over S4(K).

Th t changes in these areas are as follow s.

• There is a separate line on both the 1040 and the 1040A fo r c la im ing the $1000 j>cn»onal exemptions. The per­sonal exemptions are no longer bu ilt into the tax tables.

• The lax tables have been revised to be u.sed by all taxpayers w ith taxable income o f $50.(XX) or less, regardless o f fil in g status. Those w ith over $50.(XX) taxable income cannot use the tax tables and must use the tax rate schedules.

• The Schedule TC has been e lim in ­ated.

• The tax rale reduction legislated by the flconom ic Recovery A ct is already computed into the lax tables. But those w ith taxable income over $50.(X)0. who must use the tax rale schedules, w ill make a separate tax reduction computa­tion on a worksheet accompanying the tax rate schedules.

• The Konn 1040A can now be used by persons w ith over $4(X) in interest or d ividend income. The reverse side o f the Form 1040A provides space fo r rcp iirt- ing this type o f income.

• The reverse side o f the Form 1040Aand the Schedule B fo r those H liag the Form 1040 contain a space for refH>rting

D e m s c e l e b r a t eDcscnhmg hist year's e lection cam­

paign as (he ‘ ■most d if f ic u lt e ve r.” Middlesex ro u n ty IX 'm ocra iic C ha ir­man ( t Nicholas Vene/ia loda> urged the part) fa ith tu l to “ celebrate our hard-earned v ic to ry ” hy attending the Democratic V ic to ry D inner Jan. -9 at 7 p.m. at (he Pines Mam>r. lid ison.

The $25-pcr person dinner w ill honor alt the candidates who won in the six state legislative d istricts touching on the county. Freeholders Dorothy Povser and Donald W crn ik . and the M victors in municipa! races

T.H.E. BIOFEEDBACK & COUNSELING ASSOCIATES

rflOFEEDBACK, STRESS CONTROL & COUNSELING FOR• children and adolescents w ith hyperactivity

syndrome and learning disorders.* adults w ith stress related disorders:

* headaches * anx ie ty * phobias * asthm a* m uscle spasm s * pain * sleep d isorders• h ype rve n tila tio n syndrom e * hype rtens ion• g as tro in tes tin a l d is tress * b rux ism • tics

Richard L Bruner, Psy. D., Co-Director Michael A. Tansey, Ph. D., Co-Director

(LICENSED PSYCHOLOGIST)100 Mercer St. - Box 1148 - Highfstown. H.J. 609-443-5533 ,

Davtime. Eweninc and Saturday appointments available

tax exempt interest received from A lt Savers C ertificates. A lthough not tax­able. this income must be reported. The new tax law permits up to $ l(X)0 tax free A ll Savers C ertificate interest fo r single persons, and S2(X)0 for married per.son.s filin g a jo in t return. The amount not received and reported in 1981 w ill be carried over and available in 1982.

• For 1981 on ly , the amount o f taxable interest and dividend income that can be excluded is S2(X) fo r a single return and S4(X) fo r a jo in t return. In future years. a.s in past years, no amount o f taxable interest may be excluded. The 1981 exclusion is reported on the front page o f e ither the Form 1040 or Form 10 4 0 A ,

• Tax exempt interest from A ll Savers C cnifiea ies cannot be rcp4.)rtcd as a taxable interest exclusion, and taxable interest cannot be excluded as A ll Savers C ertifica te m tcresl. These tw o types o f interest must be reported on the tax form only in the .spaces designated for each

by James Paulus S .B . Fire Inspector

Due to rising fue l costs, alternative energy sources have become increasing­ly popular. A number o f questions have arisen concerning these alternatives and their safety, particu la rly w ith regards to kerosene heaters. Kerosene heaters have probably become the most popular source o f supplemental heat due to a re latively low in itia l investment, usually between $150 and $300.

In answer to the most common ques­tion. yes, kerosene heaters are legal In south Brunswick Tow nsh ip , but they are not recommended by the fire service. There are certain inherent dangers w hich are o f concern. I f you choose to use a kerosene heater, there arc certain restric­tions and recommendations to be tolK)w- ed in order to avoid a disaster in your home.

A ll heaters fo r in d ix ir use must bear the seal o f Underwriters Laboratories; they must be used according to the manufacturers instructions: they must be used w ith adequate ventila tion: they must not be used in a garage: they must not be used in confined spaces: they should not be left unattended, and you should never go to sleep while one is in use.

Unless the manufacturer has .stipulated othcrwi.^c in his instructions, the units should be kept four to five feet from combustible materials. 1! an object in the v ic in ity o f a heater becomes too warm to touch w ithout rem oving your hand, that object should be moved further from the heater. Nothing .should be placed on the

top fo the unit as this w il l disturb the required a ir flo w from the w ick area. Refuel heaters on ly when “ out” and C4Xil to the touch.

Kerosene fo r indt)or heaters must be “ water c lear” grade o f uncontaininated material. I f the kerosene has been con­taminated. you .stand a greater risk o f asphyxialiim or inhalation o f toxic products o f combustion Should your kerosene have become contaminated w ith gasoline, you run the risk o f an explosion. Never store kerosene in con­tainers which have l-iccn used to store other Hammablc liqu ids, [vesticidcs. etc.

Containers fo r kerosene should be approved safely cans w ith prcs.surc rc lic l devices and a sclf-closm g top. They should have a warning label slating that the contents are tlammable or com ­bustible and have the name o f the product, kerosene, prom inently d is­played. Container storage should not exceed five gallon.s |x t container unless in a drum or lank specifica lly approved fo r such use.

S C HO LARSH IP D K A D L IN L

Junior and senior class high .school students w'ho arc interested in applying for $l.()(X) college scholarships should request applications by March !5 . 1982 from the F^ducational Com m unications S c h 0 i a I s h i p F o u n d a t i o n . .7105 M acArthur B lvd .. N orthbrook. Illin o is 6(X>62. To receive an application, stu­dents should send a sclf-addrcsscd. stamped envelope w ith a nolc stating their name, address, c ity , stale, zip code and approximate grade point average. F ifty award w inners w il l be selected on the basis o f academic perform ance, in ­volvement in extracurricu la r activ iiies and need fo r tmancia! aid.

“ Last year was the most d if f ic u lt and most expensive campaign ever because o f (he unusually large num ber o f con tests. We were extremely successful.

maintain this un ity by a strong showing o f strength at th is very im por­tant fund-raising dinner By w orking hard to get a large uirnout we can elim inate our campaign debts and gel ott (0 a good start in 1982.” V ene/ia said.

Tickets may be obtained from Dc mocratic mumeipa! chairmen or hy ca ll­ing (he county headquarters at 634-87(M)

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It is certainly recommended that all containers o f flammable or combustible liqu ids be stored outside o f the home.

Become fam ilia r w ith your unit and its safe operation. Observe all safety rec­ommendations o f the manufacturer, have a fire extinguisher handy, and a properly installed smoke detector in the area of operation.

A ll approved kerosene heaters have tip-over safety devices and a manual control to extinguish the flame in the unit in case o f emergency: know how to use this device! Keep ch ildren and pets away from these healers — the ir surface (emjTcraUirc is extrem ely high and con­tact w ill cause hums.

F ina lly , keep in m ind that almost all problems and fires attributed to kerosene heaters are a result IJSLR ERRORS or mistakes and not the fau lt o f the devic'c it.scif. Be extremely careful if you chexTse to use one o f these heaters that you fo llow all o f the safety precautions mentioned abtwe and in the manufac­turers literature.

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10-A THE CENTM L POST nmnday, january 21,1982

Profit from the avocado glutby M ichael Dorn

Las! year at this tim e. weak. mcast>. undcrsl7cd avocados uerc commanding a dear price at kKal markets — around S I .30 each, it' memor> serves, Tixtay p lum p, tem pling avixados arc m oving bnsklv at two tor cents at man> a market. It seems to be a trend hat is happening?

According to a recent repetrt. a number t>l tax cN’aders decided to take advantage o f a lax incentive law some \ca rs ago. and invested the ir di.sposable income in avtvado groves a.s a hedge ugain.st int1a- tion, a tax shelter, and a p^vssible re tire ­ment occupation Isn 't it prett> to th ink o f lending your own little avixado gri've during your golden year'' ’

The result o f al! this speculation is a rash ol avocado groves now m the ir prime, prtxiucing fru it in marvelous

abundance — in such abundance that some avivado farmers are try ing to promote the fru it as dog fix x l!

S I R ELY A BETTER way w il l be found to bring the price o f avtK'ados back up into the luxury-foi>d category, and out o f the hands o f the peasants. L’nti! that tim e, whv not p ro fit from the avocado glut',’ This is the p ak buying pcn ix l; the fru it, in addition to its dchcatc flavor and creamy texture, o f ­fers fa ir amounts o f v iiam ins A , B and C as well as iron, ca lcium and phosphorus. If IS high in fat (figure on about 2(X) calories fo r a ' :;'Cup serving) but has zero cholesterol, and lends itse lf to a variety o f Khk Is. from soup to nuts plus appetizers.

I w ill skip the cliche recipes for this native .American specialties (dishes such as guacamole) and concentrate on the

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February 17 in^ B a c k e t

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at 609/924-3244.Ad Deadline February 1

less w e ll known numbers. Remember this; This week iceberg le itiicc was selling fo r $1.25 a head at at least two local markets. ShxK'king. isn 't it? Use avocado slices to replace iceberg or other lettuce w hen garnishing salads and meal dishes In C a lifo rn ia , avexado slices appear on practica lly every dish you order, includ ing a plain old hamburger. You could do worse, m y friends, than have an avexado hamburger fo r lunch.

AviKado Consomme(6 .servings)

There are three basic avix'ado soups. Inc firs t — the consomme — is the simplest and lightest, and is nothing more than a bow) o f your favLxile consomme (a madrilcne would be nice, or a game consomme flavored w ith .sherry and a touch of red pepper) garnished w ith avocado slices. Serve steaming, but not bo ilin g , hot. Very pretty, very’ easy Next comc.s:

.Avocado Consomme Glace(6 .servings)

2 cups purecd avocado meat3 cups tomato |uicc or \cge iah lc

broth! '/ ; TabiesfHKins unHavorcd gelatine

1 cup white wine or clam ju ice3 drops Worchestershire sauce

Beat avocado puree and tomato ju ice or broth together in a saucepan. Sprinkle gelatine over w ine or clam juice; let soften. S tir into avocado m ixture. B ring to a bo il, s iim n g constantly w ith w ire whip. Add Worcestershire Sauce C h ill until pa itly set Beal !ightl> w ith w hip before serv ing in consomme cups

C ream o f .Avenado Soup(6 serv ings)

This IS the most delicious and. thus, natura ilv . the m iist lethal the avocado soups Serve it warm or ch illed in small pLvrtions

2 Tablespoons buuor2 TablespoLins Hour2 cups rich chicken broth1 teaspoon e h ili powder o r curr>

powderI H teaspoon cinnamon

1 teaspoon lemon luice1 cup dry w hitc w me2 cups purecd avix'ado meatI cup w hipp ing cream

1 4 cup tomato paste (optional)

.M e lt b u t te r in h e a v v -b o t to m e d saucepan S tir m flour. Cook, s tirring . 2 minutes. Add the broth a little at a tim e, stirring w ith w ire w hip over medium heat until m ixture forms a ihm sauce.

Stir in remaining ingredients: bring to a boil Serve warm garnished w ith chives or tresh cxiriander leaves, or cok l. garnished w ith lime butterllies

C h icken \ era ( r u /(4 t i ' 6 servings)

This IS an easy am! elegant dish lo r a candlelight part) for a dressv crowd It Christmas b ills and the 1 R.S, arc staring you in the face, just skip the shrim p and

you’ ll have a fine dish anyway Serve with homemade combread and rice. I f you want a Mexican menu, ser^e a crisp, colorful mixed salad as a first course and fresh fruit or flan for dessert. A tropical fruit compote would he nice. Kxi — mangoes, papaya, banana and pineap­ple. .say. to.ssed with a little orange juice and dark rum. and garnished with freshly grated CLK'unut

b4

I 2I '2

14

to 3 medium avixados limespound boned, skinless chickenbreastscup HourTablespvxin c iii i i pmvder cup cooking o ilpound medium shrimp (opti(mal)cup chicken brothcup brand)cup tomato juicecup w hipp ing cream or dairy .sour creamteaspvHin salt tcasfKX'n jxpp e r

Peel the avocados: cut into thin wedges. Place 1'2 o f the avocado wedges on a plate; sprinkle w ith the juice o f i o f the limes. .Set aside. Juice remaining lim e and set the juice aside. Puree rem aining avixado wedgc.s and set aside.

Cut chicken breasts into more or less equal strips. S tir Hour and ch ili powder together Dredge chicken breasts w ith llo u r-ch ili powder m ixture.

Heat o il in deep. !2-inch s k iiic i. Cook chicken breasts m o il over medium heal. 2 minutes on each side S tir in shrimp, chicken broth and brand)

Bring to a bi.nl. Reduce heat. Com bine to m a to j u i c c . c re a m and p u re c d avocado. Stir into the sk ilic t. Add sail and pcp fxr S im er .idditionai 3 to 4 minutes. Serve al once, garnished w ith reserved avocado shoes

N»ne W hether to peel and vein the vhnmp or not is up [o you. It is more ■■authentic" \o cook the shnm p in their sheIN and let guests peel them this is also easier on the chel and adtls Havor to the sauce But peeling al table ma) he a nuisance Suu vourscll CLM)kmg lime remains the same.

Avocados Elanibe(4 servings)

il Bananas Poster tums you on. .Avocados Flambe should set you on lire , and \o u don 't need tiv bother w ith ice cream. This is a pre itv. ami com parative­ly low -calorie dessert.

2 medium avocados 2 teaspoons lim e luice

i 2 cup mandarin orange segments 1 2 cup pineapple cubes or chunks ! 2 cup seedless w lm e grapes, halved 1 4 cup dark rum 1 4 brown sugar 1 4 cup orange liqueur 1 4 cup banana liqueur or brand)

Slice avocados m hall lengthw ise; remove pits. .Arrange hakes, cui-sidcs up. in baking dish. H \8 x 2 ''; inches. Sprinkle each hall w ith 1 2 teaspoon lime juice. Bake in 35U F oven 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, combine orange seg­ments. pineapple cubes, grapes, dark rum and brown sugar in a small saucepan. Add enough o f the canning liquid, or enough orange juicc ( i f using fresh fn jit) to make a thin sauce. Hcut. and keep warm.

Just before serving, combine orange liqueur and banana liqueur in a butler wanner Warm to about 110 F (warm, but not hot, to the finger

Sp(X)n the fruit and mm mixture into the avocado halves. Bring to table. W ith long-handled match, ignite the liqueur mixture; pour flaming liqueur over avexado des.sert. W'hen flames subside, serve.

Note; I^on't serve this or other flaming dishes while wearing How-ing gossamer veils.

1 large avLxado, purecd (about 1 V* cups)

1 can (14 ounces) sweetened con­densed niilkgrated rind o f 1 lemon

12 cup fresh lemon ju ice2 egg yolks1 baked 9-inch pie shell

chop fxd nuts (optional)

Puree ail ingredients (except pie shell and nuts) in blender or f<xxJ processor. Turn the m ixture into the pie shell. C h ill 3 hours. Garnish w ith the optional chopped nuts.

Shopping fo r AvoendosI f you have hitherto done all your

vegeubie and fru it shoppng in Southern California, you w ill be in for a rude awakening when shopping for avocadoes in New Jersey. You are unlikely to find more than one variety in one store, and what you do find w ill probably be as hard as a brick.

Occasionally you w ill find ‘dead ripe” (ve r soft to the touch) avocados at cut rate prices. These are not spoiled; they are ready to eat at once. Buy them and eat them.

As for the hard ones; keep at warm room temperature in a sunny spot until the fruit begins to feel soft to the touch — this may take three, four or even five days. Ripening can be hastened some­what by sealing the avtxados in a brown paper bag along with a ripe banana. The banana exudes a fruit-ripening gas.

When the avrxados are soft to the touch, leave them al rexm temperature for a day or two longer, and always try to serve them at room temperature, not chilled. Once they are ripe (but not before) they can be stored in the refriger­ator for 2 to 4 weeks, but refrigeration d ixs nothing whatever for the avtxado. Arrange your weekly menu so that you can eat the avocados as they ripen.

Note: I f you plan to use one of my avLxado recipes for your next gala, and find that your avixados have failed to npen, you can substitute purecd banana for the purecd avocado in any of the recifxs in this column.

Heat assistance offeredH u m a n S e rv ic e s C o m m is s io n e r

T in io t h ) C a rd e n to d a y u rg e d a ll low-incom e people who mav lx e lig ib le for homo energy assistance to apply for funding to help defray the ir heating expenses.

To date, M r, Carden said only 28.(KM) persons have applied lo r energy as­sistance compared to 45 .(XH) people that had applied fo r the program this lim e last year. He said it was anticipated that about 60 .(KK) people would receive benefits under the program.

M r. Carden attributed the lack o f rcspon.se to the uncertainly that had existed in November over the total amount o i money w hich the state was to receive for the program

The U.S. Department o f Health and Human Services has recently authorized S54 m illion fo r New Jersey. The depart­ment expects to receive up to .S68 m illion for the home energy assistance program.

Applications fo r the federally funded program arc available at county welfare agencies or board o f sexiai scriccs.

M r. Carden noted that the pi\>gram w i l l a ls o as si.St p e o p le d u r in g cnergy-reiated emergencies such as provid ing payments fo r essential furnace repairs. The program also provides as­sistance for cooling during the summer for those low -ineom c people w^hose life may be threatened by the heat. Medical proof i.s required to receive money lo r cooling. ___________ _____

E lig ib ility fo r the program is ha.sed on the total m onthly household income, the num lxT o f people in the household and the responsibility o f the hou.schold lor (he paynxn l o f their heating costs.

The department has already sent pay­ments to most recipients ot A id tii f-'am ihes w ith D ependen t C h ild re n (A F I)C ) and .Suppienicnial Security In- conre (SSI) whti received automatic payments.

Under the income guidelines an ind i­vidual cannot have more than $499 a month in gross income and still receive benefits.

Other maximum income levels are $593 fo r a fam ily o f two; .$737 for a tam ily o f three; $880 fo r a tam ily o four; $ 1024 for a fam iK ot five , and $1 168 for a fam ily of six.

Special aiTangcmcnts have been made to allow senior citizens and the disabled to complete their applications at home and mail them d ircc tk to the county agency. Extra applications are also ava il­able lo r (he elderly at county offices on aging.

People who have their heating cost included in their rent are also e lig ib le to apply. However, people who live in public housing or receive a direct hous­ing subsidy arc not e lig ib le .

Households that consist entirely o f students who arc tax dc|xndents o f another household and people liv ing in nursing homes also are inelig ib le.

"MORE ORLESSSALT

Now you can treat yourself or your m whole family to the creamy goodness | of Welsh Farm.s country fresh natural I flavor ice cream during our "More or I Less Sale ' With tins coupon you can I

chiM)se the size just right for you * Redeemable at any Welsh Farms |

Ice Cream dealer.

10< OFFtowards the purchase

of any quart of Welsti Farms Ice Cream.

Limit onr C<nifK)n [zer C U .S tu ine r " ■ d e a l e r Pam’s v/i" -BdeBm Ihis coupon tor 10^**^Coujxin may not lx used with anyother coutx>n.

plus 5« SssncJling on any quart o f 30e plus 5c handling on any hall gallon ol Welsh Farms country !»esh natural | flavor 'ce cream if you receive arwj handle il slnctfy m I accordance wdh Ihe terms ol th(S offer and if upon ■request you submit evidence thereof saiislaciory to |Welsh Farms Coupon may not be assigned Of transferred Customer most pay any sales ta* Void wnem I pfoh'bited ta»ed or reslncted by law Good only m the I

I U S A COUPON GOOD JANUARY 20 THRU |FEBRUARY 10, 1982 For redemption ol property received | aryd handled coupon mad to Welsh Farms. 7B0 f^ s a tc

Krafts & Knit 2.4 I n iq iie .\'f‘e d le a r l S h o p

Domestic & Imported] Yarns - Lop i. S ko l

B ritanu t

OFF!A ll

p O W G C N i i l

> e w e f • Cross Stitch • Rugs Quilts • Samplers

Visit us U p s ta ir s In Studio 12Rout# 206 M o n t9om #ry C #n t# r

M o n . Fr#. ?0 5:30, Saf. JO-5. Sun. 12-5

Knw NMMM iHm'i •W rita tiM « # « r.

Umtt one coupon per customer Coupon may not be used with

Land handled coupon mail to Welsh Farms. 7B0 i^ s a tc .. aNJ 07006 1 “ ''V other coupon I

OFF '"towards the purchase of any half j Mdlon of Welsh farms Ice Cream. |

A irm sWelsh Farm* coun<r|f1

F o rh o M d

ice cream.idfaity p iw ll lc t t kvidlabie • ! y « w door or •tore,

a d it c«n t o i frooi 800-4S2-»i80

Looking for o C areer?

Do you s o m e tim e s fee l th a t y o u r o m b itio n s are u n d ire c te d ? P ro fe ss io n a l ass is tance can be h e lp fu l. T h is o ff ic e p rov id e s a c o u n se lin g se rv ice th a t inc lu d es :

• T e s tin g o f in te re s ts o n d a p t itu d e s e C la r i f ic a t io n o f v o lu e se R e a lis t ic in fo rm o t io n o n 6 0 0 c a re e rs e P e rs o n a l C o u n s e lin g• R esu m e p re p a ra t io n

For m o re in fo rm o t io n , c o ll 921-6638 A n n a W il l in g h a m . M .A . , M .S .W .

2 0 N o s i o u S t r o v t P r in c a t o n

Thurtday, January 21,1982 THE CENTRAL POST ll-A

Fleming-Seigel exchange vows

St Cecelia's R.C Church in Mon­mouth Junction, was the setting Satur­day, for the marriage o f Sara Elizabeth Fleming to Jeffrey Gardner Seigcl

The couple's parents are Joan Fleming of B-8 Lincoln Lane, Dayton and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Seigel o f 5 Darrow Court, Kendall Park.

The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Flarry Fleming, in a 3 p m. ceremony, performed by the Rev. Patrick Durkin.

Ann Fleming o f Dayton, was maid of

honor, and serving as best man was Buddy Perdun o f Cranbury.

A reception followed at the bride's home in Dayton. Following a western European tour, the couple w ill reside at 1103 P heasant H o llo w D r iv e in Plainsboro.

The bride attended Middlesex County College, Edison, majoring in account­ing

Her husband was in the Navy four years as an Aviation Anti-Submarine Warfare Operator. He is presently em­ployed by South Brunswick Township

Speakers BureauNeed a knowledgeable and entertaln-

rng speaker for your club, school group or professional organization?

The Trenton State College “ Speakers' Bureau’ ’ may be just the service you need. The revised I9K2 Sp',‘akers' Bu­reau guide is now available upon request from the TSC O ffice o f College Rela­tions and features the names and special­ties of 74 Trenton State faculty and staff members available this year for s[x:aking cngagenients.

The !7 categories o f topics listed m the guide include business, children. imKlern living, sports and hobbies, sci ence and lechiutlogy and manv other.>.

Speakers are available to talk on a wide variety o f subjects ranging from home weatherization to new uses for the com­puter to the royal wedding.

Program organizers for civic. scK'ial or professional assexiations, and represen­tatives from .schools, churches and clubs arc invited to use the guide to request speakers.

Copies o f the guide may be obtained by contacting the Office o f College Relations, Green Hall 202. Trenton Stale College, Millwood Lakes CN Tren­ton. N.J. 0862.^ For further infor­mation. telephone the office at lb(W) 771-1208.

F - ^

January 9 th ru 24— 10% o ff so lid m aple re a d y-to -fin ish fu rn itu re in s tockNow IS the time to lake advantage of great savings on our quality crafted ready to-fmish SOLID MAPLE furniture Versatile, practical, modular design Many sizes of bookcases, cabinets, chests, storage beds, desks and shelving on sale. Mail and phone orders accepted during sale period M ost s h o w ro o m sa m p les in P rin c e to n a nd s e le c te d s h o w ro o m sam p les in N ew ark at g re a tly reduced p rice sNewark N J 95 R om e SI 07105 (20H 5«9 3^0 / P rm celon , N J Ih p M a ike lp la re H is 27 A 5 lh

- - ............. ...................... ......... '■"rfi 0H540 (2011 297 188/HI 9 Suri 12 5

T o iM fP P m N j 800 252 0930 m N Y 800-5268001 08540 (20H 29 / 188/Sale hours Tues Sa l 8 5 r * ' m 9 Sun 12 5 c lose d M on M on Sat 1 0 5 3 0 Ih u i

RicchardsShoes for the D iscr im inat ing

WINTER SALEon SHOES and BOOTS

for Men and Women

J50 /Va.v.sau Sfrpt>t / ^ r i n c f t o n . \ . J .

60^-924-6785

Mon.-Fri. 9-6 p.rn. SuturdAy 9-5 p. rn.

Oftpn Thurs. until 8 p.m.

honorsJill P e te rs o n

Jill PeiersoR, a South Brunswick High School senior, is the winner of the Baush and Lomb Award for Science this year The award, presented to one student per participating high schw i. makes Ms Peterson eligible for a scholarship at the University of RtKhesicj.

Ju d y D in ard oJudy Dinardo. the daughter o f Mr. and

Mrs. Robert A. Dinardo o f 102 Sand H ill Rd., Kendall Park was named to the Dean's list o f Trenton State College at which she is majoring in S^ieech com­munication and theater

J o s ep h A vin sJoseph Avins of Kendall Road. Ken­

dall Park, scored 800 (a perfect score) on the Mathematics II Achievement test o f the College Board Mr. Avins is a senior at South Brunswick High School

L o n n ie H o rd o nLonnie Hordon. a South Bmnswick

High Schw l senior, scored 800 (a per­fect score) on the Mathematics i l Achievement test o f the College Board. M r Hordon resides with his fam ily in Kendall Park.

M ik e R e lm e rMike Reimer. o f Pelham Road. Ken­

dall Park, scored 800 (a perfect score) on the Mathematics II Achievement test of (he College Boards M r Reimer is a .senior at South Brunswick High School

Keith Watlington H o n o r S o c ie ty indu ction p la n n e dW atlin g to n s in g s A m ahl

Keith Watlington o f Monmouth Junction was selected to sing the role o f Amahl in ihc Gian Carlo M cnoiti o|>cra A M A H L AN D TH L NIGHT VIS l l ORS, The opera, which was performed on Jan, 14-16. was sponsored by the T r in ity -A ll Saints Con-

- cert Series.

Keith is a 12-vear old seventh grader at

Crossroads .Sehix>l in South Brunswick. He studies the trumpet, and sings in the Trin ity Church Choir o f Men, Boys and Girls, In .schcH)! he has played ihc Cheshire Cal in A L lC h IN W 0N D I:R LA N D and the lead in ROBIN HOOD, Recently he was invited to Ning at the Grange Convention in .Atlantic C ity He performed several Broad w'ay songs.

On Thursday. Jan. 2K, the South Bruns wick National Honor Society w ill be holding its annual induction ceremony in the high school auditorium The opening activities w ill commence at S (K) p rn and upon conclusion, refreshments w ili be • erved in the cafeteria

Dennis Brodkin ot ttie high sehixvi social studio,s department w ill be the guest speaker for the evening and music w ill be provided by the South Brunswick High

SehkK)l bandSouth Brunswick's chapter o f the Na­

tional Honor StKicty. which is advised by Carol Walehlcr. w ilt be receiving 20 new members for the new year.

Wc expect that induction night w ill turn out to be a beautiful night for K>th the students and their lamilics.

A ll interested members o f the communi­ty arc invited.

R ID E R COLLEGE School For Continuing Studies

OJ-’FERS A VARIETY OF PROGRAMS DESIGNED TO .MEET YOUR INDIVIDUAL NEEDS

Information concerning programs on a degree or non-degree basis, course offerings for the spring semester, registration and finances, can be obtained by calling:

(609) 896-5033

Registration for the spring semester will be held on February 3, 4 and 5. Check this paper next week for a fuJl listing of all spring courses.

IV iS SAnniversary Sale

Thurs., Jan. 21 thru Sat., Jan. 30Beautiful unce-a-year savirifrs

on all Hanes hosiery styles except Spring F'ashion colors.

P u lm e r Square. l* r ir tcetun. N.,f.

W h e n y o u 're p la n n in g to landscape...

Patios • P ools • S hade Trees F o u n da tio n P lan tings W a lk s • H yd ro se e d in g S o d d in g • P lay and Rest A reas • P rivacy P lan tings

Landscape w ith a p lan!

Call one o f our landscape a rch ite c ts today.

w

wd o e r l e r l a n d s c a p e s

p h o n e 6C9-924-1221

ahtartEXSHEEPSKIN COATS FROM EUROPE

Our Business is keeping you Warm

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^20%-40% offPLUS m a n y o th e r

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4 -6 H u l l f i s h St. P r in c e to n , N. J. 921-3121

EFFICIENCY and BEAUTY

The e x p e r ts a t The E n e rg y W are hou se w ill h e lp y o u d e te rm in e w h ich fire p la c e

fnserr is b e s t fo r y o u r h e a tin g de m a nds . C h e c k o u r ex ta ns is /v s e le c tio n o f ■- -

F IR E P L A C E IN S E R T SA m a ric a n S lo ra ia to r • C ita t io n

■ A p a c h * ■ Thor ■ H rob ro n d D os ig n o r H oo rth • a n d H e a tila to r

J

BRING Ym W MEASUREMENTS

___ A 'E ia c I w id lh o f o p e n in gA .-W iO lh b « tw *« n w oo a

b o rd e r* ( it a p p h c tb ie ;___ 8-W >d th o f b e ck **11___ C -M #*oh t o f o p e n in g___C .-H e ig ru lo e too d PO fder

o r r r te n ile ( if a p p lica b le : .D -M a io b t o f b e ck »»aii ,

(b e fo re a r ig le to rw a iO i__ _ E -P e p th a t to p (m a e su re

IfOfTi to p o f C)___ F-Oep«b a t b o tto m

SrO* v>e»Beck From

2 9 3 5 R o u t e 1L aw ra n cA v ill*, NJ(609)896-9519

Visa • r r .o s te fc a rd

p t e n y 0 / p a r k in g^•eee note poemon of a

damper control 11 applicableo u ti 'd c

FINAL WINTER CLEARANCE

SALEStarts Monday, January 25

Selected coats, suits, dresses, gloves, hats sportswear, fabrics, and household linens.

VISA, Mastercard and Clayton Charge accepted. All Sales Final

Palmer Square, Princeton N. J.

Open Thursday and Friday Evenings until 8:30 P.M.

12-A THE CENTRAL POST Thonday, JaaMry 2 1 ,19S2

Groeger stands b y his lifestyle of enduranceby Pam Hersh Suit WriUr

Six months ago. Steve Cmx-gci tve came a bom again Triathloniie

The 31-year-old Lawrence resident gave up a life o f d rin k ing , partying, dating and was converted to a life ot running, sw im m ing and h ik ing His favorite hangout. The M erry 'G o Round Bar in Lawrence, lex^k second place to swimming pxx>ls. gymnasiums and road­ways. w hich are the h tily temples o f his new re lig ion , Hi.s ‘ live for today' philosophy was replaced bs a re ligious doctrine preaching 'tram for tom orrow ,'

And tomorrow is aimo.st here. On f-'eh 6. M r. Groeger w ill he called u{x>n to undergo the supreme test of his re lig ion. He w ill attempt to complete an ex- traordinarx p ilgrim age, an Hawaiian tria th lon , consisting o f a T 4 -m i{c sw im , fo llow ed hy a 112-mile hike ride, fo l­lowed hy a 2h.2-m ile marathon run It is expected that M r (iroeger w il l be one ol' approximate!) WX) men and women who w ill trv to complete the Hawaiian {Island o f Kona) tria th lon, which was conceived five years ago by a group o f Lnited Slates .^larines s lalioncJ in Hawaii.

The rn a th lo n ilc re lig ion requires a single-m inded, fanatic dedication to physical tra ining A txpicai weekda) Steve G n x “gcr begins at 5;.^0 a rn ; he works out fo r one and one-ha lf to two

hours on an ind tx jr b icycle : the next eight hours arc spent at his “ bread and butter " job as an engineer fo r the .stale IX 'partmcm o f Transportation; his eve­ning acfivitic.s include a s ix -m ile run. a one-m ilc sw im , a game o f K^w ling or basketball or raekeibal! H is weekends are the same, except the eight hours he ord inariiv would sjxmd at the department o f transpsxrtation. he spends “ doing .something unique like running, sw im ­ming or b ik ing , 1 get a little more sleep on weekends and do more outdoors bievclc tra in ing, " he .said

The tra ining mM on ly has forced him to give up many o f the things he used to enjov. but also has in tlic tcd up<m him pain and discom fort. H is ankles, a chrome source o f problems for h im . arc ■■ in very bad shafx:. I know I w il l be suffering a great deal during the race. But It doesn't matter M y goal is to finish,and I w il l fn is h even i f I have to crawl to the fin ish line '

The one sinful excess w hich M r Groeger allow s h im self during tra ining is junk ftxnJ. He takes vitam ins and makes sure ti> cal a variety o f nutritious foods. “ but I also indulge in my favorite garbage fx x ls . such as donuts. Chuckles and chtK-olate candy bars w ith nuts. I am basically an aw ful eater And at least the triath lon tra in ing has gotten me to put

healthy things into my btxly. even i f [ .still do treat myself to (he not .so healthy things.”

The decision to enter the triathlon life o f discipline and abstention came in April o f 1981. Mr. Groeger’s life had reached a low point. His marriage was

breaking up. and “ I was doing nothing more p rix luctivc w ith m y life than just going to work and going out drinking. The triath lon was a way fo r me to pull m yself together — to give my life some pur|K>sc. b n A p ril 13.1981. t had a last bash w ith my brother in W ashington. D C . and the next day I started my training.

A t first. Steve's fam ily and friends thought he was jo k in g , and if.not jok ing , then crazy. But when "everyone saw that I had stop jvd d rink ing entire ly and used my everv spare moment fo r physi­cal training.people realized I w'as not k idding I guess many people .still th ink I am nuts, but even i f they th ink I am nuts, tx'oplc have been tivrncndously sup- pvirlivc o f my efforts ” The liK a l bike shop. M arts 's Bike Shop, donated a bike ur Steve Several members in the com ­m unity rai.scd mtsney to tinanec the tr ip to Hawaii and the expenses o f the triathlon tra ining. Friends am m aking sure that he eaf.s and trams p rope rly . One couple intends to go to H awaii w ith

Steve to be his m m l support. His fam ily (mother, step-father, brother and sister) “ have been very encouraging and proud o f me and never implied that I was wasting my tim e.’ ' Steve said.

The only discouraging voice came from the physician who treats his bad ankles. “ He told me my ankles would never hold out. Although his comments really depressed me. the remarks certain­ly w ill not stop me from taking part in the competition.”

M r Gn>cgcr. however, is no stranger to intense physical competition Known a.s Lawrence Township's native son jock, he is famous for participating in nearly every sports activity available thix)ugh the schools or through the mu­nicipal or county recreation programs. And when he hasn't been playing sports, he has been running sports activities for the children o f Lawrence Township. “ I enjoy helping young kids get the same pleasure out o f sports which I always have gotten.” Steve’s more unusual sp<xling activities include parachuting, sky diving and escorting the Olympic torch through Lawrence ,

But ail these sporting achievements are “ nothing” compared to what he is abtmt to face in Hawaii. Steve never has run a marathon (his longest race was the

Princelofl H a lf Marathon), and his long- the race in less than 16 h o i^ . ” The est bike ride has been approximately 60 winner o f last year’s triathlon in Hawaii miles “ I still feel that I can do the completed the course in nine hours and triathlon, and hopefully, 1 w ill complete 38 minutes.

Learn all about torts and courts on TV

I f you always thought a tort was a pastry and aren’ t suie o f the difference between a subpoena and a summons, a new TV series, “ You and the I j iw . ” w ill shed light on these and many more legal subjects.

Sponsored by the New Jersey Bar Association and New Jersey Network, the series w ill premiere on Feb. 3. on UHF channels 23. 50. 52 and 58.

“ You and the Law ,” a scries o f 30 half-hour programs, is designed to help citizens better understand their rights — and responsibilities — under the law. The series w ill examine legal principles operating in daily situations, such as buying and owning a car. establishing credit, investing money, employee and employer obligations, obtaining in­surance. signing contracts, retirement planning, being accused o f criminal activity and more.

The series is distributed nationally by Coast Community Colleges o f Cali­fornia. New Jersey Network and the New Jersey State Bar Asswiation w ill co-pftxiucc four segments dealing with specifics of New Jersey law in .such areas as divorce, juvenile justice, taxes and our court system,

“ You and the Law ' w ill be broadcast on Wednesdays and Fridays at 6 p.m beginning the week o f Feb. I Both p rog ra m s w i l l be rebroadcast on Saturriays from 3 to 4 p.m.

Several adult schools and community colleges across the slate w ill utilize the scries in their curricula Monmouth Col lege in West Long Branch w ill offer graduate credit to high school social studies teachers who participate in week­end seminars and fu lf ill other course requirements. The series is underwritten by a grant from the Whaley Fund.

AND THE WINNER IS YOU!'VERY WORKING PERSON CAN WIN IMPORTANT TAX SAVINGS WITH OUR IRA

■ Save taxes every year with an Individual Retirement Account. You can put up to $2,000 each year into an IRA, up to $4,000 if you and your spouse are both wage earners. This contribution is deducted from your gross income and you pay no taxes on it now to the IRS. And your IRA contribution may lower your current tax bracket

■ You earn high interest, which is also tax sheltered. Since you pay no taxes on this interest, the money in your IRA account multiplies even faster.

■ You pay no taxes until you start withdrawing the funds from your IRA sometime between the ages of -59’ and 70’/2. By then, presumably, you will be in a lower tax bracket, and your tax savings will be significant

YOU WIN WITH HIGH INTEREST AND FLEXIBLE PLANS AT PRINCETON BANK

■ You earn top interest, with your choice of fixed rate or variable rate IRAs, And your investment is insured up to $100,000 by the FDIC.

■ You can make your annual IRA contribution all at once, in occasional installments, or with weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly automatic deductions from

your checking or statement savings account.

■ You pay no opening charge or annual fee for an IRA at Princeton Bank

F e d e ra l r e g u la t io n s re q u ire s u b s ta n t ia l p e n a lt ie s fo r e a r ly w ith d ra w a ls , a n d c o n t r ib u t io n s m a d e in o n e ta x a b le y e a r e x c e e d in g $ 2 ,0 0 0 p e r in d iv id u a l.

P la n R a le M a tu r it y M in im u m D e p o s i t

H igh F ixed Rate C e rt if ic a te 15 .02% a n n u a l y i e l d

o n 14.00%18 m o n t h s S2.000

H ig h V a riab le Rate A c c o u n t

1 2 . 9 6 % a n n u a l y i e l d o n 1 2 . 1 9 % . R a t e IS , % a b o v e t h e 9 0 - d a y U S T r e a s u r y B i l l & c h a n g e s q u a r t e r l y

18 m onths $ 1 .0 0 0 o p e n i n g d e p o s i t a n y a m o u n t t h e r e a f t e r

No M in im u m V a riab le Rate A c c o u n t

1 2 . 4 0 % a n n u a l y i e l d o n 11 ,69%. R a t e e q u a l s t h e 9 0 - d a y U S T r e a s u r y B i l l & c h a n g e s q u a r t e r l y

'Interest compounded daily

18 m onths No m in im u m d ep o s it Automatic deductions avatlab'e for con­tributions of at least SfO each time

W IN TAX SAVINGS, GET HIGH INTEREST, AND GUARANTEE YOUR RETIREM ENT INCO M E W ITH THE PRINCETON BANK IRA.

IT’S A KNOCKOUT!PRINCETON BANK

M e rc e r C o u n ty : P r in c e to n . M e rc e rv iN e . H o p e w e l l L a w re n c e ,E a s t W in d s o r (6 0 9 )9 2 4 -5 4 0 0

M id d le s e x C o u n ty : A v e n e l, F o rd s , C o lo n ia W o o d b n d g e (2 0 1 )6 3 4 -7 3 0 0 B u r l in g to n C o u n ty : M t L a u re l, M e d lo r d (6 0 9 )2 3 4 -4 3 0 0 G lo u c e s te r C o u n ty : S e w e ll (6 0 9 )5 8 9 -8 7 0 0

P R IN C E T O N B A N K A N D T R U S T C O M P A N Y Member H O R IZ O N B a n c o r p M e m b e r F D IC

Great seafood is just (Xie reascxi

to eat early with us.Our (Treat prices are another.lust come in any time between 2:00 p.m. and 5:50 p.m. Sunday through

Thursday and see how .sati.sfying dining light and early can he. Treat yourselt to rine ot our complete Early Dinner Specials below

Broiled Stuffed Flounder. .

Brmele.ss Breast of Chicken

Broiled Stuffed Shrimp

Langostinos iPetite Lobster)

.Alaskan Snow Crab Legs.

*3.99*3.79*4.59*4.99*5.49

Early Dinner Specials include tossed salad or cole slaw, your choice oi potato or rice pilat, and coffee, tea or .soft drink,

iR dXjobslerFor the seafood kner in you.

EarK PiniuT Sfx-ctaL arc a\ ailahlc only at the rcstauranis Iistcii hek'V, '^233 Piko, lU .S Hu'v d l l , LawTciHcvillc. 89(r-10l I

* 'k m ile vH ith lit Quaker Brid^^e M.il!II V a m -lO -O O p m Sun Thurs 11 k’’ a m ' 11 00 p ni Fn 61. Sat

C Reo Loosfer Inns o f Am enc« '9 6 2 M osi Major L-rBOit CarOs Accepted

V2 PriceWinter Sale

MEN S

SUITSSPORTCOATS

TROUSERS OVERCOATS CAR COATS

SPORT SHIRTS HATS & CAPS

WOMEN S

PANTSUITSEVENING DRESSES & SKIRTS

DRESS COATS RAINCOATS

ROBESNIGHTGOWNS

SELECTED SWEATERS

ALL SALES FINAL

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8:30 P.M.

Q Ihe € n g l i B l | ^ h o p32 Nassau Street • Princeton

609 924-7100Free Parking

in RearFree Perking

In Peer

Thunday, January 21,1982 TH E CENTRAL POST 13-A

Pelham Stcwarl

P ost o ffic e g iv e s S te w a rt c ita tio nPelham Slewart, a regular \undo\^

clerk at the Kendall i ’ark Post OlTice. has recently received a Service Award Pin Irom Raymond South Jr., Post­master. Kendall Park lo r tx 'tie r than 25 years ol Federal .Service, Me is well known by the many customers tiu Ire- qucnl the post olTice.

■■Mickey" as he is alTectionately called by many o f his tnends started his federal employment n 194.^ when he was appointed by an executive order to the I ’ . S . A rm y Q u a rte rm a s te rs C o rp s located at that time m Belle Meade. N.J. v,hcre he was responsible for protecting government p ro jx 'rtv and the guarding ol pnsoners'of-warIn ianuarv ol id59 . alter 13 \ears as a

S is te rh o o d S h a b b a t S e rv ic e sI he members o f the Sisterhood o f Con­

gregation Bnai Tikvah o f North and South Brunswick w ill conduct ihc Shabbat

'‘ .Services on Friday. Jan. 22 at 8 p m. and on Saturday. Jan 2 } at 9 a m. ai I'cmple Beth Shalom. Kendall Park

Mermaids, monsters, inspired by reality?Ever wonder about the orig ins o f the

weird creatures that haunted your ch ild ­hood dreams — the dragons, mermaids, and gcxlzillas o f m ytho logy and monster lore?

W ell, those beasts weren’ t necessarily spun ut o f whole c lo th , according to the current issue o f Internationa) W ild life magazine. Chances are some o f them were inspired by real live animals “ viewed rarely, incom pletely, o r by untrained and im aginative eyes. ’ says the b im onth ly pub lication o f the Na­tional W ild life Federation.

This theory is being explored by scientists meeting in W ashington. D C ,, this month to found the International S ix'iety o f C ryp to zw lo g y and to try to establish which o f the “ fantastic" creatures have some basis in fact, the magazine reports.

Am ong the m ytho log ical creatures In­

ternationa) W ild life examines are these:The Basilisk: Legend has it that the

deadly basilisk, a serpent w ith a spnittcd crest and sometimes w ith w ings, could k ill on sight. That is. any creature foolish enough to look at the basilisk faced instant death. O nly one animal escaped this creature's terror — a small, weasel-like animal w ith the power to k ill the serpent.

Based mostly on this last fact, c ryp ­tozoologists believe that the basilisk actually was derived from embellished descriptions o f the hcxxJcd cobra. The cobra can also be zapped by a small, wcascl-likc animal — the mongcx)se.

The GrifTin: I f you've ever read A lice in Wonderland, you know the g r if f in , a fly ing lion w ith the head and w ings o f an eagle. W ith a little im aginatin, says International W ild life , a real b ird , the lammcrgeier o f Central Asia, could have inspired the myth o f the g r if f in . The

self-employed carpenter, he was ac­cepted by the Postal Service. Me stalled his career as a carrier in Franklin Park, translenm g in I9(>4 to Kendall Park where he is currently attached as a regular w indow clerk. In 1972. M r. Stewart received a Special Achievement Award from the Postal Serv'ice for |Xt - forrn ing his duties substantially above the nomial requirements,

M r. Stewart is married and has two children and has resided in Franklin Park lo r over 40 years. During this time he has served his com m unity as a volunteer firem an, being promoted through the ranks to C h ie f o f the Franklin Park Fire Co. He IS currently serving as Fire C'lmimissioner for the FYanKlin Park Section o f Franklin Township,

A dairy Oneg Shabbat w ill follow the Friday evening .services and there w ill be a luncheon fo llow ing services Saturday morningj.

For membership information please con­tact Carol Boinick at 828-262.^.

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lammcrgeier, a bird o f prey w ith a lO-foot w ing span, is al.so know n as the “ bearded v u ltu re ." because o f the tuft

o f bristles under its b ill.To observers from below, says the

N W F r e p o r t , the la m m e r g c ie r 's ta w n y - c o lo r e d u n d e rs id e and its manc-like beard could have evoked im ­ages o f lions. W hat's more, the range o f the real b ird matches the range o f the m ythical create; North A frica . Centra! Asia and Southern Europe.

The Mermaid: Even Christopher C o l­umbus helped propagate the myth o f the mermaid. On one o f his voyages, he reported seeing three mermaids rise out o f the .sea. But they "w ere not so beautiful as they are represented," he wrote.

T o d a y . c ry p o lo z .o o lo g is ts th in k mermaids were the product o f optical

illusions that make dum py walruses a mile o r tw o away l(x>k like svelte, low ering mermaids. It happens when an atmospheric temperature inversion ap­proaches the surface o f the sea, accord­ing to a rcpi>rt by scientists at the University o f ManiU)bga.

The Unicorn; This proud, powerful and gentle horse, famous in medieval stories fo r the magical powers o f the single horn centered on its head, could have been inspired by the one homed rh im xeros or by the narwhal, a small whale w ith a long, ivory protrusion sim ila r to the unicorn's.

But after a bio logist at the University o f Maine “ created" a modem unicorn, some s p e c ia lis ts began to w onde r whether a true unicorn had really lived.

M r. Dove noted that the transplant technique has been around since the days o f unicorns.

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Puces e ffe rt've Ihrcxjgh Jan. 23 in case ot typ o^ap h ica l enot. lowest poces peom ned by law w ilt ptevail A ll prices irxrlude NJ Sales ia> Sorry we cannot a txep i c tedil cards ditnrH) sales We reserve the r ighi Jo lim it girantities per person There may be lim ited quantities on all sale item# on Saturday the last day pi me sale

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14-A THE CEATRAL POST Thunday, January 21 ,1982

Home maintenance and ImprovementStripping furniture can restore beauty

Some old finishes, clear or opaque, are wtMth preserving; after years of polishing, they lend character to a piece o f wood furniture But many others — bubbled and brittle, or so thick they obscure carving or hide grain — are better removed

There are three ways to remove a finish; dissiilve it with chemicals, heal it so it bubbles away from the wc^xl. or scrape or sand it away. Speed and avoiding damage to the wtnxi are the main considerations in ch<.x)sing a method, Someimies yi>u may haNC to use more than o ik technique

BY FAR T H E EASIEST but not the best - - way to strip furniture is to send it to a professional who w ill dunk it in a chemical dip tank This pnxess gels the finish off. but it can also bleach the wmxl and soften glue, thereby kxisening joints and veneer, it is not generally recommended for saluahle pieces. How­ever. It may be the only practical way to strip furniture that otherwise would re­quire long hours of tedious handwork wicker, for example.

Several heating dc\ices arc cxcciiem for rapidly stripping away man\ layers o f paint One is a heal lamp with a 600-walt bulb Another resembles a hair dryer and blows air heated to 7(X) degrees onto the paint surface. A third, a heating iron with a pivoting handle, is held just abi'vve the paint to soften it Always turn a heat lamp or coll away from the suilace as sixin as the paint softens, to avoid scorching the wtxxi

surface or igniting the finish. Use a wide-hladed putty knife to remove the finLsh,

None o f the heat devices is effective on such solvent-release finishes as lac­quer aiKl shellac, and may scorch the wood. Propane torches, sometimes used for stnpptng house paint, increase the risk o f scorching and should not be used on furmture.

P O W E R S A N D E R S used w ith coarse sarxipaper. or sanding attach- rncnis for electric drills, speed the job of clearing finished surfaces But neither is recommended for fine furniture or veneers, and both should be used with caution, as they may gouge the surface

and leave scratches that must be re­moved before the furniture is refinished When using a power sander. apply only light pressure, to avoid digging into the surface with the edge o f the sanding pad. Wear goggles and a dust mask when using any sander

H and-app lied chem icals, though slower, allow the most control over the removal o f old finishes and usually leave the surface ready for a new coat The best all-purpose chemical strippers are solutions containing methylene chloride; other all-purpose chemicals, such as lye and oxalic acid, are more dangerous and d ifficu lt to control, Trisiidium phos­phate. methyl alcohol and lacquer thin­ner work only tin specific finishes. Methylene chloride strippers come as liquids and pastes; the paste type is much

easier to use because it clings to vertical surfaces and evaporates more slowly.

Some paste aiul liquid strippers arc labeled "no wash;" others are thickeiKd with wax. which must be removed after use with a wash o f denatured alcohol. A third type calls for a water wash; but these are less satisfactory, as the water is likely to raise the grain of the wood and may separate a veneer surface from its wo(xl base, requiring sanding or reglu­ing.

ALTHOUGH SOME makers o f chemical strippers recommend removing the entire finish w ith one application, the best technique is to prexeed layer by layer. O ne-step rem ova l requ ires prolonged soaking with stripper, which may saturate and soften the wood so that the scraper gouges the surface easily and the stripped wcxxl kx)ks bleached and rough.

Because chemical stripers can irritate your lungs and skin, protect yourself by- working in a w'cll-vcntilated space and wearing goggles and rubber gloves. Cover the workrm^m floor w ith news­papers and put foil piepans under furniture legs to catch drips; stripper can dissolve some types o f plastic and linoleum fiiHiring as well as rubber soles on shixs. Work carefully, and allow plenty of time for each job and the subsequent cleanup.

T O R E M O V E a f i n i s h w i t h chemicals, begin with a large horizontal surface, pat the stripper evenly over the

surface with an old paint brush (drawing !); let it work for five minutes. When the finish begins to bubble, use a wide putty knife to scrape the stripper and the dissolved finish into a can at the edge of the surface, or wipe it onto an old newspaper with the putty knife. Scrub the surface w ith 2/0 steel wool, working parallel to the grain, to expose the next layer o f hard finish. Repeat until you reach the bare wcxid.

Turn the piece so another large surface is horizontal and repeat the stripping process. Then strip smaller elements, such as chair legs and rungs, by patting on stripper and rubbing with 2/0 steel wool (inset, drawing 1).

Brush on a final thin coat o f stripper to soften any residue o f finish in the pores of the wood. Scrape gently w ith the putty knife and then scrub the surface ' smooth with 3/0 or 4/0 steel wool, following the wood’s grain.

To remove the softened finish from cracks or crevices in a caned surface, position the fum iiurc so the carved surface is horizontal and pal on stripper, then use a pointed dowel or an orange stick (drawing 2). to lift out the finish. Work gently, since the wcxxl may be softened by the stripper and easily gouged. Use 3/0 steel wool wadded into a small, tight hall to scrub gently inside the crevices. I f you are doing extensive stripping o f heavily carved surfaces, you may need to have special tools. Old toothbrushes, an awl. a small soft wire brush, uxvthpicks. and a pen knife (inset, drawing 2) are all useful for this purpose.

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sportsThunday, January 21,1982 The Central Post ISA

Viking cagers drop two games

by John Puccio Special W rite r

The South Brunswick boys basketball team lost its two games last week to fall to 3-7, Last Tuesday. South River beat the Vikings 55 43 arid four days later the team lost to Highland Park, 38-33.

■‘We were in the South River game until the last couple o f m inutes." said South Brunswick coach Al Balcomb. " In fact, we had a one-p<iint lead with a little more than three minutes left In the game. But South River got a couple o f quick baskets and then we had to foul to get the ball back. They hit their foul shots and then got a few key rebounds at the end o f the game. The game was a lot closer than the score would indicate,"

The V'ikings were down by five points at halftime and by only three points at the end o f three quartcrr>. firian Ward was the top South Brunswick scorer with I.3 points and Cube Cudjo followed w ith I I Monty Gallant had seven rebounds and Paul Casarona hauled down six.

I'he Highland Park game was originally intended to be played last Thursday but was moved to Saturday because of snow Balcomb said it )ust kxikcd like his team wasn't ready to play on Saturday.

" I t was probably our p<H-)rest game of the year." he said. ‘ We shot only 26 percent from the llix ir . Wc hit only 12 of 45 shots Our normal shcKiting average ftir the year is up around 47 percent." Still. South Brunswick led by a point after three quarters but couldn't hold the lead. H igh­land Park outscored them I6 - I0 in the final pcruxl

W'ard again topped the scoring c flon with 14 ptiinis and Gallant pumped in lO.

I'he Viking.s w ill face Hillsborough tonight and Montgomerv' on Saturday. Both o f those games w ill be at home

GIRLS BASKETBALLThe Viking girls basketball squad drop­

ped to l-IO after losing its two latest gam es .South R iv e r defca»tc^ th e m Tu esd a y of last week. 42-35. and they lost to

Carteret this Tuesday, 6I-35.Two South Brunswick starters — Shelly

Spriggs and Gaye Stevens — were out o f the lineup because o f illness for the South River game. But the V ikings were still doing well, leading 25-20 at halftime. However, in the third quarter. Dawn Hague, another starter, was ejected from the game for fighting and South Bruns­w ick's chances went downhill from there.

" I t is very d ifficu lt to win three starters out o f the lineup." said V iking coach Aloysc Holman. "W c had to use some of our JV players. Even 'though they arc g(X)d players, they're just not going to beat a g ixxl varsity team.

"D aw n 's fight was perpt'tratcd by the S o u th R iv e r g i r l . It s ta r te d w ith name-calling and then she slapped Dawn. When Dawn retaliated, both girls were thrown out o f the game. When something like that hap|XMis. you can't retaliate be­cause it only hurts the team to be thrown out o f the game,"

Su/anne Luna was the lop V iking scorer with 17 points and Hague had nine before leaving (he contest, Luna and Betty Bnd played (he entire game w ith no rest. " They were pretty tired by (he end but they did a real gtx>d jo b ,"

South Brunswick trailed Carteret 14-2 after one quarter and it got worse in the second quarter when the Vikings shot only one-for-15 from (he Ooor and played what Holman described as "p<xH- defense," The game turned around in the second hat! w lie n S o u th B ru n s w ic k w e n t to a four-corner offense and the score lor the second half was 23-23 It wasn't, however, enough to ofiset the devastating first half.

"Carteret had some goixl shixitcrs. " noted H o lm a n. " T h e y w-cre h it t in g 2U-!w)(ers with consistency. What wc need is more four-quarter consistency. Wc play very welt in parts o f games but wc can't seem to put it together for an entire game. "

The Vikings, now having lost 10 M ru ig h t. w i l l p la )( H ilU b u m u g h to n ig h t and New Rninsw'ick next Tuc-sdav.

Chorus to begin winter season, Feb. 2

SIGNING UP for another season of the South Brunswick Community Chorus is Gene Caldwell. A sign-up list is available at the public library.

P o s tm a s te c to m y s u p p o rt

It 's final S i g n - u p time fo r the vvinter sc-ssioit o f S i'u lh B um sw ick C om m unity Chorus. First rehearsal is Tuesday, hob. 2. from 7:30 to 0;30 fo r all participants. As usual, (ho place is the choms room ol South Brunsw ick High School

The sign-up sheet is just inside the front entrance to South Brunsw ick Pub­lic Library'. But it you can 't make it 'n the lib rary, you can call the ch^^^us director. Ada Schneider, at 297 ^355. to let her know you're interested. Mrs. Schneider d(x:s need an advance count approxim ately, in order to have enough music on hand.

This w inter sca.son is lo r 14 weeks .A final recital in May w ill again be held jo in tly w ith several church choirs It w ill be sim ilar to last year's event at Six m ile Run Reto.^med Church. Tw o or three major works w ill be sung by a ll. in addition to several selections by the chorus.

First selections Ui be developed by the Chorus w ill b c G . F. Handel's " ’rhanks Be To T h e e ". John Denver's " I Want (o

la v e " , and a live ly ‘a tt ic " version ol " M v B o n n ie ". Other pieces w ill be added later

I f yc>u've wanted to sing w ith a groiq i hut never tried, hero's your chance and time to do it. I'he South Brunsw ick C'ommumty Chorus is open to all tow n­ship residents. There'.s also s|X‘cial work for experienced singers. In tact, (he Chorus' Octet is already in rehearsal, even while it has Ofxmngs for two part singers. The chorus also urgently needs a guitarist.

South Brunsw ick C m nm uniiy Ch<irus has grown to over 3(K) voices in less than IS months. T h e ‘ownship 's Cultural .Arts C om m ission, w ith Bonme Senmgeour as program ilirce lo r. has sponsored it ih iough early grow ing nams. I'iuis die chorus has heeouie a Si>uth Brunswick institution that shortly should he able to stand on its ow n

I f you want to sing, you don 't have to commute to Princeton or New Bruns w iek. South B runsw ick's own Com mumtv Chorus can challenge vou ai anv sk ill level.

The loss o f a breast is overw helm ing trauma fo r many women vvh^i arc v ictim s o f cancer. S till others adapt to this surgery very w ell.

W ith breast cancer s trik ing some one out o f 12 women, wc believe there are many pvxstmastcctomy patients right here in Central New Jersey who may be having d ifficu lties .

I f you arc one o f them and feel in need o f help — through support groups. exerci.se classes, psychological counsel­ing or perhaps just shopping hints for special garments, plca.se call 828-1020

L o st a sp o u se ? -for intorina tion .

.A b r ’ ast rehabilitation service is spon­sored by Rutgers Medical .Scluxil in Piscata-/av.

T A X A B L E U N E M P LO Y M E N T O iS A B IL IT Y IN SURANCE

New Jersey employers were reminded recently that the m axim um amount o f wages subject to the New Jersey payroll tax fo r unemployment and d isab ility insurance purp<.)scs has been increased. The $7,500 m axim um taxable waecs in 1981 gex;s to $8.2(K) fo r the 1982 calendar year.

Registrations are now bt'ing taken tor the next session o f Lost A Spouse to begin later (his month at St. Peter's Medical Center. Lost A S|X)use is a special program designed to help both men and wcunen cope w ith the death o f (heir spouses, Initiated in 1976 by the M edical Center's Social Service Depart­ment. the group is led by Anne Graham, a prv)fessional .social w orker who is hcr.scif a w idow .

A l the sessions, special a ttcn lion is always given to the ind iv idua l concerns o f the group members. In add ition, the fo llo w in g topics are discussed; ex ­

periencing loneliness, persona) manage­ment w ith an emphasis on health and the physical ravages o f gne t. money and home management, relationships w ith fam ily and friends, help ing ch ildren to understand and co{X' w ith death, and em ploym ent.

The group meets once a week, on Wednesdays, fo r about six weeks. I'o register, call St Pe ie i's Social Service Deparlm cnl at 201-745-8522.

Recycle this newspaper

B aseb all le a g u e s la tes re g is tra tio nBaseball registration w ill be held at

the C om m unity Center on Jan. 23 and 30 from mxm to 4 p.m .

A ll children born between Aug, I, 1964. and Dec, 31. 1974. arc e lig ib le to register. There is a registration fee and accident insurance is available AM new

registrants must show p roo f o f age.Any equipment and uniform s from la.st

year must be returned before registering.

For additional inform ation please call: Patrick Markham 297-6382 or Steve A llam ura 392-3023.

SALENOW!

New Y camping program unveiledA slide .show o f the New Jersey

Camps w ill be held at (he South County build ing , 108 Church Lane. Fast Bruns­w ick , on Thursday , Jan. 28 at 8 p.m.

Summcriecn Travel Camp is divided into tw o, three-week sessins and is Jc.signcd for seventh-1 Ith graders. There w ill be one week o f day trips and two.

five-day extended trips. Fach session w ill be S3(K).

New Jersey Y S lecp-Away Camps in Pennsylvania are al.so available.

For details concerning specific camp­ing programs, call Flainc Reason at 29'’7-6070,

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M RE E S P

O R T E R

TRUCK HEADQUARTERS F ORD MOTOR CARS

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WILL FAY ftFOT CASH FOR YOUR

C A M . TRUCKA, ETC. F tU S W NCEUNO

TRAet-IW -ALLOW AW CEft•u M A t TtM Naw F lant W M Tfia U M a t Faint FacWItaa AeaWaaii in

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SALES OEFARTMENTS Open WaaKdays • AM le to FM

Sal « AM le 7 FM Cloaad Sunday

FLASH? 15.17% A.P.R.NEW CAN A TRUCK

FINANCE RATE AVAILASLE TO

QUALIFIED AFFLICANTS

l4 A MM.OO Radwetten O tI 0< M tf . U a t Fdca 1M 2 CavaMan C .L

Medata Sdna. HatctW acks. W ant. F ront Wheat Ortva

4 C |l.. 4 Spd A Awtamatk;

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M fe. L lat Frtca tM 1 La fta va rt CHavattas

2 Dt4.. 4 Ors . H a tc fW aclii. W ttn D iaaal EngUiaeW ftaa ling Otacownie

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, , N StockamtilnTii

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SHOP BEEDMAN C H fV

THUCK HEADQUAHTEHS

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2 WM . t 4 WM Oriva Modals Cheseis A Cabs

1902 Chavy Vane t72. 3/4. Ton Modale

IM 2 Spt Vane 190? Swburban Carryell

1902 Bta^ar I992 El Camtnos

6 Cyl . A VA Enginae Gae Or Diaaal

Ovar 140 In Stock Ravotving invonlo ry

fxird 'J««l •*»*• WCCAIktM r ’iiliu iiT» e A /.W

a, 16v T c la ^ E c o lM Q B l^ ^ iC e e T

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s A tiSOO 00 Raductron OH O l M ig L ia i Prica

190? Chavy P ickup 3/4 Ton A 1 Ton Craw Cabe V O M odals Gas Or Diasal

Erxgrnas__________

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1102 C ^ y Vane 1 Ton C20 Modata

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A tISOOOO R aduciton O ft Of M ig L is t Price

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P83S0 12 Ar>d 15 Paesarrgar M odals

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$ 4 6 9 9

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$ 1 8 9 9

f r i ihic ■ $ 1 9 9 9

wfVe fvf $ 3 1 9 9

"<7lr> Si $ 4 9 9 9

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$ 5 9 9 9

ac e n tv PJ

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$ 5 9 9 9

$ 7 9 9 9

Si'cWYv El" tAWhfe$ 5 9 9 9

$ 7 2 9 9

JASUAR SALES A SEA»<''E WHEELINC DISCOUNTS

1M2 JASUAR XJS 2-e ? CPE

EHtrtltltlOla A 12000.00 Radwetion O tf O t M ig . Ltat Frtca

1fd2 T rtw m M TR-A Cons., Aw tom atlc AIr Cond

I f t S tl llT'l ■« WT ax. illU U l— — — —

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$ 3 7 9 9

$ 4 4 9 9

- . 1 4 4 9 9

.15325

$ 6 4 9 9

'$ 5 7 9 9Tr»TT7 *■■■•.'

$5199s f I iLc (d u f inMATLiAE '»K «

iMtf’WAAr VI$ 1 1 . 9 9 9

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JAPANESE IMPORTS-• -USED - --

DPiSUM. roTOiP KOnOP

e v ir r VrwTjDtrr’ir T/xfinrsTr?

j i -yjTsx.-r'g "mr T r W o j r s * n r r u r x r i r

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16-A THE CENTM L POST

NJ wildlife refuge hearing scheduled

Thurtday, Jmiiary 21,1982

The U.S I'tsh ami W tid litc S cn icc is beginning a comprehensive pnvess to develop a master plan for the Great Swamp National W ild life Refuge. Bask­ing Ridge.

During the preparation o f the plan, the sapabiliues o f the land \‘. i ll by anai>/cd. long-range goals w ill be set, and alterna­tive ways o f achieving those goals w ill be evaluated ,-\n l-.nvironmental impact Statement (Id S ) w ill also Ix' prepared and w ill show the various master plan alternatives and an analvMs ot impacts. .■\s a part o f the planning, the Fish and W ild life Service is asking the public and other govemmem agencies to assist them m idcn litvm g is^sucs that should be considered

Sessions to idcn tilv issues w ill be held lo r federal, state and local agencies the week o! Jan !Ug2 The public isinvited to attend these sessions cm

Feb. d. *’ .30 p.m . at the l-.nvironmcn- tal Center Aud itorium . I .ord Sterling Park. id(» Lord Sterling D rive, Basking Ridge.

Feb U). 7..^0 p m . at the Upper School Cafeteria. Harding Township Schi'ol. i.ee's H ill Road. New \e rn o n .

Public involvement w ill be an essen­tia l pan o f the planning prtKCss. The U S Fish and W ild life Service, as a public resource management agency, w ill make every e ffo rt to ensure thsit altitudes, interests and desires o f local, m gional and national groups are con­sidered in the planning process. Public participation w ill include personal con­tact w ith ind ividuals, us«'r groups and agencies, and in worksnop sessions and meetings.

An inform ational leatlcl w il l be d is­tributed to interested inu iv iduals. agen- eie.s and organizations to so lic it com­ments and to keep them infonned. A ny­one w ish ing to be placed on the mailing list should contact Great Swamp Na­tional W ild life Refuge. RFD # 1 . Box ]>2. Basking Ridge. New Jersey 07920. iciephont number: 201-647-1222, or the Regional O ffice at U S Fish and XS'ildlifc S cn ice . One Gateway Center. Suite 7(X). Newton Corner. Massachu­s e t ts 0 2 1 5 X , A t t e n t io n ; M a r v in .A r m s t r o n g , te le p h o n e n u m b e r ; 6n-9P 5-51(K ). ext 278

A il comments should be written and Nubmitled to the Regional O ffice , ad­dress aN,ive,

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H ours: M on.-F ri. 10-9 S oturday 10-5

1800 N. Olden Ave. Trenton, N.J.

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Undercover signUnder the snow, it will say “ ANTIQUES ’ if memory serves correct on this Kingston landmark.

(Triila Ramage, photo).

P R / / \ / C E T O / \ /

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la k e .iilva n ia g e ot a ir l in e ( i is io u n t (ares and use f’ r im e to n A irw av - Si*) ( .o m m u te t Ivonus tare to N ew ark Im e rn a n o n a i A ir f iu r i W lie n v o ii trave l to o th e r u n e s o u r l.ONXFK ( osi iM im tares supp ly on lo a i h (Y ) and I irs i ( lass (F)

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U . S . Route One Princeton, N . J .(609) 452-9400

iR O R S e Z H E A U D I! N O T H IN G E V E N C O M E S C L O S E

school m enusWeek o f Jan. 25

BRIJNSWICK ACRES, CAMBRIDGE.CONSTABLE, GREENBROOK SCHOOLS

MONDAY

Hamburger on bun, French fries, fru it and chilled juice.

TUESDAY

Batter dipped fish submarine with shredded lettuce on frankfurter ro ll, cheese wedge, whole kemal com and fruit

WEDNESDAY

Minute steak on .steak ro ll, potatoes, vegetable and fruit

THURSDAY

Cheese dog on frankfurter ro ll, potato chips, chilled juice and fruit

FRIDAY

Pizza, tossed salad with dressing, fruit and homemade cake

South Brunswick High School

May contain a half pint o f whole or skim milk

M O N D A Y

LU N C H E O N #1 — Batter dipped fish submarine w'ith tartar sauce and cheese wedge.

C HO IC E OF TW O ; French fries,vegetable or fru it

LU N C H E O N # 2 — Cheese steak on steak roll-

C H O IC E OF TW O : French fries,vegetable or fru it.

LU N C H E O N #.2 - Spiced hamsandwich.

C HO IC E OF TW O ; French tries,vegetable or fru it.

juice.LUNCHEON #3 — Tuna salad sand­

wich.CHOICE OF TWO: French fries,

tossed salad with dressing or chilllcd juice.

FRIDAY

LUNCHEON #1 — Pizza.CHOICE OF TWO: Cole slaw, fruited

je llo or fruit.LUNCHEON #2 — Hamburger on

bun.CHOICE OF TWO: French fries, cole

slaw or fruited je lloLUNCHEON #3 — Salami sand­

wich.CHOICE OF TWO: French fries, cole

slaw or fruited jello.

Crossroads School

May contain a half pint ot whole or skim milk

M O N D AY

Oven friedLU N C H E O N #1 chicken w ith dinner ro ll

LU N C H E O N # 2 - Hamburger on bun.

LU N C H E O N # 3 — Bologna sand­wich.

Each o f the above luncheons w ill contain your choice o f two: later tots, vegetable or fru it

TflE S D AY

LU N C H E O N #1 M acaroni w ith meat sauce, bread and butter, tossed salad w ith dressing and fru it. ‘

LU N C H E O N # 2 - Batter dippedfish submarine w ith shredded lettuce and tartar sauce n steak ro ll and cheese wedge.

C HO IC E OF TW O : French fries or fru it.

LU N C H E O N # 3 — Cold submarine sandwich w ith lettuce and fru il

WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY

LU N C H E O N #1 - Hot meatballsubmarine.

C HO IC E OF TWO: French fries,vcgclablc or fru il

LU N C H E O N # 2 - G n llcd cheesesandwich.

C HO IC E OF TW O : French fries,vegetable or fru it

L U N C H U fN Peanut huuer andje lly sandwich.

C HO IC E OF TW O ; French fries,segetahlc or fru it.

W EDNESDAY

LUN C HEO N #1 - Hot turkey sand­wich w ith grav\

C HO IC E OF TW O : French fries, vegetable or fru it.

LUNCHFiO N # 2 - B IG BU K G E K : H A M B U R G E R CHEE.SE - LE TTU C E

T O M A T O - P IC K LE ON B U N ; French fries or fru it,

LU N C H E O N # 3 - - Cold submarine sanndwich w ith leliuce and fru it.

I H l R S D A Y

LUN C HEO N #1 Spaghelli or macaroni w ith meat sauce, bread and butler, tossed salad w ith dressing and ch illed ju ice.

LU N C H E O N # 2 — Frankfurter or ch ili dog on frankfurter ro ll,

C HO IC E OF TW O : French fries, tossed salad w ith dressing or ch illed

LU N C H E O N #1 — F ra iik lu r tc r on roll

C H O IC E OF FWO; W hole kernel corn, ch illed ju ice or tru it

LU N C H E O N # 2 - - Pizza C H O IC E O F T W O : V e g e ta b le ,

ch illed ju ice or fru itLU N C H E O N # fi Peanut butter ami

je lly sandwich.C H O IC E OF FWO: W hole kernel

corn, ch illed ju ice or Iru il.

THURSDAY

LU N C H E O N #1 — BIG Bt^RGER: H A M B U R G E R CHEESE - LE TFU C E - T O M A T O P IC K l.E ON HUN.

CHOICF; OF TW O Potatoes or fru il.LU N C H E O N # 2 Hoi turkey sand

wich w ith gravy,C H O IC E O F T W O P o ta to e s ,

vegetable or fru itLU N C H E O N # 3 Tuna salad sand

w ich.C H O IC E O F T W O : P o ta to e s ,

vegetable or fru it.Each o f the above luncheons w ill

contain your choice o f two: cole slawo fru it, fru ited jello.

D AILY SPECIALS

Large salad platters w ith bread and b u tte r, hom em ade soup , in d iv id u a l salads and desserts aiul prc-announccd specials.

M ENU SUB.IEI T TO CHANCfE

1 ATHLETIC SHOES ON SALE1 ETONIC CANVAS TENNIS SHOES >12” Reg.«22"

i FRED PERRY CANVAS TENNIS SHOES >16” Reg. ‘ 28"> \ ADIDAS STAN SMITH TENNIS SHOES >29” Reg.‘ 39"

ADIDAS ROD LAVER TENNIS SHOES >29” Reg. ‘ 3 9 "

3 S - PUMA HARDCOURT TENNIS SHOES >29” Reg. ‘ 4 7 "

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Qpp BROOKS VANTAGE RUNNING > 1 8 n Reg. >3 7 " ETONIC STREET FIGHTER > 1 9 w Reg. *39",

ATHLETIC CLOTHES ON SALESHIRTS t TOPS 9 ” REGUURLY $21,99 to $44,99WARM UPS *79” REGUIARLY $99.99 to $109.

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Thunday, jMMry 21,1982 THE CENTRJIL POST n-A

South Brunswick track team maintains winning record

W elcom ing developm entAmong South Brunswick ofticials on hand to celebrate the opening of the new corporate headquarters of Bellemead Development Corporation, developers of the Princeton Corporate Center, are (left to right): Jerry Bittner, Township Administer: Muriel Calvanelli: Kathleen Thorpe, Township Clerk; Mayor Paul Murray; and Daniel Brachfeld, executive vice president of Bellemead Development Corporation

library museB A L l.n i)IS ( tS S K i)

“ The Art o f Classic.)! B a !lc i"w i!t bo prc>ented ai the South BrunsvsicV. Public Library on Sunday. Leb 21 at 3 p m. This pro^rani vsill include a discnsxjon and demonstration ot this bciautilui art and vsili feature guest speaker. I.autie Abramson, of the Aparri School o f Dance in Princeton.

This event is free and open to the public, ft IS part ot “ AKsays on Sunday," a continuing program senes co-sponsored by the South Brunswick Cultural Arts Com­mission and the public library.

SEW I AX LAV\

The tax program entitled. “ How the New Tax Law Benefits > 'ou." has beenre sch ed u led a i the SciA^hl.ibrary for Monday. Feb 1 at 7;30 p.m. Sp-jakers w ill include an ailorncN amt a certified public accountant, they w ill dis- cu.ss IKA 's and retirement planning, the new Bconoinic Recovery Act and income tax and estate planning and w-ills.

This program is tree and of)cn to the public, but prc-rcgistration is necessary. To sign up please call the iibrars at (20!) K21-X224.

i k k n a ( ; i :k s a n d d r in k in (;

Teenagers and D rink ing" w ill be a progrant sjsonsorcd by the South ffruns- wick Public Library on beb. i 7 at H p.m. This progratit is primaniy directed toward parents and other adults who are concerned about the ever increasing use ot alcohol by young people.

Marcia Smith, executive director o f the Middlesex Council on Alcoholism, w ill be making the presenlaiutn and Icadittg the discussion Lopics to bo covered w ill i nc l ude recent t rends in teenage alcoholism, identilying the teenage user, drinking and driving, prevention of the problem, and what parents and the school

can do about drinking and drugs. An explanation of the Middlesex Alcohol and Substance Abuse Project w'ill also be given.

'['his program is public. Par further pre-register plea.se 2()t-82!-H224.

free and open to the intormation and to

call the library at

by John Puccio Special Writer

The South Brunsw ick w in ter track squad found itse lf w ith a record o f 4-3 this week after w inn ing one meet, then losing biMh ends o f a double dual meet.

On Tuesday o f last week, South Brunsw ick travelled to South R iver to beat the Rams. 49-28 Dave M olec set a personal best o f 42' 7 " in the shot pul to take first place in that event, Dave Larsen won the 55-m ctcr high hurdles in 8.6 seconds and N ick Sferrazza was a w inner in the 55-m ctcr dash in 6.7 seconds.

John R cil lopped a ll runners in the 4(X) meters, crossing the fin ish line in 56.0 and K evin Negron won the high jum p w ith a 5 ’ 6 " e ffo rt.

V ik in g coach Brian Josl was pleased w ith the way his team perfonned. “ The meet was held outdtx'jrs in 12 degree w eather." he said. "T h e conditions were not conducive to gotxl per­formances but we d id very' w ell, '

The conditions w-erc better Saturday when the V ik ings faced H am ilton East and Ham ilton West in the same meet at Lawrenceville w ith the meet w-as held indoors. vSoulh Brunsw ick lost to East59- 28 and wca* also beaten by West 54-44

Alan Campbell won (he 60-yard hur­dles for South Brunswick in 8.0. his best time ever, Sferrazza look first in the60- yard dash in 6 .5 . Marcus Bosenberg ran a 4:.‘'7 m ile — his bc'<t time this season to fin ish th ird in that event. Then, less than 20 minutes later, he placed lif th in the tw o-m ile in 1 1:10.

The V ik in g girls ran u n o lfic ia lly Sat­urday. Sandy Humphrey took first in the (XLyard dash in 7.7 and alst) ran the Icadoff leu o f the m ile rclav in 63,3. one

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o f the fa.siesi quarter miles ever in this area.

Dawn Richardson was second in the 6()-yard dash in 7.9 and Dot Kukfa broke her own school record in the shot pul w ith a tos.s o f 30’ 11. " She wa.s second in the event

Next Tuesday, the team w ill be at Jadwn G ym in Princeton for state Group II com petition. Every Group II team m the state should be represented there

WRESTLINGThe V ik in g w restling team split its

fastest tw o matches and now has a record o»' 4-2. The team beat North Brun.swick 44-18 last week and lost Monday to East B runsw ick. 4 2 -11.

Again.sl North Brun.swick. Dalton Featherston (115). Jtx.'! Nevins (135). Greg Patton (170) and Boh Schiff ( 1H8) all pinned their Uk s . Steve DiG ianno (180) won his snatch 17-2 and freshman Steve Crane was a 7-6 winner. Crane beat Dennis Edson. who was fourth in

the d istrict. M att Ta larick (148) and Spencer Craig (158) were winners by fo rfe it.

T hough the East Brunsw ick contest was not very close, V ik in g coach Tom Flanagan was not displeased. " I ’m not unhappy w ith the way we w res tled ." he said "E ast B runsw ick is ranked 15 in the entim stale but we did w ell. It was gtxxl experience fo r our kids ’

South Bninsw ick had three winners by decision, Fran W’hitc (122) won 7-1; l alarick was a 5-4 and Patton won 7-4

The V ik in g ju n io r varsity team beat the East Brunswick JV team the same day. .34-30. It w'as the first time in five years the V ik in g JVs have been able to defeat the ir East Brunsw ick counter­parts, The team is now 5-1.

The V ik in g frc.shmcn beat Coloniu last Thursday 42-21 but then lost 40-20 on Saturday to Madison Central The Madison team has won 29 in a row. The South Brun.swick freshmen record is 4-2.

‘Indignant Artists,’ MCC gallery exhibit

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Piotesi and social com nvn t from the 17th to (he 20th Ccniunes w ill l be the subject o f an exhib it cm ided. "T h e Indignant A r t is t" to be held at the Middlesex County College z\rl G allery. Monday. Jan. 2.3 through Friday. Feb. 12,

Forty-five graphic works on loan from the Prau Insiiiu tc in New Y o rk , w il l be displayed. Pt)titfcs. social change, hu­man rights and ant-war protest w il l be

among the U>pics considrod, Arti.sts in ­clude W illia m Hogarth, Thomas Nast. Kaihe K n o llw it/ , Jose Clement Orozco. Caumier Ron Cobb. O tto D ix . W illia m Gropper. Reginald Marsh. (iab<fr Peterdi and John Sloan.

The gallery is open Monday through Thursays frtm i 10 a m, to 3 p.m . and on Fridays from 10 a m (o 1 p.m . For further inform ation contact the O ffice o f Student A c iv itics at 548 6(KK). ext. 327,

Nobody knows your hometown

better than we do!A su b s c rip tio n b rin g s all your hom e to w n new s, sports , pe rsona litie s , rec ipes, schoo l new s and m ore , .p lus the fa n ta s tic S w a y C lass ified sec tion fille d w ith job s , se rv ices, th in g s to b uy and ren t, g rea t Real Estate lis tin g s all de live re d w ith yo u r m ail. A n d , th is inc lu d es T IM E OFF the w e e k ly e n te rta in m e n t g u id e w ith a rtic les and re v ie w s on the arts, fin e d in in g , w in e s , TV , m o v ie s , a n tiq u e s and a ca lendar o f all e ven ts h ap p e n in g in the area.

Subscrib* nowl Put your hometown newspaper in your maHbos.

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Please use ttus convenient order fwm todayThe Princeton Packet, 300 Witherspoon Street, P 0. Box 350, PrirKeion, N.J 08540

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IB-A THE CENTM L POST Thuf»d«y, JwiiMury 21,1982

Panelists ready for waste seminar

H alted b y w in terConstruction crews have not had much chance to get outside and work during the past few weeks. Photographer Mark Czajkowski

Community Services seeks award nominees

Spotted these manhole entrances sitting idle on Penn-Lyle Road West Windsor and caught them against the winter sunlight.

The panelists fo r “ M ov ing and Storage in New Jersey.” aconfcrence on the transport and disposal o f radioactive wastes, have been announced by Linda Stansfield. energy d irector o f the L>eague o f Women Voters o f New Jersey, The conference, to be held Jan 20. is cosponsored by the League and the D iv is ion o f C om m unity Education o f MiddlCvSCx County College.

“ W'e are very pleased to have representatives o f industry, government, and environmental groups on the pan­e ls .” M s. Stansfield said *‘W c w il l be able to hear all sides o f the issues involved and to ask questions o f the experts.

The panelists discussing “ The Tran.s- portation o f H igh and Low Level Wastes” include Douglas A . CrcKkctt. attorney-advisor. O ffice o f the C hie f C ouncil. Research and Special Programs Adm in istra tion. U S Department o f Transportation. He is a graduate o f the Yale Law S ch w l and is a member o f the Connecticut Bar, A former ch ie f o f the Standards D iv is ion . O ffice o f Hazardous Materials Regulation, he has also w ork­ed in the General Counsel's O ffice of the Department o f Transponation dealing w ith environmental matters,

Eugene J. Fisher holds a master s degree in radiation physics from Temple University and i.s (he former ch ie f o f the New Jersey Bureau ot Radiation Protec­tion. Currently, he is assistant d irector o f the Bureaus o f Radiation Protection.

Pesticides Contro l and the Environmen­tal Protection's D iv is ion o f Environmen­tal Q ua lity.

The c o o rd in a to r fo r “ R o ck la n d Citizens for Safe Energy.” Judith Kessler, has lobbied fo r legislation to control or p roh ib it transportation ol radioactive materials near population centers. Ms. Kessler is president o f the Rockland Audubon .Society,

[X inald F. Schutz is president o f Tclcdyne Isotopes. Inc., o f WestwexxJ Dr. Schutz is experienced in the day-to-day operating techniques o f his company, which transports radioactive materials.

During the luncheon. Peter Montague, professor at the Center for Environmen­tal Studies. Princeton U niversity, and project adm inistrator for the Hazardous Waste Re.scarch Program at the Prince­ton SchiM>l o f Engineering, w ill speak. Dr, Montague's subjeel w il l be “ An Understanding o f L o w ’ Level and High Level W a s te s "

I'hc panelists for the aftcriKKin session w ill discuss “ The Disposal ol Low l.evc! W astes.”

The Jan. 20 cHMilcrenec w ill take place at M iddlesex County College. Edi.son. Registration and coffee arc at ^):30 a m. w ith the first panel slated for 10 a m. Ihe conference w ill end at p m. Lunch IS included in the .S20 registration tec. Members td the League ot Wtnnen Voters w il! be ciiargcd $1.^

Further inform ation i.s avatlab!*? Irom the IxMgue at H(K)-7q2-SS36.

Tlte Princeton .Area C ouncil o f C om ­m u n i ty .S e r \ 1 c e s a n n o u n c e s th a t nominatons are sought fo r the Robert E. Clancy Award t«ir Outstanding Service as a \o lu m e e r The award, which honors the volunteer who best ex ­em plifies the sp irit ot direct-service v o l­untarism. was msniured la.si >car b \ Robert F. Cianev .Asstviales and the Massachusetts M utual L ife Insurance Company m coniim ction w ith the Coun- ».il ol c'om m unitx SerMccs. a member .igenev ot the Cmted V's as-Princelym •Area CL'' \muniUcs

Tc- .osure that the award -.oniinucs as an annual event. RotK-rt I. C lauc>. id Princeton, ha.s arranged to endow the program In appreciation o f M r Clan- ev's eenerositv. the award. ong ina lK named the Outstanding Sen ice as a Volunteer .Award has been renamed the Robert L Clancy .Award (or Outstanding Srvice js a \ oiunteer

M r. C lancy is the principa l m Robert E Clancy As.sociates. Inc. which represents the Massachu.scrts M utual L ife Insurance Com pany in the Princeton area and New ^'ork C ity , and is the founder o f C lancy-Paui. the new- Iv-ofX'ncd com puter store in the Prince­ton Shopping Center

Human service agencies, hospitals, I . IV 1C and Ira te rn a l o r g a n i /a h o n s , churches. Inends and members o f the c o m m u n ity are in v i te d to s u b m it nominations Nominees must live and ov work in the area covered bv the I 'n ile d Vk a>-PnnccU»n ,-\rea Com m unities and the C ouncil ot C 'omnuimty Services. Cranbury. K ingston and Ptamsoboro in •Middlc-sex County; G riggsiow n. .Mont­gomery and Rocky H ill in Somerset County; Last ^Vindsor. H ightsiown. Princeton Borough. lYmceton fow nsh ip and West 'A 'lndsor in .Mercer County; and adiacent areas ot H opew ell. Law- rerH.e and South B runsw ick Townships.

Classified{C lassified c o n tin u e d fro m page 16H)

Real Estate for Sale

KENDALL PARK — By own- er Lovely 3 bedroom, fire­place. new kitchen & carpets, targe fenced lot N Y. bus Below market mortgage -f owner financed. $76,90C. Call Pat, >9-921-8718

Too Late To Classify

FURNISHED ROOM — Hill- shorouah Gentleman pref . knehen pnv Ref & sec de­posit re qu ire d . 2P1-874- 4879,

TWIN RIVERS — 3 BR, 1'/? bath, A va il 2 '14 All ap­pliances. gas grill, move-m cond S475/mo utils. 609-443-4941.

BABYSITTER Required — 2 to 3 afternoons.week Call 609-924-9478 after 6 c>m

REAL ESTATE — Develop- menl Company looking for adm inistrative assistant in the commercial field Multi­faceted ]Ob: contact with pub­lic, assist with selling/renting- managing space. Sleno and. or dictaphone required Con- struction^archileciurat back­ground preferred Call 609- 799-2888

ROOMMATE WANTED — to share conver'ently located house in Princeton Junction with two young bachelors Call 609-799-3922 after 6 pm

ATTENDANT — for disabled Princeton Univ. graduate stu­dent Full & part time, nurses aide training helpful. Must have car 609-924-0368, bet 10-12 am, 6-7 pm.

Too Late To Classify

TAKE CHARGE Office Man- ager — Bookkeeper, oppor­tunities in expanding co Con­tact Princeton Caterers, 609- 924-0685!

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSIS­TANT — (Word Processing) Typing, steno, word proces­sing skills required. Mag card A and office systems six. Cali Personnel 201-231-7120 for a p p o in tm e n t. S o m erse t County Government, EOE, M/F

KENDALL PARK — 4 bdrm, iQ liv rm, den, eat-in kit, $595 mo + utils. 609-799-3165

Too Late To Classify

h o u s e m a t e s Needed — 2m.'f 10 join 2 In 5 bedroom modem model home in Ew­ing Lease required Call Bob 6O9-803-3235 evenings or Roger 609-921-2068 days

MERCER COUNTY Com­munity Action Council Head Start — Head Teacher must have Degree in eariv child­hood educ & NJ certificate in E C-E. 2 Of more yrs, re­levant exp. w.'preschool dis­advantage chiWren & their families At least 1 yr of su­p e rv is o ry exp S a la ry $12,720 Send resume to MCCAC Head Start, 2238 Hamilton Ave , Trenton, NJ 08619 D eadline Jan. 28, 1982

FOUND — orange & white cat with black collar Nesha- nic area. Friendly. Owner of good home 201 369-7615. 369-4963,

3 BR HOUSE to Share — w^2prof, women r>ear Nassau St $300 y/3 utils. Avail im-med. Call 609-799-0091 or aft. 5 pm 921-2725

LARGE OLIVE Green Carpet — 15x11. matching ha*r pad Sacrifice Best offer, 609- 924-6065.

FRENCH TUTORING — By professional teacher from Rutgers University All levels Cal! 609-921-0372.

1981 TOYOTA COROLLA —4 dr deluxe, 5 spd, a/c, am; tm tape, many extras, best offer 609-587-2542

FULL TIME Housekeeper — Live-in or not to care for two children and house in Prince­ton. References & resume to Box #04266 c/o Princeton Packet

RN’S & LPN'S — part time relief positions available at our conven ien tly located nursing facility Inquire about our special weekend pay rates, Call 609-896-0016

PAINTED MATCHING Furni­ture — 2 desks w/drawers, 2 chairs, bookcase Bargain $30 609-799-1475

LIQUOR STORE & business avail — Modem, well estab­lished D-license $195,000 plus inventory

STULTS REALTY CO. Realtor

37 N. Mein St. Cranbury, N.J. 609-395-0444

Eves: 609-655-1881

THE BREAD Factory — is looking for people experi­enced in bakery coun ter sales Interesting A reward­ing work. Call Mr Paul be­tween 1-4pm 609-799-9743

CLEANING Of Model Homes — 2 days weekly Days 201 - 369-3250. eves 297-6744

COMPUTER OPERATOR — Operate IBM 4331 DOS JCL Maintain tape 1‘brary. Expon- enced or recent computer school grad Cal' Personnel 201-231-7120 for appoint­ment Somerset County Gov­ernment. EOE. M/F.

Atax break every year and up to half-a-million when you retire.That’s

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$.38,360IRAat Midlantic.

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S2 ,0 0 0 A n n u a l C o n tr ib u tio n

IRATax-ShdteredAccumulation

500

450

400

350

300

250

200

150

lOO

50

Years I5 20 25 30

Retirement Accumulation$2,000 annual contribution made at the begiqninq of the year at I }% annual interest rate, compounded monthly

The IR.A rules have changed A nd for a change. In yo u r fa v o r l i‘ you re a wage earner and under age 7 0 v . yo u ’re eligible for an Individual Retirement Account. Lver. if you re already covered by a com pany pension plan, .And M idlanlic 's new IRA can be your greatest tax shelter . your best source of retirement dollars.

J u s t Like H aving U ncle Sam C o n trib u te to Your R e tire m e n t P lan!

Lor all imenLs and purposes, your new IR.A helps you turn lax dollars into re tirem ent incom e. Dollars you m ight have lost to incom e taxes are in.stead available to build your IRA

. adding substantially to your re tirem ent nest egg.(Now. you can deduct up to $ 2 ,0 0 0 s tra ig h t o f f the

to p o f y o u r g ross Federa l incom e . $ 2 ,2 5 0 if you include your non-working spouse. $ 4 ,0 0 0 a year if your spouse is w orking, too! In fact, anyone in your fam ily can open their own IRA and contribute !0 0 % of their annual .salary or $ 2 .0 0 0 ,whichever is less. Rem em ber. You don't have to Item ize deductions on your fax return to take advantage of the IRA tax break.

W ith IRA your contributions a.nd earned interest are tax-sheltered until you w ithdraw them when you retire.’*' A t that tim e, you presum ably could be in a lower tax bracket. So m oney that would have been lost to taxes earns interest instead . . . year after year. It adds up fast!

M id ian tic ’s IR A G ives You a Choice.

Choose our Variable Rate. 18-M onth Certificate of Deposit The rate fluctuates m onth ly fo r those preferring money- market-sensitive returns. O r. select a Fixed Rate Certificate of Deposit that guarantees the rate for the full term of the certificate. You can open e ither with as little as $250 ,

(Jf course, your deposits at M idlantic are safe, secure and insured by the FD!C up to $10 0 ,0 0 0 . W hat could be better?

31ANTICMidlantic National Bank Cranbury

The E arlier You C o n tr ib u te ,The M ore IRA E arns For You.

C ontribute your m axim um legal am ount to your IRA at the beginning of e a d i year and you II add tens ol thousands of dollars to your potential accum ulation, as com pa if'd to waiting until year's end.

Difference In R etirem ent A ccum ula tion By M aking C ontribu tion Early in The Year

(Baaed on 1 1 A n n u a l In te re a l R ate . C o m p o u n d e d /A o n th ly )

A c c u m u la t io n P eriod2 0 y e a rs 2 5 y e a rs 3 0 y e a rs 3 5 y e a rs

$ 2 ,0 0 0 c o n tr ib u t io nm a d e a t th e b e g in n in g o f e a ch y e a r; $ 1 5 3 ,0 1 3 $ 2 7 8 ,6 0 2 $ 4 9 5 ,7 3 6 5 8 7 1 ,1 4 2

$ 2 ,0 0 0 c o n tr ib u t io n a t er>d o f e a ch ye a r; $ 1 3 7 ,1 3 5 $ 2 4 9 ,7 0 0 $ 4 4 4 ,3 1 6 $ 7 8 0 ,7 4 5

A d d it io n a l a c c u m u la t io n th ro u g h e a r ly c o n tr ib u t io n : $ 1 5 .8 7 8 $ 2 0 .9 0 2 $ 5 1 .4 2 0 $ 9 0 .3 9 7

If you want to make your total IRA contribution right now but don't have the funds on hand, borrow with an !RA-m atic Loan* from M idlantic. The interest on your loan can be deductib le if you itemize deductions on your tax return. And. the interest you earn in your IRA is tax-sheltered.That can put you dollars ahead.

stop in!

O ur IR.A and help

Specialist will be happy to answer all your questions you open your IRA.

* ! e d e ra l rp g u ld iio n s re q u ire j s u b b ia n lia l in le 'p s i p e n .iH v '-u > .ilh d fc iw a l o f l im e d e p o s its b e fo re n id iu n tv W ilh d rd v .< jis f io m dn IR A P lan b e fo re ag e $ 9 ‘ / a re ta x a b le in ih e ye a r o f w ith d ra w a l a n d a 'e su b je c t to a la x p e n a lty T h is ad is d e s ig n e d to h e ip y o u u n d n s ta n d th e b e n e fits ui h a v in g an IR A .A ny th a r ls o r tax .n fo rn > a h o n a re p ro v id e d fo r i l lu s tra t io n o n ly a n d m ay n o t r e l le r t a< lu a l ra te W e a re p ro v id in g th e a b o v e in fo r m a t io n w ith th e u n d e rs ta n d in g th<it M id la n t ic is n o t e n g a g e d in re n d e r in g le g a l, tax d c c o u n lin q o r in v e s tm e n t se rv ice s

1 A n u n s e c u re d , s h o rt te rm p e rs o n a l m s la llm e n i lo a n th e p ro c e e d s o f w h u h < an be u se d fo r an y p u rp o s e

M a in Office32 North Main Street

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Plainsboro OfficePlainsboro & Schalks Road

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South Brunewick OfficeGeorge's Road

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Monroe Towntbip OfficeForsgate Drive

Monroe Township

fcyudi OppoMunily (.f'tjer Eoudi (yppornmiiy ( fnpi(,>pi

THE P1UNCET0N PM KET

l>M! Jawnimji l/xlgr.r THE CENTJUH POST WINDSOR MIGHTS HERJH D

Every week find in this section. ‘ ILLSROROUGH BEACOti rhe Mdnville News

I h e I i n n k l i n W S RF ( O R D

(l I)c t f r n n b u r n ^ r c o o

Classified Advertising" E i g h t F o r C e n t r a l J e r s e y "

V W e e k o f J a n u a r y 2 0 - 2 2 , 1 9 8 2l - B /

Business Business Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help WantedOpportunities Opportunities

PROFITABLE Luncheonette business for a sale in Pen­nington. Call after 5 pm, for details 609-466-3613.

MASON — Licensed Florida contractor has position avail­able tor ambitious person witling to relocate to Florida. Excellent partnership/profit sharing arrangements possi­ble. Must be experienced in all phases of concrete and masonry construction. Call for details 609-799-2828 or 609-452-2251 nights.

E A S T W IN D S O RTOWNSHIP — Deli. Good gross Jamesway Shopping Center Excellent, condtiion Ample Parking. Owner retir­ing. Terms available.

JOHN SIMONE REALTY REALTOR (609) 882-1105

$60,00/HUNDRED Secunng - stuffing envelopes!! Offer details Rush stamped self- addressed envelope Impe­ria l P -594 X I 7410 Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33318

COINS W ANTED — Top prices paid. You owe it to yourself to check into this ad Sound good? Send selt- a dd ressed s tam ped en­velope & $.25 sen/ice fee to Brown.CBl0-1091,PO Box 1403, Trenton, NJ 08618

BEAUTY SALON — Well established, excellent loca­tion, Hightstown area. Asking $6000. Call 609-298-0031 af­ter 6 pm

RESTAURANT ~ success­ful established business in historic renovated g^ift mill, Listed as ooa

only lunch. Great potential Business & equipment

$55,000

WEIDEL REALTORS (609) 921-2700

SWING LOAN Wanted — of $15,000, collateral property worm $150,000 Call 609- 259-9211

ADVERTISING BUSINESS for sale. Profitable advertis­ing sales rep business in cen­tral New Jersey Ongoing contracts for exclusive adver­tising sales representation With lo c a l p u b lic a t io n s . Opportunity to get into an estab lished and grow ing advertising rep business Advertising or safes experi­ence advisable Can be run from your home Bank financ­ing available. Owner retiring Phone or write H C Agency, 609-655-4010. P.O. Box 10, Cranbury, N.J 08512.

RESTAURANT CONCES­SION — in well known tavern. Grossing $225,000 year Op­tion to buy tavern VR Busi­ness Brokers of Central N J 609-989-8349.

SPORT SHOE Repair Busi­ness — excellent profit Full or part lim e Reasonably priced. Call Jim 609-443- 6291.

WICKER FURNITURE Busi­ness — for sale in suburban Princeton area Full price of $10,000 IS cost of inventory. J T Boyer Realty, Realtor, 609- 921-1805

ADDITIONAL INCOME — Develop financial independ­ence with your own business. Riskless Up to $20,000 pari time possible. Call for your appointment workdays. 9- noon. 609-448-4383.

M IN I-M A U SPACE — for rent at $250 per mo. in Mont­gomery Shopping Center. Ideal for part-time or secon­dary business, sales help can be provided. J.T. Boyer Real­ty, Realtor, 609-921-1805

SELLER FINANCING — 2 bldqs on Commercial Corner acre 2 story store plus 5 BR house (com m ercia l too l). Ample parking. Easy terms: $22k dow n. SAC RIFIC E sale.

HOMES OF QUALITY r ealto r s

443-1313 1

REAL ESTATE AND — in­surance agents, auto sales and other professionals. In­terest rates and in fta iion affecting your commission or income? Earn $700 to $5000 per month part lime while building your own business in marketing and wholesale dis­tribution, Many benefits. De­ta ils by appointment. Call evenings 215-943-1356.

STATIONERY BUSINESS — for sale with or without building Gross $400,000, with substan­tial potential for increase in de­veloping suburban location J.T Boyer, Realty. Realtor. 609-921-1805.

IF YOU WOULD — like to earn an additional $20,000 or more & are presently occu­pied in public reaitions, train­ing, motivation or teaching, call 609-443-3014

ESTABLISHED WORD Pro­cessing and typing service for sale ^ the hean of Princeton ... - j^iftstrict Call 609-

INVESTORS Of Partners ~mir>»mum of $100,000 each for a ooat related business H isto rica l & com m erc ia l, already have the approvals & license. Call 609-394-2635.

SATISFIED WITH your pre­sent work'^ — Make a new life with Shaklee. Good income, bonus car & travel can ail be you's Cal! Fred Campbell, 609-259-9817

Help Wanted

SUPERVISOR/TYPIST — Rapid, accurate typist sought to serve as lead typist & su­pervisor in small typing pool Ability to schedule & proof work essential- Office^super- visory experience required Knowledge Memory typewri­ter helpful or will train. Grow­ing Princeton firm, uall 609- 924-3463 EOE

r-ULL TIME — Cook needed tor lunches 6 dinners for 50 people. Call 609-896-1036.

E S T A B L I S H E D WHOLESALE Business — Operate from home, set your own hours.Good profits VR Business Brokers of Central N J.. 609-989-8349

ESTABLISHED DAY CARE— Nursery (&cit'ty. sta le approved. Business and properly to be sold. Asking $184,900. Century 21 Krol, Realtors 609-924-7575. 882- 5000

MAKING MONEY “Working Af Home” — be flooded with offers Offers, details, rush stamped self-addressed en­velope & 25c service fee to Brown, Dept M, P.O Box 1403, Trenton, NJ 08618.

NATIONAL CREDIT CORP— makes ioans to homeown­ers to purchase businesses Phone 609-396-7500 or 201- 246-4883

GETTY PERSONNELCLERICAL

Composer Operator $240 Word Processor Typist

$10K ‘ •Receptionist to SiOK

Me - Heat Transfer ME - StressME - project & research Chem Eng - epoxy resins Chem Eng ■ soft goods Chem Eng • organic process Sys Eng - data scope Physicist - Thermo Dynamics EE -BSrMS-design EE - analog design EE - Hardware Field Tech - 20% travel Chemist - rubber compounds Supv - union exp Mold Maker

GETTY PERSONNEL Rt. 130

Hightstown 609-448-6500 609-896-2323

HOMEMAKER EAST WINDSOR AREA

to assist young mother tem­porarily handicapped with cooking, cleaning & shop­ping. Must have car & flexi­ble hours. Call after 6 p.m. 609-448-8697.

PART TIME — D river to transport elderly physician from Kend, Pk, to visit his wife in Princeton Hospital & also to do supermarket shopping, etc. You would use our Pon­tiac & could bring your own children along in car. if nec. $5 per hr. 201-297-2525.

WANTED RELIABLE dedi­cated Groom — to work with standard-breds at Show- place Farm Experience with horses a requirement. Will train (he right applicant. Call a t^ f 4 p.m. 609-443-1208,

R ecycle

F U L L /P A R T T im e H e lp Wanted — in record store, m u s ic a l b a ckg ro u n d re­quired. 609-924-8296.

TYPIST NO FEE

JOIN★SELECTIVE^ ★ TEMPS ★

Call Renee or Nancy 609-896-9470

3131 Princeton Pike LawrenceviHe, N.J.

AEROBIC DANCEINSTRUCTOR

To teach in Princeton. Will tra in . Dance experience necessary. Call 201-238- 6115,

COUPLES OR SINGLES — Management training, se­rious about earning $1000 1 a month commission, & who have 10-20 hrs a week tc trade for it. Interviews by appointment only. Call 201- 821-6196.

TYPIST

Full lime for environmental consulting firm. Minimum 80 wpm. Some clerical duties Must be willing to learn word processor - exp in this area is a plus Modern congenial office. Convenient location Permanent position Excel­lent salary & benefits. Contact Eileen at 201-846- 8800. Princeton Aqua Scien­ce. 789 Jersey Ave . North Brunswick.

EOE M F

A c^H jntan t To $22K GROWING COMPANY

Degreed 3 years experi­ence, private or public Heavy conso lida tions. Excellent spot. All benefits Never a fee. Call Irene Carter 609- 896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL★

3131 Princeton Ptke Office Park Bldg. 4 LawrenceviHe. N.J.

RECEPTIONIST/SWITCHBOARDAn individual with a

cheerful business like manner, is sought to fill the position of recep- tionist/switchboard oper atof tor a busy 35 em­ployee firm. Applicant should present an at­tractive appearance and friendly telephone per sonality. We offer ex­cellent employee benefits and a pleasant working environment,

I.E. Shaffer 4 Co.3! Airpark Rd

CN62 Princeton NJ 08540 609 921 0644

TYPISTW ord processing op­portunity for person with excellent typing skills. Must type 60-65 wpm. Will train right person for r a p id ly g r o w in g marketing research firm. Profit sharing, excellent medical coverage, life in surance, other fringes. Salary commensurate w ith experience and ability. Please call (609} 921-8100, B e rn ice Cushing.

TOTAL RtStARCH GROUP 1101 Slate Rd

Box 307. Princeton. N J,

PART TIME

AUDIO VISUAL TECHNICIAN

Required individual with electronics background tor repair of AV equip­ment. Must be available to work during school hours. 10-15 hours week Call lor application or send resume to: Prince­ton Regional Schools, PO Box 711. Princeton. N J 0 8 5 4 0 (6 0 9 )924-5600 X 220.

an equa l oppo rlun ily en ip loyef affin-nalive action em ployer

ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANT

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY

Expanding, professional firm seeks an energetic, mature ind iv idua l who p o sse sse s e x c e lle n t typing, transcription & or ganizational skills.

You should possess in­i t i a t iv e and h a v e p re fe ra b ly p re v io u s supervisory experience, if you seek a growth op­portunity, we offer you the challenge Reply to Box 04246 CO Prince ton Packet,

EDITORIAL/PUBLISHER TRAINEE"Jumof Position”

Learn ail aspects of publishing with small 20 year company. Pleasant working environment. Excellent opportunity for extremely capable college graduate. English or Journalism major with top grades, honors or Phi Beta Kappa. Excellent command of grammar, typing, interest in history, writing, editing, research, advertising, and promotion. Must be interested in automobiles. Send r«mjme or photo copies of work;

221 Nassau St., Princeton, NJ 08540

IN S ID E S A LE SELECTRONIC TEST EQUIPM ENT

Excellent opportunity for a dynamic and ambitious in­dividual with technical background and some sales experience to represent a progressive company with top line recorders and measurement instruments.Work consists primarily of customei lelephune contacts from our main office i’> Princeton Jet with logical backup of our independent reps in certain assigned territories.

Pleasant surroundings and benefits Please call Robert Ansel (609) 799-6282

u N s m i N c .Princeton Jet,, NJ

KEY TO DISC OPERS.

EXPERIENCEDT e m p o ra ry P o s itio n s at

E. T. S. ■ 1 s i &■ 2 nd S h ifts

If you have 1 2 years experience and general knowledge of keying data from various forms using both alpha and numeric keys oui temporary openings should be of interest to you. Salary up to $5.34 per hour.

Please call Lillian Everett for an interview appointment

(609) 734-1639

KDLIC.ATIONTK,STIN(;SF,1<V1CK

Rosedale Rd Princeton, N J

af' equal opponunity em ployef Mit-

ON-LINE TRAINING fj ADMINISTRATOR>^

E x c e lle n t O p p o r tu n ity For P hys ics o r E n g in e e r in g L ib ra r ia n

P ro f ic ie n t inO n -L in e L ite ra tu re R e tr ie v a l.r

■ This high visibility position in our INSPECH department requires public speakingH ability combined with on-line literatureH searching experience Position requires

flexibility to travel 50% of time. IEEE, located in Piscataway, NJ offers an ex- cellent salary and benefit package.Send resume which MUST include sdlary 'cquirements to D onnq M itY r* tta

445 Ho«s Lone P itc o to w a y , NJ 0S854

THE I n s t it u t e o f

E l e c t r i c a l AND

E l e c t r o n i c s

E n g in e E r s in c

Equal Opportunity Employer M-F

PERSONNEL

TEC H N IC A LR EC R U ITER

This expanding Fortune 500 firm located in central New Jersy is seeking an addition to staff m the area of technical recruit­ingResponsibilities include both local and national r e c r u i t in g fo r d a ta processing and other technical areas. Individ­ual should be able to work independently and assist in other Human Resource areas as well Some travel is required. The successful candidate Will have 1-3 years ex­perience in recru iting some technical positions. In addition, this individual must be able to deal ef­fectively with all levels of management.We offer an excellent ca­reer opportunity as well as competitive saiary and benefits if you meet the qualifications as outlined, please forward a detailed resume including salary history and requirements in complete confidence toEMPLOYMENT MANAGER

P.O. BOX CN-5237 PRINCETON, N.J. 08540An Equal Opportuntty Em ploye:

r M IN IC O M P U TE R P R O G R A M M E R /A N A L Y S T

If you have the following

.. .h ig h p ro fe s s io n a l g o a ls

. . .m in im u m 3 y e a rs e x p e r ie n c e in IBAA S e rie s ''!ED X/ED L p ro g ra m m in g la n g u a g e is h ig h ly p r e f e r r e d h o w e v e r

...C O B O L , BASIC , D IBOL o r F o r tro n on b u s in e ss a p p lic a t io n s m a y b e a c c e p ta b le .

.. .s o lid k n o w le d g e o f m in ic o m p u te r sys te m s.Wc hove a rew ard ing opporfunHy aw aiting you f

Join Petroleum Data Corporation, a well established and rapidly growing leader in providing minicomputer systems to the oetroleum distribution in dustry Our Princeton headquarters, provides marketing and support for IBM beries'l minicomputers to our clients nationwide.Your responsibilities will include writing applications programs in EDX'EOL for complete systems using fully developed specifications, performing custom programming based on client requests and maintaining our preserit group of application programs. In addition, you will be involved with the distribution, orogram fixing and-'or enhancement of present client base as well as customer interface via modern connections.This career position offers an excellent salary and comprehensive benefits plus exceptional personal and professional growth potential Please send your resume, including salary history, in complete confidence to Betty W, Birch, Personnel Manager

PETROLEUM DATA CX)RPORATION

1101 S to lo R ood P r in c o to n , N . J. 0 8 5 4 0

Equal O p pfjnun in Employe: M. F

EARN A GOOD income — While you train for a profes­sional career in Sales. Cali Mr Cohen, 609-298-5852. e.O.E, m/f

FULL TIME — machine oper­ators for a light gauge sheet metal manufacturing plant. Must be willing to work at least 40 hrs week. Will train interested persons. Please apply at comer of Old Trenton & South Mam in Cranbury bet. 9am & 4pm. Gilbert A, Cheney Inc 609-395-0350.

SEEKING INDIVIDUAL who loves people and loves to assist — (or position in uni­que 4 attractive dental office ExperiefYce in dental assist­ing required. Call 609-799- 4422 8am -5pm Tuesday through Friday

INTERVIEWERS NEEDED — p.t for central telephone facility. Day. evening 4 wknd hrs available Flexible sche­duling. Pleasant atmosphere. Will train HS grad Call Total Research. 609-921-8053

EXECUTIVE DIRECTORMercer County

Women's Cenlei of Womanspace Inc.

Challenging opportunity lot ex perienced administrator to lead and direct emergency residen tial shelter tor female victims of domestic violence and then children i20K t depending on experienceCandidate should oossess rele vant advanced degree and strong history in supervision program and physical manage­ment and fund raising Send resume including saiary hislorv hv fpb 1 to Search Commit lee P 0 Box 7182. Trenton N I 08628 AAEOf

PRINCETONEMPLOYMENT

AGENCYBy Marjorie M, Hailiday

SPECIALIZING IN (^ALITY PERMANENT

AND TEMPORARY...A Full Service Agency

Clerical through Staff Placement

Personalized Counseling20 NASSAU STREET, SUITE 408

(609) 924 9134

CARPENTER

Prefer individual with 5 y e a rs c a rp e n try e x ­perience to a ss is t in maintenance of the dis­trict building and ability to tram maintenance per­sonnel Apply to Prince­ton Regional Schools, P.O. Box 711, Princeton, NJ 08540

equal oppo rlunifv em pioyei afiirm ative action em ploye:

RECREATIONTHERAPIST

fUUTIMEPERMANENT POSITION

Progressive psychiatric hospital has an opening in fhe Adjunctive Therapies Dept, tor a Registered Recreation Therapist Experience (psychiatric preferred) in active games and s p o ils . A Bachelor s

Recreation is necessary Excellent working con­d it io n s and fr in ge benefits. Please submit resume w ith salary requirements to:

Personnel Office

Carrier FoundationHeik- Mt*,*- kWA nH":

Lqufli Opporiimity f-mpinye: M-F

Programming DirectorGrowing, aggressive central New Jer­sey new spaper pu b lishe r seeks hard-working, hands-on person with local prograi-nming experience to head up news programming effort on local cable system. Must be a do-er and le a d e r. J o b re q u ire s u s in g s tu d io a n d remote equipment Ability to edit, de­velop programming and advertising a must. Successful applicant to work with newspaper staff. Good company to work for. E xce llen t loca tion Benefits. Please send resume and salary requirements to Box # 04236. c.'o The Princeton Packet

equa l O pportunity em p loye: W (

TO RE PL Y TO A P R I N C E T O N P A C K ET BOX N U M B E R

A d rire ss your re ji ly to th i- s [n T if i, Box nurnher, r. o Tin., P riiii.r-ton Pat ke l, P 0 Box 350, Pnncrrton, N J 08540

R efilies to p .rcket t>ox rrum tirns s lio u td tjr; rnailrrd in ,j IcUnr s i/n r-n vo lope , O versizt; c n v rd o p fs .inrf [),-ick,ipr!s w ill tie helri for p ick up at The P ackr'l o ffice

The P r i n e e l o n P a e k e f N e w s p o p tv r 300 W i t h c r ’i p o o n SI P O B o x 350

Princefon N J 03540 609 924 3250

South S om erse l N e w sp ap e rs 740 5 Mam St

M o n v ille N J 08835

701i 775 3300

8 - WAY CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING FORMr

1 " r ■

— - -

•one square fo r each le t te r n um be r ip o ce o r p u n c tu a tio n

4 L INES - 1 I N S E R T I O N ...............................................................$7.003 I N S E R T I O N S , n o c h a n g e s , p a i d b e f o r e b i l l i n g . . $11.00

l l b i l le d o d d sOC b i l l in g c h a rg e

N A M E

ADDRESS

C IT Y S T A T E -Z IP -

C LASS IFIC ATIO N INSERTIONS A M O U N T PAID

All Classified ads appear automatically in all 8 Packet newspapers The Princeton Packet. The Lawrence Ledger, The Central Post, Windsor Mights Herald, Tfte Cranbury Press, The Manville News. The Franklin News Record and the Hillsborough Beacon. Ads may be mailed Of phoned in. The deadline for new ads is 5 p.m Monday if they are to be properly classified. Cancellations cannot be ac­cepted after noon on Monday "Too Late to Classify" ads will be accepted until noon Tuesday

RATES: A Classified Ad costs $7.00 for up to 4 lines for one insertion, or if originally orderr^d, tr>o changes), $4,00 additional for 2 consecutive weeks or issues, the 3rd cc-''b8€utive insertion is FREE. Thereafter,

each consecutive insertion only costs $3 00 if placed with original order Call for informatior^ on the small charge for ad ditional lineage.

Ads may be displayed with white space margins and/or additional capital letters at $9.00 per m cfi Box numbers are $3.(X) extra per order or per month

TtRMS: There is a 50C billing charge, if ad IS not paid in advance Personals, Situations Wanted Housesilting, Apartment Sublets, Wanted to Rent or Share and all out of area and moving ads, are payable with order. This r>ewspaper is not responsible for errors r->o ( co rrec ted by the advertiser im m ed ia te ly TolTowirig the f irst p u b li^ t io n of the ad.

2-BClassified Advertising Week of January 20 - 22, 1982

Help WantedREAL ESTATE Career — Come join us. .Join WeKJel, d iscover the opportunities ava iia t^ in workiri9 with one of the area s oldest, largest & most successful firms. Ex­perience preferred but not necessary - our tra in ing makes the difference! To be­come a Real Estate profes­s io n a l ca ll W eide l Rea! Estate. Ir>c. at your choice of locaboo for confidential inter­view. Pennihgton O ^ e , Earl Sneddon, 609-7o/’ -1500. P rince ton O ffice, Estelle O 'Connell. 609-921-2700: Lawrence Office. Tern Hale. 609-896-1000: East Windsor Office. Sandy McDermott, 009-448-6200: Airport Office, Judy Cherry, 609-883-6950.

Help Wanted He^j Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

Banking To $12KTELLER

Experienced Tellers. Excel­lent benefits Never a fee. Call 609-896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNELS

3131 Prlncaton P ita Omca Park Bldg. 4 LawrancavBa. N.J.

SECURITY Guards, perma­nent 8 part time. Middlesex County. H ightstown Law- renceville Areas Uniforms fum. All ages For appt.. call ^1-329-6021 btw 9 a m,-4 p m. Equal Opportunity Em­ployer.

SALES REP — Major c»r- poration, high technology product Business or Market­ing degree. Comprehensive trainmg & benefits. $14-15K * commission, expenses,

etc. Call Ms Neuman (609) 896-1183 P Robert Dann Personr>el 134 Franklin Cnr Rd________________________

P R O G R A M M E R S — To $35K. lrTH>ioment mirWmicro based systems in a com­m unications environment. Fortran. Pascal. "C". Assem­bly. PU1. Excellent future F Pd. Call 609-683-0800 Place Mart Consultants, spe­cialists in EOP. 1 Palmer Sq. Princeton 06540

O erk Typist to $10,800 PBtSONNEL Oe»T.needs your 50 typing to

process medical claims with insurance carriers and docu­ment control ol en^)loyee sta­tus. Bright beginner or re­entering work market OK Corp. headquarters. Out­standing benefits Company paid fees.ASK FOR LORRAINE DAVIS

OfTICEIHHTEK

Rl 130 at Black Horse U . No. Brunswick. MJ 06902

201-297 1230

SECRETARYPosition available for a secretary with 3-6 years experience typing 55 wpm and steno 80 WPM. Word processing experiertce on either wang or vydec a plus

We offer a 35 hour work week, liberal company benefits including dental insu rance and an educational assistance plan. Salary is $230 $250 per week

interested applicants, please stop by to com plete an application at Rte 1. South Brurrswick, or send a resume tO'

Associate Personnel Manager

Wall StfNt Journal P 0, Box 300

Princeton, N, J. 08540Equal OppofTunirv Employer

W H A T 'S YOUR NEW YEAR'S

RESOLUTION?Nei5 PfOtec' lob Career' Disccve’ YOij'-r ba/ners lo

Gr'uOS now loirmng V ' 'Rve you nai't Dav time

ev>-. i.L avaiidb*NVtSl IN tOUR5fU NOW

S *eeK5 S3b Call 609-921-0308

Arista Concepts\ndividval Career

C oun se /ing A va ifa b /e

SALES PERSONS RECRUITERS SECRETARIES

Technical background Required Send resume orcail.

KTS50 Conover Rd

Hightstown. NJ 08520609/443S15I

TO EARN GOOD MONEY AS AN AVON

REPRESENTATIVE. C a ll

609-443-5764609-587-0807

or 201-359-1535

SPOT WELDER

Experienced spot w e lde r needed. Good salary and benefits. Call Per­sonnel Dept., 609- 466-3400 between 9- 3,

CLERK TYPISTP A R T T IM E

Looking for conscientious person to help with general office duties Some typing and answering of telephones. Pleasant working conditions and fringe benefits

Please call Robert Ansel |G09) 799 6282

U N SE ISIN C .p r m c e t o o J c f . N J

SECRETARY■SIOM-SIO 5M annually)

P e rs o n n e lln s u ra n c e Dept., good typing n ee d e d . E x c e lle n t company working con ditions and benefits. Call Joe Massone, 201-297 0100.

RHONE POULENC. Inc.Black Horse Lane

Monmouih junction Nj 0885?Equal Opporiuniry Empiove* M F

CREDITREPRESENTATIVE

Company seeking candidates with 1-2 years of collections experience in an industrial manufacturing or distribution environment Successful candidates should have proven experience m handling collections, credit investigations and opening new accounts. Musi be familiar with financial statements. Excellent starting salary and benefits package Rush resume and salary requirements to: Manager of Employment

/Slorelcon o r t h A M E R IC A N PHILIPS

LIG HTING CORPORATION Bank St. H ig h ts to w n N . j OB520

Equal Opponuntrv EmpioYe' W f

D irw to r o f M ailing on tt IPu/tiivation

Person experienced in operation of A M multilith p rin ting m achine and other duplication copy equipm ent. M ust also supervise o ffice staff, handling first class and b u lk m a ilin g and be responsible for ordering general office supplies. Pleasant academic sur­roundings, 4 weeks va­cation after 1 year, ex­cellent benefit package, 35 hour work week Please send resume to.

W.E.LP O. Box 29

Princeton, N.J 08540An Equal O poortun ily Em pioyet

SOFTWARESPECIALIST

If you want more involvement, more influence, and more opportunity, talk to Digital.Join us and you'll enjoy greater technical challenges and opportunities. You'll be part of our Regional Software Support Group in Princeton providing technical support to specialists in the field.And your success at Digital will open exciting avenues for grov.dh, both within our Software organization, and other advanced areas of our $3.1 billion dollar corporation.To qualify, you should have 2 3 years experience with Digital operating systems. Experience in RSTS.'E, RSX- 1I M, or VAX/VMS is preferred.If you feel you have the background we need, talk to us about the future you can start building now. Call Jane Chappell or Ward Hopkins at (609) 452-2940 or send your resume and salary history to Ward Hopkins, Digital Equipment Corporation, U S. Route One, CN-2, Prin­ceton, New Jersey, 08540.We are an Affirmative Action employer.

mmW e cluinf/e the w a y the 1 o rk l th inks.

(604) 452-2940

ORDER PROCESSING CLERK

Applied Data Research is currently looking for a qualified individual for their Order Processing Department. This position requires a well organized detail oriented person who has an average knowledge of all business machines, likes working with numbers and can type 40 WPM. if you are looking for a change in your job or seeking a new position and are interested or have experience in the processing of orders, this may be just the job you are looking for,ADR is a growing soft­ware company which has excellent benefits, a very outstanding work en­vironment and offers promotional opportunity.All interested applicants co n ta c t- Personnel Department, APPLIED DATA RESEARCH, INC , Route 206 and Orchard Rd , CN-8, Princeton, NJ 08540. (201) 874-9000 Ext 3101. Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.

PART TIME CLERK — o w 16, no nights, apply In person til 2p.m. Carters 108 Main S t , Hightstown.

O FFIC E A S S IS T A N T —needed for ger>eral derica) duties in small publishing company centrally located in Prirrceton. Position requires excellent grammatical and d ic taphone tra n scrip tio n skills. Automobile Quarterly Magazine, 221 Nassau St.. Princeton. NJ 08540. 609- 924-7555.

THE GALLUP Organization — is looking tor reliable ma­ture people to do daytime telephone interviewing from our office. Hrs. 9am-4;30pm. Monday - Friday. We will tra in . Call 609-924-9600 x351.

FULL TIME —♦Part time tern porary help for ski rental shop. Call Ray 215-598-3673 evenings.

WORD PROCESSINGNO FEE

JOIN★SELECTIVEA ★ TEMPS ★

CaN Renee or Nancy 609-896-9470

3131 PrkKeton Pike LaprerYcevile, N.J.

CHILD CARE — experienced woman for daytime care of 2 young children in Lawrence- vine. Car & references re­quired. Salary negotiable. Begin March. 609-896-2020 after 7pm.

CLERK TYPIST M/F — full time. Clerical experierrce re­quired. 50 WPM typirrg. pur­chasing procedures & muni- 6pal experierrce a plus. App­ly Boro of Manville, Clerks O ffice. 101 So. Main St,, Manville. 9 a m. to 5 pm.

CODERS — Part time tem­porary d^ricai help, no ex­perience necessary. Min. of 30 hrs./week required. The Gallup Organization. 609- 924-9600, ext. 270 EOE.

NURSES — for private home care case In H ightstown. Pleasant working conditions. 609-448-2022.

HOUSEKEEPER/Childcare — live in'out. Good with chil­dren References, 609-799-2278.

COMPUTER OPERATIONS

Full time temp Experience Required

High Hourly Rate

SR. OPERATORS- M V S /JE S II

JR OPERATOR- DOS/VSE

DATA ENTRV- 129, CRTSYSTEMP

Cali Stephanie 201-845-5600

Recycleth is new spaper

TOWN TEMPS offers the perfect solution lo those money problems. We have interesting, long and short term, high paying assignments. In addition, TOWN TEMPS has vacation and gift bonus plans. If you are just starting out, or returning to the job market, TOWN ' TEMPS is the way to go.Our c lien ts in RO BBINSVILLE arid LAW RENCEVILLE rely on TO W N TEMPS lo r qua lity Secretaries, T yp is ts and W o rd Processors. Cail or com e in today.

You'll like the company(s) we keep

Town lempsDIVISION o r TOWN PERSONNEL AGENCY I

PRINCETONPrinceton Forrestal Center

101 College Road East Princeton, NJ 08540

(609)452 1122 __________(201) 828-6200

Can you worK from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.? Are you great on the

T E L E P H O N E ?Here's an opportunity to capitalize on this talent. The Princeton Packet Inc, is looking for two people to sell sub scriptions by telephone for any and all of our 8 community weekly newspapers. The work can be done at home or at The Packet office depending on telephone exchanges involved.Salary is based on hours worked and subscriptions sold.If you are interested please call William Bennett at 609-924-3244 for an in­terview appointment.

an equal opporlunitv employer mft

PROGRAMMERANALYST

Mainstem Corporation is the acknowledged leader in the fieid of fleet management information services We suppo.t an international lis! of clients, and are currently involved in the design and implementation of state of the art systems.

Internal growth has created an opening for at least one Programmer Analyst to help with the design and documentation of new systems, develop program specifications and partici{;>ate in the development of programming and documentation standards. Successful candidates will have 1 3 years COBOL programming and analysis experience. Experience in the area of user documentation and standards is also desired. Any ex posure to NCR hardware and/or software would be considered a plus.

We offer a generous benefits program, liberal com- f>ensation plan based on experience, and ideal working conditions in the Princeton Forrestal Center. Call or write;

Brandy FrankCoordinator, Personnel ServicesMAINSTEM CORPORATION

P 0. Box 2 Princeton. NJ 06540

(609)452 1300

We aie an £qu^ Opcxxtufiiry Empfov®' F/M.'HfV

CLERKTYPIST

Challenging atmosphere tor a candidate with good typing skills & proven of­fic e e x p e r ie n c e . Ex- perience in transcribing equipment a plus. Good salary & full company benefits package accom­pany this opportun ity Call 609-448-4000 for an appointment or apply at.

NGRELCONORTH AMERICAN PHILIPS LIGHTING

CORPORATION Bank Street

Hightstown N J Equal O poorlum iy Em pioyei M F

MEDICAL SECRETARY FULL TIME

An opening exists for a well organized individual with good steno, dic­taphone, and typing abili­ties. Must be able to schedule appts . and fol­low through on own in­itiative. Excellent working cond itions and fringe benefits

Interviews bv appt only call (201) 874-4(300 9 lo 11 a m Mon -Thurs ONLY

CarrierFoundation

Equal Opponumtv Employer M F

NEWSPAPER CARRIERS WANTED

West Windsor. East Windsor, Hightstown. Cranbury, Piainsboro, Boys girls 12-17 join the carrier crew of New Jersey's No. 1 newspaper. Morning newspaper routes are available. Would you like a new bicycle, stereo or just plain cash? Call the Star Ledger, toll free 800 242-0850.

ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANT

We are a natk>nal pub­lisher located in the Princeton area w ith an immecHate opening tor an Administrative As­sistant to work in our financial area. Responsibilities will in­clude record keeping of a ca sh m a n a g e m e n t system, tracking and analysis of cash trans­actions. and coordina­tion of company credit cards. Prior experience w ith c a s h m a n a g e ­m e n t , a c c o u n t in g c o u r s e s , o r a d ­m in is tra tive a ss is tan t background requ ired. Salary is $13,500, per year.We offer an excellent b e rte flts package in ­c lu d in g d e n t a l i n ­s u ra n c e and e d u ca - tional assistance. For im m ed ia te c o n s id e r ­ation, please send re- surne w ith salary re ­quirements to;

Associate Personnel Manager

P 0. Box CN-5237 Princeton. NJ. 08540

Equal O pportun ity Em piover

KEY PUNCH OPERATOR

DAY SHIFT 8:30 AM-5 00 PM

This leading oil com­pany has an immediate full time opening avail­able for an experienced CM C O p e ra to r o r a similar key-io-disc oper­ator. We would be willing to tram a keypunch oper­ator with at least 2 years of recent IBM 129 ex­perience

We offer a competitive starting salary and an ex­cellent benefits package including major medical insurance and a com­pany paid pension plan

Please call for applica­tion. All aoplications must inc lude SALARY R E ­QUIREMENTS.

Personnel D epatim ent (201) 636-3000

exl. 2310

AMERADA HESS CORPORATION

I Hess Plaza Woodbridge, NJ 07095

Equal Opportun ity Em ployer M F

N UR SES, RN s

Are you a“ people person” ?If your commitment is lo Patient Care" we can offer you an innovative and progressive therapeutic atmosphere plus the tremendous personal fulfillment in helping patients thru emotional difficulties

Carrier Fouivdation has kail!

We are situated in a lovely, semi-rural area m a campus-iike setting with well-lighted parking area and security on grounds

We offer competitive salaries that are ad|usted for prior hospital nursing experience for a maximum o( 4 years

We can offer you no rotation ot shifts, both full and part-time openings and flexible hours ar­ranged to fit your schedule We also have per diem and on-call opportunities

Stop in at our Personnel Office and find out about our unique non-institutional open atmo­sphere. We welcome applicants to stop by any time and lour our many and cheerfully deco­rated facilities, Cail for interview appt

(201) 874-4000

Carrier FoundationEqual OpportuD.iy E-ripioye' M f-

Rrwvoe T o $ 1 3KEXCaiENT

PHONE MANNERIntelligent & professional for consuNing firm. Aasist V P Know led^ of IBM Memory. Never a fee. Call 609-896- 9470

i t SELECTIVE PERSONNEL ★

3131 Prince ton P lia Office P w li Bldg. 4 LawrencevBe. N.J.

STORE CLERKS — must be 18 years or older to work part lime in our Somerset Farms food store located in Prince­ton, Call 609-924-9893

EXECUTIVE SEARCH/ SALES

Please consider the stimulat­ing, challenging and very lucrative field of executivesearch.

Our organization is unique within this industry. We enjoy an excellent professional as well as personal reputation Our list of satisfied clients in­cludes some of the most pre­stigious conglomerates in the world.

We are conveniently located in suburban Princeton in beautifully appointed offices which offer an attractive en-vironment-

If you possess a positive mental attitude and are a creative thinker you owe it to yourself to investigate this opportunity. Please contact immediately:

r Kantor Inc.P.O. Box 1223

Princton, NJ

NURSE — RN or LPN, part time, 3;30pm-11pm. Small nursing home. For interview call administrator, Sunnyfieid Nursing Home, Cranbury, N J 609-395-0641.

TEXAS REFINERY CORP — offers Plenty of Money plus cash bonuses, fringe be­nefits to mature individual in Princeton area Regai'diess of experience, write A. S Sears, Pres , Texas Refinery Corp,, Box 711 Fort Worth. Texas 76101.

Secretary T o S12KLEGAL

Good typing and steno skills, for co rpo ra te a tto rneys Beautiful surroundings Good benefits, tree parking. Never a fee. Call 609-896-9470.

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL i t

3131 Princeton Pike Office Park BMg. 4 LawrencevBe, N.J.

CHILD CARE — 4 yr. old, 2 day wk, in my C ranbury home Own trans 609-655- 3701.

ROSE JOYCE Cosmetics — Has lim ited openings for beauty consultants in your area. Full or pan time, train­ing program. Ca'l 201-542- 7631 lor appt.

COLLEGE STUDENTS — Large firm now interviewing for several semester break positons. If desired, position can be pari time when clas­ses resume. Starting rates $5 $6.50 InitJfview now be­fore final exams. Call 3-6pm for interview. 609-452-7530.

PROJECT ENGINEER

BSME or CHEM E: Major drug firm seeks an indepen­dent self starter to supen/ise project responsiblity. feasibil­ity studies, design, cost con­tro l, GMP com pliance. 5 years manufacturing or pro­cess experience in a major health care industry. Superb benefits including profit shar­ing. & yearly cash bonus. Starting salary; 30's. Call Harriet McCormick. McCor­mick Associates, P C Box 1206, Princeton, N J 00540 609-924-2022.

TELEPHONE INTERVIEWING

PART TIMEC p p o riu n itie s ava ilab le . Days, afternoons, evenings & weekends. Flexible days & hours. No experience neces­sary, Will train. Call between 9:30-4, 609-448-2107,

McGRAW-HILL H IghUtown. EOE

B O O K K E E P E R — F u ll Charge, private, non-profit o rgan iza tion . ADP back­ground. Super almoepbere. $13-15K-f Call Mr. Kris (609) 896-1183 P. Robert Dann Personnel 134 Franklin Cnr Rd.

DENTAL ASSISTANT — Ex­perienced, healthy person who likes to work with people Good salary & benefits are offered lo the right person Resurrie sent to Box #04257. d o Princeton Packet All re­plies confidential.

CAREER — in sales & man­agement with major company due to expansion Sales ex­perience h e lp fu l but not essential. Substantial start­ing salary with incentive in­creases as earneo. After a training period in sates, an opportunity for career in man­agement is available. For particulars call Mr. Adkins at 609-096-9740 EOE

GALGUY FRIDAY — work 0-15 hours per week for in­terior designer. Reconcile bank sta tem ent m onthly. Good typing, attractive hand­writing, do own correspond­ence Good telephone perso­nality. Hours highly flexible - sometimes Sat. hours, some­times Sun hours. S5 per hour. E, Windsor location. Call Mrs Harris at 609-443- 5804,

Secretary'StenoT o |1 7 K

NEW YORKBe right hand to chief execu­tive of prestigious firm. Excel­lent benefits. Never a tee Cali 609-896-9470.

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL VY

3131 Princeton Pike Office Park Bldg. 4 Law rencevile, N.J.

RECEPTIONIST Technician — for Veterinary Hospital. A veterinary hospital is seeking a receptionisttechnician. An active and exciting position for the right person Duties consist of heavy telephone contact, assisting the doctor, bookkeeping, laboratory and janitorial functions. Pari or full time Good technical ability and typing accuracy essen­tial Love ot animals a must'E x p e r ie n c e a p lu s ' S a la ry Open, Vacation, sick leave, ho lidays, o the r bene tits . Cheerful environment with friendly people. Opportunity fo r a d va n ce m e n t. Send handwritten reply with formal typewritten resume to: Box 398, Rocky Hill, N.J, 00553

Accounting to $210NORTH BRUNSWICK

, corp. has accounts pay­able position. 6 months ex­perience IS all you need V e r ify p u rc h a s e o rd e rs against receivables. CRT ex­perience helpful. Congenial atmosphere. Overtime sea­sonal. 3 month review. All be­nefits included. Company paid fees,

ASK FOR LORRAINE DAVIS

OFFICEI M m X K

Rl. 1 3 0 a tB la c k H o rs « L a . No Brunsw ick, NJ 08902

201-297-1230

SALES $17^ KIMMEDIATE INTERVIEW

Large company r,as immedi- ale opening in sales — NJ lerrilo ry. Automotive after market experience a plus. SALARY a HIGH commis­sion — ail expenses-car allo­wance + Mileage — full be­nefits — IMMEDIATE. Cali

GETTY PERSONNEL Rt. 130

H ightstown 60^448-6500 609-896-2323

LOOKING FOR AN Oppor­tunity? — We have a career opportunity in our manage­ment trainee program. Wil­lingness to work hard, im­agination and initiative are the main requirements. Start $15,(X)0-$20.(XX). An equal opportunity employer. Call Mr Thomas. 609-599-3035.

PART TIME On Cal) Work — for Public Opinion Telephone In te rv iew ers. No se lling . Good reading, writing and speaking skills are essential. Call Opinion Research Corp., N. Harrison St., Princeton. 609-924-5900 ext 313 be­tween 10am & 4pm Mon-Fri.

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSIS­TANT — Clerical, Public Re­lations Department. Steno, popular firm. Start $200 plus Call Ms Cohen (609) 896- 1183 P. Robert Dann Person­nel 134 Franklin Cnr Rd.

BIOSTATISTICIAN

Exceptional m anagem ent level position with interna­tional conglomerate for se­rious professional with in­dustria l or b iom edical re­search experience & adv­anced degree in statistics. Ability to design clinical in­vestigations & data proces­sing programs essential. Sal­a ry ; $30 s. C a ll H a rr ie t M cC orm ick , M cC orm ick Associates, P.O. Ek)x 1206, Princeton. N.J. 00540 609- 924-2022,

H O U S E K E E P IN G PER­S O N N E L — Im m e d ia te openings, full time positions with excellent benefits Apply in person. Executive House­keeper, Hilton Inn. Exit 8 NJ Tpk, Hightstown-East Wind­sor. No phone calls.

Weekoljanuary 20 - 22, 1982Classified Advertising

:i B

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help WantedSystem* Programmer

T o $ 4 0K ^DATA PROCESSING

Telecommunications experi­ence, Assembler. Pascal or Fortran. Outstanding com­pany and benefits. Never a fee. Call Dick Simon 609- 896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL★

3131 P rkK eton Pike Office Pmk Bldg. 4 LewrencevNIe, N.J.

BOOKKEEPERPart or full. time. Must be ex­perienced in accounts pay­able, bank reconciliations, & general ledger Duties in­clude m aintenance of job cost records & occasional lighi typing Exposure to ADP systems a plus.

We are a rapidly growing in­ternational firm with good opportunities, excellent pay & benefits.

Please send resume or re­quest application.

Contact: Director of Person nel, PA International Man agement Consultants Inc. 707 Alexander Rd.. Prince ton, N.J 08540 An equa opportunity employer m/f.

TEMPORARY Position — key punching, editing, plus other diversified duties. Ex­p e rie n c e n e e d e d . If in ­terested please call Mrs P inelli 609-924-9300 ext. 261.

SALESREAL ESTATE

Are you finding things slow where you are? Why not con­sider a move to our Success Team at W e lc h e r t Co., Realtors. For a confidential interview call James Longo, Princeton office manager at 609 -6 8 3-0 3 0 0 . If y o ‘ ' ’re good, you coulc be better with Weicherl'

EXECUTIVE SALES Col­lege grad, w TEACHING, COACHING OR SALES exp. Earn up to $25,000 1st yr Sal t comm C areer oppty

Prudential provides profes­sional training in all product lines incL Life. Health, Group, Pension, Equities. Auto & Homeowners. Attractive be- nettis package Management poienital, Call Ed Ede ur JerryYaros, CLU Dev. Mgr. at 201- 745-9004 or 609-452-1900

Secy $$$O P E N $»GERMAN BILINGUALfor VP of international con­

cern needs your 60 typing and 80 steno in both lan­guages. Expansion leaves position available. Full be­nefit package. Company paid

ASK FOR LORRAINE DAVIS

OFFICE

R1, 130 at Black Horse La. No. Brunsw ick, NJ 08902 , 2 0 1 -2 9 7 - '3 0

AIDE TO supervise — and care for the elderly, 11 -7 shift, 4 days a week, weekends a m ust. Call 201-446- 6699,

WAITRESS WAITER — Ex­perienced, full time. Apply in person Cranbury Golf Club. See Drew or Daisy. South- field Rd, W Windsor Iw p

DELI CLERK — full time. Call 8am-10am 609-924-1802 Nassau Deli.

SECRETARY — part time, ^rinceton , 15-20 flexib le nours. week We need clerical support someone who is 'omtortable with numbers & :an help with our books, who :an type exceptionally well [Memory experience helpful, out not required), is a quick learner & displays good re­tention, IS professional on the phone, & is happiest handling diversified duties. Piease send a letter telling us about yourself & your desired hour­ly rate. Box #04261 c-c Prin­ceton Packet.

: ;l e r k s , r e c e p t i o n ­is ts , SECRETARIES'our skills are needed NOW! ong & short term a.ssign. nents.^EVER A FEE!

SALES PERSONNEL INSANITY

Some people believe that dealing with that uncertain, everchanging, independent, s tubborn anim al we ca llHomoSapien's to be, shall

we say. difficult. Enough to d r iv e s o m e o n e in s a n e . Others find challenge in un­certainty and believe that the more difficult the course, the sweeter the reward Specifi­cally. they will want a position in which they will stand on their own two feet and in which their compensation will be directly related to their accomplishments. The type of person we are lookir>g tor will be someone who is ex­perienced at selling their ex­pertise in a corporate settir>g Or you might have been in­side that structure as part of management and frustrated by your inability to chart your own course. Our business is placing middle and upper management in the central Jersey area. This requires the ability to establish day to day relationships with corpo­rate executives in order to best advise them in their per­sonnel needs. A creative, energetic individual can be trained to be productive in our business in a surprisingly short period of time. The suc­cessful candidate can expect to reach a 40-50K level with in the firs t year. If you are choson, the path will not be an easy one, the first step is sometimes the hardest to take. Overcome inertia - call Lila Rugg today at 609-452- 1122 .

mTownPersonnal Agency

Princeton Forrestal Center 101 College Road East Princeton, N.J. 08540

609-452-1122

CHILD CARE — needed for 2 yr. O ld boy weekday morn­ings in our Princeton home Kind, competent person de­sired. 609-921-2463.

TYPIST'Executive Secretary — for direct mail marketing Princeton firm. Word proces­sing knowledge necessary Salary commensurate with experience Contact Person­nel 201-8?‘ -4300

DOCTOR S ASSISTANT —f ro m a n d t>ac*k o f f ic e 2 5 -3 0hr. week. Evenings. Will train Experience a plus. Must en­joy working with people 609- 883-0674

KEY TO DISC — Princeton area company is seeking ex­perienced operator on 029 and 129 or Key to Disc. Opening on evening shift 4pm-12. Excellent benefits including dental insurance and tuition assistance. To ex­plore further, please call Miss Frank at 6 09 -452-1300 E O E

WANTED TRACTOR TRAIL­ER DRIVERS — thorough knowledge of NY, NJ & Pa Able to peddle 10 to 15 stops a day Cal!Elliotibetween9&5. 609-443-5500

Programmer To $25K SERIES I, IBM

DATA PROCESSINGMove up to an exceptional company. Fine tune your EDX. EDL skills and com­pensation Don't miss this opportunity Never a fee. Call Dick Simon 609-896-9470.

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL ★

3131 Princeton PikeOffice Park Bldg 4LawrencevWe. N.J.

WELCOME WAGON — You choose the hours in reward­ing career meeting people. Car needed. Training pro­vided. Openings in Princeton. PlainsDoro, Monroe, Lawr­ence, H a m ilto n , E w ing. W a sh ing ton Twp. O ther areas. Cal! 201-766-3262 Thurs, & Mon. 2-7pm or write 29 Ann St., Bernardsville, N.J. 07924 EOE

HOUSECLEANING — once a week Business couple no ch ild ren . Must have ow.i transportation & references Call after 6pm 609-921 -3172

GETTY TEMPS Rte. 130, Hightetown

609-443-6500 609-896'2323

GETTY TEMPS II1 5 2 7 R n o « f l« i 's

North B ru n s * * *201.821.6750

IN T E R IO R D es ig n e r — talented person with training in interior design w ability to sell. Residential interiors & or office furniture. Submit re­sume with salary history to Leonard LaPiaca, 162 Nas­sau St. P rin ce to n , N.J. 08540.

PART TIME — $10-$15/hr beauty consultant. Will train, no investment. Make your own hours M anagem ent potential. 609-924-1760 or 609-259-7164,

CHILD v^ARE — Long term, 18 mo. old boy. Mon.-Fri.. 7:30-5:30, live in or out. Light housekeeping. Must have own transportation. Edin- berg 609-799-9123 aft 7 pm

W A IT E R /W A IT R E S S — needed for busy luncheonet­te In Pennir^ton Mon -Fri,, 11-3:30. 609-737-2276

DAY CARE Center — needs creative woman to supervise 4 yr. old class 11:30-5:30 Mon.-Fri. Call 609-448-3383.

EXECUTIVE SALES: Sal, up to$400wk, -f comm. Career oppty. Prudential provides professional training in all p ro d u c t lin e s in c l. L ite , H ealth , G roup, Pension, Equities. Auto & Homeow­ners. A ttra c tive benefits p a c k a g e . M a n a g e m e n t potential. Call J. Yaros, CLU Dev, Mgr,, at 201-745-9004 or 609-452-1900

Bookkg T o $ 1 5 KkaaparFASONATMQ

NEW COMPANYGeneral experience. Cost accounting needed for adve'- tisir>g projects. Benefits Nev­er a fee Call 609-896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL

3131 Princeton Pike O ffice Park Bldg. 4

«e, N.J.

PUBLISHING — Managing Editor. N.J, book producer arxj copubtisher needs skil­led professional with experi­ence in trade book publishing to manage in-house & free­lance editoria l personnel. Position is exciting & deman- d ir^ . College required. Sal­ary commensurate with ex­perience. Benefits Send re­sume & salary requirements to Box #04237 c/o Princeton Packet.

TELEPHONE SALES/COM- MISSION — Monmouth Jet area, 201-329-2700, 9am- 4pm

PART TIME Deli — 11 to 3, Mon, thru Fri., good pay. Call 609-799-0530 for interview.

BOOKKEEPER

for private banking o ff ic e . Te lephone, typist, bright, person; to work independently,

LOR Agency 609/921 6580

REAL ESTATE LICENSEES

Salary $6.00 per hour p lu s m a jo r b o n u s e s . Part-time evenings & lu ll time.

Royal Vacations International

Cali 609-452-1160

m u m

For Princeton real es­tate leasing company. Diversif'ed duties, good secre ta ria l sk ills . Ex­cellent salary for one-girl office. Respond with re­sume to

Baker Merin Associates. Inc.

105 College Road East Pnm:eton. H J 08.S40

CLERICALWORD PROCESSOR

P rince to n area. Exp. p r e fe r r e d on w o rd processing equipment Must have good writing skills. Call 201-628-8888 Send resume to:

MAYFAIR SERVICES19 Mayfair Dt

Wayne NJ 07470

BOOKKEEPER(P o r t- t im » )

Responsible person to assume all bookkeeping duties for small office. Must be experienced in accounts payable, receivable, payroll, preparation of tax reports and typing. Safeguard system experience helpful. Hours Monday to Friday can be flexible. Pleasant surroundings and benefits.Please call Robert Ansel (609) 799-6282.

LINSEtS INC.PRINCETON X T ., N.J. _____

CLERKS:

TECHNICAL CLERK -for SIX month position m the Princeton area, ideal candidate must have some technical training. Familiarity v/ith electronic components is required Job responsibilities include'Setting up inventory Maintaining stocks Writing purchase orders

-copying b filing document.sResumes should accompany qualified candidates. Cal! for an appomtntent Must have own transportation

PURCELL TEMPORARIESl u H IM SL. Pitm iw , *1.

m *L t. t u i^ r i in , K.I. »1«1442M

CHAINSAW OPERATORS Exp. & dependable, must

have own saw & pick up truck or larger. Call 609-267-7049.

PART FULL TIM E Sales Positions — open to cover NJ. NY, PA Products are energy .saving TFE engine oil & other related products for cars, trucks & machines. YTI. inc 609-883-0346,

SECRETARY — for partner in major Somerville law firm. Legal or executive secretarial experience preferred. Steno & typing experience required Salary negotiable. Call Mrs. Whipple at Ozzard, Rizzolo, Klein, Mauro & Savo. 201- 526-0700

PART TIME — experienced sa ndw ich .'S a iad m a k e r w ith re fe re n c e s . Call 609-921- 0809 betw e en 3-5pm.

CustomerService

AAcMASTER CARK SUPPLY COMPANY it looklns for on •xporioncod Cutlomor Sorvico/IntiJo Solot oorton to join our growing to lo i loom. Quolifiod condidotot w ill hovo;

• A t loa tt 2 yoort of Cuttomor Sorvico • xporionco in o hoovy toiophono •nvironmont

• An Intido Solot bockground with induttriol produett

• Ability to oporato o CRT• Aptitudo ond dotiro to loom moro obout

irtduttrloi oquipmont

We offer an excellent salary and benefit program, including company paid medical, dental and life insurnace, tuition reimbursement, profit sharing and paid vacation.

Interested carxjidatos should call our Personnel Dt partment at: (201) 324-4444M c M A S T E R - C A n n

F ^ u c o lv c o m n a n y

MOM NEEDS Some Help - It you like little kids, ' m 5 and my brother s 3, and want to

us help Mom, please call 609-883-0346

BE A FULL TIME Or Part Time Cosmetic Consultant — Will train, earnings of $ t 50 or more tor 3 evenings work. Aloe Charm Cosmetics. Call 609-883-6017.

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE — Clerk Very nice, congenial office, excellent benefits & fu­ture. Start $175. Call Ms Cohen (609) 896-1183 P. Robert Dann Personnel 134 Franklin Cnr Rd,

CLERICAL — Part Time Trenton Slate College. Flexi­ble daytime hours Typing ability W wpm Tuition waiver & other beneKIs Call Marilyn Chadwick at 609-771-2282 A flirm a liv e A c lio n /E q u a l Opportunity Employer.

CASHIER/CLERK — P/l for busy health & beauty aid store. Must be mature & able to work flexible hrs. Apply Brooks Discount, Rt. 206, Hillsboro

DESIGNDRAFTSPERSON

Experienced mechanical draftsperson with sheet m eta l b ackg ro u nd required. Must be able to work from sketches or verba! instructions from our engineers and shop personnel. Good salary and benefits. Call Per sonnel Dept 609 466- 3400 between 9 am and 4 pm.

CUSTOMERRELATIONS

College art background for trainee position, Work b le a rn w ith professionals. Arithmetic, telephone b typing proficiency capability. Phone 609^924-8668 for appointment.

PLAYGROUNDCAFETERIA

AIDESupervise e lem entary school children during (h e ir lu n c h b re a k . 1 0 :3 0 -1 -3 0 P M Mon -Fn. Currently a one month replacement pos­ition but may work into permanent part time Im­mediate opening, apply to P rinceton Regional School, P- 0 Box 711, Princeton, N J. 08540.

eoudi oppoftuFiify employe' anirmalive action employer

OFFICE MANAGERWork in exciting creative field. Must have good typing, lite steno and bookkeeping including payroll skills.

TYPISTDo you have an interest in advertising? Accurate typist IS needed for this busy, exciting firm. Ex c e lle n t ve rba l and grammar skills needed.

SECRETARY TO S13,000.President of medium sized firm needs your excellent typing and steno skills. Must have 3-5 years experience.

TELEPHONE SECRtTARY TO $11,000.

Accurate typist with light steno or speedwriting and excellent phone voice needed. Must want growth and assume responsibility,

nPESEHERtoExcellent typing with knowledge of IBM Composer needed for outstanding firm. Full company paid benefits package.

RECtPTIQKIST/ SECAETAIIT 10 U K

Insurance experience is a must. Either company or agency background. Should have accurate typing and want to deal witri ciieniE in a lovely atmosphere

njafy ernck^orj a s s o c i a t e ^

6 Coloniol Loke Or lowrenceviUe N J

609 8835103

C L E R K T Y P IS T — (Township Clerk's Office) 35 hours per week; starting annual salary $10,301; good benefits; High School gradu­ate and one (1) year of busi­ness school or two (2) years experience or combination; ability to provide full range of office services including typ­ing 55 wpm, light stenogra­phy, record keeping, public contact, experience with the word processing equipment helpful Apply in writing to Eli­zabeth G, Nolan. Township Clerk. Police Headquarters, 80 One M ile Road, East Windsor. N.J. 08520,

Supervisor To S20K HEAD CLERICAL

STAFF2 plus years experience Data entry a plus Outstand­ing benefits package. Never a fee Call 609-896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL ★

3131 Princeton Pike Office ParV Bldg 4 LawrencevHle. N.J.

MAIL ROOM Clerk — this is a permanent part tirrYe position. Some heavy lifting required. Would prefer someone with car. Min, of 30hrs./week. The Gallup Organization, 609- 924-9600 ext 278. EOE

MUSICIANS — Drummer looKing to start or join group Top 40's. Call 609-443-1391.

TYPIST — Advertising field. Entry level or re-enter job market. Good company, nice people, $140, benefits, fee paid Ms Neuman (609) 896- 1183 P. Robert Dann Person­nel 134 Franklin Cnr Rd

SALESPERSON — John Hancock is in terested in financing a man or woman in the Multi-line insurance busi­ness We offer a training allo­wance plus comr'nission with management opportunity or eventual agency ownership Call Joe Messineo 609-896- 2550

PART TIME A dve rtis ing Salesperson — for aviation and Marine publications. Cal! Karl at YTI, 609-883-0346.

ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR - Full time position in nursing home. Available for viva­cious. innovative, creative, caring person Pis. send par- ticLiiars to Parkway Nursing Home, 1201 Parkway Ave., Trenton. N.J 08628

TYPISTS SECRETARIES

WORD PROCESSORSTemporary positions keep pouring into our office. Help us fill them'TOP PAY NO FEE

J&J TEMPORARIES 2936 Rt. #1

LawrencevfHe, N.J. 6 0 9 ^ 3 -5 5 7 2

PART TIME Bookkeeping & Clerical Clerk — To handle payables, media bills, bank recs. e tc . For Princeton Advertising Agency 15-20 hrs per week Call 609-452- 1116 tor interview

SECRETARY — For smalt law office in Pennington. N.J Legal «xp not nec., but helpful. Exc. typing ability Call 609-737-9300

SECRE TARY — Centrally lo­cated small growing dynamic corporation. We need a well- organized person who tikes working with numbers as well as peo p le S a la ry com ­mensurate with experience Send resume to: P O. Box 431, Princeton. N.J 08540

JANITORIAL — Steady parttim e e ven in gs . M on-F ri, Hightstown area Car neces­sary 609-443-1033.

RECPT NO FEE

JOIN★ SELECTIVE#★ TEMPS ★

Call Renee or Nancy 609-896-9470

3131 Princeton Pike LawrencevHle. N.J.

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST — full time, for progressive pre­ventive-restorative practice in the East Windsor James- burg Call 609-443-6464. Lj K for Mrs. Gill.

LAB ASSISTANTOpening In Princeton area for lab animal Technician to feed and care for lab animals and maintain lab animal cages and area.

Cali 201/628-8888 or send resume tO'

MAYFAIR StdViCES19 Mayfair Dr. Wayne, N1

07470

MACHINIST

All around machinist Must be capable of own set-up, machine repairs and able to work from blueprints. Steady work w ith good pay and benefits. Call Personnel Dept. (609) 466 3400 bet ween 3 am - 3pm.

P A R T - T I M EF A S H I O N R E P R E S E N T A T I V E

At home career for conscientious sewing en thustasi Expand fashion knowledge and earn extra income through sales of exclusive LEITERS DESIGNER FABRICS Plan vour own schedule, set your own goals For further information call. New Jersey Field Manager.

(201) 561-7289

LO RA G E N C Y

TRAINEE, sales deskPRODUCTION, conlfol cieik $UhENGINEER trainee SiskACCOUNIANl $20kOfFICt MANAGER S20kSECRETARY S20hPRODUCTION SUPERVISOR S20k.BSEE 1981 grad $2 7kPROGRAMMER pascal + $3ShPLANT MGR S3Skmarketing S40k

1101 State RoadResearch Park

Princeton, N.J. 08S40609/921 6580

S E C R E T A R YResponsible, mature indivwjuai with excellent eteno, dictaphone and typing skill* wanted for intereatKYg position in our Research Compary KfYOwfedge of office procedures essential.Excellent salary. Liberal benefits.

If qualified please contact Mr J.F. Crorciari at 394-3$01 between 9 AM end 4 PM.

HYDROCARBON RESEARCH, INC.

Research b Difvelopment Center P,0. Box 6047

Lawrencevtlle, N J. 06648bqu«l OppOFtunry Crrto*oy« M/f-

IMPG/s s h a p i n g

t h e f u t u r e I n

s o f t w a r e -------------------

Be anIVIPG SOFTWARE ENGINEERP ortic ipo t© in m « a e i tg n d e v e lo p m e n t o n d m o n o y e m e n f o t MTKi > (u lu /e g e n e ro t to n ot ioftwaieMPG takes the m o i l o d v o n c e d soe w o re le c r tn o lo g y o v o ila b ie p u t i tl lo p fa c t ic o l use o n d s u p p o n i il w ith h ig h < a itP e t p r o le u io n o is The result i i ftve success ive y e o n o f g ro w th in e x c e s i o l 50\ p e r o n n u m

MPG is a le a d in g p ro d u c e r o f g e n e ro iu e d systems sott-FYore fo r the IBM m o rk e tp lo c e w ith

. (4AMIS M m e first p ro d u c t to in te g ra te a user o r ie n te d E ng llsh -lixe n o n p ro c e d u ra l lo n g u o g e w ith a c o m p re h e n s iv e DBMS

• The MF^SWIFT p ro d u c t lin e o n e ff ic ie n i e c o n o m ic a l a n d e o iy - fo use IP m o n ito r d a ta en try ly s te m a n d o .t im e p ro g ro m d e v e lo p m e n tto o l

C or>d idc ites m u s i D« h ig n iy c re o t iv e a n d sell m o tiv a te d w ith d e m o n s tro te d e *p e tie r> c e in IBM o s * *m b (e r lo n g u o g e p ro g ro m m m a DBMS or te le p ro c e s s in g o n d so ftw a re d e v e lo p rr ie n t S p e c ific e x p e r ie n c e m o n y o f th e fo llo w in g o re o s Is a ls o d e s iro b le

• DOS/VSE, POWER inlernols . VM/CMS iOterrYOls• OS/MVS inlarnols• VSAM • BTAM or VTAM• Com piler Development

MPG Offers o n e x c e lle n t w o rk in g e n v u o n m e n i in c lu d in g ou r o w n c o m p u te rs a n d p r iv o te F)tflce$ w im te rm tn o ii o n d fle x ib le w ork d a y We rew o rd h ig h o c h ie v e m e n t w ith e x c e lle n t p e r lo rm o n c e in c e n tiv e s S o lo rles a re very c o m p e t it iv e o n d o u t b e n e fit p a c k a g e is o n e o f the bes t in the Industry

MPG II h e a d q u a r te re d in P rin ce to n Hew Jersey M yo u w a n t 'jrh a t w e o ffe r a n d h o v e th e e x p e r ie n c e we n e e d se rid you* resumre In c o n f id e n c e to J u o m to B id d e n M o th e m o ttc o P ro d u c ts G ro u p P O Box 2392 P rin ce to n New Jersey 0« M 0

S h a pe th e fu tu re w ith

M Mathematica Products Group

P ^ Yours a n d ours

An fg u o / O p p o iiu n lty Bm ployer M f HC

SECRETARYECONOMICS

DEPT.Perform secretanal duties tor a membei of tlie [conomics DeL't tacullv Individual must have strong organizational and serretanai sMtls Must he .vil mg to learn lechncal tvgmg ((orrmjia & equation) Short­hand helr’tijl but not required

AdoIy m oerson PRINCnON UNlVtRSlTY Personnel Services, Clio Hall or l jII (60' ) 4S2 G130 for aDPomlment

A ll F ijiifli OptxMtiifiHv A ir i ii ’ i.iiiv i- ALfiiwi Emplovni M r

BA N K IN G POSITIONSM O RTG AG E CLERK: H.S grad with good math clerical skills, some knowledge of basic accounting, | pleasant phone manner and ability to use an adding I machine.CHECK FILING CLERK: Beginner s position requiring j attention to details with lots of phone work OPERATIONS CLERK: Part time. 1 5 DO p m M oit. Thurs Requiras g oo n ty p iitg Fo rto im u nnjiin t.- ■wUh vvorlir e t te it s ; ciu»s to ••consider candidates who are service oriented with uItove; | average figure aptitude and a professiortal appeaiance All positions require your tiwn tra iTspo ila tiun to work | location. We provide an excellent l)enefit par kage m eluding dental and p ro fit sharingApply at the Personnel Office on the third floor btMween 9-11 a.m. or 2 4 p.m.

PRINCETONBANK

76NoisouSf. Princeton. NJ

Recycle th is newspaper

DATA BASE MANAGEMENTAdvanced Data Management a division of A R A P inc., has recently embarked upon a iTiaior t*xr>.)nsion ol Its customer support and sales activities ( 'fjeniixj'-. currently exist for the following posit'o''"

s a l e s r e p r e s e n t a t i v eWe seek a person with at least 3 years experience in end user sales of cornputei and.or software systems The successful applicar»t will be primarily responsibir* for the direct sale of ADM sofiwarE; products and servir e?s Other responsibilities will inchide 1) [jreijaraiion and delivery of sale.s present.itions, contracts and the coordination of technical and administr.'jtive siipporl of sales. 2) customer follow up to assure s<atisfaf ii'm .inrl 3) participation in sales and marketing rrjsedft.ft and planning

PART TIME SALES l e a d QUALIFIER

This 20 hour week position will requir(? a personEible and well spoken individual to mETintam input for our sales systerTT and to call prospective customers to determine their inlerest in our products Previous ex penence entering data on VDT s is desirable

TRAINING CUSTOMER SUPPORTResponsibilities will be aid ut the dtiveioprnent of training materials and course conlent leach in a classroom and provide consulting services lo our cus­tomers Some travel will be required In-deoth knowl­edge of any commercially available data base system IS highly desirable and past experience is preferred

COMPUTER OPERATORThis IS an entry level position in computer operations on DEC VAX 11 780 HesponsibiHies will include day-to-day machine operations and w ’' provide opem lionai support lor our timesharing customers The successful applicant will have some background in computer science or operations and a strong desire to advance in the field of software products and O' cus­tomer supportThese positions offer an unusual opportunity to ad- vanr;e professionally while performing challenging work m a stimulating environment Salary com- mensurale with experiencePlease send resume and indicate which position you are applying (or lo

Ms Ann-Mane Barber Advanced Data Management

a division of A R A P P O. Box 601

Kingston, N J 08628An Ec)ual OpDonunily Affirmative AcliO’'. Empfoye' E/ 1 H

4-BClassified Advertising

Week ol January 20 • 22. 1982

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

M A N A G E M E N T — TRAINEE. N ationa lly re ­spected financial firm Fast growth opportunity Excellent benefit pak. Start $11.4K Cali Ms Miller (609) 896-1183 P, Robert Oann Personnel 134 Franklin Cnr Rd

SALES SECRETARYTo$13.5K

Top typing and shoithand for this busy diversified position in an exciting Princeton firm. Mimmum 5 years secretarial experience Excellent be­nefits. Fee paid

PRINCETONEm p lo y m e n t

AGENCY609-924-9134

RECREATION DIRECTOR — Applicant should have ex penence as a recreation ther­apist in a nursing home re­lated setting BA preferred Must have adm inistrative skills: good working condi­tions & fringe benefits Send resume to Princeton Nursing Home. 35 Quarry St , Prince­ton, NJ 08540

MSW — with ACSW & super­visory experience, with know­ledge of Middlesex County. MSW & community health nurse needed for assess­ment & case management function Federally funded Com m unity Care for the Elderly Program. C lerical with telephone & general o ff ic e e x p e r ie n c e a lso needed Call Director. Visit­ing Nurse Assoc 201-821 9500. 10am-3pm

PART TIME Receptionist Secretary - Doctors office. M W F 10-1 and 3-7 30 om Tues 3-7 30 pm Varied duties Call 609-586-630U or 609-896-1634

GROUP TEACHER — for toddlers in day care BA & early childhood cert Salary S9500-10.000 ann Call 609- 989-7333 bet 7 30 am- 3 30pm

P A I N T S P R A Y E R SSpray painters with ex penence for small parts. Salary commensurate with ability Excellent company benefits. Steady work and overtime. Call personnel department between 9 am and 3 p m

(609) 466-3400

A C C O U N T I N GCLERK

if you have 1-2 years ex­perience as an Account­ing Clerk Of worxing in a position that deals pnmar- i iy w ith f ig u re s and calculations, you may be interested in this position Also, courses taken in basic accounting are a plus, but nol essential This position will tap your e x is t in g s k ills w h ile broadeninq your knowl­edge in the accounting area You wiH also have the chance to earn extra money through overtime Send resume with salary requirements or call for application

Personnel Department (201) 536-3000

ext, 2310

A M E R A D A HESS C O R P O R A T I O N

1 Hess Plaza Woodtindge NJ 0709S

Equal O pporlu fiitv E 'np loyef M F

REAL ESTATE Salesperson Wanted. Join our prnfession- ai and coopera tive staff. Generous commission split.* Call Lifxla for a confkJendai interview. Princeton Cros­sroads Realty, Inc, Realtor, 609-924-4677-

TRAVEL AGENT — mini­mum 2 yrs. experience Heavy commercial 4 interna­tional travel. Apollo experi­ence preferred No Satur­days. Reply Box #04243 c c Princeton Packet.

DISPLAY TRAINEE — For contemporary housewares store with 5 locations. Good growth potential, portfolio or exp. req. Call 609-799-5200 for appt. w Ellen

PAY THOSE Holiday Bills —4 earn Free vacation trips Part time positions now avail­able, make your own hours 509-587-3511

Secretary To$13KCUSTOMER RELATIONS

Excellent typing and phone manner. Super benefits. Nev­er a fee Call 609-896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL★

3131 Prtr>ce!on Pike Office Park Bldg. 4 LawrenceviHe. N.J.

ASSISTANT ACCOUNT Ex­ecutive Needed for fast growing Princeton direct mail marketing firm. Typing, learn marketing, research Exc. career opportunity Start im­mediately. Call Personnel deo! . 201-874-4300

SALESPERSONDESIGNER

for established residentia builder remodeler in the Prin ceton area. Sales ability man datory Light construction ex penence preferred Send re sume to Williams Builder P O Box 227, Crosswicks NJ 08515.

M cD onald 'sQuaker Bridge Mall

IS now raking applications for the position of maintenance person Dependability is a must Agi7ity and speed are required. Call for ap ocwnfmenr at

609 799 3330and ask for Mike.

RN's 4 LPN s — Pah lime re­lief positions avpilable at our conveniently kx:ated nursing facility Inquire about our spe­cial weekend pay rates. Call 609-896-0006

ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR — for small nursing home. Ab­out 4 hours per day. Degree 4 musical skills desirable, ex­perience preferred. For inter­view contact Administrator. Sunnyfleld Nursing Home, 61 Maplewood Ave., Cranbury, 609-395-0642.

SECRETARY TYPIST — Full time position available for a hard working conscientious person Requirements; typ­ing 60wpm - Word Proces­sing experience helpful: must be organized and able to work under pressure. In­terested applicants should send their resume to. Mrs. Marks. Wren Associates Inc,, 208 Bunn Dr., Princeton, NJ 08540

OFFICE CLEANERS — part time evenings Belle Mead Princeton area. Own trans­porta tion necessary, Cali 201-874-6202 between 1- 5pm,

PER SO N NEL CLERK — Pleasant surroundings. Good figure sense, super benefits & future. $190, call Ms Miller (609) 896-1183 P Robert Dann Personnel 134 Franklin Cnr Rd.

PART-TIME SECRETARY w an ted . C ran b u ry area Pleasant, quiet office. Write, stating remuneration desired. P O. Box 778, Princeton Junction. NJ 08550

CARPENTER'S APPREN­TICE — $140 per week • bonus. Great oppohunity for advancement 609-443-4499 or 443-1953

SEWING MACHINE Oper­ator — $140 per week ■ Bonus for right person 443- 4499 or 443-1953,

E X P E R IE N C E D T E L E ­PHONE Interviewers wanted — Medical experience a plus. FuM & part time positions available Please respond with references to P O Box 427. Rocky Hill, N J 08553

LEGAL SEC Y ~ dictation* req. active Hightslown office. 609-443-1600

Software EngtneerTo $35K

DATA PROCESSINGOS. Internals, PL-1. Fortran, or Assembler 4300 IBM Pre- feried. Exceptional benefit package and company Nev­er a fee Call Dick Simon 609- 896-9470.

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL ★

3131 Priocoton Pike Office Perk Bktg 4 Law rerKevile , N.J

DANCE TEACHER’S Assis­tant — Classes in Tap 4 Jazz in exchange for helping out with scheduled concert 6 6 82 Also occasional substi­tute teaching with pay Must have previous dance training. Call Actors Dance Studio, 609-882-6099.

A IR C R A F T R e fu e le r n e e d e d 1-1 1pm , som e weekends, duties also in­clude ground maintenance. Start at minimum wage App­ly Princeton Airways, Rt 206. Princeton.

MEDICAL EDITOR Proof­reader — small, dynamic growing pub. co. seeking exp'd editor Must be very familiar w medical terminolo­gy Accurate proofreading req d. Attention to detail, abil­ity to deal w clients & authors req'd. Princeton area Salary b a s ^ on exp Call Pat 609- 799-5700.________________

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Store — temporary cashier positions. Approx. 1 21 82 thru 2 6 82. 37 hr. week including Sat. S3.35 per hour Call 609-921-8500 9am to 4 30pm for interview appoint­ment

CLERK STENOGRAPHER — Training School for Boys.

Skillman Mm requirements 80 wpm dictation & good typ­ing skills Civil Service be­nefits. 35 hr work week & S8623 99 to Start Cal! Per­sonnel. Dave Duncan 609- 466-2200, ext 56 AA EOE

NEEDS ANALYST — Stu­dent Financial Aid Analyze student applications for aid & develop award package Energetic problem solver sought with proven figure ability Growing company in Princeton area Call 609-924- 3463 EOE

ADMINISTRATIVE ASST, ■to research director.

a promising future can be yours m this entry level position with a leading Thoroughbred racing and breeding firm The position entails some typing and general office work With room for in creased responsibilities K n o w le d g e ofthoroughbreds helpful, b u t th e m a jo r requirements are energy, a vviMingness to learn and good organizational skills Salary commensurate with exDerienre. and the company also features an attractive bonus plan. Send 'esurne m con fidence to: ITB, Inc.. 306 Ahbington Dr , East Windsor. N J 08520

K n o w s o m e o n e w h o ' s a f eat ure? Cal l the edi t or .

SHUT METAiPOWER BRAKE

OPERATOR

Able to set up and operate brake m light gauge sheet metal shop Familiar with normal shop practices, m a th and trend allowances. Steady work, good benefits Call Personnel Dept between 9 am and 3 p m. 609 466 3400.

T E L E P W N ESOL I CI T OR

,.-jme y. • • ■■■lu5 'ib e 'd i ■ •••' ■ ."•3h -|p , rt Ti

Ca!i 60 i 6SS Vi Roben Ooii''

Executive Buying Corp. 1000 Executive Office Ctr.

Cranbury, N.j, 08512

E X E C U T I V E DI RECT ORWe are a Municipal Utilities Authority supplying water and sewer services to a growing MidrJIesex County Townsirip We operate a 3 rngd, advanced level sewerage collection system feeding into county authority lines and a Township wide water system supplied from deep wells

The successtui candidate will be results oriented, enjoy a fast paced environment, possess excellent com munication skills, be expeneni ed in training and managing office and plant personnel and hav-r a com bination of education and experience that will demonstrate leadership and mdriagement achievements Position reports to a Board of Cor'"nissiunefs New Jersey S ' W 1 ar*d T 2 licenses pref^-rred. Thu cessfui candidate will be required to move his resirlence to the vicinity of the Town..i-i;‘ w thin -»m.- yfuii of eiTi ployment

Send resunie, references, requirements to.

tiistofv and present

MONROE TOWNSHIP MUNICIPAL UTILITIES AUTHORIH P.O. Box 159, Jamesbuig New Jersey 08831

Genuinely Experienced

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY$20,000 and Benefits START IM M EDIATELY

The company is moving lo Princeton The office is very small now The business is phenomenally successful and growing.

^he president requires an experienced aide for office management, administrative and secretarial support Skills must be spectacular

Ttie work is investment management. Tiie clients nationwide Everything done is fed to a computer you control The pace is fast The demands exacting. The rewards include your own satisfaction in knowing you have done a superlative job and wilt be compensated accordingly

Send a resume and a letter today. Tell the president what kind of job you really want and wtiy the job makes sense to you The president will contact you by telephone at whatever time you request Mr Sam i-fayes, Maine Mutual Corporation Princeton Packet Box 04184

P R O C E D U R E SW R I T E R

The Wall Street Journal looted in So. Bruns­wick. has an immediate need for a Procedures Writer. This position is open due to expansion in a growing depart­ment.Duties will include w rit­in g o f t e c h n ic a l p r o c e d u r e s a n d docum enta tions This position requires ex­perience in technical w r it in g w ith ty p in g skills Experience with a CRT is helpful and data processing back­ground is a plus.We o f fe r e x c e l le n t benefits, including den­tal insurance and an educational assistance plan. Salary is $14,000 per year Interested ap­plicants. please stop by at Rte, 1 South Bruns­wick to complete an ap­plication. or forward a detailed resume includ­ing salary history to:

Associate Personnel Manager

Wall S treel Journal PO. Box 300

Princeton. N J. 08540Equal O pportun ily Em pioyef

ENERGETIC Self-Starter — needed for small R 4 D firm in Princeton. Entry level posi­tion. clerical, som? typing. Cali 609-452-9595 between 9-5.

COOK WANTED — St. Paul Convent. Princeton, M ini­mum wage. Call Sister Mar­garet 609-924-4414 aft. 3pm

SECRETARY OFFICE Man­ager; Small, congenial but hard-working management consulting firm moving to Princeton seeks top-notch secretary o ffice m anager starting mid-February, This is a fu ll-tim e, h igh-ootentia i posiliori, with all benefits, in a growing firm specializing in public affairs We seek an outgoing, energetic person who IS a tiger on details to manage all office functions. Word-processor experience is useful. Please send re­sume to Vanderwicken 4 Co , Suite 250. 20 Nassau Street, Princeton. Don’t phone; inter­views will be arranged in late January in Princeton.

HAIRDRESSER — full or part time. Commission. 609- 586-2747 Song s Beauty Salon.

TELEPHONE INTERVIEW­ERS — part time 18yrs -- . Market research for the Gal­lup Organization, Work from your home We will train. Phone 609-924-9600. ext 350., 9am-2'30pm,

RECEPTIONIST Secretary— Princeton CPA firm needs someone with typing & cleric­al skills to help during tax sea­son. Part time position w flexible hours. Call 609-924- 1010

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY— Delightful firm. Very diver­sified position Benefits, solid future. $14'15K Call Mr Kris (609i 896-1183 P Robert Dann Personnel 134 Franklin Corner Rd.

HORSE FARM ASST - re­sponsible individual to work part lime with show breeding quarterhorses Must be over 18 and experienced M ini­mum wage to start Call 609- 924-4522

CHILD CARE — needed for 21 mo giri. Mon-Fn. 8;30am- 1 30pm. Prefer with 1-2 other ch ild ren . W est W indsor- LawrenceviOe area 609-799-

after 2pm

FEE PAR>

SEC RETARY C LER K Knowledge of tax forms 4 p a y ro ll re p o r ts a p lu s Appointment or'iy 609 466- 2026.

P A R T N E R

service business. High yield, low investment Will tram right person M D, Lyons 609 921 6580.

SninyMq609-924-8064

20 Nassau Street Princeton, N.J.

BANKINGEDP AUDITOR to $20,000M n. 1 yr growth spot. CotX)l. OS, JCL Full Benefits.

ACCOUNTANT

State tax and fiduciary Trust E x p e r ie n c e . Law a <- Growth & full benefits

ASST MGR & BR ANC H MGRS. to Low 20's

Sxnvings and Loan Full be­nefits and growth lite exp OK

TRUST ADMINISTRATOR to $20,000

Knowledge of NJ probate laws, trust and estate tax re­turns. Super benefits.

INTERNAL AUDITORto $18,000

Degreed - lite exp. CPA or financial institute

MORTGAGE CLERKto $11,000

Ljte exp in mortgage servic­ing department Good oppor­tunity to grow

CALL GEMMA OR JOANNE TO START YOUR FUTURE

CAREER

Se c r e t a r ie s

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY to S15,000

Excellent skills for fast grow­ing company. Financial back­ground a • Full benefits.

SECRETARY to $13,000

Fonune 500 needs steno & typing for department heads Super benefits

S E C R E T A R Y TO TH E PRESIDENT to $12,000

Congenial Princeton office. Academia background a • Excellent benefits and tree parking

SECRETARY to S11.5CX)

No steno, diversified duties tor targe Princeton Corpora lion Typing, tnsu'ance ex­perience helpful

CALL JOANNE TO START YOUR FUTURE CAREER

SECRETARY — The Gallup Organization in Pnnceton is seeking a person with good typing and organizational skills. Full time position In­teresting market research re­lated work Please ca'l 609- 924-9600. ext 278 E.O E

CAREER Will tram selec­tive person for exceptional career opportunity in sales. This opportunity will be avail­able March 1, 1982 3 year salary plan • incentive in­creases as earned Send re­sume to Career, P O. Box 5012, Trenton, N J 08638 EOE- M F

AIDES M FHOME HEALTH AIDES

LEARN & EARNBecome a certified Aide Free training course. Care fnr patients in their own home in your area Starting vvage, $4 00 per hour plus travel Cali for iritt^fvicw

6 0 9 -4 5 2 -9 1 5 0

PRINCETON HOME HEALTH AIDE SERVICE

and' 'V 'Drrimunirirs

Management

Looking For An

O pportunity?*Ve nave a career oppurtumty m our management training oio yram willingness to work hard imagination & initiative are the mam requirements Start at S25.000 per year it qualified

C a l l D. Lu ttes M o n d a y - F r id a y ,

9 -4609 -8 82 -2 30 3

Equal opportun ity em p loyer M F

MARKETINGCOMMUNICATIONS

COORDINATOR

Mainstem Corporation, a computer based management information service Company with clients throughout the U S and Canada, has created a new position chartered to coordinate the creation and production of diverse communications vehicles for promoting the sale of the Company’s services.

This persor. will have tfie responsibility for advertising, public relations, conferences and direct mail programs, and will assist with the preparation of proposals, manuals, and various Marketing-onemed literature. Prior relevant experience is essential, with comprehensive knowledge of effective advertising, direct response, and publicity practices. Must be a persuasive, skilled writer, w itii a knowledge of the principles of graphic arts production.

In addition to a competitive salary, we offer first rate benefits and excellent working conditions. Interested candidates should send a resume to Allan Salkin, Mamstem Corporation, P 0. Box 2. Princeton, NJ 08540.

W e a ie an Equal O ppoftunity Eniqloyei K'm

REGISTERED NURSE — Temporary position thru April 30. 1982. Starting salary. $14,045.85. Contact Dave Duncan. Training School for Boys. S killm an 609-466- 2200 ext 56 AA EOE

CASHIER NEEDED — lor national brokerage firm in P rinceton. Duties include p ro c e s s in g c h e cks and securities. Typing is required. Previous brokerage or bank­ing experience preferred Cali Mary at 609-924-6200.

G R A P H IC A R T IS T — needed to fill supervisory position in small growing typographic firm, Require­ments include a minimum or 3 years working experience in the following areas' design conception, printing speci­fication. copy fitting, & actual mechanical preparation. For further information, please cal! 609-921-0895.

HAIRDRESSERS — 3 part time experienced operators Must be able to roller set & blow dry for very busy salon Cali 609-655-9741 days. 201-297-8799 aft. 6 pm.

Admin. Assis i. To $14K KEY PERSON

Prestigious consulting firm. Typing & steno. Professional, mature personality. Never a tee Cali 609-896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL W

3131 Princeton Pike Office Park Bldg. 4 Lawrencevilie, N.J.

BILLING CLERK ~ full lime position available in billing d e p a rtm e n t D iv e rs ifie d duties requiring accurate typ­ing arid math skills. Competi­tive salary & excellent com­pany paid benefits. Experi­ence helpful Apply at 50 Lake Or. Highlstown. N.J. or call Gai! 609-443-6500 EOE

SALES-MGMT. CAREER -- Immediate training program, national co,. all fringe be­nefits. $20-25,000 By appl 201-722-3990. Mr Peterson, E O E

REAL ESTATE— Licensed M F Permanent part time New deve lopm ent sales. Seeking mature, reliable per­son Flexible hours Call 609 896-2995 for appointment,10 -4 .3 0 daily

PART TIME — Sec for con­sultant in m arketing com­munications 10-20 hrs wk knowledge of foreign lan- guage(s) helpful 609-683- 1322 or P O Box 1406, Prin­ceton, 08540.

Part-Time To $5 per hr. CRT

IBM System 32 experience a plus 20 hours a week Be nefits Never a fee Call 609- 896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL ★

3131 Pnnceton Pike Office Park Bldg 4 Lawrencevilie. N.J.

KITCHEN SUPERVISOR - - Position avail, in March for person exp in institutional dietary supervision HIEFFS certificate a must Pis send particulars to Parkway Nurs­ing Home, 1201 Parkway Ave.. Trenton. N J 08628

HELP WANTED — part time Gift Shop, 3-5 hours daily, M on-F ri 5 09 -9 2 4 -4 191.11am-6pm, M-F

GENERAL DUTIES - Retail estabiisnment Includes driv­ing van, receiving & misc. 609-924-8296.

Secretary To$13KLITE WORD

PROCESSING EXPERIENCE

Report lo dept mgr Some stal typing & client interlace All benefits Never a fee. Call 609-896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNELS

3131 Princeton Pike Office Park Bldq. 4 Lawrencevilie, N.J.

REAL ESTATE Sales — We need help lo handle the in­creased business we are en­joying in the residential and commercial areas. Experi­ence helpful but not neces­sary. J.T Boyer Realty. Real­tor 609-921-1805.

FLOWER SHOP Assistant - experience unnecessary but d e s ira b le P lease s ta te education, experience and other qualifications. Reply Box #04155 c/o Princeton Packet.

SALESPERSON ~ Can you sell engineering skills & posi­tions? If so. we'll train you as an executive recruiter in pro­fitable. secure, non-traveling career Established agency, top reputation. Location Exit 8A NJ T p ke . W rite Box # 0 4 2 2 2 c/O P r in c e to n Packet

Accountant To $16K ANALYST

Young, dynamic company. Degreed. 1 4 years public experience preferred- Prom- otable. Excellent benefits. Never a fee. Call Irene Carter 609-896-9470.

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNELS

3131 Princeton Wke Office Park Btdg. 4 Lawrencevfie, N.J.

SECURITY GUARDS — part time weekends 4 pm lo mid­night. No experience neces­sary. All uniforms & equip­ment supplied. Call Industrial Security Service 201-359- 4505.

DENTAL ASSISTANT — needed in orthodontic office. Hightstown area, full time, ex­perience preferred, will train Call for interview 609-448- 6600.

PERMANENT FULL-TIME P osition— General office Light bookkeeping, typing 609-924-8296.

M A I N T E N A N C E - HANDYPERSON — to assist building superintendent of office complex located in the Princeton area Reply Box # 0 4 2 2 5 c .o P r in c e to n Packet.

COLLEGE STUDENTS — make your Summer plans now Day camp counselors wanted Mature, arts & crafts knowledge preferred. Call for applications, 609-924-4497

BUS DRIVER Summer Day Camp Counselor wanted - must be over 21 Call 609- 924-4497 for application

CLERICAL NO FEE

JOIN★SELECTIVE#★ TEMPS #

Call Renee or Nancy 609-896-9470

3131 Princeton Pike Lawrencevilie, N.J.

W AREHOUSE PRODUC­TION — We are a smalt manufacturer located in Prin­ce ton loo k in g fo r m u lt i­talented individual with split personality. If you have ex­perience in a pick/'pack en­v ironm ent & m echan ica l aptitude give me a call at 609-452-9275. Ask for Frank Batsch, Prod. Depl. 8am- 4;30pm.

EXCITING RETAIL Sales Position — Experience not nec. Must know how to sew. ble hrs. Contact Mr Vine 609- 882-6657

PART TIME — Former Am- way Diamond D irects has started a more profitab le business. Looking for former Amway D is tr ib u to rs who would really like double their incomes. Call 609-665- 2566-_____________________

RECEPTIONIST/Typist — Progressive architectural firm seeks pleasant, well edu­cated person to act as gener­al gal/guy Friday. Must be accurate typ is t (60wpm) Please cal! 609-924-7770

Secretary T o $13 ,5K INTERNATIONAL

Variety for top local company Steno, te lex. Superb be- nefils-tuition, dental. Never a fee Call 609-896-9470.

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL ★

3131 Princeton Ptke Office Park Bldg. 4 Lawrencevilie, N.J

ADMINISTRATIVE Assistant -- with knowledge of book­keeping for sm all fam ily counseling agency. Hours 10-3 S alary n ego tiab le Send resume to Family Ser­vice Assoc.. 143 E. State St , Trenton 08608

COMPANION for elderly man •— 9am-1 pm week days Call 609-448-4741 after 5pm.

ENGINEERING AiDE — En­try level position with rapidly expanding consulting firm in Princeton. Some computer knowledge a plus. Assoc de­gree preferred Send resume in confidence to Box #04230 c 0 Princeton Packet.

SECRETARY — Full time for rapidly expanding consulting firm in Princeton. Exc typing, pleasant phone manner, no steno nec CRT knowledge a plus. Will tram right person. Reply in confidence Box # 0 4 2 3 0 c 0 P n n c e to n Packet

FUl I TIME BEAUTICIAN — dependable. 609-799-9828. ask for manager

TIRED OF Commuting to the c ity? Come lo Princeton where there is an interesting and challeng ing position available for someone with a minimum of 2 years experi­ence in insurance underwrit­ing or background m con­tracts. Musi have flair for writ­ing Excellent salary & oe- nefits. Please send resume (o: Donald F Smith & Associ­ates. P.O Box 2197, Prince­ton, NJ 08540 Dept C

TEMPS NEEDED - - Earn top hourly rates on long and short assignments We are seeking. Secretaries. Word Processors, Clerk Typists. Receptionists, Staff Builders. 20 Nassau St , Princeton. NJ. Call for appt 609-924-0604.

RECEPTIONIST — Diversi­fied position. Ability to work independently and acurate typing a must Please cal! 609-452-2666,

GROUP HOME Assistant — Seeking individual to work w autistic youngsters. Training & consultation provided. Exc. opportunity to develop career skills as part of the profes­sional treatment team. Sal­ary-Si 2000 yearly. Call Mr. and Mrs. Harris at 609-443- 8494 or send resume (o 40 Pine Drive. Roosevelt, N.J. 08555.

CLERK TYPIST Reception­is t — part tim e fo r real estate office in Princeton. 609-921-6060.

SCHOOL BUS Driver — 21 yrs or older w bus 1 license, or will help to obtain, Benefits, im­mediate vacancy South Bruns­wick school district, 201-297- 7800 ext. 244

SECRETARY NO FEE

JOIN★ SELECTIVE## TEMPS #

Call Renee or Nancy 609-896-9470

3131 Princeton Pike Lawrencevilie, N.J.

SECRETARY

Prestige environment in local facility of respected national firm 50 wpm typing No ste­no Flexible hours. Word pro­cessing experience helpful. Salary open. Call Harriet M cC orm ick , M cC orm ick Associates. P.O Box 1206, Pnnceton, N J 08540. 609 924-2022

IN TE R P R E TE R S — and translators with experience for freelance assignments. Albanian. Bulgarian, Czech, Greek, Japanese, Polish. Rumanian. Russian, Serbo- Croatian. Slovakian. Please send background information to Interhost. 46 Shaftsbury Ave , Hopewell. N.J. 08525. No telephone calls

DENTAL HYGENIST — part time days flexible. In preven­tive practice 609-924-9411

WOMAN TO CLEAN — 5 days week. 6 hrs day at $5 hr References required. 201- 359-4493

Executive Corp Officer — wanted part time to act as Sec & Treasurer, must be able to secure loans up to $50,000 Salary $1000 a year and 5% of corp income. Call 609-259-9211

SSWICKER DemonstratorSS want part time work wJull

lime pay ($100 eve)'?’ World Odyssey Home Party Plan needs ladies to open area' No exp nec! Call collect 609- 768-0136

MANAGER TRAINEE — Ai- jon's is looking for aggressive individual Benefits available upon completion of training

program. 609-655-3700 be­tween 9-4 p.m . 609-443- 3411 after 4 p.m.

RN - private School, part time. Please call 609-448- 0374 betw een 9am and 12am.

WAITRESSWAITER — Ex­perienced only. Lunches, din­ners. Exc. lips. No Sundays. Michele’s 609-924-9313,

TELEPHONE ADVERTIS­ING Sales Permanent part time. 3 hr daily shifts, Mon- Fn Across from Princeton Airport. Salary commis­sion. 609-921-9400.

SECRETARY— Good typing skills for dynamic, expanding professional organization. Full time, experienced 35 hr, wk, EOE Please send re­sume & salary expected to N.J State Nurses Associa­tion. 320 W, State St., Tren­ton. N.J. 08618

BABYSITTER — To care for 5 mo old son m my home. 5 days, 8:30am-5pm. Please call 609-799-1861 after 6pm

DENTAL ASST. — Experi­enced Cranbury-East Wind­sor area Benefits. Call Mrs. Gill, 609-443-6464,

PART TIME B ookkeeper Wanted — must have mini­mum 3 yrs bookkeeping ex­perience including posting to subsidiary & general ledgers, typing ability a plus. Contact New America Ventures, inc. 609-446-4700.

We«kol January 20 - 22, 1982Classified Advertising

5-B

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Jobs Wanted Jobs Wanted

R E S E A R C H P O S IT IO NAvailable — in organizatk>nai research group. Bachelor's degree ar>d survey research experience preferred Must have excellent writing, analy­tical and interpersonal skills. Must be witling to travel. Please call 609-924-5900, ext. 237

Opinton Research Corp. No. (Garrison St. Piir>ceton, N.J.

E.O.E.

VETERINARY Assistant — needed part tim e, some ^venings & Saturday. Send resume to Box #04256 c/o Princeton Packet.

M C C A R TE R TH E A TE R Company — is now accept­ing applications for volunteer ushering staff. See plays, music & dance events & be paid $5 for most perform­ances for travel expenses Call Don 609-452-G125 Mon & Fri between 10am & 6pm You must be at least 16 yrs. old.

SECRETARY FOR CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPT.

needed immediately Qual­ifications'• experienced in customer service• typing essential• Knowledge of electronic parts a plus.

Interesting diversified posi­tion Excellent company paid bene fits . Calf Personne l Dept, at 609-466-2100 to set up an appointment PROGRAMMED CONTROL

CORP2 E Broad St

Hopewell, N.J. 08525

DENTAL ASSISTANT (Part-time)

Modern dental office is seek­ing an intelligent, highly skil­led. experienced, career oriented chairside assistant It you are a self-starter, confi­dent, enthusiastic, and desire a rewarding position com­mensurate with your experi­ence, call Ruth or Selma

n } ^ e t f i c k § o r i

a s s o c i a t e s : ,

6 Colonial Lake Dr LawrenceviHe, N.J

609-883-5103

IN T E R IO R D E S IG N —Sales. Flair for decorating? Creative people to tram as design consultants for art & home accessory co Flexible hrs Call weekdays 9am- 12noon 201-780-4307

SECRETARY TYPIST

Position in executive sales office of Princeton based advertising research firm re­quires excellent typing skills, good telephone manner and ability to handle pressure No steno needed Cal' 609-924- 3434 lor appointment

G A LLU P a R O B IN S O N INC.

Princeton, NJ EOE

SECRETARY — Exc oppor­tu n ity ex is ts fo r m ature minded professional ind i­vidual w good typing and ste­no skills. You will assist the company administrator in a diversity of projects Good atmosphere, great people & interesting work. Princeton area 201-560-1720

PHOTOGRAPHIC Labora­tory Technician — Custom laboratory m the Princeton Trenton area is seeking a qualified black & white color technician to work during the evening hours. Individual should be a self starter with experience m both black & white color darkroom techni­ques, Educational experi­ence in lieu of practical back­ground will also be consi­dered Reply Box #04262 C''o Princeton Packet

WORD PROCESSOR — p a rt tim e , e v e n in g s or weekends, on call basis. With minimum supervision sets up word processing equipment and or script computer ter­minal to produce a variety of correspondence. Experience required $5.25-'hr Contact P. Ritlerson, 609-452-3276, Princeton University. Prince­ton. NJ EOE, AAE

IG — Acquisitions book producer & r seeks experi- jger to coordinate

expert consul- s, artists & photo- jeeded for wide on-fiction books, exciting & deman­ge required. Sai- jnsurate with ex- (©nefits. Send re- lary requirements ^238 c/o Princeton

TELEPHONE INTERVIEW ERS — pari time. 18 yrs + Market research for the Gal­lup Organization Work from your home. We will train. Phone 609-924-9600 ext 350, 9am-2;30pm

SALES ENGINEER — To $80K/1 St yr (sal. -i comm ). M arket industria l energy m anagem ent system s & alternate energy devices in tristate area. Dynamic state of art industry leader offers superb advancement & man agement potential. ■* + yrs sales exp. or technical back ground in energy manage menl Prefer BSEE or ME 609-683-0000, Place Mart Consultants. 1 Palmer Sq.. Princeton 08540.

PART TIME REPORTER — for night meetings wanted Send resume to THE CEN­TRAL POST, P 0. Box 5056, Kend Pk., 08824

TWO MEDICAL Office Assis­tants — or LPN's. Resume and references required No RN's need apply Reply to P.O- Box 3706, Trenton, NJ

Accountant To S35K CREDIT MANAGER

Degreed in finance/business. 5 years credit/managemeni experience in large, corpo­rate environment with asset management and account­ing. Excellent opportunity. Top benefits. Never a fee. Call Irene Carter 609-896- 9470.

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL Ik

3131 Princeton Pika Office Park Bldg. 4 LawrencevNe, N.J.

ALCOHOLISM Specialist — for aqerjcv doinq education training/limited counseling. Experience or tra in ing in a lc o h o lis m n e c e s s a ry . Teaching experience desir­able Send resume to Box # 0 4 2 5 4 c 0 P r in c e to n Packet.

Accountant T o$17.5K CORPORATE

Degreed 2 years experi­ence. Ledger, journals, some fixed asset Highly promot- able spot in top company Ex­cellent benefits. Never a fee Cat! Irene Carter 609-896- 9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL

3131 Princeton PikeOffice Park Biug. 4LawrenceviHe. N.J.

DIETARY AIDS — FJ o p/t Pleasant working cond Be­nefits. Need own trans. Cat! dietary supervisor 201-369- 0711 , Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m Foothill Acres Nursing Home, Neshanic-

B A B Y S ITTE R -LO O K IN G (or mature loving person to care tor special infant lor working Mom. Full time My house or yours, Neshanic 201-369- 6510.

ASSOCIATE Therapist — in group home for 5 autistic chil­dren. Should have experi­ence with autistic or emo­tionally disturbed children, or experience with group home care, or familiarity with be­havioral intervention. Pri­m arily 3-11pm weekdays, sonie weekends and 2 over­nights per month, Starting salary $10,000 plus health, (rf*. UiMbfItty and profeaaion- al insurance Calf 609-924- 6280,

VENDING ATTENDANT — Daily, 0:3Oam-2pm Dayton- Cranbury area. Call for appt 609-599-9003,

LEGAL SECRETARY Book­k e e p e r — fo r g ro w in g Princeton patent law firm, Cali Mr Woodbridge 609- 924-3773

EDITOR - - Part-time for non­p ro fit educationa l health newsletter Must be familiar with layout, printing & other aspects of production Flexi­ble hours, salary negotiable Please send details of pre­vious experience, education & interests to Box #04241 c/o Princeton Packet.

CLERK — An oppOf- jr the right person in a lous hotel Qualifica- nclude maturity, ex- ce flexible hours & ance. Call Ms Pogue loyd a t 201-780-3870.

REAL ESTATE SALES

Why earn less?

• ERA HOMES OF QUALITY

• O ffers much more for -experience-higher graduated com m is­sions-superior o ffice location -better professional tools

CaN. Evelyn Boyarsky Marilyn Kessous

orChuck WUms

HOMfS O f QUAIITY

CHOIR DIRECTOR.'Organist — H illsboro Presbylerian Church, Belle Mead. 201- 359-7643,

PART TIME — C leaning. Princeton area fitness center. 10pm-3am. Cali 609-896- 9022.

Have You Been Out Of The Job Market For a While? — Would you want to ease back into it? 10-15 years away from the office is not a long lime. Call us and we'i! tell you why. 201-469-0920 Ambas­sador Temps.

PART TIME — Legal Secret­ary. experienced General practice in E Windsor, flexi­ble days.hours. Reply box # 0 4 2 2 3 , c.’O P r in c e to n Packet

FULL TIME Position — Full benefits at pleasant Mon­mouth Jet , So Brunswick loca tion Good room for advancement in customer service or production. 609- 924-4020

PRODUCT MANAGER FIELD SALES DIRECTOR

Rare opportunity for entry into pharmaceutical firm with im peccab le in te rn a tio na l credentials. Ability to develop product line & supervise sales force in the field. Mini­mum re q u ire m e n ts : BA, proven track record 4 7-* years e xp rie n ce . S a lary range high 30's to low 40’s. C a ll H a rrie t M cC orm ick, McCormick Associates. P.O. Box 1206, Princeton, N.J. 08540 609-924-2022.

p a r t t im e —- Telephone workers Make appts. from your home, for our salesmen No se'ling, earn $5 per appt.

bonus. Exp. preferred. Call Mr Lowe. 201-329-3777.

PRINCETON OFFICE -- needs p leasant voice for phone work Flexible hours, part time Call 609-896-2350

CHILD CARE - - Responsi­ble person needed to care for 2 girls ages 3 4 5 Part time a ft , eves., some light cook­ing. Must drive. Our home 201-369-5177.

PART-TIME CLERICAL - position; 15-20 hrs per wk.; $3.30-$6 per hr.; typing ex- per. req. Apply Administrative Office. So Bruns. Twp , Mun. Bldg , Mon Jet., N.J So. Bruns, is an E O E

FULL TIME RECEPTIONIST Asst — Optomethc office in LawrenceviHe Reliable ma­ture attitude, experience pre­ferred but not necessary 609-92J-3567 Mon 9-5, Wed 12-7, Thurs. 10-7, Fri, 9-5. Sal 9-2.

MARKETING Representa­tive — Real Estate back­ground helpful Full or part time for U.S.D O E, endorsed ene rgy saving program Liberal commission, oppor­tunity to grow with young company Contact Thermo- Logics Inc.. P.O Box 5505, LawrenceviHe, NJ 08648. 609-896-2214

CHILD CARE — Part or full time hours needed Malure individual. Plainsboro. Pr Jet or Princeton areas pre­ferred 609-799-1850

PART TIME Secretary — Princeton office, 10-16 hours weekly. Work is interesting & d iversified. Call 609-924-

TuesC)p»ys b«*»ween 9 am & 1 pm

SPEECH THERAPIST ~ M ust be p ro fe s s io n a lly licensed Fee - S25 pm 40 mins Reply to Box ^04245 c 0 Pnneeton Packet

NEW BUSINESS - Needs attractive seif starter for com­mission sales No financial obligation, our resources your hours Ground floor opportunity for right person, 609-452-7782 after 6pm.

LOVING PERSON — to care for 3 yr old & infant in my home plus possible house­keeping. mornings. 609-448- 0647

LEGAL SECRETARYExperience Necessary Ex­panding General Practice Pleasant Surroundings.

LANE AND PERL 201 <874-8800

NEW JERSEY TAX — Sea­sonal Hourly tmpioyrnent. Day or evening shifts, must type a minimum of 40 wpm. $3 85 per hour, may lead to permanent full time employ­ment Interesting & challeng­ing work processing New Jersey income tax returns Work in pleasant environ­ment with the latest modern equipment Contact N.J Divi­sion of Taxation. Milt Hill Pro­cessing Center, 160 S. Broad St . Trenton, N J.| formerly VanSciver Furniture Store. Equal opportunity employer. Call 609-292-9852.

RECEPTIONIST TYPIST— progressive architectural

I firm seeks pleasant, well edu- I cated person to act as gener- i al gal guy Friday. Must be

accurate typist (60wpm), Please call 609-924-7770.

CEHAMiC DECORATORS— persons interested in part time work by the day who would be on-call preferably with ceramic decal experi­ence A p p ly in p e rs o n Lenape Products Inc. Rt. 31. Pennington. N.J 609-737- 0206

PRINTER — A B Dick 350 operator, Cranbury area Ask tor Mr Hughes 609-655- 2166.

Secretary/ExecutiveTo $15K

DIVERSIFIED SPOTGrowing Company needs typing, shorthand and good organ izationa l sk ills Be­nefits Never a fee Call 609- 896-9470

★ SELECTIVE PERSONNEL ★

3131 Princeton Pike Office Park BWg. 4 LavYrenceviNe, N.J.

CHILD CARE NEEDED — Rutgers prof. 4 wife looking (or mature person to care, full time, for our 4 month old in­fant, pref, in our home, in Dayton, So. Bruns. Call 201- J29-3375.

FULL TIME Cashier — Mon- thru Fri.. good pay 4 benefits. Cal! 609-799-0530 for inter­view.

DATA ENTRY — IBM S-32 o p e ia io r , e x p e r ie n c e d . Permanent position in Law- renceville area. A pprox i­mately 30 hrS'Wk. Start 8 am. Responsible person for data input & output, must be able to work w 0 supervision after initia l break-in. Write Box # 0 4 2 4 9 c o P r in c e to n Packet

SECRETARIAL Person — good basic skills including steno to assist 2 busy execu­tives Must like detail & be capable of independent work assignments. Salary com­mensurate with experience Excellent benefit program. Write Box #04250 C O Prin­ceton Packet

SUMMER EE JOBS

A summer Program Director and Summer Program Assis­tant are being sought to con­duct a 5 week environmental educa tion day cam p for youngsters entering grades 1-10

A p p lic a n ts shou ld have knowledge of environmeniai and outdoor education, first aid ce rtifica tio n , d rive r's license and vehic le The Director must have one year teaching experience The Assistant must have some teaching or camp leadership experience.

Send resume, letter of intent, copies of first aid certifica­tions, 3 letters of recom ­mendation by April 1, 1982 to Pamela Paquette, Program D ire c to r . S to n y B ro o k - Millstone Watersheds Asso­ciation, R.D #1 Box 263A, Pennington. NJ 08534.

TEACHERS — 2 full time openings Both begin March 1, 1982 thru Jur>e 1983. due to maternity leaves; grade 4 se lf-con ta ir^ 4 grade 7. So­cial Studies 4 Reading. Must be N.J certified Some ex­perience preferred. Closing date January 30th. Send let­ter of application 4 complete resume to: East Amwell Twp School, Ringoes, N.J 08551 EOE

SALES/PERSONNELOPENSSS

EXPANSION 1962

Are you ready tor a change? This job can change your life .' The phone never stops ringing, the pace is hectic 4 som e days y o u ’ re even busier. Even worse, you work independently with little su- oervision, so you must keep up with a million details at once. This is your opportunity to step into sates. We are a placement service, one of the best in the business What do we offer? For the first month, a lot of hard work, headaches and a bit of money. After that, a lot of hard work, headaches and a lot of money. Yuu can expect to earn 25 to 40K your first year and after that, you write your own check We even have benefits in case you break a leg Call Bette Dye at 452-1122.

mTownPersonnel Agency

Princeton Forrestal Center 101 CoHege Road East Princeton, N.J. 08540

609-452-1122

FIND OUT — How to earn a lot of money, without a lot of work No selling, no gim­micks. Send name, address. & phone no. to Mr Stevens. P O Box 115 Monmouth Junction. NJ 08852

NURSES — RN LPN. male, iemaie, aii snms tor nursing home in Monroe Twp Call Mrs. DeRisi 609-448-7036. bet 9 & 4

TYPIST Executive Secretary — lor fjireci mail marketing firm in Princeton. Word pro­cessing experience preferred or we will train Salary com­mensurate with experience Contact Personnel 201-874- 4300

PERSONNEL LOCAL PEOPLE PERSON

Do you love to meet new peo­ple? Talk on the phone a lot? You'll love our office. We re m need oi a bright, self-starter to interview applicants and fill temporary orders for our Princeton office. Must have general office experience w ith good organ izationa l skills. Call or come in today

# 3 ta to ^^ OCVIt'OI.

194 Nassau St. Princeton. N.J. 609-924-1022 Never a Fee!

EOE.

IM.MEDIATE Opening — For secretary in small Pnneeton area law office Typing & shorthand req Send resume in confidence to box #04247 c/o Princeton Packet,

COOK — Take charge type Experienced in institutional cooking, sanitation, inventory 4 food cost control. 6 day wk Available immediately. Sal­ary open. 609-921-2750 be­tween 9am-2pm

DISHWASHERS, Salad pre­paration. & Line servers — all shifts open 5 day wk Some exp req Reliability essential. 609-921-2750 between 9am- 2pm

ELECTRONICS Technician — 2 yrs, training beyond High School in electrical engineer­ing Tech n o lo gy area or equivalent experience re­quired Successful applicant should be familiar with 4 be able to use pressure trans ducers, thermocouples, elec­trical wiring, oscilloscopes, meters, etc. Excellent be­nefits 4 working conditions Please send copy of your re­sume or call: Donna Vander- mark. Personnel Manager, lngerso l!-Rar,d Research Inc., P.O. Box 301, Princeton, N.J. 08540, 609-921-9103 - EOE

FOOD SERVICE

ASSISTANTFOOD

PRODUCTIONMANAGER

Immediate opening for an assistant food production manager to work full time for suburban Trenton hospital Must have Associates de­gree in Industrial Foods, or related field. Excellent be­nefits including tuition refund Apply to Personnel Depart­ment.

HAMILTONHOSPITAL

1881 White Horse Hamilton Square Rd.

Hamilton Square. NJ 08690 609-586-7900

Equal Opportunity Employer, M F

SMALL PRIVATE school — looking for highly efficient secretary. Good typing, able to assume responsibilities, and must be well organized, Send resume to PO Box 297, Blawenburg, NJ 08504

D E C O R A T O R A C C E S ­SORY SALES — Part time or full time. Will tram. No exp. nec. Call Sherry. 201-359- 1670.

BOOKKEEPER -■ Part time, prior exp. 4 typing required Call 609-443-6706,

SALESPERSON — Live and work in Europe. Strong indi­viduals needed for financial consulting in Europe ar>d loc­al areas, Degree in ac^-rnmi- ing helpful but will tram the proper person Expected first year incom e $35 ,000 Company car possible Con­tact Pat at 201-247-8210.

SECRETARY RECEPTION­IST —- for busy dental office We have a full time position for an organized, motivated, people person, who can be given responsibility Exc. sal­ary 4 benefits. Pis. send de­tailed resume in complete confidence to Box #04255. c 0 Pnneeton Packet

CLERICAL ASSISTANT - H and le de ta ile d c le rica l assignments 4 filing. Some office exp preferred Grow­ing firm m Princeton area Location requires access to car C all 609 -924-3463 . EOE

RECEPTIONIST — For pre­vention oriented dental prac­tice Some typing, secretarial 4 hookkfteping skills neces­sary, But a pleasant perso­nality with ability to get along With people IS most impor­tant Previous dental office exp helpful, but the right per­son IS who we are looking for please call 609-448-6300, 8am-5pm.

LEG AL S EC R ETAR Y - Typing 4 steno. Litigat'on ex­perience preferred Call 609- 443-6706

PHARMACIST — N.J Reg­istered pharmacist wanted for busy Trenton pharmacy Must have 3rd party know­ledge Good pay 4 benefits No nights, no Sundays. Call 609-394-5212

LIVE-IN Companion •— for e lderly woman. Applicant must be mature, experienced & responsible. Current refer­ences required Please call 609-083-0817 after 7pm

DC YOU RUN Out of Money -- before you run out of months'^ Earn extra income, Appt, only. Eves, 201-636- 0258 874-6615.

GUEST HOUSE — part time Company owned meeting fac ility Branchburg area Help needed for servicing, cleaning 4 kitchen Various hours. For info call 201-725- 2078, Mr Thomsen, Man­ager

GIRL/GUY FRIDAY — ex­p e r ie n c e d s e lf - s ta r te r . Ground floor opportunity in n u t r it io n a l a s s e s s m e n t marketing dept. Contact R McCiinlock 609-452-1899

DAY CARE Center — needs resourceful person to super­vise after school children ages 647. 3 .30 -5 :30 pm Mon -Fri. Ideal for college student. Call 609-448-3883.

SERVICE STATION Atten- d e n t — n e e d e d fo r weekends. Apply al Prince­ton Exxon. 271 Nassau St. or call 609-921-9707

SYNAGOGUE — m West W indsor needs fu ll time secretary with prior office ex­perience. For information call after 6pm, Dick Sloller 201- 329-4662

ACCOUNTANT- ENTRY LEVEL

E xciting opportun ity with growing OTC listed firm. Re­sponsible tor journal entries, payroll, accounts payable, bank reconciliation, general ledger 4 fin an c ia l s ta te ­ments Accounting degree preferred. Please send re­sume including salary re­quirements to Box #04252 c c Pnneeton Packet

COMMERCM^I TRAVELs a l e s

UNIGLOBE, the world s lead ing travel franchise organiza­tion. IS seeking highly moti­vated sales professionals to market commercial travel on a commissioned basis. To arrange for a confidential in­terview call Ken Kane al 20i - 750-1751 or send resume to UNIGLOBE. P.O Box 652. Woodbridge. N.J 07095.

CHILD CARE — 2 boys. 18 mos & 3 yrs My John St home or yours Hours flexi­ble 609-924-1325.

DENTAL ASSISTANT — Re­sponsible person for full time (4' / day), progressive ortho­dontic office. Requires travel between 2 offices Experi­ence w certification prefer­red P lease reply to Box # 0 4 2 5 1 C O P r in c e to n Packet.

ACCOUNTS r e c e iv a b l e C le rk — fo r cab le c o m ­pany. Experienced and CRT knowledge helpful but not essential Good with figures and details Ground floor opportunity with growth pos­sibilities. Apply Hillsborough Cable Vision, Homestead Plaza. Belle Mead, 201-874- 6197

SECRETARY - - Immediate ope Ting for secretary to 2 person team in our Projecl Development Division Good typing and steno required plus 2 years experience or educational equivalent Ex­cellent opportunity for recent secretarial school graduate or person returning to full time employment Comprehen­sive benefits, free parking, not under Civil Service Send resume to' Personnel Oepi , N J Economic Development Authority, CN990 Trenton, N J 08625,

PART TIME Ambitious Cou­ple — willing to exchange 20 hrs. per wk for $1000 plus per mo. 201-526-4530 for appi

ASST TEACHER — fulltime position in day care center lo­cated in Princeton For more info, reply Box #04265 C/o Pnn­eeton Packet

BOOKKEEPER — Experi­enced. full charge. 3 days, Mercerville Non-Smoker Re­ply WHH #0994, Box 146 Highlstown.

CAREER JOB search & edu­cational counseling — Test­ing 4 Resume included. Dr Michael L Rosenthal. 609- 737-2236.

CHILD CARE — Mornings Mon-Fn. for 1 yr. old. Plains- boro or Princeton, 609-799- 3523.

CAFETERIA HELP Positions now available in new employee cafeteria Full time 4 part time jobs at very attractive rales 4 fringe be­nefits Days only No nights weekends or holidays Car essentia). Openings in the Cranbury area. Call Mrs. Cul­len at 201-567-5795 between 10 4 12 for interview in your neighborhood.

PART TIME Stable Work — on weekends. Must have ex­perience 4 'must" be de­pendable. Call 201-359-2660 ask for Chris.

DISHWASHER Utility Per­son - - part time, dinners, evenings M ichele 's 609- 924-9313.

TEACHER - Special Educa­tion — Hopeweii Valley Re­gional School District- Must be certified by the stale of N.J. as a teacher of the hand­icapped. Self-contained spe­cial education class at prim­ary level. Teaching experi­ence with learning disabled students desired Position available March 5, 1982 Send resume to Director of Pupil Personnel Services, Hopewell Valley Regional School District. 2 Academy St , Pennington, N.J. 08534 AAEOE.

CLERK — We have an im mediate opening for a repro­duction 4 filing cierk with accurate typing at 40wpm 4 1-2 yrs experience This indi­vidual will file 4 reproduce blueprints & drawings, main­tain a catalog file, shelve books, type library cards 4 update 4 file magazines, If in terested please call for im mediate interview: Dot Wal ton, Personnel Asst , Ing ersoil-Rand Research Inc P.O Box 301, Pnneeton, NJ 08540, 609-921-9103, EOE.

ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE Clerk — full time position, di­versified duties. If interested please call Mrs Pinelli C09- 924-9300 ext 261

EFFECTIVE RESUMES - over 10 yrs. experience as a personnel manager 4 place­ment counselor I can present your background in a profes­sional manner which will en­able you to stand out from the rest. Call me 4 get your career in gear. By appt only After 5 p m 609-443-5922.

RESUMES UNLIMITED — complete one slop service featuring resumes profes­sionally prepared to highlight your quaiilTcations, expertly typed 4 printed Cover letters 4 applications typed Type­se ttin g ava ilab le (or re sumes Personal, confiden­tial service 609-448-0701

RESUMES BY Gene Ryan — Your personalized 4 effective job marketing tool. Evening appointments available Day- ton, N J 201-329-2431,2u1- 329-6210.

Jobs WantedHOUSE CLEANER - seeks work in Kendall Pk area 201-873-2046 aft 5.

SECRETARY — 25 hours plus. 5 Years diversitied ex­perience also in bookkeeping 4 insurance 60'9-443-1281.

CHILD CARE — by 2 experi­enced mothers. Any age C lose to W alter C. Black School 609-448-4337

CHILD CARE — Service pro­vided for your preschool 4 school aged youngsters in our Belle Mead home. This professional molher daugh- ter team offers responsible daily child care service to the children of working parents. Transportation avail for local residence. Please call Mrs. Trani at 201-359-5735.

M A N A G E M E N T LE V E L POSITION — Warehouse Manager or Supervisor Ex­cellent organizational skills 20 years background experi­ence Knowledge of all ship­ping 4 receiving procedures Including export shipments. Also proficient at setting up inventories and inventory controls. Experienced in food handling, FDA requirements. GMP and OSHA regulations. High sense of integrity and motivation to successful pe.r- formance. If my qualifications fit your needs, please call P01-359-4185.

MARKETING 4 DISTRIBU TION EXECUTIVE — 25 yrs exp. Marketing 4 distributing parts in U.S., Canada. 4 Europe. Well qualified to manage i or more distribu­tio n c e n te rs or h a n d le markotir^g responsibilities For complete resume call201-359-2726.

CHILD CARE — in my home Full or part time. Experi­enced. References. 609-448- 2755

CHILD CARE my home, full time. Ages 1 -5, Ig yd. no traf- nc b09-448-0526

FULL CHILD Care — Early cbildhood exper. Learning acttvHies. ind attention, crea­tive play provided. 609-921- 1135.

M arket Research

McGraw-Hill Telephone In­terviewing Department seek­ing qualified applicants with market research experience in telephone market research interviewing and or market research telephone supervi­sion, Late atternoon until approximaiely 'a m . flexible weekends Call anytime 609- 448-2107.

McGraw-Hill, Inc.Hightstown

ENTRY LEVEL - Clinical Social Work position MSW 4 clinical placement required. Send resume to, CPC, 2330 Whitehorse • Mercerville Rd , Trenton, NJ 00619

Refiumes

COPIES — resumes, invita­tions, business cards, rubber stamps, complete typeset­ting, composition 4 printing service, 7 days a week at Sears Quick Copy Center, Quaker Bridge Mall.

CAREER AND Educational Counseling. Resumes ~ in­dividual testing, career plan­ning, college advisement Cali Anna Willingham, M A . M S W 20 Nassau S t , Prin­ceton. 609-921-8638

CAREER, JOB search 4 edu­cational counseling — Test­ing 4 Resume included Dr. Michael L Rosenthal. 609- 737-2236

HOUSECLEANING — com­plete home arnj office clean- i.ig. Daily-weekly-monthly. Reliable service. Call 609- 392-0897

CHILDCARE Alternatives — Creative learning exp in a nurturing environment Mon- te sso ri te a ch e r and ex- governess of this area is ottering childcare with a dit- (erence for a few children ages 2 and up. full time. Cal' lo talk, Kate. 201-359-6555

M ANUSCRIPT Typing — Cassette Transcription, le t ­te rs , e n v e lo p e s , labe ls Reasonable, 609-448-7180

NEED A V A C A T IO N — Young woman (ex-school teacher) w ill do weekendbabysitting in r ly home for one child. Meals provided $75 References While Pine Apts., 609-771-9232

4fELL KNOWN — and reli­able mother wishes to babysit day or w ee k ly . Located across the street from the Ethel McKnight School 609- 448-5330

B A B Y S IT T E R E X P E R I- E f iC E D — L a w re n c e - Princeton-Ewing area. Refer­ences 609-883-8709

EXPERIENCED TYPIST — Correctable Seteclric for free lance assignments. Have been employed in medical, publishing 4 legal fields. Cclf after 6pm. 609-443-3445.

MANAGEMENT LEVEL — position. Excellent orgwiiza- tional skills incl. typing, sys­tems development, finerteW accounti*'‘n. supervision of personnel. Outstarxfing corn- mu Ication skills and special wo 'g knowledge in a varie­ty of field; music, theater, photography, na tu re and ecology, ph ilo sop h y and education Proven flexibrtity as to schedule, job fun^ion and work environment. Keen sense of integrity, arxl high motivation to successful per­formance. Reply to; Cran. Press #24007, PO Box 396. Cranbury NJ 08512.

INTERIOR DESIGN Student— Parsons, NYC. Avail to assist prof, designer or arch t in alt aspects of design pro­jects. Excell, organizational 4 communication skills. Detail oriented 8 yrs exp in public re lations/problem solving. Suzann 609-448-0390,

HOUSECLEANING — Busi­ness women experienced in cleaning Call after 6pm, 609- 799-5014.

CHILDCARE IN MY HOME— Full lime Experienced. Belle Mead 201-874-5732

CHILD CARE — planned learning 4 creative activities. R e s p o n s ib le , in d iv id u a l atten Exc. credentials 609- 799-0150.

R E L IA B L E W O M A N — Seeking days work or take care of old people. 609-394- 9560.

VY D FC O P E R A T O R — Wishes to relocate to Prince- ion area P/ease call after 7pm 609-397-0914.

BOO KKEEPER EXPER I­ENCED — 1 or 2 full cays per week Can do up to ard mdud- ing trial balance, payroll and all related payroll taxes 609-802- 0634

RESEARCHER - Sc, D. '68 Seeking new position. EE, Energy, Patent Agent, Pro­duct Dev . Mgmi Exp Reply Box #04215, c/o Pnncelon Packet.

Announcements

PORTUGUESE COUPLE Cook, housekeeper, butler, chauffer Exc ref, experi­enced Call 609-921-0435.

WlLl DO BABYSITTING - in my Cranbury Manor home full or parttime, any ages 609-443-8792

C H ILD CARE IN MY — home Highly experienced, excellent references Full and or part tim e, from 6 weeks up, 609-737-2706

FREELANCE WRITER - specializing in industrial and high technology products and services. Fast turnaround Reasonable rates (201)708- 2032, after 6 pm

B A B Y S IT T IN G — m my home. Reliable mother In­fants 4 Toddlers Hot lunch LawrenceviH e 609-082- 3817

ENTRY LEVEL Position -- full lime Shipping 4 Receiv­ing clerk. Stock Clerk'Driver, Material Handler, Mail Room Office Assistant, Blueprint Operator, Drafting Assistant. Machine Operator Please reply lo P.O Box 5304, Tren­ton. NJ 08638

RESPONSIBLE Couple — seeking caretaker job or care of elderly person in return for free rent References. 609- 921-6927

HANDYMAN with truck — Painting 4 carpentry, moving 4 hauling, cleaning. Re­sponsible 609-924-5792.

HOUSECLEANING — Cran­bury Hightstown area Call between 2 4 4 609 448- 1524

MOTHER OF INFANT — will care for your child in our country home in Pennington Early Childhood Education 4 experience Call 609-737- 1914

TIRED of cleaning your home 4 office after a long hard day at work - Then call us, a reli­able Domestic Office Clean­ing Service. 609-393-3578

EARN CASH - Free Shoes - Have fun having a Shoe Party* 609-448-1478

FARM & W ilderness — 5 camps in Vermont for ooys 4 g ir ls 9-17 Q uaker lead­ership Informational meeting Jan 26. 12 Lumar Rd., Law- rencev ille , 609-883-1524 eves.

CRUISE & DIVE - the Brit­ish Virgin Islands aboard 90' motor yacht, Tropic Bird. 12 double S late rooms, spacious lounges 4 decks, fully air con­ditioned Diving, sailing, wa­ter skiing. All meals $585,' person April 9-16 Call Ckean Ou65t Sales Rep , Edith Brown. 609-799-3407,

MEET PEOPLE — If you're over 40 or 50 or 60 years old and you don't care for the li­quor scene but you'd like to go out dancing and meet peo­ple on sober terms - try the H ightstown Country Club Ballroom We feature the finest in big bands with music from the "Golden Era of the Big B and" sound Come alone or come with someone. There's plenty of free park­ing. And. remember, there's no liquor served We re open Wednesdays {FREE dance lessons from 8 30 - 9:00 P M included with admission) ar>d Saturdays from 9;00 P.M to midnight Dress is casual lo fancy (jackets tor fT>en) ar*d admission is $4,00 We're conveniently located off Exit 8. New Jersey Turnpike be­hind Mom s Peppermill Res­taurant So. come out danc­ing at the Hightstown Country Club Ballroom See you this W ednesday or Saturday P S We have the best dance floor in the East

FAMil YBORN — Offers total prenatal, labor 4 delivery care given by certified nurse- m id w iv e s , in a ta m ily - c e n te re d b ir th c e n te r . Routine gyn care - pelvic 4 breast exam, pap smear 4 fam ily planning provided. 201-821-6200 9 mi north of Princeton.

INCREASE YOUR EFFEC­TIVENESS in work 4 person­al relationships Learn »o use the positive aspects of your personality more productive­ly Weekly interaction meet­ing in a pleasant cxxistructive group atmosphere Certified group leader. Offices in Prin­ceton 4 Kendall Park. Con­tact B Blank. 201-297-9567

6-BClassified Advertising

Week<rf January 20 -22. 1982

Announcements

WINE a CHEESES of France — Tasting Event. Jan 31 Sponsored by Single Profes- siooals of Princeton For de- tatis send SASE to PO Box 1390. PriiKeton, NJ 08540

BK)f=EEDBACKThe Center For Stress Con­trol otfcars programs tor the treatment of headaches, high blood pressure, insomnia, d ig e s tive d iso rd e rs and more. Free consuttabon. Call 609-448-9595

J O Y 'S L IM O U S IN E — anoour>cos its mflatton fighter sale $48 to Kennedy & LaGuardia Aiiports including tools $36 to Newark Interna­tional 4 Phila International including toils Reservations required 609-587-2826.

EARN EXOTIC GIFTS — Hostess an exquisitely yours party 201-521-3187

AIRPORT TAX! — Comfon- able transportation to and from ail airports Tel 609- 921-7339

TYPING — WPR Secretarial Service. Resumes, term pap­ers. repetitive letters using Xerox system for personal or busings needs. 112 Amwell Rd.. Belle Mead. N.J. 20i- 874-4096.

LOOK. LOOK. LOOK There IS parking at Pnneetor. Sta­tion Rates 50 cents oer dav $1 50 (or overnight, by the week $4.00, by the month $12 00 The only overnight parking in Princeton 609- 924-0976

NASSAU AIRPORT TAXI - 609-466-1028 Courteous^ Dependable Economical Service to ai) Airports

RESTORER OF PAINTINGS

All MediaExtensive museum &

Studio experience Now w^orking privately

609-921'-6477 Between i-4pm

TWIN COUNTY Country Day School. Kend Rk. full & ' day creative nursery Hrs 7 30 - 5 30 Children's ages 2' ?-5. After school proaram avail. Call 201-297-78^ or 201-297-9340 aft 6

SUCCESSFUL IN Busi ness Career Pur experienc­ing little satisfaction in deal­ing with your feelings and personal relationships'^ June Lioht Goldbero is a Cenified Psychotherapist practicing m New York City and m law- renceville, who specializes m these problems. In N J 609- 883-7888 in N Y C 21 2-868- 3330

ART LOVERS BE AWARE

Counleiieiters in Princeton Exact replicas on canvas of the works of Rembrandt P icasso. Renoir. Stubbs VanGogh, Gauguin. Winslow Homer Lauirec. Degas. Mil le t, B ru e g e l. C ezanne Monel. Pissarro S others Masterworks Ltd 254 Nas sau St . Princeton, 609-683 1234

NEW AGE vegan SWM 42, seeKing female same atti­tude Contact Box *^04264, c o Princeton Packet

L O O K IN G FO R M R . RIGHT? The Ms or M' you need to do any job right is easy to find in the screened C onsum er Bureau Reg­istered yellow pages of your handy Person-To-Person Phone Book where not just anybody is allowed to adver­tise

ATTORNEY HOUSE Calls ■ Wills (From $40). Unc Sell- Divorces & Name Changes ($1 25), House C los ings ($120-Selter $265-Buyerj Unc Self-Bankruptcy ($175). Incorporations ($100) Add costs w here app licab le James E. DeMartino. Hill sborough, NJ. 201-874-5626 (answer phone).

Personals

t a r o t CARD Readings — $25, Call Toby at 609-921- 7408

LONELY? — No need to bar hop Pick an activity or group from the hundreds listed in the Places To Go and Things To Do pages of your handy Person-To-Person Phone Book Then get involved and make real fnends

PRINCETON PSYCHOLO­GICAL Services ~ Ph D, Cli­nical Psychologist, licensed in N J & N Y. 609-921-6936

EUROPEAN Prof, man — 40's. wants to meet attractive woman to 35 609-924-5584

WANTED — Single women for love and friendship, for bachelor ol 27 years who en­joys racquetball, the outdoors and in, music, plants and will­ing to listen and share you' thoughts Reply Box «04258 c o Princeton Packet

SWF — 26, extremely attrac­tive. slender petite, protes tant, never married, edu­cated, refined, enjoys music, nature, dining Would like to meet a well educated, sin­cere professional man to age 40. interested m family life and a lasting relationship ply Box 04260. c o Prince­ton Packet

Personals Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart Bargain Mart

EXOTIC TOYS, Lingerie Candy-have a fun party' Ge free gifts' For bookings 509 448-6866

USED BOOKS NEEDED - for Brandeis University We recycle your old books Look for our Spring Book Sale at Quakerbndge Mail Tax de­ductable Receipts available Will pick up used books For further information call 609- 448-7899 or 609-448-4978

Personals

KAY'S Introduction Service — ell ages Meet partner for a fneriuship or marriage 201- 534-2726 10am to 6 pm

THE ART Of Listening — A program by the Rev Dr Charley Brown for ail singles on Friday, Jan 22. 8pm, is l Presbyterian Church, High- Istown Further info 609-448- 3265.

NATURAL MAN - who enjoys sun. swimming, running, surf­ing. health foods, dancina. theater and is nurtured by quiet walks, the beach, kind­ness and compassion Seeks female who wishes to share the same and be herself in an atmosphere which allows mutual growth. Please reply to Box #04234, c 0 Princeton Packet

ATTRACTIVE & S incere Male — late 20's. intelligent, mature, seeks self aware and self confident woman for a m e an in g fu l re la tio n s h ip based upon mutual growth, companionship, and sharing of life s pleasures Reply Box # 0 4 2 5 9 , C 0 P r in c e to n Packet

PLEASANT POSITIVE. Pe tite Woman — 39 wishes to meet single btncerc. sear­ching man Please '^ep'v to Box ^04227 c 0 Princeton Packet

ALONE FOR THE HOLIDAYS'?

You didn 't have to be Cali iNTROLENS, the Video D ating P eop le , for free brochure or information

liit:roLeiis609-396-4300201-257-7900

GENTLEMAN WITH PROP­ER • credentials seeks gent­lew om an for s o lid re la ­tionship Am writeceditor for the stale Been dating 4151 area Please reply to Box 04263. CO Princeton Pack­et, stating your desires and objectives.

WEEKEND SKI Flights — destinations include Stowe. Whiteface Approx, 2 hr. flight time. Share flight expenses with commercial pilot. $125 to about $195 per person. 609- 921-3867

TROUBLED? Family Service has counseling. Non-profit United Way SuppOi leu 609- 924-2098

HAVING TROUBLE meeting Of staying with the right per- son7 Loneliness counseling could help you find what yo'j're seeking Individuals sm all groups Michael L. Rosentha'. M S W . Ed.D 609-737-2236.

S IN G L E P E O P L E ' — The re s an E cu m e n ica ' Worship Service just for You' Sundays at 2PM The Rev Nanev H icks. Minister Also. Friday nights ai 8 45 there are planned activities for Singles All held at the High- istown Presbyterian Church 318 N Mam St Hightslown 609-448-3265

Bargain Mart

AMADEUS — 2 tickets for 1 24 82 matinee performance Call 609-882-8222

I AM 27. 5 10 Clean, atlrac - tive male Needs female T-,-- love & to share apt Please apply to Box #04242, c o Princeton Packet

DO YOU FEEL LOST wandering in a circle and no one cares for you'? Loaded with problems and no one to turn to"? Someone cares lor you and was rrucified for you' Call 609-443-5142 anytime

COPIES — resumes invita­tions, business cards, rubber stamps, complete typeset­ting, composition & printing service 7 days a week at Sears Quick Copy Center Quaker Bridge Mall

CLASSICAL MUSIC Lovers Exchange — The link be­tween unattached music lov­ers Write CMLE, Box 31. Pelham. N Y 10803

SINGLES MEET & MIX— in­vites all single, widowed, separated and divorced per­sons. ages 30-60 » . to their dance & social every Sat night 8 30 pm-1 am, Carolier Lanes, in Gazebo Lounge. Route 1 North North Bruns­wick Live music. Adm $3 50, public invited, no club to join Cal! 609-655-5825 or 201 350-7055

ELECTRIC Typewriter — works well, asking $85 Call 609-466-3283

CAR TELEPHONE - with number avai'abie immediate­ly for $2300. Cdii Gene at 609-924-7500

2 WOODBURNING Stoves— brand new right out of the crate $200 or b o 201-359- 7259

SEASONED HARDWOOD— $125 per cord Spill hard­wood $65 per half cord deli­vered Flammer Tree Ser­vice 609-395-0844

FIREWOOD Mostly hick­ory, cut in September Splits de live red w ithin 20 m ile rad ius of H opewell $90 truckload Call 609-466-0804 eves

CLOTHES DRYER -- $70 Women s 5 spd bike, $50 firm 201-359-5580

L OUCH & Chair — Like new reasonable Carpeting. 3 yrs old, plush, reasonable 609- 448-0986

ITALIAN PROVINCIAI Antique gold dining room set Round 48 tab le , ch ina cabinet, velvet chairs Ex­quisite & never used 609- 896-2030 Monday-Fn

l e g a l FORMS 8 KITS. Inc Available. Divorce Wills,

Separation, BanKruplcy & In­corporation Call 6 0 9 -^7 - 7257 6-9pm, 201-782-5540. anylirr *

RIDE NEEDED NYC com­muter between Hopewell & Pnneeton dinky Mon-Fn Ex penses shared 609-466- 3269 aft 7pm

DIVORCED -- pretty, bright seeks latt honorable man 55- 65 Reply Box #04244. c Princeton Packet

Date S ingle ProfessionalPeople — We re a Selective Dating O rgan iza tion that unders tands the specia l needs of Single Professional People. CompatibNrty Plus, inc. 201-256-0202.215-545- 8489

GAY Switchboard informa­tion center Call 609-921 2565 Best hours 7-10 pm Mon thru Thurs

ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Help and Information Call 609 924 7592

PREGNANT?WANT HELP

CALL BIRTHRIGHT609-771-9505

Free confidential service and free pregnancy test Cal! We do care.

AN TIC IPATIO N DATING SERVICE Call for freebrochure toll free 800-662- 3033

BUILDING MATERIALS ANDERSEN W indow s & Doors All sizes & styles 50°- discount PLYWOOD Sfiea thing 4x8. exi3 8 $6 48 $7 485 8 $9 88 3 4 512 88R A IL R O A D T ie s , new creosoted - 5x6x8. $4 90 4x6x8. $3 45PRESSURE treated RR ties. 6x6x8. $8 90 LUM BER, new big discount HARDWOOD FLOORING, Bruce. Sykes, etc Big dis­count BIRCH Plywood, new, 4x8 '.-$18 , S32 3 4-S38 F O R M IC A , N e v a m a r . Meiiamite, Wilsonart. etc. Discounts DOORS, steel & wood. Stanley. Benchmark, etc. Big discount KITCHEN Cabs, new Big discounts on all brands SKY­L IG H TS , Big d isco u n ts WOOD Sneathing, new spe­cials. $5 84D IS C O U N T P LY W O O D

CENTERSWINOOWIZARD

Bristol 1-800-523-8707 Warminster 215-674-0205

USED FURNITURE FOR SALE

Assortment of all kinds of furniture for the home.

SUhnan Fum Kiir*212 Atoxandpr St.

PrlnoPtOfV N.J. 08540 609-924-1881

Hour*: M-F, 9 ^SM. 9-1

FURNITURE CLEARANCE Center — The Montgomery Center. Rocky Hill, specializ­ing in sofa beds, box springs, mattresses and contempor­ary life stylo furniture.

STAINED GLASS Supplies— Distributors & Discoun­ters Custom designs Repair & restoration Lamps, mir­rors. planters, etc Princeton Stained Glass. 38 Spring St , 609-921-1311.

DISCOUNT Lighting — The Rooster's Coup Lighting fix­tures. lamps, shades parts and repairs. Clocks, gift items & fireplace equipment. Huge assortment of brand names at d iscoun t p rices . THE ROOSTER'S COUP on Rt, 29 Lambertvifle, N.J. OPEN 6 DAYS 609-397-0027.

FIREWOOD — Mixed hard­woods, delivered $00 up, Call 609-267-7049

ANTIQUE PEDESTAL Sink— $50. Cali 609-393-6623 between 6-8 pm

AIR CONDITIONER — 6000 BTU. $90. Toro grass trim­mer. $10 Both exc. cond 609-924-4760.

ATARI, Intelnvision, Odyssey owners — For free informa­tion about your local Car­tridge Exchange program send stamped self addressed envelope lo Gamex-42, P.O. Sox 324. Pennington. N J. 08534

FILING CABINETS — Steel, letter size, new. $65 each 609-799-5270.

LiVlNGRM FURN — couch. C lu b chairs, tables, lamps, 2 dining room sets, carpet, drapes 609-443-1361

SUBARU Rims — $20, hub caps Singer portable, $50. Pole iamp. $10 609- 882-7841.

FIREWOOD - All Oak. well seasoned, split, delivered & stacked. By the cord After 5pm 309-466-1080

BROWN BUILTRITE Car­riage & Swing-o-matic Cradle Swing Exc cond Best offer Cali after 6 pm 609-448- 5285

BABY CRIBS - white con- temo Child Craft Walnut Lul- labye Exc. Cond 609-443- 6058

TWO OAK CHAIRS — Cus­tom made for Twin Rivers Kitchen counter S100 call 609-443-6307

SPORTING GOODS — deluxe Tantun rowing machine. 4 bil- lard 25tb plates & solid chro­mium E-Z curl bar, executive 5- spnng exercizer w two 3 lb iron dumbbells, Browning 50 lb Bantan com posite bow & bmounted 6 arrow quiver, best offer Cal! Honest Bob 609-890- 2869

COMPLETE bdrm unit — only 40x80in, includes bed, desk, shelves, drawers, mir­ror, closet 201-254-6318

MODERN WALNUT — Din­ing Room 6 chairs. 2 leaves, custom pads, lighted china hutch $900 Maytag Washer RCA Whirlpool aas drver. while Magnus Upright Chord Organ 609-924-3427. aft 2 p m

OAK HUMIDOR — Oak table & 4 chairs (plain). Sale now going on. Everything 10%- 50% oH Consignments Unli­mited. 15 Lexington Ave , Ewing 609-883-4807

BUYING A HOME Compu­ter'? - Can save 25% plus with impartial assistance 3 hrs for $19 for choosing best computer & software lor your needs from most reasonable & serviceable dealers. Help in ordering set-up and in ­struction for Apple II, Atari, IBM, TRS 80 S. Commodore 609-683-0991 aft 7 pm

ORIENTAL RUGS — Settle estates. Magnificent collec­tion, fine quality, old. new & used. Perfect condition, Ira­nian. Chinese, Turkish. Indi­an & P akistan. Including Dhurry 9' x 12' $490. Heriz 10‘ X 12', $1190. Yalane 9‘ x 12 . $950, Oriental Gold 12 x 20’. $1400. Bokhara 9 ‘ x 15', $8W, Aubusson’s 9’ x I2s', $1090. European orientals $490. Safoukes 1 T x 14', 9' x 12'. 10 X 18'. 12' X 26'. etc. Tabfiz 9 'x l2 ’ , 10’ x 1 8 , 12' x 12', etc Kermans 9 x12 ’, 12 X 20 . 11' X 16'. 15’ X 23'. etc. Arak 9' x 12'. $400 Many C h in e se 9 'x l2 '.8 'x1 0 ',1 0 'x 14 , 12' X 15', 12' X 20’, etc. M any-other large unusual sizes, throw rugs, silk rugs & runners No dea le rs , by appointment 609-625-9810. 609-398-6571. Ocean City Galleries. Hotel Flanders, 1 1 th S t. & B oard W alk, Ocean City. N J. 08226.

WEDDING GOWN — Size extra largo, veii. headpiece & bride's bag $100 Call 609- 448-5360

SKI SALE — with this ad 50% off any ski purchase at All Work Ski Shop, Rt 206, Belle Mead. 201-359-3000

WELL SEASONED Wood — 16" cut, split, delivered, $70 ’ cord Also in good solid green wood, oak, maple cherry. $95 cord 609-448- 9434 ask for Stevw bet 9am- 9pm.

CB SEARS — Power box w car antenna. 609-655-2863 after 6 pm.

MAN'S DIAMOND Ring — Antique European cut i.8 c a ra t c e n te r s to n e s u r­rounded by 6 sm diamonds set in platinum Appraised $7500, asking $5500 Reply Box #04239 c 0 Princeton Packet,

NORITAKE c h in a — Be ned ic ta P a tle rn (# 69 7 6 ) Complete service for 12 ' co ffee pot N ever used Asking $300 609-443-3886

Pr'NEY BOWES — 3 brand new mail machines, Model 5511 Must sacrifice, best offer. Cali 609-924-0095 ask for Barbara

SOFA --8 4 " 3 cushion Blue tweed, excellent condition $250 or best offer 609-882- 1200.

5 PIECE MED. Bedroom Set — good cond, best offer. Call 609-799-2859.

4 JE E P W H E E l S w ith L78x15 snows. $80 Meyers Snow plow ST 78 power angling electro touch, almost new w ith fitt in g s for CJ, $1200; Ski boots, San Marco, used 1 yr, sizes 5 & 6 $20 each 609-448-1886 after 4pm

TYPEWRITER— IBM Model C in exc cond, Pica type, 16 carnage. $300 Firm 8 ft York Rake in exc cond, $500 Cal! The Dawson Corp, 609-443- 1551.

OLD FASHIO NED Sm all iron, wood or coal cook stove — Inc warming ovens. $350 609-896-0980

2 LAMPS — Ig.livingrm $50 2 Ig pictures $25 ea Leather coat, womans size 14. $85 Mini refrig . new, $95 609- 882-4358.

CALCULATOR HP-34C Advanced Programmable, Brand new $120 201-874- 8557

SKI BOOTS - NordicaCom­petition III, Size 12. San Mar­co size 10-1 1 . Camarosize9 609-924-3333 aft 6 pm, any­time wkends

ORIGINAL AUSTRIAN Jack­ets — direct import. $1 lO.Call 609-466-3360

CHAIRS — 2 Club, one high back. Contemporary design ny lon u ph o ls te re d . Exc. cond. Slip covers included. Best offer over $170. Call af> ter 7pm 609-921-2305

LANE CONTEM PORARY dining room set — round pedestal table w/2 leaves. 6 chairs, lighted hutch. $800: coffee table & 2 erxj tables, smoked glass tops, $60 set. 609-799-1861 aft 6pm

2 GARRISON I wood stoves — 1 yr. old, exc. cond, $475/ ea. Call 609-924-6070. 9- 5pm,

WHITE SEWING Machine — Hair dryer. Air conditioner Recliner with neat and vibra­tor. Soring & mattress, A lot of stack tables, new. Rockwell S a n d e r with dust bag. like new. Large wood stove. Counter range. Plywood & hardwoed. Call anytime 609- 452-2566

BURNING MONEY LIKE OIL? — visit Oilturnative for a low cost solution to a warm home We specialize in multi- fuel furnaces, wood coal stoves and fireplace inserts. We also stock accessories, pipe, and supplies We pro­vide complete service and in­sta lla tion . Ask about our money saving interior storm windows. Check our wide selection and tow prices be­fore you buy. 609-466-1835, Oilturnative. 33 W Broad St (Rt. 518), Hopewell. N.J, Hours: Tues-Fri. 10 am-8 pm Sat. I0am-5pm. Closed Sun & Mon

FREE KINDLING - pile ol fallen & pruned tree limbs Cut what you need. 609-448- 7176

DINING ROOM S E T - table w loaf & 6 chairs. Aisd 64 " wide breakfront w 4 glass doors. Pecan wood, perfect condition. $2500 Please call 609-883-2252

FIREWOOD — Slabwood, all hardwoods 3 cords $207 del­ivered. Also logs, green & seasoned by the trailer load 215-736-2866.

FREEZER - Westinghouse, 17 1 cu ft. exc. cond. $250. 609-883-7274, aft 3 pm

B E D R O O M S U IT E - Broyhill 5 pcs. w bos spring & m a ttre s s (b e a u t ifu l) , $1200 609-882-7274 aft 3pm.

GLASS & CHROME Dining Table ■ approx. 60x31, w 4 chrome & while vinyl chairs$165. Cali 609-737-3672

CHINESE MODERN Hutch Oiled walnut finish, one of

a kind 86' long $1750. 609- 392-7874 or 609-695-9721

LIV. RM & Dining Rm Suites -- antique Flintlock shotgun, plus nearly new refrig 609- 392-4999

MUSKRAT FUR COAT— Exc. cond. Size approx. 14 $600. Call 215-736-3971 af­ter 5.30pm

UHtSSEHS - 1 small $25. 7231

1 large, $50, :a ll 609-924-

BRASS CHANDELIER Duncan. Fife antique couch, assorted lamps & pictures. Call after 5pm 509-683- 1325

SMITH-CORONA Portable Elec, typewriter —- $75. 2 bur­gundy exec, desk chairs. $75 ea 609-452-1965 eves.

MOVING Must sell solid maple bedroom set. $500. D in in g ro o m s e t w- chandelier. $250. 609-924- 3427

H A IR C U T S — M en $5. Women $7 My home or yours For appointment call: G09-921-6966

SOFA Green gold Com­plimentary gold swivel rock­er 3 lamps. Gd cond. 201- 359-2795.

TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals, trade-ins, ribbons, cartridges, calcula­tors. radios, recorders, phone answerers. Center Business Machines. 104 Nassau St. 609-924-2243.

M ATTRESSES — W orld famous bedding at discount prices. Factory direct to you. fully guaranteed by manufac­turer Call 201-536-1784 af­ter 7pm,

REGISTERED OR NOT — I will buy your guns legally I am licensed and will pay a good price. Call Bert 609- 924-3800 days.

RUBBER STAMPSSchool or College address. Home, business, zip code Rubber stamps of ail kinds and sizes made to your order at

HINKSON’S 82 Nassau St.

CARPETS — 2 burnt orange 19x11 and 11x14. One light green 15x12 $99 ea 609- 443-6490 after 3pm

PINBALL MACHINES & Juke Boxes — reconditioned lor home use Reliable service after the sale, A small deposit will hold until Christmas 609- 585-4927.

M E TA L C O N F E R E N C E DESK — chair, small wooden desk, office chair 609-443- 6697 or leave message

MATTRESS FACTORY — See them made on the pre­mises. Custom sizes. TEN YEAR GUARANTEE, 30 day unconditional refund. Prices gladly given on phone. The FOAM FIRM. Gladstone • 201-234-1622

EDISON FURNITURE - is still open at the same loca­tio n . For USED FU R NI­TURE of every description come see us. Rt, 611 south of D oylestow n, Pa. 9-4 30. closed Sunday

TRIO TAG Sales. Inc.— We do all the w ork," Profitable sate of entire or partial con­tents of your home. Profes­sionally conducted at your convenience 609-883-3535. 215-493-5332 or 609-882- 1554.

7' CUSHIONED COUCH - - b lu e g re e n $25. d o u b le b e d (n o m a t t r e s s o r b o x s p r in g ) $25. n e w h a n g in g l ig h t w C h a m $20 Cali 609-448- 5837 after 6

FIREWOOD — Seasoned, split, mixed hardwoods. Free delivery 1 c o rd 4 x 4 x 8 201- 526-8898.

SALE — Lighting fixtures at real discount prices!! Call now lo find out alt the details. We also install A rewire fix­tures at reasonable prices. Pleas© call 609-448-2906 any weekday between 7pm & 10pm or Sat, from 10 to 5pm.AJS Liohtinn.______________D R IE D N U T S A L E — almonds 5 lb. $9 99, p is­tachios salted $4 99 per lb., cashew nuts (raw) $4.99 per lb. We also carry Indian Jewelry. Indian cotton gar­ments (up to 40% off). Indian groceries, sweets, Sans & appliances for foreign travel ( 1 l0 220v). We also reni Indian video movie tapes & tape recorders For more info call 201-821-7775 or visit India Discount Store, 3001 Rt. 27 & Finnegans Ln,. Franklin Park. N J 00823

R ECLIN ER — m an-s ize orange tweed, bxcell condi­tion $60! 609-448-1820

WINTER SALE — now in progress. Fine furniture & Witiiamsburg accessories all reduced, 10-40% off. "Take 202. 4 mi, past Peddler's Vil­lage lo Buckingham. Turn right onto 413 No. two miles to Stone House Furniture. Rt. 413. Mechanisville, Pa, 215- 794-7479,■■

COAT ~ full length, black wool, fur trim, very fine, size 12, $65. 609-882-7010.

LIVING ROOM furniture for sale — Excellent condition Call 609-448-8278

TAG SALE — fu rn itu re , clothes, knick knacks, hair­dressing equipment, canoe Jan. 23 & 24, 11 Tanglewood D r . Mercerville.

LAMPSHADE SALE — Burtap. silks, hard backs, wet backs, pleats, cut outs, even S tiffe l shades 20% OFF From the largest assortment in Bucks and Montgomery $5 worth of Sylvania Bulbs FREE with any shade purch­ase over $12 On Sale Janu­ary 21 to January 28 FUR­LONG LA M P FACTORY OUTLET largest for a 99 mile rad ius 5 m iles south of Lahaska's Peddlers Village on Route 263, Furlong. Pa Micro Dot Pricing OPEN 7 days (215) 794-7444-5-6.

MY FAVORITE SHOPPELadies Fashions inside the Outlet' 50 Skirts Values to $50. Sizes6 to 18 NOW$tO

ALSO; Baldwin Room Solid Brass Williamsburg Repro­ductions. Russian Roulette Gallery (opening soon) Ori­ginal Art Prices reduced ev­ery Iwo weeks. HandPnnl Gallery. Framed Pictures and Picture Frames at left bank of Seine prices Gourmet coflee and lea. Electricity Substi­tutes Candles. Kerosene Lighting and Candy

JANUARY THAW SALEAll Hand S Power Tools Now 20% o ff .S ta n le y . T rue- Temper, S-K. B & D. Rock­well & Skii All Display Stoves reduced 25% now Anthracite and Cannel Coal See us for your Building.

J.S. Amerman Co Your Pro-Mart Hom e C ente r

Neshanic Sta, N.J. 201-369-5511 201-369-4202

HEALTH CLUB Membership— for sale Holiday Spas. CaH 609-734-2669 before 5pm

RALElGH COMPETITION GS - - AI! Campagnolo. used1 season $500 Cal! 609- 587-4173

USED SKI Boots — 4 .. 7, 8. $25 Poles 39'. $5 Dry bar. 48x18x40'.•. $50 609- 799-2107

EXTREMELY Large Assort­m ent o f H ousehold Fur­nishings Prices negoti­able On Consignm ent (P rinceton Furnishings & Antiques' 4 Chambers St , 609-924-1989

S A T . STUDY PROGRAM— for high school students. On computer disc or tape 609-921-6612 eves

ASH & O A K F ire w o o d Assortment — split & aged One cord delivered S stack­ed, $120, just delivered, $100. Pickup truck load. $75 Call Chris 609-466-0246 aft 6pm.

SEASONED Hardwood For Sale — .‘ plit or whole Deli­vered by (he cord. 609-259- 7001.

FREE WICKER Chest — have your party before Jan 301h. Call for oeiaits aft 4 pm 609-587-3511.

2 CANE TUB CHAIRS — gold & green upholstered seals, exc cond , $50 ea 201-074-6572.

VALEN TlN EG iFT- ' .cardt diamond in gold lovers knot pendant setting Appraised value $2000 Must seH im­m e d ia te ly B e s t o ffe r Address inquiries to P.O, Box 1431, Princeton, N J 08540

MEYERS 6 FOOT Straight Snow Plow — $375 Call 201- 359-3349

250 GALLON Oil Tank— $50 Please call 201-35'9- 5595.

GOLD MEDITERRANEAN— Living room furniture, sec­tional sofa, chair, etc. All in excel, cond. Tables, iamp & picture inci $500 609-505- 9441,

ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER— Royal, $175. Small pink bathroom sink, $25.609-882- 5129,

LARGE SELECTION of re­conditioned Simpiictly and Inlernational Harvester riding lawn mowers and tractors. 5 to 20hp 609-924-4177

CHAIR — Knotty pine re­fin ished , re -upho is tered , $136 Rogers Interiors. 609- 799-2007.

WE WILL SELL No Wood Un­til It s Seasoned Good — $100 a cord, $55 V2 cord deli­vered. Call 609-460 1934

KERO-SUN HEATERS — special values. Omni 105 s, $199,95: R adiant 10's & Radiant 36's. $179.95 Lam- bertville, NJ 609-397-3348

COMPLETE LIVING — room w lamps for sale. Practically new. Evenings, 609-655- 3675

M IN O L T A O ff ic e C opy Machine — 114TC, excellent condition $495. 609-466- 1271.

ETHAN ALLEN — cut crystal ginger jar iamp $100. Queen Anne, go ld ve lve t, cane sides, tufted back, cherry tub chair, $50. Mirrors, antique gold framed, $50 ea Acces­sories. Exc, cond. 609-799- 3759.

LAST DAYS

Suits now $50, value $120 Pantsuits now $60. value $120Skirts now $13, value $30 Sweaters, blouses, pants, all at ’ price.

All b jies final Please call if weather is bad

RED BARN CASUALS Rt 206 Belle Mead

201-359-3305 or 201-359-6418

SOFA — 92' 3-cushion, very comfortable, good cond $75 609-799-3328

POOL TABLES — antique & used Large selection. Expert service, Call Princeton Pool Tables. Rt 518. Hopewell 609-466-1717 "Your Local Pro Shop

BROWSE THROUGH — 15 designer showrooms display­ing Williamsburg style fur­n ish ings & g ifts Henkel- Harris & other quality lines. Take 202 south 4 mi. past Peddler's Village to traffic light at Buckingham Take right onto 413 north. Two miles lo Stone House Furni­ture. Rl 413, Mechanicsville. Pa 215-794-7479

FREEVa mini chain with every two purchased

Expert Chain Sharpening. Chainsaw & Powerm ower Sales and repairs L e is u re S ales 6 0 9 -5 8 7 - 2797.

EARLY AMERICAN Barn with huge oak timbers pinned together. 35 x 40, will be given lo a very reliable per­son that has the equipment to (ear it down and dean up afterwards. Please apply 45 Pine Knoll Drive. Lawrence- ville 609-882-7788

SKIS — Hossignol 150 cm. Tyrolia 150 bindings. 4 yrs old good cond $30 Also, Rossignol 160 cm. 4 yrs. old, without bindings. $15 After 7pm 609-883-5961

CAR TELEPHONE — with number available immediate­ly for $2300 Call Gene at 609-924-7500

2 SNOW TIRES — tubeless H70-15. hardly used, $50 Toilet • white, good cond., $25 609-924-5119.

THE STOVE BARN dis­count wood coal stove sales Energy specialists, instalia lions, accessories Rie 206, Station Square, Belle Meade 201-359-5206

SHELTER COUCH - Haifian cotlon, beige, exc cond Asking $300 609-924-4519 609-924-4485,

IBM TYPEVyRtTER - Office model. Exc for long reports & extended use Very reason­able. Call eves after 7 p.m 609-585-6345.

CHINA & PRESSED GLASS •- Lenox. Slangi, Meissen, etc. Old rockers & caned chairs. 609-737-9034

DINING TABLE — smoked glass top & 4 swivel chairs, very good cond $250. 609- 799-9223 alter 6pm

FOAM CUT — Any size - any s h a p e , W h ile -U -W a it Cushions made like new Prices given over phone The Foam Firm. Gladstone, 201- 234-1622

Classifieds run in

8 papers

for

1 low price.

NORDICA Ski Boots — size 9, excellent condition 609- 924-7934

GE DRYER — 5 mo, old, top feature model, elec cord inc $300 609-443-4210.

J.P SAUER & Sons — 20 ga. 26" bris. "Made In Prussia Cal! 609-452-2162 eves,

2 BEDROOM LAMPS — per­fect condition Call 609-448- 6324.

CARPE i S — Brown 9x9, $40. Oriental type 8x11'/a, $60- Like new. 609-737- 8090.

MUST SELL — brand new 7- pc. Daystrom dinette set, $150. Cal! 609-443-M69.

G AM BLER 'S NEW SLET­TER- Postage brings sample Gam enian. PO Box 043. Manville, N.J. 08835.

BOEHM PORCELAIN — Ir­ish Beauty Rose Best offer over $85. 609-771-0764.

BOOK RECORD Case — $50 or best offer Couch $35 or best offer 201-254-6054

ENORMOUS Beechwood Slabs — 3 " thick, up to 50" wide. 6-8 ft long, can be used for counter or table tops ’ . price 201-359-4680

FIREWOOD ~ Seasoned 1 yr $110 a cord. Delivered 609-443-4919 after 5pm

FOR SALE — 4 ' Unttron re­fractor Equatorial mount, electric drive, super Unihex, 5 eye-pieces r 60mm and Zoom eyepieces 609-683- 1073 6-7pm

WOODBURNING Stove - 2 yrs, old. Jotui #1 Call even­ings 609-924-7934

FREEZER BEEF

Home grown naturally fed steers Culto your own speci- f ic a iio n , w ra p p e d , and frozen Kaufman Farm 609- 466-0773 Master Chg avail

SM ALL M A IL IN G S ? Big Troubles?? Here's help' All steps; Printer to P.O Press­u re s e n s i t iv e la b e ls (Cheshire #730) a specialty' All at very competitive prices CCC 60 N Main. Cranbury. 609-655-3477

FIREW OOD - - A-1 sea­soned hardwood, must sell lo meet college tuition Deli­vered & stacked. $125 cord 609-737-9142,

PRINTING SPECIAL

S '. 'X l l (only)-PhotoCopy Black Ink on 201b Whl Paper

$13,00 Per Thousand

2nd Side • $9 OOMColor Paper • $2.00MStd Color Ink . • $7.00 Padding $1 00 M

MASTEBGRAPHX 609-924-0460

Rte. 206 Rocky Hill

LOG SPUTTERS — for rent and logs split at your home Call Montgomery Small En­gine Repair, 609-466-2829

BATHTUBS — tile & shower stalls professionally cleaned Bathtub & tile, $25. shower stall $25. Tub recaulked $20. Serving Mercer Co . Rendall Par^ & Belle Mead areas Call Save Your Tub. the bath­room experts. 609-448-3339

WOOD CUTTING — Splitting and or Stacking. Reasonable— paying for college Bruce 609-585-7099, 888-4149

RCA COLOR TV ~ 25' , needs minor work Asking $100 609-448-9439 after 5.

MINK COAT with leather T h re e q u a r te rs le n g th , medium size 609-655-2798

COAL FOR Stoves & Fire­places — 50 lb. bags of nut & cannel coal. $5 bag 201- 329-6044

SEASONED HARDWOOD— Split & delivered $100 per cord Call 609-737-0438 or 609-466-mnR

LEVELOR'S Riverla and Ver­tical Blinds — at discounted prices. Call Marcia at 609- 448-2088

SEASONED HARDWOOD— split, delivered & stacked 1 cord. $1 15-$ 130. If you will need wood w in 7 mos. please oroer today 609-259- 7015. Mark Pullen.

CRIB — Perego Stroller car bed. Children's clothing in­fant to 4T, 201-359-2113.

BDRM SET — 6 PC Dbl Bed, Bookcase headboard $150 Cal! Lynne 201-329-6638.

FIREWOOD — Hard Sea­soned. spill $90 a cord. On farm. 609-448-4856

ROYAL DOULTON — Fine bone china. Golden Maize, serves 12 . Sacrifice, 201- 545-930?

Week of January 20 -22. 1982Classified Advertising

Bargain Mart

FIREPLACE WOOD — call 201-359-5556.

HOT TUBS & Jacuzzi Whirl­pools — Many styles and sizes. Expert installation. Au­thorized Jacuzzi whirlpool Spa dealer Princeton Pool Table & Spa Co Rt. 518, Hopewell, 609-466-1718,

HORSE MANURE — Get y o 'jr g a rd e n s ready to r spring. $25/truckload. deli­vered 609-448-2191

EARN CASH & Free Shoes — Invite your friends to a Moccasin Show 200 styles & colors for the whole family Call Southern Sun 609-448- 1478.

FIREPLACE WOOD — Cut & split, choice seasoned oak. seasoned 1 yr & longer. Deli­vered & stacked a load within a 10 mi, radius of Hlgh- tstown. 609-448-4253-

WATLINGTON’S PAINTING

For caulking and puttying your complete house, win­dows and d oo rs , gutte r cleaning.

609-799-2020 or 443-4790

CARPET — Residential or Commercial. Low overhead means big savings. Get my price before you buy Free shop at home service. We also prov ide installa tion, cleaning & repair service. Call Bill. 609-466-1887.

LOG SPLITTING — Reason­able rates 609-4P6-1887

2 UPRIGHT FREEZERS; 5 used refrs.; 4 washers; 5 gas dryers; 2 elec dryers; pod, washer; 30' gas range, pod. dishwasher; pod. B&W TV; guaranteed free delivery 201 369-3718.

FOR SALE 3000 Gal. fuel tank Excellent condition Ed Diefenback. 609-443-1701 or 259-9346 after 4 p.m.

WINDOW TREATMENT Finest Quality

Low est Prices Vertical Blinds

Levolor Riviera Blinds W oven Woods

Custom Shades, etc. Free shop at home service, prof, measurement and in­stall

ROBERT SITNER DECORATORS 609-448-3758

TERRIFIC STUFF — Holiday Spa, Jack LaLaine VIP mem­bership, Ithaca 12 gauge shotgun {pump action) like new. Silver Cross baby car­riage; bedroom set, triple dresser, high chest, 2 match­ing mirrors. Danish modern, modern table lamp Call 609- 448-6858 or 448-3361.SOFA - sectional, avocado crushed velvet, good condi­tion $65. 609-448-6505

MerchandiseWanted

OLD PAINTINGS WANTED — 19th, early 20th century O ils , w a te rc o lo rs . lan d ­scapes, seascapes, still lifes. 609-737-9467 eves.

PO C K E T W A TC H E S — wanted, silver, gold or any base mental, in any condi­tion. running or broken no problem The older the better. Private collector. Call 609- 587-7507.

U.S. SILVER — dollars, also silver coins any denomina­tion, gold coins, copper coins, proof & mint sets Also foreign coins. Private collec­tor. Call 609-587-7507

SAWYERS VIEW-MASTER REELS — from 1940's to 1950's. 201-249-2896

WANTED ' STAMP accu­mulations, collections. Post Cards. 609-448-8941

RAW FUR Wanted — Rac­coon, Fox. Muskrat. 9 -9 ev­ery day. Windsor Furs Co, 124 So Mill Rd. Princeton Junction 609-799-8057,

p ia n o s w a n t e d

CALL

80D-392-6927

CASH FOR YOUR Antique Furniture — we are a large dealer specializing in Oak. Willing to buy 1 piece to entire contents. 201-329-2062.

WANTED TO BUY. Scrap copper, brass, lead, alumi­num, stainless steel, sterling silver, etc. solids or turnings. Industrial, business or pri­vate, Correct market price, cash paid. S. Klein Metals Co., Inc,. 2156 Camplain Rd . Somerville, NJ 08876 Call 201-722-2288

WANTED FIESTA — Dinner- ware, any quantity 609-799- 9410.

MerchandiseWanted

POOL TABLES WANTED — used slate & antique tables. Also antique cue & bell racks wanted. Calf Prirtcelon Poo' Tables 609-466-1717

GUNS & SWORDS — Milit­ary Hems. Federal A State licensed as required for New Jersey transactions. Will make house calls, pay high­est cash. Bert. 609-924-3800 days, or leave tape message

WANTED — die cast and stee l toys. Call 609-443- 4556

SHOTG UNS. RIFLES — handguns wanted for cash, especially old .Winchesters. Licensed dealer pays rnore. New g un s fo r sa le d is ­counted. We will buy, sell or trade, Murphy's Sportsmen s J3en. 201-297-3357

WE BUY — Stamp collec­tions. old letters & postcards. Immediate cash avail. Call 609-448-0300 aft 5pm

AN YTH IN G MARKED — sterling silver, silver & gold, any condition; silver ingots Wedding bands & sets. U.S stamp collections any size; antiques any kind. Private in­vestor. Cali 609-587-7507.

LICENSED GUN - dealer buying & selling any kind of handguns, rifles, shotguns, unusual knives, daggers, swords & bayonets. Modern or antique. U S, or foreign. Buying registered or not Pri­vate collector. Call 609-587- 7507.

BUYING DIAMONDS — no size too small or too large. Also silver, gold & dental gold. Private investor Call 609-587-7507.

LIO N EL TRAINS — and accessories wanted. 609- 587-7271 _________________

LADIES 160 cm SKIS — w bindings & brakes, size 9 bool, very good cond. 609- 466-0684

S T A N D IN G T IM E R — Wanted 609-397-1822

WE BU Y ~ good used & anti­que furniture. One piece to entire estates. Cal! 609-397- 1599.

W AN TED —- A ntiques &Furnilure from the 1940's and back. Dining & bedroom sets, desks of all kinds, glassware, clocks & lamps, etc. Estates purchased with clean out ser­vice 509-586-0777 anytime.

Wanted to Buy — Scrap met­al, light iron, steel, batteries, radiators, copper, brass S aluminum We specialize m industrial scrap. Currently paying the highest prices in the area. Payment at time of delivery Receiving hours 12- 5 pm Mon. thru Fri. Appoint­ment only on Sat Gale in­dustrial Scrap Iron and Metal Co , N o rth V a lle y Rd , Roosevelt For info call 609- 448-2679

WANTED — Outdoor plastic nativity scene. 2 ft. high, animals, kings, shepherds. 201-874-8253.

GOING TO Baham as — Need Scuba Equipm ent. New or old. 609-448-5358 af­ter 6 p.m

ORIENTAL RUGS — we pay cash for antique & semi- antique oriental rugs. One or many. 609-397-1599.

WANTED — 1 exercise bike 8> 1 barbell set. Days 609- 984-5585. eves 921-6573

MusicalInstruments

ChopinPiano & Organ Co.

C hoose from S fe inw ay. Sohmer, Knabe etc. Rent or buy 1001 N. Olden Ave . Trenton 609-695-7456.

IBANEZ LES Paul Custom — Guitar - Exc. cond , $180. Ask for Steve 609-921-7950.

CLARINETS — BOOSEY- HAW KES'W OOd asking $240 And 2 at $75 ea. (wood) 201-782-6840.

KING. ALTO SAXOPHONE — tike new condition. Call 201-725-6952

FOR SALE — Viscount Elec­tronic Organ, lots of extras, excel, cond , $800 609-921- 9144 aft, 8pm.

GUITARS, BASSES, Amps & More — new & used Lowest prices around. Money back guarantee We buy, sell, trade & do repairs, Dan Sky Music of Kingston, 201-297- 3520-

P re-CBS Fender — pro- reverb amp, excellent cond., best offer 609-921-8259.

R IC K E N B A C K E R Bass Guitar — And case. Very good cond. $350. 609-896- 0980.

MusicalInstruments

PIANOS — Bought, soW, re­built. refinished. Call 201- 356-9153

KIMBALL SPINET Piarx) — excellent condition. $875. 201-356-9153

HAYNES FLUTE — Recently overhauled. Excellent cond. Frer>ch model w'B foot. 609- 924-3777.

PIANO — Yam aha, 5'3 ’ grand. Ebony, w warranty, $4500. 215-943-3809.

Antiques Pets & Animals Pets & Animals Autos Wanted Autos For Sale Autos For Safe

S E L M E R B U N D Y Sax- ophone — excellent cond. Never used. $175. Call 609- 882-8395,

1980 SEARS ELECTRIC GUITAR — needs 5 strings. Asking $80 609-440-9349 after 5.

P IAN O S & O R G AN S — Sales-Service-Rentais. Les­sons. Baldw in Hammond Music Center, 1911 Bruns­wick Ave., Lawrenceville. NJ 609-599-2700.

BABv GRAND Piano — ex­cellent cond- inside & out. $2000 201-356-9153.

PIANO TUNING & Repair guaranteed, reasonable free estimates M Schmahl, 609- 452-8806

PIANO UPRIGHT — Kohler & Campbell 1 yr old $1600Call 609-603-1405 after 7pm

Flea Markets & Rummage Sales

PACKARD 'S OUTDOOR FLEA Market now reopen under new management. Wed,. Fri,. Sal. & Sun 9.30 am until dark Space $3 per day. Res. call Charlie Stone. 201-369-3188

Auctions

CERTIFIED AUCTIONEER — Appra isa ls Personal, commercial, (arm, estate. Richard S Winthrop, 609- 921-0967

CollectiblesHISTORIES of Trenton — John O Raum, History of the City of Trenton " $50 Trenton Historical Society, Guarantors Set History of Trenton" 2 vols. $150 609- 392-0675.

DUCK LOVERS — Unique opportunity from private col­lection, Atlerbury, Challinor- Taylor, Westmoreland Pintail authentic duck covered m;lk- glass dishes: one purple slag glass Wright duck 609-655- 5131

Antiques

UNIQUE ANTIQUES

A-^praisalsESTAT?' & TAG SALE

SERVICE

Comptete or Partial Contents

East Millstone. NJ 201-873-3838

HANKINS A ntiques. 169 Mercer St., Hightstown, NJ We buy & sell furniture, china, glass, jewelry, lovely things. Come in and browse Open 11 to 4:30 Tues- tc Sal 609- 443-4102 or 448-8772.

ALLENTO W N AN TIQ UE CENTER — 7 Church St.. Allentown, N J. 8 dealers specializing in furniture, chi­na, glassware, prim itives, doils, art deco & nouveau & co lle c tib le s . Open 10-5, Thu rs .-M on , $55 dea le r space available. 609-259- 3952

HI-FI, EARLY 1950's • s5id mahogony console Asking $150,201-074-6250

V ICTO RIAN SETTEE ~ carved rosewood, recently refinished & re-upholstered $700, 609-896-0053

MAGNIFICENT — Crystal chandelier for sale. Call 609- 896-0462 after 7 p.m

ANTIQUES primitives — Mill- house Antiques, 1007 Rt 28, North Branch, 201 -725-7306. Weekends & by appt,

ORIENTAL RUGS — Ker­man 16x10, $550. Sarouke 11x14. Ispahan 15x24. Khor- rossan 13x20. Others. 609- 625 3 81 0 or 398 -6571 . Ocean City Galleries. Hotel Flanders, i l t h St. & Board­walk. Ocean City, NJ 08226.

QUALITY REFINISHING — Restoration of antiques. All work dune W'care & expertise to increase the value and beauty of each piece. 609- 466-2206.

ELECTRIC PLAYER Piano— Best offer. CaH after 4pm 609-924-1711

PIANOS ORGANSMost Major Brands Warehouse Prices

FREEHOLD MUSIC CENTER

Rt, 9 (1 Vs mi. no. circle) 201-462-4730

Monthly Rentals From $7.50

AARON-ALL PIANO — Mov­ers. We move it anywhere Fully insured. 201-225-5977 or 225-5976

1963 GIBSON Guitar ES 335— Beautiful cond Exc. action & sound. 12 string $500 215-060-0265.

FENDOR RHODES 88 — elec, piano, brand new, $750 Acoustic Bass Amp 220 $250, 609-799-0146. 5-6 pm.

(SAVE)

Weekdays to claim or adopt a pet call Mrs. Graves for an appo intm ent at 609-921- 6122. Hours. Mon-Fri. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sat. 8 a m,-11 a.m. Nights & weekends report lost, found or injured animals to the Police Report lost and found pets within a 24 hr period

Male & female Dachshund- Terrier type pups, 6 weeks oldYoung male Labrador type dog. picked up at Arco Gas Station. Alexander St Male Beagle type dog, black & while, 5 mos old.Male 3 yr old, pure breed Great Dane with papers Male young, rugged black German Shepherd. Good watch dOQ.Male young. Brittany Spaniel nice temperament Male pure breed. 6 yr old & female 9 yr. old pure breed Siberian huskies with papers & must go together.Male 6 mos old, Shepherd- Doberman type dog Female 7 mos. Shepherd- Golden Retriever type dog. Good w children 3 male & female black Lab- Beagle type pups.Male 6 yr old, Old EnglishSheep dog Has papersMale & female Shepherd-Terrier type pupsMale 5 yr. old, Lhasa Apso,H ouse b ro k e n P re fe rsadults,Male 3 yr. old Irish Setter type dog Medium size Prefers adultsTwo lemaie spayed brown & while Terrier type dogs. 6 mos, old Shots & nice tem­perament

Beautiful semi-long hair Cali­co cat. Picked up at 32 Edge-hill St.Young m ale, orange cat Picked up at 645 Snowden LaneAltered male, all black, gentle cat.Two altered males, 9 mos old, orange & white Tabbies 2-6 mos old. male black & white cals. And others

REG QUARTER HORSE Mare — 5 years, Sorrel with whVe F lashy , ta len ted , agreeable. English dressage training Super driving horse Reserve champion driving horse Foggy Meadows Fall Series. Good home only $4000 Call 201-534-2412 or 534-9803 evenings.

FREE — m a le G e rm a n Shepherd. Good disposition Good with children Cali after 6pm. 201-329-3317.

B O X W O O D A R A B IA N Farm— Arabian breeding & show stock for sa le . P. Weidel. 609-737-1036

HIDEAWAY FARM — otters the finest incfoof-outdoor faci­lities for boarding your horse or pony. Instruction & training In riding 4 driving. Special­ized rates. Open nighlt>. in­qu iries invited. 609-466- 3426

H O R SES BO AR D ED — Lush pasture; stalls avail­able, pool privileges in sea­son, 609-466-3539 after 4pm or weekends

ANTIQUE SALE — 20% off in both build ings. Furniture, lighting, collectibles, 1000’s of items too numerous to list. Come early! Miller-Topia De­signers, 41 E. Afton Ave. Yardiey, Pa.. 215-493-6114.

SALE! — All Prices Slashed. M ust re d u c e In v e n to ry . Agnes Sheehan Antique Shop, 64 Main St,. Kingston.

4 ANTIQ UE OAK Press- backs — With rabbit ears & cane seats. Best offer over $400 609-799-0988

KINGSTON ANTIQUES — 43 Mam St.. Kingslon, NJ. Fine antiques & estate jewel­ry Victorian & Deco furniture Jewelry repair design 8. res­toration. Discreet disposal of family treasures. 609-924 0332.

VISIT WHITEHOUSE Manor Antique Center. 14 dealers, 'arge selection of antiques Open 7 days. 10am-5pm. Route 22 West. Whitehouse, NJ, 201-534-9904,

Pets & Animals

Princeton Small Animal Rescue League

PROVEN MALE — Hima­layan Stud Cat only $250 609-259-3017

RIVERVIEW STABLES BELLE MEAD, N J.

InckxH FadMles BoanAng A Training

Inatructton

201-874-5484

STRAW FOR SALE — $1 pc bale, 609-466-3079

AKC DOBERMAN — Pups. Reasonable price. 609-890- 8237 or 392-5044.

CHESAPEAKE BAY — Re­triever pups, whelped Dec. 1, Males $300 Females $250 after 6 p m. 201-359-7230.

5 M O N T H S — fe m a le S a m o ye d , AKC , s h o ts , friendly. Call 201-494-0475.

AKC Doberman Puppies — Ch. lineage, for show, breed­ing & companion Cal! 609- 466-2427.

LABRADOR RETRIEVER Puppies — show, field, pets A K C ’OFA reg. Ch, sired. Guaranteed, 609-883-4505.

FREE TO A Good Home — 6 month old male mixed breed puppy, good w.chitdren. Cali before 2pm 201-359-5039.

BASSETT PUPPIES — AKC reg, males & females, ready 1st week Feb. Call 609-397- 1172.

FRIENDLY ANIM ALS for adoption — from a kennel that cares. Many pure & mixed breeds. Please visit the orphanage or call for in­formation 20T251-3210

ADORABLE COCKER Spa- ruei Puppy — 10 mo., black & w h ito , n e e d s h o m e w 'affectionate people. Good watch dog Call 212-675- 8003

A.B.R. Animal Behavioral R ese a rch . P riva te pet- training lessons at your resi­dence designed especially around the needs of you and your family - Special focus on your hildren's rapport wit*' their pet Loving and ge'itle^ handling for Consistent and Accurate off-leash corirol, regardless of distractions - refinements and corrections following obedience ciciss ■ Trauma, Excessive Domi­nance and Submissiveness Don't wait! Your anm i\ Is never loo young nor too old to learn. No problem is too diffi­cult to remedy A.B R, has th e s o lu t io n : S u c c e s s through Knowledge. For the Performance, Precision and Perfection of a Seeing Eye dog, call Jeffrey J, Loy. Anim­al Behavioralist, Naturalist, Researcher and Former In­structor at the Seeing Eye, Inc. at 201-889-9125 Serv­ing all of Central Jersey.

TASHAMA FARMS Belle fyiea<t N.J.

Indoor Outdoor Rings Boarding

instruction & Training

201-359-2660

SHAVINGS FOR STALL bedding — in bags. Call 201- 329-6259.

Feeds and Grains For all animals at

ROSEDALE MILLS274 Alexander St.

Princeton 609-924-0134

GOLDEN RETRIEVER pup­pies, AKC registered Excel lent bloodlines Raised at home. 609-466-2469

LABRADOR RETRIEVERS — Yellows & blacks, AKC, good quality, lovable 609- 448-6121

SAM OYED PU PPIES — C h a m p io n s ire d A K C . beautiful & sweet Whelped 12-28. 215-322-4187 after 4 pm

LABRADOR Retriever Pups — AKC reg, blacks & yellows, clear hips, Ch bloodlines 609-397-2287

SPRINGER SPANIEL — Beautiful 4 mo old puppy Fully house trained Alt pap­ers. Relocating for job, must sell Interested parties call 609-924-5608

2 T H O R O U G H B R E D brood mares — For sale, in foal. Due m March $2000 each. 609-466-0414,

SMALL STABLE — in So. Brunswick has box stajus avail Ring & exercise track Best ot care 201-329-6259

FREE TO Good Home — Spayed cat, well behaved, lit­ter trained, doesn’t claw furni­ture. 609-443-5273

COLLAPSIBLE CAGES — wood bottoms; also cat ear­ners, 201-297-0045.

DOG — GOOD Guard tor adoption. Part Shepherd, pan Collie, 201-254-6054.

FREE — To good home, 2yr. affectionate male black & white loy poodle. Wonderful with children Call 609-448- 3051,

HORSEBACK RIDING — A!! year. We never close. Also well trained horses for sale. 201-521-9079.

FENCINGFor Home or Horses SpNt Rail - 3 hole $14.35 per 10' section, 100 sections at $13.35 ea, 2 hole, $10,70 per 10’ sectionBoard Fence - Ix6 x i6 Oak Boards, $4 50 ea. bundles of 98 at $3.50 ea Sawn Locust Posts. Keystone 2x4 woven wire fence. Also 12’ round C edar show jumps rails. $10 50 ea, 20 or more $6.50 each.

Cash & Carry Prices Top OuMity

Any QuantityFor Infor. & Dei. Chgs B.L. King 215-347-1730,

Lost & Found

DOG FOUND — Female. Med. sized, young, tan, dark muzzle, long hair 609-921- 7524

LOST BEAGLE — Large, tri- colored male, friendly, has lags for Snowden Lane, but staying on Mt Lucas Rq 609- 924-3718 if found.

LOST — Old fashioned small go ld w r is lw a tc h w 2 d i­amonds, Princeton Shopping Center, proximity fish store Reward. Call 201-297-0465.

Auto Tires / Supplies

COMPLETE MOTOR 283 - 2 bolt main Crane cam & lif­ters, lorker manifold, Holley 750 double pumper. Moroso valve covers, Hooker head­ers. Muncie m-21 close ratio transmission Turbo exhaust Complete drive train exclud­ing clutch 70-72 Cowl induc­tion hood for Chevelle $175 for hood. $1 75 for trans., $500 for motor Must see 201-369-5289 after 6. Ask for Ken

TRIUMPH TR-6 or TR-250 — rear end, good cond., $275. 201 -265-2000 ext 2806 days, 609-448-7352 eves, wkends

DUNLOP SNOW TIRES -- 165SR13, steel belled ra- dials. Brand new Call 609- 924-7934

TAPE CASSETTE — am fm radio in-dash, Sanyo, 2 6x9 speakers, antenna. $100 609-921-1525.

SN O W TIR ES- Sleelbelted radials, white wail, PI 95 /5R 14 Exc. cond. 2 $85 609-443-5868

SNOW TIRES — 2BR78 13, steel radial. Less than 1000 mi $80 609-587-6763

Auto Repairs

FOREIGN CAR Repairs - reasonable prices, quality workmanship. Call Joe, 609- 585-0134

TRANSMISSION Service — foreign & domestic, all work fully guaranteed. Call Walter. 201-359-2103

Autos Wanted

I WANT Your VW Now' (If thai's okay with you) Bug Wagon or Ghia, any year Oi condition, prefer runnrng Call Bill. 609.466.1328.

ALL JUNK CARS and Irucks wanted Free towing $15 and up Scarpati Auto Wrecking. 609.396-7040

CARS WANTED

AMERICAN AND FOREIGN

Top DoVar Paid

Nebbta Chevrolet

Rte. 130 Hightstown, N.J. e 0 » 4 4 8 -0 9 l0 587-8226

ANY CLEAN DOMESTIC OR FOREK3N CAR

HIGHEST PRICES PECK MOTORS

255 Nassau. P rlrx»ton 309-924-5454

WANTED — VW's in need ot repair. Any year. Top dollar ottered 201-297 7500, after 6, 297-6721.

MACKEY'S Towing Service — wants your junk car. Any cond ition . Call 609-443- 6259

JUNK CARS Wanted - $20 - $100 201-548-6582

Autos For Sale

1978 FIAT 128 — 2 dr. low mileage. $2000 609-443- 5126.

1978 OLDS — 98 Regency Sedan. Diesel, 38000 mi. Black, loaded, leather int. 215-493-3915,

1977 T-BIRD — While, auto, p-’s, p'b, amdm stereo, ra­dials. 201-297-7908. Best offer,

1973 CHEVROLET Caprice Wagon — Extras, clean, $700. 201-359-8778.

1980 AUDI 5000 S Diesel — Loaded, P'W, p-l, ac, sunroof, fog lights. Blaupunkt 3001 w EQ 609-924-8866, days.

1973 MERCEDES 280 C — 51000 original miles, sunroof, beautiful in & out. Must see & drive $8900, 215-860-0265.

78 PLYMOUTH — Station Wagon. 10 passenger, p. s, p b, a'c, chrome roof rack, am fm stereo. Low mileage, good snows. No rust, one owner $1950 609-298-9708.

1 9 7 0 , V O L K S W A G O N Dasher — 2dr, sedan. Dealer serviced from new. complete s e rv ic e h is to r y a v a il Blaupunkt am fm, ac, 4 spd, champagne edition. New top of the line volkswagon like this would cost over $11.000 This welt maintained auto is avail, for $4295. Call 609- 443-3564 after 6pm.

1977 PORSCHE 924Silver, black ml , 4 cyi, 4 spd, air cond, man. steering & brakes, am fm stereo casset­te, alloy wheels, 50,743 mi. $7995 excludes tax & lags.

OUAKERBRIDGE PORSCHE-AUDI

U.S- Rt. One Princeton, N.J 009-4S2-M 00

79 HONDA PRELUDE exc cond . sunroof, cassette Call day 609-292-7400. eves 609-896-9318 or 201-766- 7983

'73 PLYMOUTH Duster 2 doors, 60,000 miles, air cond. am radio ExcellenI condition Asking $800 Call 609 924- 1665 from 12 to 4pm

74 TOYOTA Corolla 8 track fm, 4 speed, 5 new ra­dial tires. $1800 Call 201- 297-8235 after 5pm

’81 CHEVETTE — Wife scar, ac. 4-spd. very economical Must .sell, new car on way 215-493-4533.

'72 PLYMOUTH Fury - New s la rte ., carburetor tires Sport features, runs very good Asking $750 609-799- 0891

1967 VW BUG • with no mileage on rebuilt engine Repainted green, beige in tenor. 1 owner, exc. cond 609-466-0732

1 977 H O N DA C IV IC — 20,000 mi. on rebuilt engine needs some body work, runs good Best offoi Days 609- 655-9099, eves 799-8737

1980 VW RABBIT - .? dr custom, excel cond 26 000 mi. $5200. 6A9-452-4607 or 924-8393

1967 VW BUG — Good con­dition. No rust. $500. Call 609-921-1520,

1978 PORSCHE 924Brown, beige int , 4 cyl, 4 spd. air cond, man. steering & b rakes, su n ro o f, am fm ste reo casse tte , 62,084 miles $8595 excludes tax & tags

OUAKERBRIDGE PORSCHE-AUOl

U.S. Rt. One Princeton, N.J. 6O9^S2'94O0

'76 RENAULT LeCar — ac. fm. 32 mpg. good cond. $2500 or b/o 609-799-8250

MAZDA RX-2, 74 — snow tires, arnTm cassette stereo, good shape. $975.609-737- 3946

'77 PINTO — $1595, white, autom atic, rad ia ls, good shape, 74 Pinto - $875, blue, automatic, snows 609-695- 5547

'71 MERCURY — P b, p.'i, auto, air. Starts right up. $500 609-448*3634

BMW 1970-2002 - Exs. mt. Body needs work. $1,000 firm, Exc. for parts 125,000 original mi. 20T369-v5289 af­ter 6. Ask for Ken

79 FORD MUSTANG — 3 dr. sedan, p-s. p b, a c. am fm, other extras, exc. cond Call 609-896-3539 aft 5pm

1979 MAZDA 626 — gold. 2 d r . 5 spd.. ac. am fm casset­te. mags.. 42.000 mi $5700 Call 609-896-1999 days. 799-8485 eves

1971 BUICK Skylark - 1962 Ford pickup Good mecha­nical cond Best offers 609 799-8019.

76 MAVERICK - 2 dr. 30.000 mi. exc cond $2350 609-737-1252 after 5pm

'75 DAT3UN B210 — exc mechanical cond. 80,000 mi. $1,500 Call 609-799-3374

1979 DIESEL Rabbit — 2 dr , ac. am fm cassette, 4 spd , new tires, extras, low miles 609-799-3575.

1977 TOYOTA ■ Corolla SR5 liftback. good cond , new tires. $2800 609-683- 1588 aft 7 pm.

'77 TOYOTA Celics G7 Auto, a-c, am fm. welt main­tained, new radials & battery $3000 609-924-3427

1981 CHEVY VAN -- cuslom conversion Sleeps 4, low mileage, fully loaded 609-771- 9067

77 MC MIDGET many new parts, exc. shape $2400 or best offer 609 92 ' 3917 or 924-6094

SURPLUS JEEPS. Cars and Trucks available - Many sell (or under $200 Call 312-742- 1143 Ext 6113 for informa­tion on how to purchase

1981 JEEP Scrambler ■ 4wheel drive, 4 cyl. engine, 4 spd. 22 mpg. loaded Must sell 609-737-1721

78 OLDS Custom Cruiser Wagon — 48.000 mi, 8 Irack. am fm, air Asking $5500 609-443-6645

'74 FORD WAGON 8 pass, new baft, exhaust sys­tem $1695 Cal! 6pm (0 8pm 609 448-6088

78 PL YMOUTH Arrow — sil­ver w/black stnpe & interior 2 dr , 4 cyl . 4 spd AM fm stereo cassette, excel run ning cond Good body 8 ml New front tires. Snow tires inci 40 mpg 62,000 mi $4500. negotiable 609-921- 0728 a.t;k for Elite

80 CADILLAC Sedan DeVil- ie — 2 lone beige, fully leaded, low low mileage Exc cond. available for best offer 609-448-6651

80 OLDSMOBILE DIESEL — 98 R e g e n cy sedan 49.000 mi. fully equipped, service records available $8200 609 452-1000 ext 337 or 448-6929

'76 PLYMOUTH VOLAR! a c ps p b , 5 7 ,0 0 0 m i. reasonable Cal! 609-448- 0332 after 5 pm or wknds

\/W DASHER Diesel - 1980. 36 mpg. am fm stereo, ac, $6300 609-771-0794, 587- 0900 ask for Marc,

1980 CHEVETTE - Unex- oectedly bought elderly un­cle's car. Exc cond Reason­able. 609-924-8231

HONDA ACCORD - 2 dr, 1981, auto, am;fm, extras A- 1 cond $6000 609-771- 280Z’609-466-15T'

1970 BUICK LESABRE — good running cond, $150. Call 609-924-0520 eves

'73 LTD — GoaJ condition. Asking $800. Call 609-924- 1816 Ask for Tom.

HONDA ACCORD ~ '76. $2400 Leav'i message for Mr Shanfielo 609-924-5792

OLDS 1981 DELTA 88 — Royate, Deisel, 4 dr, dark blue, load'id. low mileage, 28 mpg. $8800 201-264-9061.

'75 FIAT 128 — sedan, Ngrit green, am/tm cassette, r>ewtires, new battery, $1300. 201 -265-2000 ext, 2806 day?. 609-448-7352 eves., wkends.

19'JO VW Diesel — like new. low mileage. SOmpg. Sun­roof, stereo $6300 Call 201- .397-4067.

77 CORVETTE — Loaded, For parts or rebuilt by expert. Int exc Asking $2200. 201- 329-2329 after 6.30 p m

73VWBEETLE — Blue.4sp Good c o n d itio n , a sk ingt l i o o 609-924.715b after 6pm.

'79 HONDA CIVIC Slation- wagon — moving, must sell Exc. cond $4300 609-799- 0988

72 CHEVY W AGON ~ Kingswood runs well, ps pb, ac, HD hitch $495 609-443- 1237 after 5 p.m

79 OLDSMOBILE Regency — Diesel. 4 door, leather 60- 40 6 way power seats, vinyl roof, electric windows, rear defrost and door locks. A C. 8 track stereo, cruise control, company owned & m ain­tained. Absolute Creampuff 67.000 mi. $5700. Must be seen to be appreciated. Call 609-448-8927 between 6 & 9 pm . C an be s e e n on weekend

1964 MERCEDES - 230SL convertible, both tops, excell cond , $14,500 201-359- 0042 aft. 4pm.

82 MAZDA RX-7 — GLC, 5 spd, a ir. sunroof, am Im stereo cassette, security sys­tem & many other extras $14,200. Call Debbie 609- 924-6500 ext 162

1 975 VW BU G low mileage, sunroof, am fm cas­sette. $3000 Call 509-466 1431

'78 CADILLAC Coupe - exc. cond, fully loaded, all power, new tires, garaged, 45,000 mi. $6200. 201-329-6741

'79 CHEVETTE - 5-dr. su­per cond .. m any ex tras $3900 Call 609-799-8470

'72 TOYOTA Corolla Wagon — Good running cond., fm. air. New tires, muffler, & bat­tery. C urren t inspection $890 or best offer. 609-921- 1744

RARE ITEM ~ 1970 GTO 400, V8. auto.. P'S. $2600 201-297-2344. aft. 5p m.

1976 CHRYSLER CORDO­BA w low miles, air, ps'pb, leather int . silver w burgan- dy landau roof Reg gas. ra­dial tires, am fm, stereo. $2500 or make offer After 5, 201-231-0324

1970 VW BEETLE — $1500 New ignition, re-built engine, transmission Original owner Call evenings 609-452-1728

'79 FORD LTD — 4 dr, a'C. am Im ste reo Executive driven. $3000 or best otter 609-587-4082 ask for Tony.

1977 CHEVY- Monza 2 » 2 - candy apple red. auto, sun­roof, air, p/s, am fm cassette, CB, with new engine. Best ofle^ Call eves 609-448- 6916

77 B-2 10 DATSUN excel- le n t condition Call 215-493- 3042

78 OLDS DEI TA 88 — D ie s e l, m m ! c o n d itio n . $5000 Call 609-587-6193

PLYMOUTH 1970 - $300, runs well, new front retreads, snow tires, auto Datsun 1200 1971, $100, good eng, for parts Eves 6O9-09O- 8099

1976 TOYOTA — Corona station v/agon, automatic, 43,000 miles, excellent con­dition Asking $3000 Call Tam after 6 pm 609-921- 1839

1971 YELLOW VW — Super Beetle Reliable iransporta don, reconditioned engine, good tires, make offer 609- 448-4951 ah 5 30 prn.

LANCIA - Bela Coupe. 1976, iike new, only 22,000 miles, loaded, 25 mpg Origi­nally $8500, must sell im ­mediately. leaving for college $3499 Call Bob, 609-298- 0122 anytime.

'72 VW SUPER Beetle — ex- cell working cond , $1275. 609-924-4338

73 V O L V O S T A T IO N Wagon - Automatic, a c, radio Excellent condition $2100 609-737-0442

Al I AIRE LEASING SER­VICE — Domestic or foreign New cars, vans, light trucks Lease ihe engage-a-car way No down payments, lower m onih ly paym ents Free booklel 609-393-1190

NATIONAL CREDIT CORP makes loans to home own­

ers to purr'hase automobiles Phone 609-3UG-7500 or 201 ■ 246-4883

'77 DODGE WAGON V8 ac. p s, p b, & more Asking $1800 201 297-8332

1 974 TRIUM PH TR-6 — 54000 mi New c lu tc h , brakes, ait, valve 609-799- 8367 after 6om $2000

1978 BUICK LeSabre Cus­tom A-1 cond, designer paint, must be seen $5195 609 587 2049

CAPRI '72 -- new paint, snow tire s , good cond.. $1100^09-737-3946.

55 BUICK Riviera - - good motor, runs good, $500. Call 609-921-6020

'70 OPEL Kadett — Used alt summer by college student. Must sell, Runs well, has been parked 4 mos. Cali David 609-921-0235 Best offer.

8-BClassified Advertising

Wc«k of January 20 - 22, 1982

Autos For SalePEUGEOT DtESEL — 1974, 69000 rm. am tm , sunroof, stick, exc. cond, S3900. 201- 257-8870

1980 AUDI 4000 — 2 dr 4 cyi. am'fm stereo, air & sun­roof. Excell cond 609-883- 7405 aft 5 pm

'68 DODGE WAGON — V-8. manual trans 127.000 mi 14-18 mpg, $200 609-683- 1097 aft 6 pm

1980 FORD Fairmont — 4- cyi. auto, p s, p b, rear defros­ter, rust proofed, new tires under warranty $3645. Days 609-683-2296, eves 609- 799-3307

1980 CHEVY IMP ALA — 4 dr , V8, 19-20 mpg options, like new $4650 609-799- 2683

81 CHEVY Citation ~ 5 dr mint cond Lowmt Loaded. 1 owner, garaged. $6950 609- 655-3822

Trucks

1977 DODGE MAXI Conv Van — 6 cyi . auto, p s. p b3 8 .000 mi C ustom in t $6800 609-443-5500

74 PLYMOUTH ~ 4df H lop. ac, ps pb, stereo radio Exc tires & overall cond Mounted snows Babied mileage. 609-

448-6373 or 443-6318

72 BRONCO — needs work Rebuilt engine Many extras Call after 5pm 609-466-0752

1979 VW RABBIT Custom —42.000 m iles, exc cond. asking $4500 Days 609-984- 1021

M OVING OVERSEAS —1976 VW Rabbit, good cond,52.000 mi Call Lilly. 609- 921-8900

1981 8UICK Skyiard Ltd — 4 cyi. auto, 4 dr. dark blue Many extras, exc cond S6950 or oest offer 20-< -3-59- 4207

70 DODGE DART — 4 dr , super run , 6 cyi . AC, P S, $700 best offer 201-821- 8422

79 CJ7 — 6 cyi. p s. am fm, R enegade pkg. 3 1 .000 $5300 609-924-2321

1974 VOLVO 144 — 44 000 m i. ac, p s. pb. am fm 8- track Good cond $3000 609-799-8481 aft 5 pm

JEEPS, CARS, PICKUPS — from $35 Available at local Gov t Auctions For Directory call Surplus Data Center 415- 330-7800

1980 MAZDA RX7 - Blue 5-spd, am fm stereo casset­te a c. rear window defogger approx, 28,000 mi, exc. cond $8500 Cali 609-924-6070. 9- 5pm

74 CHARGER - 318 en gine, auto. ps. pb good trans­portation $750 509-799- 8813

69 CAMARO CLASSIC ■ Exc running c o n d ,g o o d body & in te r io r S i 975 negotiable 201-356-6155.

'79 PONTIAC Bonneville — 4 dr lull pwr pack am fm stereo.50.000 mi, $5500 609-443- 4110

67 OLDS - 98 Deluxe 4 dr sedan, radio, p w Running. $800 as IS Snow tires mc< 609-448-2085

Trucks

73 CHEVY PICK-UP — 307- headers. 4-barrel card, am- tm 8 - tra c k , good cond. $1100 609-737-3015 after 3.30

1973 DATSUN Pick-up truck ~ Wrecked, but transmis­sion, engine & other parts in good cond Best offer 609- 452-8798

Machinery & Equipment

FARM PLANTER — Large water tank, rubber tires, reasonably priced, like new 201-787-5604

GARDEN TRACTOR — 12 hp ! H with rotary mower, needs work. Best offer 609- 448-1370 bet 8 & 5

MACHINF.RY — repaired or made to order. Parts made for anything, welding, forg­in g . f in e m a c h in in g LeyZOfek. Skiilman, 609- 466-3399.

RecreationalVehicles

77 MIDAS MINI Motorhome — 3-way d in e tte , ps pb cruise, a c. self-contained. TV ant ' booster, CB, GMC chassis. Good buy' See at Kadco Camping Center. Rt 130 33. Robbinsville 609- 443-1133

1981 MIDAS — 3 3 'RV trailer All extras. Must sell Best offer 609-395-0867

SNOWMOBILE — '79 Polar­is 440 Cobra Exc. cond. And cover $1200 or best offer 609-466-1466

SNOWMOBILE 79 — Trail- fire 440. 400 miles S1600, w extras 609-443-2751.

1975 M ID AS V o lu n te e r Travel Trailer — 22 Com­ple te ly se lf conta ined w awning Call after 5pm 609- 466-3613

Mobile Homes

ADULT PARK— 10 x55 , ful­ly furnished 2 bdrm home Call eves 6-fO 609-448-490 7

■71 BONANZA — 12X60, 2 bdrms.. furn optional. 2 AC units, ig S2 lot, shed, oH- street park , extras Must be seen 201-297-4582

Boats

1979 BMW 320i — Stick, air. sunroof alloys, fog lights, Biaupaunkt cassette. Sierra beige Asking $9800 Call 609-737-0914

VW BUG 1970 — no rust or dents, rebuilt engine, new clutch AM fm casette Very reliable $1200? 609-466- 1326 please leave message

1976 DATSUN B210 - - auto, 2-dr, blue. 59.000 mi Good cond 35 mpg. $2500 609- 737-2478

Motorcycles

78 KAWASAKI 650 — low mliedge. like new Moving $1800 or b o 609-799-4826

1981 HONDA Moped — Used 1 sum m er Valued $695. selling for $450 609- 448-6969

1980 SUZUKI - 175, brand new fantastic cond Asking $950, 201-874-3660

79 PLYMOUTH Trail Duster — Meyers 7 way plow, CB radio, tape deck. 5 snow tires. 4 reg tires. 34,000 mi, Orign owner, excell, cond 2 0 1- 359-5856 ah 5 pm

THREE TRUCKS — For sale 1971 Ford pick up. F 250 1967 Ford pick up, F 350 1969 Jeep Commando complete w snow plow Ah trucks good running cond Best offers 609-921-0070

TUTORING -• Math & Read­ing by a licensed teacher. 15 years exp., grades 3-9. 609- 448-4282 after 6pm

Instruction

The M ercer County lAathematics

Center P 0 Box 990 H igh titow n

Group 4 individual lessons offered to students of all ages and abilities

CCXJRSES:•Basic Arithmetic Skills •Enrichm ent for the gifted and talented•Preparation for the Math S.A.T.’•Computer Programming • All hiqh school Math •A lso reading and English instruction

Register Now 609-448-6023 443-1013

GU iYAR & BASS Lessons — tor beginners, intermediates & advanced students. Experi­enced teacher in rock, jazz, .md other styles including music theory. Call Jake 609- 799-3083.

PIANO INSTRUCTION — re­cording artist will (each rock & roll technique to intermediary students and wiH also teach beginners. Very pa‘>ent with children For afternoon and evening lessons 609-443- 8394.

PROF PIANIST — accepting students Graduate Hulgers M u s ic . All styles: excellent program for beqinners 609- 448-8833,

TUTOR — Elem teacher w classroom exp. in grades 1-7 & as supplemental instructor of children w learnmg'disabi- lities will tutor your child Cali 609-799-4498 after 6 pm.

ENGLISH as a second lan­guage — Exp. teacher for children & adults All levels Individuals, families, small groijps Princeton Free con­sultation 509-924-8545

OPERATIC VOICES started from scratch — Develop your voice to Its highest potential. Any age. no previous training requireO 609-443-3886

VOCAL STUDENTS now being accepted — Have stu­died at Manhattan School of Music & Westminster C.C Reasonable fee. Interested persons call 609-443-5947

OIL PAINTING LESSONS (private) Write Eli Dimeff. P O Box 1509. Princeton, N J 08540

NEW BOAT SLIPSDiscount Prices 25 Ft Sltp-S275

Up The Creek Manna 201-269-6469

Bayville. N J

Instruction

The Green Oaks at Princeton

French Spanish English Na­tive teachers Small classes and Private instruction for adults and children

Theatrical Arts Courses 609-921-8118P O. Box 1137

Princeton M Fn 9-30 4 30 Mon & Wed 7-8

Sal 10-12

PIANO LESSONS - qua]- ifted teacher with Master’s Degree in piano 11 yrs teaching experience • all levels & ages welcome. Clas­sical musician, i teach Jazz & Popular, too My Princeton studio or your home Cali Kathryn L Werner 609-921- 0353 References available from happy students'

C REATIVE PIANO LES­S O N S - w iU ' H a n d y Sweazey. MA Ed M, Col­umbia Untv Group and pri­vate lessons, children and adults Princeton studio For brochure 609-924-9497

BASS & GUITAR Lessons — by Dan Sky Pro teacher & recording artist Aii styles, be­ginners to advanced Low rates, will travel Princeton area. 201-297-3520 or 609- 924-7039

CELLO LESSONS — Suzan ne M ead. D egrees from Oberlin Consen^atory. Univ N Y . masters in music, Tren­ton Symphony Will leach Suzuki 609-924-3133

PIANO LFSSONS — for be­ginners & beyond AH ages Emphasis on poprockjazz 609-448-6276

ENGLISH COMPOSITION Tutor — BA • MA. state cer­tified, secondary ed Jr. • Sr high * college expenence Call 609-393-1987 nfter7om ,

GUITAR LESSONS Jazz, Classical. Folk. Pop Experi­enced teacher of beginning & advanced students 609 924-2946

THE FOURTH WAY — a method of work on oneself, is a synthesis of Eastern and Western methods based on the work of G 1 Gurdjieff. !l's aim IS to help us recognize, study, and eventually elimin­ate false [personality while de­veloping essence and true personality Akhaldan II is a school in the Fourth Way led by an experienced teacher Weekly meetings, private consultation, modest fee 609-443-1898.

READING TUTOR - N J Certified Reaaing Specialise with Master’s degree & ex penence offers tutoring in re medial reading for all ages Reasonable rates Refer ences available 609-921 9398

Instruction

TRANSLATIONS — offered fro m D u tc h . G e rm a n & French info English or vice- versa, also corresponder-.ee in these languages & Span­ish Call 609-921-2306, pre­ferably after 6pm.

NJ NY C e rt te a c h e r— to tutor reading. LA. study skills. Spec Ed 609-448-6902.

TUTORING — All areas of disabilities, references avail­able 609-443-3568 after 7pm.

CERTIFIED TEACHER — Tutor grades 3-6 Reading, English, math $12hr 609- 448-4503.

CERTIFIED TEACHER — w MA will tutor Spanish & Heb­rew 201-297-4826.

T U T O R IN G — E n g lis h Grammar and Composition Call 609-924-5249

MATH TUTORING — Avaii- able for long or short term in­s tru c tio n P rogram s de­signed to su it ind iv idua l needs MA. Columbia Univ 609-443-1739.

MATH TUTORING — by Ph.D., High School & College level. SAT & al! college board exams, remedial enrichment programs, custom, individual instruction. 609-448-3690

TUTOR — NYC teacher Master s Degree * expen­ence in reading & math Call 609-448-1024.

G U IT A R LESSO N S AM Levels Vocal coaching, tape facilities avail Bob Korman (609) 921-3669

Entertainment

A UNIQUE Approach to lan­gua g e le a rn in g 25 lan ­guages Native teachers and translators Instruction for children and adults AiMevels Brush-up, conversational and literary classes. Inten­sive courses for travelers and business people Tutoring Cal! 609-924-2252

E X P E R IE N C E D E ng lish Teacher — offers private tutoring Special emphasis on writing skills and review of grammar and mechanics. N J teacher and supervisory certification Call 609-924- 6365 evenings

BEGINNING PIANO - in­struction for children Com­prehensive program, West­minster Choir College train­ing Your home or mme Becky 609-466-1349

G U ITAR - Lessons all levels, all styles, taught by Berkiee College of Music graduate Call Ed Cedar 609- 443-5163

RETIRED TEACHER will tutor elementary reading & math at home Pennington area 609-882-4358

DISCOVER FLYING Les­sons — $20 Raritan Valley Flying School. Northside Kupper Airport. Manvifle 201-722-5111

Entertainment

LARK STRING QUARTET for ail notable occasions — weddings, parties, recep­tions, openings — classical to light. (201) 297-4267. 469- 0229. 249-5460; (609) 924- 6037.

MtCKEY STARR Disc Jock­ey. Music for all occasions. The best in portable sound. Go with the Pro. 609-737- 0504.

BusinessServices

BusinessServices

Catering

CATERING — D eitc icus quality foods served with perfection for your party. For complimentary estimate call M artha S zym ezak, East Windsor Catering. 6C<9-448- 4130 after 4 pm.

W O ND ER FU L ONES — Catering. Let us rrtake your special occasion memor­able. 201-821-9574 or 201- 297-3348.

e.ABCrS PARTIES — Unli­mited. We create successful parties. Don’t hire a caterer, engage a complete catering service. 609-695-5666.

BALLOON — your Bar Mitz- vah. wedding, or any special occasion w Balloon Bou­quets & unique & creative balloon centerpieces. Caii Balloon Fantasy. Inc. 609- 448-5220.

Photography

V ID E O TA P IN G — rea l estate, insurance, weddings, athletics. Call Ed. 609-799- 5638,

ENTERTAINER Available — March 27 Our loss your gam Had to change plans but must pay the piper. Stereo organ vocals - for all ages Let's make a deal. 609-448- 9476

TREAT YOUR — Eardrums to a Parties Unlimited Disc Jockey, Diversified or spe­c ia liz e d program s, ligh t shows & professional sound equipment 609-695-5666

JONJ16 THE MAGIC CLOWN

M agic comedy & balloon animals. Available for school, show s, b irthday parties, grand openings and fund raisings. For further informa­tion cat! 201-254-6374

MAGICIAN EXTRAORDI­NAIRE" — Great Bernini will entertain at your child's party with mystifying illusions, bal­loon animals, audience parti­cipation and surprise gifts, guaranteeing fun for all Fea­tures illusions from Broadv/ay Shows Rave Revue Refer­ences Responsible Prince­ton student • has car. Call now to insure your special dale David 509-734-0511 after 9pm

DISC JOCKEY FOR HIRE — Weddings. Parties, Dances, Live Band Sound For low cost, any type music - Disco, 50 s. Pop, Elvis, etc. Barry Davison, 609-466-2709.466- 1141

MAKE YOUR Next Party — complete with entertainment from WPST disc jockeys. Steve Treveiise Dave Hoef- fel, Tom Cunningham, and Tim Downs, equipped with sound and lights Any type of music for any type of occa­sion. Call 201-542-5410

PIA PUPPETEERS — Book­ings for children’s parties and other happy occasions. 201- 251-0323

BLUE GRASS — Parties, concerts. Magnolia Road Band. 609-261-1691

MUSIC BY TOUCH” — the area's favorite dance band. Weddings parties. 609-924- 7685

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT — for your par..y Guitar duet with vocals Full sound 609- 443-5163.

COLOR PORTRAITS— hy computer for weddings, bar m ilzvahs. parties, promo­tions Cal' 609-448-7234

COUNTRY & WESTERN Music - - Paul Danes, Singer Guitarist Call 201-997-6890

CLOWNS FOR HIRE — Jit­terbug & Lollipop parties, greetings, promotions 609- 486-1246

PM SOUNDS — Disc Jock- les All occasions. Exception­al sound and lights 201-297- 3368.201-329-6720 aft 6 pm,

EXPERIENCED string musi­cians for hire Ado a pleasant touch to your party or special occasion from classical to popular music at your re­quest Call 201-359-1662 or 359-7076.

PHOTOGRAPHIC Home in­ventory Service — We work witti insurance companies. Call G.T. Worrail Photo Ser­vice 609-883-0378.

VIDEOTAPE ALL Memor­able O ccasions — Wed- d-.ngs. Receptions. Parties — Home Inventory Spe'' ilists Princeton Videotaping Ser­vices. P O. Box 1518, Prince­ton, N J. 08540 609-799- 3055.

BLACK & WHITE PHOfO- GRAPHY — Competently ex­ecuted; reasonably priced. Phaedfus 609-392-2688 in P M

Piano Tuning

PIANO TUNING Regulating Repainng

ROBERT HALLIEZ P.T G. Registered

Craftsman SINCE 1951

609-921-7242

PIANO TUNING — Regulat­ing & repairing Call after 7pm. 201-874-4218

FurnitureRestoration

PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE — Word proces- sir>g on Xerox 000. We can revise, retain & update your material - letters, mailing fists, resumes, manuals, manu­scripts. Also error-free auto­matic typing - every page an original - on IBM memory typewriter. Instant photo­copying. addressing & mail­ing, offset printing, spiral binding. Carduner s Shop­ping Center. Rte 130 & Prin- ceton-Hightstown Rd.. High- tstown. 609-440-6707.

WORD PROCESSING — Professional with M.A. in En­glish produces superior re­ports, documents, disserta­tions, etc. Specialities include medical & computer terminol­ogy. repetitive letters, trans­cription. Research & editing available. 609-506-5825

PRINTINGp h o t o t y p e

GRAPHIC SERVICES

Business Stationery (Offset. Raised. Engraved)

Wedding Invitations (15% Discount)

Carbonless Forms (Ded. 10% Iron

last quoted price)

WASTERGRAPHX609-924-0460 Route 206

'•^ocky Hi'i

DESIGN DRAFTSMAN — Ana planner. Fast & accu­rate, layouts, details, build­ings, sketches, revisions & mechanicals. '' yrs. board exp. in all levels. Call Ed Jr. 609-448-2955 days, 609- 259-9146 eves,

TRANlWORD PROCESSING

20 Nassau St., Suite 212 Princeton. NJ 609-683^)120

Professional typing services done on Xerox system. Edito­rial license taken at no charge to correct your grammar, punctuation and spelling. Pri­vate instruction by qualified expert offered Notary public services available.

WRITING. Editing, Typing — Manuscripts. Theses Pick- u p - d e i iv e r y . P e te r S O liphan t, PhD. 609-392- 2949

UPHOLSTERERS — Quality work-kitchen chairs, break­fast nooks, etc. Many colors avail 609-587-6612,

CANED & RUSHED — Make an old chair better. Give it a new seat. Expertly done. 609-395-0342.

QUALITY REFINISHING — Restoration of antiques All work done w care & expertise to increase the value and beauty of each piece 609- 466-2206

DIP N STRIP — free pick up & delivery Hand stripping, re- finishing. repairing, caning & rushing. Our reference, your neighbors. DIP N STRIP, 49 Mam St.. Kingston, NJ. 609- 924-5668. Open Mon-Sat 9-5 pm

RIDER FURNITURE - - Re­pairing & refinishing Antique r e s to ra t io n . C a n in g A Rushing Hand stripping. Pick up & delivery service Location rear of 75 Main St.. Kingston. Mon-Sat. 9-5. 609- 924-0147.

BusinessServices

TYPING . WPR Secretarial Service. Resumes, term pap­ers, repetitive letters using Xerox system for personal or business needs. 112 Amwell Rd,. Belle Mead. N J 201- 874-4096

DRAFTING — Ink drawing, Leroy lettering, maps, grafts, curves for theses, papers, re­ports 609-443-5273 after 5pm

TYPING — w no charge for light editing. Fast, aesthetic work. IBM Selecfric. Arri 609- 924-1330

ELAINE'S TYPING Service — Experienced typist for free lance assignments Correcti- ble Setectric typewriter For more information call 609* 448-6479.

COMPUTER PROGRAM ­MING — System analysis, system design & software de­velopment. Cali 201-329- 3173.

KC ASSOCIATES

The Urtimate in Business Services

Including•Secretarial Sen/ices •Telephone Answering •Addressing S Mailing •Bookkeeping •Travel Arrangements •Conference & Seminar

Planning •Meeting rooms •Office Space •Reasonably Priced

609-799-3103

EXECUTIVE Secretarial Ser­vice — 25 yrs. expenence, IBM se iectric typewritier, work done in home Will address envelopes. 609-655- 0751 bet 3&4 or aft 8 pm

SMAL.l COMPUTER Con­sulting — Programs written to suit your personal or busi­ness needs, Week nights call 609-448-5861 afle^ 6pm

NEED LOGO — stationery, advertising, mailers, etc.? Cali the Design People, Sue David Graphics, 609-448- 8950.

MANIFOLD WORD PRO­CESSING SERVICES - Sophisticated and ingenious standalone display system used lor all and sundry typing jobs executed by an experi­enced operator. Your copy may be stored on magnetic diskette for instant recall or future revision and use. Turn around time is 8 times faster than standard typewriter Complex document format­ting available, heavy revision c a p a b i l i t y , a d d re s s e s merged with master letter for multiple originals output, sta­tistical and columnar work p e rfo rm ed , m a iling lis ts sorted according to Zip Code, and lists of any sort may be selectively picked over to suit your conditions of selection. If you have any questions ab­out our word processing ser­vice. or if you wish to com­pare our performance and charges with those of your present in-house or outside secretarial ser'.'Ice, call (609) 921-6144; if no answer, call (609) 921-7123.

TYPING — prof. neat. fast, wonderful, books, reports, edit, math, lang, tech, deliver, 201-359-3141.

TRUCK & WINDOW Letter­ing — show cards, paper signs Herbert C Rodgers. 201-297-1648

FinancialServices

FinancialServices

COMPUTER PROGRAM­MING — IBM Systems 32'34 RPGii. Aii business applica­tions Custom programs or m od ifica tions . Packages available Reasonable rates. Call Mundorf Associates. Inc 201-366-8175.

TY P IN G — D one In my home. 15 yrs. experier>de as a typist. All types of projects. Reasonable rates. 609-683-0773

W A N TE D — C o rp o ra te accounts who desire a highly p ro fess iona l and expe ri­enced travel agency to hand­le their business travel. We have been fully automated for live years and employ eight experienoert consultants. We provide free delivery service, and accept aii major credit cards. We can also provide lim ited company b illings. Please call Rose Pascarelli owner of Travel Planning" to arrange a meeting at your convenience. Travel Plan­ning of Princeton. 609-924- 5531. 924-6822, 900 State Rd , Princeton, N J. 08540

Princeton Packet, Inc has limited

Press Time Available

Web Offset Press

Let us print your newspaper or in-house organ. Camera ready mechanicals or nega­tives required

Standard pages or tabloids can be printed on regular 30# newsprint or 50# white offset stock. Nominal extra charge for spot color.

Our capacity is 32 pages standard and 64 pages tab­loid

Cal! Mr Brink at (609) 924- 3244 for particulars.

RESUMES UNLIMITED— Complete one step service featuring resumes profes­sionally prepared to highlight your qualifications, expertly typed Sprinted Cover letters & applications typed. Type­se tting ava ilab le for re­sumes Personal, confiden­tial service. 609-448-0701

TYPIST — Intelligent, versa­tile, professional, with IBM correcting Seiectric. for free­lance assignments Located near Princeton Campus. Call after 6 om, 609-921-2553

TYPING at home. Quick, accurate, neat, reasonable Seiectric Correcting 609- 466-1700 or 924-9600, ask for Madn

TAX S E R V IC E S — by appointment only 609-443- 5358 or 609-448-5127.

EDIFYING EDITING returns — Yp0 written word as it should be, for $6 hr 609 587- 7288

TRANSLATIONS — Span­ish English, English'Spanish P ro fe s s io n a l U n iv e rs ity graduate. 609-448-3388

DO YOU HAVE — problems unique to your own aging pro­cess or that of a family mem­ber.? Let me help you cope. Theresa Dietrich, Geronto­logist, 609-587-8220

A C C O U N T IN G , TAX & Financial — services pro­vided by CPA on a monthly, quarterly or annua! basis at reasonable rates. Call for an appointment 609-083-4792.

jc services — Live te le ­phone answering 609-924-0209,

COPIES — resumes, invita­tions, business cards, rubber stamps, complete typeset­ting. composition & printing service 7 days a week at Sears Quick Copy Center, Quaker Bridge Mall

PROVIDING YEAR ROUND SERVICES — Tax 4 Finan­cial Planning • Preparation all tax returns - Accounting & Aud iting For ind iv idua ls , businesses, and service organizations. James Hart- traft Jr.. C.P.A, Warren Plaza West, Rt. 130. Hightstown. N.J. 08520. 609-443-4409

TAX PREPARATION — Per­sonal & Business by CPA. Call now for early Appt. 609- 443-5407.

Income Tax Returns &cperienced Accountant P r ^ r e d in the privacy

of your home. E n ro ied to prectice

before IRS.Take full advantage of NEW TAX LAW S. Reasonable rates. Call Mr, Gaberl

609-443-4926 448-9048

TAX P R E P A R A T IO N —- Federal and stale returns Call 609 883-9863 after 5pm

TAX PREPARED ~ Profes­sionally. Gel your refund ear­ly' Call 201-821-9343.

Special Services

DELCREST Medical Products &

Services Co"We rent & sell everything for the patient from hospital to home ''

2100 Nottingham Way Trenton, N.J 609-586-1679

ALTERATION S CUSTOM D R A P E R IE S — Q u a lity work Reasonable, same day service. Call 609-799-9625.

C LEAN IN G — G arages, basements, attics, yards Reasonable 201-297-3953

BLACKJACK PLAYERS — Tired of getting a bad deal in Atlantic City? Playing black­jack need not be hazardous to your bank account Try winning for the change Adv­anced p rofess ional level blackjack player, Princeton area resident, will leach indi­viduals or small groups any aspect of the game Single or multiple sessions structured to your needs. No gimmicks. F re e in itia l c o n s u lta tio n JB Research Services. 609-799- 4208.

COPIES — resumes, invita­tions, business cards, rubber stamps, complete typeset­ting. composition & printing service. 7 days a week at Sears Quick Copy Center, Quaker Bridge Mall

TONYS CLEANING SER­VICE— Spring Cleaning -At- t'cs, Basements. Garages in­cluding general cleaning of houses, apts. offices. Cal! anytime. 609-799-1410

Special Services

WATLINGTON'S PAINTING— Interior & extenor. Press­ure washing. Aluminum 4 wood homes. Gutter clean­ing 609-799-2020 no answer 443-4790.

THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE in Cranbury, Holistic mas­sage techniques employed by Kripalu Institute trained therapist to relieve aching backs, stiff joints and ten­s ions of the w ork-a -day world. For appt. call Lynn at 609-655-4497.

RUG CLEANING & SHAM­POOING — Janitorial Ser­vice & Cleaning Service - Snow Plowing, James Stree­ter, Trenton, NJ 609-393- 4438,

COLLEGE SELECTION & APPLICATION COUNSEL­ING — individuals & small g ro u p s Dr. M icha e l L Rosenthal. 609-737-2236.

N O N -P R O FIT ORGS ~ Churches, clubs. If you have the volunteers to do mailings let us do the hard part labels (or envelopes or Chesire sheets) in zip order and cor­rected. Call for details PRIN­CETON PRINTOUTS. 609- 924-1188.

CLOCK REPAIRS - Antique & Modern, Grandfathers, Wall, Ma. iiel. Ships, Elliotts & Musk; Boxes. Pick up & del Exc. Prof. Ref. 201-560- 1921.

DRESSMAKING And Altera­tions — Janice Wolfe - Call 609-448-2125

LAWNMOWER. Snowblower Repairs— 10 yr experience. Andy's, 201-297-3953, 3609

GET IT Together — Half, make-up & wardrobe in the privacy of your home. Expert advice & grooming tricks 609-921-3504

FORGET-ME-NOT' Ser­vice — Will send special re­m em brance card to your family or customers Birth­days, holidays, anniversar­ies, etc 609-443-1320

EXPERT I'AILORING - - al­te ra tion & rem odeling of men s & women's suits Up­dating of men's styles Reas, quick & e fficen l service Romilrie 201-297-6595

BALLOONS FOR ALL occa sions Reasonable, will de­liver Call for prices etc. 609- 883-8708

SEWING DREAMS & Altera­tions — Winter pick up deliv- ery Quality workmanship Call A. 609-603-2805.

EXCLUSIVE Dress Making— & up to date alterations & remodeling Belle Mead. 201 ■ 874-4390

Home Services

PERSONAL FINANCIAL — & tax counselling, for d i­vorced & separated people. Call Split Decisions at 609- 92M 221.

INDIVIDUAL INCOME — Tax returns prepared Both federal & state. Licensed CPA. Call 609-921-0950 af­ter 6pm,

FREE DONATION - avail able to a college, school or non-profit institution, my col­lection ol Fortune Magazine (1965-1974). Write to P.O Box 22, Princeton, NJ 08540.

CONFIDENTIAL CASH — LOANS AS LOW AS 18% TO N E W J E R S E Y HOMEOWNERS. $2000 TO $ 100.000 FOR DEBT CON- S O L ID A T IO N , IN VEST­M E N TS OR AN Y PUR­POSE NO APPLICATION FEE CHARGED. PHONE YOUR APPLICATION TO: N A T IO N A L C R E D IT CORP-, 9am -7pm w eek­days. 9am -1 2 n oo n Sat. 609-396-7500 or 201-246- 4883.

FIELDS & WOODS mowed -- brush cleared 609-924- 8707

LAWN MOWER REPAIRS — Hand Mowers or tractors, also complete sharpening service. Saws, knives, scis­sors. grass or hedge clippers, reel mowers or rotary mow­ers. R.A Grooms & Son. 385 Ward St., Hightstown. N.J 609-448-1792

W E LD IN G R E P A IR S — Burning & Cutting, Portable equ ip m en t R easonab le Rates. 24 hr. service. 609- 466-1416.

CREATIVE WE' DED Sculp­tures. Our designer Tours In­terior Exterior Also repair & in s ta l la t io n of A n tiq u e

'Wrought Iron Gates & Fenc­ing Call for Consultation & Estimates, 609-446-1416.

THE WARDROBE Planner — ottering you a chance to have your own personal mix- n-match wardrobes, how to look & feel great top to bot­tom 609-443-1320

MACHINERY — repaired or made to order. Parts made for anything; welding, lorg- .n g , f in e m a c h in in g Leyzorek. Skiilman. 609- 466-3399.

O V E R H E A D G A R A G E DOORS — installed & re paired , autm omatic door operators w'radio controls 609-883-8340.

SNOW BLOWERS — Port­able generators, pumps, tam­pers, cement m'^’ers, com­pressors, chain saws & log splitters repaired Montgom­ery Small Engine Repair,1 1 43 C ounty R oute 13, Blawenburg, N J. 609-466- 2329. Authorized Briggs & Stratton, Tecumseh & Kolher service center.

FXPERT CLOCK REPAIR and restoration. 30 yrs ex­perience Jordan M Knight Pennington. 609-737-0761.

ALTERATIONS - Ladies Reasonable, high quality, quick service Call Elsie 609- 448-3181,

REGENCY UPHOLSTERY— Quality Guaranteed Work Free Estimates. 609-392- 3366 or 392-4698

FLOOR SANDING & Repairs— New hardwood floors in­stalled. custom work. Free estimates. 201-521-4796.

STAINING & Varnishing — at I ts best; cabinets, doors, stairways, & furniture. 201- 874-4879,

EXPERT EUROPEAN — c a rpe n te r custom made woodwork, cabinet maker, formica, repairs 201-369- 3135 after 6pm.

ODD JOB? NO TIME? — Painting, cleaning, light haul­ing or whatever. The Odd Couple, 609-259-3587.

CUSTOM MADE SLIPCOVERS

BRIGHTEN YOUR HOME YEAR ROUND Your fabric - Labor only Call for yardage needed References on re­quest BOB S SLIPCOV­ERS 609-655-1573.

LAMP SHADES — Lamp mounting arid repairs. Nas­sau Interiors 162 Nassau St., Princeton.

BROWNING FERRIS INDUSTRIES

Industrial Refuse Collection

Cranbury Station Rd Cranbury, NJ 609-443-4818

MR. HANDIMAN — no job too big or too small Inside & outside work. Patios & con­crete work, painting, tiie work, storm windows, chalking & in­sulation, etc For the best quality at the lowest possible price call John at 609-921- 6877 for free estimate,

HOME LIBERATION SER­VICE — Perhaps you've gone back to work, or you just can't find someone for your weekly cleaning. The Home Liberation Service performs all household chores and more! Call 201-359-5267 (local call from Princeton).

W e « k a (J a n u a ry 2 0 -2 2 , 1982Classified Advertising

9-B

Home Services BuHding Services Building Services Home Repairs

CHIMNEY SWEEP — Fire- places & wood stoves, oil & gas fired. Fully insured. Kind­ling wood, gutters cleaned N.J. CNmney Sweeps. 609- 448-4907 ask for Bob.

HOUSECLEANING — com­plete tx>n>e ar>d office clean­ing. Oaily-weekty-monthly. Reliable service. Cali 609- 392-0897.

ROGERSINTERIORS

Fine U pholstery, Custom Draperies. Bedspreads, Ver­tica l & Horizontal Blinds, Woven Woods. Additional Accessories & Decorating Advice, Call Becky Rogers,

.609-799-2807

KITCHEN CABINETS Re­fin ish e d — P ro fess iona l work Reasonable. 609-443- 346"' until 3pm. Thomas Daly

CLEAN SWEEP Domestic Cleaning — Homes & Apts, $25-$45 References avail­able Call 609-888-4516

DIAL A DECORATOR — A house call for a fixed fee offers expert advice for all your decorating problems. And money saving tips 609- 921-6662

DEStCK/DRAFTING

Service to architects, buil­ders, home owners

- Space Planning- Single 8 Multi-Family

Remodeling 4 Additions- Period Restoration- Passive Solar Design • Commercial A Retail

PERSONALIZED & RAPID SERVICE

Call 609-392 0331 Please leave message

HOUSEKEEPING — daily, wkly, monthly. Daytime & evenings 609-448-4973 or 655-3845

UPHOLSTERY SERVICE — Upholstering, furniture re­pairs. Fiee shop at home, your fabric or ours. Stephen Weingart, 609-921-8485.

HO M ESTEAD CHIMNEY SWEEP — Clean, Efficient, Reliable Service tor ail cf iim-neys (wood, oil, coal, gas). Cur Seivices Include Clean­ing. Inspecting, Repairing, Retin ing We also install chimney caps, spark arres­tors, dampers, stoves, etc. Fully Insured. Certified Mem­ber of N ationa l Chimney Sweep Guild, 609-924-1760. Emergencies Call. 201-735- 7708.

E X C A V A T IO N S (A L L TYPES) — Septic systems installed & repaired, drive­ways cut 8 stoned (alt types of stone & sand delivered), trenching, land dearir^g, in­stallation of pipes, etc., home & commercial snowplowing & m a in te n a nce . F ree e s ti­mates. Call Al at 201-359- 3735.

GENERAL Contracting — all types, carpentry, masonry. Specializing in additions, re­novations, finished base­ments, quarry tile, brick & stone terraces, fireplaces. Guaranteed workmanship, 22 yrs, experience, refer­ences. 201-821-7285

S. KLEVANS & ASSOCI­ATES — Custom Carpentry Work: additions, renovations, repairs. "We specialize in custom carpentry, cabinet work, kitchen planning and design to suit your individual needs," 609-924-8707

GENERALCONSTRACTORS

New homes, additions, gar ages, driveways, roofing, custom masonry, fireplaces, swimming pools and patios. Full line of aluminum pro­ducts.

WM. FISHER BUILDER S. INC,

Serving Princeton area for 30 years. Financing arranged.

609-799-3818

f k s r n lk l&llojnkDesigners, Builders. Plan­ners.Environmentally planned'• Kitchens• Baths• Additions• Roof Expansions• Alterations• Restorations• Slate & Copper Roof Work• Active & Passive Solar Energy• Greenhouse Specialists• Custom Homesto fit vour individual needs

CARPET Cleaning Special — Any size room steam cleaned by experts, $19,95, New Dawn. 201-466-4313' 800-022-8928

WINTERIZE YOUR Home Now — storm windows, in­sulation, weatherstripping Just a few energy & money saving methods. Low rates. Reliable & fast. Free est. Call B & P Contracting, 201-874- 6308, 359-5669

CHIMNEY SWEEP — Fire­places, wood stoves, oil bur­ners, Clean, efficient system. A d irty ch im ney is a fire hazard' Call Robert Ackers home confidant 60S-466- 3011

LEVOLOR'S Riveria & Ver­tical Blinds — at discount prices. Expert installations. Call Marcia (ASID) at 609- 448-2088

COMPLETE KITCHEN — re­m o d e lin g T o p q u a lity cabinets & counters New for­mica fronts 27 yrs experi­ence. Ron. weekdays 201- 251-2737.

DISCOUNT ON DRAPESAnd all custom cornices, shades, bedspreads, vedicai & mini b linds. Decorating advice.

Cathy Dey Custom Concepts

60^-448-4642

CHIM CHIMNEY SWEEP — Fire preventative chimney cleaning, year round service, absotuleiy neat 8 clean 609- 393-2462.

S PEC IALIZ IN G — Home window cleaning, storms in 8 out. $3.50. Free estimate, ful­ly insured. All work guaran­teed, 609-393 2122

PRACTICO Assoc, expert housecleaning. Call 609- 396-8735.

R efycle

th is

new spaper

Princeton, N.J. 609-924^1585

S & T E X C ^ A TIN G C O N TINC — Commercial • Re­sidential. 50 yrs. exp. Fully insured Save! Start with (he best Expert Excavating & Grading, Septic Systems, S tone D rivew ays. Farm ponds & field drainage. No job too big or small Call any­time, 603-896-0333 or 466- 3032

CUSTOM HOMES — re­modeling, custdm fireplace & stove installations Freeests. Gtorstan Builders, Inc 201- 329-6265.

CARPENTRY

ADDITIONS REMODELING

KITCHENS RESTORATIONS CUSTOM BARNS

609-259-7940 Peter Wikoff

C USTO M W ALKS. F ire ­places 8 Patios. References 201-821-7285 after 3pm,

C ARPEN TER — custom woodworking specializing in finish work. Cal! R Yura, 215- 493-2457.

MASON AND BRfCK — work specialists Additions, re­pairs, retaining walls, steps, driveways, patios, brickwork, fireplaces. Free estimates. Fulty insured. T 8 A CON­STRUCTION CO 609-896- 3279

Home Repairs

BEST RATE — Home Im­provement 8 Repairs. Car­pentry, panelling, concrete work, painting, paperhang­ing, carpets installed, minor repairs 8 odd jobs. Also light hauling Free estimates. 10% discount to senior citizens. No job loo small, uall 609- 585-0873 or aft 6 pm, 695- 4638,_____________________

TILE REPAIR 8 Grouting. Expertly done. Early attention win prevent major 8 costly re­pairs. Call for free estimate. 609-259-9112,

LEAKS — tub 8 shower spe­cialist in repair 8 waterproof­ing. Ceramic tile expertly in­stalled. Mr, Tile. 609-882- 0370.

EQUINOXCONSTRUCTION, INC

1939 Oak Tree Rd Edison, N.J. 08820

201-548-7505 (morns) 201-463-8604 (eves)

Commercial Residential Additions-Roofing

Interior Redecoration Passive Solar Construction

Guaranteed Prices Fully Insured

CARPENTRY — (ail phases) attics, cellars, kitchens re­modeled, interior woodwork (specialty), decks, porches 8 additions. 12 yrs. experience. Free estimates. Call after 6pm Greg Adams 201-446- 3865

C H IM N E Y & F ire p la ce s Cleaned— vacuumed & re­paired. Roof repair & coating. Home improvements. Rain gutters cleaned 8 screened Light carpentry Moving & hauling. Free estimates. 609- 394-2790.

CARPENTRY — Additions, all facets. Free estimates. Renovations, remodelling & roofing 201-359-2239.

CEDAR LOG HOMES — by W a rd C a b in . M o d e l at Howell Brochure, Otto Bldg. 201-431-0900.

D O N A L D G IE R S C H — Carpenter Contractor. Fully experienced and insured to take care ol your remodeling needs or even your small jobs Storm windows & doors. Local reference supplied upon request. Call 609-259- 7557.

W.P. CONSTRUCTION — Complete Building Contrac­tor, Alum, Siding, Hoofing, Additions, Alteration, Back- hoe work and Grading Work. 609-448-1915 aft. 6fOT.

ADDITIONS — Remodeling and Restoration. Ceramic tile 8 all finish work a specialty. Fast but careful work. Call P e te r M edina , 609-924- 0625.

PINEAPPLE DECK Builders — Custom Designers 8 Buil­ders. Now taking orders for Spring 609-924-0641.

COURTEOUS CONTRAC­TOR — Complete commer­cial 8 residential building All phases of remodeling, roof­ing. Siding, ca rpen try 8 m ason work, No job loo small Free estimates. All work guaranteed. Over 20 yrs. exp. Call Keith Matches 201-329-2402.

CARPENTRY — Renova­tions, closets, insulation, sheet rock. Free estimates Call 609-737-9484.

INTERIOR BUILDING RE­PAIRS — Spackting, plaster, sheetrock, painting, water­proofing. insulation (base­ment. w alls, pipes, crawl spaces) - apt. rental prep work. Winter rates, 609-921- 1135.

CUSTOM Carpentry 8 Re­modeling By Morion 8 De- Forest — complete additions, renova tions , a lte ra tions , basement remodeling Quali­ty workmanship. References available. Cal! Mac 609-655- 3810 or Jared 443-6954

HOME IMPROVEMENTS — light carpentry, cabinet work Renovations Don't move. Improve " 201-36S-3218, ask for Kevin.

BUILDER — Robert Novo- bilsky. Interior 8 Exterior Work. Addition Alteration Siding 8 Roofing. 609-466 0926

MR. FIX-IT — Cal! Bill for all your small or targe house re­pairs. Painting, carpentry, moving, etc. etc. Reasonable rates, 609-924-5792.

DON'T MOVE — Improve. CaM B o b S e e d s 8 S o n . General Contractors for all your building needs. 609- 587-6255. 58J-6366

COBBS FLOOR-SANDING 8 refin’shing — Floor Stain­ing or Reconditioning Make old floors like new!! Free Esti­mate, Call 609-298-3424,

CARPENTER CRAFTSMAN - - since 1952 Qualified for any size custom job Ca" 609-655-2064

O V E R H E A D G A R A G E DOORS Elec operators Factory to you. Over the counter or full service parts & repairs. Call free, for free info 800-872-4980 Ridge Door, W New Rd., Mon Jet

HOME IMPROVEMENTS — Additions, alterations, fine finish carpentry, general re­pairs. Ed Tezlaf, Hillsbor­ough, 201-874-4708

CERAMIC TILE

Small repairs, regrouling & complete bath remodeling Bath areas retried $565. in­cluding waterproof sheetrock & new ceramic tile 24 hour emergency service lor leaks 8 plumbing problems.

609-448-9333

T E X T U R E D C e ilin g s & Walls— Spackling. Free esti­mate. insured. 201-254-3015 or 201-521-2987.

BATHTUBS — tile & shower stalls professionally cleaned Bathtub & (lie, $25. shower stall $25. Tub recauiked $20. Serving Mercer Co., Kendall Park 8 Belle Mead areas. Call Save Your Tub, 609- 448-3339

HAVE HAMMER will travel! Quality workmanship by skil­led craftsman Siding, roof­ing, alterations 8 additions. No job too large or small. Ful­ly insured. Free est. Call Doug Renk, 201 -329-3616 or 201-329-2489.

F IR E P LA C E S — stone , brick, concrete, swimming pools 8 patios. William Fisher Builders. Inc. 609-799-3818,

CERAMIC TILE — Repairs, tile installed permanently with new cement board. Bath­room rem odeling, lowest p r ic e s . T i le fo r d o - i t - yourse lfe rs DELAWARE VALLEY TILE. 29 years of experience. 609-888-1067

DOES YOUR home or estate need any gene ra l home m aintenance? - If so call Creative Woodcraft, Inc We specialize in home repairs. References. Phone anytime 609-586-2130

Painting & Paperhanging

CHEAP WORK is not good, good work is not cheap. I'm reasonable, 609-440-4819.

WATLINGTON S PAINTING — Interior 8 Exterior, and gut­ter cleaning, 609-799-2020 no answer 443-4790

MIKE'S PROF. PAINTING 8 Wallpapering — In! 8 Ext. Free estimates. 201-329- 3165

JIM BOECKEL — paint, pap­er, wall repairs. Experienced, reasonable. 609-448-7965, 924-2474

CHARLIE THE PAINTER — Interior 8 exterior painting. Call 609-448-6563,

P R O F E S S IO N A L Paperhanging & Painting Call Santos. 609-799-4160

PAINTING & Paperhanqmg —- Frank Janda 292 Dutch Neck Rd Call (609) 448 3578

DANNY S PAINTING — In- (erior/exterior - residential- commercial ■ repair work. Water pressure wash or wa­ter sand blast available Free estim ates. Fully insured. S a tis fac tion guaranteed. 609 921-7835.

EDWARD SCHLiNSKI. Buil­der — Box 188. Roosevelt. NJ; 609-443-5180. Renova­tions, alterations & additions.

MASONRY WORK — of all types, brick, rock, patio, side­walk, etc Phone A! Eversen, 609-466-3424.

Suburban W oodworking Inc.

Carpentry repairs & renova­tions, custom crafted book­cases, built-ins. closets & specialty pieces. Free esti­mates.

609-883-7398

DOVE S HOME Im prove­ment & Repairs — Free esti­mate Call 609-448-6563

INTERIOR REMODELING — painting, roofing, flooring We do I t all. Reliable reas. rates, insured. B 8 P Con­tracting, 201-874-6308, 359- 5669.

PROFESSIONAL CARPEN­TRY — masonry, rexs ing, sid­ing, etc. Home remodeling & repairs. Call Nick at 609-890- 7483.

ADDi riONS, ROOFING, alu­minum siding, gutters, re­p la c e m e n t w in d o w s . Stephen J, Denarski Home Im provem ents. 609-393- 6940

Painting & Paperhanging

SUNFLOWER Painting — In­te r io r E x te rio r 201-251- 2042. We restore garage doors.

MORTON'S PAINTING & Wallpapering — Excellent quality Free estimates In­terior & Exterior, 609-443- 6333.

"SPRUCING" UP? — Don't "pine." Call the Odd Couple for ail your painting needs 609-259-3587

ANDERSON Painting Co — Prof, wall covering. Reas, rates, quality work, guaran­teed. 201-297-2741 after 5pm.

INTERIOR PAINTERS — Too quality. References. 609-924-8569

RESIDENTIALCOMMERCIAL

PETER FlUMENERO JR.

PAINTING8

PAPERHANGING SPRAY PAINTING

609-799-3657 eves,

PROF. HOUSEPAINTING & repairs waiioapering. Low overhead! You save' Call Fialph anytim e. 609-586- 3288

INTERIOR & Exterior Paint* ing — free estimates, reason­able rates, clean work. Call T Lask) 609-799-1462.

EXPERIENCED — painting 8 paperhanging, free esti­mates Call Ed Kochie 609- 448-9008

PAINTING — Quality interior, exterio r. Free estimates. Reasonable prices 201-874- 4837

DOMINICK Pintinalli Jr. — Painting (Contractor-Interior & exterior, Residential 8 com­mercial. Free estimates Call anytime. ^9-882-1631.

INTERNATIONAL Contrac­tor — painlinq, roofing, ail types of construction. Free estimates, service guaran­teed. Call 609-396-7896

PAINTING - InLExt. Also light carpentry. Free Esti­mate. Cali 609-446-6987 af­ter 5

BOLLENTINPAINTING

Paint-Stain-Paper

609-921-1192201-359-7311

DON STEINBERG Painting --- 12 yrs. experience, excel­lent prices. 609-737 2-227.

p a in t e r s - lnt^''Of Regcustom jobs. Very reason­able' Clean, quality work! Free estimates. 609-443- 8959

PREM PAINTING — Winter rates offered on all interior- exterior work, fulty insured, experienced professionals with local references We promise excellent service al fai'’ prices Free estimates. Call 201 526-4681

Christopher Woram Painting 8

Paperhanging 201-874-3347

PAPER H ANG IN G & painting by Tom Residential, commercial, fully insured. Days 609-655-3440, eves 201-251-6522

CAPITOL Painting interior 8 exterior, reasonable rales, fully insured 509-883-1537

Electricians

HALASZ ELECTRICAL Con­tractors Inc 42 Dayton Rd . Jamesburg. 201-297-0915 or 521-0919 Industrial, com­m ercial & residential AM types of wiring & repair No job too large or small

ALL TYPES —- of electrical work 20 years experience. 201-359-3387

ELECTRICAL

Residential Commercial

Industrial Wiring Free Estimates 609-443-5268

N W MAUL 8 SON U S. Hwy, 130 8

Griggs Drive 201-329-4656

Repair Service Electrical Power &

Lighting Installations Industrial Maintenance

SALE — Lighting fixtures at real discount prices" Call now to find dut all the details. We also install 8 rewire fix tuies at reasonable prices Please call 609-446-2906 any weekday between 7pm & 10pm or Sat from 10 to bpm AJS Lighting.

ELECTRICAL CONTRAC­TOR -— Residential. Com­mercial & Industrial wiring 24 hours service. Free esti­mates. Call John Cifeiii. 609- 921-3238

Heating &Air Conditioning

BURNING MONEY LIKE OIL? — visit Oitturnative for a low cost solution to a warm home. We specialize in multi­fuel furnaces, wood coal stoves and fireplace inserts. We also atock accessories, pipe, and supplies. We pro­vide complete service and in s ia lta tion . Ask about ou money saving interior storm windows Check our wide selection and low prices b«>- fore you buy. 609-466-1835, Oitturnative. 33 W. Broad St. (Rt. 510). Hopewell. N.J. Hours-Tues.-Fn. 10am-8pm Sat, 10am— 5pm. Closed Sun 8 Mon,

W A S T IN G P R E C IO U S FUEL? Call now 8 have your heating system serviced 8 evaluated. Reasonable rates Davison’s Heating Ser­vice & wood stoves, sates 8 installation. 15 yrs. exp. 609- 466-1141.

For prompt service call:

REDDINGS Plumbing, Heating A

Air Conditioning

609 924-0166

Roofing & Siding Wanted to Rent

Plumbing

MASTERW01

CdLLEGE PAINTING — and light carpentry by two reliable college students with profes- s io n a lis m g u a ra n te e d Reasonable rates. Kirk 609- 443-5846 or Don 609-393- 3540

R O o r i N C

NEW SINGLE HOOFS CHIMNEY &

FLASHING REPAIRSSeamless Gutters

921-1277 924-7737PROMPT

FREE ESTIMATESChristensen Roofing

184 Carter Rd. Pn.iceton

RO O FIN G — Free e s ti­mates Repair or install, all types of roofing 8 leaders, gutters 8 chimney flashing Call John Duma. 609-440- 7405,

ROOFINGAll Kinds

Free Estimates

WILLIAMSON CONSTRUCTION CO

609-921-1184

Got a gripe

or a com plim ent?

Write your editor!

ECKER

CONTRACTING AND ROOFING

Roofing 8 Gutter Work. Hot Roof 8

Shingle Roofs, Aluminum Siding

Aluminum Overhang. Aluminum Window Trim

Imlaystown, N.J (609) 259-2816

Snowplowing

S 4 F PIRONE CO - Snow- plowing for residential 8 com­mercial. Call anytime 609- 924-9555. 882-4078

Moving & Hauling

PARK ACRES PLUMBINGS HEATING — Installation 8 repair of all your plumbing needs. Lie #5648. 201-297- 7538

B&B Plumbing & Heating — Commercial and residential. Master plumber s state lie #3547 Bathroom & kitchen remodeling. 609-443-8733 ah 6pm Call anytime 201- 251-1332

PLUMBING — Lie #4621 Need a plumber, free esti­mates - ait types of plumbing. Call Mike anytime day or night Phone 609-586-0266

Roofing & Siding

REFOO FING-REPAIR ~ asphalt-wood single, slate, metal, tar, gutters, spouts, chimneys, flashing, vents etc Insured-guarantee 609- 921-1135,

JJ WILLIAMS — Residential rooting, gutters 8 Minor home repair. Free Estimates. Call after 5, 609-587-9098

ALUMINUM SIDING 8 all types of siding

Carpentry-Decks-Roofing

STUDENT HAULERS - Pianos - appliances - house­hold goods - etc No job too big Of too small. References. Reaso.iable. Kirk 609-443- 5846 or Don 609-393-3540

LIGHT HAULING & Moving — Low rales, don't hesitate. Call John, 609-921-3897 for estimate.

COLLEGE STUDENTS — experienced 8 reliable Light moving 8 hauling. Call Phil 609-924-6332

AARON-ALL MOVERS — Pianos, appliances, furniture, etc Local or long distance, 1 piece or 1,000. 30 years ex­perience, fully insured, free estimate. Call 201-225-5977 or 225-59V6

STUDENT H A U L E R S -E x ­perienced with al kinds of furniture No job too small Local or long distance Very reasonable. Kirk 609-443- 5846, Don, 609-393-3540

FURNITURE, bedding, ap­pliances. household goods. Moving and deliveries. Our price may be less than doing I t yourself, 201-356-8288 or 201-356-6871.

LIGHT HAULING clean out cellars & attics. Exp furn mover. Reas 201-359-4605 after 5 pm and weekends.

LIGHT HAULING ~ No job too small Call anytime, 609- 924-1462

Cali for free estimate 201-828-1994

Why watt until (he roof leaks'^ Plan ahead for your roofing needs

NEW ROOF’S REPAIRS

COOPER 8 SCHAFER63 Moran Princeton

609-924-2063

ALUMINUM siding, gutters, roofing, Stephen J Denarski Home Improvements. 609- 393-6940

BELLE MEAD ROOFING — over 30 years business ex­perience in Princeton & vicin­ity Free estimates on all types of roofing, leaders & g u t te r s , and c h im n e y flashing. 10% discount to Senior Citizens. Call 609- 924-2040 or 201-359-5992 (local call from Princeton).

Paving

COOPERS ASPHALT Pav­ing — Driveways, Parking lots, etc Seal coating. Free Est 609-758-3447

Gardening & Landscaping

DRIVEWAYS CONSTRUCTED

Asphaft or Stor>e Seal

Coating EXPERT

LANDSCAPING Commercial 8

Residential Backhoe Work Septic Systems Free Estimates

609-924-1735.

’ N.C, COUPLE — and 2 chil­dren want to trade houses, house-sit, or rent house or apt. 2-4 weeks during the summer Excellent re fe r­e n ce s . W rite Dr. D ean K o u lo u r is , 7026 V a lle y Haven Dr.. Charlotte. N.C. 28211, or call 704-365-0925,

WRITER SEEKS — small office walking distance to Princeton University. 609- 921-1519.

YOUNG PROFESSIONAL — Couple marrying in March wishes to rent cottage or apt. in N Mercer or S Hunterdon County. Please cal! Joe after 5. 609-466-2511.

MD — with quiet psychother­apy type practice looking to rent joint living (1 or 2 bed­room) and office space in Princeton area. Married, no children. 609-924-3132.

MATURE YOUNG Couple — looking (or pleasant apart­ment. Please call Leslie or Martin 609-448-8987

TREESCAPES — Tree ex­pert • pruning 8 removal. Landscape design, install. 8 maint 609-443-3067, 201 846-0251

AAA-1 — Lawn Service Tree removal, railroad ties, (op soil, sod. Aerate (hatching 8 seeding Hauling, cleaning out houses 8 attics, plus leaf removal, 201-359-7259

TREE WORK

ALL TYPES

Tree and stump removal, spraying , pruning, storm damage Insect and disease control Firewood and wood chips. N J. Certified Tree Ex­pert Consumer Bureau reg­istered Fully insured Free estimates

Call 60^737 -9600

THOMAS B GOODNOW grass-cutting coniracis. ex­perienced 609-921-3667

BOBS LAWN SERVICE - Fall clean-up. seeding 8 ferti­lizing, snow plowing. 609- 883-8072

DOERLERLANDSCAPES

Landscape Designirig and

Contracting6C''-924-122l

FINE LAWN — Care Service by Sean. Free estimates. Call 809-586-2876 after 5 pm

FIELD 8 WOODS mowed — brush c leared. 609-924-' 8707

ROOMMATE WANTED — Share townhouse in Law- re n c e v t ile House incs washer, dryer, dishwasher, carpeting 8 2 lull baths. Cal! 609-896-1358 eves 8 wknds

SHARE A House — large, modern Rancher. $350 t '/•i utilities per month starting Jan 1. Cal! 609-259-9211,

SHARE LG — comfortable from Princeton U.

Own bdrm, bath, study $325 incl, util 609-921-1519

FEMALE — non-smoker, to share 2 bedroom apt. w w asher 8 d ryer Occup March 1st. 609-799-4940.

F E M A L E p ro fe s s io n a l Wanted — to share Princeton Boro house Private bed­room. $220'mo plus shared utilities Call 201-469-7200, 8 am . — 5 pm. ask for Leslie.

Apts. / Houses to Share

2 BEDROOM APT. — From Raritan to Princeton area 201-874-4960 days, 609- 924-4347 eves.

RESPONSIBLE Newlyweds — Seek home in Hopewell- Pennington-Amwetl area to rent'Of with option .approx. $500 monthly Don't mind some work. Would like large gardening space. Need for March 1st. Call 609-883- 1090 Tues-Fri. I0am-5prr, or 609-466-1685 Sun-Fn 5pm- 7pm

APARTMENT WANTED - - Furnished studio or small effi­ciency for professional male Takes excellent care 8 is neat 8 orderly Within 20 min drive of Pennington-Prince- ton area Must be reason­able 609-737-3600 days eves. Mr Gedney

PROFESSIONAL Male — desires room South Bruns­wick area, 4 days^week 201- 821-7300 ext 200

COUPLE needs 3 bed hse w garage 6-8 mo. lease in C ranbury area 609-655- 6321 or 662-9697.

2 OR 3 RM APT. — for re­sponsible teacher w m 30min of T'enton. Reas, rent 201-755-6271 after 6pm

WANTED — in Hopewell, Law rencev ille , Princeton area garage to house small foreign car. Call 609-803- 4800 8 to 5 Aft 5pm 896- 0946

PROFESSIONAL WOMAN seeks 1 bdrm apt in Prin­

ceton Call 609-655-5369

APAR TM EN T tor S ing le Career Person — Reason­able rent. Nice location Please call 201-780-4077

WANTED TO RENT - - Office space for desk and phone Call evenings 609-452-1728

APT NEEDED — we are in desperate need of a 1 or 2 bdrm, furn. or unfurn. apt for a visiting consultant with wife and 1 year old child. From Feb 0th to April 10. Contact M rs S te w a rd , D ept of EECS, Princeton University, 609-452-4620

HOUSEMATE — to share 8- room Pennington home with fireplace. Casual, friendly, trustworthy female preferred Call Jack 609-737-0022 after 5:30.

SHARE BEAUTIFUL — 2 bdnrVS bath condo in Law- rencevitie. Fireplace, eat-in kitchen, formal dining room, 2 garages, pool, golf course, bike paths, jogging paths Professional female only rep­ly. $475/mo. Move in Feb. 1. Taking ca lls at 215-237- 0254.

SHARE ™ A com fortable country house near Prince­ton. Call 609-799-1385.

FEMALE ROOMMATE — to share 5 room apt $205 mo. All utils, inc. 6 mi. from Prin­ceton. 201-329-3429 Of 201- 329-3654

LAWRENCEVILLE — 3 BR - 2 full bath rancher. Offers family room, Florida room w/ built-in barbecue, central air. Near park & tennis courts. References. $250,mo + half utils. Call Mike at 609-896- 9300 or 77 M 076.

PRINCETON TWP. — Pro­fessional woman desired. Convenient location; pool, kitchen privileges. Separate living area. $310 incl utilities. Security. Please call after 4 pm 609-921-7618.

PROFESSIONAL Male ~ wishes to share spacious country home on 4V2 acres, fenced pastures with horse stalls, ideal for professional who enjoys country setting 609-39V-8439

TWO MATURE M F — To share w easy going owner (M) Quiet Pennington Hse 3 br, 2 b, Ir, dr, tr w fp., laundry, dishwasher, $200 8 $180 mo t utils 609-737-8050 (H) or

609-683-2809 (W).

INTERNATIONAL COUPLE ~ Interested in sharing our home with another couple or single professional person Law renceville Pennington area Call for appl 609-771- 0502 eves.

ATTRACTIVE MERCEHVIL- LE S P A C IO U S A P A R T­MENT — Working woman over 50 wishes to share 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom 1st floor apartrfienf. On quiet street, one block to bus. su­permarket 8 bank 15 mi­nutes to Phneeton and Tren­ton One-half rent, including heal, telephone A etectricity - $230 To share references, write Box #04162 c/o Pnrx»- tor Packet

HOUSE TO SHARE — for 1 professional male. Lovely view prestigious Princeton Twp $550 mo 609-683- 1056

HOUSE TO SHARE — Avail Feb 1 $142mo » utils.Bur­ton or Bill 609-452-1927.

HOUSEMATE Wanted — to share large, furnished Prin­ceton home, near University, call 609-924-3777

FEM. (pref student) — to share house $133 plus 'A util Cindy - days 609-452-8500. eves 924-9476

Housesitting

DEPENDABLE — Working College Grad seeking oppor­tunity to be on his own and help someone else at the sam e tim e H o p e w e ll- P e n nm q to n - Law '-ence areas preferred Long term avaiiability-Exceilent refer­ences. Call 609-737-3381 af­ter 6:00 P M

EXP'D NON-SMOKING Cou­ple — (no kids, pels) w refs avail. Immed for Princeton area 609-921-9701 4-6pm

Apts. / Houses to Share

R E S P O N S IB L E y o u n g woman — Wanted to share house in Pnneeton, Own bed­room • bath ' parking $210 * utils Cali 609-924- 7816 or 609-921-2902.

HOUSEMATE Wanted — to share home north ol Prince­ton off US 206 Private bed­room w ith use of en tire house. $175/mo ’ utils 609- 921-7077 days, 201-359- 6742 eves 8 wknds

THIRD ROOMMATE Wanted - R esp o n s ib le te m a le ,

$165, Lambertvilie 609-397- 1936 or 609-924-3036

SHARE LG Sunny — w 2 others, $170'm o * utils Princeton off Nassau. 609- 683-1781 eves.

ROOMMATE WANTED - Female 2 bdrm nearMCCC $175 ' '/if Uhl Avail. 2 15 Cai! 609-090-3275

ROOMMATE Wanted — for 2 BR. 2 bath P ton Meadow Apt Non-smoker 201-874- 4 3 4 3 , 6 0 9 - 7 9 9 - 5 2 8 2 , Jonathan.

PLAINSBORO — Quiet, neat male wanted to share 2 BR luxury apt, $207 ‘ Cal! 609- 799-9521

ROOMM.ATE — Female, nonsmoker, to share farm­house with three others in Robbinsvflie $1(X)rent, plus utilities and security. Cali 609-259-3896

FEMALE ROOMMATE — Wanted to share beautifully fu rn apt at P r in c e to n Meadows w young profes­sional woman. Nonsmoker preferred $155 i utils/mo 609-799-7181.

HOME HUNTER’S GUIDElO-B Week of January 20 • 22, 1982

Apts. / Houses to Share

APAMTMENT TO SHARE — PecTiate non-smoker prefer- reo. W alk ing d is tance to Urttv, $250 utHittes Call af­ter 6. 60^924-5616

3RD HOUSEMATE -----Igcountry setting 2 mi ctr Prin­ceton. Avail immed. Share utM. Ron 609-921-0239

LAMBERTVILLE HOUSE­MATE — needed to share townhouse $150 * util. 609- 397-0106.

ROOM — with full kitchen pri­vileges in house shared by three professionals, commit­ted Chnstians ideally located in the center of Princeton 609 924 3497

F TO SHARE — Furn. home w same Fm, res. 45-60 yrs $200 mo. - util. Monroe Twp Reply Box #04221 c.0 Princeton Packet

LG. SUNNY APT - - Prince­ton, off Nassau. Avail, now $260 mo. • utils Evenings 609-683-1781

Rooms for Rent

F U R N IS H E D R OOM — Kitchen & laundry pnv Prefer male $ i7 5 m o . 609-771- 0485 Of 452-6003

SOUTH BRUNSWICK Ken­dall Park area — For young woman, inc kitchen pnv . laundry, air. swimming pool. $50 per week Call 201-821- 6719 eves. & weekends

FURNISHED ROOM — with private entrance No smoking person Can anytime 609- 448-8407

UNFURNISHED Sleeping Rooms — Avail with house privileges From $160. utils included Deposit required 201-297-0757 after 6pm

EAST WINDSOR — Lovely room, pvt bath, kiu pn- vileges, (emaie $ 85 mo inc utilities 609-443-6067 eves

FURNISHED ROOM — Prin­ceton Borough. Please call a fter 5 00 p m 609-921- 3816

ROOM FOR RENT — in pri­vate home near RCA LaPor- a fo rie s . gen tlem an only: parking on premises. 609- 452-2125

LARGE ROOM — private en­trance. parking After 6pm 609-771-0920. 924-1723

CRANBURY Landmark s Old retreat Building room lor rent for Cultural or Community services Call (609) 655-1350 8 to 10 a m or (609) 395- 0711 aher 10 am

CRANBURY — Room in pri vate home 609-443-4367

P R IN C E T O N — n o n - smoker walking distance to campus & shopping Laundry facilities. Kitchen pnv . share bath, off-street parking Avail Feb 1 $185 mo. 609-921- 9144 ah 5 pm

LARG E FU R N IS H E D — Room & bath 15 mm from Pnnceton Professional only 201-329-6794 eves wknds

SPAC IO U S — furn iohed room with private bath and shared refrigerator Private entrance, nice view of woods, on 2nd floor of house Call 609-924-4961 after 7pm

ONE ROOM And Kitchen — 66£ Campiain Rd Manvifle 201-725-7680

MANVILLE-NORTHSIDE — Furnished room for gentle­man Avail Feb 1 722-(X)70 days. 201-722-5524 eves

ROOM FOR Rent — Ir pri­vate home Professionai per­son preferred Must have re­ferences Rent $200 - Call for info 509-448-0478 or eves 609-655-4229

CREATIVE HOUSEHOLD - 1 bdrm & liv ing area w kitchen to share On 4 a<~res near NY bus & Pnnceton cam pus $250 609-921- 0177

l a r g e SUNNY room - - with bath Walk to University & Palmer Square 609-924- 4347

LOVELY ROOM -- for pro­fessional gentleman, nons- m riker S ecurity & re fer ences 609-883-0916

Rooms for Rent Apts, for Rent Apts, for Rent Apts, for Rent Apts, for Rent Apts, for Rent Apts, for Rent Apts, for Rent

MOTEL ROOMS — with col­or TV, radio, ac. indiv heat control, panelling, ww cpt. H ightstown Windsor area, from $85 per week, 609-448- 8637

FURN. ROOM — w or w/o board, in rxchange tor tight houstfkaepiog Walk (o Nas­sau 609-921-6561 eves Ref

ROOM W/KITCHEN PRIV, in toveiy three bedroom Town- house (10 mi. from Princettxv 10 mi. from New Brurtswick). laundry facitities. parking woman preferred. No pets. Move in Now. $160 per month- (201) 392-2184.

ROOM — with full kitchen pri- viteges. in house shared by 3 professionafs. com m itted Christians, kJeaily located m the center of Princeton. $225 mo me! utils. 609-924-9497.

R O O M $ S E M t- 'EFFICIENCfES — at weekly rate Pnnceton Manor Motel, M onm outh Jet. 201-329- 4555. US Hwy #1.

FURNISHED STUDIO bed­room — in Princeton. Non­smoking prof man. Parking 1 car No cooking pnv $160 mo 609-924-0804

VERY NICELY Furnished Room — Prof male prefer­red Call after 5pm 609-921- 6242

BIG BEDROOM — ntcely fur­nished, share bath, rxj kitch­en pnv. Call after 5pm 609- 921-6735.

ROOM WITH BATH — Best location Walk to Princeton University Parking. 609-924- 0536 evenings

LARGE ROOM ~ With kitch­en privileges in private home in Piainsbofo Cali 609-799- 4498 after 6pm

SLEEPING ROOM — in quiet house in Hightstown, share Dat‘ . rent $50 wkly, sec $50 609-443-3570.

PRIVATE ROOM — in center Princeton Kitchen pnvileges Walk anywhere $200 - util 609-924-1917

Apts, for Rent

GUEST ROOM In Private House — for rent, to a se­rious, quiet professional per­son or grad student Pnvaie bath References 1 month security $260 month 609- 924-6065

BEAUTIFUL — Second floor apartment in village of Law- renceville On bus route LIv rm w firep lace 2 bdrms, kitchen S bath, furnished or unfurnished No smokers please $650 inci utils 609- 896-0980

VILLAGE EAST APTS — Best location near shopping center, banks, transportation, etc. Studios, 1 & 2 bedrooms Central air, heat, hot water, carpeting and ail Twin Rivers recreation facilities included in rent See Manager. Aot J- 13, A b b in g to n Dr, Tw in R iv e rs M o n -F n . 8 a m - 4.30pm. Sat 8am-12N 609- 443-3220

TWIN RIVERS — 2 bedroom condo, all appliances in ­cluded $450 mo ‘ util 609- 799-0951

BEAUTIFUL NEW 2 bed­room. 1 bath condo— Prin­ceton address, on bus line No pets, no childien. $600 mo * utMs R ep ly Box # 0 4 2 4 0 c 0 P n n c e to n Packet

PRINCETON - private stu dio apartment, private bath & cooking facilities, wall to wall heat paid, basenient storage, just $235 also 1st floor 4 room, children fine, heal paid, wall to wall. $350, modern 2 bedroom $435, prestigious 3 bedroom, patio, deck, car­peted throughout, heal paid. $500. others, call' — Ads subject to availability Loca­tors - M.R.S. Members $75 609-394-5900.

TWO BEDROOM - luxury apt heat & hot water incI All modern conveniences. 3 mi from center of Princeton $480 mo Avail Sept 1 609- 452-2104

TIRED OF COMPLEXES? We have a mettxxf of nr>dk>g vacancies quickty and effi- cientfy. with the best results Our service exterxis through­out New Jersey, with seven offices to serve you. Cali the professiortafs about your ren tal needs - Your only conveni­ence when moving! Loca* tors • M.R.S. M ewbsrs $75 60S-3S4-9900.

CENTER OF Princeton — 1 bdrm apt, walking distance from Univ.. shops, medical center. trKiudes iiv. rm. full bath, kitchen, off-street park­ing. private entrance, water & gas. $400 pius elec Pets $25-mo. extra. Avail Feb. 1. Cali 609-924-4478

RINGOES ~ Avail. 21, lux­ury 2 bedroom. 2 bath, 1st fkxH apt 2 private entrar>ces. carpet, pane lling , 3 fire ­places. plus woodburning stove, washer'dryer hookup. $450 mo plus utils Call 609- 443-5200 wkdays or 466- 9111 anytime.

s ►c - r c * K J

CRANBURY — Rare find' Cozy 3 room, open lease available, just $225. all ex­tras. ready for immediate occupancy, call & see' — Ads subject to availability Loca­tors - M R.S. Members $75 609-394-5900

ONE BEDROOM— fum stu­d io apt in P e n n in g to n Twpshq. home Private bath, private entrance, w w carpel, a c , garage S250 mo incl. utilities. 609-737-3701 eves

KINGSTON — 2nd Moor, pri­vate entry, living room, bed­room. study. Tull bath. No chil­dren, no pels. Lease deposit required S285 plus utilities Avail Feb 1. 1982. 609-924- 9700. eves 921-6602

MONMOUTH JUNCTION — Large w fireplace Kitchen, bdrm & bath Incls all Utils, Call 201-329-6879

NEW CONDO — at Hermit­age New Hope Living room, d inette, kitchen w all ap­pliances • washer & dryer, 1 bedroom, a c. pool. $525 mo • util Cali 201-725-3947

APARTMENT — 4 rooms & bath, heat 8 hot water Avail­able Feb 1st 609-448-1838

TWM RIVERS APTS.Off Rt 33, East Windsor 1 mi E. of NJ Tmpk ex. 6

StudkM, 1A2BR Apts.From $300

Central air. heat & hw. p^ios ba lcon ies , d ishw ashe rs . carpetir>g. Large apts

Excellent location next to bank & shopping mall, NY buses

Twin Rivers recreation pools & tennis courts included.

Restdent Manager at Apt B-1 Abbington Dr.

M-F 10-4:30; Sat 12-4 60^446-7792

32 Chambers Street Princeton, N.J. 08540

609-924-1416

BEAUTIFUL 2nd FL. APT —Mam Street, Cranbury, Liv rm.. f p. din rm. 1 bedim. 1 bath, bath Feb. 1st — $575 includes utilities

DOWNTOWN Pnnceton — large 3 room apt on quiet street $445, all utilities in­cluded Call 609-924-70J4.

HAMILTON SQ. — private home, 2nd floor. Avail, im­med 3 rooms & bath, finished a ttic . Heat paid Lease, security & re ferences re­quired $350 per mo After 5pm, 609-799-1147

CENTER OF Pnnceton Boro — 1 bdrm apt w liv. rm, large eal-in kitchen, den or 2nd bdrm, fuM bath, w w carpet­ing, air cond. no pets. In­cludes heat, water & gas. off- street parking & private entr­ance $575 plus elec Avail, immed Call 609-924-4478

CHARMING COUNTRY Cot­tage — Just remodeled. 2 rms, kitchenette & bath. Eiec- tne me. $325 mo ^ security Suitable for 1 person No dogs please. 30 min, from Princeton, 609-466-9178

HOPEWELL TWP - Check this stylish 2 bedroom, nes­tled in Its rural setting, large country kitchen, maple hard­wood floors, fireplace, ready February 1. just $425, call' — Ads subject to availability L oca to rs - M R S. M em ­bers $75 609-394-5900.

YARDLEY BORO— 1 bedrm apt w eat-in kitchen, spa­cious livingrm, private entr­ance $335 mo Landlord pays alt utilities. Single pro­fessional prelerred No pets 609-397-3110.

FURNISHED — 3 room 4 room apt cottage^house with equipped kitchen, a c , indi­vidual heat control, color TV. radio, w'w carpet at motel in H ightstown.W indsor area No lease required From $140 week including all utili­ties 609-448-8637

MANVILLE NORTHSIDE — 4 rm. apt,. W asher-dryer hookup $350 per mo. plus util. 1st mo dep. adults 201- 685-1858

BUCKS COUNTY - Ready now' Rustic duplex, secluded on 2.5 acres, modern ap­p liances extras, carpeted throughout, just $275. heat included, others, check it' — Ads subject to availability. L o ca to rs - M R S. M em ­bers $75 609-394-5900

NEAR Forrestal Campus — furn ished effic iency apt , $185 mo. utils $65 mo.. 1 month security Male prefer­red. No smoking, no pets Letters to PO Box 1354, Pnn­ceton, N.J, 08540

LAMBERTVILLE — spacious 1 bdrm apt on quiet residen­tial street, vestibule, eat-in kitchen, iiv. rm, bdrm. & bath $350 mo Land lord pays heat No cltildren, no pets, single professional preferred. 609-397-3110

AVAIL. JAN. 16 — 3 room, pvt. bath & entrance. Prince­ton. near Univ. & bus. Fully furnished. $375/mo. includ- ir>g heat. 609-924-7546.

LANDLORDS — Free screen­ing and counse ling , you choose tenants at no fie . free credit report provided r your convenience, call the profes­sionals for further details. Locators - M .R.S. Mem- b m $75 609-394-6900.

PRINCETON BORO — Stu­dio apt Secluded yard. $236 mo. Reply P.O. Box 1241. Pnnceton, N J.

PRINCETON HOPEWELL — $350 - utils Security. Avail, immediately 609-397-2897.

EAST WINDSOR — Hamp­ton Arms. Lovely garden apts . w w carpet, heat & hot water incid . a c. 609-448- 1440

EWING TWP — Near Tren­ton State College, executive 6 room. $350, heat included; also carpeted 2 bedroom, heat paid, kids pets tine, just $300; many others, call to­day' — Ads subject to availa­bility. L o c a to rs - M .R .S . M e m b e rs $75 6 0 9 -3 9 4 - 5900.

ROCKY HILL — new 3 BR 2'-2 bath condo Foyer, LR, DR. Fam. Room. Kit & eating area, screened in p>orch, gar­age & basement Many luxu­rious amenities. $095 mo. incids taxes, maintenance fees & insurance Purchase o p tions ava il w exceU. financing, 609-799-2828.

LAMBERTVILLE — in stone Victorian mansion, studio apt w 15x16 eat-in kitchen. Ige. iiv rm, & full bath. Deep set windows, plaster walls, wood floors. Landlord pays heat $305 mo No children: no pets. Single professionai pre­ferred 609-397-3110.

F U R N IS H E D APT — 4 rooms, pvt ent bath. $25 day. short term. Call 609- 896-0861

Ewir>g Twp.DELAWARE

HEIGHTSLuxury Garden Apts.

On 29 North Showplace of New Jersey overlooking Del­aware R iver. Many w ith finished basements

1 & 2 BR Apt.From $390/Mo.

includes heal, hot water, dis­hwasher, tennis court. Swim­ming pool at nominal cost.

609-883-1707 DIRECTIONS; 1-95 south to Exit I, take Rt. 29 No. to second exit on right.

L A W R E N C E V IL L E — 1 Bdrm Apts & 2 Bdrm Town- houses when available Stur- wood Ham let (609) 896- 2035.

LAKESIDE APT — 4 mos. start Jan 15 $600 mo • util. R en t re d u ce ri if te n a n t assumes chores. 609-924- 1633______________________ _P R IN C E T O N — L inden Lane. 2 room unfurnished apt . $250 per month, includ­ing heat & water. 1 yr, leas^ ’ month security deposit, no pets. References required, immed occup Cali 609-799- 2537 bet 5 8 8 pm

PRINCETON BORO — 2 bdrm. duplex apt. Large yard, w a ik lr^ distance to shops. NYC bus, off street parking. Avail. 2/1/82. $615 > utils. Security & references 609- 924 2680.

NEAR ROUTE #130 — 3bedroom country duplex, secluded on 9.5 acres, spa­cious walk-in closets, wait to wall carpeting throughout, alt u tilities included, children welcome, relax! — Ads sub­ject to avwlabiitty. Locelore - M.R.S. MerNbers $75 609- 394-5900.

LARGE 2 BDRM Apt For Rent — designed by well known Princeton Architect 725 sq. ft. total living space. Cathedral ceilings, french doors on patio, private drive 6 entry way, storage space, use of utility room. Lovely property on edge of Millstone River. 15 mins from Prince­ton, New Brunswick & Rt. 1. Avail. Feb. 1, $525/mo. No dogs. Call 609-924-2510 eves. 452-5634 day

PRINCETON — 6 room apt. near shopping center. Ideal tor prof, couple, not suitable for children. SSOO-mo, heat included. For appointment call 609-924-7304 after 5pm

LAFAYETTE HOUSE — Ber­keley Sq. historic district Convenient location over­looking belcony, 24 hr. door­man, ideal for professional. 1 & 2 bdrm. apts from $355. C a ll 6 0 9 -3 9 3 -2 6 2 S fo r appointment.

»Twp.BSKM AN

Luxury Garden Apts

on Rt. 206 on New Amwell Rd first left after church

1 * 2 BR Apt.

Includes heat, hot water & dishwasher, tennis courts & extraordinary playgrc4#Ki.

Largest swimmir^g pool in the area at rKxninat ccet.

201-359-7180.

NEAR ROUTT. #1 — Contemporary 2 bedroom duplex, mooern conveniences, $300. heat Included, near shopping and bus lines, open lease available, use of basement, all extras! — Ads subject to a v a ila b il ity . L o c a to rs - M R S. Members $75 609- 394-5900.

i f /

just m om en ts fro m the heart o f h is ton ca l P rince ton

The u ltim a te in g rac ious liv ing , th is prestig ­ious, new com p lex o ffe rs spacious 1 and 2 BRapts and ren ta l tow nh ou se s of up to 1300 feet

Exclusive lu x u ry features inc lude• O p tio n a l den w cusfom wet bar• P rivate entrance • C o io r-co i> rdm aied kitchen• P rivate balcony • F ro m S.VK) {»er mo. in c i. heal

Immediate OccupancyMODELS

O P E N D A IL Y

P H O N E : 6 0 9 -9 2 M 155 P n n c e lo n A v e . M o n tg o m e ry T w p

W indsor Regency Apartm ents...A nice place to live!

Luxurious Spe cious A porTm on ts

I $ 2 Sw droom s fro m $345.

R ent in c lu d e s:

' Cooking gas ' Hot Water' Heating gas

Patios 8 bofeonres on a ll a p a rim e n ts . Some w ith ce n tra l a ir.

Office open Mon.-Fn. 10-4:30: Sat. 12-4 Phone 609-148-2964 or 448-6553

Windsor Regency ApartmentsGarden View Terrace, East Windsor

('A mile east of Rt. 130 circle)

HALF OF DOUBLE HOUSE FOR RENT

Comfortable family type half of double house on quiet residential street in Prince­ton Township within walking distance of Nassau Street. Located near Princeton Medical Center and Princeton High School. 2 floors plus full standup attic and base­ment. Excellent condition.

First floor; porch, living room with fireplace, dining room, modern kitchen and breakfast area. Electric clothes washer and dryer in kitchen, Second floor: 3 bedrooms and bath, shared yard and half of garage. Avail­able March 1.

S650 plus utilities Telephone Mr. Garretson

609-924-3300 days, 609-924-4431 eves.

Rent now I

SM ALL practically new 2 bedrckxn apartment, just hall a block ofl Nassau Street Available now for $500 mo. plus utilities

ATTRACTIVE — 2 bedroomapartment m central Nassau St. building, available soon $625-mo. includes heat

COMFORTABLE - nearly new apartment near corner o1 N a s s a u a nd H a r r is o n .Streets; 2 bedrooms; avail­able soon for $650-mo. plus utilities

RENO ALL-COOK 4 COMPANY

Realtors 609-924-0326

The Yardley apartment that thinks it’s a home.

iT T h

c

CXir brand new. very spacious duplex apartments have all the features of a single-family lK » m e

A large living room; formal dining mom; 2 big bedrooms; <at-ln kitchen;G.E. refrigerator; washer Terdtey. FAdry’er: heat pump for energy Bucks Comntj

C « U (315) 493-5700 o r 85 5-3600. Nooo-5 PM <UUy. In NJ, ca ll ooUact. IXr South on US 1 to Noi-fh rnd of Oxford Valley Mall, turn l i ^ t on Oxford Vailey Rd Go 2 mUcs, bear left on Hcacock Rd . go V, mUe to samples on leftIG?G«IHO«P«C€MOmC/.

eSTclenl healing A air c'ondlilonlng; pfivate, attached

garage; from, rear A side yard, and much more. Close to com ­

muter trains to Phila. & NY. 1-95, Oxford VaUey

Mall and fine schools. Rental 8475 per month

CAHPETED. MOO — 4 RM. APART Avail. Fob. 1. No kids, no pets. 201-469-1733 bet 10-2.201 -526-9439 after 6

EWING — 2 bdrms, liv rm. fireplace, din rm. kitchen, laundry, yard. $550 incids. neat. 609-466-0467

1 BEDROOM APT. — center Princeton. Heat furnlshed. $325, Reply Box #04228. c/o PrirKeton Packet

LAWRENCEVILLE — 1 & 2 Bedrm Apts 8 Townhouses subject to availability White Pine Apts (609) 883-3333.

ONE & TWO BED ROOM LUXURY APTS

FOR RENT

Central air. patio & balconies Free heat, hot water 8 cook­

ing gas. supplied. 1 & 2 bed­room apts. from $365.

Office open Mon thru Fn, 10?im-4 30 pm. Sat 12-4,

WINDSOR REGENCY APTS.

East Windsor. NJ 609-448-2964

609-448-6553

ONE & TWO BEDROOM APTS — for Immediate occu­pancy at Windsor Castle, E. Windsor Twp. From Prince­ton take 571 to Old Trenton Rd.. make a right then pro­ceed to the first left beyond a couple hundred feet from Old Tren ton Road., 609-448- 5275.

N.T. CALLAWAY HEAL ESTATE

PRINCETON TWP. - Fur­nished 1 large room garage apt Avail Feb 1. $325 f util

C al Mrs. Bleacher 609-921-1050

TWIN RIVERS — Lake con­do. 2 BR, 2 baths, ail ap­pliances. pay electric only $550/mo. Carport & heat Inci. Avail, immed. 609-443-6360.

SOMERSET — 4 rm, apt., 2nd fl-, ideal for bus couple Ref . $450. mo 201-297- 7184,

HOPEWELL rw P — 1 Si floor apt w bedrm, bath kitchen, fam rm, liv. rm wT)rjck fpl, screened porch, basement 8 private backyard. Exc. loca­tion for commuters. $475/mo plus share utils. Avail, im­med. C all 609-737-1480 days. 737-3451 eves.

NOW RENTINGPrinceton Arms

L u x u ry A p u rtm u n ls I and 2 H udroom s

Starting at $325. per month

I 'Vaturc-;

\ \ al l- tn- \V all ('ar|M'tin>i in cr concn ’ l r in 2nd f lnor apl>.

\I1 ut i l i t ies I 'M vp t Iv l fc t r i r ln d i \ id u a lK cun lro l icd heat 2 a ir c u iu l i t i i i i i f ’ r''I ’ r i v a l t - ( M i l r a n r i ' v

\ \ allv-in clo-('t>I n d i \ id i ia l halcnnic'- Storairi ' room i t l i in a[)t.

1 ,anndr\ Knnm'' Su[H'rin tt 'nd)'n t on > il i‘ .

Opt'd Mon.-Kri.l^tOO-.-ttOU p .n i.

D ire c t io n s ; F ro m P r in c o lo n . P r in c e lo n - H ig h ts fo w n Rd. tu r n r ig h t o n O ld T re n to n Rd. ' i m ile tu rn le f t a n d fo l lo w s ig n s

APPLICATIONS BEING TAKEN NOW FOR FUTURE OCCUPANCY

NORTHGATEAPARTMENTS

O n e M ile Rood a nd P r in c e to n -H ig h ts to w n Rood (R t. 5 7 ! )

(opposiie M cG raw Hilh

East Windsor, N J.

1 and 2 Bedrooms from $365. per m onth

Features;• SWIMMING POdL• AIR CONDITIONERS• ALL APARTMENTS HAVE

CROSS VENTILATION• GAS HEAT (includerd in rental)• WASHER & DRYER FACILITIES• RESIDENT SUPERINTENDENTS• MASTER T V. ANTENNAS• CABLE T.V. AVAILABLE• KITCHENS WITH WINDOW AND

DINING AREA

M O D EL A P A R TM E N T

OPEN M O N D A Y -F R ID A Y 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Weekends by Appointment 609448-5935

HAMILTON TWP — Wood- nw© Apts. Hughes Drive. 1 6 2 Bedrooms, some/den (609) 587-2414.

LAWRENCE TWP - Spa­cious suburban duplex, 2 bedroom, garage, basement, large treed lot. children and pets welcome, just $355, heat paid! Available now, check it! — Ads subject lo a v a ila b il ity . L o c a to rs - M.R.S. Mombera $75 609- 394-5900.

ONE BEDROOM — luxury apt, heat A hot water inci. All modern conveniences, 3 ml from center of Princeton. $380/mo 609-452-2104,

FORRESTAL VILLAGE — Princeton 2 BR contempor­ary Forrestal Townrix^use w/ windowed atrium rtsir>g thru th e c e n te r , c a th e d r a l livingrm, 2V? baths, separate d in ingrm , fu lly equ ipped gourmet kitchen, hardwood floors & carpeting through­out. Full basemeril. Fully fur­nished, Month to month lease avail. Jan 10 $495'mo. 609- 924-1760.

Choose yoL'f next apartment carefully... you'll live there for many years, consider the finest...

• RobbinsvilleRural serting with acres of breathing space around lovely apartments. Extra large rooms with wall to wall carpetings. Free paiking for 2 cars Conveniem to all high ways.

SHARON ARMSSharon Rd across I'om Ihe Country Club lust east 'on Rie 130 at Rie 33 Norih ,.t I % at

tx i t 7A N 1 Tpke

Mr Sheehan 259 9449

• East Windsort in the Prince lon- ' Hightstown area Luxury ' gardei' apartments m ! quiet, subiifban settings

All have private balconies, I spacious, welt kept [ grounds Wall to wall [ carpeting Free off street I parking. Swim Club

WYNBROOKWEST

DitP ft Net k Rd

Mr & Vrs White 448 3385

BROOKWOODGARDENS

n,. Kory Corner Rd M’ Ptashmski 448 5531

CHESTNUTWILLOWOofChesier Ui

M' & Mrs fi l ls

609 448-6960

EwingTownship

Luxury aparrments with private pools Efficiencies to oversf/ed 2 bedrooms. Large rc>oms Beautiful la n d s c a p in g Con veniently located Free off sEreet parking For future occuparKy, call our Resident Managers

WOODBROOKHOUSE

865 L'Jwri Ferry Rd 4 story eievatoi bide Mr Fell 883 3335

HIGHGATEOlden Aye at Pa'kway Ave

6 story plpvator bidg

M’ & Mrs Van OeWeghe

88.3 4526

EASTGATE1501 Parkside Ave

2 story garden apis Some with pnvaie balconies and

comoleleiy caipeled

IMMFDtAlE OCCUPANCY 883-7537

PARKSIDEMANOR

1465 Parkside Ave 2 slory Garden Apts

882 3930

VERSA ILLES220 Sullivan Way

Opposile Trenton Country Club 2 slory garden apts

Mr Pergola 883 4550

AfflEGMANA SMITH tnc Propertjf Management

HOME HUNTER’S GUIDEWe,k of January 20 - 22, 1982 11-B

Apts, for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent

EFFICIENCY — 2rm + bath Center PrirKeton. $275. Rep­ly Box #04229, c.'o Prirtcelon Packet.

BEAUTIFUL LUXURIOUS — lownhouse in a country set­ting. 2 & 3 BR's avail Rentals start from $395 Call 215- 493-1988.

EWING TWP — 1 bdrm apt. 2nd tir of 2 family house. Re- sid. community. $285 mo. Tenant pays elec. 1 mo. sec. reqd. Barry, 201-984-3880

2 BEDROOM — New com- ipiex w/ swimming & tennis. 2 baths, basement. Princeton. 609-924-4519 or 609-924- 4485.

EWING — 2 bdrm. liv. rm, fireplace, din rm, kitchen, laundry, yard $550 inclds. heat, 609-466-0487.

DARIEN AT NEW HOPE Ltd. — V illage 2. 1 bedroom apartments $330 per month; 2 bedroonvden townhouses $525 per month. Plus elec­tric. 215-862-9133.

RESPONSIBLE PARTY — to rent Twin Rivers Lake Condo, prime location, 2 bdrms 2 baths, pay Elec. only. Fur­nished $750 mo. Unfurn. $550^mo, 2 mo security Avail April 1 Call 609-448-5160 be­tween 10 & 11 p.m,

APT. — 2 bedrooms, kitchen & bath. Furnished, private en­trance, parking. 15 minutes from P rince ton . C ountry atmosphere Professional or businessman only. Write Box 564, RD 1. Princeton, NJ 08540,

y#uf

M turn k w M

tra welroHMl

MERCERVILLE — new apt in private residence, t BR. Is l floor 609-587-4073.

HOPEWELL RANCHER — 3 txlrm, 2 bath, large kitchen Basement, garage, yard. $600 + utils. 609-466-0487

COUNTRY HERITAGE REAL ESTATE

REALTORS

PLAMS80R0609-79»«0«0

3 bedroom - 2 bath - Ranch w full basement, many ex­tras. $700..'mo.

WEST WINDSOR 6 0 9 -7 9 9 -^ 1 8 1

Stunning Contemporary - 3 bedrooms, 2'/» baths. Beauti­ful setting - $ 1100/mo.

WINDSOR — Ready now' Spacious 5 room, enclosed sunporch, economical gas heat, wall to wall throughout, all appliances, large yard, kirjs/pets tine, a steal at just $295, call today! — Ads sub- lect to availability Locators - M.R.S. Msm bsf i S7S 609- 394-5900.

PRINCETON TWP RENTAL — 5 bdrms, study, dining rm, living rm, basement. 2 fire­places. 2 car garage, lovely scenery. 113 Hun Rd. Im­mediate occupancy. $975 609-683-1056 or 212-332- 0699

HIGHTSTOWN — tiouse lor tamily ot 3, $500/mo., plus utils. & sec. Phone 609-446- 1075, 4-5 pm

Archie Schwartz Company’s1982 PREMIERE

-kn Environment UNIQUE Among Office Complexes,PRINCETON

PROFESSIONAL PARK

AWARD WINNING PASSIVE SOLAR ENERGY DESIGN

64,000 SO. FT.On

IOV2 TREE LINED ACRESUnits Starting at

1,100 SQ. FT. & UP!-f 3 sin£le standing buildings -k EXECUTIVE PROftSSIONAL USE ■¥ Attractively Priced For Lease

For Rental and Occupancy Information.Please Call Judy Cohen

ARCHIE SCHWARTZ CO., REALTORSExclusive Brokers

(201) 672-5500

WOODSlOE

atTWm RIVERS

RENTALS

Brand new 2-3 4 BR Town- houses for rent, one-year Lease on straight rental or with option to buy. Renlaiy range from $525.00 per rrio plus trust to $565.00 plus trust. Available for immediate occupancy,

WEIDEL Rm I Estate Inr..60&-448-62CKJ

MERCERVILLE — Lovely 4 BR Cape w/LR, Din. Area. Den, Eat-in Kit,, & finished basement. $600 avail March 1 J T Boyer Realty 609-921 1005.

HOPEWELL TWP — 3 b'Jrm R a ised R an ch e r. Q u ie t street, fireplace, wooded property. Call 609-883-6252

TWIN RIVERS — 3 bdrm townhouse w/fin b'imt, most desirable location end unit. Rental inci TruM Fee. Im­mediate occupa icy. Call af­ter 6 pm. 609-448-0762.

BEDROOM Townhouse — immediate avail. $550 + utils per mo Swimmiryg 8 tennis avail. Call 9am-5pm 609- 446-0660. After 5pm 609- 448-8974,

LAWRENCE TWP — 3 bed­room Ranch, furnished $600; unfurnished $550. Workirrg couple preferred No pets. Call 609-452-9218 eves

LAWRENCEVILLE ~ presti­gious location. 8 rooms, 4 bdrms, 3 baths, carpeted, fire p la ce , 2 car garage. $650/mo. Call only 5-6pm 609-882-5066

LOVELY 4 BEDROOM — 1 Va bath Cape. Fin ished basement, screened in patio, overtookirrg heavily wooded lo t W asher, d rye r, d is ­hwasher, $650/fTK). 212-669- 1357 from 9-5. After 7pm 609-586-2812,

LAWRENCE TWP Contemporary 3 bedroom, 2 bath, garage, large treed lot. chil­dren and pets welcome, at just $475. this lovely Law- rencev ille Road location won t last tong! — Ads sub­ject to availability Locators * M.R.S. Mambars $75 609- 394-5900.

OPEN HOUSE - Sun Jan 22 (hom 1 -4) DtreclK3,TS P ie 206 S Irom Princeton to right Oh C arter Rd . Lawrenceville 1 '-5 mi to Oennick Cl. on nghi

icoL

68a OOtt

PRINCETON Lawrence Twp

3 7 acres Exclusive

Y Lisling ENERGY EFRClEN’• Cedar Contem porary with

Oak tongue & groove ftoors• 3 zone BASEBOARD heat• 2 zone Air Condihoning e Cathedral Ceilings• 1 •haped OAK STAIRW AY• 4 000 t sq n• End o* cul-de-sac stieet

^Tlie Most EXCITING NEW CONDOS in ttn aroo - r i l i i i ' * ,being built IN YARDLEY NOW

EXCITING STYLE Outside • distinctive 2-story buildings with extensive use of brick • brick patio enclosures • balconies Inside • fireplaces • cathedral ceilings • spacious lotls • all tnese and other Iuxu7 features are standard EXCITING PRICES Spacious one and two-bedroom condos lhat you can afford, priced from |ust $56,490 to $77,490.EXCITING FINANCING We have excellent reseirred mortgages and several special plans to suit your needsM agnificent furnished samples now open daily 12-5PM!

(215) 493-2780 or 885-2600. In NJ call collect.I 95 South !o Nevviown Fxil Bear rig h t and lake 33? W e s tlo S tony H i'i Ra i '< m i ls ( tra ffic i ig h i) Go tefi on Stony HiH Ro aboul 1 m ile go o a s t'^a rd ie y U n g h o m e Rd itra if ic ug M i to C ardinal Drive T u r n n g h t to s a m p le s (% m ile ' M O M

IG? GfMNOA PWC€ HOmC/.

I'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII.

I l i l i l i n CASH REBATE CdUPONStart The New Year Off Right... With This *4,000.°° Savings From Sturwood HamletThe builders ot Siurwoocl Hamlei are now otfenmj. Inr a liniiied nme only ihis Cash Rehale Coupon woriti '4 000 ‘ inward any cme ol the remaining 4 Townhouses’

iiixunoijslv designed ihese ? 3 bedroom an [.onriiiioned lownliouses [irired from '86.400feature panelled larmly tontiis w.ill to wall carpeiing and gaiages Anri the pure indudes pan ownership of ihe pool complex and lenms r.oitris

For your convenience Sturwocnl Hanilpi is loc.<iled ptsl nmuiies Irom ih(> i.nlni.Til stalimi and near many shopping center-, and rnaior highwHys

1 2 V 2 % FINANCINGA V A IL A B L E TO QUALIFIED BUYERS

^ U F W lO O f t

DENOW ROADLAWRENCEVILLE, N J

(Adjacent to Prmceton)

MODELS OPFN DAIIY1 0 a iTi to 5 p m

EXCEPT MON & TUES {6091 896 1660

DtRfCTiONS From Princeton ■ south on Rl 206 to Franklin Corner Rd Turn nghf, then bear lefi (500 feef past Dell) onto Denow Road lo Sturwood Hamlet

Offe' nidv h f w iilim it nnlu p No Rtokcrs

WEIDEL REAL ESTATE, INC.TWELVE LOCATIONS • NEW JERSEY • PENNSYLVANIA

p T '

SOMETHING SPECIALCustomized spiil colonial with riecorafoi appointments in side and out, new kitchen cedai-lined closets, heated Florida mom comtortable living room with fireplace buck patio formal Williamsburg gardens A home tor Ihe person who appreciates quality HENI PURCHASE OPTION In Law renceville and available lot Tl 53.900

nriTTiTn

DRAMATIC DESIGNGrand entry foyer Formal dining room gracious living room Gourmet's delight kitchen Balcony overlooking large iamily room with full brick wall and raised hearth fireplace A speclacular house in Plamsboro offered at S119,50fl

If

EXTRAS! EXTRAS'Better lhan-new four bedroom colonial with central air. no-wax kitchen floor Storm windows and added insulation Beautiful natural woodwork throughout Convenient Hamil­ton Iwp location close to shopping and schools Oftered for immediate occupancy at S89 500.

WISE BUYThree unit semi attached Each apartment consists of living room Kitchen, bedroom and bath A GREAT INVEST­MENT OPPORTUNITY AT ‘ S59.500.

For Rent Lawienceville - three bedroom rancher parlialiy furnished Gas heal central air SBOO mo * util

Hillsborough - 1 OOO sq ft office space Private offices and reception area Mam road adequate parking

$600 mo mcl. heat

I J 0 4 N A S S A U S T . , P R l iN C U T O N Call(>0*M>21-2700

OPEN HOUSES SUPER BUYS FOR

SUPER BOWL SUNDAYThe following homes wiH be OPEN tor your inspection

SUNDAY JAN 24lh from 12 00 to 3 00 PM

935 UHHING AVE LAWRENCE TWP TOUCHDOWN! A real winnei of a home 3 bedrooms, formal dmmg room exceptional porch and tinished basement with summei kitchen Slate entry hall maintenance-free exterior Plush wall to wall ONLY $59,900DIRECTIONS: 206 So to Brunswick Circle to Brunswick Ave 1st right to Lanning Your hostess Carol Treihart

735 MAYFLOWER - LAWRENCE TWP DON'T FUMBLE with complicated financrng this home has owner financing *or a qualified buyer 3 Bedrooms. ! bath well mainlami j orick single on a beautiful tree lined street ipST REDUCED TO $82 500OtRECTIONS: RI 1 to Lake Drive near Lawrence Shopping Center right on Mayflower Your hosless - Beatrice Lavinthal

513 DREXEL AVE. - LAWRENCE TWP.KICKOFF SUPER BOWL SUNDAY - VISIT THIS Beautiiul custom split colonial :n a tine area ot Lawrence lownship Vermont Slate foyer, living room with stone fireplace formal dining room new eat-in kitchen, den & porch. 2V, baths 3 bed,'ooms and fm'slied basement with gas fireplace AH this on a lovelv wfh F lot QUALITY QUALITY QUAUTY FINANCING' FiNANbiNG' FHAVA OWNER financing con sidcred tor qualifted buyer"' Reduced to $89,900 DIRECTIONS: Route 206. right on Fernwood right on Drexel to Open House sign Your hostess Beverly Hubscher

199 PARK AVE. • HAMILTON SQUARETHE EXRTA POINT with this C02Y COLONIAL is the 2 carmasonary garage and workshop ideal for tinkering' Home offers a modern kitchen formal dining room, large living room, den, 2 full balhs & 3 bedrooms The basement has an office, workshop and NEW GFA HEATER VA appraised for $72,900 , but only asking $B9,900,DIRECTIONS; East on Nottingham Way left on Park Ave Your host Bruce Hubscher

41 Forrest Avenue - Lawrence TownshipBRAND NEW LISTING - Supei iawrencpville house tor sunerbowl Sunday 3 4 bedrooms..........................$57,900.DIRECTIONS; Route 206 S to Forrest Your hostess Carol Treihad

2()«1 M.AIN ST,F,A\X h k n c k v i i .ft:. n .j .

()(W -H U ()-1 0 0 0

CADILLAC TASTE and Mode! T pocketbook’ Then this is the perfect home toi you This well maintained and tastefully decorated home located in Hamilton Square offers a kitchen with no-wax floor, family room. 3 4 BRs. 1 baths and enclosed porch Ail this plus realistic asking once of

$63,900

A FRIENDLY HOUSE located on a tree lined stieel in Glendale, Ewing Cozy cape cod with two fireplaces, 3 BRs, 1'/? baths finished basement and all m good condition Priced lo sell at $63,900

BUY NOW WITH CONFIDENCE and have a quick settlement This freshly painted tour bedroom 2“,-'? bath Colonial on a beautifully landscaped lot Nu-wax entry foyer and kitchen plush camel wait to wall in LR and DR Kitchen with custom cabinets, paneled Family Room with sliding glass doors to

■ screened porch patio and gas grill Loaded with value a!$88,900

STAY A lUMP AHEAD OF THE MARKET and TARE this opportunity from transferred owner to buy this sturining Princeton Cofleclion home at below new model cost Enter into room sized reception gallery large living Room Djnmg Room and kitchen raised Family Room with full brick wai! fireplace and tour bedrooms otf balcony, overlooking Family Room Listed at under market value at $114,900

RENTAL • BR IV? bath rancher. 2 car garage, tui! basement m quiet Hamilton Township development

' $6M per montti, plus utilities. 1 year Lease

H O L i t : i :w . e a s t vt i .n d s o hC a l l (>()<T44«-()200

1' i

PROFILE OF A C H A M P I O N KARIN WAGNER

Weidol Real Estate, Inc. takes gieal pleasure in welcoming back K.irin to our Princeton office -where foi 4 years she consistently won top listing and selling awards Karin recently managed a local Princeton utlice when- she again was a lop producer and a lecipien! of Ihe 198! New Jersey Realtors Millionaires Award” with over 2 million dollars m closed sales for the year An avid skiei and tennis player Karin resides in Montgomery Township with hei husband Bill who IS associated wdh E R Squibb Inc in lawrenceviilf

BIG I BEAUTIFUL!In convenient Washington township neai Allentown sitting proud on a 184 x 200' lot 8 rooms, 2‘ balhs. ultra modern eat-in kitchen formal dining room spacious family room with fireplace For your summei en)oymenl a 44 x22 free form Sylvan pool extra large ?-cai garage Come see I t for $147,000.

1 1

MTUML WOODWORX 2 20HI HEATINGAnd a perfect area for a commuter via 1-95 8 rooms 2 balhs formal dining room, air conditioning wall lo wall carpeting - reduced now lo $87,500 don t miss it

A RECENT SNOW SCENEVery lovely stone and brick ranch on 2 acres m Hopewell Township, set back approximately 250 feet In a gorgeous seUmg of mature trees and shrubs, 8 rooms including a 15 X 24 living room with stone fireplace, and 18’ x 13 dining room with picture window and custom chair lail modern kitchen with microwave oven. 19 x 23' family room with fireplace and random pegged ttoc-s, 3-car garage All this tor $124,900. Additional 2 69 acres available

IDEAL FOR HORSES21 ‘ acres surround this 7 room colonial that dales bacK over 100 years Immaculate throughout with 2 stone fireplaces random width pegged floors, .exposed beams 2-story barn for horses ,... $225,000

H O U ' l E ,51P E N N I N G T O N . N . l.

, (.09-737-ISfM) ()0<7-8K2-3804

REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE'Beautiful contemporary ranch set amid lovely towering trees m a peaceful and serene executive neighborhood 5 spacious bedrooms, a large and '.weeping open floor plan foi versalility enhances Ihis exciling home II quality and convenience aie what yuu need call loday to arrange your personal mspeclion Recently redu'ed $20 000 to a reason able $178,000

ANOTHER REDUCTION & FHA APPROVED'The Iransfeiring owner of this rlynamde 4 bedroom 2-story colonial has reduced his house even though ht- has put su many extras into d Here's your chance to leally get a good buy Beautifully proporlioned rooms a kitchen anyone who loves to cook can ! help but love One ot Ihe friendliest neighborhoods in (he aiea is (he setting for thiS home How can you go wrong a! $90,500

,y- ■■•A

PROFESSIONALLY PERFECTBeautiful home perfect for pmlessional office clinic or private home Coiner rjf Overbrook and West Stale Street Has eveiy imaginable convenience 13 rooms 4 full baths

2 powder rooms and much more In perfect condition and could never be duplicated at todays priies Room for parking area in rear Must be seen to he appreciated' Asking $1 25 000

HEW LISTINGGreat Cape Cod which needs some pamt and paper but in exchange the owner fas put m a brand new heater there'' a new roof and all the plumbing has been checkers out and IS in good repair Steel ! beam construction There are 3 bedrooms and a living room with stone fireplace forma! dining room a large family kilcben. and a huge fourth bedroom on the secnod floor all this is set very close to Trenton Stale College for only $57,000

LAND FOR SALE4 5 acre lot " Harbourton all leadv tor spring budding

$49,500.Approx 6 acre to! m Harboufton perr.ed and ready to go

$55 900RENTAL

3 or 4 bedroom house in good location tor sale at $59,900 0' ownei will consider month to month rental for $475.

W EIDEL at the Airport

Reai estate Inc.Mercef Co. Passenger Teiminal

80^-883-6950

Call WEIDEL.,.6 decades of qualify service

HOME HUNTER’S GUIDE12-B Week of January 20 ■ 22, 1982

Ho u s m fo r Rent Hoiisee for Rent Houses fo r Rent

Miller Agenqf

THIS CAN SE YOUR DREAM HOUSE NESTLED ON A QUIET CUL-DE-SAC on 2 acres in Montgomery Twp.. this 4 be'lroom Colonial has a lot to offer There's a raised hearth fireptace in family room for cozy winter nights and a beautiful fenced in-oround pool for HOT Sumi7>er days {remember them'’ ). COME SEE!.......................................................... S129.900

YOU STILL RENTING AND COMPLAM««Q7 ISNT IT TIME to put your money back to work for YOU? This very affoixlabte 2 bedroom, first-floor corxJo in Htilsborough can make the difference in your life. Maintenance-free living for your new lifestyfe. Shown by appointment WELL PRICED............... S58,S00.

HERE'S A HOME TO BE PROUD OF! LOVELY TO LOOK AT, LOVELY TO LIVE IN! Custom bnck-front ranch in Montgomery Twp has 2 fire- piaces. in-ground pod. screened porch. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, n ew carpeting, fui! basement, niceiy la n d ­scaped. and many extras YOU'LL LOVE IT'.

$124,500.

LOCATION IS EVERYTHMG THIS 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL IS IN A VERY DE­SIRABLE NEKSIffiORHOOO Close to MwtgomeryTwp Schools. Many of the most wanted features irKlude gas heat, city water, central air, full basement with finished room-s and 2-car qaraqe TAKE A LOOK!

$119,500.

V illiie Slioppei Plaza6 0 9 * 9 2 4 - 3 3 6 6 Rt. 20 6 $ 5 1 t Montgomeiy Twp., n .i . 2 0 1 -8 7 4 -8 0 0 0

•O 'R F A I t S T A l l

PRINCETON JU N aiO N OFFICE PLAINSBORO OFFICE

CLEAN t COMFORTABLE COLONIAL in a desirable section of Hamilton Square has 4 bedrooms, Zh baths, an expanded fam ily room with lireplace and heatilator, central air and a 10 x 20 redwood deck, A must to see'

$94,900.

PICTURESQUE INOOOED LOT with lush landscaping is I only one (eature of this lovely 3 bedroom, 2h bath

Ranch in the Devonshire section of East Windsor In addition, the discrim inating buyer w ill appreciate the newly remodeled kitchen central air and basement.

$96,900.

IMMACULATE 3 bedroom East Windsor Ranch with family room, fireplace, central air, and deck also has mortgage available to qualified buyer at below market rate A smart purchase at only $87,900.

SUPERIOR QUALITY can be found throughout this lovelv 4 bedroom, 2 ^ bath home in the University Heights

I section of Hamilton Twp And you w ill appreciate the extras, such as a fenced yard and underground

[ sprinkler system $93,500.

EASY LIVING CAN BE YOURS m our 3 bedroom, 2 ' i bath East Windsor Townhouse You can appreciate the nn-wax foyer and kitchen floors, central vacuum and finished basement Bonus' Assumable 9% mortgage to qualified buyer $72,500.

EXCEPTIONAL VALUE - located in a fine neighborhood in East Windsor, this spacious 5 bedroom home has a country kitchen, central air and fireplace $92,000.

CUSTOMIZED COLONIAL with a contemporary flair is available in the Mountamview section of Ewing Twp

I This beauty has 4 laige bedrooms, family room with lireplace. spacious kitchen and a professionally

I landscaped yard $115,000.

IN ROSSMOOR VILLAGE (Monroe Tw p ) all our listings have 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air and tone heat The community maintains all buildings and grounds. Residents .,ave use of the club house, tennis courts and

I swimming pool. Price range fiom$51,500. to $72,900.

609 799 818150 Pr.nceton-Higtitsfawn Road

Princeton Junction, N.l.

•For complete details, obtain a copy of the service conliact from our ERA Real Estate Office.Each office indopencfenily owned and operataa

M e m b v rs of M « rc » r and M id d l» > *A C oun ty M u lt ip i* L is ting Sorvicos and P rin co to n Rool E s to t* G ro up

Open 7 Days IQItM MOHSIK ofrotniBin

5 « K T " I

32 Ctwmbwr* Sirwwt PrtncMon, N.J. 0SS4O

609-BR4-1416

PARTIALLY PUMMSHCO RANCH — CofNwnMnl Boro locMon. 2 br. dan. 1 b. AvNI. Fab 1-May '82 or hangar — $850

LARQE FURMSHED Attrac dva 2 story — Westam sac- tton. 3 br. 2 b, mid-Fab. to Labor Day — $850

1350 SO . FT. O FFICE SPACE. Ground fl, Princaton Junction. Walk to sMtkan. Im­mediate ooc. Ampla parking inc. — $850.

P R IN C E TO N JC T . — Cbarmlng4BR. 2VV bath Col­onial w/LR, DR, Fam Rm. A 2 car garage. Lovely traaa A manira landaoaping. Walk to High School. $750 avnil. March t . J. T. Boyar RaaHy 800-921-1805

FURNISHED — 4 PR, 2W bath ranch. Central Prlnca- lon. $750/month 509-821- 7841.

HOPEWELL BORO — lovaty 3 bdrm, ^V bath VIckMian. $550 + uW. 60IM8«-2St5.

PRINCETON BORO Town- house—2 3R s, LR, DR, k itch e n , lu ll b a ia m a n t. BaautMul garden. Raterancas A aacurtty 609-924-2680

HAMILTON TW P - Near MaA. laaidanlial 3 bedroom, garaga, enclosed porch, baaamant. lancud yard, chd- dran and pals weloome. all extras, $435; also 6 room. $350: others. caMI — Ads subisct to avaHabUlty. Locsw ton -M .R .S .M am ba tst7S aOSGSA-SSOO.

C LE A R B R O O K /C R A N - BURY — Adu* community - 48 8 over, Tlmbartlna 2 Br, 2 baths. 1 yr ok). Beautiful loca- tlo n , w ood ed a re a - ckibhousa, pod. goH, tennis, sacuilly. Avail, knmed. Lsvln- ton Aasoclates. Lie. Real E state Broker: 201-548- 2244. Eves A wknds 609- 655-4519 or 609-655-0909

CHARM IN CRANBURY ■ Desirable neighborhood, excellent floor plan with 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, prolessionally landscaped yard, fireplace and central air-sucn features make this home for the discerning buyer, $167,500.

NEW LISTING • Owner Financing is Available to a qualified buyer on this well cared lot 3 bedroom, 1‘? bath home in the Golden Ciest section of Hamilton Twp. The smart buyer w ill appreciate all the plus features in this home-fam ily room w/fireplace, central air, 2 car garage and wall to wall carpeting BUYER PROTECTION* $87,000.

COUNTRY LIVING IN PUINS80R0 with convenience to major highway arteries and transportation, an excellent school district and Owner Financing available to qualified buyer are the extra features for out 4 bedroom custom bu ilt home set on 2 acres. Call for appointment,

$139,900.

SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE,, beautifql carpeting and coordinating draperies have already been installed thru- out this immaculate home m Forreslal Village, In addition to the master suite and 2 other large bedrooms, this roomy home has an eat-in kitchen, living and dining room plus a den. Located in Plamsboro Twp , you can leap the benefits of low taxes and the excellent West Windsor Plamsboro school system.

$139,500.

WALK TO CRANBURY VILUGE from this lovely 3 I bedroom. 2 bath home, surrounded by older shade trees. Property has oversized garage/barn that could be converted to a dream studio or get away office

$108,000.

SPECIAL LOCATION a quiet cul-de-sac in Twin Rivers, East Windsor is the setting for our 3 bedroom. bath townhousc with a beautiful brick kitchen, $70,500.

OWNER FINANCING lor a Qualilied Buyer on this Quad II fwm Rivets 3 bedioom, 21i bath townhopse with a finished basement and wet bar Commuting is easy ■ express bus to N Y and N J Tpke close by, $69,900.

609 799 6060503 Plamsboro Road

Plainsboio, N.i.

Cut your Buy amortgage luxurious new

payments... duplex in Yardley!Live in one. rent out the o the r... i t ’s the perfect investment for these tirr>es. Each apartment is beautifuMy-appointed featuring eat-in k it­chens; living room; dining room; two spacious bedrooms: two full baths; GF washer, dryer and refrigerator; attached garages; front, rear and side yards. Over 90 sold, come see why!

TMtiM i tv a iitM m S47Q/1M - U t f l. : tSOO/M - E iteN iit r t ta rn tf •N8 la tc ia i p tM i I t v ttr

Om D«p(ti/T»A A|>tnn>tnU Irom $111,990

Twt DuptiKts/Feur Apart- mtnts t.offl $223,980

S am plM open daily 12-5PM. (215) 493-6700 or 865-2600. In NJ call collect.

South on US 1 lo N o rth end o f O xford V alley M all — (Sesame Piace), tu rn right on O xford -/alley Rd Go 2 m iles, bear le ft on H eacock Rd , go ' 2 m ile to ^ , 1 . sam p les on left

oMwoa pMcc Homc/i

CAllERy oF HoiVtE!NEW LISTINGS■t,

NEW LISTING IN HICK0F3Y ACRES WITH GOOD FINANCING- Priced to sell is this 4 bedroom, 2 'h bath home in a desirable neighborhood in East Windsor. Included is a large formal dining room, bright eat-in kitchen with 2 yr old refrigerator and no-wax floor, family room with upgraded panelling and new carpeting, big master bedroom with new carpeting and BRAND NEW MASTER BATH, basement, central air, gorgeous solid redwood deck and a well treed back yard and professional landscaping. Call for special financing information. $92,900.LOW TAXES PLUS CHARM! On this exceptional buy, the taxes are an economical surprise. Nestled on a dead end street in pleasant Plainsboro, this extremely well cared (or six room home can be yours for only $73,900. Included are all of the appliances and an efficient wood burning stove. Close to transportation and an excellent school system make this gem a must see! $73,900.

HOW SOON CAN YOU AAOVE? This gracious 5 bedroom, 2'h bath home in West Windsor is available tor your immediate occupancy. Your family can enjoy its convenient location enabling them to walk to trains, schools and shopping. Call today and make an appointment to inspect its construction, its charm and spacious yard. $141,000.FINISHED BASEMENT, FIREPLACE AND WCX)OED LOT are the outstanding pluses in this elegantly decorated 4 bedrooms. 2 bath colonial in East Windsor, Located on a quiet cul-de-sac, it also features a fenced yard, garage with elective opener, lovely kitchen with no-wax floor and self-cleaning oven, patio and central air. Come see it to believe it,ALL APPLIANCES AND A GREAT FAMILY NEIGHBORHOODmakes this 4 bedroom colonial in East Windsor very desirable. It's the ultimate in living enjoyment with comfortable air conditioning, 2 car garage, full basement, well kept hardwood floors, fenced yard and new kitchen and foyer floors. MOVE UP TO A DREAM

$ 8 4 , 9 0 0 .ENCHANTING SETTING IN WEST WINDSOR is the location lor this 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch that's perfect for the busy com.muter. Boasting a Princeton address, this most desirable home also has a floored attic, garage, 2 zone heating, fireplace and large eat-in kitchen with solarian floor and sliding doors to a 20 foot deck. Call for SPECIAL FINANCING INFORMATION. $99,900.DON’T MISS SEEING THIS COZY RANCH located in Plainsboro featuring 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, large eat-in kitchen, central air, electronic air cleaner, wall to wall carpeting and a full basement. Priced to selK S69.000.RENTAL - 4 Bedroom, 3’/2 bath ranch in West Windsor

$760. month.

'7 / iI

An internatHXTaf Nefvwxk o» IfvdMtienOwit Btokeoi

Conscientious Ser'Zice— 'Alrfays

^ DIener A S S O C IA T E S , IN C

REALTORS44 P rin c « to n /H *g h ts tO M m R d. W M t W ln d M r • 609-7W -1100

Ftetrungtoft • 201 782-4606

W EID EL REAL ESTATE, Inc,T w a iv * L o c a t io n * • N o w J a ra a v • F a n n ay tv a n la

s P fC iA n s rs in coRPOffAn Rfioc a j i o n

PRICED RIGHT TO SEHLE ESTATEPennin toii Boro Victorian, 8 roo-ns, I '. ’ baths, attractive double door entry, WO’ deep lot with mature plantings and detached garage A very handsome propeity tor $87,500.

PENNINGTON BOROCompletely renovated in excellent taste retaining all the charm of bygone days New kitchen with custom oak cabmets. 17'xl3‘ dming room, living room with fireplace 3 or 4 bedrooms 2 baths 2.'. car garage A gtpaf house for $129,900.

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIPJust minutes trom lawrenceville and Pnncelon 2’ year young executive colonial wth 8 rooms 2 . baths 4 bedrooms, familv (oom formal dining loom central an condition gas heat

$94,500

ONE OF A KIND HOMESOn / ptestigious acres m Hopewell lownshio this magnificent stone Arizona ranch stands alone m quality and unique features Shown above is the living room with its massive beams m the cathedral ceiling and the towering bneh lireplace. There's a total of 10 rooms, 2vv baths a 3-car gatage with an ad]0ining 18 * 24 workshop and a iantaslic 2?' screened patio with custom barbecue that overlooks the Anthony pool This property could not be duplicated at the low asking pnee of

$295,000.

ELM RIOGE PARKIn prestigious Elm Ridge Park', long established as one of this area s most desired communities we offer you this fme custom stone and frame colonial that was built as the builder s own residence with particulai attention to detail and superb construction Valley Forge stone and rough sawn clapboard exhnor, 9 rooms, 3 r baths, custom moldings, carpeting and custom draperies living room with stone fire place and mood lighting very elegant dining room, fully equipped quality kitchen and adjoining family room with massive fireplace, cathedral ceilings. Florida room, library, first floor bedroom: outstanding master suite plus 2 other large bedrooms on the second floor, basement. 2 car garage a home that s priced to sell quickly on today's maike! $227,500.

Route 31Pennington 737-1500

V___________________________________ — ----------Town & Country SpecialisVi Since J.9I5

WEIDEL REALTORS

qiHE Oft is our w e ek ly A rts & L e isu re S upp lem ent

HOME HUNTER^S GUIDEW ecko ljan iu ry 20 - 22, 1982 13-B

Houm s for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent

LAWRENCEVILLE — The VHtage. 3 bdrm. I-V? bath twnhM. Mint cond. Washer, dryer. refrIg. Jenn<Air, dis­hwasher. draperies irwiuded Many extras. Asking $625 Avail. Feb. Coupio or smg le person. Must be seen. 609- 896-9059 or 609-924 0808 ask for Gloria.

PICTURESQUE — 4 bedroom farmfK>use, secluded on 250 acres, 2V8 baths, fire­place. out buildings, horses firm. $600, check it! — Ads subject to availabiiit'/. Loca> tors - M.R.S. Members $75

*009^04-5900.

TWIN RIVERS — 3 bdrm new town house, w/w carpet, basement, immediate occu­pancy. $600. 201-388-6031.

PRINCETON HOUSE FORR B IT — Available till July 1. Convenient location. 2 bed­rooms. $5:^^

Princeton Crossroads Realty. Realtor 609-^4-4677

DAYTON — Vintage 1848, 3 bedrooms, i-Vs baths. Im­mediate occupancy. $600/ mo Stults Realty. Realtor 609-395-0444.

KENDALL PARK — lovely 3 bedroom , fire p la ce , new k itchen & ca rpe ts , large fenced lot. N Y. bus. Short term lease. $725/mo. Call Pat, 609-921-8718._________

PLAINSBORO — Princeton Collection, 4 bdrm. 2 ’/? bath Executive Colonial. Avail Feb, 15, $700/mo. Prefer short lease. Cali 609-737- 9478 or 581-3559 after 6pm.

EAST WINDSOR - Twin R ive rs , 2 bdrm tw nhse . fin bsmt, pvt patio, swimming & tennis priv. Sorry no pets. $525/mo -f util. Immediate occ 609-448-1932.

SKIERS —- House Swap. Condo in Dillon, Colorado, sleeping 6. for house in Mer­ce r C ou n ty a re a . Need house. April 24-May 2, Con­do avail, any dates. Dillon W; in 25 mins, of 4 areas. 609- 466-3369 for details.

NORTH BRUNSWICK — 7 ROOM - 3 bedrooms, fire­place. 201 297-1944 Also have rooms to let.

P R O P E R T Y M A N A G E ­MENT — LEAVE YOUR HOME OR INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN CAPABLE HANDS. 20 YRS. EXPERI­ENCE. J.T. Boyer Realty, 609-921-1805.

TW ENTY NASSAU STORE FRONTS

Two store fronts on Chambers Street, Princeton's exclusive shopping area, with large display windows. One is 900 sq. ft, with basement storage underneath.The other is 522^sq. ft.

C all 609-924-7027

65 000 S Q U A R E FEE T

I N D U S T R I A L B U I L D I N G

West A m w e l l T o w n s h i p H u n t e r d o n C o u n t y NJ

Exceptional steel and masonry struc­ture. bu ilf in 1978 15 acre site fronts onRt 179. Fully sprinklered, 16 to 27 ft ceilings, R-12 energy rating, gas heat, heavy concrete floors and six loading docks.

OFFICE SPACE RESEARCH PARK1101 Slate R oad , P rin ce to n , N.J.

54.00 per square foot net, net areas up to .30,000 square feet.

4 2 7 .0 0 0 s ip in re fe e l in P a rk O c c u p ie d h y up f> ro x . 50 T e n a n ts

P r in c e to n M a i l in g A ddrc .ss a n d P lio rw ! \n n d > e r

C. U . I . : liic s e a rc h P a rk 6 0 0 -0 2 1 -6 5 5 1

SUNSPACE

Solar Living !Add sunny living space to your home while reducing energy costs!

Princeton EnergyGroup 921-1965

FURNISHED — 3 room/4 room apt/cottaga/house with •qufppad kHchan, t/c , indi­vidual heal control, ookx TV. radio, w/w carpet at motel in H ightatown/W Indsor area. No lease requ ired. From $l40/week irKhiding ail utili­ties. 609-448-8637

HILLSBORO 3 bdrm. ranch — 1 Vg baths, gar., basement, gas h e a t, d is h w a s h e r , washer, refrigerator. $725 a mo. 2 mo. sec. References Call 201-369-7801.

EAST WINDSOR Colonial ~ 4 bdrm, air. carpeting, in ground pool, $650 mo. Im­m ediate occupancy. Call 609-443-1400.

T O W N H O U S E — E a s t Windsor, 3 bedrooms, 2-1/2 baths, avail, soon. $550 in­cluding trust,RICI^RDSON REALTORS

60^448-5000

PENNING TON BORO — charm ing 3 bedroom. IV? bath, liv ing room , din ing room, den, sun porch, base­ment. garage, big yard. Nice neighborhood. $625 +■ util. 609-896-0845.

PENNINGTON — 3 bedrm , 2 baths, living rm. w/fireplace, dining area, kit. & den. 2 car garage. $650/mo + utils. 609-737-8331 after 4 pm.

RECENTLY renovated — 2 BR single home in Cham- bersburg, $350/mo + utils. Ref & sec required. 609-393- 9766,

N T. CALLAWAY REAL ESTATE

PRINCETON TWP. ~ Fur­nished 4 bedroom. 2-Vg bath ranch available Feb - Aug 31. $750.

C al M rs. BMecher60M 21-1050

PRINCETON — 4BR. fur­nished, 4 mi: from P.U. One acre, extra rooms, lawn care, Avail. April 1, $695/mo. Chil­dren & pets welcome. Phone 609-921-2714 eves

DAYTON — Vintage 1848. 3 bedrooms, l-Vz baths Im­mediate occupancy. $600/ mo. Stults Realty, Realtor 609-395-0444

FARM HOUSE — Semi de­tached, 3 bdrms, 3 mi. from Hightstown, $400 Security, lease. Write with reference WHH 0992. Box 146, High­tstown

HOPEWELL — desirable 3-4 bedroom, 3 bath. 2 story house on wooded lot adja­cent to country club. Fire­place in family room. 3 car garage, gas heat with central air. Available immediately at $775. J.T- Boyer Realty, Realtor. 609-921-1805.

LONG BEACH ISLANDPopular Brant Buch Near Yacht Club

Spacious, Year Round Cape With Delightful Bay View - Uving Room - FP - Large Kitchen - 2 BR - IB - Utilitv Room Finished Second Root With Dormers Econ. Gas Heat Two O ' Garage O W NER M O V IN G • PRICE REDUCED TO $12f,E i6 .

Lackey R e a lty , In c .Ship Bottom R e a lto r (6091494-4511 Beach Haven (609) 492-4329Harvey Cedars (6091 494-2004

Leonard Van Hise AgencyMEMBER MERCER COUNTY MULTIPLE USTING SERVICE

160 S tockton S t. H ig h ts to w n , N .J.

Office; 6094484250

T o / / b r o t h e r stU. 'OU O' tnf Dt - r i! It )'

Openingof an Exclusive NeW Community

Only Minutes from Princeton

Included in the price:□ 4 Bedrooms, 2 V2 Baths n Fireplace□ Basement□ Two Car Side

Entrance Garage□ Gas Heat-AirConditioning

Introductory Offer — 12 Home Designs from M19,9CX)

CUSTOM SPLIT LEVEL: This lovely Hightstown home offers nice spacious rooms. 2 '/? baths and 2 car attached garage. Spend the winter evenings by the cozy living nxim fireplace. Custom built features, cen­tral air, and many extras make this a home for the top of your must see" list.

$85,250IMMACULATE CAPE COD: Custom built home with many nice features. 5 rooms, 2 baths. 2 car garage. Expansion possibilities. Nice location

$85,500WARMTH AND CHARM radiate from this custom built brick home near Peddie Golf Course 5 rooms, many nice features. Extra lot available.

$81,000.TWO APARTMENT HOUSE ^ COTTAGE Nice income package. West Windsor Twp fncome, expense, and roll over mortgage information available.

$93,000.

CRANBURY MANOR BFLEVEL. 8 rooms, 1 ': bathsgarage, v? acre lot. Owners will consider an allowance for new carpeting or would help w financing

W 9,900.*

TWO FAMILY HOUSE: Within easy walking distance to downtown Hightstown, we have a large two-family home that includes an unusually large aparlmeni; Living room, dining room, family room, kitchen, and 3 bedrooms. The small apartment has 3 rooms plus bath Aluminum siding. Garage Keep in mind the new tax laws favor real estate as an investment. Check with your tax advisor

$67,500WELL MAINTAINED INCOME PROPERTY: 16rooms presently used as 3 apartments. 3 modern kitchens Alum siding, comb storms & screens for easy maintenance

$95,000 *

OLDER HIGHTSTOWN HOME: 7 rooms, 2 full baths. 2 car detached garage w elec. Convenient to schools and shopping areas

$59,900

OWNER ASSISTED FINANCING available to qualifi­ed buyers. Call for specific delails.

13 \ / O f iim ittd tiffM 8p*ctal ' mortgaq* progr»m

Directions: N. on 1-95 to Princeton- Lawrencerilk Ejiil. Rte. 206 N. to first light, le*t on LawrenceviMe- Pennington Rd. (546), go 2 miles to Federal City Rd. Left to Lawrenceville Greene. Open Daily 12 to S. Closed Thurs. 8. Fri. Phone (609) 77M199 or (215) 441-4400.

r ------ a w»n*n«V

Itichord Van HUaC.R.S. Jeon Etchtiorboro Schnedeker Cindy M o ltb u ry Suxonne Speer

A fte r Hours and Sundey Call:448-6042 446-1176 446-0464 446-0626 443 42S5

W arren O ite n Larry M urray Jone Cox M elv in Kreps io n n te W hom -Prutow

___flT ll'M a cN IC O LL A G E N C Y

REALTORS851 Parkway Ave., Trenton

609- 396-3344

LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP - Noar St. Ann's Church. Like newColonial, 4 bedrooms, tivingroom, formal dining room, eat-in kitchen. 1 'h. baths. 1 car garage full basement $76,000.

LAWRENCEVILLE - Spacious Colonial featuring living room, format dining room, 4 spacious bedrooms, 2'h baths, large family room with fireplace. Plus more $115,000.

INIIIIHIf

NEAR RIDER COLLEGE • Large Colonial on large corner lot. 5 bedrooms, 2)6 baths, 2 car attached garage, living room with fireplace, formal dining room, uftra-rrxxJe.’n kitchen, central air conditioning. Ready to move in. 6125,000. ,

e x c e p t io n a l RANCHER - central air, 2000 square feet o f|j finished basement. Corner lot. Entrance foyer, living room, formal dining room, den. ultra modern kitchen, 2 full baths, 3 • very large bedrooms. 2-car attached garage with electric doors. 19 years young. $96,500. i

CARNEGIEREALTORS

229 Nassau St., Princeton Princeton Circle, Rt. 1

609- 921-6177 609- 452-2188fo rk oN ic* Is fnd«pai»d»n#ly ow ned ond operofad.

D O C T O R -LA W Y E R — D E N T IS T -A R C H IT E C T , A U OTHERPROFESSIONALS - Spacious colonial for Office/Residence in Mont 1 gomery within 5 minutes of Princeton. Owner will assist FinarKirig,

$149,900.

A JEWEL OF A COLONIAL • Immaculate and Ready for You. Private yard with large Patio • Mature Plantings. FULLY INSULATED AND AIR CONDITIONED- Walk to Schools. Owner will assist Financing for Qualified Buyer. Excellent West Windsor $139,000.

T p

i t

SPECTACULAR SPANISH RANCH - Robbinsville short walk to Golf Club from this 3 Bedroom 2 Bath luxuriously spacious home. $149,900.

PRINCETON JUNCTION • Comfortable Cape Cod 3/4 Bedrooms excellent commuting location convenient to schools. $79,900.

WE WILL PROVIDE A

HOME PROTECTION WARRANTY th e t e llew s you to SELL o r BUY w lfh

Full Security 4 ConfidenceNo Inspection Your word is your bond

No Limit on Repair costs to contract.O ffered Hll APRIL U f

Q n fc ^___nn i^ I

SCS AGENCYREALTORS

South Main & Mercer St Hightstown

609 - 448-0113£och Office is fnd^pmnd^ntly Owned and Opmrat0d

HIGHTSTOWN — clean, maintenance free home near center of town. 4 bedrooms. Completely remodeled. $7S,000.

IN THE VILLAGE OF WINDSOR - 4 bedroom, 2 story older home Modernkitchen, den, lovely fenced yard. $66,900.

QUEEN ANNE VICTORIAN •—ondesirable S. Main St. 5 large bedrooms, formal dining room, fovely stone fireplace. Former professional residence. Owner financing avail, to Qual. Buyer

$125,000.

CRAN6URY TOWNSHIP - 3 BRColonial on 1 acre lot Large eat-in kitchen, formal dining room. Ideal home tor growing family $66,$00.

ELLISOALE - 3 Eiedroom home, featuring fireplace in Livmy Room, Dining Room, all electric modern kjtchen. Rural locatron $76,500.

DESIRABLE YORKSHIRE DR. - 3 6R ranch with formal dining room and spacious family room, Attractive financing avail to qual. buyer $66,000.

HICKORY ACRES • 4 BR Split, part finished basement; brick patio w /gas g r il l . C en tra l air ASSUMABLE! 6% on Bal Approx. $308 mo. to qual. buyer. Tran sferred Owner reduces to $69,900.

HIGHTSTOWN COLONIAL —built in late 1800's and has been well maintained 4 BR on 2nd floor 4 2 more on 3rd. 2 LR. formal, DR, Modern Kitchen A great value.

$66,500.

CRAN6LJRY MANOR - 4 bedroom Colonial on beautifully landscaped lot. Lovely family room off kitchen. Immaculate home. Reduced $76,900.

AFFORDABLE - Two Story, 3 bed room home in Hightstown. New ro o f, alum, siding. Convenient location. $51,500.

DESIRASIE TWIN RIVERS3 0R. DET Move in Condition. Assumption to qual buyer END UNIT - 3 BR Split 7% assum. to qual. buyer.Call for details about our condos. 2. 3 & 4 BR lownhouses.

$79,000.

$71,900.

CRANBURY 3 BR Ranch, 2 car garage $650. mo.

Millstone Twp. 3 BR BiLevel, Under Construction. $500. mo.

HIGHTSTOWN 4 BR Apt, Excel cond, $600, mo. lr»cL hootBUSINESS FOR SALE yarn shop, including inventory, with dry cleaning serviceCOMMERCIAL RENTALDowntown Hightstown

$15,000.2290 sq. ft. suitable for offices or store.

$600. Mo. + vHUtlos.

HOME HUHTER’S GUIDE14-B W eeko l J a n iu o 20 • 22,1982

Welchert,

MONTEREYSOIAR CONDOMINIUMS

O P E N H O U SE*AumQi#®Townhous#communiryset amidst woods and nature

(tosifiMe Pnncetcyi. 4 solar r>eated models are available with 2 or 3 bedrooms, 20’ gourmet Kitchen and e»oansive living areas highlighted by vaufted ceilings ar>d window wails CWfectione: 31 206 north from Nassau S t, 2 n>i»es on nght FromRt I.HamsonSt west to Ewing St., turn north on 206 on right >• Sunday t -5 P M , or jom us lor cocktails and hors' doeuives Wednesday evening, Jan 27, trom 4 00 to 6 00 P M

Princeton Office 609*683-0300

WeichertRealtors

House* for Rent Houses for Rent Houses for Rent Resort ProperliM Resort Properties

LAWRENCEVILLE — 2 bed­room luxury townhouse avail­able immediately 1 full, 2 Va baths, w asher-dryer, d is­hwasher. Central air. Gar­age, pool and tennis. $650 mo 4 util. 609-096-0463

LOVELY 4 bedroom colonial in quiet residential area of Ewing: mostly carpeted!; fire­place with heat-o-later in family room, available now for S675'month plus utilities.

RENDALL-COOK ft COMPANY

n eN tofs 609-924-0326

TWIN RIVERS — 3 bedroom end Finished basement. Im­maculate cond. $575 + lt^3t. 609-799-9617

R o h ill V illageLA M 0E R TV IU E ~ 3 BR ranch, k itchen, d in ingrm , stone fireplace, large doaets, therm opane p ic tu re w in­dows. full basement. Quiet country settirtg $675/mo. l Vi months security After 6 pm 201-233-3005,

NEWLY FINISHED 3 bdrm townhouse — Route 206. 5 mi, south of Somerville Cir­cle $625 mo utils. Avail Jan 20. Retrig., washer, dryer avail, 201-874-8264.

FOR IMMED RENT — 3 bedrm. townhouse, cathedral oeiling. ail appliances, movein cond.

A shopping Bazaar that tops them all . . . oar classified pages

OLD 6RCHARD

VILLAGEPnncelon, New Jersey

Luxury C ontem porary T ow nhouses in a parklike setiing

13V2%m o r t g a g e m o n e y

a v a i l a b l e f o r 3 y e a r s

$155,000. to $169,000.Old Orchard Lane

at Mount Luca=; Road Homes open for inspection.

Nih^

E0 F

ALCOVE

----- -i ni

m s

izjL il ,mrCMtS' Upper Level

n~

G round Level Low er Level

B09 921 1050 4 NASSAU STREET

'aila\va\R E A L E S T A T E ^

•PRINCETON NEW JERSEY 08540

T w o BEDROOM Town- house — furnished. $600-♦■ ut: 609-896-1424 days. 212- 552-6379.

TWIN RIVERS — 3 bdrm. be­gin Feb. 1 ■ Er>d unit, $575 mo. Trust -f water ft sewer inc. 609-448-0989

TOWNHOUSE — 5 rooms plus bath ft laufidry, no chil­dren or pets. Couple prefer­red O ff s tre e t p a rk in g $375/mo f util, 609-466- 2457

PRINCETON A VICINITY — severe' brand new homes for rent or lease/purchase from $l,000/mo. ex tem pora ry ft traditional styles • best loca­tions J.T. Boyer Realty 609- 921-1805.

HK5HTSTOWN — Pictures­que 2 bedroom, set on over­sized wooded lot, children and pets welcome, wait to wall, at )ust $325 This is a must - see! Ads subject to availa­bility. Loca to rs - M .R .S. M am bara $75 609-394- 5900.

TWIN RIVERS — 3 bedrm, 2 ’/s bath townhouse for rent. Call 201-386-1369.

EXCEPTIONAL ~ vicinity of j Fort Dix, e legant country , home, liv rm w'fireplace. din, ‘ rm, kitchen, 4 bdrms, 2V? baths. 609-723-2425 j

LAWRENCE TWP - - 3 bdrm Ranch w'fireplace. Air cond, with or without option. $600 plus u tils. 609-396-5063, 396-1299

Resort Properties

POCONOS - - Breathtaking views, Private club, skiing, [ ■ ice skating, indoor swimming - tennis, etc. 2 bdrms. fire­place. appliances. Week . weekend season 201-369- 3558

FRIPP ISLAND, S.C. — fully turn twnhse condo on ocean avail, by week or mo. Golf, tennis, sail, swim, bike A mties of beach at your door­step 609-452-2300 ext 4089 days,

ST MAARTEN — 3 magnifi­cent ocean front villas, Ige. pool, air cond, maid service. Avail Jan. 24 ■ 31st. then af­ter Mar, 5lh. Roas rate 212- 288-3606, 212-691-7070.

Uekin) for « job? Try rtw

CUtstIwd ptjas.

You Really Can Afford A Home...Fox & Lazo jjg,,

Professionals Will Show You How - Today

JU$T REDUCED!!! VALUE VALUE!!!Famastic Buy m East Windsor' Almost NEW spacious 4 bedroom, 2' bath Colonial with outstanding features hardwood floors, pan­elled family room with fireplace, deck from fam ily room centra l a ir.la rg e m aster bedroom with walk-n; dosei and bath, and a large 2 car garage

$102,900'!!

JUST TEN MINUTES TO THE TRAIN immaculate Tudor-Styie Coioridi offering 4 bedrooms. 2 ‘ . baths, family G.-um witt' wood burning brick fireplace wall to wall carpeting, central air conditioning and many additiona' e x t r a s $ 8 2 , 5 0 0G R E A T E W I N G NEIGHBORHOOD AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUP­ANCY

FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY Seller will payS200 per month toward mortgage ur'eren- liali for 1st year on this beautiful i bedroom coionia' in Hamilton Twp A real steal ai

$96,900.

Attention Investors Four apartment bunding Brick Construction convenient Ewing Tov ’• ship location

$67,900.

Excellent location tor commuters Large yard, patio, three bedrooms and 1' bath-. University Heights Hamilton Township

$80,900.

LOOKING FOR PRIVACY AND NATURE?? WE HAVE JUST THE HOME FOR YOU 5 ACRES OF PRIME PROPERTY iN PRINCE­TON TWP- with your own pono. brook, and lo a d s of f r ees ' Ranch hom e wi t h 3 bedrooms. GREAT new kitchen and a huge 3 car garage Also has dog runs and kennel A must see at

$169,900.

EXCELLENT BUY IN LAWRENCEMll This very well maintained three bedroom ranch home has just been refurbished with a new furnace, hot water heater, and dishwastier' in .‘Gfjition imagine vourself be.side a super Franklin stove in wintei and a fantastic screened in porch in summer' This and more.

only 475,500.

Leisurely Living can be yours and one visit this LOVELY TOWNHOUSE in Hillsborough you can see what we mean" Format sunken living room to step up dining room to a country kitchen, 3 bedrooms. 2' .• baths, and a recreation room that is fabulous and as an extra there is recessed lighting and abun­dance of storage, GUESS WHAT IT'S ONI Y

$69,900.

A BREATH-TAKING VIEW OF THE FULL LENGHT OF THIS EXQUISITE HOME isyours through sliding glass doors leading to the rear deck and rambling countryside. A one-of-its kind stone fireplace accents a marvelous country family room with re­cessed lighting and built-in bookcases, SPACIOUS Contemoorarv Saltbox ttiat can lend Itself to the desires of even the most discriminating buyer. PICTURE YOURSELF IN THESE SURROUNDINGS

$184 ,900. Mofitgomery,

^oxCSiFLcLzoREALTORS AMD INSURORS

22 O ffic M E qual H ousing O p p o rtu n ity Stneo IM 6

• P rince to n ,609j 924 1600• P rince to n Jet 609i-799-202?• H o m ilto n 16 091 890 3300• B ordentovvn { 609) 298-1 600

Got a gripe or a eompliinent? Write your editor.

HILTON HEAD, S.C. — 3V»- las wnMoM*. T««o vWa* am in Sea Pmoe. #807 ie m Hw-bour Town and #8985 la ovarlooMng lha 2nd FalnNoy o( tha p rastigkxn Haibour Town QoN Course. Bodi are 2BR/2B and lam by lha weak only lor $750 and $700 from owner compared to Planla- tion rataa ol $810 and $810r w k. # 8 0 7 is lo r s a ls a t $210,000 and #8985 I t tor sale al $230,000 K you ora jmeraitad. The ttikd (#8) is on tha 18lh Fairway of lha R obert T ren t Jones Q olf Course In Pahnano Dunes. W alk to go lf, tenn is and beach 2BR/3B with slaapar sofa Weakly rale I t $575. Photos available on all three Phone 609-790-3191

POCONO CHALET — For rani. Fireplace $ cathedral oaMng. SIssps 6, near Shaw­nee $ Camalback. Private ski tun w/chair Hfl. dub house w/ Indoor hasted pod. Magnlft- cant view! Call 809-799-9318 aft. 6 pm. If no answer 609- 8 8 M 9 6 4 _______________

POCONO VACATION home — Clean, new. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, dishwasher, washer/ dryer, lake, Iannis court, in- door/ouidoor pod & health spa no extra charge Call a l­ter 6pm 609-443-5646.

POCONOS — Big Bass Lake New home. 3 bdrm. 2 bath, sleeps to. Irpic. pod lade, skiing, indoor pool. Week, weekend rental. 609-448- 0751.

l u v eF i n a n c i n g

$89f990 - 5105,990c o lt - M . - i t i 9 . 3 2 5 0 op en 7

N A S S A U S T R E E T OFFICE S P A C E

UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY

-1600S Q .F T . EXECUTIVE SUITE

■WILL DIVIDE

ELEGANTLY APPOINTED

FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED

PARKING ON PREMISES

- CONVENIENT TO BANKS & RESTAURANTS

$10 PER SQ. FT. NET UNFURNISHED

CALL FOR APPT. (6 0 9 ) 921-1754 or 921-6590

REALTOR

PRINCETON — On a quiet cul-de-sac convenient to schools, shopping and the University. This most attractive 5 BR, 3 bath home has everything needed for comfortable and esthetic living. $195,000.

Linda Carnevale Aniuta Blanc

Lois Fee Hazel Stix

Carolyn Hills Lenore Barish

Jeanette Leiggi Anne Hoffmann

Roslynn Greenberg Laraine LaPlaca Bender

LARGE, GRACIOUS HOME ON WOODED CUL DE-SAC IN EAST WINDSOR 4 bedrooms, 2'/r baths, beautiful custom fireplace and other special features. SI04,900.

DOWNTOWN PRINCETON 2 BEDROOM VICTORIAN CONDO 1 block trom Palmer Square. 2 full baths, off-street parking, private garden. Interior has spacious and open feeling. $135,500.

We have other condominiums and homes from, $65,000.We are members of the Mercer County Board of Realtors Multiple Listing Service and we can show you any property on the market.

tBl*rinceton Crossroads K(*alty, Inc.

:142 Nassau Street (C o rne r H a rrison I • P rin t eton • I ’ a rk in on r lo t.

CALI ANYTIME 609-924-4677 OPEN 7 DAYS

HOME HUNTER’S GUIDEWeek ol January 2 0 - 2 2 , 1982 15-B

MORTGAGES AVAILABLE TO

QUALIFIED BUYERSWeichert A S K A B O U T O U R EQ U ITY ADVANCE

PRO G RAM 'tssss r

All designated Open H ouse properties wlO be shown th is Sunday from 1 toSP.M .

lilSlilr

FIN A N C IN G...by OMmer, 3/30 ym r payout, plus 2 points, is avaiiaWe to tha qualified buyar of this young 3 bedroom Condo In HiHsborou^. Tudor styling aocents the exterior. $69,900. HB-SAOe.

Hflbbofough Office201-874-8100

FINE FEATURES...such as sunken living room, front and f«ar balconies, slate entry and thermo- pane windows highlight this young, 2 bedroom Condo conveniently located in Hillsborough. C62.000 HB-8438

HUlaborough Office 201-874-8100

EXECUTIVE RANCHAttractive nome in a family neighbon hood of Washington Twp. is ctoae to train for easy commuting. Three bed­room home has 2V living room with fireplace and lovely tre ^ grounds. $82,900- PR-8033-

Princeton Office609-683.0300

CONTEMPORARYCONDO

13V«% financing for 30 years is avail­able to the qualified buyer of this young 2 bedroom, bhck front Condo in Hills­borough Twp. Has full basement, gas heat and 2V2 baths. $64,900 HB-8362.

HiUsborous^ Office201-874-8100

BROOKSIDESQUARE

VA/FHA finanang is available to the qualified buyer of a fine Townhouse conveniently located in Hilteborough. Enjoy all the benefits of home owner­ship,

HlUaborough Office 201-874^100

A F A M D .Y H O M E

Fine 4 bedroom Colon­ial, in a family oriented area of Belle Mead, of­fers all the creature com­forts such as family room with fireplace and gas heat $106,900. PR-8099.

Princeton Office609-683-0300

O W N E RF IN A N C IN G

...is avaHable to the quetified buy^' of this prime commercial Victorian lo­cated in the viUage of Cranbury. Per feet ter live-in professional Lease/pur- chase option offered. $149,900. PfffiOO/,

P rinceton Office 609-68S0300

LUXURY LIVING...can be yours in this desirablo West AmweH C^em porary. On one acre, its three levels include 3 bcKjrooms, 3 baths and walls of windows. Home is newly buitt. $170.000. PR-8068.

Princeton Office609-683-0300

O W N E RH N A N C I N G

... is available to thequali- fied buyer of this beauti­fully decorated end unit Condo in a desirable East Windsor commun­ity. Enjoy convenient, maintenance free living. $45,900. PR-8103.

Princeton Office 609^834)300

INCOME PROPERTYSuppiement your income with this 2 family home set on a quiet tree lined cul de sac in Hopewell. Two bedroom apts o^separate9asheat$127,500 PR-8086.

Princeton Office609-683-0300

LANDSCAPED GROUNDS

. With many mature trees, surrounds this Hillsborough Ranch. You’ll appre­ciate spacious rooms Possible owner financing lo qualified buyer. Price re­duced to $ 100.000. H&6386.

Hillsborough Office 201-874-8100CUSTOM

CONTEMPORARYOwnsr a u M s d financing Is avail­able to the qualified buyer ol this ex- ceptionat Titusville home featuring 13 rooms which include physical fitness room, office and library, $269,000. PR-8104.

Princeton Office609-6834)300

------------- _ .

WeichertR e a lto rs

• OPFlCCS rtHtOUOHOi/T t t t w j rA t tY •All offeiings aie sutnect to ertofs and omissions

WEST WINDSOR-

O N A C U l-D E S A C $134,500.And dose to schools and the tram, this immaculate 5-bedroom colonial is just waiting for your family. You wiii love the fireplace in winter and the lovely screened porch next spring Owner will assist In financing.

— HIGHTSTOWN—

NEAR THC PARK $72,500.Comfortable Li-level with 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths. The lot has plenty of room for a garden next spring. First floor family room.

— LAWRENCE—

LAWRENCE CONTEMPORARY $229,000.Situated on 2.5 wooded acres with deck on 2 sides to enjoy the scenery. Interior features stone fireplace in den. Modern kitchen, 4 bedrooms, 2'/z baths. Lots of glass, 2-zoned heat and much more.

FORMER MODEL HOME $95,000.With many extras. Large colonial-style home with double-size family room plus finished basement. Low maintenance cedar exterior with lovely redwood deck. OWNER MUST SELL,

-HOPEWELL-

I y 4

ASK ABOUT OUR TRXDl IN/ GIMRANTEED SALES PLAN

RAISED HEARTH $112,500.Fireplace in the comfortable family room of this lovely low-maintenance home. Quiet dead-end street, yet near shopping. Delightful screened porch. Extra room tor office or den, SPECIAL FINANCING,

- H A M IL T O N -BEAUTIFUL RANCHER $43,900.in a convenient area of Hamilton Square. Family room, wall-to-wall carpeting, formal dining room, 3 bedrooms.

SUPER BUY $79,900.in desirable Langree West. Four bedrooms, 2 'A baths, family room with FIREPLACE, On a cul-de-sac for privacy.

UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS $B9,900.This excellent Hamilton Township home is just watting for your family. Great floor plan with extra large living room set apart from the rest of the house. Carpeting throughout 4 bedrooms, 2'/^ baths.

TWIN RIVERS IN — EAST WINDSOR TWP.—

BEDROOM PLUS DEN $42.900.Condominium in desirable Lake Con­dominiums. Earthtone carpet throughout, enclosed balcony, all appliances. Main­tenance fee includes heat.

UPGRADED CARPET $44,900.And appliances are but two of the features in this well-maintained 3-bedroom 2 ’/i bath townhouse. Carpeted playroom in basement, many extras. ‘

MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION $75,900Balance of $34,000. approx, at SVa %, PITI $414 available on this beautifully decorated 3-bedroom townhouse. Remodeled kitchen, partly finished basement.

BEST OF TWO WORLDS $74,900.Reap the benefits of townhouse living and still have room to spread out in this spacious 4-bedroom, 2% bath split level model. The professionally finished basement and patio are perfect for en­tertaining.

EAST WINDSOR

•O m C E LLI RANCH $11,500.Large dining room is but one of the many features in this popular model. Three bedrooms, 2'h baths, finished basement, 2-car garage, wall to-wall carpeting. SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE.

WANT A LARGE HOME S7B.900For under $80,000? This Cranbury Manor split colonial has 2^h baths and large rooms. Close to community park. Lot big enough for a garden.

5 BEDROOMS $102,900.Plus lots of extra room. Fully finished basement playroom and office, first floor laundry room PLUS 16'x32‘ inground pool and fenced yard

— MONROE—

ClEARM O O K RANCHER U T . T C O .

Aluminum siding and brick make the exterior of this condominium main­tenance-free. There are 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths plus a 2-car garage. All ap­pliances. Adults 48 and over.

R/CHARDSONR e a l t o r s

e a s t ^ s o r

4 4 B -5 0 0 0

PRINCETON JCT.7 9 B -5 8 0 0 I H O m ^^ F O H U V in C -

HAM ILTON SQUARE

Resort PropertiesVACATION Timesharing — Any 1 week/year. 1 block from Wakiki beachfront. 28 yrs. RCI Exchange. Suite lor 4 with kitchen. $4700. 609- 448-0748 pm

SWITZERLAND — Beautiful 2 BR a p t o v e r lo o k in g Frerrch. Italian & Swiss Alps Close to ski lifts, $440/week Fly to Genova, round trip for $500. 609-924-3510.

SKIERS WANTED — Feb. 7- 13 Stowe, VI $60. Days 609- 452-2950.

VERO BEACH FLORIDA — On beach, ocean view. 2 -r a.available lor season or off season. Pool. 609-924-1557.

SKI VERMONT — Rent 4 BH, 2 bath ski lodge. Fire­place. full kit. Excell, location 609-921-1736

LONG BEACH ISLAND - Haven Beach. N.J One block from ocean. New. 2 sty. 2.100 S.F., 4 bdnn, 2'h baths. I '/ r car gar. Liv rm, kitchen, din rm, don, laundry, vinyl siding Elec heal part him. 13'/a% financing avail. Brokers pro- lecled 609-799-2828 609- 737-3212 nights. $179,500.

POCONO Ski Renlal — near Big Bouldei $200 full week. $100/w eekend. 609-882- 8152. __________

SKI VERMONT — House tor rent in village ol Jamaica Ten mins lo Strallon $400 per wk(Inc. all utils) Call Denton, 202-332-6753.

HILTON HEAD. S C —New 2 bdmi/2 bath condo. Golf, free tennis, pool. $200 - $325/ wk Call 609-924-5560

POCONOS — 3 bedroom chalet near Camelback, Avail wkends, mid-week & weekly Call 201-297-1349.

BusinessProperties

I RETAIL SPACE — at Mon$- gomery Shopping Center on Rt.206 Mini-mail within large store will lease space and provide sales personnel for absentee m eri^ani. Ideal for second outlet or part time re* tffillaf, $250 per month. J.T Boyer Realty, Realtor 609- 921-1805.

OFFICE SPACE for rent — 3 room office on 3rd floor at 40 Witherspoon St., Princeton $400 mo incl. a/c & utils. 1 yr, lease w/option lo renew 609- 924-3794 aft. 6 pm.

PRINCETON AREA EAST WINDSORStart the New Year off right by locating your store or office in this at tractive 13 acre Shop ping Plaza featuring A h P and Shoetown, situated at the high traffic in­tersection of Routes 130 & 571 (Princeton-Hightstown Rd.) 1,500 to 35,000 sq. ft. avail, imm. at reasonable rentals

Rachlin & Co.Since 1905RtAliOftS MANAUIMINI DIVISION 17 Academy Si Newark, N \ (j/102 i20l) 622-7890 Biokers Invited

JUST LISTED — 5bedroom. 1 'h bath Raised Ranch with full wall brick fireplace in family room, central air, ‘/z-acre lot, 2

r garage. Located in small town approx. 20 minutes from Princeton , ,

............A»king $B4,900.

HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL ■Corner property in East W in dso r, F inanc ing available to qualified buyer. Possible 6 units.

$29,900.OLDER HOME on 3.48acres in East Windsor . . -

$49,900.

30 ACRES in East Windsor Township. Financing available to qualified buyer . . . . A tk in f 13,000/ecre.

3 HANOYAAAN SPECIALSon 1.2 acres in East W indsor. Presently rented. ......... BOTH FOR 137,900.

R U IID IN C LOT inM illstone Township. Approx. 1 acre $15,000.

S WOODED, resrdentialfy zoned 2 % -acre building lots in Roosevelt (near Hightstown). Ideal for solar home, south sloping

|27,900.-$32.900.

Sp ' * n da g e n c y

A L S U S S M A N

[ Q 896 9300

BusinessProperties

PRIVATE o ffice , or desk space Reception & tete- phone answered. Profes­s ion a l space . P rince ton address. Secretarial on pre­mises. 12x13. $250 PO Po < V. Rocky Hill, NJ 0B553.

NASSAU STREET Of ice Space for rent— One 403 sq ft. office which can be d vided In half, $550 per month, avail, immed. One 200 sq. f . office, avail. March 1st. $f'50. For details call Thomp'>on Lar>d Co., Realtors. 609-321-7655.

STORES For R^mt — Mer- corville. N.J. E/kSt State St. Ext. heavily traveled area, surrounded by nomes 8 apts. Call 609-586-J611.

OFFICE SPACE — Prince­ton area m fjling address. Up to 1300 so ft $1000/mo, in­cludes utlli. Occupancy Feb. 1st. 609-r<2 (-2800

BusinessProperties

O.'fE-MAN Office — Indi- . idual office in modem office comptex Secrelailet & tefe- phone enswering eervice in same space Reply lo Box # 0 4 2 4 8 c /o P r in c e to n Packet

BusinessProperties

PRINCETON VICINITY — 17.000 eq.ti. office epeoe. WW divide. $11 gioee renW immediate occupMwy. C a l Eric Bram $ Co. 201-238- 3500/Fteehor

WAREHOUSE SPACENear Exit 8A N.J. Turnpike

Available immediately.12,000 sq. ft., 14 ft. ceiling,

60 ft. clear span, 2 tailgate doors,1 door at grade. $2.70 gross.

7500 sq. ft. light manufacturing, to ft. ceiling, tailgate lodlng, $2.20 gross.

Ca«: F . S haak, E ric B ram & C o ., R eaN ora 201-238-3500__________

O n ly 5 H o m e s L e f t ! $ 1 0 8 , 5 0 0f r o m

T ra d itio n a l C o lon ia l s ty lin g enhances each S tarw ood Ham let hom e These luxury m odels feature 4 bedroom s, 2 V2 baths, firep laces, w a ll-to -w a ll ca rpe ting , and 2-car garages — on love ly w ooded lots!

1 2 V 2 % f in a n c in gAVAILABLE TO QUALIFIED BUYERS

Models Open Daily Except Mon. & Tues 10 a nt, to 5 p.ni. / (609) 896-1660

DIHECTIONS From Pnnciton south on 81 206 to Frtnklm Corner Road Turn right, then bear left (500 feel pall Dell) onto Denow Road to Stutwood Hamlet.

r1 ml c:\ijrvjoo<i muoo'^rash Bebaie Coupu

■ iVO BrokBf

cs*urvffif^I I* # I

HILTONREALTY CO. OF PRINCETON INC.

COLON IAL with a master bedriKrm suite and a Rilting rwrni amt bath plus 4 additional ietdrooms. Paneled family r-<>m win fireplace. Spacious modern kitchen with breakfast arei

$ I 1,1.1 rUU.

;

NEW SIX BKnR(K)M COLONIAi- In, Imlerl arc central air, brick front with aluminum siding a'd Anderson windows. Deck off rear of honsr>, full basement 2 car atlacher) heavily treed lot. $1M,WU.

2-STOKY c o l o n ia l o n I ACKL W(X)I)LD LOT. En-, trance foyer, modern kilcher dining rra.m, l i v i n g room 21 x I.V/2 , den with fireplace, r«W.sxl deck off den, “"''*7 *bedr.Kim, 21/s baths. Full hacment. 2 car garag.-. $169,bUO.

In a beautiful treerl sellio in Montgomery Iwp. A 6 b e d r ^ Colonial with over ,3,(KRI»ti- hving space. ! ^ n y extra..Twin heating and air coilHioning units. (V ner w.ll fPV* a qualified buyer. ’

2 BFDK(K)M RAN< 1 IN FRINCETON. Ideal for a . young couple or relir Bus txansporUUon. 167.000.

RENTA HOUSES AND APARTMENTSPrincato fl «m I $ • * * • ( V iN IN « $ AND W H K IN O $ CA U

M arcar 8 $a m a ria t Co*’ *y M l$AH IIio tad Indapandaf X rakart W illiam $d iw ata lar, T21 -.$4 1

* A ia C .M o w a ry . $$$-1471(Notionw irfa R a fa rrr$*rv tca )

609-921-6f)60 194 Nassau StH i l t o n B ld g , 2rd Floor

HorvoyR u#a. 20I-3S$-$$17 Emma King. 40$-7$$-14$4

Pffif Hiy 924>3923

HOME HUNTER’S GUIDEl(>-B W eek of Ja n u a ry 2 0 - 2 2 , 1982

BusinessProperties

OFFICE SPACE — Available 450*6CK) sq ft, in research park Call De»dre Cook 609- 921-3770

OFFICE SPACE — tn Prince­ton Total 2700 sq ft avail­able. Sublease l-3 years or more. IndlvKlual offtcei «n<J or suites available. Conve­n ie n t loca tion . U nlim ited park ing R eception area could be made available Competitive pricirtg. Call 609- 924-9060 for appointment

OFFICE SPACE — Prince­ton acdress on Alexander Rd , ' a mi from Rt 1. 2200 sq ft (■ $12 per includes alt utilities Avail, immediately. J T. Boyer Reatlv, Realtor 609-92-'-l805.

BusinessProperties

WAREHOUSE — 4,000 to 40.000 square feat. Loading Ducks Located 1 mile from center of Prmceten on Route 1 at Washington & Alexander Roads Long or short term lease Princeton Business Park 609-921-3150 or 452- 1234-

PRMCETON JCT.One or Two Room Office For Rent in Prof. Bidg. Utilities. Janitor K Reception Svcs. In­cluded Tel, Secy Svcs Avail.

Call Mrs. Walsh 60»-799>9595

200 SQ FT — office space in Nassau St. complex. $200 mo. - parking. Thompson LarxJ Co.. Reattor. 609-921- ^655

MANVILLE NORTHSIDE

2 Story colonial, 5 bedrooms, bath and half. L"«ing room, dining room, kitchen, full basement. Modern kitchen with dishwasher.1 car garage. Many other extras. 968.000.

fMANVILLE WESTON SECTIONConverrient location is this 2 family consisting of full basement, 4 room apartment & bath 1st floor, 4 room apartment & bath 2nd floor,2 car garage. All aluminum siding on a land­scaped 75 x 100 lot. $73,000.

MANVILLE NORTHSIDE Under construction huge 2 family duplex. 4 room apartments, 2 car garage. Call for details.

M ANVILLE NORTHSIDEImmediate occupancy. 7 room 2 story cokjnial 2 'ull baths. 3 bedrooms, 1 car garage, with many other extras. $79,900.

MANVILLE JU S T OFF M AIN STREETCustom built 5 room ranch, featuring living room, kitchen 2 bedrooms, rec, ropm, 1 bath, full basement. 1 car attached garage on a landscaped 75 x 120 parcel. $69,900.

MANVILLEBuild,ng lots available Will build to suit. Call for details.

MANVILLE CAPE COD4 bedrooms, liv, rm., kit., rec. rm. 1 baths, full basement. 1 car gar. 75 x 100 lot. Many other extras. $69,000.

MANVILLE CONVENIENT LO CATIO N <2 story colonial. 3 bdrms 1 bath din. rm. llv. rm. kit . full basemxsn-'., 1 car gar. on a huge 80x 100 parcel * $65,000.

Chameski f t BongiomoR ra lto r , bw uranca and A fip ra ia w37 So. Main St., ManviUe

(201)722-0070Evening Hours on Tues., Thurs. and Fri.

LM a ■««>. 201 722-S624

BusinessProperties

L IG H T IN T U S T R IA L — 4,000 to 40,fX)0 Square Feat. Located 1 r iite from center of P rinceton on Route 1 at W ashington & Alexander Roads. Lor>g or short term lease Princeton Business Park, 609-921-3150 or 452 1234______________________

TWm RIVERS CENTER ROUTE 33

The best modem office and retail space 700 to 2000 sq ft ProfH from both community and highway trade. Rents start at $7 25/sq ft. plus ex­cellent terms. Take a look and then phone 609-392- 3062

OFFICE SPACE — avail.. Rt 27. Kend Park. Call Danis Realtors 201-297-2822

PRIME Professionat — 1st fkx>r oftK« space in Kendall Park on Route 27 Superior business location with expo­sure on busy highway. Near shopping center, doctors, lawyers, banks, etc. Large auto parking facilities 609- 587-4909.

O F F iC tb — Princeton, 145 Witherspoon St, 1-2-3 rooms from $150-mo. includes utili­ties i use of conference room. Secy sve avail. J.T. Boyer Realty 609-921-1805OFFICE FOR RENT — 250 to 1200 sq. ft. avail. Modem carpeted office located on Main St, Penninqton All utili­ties plus a/c, irtoluded. CiJI owner 609-737-2800.

OFFICE SPACE Available — 652 Whitehead Rd.. Lawr­ence Township 609-586- 7126 or 695-0011.

SINGLE ROOM — In Nassau St office building - 200 sq. ft $180 mo includes heat

RENO ALL-COOK A COMPANY

Realtor* 609'924-0326

BiMillMS

M ANVILLE12 year-old 5 room ranch,1 % baths, full basement, nas heat, fenced yard. 50 X 100 landscaped lot. Mortgage financing available to qualified buyer

JOSEPH BIELANSKI AGENCY

ff6 o lfo r

212 S o u th M a in St.,

M o n v i l U N . J.

2 0 1 - 725-1945 E v « » . 359 3 245

MEMBEff MULTiPlE LiSr/NG SfaviCE

A D L E R M A N C L I C K1 5 Spring St., Prin c«to n

924-0401 • S86-10209 ' Realtors & In tu ro rs Sine* 1927CooetteC*

Eodl tied Corpef Office i f Independenfly owned and operofed.

SPECIAL F IN /^C IN G s available to a qualified buyer on this lovely. well-iTiaii\ained 4 B R home just listed in East Windsor. Family Room w fn^piace large eat-in Kitchen, Central Air, and 2 car garage

S97.900.

rilGHTSTOWNNEW HOMES on v jo o \ backing up Peddie Lake. 4 B/R's, 2 ' baths. Fam Rm., Ly, , .loom, full basement & Gas heat

$79,900.8 ROOM, 1'/2 BATH O D E R 'S LIVING QTRS. & 2 excellentrental apts, plus first floe y usional office, $200,000.CO LO NIAL W PROF. A ^ T N. - Sep entrances, L/R, D.'R, 4 B R s 1 '/2 Baths and 8 ■ y-i professional add'n. $92,900.

WASHINGTON TWP.CUSTOM 2 story w 5 B R s. LV, D R, eat-in Kitchen, Fam. Rm w marble fireplace & wet bar baths, full basement w sauna. Owner Financing avar to qu. Sed buyer S164,900.

r o o s fVe l tS M A LL TOW N LIVING Single .^Vlory on '/? acre wooded lot L R , eal-in Kitchen, 2 B R's, Baln\ enclosed porch & garage,

S51.900RANCH with 3 B R s, new Texture 'll exterior. Kitchen Dinette combination, bath front and rear p o i a n d attached garage.

\ $58,900.c r a n b u r A

C LEAR BR O O K ADULT CONDOS - 'L n t r y Club lifestyle foryoungsters 48 yrs & up GoK Arnm ing, tennis, etc. Many models available St'ltSOO. to $79,500.REN TAL - CLEARBRO O K 2 8 'R Con<4 in adult community Washer, Dryer, Refrigerator and all condiViinium privileges in­cluded- \ 5 5 5 0 , per mo.

EAST WINDSOR \TWIN RIVERS condo - L R, eal-in Kitchen \ B R's. 2 baths. Laundry Room, Storage Area and carport \ $55 ,900 .

OFFICE SPACE RENT — canlral Nm m u St Snwi or larg* aval, now, tow rant. Talaphona tacratarlal aar- vfcat availabla. 609-921 • 0400.

(2) 18x14 AIRY — rwwiy car- patad. paintad connaettng rooms. $150 tor doubta win­dows. $175 for tripla with lar^ ckMat. UtHs indudad. rafdg.. waiting room, aacrata- rial spaca. copiar. storaoa avaN Exoslant tor naw buai- r>es8 BIK. 609-921-9607

HIGHTSTOWN — For I 1300 ft professional otfica space in town location. Off street parking. Ramodeled colonial. Irving M. Graan- berg. Broker 609-446-8282

PANELLED OFFICE Suites— 450 sq ft. offices and lar­ger. Ewing Twp. Modem air conditioned office building. All custodial services. Ample parking. Ideal location for profaeaional practicas. Mod­est rentats 609-771-0033.

FOR RENT — Nassau Street newty rertovated office. 900 sq ft. (can be dhnded). base­ment storage, 4 car parkirig in rear, w/w carpeting, suitabla for professional use. Call 609-921-9493

OFFICE SPACE — 1280 Sq Ft. unfinished in new office/ light industrial bidg. located in W est Windsor. Immediate a v a i la b i l i t y . $ 2 6 6 'm o . Finishmg at tenants expense Call 609-799-2828_________

R O B B IN S V ILLE , N .J. — nearTpk. 7A. In 500-1000 sq ft. units suitable for travel agency, insurance office, manufacturers rep. storage, etc. Call between 9-4pm. 609-259-7333.

OFFICE SPACE GROUND LEVEL $10 SQ. FT. NET in­cludes all utilities. r>o extras. From 300 to 4000 sq. ft.

SECOND FLOOR1 room $200. mo.5 rm turn suite $850 mo

W ARREN PLAZA W EST CENTER

Route 130, East Windsor 609-448-6506

SINGLE OFFICE BUILDING— storage garages available also, Pennington Rd Tren­ton Near 1-95 and airport. Available Nov. 1st.' 609-737- 8282 or 609-882-3365

PRIVATE OFFICE — plus common area for secretary in professional building. High­way location in East Windsor $27Smo Van Hise Agency, 609-448-4250.

HIGHTSTOWN — 3900 sq. ft of new prime office space on Main St. with ample parkir>g. Suitable for professional or medical use. J.T Boyer Real­ty, Realtor 609-921-1806

OFFICE SPACE — Pnnee- ton & vicinity, several spaces from 500 to 2.000 sq ft. Suit­ab le fo r p ro fe ss io n a l or medical use J T Boyer Real­ty 609-921-1805.

OFFICE SPACE — for lease2 offices with sot storage area and private toilet. Heat in­cluded On site parking Mi­nutes from luinpike exit #8. Call 609-448-3115 after 1pm or 201-297-4200, 9-5pm

NASSAU STREET STOREFRONT SHOP

For Rent, 195 Nassau S t, $900 mo. For details call Thompson Land Co., Real-tofs. 609-921 -7655, _____FOR RENT — Montgomery Twp. Rt. 206. New office space. Paneling & carpeting Heating included 4lX)-500 sq. feet. $290 - $310. 201-359- 5837,__________

OFFICE — 1,000 to 40,000 Square Feet. Located 1 mile from center of Princeton on Route 1 at Washington & Ale­xander Roads. Princeton Business Park 609-921- 3150 or 452-1234.

OFFICE SPACE — for prof, or medical use. 1300 sq. ft. or 650 9q ft. Stalely setting. Be­tween New Brunswick and Princeton on Rt 27 Ample parking on premises. 201- 821-6810

InvestmentTrenton

APARTMENT BUILDING6 unit Tudor apartment build­ing in Trenlon is newly re­modeled and in excellent cond ition Substantia l in­come potential with energy saving furnace and otf-slreel parking $77,500. PR-8038 FINANCING AVAILABLE to qualified buyer Call 609-683- 0300, REALTOR Princeton Office

WEICHERT

PRINCETON BORO Duplex — side/side, separate gas furnaces, insulated, could be condominimized. or dcxrtors o fT ice , on H a rr is o n S t, $13,0OO'year income, price $138 000. Owner 609-921- 6612

InvestmentCOMMERCIAL ZONE IN PNMCETON - 4 apwtiTMnt VuHding phis 3 bsdroon) car- rlagaiwiM. $185,000

Pnnoii$|T%iiM$raM8

B0»-W '4B77 - ^

Real Estate Wanted

5 BEORM House Wntd. — in Princeton Ivy East. West Windsor. Principles only. 609-448>0191

HOUSE — Princeton Boro or Twp Prirtoipies only Prefer Colonial, expanded ranch, larger spHt. 3-4 SR, 1 V- -2V baths, FR or den, or space for addition of same Location important. Professional cou- pie, NYC commute, $160'sor higher vrilh owner financirtg. 201'447>4865 eves, or reply box #04232 c/o Princeton Packet.

HOUSE OR CONDO — in Princeton Boro. Fiexibie on price ($100,000 range) A number of rooms, etc. Call evenings 809-921 *2476 or write Box 1515, Prmceton, NJ 06540.

Garages / StDrage far Rent

3 STORAGE BINS available at Storage Bam in Lawrence- ville. Call 609-924-1882

PRINCETON Area Garage for rent — 2 spaces Days 609-984-5585, eves 921- 6573

GARAGE — for rent, Dayton area 201-329-6606.

STO RAG E SPACE FOR RENT — HIGHTSTOW N AREA. 609-440-0325

Land fer Sale

HAM ILTON TOW N- SHIP. — Three lo ts ac- cross fr<5m Mercer County's 3,000 acre park on Hughes Drive. 25,000 sq. ft. and more. Owner wants to dis­pose of these quickly. All utili­ties and fronting on Hughes Drive Finaiicing for a qual­ified buyer

30HN SIMONE REALTY REALTOR (609) 882-1105

50 ACRE TREE farm, north Lawrence Twp., Princeton address, terms available for qualified buyer $9,000 per acre, principals onjy. 609- 096-0321

A v ar iety^OF LOTS

HOPEW ELL — O w n e r financing is offered to the qualified buyer of this 1.87 acre lot in a convenient ex­ecutive area, Perc and soil log completed $45,900. PR- 8011.

MONTGOMERY — Beauti ful, prestigious 1 - acre lots are located in the Skillman Bedens Brook area near country club. $85,000 and $90,000 Pfl-8058-0057

WEST AMWELL — Set in as e m i- ru ra l a rea of fin e homes, this 2.12 acre lot is bordered by trees. Close to main highway. $31,900 PR- 8069.

TERMS AVAILABLE toqualified buyer Call 609-683- 0300 REALTOR Princeton Office.

WEICHERT

BEAUTIFULLY WOODED — acreage for sale in Princeton Twp. by owner. SVa acres w ith 1 Va a c re z o i n q . $160,000. Financing avail- abte Call609-921-871 Batter 6pm.

BUILDERS’ SPECIAL -Priced to sell! Land for de­velopment. Zoning allows Vd & acre lots. Wooded area with city utilities available. Approx 22 acres located in Lawrence & Ewing Twps. $9500 per acre.

PRINCETON LAND — What nicer way to start the new year than by planning the house of your dreams? And what better place to build that house than Bouvant Drive, right oft Stuart Hoad — Even in this bad market, nationally, our lots are selling! Only two teft in the first section — and they are available now in the mid-eighties with sewer, wa­ter. electricity and gas.

PARDEE ROAD — A quiet cul-de-sac off Lambert Drive, a lovely wooded 3.47 acre lot in Princeton's beautiful west­ern section. Let us show you where you can build your ewn architect-designed house. $90,000 I

Princoton Crossroads Raslty, Realtor 509-924-4677 1

DOGWOOD HILL LOTS - - Princeton Twp, cluster. 1 acre with sewer, water and underground utilities. 609- 924-0908

Land for Sale2 ACRE WOODED LOT — perkad. ready to build. Lo­cated on Epst Mountain Rd., HillaborougO TVnp. $29,500. 201-874-6197 or 201-369- 7119 eves.

WOODED 2.9 acres subdi- vtdad kX. Country location In Msofoa Twp. Convenient to 8A NJ Turnpike $19,000.

10 ACRES — in Cranbury Twp. Approx. 6 acres tillable. M illstone RIvar. Extendtsd privacy. Subject to subdivi­s ion. $62,000. Additional acreage available

TWO 1 ACRE LOTS -Cranbury Twp $22,000 4 $25,000 ea. Subject to subdi­vision.

STULTS REALTY CO.

37 N. MNn St.. Cranbury, N.J. 609-39SO444

Eves: 609-655-1881

East BrunswickPRIME PARCEL

44 acres in East Brunswick is now available featuring road frontage, fine location plus a re s to ra b le fa rm h o u s e . $7,500 per acre PR-8027 TERMS AVAILABLE to qual­ified buyer. Call 609-683- 0300. REALTOR. Princeton Office

WEICHERT

3 ACRES — 8 mi. north of center of Princeton. South­e as t exposure , sp lend id view, percolation approved, heavily wooded, $43,000 Terms avail For appointment call 609-924-7034,

WOODED LOT — 2,3 acres, zoned residential. Exclusive E. Windsor area. $36,000. 609-448-9462 after 9pm Days 212-960-1078.

PRINCETON — 1.6 acre, heavily wooded lot on Au­tumn Hill Rd. Perc approved. $56,500 J.T Boyer Realty. 609-921-1305

Real Estate for Sale

PRINCETON Real Estale — Seeking home buyer to find, purchase & d iv ide large house 609-924-2655

12'/?% Financing available' — Charming 4 BR detached colonial 2’/2 baths, beautiful­ly finished basement. All ap­pliances included Spacious '. 4 acre corner lot in Twin Riv­ers. Creative financing and many extras. No brokers please 609-448-6780.

D E S IR A B LE P la insboro location — 4 bdrm colonial, family room w fireplace, ex­cellent landscaping By own­er. Call 609-799-4018.

PENNINGTON By Owner — charming 110 year old Colo­nial. 8 rooms, 2'/? bath, 3-* bedrooms, liv. rm w fpl, fam rm,. screened porch, Ige yard In town walk to every­thing Preferred financing $79,500, 609-737-2067.

REDUCED for quick sale — Ewing Bi-Levei near Trenton State. Let's talk 609-654- 8164______________________

WHY PAY MORE — Ewing Twp. Cape Cod. You must see this lovely brick & stucco house with its large walk-tn cedar closets, finished cellar w s to n e f ire p la c e , w w carpeting throughout |usl to mention a few This house is situated on a 116x102 ft lot that IS completely fenced in It IS priced to sell at $59,900 This house is being offered through the Jake Woolum Real Estate Agency, 18 N. Main St., Pennington. N.J Call 609-737-1550, a fter hours 737-8261, 737-1476,

SOMETHING SPECIAL

Neshanic Sourtand Moun­tains. Privacy & seclusion on 2.2 wooded acres Liv rm,. kitchen, full bath, laundry room, extra large bdrm., 2 car garage, deck. Central air, wood stove, lots of extras $79,000. 201-369-4592.

IMMACULATE East Windsor Showplace — Think ahead for Spring occupancy. Priced in the $80's. Call 609-448- 4434 after 6

TWIN RIVERS — Split level, tow nhouse, lake view, 2 bdrms. 1'/? baths, finished fam. rm. no-wax kitchen floor, up-graaed carpel, walk to bus, shopping & rec area 7V?% assumable mortgage. P rincipa ls only. 609-443- 6283

SUPER 4-BR l.h — 7V?% mlg' PLUS up to $20,000 2nd mtg from SELLER ’Can you qualify? Call today!__________

H O M E S O f Q U A U T V

R IA L TO X S

_ 4 43 1313

Real Estate for Sale

LAW R ENC E TWP - by owner, 4 bdm>. split, fam. rm.. liv. rm.. din. rm., 1 full and 2 > baths, a/c, gas heat, garage, screened porch. Low 70 s. 609-883-0198

ARE YOU GETTING the real estate brokerage advice you deserve? — Should you sell or hold? Is it rtecessary to go bankrupt? tn New Jersey why not check with us? Throck­morton Realty Co.. Conaul- ta r ^ Advisors - i>togotiator$, 561 M lllto w n Rd,. North Brunswick. NJ 08902 201- 249-5543,

LOW DOWN PAYMENT Immac. 3 bdrm split T/T) end unit. Lovely beige tone decor. SELLER offers pvt financing to qualified buyer.

CRANBURY CONDO — 3 bdrm. 2 bath, w/w carpeting, centra! air. enclosed patio, 2 car garage w opener Near clubhouse. 609-655-3928.

PRINCETON Jet — Custom built 3 BR ranch. Livingrm w/ fireplace, diningrm, den, 2 car garage, full basement, near RR Station. $87,500. Call 609-799-3409.

FranklinUNLIMITED POTENTIAL

Two story 4 room home, circa 1847, is on a large lot on a main road with city water in Franklin. Represents a good investm ent opportunity at $29 ,900 , P R -8085, 12% owner financing with $6,000 down to qualified buyer. Call 609-683-0300. REALTOR Princeton Office.

WEICHERT

INTEREST RATE R O LL­BACK? — You'll think so' 9 '-4% mtg’ PLUS very gener­ous 2nd mtg from SELLER for this 3-BP I h. Can you quality? Call today!

HOMES OF QUAUTY REAITORS

4 4 1 1 3 1 *-

COLONIAL LAKESLAND —s e c t io n o f L a w re n c e 3 b e d ­room ranch. Owner will fi­nance with low down pay­ment. $79,000- 609-396- 1299 or 396-5063

M E R CER VILLE — Moro Estates, 4 bdrm Colonial, w w fireplace, storms & screens, many extras. Must sell Best oiler Assumable mortgage. Call after 5pm 609-890-0517.

STILL PAYING RENT? You deserve a new way of life at convenient Windsor Mill, 2 BR. 2 bath condo, lovely de­cor Make offer. _ _ _ _

HOMES OF QUAUTY

____ 443-1313

CONDOMINIUM in Clear- brook — 2 BR. 2 baths, kit w all appliances, 2 car garage, enclosed patio, super secur­ity 201-234-0004

ROSSMOOR RESALES — Elegant, energy efficient con­dominium homes in friendly adult community with golf, tennis, swimming, clubhouse and a multitude of recreation­al groups. Our listings have 2 bedrooms. 2 baths and range from $51.500-$72,900, Call C o u n try H e r ita g e R ea i Estate, Realtors. 609-799- 8181.

BE OWNER — Plainsboro, 2 story Colonial. 1 acre wooded lot. 4 BR., L.R., 0 R., Den w F.P . Country Kitchen w built in b rick Bar B Q , F.P., Finished Basement w F.P., Rear deck. Inground pool, 2 Car garage Low Taxes, F inancing by owner 13% Price $160,000.00 By Appt. only 609-799-3818

CHARMING Cape Cod — in desirable Glendale section of Ewing Twp. 4 bdrms, 1’/? baths, liv. rm w fireplace, dm. rm, eat-in kitchen Hardwood floors, large walk-in cedar closet, enclosed back porch, attached garage Cent, air, exc, cond $72,500 Contact owners at 609-771-9338 aft 8pm

BY OWNER PRINCETON area home on one-half acre surrounded by mature trees & shrubs, masonry exterior and attached garage. Living room with fireplace (opening to screened porch), dining room, kitchen adjoined by breakfast room, two bed­rooms, expandable attic, full basement. Wei! built, well cared tor home only one mile from tram on quiet street. $89,500. 609-452-8297.

EXCLUSIVE ELM RiDGE Park - - beautiful 4 bdrm brick ra n c h on 1'/? a c re s . $198,000. Cali 609-737-2203 or 737-3639.

ENG TUDOR — Immaculate home, prestigious area. 4 buiiris, 2V? balfis, fam. rm. w ra ised hea rth fp l, u lt ra ­modern kit, oversized gar­age, m any more extras. Asking $122,000 Patti Con­stance Real Estate. 609-883- 7250 or eves. 802-8782

Real Estate for Sale

ROSSMOOn RESALES

CONDOlyHNIUMS MaMachuM(t*-MutiMl 48 Cennecticut-MUtuN 5 New Hwnpehire-Mubisi 4B HarnMon MutuN 4

COOPERATIVES Jay-Mutual 3

STULTS REALTY CO.

37 N. MMn St.Cranbury, NJ609-395-0444

Eves: 60M55-1881

PRESTK36 ADDRESS — for a low price is available in these lovely Yardiey Com- f7x>n8 condo homes in Yard- ley. Pa. Nestled among tall trees, rolling sites and Duck pond. Luxury large 1 & 2 bed­rooms. pool and club house, 1 hour to NYC via express trains and 35 min. to Phila. Walk to village, shopping, golf & transportation Financing with as little as 5% down - 13-3/8% money for 1st 3 years, fixed 16-3/8% for re­m aining 27 years. Model open daily: Sat & Sun, noon to 5pm. Special appoint­m ents available. $40 s & $50's. Century 21, Weber Realty. 215-493-8240

VACATION AT HOME indream house in HICKORY ACRES. Owner assistance for this well appointed 4-5 bedroom home in a desirable section of EasI Windsor in a park-like setting, 3 brick patios plus 40' inground poo! offers you a lush life style.

HOM ES O F Q U A L IT Y

PRINCETON Townhouse — by owner Queenston Com­mon-32 Cameron Court, 4 b d rm s . 2''2 b a th s , fu l l basemnt, garage, den, use of pool & tennis court. Walk to Palmer Square. $165,000. Call 609-737-9478 aft. 6pm

TOWNHOUSE — Newlown, I Pa. 3 BR. 2V? baths, den, LR, 1 DR, GRG, $88,900. 215-297-

8412, 6 p,m.

invest in yourself instead of the L a n ^ rd .

C a re fre e C o n d o s

2 BR * 2 baths in Avon ViF iage. Excellent condition with p le n ty of liv in g space . $42,500.

HISTORIC COLONIAL — one of a kind, 3 bdrms, in­c lud e s m aste r bedroom suite 2 - baths, 2 fpis. wide plank floors in formal dm rm. huge fam, rm. corner lot

j Affords privacy, easy com- ’ muting Princeton. Phiia. N Y

Reduced to $125,000. Patti Constance Real Estate, 609-

' 883-7250, or eves 882-8782.

PRINCETON AREA -- By owner. Spacious 2 yr old Colonial, 4 bedrooms, car­peted. Living, family & dining rooms carpeted. 2V? baths. Kitchen w breakfast room, self-cleantng oven, auto, dis­hwasher, self-defrosting GE refng. 2-car garage, utility room for washer-dryer, par­tially finished basement, cen­tral air, gas heat, brick fire­place. Levelor blinds, storm windows. 10 min. from Prin­ceton Jet,, station, connected with P h iladelphia & New York $139,900 Principals only By appointment BOG- ZOO-1266.

HILLSBORO MOUNTAIN- TOP RANCH — 3.5 acres. 2 stall horse barn 2 BR, bath. LR with fireplace, DR. FR, attached gar $110,000 By owner. 201-369-4225.

FOR SALE By Owner — 3 Bedroom ranch. Large kitch­en, living room, dining room, 2 fireplaces. 12 x26' family room. 2 car garage, New gas hot air neat. Weil cared for home on quiet street Mort­gage terms available 206 Sun.set Ave H ightstown. 6 0 9 -4 4 8 -6 9 2 5 C al! fo r ap(X)intmen(

REAL ESTATE SALES

Why earn less?

• ERA HOMES OF QUALITY

• O ffers much more for -experience- h i^ e r graduated commls- sions-better professlonai tools

cm. Evelyn B oya»^v Marilyn Kessous

orChuck WMms

Real Estate for Sale

TRENTON HARBOURTON rd. — this tenderly cared for professionaliy decorated Cd* on ia l g ra c io u s ly s its on almost 2 lovely acres. Fea­tures: 3 bdrms. 2Vz baths, targe fam. rm w/fpl. Truly a home for your family to enjoy. Asking $128,900. Patti Con­stance Reai Estate, 009-883- 7250..

ROOM TO GROW!4 BR TH in Twin Rivera

$332/mo will buy you this lovely home if you can quality to assume the 7'/?% mtg. Asklf>g only $71,900.

OWNER ANXIOUS

TWIN RIVERS — d e s i r e lake cortoominium with car­port ACA Realty. Broker 201-297-1944. _______ _

EWING TWP — Glendale area 3 to 4 bdrms. 2 baths, dm, rm, ultra-modern kitchen, rear open porch overlooks vour family s very own fenced !arpe & beautiful quiet park. $66,900. Patti Constance Real Estate, 609-883-7250 or eves. 882-8782.

COUNTRY SHOWPLACE with development advan­tages near Princeton and NY commuter routes, 9 room^ spill, 2’/? baths, central air. secluded inground concrete pool, wooded '■? acre lot 2 brick patios. GauJener's pa­radise. flowers, fruits & ber­ries. $120,000 firm Days call 609-448-8880 Eves 448- 8335

KENDALL PARK — exc. 8 room Ranch, fenced in rear yard backing to woods, own-

* er will listen to offers that in­clude owner financing. ACA Realty. Broker, 201-297- 1944,

TWIN RIVERS

Private M ortgage Assist­ance — 4 bedroom detached Colonial on a beautiful 'A acre with finished basement and many custom extras.

2 bedroom townhouse —leady to move tn. Profes­sionally finished basement, ait a p p lia n c e s in Q ua d IV

CL E A R B R O O K R O S S ­MOOR — Adult Communi­ties. Resales Most models available, 2&3 bdrms. Extras include appliances, carpet, end patios, fireplaces more All beautifully located. Start­ing 60 s Levinson Associ­ates Lie. Real Estate Broker 2 0 1 -5 4 8 -2 2 4 4 . Eves. & wknds 609-655-4519 or 609- 655-0909_____________

EWING— Desirable Hamp­ton Hills, 10% assumable, 3 years new 3 bdrm, 2 bath, ranch Professional land­scaping , fam ily room w fireplace • super rec room Central air, garage, $93,000. 609-883-5763.

HOPEWELL — country col­lage immediate occupancy. Dead end street. 2 bdrms. bath, garage, deck, base­ment. $49,500 W.S. Borden Realtor, 609-883-1900.

SECLUDED 2 89 Acres — woods, lawns, garden, pool, greenhouse. Contemporary house. 4 bdrms (1 with fire­place). 3 full baths, dining room, modern kitchen, quali­ty throughout $210,000. W S Borden Realtor, 609- 883-1900

OWNER TRANSFERRED: GORGEOUS 3 BR. split, wooded view, Total monthiy cost $354 if you can quality to assum e th is 7v?% mtg. Cathedral ceiling. Prof, fin. patio & bsmt, too.

YARDLEY — Stony H ill, gracious 4 bedroom, 2 ’/? bath Colonial, in fine executive neighborhood. Corner lot, fenced rear yard. fam. rm w/ brick fireplace, full basement. 2 -c a r a tta c h e d ga ra g e , attractive financing available. $108,000 G ranor & Co. Realtors, 215-885-2600.

EXCELLENT BUY! — Seller w ill pay to LOWER your monthly payments while you enioy this 3-4 BR home, with super appliances, c/eir, c/vac & love iy decor - a ll in a lanced, parklike setting in Allentown's Timber Glen.

HOMCS OF QUAUTY RtALTOM

44 J I 3 I*

4 4 3 -1 3 1 3

TWIN RIVERS — 3 bdrm 2'/? bath, spill level twnhse CAur fin bsmt. gas grill, many ex­tras. Assume 7% mtg or long term fin. by owner avail. No brokers! 201-780-4543,

(( lassified continued

on back page of section)

Arts/entertainment guide for the week of January 20,1982

S ile n t s ta rs s in g in n e w m u s ic a lTime Off <5 o feature o rm e Prince’ca CowrenceCedger/WindsOr-HghiB-HeratarCentra: r A D r i v i i l e N e v v s - f ? e c o r a , H r iis tx trc u g ^ ie o c o rT a ro u c r tw v 'f^

B E L L O C

ifiHfr MUST we / iu n w r sL E FT K16HT...

IN TH E S E s o - c a l l e d CcVHfC

s r i ^ i p s =V

I MEAN - SUPPOSE tMHAT J WANTED \NAS o v e r TTjEfle ^

\

Wo u ld x haveT ^ V ^ K APOU<£> THE NOW-D Tos » e r To I T p,'

Be l l o c

INDEXON THE COVER

Th« unmistakabto and fortom visage of Charlie Chapiin is a trademark for the goiden age of siient moviemaking. Now that goiden age - replete with the colorful characters of Chaplin, Fatty Arbuckle, Mack Sennett and, of course,the Keystone Cops -has been captured In an original musical that bowed at McCarter last weekend. For Laura Haywood’s review, see page 8.

FEATURES AND DEPARTMENTS

Worth a Trip: One of the best-kept secrets In Manhattan lodging is spilled by Ann Wood....3

In Concert..........................................................4-6

On View.................................................................7

On Stage; McCarter and George Street both draw on history for their new plays..............8-11

Hearsay: Who's doing what in the arts...........12

Centerfold feature: The National Theatre of the Deaf transcends words with its acting.......14,15

New Jersey Notes......................................... 17,26

Wine Lines: What's behind the now 'light' wines ................................................................................18

Table Talk: Sunday brunch is hearty at the Nowau Inn...........................................................19

TubeVlew......................................................... 20,21

By Linda Burton; The microwave just doesn't make it.................................................................22

On Screen...........................................................23

Now Playing............................................. 24,25,27

Crossword puzzle.............................................. 28

On Bridge............................................................ 28

Editor: Jane BradleyAdverlMrtg Coordinator: Patricia Landmann

Workshop on growing plants with artificial light

The FHends of Horticulture of the Someraet County Park Commission will hold their first Winter Workshop on Jan. 23 at 10 a.m.

Floieace Gerst, a member of the Indoor Light Gardrning Society, will te at the Envirtnmeatal Education Center, Lord Stirling Road, Basking Ridge, to discuss growing plants with artificial lighting. Ms. Gerst, whose nuun area of interest is fern growing, is also a member of tiK Philadelphia Horticultural Society and has won numerous awards for exhibits at the Philadelphia Flower Show.

The amount and types of artificial light needed for prop,ii plant growth, regulating humidity, proper soil mixtures and types of equipment available to indcxir gardeners are among the mwy topics Ms. Gerst wilt discuss. Also, she will show several plants suitable to iiuloor l i^ t gardening as well as explain how artificial lighting can be u s ^ to start seedlings for spring plaiRing outdoors.

.s<>jring is limited and pre-registration is required. For more information call 201-873-2459.

Scrabble Players Club meets in SomervilleScrabble players are invited to join Scrabble Players Club No. 164, meeting the second and

fourth Sundays of each month at 7 p.m. at 1007 Route 28, North Branch Village. Somerville. Players of all ages and levels of skill are welcome.

Scrabble Players Club No. 164 is licensed by Scrabble Crossword Game Players Inc., Holbrook, N.Y., the central headquarters for local clubs spread across the United States and Canada. It awards expert certification to top competitors in supervised play throughout the country.

In addition to meeting new players and improving their word skills, club members can earn expert points and Certificates of Merit.

There are 514 certified Scrabble experts. Average scores for premium players range from 3.50 to 400 points. The highest recorded score in sanctioned competition is 724.

For mote information call 212-867-8300.

Antique show to be held in East BrunswickAntique dealers will exhibit their wares in the Impenal Ballroom of the Raniada Inn. East

Brunswick, on Ian. 23 from noon to 10 p.m and Jan 24 Irom noon to 6 p.m.The show will feature antiques from around the word. Exhibits for sale include porcelains,

china, ivories, paintings, prints, bronzes, silver and jewelry. There will also be country and formail furniture, toys, lamps, Orientalia. primitives, quilts and art glass.

A special feature of the show is a clock repair shop set up by Bill Martin of the Brass Pendulum. Mr. Martin has many clocks for sale, and minor repairs can be made at the show.

All antiques are authenticated and guaranteed by the dealersThe Ramada Inn is located on Route 18 and the New Jersey Turnpike in East Brunswick For

more information call 201-687-5296.

Sesame Place offers workshops on computers

A special winter school program designed to familiarize children from elementary school age through high school with computers and their capabilities is under way at Sesame Place, the educational play park for children, and will continue through March 31

The program, titlted "Games Computes Play," is a two-hour structured workshop on computers, and includes both explantions and demonstrations of the computer’s range of capabilities. The program is offered to single classes or schools on a reservation-only basis weekdays 10 a m. to 4 p.m. in the park's Computer Gallery, which has the nation’s largest collection of public-access computers and one of the nation's most unique collections of computer games.

“The Playful Computer, ” a separate two-hour workshop for teachers, is being offered on a reservation-only basis Monday and Wednesday evenings beginning at 7 p m.

All workshops are taught by trained personnel from the park’s educational programs department.

Sesame Place, an innovative play park for children ages three to 13 and their parents, has a Computer Gallery containing nealy 60 computer games for both children and adults. The games, created especially for Sesame Place, range from word and image identification puzzles for the young, like "Dial-A-Muppet ” where children press the picture of a Muppet and that character pops up on th video screen, to sophisticated challenges like "Spotlight ” where the visitor tries to bounce a light beam off two adjustable mirrors and illuminate a moving figure.

In audition to the unique games, the gallery features computers and keyboards designed specifically for Sesame Place in order to make the machines accessible to the park’s young visitors.

Like the children’s classes, the teacher’s workshops will enable teachers to overcome any fears they may have aout computers and to understand their workings and capabilities

Sesame Place is adjacent to the Oxford Valley Mall in Bucks County, Pa,The park is dosed to the general public for the winter season and will resume its normal

dayime operation in .April.For more information call 21.5-752-7070.

''jihk’‘OF'jANuk V'2‘0’-V ,V982

■ H i

WORTH A TRIP

Manhattan’s last hotel bargainby ANN WOOD

The lab on my favorite Manhatt|« hotel room went up three dollars a night to $20.25 Iasi spring. During the summer there was an exrra dollar charge for air-conditioning, bul I didn't mind a bit. In fact, I didn't plan to share the secret of this small sanctuary, bul the place is due to close next spring, and its demolition is imminent. Another relic of Edith Wharton's New York is to be replaced by a modem, glass stalagmite.

It isn't a place rock and movie stars like. If the rich slay there, they come and

anonymously from all over the world, md the only famous person anyone re­members slaying there was ^ n a St. Vincent Millay. She spent time writing poetry. It's that kind of place

In Id 11 when the national tx>ard of the Young Women s Christian AsscKiation built its headquarters and training center at the corner of 52nd Street and Lexington Avenue, it wasn't considered safe for females to stay in hotels alone, so bedrooms were included in the building.

It still stands in elegant and somewhat dismal simplicity There is no name on the d(K>r — only the numerals. 155. above it — to identify the 12-story building. Architecturally it is about as cozy looking as the New York Athletic Club or an old. limestone branch of a public library

BUT AT AI.I. hours ot day and night women arrive on its rather forbidding doorstep with great mounds of luggage, or just a hack pack They arc international women of all sorts. American women in town on business or foreign travelers in jeans, saris or rumpled attire that shouts of a long flight from somewhere nteir skins arc of any hue Inside the walls they find peace and quiet, courtesy and security smack in the hean of a city not known for these qualities.

Now Ladbroke s, a giant British gambl­ing corporation, has bought the building for $18 million and will build a $55 million tower in its place. It's the sort of thing that isn't permitted in London and why that city remains so liveable.

■fhe location, which is up Lexington Avenue a block from the Waldorf Astoria and down a block from Citicorp Center and between one stop of the Independent subway line and another on the IRT, was destined to be too valuable to house little old ladies in oxfords, middle-aged women in pumps, and young girls in running shoes, if a big offer came along. The 75-member board, headed by Jewel Graham, of Yellow Springs, Ohio, and including Mrs. Laurence Rockefeller has decided to sell and move somewhere else.

THE RESIDENCE, as it is called on its letterhead, is open to transient hotel guests except for the three times a year when the board meets and occupies the 77 bedrooms. It is the la.st Y.W.C.A. accom­modation left in M anhattan. The Y.M.C.A.s in Manhattan have gone co-ed, and there arc Y.M.C A. hotels around the world for economy-class travelers.

In New York last spring 1 looked at less expensive accommodations and found the Barbizon for Women going co-ed and upping its prices. Cheap in New York also meant dirty aiiu crummy. The Y.M.C.A.s looked like the kinds of places where you keep your valuables with you every

Take a good look at the YWCA in Manhattan - the wrecker's ball will hit next spring.

minute, I sympathized with a non-English speaking Japanese boy in the lobby of one who had discovered his passport and money gone. I was not templed to move in. TTte desk clerk was bored by this disaster.

1 stumbled on The Residence in the pages of the Manhattan phone book, and someone on the phone admitted grudging­ly that they did take a few guests. It was like falling into heaven after some of the places I'd seen.

YOU DON’T HAVE to be young or Christian to stay there or even a member of the New York Y.W.C.A. You do, however, have to be female. The only other discrimination is an extra two dollars a night for non-member guests. Joining is a matter of dashing around the comer to the New York Y.M.C.A. offices during business hours. A two-week stay amortizes the annual dues.

The Residence means nothing to New York cab drivers, and the address. 135 East 52nd Street, has never been heard of. But tell someone to take you to the Four Seasons, and you are within a few feet of your hotel. People all over Manhattan have the impression that I live on Park Avenue and eat constantly at the Four Seasons. Or they did.

THE RESIDENCE had 112 bedrooms in 1911, a dining room, roof garden and solarium. Some of the bedrooms are offices now. With only 77 rooms to let it is the next to smallest hotel in the Rashmaps guide to Manhattan, where to my delight it was listed as the Y.M.C.A. national residence, throwing off a lot of would-be customers. Only the Kitano on Park Avenue with 70 rooms is smaller.

I had no plans to broadcast news of this little gem One does not have to be generous to stay there. The single most important imperative of the Y.W.C.A. is the elimination of racism, and I wasn't sharing this find with anyone of any color

A single room with a wash basin is priced from $20 to $25, and a double is $48 to $50. A few of these have private baths. Everyone else uses the spotlessly clean communal washrooms on each floor

There is no rrxim service, no credit cards accepted and no men allowed up­stairs. The diniiig room closed years ago, but there are restaurants outside in every direction. 1 highly recommend the Big Apple Coffee shop a block down the street from the Four Seasons.

Whatever disadvantages the restrictions impose are offset by cleanliness so ex­treme that all the brass pipes in the bathrooms, and the doorknobs, hinges.

WEtkOf JANUARY 20 , 26. IM2. t>'. J V 1'( li.CA j . I,

and name plates on every door are polished to a high shine There's a maid on the sixth fltxrr who leaves me a thank-you note everytime I leave her a tip.I never got that at the Waldorf Tower

The Residence telephones are in the halls The desk clerk gives you a card witn the code for your room when you check in, and then you listen for it. One switchboard operator's idea of a long and short is not necessarily another's, so a neighbor may grab the phone by mistake, but she'll come looking for you in your room or the shower. The system isn't the most efficient, but it's friendly.

In the middle of the night, when it's day on the other side of the globe, a woman will sit chatting with someone. The sound of conversation with Hong Kong affects me like a train whistle in the night, and I don't mind being awakended at 2 a m by it echoing down the hall. Economizing on hotel bills and on phone calls are apples and oranges, not to be compared

ANY WOMAN CAN pop in and spend the night at The Residence, if there's room, and there usually is. Reservations arc not often necessary for one person, bat are accepted when accompanied by ad­vance payment in time for a check to clear the bank — before registration. I leave money on deposit for unexpected stays, and so may make a reservation by tele­phone. It's a cash and carry operation. But when men moan that they can't find an unoccupied hotel room, and women shud­der at staying in a big city hotel alone, I iiol aiong to 135 bast 52nd Street and ring the doorbell.

The locked door is a safety precaution There is no curlew. The maid may report an unused bed, if her records show someone is supposed to be in it, but the desk clerk only wants to know there is no error Questions are based in efficiency, not morals.

I weni around the world with one small suitcase of all purpose clothing, so when I spend a night or two in town there is often little evidence of my passage except a tcKithbrush and book. It is handy to be able to stay in town on the spur of the moment, when I have to change clothes for some event or tote a typewriter. At $20 a night it is what I call an affordable luxury.

THERE ARE NO permanent resi­dents, and any stay longer than two weeks requires an interview with the manager. Maiga Boehm, or a brief stay somewhere else before beginning another two-week stay

There is a notice posted prominently in many locations at The Residence alerting guests to its primary function as a conve­nience for the national board and staff members in transit. It concludes: "We hope that guests will understand that we must be strict in our r^uirements that a serene and orderly atmosphere be main­tained at all times. We reserve the right to ask anyone who does not conform to our standards to find other lodgings."

I wish that the 2.5 million members of the Y.W.C.A would ask Ladbroke's and their wrecking ball to do Just that.

There is no room service, no credit cards accepted and no men allowed up­stairs. The dining room closed years ago, but thee are restaurants outside in every direction I highly recommend the Big Apple Coffee/shop a block down the street from the Four Seasons.

TJjitOff 3

IN CONCERTLittle Orchestra of Princeton to performThe Little Orchestra of Princeton will

present a concert on Jan. 24 at 3 p.m. in the theater of the Princeton Day School. The Great Road, Princeton

Guitarist Alice Artzt. who grew up in Princeton, will be the soloist in the East Coast premiere of Concicrto Evocativo by the contemporary Puerto Rican com­poser Ernesto Cordero. Ms. Artzt has been featured on numerous television and radio programs throughout the world, and has recorded on Gemini Records of England, Klavier and Meridian labels.

‘Y’ Chamber Symphony to playStanding room only is available for the

first appearance ever in Princeton of the "Y" Chamber Symphony, at McCarter Theatre on Jan. 25 at 8 p.m.

Under its conductor and music director Gerard Schwarz, the 40-member chamber orchesta annually presents 12 pairs of concerts at the 92nd Street YM-YWHA in New York City, where it is the resident ensemble The Symphony also appears at

Lincoln Cenier. the Kennedy Center in Washington. D C and other majoi East­ern cities.

In its first McCarty concert, the or­chestra will play Waite Piston's Sin- fonielta and the Czach Suite. Op. 39 of Dvorak Pianist Joseph Kalichstein will be the featured soloist for the Mendelssohn Piano Concerto No. I in G Minor.

For more in fo rm a tio n , call 609-921-8700

Auditions open for Masterwork ChorusThe Masterwork Music and Art Foun­

dation announces openings in The Master- work Chorus for all voice parts. The requirements are an ability to stay on pitch, a blending voice and some ability to read music.

The Masterwork spring performance schedule includes two performances of Ralph V'lughn Williams' Sea Symphony,

/one in Sacred Heart Cathedral in Newark and the other with Spectrum 82 at the campus of Fairleigh Dickinson University.

The chorus rehearses every Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the County College of Morris in Dover. Directing the chorus is David l^ndolph

For more in fo rm ation call 201-538-1860

Ron Eiiran to present a concert of songsThe Solomon Schechter Day School of

East Brunswick will present a concert by singer Ron Eiiran on Jan. 23 at 8.30 p m at the East Brunswick High School. Cran- bury Road, East Brunswick

Mr. Eliran's repertoire is a potpourri of

songs consisting of his own writings, music in a host of languages and every­thing from lyrical ballads to contemporary pop.

For more in fo rm ation cal! 201-238-7971.

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The CoBCMio for Bait Tabs aad Orciicstn by Ralph Vaughn Williams will also be heard, with soloist Karl Megules. Mr. Megules has been principal tubist with a number of New Jprsey orchestna, and is the founder and dmector / of the Tienhxi Brass Quintet and the / Garden Stale Tuba Ensemble. /

Other works on the program will hfe Mozart’s Orerture to the Impresario m Haydn's Syaipliony No. 103. knotyii as ■‘■nie Drumroll ”

For more in fo rm atio iv ' cal! 609-924-7497 ,

%Guitarist Alice Artzt will be one of the soloists in a Little Orchestra of Princeton concert on Jan. 24 at 3 p.m.

Lindsay Family Trio to give concertThe Manville Public Library will pres­

ent the Lindsay Family Trio on Jan. 21 at 7:30 p.m. The program of classical selec­tions is free.

Tom Lindsay, violinist, has been the first violinist of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra for the past 12 years. He is also the concertmaster of the New Brunswick Chamber Orchestra and ai^unct lecturer in violin and viola at Morris County College.

Alice Lindsay, violist, was for several years assistant principal viola of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, and for the

past seven years has been a string special­ist in the Edison Public Schools.

Margaret Lindsay, cellist, has been assistant principal cellist of the Connecti­cut Philharmonic Orchestra, and is now principal cellist of the New Brunswick Chamber Orchestra.

The program will consist of Emo Von Dohnanyl's Serenade, opus 10. and Beethoven's Trio in E-Flat Mnjor,. opus 33.

For more in fo rm atio n call 201-722-9722.

Violinist Mark Kaplan to play at RiderViolinist Mark Kaplan will appear at the

Rider College Fine Arts Theatre on Jan. 23 at 8:05 p.m

Mr Kaplan has played with orchestras throughout the United States and Europe, and has performed as soloist with the New York Philharmonic orchestra and the

Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras. His pnzes include an Award of Special Distinction from the 1973 Leventriti Com­petition, the highest award given and one never before granted in the histor> of the competition.

F o r m o re i n f o r m a t i o n c a l l 609-896-5303.

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wrtKOf

IN CONCERTYoung musicians to piay classical worksThe Mercer County Syn^bonic Or­

chestra. String Training Ensemble, will present its annual winter conceit on Feb. 7 at 2 p.m. at the Edith Memorial Chapel of The Lawienccvilic School. Admission is free.

The String Training Ensemble, con­ducted by Portia Sonnrnfeld. offers pro­fessional guidance to young musicians in grades three through eight They rehearse weekly and offer two concerts a year. The second one will be presented on May 2.

The Concert M istress. Corinne

Stillwell, will perform Paganini's Vlslto Coocerto No. 1 hi D MstJor, 0|*. h. F im . violinists Denise Stillwell and Jason... Pbsnock, with cellist Stephen Kreisler. v- w-ill form the Concertino solo group for Handel's CoanrtQ Gmaao No. 5, Op. 6 , and Helen Kreisler, First violinist, will perform the solo passages in Hoist's Brook Green Suite. The piogram will also include Christoph Willibald von Gluck's Overture to lite BaBct Don Juan

For more in fo rm atio n call201-297-0528.

Yehudi Menuhin to play in TrentonWorld-renowned violinist Yehudi

Menuhin will perform on Jan. 24 at the Trenton War Memorial Auditorium.

Mr. Menuhin began his performing career with the New York Symphony at Carnegie Hall in 1927. Since then he has played around the world, and is one of the

most recorded artists in music history, both as soloist and conductor. In addition to numerous musical awards, he has - received eight honorary doctorates from leading universities the world over.

For more in fo rm atio n call 609-737-8200.

The Newark Boys Chorus will perform at the Somerset County Vocational High School on Jan. 23 at 6 p.m.

Somerset to host Newark Boys Chorus

Got an idta for a photo? Call us now.

The Newark Boys Chorus will perform on Jan. 23 at 8 p.m at Somerset County Vocational High Schixil. The concert is part of the New Jersey Center for the Performing Arts' Beaux Arts Festival.

The Newark Boys Chorus, founded in 1969. has perfonned with many leading

orchestras including the New York Philhannonic and the Philadelphia Or­chestra Chorus members, ranging in age from 9 to 14, attend the Newark Boys Chorus School, which is affiliated with Seion Hall University

For more in fo rm ation call 201-526-6074.

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priced accocdiiig to marketV«al and Pcppcia Marsala • Braast of Chicken Frsskold Inn

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Tokyo Quartet plays with verveby WALTER RUSSELL

The Tokyo String Quartet performed Monday evening at McCarter Theatre, as pan of the Music-at-McCarier concert series. First violinist Peter Oundjian. who joined the quartet last June, commented that he greatly enjoyed pertomiing in Princeton. Kikuel ikeda is the second violinist. Kazuhidc Isomura. the violist, and Sadao Harada the cellist.

Opening the program with Haydn's Siring Quartet in E-flat. Op. 33. No. 2 . suhtiticd “ The Joke.'* the Tokyo Quartet was bright, somewhat pressing in the opening allegro m^xlerato. The ensemble has a remarkable attack and precision, and a round tone. Its vi<ilins arc Amatis. which arc extremely pure in tone, With phrasing les.s incisive than the Juilliard Quartet, the Tokyo Quartet tends to emphasi/e the (op and bc)ttom lines a bit more, which lends to somewhat mute the independent part writing for the inner voices : the second violin and viola.

The group actually combines the crisp­ness of the American quartets with some of the balances of their European counter­parts. The scherzando movement was a bit quicker than is customary. The trio section could have had a bit more contrast by a change in temp >. or an increased legato. Cellist Harada's tone was exceptionally resonant throughout this movement.

The slow third movement, a touching and .'vrical largo e sosienuto, could have been somewhat more fli»wing and mellow . The playing was transparent, however, which gave the work a shimmering beauty.

The final movement, a presto, is quick and thrusting, and ends m a surpri.se. which is a man clous example of Haydn's sense of humor in his comptisioons. The quartet captured the rhythmic twists and turns, sudden pauses, and darting phrases, with the comhinalion of technique and facility that Is the mark of a great quartet ensemble,

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Quartet, Op. 3. by Alban Berg, was written in 1910. and signals the final work in the composers apprenticeship to Arnold Schoenberg This quartet shows Berg beginning to assert his individual style, a combination of aionaliiy and romanticism. The Tokyo Quartet brings the lyrical quality of the work to the fore. The interpretation Is more “ romantic" in conception than that of the Juilliard Quartet.

In the slow- I'irst m o c m e n t. a quasi-sonata form based on the chromatic half-step, (he ensemble follows the sudden shifts of nuH>d and tremendously indepen­dent part-writing. In quaitct. each instrument seems to embody a different emotion, and their clash and resolution is the essence of the w'ork's force.

The second movement, somewhat similar to a rondo, is performed with great energy and rhythmic thrust, in its inter­pretation.the Tokyo Quartet is \inually without peer. It is interesting that many en.scmhies feci more free when cxpres.sing a lyrical interpretation of 20th century wnrks than when pcrfomiing Beethoven or Haydn.

I'he concert concluded with a per­formance of Beethoven's String Quintet inC .O p. 29 This IS the comptiscr's only string quintet; perhaps he decided not to write (hem because of the bitter legal battle that ensued during the publicauon of this work, a suit instituted by Beethoven, which he lost. Also perhaps the form did not particularly appeal to his genius; the part writing for the additional viola is not notably independent.

Guest artist Raphael Hillycr. one of the . founding members of the Juilliard Quartet.

completed the ensemble. The opening allcgrt) emphasized the thrust of the first violin and cello, rather than caressing the inner rhythmic pulse. Some of the sections seemed compressed, rather than express­ing the feeling of an expansive unfolding of niotivic material This approach worked best in the stressful development section; however, the tempo did become more leisurely in the recapitulation.

The second mo\emenl adagio was per­formed almost in a style gallant - the I'okyo Quartet approached this movement more in terms of Beethoven's early }x‘rioJ than his middle one. The quintet actually bridges the gap between the composer's stylistic changes, and can be interpreted either way. The Tokyo Quartet's inter­pretation had lightness and grace, but not the profiiund yearning that is a trait ('f Beethoven's slower movements.

The scherzo w'as performed more de­licately than is often the case: style gallant predominating over rough humor. The trio was nicely dcliniated hy contrasting tempo and texture: the rhythmic clarity of the of ensemble created a vibrant perfoniiancc.

The presto finale, with its sudden dynamic sliifts. is responsible for the quinlet'.s subtitle; “The Storm, ’ This movement is the most daring and original of the fiHir. and parallels the composer's similarly playful c.xplorations in the finale of his Second Symphony, 1'he Tokyo Quartet maslorUilly created the super­charged atmosphere by contrasting an elegant melodic line with explosive ut­terances — as if Beethoven himself were heroically breaking through the conven- tion> of Hiehtcenth Centurv form.

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ON VIEW* Realism and Reality’ on view at RutgersRealism and Realities: The Other

Side of American Painting, 1940-60,will be on view at the Rutgers University An Gallery, Voorhees Hall, Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, through March 26.

More than ISO works by 75 anists will be represented in the c’thibit. Anists include Andrew Wyeth, Ben Shahn. Re­ginald Manh. Raphael Soyer, Milton Avery, Geo ge Tooker, Peter Blume and Fairfield Poner,

Topics such as the effects of World War II on realistic imagery, the persistence of the academic tradition, the evolution of social and political themes, romantic art and still life, will be examined in the exhibit

In conjunction with the exhibit, a free symposium on .American representational art of the 1940s and 50s will be held at

10:30 a m.. Feb. 13, at the gallery. Talks by exhibit organizers and art professors will be given.

The exhibit and its catalog was funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. Works were loaned by public and private collections. Major le i^ rs include the Whitney Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art. the Hirchom Museum and Sculpture Garden.

The gallery is open free, 10 a m. to 4:30 p.m., Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, and noon to 5 p.m., Saturdays and Sundays.

For i.ifonnation and to schedule group tours, call gallery curator Stephanie Grunberg, at 201-932-7096 or 932-7237.

The gallery is partially supported by a general operating grant from the Institue of Museum Services, a federal agency in Washington. D.C.

Mercer County faculty’s 1982 exhibitAn exhibit of creative work.s by the

Mercer County Community College Vis­ual Arts faculty, to be on view from Jan. 29 through Feb. 19 at the Triangle and Library Galleries on MCCC's West Wind­sor campus, will open with a free recep­tion at the galleries, from 7to 9 p.m., opening day.

The 1982 exhibit will feature the work of Barbara Tiso. first year ceramics in­structor. and Gary Saretzky. a member of the photography adjunct faculty. Other members of the Visual Arts faculty will also display creative works in photogra­phy. printmaking, painting, drawing sculpture, ceramics and advertising de­

sign.Fulltime faculty and staff members of

the Vi.sual Arts Division include William Barksdale, Vincent Ceglia. James Col- avita, Paula Gillen. Jack Harris. Mel Leipzig. Frank Rivera. Evelyn Stem. Barbara Tiso. Larry' White and Jack Williams. Adjunct faculty and parttime staff include Bob Alcorn, Frank Bitetto, Pal Hutchinson. Heidi Jain. Peter Kruinins. Joan Needham, Mary Peck. George Poli, Ellon Pope-Lance. Gaiy Saretzky, Randy Salcwski and Phi! Smith.

For information and the gallery sched­u le . call the co llege cu ra to r at 609-586-4800, extension 588.

Photos by Barbara Freymouth are on display in Princeton.

Nassau gallery opens photo show

‘The Indignant Artist’ exhibited in EdisonProlest and scK'ial comment from the

17th to the 20th Centuries will be the subject of an exhibit entitled The Indig- nanl Artist to be shown Monday, Jan. 25, through Friday, Feb. 12, at the Middlesex County College Art Gallery in Edison.

Forty-five graphic works, on loan from the Pratt Institute in New York, will examine topics such as politics, social change, human rights and anti-war protest.

Artists to be represented include Wil­liam Hogarth, Thomas Nast, Kathe Knollwitz, Jose Clement Orozco, Caumier Ron Cobb, Otto Dix, William .Gropper, Reginald Marsh, Gabor Peterdi and John Sloan.

The gallery is open Monday through Thursdays from 10 a m. to 3 p m , and on Fridays, from 10 a m. lo I p.m For information call the Office of Student Activities at 201-548-6000, ext. 327.

The photographs of Barbara Freymuth, Eileen Hohmuth, and Heidi Jain will be on cxhibil at the Nassau Gallery from Jan, 15 to Feb. 6.

Eileen Hohmuth, who teaches pho­tography at Princeton Day School, has .studied with Eva Rubinstein and Craig Steven.s at the Maine Photographic Work­shop. Her figure studies have been exhibi­ted in various shows on the national level including the Creative Photography Gal­lery at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Second Biennial New Jersey Artists Exhibition. Her work has also been published in "New American Nudes ' and is in the permanent collection of the Mercer County Cultural and Heritage Commission.

Ms Freymuth, who studied with Bill Barksdale at Mercer County Community College, will be showing her "Encores " - multiple, composite prints originating

from one negative. They are arranged around either a vertical or horizontal plane and possess a strong sense of order and rhythm.

Heidi Jain will display her infra-red light studies taken in the immediate vicin­ity of the New Jersey State Museum She studied with Philippe Halsman, Lisette Model, and A D. Coleman at the New Schixil, and with Arthur Freed at Pratt Institute, She is afso on the adjunci staff of Mercer County Community College and has, in the past, taught photography at Briwkdale Community College Both her work and that of Ms. Freymuth is current ly on view at the Newark Museum as part of the Third Biennial Exhibition of New Jersey Artists.

A reception open to the public will be held Jan. 15 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m at the Nassau Gallery. 20 Nassau St , Princeton For more information, call 609-921-1062

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TIME Off /

ON STAGE

McCarter scores with ‘Keystone’by LAURA W. HAYWOOD

Keystone, which opened last Friday evening, is the best production I have seen at the McCarter Theatre. 1'hat is nut to say there aren't things to carp at — there arc. and I'm going to — but one of the endless faticinations for me of the musical theater is the way a show, despite a string of flaws, can somehrjw come together into a

reviewkind of magic, and that is exactly what happens at the McCarter with this produc­tion.

Keystone is .set in Mack Sennett's Keystone Studios, and runs from the establishment of the studio in Hollywood through the Fatty Arbucklc and Mabel Norman scandals, ending with a reunion of the principals some time later. It is an enormous chunk of film history to com­press into the range of one musical, and there is a price paid for this ambition. Character is sacrificed in many cases — the people become, in the words of one of the better songs. “ Shadows” — and some of the scenes are sketchy in the extreme. ! suspect they are supposed to be.

There are hints that John McKellar s book is intended to tell the story in the format of the silent movie — certainly the two scandals are covered in that fashion — and I am troubled only by the fact that the method is not used consistently .

MOST OF THE characters never real­ly come to life. I left the theater, for example, with no sense at ail of what kind of man Mack Sennett might have been. He

is presented as a “ workaholic,” dedicated to his films (but dedicated in a commercial sense — he is onto what the public wants, and isn’t interested in experimentation), and ambitious, but these are supcrficim attributes; what made the man that way. what he's rcally feeling, nev. r ctfmes acn>ss. That is not the fault of John Sloman. who plays the part, makmg the most of the material he has to work with. In a like fashion. Charlie Chaplin (Tommy Breslin) and Fatly Arbucklc (Thomas l.x'c Sinclair) are used without being revealed, and Maria Dressier (Sinclair in drag — and I hated that touch) is grotesquely caricatured. People like Ben Tuipin. Ches­ter Conklin, and Harold Lloyd become names to be dropped — Lloyd so much so that the actC)r playing the pari isn't even given credit in the program

There are details that bi^hered me greatly. Why is Tommy Breslin's make-up reminiscent of the M.C. in Cabaret Why did Sennett. making silent movies, start by hiring tw'o piano players (who. by the way. are spectacularly good — they have the demanding job of playing aH through the show, and they deserve credit for not succumbing to fatigue, apart from their skill)? Why was it necessary to include one song which adds nothing to the evening except a few tasteless words, and makes it impossible to bring children to the show?

BCT MY BIGGEST objection is the matter of lyrics Bluntly, they are poor I was uneasy when in an early song, lyricists John McKellar and Dion McGregor rhymed “ warn ya” with “Cali­fornia.” and I was appalled when a few numbers later “ earthquake” was rhymed

Tommy Breslin and Randy Graff play early movie stars at McCarter.

with “ mirth quake ” That, you see, is the trouble. You can see the rhymes coming a mile away, and at no time do the lyrics take off and delight.

Wc have Mabel singing. “ I’m nobody's wife, like peas off a knife, I'm failing through life " — and she keeps “ falling through” it endlessly. The only two songs in which the lyrics rise above themselves are “ Shadows. ” and the finale of (he first act. “ Two-Do!lar Ring,” which is the first time one of the characters suddenly acquires some depth The character is

Mabel Normand. and let me pause here to note that Randy Graff in the role gives a performance that is nothing short of per­fection. I loved her vulnerable toughness, and I admired her ability to make a trite lyric soar with emotion.

If I was not satisfied by the lyrics, I loved the music — it's the kind of score that makes you want to run out and buy the album (which 1 doubt exists at this point). The bix)k itself is sketchy — Keystone is

Sec KEYSTONE, page M

The 16th ScMon... 29th National Tour of 1

^ / T h e l^ io n a l

u T h e a t r e ^ o f t h e D e a f

America’s Moat Unique Profesaional Theatre Company performing two works in their dazzling combination of voice, sign language, dance and music indudir>g:

GILGAMESHAdapted from the great Sumerian Epic of gods, god-men ar>d heroesONE PERFORMANCE ONLY at

McCARTER THEATRE TUESDAY. FEB. 2at8p.m.

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(609) 921-8700Reservation, Information and Charge-by-Phone

(Visa, Mastarcard and Anierlcan Express)

Directed by Harry RubelJANUARY 8 THRU FEBRUARY 7 Friday • Soturdoy Sunday Evening.

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GERMD SCHWARZ, Conductor JOSEPH KALICHSTEIN, Piano Soloist

Piston: Sinfonietta / Dvorak; Czech Suite Mendelssohn; Piano Concerto No. !

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Y’SAiliV.. !C

TIME OFF WEEK OF JANUARY 20 26,1982

wm

ON STAGEBlending novel

and playby JAMES OLSON

The George Street Playhouse offers as its third production of the season a world premiere. Out of tire NtgM. written and directed by Eric Krebs. It is a new play which tells an old story, and there is nothing at all wrong in dial. What it does not do is tell the old story in a new way, a dramatic reality that effects diminishing returns

Out of the Night is based on the autobiographical novel of the same name. written in 1940 by Jon Valtin, a German activist in the Russian Comintern which flourished in the aftermath of World War 1. Youthful, idealistic and committed to social revolution, Valtin worked inter­nationally for the Comintern and later suffered cruelly at the hands of the Nazis. His story, a bold expose in 1940, is Itxiay only a prodding reminder that history, it forgotten, nsks repetition, and stionger manipulation by the play­wright to remove it from the bciokshelt and bring it boldly to the stage,

Daniel Proett's set is sufficiently somber and dark, and is eflectively

enhanced by Phil Monat’s lighting design which is pointedly attuned to changing moods. Also praiseworthy are various sound effects engineered by Peter Kallish which make those small scenes awfully real.

Eric Krebs’ staging falters only in Valtin's many monologues, during which he moves around a lot, clearly in an anempi to avoid being static. But the movement is too often arbitrary and un- ‘ focused, and does not mask a verbose script. The scenes containing action are infinitely more interesting.

Out of the Night will play through February 7 at the George Street Playhouse in New Brunswick. For ticket information call 201-246-7717

VALTIN IS PORTRAYED by Rob- en.son Carricart in a performance that might have been a tour de force were it not for the excessive narrative that he is obliged to wade through to get at the action Mr Krebs teeters between the worlds ol biographer and dramatist, per-

See GSP, page 10

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Jan Valtin (Robertson Carricart) is a subjected to interrogation by Inspector Kraus (Luke Sickle) under tbe watchful eye of a Nazi guard (Douglas Werner) in the George Street Playhouse production.

IN A N E W M U S IC A L !

KEYSTONE■| ,.S n

. M S M ^ i t. A H a ‘ IH \SAi i c' •

lU S M .iN il

WEEK Of JANUARY 20 26.1962

16091 921 -8700

. -TWEDfE

TTie 40-voice. Princelon-based W«sl- mtMtcr Choir from Wcsiminsler Choir College. Princeton, will tour Alaska through Feb. 9. under the direction of Joseph Flummerflct.

The choir will give major concerts in Fairbanks. Anchorage. Kenai. Juneau, Ketchikaw. and. upon returning to the United Sutes, in Spokane and Seattle. Washington; Monmouth and Corvallis, Oregon: Logan and ,St. George, Utah; Visalia. Oceanside. El Cajon and Los Angeles in California; and Phoenix and Cottonwoixl, Arizona.

In March, the Choir will tour Illinois and Indiana with the Chicago Lyric Opera Orchestra, and in May. the ensemble will participate as chorus-in-residence in the Spoleto U S A. Festival for the 6th season In June, (he Choir will perform in the Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto. Italy, for the I Ith season

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Winners of the Tri-County Art Associa­tion’s fourth annual juried show held Jan 9 to 17 at the Old Cranbury School in Cranbury. were chosen by noted artist Flank Greco. They are as follows.

In the patnting category are: Stephanie Mandeibaum of F.ast Windsor. Larry Chestnut of Trenton, and Audrey Per- rine of Plainsboro

Watercolorists are Ruth Bruh of East Windsor. Barbara Cook of West Wind­sor. and Joyce Manowitz of New Bruns­wick. Honorable mentions were also given to Jackie Burke of East Windsor. Harriet Kaftanic of Princeton and Rosella Petito of Belle Mead.

In graphics/mixed media are Elizabeth Shore of East Windsor, and Sheila Alber- ola and Victoria Moy. both of whom are from Princeton.

Photography winners are W.R. Allen of Princeton. Craig Smith of Cranbury and Howard G. Wood of Mercerville.

The exhibit is open 1 to 4 p.m . Tuesdays through Thursdays, and Saturdays through Sundays. 2:30 to 6 p m.. Fridays, and by appsiintment.

For information call 609-448-8967

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Chuck Miley’s one-man painting exhibit of food preparation utensils and

"Silver" by Chuck Miley, a 1981 acrylic.

vessels for eating and drinking entitled The Prometheus series, which was re­cently at the Alternate Space Gallery, has evolved into an even larger show now at the Westbroadway Gallery in New "Vork City.

His recent paintings deal with problems of light on surfaces as illusion, and emphasize the underlying structure and composition Mr. Miley acknowledges the influences of Mark Rothko. Phillip Pearls- tein and Edward Hopper.

His work, which was exhibited widely throughout the area, and has won Mr. .Miley the New Jersey State Council on the Arts Painting Fellowship for 1980-81. and the National Photo-process print show award for 1981.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Christoplwr Sanborn, an alumnus of

the Princeton Boychoir School, is a mem­ber of Quartet Montage, a group that won the 1981 East and West Artists and the Artists International awards.

The quartet will make their debut at 8:30 p.m , Jan. 22, in Carnegie Hall, New York City They can also be heard at 9 p.m., Jan. 20, on WQXR's Young Artists Showcase.

Chris, a student at Princeton High School, was winner of both the Gindhart Piano Competition and the Stokes Music- Scholarship. and was soloist with the Trenton Symphony. Teachers he studied with included Robert Haley. William Cheadle, Zacha Gordenitski. Lucy Green and Gil Kalish.

He has won scholarships for study at Aspen Music Festival, Tanglewood and Yale Summer School of Music, and has also received a fellowship for graduate

The 1982 Westminster Choir

i5 t'imf’off

study at SUNY at Stony Brook

i t i r i r i r k

Dianne Doctor and Rolonda Waltshave joined New Jersey Nightly News as reporters. Both will be headquartered at NJNN’s Newark bureau

Dianne Doctor, a 1978 graduate of Hobart/William Smith College with an English degree, holds a masters degree from Syracuse University's S.l New- house School of Public Communication Between 1978 and 1981, Dianne anchored, produced and/or reported news at a vanety of stations including WECQ radio in Geneva. New York; WHEN radio and W tXT-TV in Syracuse; and KARK-TV in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Rolonda Watts is a 1980 magna cum laude graduate of Spellman College in Atlanta. Georgia, with a major in English and Drama. While still an undergraduate. Rolonda reported news for the IcKal radio station. WIGO. and co-hosted "The Sound of Youth." a program for urban youths on WAIB-TV

In May of 1981, Ms. Watts received her masters degree in Broadcast Journalism from Columbia University. Immediately before joining N J. Nightly News, Rolon-

_da was a reporter for WFMY-TV, the CBS affiliate in Greensboro, North Carolina

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Joshua Walden, jazz choreographer and performer from New York City, will teach a new series of jazz workshops at 7:30 p.m.. Wednesdays, throughout the Spring.

In addition to the series, which is designed for elementary and intermediate students, will be an audition for those who wish to participate in a pertbrmance to be choreograhed by Mr Walden.

For information, visit the Center at 2.s.‘\ Witherspoon St , Princeton, or call 609-924-1917

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WEEK OF JANUARY 20 26,1982 TlHEOfF 13

The entire company performs “Songs from Milkwood.”

Words come alive in Deaf Tbv A.C. WILLMENT

It'scalled the National Theatre ol the Deaf, but the productions arc for everybody.

In its 15 year Insiory. The Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center’s National I'heaire o( the Deal (NTD) has brought its energetic blend of sign language and spt>ken word to five continents and ail 50 states. On Feb 2. it will begin its vivid artistry to Princeton for a single per­formance at McCarter Theatre. The NTD comes from a three-week tour of India; before that, it spent a month in Japan and taped a television special for WGBH, Boston’s Pub­lic television station The show, which will air this spring, features Japan's popular television personality, talk-show hostess Tetsuko Kuroyanagi. who hopes to found a Japanese theater of the deaf.

In addition, NTD has had two runs on Broadway. 12 tours of Europe, three films and a special Tony Award. Though its formal history begins in 1967 with a grant from the federal Department of Health. Education and Welfare (HEW). NTD’s Producing Director. David Hays, did not found the company primarily as a social welfare citort. He was fascinated by the hitherto unexplored possibilities of sign language as a theater art

form, an NTD spokesman explained"The state is very much a visual me­

dium...to see language as well as hear it You could close your eyes and hear all the dialogue. ' the spokeman said.

Though some theaters provide interpreted performances for the hearing-impaired, the NHF is the only company in which all actors both sign and speak. (In the case of deaf actors, voices are provided by other actors, so that they seem to speak.)

THE GERM OF THE IDEA for the NTD was planted in 1960. when Arthur Penn and Anne Bancroft, the director and star of Broadw ay’s hit drama The Miracle Worker, were first approached by HEW represen­tatives with the idea of founding a pro­fessional theater comptwy of the deaf Penn later transmitted the suggestion to Hays, his colleague.

Hays' strong theater background includes more than 40 set designs for Broadway, a nearly equal number for the New York Ballet, and set designs for the Vivian Beau­mont Theatre at Lincoln Center In addition to several award.s for his scenic designs, he has received a Ford Foundation grant to design an ideal theater

Every year. Hays and Mack Seism, NTD s tour director, sit down and make "a very personal decision ' about the annual offering, the spokesman said. This year marks a first in NTD history, the recreation of a past show. The ancient Sumerian legend of Gilgamesh, widely acclaimed in its first incarnation several seasons ago and often requested since, has been recreated.

The production of Gilgamesh which the NTD will bring to McCarter in February Is not exactly the same as t!’f original. Depend­ing on the show , the members of the NTD change from year to year, so the cast is entirely new The NTD’s method of staging has introduced many changes in the script as well.

All the actors were presented not only with the adaptation of Gilgamesh which formed the basis of the original NTD production, the spokesman said, but also with the origin,al legend They were assigned characters and in the course of rehearsal, under Seism's guid­ance. made changes, additions and deletions. N TD 's ac to rs are ‘ ‘freer to make change* than arc (the members) of most othei puxiuction companies." he noted.

The result is "a totally new production, ba.scd on the outline of the original script."

he said. The legend of the demigtxl-princc Gilgamesh and his efforts to transcend mortality predates the epic poetr> of Homer by some 1.50() ycras. <2lay tablets detailing his fabulous adventures were first found in Assyria in the mid-19th century, and scholars have suggested comparisons with the Bible and the l,(X)l Arabian nights.

THE TROUPE will combine Japanese Kabuki theatre and Western horse-opera in a brief comic offering to follow Gilgamesh at McCarter, titled The Ghost of Chastity Past, or: The Incident at Sashimi Junction. This "crazy, madcap Kabuki western, " in­tended as a change of pace after the high dramatic intensity of Gilgamesh. is "a spoof on everything, (which) gets away with (its outrageousness) because it is true to both traditions" of both genres, the spokesman explained.

The NTD has also spawned a Professional School for Deaf Theatre Personnel in Water­ford. Conn., home of the Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center of which the NTD is a pad This is the only professionally orienicd pro gram for the deaf in America, and offers a wide variety of instruction in all aspects ot theatre under a faculty of top theatre pro-

• f -

i y .

’i

Joesph Sarpy and Linda Bpve perform in 'Giiganresh."

heatre' I'cssional-s. ''' The NTD also sponsors an annual Deaf

Playwrights Conference, directed by Shanny Mow. in which three deaf playwrights re­ceive assistance in developing their works. The NTD's Little Theatre of the Deaf also lours world-wide, entertaining children with two companies, each composed of five actors

I (four deaf and one hearing). They have been seen many times on "Sesame Street," and company member Linda Bove has become a regular member of the cast.

; NTD’s "Theatre in Sign,” a special pro- > ject. presents shows entirely in sign language

only, for hearing-impaired audience. Linda 1 Bove directed the project’s first offering, ’Tlie ' Gin Game, with former actor Patrick Gray-

bill and Tony Award winner Phyllis Grelich (also an NTD alutma).

THE NATIONAL THEATRE OF ’HIE DEAF'S production of Gilgaimafc will be presented at McCaner Theatre in Princeioit for one night only, Feb. 2 at 8 p.m. To reserve seats or for further information, contact >he Ticket Office, McCarter Theatre. 91 University Place, Princeton, 08540, or call 609 921-8700. Monday through Satur­day, noon to 6 p.m.

The god Enlil (Mike Lamiltola) invokes a curse In ’Gilgamesh

^ D IN IN G G U ID E

ALCHENUST 4 lARRISTU 28 Witherspoon St., Princeton. Fresh seafood, choice steaks. Lunch Mon.-Sat. 11:30-2:30; Dinner Mon.-Thurs. 5:30-10, Fri. & Sat. 5:30-10:30. (609) 924-6555. Sun. Brunch 12-3, Dinner 4:30«:30

FEEDBAG Princeton Shopping Center, Harrison St., Princeton, N. J. Monday-Saturday 8:30 a m. 4:00 p.m. Srrtorgasbord. Fri. Eve. Et regular menu. BYOB (609)924-8441.

LE PETIT M AXIM S. Main St., Yardley, Pa. Tues. Sat. 5:30 - 10 p.m. Free Salad with dinner Tues., Wed. 8 Thurs. (215)493-6944.

ANDY'S Tavern £t Restaurant, 244 Alexander St., Princeton, N.J. Open 7 days. Lunch, Dinner, Cocktails. Fri. Shrimp in the Basket Special. (609) 924-5666

THE FOOLISH FOX Rt. 206, 316 mi. north of Prin­ceton. Prime Ribs, Seafood. Lunch, dinner St after theatre. Mon.-Sat. 11:30-1 AM, Sun. 5-1 AM. En­tertainment Fri. & Sat. eves. Cocktails. (609) 924- 02G2.

LE PETIT VILLAGE Rt. 130, E. Windsor. French Cuisine. Sat. Nite Spadal-Clam dip. Salad, Roast Duck or Bouillabaiae & coffee $13. Open Fri. St Sat. 810 p.m. Res: 609/448-6670. Cocktails avail. Banquet facilities to 150.

ANNEX Restauram 128'/^ Nassau St. Princeton Won. - Sat. 11:30 to 1 a.m. Luncheon, Dinner, Cocktails. Large selection of Italian £r American food & seafood at reasonable prices. 609-921- 7555.

FORAGER HOUSE Route 32, midway between Washington Crossing and New Hope. Dinners daily except Monday. Sunday Bruncn. Reservations please 215-862-9477. Now serving your favorite wine Et spirits.

MCATEERS RESTAURANT • 1714 Easton Avenue, Fninklin Township. American Continental Cuisine. Lunch, Dinner, Cocktail. Live entertainment. Wed­dings. Business Luncheons: Tues.-Sat. (Tues. Night Belly Dance) Reservations 201-469-2522.

■lUE RAM Rt. 532 Washington Crossing, Pa. Tues.- Sat. 11:30 a.m. to 2 a.m. Sunday, noon to 2 a m. Brurxth 12-3. Entertainment nightly, Sundays, 4-8. (215) 493-1262. Cocktails.

FOUNDERS INN just off Cranbury Road, Monroe Twp/Jamesburg. 201-521-0319. Charming atmos­phere, soup-n-salad bar, cozy lounge, steaks, fresh seafood, gourmet specials, happy hr, 4-7 wkdys; Lunch Tu-F; Dinner Tu-Sat; Moderate prices.

MILLER'S WIFE S. Main St. (Rt. 539) Allentown, N.J. Country cooking served in an historic grist mill. Lunches 11:30-3 Tues. thru Sun.; Sun. Brunch 11:30-3; Candlelit Dinner Sat, 6-9. BYOB. 609-259 3774.

CAMPO'S RESTAURANT ■ 1001 S. Clinton Ave., Trenton. Specializing in Italian Cuisine. Prime Rib Special Wed. thru Sun. iReservations required.) Cocktails. Open 7 days (609) 599-3175.

4 MUSKETEERS Pizza Restaurant, 3181 Rt. 27. Franklin Park (just 2 miles No. of the Marketplace). Pizza Neapolitan Et Sicilian; Hot Et Cold Heroes; Complete Dinners. Sun-Thurs. 11 am - midnite, Fri. Et Sat. 11 am - 2 am 201 /297-1981.

NASSAU INN Palmer Sq., Princeton, N.J. 609-921- 7500. Three Restaurants. Tfie Greenhouse, Yankee Doodle Tap Room & The Inn's Dining Room. Enter­tainment nightly. Dancing Fri, & Sat, Eves. Break­fast, Sun. Brunch, Lunch, Dinner Et Late Nite.

CHUCK'S SPRING STREET CAFE 16 Spring St., Princeton. Princeton's newest idea in a restaurant. Specializing in great food and take out service. Breakfast 8-11:30: Full menu 11:30 am - 10 pm. 609/921-0027.

GLENDALE INN 48 New Hillcrest Ave., Trenton, N.J. International Cuisine, special menu daily, can­apes served at cocktail hour 4:30 to 7:00. Entertain­ment Wednesdays Et weekends. Closed Sundays. (609) 883-2450 Banquet facilities all wk.

NORTH CHINA Mandarin 8 Szechuan Cuisine, 36 Witherspoon, Princeton, N.J. Mon.-Thurs. 11:30- 10 Fri. 11:3811, Sat. 11:30-11 Sun. 1:0810, BYOB, Carry out service. Daily Lunch Specials 11:30;3:(X).

THE CLAY POT Restaurant, Rt. 1 St Major Road, South Brunswick, Serving luncheon. Cocktails, unlimited salad bar, fresh seafood, and a specialty in barbequed baby back ribs. (201) 297-6678.

GREENLINE 175 Nassau St., Princeton, N.J. (609) 683-0240. Featuring fresh, whole foods, whole grain breads, vegetarian specials. Mon. thru Sat., Breakfast 8-11:30 a.m. Lunch 11:30-2 p.m. Tea 2- 5:30 p.m.. Dinner 5:30-8:30 p.m. (BYOB).

OVER THE BRIDGE INN Continental Cuisine. Ap- plegarth Road, Monroe Township, N, J.; Lunch, Dinner, Cocktails. Open 7 days 609-448-6630.

COACH 4 FOUR Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge, Rt. 33, Hightstown, N.J. Dancing and en­tertainment with Sal Trippi Tues. thru Sun. evenings. Luncheons St dinners. For reservations, call (609)448-2400.

HENRY BECK’S EATERY 2944 Brunswick Pike (Rt. 1), (.awrenceville. Lunch St Dinner featuring homemade soups, quiches, fresh salads, casseroles, sandwiches, etc. Catering. Open 11:30- 9 Mon.-Fri., Sat. 5-9:30. BYOB (609) 882-6080.

PAGODA specializing in Szechuan 8 Hunan cooking. 1342 Brunswick Ave., Trenton, N.J. (at U.S. 1 8 Brunswick Circle). Mon.-Thurs. 12-10 p.m.; Fri. 8 Sat. 12-11 p.m,. Sun. 4:3810 p.m, (609) 392-1122.

CONQUISTADOR, Hilton Inn, Monmouth St., East Windsor, N.J. Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Served Daily. Elegant Continental Dining, Winner 1981 Menu of the Year Award, Cocktails Available. (609) 448-7000.

HUNAN Chinese Restaurant, 1715 N. Olden Ave., Trenton, N.J. Hunan, Peking Specialties, take-out orders, BYOWine. Lunch served Mon. thru Sat. 11:30-2:30; Dinner served Sun. thru Thurs. 4:30-10,

,Fri. Et Sat. 4:30-11. (609) 883-8759.

PEACOCK INN 20 Bayard l.ane (Route 206 near Nassau St.) Princeton, N.J, Lunch, Dinner, Cocktails Mon.-Sat. Closed Sun. Major Credit Cards Accepted. Lodgings available (6091924-1707.

COUNTY LINE INN Steaks. Seafood, Italian Dining. US Hwy. 206, Skillman, Mon.-Fri. Lunch 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m., Dinner 5 p.m -11; Sat. Dinner 5 p.m - 12; Sun. Dinner 4 p.m.-9. Cocktails available. (201)359-6300.

KIM'S KITCHEN 18 South Main St., Lambertville, N.J. Korean cuisine. Open Tuesday through Saturday for dinner 609397-1509.

PEKING EXPRESS Chinese Cuisine, 31 Station Dr7 Princeton Jet., N. J, Tues. - Thurs. 11:30 - 2, 5- 9:30; Fri., Sat. 11:30 -2 , 5-10, Sun. 1 9. 609-799 9891-3334. BYOWine Carry out, seivice.

CRANBURY INN 21 South Main St., Cranbury, N.J. Lurx;h Tues.-Fri. 11:30-2:30. Dinner Tues.-Thurs. 5- 9. Fri. St Sat. 5-10. Sun. Dinner 12-8 P.M. Private parties. Cocktails. Entertainment Fri. Et Sat. evenings. 609-655-5595.

KONDITOREI Continental Cuisine, Reasonable. Cafe with homemade specialties like Spankapita, Tostada, Quiches & scrumptious desserts. Catering Et Box lunches. 48 W. Broad St. (Hopewell House Sq.) Hopewell. Tu-Fri. 9:30 - 3 p.m.. Sat, 10:30-3. 609/466-1221

PHEASANTS LANDING — 2 restaurants: The Nest, a Rathskallar for luncheons, casual dining 8 late night sandwiches. Entertainment Fri. 8 Sat, Eve; The Pheasants Inn for cocktails and fine continental Dining. Amwell Rd.. Belle Mead.

Dl AAATTIA'S Restaurant Et Lounge, 1 N. Main St., Allentown, N.J. Italian-American Cuisine. Dining room hrs. Tues. Thurs. 5 p.m.-9 p.m., Fri.-Sat, 5-10, Sun. 3-8. Sunday Brurtch 11-2 p.m. Cocktails (609) 2599128.

THE KING'S WHARF at the Somerset/Marriott 110 Davidson Ave. at 1 287 Et 527, Easton Ave. Somerset. Breakfast, Lunch Et Dinner daily; Light Et Gourmet dining, Mon.-Sun. 7 a.m .-ll p.m.. Sun. Brunch 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. 201-5690500.

PRINCETONIAN DINER 3501 Rt. 1, Princeton, N.J. Open 24 Hours - 7 Days a Week.Delicious Salad Bar. Special Brunch for Sat. 8 Sun. All cooking done on premises with a large selection of desserts.

EAGLE TAVERN 429 S. Broad St., Trenton, N.J. Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11-2:30; Dmner nightly except Mondays from 6 PM; Sunday Brunch; Parties; Banquets and catering. (6091393-1765.

LAHIERE'S Frend) Cuisine 5-7 Witherspoon St., Princeton, N.J. Mon.-Sat. Closed on Sunday. Wine Cellar. Lunch, Dinner, Cocktails available 609921- 2798.

To Advertise your Restaurant in TIME OFF's Dining Guide

Call (609) 324-3244 or contact your Sales Representative.

16 TIME Off WEEK Of JANUARY 20 26 1982

N ew Jersey Notes

Jazz jives with Jerseybf GENE KALBACHER

The music business can be a strange animal.

There is the music, and there is the business. At best, the successful record companies intertwine these two, some­times contradictory, elements into a uni­fied whole. But often the musk of the music business is overwhelmed by the bttsiiicm of the music business. Record com pan ies, to be su re , are not philanthropic enterprises, yet when they are headed by accountants and lawyers with little understanding of, let alone appreciation for, the music, then the music lover is ultimately the loser.

Carl Jefferson, founder and president of Concord Records, the Califomia-ba.sed jazz label, combines an abiding love of jazz with business smarts. Undoubtedly, he is a winner and, consequently, jazz lovers are the beneficiaries. And though based on the West Coast, Concord has released records by such Jersey jazz stalwarts as Jackie and Roy, A1 Cohn and guitarist Tal Farlow (soon to be profiled in this column).

Since its formation in 1973, Concord Records has become a little giant in the record business. Granted, sales of jazz product account for perhaps 5 or 6 percent of die total prerecorded music market, but Concord wimessed in 1980 a 34 percent growth rate over the previous year. To be more specific, Jefferson's company now boasts a roster of 34 artists and a catalogue of more than 160 record titles; however, it is the quality of the music rather than the quantity that earned the company three Grammy nomination in 1980 and a cita­tion from the prestigious Downbeat magazine as record companv of the year in 1981.

Considering the company’s phenomenal growth, one would assume that Jeff, as his

' friends call him. has been a music mogul all his life. But starting his own record company was not Jefferson's lifelong ambition.

IN 1958 he started Jefferson Motors, a car dealership, with seven employees.

Twenty-two years later, when he sold the business ("The Japanese had declared World War III," he can now say with a chuckle), he had built Jefferson Motors into the nation’s leading Lincoln-Metcury dealer.

Though knowledgeable about jazz since a youngster — "with no television and only the radio, you had to learn all the different sounds by attentive listening, and you knew them like you knew Tommy Heinrich played right field and Joe DiMaggio center field" — it wasn’t until 1969 that he made his first major foray into the professional jazz world. That year he organized the Concord Jazz Festival, which has gone on to become one of the country’s most acclaimed yearly jazz events. In addition, he was instrumental in the development and building of the Concord Pavilion, a slate-of-the-art per­formance center

Concord Jazz Records was started in 1973. he recalls, because several of his musician friends, guitarists Joe Pass and Herb Ellis, explained to him that without records on the market, it was difficult for them to gel work in clubs and concert halls. Figuring "I can’t lose my fanny on it. ” Jefferson produced his first record.

Unlike most record company presi­dents. Jefferson actually produces 95 per­cent of Concord’s albums. The company’s principal strength is its roster of main­stream musicians, but Jefferson has also formed two subsidiary labels — Concord Concerto, a classical division, and Con­cord Picante, which handles Latin music.

Jefferson may have bowed out of the car business, but he mhs his record company on many of the same principles, among them "to always give the customers what they deserve” For this reason. Concord records ate pressed on virgin vinyl, rather than the recycled kind, and the engineer­ing, inner sleeves and graphics are top- notch.

INSISTING THAT Concord Records will never become a huge company ("When my car business got teal big, it was no fun. Some of the challenges even disappeared” ), Jefferson intends to follow the small-is-beautiful philosophy and keep Concord an intimate "family operation."

Carl Jefferson keeps jazz alive In his Jersey business.

And. he knows, small doesn’t necessarily mean unsuccessful.

Sales of jazz records may constitute a small share of the overall music market, but he remains convinced that jazz has a bright future. "For anyone who grew up in the '60s and '70s and was punished by three-chord, IS-minute, high-decibel .sound, that music will eventually wear thin and they’ll start looking for more sophisticated music And once they get into jazz — if you haven’t stiffed them — they’ll continue buying it. Jazz is part of our cultural heritage and we should take

better care of it ”" I’ve never had a disagreement with

any artist about money," Jefferson replies when asked if wearing two hats, as both president and producer, ever makes his job difficult. " I’m not going to gyp a mu­sician out of five cents. I guarantee that I’ll mainuin my integrity until I'm in the box!”

As for his company, he remarks that "we’re just a little frog in a big pond..." He doesn’t cotnplele the sentence but his thought is rather easy to convey: "But given the room to swim, sse’ll continue to make waves."

g DINING GUIDE %

P.J.'t PANCAKE HOUSE 154 Nassau St., Prirx»ton. (6091 924-1353. Homemade specialties are features in a large menu. Breakfast is served all day along with food for the whole family at affordable prices. Open 7 days from early to late.

SCANTICON Conference Center & Hotel, Princeton Forrestal Center, Rt. 1, N.J. 3 Excitirig RestauranU; The Elegant Black Swan, The Gracious Courtyard £f The Charming Tivoli Gardens. Continental & Danish cuisine. Also 4 lounges. 609-452-7800.

SOUPE DU JOUR Blackwell Ave. ft Rte. 518, Hopewell, N.J. Lunch Mon.-Sat. 11;30-2;30; Wed. Nite coffee house 8-11 p.m., (^ndlelite dinner Fri. 6:30-9:30 (609)466-3777.

SITAR Exotic Indian Cuisine. 3068 Rt. 27, Kendall Park, NJ. Open for Dinner Sun-Thurs 5:30 to 9:30, Fri & Sat 5:30 to 10:30. Visa. Mastercard, Am. Express accepted* Parties arranged. 201Z297-9496.

SOUTHVyiNO Chinese-Polynesian Restaurant. 479 Ridge Rd. (Rt. 522) Monnriouth Jet., So. Brunswick Twp. Different Special Luncheon Daily $2.88. Gourmet Chinese Cuisine prepared by seasoned chefs. BYOWine. (201) 329-2722. Open 7 Days.

STARS RESTAURANT 9 Kline's Ct. ’jm bertville, N.J. Fine continental cuisine, changes daily. BYO Wine. Open for dinner Wed, thru Sat. 7-11, Lunch Fri. £f Sat. 12-4. Sunday brunch 12-5. Nightly Chef's Special $7.95. For Resv. 609/397 2923.

SZECHUAN CARDEN Mercer Mall, Rt 1. LawrerKeville, N.J. Fine Chinese Cuisine. Lun­cheon, Dinner, Take Out. Bring your own wine . 609-452 1525.

THE TERRACE at the Marketplace, Princeton, l\I.J. Seafood ft Natural food recipes. Open for lunch under skylight Mon.-Sat. Dinner by candlelight Thurs. ft Fri. nights. BYOB. (201) 821 8822. .

TRIVENI Exotic Indian Cuisine. 908 Livingston Ave., N. Brunswick, N.J. Dinner 5:30-10 P.M. BYOWine. Complete Indian menu from Pakors & Mulligat­awny Soup to Lamb Vindaloo, Curries, Beef Nirgiai ft Moglai Kofta. Take-out. (201) 249-6496.

TIME’OPFlA/rtk OF jANU/0fV-2D 26,1982 t r

4 4 Light” at the end of the cellarby BOB LEVINE

Have you noticed some wines with labels that rerniiid you of old beer ads? Labels wiin the word light prominently displayed on the. label?

We are witnessing a new battle of the Madison Avenue wine ad men who arc following the no gloves, hardsell cam­paigns originally introduced by Coke when they entered the wine business Agencies are pushing wine with all the subtlety associated with Bowser's Tidbits or Mother’s Washing Powder

It's well known that while the French and Italians out-drink Americans in wine by about 17 to I, just the opposite is true when it comes to America's consumption of soft drinks compared to that in most European countries. The vini cognoscenti have come to realize that there is a large, semi-integraled market for a beverage which is cold. wet. pleasant and cheap. By now it should be fairly clear that whether one dnnks one type or another of cola, ginger ale. sparkling water or. for that matter, ordinary commercial American beer, the choice is more normally made on price, availability or Just as frequently, habit. Madison Avenue pitchmen make very comfortable livings convincing Americans to impulse-buy or switch from one brand to another From time to time we find that Brand A outperforms Brand B and later vice versa. Upon close analysis the reason almost always is clever market­ing.

Tied to Americans' fear of being over­weight. the market for lower calorie fotxl products has been a great commercial success and it was only a matter of time before the wine industry, eager to make

deeper penetration into what is still a virgin market (only about 35 perenet of the adult Americans now drink wine), would make their move /

The CoatendersThere has been an enormous amount of

market research and planning put into the effort. At the present time there are four big guns contending for what may very well be a developing market which could be as much as 10 percent to 15 percent of the total American table wine business by 1985. In the order in which the new products were rolled out they are:

1. Los Hernandos Light Chablis -(Berringer) offerred in magnums only at about $5 45 per 1,5 liters

2. Taylor California Cellars Light Chablis - about $3 50 per 0,75 liter bottle

3. August Sebastian! Light - also only offered in magnums at about $5

4 Masson Light Chablis - (Paul Masson) $3.45 per 0.75 bottle.

There are many questions about these new wines, all centered on to whom they will appeal. Kenyon and Eckert, the advertising agency for Taylor California Cellars, expects this year's sales of the new product will be in excess of $3 million in spite of the fact that it is only going to 12 carefully selected medium markets Berringer. even more optimistic, expects to sell almost $9 million worth of their Los Hernandos Light Chablis which is offered in all of their national markets. Similar optimism is cxprcs.scd by Sebas- liani and Masson,

x^SO N L IG H T '

LIGHT CHABUS

i lMASSON UGHT CONT/IMS

O^-THMO FEWER CALORCS THAN OUR REGUUR O M U S

AVERAGE MMLYSiS PER 100 ML

GALORES . 49CARBOHYDRATES .3.0GRMASPROTEIN FAT

.0.1 GRAMS 0.0 GRAMS

PAUL MASSON, SARATOGA. CA?50mJ

The New Market

Who is going to drink aii of this light wine? To obtain answers to questions like this, wine companies spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in market research to obtain a ‘ prorile’* of the potential cus­tomer.

Research has proclaimed that tb prime group is college educated, working, weight watching women in the 29 to 49 year old group who tend to be trend setters. Trend setting in the ad business means that you bought the first hula htnip on your block .

Further tcsearch has indicated that the lady in question may not be a current consumer of wine but does drink other alcoholic beverages as well as various

U;w-v:alorie beverages. When she drinks wine, it is white wine as a cocktail and she does so consciously because the wine is lower then distilled spirits.

The market consists of about 70 percent women as opposed to only 30 percent men and these potcr'ial white w ine consumers primarily live either in the far west or the northeast.

Because the word "light" has a con­notation indicating less than normal calories, the wine industry expects that the new wines will appeal to people who are not otherwise terribly interested in wine. Since this will represent a substantial market of new' wine consumers, the prod­uct formulation has to be very carefuly considered

It is well known among experienced wine instructors that when one intnxiuces wine to a nondrinker one invariably starts with something white, slightly sweet, fruity and simple Until the advent of this new' light wine, I generally began with a simple German Mosel which interestingly enough has long been made to meet virtually all of the current prixluci objec­tives of the American pnxlucers, including low alcohol. Most of the new wines have an alcoholic content of about 9 percent but in the Masson product it is 7.1 percent Conventional Mosels have about 9 percent to 10 percent alcohol but I have seen some with alcohol levels as low as 7 percent.

1 would speculate that if the American marketing effort is successful, the Germans will jump right in with this lime proven pri>duct with enormous appeal to the first-time drinker.

Ellsworthfor Great Wine Values

including

Light WinesPaul Mason -1 .5 liter

Lite Chablis....... $5.52

Los Hermanos -1 .5 liter Lite Chablis....... $4.65

6,(XX) WINESLARGE SELECTION OF IMPORTED BEERS

KNOWLEDGEABLE CONSULTANTS CHEESES FROM AROUND THE WORLD

GOURMET FOODS £r SANDWICHES

ELLSWORTHWINE ft LIQUORS

Princeton Hightstown Rd.(1 s t le f t over th e b r id g e fro m P r in c e to n )

Mon-Th 9-9 Fr & Sat 9-10 Plenty of Free Parking 6 0 9 - 7 9 9 - 0 5 3 0

Our Wine List is as Impressive as our M enu... There is a saying that a "day w ithou t w ine is like a day w it)x x it

sunshine" and since wine is a pleasant part of your meal, Lahiere's now can o ffe r you your choice o f over 300

fine wines, a ll a t m odest cost N atura lly, the fo o d you eat shou ld c o m p lim e n t the w ine you d rink — so — as o ur m any

boasters say — "Lahiere's food is superb" Come soon and see

L A h i E R E SFrench R c tU u n n l

’ * *^ 4 Frincelon. N .|.. TeteP*«^

18 TIME'OFF'' IK E K W WNDMPf 28 26) 1982

TABLE TALK

Sunday brunch fares well at Nassby DIANNE WILLIAMS

Although late Sunday morning has never been my favorite time for serious eating, the idea of brunch has become quite popular these days. Several weeks ago. in the midst ot the Christmas crush, we had an opportunity to sample the Sunday brunch at the Nanau Inn. At that point in the holiday season, I was not about to turn down any meal that I did not have to cook myself, regardless of when it took place My life since Thanksgiving has been one continuous bout in the kitchen. When we walked into the Yankee Doodle Tap Room and looked at the buffet. I could only experience blessed relief that I was not the one responsible for producing all of that food.

Probably the most persuasive rec­ommendation a restaurant can receive is by word-of-mouth Good reviews are nice, advertising is informative, but if a neighbor tells you that a certain place is good, you are apt to pay much more attention. Several people urged us to try the Nassau Inn's brinch. empha.sizing that the meal’s dollar-for-dollarfood value was hard to beat. Forgoing the On Perfect Rose theory of dining.* I would have to agree $8.50 per pcison Buys a lot of brunch.

The food is soli.jly American fare — nothing very exotic it is not haute cuisine — but there are a larg variety ot hot dishes that will appeal to the hearty appetite. They are kept warm in steam trays and include short ribs in gravy, orange chicken with walnuts, seafood Newburg. beef stew, green noodles, filet of turbot, potatoes, peas, carrots, sliced roast goose

with stuHing, scrambled eggs, ham and sausage.

One problem I have with this manner of dining is a iendeiKy to eat way more than is necessary. Things lose their savor and begin to taste the same after a while, so here is a bit of advice; limit yourself to one or two hot dishes, some fruit, a freshly made omelet and a few salads. If you don't have a will of iron, the very least you're going to need is a strong constitu­tion

THE OMELET section of the buffet features a choice of fillings to suit individ­ual tastes The selection includes ham, sauteed onions, mushrooms, cheese and fresh herbs. A white-clad chef manages three pans at a time with fine results There may be a short wait in line, but it took me that long to finally decide on my filling.

Beyond the fresh fruit section, thee is a bank of cold dishes. Dozens of baskets, brimming with fresh vegetables, add to the general impression of abundance (I won­der it anyone ever confuses the decora­tions with the eatables ) There is no way an ordinary motal could sample all of the items. Like the hot dishes, the cold ones- arc subject to change from time to time

On the day of our visit, some of the salads included green pea, cucumber, herring with sour cream, kidney bean, len til, lima bean and mushroom, black-eyed pea. carrot and coconut, beet, potato, macaroni, chicken and tuna. There was also a platter of cold chicken prepared with fruit, if you want to restrict yourself

to two choices, I would recommend the herring in sour cream and the lima bean and mushroom.

Coffee is served throughout the meal. Every so often a waiter comes by with delicious hot cinnamon buns. Fruit juices are avilable on the buffet. Although the dessert table w ^ directly in my line of vision. I did not have the fortitude to investigate its offerings. There was a huge punch bowl of something that looked like chocolate mousse and another that looked like a mint mousse.

Drinks arc large and well ntade. Bloody Marys have just the right amount of zip You may want to try the Mimosa cocktail, a delightful combination of champagne and orange juice, served with plenty of ice in a balloon goblet.

♦Let's return to the One Perfect Rose theory of dining for a moment. My most memorable bmnch occurred 20 years ago in the dining room of the Gotham Hotel in New York An impeccably poached egg was coated with a velvety hollandaise

mousseline and topped with thin shavings of fresh truffle. Fresh truffle ... not the gummy little canned things that, today, claim a king’s ransom. Naturally, im­printed with that experience, nothing since has matched it My state of mind as a new bride, no doubt, did a lot to color the rosy picture.

On our way through the Tap Room, we passed a large family group in one of the pivate dining rooms. Who is to say that one of its younger members will not have the same fond memories if a Sunday brunch at the Nassau Inn? One perfect rose or a bouquet of daisies .. all in the eye of the beholder

Nassau InnPalmer Square, Princeton R eserv a to n s fo r la rg e p a rlie s

609-921-7500Brunch Yankee Doodle Tap Room on

Sunday 11:50 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.Master Charge and Visa

1

b u c k : ^ j

S thec io u in

Children’s Birthday* Carnivals, Fairs

Grand Openings Company Picnic* Speciai Promotions School Event*

609-924-2471

■■.IGracious Dining.

Oellghtful Atm osphere

IHMoHia'ftRESTAURANT and LOUNGE

agHours: Lunch 11:30 - 2:30 Fri. I Sot. 5-IOP.M.5 Tuof.-Thors. 5-9 P.M. Sun. 4-10 P.M.V 7? Veal It our Specialty \$ I N. MAIN ST.. ALLENTOWN •609-359-9120 9

Now Open For lunch 6 Days A W eek Tuts. - $n. 11:30 - 3 p.m.

CANDLELIGHT DINNERS S«L 6-9 p-m.

BRUNCH Sun. 11:30 p.m.-3 p.n.brm| youl own wine

"A uniqM Mm 4 of geod food Md atmoophon.”

f ThwMillwr'o Wifw Rwstouront

i t located e« Hoe M ie et 42 Sovth M e in i f . ( I t . $ $ 9 ) InX- * - * —I - AnOwWlC •V K AZM Am R C AK O ACCfFTtD (009) M 9-1774

A GOURMET RESTAURANTSpecializing in Szechuan And Hunan (booking

CELEBRATE THE CHINESE NEW YEAR

Special New Year’s Menu Jan. 25 - 31 SI 5. per person. Please call for reservatioiis.

1342 BRUNSWICK A V I.. TRfNTON, N.J.lAt U.S. 1 & Brunewick Circiel

(6 0 « )m -1 l2 2Hours: Mon., Turn., Weds. O Thun 12 -10,

Fri. Et Set. 12-11; Sun. 4i30 - 10O0

HUNAN HEyC H IN E S E R E S T A U R A N T

. H U N A N - P E K I N G S P E C IA L T IE S *

CHINESE INEW YEAR’S Special Banquet Menu

January 2 5 - 3 1 $15 . per person

RESERVATIONS REQUESTED(Resorvation required for more than 5 people)

Bring Your Own ff'ine• T A K E - O U T O R D E R S *

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Actors live on in memorable rolesby JEFF WEINGRAD

'Round and 'round the dial goes .

i t i r i r k i t

FADE OUT: It seems tliat each day's obits these last couple of weeks had a sad surprise in it. One right after the other, characters all ...Victor Buono ..Hans Con- ried ..Harvey Lembeck.. .Paul Lynde. Buono. his huge statute making him far older than his 43 years, is best re­membered here not as a character actor, but rather for the times he played only himself, on the Tonight Show. He used to read some of the poetry he wrote, and it was wonderfully witty, and at times most moving .. All the obits for Hans Conried mentioned his versatility, radio, movies. TV, Broadway, serious, urbane, funny And of course. Uncle Tonoosc. They mentioned it all. except for the one thing that sticks in this craw, his portrayal of the fastidious gambler who meets up with Davy Crockett on his way to the Alamo in the climactic episode of the Disney trilogy that virtually every kid in America tuned in to see back on Feb. 23. 19.35 .. Harvey Lembcck, for those not familiar with the name, played Sgt. Bilko's suaigiii luau, CpI. Icocco Barbdia. "But Ernie. ■ Before Bilko. he earned his stripes with memorable performances in both the stage and movie version of Stalag

17... Paul Lynde. I was never a big Hollywood Squares fan. not at least after Wally Cox and Cliff Arquette died. All Lyndc's obits mentioned his two "flops " when he tried his hand at regular series work. Well, I happened to have been a big fan of Lynde’s 1972 series, which had him playing a poppa driven to distraction by his genius son-in-law. Not Shakespeare, or Neil Simon, or M*A*S*H, but still very funny. Strangely. Lynde’s final no­tice suggested that his weak heart might have come from too much dieting Buono's obits all pointed to his excessive poundage as the major contributor to his death.

i r k i t i r i r

CHRONICLE: That's the name of a new 24-part series popping up for the first time this week on Ch 9. Saturday night at seven. Actually, the whole title is Eric S evare id ’s C h ron ic le , and it 's a magazine series, hosted of course by the former CBS newsman, commentator non pareil I trudged uptown to a ccxiktail soiree recently — The things I do for you! — to catch a few minutes of the new show and hear a few words of whatever might drop from the scholarly Sevarcid. The bits and nieces I caught of the show seemed well done Intelligent. And a bit boring, though to tell the truth I will admit that I certainly didn't give the short presentation

my closest attention. I did manage to sneak a few minutes one on one with the very distinguished looking not-so-retired journalist, and the topic of conversation pursued was the state of CBS News today. Specifically, are we now going to see Dan Rather backed up by some chorus girls in order to give the ratings a good jolt. You'll remember that CBS News brought in a new president recently, and industry ob­servers are watching each of Ms moves carefully to see where his priorities lie. be they show business, journalism business, or somewhere in Iwtween, if that be possible.

Mr Seavareid (somehow I couldn't get myself to call him Eric) surprised me with some of his comments In fact, there was a strange twist to the whole discussion, because I kept saying how disgusted I am with the show-biz aspects of TV journal­ism. and he kept telling me to give it a chance, give it a chance He was talking ‘ about Rather, and his new bosses, and I think he meant to say that he feels that they'll hold tight to proper journalism, while somehow jazzing themselves up at the same time Gixxi luck.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

FOCUS; According to a recent report in • TV Guide, ABC is interested in putting the recently deposed Tom Snyder into a late-night spot opposite Johnny Carson

and the soon-to-be David Letterman. This would have to wait until Snyder's contract expires this fall. Big Tom’s Tomorrow show is now only seen in repeats, and that’s just until the end of the month I’d love to see Snyder come back to haunt NBC. . According to the latest radio ratings book, WOR is the most-listened to station in the metropolitan area. The rest of the top ten plays like this: WKTU, WBLS, WINS, WRKS, WPU, WNBC. WRFM, WYNY, WCBS-AM Rona Barrett’s severing all ties with NBC. She got so fed up with her prime-time disaster — blaming NBC of course — that she now says she’s not coming back to the Today show either. Her contract there runs out later this month . Meanwhile, over on CBS. its newly expanded tWo-hour Morning show announced that in March it will add Pat Collins as its entertainment editor She's an excellent reporter and a lovely person She had taken Miss Rona’s place at Good Morn­ing America when Rona jumped from ABC to NBC. but she stayed there only a few months before deciding that the job wasn't what she wanted, and it was taking her away from her family tixi much to Ixxit She'll be a '.cry welcome return edition come March

k k i t i r i t

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WEEK OF JANUARY 20 26 .1 9 8 2"x. • C . I ' I J3 V i ’ V'

(Continued from p i|e 20)CONTRAST: CBS' Morning is now two hours, suiting at 7 a.tn. in order to jump in at the same time as GMA and Today. Great for CBS News, but a stunning blow to Bob (Captain Kangaroo) Keeshan. He got pushed back to 6:30, and while he managed to see the bright side — he's still on the air — most observers with kiddies in their hearts were very unhappy about the move. Next step is ^viously out the door... Keeshan’s contract now ties him and the program to CBS until the end of 1983 He said he's hoping to start syndi­cating the show sometime next fall, which would be a giant step away from the CSS family.. CBS' replacement for Search for Tomorrow, which got the boot, and then a new home at NBC starting March 29. will be a new soap called Capitol CBS describes the half-hour show as a drama "centering on two young lovers caught in the crossfire of a bitter feud between two ambitious Washington D C. families " . Barney Miller starts up its eighth year this week If we re lucky if II run another eight, but don't put any bets on it It almost folded last year when its exec producer. Danny Arnold, said enough was enough, but then changed his mind

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

FINE TUNING: The networks cancelled 44 shows in 1981. topping the 1980 total of 38. so says Variety, the show-biz Journal. One of the 44 cancelled programs was revived on a new network. Walt Disney, going from NBC to CBS. Long-runners that got the ax in 1981 included C harlie’s Angels, Eight’s Enough, Soap, White Shadow, The Hulk and The Waltons. Comebacks didn't do too well either. Revivals of The B rady B unch, S an fo rd and The Flintstones went nowhere. So too did new tries by Steve Allen, Marie Osmond and the Smothers Brothers. My vote for best new show cancelled goes to The Gangster Chronicles (which NBC hap­pens to be rerunning these days, or rather. Sunday nights, at 11:45). 1 was also very saddened by the departure of Soap, While Shadow and the very short-lived Secrets of Midland Heights . The networks share of viewing audience is shrinking, no doubt about it. Comparisons of Novem­ber. 1976. to November. 1981. show last fall's three-network portion of the total viewing audience to be 7,3 percentage points lower than five years ago. Whcrc'd it go? Cable, independent stations, and in general, just aw ay from the same old stuff the networks keep churning out.. The average hour network show now costs $550,(X)0 to prixluce. Or at least that's the average fee paid by the networks to the production companies

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

CASTING CALL: Michael Learned will once again put on Olivia Walton's old housedress for the special two-hour Waltons revival NBC is readying for a spnng outing. (The series ran on CBS.) John Savage, who was superb in The Onion Field and The Deer Hunter, will star along with Willie Nelson in Coming Out of the Ice, about an American who spent 10 years in Siberia doing hard labor Francesca Annis. so great, and so lovely, as Lillie Langtry in the PBS series. Lillie . plays the Russian woman who he falls in love with.. Lance Kerwin, who starred in James at 16, and 17. has just finished shooting The Shooting for CBS. Lynne Redgrave co-stars in the feature, which will run as a CBS Afternoon .Special. It's about the effects of a hunting accident on the boys involved... Ann Jillian. the wise-cracking blonde from It’s a Living, ,Cjp ,wl}ate)[sr^.^^,:^;jii fhajlged its name

to, has been signed to play Mae West in n upcoming ABC biopk.

COMING ATTRACTIONS: Wednes­day (20) night. Live From the Met, on Ch. 13 sings out with Puccini's La Boheme. Stereo simulcast can be found on WQXR-FM... Thursday (21) night, Ch. 7's Where Were You? series at 7:30 looks back at the year 1964. Beatles, Jack Ruby on trial. Pink Panther, Hurricane Dora, Barbra Streisand's People, My Ftdr Lady, New York World's Fair, opening of Verrazano Bridge and Shea Stadium. Ahhhhh. Tlie kids might want to see a tenth-uiniversary salute to Florida's Dis­ney World. Ch. 2 at 8... Saturday (23), at 7, Ch. 9 cranks up Eric Sevareid’s Chronicles. Later, at eight. ABC starts up weekly version of new King’s Crossing If it looks familiar that’s because it’s a reworked version of sorts of last year’s dearly-departed Secrets of Midland Heights. Same time, over on NBC, Mickey Rooney's new show also makes its seasonal bow. It's called One of the Boys, and has Rooney playing a sprightly grandfather sharing an apartment with his grandson. At 9:30, on CBS, Mike Wallace looks back at the Vietnam War In particular, how the CIA and Army in­telligence lied to the American public about what was going on tliere. Same night, much later, at 2 a m.. Ch. 2 is repeating the 1974 pilot movie for Little House on the Prairie. . Sunday is Super Bowl day, 4 p.m. on CBS. Ch .8 is countering, all day long with some top-line movies, including Mister Rob­erts (1:45). NInotchka (4:30) and Mrs. Miniver (7 p.m ). The Superstars starts up its tenth season on ABC. I p.m. Sunday. At 7 Sunday night, if you can tear yourself away from the game, ABC is a ru nn ing specia l one-hou r be­hind-the-scenes look at the making of Superman I movie. Same time, over on NBC, The Sound of Music is making a return engagement. When that ends, at ten, NBC has news special about Franklin Roosevelt, marking the 100th anniversary of his birth (a few days early)... Ch. 13, Monday (25) night at nine, starts up 11-pan series featuring Leonard Bernstein conducting Beethoven's nine symphonies.

AND THEN: Wednesday (27) night, CBS unreels Tom Horn, cowboy saga that was one of Steve McOueen's last efforts.. If you're up late Thursday night, you can catch one of my favorite warm-the-lieart movies. The Easy Way The 1952 film stars Cary Grant and then-wife Betsy Drake as two softies who just keep adopting kids... Friday (29) night. ABC offers its 1 OOth-birthday special on FDR (one day early), 9o'ekx:k This one includes discussion of the four-term leader by later prezes Nixon, Ford. Carter and Reagan . The classic Maltese Falcon flies onto Ch. 5. Saturday (.30) night. 8 p.m. Same time, Ch 13 takes up the FDR spirit with a two-hour look at the movies that Filled the theaters during the 1930s. CBS, at nine, chimes in with the Golden Globe awards, live from Beverly Hills, Califom-i-a Very late, same night, 2:45 a m , Ch 7 replays Then Came Bronson. THE brooding TV series of the Sixties. Sunday (31) night, at 9. NBC starts up two-part miniscries. World War III Rock Hudson plays the President in late 1980s time of crisis (to say the least). Conclusion is following night. Also Sunday night, also 9 ^ m.. ABC brings on Slap Shot, starring Paul Newman as aging hocjtpy player on team that takes vicious ride toward cham­pionship. I saw it on cable and thought it was a terrific movie. I'm hoping ABC doesn’t butcher it while snipping out all those four-letter locker room words which pop up. if I remember correctly, at least every fifth work or so... [)avid Let- terman’s new late-night show arrives on NBC Monday (I) night at 12:30... Rob R einer's M illion D ollar In fie ld . TV-movie about four aging softballers. airs on CBS Tuesday (2) night, 9 o’clock.

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WEEK OF JANUARY 20 2S. 1982 TIME OFF 21

Spending time well in the kitchenby LINDA BURTON

During my annual bout of the post-holiday Muet, my mother decided to cheer me up by inviting the family to dinner She also intended, she told me on the phone, to use the occasion to "christen” her new microwave oven

Yes. My mother — a woman of some 60-odd years — would dare to roast a stuffed chicken in *¥2 new-fangled minutes of blazingly modem technological glory. I didn't like the idea.

In fact, I didn't even understand why anyone would sraBt to roast a chicken in 416 minutes. To my mind, grandmothers are not suposed to be laser cooks. They are supposed to wear ample white aprons and bake gingerbread men. Somehow or another, the idea of my mother's "selling out" to the microwave industry really seemed a great disappointment.

You see, some of the most pleasant memories of my growing-up years revolve around the lengthy discussions my mother

and I had while "hanging around" the kitchen. 1 liked the kitchen. So 1 have never really understood why anyone would spend money to stay out of it. It seems to me that people eager to flee the kitchen are simply missing out on all the hm.

IN MY EXPERIENCE. our most im­portant discussions h^ipen in the kitchen. Not in the living room. In the living room, most of us tend to sit and be convivial together. We chat, we banter, we discuss the latest books and answer questions about what we have been doing with ourselves lately. But in the kitchen, we pour our guts out.

The kitchen lends itself well to the discussion of important matters. First of all, it offers a captive audience in the form of the cook, who is sort of omnipresently simmering something, or stirring some­thing "until it thickens" (which can be forever).

Secondly, the kitchen smells good, and it is usually, by virtue of all four burners

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going, a waim place to be. For most of us, it is particularly pleasant to discuss impor­tant matters amid nice smells and warm air.

Finally, it is often much easier to share our most intimate feelings and heartaches if it seems like we are not actually doing it. If what we arc actually doing is dicing the onions or peeling the potatoes — if we ate somewhat diverted from the strength of our feelings for a moment — it seems somehow easier to express them. After all, if we become too embarrassed or over­wrought, we can simple return to making the salad with vengeance. So the kitchen is often an especially "safe" place to talk. No one is calling us on the carpet, as it were, to Open -Up-Your -Hear t And-Be-Quick-About-lt.

Certainly, the creation of this low-key, cozy atmosphere is therapeutic for adults. But for children, I think it is cniciai.

IT’S HARD FOR a child to talk about how he might flunk gym or how the other kids made fiin of him on the way home from school, if he is supposed to make an appointment to do it. Children, like all of us. are only human, and it is sometimes easier to amble around a pain before we finally tear the band-aid o ff and expose it to the healing air.

I remember doing that sort of ambling in the kitchen.

'we would come home from school and see Mom in the kitchen simmering chili. We would open the leftigerator, close it, and say "Why don’t we ever have any­thing good to eat? Then we would go

downstairs, take off our sweater, throw it on the floor, come upstairs, open the refrigerator door again, and say "Whats fordiiuier?” Mom would tell us. "Ugh," we would say. "We just had that"

Then we would call our best friend and be told that she was at a yearbook meeting. We would walk around the living room, pick up a magazine, throw it on the sofa, go into the kitchen again, and open the refrigerator. We would tell our mother that we did not want a nice, fresh apple Then we would heave an enormous sigh, look in the cupboards, leave them open, listen to Mom ask if there was anything wrong, and tell her "No.” We would go downstairs, bang on the piano, have an argument with a sibling, come upstairs, look in the refrigerator, shut it again, and agree to chop the green peppers for Mom.

Then — observing her still simmering chili on the stove — we would sit down on a stool and say "You know that stupid Tommy Morgan? I hate that stupid Tom­my Morgan?" Thcin Mom, not looking up from the chili (most Moms knew you’d stop talking if they looked up from the chili) would say "Oh, really? Why do y' u feel that way?" And somewhere in be­tween the green peppers and running the dishwasher, we would tell her.

SO I SPEAK in praise of simmering. It deserves its own preservation fund, like the ones for whales and bald eagles. Microwave ovens may "free” us from the kitchen by taking idl the time out of cooking. But they take all the life out of it. too.

22 i'V lErt 0fdXWMaf2l>'-'>ii¥982

Chariots of Fire’ a jubilant film

by THOMAS SIMONET

Tlw 1924 Olympics held in Paris were memorable in severai ways.

it was ihc last Olympics to include tennis and the first with really contested boxing.

The American team included three men who became famous for other reasons: swimmer Johnny Weissmuller, who later played Tarzan on the screen; Yale Univer­sity rower Ben Spoek, later the famous baby doctor: and sculler Jack Kelly, brother of Princess Grace.

Finnish distance-runner Paavo Nurmi ran with a stopwatch in his hand His mam concern was not the opposition but the records as he won an unbelievable five gold medals

With all that taking piade, a story of the hops, skips and jumps of the British track team would seem to merit little more than a footnote But a basically true story presented in the British trim Chariots of Fire leaves you throwing your fist in the air exultantly for a couple of skinny runners who are the 1924 British equivalents of Rocky

The story follows Harold Abrahams (Ben Gross), a youug Jew at WASPish Cambridge, and Fric Liddell (Ian Charleson), a born again Scotsman who will remind you of Jimmy Carter, as they train to wm for King and country.

Actually, it is not only King and country that inspire these two. Each man has a religious cause as well.

.Abrahams feels ” an ache, a help­lessness. an anger" at being Jewish, and he calls his running "a compulsion, a weapon." .Against what, a friend asks.'.Against being Jewish." You're not

serious, the friend .says, "You're not Jewish." Abrahams replies.

Christian divinity student Liddell's run­

ning has to do with GexI 'He made me fast." Liddell says. "When I run fast. I feel His pleasure." His religious belief keeps him out of the 200-meter final because it takes place-on .Sunday. This causes consternation to the coach, nat­urally. until Liddell agrees to try the 400 meters (not his best event) on another day

THE ISSUES and even the values presented can seem quaint in 1982 While Liddell is worried ab<)ui sports on Sunday (what would the NFL do, Abrahams is hassled by questions about the amateur status of his coach.

But the movie is exhilarating. Hugh Hudson’s direction makes it look and sound at once like a sports spectacular and a period piece. It opened last fall s New York Film Festival to considerable ac­claim

Beautiful, fluid photography by David Watjeins provides dazzling sf>cctaclc. The practice sessions and laces arc covered vsith aerial and tracking shots at sprinting speed, Slow-motion shots provide simul­taneous replays of the high points. Van- gells Papathanassiou's surging score (per­haps too surging, here and there) ntakcs the movie a pleasure to listen to.

Social commentary on topics like the subtle ai.h-Semitism at Cambridge makes some scenes loo dry. John Gielgud and Lindsay Anderson play college deans who fret at length about the appropriateness of Abrahams’ hunger to prevail. "My dear boy. your approach has been, if I may say so. a little too plebian, ” Gielgud says in a typical line.

David Yelland plays u disgustingly charming Prince of Wales who. in real life, attended these Olympics as a spec­tator. a dozen years before he assumed and abdicated the British throne. His scenes convey some gentle barbs at the British

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Not since 'Rocky” has there been such a winning film.privileged class.

Alice Krigc plays an cnterlaincr who is chamied by Abrahams. The flirtation scenes between them are the movie's weakest.

But all this smoke clears away in the exciting races. The movie sets you up to love these underdogs and then carries you

to the thrill you probably felt if you watched the 1980 U..S h<x:key team whip the Russians It’s a jubilant experience.

Chariots of Fire, rated PG. is family fare in every respect, though some of the verbal subtleties and eloquent speeches could be lost on children.

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All submissions to the Now Playing calendar listings must be received no later than Thursday at noon prior to the following week’s pubiication. The caiendar listings include only those events which will take plaM between the Wednesday Tbna on is published and the following Wednesday. However, notices may be sent in advance to be used in the appiopriate week.

All submissions must be typed and double-spaced and contain brief information on the event — where It is taking place, when, who is sponsorirtg it, whether a fee or registration is required, and a teie- phone number readers may call for further information.

To mail submissions, write Now Playing, cJo Tima Off, P.O. Box 3Sa Prinoalon, NJ. 08540. If you have other questions, call 609-924-3244.

A R T ]Worntn Artitts i Grtt G, Douglass College Library, New Brunswick: Jan. 25 through Feb 19, for hours call 201-932-7084

The fncSgnant Artist Middlesex County Col­lege Art Gallery, Edison: Jan, 25 through Feb 12, for hours cal' 201-548-6000. ext. 327.

Earlhfy Bodes by Irving Penn, Philadelphia College of Art Gallery, Broad and Spruce Streets. Philadelphia. Jan 25 through Feb 10. for hours call 215-893-3188.

Princeton Art Association exhibits: paintings by Frank Johnson, First National BanK of Central Jersey, Rocky Hill, through Jan. 30, photographs-by Charles R. Ream, N.J. Na­tional Bank, 194 Nassau St.. Princeton, through Jan. 31: waiercoiors by Pamela Wagner. Center for Health Affairs. 760 Alex ander Rd., PrirKeton. through Jan. 31; The 1982 Invitational Exhibit McCader Theatre. Pnnceton. through Jan. 31 for hours call 609-921-9173

Art Modem by the late Andrzej B. Bajkowski of Manville, Manville Public Library. 100 South 10th Ave.. Manville; through January, for hours call 201-722-9722.

Black and White by Printmaking Council members. Printmaking Council building, Sta­tion and River Roads, North Brar>ch; through Feb, 10. tor hours call 201-725-2110

Paintings by Bucks County artists. Golden Door Gallery, 52 South Main S t , New Hope.P a.; th ro u g h Feb. 10, fo r h o u rs ca ll 215-852-5529

LMbe Houses for Little People, through Feb. 21; Greek arKf Roman Art, continuing exhibit; N.J. Artists Biennial Exhibit throughJan 20; The Design Factory, through Sept 26; Newark Museum. 49 Washington St., Newark; for hours call 201-733-6600

by Ban Shahn. through April 25: Houaes, through Feb. 28:

Watercolors by Marge Chavooahian. through Jan. 24; Rower Prints by Elizabeth M o n ^ through Jan 24, N.J. Ceramica from the Muaaum Coiaction, through April 25. N.J State Museum. West State Street. Trenton; for hours calf 609-292-6300, free.

Raakam arKi Realties: The Other Side of American Painting. 1940-1960, An Gallery. Voorhees Hail, Rutgers '' oHege, New Bruns- w»ck. J in . 17 through March 28, for times call 201-932-7084.

PikKOlon Art Aaaooiation axNbita: photo­graphs by Charles Ream. N.J. National Bank. 194 Nassau St., Princeton, paintings by Frank Johnson, First National Bank of Ceolral Jer­sey. Rocky Hill; watercolors by Pamela Wagner. Center for Health Affairs, 760 Alex­ander R d . Princeton; The 1982 Invrtationa! Exhibit. McCarter Theatre. Prtr>ce!on: through January 609-921-9173.

I for the New Year. The Nassau Gallery. 20 Nassau St.. Princeton; J-n 2 to Feb 6,

Rare and unusual poatara by ChagaA Ptcaaao and Wdl Olanay. and photography posters by Edaard Waaton, CsMarMira Jane, Alfred Stiegitz and Jaccjualna Fogal

Jentra Fine Art Qatlery. Route 33 and MHihurst Read. Freehold; through January, for hours can 201-431-—O838-

Photos by Martha Tabor. Labor Education Center, Cook College, New Brunswick; Jan. 13 to March 30, open Mondays to Fridays. 9 a.m to 4 p.m.. 201-932-7084

P ro m e th e u s s e r ie s , food prepara tion ulef sils and vessels for eating and drinking. Westbroadway Gallery 43' West Broadway. NYC, th ro u gh Jan 28 fo r tim es call. 212-966-2520.

Seeing with the inner Bye, paintings by Peart Hardaway Reese. Princeton Airport; through Feb 1. for times call 609-655-9111.

Pyieneea by Sooiti TafipofcvelA Prirweton UrWeraky CuNure Worksf^, Aaron Burr HaN,through Jan., 201-344-3771.

Afnailcan prkila: prooeaa and proota» Nov. 25 10 Jan 24.1962: Cw w ic tci4p>— : Sbl ■rIMi, Oac.9loFab. 7;20lhCanlwy4lMr- icin Alt 06>icllcni from llw p iii iw n l eolloctlon, continuing oxhibit: Whitnoy Muaaum of Amortcan Art, Madlaon Avo 0175lti St.. Nm YorX CXy. 212-570-3633.

Works of Coftisiiiporsiy BIsok Amsilcsn and African Art, Westam Electric Corporate Educalior Gallery, Carter Road. Hopewell: Jan.etoFeb. 16. to' hours call 609-639-4719

Snowacapo, pfwOopnpfiaandaoid^ureby T. Wayne Hobfta, Princeton University Leegue. 171 Broadmead, Princeton, Dec. 13 to Jwi 22. 609-921-3393.

Works of Atom Paeksnd, Full Houss Qalisfy. 32 Main Si.. Kingston, through Jan., 609-924- 4040.

Pater Boiwist Wight aiNi Via QMsd Ags,and A Maatarpiaca of Amatfcan ArchHsc-tura, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Broad arxi Cherry Sts,. Philadelphia: through Feb. 7. 215-972-7642.

OR pabUIngs ol Anne Packard. Capa Cod artist: walareotora by Joanne Augustine, Anna Conlinas arto Pat Huichiaon: gragft o and paper works by Kim Kettlsr: mbtsd msda palntlngB by Hatrial Hurwitz and Bunny Neuman: aR at lha Full House Oalleiy. 32 Main S t , Kingston: through January. 609-924-4040

Florala on fiberglass, oriental papers in airbrush, and landscapes in wataroolor by Diana WWoc Patton of Brtdgawatar. 1812 Room:pen and Ink works by Tom Duffy ofWest Orange. Buttery: Uambertville House. 32 Bridge St.. Lambertville, through January

1982 Members S h o w . H unterdon Art Center, Old Stone Mill, Center Street. Clinton: J a n . t o to F e b . 14, fo r t im e s c a ll 201-735-8415.

PhotograpfM by Solsbury School students. Continental Bank, Bridge and Main Streets. New Hope, Pa.; through January.

Papatmaker. Rider College. Route 206. Law- renceville, Jan. 10 to 29, tor times call 609-896-5000

I Houtaa, photography exhibit. N.J State Museum. West State Museum. Trenton; thrnirgh Feb 28, open Monday through Fridays. 9 a m to 4:45 p.m . and weekends, 1 to 5 p m.. 609-292-8594. free

PMnfInga and prints by Fla Corona PfeiHer. Fleminglon Public Library, 118 Main St., Flom- ington; through Fsb 201-782-5733.

Paintings. Diamond Sorias, and photographs ol Acadia. Me . by T. Wayne Roberts, Renais­sance Restaurant, Princeton Ave.. Hopewell; through Jan 30. 609-466-1700

Mixed Media Show, Cranbury Corner Gal­lery, 61 N Main S I . Cranbury: through Janu­ary, for limes call 609-655-9111.

M U S I C

I trk>. Cafe Renni, 13-15 Kline's Court, Lambertville. every Friday from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m., 609-397-2631

Soups du Jour, Blackwell Avenue, Hopewell, 8 to 11 p m : Jon Sprout, Nov 20: and O pM * a, Nov. 27: 609-466-3777.

LMsay Famly Trio, Manville Public Library, 100 South 10th Ave., Manville. Jan 21 a( 7:30 p.m., 201-722-9722.

Acoustic Open Stags, Hunterdon County Park System Administration Building, Jan. 21 at 8 p.m , 201-782-1158

John and Pstar’s Pisco, New Hope. Pa.: Dandng D o ^ Jan. 2 i; Ramin Horry, Jan22 and 2 3 ; Chot Bolins, J a n . 2 4 : 215-862-9961.

Eatsry Amulstta, Otde English Square, Ridge Road. Monmouth Junction, South Brunswick. 730 p.m to midnight: Glsnn KsMrInos, Jan. 22: and Jonathan Sprout,Jan. 23; 201-329-2777,

Blusgrass corKort M and M Hall, Texas Road. Old Bridoe Jan, 23 at 8 p.m.. 201-828-1059.

Singsr Ron EKran, East Brunswick High School, Cranbury Road, East Brunswick, Jan,23 at 8:30 p.m., 201-238-7971.

Kaplan. Rider College Fine Arts Theatre. Route 206. Lawrenceville. Jan. 23 at 8:05 p.m., 609-896-5303

MMionay Bralhars eoncart Trenton War Memorial Auditorium, Jan 23 at 7:30 p m , 609-587-7129

Boys Chorus, Somerset County Vocational High School. Jan. 23 at 8 p m . 201-526-6074

UMa O rch M b a of Prtneaton, Princeton Day Schoot Theater. The Great Road. Princeton. Jan. 24 at 3 p.m., 609-924-7497.

Yehudi Manuh in concert, Trenton War Memorial Auditorium. Jan. 24, 609-737-8200.

Tho Y Chambor Symphony, McCarter Theatre Princeton UniversitY, Jan. 25 at 8 p.m., 609-921-8700

Sharril M in a a, baritona. McCarter Theatre. Princeton University. Jan. 26 at 8 pm.. 609-921 8700,

Naw Brunawtok ChambarO' 'ihasba, ChristEpiscopal Church, 5 Pair ison St., New Bruns­wick, Jan 26 a' 8 o.m., 201-273-1755.

D R A M A I

)Jazz Jam Saaikm. various artists. The Blue' Ram, Rt. 532 at Taylorsville Rd , Washington’s Crossing. Pa Sundays, 3 to 7 p m , 215-493-,' 1262 '

A Kurt WaM Cabaraf. Whole Theatre Com­pany, Montclair: Jan 8 to 31, 201 744-2989

Sly Fox, Franklin Villagers Barn Theatre Municipal Complex on DeMott Lane. Franklin Township; th ro u ^ Feb. 7; Fridays. 6 p.m : Satuntays. 8:30 p m ; and Surrdays. 7:30 p.m,, 2C1-873-2710,

Out the Night, George Street Playhouse. 414 George St , New Brunswick: Jan 14 through Feb, 7, for times call 201-246-7717

Keystone, m u s ic a l a b o u t h eyd a y of silent-screen comedy, McCarter Theatre. 91 University Place. Princeton Jan 15 through 31. for times call 609-921-8700.

I Lev# My Wfe, Edtson Valley Playhouse. Oak Tree Road, Edison; Jan. 15 through Feb 14. for times call 201-755-4654

Ladyhouse Btues, N.,). Theatre Forum. 232 E. Front St.. P la in^ ld . Jan. 21 through Feb. 14: for times call 201-757-5880.

The Overtand Roome, The Acting studio, 165 Nassau S t , Pfinceton; Jan 21. 8 p.m.. 609-452-6615

HugMe by Eugene O'Neill. ar>d The Men WNh The Rot^f In Hie Mouth by Luigi PirarKfeUo. Actors Cafe Theatre. Bloomfield C ollege, Franklin and Frem ont S treets, Bloomfield: Jan. 22 through Feb 20. for hours call 201-429-7662

lO u l James Kernoy Campus of Mercer County Community College, North Broad and Acadamy Streets. Trenton, Jan 22, 8 p.m , 609-586.4695

Happy Birthday, Wanda June, N.J Public Theatre, 118 South Avenue E , Cranford; through Feb. 13, tor times call 201-272-5704.

AU D ITlO f^Masterwork Chorus. S tudent C en te r Cafeteria, County College of Morris, Route 10. Randolph Township; Jan. 13 and 20, 8 p.m . 201-538-1860.

MatropolKan OoGra Auditions, New JersGy Dtatrtet, Kirby Arts Center. Lawrenceville School, LawrerK»vllle Ian, 23 from 9 a.m, to 5 p.m.

D A N C F I

Traditional Am otican and Engtah dandng.Wilcox Hall, Princeton University campus, every Thursday, 8 p m , 609-466-3896.

Merge Cunningham Dance Company,McCarter Theatre, University Place, Prince­ton, Jan. 19 and 20, 609-921-8700.

briemalionalfolkdanc-ng. Rutgers Universi­ty. Bartlett Hall, Cook College, New Brunswick, every Wednesday at 7 p .m., 201-932-7084.

SooMWi Country Dancing. Murray Dooge Aall. Princeton University campus; Saturdays, 8 p.m., 609-883-6295, no experiance required

F O R K I D S i

Courttry Coyote Goes to Hoiywood; Daffy Duck and ttia Dinosaur; and Cosmic Zoom:

(Continued on page 25)

24 .WffK'PFTANUAWiO ,26,1932

Week of January 20-27,1982(Continued from page 24)

South Brunswick Public Library. Kingston Lane. Monmouth Junction. Jan. 23. 1 p.m., 201-821-8224.

I.andacepee: Earth'* Fae** with Rosemary Smith. Prtncelon University Art Museum. Princeton; Jan. 23, 11 a m., 609-452-3738.

Crtckal on the Hearth, Newark Museum. 49 Washington St.. Newark; Jan. 23. 1:30 and 3 p m., 201-733-6600, free.

Drop-in Storytime and Snow Craft forpreschoolers, Jan 18, 6:30 p.m ; The Red Balooa film, Jan 20, 11 a m ; Ewing Branch of Mercer County Library, 41 Scotch Rd , Trenton; 609-989-6922

Habitats II, Monmouth Museum, Wonder W arehouse C hildren 's Qallery, Newman Springs Road. Lincroft; through August 1982. for hours call 201 -747-2266.

FILM ]idantifying. feeding and housing.

Nature Center of Washington Crossing State Park, RR 2. Church Road. Titusville; Jan. 23 and 24; 2 p.m., 609-737-0609.

The Sacred Grova, Toulouaa Lautrac with Robert Sawyer, Princeton University Art Mu­seum, Princeton; Jan. 22. 12:30 p.m., and Jan. 24, 3 p.m.. 609-452-3788,

WMar Woriuhop by Friande of Hortieut-tura of Somerset County Park Commission. Lord Stirling Road. Basking Ridge; Jan. 23, 10 a.m., 201-873-2459.

Carolier Lanes. Gazebo Lounge, Route 1 North, North Brunswick, every Saturday from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a m . 609-655-5825.

Somerset County Photography Club. StJohns Foisr-onei r-.hnrch, Somerville; second and fourth Tuesdays of each month, 201 -526 1186.

Cal Colect. planetarium show. Newark Mu­seum Pfanetarium, 49 Washington St.. New­ark; Jan 9 through March 28. 2 and 3 p.m,, Saturdays and Sundays, 201-733-6624

Starbound, a space-age fable, New Jersey State Museum Planetarium. West State Street, Trenton, through Feb 28, Saturdays and Sundays at 2 and 4 p m., also Jan. 15, Feb 12 and 15 at 2 and 4 p m , 609-292-6333

Siddha meditatioa discussion and demonatrallon. East Brunswick, every Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m , 201-238-8262, free

Hopawal Valay Chorus, Spring Concert rehearsals, Hopewell Valley High School mu­sic room. 8 to 10 p m Mondays, no auditions necessary, 609-737-1425.

Antique show, Ramada Inn, East Brunswick. Jan 23 from noon to 10 p.m. and Jan 24 from noon to 6 p.m., 201-687-5296.

TELEVISION I

N JP T V C h , 5 2 , 2 3 , i

LECTURES~|

MISCELLANY I

Focus on the Famly Garden SM* Conaumar Une Garden Stale T o n l^

WEBCDAV PROGRAMS PM

4;00 Mialar Rogers'4:30 Sesame Street 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30V:57 NJ Lottery PIck-il Drawing

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20

8:00 Colega Baskalbal — Live Iona vs St Peter's Bill Perry calls play-by-play and Elnardo Webster does color commentary 10:00 New Jersey Nghtly News 10:30 Al Things Considered — Special— A review of the economic, political and social state of Mainstreet " based upon National P u b lic R ad ioes a w a rd -w in n in g new s magazine, "All Things Considered. Hosts Susan Stamberg and Stanford Ungar anchor the reports.11:30 Captioned ABC World News To-

THURSOAY, JANUARY 21 PM

8:00 McLaughfei's Best — Veteran New Jersey State House reporter and political columnist John McLaughlin talks with Garden State newsmakers.8:30 MBsr's Court — Sentencing" Host

Arthur Miller is joined by guests Judge Lisa Richette, attorney Henry Owens and Steve DelinskI, chief of the Criminal Division of the Attorney General's Office, lor a discussion of sentencing practices.9:00 Maatarplace Theatre — "The Flame

Trees of Th ika" The Grants leave Elspeth with the consenrativa Mrs. Nimmo while they are all in the New Year race in Nairobi. The subdued celebration Elspeth anticipated turns out to be a boisterous event, owing to the antics of Mrs Nimmon's last-minute guests 10:00 New Jaraey Nightly Nows (R)10:30 The Scarlet Letter — Separated tor seven years, the lovers have been reunited. Chillingworth learns of their plan to leave Boston and begin anew The minister preach­es his last sermon and. at that time, reaches a decision that spells disaster for all (R)11:30 CwMoned ABC World News To-

FRIOAY, JANUARY 22 PM

8:00 Once Upon A Ciasale — A Tale of Two Cities" The fury of the poor people in Paris begins to grow against the aristocracy. Monseigneur the Marquis St Evremonde rides through the countryside, and a young peasant is carelessly trampled by his horse. Charles Damay comes to France to renounce his inheritance and to plead with the Marquis to make amends lor the injustices his family committed8:30 Live From Lincoln The Mat — La

Boheme " A new production of Puccini s ro­mantic tragedy, featuring Teresa Stratas as Mimi, Jose Carrerras as Rodolfo, Renata Scotto as Musetta with Richard Stilwell, James Morris, Italo Tajo and Alan Monk. James Levine conducts the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus Videotaped live11:00 WeaWngton Week hi Revlaw 11:30 Rambln' — "Mike Seeger,Elizabeth Colten" Seeger plays virtually all the musical instruments c o m m o ^ associated with moun­tain music. Nkiely-l(ve-year-old Elizabeth Cot- len. best know(i for composing "Freight Train." sings blues and gospel

PMSATURDAY, JANUARY 23

4:00 Croae-Country Skiing — Double Pokng' Learn how ski poles can be utilized to increase control and speed 4:30 MaUnae At The Bijou — The

C ourageous Or. C hris tian " (1940) Jean Hershdt start as a kindly and too saintly country doctor who has a chance to dean out a shantytown Inhabited by Itinerants. Before ha can parsauda cHy fathers to his way of thinking, the good doctor is on the receiving and of romantic overtures by the town widow. Cartoon: "Chrialmas Comas But Once A Year" (1936) Short: "The Houae I Live in " (1945) Starring Frank SInatrs. Cerie’ : "Lost City of the Jurig la ' (1948) Episode live.

6KX) R u ig a f* B ^ — “Cherry HKI High School. West vs North Brunswick High " Students vie In a spirited quest for high scores in thte question and answer rivalry. (R)Once Upon A Claasic — "A Tale of Two

atlas" (R)7dM fcnaganas Latbius — "History and

Evolution of Latinos In The Screen" Latino portrayals since the advent of silent movies to modem television Special guests analyze the trends. (R)7:30 The New Voice— B a tte re d

Teacher " With a teachers' strike looming at Lincoln High and tensions mounting, a teacher is struck by a student with a learning disability arxf the ai^ation becomes intense. Reporters for The New Voice learn about frustrations that lead to violenca (R)7:57 NJ LoMary Pkk4l Drawing — Live 8d» CeBsgs Pukalbal — Live "Pit­

tsburgh at Rutgers" Bill Perry calls the play-by-play, with color commentary by Dick Lloyd.ChannaN 23 and 52 Only10:00 Movie: Three Slslera — (1964)Russian version of the great Chekhov play.Stars Lyubov Sokolova. English subtitlesChannah 50 and n Oidy10:00 Movla: Tha Blgawdat — Stars JoanFontaine, Edmund O'Brien and Ida Lupkio. Achildiess couple go through the rigors of tryingto adopt a child only to be thwarted by thefinding that one parent is a bigamist. (Date notavailable)

SUNDAY, JANUARY 24 PM12:00 Tha Lawmakers12:30 WaaNnglan Week In Review1:00 knagenes 1 aWna* — "Hispanics In

"The Media: A Close Look"1:30 Rower Show 2:00 AnMques 2:30 Sbn Cuisine 3:00 Coneuftadon 3:30 Magic Of 01 Painting 4:00 VMory Garden 4:30 Rulgm Bowl — "Rutherford High

School vs WiHIngboro H igh" Students vie in a spirited quest for answers to questions in this competition for high scores.5:00 Waahingtan Week In Review (R) 5:30 McLaughIn's Beat — Veteran New

Jersey State House reporter and political columnist John McLaughlin talks with news­makers in the Garden State.6:30 Old Houseworks — Professional lips

on renovating and updating your old home­stead.7:00 You Are There— "The Assassination

of Julius Caesar" Walter Cronkile narrates 7:30 Jack Benny — "Benny Is Kidnapped' 8:00 Great Performance* — Brideshead

Revisited" An adaptation of Evelyn Waugh s story about the magnetic, brilliant and dis­solute Lord Sebastian Flyte and Charles Ryder, a struggling painter whose life is changed irrevocably when he falls under

Sebastian'* spell. SebasUan and Charles ars played by Anthony Andrews and Jeremy Irons.lOdW MOVE: Wabash Avenue — (1950) Betty Grable, Victor Mature and Phil Harris in a s t ^ of two friends who play poker, piano and practical joke*.

MONDAY, JANUARY 25 PM

8KM Sport* Inalght — Interviews with New Jersey sports personalities and behind the scene* looks at some of the sporting events In tha Garden State, with host Billy Perry.

8:30 Sport* Amerk:*' Hookey — Wlscnn- ski vs. Minnesota. The Minnesota Gophers, arch rivals of the Wisconsin Badgers. I960 champion in co lle i^ hockey, pit a psrenially powerful team against traditional rivals.9:30 New Jarwy Outdoor* — "A Sense

of Value" A panoramic look at the lour seasons in New Jersey — spring to summer, tall to winter, with all of the Garden State's splendor, from shoreline to mountain trails, and highland lakes to lowland bays. Narrated by Gary Merrill. (R)10:00 New Jersey Mghlly News (R)10:30 Cosmos Closeup — Bill Perry hosts selected members of the Ciosmos soccer team, featuring taped highlights of games and sahiles to outstanding players.11:00 Jan Al The Mskdetiance Shop — "Phil Woods QuartsI" One-time alto sax play­er of the year ( "Downbeat"), Phil Woods. Steve Gilmore. Mike MekHo and Bill (joodwin ars featured in this first of a series of Jazz performances by outstanding musicians. 11:30 Capfkmed ABC World News To-

TUESDAY, JANUARY 26 PM

8:00 Tha Dueheas of Duke SIraat — "Poor Uttls Rich Girl" Louisa misses Charlie mors than aver when she is faced wMh a mirror Image of her young self.0K» Maafatpfacs Theidis — "The Flame

Trees of Thika" The son of the Grants' head mwi. Sammy, finds his way Into tha dynamite storage hut.10:00 Naw Jaraay Mghlly New* — (R) 10:30 Raflecllona of Ihe Third Ral* — "Confessions of Winifred W agner" Continuing film portrayal of Hitler's Germany, from the

' rise of the dictator, to the nation's defeat. (R)

PMWEDNESDAY. JANUARY 27

8:00 Al Creafure* Great and SnaB —Advice and Consent" Siegfried gives some

sound advice and James acts on it. (R)9:00 Jan* Goodal and the World of

AnlmN Bafwvlor — Tonight Jane Goodatl examines the behavior of Ihe King of Beasts' — the lion, magestic and powerful.10:00 Naw Jersey MglWy News (R)10:30 Vikings — "Hammer of the North" The myths arxf reality of the Viking culture are explored in this opening episode of a 10-part series. (R)11:00 Tha Human Fae* of China— 100Entertainment*" First of five, half-hour pro­grams dealing with daily life In contemporary China Forthcoming titles are; "Something for Everyone"; "Son of Ihe Ocean"; "It Is Always So In The World" and "Mind, Body And Spirit' (R)11:30 Captioned ABC World News To-

r The CLAY POTLUXCH & DI.VVEfi SPECIALS DAILY Lunch Served from 11:30 to 5:00 P.M.Dinner Served from 5:00 to 10.00 P.MS IM M Y im i \C t l Seri’ed 12.00 to 3:00 P M

,., ,,,. , . 1st In Ihe area servinp Barbequed(honqMgrie-WljKsLey 5onr Canadian Babv Back Ribs' Were

Ulo<xly Mary t l OO unlh Brunch jm iuted. NEV^R duplicated!“ Simply rnarvHou.s, I rri a rib man. I ll be driving up Route 1 past the Clay Pol and get a \cn lor them iind pop in "

//.in-f-jy Vrif'f'KPr T / f f TKC.VT-.A T IM F S Ma\ I make a sueeostion The Clay Pot' vLould ntakt* a Nfconderful change of

scenorv .Strictlv a class restaurant in a counirifjed setting"/•J.KN.' fiiltFin-v AMFHir.W .IKW'JSi: U tF

"The salad bar u hn li i.s irn lutlctl vkiih aii entrees, is one of the best mv famtl has (dine a<TOSS Save room for the Cheesecake if vou can."

./<«■ Ko.scif T H h I 'R 1\ ( K V i S IW C K F .T

Houle I & Major Kci S Hrun'>'«ut k .//i.sf \ i i n h o f P n n i t 'io n

I t N( HFON n iW K R ( ()( K T A il S

(201) 297 6678

- Ed'OF-fMWMHV ?0 .25

The Force is with Ryo Kawasakibv GENE KALBACHER

Close your eyes, pen your ears and listen u> the oa hestra The bass and drums set the rhythm. An electric guitar states the melcKiy Then, softly, the string section sweetens ihc sound As the parts come together, the music picking up speed, the horns aan m and out. pn>vjdmg Ihc appropriate punch.

Open your eyes. What you’ve been hearing isn't an orchestra. It's a one-man band, and the leaders — not to ntention all the players — is Ryo Kawasaki, the 34-year-old. Tokyo-bom guitarist and elec­tronics innovator.

His band, as it were, is a guitar syn­thesizer. This apparatus, weighing about

350 lb and looking like a soda machine with dozens of knobs, crisscrossed wires and lines of green flashing lights, may not be human, but it possesses a memory that IS simply astounding. His electric guitar plugged into the synthesizer. Kawasaki can command strings, horns and a rhythm section by depressing a foot p<*daf What'‘; more, the guitarist can freely imprt>vise with — or against — himself by summon­ing earlier passages that have been stored in the memory unit.

"I like to appeal to all the senses. ' explains the soft-spoken Kawasaki, his long black hair tucked behind his cars, in his loft in lower Manhattan. ‘The syn­thesizer can expand your imagination be­cause It's a real sound, but it's also an

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Located on Youngs Road — just off Quakcibridgc Road - (609) 586-9444

unreal sound It lets you travel with your imagination "

That holds tnie for both the palyer and the listener In planetariums. where Kawasaki ften peftorms with his guitar synttwsizer while a laser light show is projected overhead, the viewer can ponder the secrets of the stars and be transported by the guitarils's majestic soundtrack. During .hese planetarium performances. Kawasaki and his guitar synthesizer arc positioned in the wings, in near darkness, and listeners can only assume that an orchestra, or an orchestral recording, is playing the music.

MUCH AS HE ENJOYS these solo ventures. Kawasaki is equally comfortable and proficient as a bandleader with an actual flesh-and-blood band. With his main unit, the Golden Dragon, a quintet featur­ing the exqusitc vocals of the lovely liana Morillo, Kawasaki creates what he calls ■’Electronic Third World Space Music. " a heady mixture of jazz. nKk. funk and ethnic textures Kawasaki's other working group. Sapporo, concentrates more on jazz but also is highlighted by MoriiUi's en trancing voice.

Kawa.saki. who believes music is his ■ mission.■■ earned a physics degree from Nippon University m Japan and moved to the United States in 1973. Since his arrival he has wasted no time establishing himself as a premiere guitarist and composer. After stints with such jazz stars as Gil Evans. Chico Hamilton and Elvin Jones, the guitarist busied himself with his own projects, in all. he has recorded 10 albums for a variety of foreign and domestic labels.

Now. in addition to w'ork as both a solo artist and bandleader. Kawasaki intends to dcvelcp multimedia presentations combin­

ing audio with such visual effects as shadow puppets, according to Dan Berman of immigrant Music, a South Orange-based company that handles a multitude of alternative, but highly original and enter­taining. artists.

interestingly. Kawasaki's lifework com­bines his two abiding loves; Electronics and music. Says the guitarist, who also plays classical guitar with crystaliine brilliance: ‘I have to be two persons when I play. The leaders, the operator, has to be cool and In control. The other person is totally emotional — freaking out. scream­ing. whatever. He's the performer. One side always has to know whai's happen­ing.”

Noting that he considers himself a ■messenger.” Kawasaki says; ' The

message comes through me to the au­dience. I feel a force If you don’t feel a force, what’s the reason for playing in the first place ’”

' I E

Ryo Kawasaki

iCHolotiial1745 Aimtll Id., MiMMutli (SMitrMl) ITMIfl

Prime Rib:pe€tj

Sunday-FridayStarts Wad. 1/13PRIME RIBS

Au JusOur famous Western Grain Fad Beef Seasoned & Roasted to Perfection

O'CoBBor's Beats laflitioBl

$g95sinoi cinznsEarly Bird Special

5 -6 p.m.Cup of Homamada Soup, EitolMi Cut Prima Rib, Potato a VopotaMo, Choico of Ooaaort—)oHo, ahorbort, rica pudding or appio pta.

M iaars IrU i ulf-savin uM AIm ibM ntkowrSlitaR

26 WEEK OF JANUARY 20 26. 1982

NOW PLAYING January 20-27CINEMA ] ' Mini Movie Reviews*

E A S TW M 080RCmwna I (009-448-1231): 9:25.Onam a II: A rth u r, 720 . 9:30

7-30,

Park Ava. CInama (201-402-2141): bora, 730 . 920 .Pond Rd. CInama (201-780-2313): Shartqr'a MaeW na, 7:30. 930.

Call for waaliand Mmaa.

HUJBOROUQHH illabo ro C Inam a (201-359-4480): W ad . Thura.. M adam Protatoma. 8. Starts Fri., A S hangar la W afchh ig .

JACKSOND iracto r's C hair (201-304-6085): M adam Profalam s. 7:30. 9:1S.Jackson CInama (201 -367-7300): Call theatar.

LAWRENCEEric I (009-002-9494): O hoal S lo ry.Eric II: Rada.Marcar Mad I (009-452-2868): W lnAM akor. Marcer M all II: Abaaoca o f M o lca .Marcar M all III: S harhy'a MaeW na.O.B. Mad Thaatras (609-799-9331):O ia m a I: CIn d a ra la .CInama II: O haal S ta r/.CInama III: N alghbora.CInama IV: fld d a ra o f (ho L ost A rk.

MANVHXEManvHle Cinema (201-526-6999): C Indara la . 7:30.9:15: S m alO no. 7.8:45. Starts Fri . Vica Squad.

M ONTQOM BIVMontgomery Cinema (609-924-7444): T icka t toH aovon . 7 20. 9 15: Sun., also 5:25.

PRMCETONCardan I (609-924-0263): Roodma. 7, 9:45. Garden II: M adam PraW am a, 7:35. 9:20

SO M BISETRutgers Plaza I (201-828-8787): Abaanca o fM afca. 7:25, 9:30.Rutger.s Plaza II: Tape, 7:25. 9:45.

Cad for * 1 akend timas.

TR BITO NOirector's Chair I (609-586-9111): R aktora o fth e L ost A ik . 7. 9:10D Iraclor’s C2iair II: R o lo va r, 7:10. 9:20

W ESTW SO SO ffPrince Budco I (609-452-2278):Prince Budco II: M ghbnare.Prince Budco III: Lova Ooddaaaaa; M a ty

See the Gallery openings

lir..i„fTlnE Off

MTM6KIY

G reat Good Fair

m aB orins Poor

(W alked out)

SHARKY'S M A C H IN E

Ekirt Reynolds is direc­tor and star o i this gripping action-packed

I police thriller and he handies the assignments w ith extraordinary flair ar>d energy. He's a w ily undercover cop who cracks a high-flying prostitution ar>d drug operation while erv coun te ring an overw he lm ing an>ount of blood, gore and brutality In .the process. In fact, Sharky bears a likeness to Clint Eastwood's "Dirty Harry ' char­acter. Burt Reynold's accom­plishes the teat with more style and glamour. Also stars Rachel Ward and V ittorio Cassman. (R)

Columbia Pictures w ill produce "Cheech A Chong IV ." Filming w ill be In Las Vej^as and Chicago

Alan Arkin and O iriitophcr Leew ill star in 'The Retimi o l Captain Invincible.'’ The film w ill be shot in Australia.

a • •Columbia Pictures w ill release "Robin Hood." a Brooksfilms feature to be filmed in England.

• a •"E," the story o f the last sevm years of E lvii Pretley't life, w ill be a major motion picture. The screenplay is to be based on the novel, 'Elvis; The Final Years."

a • aFilmway Pictures and PolyCram Pictures w ilt jo in tly produce'‘Captuted," a film about the desperate s tru u l^ o f a young man to free nimself from abizarre religious cult

a a aR obert D uva ll w il l star in '^Ten^ler A4eccieR/ " an EMI Films production. The story is about a fallen star.

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W eekand C nferfo lnm ant * Bongwef Foc/fitlas

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Mou'S M on Fti. Lunch ' 1 X d m. 3 p.m . D inn*r 5 p.m 11 p r S«t D in n « f5 p m 1 2 p m , Sun D inn*f 4 p m 9 p.m

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Mon.-Sat. fo r dinner 41 Use Hite ro t toe., TrotUn

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M O D E R N PROBLEM S

I A creaky clursker o f a I comedy w ith Chevy

> as a young blade acctoentafiy ac­

quires te lekine tic powers w hich he uses to w in back his form er g irl friend. The entire production IS beset w ith problems galore: stale jokes, sloppy d irection , shabby performances and an unbearable K rip t. Chevy mopes about w ith an am azirij| lack, o f energy and com ic skiiT It's an unm itigated fiasco Also stars P atti D A rbanville arnf Dabney Coleman (PC)

RO LLO VERjane Fonda and Kris Kristofferson star in this meandering mes­sage movie a b i^ t the

v u ln e ra b ility o f the w orld monetary system. The romantic thriller, set against the backdrc^ of banking and multinational corporations, is overburdened w ith economic technical jargon. Fonda, dressed to the nines, plays a petrochemical company executive trying to save the business from financial ruin. The film and Fonda look elegant, but the bottom line is confusion Also stars Hume Cronyn and Josef Spmmer (R)

N EIG H BO R SI A weird couple moves

next door to peaceful I s u b u r b a n i te John

Belushi and they set out to drive him up the wall with their peculiar antics. This fairly good comic idea soon turns sour and eventually falls apart a* the seams. Many of the boisterous gags are tasteless and crude and nzzle as rapidly as they are presented. Dan Aykroyd and Cathy Moriarty overstrain as the strange new neighbors and director John C Avildsen is at sea w ith the absurd material. (R)

•fd iaF a W M M iM ia l

HJ.BaSvRckNafim n i t m

Meetk>gB held at Unitarian Church 8:00 P.M.

JM . 21:Growinf up gty today

IM 28 Taloiit Niilit

REDS

A brilliant and pas- .r-m m thick slice of

■ history w ith Warren ■ ^ Beatty splendidly per­

forming as radical lournalist John Reed who chronicled the Russian revolution. The epic adventure also involves the stormy love affair between Reed and writer Louise Bryant, played exouisitely by Diane Keaton. Although the remarkable story deals l^a v ily in radical politics, it's amazingly lucid and invig­orating A triumph for Beatty who also produced, wrote andorating A triumph for Beatty who also produced, wrote and directed Superb support from jack Nicholson and Maureen Stapleton. (PCJ

G H O S T STO R Y

wI Four o ld men are haunted by a ghastly

j deed they committed SO years ago ar>d a

m ysterious wom an suddenly appears to seek revenge This topic seems menacing, but the story quickly bogs down w ith trite fright effects, unimpressive atmospherics and other failed attempts to scare The film eventually resembles a fluffed up version of such cheap horror outings as "Friday the 13th" John Houseman. Fred Astaire, Meivyn Douglas and Douglas Fairbanks, I r , as the elderly gentlemen, try to give the production some class but they waste their talents. (R)

€1M 1 CINEMAN SYNDICATE

inf Offhas Ideas for your

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n inE O ff Crossword PuzzleEMMtd ky M ariam Farrar aa4 Jaaa

By FrancM 50 M o rn in g m o is ­ 99 T a s ty sausa 17 A c to r Ray 66 ' V en ice o fHans«n tu re 100 F o lk m u s ic 18 Take in sa il Ja p a n "ACROSS 51 R o m a n tic nam e 24 W here G reek 67 R ooste r s

1 B a ck ta lk m u s ic a l q u e s ­ 101 M u s ic a l a d ­ m et G reek rouser5 Muslim world tion vice to the 25 Mountain 68 Tiny: P refix

10 Signaled 56 Heavy sound lovelorn nymph 69 Name mean15 Angle iron 57 Never 104 Summer des­ 30 In ------(lined ing "youn g19 About 59 Operatic serts up) warrior"20 Word with division 1Q5 Anoint, old 32 ■ It My Friends 70 Russian re­

turn 60 Not so long style Could----- fusal21 Brazilian ago lOb It was 'good' Now!' 71 Carroll

novelist Jerge 62 A m ------ to Pearl Buck 33 Quuky craft O'Conner22 She. in Guy?" i0.^ ------for one's 35 Night sound award

Somme 63 Ring up money 37 Korean 73 Old Irish tax23 Romantic 64 Z ------ 108 The Banana capital 74 Sources

musical ac; u Zebra ■ Bf^at Song ' 38 St Louis 77 Can/ed orsation 65 Fetes 1(}9 Marie's Blues" com­ cheated

26 Sans 67 AnichoKe s orot.'ier poser 79 Civil War citytrappings cousin 110 Fleur------- 39 Flapper s 81 Sealed docu­

27 - Pilgrim's 68 Oi»3i scte'iue 111 Wardrobe fea­ song mentProgress , lor 72 Renaissance tures 40 ••------a 82 Fit for a haloexample lamiiy man . 83 Snowhouse

28 Omni, for one 73 Lovelorn DO W N 41 Lovelorn's 84 Like some29 " . this IS the musical de­ 1 Doctor's order musical birthday

------hea­ mand to patient locale cardsven' • Genesis 75 Prom locale. 2 Silk mill town 42 Gossip sub­ 85 Shinto gate­

31 Minstrel show usually of Lombardy ject waycharacter 76 Cheers 3 Adit 43 ■ A Majority 07 Melodic

32 Woodenhead 77 Neato! 4 Unidentified ------ 89 Caldwell and33 Net set first 78 Wood sorrel one 44 Sea lettuce V aughan

name 79 Noah 's eldest 5 "When Day genus 91 Breed of duck34 Bauxite or 80 Make do (with — 49 Place for 92 Wingding

galena ■out") 6 Metric mea­ Heilman’s 93 Native-born35 'Love Story 81 Lovelorn sure toys Israeli

author musical plaint 7 Like a Cuba 51 Climate. Abbr. 94 In ------36 Stamp out 85 Cheap, in libre 52 Makes tracks 95 Suburban39 Port near Chelsea 8 Pub libation 53 30's band­ sights

Mecca 86 B riila t------. 9 Hodgepodge leader Jones 96 Gave the piper42 Romantic )urist/gastro- 10 Town near 54 Musicians' his due

musical plea nome Elmira, N.Y guide 97 Killer45 Teachers' org. 86 ■'From------ 11 Modify 55 — - hand whale46 Island m the cheated age". 12 ‘------Con 58 Western 98 Rough

Formosa Kiphng D ios ' Indians characterStrait 89 Emp 13 Tokyo, for­ 60 Take on cargo 99 British black­

47 Thumb 90 Revolt merly 61 Province of bird48 Flat Foot 91 Wet blan. ets 14 Gl Joe of Saudi Arabia 102 Yoko

Fioogie with 92 Sunshade WWl 63 Related 103 "Som e------th e ------. 96 Courteous 15 Popular soup language meat and

49 L ike ------of 98 Birthplace of 16 Lovelorn even­ groups canna eat.'bricks Columbus song 65 Toast starter Burns

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L a s t W 9 0k s A n s w e rs

On Bridge

The smother p lay-a fairy taleBy CHARLOTTE and PAUL DOBIN

Once upon a time, in a tar away land, there dwelt an expert bridge player His

luck was such that he almost never was dealt a routine hand, and his skill was such

West* K 7 4 .1 ^ K Q 7 0 8 7 5 3 2* 9

NorthA A 5 2 1? A 6 4 3 0 A J A K 0 J 3

SouthA Q J 10 9 8 6 ^ H0 K 0 10 9 6 A 4

North dealerEast-West vulnerable

EastA void

J 10 9 5 2 0 4A A 10 8 7 6 5 2

North East South West1 A P 1 A P2 NT P 3 0 P3 A 6 A

PAll pass

Opening lead -

4 0

heart king

P

that he never failed to find the optimum play at any contract. One evening, while playing in a high stakes game at the liKal country club, he found himsief in a six spade contract on the deal shown

He won the ace of hearts, ruffed a heart in his hand, and led the queen of spades West, of course, refused to cover, dummy played low and East failed to follow suit Our hero didn't even blink. He continued with the jack of spades which held the trick. A diamond to the ace was followed by another heart ruff. Now came four more rounds of diamonds. West helplessly fol­lowing suit. Finally, the small club was led to the queen and ace. With East on lead, these were the last two cards:

A AA K

A K 7 A 10 8

A 10 9

East perforce led a club. South ruffed with the nine and West's .sure trump trick vanished (or so the story goes).

A person may play bridge for many years and never encounter a "smother” play but if such a play docs come up, there is a greater chance that maybe it will be recog­nized as a result of this tale.

latcal Duplicate Club Results

1/6 MERCER COUNTY DUPLI­CATE: N-S I - Madelyn Plattus, Everett Harris; 2 - Tess Papp, Bob Rhodes; 3 - Bea and Iggnace Littman; E-W' I - Lillian and Joe Coult; 2/3 - Hilda Weiss. Hildied Gross tied with Claiie Levitt, Ben Moskowitz

1/12 PRINCETON YMCA Bridge for Fun: N-S I - Marge Blaxill. Julie Whit- e; 2 - Dianne McLaughlin, Cia McDermott; 3 - Agnes Booher, John Mileham; 4 - Gig Ayling, Elizabeth Baitholomew; E-W I - Joan Lechner, Grace Wiie; 2 - Madelyn

Plattus. Phil Heinz. 3 - Sandy Mulinos, Nectar Sanders; 4 - Alice Irmisch, Seward Jacobi

1/12 PRINCETON YM-YWCA: N-S 1 - Bill Ward, Hal Parker; 2 - Dick Kuti, Sheryle Anapol; 3 - Dick Gustafson, Cy Kust; 4 - Elizabeth Bartholomew, Bruno Voegele; 5 - Natalee Rosenthal, Peter Wright; E-W 1 Charles Seymour, Jim Luce; 2 - D. McDonough, A. Freeman; 3 - Fred Lord. Rex Jackson; 4 - Alan Medvin, Wayne Roney; 5 - Beverly Zissman, F. Feldman.

28 TIM E OFF WtEK OFMNiMItYZO 2 c ; i ia