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Middletown South sweeps SC cage laurels, C1 The Register 25 VOL.101 NO. 207 SHREWSBURY, N.J. FEBRUARY 25, 1979 NINE SECTIONS Vietnamese reportedly strike back BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Vietnamese troops hit back at the Chinese Invaders in three provinces yesterday, "wiping out" hundreds ol soldiers, Hanoi Radio said. China vowed to continue iU "punitive" war and made It clear it will seize disputed border lands Two members of Congress just back from the battle area confirmed Intense fighting and heavy casualties but said Vietnam appears confident of winning and of getting help if needed apparently from Moscow A Hanoi Radio broadcast late yesterday said the Vietnamese had killed or wounded 15,000 Chinese troops and destroyed 230 tanks and armored vehicles since the invasion began Feb. 17. Vietnamese casualties were not men- tioned. The broadcast, monitored in Bangkok, said Vietnamese troops were blocking Chinese ad- vances along Highway 4between Dong Khe and Cao Bang city in Vietnam's northernmost Cao Bang Province and the center of the embattled 450-mile border In Hoang Lien Son Province, farther west, Vietnamese units counter-attacked, killed "hundreds of enemy troops," and destroyed 73 vehicles and four tanks, the broadcast said. In the coastal Lang Son Province, "hundreds of enemy troops were wiped out," with one bat- talion "badly trounced" four miles from the Chinese border, it said There have been reports that Chinese forces have penetrated as far as 20 miles into Vietnam since launching the invasion, purportedly to "punish" Vietnam (or past border incidents In Washington, U.S. intelligence sources said Friday the Chinese drive appeared in have slowed, possibly in preparation for a major thrust In Peking, a government official said Chi- na's action had not ended because China needs "to give a bit more lessons" toVietnam. Japan's Kyodo news service reported yester- day in a dispatch from the Chinese capital It quoted the unidentified official as saying, "The overall pull-out won't come today or tomor- row." He said Chinese troops eventually will withdraw to "what China claims is the border line and not the border line Vietnam insists upon," Kyodo reported. The report said the disputed territory totals about 38 square miles and is scattered all along the border. The dispatch quoted the official as saying the disputed land issue could be negotiated if Vietnam agreed. The Soviet news agency Tass said that, in a conversation with ambassadors from several Asian and African countries, "a Chinese spokesman said that even if China pulls out its troops from Vietnam it will leave its garrisons in some of the so-called 'disputed areas.' The spokesman did not say what the 'disputed territories' are and by what right Peking claims them " Tass said reports that China does not plan to expand the invasion are "refuted by the actual state of things in the combat area." It claimed China is using Western ambassadors and correspondents in Peking to spread "mis- information" about the Chinese aims. In Hanoi, Vietnam's official Nhan Dan newspaper rejected a "mutual withdrawal" formula that calls for Vietnam to withdraw its troops from Cambodia and China to withdraw from Vietnam. See Vtetiameu, page A! Coming to grips in districts Red Bank Catholic's Mark Charmella has Holmdel's Mark Carotenuto In a predicament en« route to a maior decision in their 158-pound Dis- trict 22 bout at Holmdel High School Friday night. Charmella wasn't as successful in yesterday af- ternoon's semifinal action, however. Complete coverage of all the mat action in Districts 22, 23 and 24begins on page Cl. «t«iii.r»».t.i,r FAA denies rule change will increase plane noise By STEVEN L. LUBETKIN The Federal Aviation Ad- ministration has denied charges that a rule change it is proposing will increase the noise levels generated by planes flying over the Mon- mouth County area. In a letter to the Sunday Register. Gordon I Graham of Jackson Township, a former Red Bank resident and a com- mercial pilot, maintained thai the FAA was planning to change its rules in such as way as to extend Its control areas into Monmouth County. "The Red Bank area is about to become a next-door neighbor to Kennedy and LaGuardla Airports." Mr. Graham wrote Mr. Graham said he is em- ployed by a major airline, but he declined to say which one. He said he had been flying for almost 25 years, and currently pilots a Boeing 727 jet. The FAA is planning to ex- pand its terminal control area (TCA), Mr. Graham charged, in such a way as to effectively quadruple the chances of a major mid-air collision "The air traffic controllers and the pilots are against Ibis," Mr Graham said. "The system we use was designed in 1M9, and there have been con- tinual attempts to patch it up." The changes Mr. Graham said would take place are con- tained in a Notice of Proposed Rule-Making issued by the FAA, but will not have the effects he claims they would, according to Fred Farrar, pub- lic information officer with the FAA in Washington. DC. Mr. Graham said the changes would require private planes within the TCA to be equipped with sophisticated equipment to transmit detailed identification information to radar scopes. "To meet the requirements. 11,900 worth of equipment will be required for which there is no other use," Mr Graham asserted. The equipment, a radar Future of Resorts rests with casino commission ATLANTIC CITY (AP) - Like students cramming for final exams, five casino com- missioners are spending the weekend studying transcripts, charts and documents in their Boardwalk offices in preparation for a vote on Resorts International tomorrow. The commissioners are meeting informally in groups of twos and threes to discuss the 8,078 pages of testimony and 468 exhibits produced during 30 days of hearings into the company's application for a permanent casino license. The documents were spread neatly around their public meeting room here, looking like a supermarket of paper and plastic binders. Resorts International's long-awaited mo- ment of judgment is expected tu come some- time Monday after the commission reconvenes in public to discuss, debate and finally vote on whether to permanently license the East's only legal casino At least (our commissioners must vote in favor for the license to be granted "There's no question we'll vote Monday." commission Chairman Joseph P. Lordi said. "Unequivocally yes, we're voting." The casino's nine-month temporary permit expires at midnight tomorrow and cannot be renewed without an act of the legislature, which is unlikely Any decision tomorrow, either for or against Resorts International, would guaran- tee that the casino remains open. The casino would have to close temporarily if the commission does not act by then, accord- ing to company and commission attorneys. If the commission rejects Resorts Interna- tional, a state-approved conservator would take over the casino during certain court ap- peals. If the firm is approved, it would operate under the permanent license, which must be formally approved every year and can be revoked with cause at any time. Set F«l»ra, page Al 1 transponder and an altitude encoder, would transmit an aircraft's identification number and altitude, as well as other data, to air traffic controllers at the three major airports, Mr. Graham said Pilots of private planes would then be subject to FAA control of their movements, he said, and would be unable to change course headings without the approval of al- ready overworked controllers. One of the dangers of the new rules. Mr. Graham said, is that controllers already deal with large numbers of aircraft, both private and commercial. At Kennedy International Airport, two planes take off every 10 seconds. Mr. Graham said. At LaGuardla and Newark Airports, between six and nine planes take off each minute. Mr. Graham asserted. "There are too darn many airplanes for the three airports to handle," Mr Graham said "The controllers end up with so many targets on their radar screens that they selectively display only the targets they're working with." A controller who Instructs his radar screen's computer to selectively display the planes in his area may give one of those planes instructions to collide with a plane that he See FAA, page A4 Alaska! Mag Crab K.K Wharf Pub, Shrewsbury Ave., Highlands. 291-5722 py Madness Don't Get Any On Ya! To- night! Chazz Mon.; Phoenix Back Tues , Star Wed. 22M2JJ, Wacko! Licitra is confirmed as head of detectives By BARBARA KATELL LONG BRANCH — The county prosecutor and Ihe mayor of Long Branch made it official at a press conference yesterday morning: Frank R I.icitra, the city's director of public safety, will become head of the county detective squad as of April 1 Mr Licitra's title will be chief of investigations, and he will be paid 130,000 a year He now earns (26.500 annually in his post with the city According to County Prosecutor Alexander D Lehrer, Mr Licitra will fill the job but not the title of Albert V. McCormick, County Prosecutor Lehrer strives for 'better way,' Bl who retired as chief of county detectives last September. Mr. McCormick was paid less than 125,000 a year, and his job was covered by state Civil Service Mr' Licitra's new position will not be covered by Civil Service, so he will not have tenure. Instead, he will serve at the pleasure of the prosecutor. "I'm not appointing a chief of detectives,' Mr Lehrer said "There is a vacancy in the bureau, the vacancy of Mr. Mc- Cormick I am now filling the vacancy. But it was my choice not to appoint a chief of detectives, but to fill the slot open under my budget with a chief of investigators " Mr Lehrer's move will probably eliminate the need to hold a competitive Civil Service examination for the job. Detective Capt. Andrew B. Manning has been acting head of the detective squad since Mr McCormick went on sick leave about 18 months ago. "1 trust Capt Manning will stay with the prosecutor's office as captain of detectives," Mr. Lehrer said. "He is one of tbe best detectives I have ever come across In law enforcement. "I've had discussions with Capt. Manning," the prosecutor continued. "And there have been discussions between Capt. Manning and Mr. Licitra. Capt. Manning has pledged support to me and to Mr. Licitra. "I don't anticipate any problems within the detective bu- reau," Mr. Lehrer Insisted. "I won't allow them. I explained my decision In detail a week ago And everyone has pledged their support to me and to Mr. Licitra." It had long been rumored that Capt. Manning would replace Chief McCormick when he retired. And last summer then Acting County Prosecutor Clinton E. Cronln repeatedly said that he would appoint Capt. Manning to the job If he were still prosecutor when Chief McCormick retired. However, Mr. Cronin returned to his pdst as a deputy attorney general when Mr. Lehrer was Installed as prosecutor for a five-year term last Sept. 1. And Mr. McCormick protracted his last leave until the final mandated retirement date at the end of the month. There had been reports of divUlveness and factions in Ik* county detective bureau when Chief McCormick was still In charge. Andthere were reports that morale was again dropping during the months that Mr. Lehrer kept Capt. Manning as acting chief without announcing a decision as to who would be the permanent head of the 26-man bureau. Mr. Lehrer alluded to the past factionalism when he noted that Mr. Licitra in his 16 months as head of the Long Branch police department united a previously (action-ridden force. Mr. Lehrer said that he expects Mr. Licitra to completely restructure the detective bureau so that it can move intensively Into such areas as narcotics, arson, major crime and white collar crime. And he noted that Mr. Licitra brings extensive experience In narcotics work to the bureau. Mr. Lehrer has already established a narcotics strike force. 8MLkttra,|MftA: THE NEW AND THE OLD - Long Branch Public Safety Director Frank R. Licitra, left, discusses his move In April to a new |ob as head of the county MMKIHktlDHlM prosecutor's detective squad with County Prose- cutor Alexander D. Lehrer, center, and Long Branch Mayor Henry R. Cloffl. Heavy flooding expected today Heavy rain forecasts caused flood watches to be posted (or Monmouth County and most of the Garden State yesterday, as New Jerseyans readied for the latest bout with the weather Rain, heavy at times, was expected to overtake New Jer- sey and cause flooding In Id- lying areas, normal flood areas, basements and high- ways, the National Weather Service said. The rain began to pelt Mon- mouth County late yesterday afternoon and by early evening areas along the oceanfronl re- ported some cases of flooding As much as two inches or more of rain was forecast, the weather service said. Pre- cipitation could change to snow as temperatures drop" from the 40s yesterday into the low 30s before the rain ends today or tonight, the weather- man said. A storm system was form- ing in Ihe Gulf states yester- day and was expected to move into our region yesterday, the weather service said. "Actually, what we've got here is a frontal system run- ning from approximately New England southwestward down toward the Texas Gulf Coast," said Val Nowak, a weather- man at the Pomona station "The whole front is moving very slowly " Along, and just ahead of this frontal system are numerous areas of moderate to heavy precipitation. North Jersey was more con- cerned with flooding than South Jersey, according to Nowak. Nowak said the positions of the moon and sun yesterday would also contribute to the high tides. Rich month there is a period when abnormally high or low tides are caused by lunar and solar positions, he said. Yesterday's flood watches were Imposed less than one month after torrential down- pours forced evacuation of homes throughout the state Jan. 26. Brendan T. Byrne had urged the federal government to des- OMe Uilra HMM Brunch today, 12-3. M2-7575. Clam Hal Now Opts 7 days a week, lunch and din- ner. Highlands, 872-MM. ignale five counties as disaster areas in last month's flooding. Warren County was report- Ing some minor flooding yes- terday after rains drenched the Garden SUte Friday night causing snow melting Residents along the Pequest and Muskonetcong rivers in Warren County and the Raritan River in Middlesex County should keep abreast of the flooding situation through today, the weather service warned. They should be pre- pared to move to a place of safety quickly. Banes AaiMiees Walt Green, formerly at Atlan- tic Appliance, now with Barnes Sales and Service Inc., 4U-8Q17. Mon. - Sat., M , Fri., M.

Register 25

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Middletown South sweeps SC cage laurels, C1

The Register 25VOL.101 NO. 207 SHREWSBURY, N.J. FEBRUARY 25, 1979 NINE SECTIONS

Vietnamese reportedly strike backBANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Vietnamese

troops hit back at the Chinese Invaders in threeprovinces yesterday, "wiping out" hundreds olsoldiers, Hanoi Radio said. China vowed tocontinue iU "punitive" war and made It clear itwill seize disputed border lands

Two members of Congress just back fromthe battle area confirmed Intense fighting andheavy casualties but said Vietnam appearsconfident of winning and of getting help ifneeded — apparently from Moscow

A Hanoi Radio broadcast late yesterdaysaid the Vietnamese had killed or wounded15,000 Chinese troops and destroyed 230 tanksand armored vehicles since the invasion began

Feb. 17. Vietnamese casualties were not men-tioned.

The broadcast, monitored in Bangkok, saidVietnamese troops were blocking Chinese ad-vances along Highway 4 between Dong Kheand Cao Bang city in Vietnam's northernmostCao Bang Province and the center of theembattled 450-mile border

In Hoang Lien Son Province, farther west,Vietnamese units counter-attacked, killed"hundreds of enemy troops," and destroyed 73vehicles and four tanks, the broadcast said. Inthe coastal Lang Son Province, "hundreds ofenemy troops were wiped out," with one bat-talion "badly trounced" four miles from theChinese border, it said

There have been reports that Chineseforces have penetrated as far as 20 miles intoVietnam since launching the invasion,purportedly to "punish" Vietnam (or pastborder incidents

In Washington, U.S. intelligence sourcessaid Friday the Chinese drive appeared in haveslowed, possibly in preparation for a majorthrust

In Peking, a government official said Chi-na's action had not ended because China needs"to give a bit more lessons" to Vietnam.Japan's Kyodo news service reported yester-day in a dispatch from the Chinese capital Itquoted the unidentified official as saying, "The

overall pull-out won't come today or tomor-row."

He said Chinese troops eventually willwithdraw to "what China claims is the borderline and not the border line Vietnam insistsupon," Kyodo reported. The report said thedisputed territory totals about 38 square milesand is scattered all along the border.

The dispatch quoted the official as sayingthe disputed land issue could be negotiated ifVietnam agreed.

The Soviet news agency Tass said that, in aconversation with ambassadors from severalAsian and African countries, "a Chinesespokesman said that even if China pulls out itstroops from Vietnam it will leave its garrisons

in some of the so-called 'disputed areas.' Thespokesman did not say what the 'disputedterritories' are and by what right Pekingclaims them "

Tass said reports that China does not planto expand the invasion are "refuted by theactual state of things in the combat area." Itclaimed China is using Western ambassadorsand correspondents in Peking to spread "mis-information" about the Chinese aims.

In Hanoi, Vietnam's official Nhan Dannewspaper rejected a "mutual withdrawal"formula that calls for Vietnam to withdraw itstroops from Cambodia and China to withdrawfrom Vietnam.

See Vtetiameu, page A!

Coming to grips in districtsRed Bank Catholic's Mark Charmella hasHolmdel's Mark Carotenuto In a predicament en«route to a maior decision in their 158-pound Dis-trict 22 bout at Holmdel High School Friday night.

Charmella wasn't as successful in yesterday af-ternoon's semifinal action, however. Completecoverage of all the mat action in Districts 22, 23and 24begins on page Cl. «t«iii.r»».t.i,r

FAA denies rule changewill increase plane noiseBy STEVEN L. LUBETKIN

The Federal Aviation Ad-ministration has deniedcharges that a rule change it isproposing will increase thenoise levels generated byplanes flying over the Mon-mouth County area.

In a letter to the SundayRegister. Gordon I Grahamof Jackson Township, a formerRed Bank resident and a com-mercial pilot, maintained thaithe FAA was planning tochange its rules in such as wayas to extend Its control areasinto Monmouth County.

"The Red Bank area isabout to become a next-doorneighbor to Kennedy and

LaGuardla Airports." Mr.Graham wrote

Mr. Graham said he is em-ployed by a major airline, buthe declined to say which one.He said he had been flying foralmost 25 years, and currentlypilots a Boeing 727 jet.

The FAA is planning to ex-pand its terminal control area(TCA), Mr. Graham charged,in such a way as to effectivelyquadruple the chances of amajor mid-air collision

"The air traffic controllersand the pilots are againstIbis," Mr Graham said. "Thesystem we use was designed in1M9, and there have been con-tinual attempts to patch it up."

The changes Mr. Graham

said would take place are con-tained in a Notice of ProposedRule-Making issued by theFAA, but will not have theeffects he claims they would,according to Fred Farrar, pub-lic information officer with theFAA in Washington. DC.

Mr. Graham said thechanges would require privateplanes within the TCA to beequipped with sophisticatedequipment to transmit detailedidentification information toradar scopes.

"To meet the requirements.11,900 worth of equipment willbe required for which there isno other use," Mr Grahamasserted.

The equipment, a radar

Future of Resorts restswith casino commission

ATLANTIC CITY (AP) - Like studentscramming for final exams, five casino com-missioners are spending the weekend studyingtranscripts, charts and documents in theirBoardwalk offices in preparation for a vote onResorts International tomorrow.

The commissioners are meeting informallyin groups of twos and threes to discuss the 8,078pages of testimony and 468 exhibits producedduring 30 days of hearings into the company'sapplication for a permanent casino license.

The documents were spread neatly aroundtheir public meeting room here, looking like asupermarket of paper and plastic binders.

Resorts International's long-awaited mo-ment of judgment is expected tu come some-time Monday after the commission reconvenesin public to discuss, debate and finally vote onwhether to permanently license the East's onlylegal casino

At least (our commissioners must vote infavor for the license to be granted

"There's no question we'll vote Monday."commission Chairman Joseph P. Lordi said."Unequivocally yes, we're voting."

The casino's nine-month temporary permitexpires at midnight tomorrow and cannot berenewed without an act of the legislature,which is unlikely

Any decision tomorrow, either for oragainst Resorts International, would guaran-tee that the casino remains open.

The casino would have to close temporarilyif the commission does not act by then, accord-ing to company and commission attorneys.

If the commission rejects Resorts Interna-tional, a state-approved conservator wouldtake over the casino during certain court ap-peals.

If the firm is approved, it would operateunder the permanent license, which must beformally approved every year and can berevoked with cause at any time.

Set F«l»ra, page Al

1

transponder and an altitudeencoder, would transmit anaircraft's identif icationnumber and altitude, as wellas other data, to air trafficcontrollers at the three majorairports, Mr. Graham said

Pilots of private planeswould then be subject to FAAcontrol of their movements, hesaid, and would be unable tochange course headingswithout the approval of al-ready overworked controllers.

One of the dangers of thenew rules. Mr. Graham said, isthat controllers already dealwith large numbers of aircraft,both private and commercial.

At Kennedy InternationalAirport, two planes take offevery 10 seconds. Mr. Grahamsaid.

At LaGuardla and NewarkAirports, between six and nineplanes take off each minute.Mr. Graham asserted.

"There are too darn manyairplanes for the three airportsto handle," Mr Graham said"The controllers end up withso many targets on their radarscreens that they selectivelydisplay only the targetsthey're working with."

A controller who Instructshis radar screen's computer toselectively display the planesin his area may give one ofthose planes instructions tocollide with a plane that he

See FAA, page A4

Alaska! Mag Crab K.KWharf Pub, Shrewsbury Ave.,Highlands. 291-5722

py MadnessDon't Get Any On Ya! To-night! Chazz Mon.; PhoenixBack Tues , Star Wed.22M2JJ, Wacko!

Licitra is confirmedas head of detectives

By BARBARA KATELLLONG BRANCH — The county prosecutor and Ihe mayor of

Long Branch made it official at a press conference yesterdaymorning: Frank R I.icitra, the city's director of public safety,will become head of the county detective squad as of April 1

Mr Licitra's title will be chief of investigations, and he willbe paid 130,000 a year He now earns (26.500 annually in his postwith the city

According to County Prosecutor Alexander D Lehrer, MrLicitra will fill the job but not the title of Albert V. McCormick,

County Prosecutor Lehrerstrives for 'better way,' Bl

who retired as chief of county detectives last September. Mr.McCormick was paid less than 125,000 a year, and his job wascovered by state Civil Service

Mr' Licitra's new position will not be covered by CivilService, so he will not have tenure. Instead, he will serve at thepleasure of the prosecutor.

"I'm not appointing a chief of detectives,' Mr Lehrer said"There is a vacancy in the bureau, the vacancy of Mr. Mc-Cormick I am now filling the vacancy. But it was my choice notto appoint a chief of detectives, but to fill the slot open under mybudget with a chief of investigators "

Mr Lehrer's move will probably eliminate the need to holda competitive Civil Service examination for the job.

Detective Capt. Andrew B. Manning has been acting head ofthe detective squad since Mr McCormick went on sick leaveabout 18 months ago.

"1 trust Capt Manning will stay with the prosecutor's officeas captain of detectives," Mr. Lehrer said. "He is one of tbe best

detectives I have ever come across In law enforcement."I've had discussions with Capt. Manning," the prosecutor

continued. "And there have been discussions between Capt.Manning and Mr. Licitra. Capt. Manning has pledged support tome and to Mr. Licitra.

"I don't anticipate any problems within the detective bu-reau," Mr. Lehrer Insisted. "I won't allow them. I explained mydecision In detail a week ago And everyone has pledged theirsupport to me and to Mr. Licitra."

It had long been rumored that Capt. Manning would replaceChief McCormick when he retired. And last summer thenActing County Prosecutor Clinton E. Cronln repeatedly saidthat he would appoint Capt. Manning to the job If he were stillprosecutor when Chief McCormick retired.

However, Mr. Cronin returned to his pdst as a deputyattorney general when Mr. Lehrer was Installed as prosecutorfor a five-year term last Sept. 1. And Mr. McCormick protractedhis last leave until the final mandated retirement date at the endof the month.

There had been reports of divUlveness and factions in Ik*county detective bureau when Chief McCormick was still Incharge. And there were reports that morale was again droppingduring the months that Mr. Lehrer kept Capt. Manning as actingchief without announcing a decision as to who would be thepermanent head of the 26-man bureau.

Mr. Lehrer alluded to the past factionalism when he notedthat Mr. Licitra in his 16 months as head of the Long Branchpolice department united a previously (action-ridden force.

Mr. Lehrer said that he expects Mr. Licitra to completelyrestructure the detective bureau so that it can move intensivelyInto such areas as narcotics, arson, major crime and whitecollar crime. And he noted that Mr. Licitra brings extensiveexperience In narcotics work to the bureau.

Mr. Lehrer has already established a narcotics strike force.8MLkttra,|MftA:

THE NEW AND THE OLD - Long Branch PublicSafety Director Frank R. Licitra, left, discusses hismove In April to a new |ob as head of the county

MMKIHktlDHlM

prosecutor's detective squad with County Prose-cutor Alexander D. Lehrer, center, and LongBranch Mayor Henry R. Cloffl.

Heavy flooding expected todayHeavy rain forecasts caused

flood watches to be posted (orMonmouth County and most ofthe Garden State yesterday, asNew Jerseyans readied for thelatest bout with the weather

Rain, heavy at times, wasexpected to overtake New Jer-sey and cause flooding In Id-lying areas, normal floodareas, basements and high-ways, the National WeatherService said.

The rain began to pelt Mon-mouth County late yesterdayafternoon and by early eveningareas along the oceanfronl re-ported some cases of flooding

As much as two inches ormore of rain was forecast, theweather service said. Pre-cipitation could change tosnow as temperatures drop"from the 40s yesterday into the

low 30s before the rain endstoday or tonight, the weather-man said.

A storm system was form-ing in Ihe Gulf states yester-day and was expected to moveinto our region yesterday, theweather service said.

"Actually, what we've gothere is a frontal system run-ning from approximately NewEngland southwestward downtoward the Texas Gulf Coast,"said Val Nowak, a weather-man at the Pomona station"The whole front is movingvery slowly "

Along, and just ahead of thisfrontal system are numerousareas of moderate to heavyprecipitation.

North Jersey was more con-cerned with flooding than

South Jersey, according toNowak.

Nowak said the positions ofthe moon and sun yesterdaywould also contribute to thehigh tides. Rich month thereis a period when abnormallyhigh or low tides are caused bylunar and solar positions, hesaid.

Yesterday's flood watcheswere Imposed less than onemonth after torrential down-pours forced evacuation ofhomes throughout the stateJan. 26.

Brendan T. Byrne had urgedthe federal government to des-

OMe Uilra H M MBrunch today, 12-3. M2-7575.

Clam Hal Now Opts7 days a week, lunch and din-ner. Highlands, 872-MM.

ignale five counties as disasterareas in last month's flooding.

Warren County was report-Ing some minor flooding yes-terday after rains drenchedthe Garden SUte Friday nightcausing snow melting

Residents along the Pequestand Muskonetcong rivers inWarren County and theRaritan River in MiddlesexCounty should keep abreast ofthe flooding situation throughtoday, the weather servicewarned. They should be pre-pared to move to a place ofsafety quickly.

Banes AaiMieesWalt Green, formerly at Atlan-tic Appliance, now withBarnes Sales and Service Inc.,4U-8Q17. Mon. - Sat., M , Fri.,M.

A2 FEBRUARY 25.1979

Inside StoryGOOD MOIN1NG - The word today for the weather It

wet Heavy ra in .are In the forecast, with flood alerts Ineffect Temperatures are expected to range Into the high Ms.There's also a chance of mow late today, but nothingnansgbing last Monday's onslaught. If you're fortunatefamuli •" > v o U pumping water out of your basement today,use the time to stay dry, sit back and relax with today'sSunday Register offering which Is in nine sections: NewsOne and Two, Sports, Business, Lifestyle, "Monmouth"magukM. U-page TV Week, Comics and The Mini Page

Hav.apeek:

News•ACK FROM IRAN - Samuel Rock, a native of Long

Branch, has returned from Iran after spending little morethan a few weeks there on a new Job. Staff writer Joan Kahncaught up with Mr. Rock at his sister's house In Sea Brightand filed a story on page AS.

rROSECUTOR PROFILE - Monmouth County Prosecutor Alexander Lehrer has been on the Job six months,striving for the "better way." Freehold Bureau Chief Wil-liam J. Zaoraki profiles Mr Lehrer and his accomplishmentssince assuming the position See page Bl. <•>

RED LETTER DAY It's April i, the' day the countyfreeholders have declared "I Love Monmouth Day," inspiredby. The Register's contest. Details on the contest and asample of some of the entries to date also are on page Bl.

SportsEAGLES FLY HIGH - For the first time in Shore

Conference basketball history the same school has won boththe boys and girls basketball championships in the sameyear. Mlddletown Township High School South, only threeyears old in varsity play, boast the kings and queens of the

court, Complete coverage begins on page Cl.DISTRICT WRESTLING - The district wrestling cham-

pionships were staged last night around the state, includingthree sites involving Monmouth County high schools. Findout how the grapplers fared on page Cl.

The ArtsTOLAND TALE - Former Red Banker John Toland, an

outstanding author, has written another book. Staff writerIris Roxencwajg updates the success of Mr. Toland as ourArts section header on page C7.

BusinessFREEHOLD FIXTURE - Silvert's is golden. Harry

Silvert is the subject of a Business section story. He and hiswtfe, Evelyn, are celebrating the 50th anniversary of theirfurniture story which has become a Freehold institution. Itappears on page Dl.

Lifestyle' COSMOS GIRL - Susan Leahy of Freehold, model and

beauty queen, is preparing to embark on still another facet ofher blooming career. She's a new member of the CosmosGirls, "cheerleaders" for the Jersey-based pro soccer cham-pionship team. The story, which ties in neatly with our MiniPage's soccer theme, is on our Lifestyla^aver, page El .

MonmouthMAGAZINE — Today's magazine section focuses on the

role of federal Judges, the impact of black Jews in SouthJersey and a color cover photo and centerfold spread accent-ing winter's white dress by Chief Photographer Don Lordl.

IndexAaa Landers. ElClassified MEditorials AtEngagements. ElLa** Rikeyier DIMavlet aOMtaarks A4OptalM A7OMoterWtrid B4Real Estate D4Slack Market DJWett tap El

DAILY REGISTERPHONE NUMBERS

Mall Office MZ-4M*TrilFree 171-tJHTall Free MM1M

Classified Depl MM7M(Ircalatka Depl M1-4WSSpsrts Depl M2-4M4MMdletewi Barrau 171-HStFreektM Bureau 411-tinL*ag Braiea Bireai . .Hi-MilSUrtehMN Bureau <H Ml -MM

Harbor unit to appeal decision• y MARK GRAVEN aad WILLIAM J. ZAORSKI

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - The borough's Harbor Com-mission yesterday voted yesterday to appeal a decision bySuperior Court Judge Merrill Lane Jr reinstating the harbormaster and the the clerk it fired last month.

On Friday, Judge Lane directed that Richard Weber bereinstated as harbor master and that Rose Krrington be re-instated as clerk and secreteray treasurer

Mr. Weber and Ms. Errington were fired al the com-mission's Jan 1 organization meeting The commission hassince hired Martin Sauble Jr., a former Henry Hudson HighSchool teacher, as harbor master, and hired Lugene Thierolf ofMiddletown. as a clerk

The commissioners decided to ask the courts to slay thereinstatements, pending a decision on the appeal

Ms Erringlon was expected to report to work al 9 a mtomorrow morning, while Mr Weber, who is vacationing inFlorida will not be able to report for work until March IS,officials said.

The commissioners passed a resolution at yesterday's emer-gency session, held in the harbor master's quarters. Simon LakeDrive, to retain Mr Sauble as acting harbor master, until MrWeber's reinstatement is stayed, or until Mr Weber returnsfrom his vacation, if the stay is not granted.

The commissioners also hired Ms Thierolf as a temporaryclerk, untilM a favorable ruling on a request for a slay on thereinstatement of Ms Errington, or until March 6, when thesituation will be reviewed at a regular meeting of the harborcommission

It is likely that the commission will have two clerks report-ing for work tomorrow, because a request for a stay of thereinstatements will nol be filed until lale tomorrow or Tuesday,according lo John Manna, harbor commission attorney

Asked if there would be work enough for two clerks. HarborCommission Chairman James R. Snyder replied: "Yes, if oneworks out in the yard "

Commissioners voting in favor of the appeal in addition to•Mr Snyder, were John Kelleher. Helen Marchetli, Florence

Black and Daniel Ferencxi - all Democratic appointmentsCommissioners Everett Curry and Herbert Juppee, both Re-publican appointees, opposed the appeal.

In his decision Friday, Judge Lane held that the commissionhad not complied with the state's Open Public Meetings Act,also known as the Sunshine Law, when it terminated the twoemployees from their Jobs because there was no public notice ofthai action The two employees were dismissed at the organiza-tion meeting of the commission after control of the appointedbody was turned over to the Democrats. Both then began legalactions to block the commission from hiring replacements andto be reinstated.

In his ruling, Judge Lane continued a court order whichblocked the commission from hiring permanent replacementsuntil there is a full court hearing on the matter.

No replacements are to be hired until that court hearing,directed Judge Lane. He further ordered that the two employ-ees are to receive back pay from Jan. 3 less any amounts earnedby other employment.

Mr. Weber was hired as harbor master in 1171. Ms. Err-ington was hired in 1172 and was appointed secretary-treasurerin 1973 Both maintained in their legal actions that they wereterminated from their jobs because of their political affiliations.

In his ruling. Judge Lane noted that the U. S. Supreme Courtruled in(19?6(that the practice of patronage dismissals were a.restraint on freedoms of belief and association and thus violatedthe First and 14th Amendments of the Constitution. The nation'shighest court held that a non-civil service employee had a"liberty" interest in his job

The N J. Supreme Court in 1978 ruled that a non-tenured,non-civil service employee was entitled to a hearing before hecould be terminated from employment, holding that terminationwithout a hearing amounted to a deprivation of liberty withoutdue process of law.

Judge Lane noted that the state's highest court, in anopinion written by Chief Justice Richard J. Hughes, held thatremoval of an employee from public employment per se ex-posed him to potential disqualification from further publicemployment because he could be automatically excluded from

future civil service Jobs.Both Mr. Weber and Ms Errington "were engaged in public

service," said Judge Lane, adding that "under these circum-stances they had a liberty interest'' in their Jobs.

While the judge ruled that the termination of Mr. Weber andMs. Errington from the commission violated their FourteenthAmendment rights, he was not convinced at this stage of theproceedings that they were lerminattd for "political reasonsalthough I have very grave suspicions."

The burden is on the plaintiffs to prove that they weredischarged because of an exercise ol their First Amendmentrights, said the judge.

Turning his attention to the special meeting of the com-mission of Jan. ] , the judge noted thai the plaintiffs maintainedthat their discharge from their jobs was not on the agenda forthat meeting and that the commission contended that theagenda had been prepared and mailed before the new adminis-tration took office.

Judge Lane said the commission's actions were "pre-cipitous There was no reason whatsoeve why the harborcommission should have acted without giving notice to thepublic."

This leads to the suspicion that the actions were strictlypolitical, said the judge.

When the matter is heard by the court In a full hearing, thecourt will undoubtedly consider whether the two employeeswere discharged solely for political reasons

The two employees at that time also will seek to prove thatthe commission deprived them of their civil rights and that theyshould be entitled to damages.

John C. Manna of Asbury Park, representing the com-mission, had urged the court not to continue the temporarycourt order so that the commission could hire two new employ-ees. He was joined In that motion by Edward McKenna Jr. ofShrewsbury, who represented the individual members ol thecommission.

Eugene McEnroe of, Mlddletown represented Mr. Weber

and Ms. Errington.

Long Branch startssearch for successor

By BARBARA KATELL

LONG BRANCM — Any outstanding policeofficer in the slate who thinks he can eithermatch or exceed I he record of Frank It Licitraas Long Branch director of public safety shouldapply to Mayor Henry R Cioffi immediately

The mayor yesterday said the city willimmediately start looking for a replacementfor Mr Licitra, who announced he will quit aspublic safely director to become head of thecounty prosecutor's detective squad on April 1.

Mayor Cioffi said thai if a replacement forMr Licitra is not named by April 1. he mightappoint an acting director from among thesenior officers in the department But he againinsisted that he would not appoinl a chief nlpolice instead of a civilian director.

The City Council has already gone on re-cord in opposition lo a bill proposed by StaleSen. Eugene Bedell. D-Monmouth. who is alsoadministrator here, that would require everymunicipality lo hire a police Chief

"I don't think it serves the best interests nflaw enforcement to have the head of the policedepartment in a tenured position. " Mayor Ciof-fi said

Mr. Cioffi refused to be pessimistic aboilthe future of the police department without thestrong leadership of Mr Licitra In fact heJokingly insisted that since Mr Licitra "didsuch a good job. we will be overwhelmed withoutstanding applicants and no interim directorwill be needed." Bui Mr Cioffi acknowledgedthat the city "did everything possible lo keepMr. Licitra here" "We're not delighted that hewas lured awa^ by the county prosecutor," themayor said "It is a loss to Long Branch Hut itis natural that he should move on to a biggerjob that pays more than we can afford (Mr.Licitra will be paid $30,000 a year fh his newjob. He currently makes 126,500) "II Is afeather in our caps," Mr. Cioffi said "He joinsat least one-half dozen men who were selectedby me and council who left for jobs of somemagnitude. He carried out the objectives of thedepartment that we set, and his accomplish-ments were constant '

The mayor said thai the city would beseeking a new public safety director "who willbe equal lo Mr. Licitra. and If possible on theface of the earth, someone better."

The mayor denied that morale problemswithin the police department will escalate withthe departure of Mr Licitra. But he noted thatsome people had been troublesome in the past.And he said that if "they want to cause trouble,they will But maybe they will all call a truce."

Mr. Licitra has been director of publicsafety here for the past II months He inheriteda police department which had become bitterlydivided under the leadership of former policedirector S. Marshall Roser Jr. Mr. Reiser re-signed under pressure after heading the de-partment for m months

Mr Licitra has been credited with pullingthe strife-torn police department back togetheragain And he convinced council to add 13 mento the department to bring it up to its fullstrength of 81

Yesterday, Mr Licitra also listed amonghis accomplishments the complete revision ofthe department's table of organization whichpermitted the increase in lieutenants fromthree to six. and an Increase in sergeants fromeight to II He also pointed to a new six-manreview board headed by Cap! Michael Irenewhich is screening candidates for the fozce andhas accepted nine men toward the goal of 13additional men The nine were selected from 20candidates on a Civil Service list. "We want tomake sure we have the best force possible."Mr. Licitra said. *

"Everything I needed for the department, 1got," Mr. Licitra continued. "Everything 1achieved was through the efforts of MayorCioffi, the council and Sen Bedell I feel verybad about leaving "

Mr. Licitra acknowledged that the policeforce was "polarized" when he came. "I in-sisted on an objective approach' and now theforce Ls cohesive,' he said. "I would not toler-ate insubordination. I delegated authority, andwith authority cpme responsibility and accoun-tability We' had a coming together of thedepartment 1 leave with a heavy heart."

He acknowledged that there has been someconcern that the police department will revertback to its previous divisiveness when heleaves. But he said that "it's a strong depart-ment that should go nowhere but up

"The only thing they that can destroy thedepartment is internal friction, and I hope itdoesn't occur," Mr Licitra concluded

THE WEATHER

Shown Stationary Occl»d«d

K«««J •»«•« s r s

jhow

Doto f r o .

' O N A T I O N A I WEATHER SERVICE.NOAA, U.S. Dept. ol Coal

Lacal Weather:Rain, heavy at times, with

passible flooding in low-lying{teas, normal flood areas.Msements. and highwaysPrecipitation could change lo( iow as temperatures dropfrom the low 40s early this•Joining into the low 30s to-night.

, Residents along the HantanRiver in Middlesex Countytooukl keep abreast of theflooding situation through to-day, the Nationa^Weather Ser-

vice warned They should beprepared to move to a place ofsafety quickly.

Tomorrow, a colder airmass will bring intervals ofsunshine with a chance ofsnow flurries. Temperaturesbetween 30 and 35 tomorrow.

OeeaiTenwra lures:Low Ms.Teaay's Tides at Saady

Hafk:High4:59am and5:24p.m.Low 11:21 a.m. and II 33

p.m.

Tomorrow's Tides al SandyHook*

Highs 5:55 a.m. and 6:21p.m.

Low 12:16p.m.

NaUM's Weather:Rain continued to fall over

much of the country yesterdayfrom Texas to the East Coast.Snow fell in parts of South Da-kota, Nebraska and ColoradoSnow mixed with freezing rainfell from the Texas'Panhandleto Oklahoma.

Licitra to headdetective unit

(continued)And he said he "looked forward to having a greater impact onnarcotics now that Mr. Licitra will be directing operations "

Mr. Lehrer said that as prosecutor he would make all finalpolicy decisions in the department. But he said that "anyrecommendations thai Mr. Licitra makes for the restructuringof the bureau will have my complete backing.

"I'm elated thai he has agreed to join the Monmouth CountyProsecutor's office." Mr Lehrer continued. "1 look to thisappointment as the beginning of a new era for the office inwhich we will gel involved in substantial investigations at thecounty level in cooperation with local police departments. And 1also look forward to extensive cooperation with state lawenforcement authorities."

Mr Lehrer acknowledged that he had been speaking to Mr.Licitra for a number of months about coming to the prosecutor'soffice, and that on "three different occasions, Mr. Licitra turneddown offers because of his loyalty to Long Branch "

Mr Licitra said thai it was with "deep, mixed emotions"(hat he was leaving the position of public safety director in thecity, which he has held since October 1977.

He said Mayor Cioffi and the council had given him all thetools he needed to rectify problems he had found in thedepartment when he came And he expressed gratitude lo themand to the men he supervised.

"It is a good police department," Mr. Licitra said. "I had nodifficulty in obtaining the goals I hoped to achieve. My stay herehas been one of deep gratification I have become very attachedlo the department.'It is a fine goup of men. 1 feel bad aboutleaving.

"I hope I can reach the expectations of the prosecutor," Mr.Licitra continued "I will give the county my best efforts."

Mr J,nilra brings a long and outstanding career in lawenforcement, especially in narcotics detective work to his newposition.

Mr Licitra, 52, served 25 years in the state police, retiring in1977 as a lieutenant

In 1974. he was made regional director of the state policenorthern region narcotics bijfcau.

SWIMMING FOR DOLLARS - Marathon swimmer George Kauffmonn,Keansburg, swims for a penny a lap for local students, who had received-pledges from area residents. Mr. Kauffman hoped to say In the water forat least 12 hours to break his personal record set during a swim fromBattery Park In Manhattan to Sandy Hook'.

Kouffmonn strokesfor 12-hour record

By CORSON ELLIS

SEA BRIGHT - After five and a halfhours of swimming yesterday, GeorgeKauffmann was still going strong in his bidto break his own record of 12 Consecutivehours ui the water.

Mr Kauffmann was churning up anddown the indoor pool at the TradewindsBeach Club here in his effort lo raisemoney for area schools, and, after MX)laps, he had apparently turned the eventinto a popular and financial success.

Mr. Kauffmann, a Keansburg mara-thon swimmer and father of 10, who lastsummer swam from Battery Park inManhattan to Sandy Hook and then backhome to Keansburg, had promised to swim"as many laps as possible" for each pennyraised by the students.

Although it has not been determinedhow much money the students had col-lected in pledges, Mrs. Kauffmann, whowas standing at poolside, said that a largenumber of students from Keansburg HighSchool, the Collier School In Marlboro, St.Mary's High School in South Amboy, andSt. Ann's Grammar School in Keansburghad participated in the pledge drive.

The money will go to the schools whosestudents worked to raise the funds, ac-cording to Mrs. Kauffmann. St. Mary'splans to put the funds into its athleticassociation, while Keansburg students willuse the money to pay for their annual classtrip.

Several other organizations donatedmoney to Mr Kauffmann's cause, includ-ing a |100 gift from the Paul EngermeyerMemorial Softball League, Allenhurst,which earmarked the funds for the Ameri-can Cancer Society.

A door prize of a dinner for two went tothe spectators who most closely estimatedthe number of laps that Mr. Kauffmannwould swim.

Bahrs Restaurant in Highlands, ShoreCasino in Highlands, SUrny's in Rumson,the Shipwreck in Keansburg, and LongJohn's in Highlands have donated a prizeof two free dinners to five of the guessers,while Joseph Buonacquista of Fair Haven |

offered a free day of fishing on his com-'mercial fishing boat.

Mr. Kauffmann paused occasionallyfor a candy bar and orange Juice, butnever stopped his forward movement,even while eating.

Mrs. Kauffmann said that, as the half-way mark neared, her husband's pace hadkept steady.

"He hasn't slowed down," she said."He's still going as fast as he was when hestarted."

And while Mr. Kauffmann swam, hiswife, who said that they had celebratedtheir 25th wedding anniversary last Tues-day, watched, as she has done so often.

"He's just fantastic," she said. "Hereally doesn't train that hard, jdsl somerunning and swimming a few times aweek"

Vietnamese hit(continued)

Such a proposal was made Friday night byU.S. Ambassador Andrew Young at an emer-gency meeting of the U N . Security Council todiscuss the Indochina conflicts. The counciltook no action immediately and continued thedebate yesterday.

The Vie—namese( invaded Cambodia twomonths ago and toppled the China-allied gov-ernment there. The ousted regime's soldierscontinue to wage a guerrilla war against theVietnamese.

"China's allies are speaking out about Chi-na's aggression against Vietnam only to con-demn Vietam for 'aggression' against Kam-puchea (Cambodia)," the editorial said.

U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman left Vietnamyesterday after a five-day visit that included atrip to the front lines. On arrival in Bangkokshe said the Vietnamese have "supreme con-fidence" in themselves and feel they can"count on help if they ns^d il."

The New York Democrat said, "I saw a(large number of refugees, a hospital with

wounded soldiers. I heard artillery.""I saw thousands of refugees fleeing the

city to the countryside, bringing with thempigs, oxen, buffaloes and other belongings,"she said after arriving in Hong Kong fromBangkok en route home.

"I saw two trucks loaded with woundedsoldiers," she said.

She said that with fighting in Vietnam andCambodia at the same time, "there's a possi-bility of a World War III."

Rep. Billy Lee Evans, D-Ga., who accom-panied Holtzman, said Vietnamese DeputyForeign Minister Phan Hien told the Americandelegation China invaded Vietnam because theChinese "lost face"ln Cambodia when the pro-Peking Cambodians were defeated.

Evans said he was taken on a tour nearChinese-occupied Lao Cai on Friday.

State budget study to start SHREWSBURY. N.J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25.1979

• y JAMES MAN10N

TRENTON (AP) - A month-long review of Gov.Brendan T. Byrne1. M l billion sUtc budget pro-poul begin* tali week when the Joint AppropriaUom Committee meets on Tuesday

It to the time of the year when many legislatorsplan vacations to Caribbean islands while the 25-member committee holes up in a room under theA»«emMy chamber and gives Byrne's budget adollar-by-dollar scrutiny •

While the committee prepares amendments onhow to spend taxpayers' money for the fiscal yearbeginning July 1, the rest of the Legislature Isexcused from formal voting sessions.

"I'm not prepared to make any recommenda-tions at this point, but I am sure the entire commit-tee is taking a very close look at the budget," saidstate Sen. Bernard Dwyer, D-Middlesex, the com-mittee chairman.

But insiders claim the primary target of legisla-tive wrath in Byrne's budget is a request for a $10.2million increase In tuition charged at state colleges.

"It's no great secret that a main concern is howto find money to eliminate the tuition hike or toreduce it substantially, especially when the As-sembly Is up for election" said one legislative aidewho asked not to be identified.

The 4t,000 students at New Jersey's eight statecolleges face a » percent increase in their $704annual tuition. At Rutgers, the state university,30,010 students are being asked to pay $114 in tuitionnext year, up from $700.

"The budget we're receiving is tight, but at leastwe don't have the big problems of previous yearslike the school funding crisis or a major deficit,"said Assemblyman Francis Gorman, D-Camden, thecommittee vice chairman.

There are no new taxes in Byrne's budget, whichcalls for a $241 million spending increase averaging5 5 percent above the budget last year.

The state Office of Fiscal Affairs is scheduled toopen the initial session of the committee by pres-enting Its review of the Byrne proposal.

The so-called fiscal watchdog of the Legislature,the OFA traditionally has been at odds with stale

treasury estimates of anticipated revenues and de-partmental claims concerning the costs of variousstate programs.

State Treasurer Clifford Goldman is expected tofollow the OFA with a review of the budget and arequest for funds to run his department next year.

A scheduled appearance by members of theCasino Control Commission was postponed becauseof hearings on the application for a permanentcasino license by Resorts International Inc.

After the departments complete their presenta-tions to the committee, there are three days ofhearings planned March 21, March 22 and March 21here for members of the public to express theirrequests for state spending next year.

When the committee finishes its budget study, itprepares a series of resolutions to make final recom-mendations for a budget appropriations bill.

The governor then gets a (inal chance to makedeletions or restorations in the form of line itembudget vetoes before signing it into law in time forthe new fiscal year.

THE STATE•y the Associated Press

'Death status review1 restrainedTRENTON - A Red Bank woman has 45 days to produce

new evidence in her fight to keep the Marine Corps fromdeclaring her pilot husband - missing in action in Vietnam for12 years - legally dead, a judge has ruled.

U.S. District Court Judge Clarkson S. Fisher issued apreliminary injunction temporarily barring the Marine Corpstram completing a "death status review" that could turnPatricia Kane of 270 Broad St., Red Bank, into a widow

Her husband, Maj. Richard Kane, was shot down overSoutheast Asia while flying a reconnaisance mission 12 yearsago.

The ruling Thursday was a partial victory for Mrs. Kane,who contends her husband could still be alive and a prisoner ofthe Laotian government

Her attorney, Robert Kelly, said he was disappointedFisher's order does not extend until her suit challenging theMarine Corps' handling of her husband's review goes to trialNo trial date has been set.

Fisher's ruling noted the Marines furnished Mrs. Kane with15 volumes of information about missing US servicemen in lateJanuary. —

The judge said she should be given an opportunity to reviewthe material and submit any new evidence it might containabout her husband's case to the Marines before a decision Isreached on whether to declare him legally dead

In a hearing last week in Fisher's court, Mrs. Kane said shedoesn't want a review held because the Marines have notprovided her with all Information concerning her husband.

A change In status from missing to killed in action would cutby about two-thirds the $20,000 yearly in pay and benefits thathas been accumulating in a special account for the pasl 12years.

Mrs. Kane said she has not withdrawn any of the money.

Elective hospital surgery haltedNEWARK — The slate Department of Health has ordered

the one-month-old teaching hospital at the College of Medicineto halt all elective surgery because of unsanitary conditions inthe operating rooms. '

Only emergency surgery Is being performed in some of the12 operating rooms, a department spokesman said Friday,adding it has not been determined when the operating roomswill reopen for general surgery at the 520 bed facility.

Department spokesman Mitch Leon said the partial shut-down was ordered earlier this month after department inspec-tors found the following:

—The surgical suite was not maintained as a segregatedunit

—Traffic patterns in the area were "non-existent," a situ-ation which could lead to contamination.

—The scrub sink was also used for the disposal of wastes.—Every precaution was not made to "ensure safe and

aseptic surgical care."—There were insufficient instruments and sterile supplies

for surgical procedures.—The standard of housekeeping throughout the area was

unacceptableSix Inspectors found the alleged deficiencies in a surprise

visit to the hospital Feb. I, less than three weeks after it openedas the hub of the College of Medicine and Dentistry andreplaced the old Martland Hospital

Jenlta McDaniels, spokeswoman for the hospital, said theclosings were "temporary ' She said the closings were forcedbecause the new building "is outdated.

"Any lime you have a building planned years ago," she said,"it is going to be outdated In some aspects when it opens, justbecause things have changed."

Ms. McDaniels described the situation as "normal."We just need to adjust," she said

Two held in 'pot' seizureCLIFTON - Two Canadians were arrested after 175 pounds

of marijuana were found in the trunk of their car yesterday onthe Garden Stale Parkway, authorities said.

Sgt. Joe Kobus, spokesman for the New Jersey State Police,said the Colombian marijuana has an estimated street value of

Being held in the Clifton city jail in lieu of $15,000 baU eachwere Peter Elliott, 2J, of DoUard Des Orneaux, and Byron PAUianasiou, 28, of Point Clair, both of Quebec.

They were charged with possession of a controlled danger-ous substance and possession with Intent to distribute, Kobussaid.

He said Trooper William Bergen stopped the slow-movingcar and found eight bales In the trunk after he smelled a strongodor of marijuana and spotted marjuana seeds on the front seat.

Florida authorities have been notified since the car wasregistered in that state by a third person, Kobus said.

The Daily RegisterThe Sunday Register

PuMltfwd by Tht RtO Bonk RoglitctGilaWlthM In 1171 by John H. Cookond Htnry Clay

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Outlook is brightfor Resorts' cause

By PETER MATTIACEATLANTIC CITY (AP) -

The future never lookedbrighter for Resorts Interna-tional /

In JO days of hearings andmore than 8,000 pages of testi-mony before the New JerseyCasino Control Commission,the state Attorney General'soffice proved little except theembarrassing weakness of Itsown case.

If there is something evilabout Resorts International,Attorney General John J.Degnan and his Division ofGaming Enforcement didn'tshow it here despite his highly-touted year-long investigationand 17 legal objections to apermanent ncens*.

Resorts International bylaw needs the votes of at leastfour of the five casino com-missioners tomorrow for thelicense

The odds are overwhelm-ingly with the house

Only Commissioner AlbertW. Merck, the studious Men-dham millionaire, is a ques-tionable vote. Merck, however,has a record on the com-mission of demanding toughanswers and then voting yes

It is possible that com-missioners, debating in publictomorrow may attach one orseveral conditions to their finalmotion (or licensure The com-mission has already set suchprecedents in lesser matters,but the stipulations are unlike-ly to be more than relativeInconveniences for the con-glomerate

If the commission approvesthe license, Resorts Interna-tional will hold a permanentstate franchise to gross morethan $200 million a year in a

Colts NeckInn robbed

COLTS NECK - A manbrandishing a .38 or .45 caliberrevolver held up the bar at theColts Neck Inn yesterday, es-caping with at least $500. po-lice reported.

The robbery occurred at5:45 p.m., when the suspectwalked into the bar. pointedthe revolver at the bartender,and demanded that he be giventhe money in the cash register,according to police.

Police did not know whattype of vehicle was used by therobber in leaving the scene.

The suspect was describedas white, six feet, two inchestall, with dark complexion,slim in build, wearing a tanJacket and checkered slacks.

The case is being in-vestigated by state detectives,along with state trooper Law-rence DUIette, who first re-sponded to the call!

ANALYSISgambling casino which is al-ready by far the world's mostprofitable The firm plans tobuild two more casino hotelson the Boardwalk.

The c o m m i s s i o n e r s ,through their questions to wit-nesses and other comments,were clearly asking for proofof a "smoking gun" in ResortsInternational's past

— Did the company violateBahamian laws by giving giftsand money to customs officersand by making political con-tributions?

— Did the company willing-ly associate with businessmenor retain employees who wereproven to have direct under-world connections or criminalrecords?

— Did Bahamian gamingauthorities ever formally citethe firm for mismanagementof its Paradise Island casinoand were casino mismanage-ment charges filed here of avery serious nature?

"We can't hold someone re-sponsible today for actionsthat were legal and acceptablein another place, another timeand another situation," saidone commissioner who askednot to be identified

In other words, com-missioners are likely to dis-miss the state's plea that theyset an extremely high (andsome say impossible) standardfor casino developers here Al-leged second-, third- andfourth-hand associations withmobsters will not be enough todismiss a company or its ex-ecutives in a business likegambling.

But assuming the un-assumable, that Resorts In-ternational doesn't deserve acasino license because it issomehow bad. it still wasn't a(air fight here. The state mayhave blown it from the start

At the conclusion of its 17objections filed Dec. 4, stateofficials recommended thatResorts International not belicensed — and Immediately

Lottery winnersTRENTON (AP) - The

winning number in New Jer-sey's Pick-It Lottery yester-day was 887. A straight betpaid $290 and the pairs paid$28. There was no box payoff

The winning number in Fri-day's Pick-It lottery was 315.Straight bet paid $131 and boxbet paid $21.50. Front or backpairs paid $13. The Plck-4number was 3392 Straight betpaid $4,741.

found themselves in an ad-versary relationship with thecompany instead of remainingIn an aloof Investigatory role.

State officials became pros-ecutors in what soon developedInto a desperate win or losesituation. This stance hasdrawn private criticism fromwithin the commission

Also, high administrationofficials. Including Gov. Bren-dan T. Byrne, Degnan anddivision director Robert P.Martinez, may have failed torecognize that their newcasino investigative bureauc-racy was as much on trial thisfirst time around as ResortsInternational

It was Degnan, Byrne's ap-pointee, who spent much ofDecember publicizing thestate's findings and predictinganother victory over organizedcrime, this time in the form ofResorts International.

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LONG WEEKEND PLANNED - New Jersey Casino Commissioners AliceCorsey, left, Chairman Joseph P. Lordl, center, and Kenneth AAacDonaldlook over more than 8,000 pages of transcripts produced In the 30 days ofhearings Into Resorts Internatonal. The commissioners are expected to votewhether to grant Resorts a permanent casino license tomorrow.

Future of Resorts restswith casino commission

(Continued)The commissioners began their private de-

liberations after attorneys for Resorts Interna-tional and the state Division of Gaming En-forcement made their closing summariesThursday during the seventh week of hearings.

They cannot meet as a group because NewJersey's sunshine taw requires any delibera-tion be done In public.

The gaming enforcement division, a branchof the state Attorney General's office, is oppos-ing the (inn based on 17 objections filed on Dec.4. The objections followed a year-long, $1million-plus investigation of the conglomerategoing back to Its roots as the Mary CarterPaint Co. in 1958.

The state charges that Resorts Interna-tional over the years has dealt with persons

with ties to organized crime and sought financ-ing from businessmen of questionable Integrityduring the development of Its casino hotelcomplex on Paradise Island, Bahamas, In themid-1960s

The state further maintains that ResortsInternational kept on employee* with criminalbackgrounds or associations and only firedthem on the threat of legal action or publicexposure. It also charges that the firm hasmismanaged its casinos here and in theBahamas.

Resorts International presented 28 wit-nesses during the hearings who attempted torebut all of the state's charges and picture thefirm as a progressive business operating in theunknown political and social climates of theBahamas and Atlantic City.

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29 CONVENIENT OFFICES • MIDDLESEX • MONMOUTH • OCEAN • UNION

A4 The Sunday Register SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25.1979

OBITUARIES

Milton R. Weaver,former football coach

LAWRENCE, Kan. -Milton Rupp "Buck" Weaver,7}, a former assistant principalaid head football coach atLong Branch, N.J. HighSchool, died Friday at hishome here.

• He w u employed In theLong Branch school systemfrom 1930 until 1M6

Mr. Weaver was a retiredAir Force lieutenant colonela«d a veteran of World War IIaad the Korean conflict.

i He was a graduate ofAlbright College, Reading,Pa., and Rutgers University,New Brunswick, N.J. .

He w u a member of Air

George Repasy Sr.BELFORD — George Re-

pasy Sr., 58, of 173 Ninth St.,died Thursday at MonmouthMedical Center, Long Branch

Bom In Garfleld, he lived inCalifornia and Florida beforemoving here five years ago.

Mr. Repasy was an areamanager for Channel LumberCo.

He w u a communicant ofSt. Mary's Roman CatholicChurch, Middletown

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Dorothy Repasy; twosons, Bruce Repasy of LongBranch, and George RepasyJr. of Dayton, Ohio; a daugh-ter, Miss Joyce Repasy, athome; four brothers, John Re-puy of Garfleld, Joseph Re-pasy of Paramus, Stephen Re-pasy of Oregon, Ohio, andFrank Repasy of Garfleld;three sisters, Mrs. Mary Leducof Passalc, Mrs. Irene Stolz ofHuntsville, Ala., and Mrs Bet-ty Sevenko of Garfield. andthree grandchildren.

The John F. Pfleger Funer-al Home, New Monmouth, is incharge of arrangements.

Mnt. Pilar LizazoLONG ISLAND CITY, NY

- Mrs. PUar Lizazo, 83, of31-85 Crescent St., died Fridayat Freehold Area Hospital,Freehold Township, N.J.

She was bom in Cuba, andresided there until coming tothis country 12 years ago.

She was the widow of LuisFelipe Lizazo, who died in 1967.

Surviving are two step-daughters, Mrs. Delia L. Quin-tero, with whom she lived,Mrs. Nilda Behar-Ojalvo ofFreehold Township, N.J.; asister, Mrs. Josefina Garcia-Tramount of Miami, Fla.; andtwo grandchildren

The Freeman FuneralHome, Freehold, N.J., Is incharge of arrangements.

1M. DtOWl NOllCMBROWN — AnnoE. age «. onFeb fl. 1979. of Me River lid., FairHaven. Devoted mother ot Howard L.and Harold E. Loving grandmother otCarol Slmmonds. Funeral services onMon, Feb. 3*. ot II a.m. at lite WordenFunerol Home. eO E Front SI , RedBank, with the Rev. Charles Williamsofficiating. Interment. Holmdel Cometery. Holmael. Vllltatlon, Sun.l-Sp.m.

DANOWITZ - William, ol FairHaven, on Feb. 24. 197*. Husband olMalvina Inee Savogel. father of Chelter J . Stanley H.. and Col. Edward FFunerol Mail Church ol the Nativity.Fair Haven, on Tues. ot 10 a.m. Visita-tion at the John E Day Funeral Home.

. U Riverside Ave.. (ted Bonk. Sun and

. Mon..}-4and7-f p.m.

FISHER - From. W.. el. PI 7woodrldge Ave , Middletown. on Feb.22. 1970 Beloved husband of HelenGreom. Devoted father of Fronds X

• Oear brother ot Mrs MargorelMcGulre. Funerol Tuesday ol I IS a mfrom the John F. Pfleger FuneralHome, US Tlndoll Rood, New Monmourn. Mass ot Christian Burial will beoffered at SI. Mary's R.C. Church al «a.m. Interment Mount Olivet Ceme-tery, Middletown. visiting Monday 1-4dnd7-fp.m.

M A L O N E Y — Morllyhn E , ageS7, on Feb 71. 1170, al 171 OortmoulhAve.. Fair Haven. Beloved wile olDavid C devoted mother ot Glenn K .Craig C . Woyde E., and Cynthia LMoloney Beloved daughter ol EdnaEngel. Loving siller ol ConstanceJones. Funerol Services Mon.. Feb. » .at 2 p m ol the worden funerol Home,W E Front St.. Red Bonk. The Rev.' Jonathan Miller ottlclollng Interment.Fair view Cemetery. Middletown. VIInotion. Sun.. 1-s and 7-0p.m.

MONAHAN — Patrick r.. styears, ot 74 Bay Ave., East Keonsburg,£n Feb. 22, IfTf. Beloved husband ofVivian R Keouflh. Devoted father ofPatrick, John, and Mrs. Kathleen0 WMadeline Errlcklon, Mrs. PeggyFltlgerold. Mrs. Ann Dulour Funerol

1 Tuesday ol ID: IS a.m. from the John F•pileger Funeral Home. IIS TlndollRood. New Monmouth, N.J. Mass ol

Keonsburg, N J , at It a.m. Interment! SI. Joseph's Cemetery. Keyporl v im; Ing 2 4 and 7-e p.m. Sunday and Mon^ 8 *

R E P A S Y —George Sr . SI years.'fit 173 Ninth It. , Bellord. on Feb 22.1979. Beloved huibond ol DorothyKoshmorlc Devoted lather of Bruce.

j George Jr . and Miss Joyce DearI brother ot John. Joseph. Stephen.. Fronfc. Mri. Mary Leduc. Mrs Irene. StOti. ond Mrs Betty Sevenko Funeral. Monody al I:1S o.m from me John F

pfleger Funeral Home. IIS TlndollRood. New Monmouth. N J. Mai l Olihrlltlon Burial will be offered ot St.JMory's R.C Church. New Monmoulh.

Pmenl Mount Olivet Cemeteryletown. visaing Sunday. 7-4 and

• V I V O - "•nPrl , Feb. J

- Rosemorle Inee Carroll!.). 23, If7f, ol Holmdel. N.J .

] formerly ol Bayonne Beloved wile ol'Joseph R . and loving mother otJoseph Dear sister of Arthur J. Corroll, Mri . Constance Walko, MrsKathleen Opel. Mr i Bernodlne Len

"nan, Mri . Mary Lou Homerle. and MrsThereto Roth, and the late James J

~«nd Richard. Daughter al the late wu• j l o m E. and Cothrlne (nee Herrkkl-,Carroll Relotlvrs and Irlends ore In- ..tiled to attend the funeral from the.William J. K. and G Keenen O'Brien.Funeral Home. M4 Avenue "C".

'ctoyonne. on Tuts., Feb. 27. Funeralt-Mass. SI. Andrew's R.C. Church,i-BoYonne. 10 a.m. Interment, Holy. Craee Cemetery. North Arlington Vis

; a»IH«i>un..7>prri.andMon.74ond

Force I Masonic Lodge andPout K0. V.F.W , both here

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Wilma Weaver; a son,Albert Weaver, at home; and abrother, Edwin R Weaver, ofPompano Beach, Fla.

The Rumsey Funeral Homeis in charge of arrangements

Mr*. Edith C.Reckless

BOYNTON BEACH, Fla -Mrs. Edith G. Reckless, 81, of144 S.W Uth Ave., formerly ofShrewsbury, N.J., died hereFeb. 9

She was a charter memberof the First United Presby-terian Church here and amember of the JonathanDickinson Chapter, Daughtersof the American Revolution.

Surviving are two sons,Walter II Frost of Albu-querque, N.M; and William GFrost, Portland, Ore.; adaughter, Margaret FrostYates, here; eight grand-children and several great-grandchildren

J. KaneHIGHLANDS - Joseph J

Kane, 79, of 404 Navesink Ave ,died Thursday at MonmouthMedical Center, Long Branch

Bom In Kenneth Square,Pa., he had lived here for 55years

Mr. Kane was the pro-prietor of an upholstery shopon Route 36, here.

He was a communicant ofthe Church of Our Lady ofPerpetual Help, here.

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Harriet McKeegan Kane;a son, Thomas J. Kane ofAsheville, N.C.; two daugh-ters, Mrs. Kathleen Kelly ofLeonardo and Mrs. EvelynBrown of Atlantic Highlands;a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Martinof Aberdeen, Mil . a brother,John Kane of Baltimore, Md.;11 grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren

The John P. Condon Funer-al Home in Atlantic Highlandsis in charge of arrangements

Williani DanowitzFAIR HAVEN - WUliam

Danowitz, 88, of 75 PoplarAve , died yesterday at ltiverview Hospital, Red Bank.

He was born in Poland,came to this country in 1911,and moved here in 1921.

Mr. Danowitz retired in1957 as a utilities engineer atFort Monmouth.

He was a communicant ofthe Church of the Nativity Ro-man Catholic Church, here.

• Surviving are his widow.Mrs. M a l v i n a S a v a g eDanowitz; three sons, ChesterJ. Danowitz of Little Silver.Stanley H. Danowitz of West-port, Conn., and Col. EdwardF Danowitz (USMC-ret.) ofAltamonte Springs, Fla.; ninegrandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren.

The John E. Day FuneralHome, Red Bank, is in chargeof arrangmements.

Mitt. Anna E. BrownFAIR HAVEN - Mrs

Anna E. Brown, 95, of 864River Road, died Friday atKing James Nursing Home.Middletown.

She was bom in Wales andhad lived here since 1961

She was the widow ofCharles S. Brown, who died in1961.

Surviving are two sons,Howard L. Brown, with whomshe lived, and Harold E.Brown of North Brunswick,and a granddaughter

The Worden Funeral Home.Red Bank, is in charge of ar-

Frank W. FisherMIDDLETOWN - Frank

W. Fisher, 61, of 7 WoodridgeAve.. died Thursday, at Co-lumbia Presbyterian MedicalCeWr, New York City

Bbrifni Utaw.York City, helived in the Middletown areafor the past 20 years.

Mr. Fisher was a purchas-ing agent for Seagram's

He was a communicant ofSt. Mary's Roman CatholicChurch, here, and a memberof the Holy Name Society atthe church.

He was an Army veteran ofWorld War II. and a memberof the V.F.W. Post 2175V PortMonmouth.

Surviving are his widow.Mrs. Helen Fisher; a son.Francis X. Fisher of Cllf-(wood, and a sister. Mrs.Margaret McGulre of Woods-ide. NY.

The John F. Pfleger Funer-al Home, New Monmouth. is incharge of arrangements.

Holmdel womansuccumbs in fire

HOLMDEL-A local wom-an died yesterday when a firestarted in her home at 12 Cov-entry Square in the HeatherHill development, here.

Mrs. Rosemary Vivo, wholived In the house with herhusband, and son, was pro-nounced dead on arrival atBayshore Community Hospi-tal. The cause of death wasapparently smoke inhalation,according to township FireChief Ralph Molzon, but anofficial determination has notyet been made

Her husband and son werenot home when the fire in-curred, the chief said.

The fire department re-ceived a call from a neighborof Mrs. Vivo al 11:05 a.m. yes-terday, according to police

When firemen entered thehouse, they found Mrs. Vivounconscious in her bedroom asa fire blazed in an adjacentroom, police said.

The house was a single-story ranch house, accordingto Chief Molzon, and the firewas confined to the one room

Chief Molzon said that the

firemen had the fire under con-trol within several minutes af-ter they arrived at the house.

The cause of the fire hasnot been determined, the chiefsaid, adding that county FireMarshal Fred Leggett and hisassistant, John Fowler wereboth present at the scene andwill be Involved in the In-vestigation

Detective Michael Borsariis in charge of the local in-vestigation.

Mrs. Vivo, who was 49, wasbom in Bayonne, and livedmost of her life there beforemoving here eight years ago.

She was a communicant ofSt. Catherine's Roman Catho-lic Church, here

Besides her husband,Joseph Vivo, and son, alsonamed Joseph Vivo, she is sur-vived by a brother, Arthur J.Carroll of Bayonne; and fivesisters , Mrs. Constance _ _ _ _ ^ ^ _ ^ ^ _ _ ^ _ ^ _ _

wasko, Mrs Kathleen Opel, Wathinnton's Birthday sale* lure shoppers to Monmouth Mall in Eatontown yetterday.Mrs. Bemadine Lennon, Mrs. ° *Mary Lou Hamerle, and MrsTheresa Roth, all of Bayonne

The O'Brien FuneralHome, Bayonne. is in chargeof funeral arrangements.

Businesses bounce backJoe *jHambone" Keeleyprofessional boxer

LOWELL, Mass. (AP) -Joe "Hambone" Keeley, awell-known middleweight box-er of the 1920s, died Friday atthe age of 82 in Lowell GeneralHospital

One of a group of pro-fessional fighters to come outof South Boston during the1920s. Keeley was only 18 when

Maxie" Rosenbloom in NewYork and a close loss to PaulBerlenbach who went on to be-come the world middleweightchampion.

Keeley leaves a sister andbrother.

Funeral mass will be saidat St. Augustine's Church inSouth Boston, Monday at >a.m.

Among his major fightswere a knockout of "Slapsie

Mrs. Richard H.Pieper

OCEAN TOWNSHIP -Mrs. Nortna L Pieper, 55, of 4Berger Ave.. died Friday atMonmouth Medical Center,Long Branch.

She was born In Manas-quan, and lived there beforemoving here 15 years ago.

Mrs. Pieper was a memberof the Oakhurst United Meth-odist Church

Surviving are her husband,Richard H. Pieper Jr.; a son,Richard L. Pieper, here; twodaughters, Margaret Britton.at home, and Mrs ViolaMcAllister of Maryland; hermother. Mrs I'earl M.LaVance of Manasquan; twobrothers, David LaVance ofRivervale, and Paul LaVanceof Manasquan; four sisters.Mrs. Margaret Epstein of NewYork City. Mrs. Jessie Lista ofEatontown. Mrs GloriaMcEntee of Collingdale. Pa.,and Mrs. Carol Anderson ofDanlgren, Va. The Woolley Fu-neral Home, Long Branch, isin charge of arrangements.

Lester M. BellNEW YORK - Lester

McCoy Bell, 42. of 19 E. 31stSI, died Friday at BellevueHospital after a brief illness.

He had lived in Neptune.N.J. before moving here 18years ago.

Mr. Bell was a former truckdriver.

He was a former memberof St. Stephen A.ME. ZlonChurch, Asbury Park. N.J.

Surviving are his mother,Mrs. Pearl Bell. Long Branch.N.J., six brothers, Percy BellJ r . here; Willie Bell ofBelmar, N.J.; Howard Bell ofSkiUman, N.J., James and Ed-ward Bell, both of Lakewood,N.J . and Stephen Bell of LongBranch; five sisters, the Miss-es Gloria. Ruby, and DeloresBell, all of Long Branch, Mrs.Pearl Hill, also of LongBranch, and Miss Helen Bell ofAsbury Park.

The Edward E. JacksonFuneral Home. Neptune, is incharge of arrangements.

George P. RobinsonHAZLET-George P. Rob-

inson, 80. of Adam Place, diedyesterday at the Arnold WalterNursing Home, Holmdel

Bom in New York City, hehad lived in Chadwick Beachbefore moving here threeyears ago.

He retired fifteen years agofrom his job as a guard at theMetropolitan Museum of Art,New York City.

He was the husband of thelate Mrs. Agnes R. Walsh, whodied In 1969

Surviving are son. GeorgeD. Robinson, at home; and fivegrandchildren.

The Day Funeral Home,Keyport, is in charge of ar-rangements.

Mrs. Marion M. PikeMATAWAN - Mrs Marion

M. Pike, 78, of 6 WashingtonSt., died Thursday at BayshoreC o m m u n i t y H o s p i t a l ,Holmdel.

Born in Dalton. Mass., shehad lived here 59 years.

Mrs. Pike had been em-ployed as a secretary for theHanson Van Winkle, ManningIt Co. for many years.

She was a 50-year memberand past matron of CirusChapter 123, O.E.S.. and amember of the Club 60 at theFirst Presbyterian Churchhere.

Mrs. Pike was a member ofthe First United MethodistChurch and its Women's Socie-ty of Christian Service.

She was the widow ofEdgar Pike.

Surviving are two sons.Donald McMillan, here, andRobert McMillan of Omaha.Neb., two stepsons, WalterPike, here, and Kenneth Pikeof Reading, Pa., and 13 grand-children.

The Waitt Funeral Home,Marlboro, is in charge of ar-rangements.

Mrs. Alniira R.Slendorn

MORGANVILLE - MrsAlmira Slendorn of GreenwoodRoad died yesterday at PerthAmboy General Hospital

Bom in Newark, she hadlived in Laurence Harborbefore moving here.

She was the past presidentof the Laurence Harbor Wom-en's Club.

Mrs Slendorn was a com-municant of the St. LawrenceRoman Catholic Church.Laurence Harbor, and pastpresident of the church's AltarRosary Society.

She was a member of theV.F.W. Auxiliary here.

She was the widow of Wil-liam T. Slendorn, who died in1976

Surviving are two sons, Wil-liam and Robert Slendorn,both of Howell; two daughters,Mrs. Roseann Potts of Keasby,and Mrs. Kathleen Gormley ofSouth Amboy; and six grand-children.

The Day Funeral Home.Keyport, is in charge of ar-rangements.

Area merchants were generally pleased with their recoveryfrom the ill-fated Washington's Birthday sales last Monday.

Most stores lost out on what is considered one of the biggestdays for retailers because of the fifteen inches of snow whichblanketed the county last week.

The majority of the stores extended their sales to runthrough the week, as a result, and wound up with sales whichequalled or slightly bettered thejr sales for last year.

At Monmouth Mall in Eatontown, Paul Kastner, promotiondirector, said the mall had been extremely busy yesterday.

"The storm took Its toll on Monday, which was a hard day toreplace," Mr Kastner said

Tuesday was a strong comeback day, Mr. Kastner noted"We extended the stay of our attractions, and we had other

attractions on Saturday," Mr Kastner sa"id "We've recoupedsome of it, but 1 have a feeling that the storm was hurtful."

Bud Natelson, owner of Natelson's in Red Bank, said he hadjust finished comparing ttii» year's Washington's Birthday re-ceipts with last year's.

"1 think we picked'it up." Mr Natelson said "We justpecked away at it We had a very big weekend "

Mr Natelson said no individual day this week was as largeas Washington's Birthday last year, but the total sales for theweek equalled last year's receipts.

"We saw a lot of familiar faces, who knew we wereextending the sale," he said.

Herman Huber, manager of Roots in Red Bank and presi-dent of the Greater Red Bank Chamber of Commerce, said theextension of the sales had helped the clothing store.

"Tuesday we were quite busy, and yesterday and todaymore than made up the deficit for us," Mr. Huber said. "I hopethe others did as well."

Mr. Huber said he didn't think the success of the week-longsale would result in longer Washington's Birthday Sales in thefuture

"I think you can push a good thing too far," Mr Huber said"The people accepted the fact that Monday was a washout day.but you'd be killing to goose that laid the golden egg to make thesales any longer You'd be diluting U •'•'• - - -

Mr Huber said the suggestion had come up to extend thesidewalk sales In Red Bank, but sentiment was against it forthat reason

FAA denies noise increase(continued)

isn't aware of. Mr Grahamcharged

"So even though we willhave this Jl ,500 worth of equip-ment to prevent us from collid-ing with his planes, he doesn'teven know we're there," hesaid.

Mr. Farrar confirmed thatthe FAA was proposing to re-quire the equipment on privateaircraft

Mr. Graham said the TCAwould be extended south ofAsbury Park, resulting inmore planes flying directly be-tween New York airports andPhiladelphia fields

"By expanding this TCA toAsbury Park, now It will no

Patrick F. MonahanEAST KEANSBURG - Pa-

trick F. Monahan, 59, of 74 BayAve., died Thursday at Riv-erview Hospital, Red Bank

Born in Jersey City, he hadlived in the Bayshore area forthe past 32 yeasrs.

Mr Monahan was an iron-worker, and a member of Lo-cal 373 of the ironworkers' un-ion, Perth Amboy.

He was a fourth degreeknight of the Knights of Colum-bus, Bayshore Council 2858.

Mr. Monahan was a com-municant of St. Catherine'sRoman Catholic Church, here,and he was a past president ofthe Holy Name Society at thechurch.

He was a Navy veteran ofWorld War II

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Vivian Monahan; twosons, Patrick and JohnMonahan, both of Belford; adaughter, Mrs. KathleenDougherty of Fair Haven;three sisters, Mrs. MadelineErrickson of Long Branch.Mrs. Peggy Fitzgerald ofBarnegat and Mrs. AnnDurfour of Sacramento, Calif.;and nine grandchildren.

The John F. Pfleger Funer-al Home, New Monmouth. is incharge of arrangements.

Ravmond MichaelsMATAWAN - Raymond

Michaels, 54, of Jubilee Circle,died Friday at Riverview Hos-pital, Red Bank.

Bom in New York City, helived in Flushing, N Y . beforemoving here 13 years ago.

Mr. Michaels retired in 1977after 21 years as creative su-pervisor and vice-president ofthe Foote, Cone It Belding Ad-vertising Agency, New York.

Mr Michaels was presidentof the Matawan Regional HighSchool PTA in 1970-71, and hadbeen chairman of the referen-dum committee for the addi-tion to the school.

He was a Cubmaster ofPack 237 and treasurer of BoyScout Troop M, here.

He was a member of St.George's Episcopal Church,Flushing, NY h

Mr. Michaels was an Armyveteran of World War II

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Ann Wolfhegel Michaels;two sons, Kevin Michaels ofMiami, Fla. , and BrianMichaels, at home; twobrothers, Arthur Michaels ofWest Islip, NY., and Col.Harold Michaels of BocaRaton, Fla.; and two sisters,Mrs. Joan Abel of Hicksviile,NY., and Mrs. Shirley Rodri-quez of Boca Raton.

The Day Funeral Home,Keyport, is in charge of ar-rangements.

longer be necessary to go outOver the water," Mr Grahamsaid.

Planes now must do a dog-leg turn over the ocean in or-der to remain in contact withNew York area controllers, hesaid.

Mr. Graham said that thereis a lot of air traffic over cen-tral New Jersey already, but itis flying at high altitudes

"The bulk of it is well abovea mile high," he said "Butwith this TCA. you'll find thebulk of the aircraft between2.000 and 5,000 feet from sevenin the morning until operationscease at 12 midnight or 1 a.m."

Mr Farrar disputed MrGraham's assertions about thealtitude changes.

"The TCAs are going to beexpanded vertically, but nothorizontally." Mr. Farrar said.

The terminal control areawill be expanded so that itsboundaries meet another traf-fic area known as the positivecontrol area, Mr Farrar said

The changes will not in-crease the noise in the RedBank area, he asserted.

"It's not going to Increasethe noise In any way." Mr.Farrar maintained. "Your cor-

Opens officeKEANSBURG • - Dr

James C. Day Jr. has an-nounced the opening of his of-fice for the practice ofpodiatric medicine andsurgery at 365 Carr Ave

Dr. Day is a graduate ofChristian Brothers Academy,Uncroft, LaSalle College, Phil-adelphia and the PennsylvaniaCollege of Podiatric Medicine.Philadelphia

Mr». Lillian P.Powell

BELFORD - Mrs. LillianP. PoweU, 89, of 11 Cedar St.,died yes terday at theBayshore Community Hospi-tal, Holmdel.

Born in Birmingham, Eng-land, she came to the UnitedStates in 1891. She had lived inHazlet twenty years beforemoving to Belford six yearsago;

She was a member of theArlington Chapter No. 66, Or-der Eastern Star, and of theMother's Circle of the ValiantChapter, Order of DeMolay,both in Keamy.

She was the widow of Al-bert PoweU, who died in 1956.

Surviving are a son, GerardP. Powell of Robbinsdale,Minn.; a daughter, Mrs. IrisMeyer, at home; a sister, Mrs.Harry Kessler of Point Pleas-ant; seven grandchildren; andthree greatgrandchildren.

The John W. MehlenbeckFuneral Home, Hazlet, is Incharge of arrangemer^

respondent has some misin-formation "

Mr. Farrar said the jetswould not be flying at thealtitudes Mr Graham sug-gested because of wind drag

"Eighteen thousand feel isactually considered low forthese jets." he said "They'remuch more efficient at higheraltitudes."

Mr Graham criticized the

has not worked," he said"There's too much delay in-volved."

The Notice of ProposedRule-Making, NPRM18M5.deals with proposed changes tothe visual flight rules, Mr. Far-rar said. The notice was issuedJan. 4, and March 5 has beenset as the deadline for com-ments from interested parties

"We will review and eval-present air traffic control sys- mite the comments, and issuetern as Inadequate a final ruling we hope some

"We are separating aircraft time this summer," Mr Far-in virtually the same way we rar saiddid it In 193 9." he said."There's a man looking at aradar screen, and writingdown coordinates on a littleslip of paper. Except that in-stead of slips of paper, now wehave computers, and when thecomputers go down, every-thing stops."

Mr. Graham said the Air-line Pilots Association wasagainst the changes in therules, but he added that hecould not speak for them.

Mr. Graham said the FAAaction was designed toeliminate the possibility ofcomplaints about noise levels.

"The odds on getting com-plaints from the people in thearea will be negligible becausethey will not know who tocall," Mr Graham said"When they find out, theywon't want to make the longdistance call."

"All you're doing is addingmore airspace at the top of

"The system will not and your TCA." he said

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THE WORLDSHREWSBURY, N. J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1979 AS

•y Ike Associated Preu

Iran reveals oil export plansTEHRAN, Iran - The new government said yesterday it

will begin exporting Iranian oil again within 15 days, breathingnew Ufe into the country's devastated economy and easingsupply problems that are being blamed (or recent price hikes.

In downtown Tehran yesterday, gunmen took over theIranian headquarters of International Business Machine Corp.A spokesman for the gunmen said they were sent by AyatullahRuhollah Khomeini's revolutionary committee to question theHI Iranian employees to determine whether any had connec-tions with the. U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, the shah'sSAVAK secret police or Israel.

No one was arrested and, though the men carried weapons,no shots were fired, said an IBM spokesman who declined to beIdentified. He said all foreign nationals working for IBM had leftthe country.

In another development, the man widely regarded as thelikely choice to be Iran's next president, All Shayegan, said inan interview with The Associated Press that Iran cannot goback to uV'first century of Islam," but must become a modernnation with an Internationally acceptable government.

Khomeini, the 78-year-old Moslem religious leader whoheaded the mass movement that toppled Shah Mohammad RezaPahlavl's government, Intends to establish an "Islamic re-public" but has given few details of how it would operate

Shayegan, 76, returned to Iran Thursday after 20 years inexile in France and the United States

Duchess of Windsor has surgeryLONDON - A Buckingham Palace spokesman said late

yesterday that the 82-year-old Duchess of Windsor had under-gone an emergency operation in Paris for an intestinal obstruc-tion and was reported to be in "fair condition."

He said that Information was sent to Queen Elizabeth II,who is touring the Persian Gulf aboard the royal yacht Britan-nia.

According to the palace spokesman, the duchess, who is thewidow of the queen's uncle Edward, was taken to the AmericanHospital in Paris Friday night where It was determined thatsurgery was required to remove the obstruction.

Edward died in Paris in 1172 and his body Is buried atWindsor He became King Edward VIII In January l*Jt on thedeath of his father and was popular until he announced heplanned to marry Wallis Warfield Simpson, an American who atthe time was seeking a divorce from her second husband.

The British government opposed the marriage and the issuedeveloped into a stuggle between the monarch and the Cabinet.

Edward Insisted he had the right to marry the woman of hischoice, even though she was unacceptable to the governmentand the Church of England because of har background.

City native home from Iran, _ , ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ — i — ^ ^^^^^^^B_T HA aasisaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVBaai1 *d_ *** . a. _ „ * * A a 4 111 & A A M ^ U I I U I i A na

•y JOAN KAHN '

SEA BRIGHT- Only six months afterSamuel L Rock signed a two-year con-tract with Grumman Aviation Corp. towork In Iran, he was back on Americansoil and ready to work in another foreigncountry.

"I would like another overseas assign-ment — anywhere where there's no tur-moil," said the retired Air Force mastersergeant who landed in New York Wednes-day after being evacuated from Iran.

He was one of 10 Grumman employeesremaining from the hundreds In Iran, andall left on the shuttle, taking only whatthey could wear and a few days clothing.

The sergeant, a cooking buff, left be-hind some cherished cooking utensilswhich he had shipped to Iran from hishome in California, where his wifeBarbara Jean, a teacher, and his two sonslive. (William John, IS, Is a high schoolstudent in Fairfield and Samuel Jr., 22, is astudent at the University of the Pacific,where he is a tight end on the footballteam.)

Until Mr. Rock learns his next assslgn-ment from the company, he is staying atthe Sea Bright home of a sister, MissCatherine Rock.

Mr. Rock, a native of Long Branch whowas graduated from Long Branch HighSchool in MSI, was a bench stock specialisttor Grumman, supplying nuts and bolts foraircraft, trucks and other machinery inIsfahan, Iran's second largest city, about300 miles south of Teheran.

Only three days after Mr. Rock'a ar-rival In Iran, martial law went into effect,and he remained under some restrictions

EE - Long Branch native Samuel L. Rock Is back at his sister'shome in Sea Bright after leovlng Iran with little more that the locket heclutches.

during the time he remained In the coun-try.

"I knew they had problems, but Iwasn't aware they were that bad." notedMr. Rock yesterday.

Problems In Iran began to surface inDecember, said the Vietnam War veteranwho retired after 26 years in the Air Force.Then the company began sending theAmericans back to the states or to Germa-ny during a 30-day period alter which thecompany hoped the political situationwould cool down.

latHMr pMM >r DM L«.*

The dependents left with only theirsuitcases, leaving behind many personalpossessions. >

On Dec. 27, the Iranian military re-quested that all Americans leave the basein Isfahan. At this time, Mr. Rock and nineother Grumman employees began packingup the possessions of the evacuated em-ployees, including their clothing, furnitureand valuable items. This was loaded onvans for removal to the United States bychartered aircraft.

"Most of the articles are still there,"

Mr. Rock noted. "We continued to packthe goods and put it in storage, hoping theplanes would continue to come in — butthey never did."

Mr. Rock left Isfahan for Teheran Air-port on Monday, taking off by commercialairline to Germany where he remainedtwo days before departing for New York.

But, Mr. Rock notes, there was littledanger in Isfahan, except for one dayshortly before his group left, when helearned there was a mob outside the com-pound gate where his crew was working.

"A couple of shots were fired and someof the Iranians started moving into thehousing area. At this point In time, wewere ordered up onto the roofs of thehousing compound, and we stayed therefor three or four hours. We were told tokeep low," the retired sergeant said.

"They came after our radio equip-ment," said Mr. Rock.

Later at the airport, Mr. Rifck said, hesaw many persons walking about withguns. He said he remained unafraid, de-spite the disturbances.

"I make it a point to g e - along wher-ever I go, and I personally lid not have anyproblems with the Iranians," he said

"If I was sure of safe conduct, I'd goback," he noted.

Mr. Rock said he believed that many ofthe Iranians were caught up in a civilsituation over which they had little con-trol.

"The people of Iran are no differentthan anybody else in the world. I feel theyare just caught up in a movement, like theblacks were caught up in a black move-ment a few years back "

After efforts to settle the dispute failed, Edward abdicated,ending a 325-day reign as the first English monarch to give upthe throne voluntarily.

Parliament passed a bill of abdication on Dec. 11, 1938. uidEdward's brother became King George V. The ex-king then wasgranted the Utle of Duke of Windsor, and on June 3. 1937, hemarried Wallis Warfield in France

After World War II, the couple lived In France as royaloutcasts, but made many voyages abroad Including visits to theUnited States

Ugandans, Tanzanians clashNAIROBI, Kenya - Radio Uganda reported fierce fighting

yesterday near the garrison town of Masaka with thousands ofUgandan and Tanzanian troops engaged

The state-run radio said Ugandan soldiers and a force of20,000 Tanzanian soldiers and mercenaries, with "a few Ugandaexiles," were fighting for Masaka, 45 miles north of the borderwith Tanzania and 80 miles southwest of the Uganda capital ofKampala

In a broadcast monitored here, a military spokesmanquoted Ugandan President Idi Amin as appealing to all friendlycountries for troops and military supplies

Amin also was quoted as saying Ugandan forces wereoutnumbered 100 |o one, and all soldiers should die honorabledeaths without disclosing secrets to the enemy

The broadcast said the "invasion force" had reachedMasaka and the city had been deserted, apart from the III andwounded remaining in hospitals II did not say Masaka hadfallen, but diplomatic observers here said the broadcast implied

' the dty had been captured or was about to be lost.

Italy stalled on new governmentROME — Premier-designate Ugo La Malta, trying to re-

build a government for Italy, reported no progress yesterdayafter the first round of talks with all major political parties.

The 75-year-old leader of the tiny Republican Party wasgiven the task by President Sandro Pertinl Thursday of trying toput together a coalition in Parliament and thereby become thefirst non-Christian Democrat premier since 1M5.

Pertini turned to La Malta after four-time Premier GiulioAndreotti failed to narrow the gap between Italy's two biggestparties — his own Christian Democrats and the Communists. LaMalfa has said he will not invite the Communists to join hisCabinet

Police holdmother oflate star

LONDON (AP) - AnneBeverley. mother of the latepunk-rock musician Sid Vi-cious, was arrested early yes-terday in a London apartment

I and charged under the Misuse\ of Drugs Act, Scotland Yard

announced.

Mrs. Beverley,«, was visit-ing her son in New York Cityearlier this month and foundhim dead in bed in a Green-wich Village apartment Feb. 2after a party celebrating hisrelease on bail on a charge ofmurdering his former girl-friend with a knife. Police saidVicious died of a drug over-dose.

A Scotland Yard spokesmansaid Mrs. Beverley was beingheld in a Paddington jail for abetting tomorrow at the Mary •lebone magistrate's court.

He said Mrs. Beverley andtwo other persons were ar-rested In a raid on an apart-ment in Paddington District.All three were charged withmisusing drugs, the spokes-man Mid, but he gave nofarther details

Teacher indictedin youth's death

TOMS RIVER (AP) - A teacher who was employed at theSearch Day Program in Wanamassa has been indicted by anOcean County grand jury on charges of murdering an autisticteen-ager left In his care.

Jeffrey Clark, 32, of Dover Township, waMccused of killingWilliam B Graham, 15, of Columbus, Ohio, last July 12.

The handicapped youth's partially decomposed body wasfound by authorities five months later, wrapped in plastic bagsand bed clothes and left on Clark's apartment balcony.

An autopsy showed the boy died of cochexia, an emaciatedcondition associated with chronic illness.

Clark had first told police the boy had jumped out of his carand fled Sept. 27,1978, while they were driving in Pennsylvaniaon their way to visit the teen-ager's parents. State police calledoft their search after three days of looking failed to locate theyouth.

Chowder Pot comment clarified

FIGHTING FIRE — Firemen battle blaze at the Maurice Scully home, 31Falrvlew Drive, Mlddletown, yesterday. The cause of the early-morning firehas not been determined. There were no Injuries reported.

Home hitby blaze

MIDDLETOWN - Fireearly yesterday extensivelydamaged the first floor, base-ment and recreation room of ahouse at 31 Farview Drive

Township Fire ChiefGeorge Gremmlnger said thatthe home of Maurice Scullyalso suffered heavy smokedamage. Mr. Scully and histwo children escaped safely.

; Mrs. Scully was not home atthe time, he said.

The cause of the 1:30 a.m.blaze is not known, Grem-minger said. Firemen fromMiddletown One and OldBridge brought the fire undercontrol in 20 minutes. TheFalrview first aid squad'alsoresponded

KEYPORT - Richard Per-tin, a singer-song writer for-merly appearing at theChowder Pot, Route M, here,said yesterday that a refer-ence he made to MonmouthCounty club owners in an in-terview two weeks ago did notpertain to the Chowder Pot.

Mr. Perrin, in an articlewhich appeared In The SundayRegister Feb. 11, was quoted

as saying that most MonmouthCounty club owners do not nor-mally pay as much as clubowners In northern New Jer-sey.

Mr. Perrin went on to saythat he did not Include JohnDeaver, the owner of theChowder Pot, In thatassessment, but that commentwas Inadvertently omittedfrom the interview.

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The Sunday Register Budget cuts won't cut inflation- Pybilried by TV Red tank Rtf Met

ARTHUR Z. KAMINPresident and Editor

Thomas J. BlyExecutive Editor

William F. SandfordAssociate Editor

A6

Charles C. TriblehornSunday Editor

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1979

Bayshore ferry planResponse in Atlantic Highlands to

the proposal for high speed ferry ser-vice between New York and ourRan tan Bayshore is, as reflected ininterviews published in last Sunday'sRegister, generally enthusiastic. Withtheir borough the currently apparentlogical choice for siting of the south-ern terminus of the proposed service,Atlantic Highlands merchants are un-derstandably excited by the prospect.Equally understandable are the reser-vations expressed by some aboutpotential problems, with parking themost frequently mentioned possiblesource of difficulty.

Any undertaking of this magnitudeis certain to encounter complicationswhich will have to be ironed out in theplanning process. None of theevidence presented to date indicatesany insurmountable obstacles to theplan, with the possible exception offunding. On that score, As-semblywoman Marie A. Muhler, R-

Monmouth, is seeking audience withfederal Transportation SecretaryBrock Adams, hoping to obtain financ-ing through Urban Mass Transit Ad-ministration funds available for "in-novative mass transportation plansand facilities." Mrs. Muhler at thesame time will be seeking state As-sembly action to set up an ad hocstudy committee to go over all phasesof the proposal and determine itsfeasibility.

We hope that study will be forth-coming and that it will include ahearing of all the views — enthusiasticor otherwise — of the Bayshore munic-ipality's business people. Concern hasbeen increasing over the years as tothe Atlantic Highlands business dis-trict and its economic future. Theferry plan puts a bright light of poten-tial benefits on the borough's horizon,and the prospect of local bettermentmust be considered along with all themany other ramifications of the plan.

The Red Cross imageIt appears that the American Red

Cross has found itself with an unusualproblem for major public serviceagencies. Nationwide polls disclosewidely held public misconceptionsabout many aspects of the organiza-tion, particularly as to finances andthe services it provides. And a morerecent survey of Monmouth Countyresidents confirmed the national pollfindings. So a major thrust of thisyear's fund drive of the MonmouthCounty Chapter Will be an effort topresent to the public a more accurate,updated portrayal of Red Cross and itsfunctions.

The planned program of publicenlightenment will include radiobroadcasts of messages by prominentstate and county officeholders, enter-tainers, sports personalities and otherpublic figures describing the currentprograms, services and accomplish-ments of the organization. Newspaper

advertisements will feature similarstatements regarding the worldwidework of Red Cross bjmationally recog-nized entertainers. Volunteers willdistribute information and educationalmaterial from a booth to be set up atMonmouth Mall during the month-long drive starting March 1.

There can be no doubt that old,established images are difficult toerase. Through the period of WorldWar II the work of Red Cross wasrelatively well known and the public'sperception of the organization proba-bly was a fairly accurate one. Sincethen the picture has changed, some-what, while relatively less exposure nodoubt has dimmed it.

We are glad this great organiza-tion is doing something to refocus andclarify its image. The public should befully aware of the indispensable andinvaluable job it is doing both in ourcounty and throughout the nation.

Compassion in the stormThere's something about hardship

and emergency — even minor emer-gency — that seems to bring out thebest in mankind. Even the mostCallous and. self-centered of us, it ap-pears, is moved to help a fellow hu-man in trouble. We saw the fact amplydemonstrated during Monday's snow-storm that made things difficult foralmost all of us.

We saw — and we read about —people helping people whose carsstalled, whqse pipes froze, who needed

rides; people who had food sharing itwith those who hadn't; people workinglong, difficult hours to bring vitalservices to others.

Our chronicle of the day's happen-ings is all too full, we fear, of ex-amples of man's inhumanity to man.It is with more than a little pride andpleasure, therefore, that we call toattention of all who will listen thisreassuring evidence of the truly ad-mirable qualities, of our species.

WASHINGTON - Simplifying complicated is-sues if regarded by presidents and their advisersas essential if the American public U to be enlistedin support of an administration's program.

But making something as complex as inflationsimple enough (or everyone to understand can bea tricky business. It's only a short step fromsimplification to simplemindedness; just askJerry Ford and the geniuses xho persuaded himthat the way to "Whip Inflation Now" was todistribute little red-and-white WIN buttons.

Jimmy Carter's anti-inflation battle hasn't pro-voked the guffaws that Ford's button gimmickdid, and in a sense that Is too bad. For the Carteradministration's insistence that inflation can bewhipped by cutting the federal budget is equallylaughable — or would be laughable if Carter'spronouncements hadn't convinced the public thatbudget-cutting is the best way to stop inflation.

A recent New York Times poll showed thatmost Americans have bought the budget-cuttingIdea. But the sad truth is that trimming thefederal budget is only one weapon against infla-tion, and not a very heavy piece of artillery atthat.

No one argues that profligate governmentspending is good for the economy, that waste andinefficiency should be winked at or that theavalanche of bureaucratic forms fuels inflation byimpeding a businessman's productivity. It's sim-ply that the impact of budget cuts on inflation isnot as impressive as Carter's people would haveyou believe.

Indeed, Charles Schultze, the chairman of theCouncil of Economic Advisers, has admitted that"we do not have, today, an inflation problem thatstems from excess demand placed on the econo-my by government deficits."

Congressional Budget Office experts agreeAccording to Internal working papers they haveconcluded bluntly that "overall, the Adminis-tration's cuts in spending relative to current poli-cy are not expected to have major effects on theeconomy ... The reductions are estimated to lowerthe inflation by 0.2 percent points in 1981 "

The president's anti-inflation package is ac-tually a three-fold program: curb consumer

JACKANDERSON

spending by raising interest rates, appeal to laborand business to hold down wages and prices, andcut back on federal spending.

Unfortunately, instead of emphasizing the in-terdependence of the three inflation-fightingsteps, the president has tended to oversell thegovernment-spending angle. The reason, ap-parently, is that the first two parts of the program— higher interest rates and holding down wagesand prices — are directly distasteful to the Ameri-can public. Thsy are not the kind of bitter medi-cine that a president hoping (or re-election wouldwant to stress.

Cutting federal spending, on the other hand,with its implied possibility of lower taxes, isalmost universally popular, at least on the face ofIt. The indirect results of budget cutting are notreadily apparent.

Yet they are as real and as painful in the longrun as high interest rates and wage-price belt-tightening Budget cuts can be achieved only bylaying off government workers or reducing gov-ernment contracts, which means laying off work-ers in private industry

As economist Arthur Okun puts it: "Any anti-inflation proposal that relies solely on balancingthe budget and tightening money should carry atruth-in-packaging label, revealing that its con-tents are roughly DO percent production and joblosses and only 10 percent inflation saving "

The mathematics of the inflation battle arecold and cruel "It would require about one millionadditional unemployed and a loss of about 1100

billion in output to lower the inflation rate by 1percentage point," says Barry Bosworth, directorof the Council on Wage and Price Stability

And SchulUe, the president's lop M ° » o m l c

adviser, has said. "We would have to hold theunemployment rate to about « and one-naUpercent for between six lo 15 years in order to cutthe current inflation rate in half."

Putting too much emphasis on budget cuts,except as a supplement to tight money and wage-price holddowns obscures some additional narsnrealities - and harsh realities are not what makea politician popular.

Productivity is one such unpleasantry thatmust eventually be faced. "Wages must bebrought more in line with productivity," explainsAlice Rivlin, director of the Congressional BudgetOffice. She points out that while average hourlypay scales have risen more than » percent recent-ly, productivity rates have remained virtuallyunchanged

Holding down prices, wages and consumerspending is obviously the ultimate solution lo oursoaring inflation But even here, there is only somuch that can be accompUshed by Carter's poli-cies.

"Even with widespread compliance with the(wage-price) guidelines, It is doubtful that this willslow inflation," says Rivlin "Well over hall thelabor force is explicitly or tacitly exempt (rom thewage standard, and about M percent of the goodsand services of the Consumer Price Index are alsoformally or tacitly exempt from the price stan-dard "

In fact, inflation has been the most severe Inthe price of necessities, where the voluntaryguidelines will have little effect. Last year, pricesfor food, energy, health care and housing rose 10percent, while prices o( non-essential items roqeonly about 6 percent

The answer to our inflation misery is that thereis no easy answer; the eventual solution Is going tohurt, one way or another And President Carter isdoing the country a disservice by creating theimpression that inflation can be brought undercontrol by the seemingly painless method ol cut-ting the federal budget

Carter: Born again what?We have his very own word for it; Jimmy

Carter has been born again. The question is, whathas he been born again as?

The answer, I suspect, is to be (ound in theCarter budget, the Carter buddies, and the Carterbrother.

The biggest increase in the budget Carter sentto Congress last month was for defense. (TheChinese called it "defense" when they sent theirtroops and tanks rolling into Vietnam last week )The president who, before he was elected, prom-ised to trim defense spending, now is proposing toIncrease It by $10.8 billion to (122.7 billion

At the same time, the Carter budget cuts backon public jobs (or the poor and slashes SocialSecurity survivors benefits.

The president makes pretty speeches in sup-port of human rights 'round the world, while hisadministration arms to the eyebrows some ol thenastiest governments on earth.

The brutal truth Is that the Social Securitycutbacks Jimmy Carter is proposing would vic-timize the poorest and the most defenselessamong us — old women, widows and latherlesschildren

The Good Book commands us: "Do right to thewidow, judge (or the latherless, give to the poor,defend the orphan, clothe the naked." And, again."Learn to do well; seek justice, relieve the op-pressed.plead lor the widow."

Well, when it comes to pinching pennies, Jim-my Carter would begin by slashing Social Securitysurvivors benefits. He would cut oil benefits to thesurviving parent when the youngest child turned16, end benelits (or college students aged 18 to 21,and eliminate the 1255 lump sum death payment.He also would scrap the (122 minimum monthlybenefit (oh, princely sum!).

One at a time.Not only Is the surviving parent from whom

Social Security benefits would be lilted when theyoungest child reaches 16 more likely to be thechild's mother than the child's lather - 125 timesmore likely — but a mother would lose, in dollars

DORISKULMAN

and cents, more than twice as much of her month-ly Social Security check than a father would.

According to the Women's Lobby, which hasdone all this arithmetic, that proposed cutbackwould lift benelits (rom 648,000 women - and 5,000men. Women would lose $41H a month, or one-halltheir incomes Men would lose $175 a month, ashade less than 20 percent their incomes

But, alter all, when one speaks ol cutting oilbenefits to children over 16, one is speaking only olthe material things ol this world — things such asblue jeans to wear to high school

Ending Social Security benelits lor collegestudents aged It to 22 is a double whammyHelping a kid through college is a financial straintoday even lor two-parent families with heftyincomes. One-parent (read "mother") (amiliesgetting Social Security survivors benelits arepoorer than most. It is a cruel challenge (or ourpresident to say to them, as in eltect he did , thatwe will first slash their incomes and then expectthem to get their children through college, too.

The elimination of the $255 lump sum deathpayment would affect many more women thanmen because women live longer They live poorer,too. Usually, the money goes to help pay (uneralexpenses. Two-thirds ol the persons in this coun-try who are 65 or older and collecting SocialSecurity benelits are women. For more ot themthan we permit ourselves to acknowledge, that

meager check is their only IncomeMore women collect Social Security on their

husbands' work records than on their own; manyolder women never have worked outside theirhomes Because twice as many women as menwork part-time, because two'-thirds ol all workersearning only the minimum wage are women,because women's work records are more likely tobe interrupted by wiving and mothering, the $122-a-month floor on Social Security is important tomany more women than men Reduce minimumbenelits as the president proposes to do, and wewill have aged women in this country starving todeath on $70 a month

"Do right to the widow, judge (or the latherless, give to the poor, delend the orphan, clothethe naked..." I'm not sure what you'd call a guywho beats ploughshares into swords and takesmoney Irom widows and orphans, but "Christian"doesn't seem to fit.

It was for pointing out things such as this thatCarter (ired Bella Abzug from her unpaid post aschairwoman ol the National Advisory Committeeon Women. With what haste he banished theoutspoken Bella, compared to the sympatheticslowness with which he divested himself ol thatnational embarrassment, Bert Lance. But then,Bella isn't a banker who lends money at preleren-tial interest rates to the Carter lamily's peanutbusiness.

(The firing ol Abzug, said my friend, the silentcongressman, was all a misunderstanding "Jim-my said 'get rid ol Billy' and they thought he said'get rid ol Bella' You know how those southernerstalk...")

Brother Billy, meanwhile, is palling around thecountry with the pals ol that great respector of thehuman rights Carter so nobly espouses, the Lib-yan dictator Muammar Qaddafi Along the way,Billy drops a racist remark here, an anti-Semiticremark there And, lor reasons we are beingforced to speculate on. Carter is disinclined to tellbaby brother to shut up. It is time tor the presidentto start on another B.A. — Brothers Anonymous

Smiles for a winter dayFeel depressed? Is your life dull? You say you

haven't smiled since grandma was picked up lordrunken driving with an AWOL sailor? Your days,you say, are all drudgery and no ludgery? Have achuckle with me:

A rich man says: "Wile, our 25th anniversaryis coming up. You can have anything your heartdesires. How about a brand-new Mercedes Benz?"

"No," she says.He grins: "OK, then. A full-length sable with

mink lining?" She shakes her head negatively."What?" he says. "Then a three-month trip to

Europe?""Not lor me," the wife says. "I know what I

want. Give me a divorce.""That," the husband says, "I couldn't afford "

Two old school teachers meet on the Champs-Elysees. One says: "I've been in Paris three daysand haven't been to the Louvre yet."

"Neither have I," whispers the other."Must be something in the water."

Two drunks staggering down Broadway. Onemisses his step and (alls down the steps of asubway He emerges (rom a kiosk a block furtheron.

"What happened?""I (ell down some guy's cellar stairs and, boy.

has he got a set of trains."

• • •Editors grow gray making typographical cor-

rections. One in Virginia spotted this in his firstedition: "Col. Eustls celebrated his Mth birthday.He will be remembered as the bottle-scarredveteran ol the War Between the States."

Savagely, he rummaged through the secondedition (or the correction. It said: "Col. Eustiscelebrated his 90th birthday. He will be remem-bered as the battle-scared veteran ot the WarBetween the States."

JIMBISHOP

The class was asked to write anything itpleased on people. A pigtailed girl wrote: "Peopleare composed ot two kinds, boys and girls. Boysare no good at all until they grow up and getmarried.

"Boys are an awlul bother. They want every-thing but soap. A woman is a grown-up girl withchildren. My dad is such a nice man that I am surehe must have been a little girl when he was aboy."

• • •Diner: "Miss, I'll have the corned beet sand-

wich. Make it lean "Waitress: "Sure. Which way?"

• • •An American couple adopted a little Vietnam-

ese girl. Ol course, they spoiled her rotten. Shehad her own room, games, TV. The one thing thatirritated the child was getting bathed by hermother every evening. After a month, she lookedup Irom a million suds and said: "Mom, you don'twant a little girl. You want a duck."

• • •There was a small traffic accident. A woman

elbowed through the crowd to help the Injureddriver. A burly man shoved her aside and said:"Get lost. 1 took a course in first aid."

After a (ew minutes, the lady nudged the bigman. "When you get to the part about calling (or adoctor," she said, "I'm here." i \

The little boy (ollowed grandpa into the.bedroom. Fascinated, he watched the elderly manremove his shoes and take arch supporters out.Then he took his spectacles Irom his eyes and laidthem on the dresser. Alter that, he removed histeeth and placed them in a glass

"What now?" he said to his grandson.The kid smiled "Take oil your nose."

• • •A doctor got in his car and started It. Every-

thing rattled. It was an old crate. Some boysbegan making fun of the automobile. The doctorgrinned "It's paid lor," he said, pointing, "andyou're not And you're not. And you're not."

• • •This one is almost too horrible to repeat.

"What happens when ducks fly upside down?""They quack up."

• • •

Mother put tw.o little boys to bed and orderedthem to say their prayers and go to sleep. Shewent to the bathroom, changed to an oversizesweatshirt, cut-oil jeans, ugly moccasins andshampooed her hair. She applied a white tacialcream too.

Hearing bedroom bedlam, she hurried out."Stop that noise," she roared. "And go to

sleep."As she returned to the bathroom, the smaller

one sat up and whispered: "Who was that?"

• • •A pompous character called the law firm ol

Wilton, Stilton and Hilton. The sweet operatorasked who he wished to speak to.

"Sexauer," he said."Who?" she said."Sexauer. Sexauer," he said irritably. "Don't

you have a Sexauer there?""Mister," she said softly, "they don't even give

us a coffee break."See? You're smiling..

SHREWSBUR' SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, i97e The Sunday Register A7

How do we remedy today's racial injustices?WASHINGTON - The lundamenUl Issue

before the U S Supreme Court In the case ofBrian Weber against Kaiser Aluminum and theUnited Steel Workers Union is this: when maya company and/or union voluntarily take ac-tions based on race to remedy racial injusticesof the past?

A U.S. District Court and a divided AppealsCourt have upheld Weber's contention that anon the-job training program at Kaiser'sGramercy, La., plant discriminated againstwhite employees because It set up one senioritylist for minorities (Including women) and an-other for white males. Weber argued suc-cessfully so far, that this violated Title VII ofthe Civil Rights Act of 19M

Title VII clearly permits an employer andunion to take voluntary remedial action if theyhave a reasonable factual basis for concludingthat there may have been employment dis-crimination in the past.

Five years ago Kaiser executives and steel-workers' union officials agreed that there wasa factual basis for believing that such dis-

crimination had affected employment at theGramercy plant. Kaiser had required at leastfive years of previous industrial experience ina craft for workers hired by Gramercy Ex-ecutives and union officials conceded that be-cause blacks had been virtually excluded fromboth union- and employer-operated craft train-ing and apprenticeship programs, they couldnot have five years' experience - so this rulediscriminated against blacks (and women, itwas decided) Furthermore, in 1973 the Officeof Federal Contract Compliance found thatKaiser waived experience requirements forwhite applicants, but not for blacks

Management and union people concludedthat, based on every logical measurement,blacks were underemployed In the crafts atKaiser's Gramercy plant. The company feltvulnerable to a lawsuit by blacks and/or thefederal government, and the union agreed, sothey began a good-faith program to makeamends for past injustices.

But the U.S. District Court for EasternLouisiana ruled that preferential affirmative

CARLROWAN

action programs can be imposed only by thecourts — and only to cure effects of pastdiscrimination; even then only in behalf ofspecific individuals victimized by past dis-crimination. This seemed to say that a black in1974 could not be given preference for a jobbecause all blacks had generally been dis-criminated against for the previous 20 years.

'Moreover, the Louisiana judge found no past

discrimination at the Gramercy plant.The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected

the lower court argument that only the courtscan order racially preferential affirmative ac-tion programs, or quotas It said an employeror union may do so, but that they must firstprove that they have been guilty of discriminaUon.

It seems to me incredible that the head of aunion or company — or of the Agency forInternational Development (AID) - must wailto be sued, or must go into court and say,"Judge, we've been screwing minorities, andhere Is my proof of our guilt," before he cantake meaningful action to remedy injusticesthat every idiot knows to have existed Doesany white American really believe that whiteexecutives at Kaiser or the steelworkers unionwould adopt a program to give blacks, orChlcanos or women special opportunities ifthey did not know, deep in their hearts, that .they had been favoring while males for gener-ations?

Obviously, there are cases of "reverse dis-

crimination" against white individuals U.S.District Judge Harold II Greene recentlyfound the D.C Department of Human Re-sources guilty of "violating, manipulating andignoring regulations" in order to promote ablack person Instead of a white one Blacksknow how to discriminate too

But the same judge on the same day foundthat statistics at All) "show an imbalance inlavor of white tenured employees, an over-whelming and unexplained concentration ofblack employees in Africa and an extremelysmall number of black employees in LatinAmerica ' Greene oMered AID to reinstate ablack employee, give him job (enure and purgeitself of racial bias

Judge Greene sought to protect the basicrights of whites as well as blacks, while takingnote of the historic evidence of discriminationagainst all but the American white male

We await — I with uneasiness — SupremeCourt guidance as to who may do what volun-tarily, in a spirit of democratic decency. Idprovide justice in employment

Eclipseawesomespectacle

• y ROBERT LOCKE

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The dark shadow of the moonwill race across the Pacific Northwest tomorrow as naturebrings one of its most awesome spectacles — a total eclipseof the sun - to North America.

For a minute or two In a handful of American states andCanadian provinces, the sun will grow dark as It hides behindthe moon.

Stars will come out, temperatures will drop a fewdegrees, street lights will flicker on, birds will go to roost,horses and dogs will be puzzled and local residents andvisitors will watch what few people ever see Then daylightwill return abruptly. A few confused roosters might crow awelcome to a second dawn.

It won't happen again in this part of the world until 2017A hint of the eclipse should be visible throughout the

continental United States and most of Canada. Partialeclipses will black out more than 99 percent of the sun inSeattle, 81 percent In Denver, 80 percent In Los Angeles, 79percent in Chicago, 67 percent in Dallas, II percent in NewYork and 45 percent In Miami

But the best show is the total eclipse, which will occuronly within a ISO-mile arc swinging through parts of Oregon.Washington, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Saskatchewanand Manitoba, and bits of Ontario and Quebec Portland.Ore , is almost in the center of the path.

Within that arc, the eclipse will last from 45 seconds toabout three minutes Totality will begin at 8: IS a.m. PST onthe Oregon coast and progressively later as it moves inland.

If the weather cooperates, it promises to be quite a show.But only when the sun Is completely hidden is II safe to lookdirectly at it.

A partial eclipse should never be viewed directly Thebrilliant sunlight can cause permanent eye damage, eventhrough smoked glass, dark sunglasses, overexposed film orother common filters A simple pinhole camera can be madeeasily, however, and used to reflect the sun's image on asheet of white paper for safe eclipse watching.

Prof. Jay M. Pasachoff of Williams College is a veteranof eight solar eclipses He says the very special event shoulddevelop like this:

"About an hour and a half before totality, the moon willstart gradually covering the sun After about an hour, if thesky is clear, it will begin to grow darker. About 15 minutesbefore totality, the light takes on an eerie quality.

"As the last sliver of the sun disappears, we might beable to see the great shadow ol the moon approaching atabout 2,000 miles an hour — it will look like a massivedarkness racing at us.

"The last sliver of the sun (as sunlight shines aroundmountains and canyons of the moon) will appear to break upinto beads of light known as Bailey's Beads The last fewBailey's Beads will glow so brightly in comparison with thedarkness around them that It will look like a diamond on aring. That's called the diamond ring effect

"Then the everyday surface of the sun will be entirelycovered by the moon and this marks the beginning of totality.

"For 5 or 10 seconds, we'll see a pinkish glow around theedges of the sun This is the chromosphere (a layer of gasesjust above the solar surface). The pearly white corona (thesun's outer atmosphere) will be visible as a halo dancingaround the dark backside of the moon That's a beautifulsight.

"The end comes pretty sudlenly. We'll see thekhromosphere for a few seconds and the diamond ring willburst out again. Bul^lnce our eyes will have adjusted to thedark, the eclipse seems to end in an instant"

An eclipse of the tun will be seen In North Ameri-ca tomorrow. The path of total eclipse will passthrough Portland. Ore., Butte, Mont., and Win-

A partial eclipse Is less dramatic but still "somethingvery different from what you normally see," said AllenPatterson of the California Institute of Technology's BigBear Solar Observatory.

The partial eclipse will feature a black disc — the moon— creeping slowly across the golden circle of the sun. If 75percent of the sun Is hidden, It will look like a brilliantcrescent similar to a quarter-moon. The sky should darkensomewhat

Total solar eclipses occur somewhere on earth aboutonce a year But totality is visible only along a narrow path,so any given point sees such an eclipse only once every fewcenturies.

This month's eclipse will be the Uth in the continentalUnited States this century. The next isn't due until Aug. 21,2017, although Hawaiians will get a glimse of one in 1991

Parts of the East Coast saw solar eclipses in 1959, 1963and 1970, but the West hasn't had its chance since 1945.

An eclipse is usually described as eerie and awesome,even a bit frightening The ancient Egyptians worried itmeant their sun god Ra was being devoured by a greatserpent. Chinese astronomers saw eclipses as a recurringbattle between good and evil.

Ancient records tell of two royal Chinese astronomers,Hsi and Ho, who made the mistake of drinking too much winebefore an eclipse in 2137 B.C. Too tipsy to conduct thenecessary rituals, which included firing an arrow at theravenous serpent, Hsi and Ho were beheaded on orders of anervous emperor.

Modern astronomers are still drawn to eclipses and a,number of scientific expeditions and observations areplanned this month.

Pasachoff is leading an American group to Brandon.Manitoba, where instruments will be set up at the Universityof Brandon.

The spot was chosen, he said, because past weatherrecords indicate it has one of the best chances of clearweather — about 50-50 It's also where totality will lastlongest: about 2 minutes, 50seconds.

He said the scientists hope to learn more about the

nepeg, Canada. A partial eclipse will be seen asfar north as Alaska and as far south as CentralAmerica.

composition of the sun's atmosphere, which normally isInvisible because it's lost in the bright light.

The total eclipse of the sun tomorrow should be a rareand memorable spectacle that can be enjoyed safely if youtake a few simple precautions. Permanent eye damage couldbe the price of carelessness

Rule number 1: Never look directly at the sun except forthe few moments when the eclipse is total and the sun iscompletely blacked out. That will occur only In parts of a fewNorthwest states and Canadian provinces

The sun's rays are powerful and easily capable of burn-ing an eye. The sun can be dangerous even when only a sliveris visible.

Doctors and astronomers also warn that once-populareclipse filters — such as smoked glass, dark sunglasses,welder's goggles and overexposed film — won't protect youreyes against the sun's invisible infrared radiation.

But there are safe ways to watch the eclipse and someastonomers. like Jay M. Pasachoff of Williams Collegecomplain scare stories may discourage people from enjoyinga rare natural phenomenon

"Some doctors are advising people to watch the eclipseonly on television," he said. "Now that would be a realshame."

About the only completely safe way to watch, authoritiessay. is to view the sun's reflected image. That can be doneeasily and at virtually no cost by making a simple pinholecamera. Slightly more sophisticated devices will producebetter images.

Some examples:—Punch a pinhole in paper or cardboard and hold it so

sunlight streams through the hole. Hold white paper behindthe first and the result will be an Inverted image of the sun,about a quarter-inch in diameter. A larger hole will producea larger but fuzzier image.

—A more elaborate pinhole camera requires only a box, abit of aluminum foil and some white paper. The box can bealmost any size, from a shoebox on up.

GARRYWILLS

JuliusCaesarand SALT II

Television, that maligned tool, entirely justifies its existenceby the current presentation of all Shakespeare'a plays Theperformances promise to be stunning—the first one was "JuliusCaesar "

No matter how often one sees or reads a Shakespeare play,different lines come home with new force That Is certainly trueof what has been called the world's greatest political play"Julius Caesar" is a complex study of the way politicians

deceive others only by deceiving themselves That happens laall the male characters—Caesar, Brutus, (assius, Antony.Lepldus-but two: Cicero, who is the spirit of the republic, andOctavius, the cold, triumphant calculate!

The most interesting self-deception is that of Brutus Helaughs when Declus says he will flatter Caesar by telling him heis above flattery Yet Brutus has been flattered with theanonymous letters, playing on his pride and honor Antonyknows how to rub that boast In all through the funeral oration

But no one is more expert at gulling Brutus than Brutushimself. He must, for his honor, justify himself to himself; andhe does it with the rationale of all pre-emptive strikes Consider-ing Caesar's ambition, Brutus thinks it is only prudent to act onthe "worst case " hypothesis. Caesar may do something horren-dous —therefore it must be presumed that he will Act as if theworst were not only aimed at, but accomplished It will be toolate to act once it is accomplished. Brutus puts it all in eightwords: "So Caesar may Then, lest he may, prevent"

Here we have the justification recently given to the CIA'smind experiments on unsuspecting American citizens

If the bad guys should get certain chemicals, they would dneven worse things. So the good guys must be prepared, ready tocounteract the very worst with acts that are only bad

The trouble with this, of course, is that the "worst" of thebag1 guys is only hypothetical at this stage The bad acts ol thegood guys become actual, they are present, not future: Or* inthe order of time, though subsequent in the twisted logic of thepreemptive strikers The good guys become bad guys at thethought of how much worse the bad guys might conceivably beat some future point

This was the logic of our Asian adventurismWe must bomb hell out of distant countries for fear some

later topple of the dominoes might bring the conflict nearer usIt is the logic of the arms race, of opposition to SALT 11 We

must get more overkill capacity this minute, for fear of theother side's super-overkill capacity somewhere down the roadAny hypothetical future evil will justify actual and Immediateevils that are called countervailing, but are initiative in fact.

So, living in fear of a future enemy, we make ourselves iheenemy at hand—our own enemy and the world's Logic is turnedupside down, as with Brutus

"Tis a common proof" Shakespeare makes his self-deceiver argue that, since lowliness looks to ambition's ladder,and those who climb it become arrogant, the lowliness Itsett issomehow dangerous Strength must fear weakness, hysterically:

Fashion it thus: that what he is, augmented, would run tothese and these extremities.

And therefore think him as a serpent's egg which, hatched,would (as his kind) grow mischievous, and kill him in the shell

The whole history on the Cold War is in those lines. The linesthemselves are a glory of the human race

What they describe could end that race.

FROM OUR READERS

Contest ridiculousCllffwood Beach

To the Editor:

Your "I Love Monmouth County Because"contest is ridiculous A money contest provesnothing except how low people will stoop tomake a fast buck. Of course you and politicianswill show the response as "unbiased" proof thesurvey was In error. But what bothers me mostis that Freeholder Director Ray Kramer re-fuses to believe what Is self-evident — ourcounty has problems.

Here is a man that supposedly representswe the people and yet ignores us. He sees onlywhat he wishes to see and unfortunately youassist him In his attempt to turn our eyes away.If I was Mr. Kramer, 1 would be running thecontest as "Some of Monmouth County Prob-lems Are" to find out what the problems reallyare. The prime directive of any leader is to findout what is wrong and needs extra attention.

With so many high-caliber managementpeople living in the area I am simply amazedhow petty, foolish people perpetuate them-selves in office. We should be electing realproblem solvers and not whitewashes Wake

up everyone and face the truth, someone has toand it Isn't our leaders

Theodore Fitch

A bad odorUnion Beach

To The Editor:I've just finished reading your editorial

"Our state's image". In il you expressed disap-pointment and surprise that our county wasamong four that got the lowest vote of con-fidence in a Gannet News Service Poll.

You wonder why so many people would liketo live elsewhere. Why not conduct your ownpoll and find out exactly why so many wouldlike to move on out? Run a questionnaire Let'ssee the reasons.

Being bom and raised in Union Beach. I cantell you the air was so much more pleasant tobreathe before IFF came here with their stink-Ing factory.

And though they had only one major ex-plosion, the fear is always with us. Every timethe fire siren blows the first place we look isIFF

So come on, Mr. Editor. Run your question-naire. It would be Interesting to see what's onthe minds of our Monmouth County neighbors.

JoanM Sodon

Valentine chuckleAtlantic Highlands

To the Editor:M>. Ray Kramer's letter re. "I love Mon-

mouth County" was my Valentine chuckle ofthe day

1 cannot help but wonder if he is just naiveor being facetious regarding the poll results.Neither can I believe that anyone stated thebeauty of Monmouth County as their desire topull roots and move elsewhere. Certainly, thatwould not be my reason! Rather, I would say,the priority reason could just be the Free-holders and their lack of concern for the finan-cial well being of Monmouth County residents.

No, Mr. Kramer, the rolling hills, the sea,the beauty of Monmouth County is not thereason for rebellion. If I were you 1 wouldpursue the true reasons and make an effort tocorrect the situations responsible for the dis-enchantment of Monmouth County residents.

God granted to all of us the beauty of thisland,, but had nothing to do with the way it isgoverned — God help us all — what a mess wehave made of It!!

Mrs. Gloria M Rast Moloto% cocktail?

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1979

THE NATIONEilberg in surprise guilty plea

PHILADELPHIA - Former Rep Joshua EUberg pleadedgaflty yesterday - a plea that will make him Ineligible to holdpMtc office - in a surprise deal at his cosfUcr-of-tatereit trial.

The plea bargain agreement wai accepted by U.S. DistrictCourt Judge Raymond Broderick after an hour's considerationIn his chambers

"I have given very careful consideration to the plea agree-ment and I have determined that it is in the best interests ofJustice to accept it," said Broderick, who could have rejectedthe plea change

The Judge said one of the results of the plea bargain wasthat EUberg shall be incapable of holding any public federalo»ce

"That is not the words of this court, but that is the mandateof Mr. EUberg's former colleagues in the Congress and he willhave to live with them," the Judge said, referring to the federalconflict-of-interest statute.

Broderick noted that plea bargaining is an accepted legalprocedure In federal courts, but that he personally did notparticipate In It.

Under the agreement. Eilberg is to be sentenced to a termof probation to be determined by the court and fined not lessthan 15,000 and not more than 110,000

The 58-year-old Philadelphia Democrat was accused ofaccepting compensation from a law client for services herendered before a federal agency in 1975-76.

The surprise change of plea came after a Jury of seven menand five women was sworn in Friday and before a single word oftestimony had been given by any witness.

"In considering the plea and considering the Interests ofJustice," Broderick said, "the law doesn't make it a crime for acongressman to represent clients or perform services before afederal agency as long as he doesn't accept compensation.

Schlesinger in solar power pleaWASHINGTON — Energy Secretary James Schlesinger,

never known for his staunch advocacy of solar power, Istrumpeting the political and economic advantages of spending92.5 billion on technology that would enable the nation to relymore heavily on the sun.

In a confidential memorandum to President Carter, Schles-inger, a onetime chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission,endorsed a five-year government effort to stimulate solaradvances. He also urged Carter to "give serious considerationto establishing a goal" for the amount of energy the U.S. can tapTrom the sun.

Despite all the clamor about dwindling supplies of fossilfuels, the nation currently satisfies only 5 4 percent of its energydemand with solar technologies.

The Schlesinger memorandum, a copy of which was ob-tained by The Associated Press, was presented to Cartel* as thepresident continues his review of U.S. solar policy.

Sources said that within several weeks, the president willdecide precisely how far the government should go in stimu-lating solar technologies. The sources declined to be identified.

In a meeting with solar lobbyists here Friday, Carterdeclared he is "as enthusiastic as anyone in this room" andvowed he'd make good on commitments to a strong solar policy,according to participants in the session.

Plan eyed to move Temple deadSAN FRANCISCO - A Judge will consider tomorrow a plan

to use a convoy of moving vans to ship the 567 poisoned bodies ofthe Peoples Temple mass murder-suicide from their temporarystorage in a Delaware hangar 3,000 miles back to California.

The State Department has been negotiating with a halfdoten East Coast states to find one where the bodies could beburied or cremated, but at least two — Delaware and WestVirginia — have made it clear they don't want the bodies.

At the hearing before San Francisco Superior Court JudgeIra Brown, attorneys are expected to argue that individualclaims against the Temple should be met before any money isdoled out to move the bodies from Dover.

Under the government's plan, assets of the dissolved Tem-p l e — a n estimated $302,800 — would be used to pay for theshipment and burial In California.

Brown will hear arguments on whether $540 should be paidto each of 346 families to reimburse them for relatives theyalready claimed and buried at their own expense.

More than MM persons died at the Guyana jungle settlementon Nov. 18 — most of whom are believed to have drunk poison onorders from their leader, the Rev. Jim Jones.

Host of the bodies - the 255 still unidentified and another 79whose families have signed away responsiblity for them —would be buried en masse In a cemetery 30 miles south of here,overlooking the Pacific Ocean.

Struck lettuce fields quietEL CENTRO, Calif. — Struck lettuce fields in the troubled

Imperial Valley were reported quiel yesterday as United FarmWorkers temporarily shifted their focus to organizing In Texas.

"We're going to repeal our California experience," saidunion spokesman Mark Grossman, who was in Pharr, Tex., withUFW President Cesar Chavez for the first organizing conven-tion in that state.

The UFW also announced plans to stage a series of one-daywork stoppages throughout California In a show of support forthe 37-day-old strike by field hands'.

"We plan to call more work stoppages and to extend them toother areas," UFW spokeswoman Vicky Lopez said Friday."But we have not yet decided on the dates or on which regionswin be affected."

To date, there have been three one-day general workstoppages, but all have been limited to the Imperial Valley,which is the focus of the strike.

The latest stoppage on Wednesday lifted lettuce prices to ahigh of $12 per box Thursday and Friday, $4 higher than beforethe stoppage.

'75-'76 athletic injuries notedWASHINGTON - A new government survey estimates

more than 1 million injuries — 111,000 of them "major" —occurred in high school and college athletic programs duringthe 1175-76 school year.

Hany of these injuries could have been prevented if schoolsused safer equipment, gave coaches and trainers better trainingand taught youths safety rules as well as the rules of the game,HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. said Saturday.

"This report suggests that the casualties may have reachedunaccepUbly high levels," Califano declared in a statement.

The estimates in the long-delayed, $240,000 report, whichwas ordered by Congress in 1174, were based on a survey of2,500 high schools and 1,300 colleges.

There were 14 athletics-related deaths In those schools in1175-76. Four were from tackle football, four from other contactsports, three from non-contact sports and three from physicaleducation programs. The only female victim was a girl killed inher high school P.E. class.

The survey did not estimate the total number of athleticsdeaths In In 1(75-76, which was higher, A survey run byresearchers at Perm State recorded 13 high school and collegefootball deaths that year.

Football remains far and away America's most dangerousmajor sport.

With 1.1 million men playing tackle football, the sportaccounted for 326.000 of the estimated 1.06 million injuries. TheInjury rate was 280 per 1,000 participants. At four-year colleges,toe rate was «2> per 1,000

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The Sunday RegisteiSHREWSBURY. N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25,1979 News Two B OUTDOOR WORLD 4

NAMES AND FACES 6

ROUTES •

* CountyProsecutor Lehreij• strives for the ^better way 1

Alexander D. Lehrer

By WILLIAM J. ZAORSK1

FREEHOLD — Completing his sixth monthin office, Monmouth County Prosecutor Alex-ander I) Lehrer has instituted some dynamicprograms in his office, and there is more tocome as he goes into the second half of his firstyear.

When the 3f year-old Asbury Park attorneywas sworn infor a five-year term Aug. 31, hemade a number of promises to the public thathe would accomplish during his tenure as thecounty's chief law enforcement official.

He has implemented most of them. Underhis leadership, the office has made countyhistory in several areas. He has hired the firstwoman assistant prosecutor and the first wom-an investigator He also has formed a countynarcotics strike force. A number of other pro-grams are under way

The one goal he hasn't accomplished yet isto personally try a criminal case as the countyprosecutor. But he hopes to do this soon.

"My true love is the court room." said MrLehrer He said he misses being in court, but"my responsibilities as prosecutor have pre-vented me from doing it " However, he hopesto try cases during the second half of his firstyear in office

As prosecutor, Mr Lehrer works 14 or morehours a day and frequently has speaking en-gagements at night and works six days a week.He sold he did not realize the demands"on'thetime of the prosecutor, especially during thefirst six months of office.

Mr Lehrer's approach to his new duties isfocused on his goal of being the best prosecutorin the county's history. "It takes a lot of hoursof work to do it," he said.

Work is no stranger to the county prose-cutor After graduating from Notre Dame Law

"/ try to beat Judge Lane to thecourthouse in the morn-ings...impossible."

School, he served as law clerk to SuperiorCourt Judge Merritl Lane Jr., now the countyassignment judge It was from Judge Lane thathe learned the work habits he has maintainedthroughout his professional life.

"I try to beat Judge Lane to the courthousein the mornings," smiled Mr Lehrer, quickly

adding that "this is impossible " Judge Lanenormally is the first person to arrive at thecourthouse in the mornings.

When he became the county prosecutor,Mr. Lchrer pledged to make the office the"best law firm in the county." Changes in theoffice give a visitor the impression he is In alaw office There is a professional aura andmorale is high The staff is friendly andcourteous

Believing that the public has a right to knowwhat

the prosecutor does, Mr Lehrer has made ita practice to reveal most things that go on inthe office — except, of course, informationpertaining to ongoing investigations and whatcould be xrejudicial to pending cases He issensitive to the needs of the community andwants to bring the office closer to the people ofthe county.

He also wants to bring his office closer toother law enforcement agencies. Having joinedthe Police Chiefs Association, he takes anactive part in that organization "I have atremendous respect for them," he said

By being a member of that organization, theprosecutor said he can exchange Ideas withthem and to aid them if he can He emphasizedthat he is not competing against them, butwants to work with them.

In the coming six months, the prosecutorplans to implement a program where he willvisit each municipal police department; may-be, one department a week* 'I want to learntheir operations first hand and to speak to(thepolice officers personally," said Mr. LehrerHe also wants to ride with them on patrol so hecan leam their operating procedure and theirviewpoint

Mr. Lehrer's management philosophy is

See Ukrer, page Bl

Readers rally'round Monmouth's meritsThere's a k>l of love for Monmoulh ( ounl\

HI Ikere, and Register readers are proving uwith Ihrlr eatries Into our "I love Monmouth( • u l > because..." routes!, some of which anpeir below

I t * IreckoMerk kavr added a m twist toThe Register's Inspiration by declaring April iat "I Lave Monmoulh Day." The Hirer prliewfaaers (tM, 125 and t i l ) have been Invited toattend Ike freeholders meeting aid read Ikelrwtaalag entries.

T V deadline lor receipt ol entries IsWedaeutiv Simply tell us In IN words or lesswky you love Monmouth County, aid Include•ante, address and telephone number. Mallentries lo Sundav Register Kdllor Charles ITrlMekoin, one Register Plata. Shrewsbury,N.J. 17711 Judges Hill be members of I h,Register stall

Additional entries will be printed next Sun-day, and winners »lll be announced SundavMarch II.

Twxs here thai Freedom look a stand.W6TJ pafl of hisltin

Because our men and women foughttoday we all livr fri'tv

Both rural and suburban. I find ilnperfect mix

Of drama, art. anil music.. B cholCf folany lasli'

In springtime people stop their cars losmile, and point, iind stare.

To view a pastoral display, a newbornfoal and mare

In summer ripe tomatoes, strawberriesand corn,

Swimming, boating. Monmouth Park infall the huntman's horn

I've left »III many thing! I know, bul briefas I must be

This is in one hundred words whal Mon-mouth M o mi'

Cheryl I) CobbTinton Kails

I love Monmoulh County for its fascinatinghistory My imagination is stirred seeing its oldhouses, churches, graveyards, battlefields Ilove to hear ils legends and examine the rem-nants of its life style from centuries past al theDeserted Village of Allaire

Monmouth County has its own story lo tellof tradition, struggle and progress There aremany sources to explore which are available toall of u.s We-are surrounded by our heritage

° Ruth I. MurphyHoweil

"People" is Whal makes me love tbOUlMonmoulh County

Sure, we have everything here from theocean to beautiful scenery, but the warmthMU'is something lhal never can he taken away

When I moved tore Ihere was a differentatmosphere about the county II is people,concerned people helping others not alwaysthinking of themselves and what they can netout of it

There are so many programs available .for

helping others My son having a mild handicapwill always be grateful for the love andIhoughtfulness of people

If every county could say the same thisworld would be a "Perfect Place To Live."

Mrs. Joan KaneRed Bank

Why do I love the Monmouth9

Let me subtract the ways — Marvelous,magnificent, mammouth — you're not Norare you New York. California, or Camelot.

You offer no more, no less Than a multi-tude of other locations, I guess

Why do 1 love thee Monmouth?I love you in the ways that count —

Moments and days of my life I share Withthose in my world whom I hold dear Here.within the boundaries you possess Whichclearly sum up my feelings. Yes!

Why do I love you' All along I have knownI love you Monmoulh You are my home

Ellen M HeffesHolmdel

The silent passage of time recording theadventures of my life

Summer with its loving, quiet warmthwatching me grow

Winter offering exhilaration: the excite-ment of living a picture post card of gloriouswhite and crystallite

Spring; budding, fragrant, with its easyadoption of the fresh, the new, the green ofGod's Paradise

A 'love letter9from 1675EDITORS NOTE: The following, sab

milled by Ike Shrewsbury Historical Soci-ety, b a MMmMtk C e n l y "love letter,"by Rkkard Hartshorn ef MkMMewi In1171 and prilled ki "Tke Story ol Midfletewi - T V Oldest SetUemeal I* NewJersey," by Erwtt W. MandevlUe

DEAR FRIEND: My love Is to Thee,and thy wife, desiring your welfare, bothinward and outward; and that we may befound steadfast In that truth which is sav-ing, for the welfare of our immortal soulsAnd, dear friend, the desire of my soul Is,that we may know true Love, and I shouldbe glad to see the and thy wife. 1 havepartly a remembrance of thy wife. And 1have thought of thee many times withtears in my eyes. The Lord has donewondrous works for me; unto Him I returnthanks and praises, who is God over allBlessed forever. Now Friend, I shall givethee some information concerning NewJersle, but time will not permit me towrite al length. Thee desireth to know howI live. Through the goodness of the Lord Ilive very well, keeping between JO aud 40head of cows, and 7 or 8 horses or mares to

•Ride upon. There are seven towns settledIn this Province, viz.: Shrewsbury, andMlddleton, upon the Sea-Side, and alongthe River side, and up the creek there IsPlscattaway and Woodbrldge, Ellz-abethtown, New Coake, and Bergan. Most

i Towns have about 100 Families;and the least « The country Is veryhealthful. In Mlddleton, where 1 live, in 6

ars and upwards Ihere have died but onei about 80 years old, and one man

about 60. a Boy about five years old, andone little Infant or t. There are In thisTown in twenty-five Families about 95children, most of them under 12 years ofage, and all lusty children The produce ofthe Province. Is chiefly. Wheat. Barly.Oates, Beans, Beef. Pork. Pease, Tobacco.Indian corn. Butter. Cheese. Hemp andflax. French beans. Strawberries, Carrots,Parsnips, Cabbidge, Turnips. Radishes.Onions. Cucumbers, Water-melons .Mushmelons. Squashes; also our solle isvery fertile for Apples. Pears, Plums.Quinces, Currans red and whi te .Gooseberries. Cherries, and Peaches Inabundance, having all sorts of green trashin the summer time The Country is great-ly supplied with Creeks and Rivers whichafford stores of Fish. Pearch. Roach.Baste. Sheepshead. Oysters, Clams,Crabs, Sturgeon, Eels, and many othersorts of Fish that 1 do not name. You mayBuy as much Fish of an Indian for half apound of powder as will serve 6 or 8 men.Deer are also-very plenty In this ProvinceWe can Buy a fat Buck of the Indiansmuch begger than the English Deer for apound and a half of Powder or Lead or anyother trade equivalent; and a peck ofstrawberries, the Indians will gather, andbring home to<us for the value of 6 pence.

Our beef and Pork is verry f i t andgood. The naturale Grass of the country ismuch like that which grows In the Woodsin England which is food enough lor ourCattle; but by the water side we havefresh meadows, Salt Marshes. We makeEnglish Bread and Beer; besides we have

several other sorts ot Drink. In travelingin the country, and coming to any House,they generally ask you to eat and drink,and take Tobacco, and their several sortsof drink they will offer you as confidentlyas if it were Sack. Here are abundance ofChestnuts, Walnuts, Mulberries, andGrapes, red and white, our Horses andMares run In the Woods, and we givmthem no meal Winter or Summer, unlesswe work them; but our cows must belooked after

Our Timber stands for fences about theland we manure; we plough our Land withOxen for the most part. Husbandman hereand in old England is all one, making mostof our utencils nor Husbandry ourselves,and a man that has three or four sons orservants that can work along with him willdown with Timber, and get corn quicklyThe best coming to this country, is at theSpring or Fall. We make our soap andCandles, and all such things ourselves. Inthe Winter we make good fires and eatgood meat; and our women and childrenare healthy; sugar is cheap, venisan,Geese, turkeys, pidgeons, Fowls and Fishplenty: and one great happiness we enjoy,which is we are very quiet. I could givethee more information concerning thiscountry but time will not give leave. Insnort, this is a rare place for any poorman, or others; and I am satisfied thatpeople can live better here than they can

i in Old England, and eat more good meatThe vessel is going away, I have to time tocopy this over; therefore lake the sense ofil. My Love salutes thee. Farewell.

And fall! Unending hues of color and therefreshing sweetness of life

The peoples' smiles that say, "I am yourneighbor: no stranger to you."

Security' My growth' The friendship of thepeople!

Untarnished memories that belong to noother county.

Home is Monmouth County.Thank you Monmouth County for it all!

Mary C McDanielRed Bank

Monmouth County has everything!It has rainIt has snowIt has sports fast.It has trains slowIt has summer sun brightJt has winter time a frightIt has the Monmouth Arts.It has Freehold's horse cartsIt has tomatoes and cornIt has Danny O'HornIt has really good peopleIt has the Tower Hill steeple.It has the Molly Pitcher Hotel.It has the yacht basin so swellIt has the Navesink River.It has poultry farms and chopped liver.It has mothers, fathers, brothers and sis-

ters.It has above all The Daily Registers!

Marilyns. GrubbsRed Bank

• ••I love Monmouth County because ils back

road rustic wonderlands meld with modern dayshopping malls that I REQUIRE, its heroicvolunteer firemen and first aid provide as-sistance if I INQUIRE, there is a touch ofquaint, colonial revolutionary airs that I AD-MIRE, and Its lovely odd named rivers lacethrough a mosaic of cultural and recreationalfacilities that 1 DESIRE!

Jack BlrmeleKeansburg

The seasons of Monmouth County, or why 1like to stay!

Look out of your window, whal do you see?Spring! Green trees! Soft hills! Birds singingwith glee!

Open your door on a summer eve, warmtender air, golden sunset, flowers bright, wouldyou want to leave?

Look up into heaven when fall comesaround' clouds storming by, leaves rustling,squirrels hiding nuts in the ground

Then in winter time look at the ice flowers,glued to your window in a gorgeous array!

Now you know why I like lo stay?Mrs Anita Schott

Eatontown

1 love Monmoulh County because for 18years it Has been a favorable medium for ourtwo children's physical, emotional and spiritualgrowth We have watched the area expand andbroaden to offer better residential op-portunities for young and old. high-gradeeducation in the schools, cultural advantages,excellent medical services, good recreationalfacilities, and consideration to the needs ofsenior citizens. In retrospect, I feel lhal, as ourchildren go off to college, they will carry withthem a memory of growing up in a progressiveatmosphere I believe the problems existing inMonmouth County are symptomatic of thetimes rather than of this area

Mrs. Douglas OsbornRumson

I love Monmouth County becauseFor living space, plenty of elbow roomFor the shopper, one does not have to leave

the county.For the sportsman, fishing, boating, swim-

ming, golf, horseback riding, etc.For eating out, a variety of the best restau-

rants.For the music lover, "The Arts Center "For protection, the best police, first aid.

firemen in the country!

For transportation, numerous highwayslaced throughout the county plus Ihe GardenState Parkway.

The local municipalities are striving to keeptaxes and crowded buildings down

When one thinks of the congested cities andhigh taxes they have, you should count yourblessings that you live in Monmouth County'

Dan NoreenEast Keansburg

12 The Sunday Regitfer SHREWSBURY N J SUNDAY FEBRUARY 25.1979

PEOPLE

Prk Sea. RtbertC. Byrd

Pele investsin Kenya

By the Assoclitrd PressNAIROBI, Kenya - Pele, the Brazilian soccer idol-

I turned-businessman, said yesterday that he plans to invest; in Kenya's booming tourist industry

Pele, who last played (or the New York Cosmos,I stopped at Nairobi International Airport after a brief visit; lo the Seychelles, off the East African Coast; . He said he had just completed a deal to build an' international class beach hotel in the Seychelles and that he| Kad also decided to invest in the tourist and hotel industry| in Kenya because he had been impressed by the country's• political stability and scenic attractions

He said he would conclude the deal later this year• Pele, whose real name Is Edson Arantes do Nacimento.lias extensive business interests in South and North Ameri-

' ca and in Europe He said he expects to make more; investments in Africa, adding, "You will be seeing more of

me in future "

Sen. Byrd give* inNASHVILLE, Tenn - Officials of the Grand Ole Opry

.have finally convinced Senate Majorlly Leader RobertByrd to play the fiddle on their stage

Opry officials, who for several years have been tryingJo get the West Virginia Democrat to make a guestappearance, have announced that Byrd will perform at theOpry next Saturday night and that the show will betelevised live by the Public Broadcasting Service

Byrd has played the fiddle since childhood.

llonvicled in shootingJOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Bebby Locke, one

of South Africa's greatest golfers, has been convicted ofshooting a black laborer in the back. He faces a 1140 fine orto days in jail.

The 61-year-old golfer, who pleaded innocent to thecharge, was found guilty Friday and sentenced in theJohannesburg regional court

According to court testimony, Locke got into a heatedargument with the laborer, who had done work on anapartment complex the golfer owns. In the course of thedispute, Locke fired a shot and slightly wounded the laborerin the back

Locke won the British Open in 1949. 1950. 1952 and 1957He also won the South African open nine times.

Italy's got bronchitisAMER1CUS. da. - Billy Carter was to remain hospi-

talized through today for treatment of bronchitis, his physi-cian said yesterday

The president's brother was being treated earlier as anoutpatient for a serious cough and infection, but was notresponding to treatment, Dr. Paul Broun said.

(arter.41. was in the Americus-Sumter County Hospitaland Broun said yesterday that he was "doing real well "

The hunt is onfor radio pirate

By the Associated PressThe foul-mouthed antics of

a pirate broadcaster who hasemerged on AM radio late atnight has prompted the Feder-al Communications Com-mission to begin a search forthe mysterious buccaneer" The pirate broadcaster's

show has been heard at 1600Ulohertz on the AM dial bylisteners in New Jersey andNew York for the past threeweeks

The pirate, as unlicensedbroadcast stations are called,spins discs and c a m s on ;ione-man talk show spiked withobscenity, officials said

"He's clever, very clever."said Jud Mansbach' an FCCinvestigator assigned to track(town the bogus broadcaster"Me thinks he's actually mis-leading us by broadcasting atnight when he thinks the FCC

• js not working "; • . The pirate plays at mghl; because other stations have

Signed off. and his un-sophisticated equipment faces

; less competition for airspace.- the official said Radio signals• travel farther al night, forcing. the FCC to search a wider; area for the transmitter

! - Mansbach said the FCC hasreceived complaints that thepirate broadcaster was usingvulgar language during hisi iiniinentarv between records.

If apprehended, the secretdisc jockey could face a yearin jail and a 110.000 fine forviolating the CommunicationsAct of 1034, which makes It

Lehrer hunts 'better way'one that encourages participation from hisstaff and those around him He views his officeas a partnership. Although he is the chief lawenforcement official in the county, personsworking for him are not employees but are "co-workers"

Each week he conducts a department headmeeting where problems are discussed "1 feelthat an effective manager takes into accountas much input of his people as possible in thedecision making process," he said.

The prosecutor encourages every memberof his staff to make suggestions for improvement in the office Their ideas have been"excellent," said the prosecutor

Through the exchange of ideas, the decisHins become obvious to everyone, he saidAlthough some may disagree with his finaldecision, which he as prosecutor must make,they understand why the decision was reached.he said. He invites his staff to discuss with himdecisions which they disagreed with and if hemade the wrong decision, he admits it

"1 enjoy work," said Mr Lehrer "I lookforward to it I hope that my work contributesto law enforcement and to the citizens of thecounty.

" I want my staff to feel the same. I wantthem to feel that what they are doing is impor-tant," he said, stating that he believes thatbeing a public employee is a high position oftrust and responsibility

" I am very proud of my co-workers' re-sponse," he said "The taxpayers of the countyare well served by the people working in theprosecutor's office "

Before becoming the county's chief lawenforcement official, Mr Lehrer was inprivate practice of law "My eight years ofdefense experience has enabled me to gain aninsight into the problems of the prosecutonalsystem which I now hope to rectify as theMonmouth County Prosecutor," he said.

"My job as prosecutor is to see that justiceis done." said Mr Lehrer "To do justice, youmust understand both sides of the Issue Mydefense experience enables me to make toughdecisions with a clear conscience and to understand the plight people have found themselvesin."

Although the prosecutor advocates a hard-line approach against repeated offenders andthose who commiJ violent crimes, he does notbelieve that this same approach should beapplied uniformly in all cases "My goal is tomake sure that people only come through thecriminal justice system once Each case re-quries an analysis of what a prosecutor feelsthe interest of justice requires "

Within the first six months of his admims

tration, Mr Lehrer has instituted a number ofin-house programs to make the office moreefficient. One example was the creation of ajuvenile division within the office to examine inminute detail the existing juvenile justice sys-tem In the county and to recommend improvements

He also has instituted a screening programso that cases which can be processed in munici-pal court are handed there, leaving the Supenor Courts more time to handle the more seriouscriminal matters.

Each trial day in the Superior Courts costthe taxpayers taxpayers about $4,000 By send-ing back to the municipal courts those casesthat can be processed there means not only atax savings but also that the cases can bedisposed of in a shorter period of time.

Criminal matters should be disposed of asclose as possible to the time of the offense if thecriminal justice system is to be meaningful,said the prosecutor

By eliminating some of the backlog of casespending before grand juries, Mr Lehrer is ableto use those panels as investigative tools Hebelieves that the grand juries are the "cons-cience of the community" and he wants to beable to bring various matters to them.

Mr Lehrer also has launched an attackagainst the commission of violent crimes in thecounty He believes in the theory that there is arelationship between violent crimes andnarcotics "May people who are unfortunatelyaddicted to drugs commit violent crimes tosustain their habits." he said.

Through his efforts, the county was able toget a 150,000 federal grand when (ederal moneywas not us readily available as It was years agofor the creation of the first county NarcoticsStrike Force In operation since last Jan. 15.the results of the force have been "truly ex-traordinary." he said Because of the nature ofthe operation of the strike force, he declined toelaborate further at this time

" I feel that in the first six months we havemade great strides in the reduction of violentcrimes and narcotics trafficking," he said "Wehave made it known that we are waging an allout war against them '

Although Mr Lehrer is initiating a numberof new programs for the office, he is consciousof the economic conditions of the times " I t isincumbent upon law enforcement officials tomarshall their efforts No longer can we affordthe luxury of having our own equipment andpersonnel We have to help each other." hesaid

Within the first six months of his adminis-tration, Mr Lehrer also has organized a MajorCrimes Squad, a Fugitive Squad - where he

Port Authority eves industrial sitesNEW YORK (AP) - Nine

sites in New York City arebeing considered by the I ' dAuthority of New York i.ndNew Jersey as locations forindustrial parks, according tothe Port Authority's directorof industrial development

There are six sites in four-New Jersey cities that also arebeing looked at, according toNeal Montanus, who testifiedFriday before a state As-sembly committee's hearing

The Port Authority was stu-dying the marketability of thesites, "which in the finalanalysis must be the key fac-tor in ultimate site selection."

A consulting firm has Identi-fied for solicitation 63 manu-facturing industries that havean economic reason for conve-nience to choose the parks, theI'm I Authority official told the.Assembly's Standing Commit-tee on Corporations. Author-ities and Commissions They

included f irms processingfood, wood produc man-uafacturing metal products,and chemical and paper product producers.

Last year, the Port Author-ity was authorized by the NewYork and New Jersey statelegislatures to develop in-dustrial parks that would usegarbage to produce cheappower and create jobs by at-tracting manufacturing tenants

illegal to broadcast without anFCC license. Additional penal-ties could be levied for broad-casting obscenities.

"We rarely prosecute inthis type of case, however.said Wayne McKee, an FCCinvestigator in Washington.DC "Usually the pirate is ateenager, and a warning usu-ally does the trick We try todirect them into amateur radioclubs."

McKee said the FCC getsabout eight complaints a yearconcerning airwaves pirates,most of whom operate in ma-jor cities.

"It 's easy for anyone withsome electronics knowledge toget a transmitter from, say, anArmy surplus store, and sim-ply retune the circuits to ac-climmodate AM frequencies."McKee said

The FCC uses addresses ofcomplaining listeners to mapout the pirate station's broad-cast territory.

"It's usually about a 12-block area, although the NewYork pirate seems to havemore powerful equipment," hesaid, noting that the broad-casts have been picked up onboth sides of the Hudson River.

Once the broadcast terriro-ty is determined, McKee said,FCC investigators drivethrough it with a directionalantenna to pick up the signal

"When we pass the site, oursignal becomes stronger."McKee said. "And that's allthere is to it It isn't reallyvery scientific "

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encouraged me public to assist — an OrganizedCrime Unit and is working on specialized unitsto deal with sex crimes and white collarcrimes

He also has launched a number of in-housetraining programs for his staff and has broughtin more modern office equipment in his effortsto modernize and professionalize the office

In the next six months, these and otherprograms will undergo a period of second levelanalysis to determine how well they are work-ing, said Mr Lehrer "We have instituted somany new programs that the next six monthswill be sort of a catch-up period so the per-sonnel can adjust to the new systems andrefine them,' he said

"My major effort within the next sixmonths will be restructuring . modernizing andprofessionalizing other areas of the prose-cutor's office," he said, explaining that heplans to divide his investigative staff into vari-ous squads and sections so that each personinvolved can be well trained in specializedareas He wants to create an arson squad, abandit squad, an organized crime unit, intelligence unit and others

Although the job of county prosecutor is ademanding one requiring long hours of work.Mr Lehrer tries to take Sundays off so he canbe with his wife, Mary Ann, and their daughter.Alexis, 15 months Mrs. Lehrer is a first gradeteacher in the Elberon school system

"1 am looking forward to the spring andsummer so I can spend time with my daughteroutside and watch her grow," beamed theprosecutor

For recreation. Mr Lehrer likes to playracquetball and tennis and hopes to rekindlehis intei esl in golf

"My job as a prosecutor is to seethat justice is done."

To those who see the county prosecutor inaction, the position Is more than just a job; It ispart of his life He appears to be a person whohas taken Thomas A Edison's maxim to heart"There is a way to do it better, find it."

Neil Knorrdid It againin Colts Neck20 Saratoga DriveTo Be ExactNeil Knorr, a sales associate inthe Sterling Thompson realestate office at 144 Hwy. 36,Middletown, has reported avolume close to $650,000 sincejoining the leading N.J realtyfirm in late 1978. He is aresident of Tinton Falls. Givehim a call today at 495-9600

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SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1979

Bird behavior shows adaptability in wildlife survivally WILLIAM F SANDFOltD

AdapUbUtty U one ol thekeys to wildlife lurvivil, andwe ace U demonstrated In thebehavior of birds in severewinter weather like that we'veexperienced this month Afriendly titmouse thai will per-mit you to approach to withinsix feet under normal condi-tions may come perch In yourhand — If it's full of sunflowerteed— when severe cold, snowand Ice make ample food vital-ly necessary and hard to comeby

A Runuon reader who ad-mits he's always been partialto hawks feels a kestrel thatappeared In his yard last week-end was an example of unusualbehavior brought on by un-usual conditions.

WUlllorrisey writes that helive* in an area of small lotswith the houses close together,hardly prime kestrel habitat,and he'd never seen one therebefore His family had put out

' a turkey carcass left from thetable, expecting the starlingsto pick It clean. The starlingscame, but promptly scatteredwhen the kestrel settled in.The little hawk picked at awing for awhile, then flew offwith It

The bird appeared a bitweak and our correspondentbelieves that it had extendedits normal foraging range outof need for food after 11 daysof abnormally cold weather

We hail similar experiencewith crows, birds traditionallywary of man which now seemto be growing bolder. Moreand more of late we've seenthem perching on store frontsto drop down into busy urbanstreets to grab morsels of gar-bage. At our house they havebeen coming close enough tobe seen in the larger trees 100feet distant But not until lastMonday's snowstorm did theyever come to our feeding sta-tion area - within 25 feet ofthe back door — to share tablescraps with the starlings.

United Wayboosted bybusinesses

ASBURY PARK - Whenthe Monmouth County UnitedWay recently reached its re-cord goal of 1809,000, much ofthe credit for the successfulcampaign was attributed tothe growing cooperation be-tween employees and theirmanagements in helping Unit-ed Way drives

One of the examples citedby United Way leaders is thecampaign among New JerseyNatural Gas Company's Mon-mouth County employees, whocontributions this year totaled15,900, an 18 percent increaseover the previous year.

William J. Storms, co-chair-man of the company's driveand president of its Local 1820,International Brotherhood ofElectrical Workers, com-mented by saying, "Because ofthe effort shown by both theunion and management. It wasa successful campaign. I thinkit stands as an example ofwhat can be accomplishedwhen there is a sincere effortto hurdle the obstacles andreach a goal that we eachleek."

James T. Dolan, Jr., presi-dent of New Jersey Natural, .said employees of his companycontributed a total of (8.147 inUnited Way drives in (ourcounties, a record high for hiscompany's employees. He, too,credits "the mutual concernand cooperation of the com-pany and the union "

James E. Bourque, ex-ecutive director of the Mon-mouth County United Way.said the gas company's 18percent increase was amongthe highest in the county and is"typical of the growing awars-ness by employees in industryin the county thai the UnitedWay is providing a service thatIs helpful to all county resi-dents."

Mrs. Carley namedto head board

MIDDLETOWN - Mrs.Carmella Carley has beennamed chairman of the localassistance board for this yearOther members of the boardare Mrs. Maude Smack, MrsNurlel Hanf, Mrs. Alethia Gayand Mrs. Kathy Dasaro

Mrs. Marie L. Bevacqua isthe local welfare director. Theboard meets in Mrs.Bevacqua s office the fourthThursday of each month at 8p.m

Our small flock of winteringevening grosbeaks — scarcerthis year and seemingly lesstrustful — has been quite hap-py to make do with the feederssome distance from the house,disdaining the windowsill of-ferings they had accepted inother yean. On Monday, witha frigid gale whipping theheavy snowfall and cloggingthe seed outlets at the otherstations, they changed theirways. Quite a competition de-

veloped among the grosbeaksthen for the perches on theseed dispensers just outsidethe window

By Tuesday they were pa-tronizing the more remote sta-tions exclusively again. Thusdo conditions alter behaviorpatterns.

One of our readers in De-lavan, Wise., writes to let usknow that "people way out InWlsconisin" like this column(I can say "one of our

readers" there because he re-ports other members of thefamily read it. too. And it Isn'tthat we've expanded ourcirculation area that much; afriend, Mrs. Naomi McGregorof Oceanport, sends them thecolumn

Kenneth P Van De Bogert,who says he's never beenknown to write a short letter,sends an interesting long oneabout regular visits to theHoricon Marsh Wildlife Ref

uge to see the huge assembliesof geese it harbors, and toCaasville, Wise , where about40 eagles winter. He and hiswife, an accomplished birder,,are nature photography hob-byists

The annual backyard birdcount sponsored by the OceanTownship EnvironmentalCommission has been set forMarch 10-13. The object is torecord the number and kinds,of birds found in the township

to indicate trends and help thecommission keep its inventoryof wildlife resources updated

A free bird guide, helpful inidentifying the subjects, is of-fered at Township Hill. Con-tributors of the data are askedto report the birds seen eachday and send the lists to OwlHaven , P.O. Box 98. Oakhurst077S6. (Owl Haven is theprojected New J e r s e yAudubon Society nature centerto be located in the township )

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SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25,1979

Overeaters Anonymous deals with more than weight•y IMS ROZKNCW AJU

HOLMDEL - OvereatersAnonymous, Central Jerseylatergroup, it having an all-day marathon today, entitled"There Is a Solution," from 1*a.m. to I p.m., at St. JohnVlanney High School, LineRoad.

Members of OA from aUover New Jersey, Pennsylva-nia, Connecticut and NewYork are expected to attend,and the public is invited to

come and bring a brown baglunch. There will be group dis-cussions on a variety of sub-jects related to compulsiveeating.

Overeaten Anonymous is aprogram based on that of Alco-holics Anonymous — the prob-lem OA Is designed to arrest iscompulsive overeating

Today's marathon promtea, "If you don't want to, younever nave to overeat again"— a stunning promise to thosewho have battled food and

weight problems, to no avail,for months, years or a lifetime

Interviews with OA mem-bers make it clear that food Isconsidered only part of theproblem, and that "the pro-gram," as It is called, dealswith far more than weight

The program Is run by non-professionals — that Is, bythose who attend meetingsregularly and attain a certainmeasure of abstinence fromcompulsive overeating. It isautonomous and non-profit;

there are no dues or fees. Theonly requirement (or member-ship is the desire to slop eatingcompulsively.

"I think the program is away of seeing the problem ofovereating from more thanjust a physical angle," saidKalby of Fair HavenAnonymity Is a cornerstone ofOA, partly because, accordingto an OA slogan, principlescome before personalities, andpartly because members sharefeelings quite freely during

meetings."The program works from

an emotional and spiritual an-gle," she said "1 think that'swhy it works."

"It's enabled me to freemyself of destructive eatinghabits," said Jane of Mid-dletown, who is maintaining a40-pound weight loss. "It'shelped me to grow emotionallyand spiritually."

"The weight is really theleast of it," said a Holmdelwoman who asked that her

name not be used "I've gainedself confidence and under-standing It's helped me withmy marriage and to under-stand my kids.

"It's done a lot more thanthat — it's taught me patience.If something happens that Idon't like, I've learned to sitback and let it hurt. I let itpass. I don't constantly try tomanipulate things any more.

"And I've accepted mycompulsion. I know OA isalways there to help me over it

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when the compulaion lakethold of me." There are OAmeetings every day of theweek, except Sunday, In Honmouth County Mo* meetingslast two hoon, and some aredevoted lo studying OA literaturc.

"The gaining of weight Uoaly the symptom of the illnessof compulsive overeating,"said a woman from Eatonlownwho asked that her name n*tbe used "In the program, thea tfeps deal with the cause -they're the road to recovery."

The I! steps frequently re-ferred to by OA members afetaken from Alcoho l i c sAnonymous. The first stepstates, "We admitted we werepowerless over food — that ourl ives had b e c o m e un-manageable."

"It's made a tremendousdifference In my life," saidJane of Fair Haven, who hasbeen in the program for threeyears and is maintaining a 55pound weight toss.

"I read about It in The Register when it was at the Salvalion Army, and it's made atremendous difference, Interms of personal change andthe ability to cope with lifi-more.

"My temperament Wasvery different," she said. "IJust am not angry as much,and not as easily provoked."

Many of the OA testimonials sound almost too goodto be true, almost simplistic,with frequent avowals of spiri-tual growth and peace of mind.OA members insist that thesuccess of the program in batUing a progressive disease re-sides in the fact that It dealsnot only with the physicalproblem of overeating, butalso with emotional problemsand with spiritual growth

"I always had an palingproblem," said Ben of OceanTownship, "But I didn't recog-nte it. I mean, didn't everyfootball player eat a lot? Anddidn't every middle-aged manget a paunch?

"I'm trying to grow up, andthai means coming around andgiving service — for instance,leading meetings, telling mystory at meetings, helpingsponsor newcomers, carrjingthe message for people wliohaven't even come yet."

Many OA members attendmore than one meeting aweek, as well as making phonecalls to other OA members Ifthey need to talk. Some havesponsors, with whom they dlscuss food plans and food prob-lems These are all aspects ofthe program unique to OA, saymembers who have tried pills,shots and diet clubs.

"I was in health clubs.Lean-Line, Weight-Watchers,"said Kathy of Aberdeen "I'vebeen in just about everything

"I think that the differenceIs, with the other ones, whenyou don't lose weight you areconsidered bad. In OA, fat,thin, people love you anyway. 1think the whole concept is dif-ferent.

"I don't think It's a cos-metic problem," she said, hav-ing Vast (6 pounds "The program deals with emotionsFive, ten years ago, I didn'tunderstand the compulsionBut I can only control myproblem with the meetings — Ican't do It alone."

Said Ron of Middletown, "1had been to Weight Watchersand to Lean-Line. I even hadmy own diet group at onepoint. I found that I was unableto keep the weight off after I'dlost it. I tried to do it on myown and stumbled into OA."He is maintaining a 50 poundweight loss.

"You have the tools of theprogram to get you throughthe rough spots," he said, "asopposed lo a weight club,where you're only okay as longas you're losing. One of themost difficult things to realizeis that you're powerless overfood and you have to facethat."

The tools of OA are bestunderstood from attending -ameeting, and meetings thenselves are an important tool,sav members.

l i m ANONYMOUSMHTINSS

area-lav Baeck: St JomeiFpluocol Churdi, aOl Fourlti »va , »a.m.; Reel Keek I Fl.it Boptltl Church.Map)* Avenva. t-10 p.m ; TaaaawlOld lament etnwer.. Tannwil Rood.I M o m

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SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY FEBRUARY 25. 1979

MONMOUTH COUNTY NAMES AND FACESLets hair down

Republican FreeholderJane Clayton let her hair downat last weeks'! Lincoln DayDinner - and she was the talkof Buck Smith's Restaurant inEast Keansburg Seems thecomely Rumson politician tooka mini-vacation before the din-ner and arrived at the Re-publican gathering looking, asone guest said, "simply ter-rific"

To end speculation onceand tor all, Mrs Clayton didn'tgo away for a facelift Shewent for — and came backwith - a glorious Florida tan,a short rest, a new hairstyleand a new dress.

Put that all' together andyou get compliments and flat-tering comments on a photothat appeared in last week'sDaily Register "I had on ahigh fashion' dress, and I'm

usually dressed more con-s e r v a t i v e l y , " the GOPstalwart said. "It's the kind ofthing, being in the public eye,that I can only wear once ortwice. Another thing, is thatI'm letting my hair grow backto the longer length I used tohave it, I had it shaped inFlorida, and people didn't likeit short. The tan from Floridadidn't hurt either

"I certainly didn't have afacelift. I won't say that I'venever considered it. but I don'tthink I ever will, because I'm asun worshipper and if you getplastic surgery , you have tostay out of the sun. Thatwouldn't be for me," MrsClayton declared.

JaneClayton'a personal Rxthen, for looking terrific rest,tan, an addition to the ward-robe and a recherche hairdoShe's also, she said, "verycomfortable at the county

level of government, with nohigher political aspirationsthan to win again, and win big,In the next elections for Free-holder" •

Enthused youthA lt-year-old high school

junior who spent the summeror 1878 with the Youth Con-servation Corps at StokesState Forest, is so enthusedabout his experience that hehas begun encouraging otheryouths to apply for membership in the program

Christopher Davidson ofHaiell, who attends St. JohnVianney High School inHolmdel, is attempting to re-cruit boys and girls betweenthe ages of 15 and 19 years oldfor the federally-aided pro-gram.

Teens who are interested inlearning skills such as mason-

ry, roofing, and carpentry aswell as learning to understandthe environment, would be ide-al candidates for the program.

"It was a fantastic op-portunity to learn and toserve," said the young man Itu an excellent program (or allyoung people, but unfortunate-ly not too well publicized.

"It is only possible to be apart of this program onc«, so 1would like to give somethingback in return for what I re-ceived 1 would like to helppromote this program so oth-ers might experience the samegood things I did," noted MrDavidson

The program encompasses

two types of Jobs, residentialand non-residential Non-resi-dential parks in the area in-clude Cheesequake, SandyHook, Thompson and Allaire

„ State Parks Residential areas. include Stokes State Forest inthe northern part of the stateand Belleplain State Forest inthe south

Teen-agers in the pro-gram are accepted for aneight-week session, from July5 through Aug. 21 Each youthreceives $2 to an hour for a 30to 40-hour week

Persons wishing additionalinformation on the programmay contact Mr. Davidson at UGalewood Drive, Hazlet. JaietiaytN

By George, she's 102!

MflttfCMMMMRS. LEWIS AT 105 - Mrs. Elizabeth Lewis Is 105years old this week. Born In Skinquater, Va., shelived on Scenic Drive, Atlantic Highlands, beforecoming to the Hilltop Nursing Home, Kings High-way, Mlddletown, last year. Laralne Llndaman,Port Monmouth, Is head nurse at the private nursinghome, which gave Mrs. Lewis a bang-up party, com-plete with cake, flowers and a visit from the mayor.

Mrs. Lewis 105 years youngMrs. Elizabeth Lewis Is probably Monmouth County's oldest

inhabitant — she is 106 years oldNow a resident of the Hilltop Nursing Home, Kings High-

way, Mlddletown, Mrs Lewis — "Lizzie," to her friends at thenursing home - was born Elizabeth Watkins on Feb 21,1974. inSkinquarter, Va.

In 1874 "Boss" William Tweed of New York City wasconvicted of fraud. It was the year before the first KentuckyDerby and two years before Ouster's last stand at the Battle ofthe Little Big Horn. F W Woolworth and the Brooklyn Bridgewere years in the future.

Mrs. Lewis, the oldest of six children of a farmer, went toschool through the sixth grade — she can still read withoutKlasses

After working as a cook in Essex Fells, she married JohnLewis in 1928 (her husband died in 1955) They worked togetheras a couple for private famillels, and they also had a farm inVirginia, where they spent six months of each year, working thefarm.

Mrs. Lewis lived with her niece, Mrs Alida Daley. ScenicDrive, Atlantic Highlands, until Mrs Daley was no longer ableto care for her. Last August Mrs Lewis came to Hilltop, aprivate nursing home

On her birthday, Elizabeth Lewis was given a surpriseparty, complete with a sign which read, "Happy Birthday.Elizabeth Lewis, 105." There were just a few token candles onthe sign. She was presented with a bouquet of flowers and acake, and Mayor Robert Eckert paid a birthday call.

"It was lovely," said Mrs. Lewis, of her birthday party "1wasn't expecting all that I wasn't thinking of it.

"I really thank them In my heart for it."

Mae Black of Aberdeen,who shares the same birthdaywith George Washington,doesn't like "large, noisyplanes nor fast speeding car "

This is quite under-standable when you realizethat life moved a lot slowerwhen Mae was born on a farmin Camden In fact, it it wasexactly 102 years ago and herbirthday celebration broughtforth some fond memories

However, it would be wrongto imply that the engaging cen-tenarian-plus has spent her lifein the tranquil atmosphere ofher early childhood She mar-ried, moved to a farm on LloydRoad In Aberdeen, at that timeMatawan Township, with hernew husband, raide a child andwent to word

She was first an assistantbuyer for Bambwger's andwent on from there to work forKresge's. a position she helduntil early 1950 "They gaveme a high recommendation formy years of service." Some-how, during part of thoseyears, she still helped on thefarm

In celebrating her birthday,she Is a little impatient withthe fact that she has had toslow down considerably afterdeveloping a coronary condi-tion a number of years ago

"But you don't find her stayingin bed and feeling sorry furherself." said Karen Hayes, a

nurse (or the MCOSS NursingService who visits her regu-larly

The nurse added that Mrs.Black "can tell some prettyfunny stories when she has amind to ." Besides the regularhealth supervision she re-ceives from MCOSS, her mealsare provided by Meals-on-Wheels, except on Sundaynights when neighbors drop bywith her supper

Like many of her gener-ation. Mrs. Black attributesher longevity to "hard work."And there are lots of things totalk about when people cometo visit She chats about "thegirls" a granddaughter, twogreat granddaughters and twogreat, great granddaughters,who all now live in Florida

Mrs. Black was delightedthat nurse Karen rememberedher birthday with some home-made cookies" and after checking out her patient. Ihe nurse

Mae Black

look time to visit for a mo-ment

"She's really great for 102,'said Karen, "but I know whenshe gets that far-away IBMthat she's back where life wassimple: she's back on thefarm '

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NEWARK (AP) - Targetpractice may prove very ex-pensive for two PembertonTownship police officers

The pair was indicted by afederal grand jury Friday forshooting out traffic lights inthe Ft. Dix military base inBurlington County last November

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MontvaleRamadalnnChestnut Ridge Rd atExit 172GSP

TuesdayFeb 20 or 278:00 pm

TuesdayMarch 6730 pm

Hackensack Monday MondayOntaniMtr Hotel Feb 19 or 26 March 5Hackensack Ave IUSI 8 00 pm 7 30 pmnorth ol Rle MBt*n Riverside Sq 4 2 Guys

ParsippanyHearthstone Mir LdgUS Hway 146 Easlbound 4Rte 1202

TuesdayFeb 20 or 276 00 pm

TuesdayMarch 67:30 pm

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ThursdayMarch 87 30 pm

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The suspects allegedlycaused about 13.000 worth ofdamage to traffic and streetlights at the base and wereboth charged with damagingU.S. government properly, ac-cording to U.S Attorney Rob-ert J Del Tufo

The two officers were ar-rested by military police whenthey were found silting on anold Army tank displayed at thebase. Del Tufo said

Charged were MichaelHolmes. 25. and MichaelO'Brien, .25, both of BrawnsMills

Both men have been sus-pended from duty, authoritiessaid

If convicted, each faces upto 10 years in jail and a $10.1)00line. Del Tufo said

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Make a DateA paid directory of coming events for non-profit or-

ganizations. Kates: 1200 for three lines for one day, $1 00each additional line, $3 00 for two days. 11.25 each addi-tional line, 15 for three to five days. II 50 each additionalline; $6.00 for 10 days, XI (HI each additional line Deadlinenoon 2 days before publication Call the Dally Register,542-4000. ask for Ihe Date Secretary

FEBRUARY II, 17,14 i MAR. 1, >"THE GLASS MENAGERIE" presented by Pine Tree

Players, Community House Theatre, 3rd & Madison Aves.,Spring Lake, 8:40 P.M. Director, Henry Franzoni, starringEvelyn Franzoni. B.J. Griffiths, Dennis Kane, GeorgeAUgor Tickets at door. $4. J3. group rates theatre parties774-2708.

FEBRUARY M * 27Red Bank and area Alateen & Post-Teen groups meet

every Tues. night at 8 P M at Trinity Episcopal Church,White St. entrance, in downtown Red Bank.

FEBRUARY 2), MARCH 1, 3The Monmouth Players will present the Mystery-Com-

edy "Catch Me If You Can," at the Navesink Library, Fi t ,Feb. 23. and Fri and Sat March 2 and 3. Curtain at 8:40p.m.

FEBRUARY 14, 25Christian Brothers Academy, Newman Springs Rd.,

Uncroft. Art Show 4 Sale, sponsored by the Women'.'.liuild. Sal. Feb 24. 3 to 8 p.m Sun . Feb. 25, 12 to 5 p.m.Opening reception Sat. 3-5 pm Artists' Demonstrations,Sun . 2-4 p.m. Admission: $1 00 All students free. Informs-Usntn-HWorMMtn.

FEBRUARY ISBayshore Companion Dog Club. Red Bank, A.K.C.

licensed obedience trial, indoors. Middletown High SchoolSouth, Nutswamp Rd , spectators invited, 9 A.M. to 3 P.MAdmission; Adults $100 Children. 50c Dogs and handlerswill be competing for A.K.C. titles, trophies and moneyprizes Benefiting Monmouth County SPCA Spaying Fund 'Middlftown High School South Greening Committee.

The International Concert Series of the United Method-ist Church. 247 Broad St.. Red Bank, presents FlorenceBlumberg, Soprano, accompanied by Genevieve Ross, atthe piano, on Sun , Feb. 25, at 4 P.M. Freewill offering.

FEBRUARY 25, 2t, 27Eighth Annual Antique Show It Sale is planned at

Congregation B'nai Israel, Harice k Ridge Rds, Rumson,the show will feature fine china, jewelry, furniture, andcollectibles. Show hours are: 4-9 Sun., 11 A.M. to 10 P.M.Mon. and 11 AM to 5 P.M. Tues Admission: $150 Diningavailable. Plenty of free parking. For additional informa-tion call 842-1800 j

FEBRUARY NSt. Agnes Church, Atlantic Highlands, will have a

meeting in the church hall to show a film and discuss thetrip to England-Scotland 4 Wales, June Zl-July 5 Call291-0876

FEBRUARY 17Parents Without Partners Bayshore 644 Hospitality-

Orientation Night, 8:30 P.M., Cobblestones, Hwy 35, Mld-dletown Music, dancing Call 5664)170

BYAA Tuperware Party Belford Flrehouse. Mam St.,Belford, 8 p.m Proceeds used for the children

MARCH 1Group Against Smoking Polution. Smoke Free Dinner,

Shore Point Inn, Hazlet. Thurs , March 1. at 7:30 p.m

MARCH >Bayshore Recreation Center presents Flea Market,

Sat., Mar. 3,9 AM to 5 P.M., Port Monmouth Rd., l> BrayAve., East Keansburg. Indoor space $7. Call 787-1880.

Italian Festival, sponsored by Ladles Auxiliary of RiverPlaza Fire Company, at River Plaza Firehouse, ColonialRoom Music by Blue Satins. Buffet. H Y OH Tickets'747-2148 or 741-7365.

MARCH 4New Jersey State Orchestra, Murray Glass, Music

Director, Concert at 3 p.m., Sun. Ehck Friedman, Ameri-can Violinist' playing "Vleuxtemps Fifth Concerto" &"Sarasale's Gypsy Airs." Tickets box office Paramount^Theatre, Asbury Park $800 One-half price Smiats^*Students

Organ Recital — Mary Fenwick, Recltalist. First Pres-byterian Church, Tower Hill, Red Bank 4:30 p.m Childcare provided. Free will offering.

MARCH IISt. Patrick's Dance sponsored by St James Parish to be

held in the cafeteria, 30 Peters Place. Red Bank, N.JMusic by Paul Dolan Donation $7.91. Beer and food sup-plied. BYOB. For tickets call Boehning, 842-7257; Conley,741-3295; Dillon, 842-7417.

MARCH IIN.J.O.W.P.A. sponsors a benefit featuring Bella Abzug

for the Women's Resource and Survival Center, at theAmeriauf Hotel $35 tor dinner. $10 after dinner. Call ArtColdsw*. 591-1200, for info. Ad deadline March 1 Call PatHeflernaTl. 536-4341, for rates.

• JUNE 11 TO JULY JSt. Agnes Church, Atlantic Highlands, will sponsor a

trip to England, Scotland * Wales. Most meals Include.!Sightseeing. CaU 2914W76.

RasM larry D*v Lener Rabat Jack* Rmlf

Rabbis backordinationof women

•y DORIS KULMAN

The recommendalion that the Conservative branch ofJudaism ordain women is enthusiastically supported by localComervative rabbis.

The recommendation was made by a special commission ofthe Rabbinical Assembly, which Includes more than 1,150 Con-servative rabbis worldwide. If It is approved by the faculty ofthe Jewish Theological Seminary, the seminary will admitwomen to study tor the Conservative rabbinate, perhaps asearly as September

The Jewish Theological Seminary, the only seminary for thetraining of Conservative rabbis, has promised s decision by May

Rabbis Jack M. Rosoff of Congregation B'nai Israel,Rumaon, and Daniel Tepliti of the Marlboro Jewish Center,attended the recent annual meeting of the Rabbinical Assemblyin Lot Angeles, where the commission presented its report.

"I welcome the recommendation and support it as a naturalextension of the education of our girls," Rabbi Rosoff said.

Rabbi Rosoff noted that Conservative Judaism has a BatMllzvah ceremony for girls of IS, which marks the coming ofage at which Jewish children assume the religious obligationsand privileges of an adult, and permits women to be counted inthe minyon, the quorum of 10 Jews necessary to conduct aworship service, and to read from the Torah during servicesThe Torah is the first five books of the Bible.

The ordination of women "is a culminating part of thatprocess," Rabbi Roaoff said. "We have many talented, capablewomen with the capacity to serve in spiritual leadership, andthe synagogue s houjdn't deprive itself of thai."

Rabbi Rosoff said "I can see how strict traditionalists Wouldbe troubled by the ordination of women, but the benefit to thesynagogue and the community outweighs that for me."

"I look forward to the day when 1 will be joined in theRabbinical Assembly by the first woman rabbi of ConservativeJudaism," Rabbi TeflIU said "Women can contribute a tremen-dous amount to the synagogue and to community leadership Inthe professional role of a rabbi"

Rabbi TeflIU said that "there is tremendous need forinfluence from women as well as men" in the Jewish communi-ty, and suggested that women congregants might find It easierto relate to a woman rabbi than to a male.

"There Isn't any reason why only one type of Individualshould be in a leadership role," Rabbi Teflitz said. "Especiallyin the professions, there Is need for various personalities withwhom others can identify. There Isn't any reason to excludeone-half the population from serving on an equal level In the fullgamut of professional Jewish life."

The recommendation for the ordination of women wassigned by II members of the 14-member commission. Threemembers signed a minority report opposing the recommenda-tion and arguing that many congregants might leave theConservative movement if it accepts women rabbis.

The commission was headed by Dr Gershon Cohen, chan-cellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary.

"Dr Cohen has taken a courageous and bold step, and hasshown himself to be a true leader of the Jewish community,"RabbiTefliti said. "I hope the faculty will follow his leadership

"Conservative Judaism has room enough for all perspectives," Rabbi Tefliti continued, "And I'm not reallyafraid(members will leave. I think the ordination of women willbring to the Conservative movement many Jews who areunaffuiated at this time. And the Integrity of a congregationwon't be violated, congregations still will have a choice of whomthey lure."

Rabbi Tefllti said he had discussed the question with hiscongregation "and while there are members who stronglyoppose the ordination of women, I find the majority are in favor

•ftv."Declaring that "the issue is one of human rights," Rabbi

Teflilz said the ordination of women "might change the per-sepctive of what the rabbinate means, but it won't basicallychange the nature of Jewish life nor be a panacea lor savingJewish life."

"If I understand the report, the dissenting minority didn'tsay that the ordination of women is against Jewish law, theysaid that to preserve unity in the movement, women shouldn'tbe ordained," Rabbi Barry Dov Lerner of Temple Beth Ahm,Aberdeen Township, said.

But, Rabbi Lerner said. "There is unity only on Jewish lawIn the Conservative movement.''

Rabbi Lemer, who said "women ought to be rabbis," saidthe question has been raised as to whether or not synagogueswill hire women rabbis.

"My answer is, ordain them and find out," he declared."None of us was promised positions. Women rabbis will endurethe marketplace, and I believe they will compete favorably.Many of the women I know would be stiff competition for manyof us '

Rabbi Lemer predicted the recommendation "will squeezethrough " A spokesman for the Jewish Theological Seminary inNew York said, with a laugh, "no one here would dare" predictthe vote.

The spokesman said the recommendation will be voted onby the Faculty Senate, made up of the W tenured facultymembers and three representatives of the 40 non-tenuredteachers. He said the specific procedures for deciding the issuehaven't been worked out, "but we will be looking for a con-

He said there are about 110 women attending the seminarynow, doing graduate work in Judaic studies. He said it has 124rabbinical students

Conservative Judaism could use more rabbis, the spokes-man for the seminary said, "We have a shortage of rabbis, wehave many pulpits."

There are about a dozen women rabbis now, most of them Inthe more liberal Reform movement, and some in the Re-constructionist movement, which occupies a position betweenConservative and Reform.

More than 52 percent of American Jews affiliated withsynagogues s regard themselves as Conservative.

Institutionally, the Conservative movement is composed olthe Seminary, the Rabbinical Assembly, and the United Syn-ogogues, which represents, the laity.

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SHREWSBURY, NJ SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1979 T I l C Sunday RcgiMCr B f

A tour for two at the end of the road« _ ««_ _ >• •_ _» L _ _ » i k u l _ ._ i L . #;-_» „ . ! „ thrratiah th*ir nu/n noiohrmr. 1 Ctart B I tK» / T M v m n n l i <»f COflllftllCi ftCFOSS UK UltCfAi Ike Hide

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ROUTES

Hank and Michele Sandless and their tour

• y SARAH HILTONSo fir, "Routes" hai high

nghled the lonely long-distancerumer, some U to 20-milewonders, * lair share of 5 to 1«-mile devotees, nipple teen-ager u m e n who it might seem"will never hit the wall," andmature Joggers who readilyadmit to "hitting It" with eachstep and visa-versa Therehive been during the run of"Routes," doctors, house-wives, stockbrokers and lastweek a dog, who share theirfavorite runs. So, M "Routes"and many new friends later,I've hit the wan of my own.But, with final installment, td

Uke to give you something wehaven't done—a run (orcouples

TOUt FOR TWOLakeside Avenue and

Locust Point Road, Locustacross the Oceanic Bridge viaIfonmouth Avenue and/orHartahome Road 8 milesHank and Michele Sandless, 30

Both Hank and Michele enjoy running, but it seema Hankenjoys lit about Vfr miles morethan Michele No prob-

MonmouthappointsProf. Cave

WEST LONG BRANCH -William C. Cave of lianasquanhas been appointed associateprofessor In the department ofmathematics/computer sci-ence at Monmouth College. Hisassignment will be In the com-puter science area, teachingcourse* In the master of sci-ence in computer science pro-gram Instituted last year bythe college, as well as In under-graduate level classes. He Iswriting a textbook for use inthe master's program.

Prof. Cave comes to the col-lege from a post as senior con-sultant with Prediction Sys-tems, Inc., lianasquan. Pre-viously, he was employed bythe Army Communications R* D Command (CORADCOM)at Ft. Monmouth, where hedirected the Computer Re-source Management program.He la the recipient of threeArmy Outs tanding Per-formance Awards.

Earner In hit career, Prof.Cave was president of OptimalSystems R e s e a r c h , Inc . ,lianasquan, and following thatwas vice president of market-ing with Martin Marietta CorpIn Hartford, Conn. •*

He la a frequent participantin scientific conferences, andseveral of his papers havebeen presented at these ses-sions.

lem. they run the first mile"and a hall together, she re-

tires, he continues (after anice warmup) This couple has

2 been running for about sinmonths, 20 miles per weekHank and Michele like to runthe the morning, before break-fast and warm up with DrGeorge Sheehan's Magic I ex-ercises.

"The double loop strategy,"says Hank, "is that two Jog-gers of differing capacity mayjog together for the first round.This helps both get started andthe second runner can keepgoing. Any couple can probably design a double loop

Our George Washington's BirthdaySpecial Got Snowed Out....

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Feb.26thand 27th ONLY. ,Last week we scheduled a

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So we're going to try Itagain. On February 26th and 27th

•jlfthofctaj| W. S p Q S yfr promise to help you look and feel better

you can get one half of a stand-ard membership for one half theprice. This includes all the samerights and privileges as regularmembership.

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Let Holiday Spas "SecondEffort" George Washington'sBirthday Special be your reasonto get started on that shape upprogram you've been planning.Stop In or call today.

Stop in today orCall 800 /638-7710

East ftrunswlck4O5 State Highway No 18Monmouth MallEatontown. NJ.

ALL NEW LOCATIONSEAVIIW

Seaview Square Moll

through their own neighborhood."

Terrain Mostly flat with aslight incline and one steep hill"A highlight on this run is thepeace and seclusion alongHartshorne Road And, thereis a refreshing breeze whencrossing the bridge what aview!"

Parking: Best on theRumson side of the bridge

Water None along the wayIt's a good idea to drink someliquids before and after a run

Traffic: Light to moderateAlways be especially cautiouson these very curvy roads.

Shade Excellent

Start at the crosswords ofLakeside Ave and LocustPoint Rd Run north to alon-mouth Ave.

2. Go right (east) on theMonmouth Ave around LocustAve — a five-corner Intersec-tion. Head right (west) onLocust Ave — across "the tinfoil bridge." back to LocustPoint Rd Turn right (north)on Locust Point Rd and runback to Lakeside Here therunners part

3 The second runner continues following the sameroute as before until the five-corner intersection Instead ofturning onto Locust Ave., he

i across the intersec-tion to Hartshorne Rd FollowHartahome (southeast) to theend of the road, then loop back— retracing your steps - tothe intersection

4. Go left (south) across thetin foil bridge to Locust PointRd At Locust Point Rd., turnleft and continue to run, acrossthe Oceanic Bridge, intoRumson

5. Loop back across thebridge, back up Locust PointRd (north), over Locust Ave.and finish at Lakeside, whereyour faithful and well-rested,partner is waiting with a cool;glass of water.

Facilities and hours may differ at each loccrtlon and with membership type,

IsUnion, N.J.

2268Rl 22 Ne«t tomellagshipMon-Fri 9-9 • Sat 9 6 • '

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d. Sale Itemsnot available In case lots. Prices effective Sunday, Feb. 25 thru Saturday, Mar 3 only "Not responsible for typographical errors. Member Twin County Grocers SOOUMMU

Raritan captures District 22 crownHOLMDEL - Raritan High School took the team title

in NJSIAA District H wrestling competition yesterday asfour of iu wrestlers, Bob Morton (188), Doug Smith (115),Tim McDonald (135), and John McGreevey (188). werevictorious in their final round bouts.

St. John Vianney was a distant second at «H4, paced by.three final-round winners Red Bank Catholic was thirdwith 7« points, followed by Malawan, «2, and Cedar Ridge,

Rounding out the field of 10 schools were Keyport, sixthwithMpoints; H o l m d e l . a ^ ; CBA.20; Keansburg, 18; andMater Del, 2.

Morton of Raritan was credited with a 4-3 decision overMatawan's Tom Grtfa, and Smith outlasted St. John'sLarry DeSimone, 7-4. McDonald got past Dan Breen ofCedar Ridge, l i t , and McGreevey brought down the onlyfinal round pin, flattening Ray Schweikert of Matawan in3:28.

DISTRICT WRESTLING

For his team's efforts, Mike Sandor of Raritan wasnamed the District's Coach of the Year

Raritan's grapplers were also the victims of severalupsets

Joe Migmano (129) fell to a 7-3 decision at the hands ofTom Morov of Cedar Ridge

But torn Deitz (148) of St John Vianney led his team toits second-place showing by getting by Dave DeMonte ofRaritan, and Lancer teammate Tom Bent (158) did inRocket Ron Ennis, 9-7.

St. John's David Dodds handed Keansburg's MarkHarrington a 170-pound loss for the other Lancer finalround tally

Jim Jeffcoat of Matawan was the only finalist for theHuskies to win his bout, upsetting unlimited-class star BobManning of third-place Red Bank Catholic

The Caseys saw Bill Herchakowski (141) hand TomGruskiewicz of Raritan a 10 2 major decision for their onlyvictor

Dli lrkl 13NEPTUNE- Defending champions Scott Bigelow (un-

limited) o( Neptune, Luke Skove (121) of Long branch andKeith Alston (135) of Neptune defended their titles lastnight with impressive triumphs

Bigelow pinned Middletown South'* I.eif Hartkopf in5 54 to remain unbeaten while Skove also stayed un-defeated with a 4-0 decision over Manasquans Joe Hopf

Alston scored a 4-0 decision over Middletown North'sMark Parker to 9 retain his title

A major upset occurred in the team scores as Manas-

quan edged Neptune, 100 ft to 87 Long Branch and Oceantied for third with 50 points.

Manasquan had three district champs in Scott Simek(101), Matt Sagui (141) and Dave Crabtree (158)

Simer downed Monmouth's Mario Levy, 1-3; Sagui tooka 7-3 victory over Middletown North's Ed Coleman andCrabtree edged Rumson's Sean O'Conner, 3-2.

Neptune had two other champions as Curt Rush (108)defeated Dino Fornicola of Ocean, 4-2 ad and Ty Virgil(122) topped Bob Cannon of Middletown North, 5-2

Other winners were Jude Skove of Long Branch whodowned

Jude Skove (115) beat Neptune's Vic Keenan, 4-3, RickLovato of Middletown North topped Walls Bob Larson, 8-4)and Ocean's Skip Wohleri (188) downed Greg Holland ofRumson, 8-3

See Rarllai, CJ

The Sunday RegisterSHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25,1979 Sports c THE ARTS 7

JACK O'BRIAN 7

MOVIE TIMETABLE 8

Eagles to critics: Lookwho's tops in conference

By JIM H1NTELMANN

LINCROFT- "We playedNeptune, Lakewood, LongBranch, Southern Regionaland now Red Bank, " Mid-dletown South BasketballCoach Pat Houston said yes-terday.

"I wonder what those peo-ple who took cheap shots at ourschedule will say now "

Houston was speaking inthe Middletown South lockerroom after the unbeaten

Just as in every other gamein which the Ragles faced achallenge, Middletown camethrough with the clutch piays

The moment of truth forMiddletown came with I 30 re-maining Vince when RedBank's Dwayne Lodge andAtkinson scored layups toshave the Middletown lead to6948

Second;, .,!.-! a Middtetown turnover gave the ballto the Bucs again.

"I was just praying at that

point," Houston recalledNidge took a 25 footer that

missed, however, and JohnBenbrook grabbed the reboundfor Middletown with a minuteleft.

Jim Murray, the F.aglesstandout sophomore pointguard, then drove in (or a shotand missed with 40 secondsleft Benbrook, however, wenthigh in the air to tap in therebound

V'^v.Following a missed BucI \ shoVPau! Hall put the finish-

ing touches on the victory witha layup

"Murray was sick yester-day, " Houston said "I was athis house and I was afraid hewouldn't get the opportunity

"He played and he wasgreat He's just been doing itall season and it proves thatthere is more to basketballthan scoring points."

Actually, everyone con-tributed tothe Eagle victory.

Center Jeff, Ennen, Ben-brook and Chris Montanti did

great Jobs on the boards in atorrid battle with Red Bankstandouts Chris Rose and DanO'Hem while Guard DaveHarrington continued his dead-ly outside shooting and Hallcame through with severalclutch baskets down thestretch

Red Bank was not withoutIts' s tars The Atkinsonbrothers, Dwight and Vince,continually gave the Eagle de-fenders fits with their layups

See MIMleuwi, page C4

• •titter *mH put** kr D

UNBEATEN CHAMPIONS —Pat Houston, head basketball coach of Mid-,dletown South High School, is hoisted onto the shoulders of his Eagles playersafter his team beat Red Bank Regional to win the Shore Conference Basket-ball Championship yesterday at Brookdale Community College.

More photo*,utorv page (.4

Eagles (24-0) copped the ShoreConference boys basketballchampionship with a 73-68 vic-tory over Red Bank yesterdaybefore a standing room onlycrowd at Brookdale Communi-ty College

" We're number one at theShore," Houston told his team"Now let's set our sites on

number one in the state "The Eagles had some anx-

ious moments against RedBank which fought back froma 14-point defict to almost pullthe game out

Monroe's grand entrancesparks Knicks over Nets

NEW YORK (AP) - Earl Monroe, starting his first game ina month, tallied 2H points to provide New York with a 111-107National Basketball Association victory over the New JerseyNets last night, halting the Krinks losing streak at sevengames

Bernard King had 40 points for the Nets, who had a'three-game winning streak stopped

Monroe had IK points in the first half and chalked up eightassists in the first quarUr helping the Knicks take a 62-56 leadat the half

With the Knicks leading 96 95 and a little over three minutesto play. Toby Knight — who had 2H points overall — scored ninein 2Vi minutes to help seal the victory for New York.

i K o i n r n iWHUamion 1 9-0 1, CotcrungiJockkon . M l Toioittt 15-49

Oondrttiik I J } 4 KnMonrot f 10 10 It , Wllllarm IOI»f»nt(MM],Ru<MU i* Tololi *i J\ 14 tNtw i * fMf

IS. King 14 13-11 « , Johmon 10-0 4, Jordan & 4 4 14.0 J 0, Simpion i 1 S 13. Boynei i S 7 7. BaiwM 0 00 0.

10' NEW YORK f i l l )iflhi 11 I i u, Mtrlwtttitr I 4-1 V, Cltdfnont 4 0-« 17.

" 1, Border I 0-0 7. Kittrarctton I 113, Bthogtn 0 0 0 0

J1 U H 14-117mw T*** » H n »i-ni

FoulMoul-Williomwn Total .(>««- N«« Jtrtty 24. New Vorh Jl TtthnicolvonBrwJoKolft * •).»«

The Knicks led 103102 with 57 seconds to play when Knightscored two baskets within 17 seconds to give them a 107102 leadAfter Jan van Breda Kqlff drove for a three-point play with 28seconds lo go to cut the Knicks1 margin to two points, Monroeconverted two foul shots and Joe Meriwether put in a layup toclinch the game for New York

Hawks US. Sins 85

ATLANTA — John Drew's 27 points combined with asecond-half scoring swoon by Phoenix to give the AtlantaHawks a victory over the Suns.

Phoenix, which led 58-53 at the half, collapsed in the the finaltwo periods The Suns were out-scored 57-27 in the second halfas Atlanta forced them into turnover after turnover.

Atlanta opened the final period with six straight points totake an 84-75 lead

Drew powered in three consecutive baskets to put Atlantaup by 15, 96-81. with 4:30 left With 51 seconds left. Phoenixappeared to give up completely.

Middletown South girlsmake it a complete day

«»t*Mr Mel pktMkf D m ICXJ4M

OVER THE BISHOPS -Middletown South's Holly Smith goes overAsbury Park's Karen Svege and Rosle Strutz last night for a basket-that helped give the Eagles the Shore Conference girls basketballchampionship at Shore Regional.

By GREIG HENDERSONWEST LONG BRANCH

The kings and queens of ShoreConference basketball resideat Middletown South HighSchool.

Middletown South's girls't e a m , p a c e d by MaryGilligan's unflappable play,joined their male counterpartsas conference champions bybeating a veteran Asbury Parksquad, 45-43, last night

It marks the first time inshore area history that a girlsand boys basketball championhave come from the sameschool in the same year. Thefeat was sweetened evenmore. It marked the first timeMiddletown South had sentteams to the finals in its threeyears of varsity play.

"Yes, It's the biggest thingto happen to us," South CoachPat Smith said amid kisses andembraces. "It's one morestep"

The Eagles (21-2) made ahuge stride last night in toppl-ing a Blue Bishop team thatwas making its sixth straightappearance in the finalsAsbury (22-2) had a four-yearrule snapped last year byShore Regional. Gilligan'sclutch foul shooting late in thegame shut the door on Asburylast night.

See Kagk, Page U

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C2 The Sunday Regirttr SHREWSBURY . NJ SUNDAY FEBRUARY 25 1979

Raritan grapplers collect District 22 title(continued)

District 22Ml e«M<Dpnnell (Kiyperiid Mart McGuigan l i t JohniM-eIM Sob Morton I HoM Ian I d TamO'lfa IMalawafl>.4 1US OougSfnlfhlRafllanld Loiry DeStmene isi Joiwil ) *i n n?fiBwnkeHCedorR.d§e)d Jim Kirgln <R*Cl. 4 3ll f TemMcrev [Cedw RtdfeX) J M Mlgmono ( I w l l t n l . M114 TtniMcD«MM(ftorlta»ld Dontreen (Cedar I IKfe) , It *141 ttllMe»cho*owUI|R»C)mtf TwnGruthltwicMftVltanl. W> J141 TvmDtltltSI J*tm)d OtvtDcMwitff <lt«rlt«n) 5 4I I I Te*i»te*»t ( t l Jatwld. RwiEnnU (Raritani,? 71W U W M D A M I I I Jennie Mark Horrlnfton (KtoftWwrpl.Ml « JohnMcGreewey IRorttonip flay Schwetkert IM«tawan>, 3 MUnl JlmJeftcod IMa«cmonld BokManntng (R8C). 1-4

1*1 r M n M v l M n l H o l m d t l l i l G r M i u m t l C M o t R M f i l . l lIH Al Smith {Keypom Ml Sieved Cennell IRBC), 11-4IIS Jot to l t l i tO lMOp PhlllhirihellelKeyportl I 33173 Go#yFu*ry<Ma1owon)<» Jim Rossi IRorltonl. S 3ll f TetfLabreowe (Hglmdell wonbyforfeittJJ RemsemSlroubeiCBAlp Steve Fedele iMatawani. 1 N141 CorlSommwcotCtAld ChrliMcGuigon 151 Jahnl.Al141 Jim Wing (Mo to won I d John Muratti (RBCl 3 flIM JolwRtchQrdKedor Rldgel wonbyfortelll » FranMultonlHotmdeMmd Bill Jetfcoot (Keyport), 11 JIM ( ail Montonoro (RAO p fhr l i Meiiofappa (SI John) 4 S)Unl Tony O#GuMi ISI John) p Roy Janesho (Keontbuf|). 10 51 FhW Tei

I Ramon IM points. 1 St John Vlanney, 90 ><i. 3 Red Bonk tothoik.ion. 67 S Cedor Rldg* \7 t Keyport 34 1 Molmo>l 71 ' i I CBA.

"1, 10 Mater Del. JCe*ct. of M M Y M T

Mlkt Sondof Rariton High School

10) Mark McGuigon ISl d Greg Wutifce (CR) 5 IEd McDonnell <K Id Don MultanlHi I 0

IM Bob Morton (Rip Sieve 0 Connill I R B C I t IS Tom G n u (Ml d Al Smithm i 57

HJ Lorry D*Slmon« (Si p Phil t. hir uh,Mo i* I I 43 Doug Smith (HI d JoeftatiittolRBO IS 3

177 Jim Kirgln ( *BO d Gory Furry (Ml 1? Tim R M W I K R i d Jim RouiIRI. 1-1

llf JoeMlgnana |R|d I M l ab'rfQue IHI IMJTOIH Morol H R) default ierr ,Coitrod ICBAI

IIS Tim McDonald IR) d Remion Slraub (CBA| 4 0 Don Breen lCR> d SteveFedele (Ml , 114

141 l o m G r u i U M K H R i d ChM* MtGulgon (5) J OBlll Herchokowsfcl (RBCIa loriSomrnonolCBA) • l

141 Tom Deitt ISI d John Murath (RBCl 4 l Oove DeMonte (ftl d Jim WingIM1 ID4

IM RonFnnU (Bid John Richard 1CR). 4 I Tom Bent (S)d Mark ClaromelloiRBCl, f 3

1W- Mork HOMington (Kcont ) d Fran AAoiion (HI 7 I Davl Dodds ISI d Billierkoot (Ki S I

IM JottnMtG'Mvy (Rip Con Montana to IRBO.4 UHay Stnwicktn <M) nChmMeiiotoppoiSl 1 I)

Unl Jim Jetfcoat I M I d Tony OeGuilus (SI. f 3 Boa Manning (RBC) d RoyJcwMko tKeon» I, 133

IM OoveCrubtreelrtHinld StanO Cotvto.. (Ml J I iMrHi . j itIK RIckLovotOIMNImd Bob Lofton ( W ) . MIM SfclpWoWeMIOId &regCoMollO«d|RFM|,l 3Unl Scott •ige.ow(Net»p Lelt J Hortfcopf (MSI. 5 44

Goy Martin (SR). I l l17* Rick Lovolo IMS) d OanBw

nlWI.f t lDaveCi

• Iff) le-7 Bob

tpld Ken Hinds (MS) 7 tm Tim Carier {Man) p Olno Girol Glrooio (SI S SI I11* Bill Kellom IS) «d

John Alter (RFH) 1)1.177 ScofiClork u Bid Frank CapMoni ($1,3-0179 RaySiymontkilO)d Dove Cameron (Nep).9-4114 Chod Welkins lOld BobDiubalgl (Mon)]4141 MifceMohoniL Bid BobKicafc (Wi.9 ]141 JlmLouLoliot (Old Dave Hortley IRFH), 4-0l i l 6obCurran(W)p Guy Moriln (S>. 5 37170 Sean Ahera (Man! d Don Beggs IRFHI. 3-1IM JohnCoftoverlWJp Mike Squltonle ll B) 4 47Unl AngeloCtagllalSI wonbydeloull

JohnConover(W).7 7Unl Scon BlgelDi

Brian Studnicky (Monoi ). 3 M

District

I W . . I * L.IIM-1.-. W» P

24

DiHtriet 2,'i101 Scott Simrt IManld Morlol cvy (MR), 6 3IM Curl Ruth (Nepld Dlno Fornlcolo (0 ) ,4 7US JudeSkovefLBId Vic KetnanlNep) ,4 3171 Ty Virgil (Nepld BobConnon (MNI . S-Jl l f LukeSkoweUBId JoeHopf. (Mon)4 0IIS KtttttAliton IN*p)d Mark Parkct IMNt * Q141 Matt Fogul IManld EdColtman (MNI . r 3I4t K«nSttln«r iMNld Kevin Boll IMonl, 3 I

Monoiquon I W I . 1 Ntptunt 17, i . Long Branch and Ocoan M Hit), SSnirJdlelown North M-Vk, * Short M 'o. J Mlddlctown South V "», I Wall 17. fRumton FH U. 10 Monmouth 10 10 10 Vl

MNtl-PIMh

101 Mono Levy iMonld Ktn Hindi IMS). SJ OT Scott Slnrt (Mono* ) d

E d R°Sl0Dlno (Fornlcoto (01 d Gtiw Clroalo (SR). 3 7 durt Ruth (N | d Tim

IIS Jude Skovc (LI d John AI Iff (R), so w>c Ko*non ( N l d Bill KcKom

' ' i n Tyront Virgil INI d Frank Coprlom iSRI. *-0 Bob Connon ( U N ) dScoH Clark I I H I i l l

\Jt LukeSkov* (L Id Dov* Cameron (N). 71-1 Jo« Hoop (Wonai ) d Roy

^ " ^ u f l t t ^ t h A l f l O n l N I d ChodW0t* ln* (0 l .4JMor l .Par fc tMMNId «obUiutxtldi Mono* J 3-7

u l EdColtmofilMNtd BotKlcak IW),S4MaltSo«ul IMonaf )d Mtht

l«t Ktn SlfliWf (MNI d Oovt Hartlty IR I i 1 Ktvln Bad I Mono* ) d

id «p,...imwJ«dMdyd.lTfWld»l.»'

I I I - Kevin Lowlor (Mowed I d

IIS I18 .19-1l » lU I - .141-1

• (Hamilton«»>tldHllta M d

DISTRICT 22 POWERS —Red Bank Catholics BillHerchakowskl (photo left) has Christian BrothersAcademy's Carl Sammarco under control In yester

day's District 22 wrestling semifinals at HolmdelHigh School. Herchakowskl scored an 8-1 victory inthe 141-pound match. Rarltan's Joe Mignano (photo

right) seems to be asking, "What now, ref," as hestraddlesHolmdel's Ted Lebrecque en route to his17-0 victory in the 129-pound semifinals. The DIs

trlct 22 championships are a prelude to next week'sRegion VI Championship scheduled for Cedar RidgeHigh SChOOl. •§»««awn»y L«n hra

Murdoch's 32nd of year lifts RangersTORONTO (AP) - Phil Kspnsili, set up Don Murdoch's

I goal "I tin' game, a tiebreaker with 5 58 lo play, thenscored his 32nd of the season to give the New York Rangers a 4-2National HiHkey League victory over the Toronto Maple Leafslast night

Ksposito picked up the puck in the left corner and centeredil to Murdoch, who wheeled and fired a 10-foot shot underToronto goalie Mike Palmateer's left leg It was Murdoch'sninth goal of the season

New York put the game away with 3 37 to play Espositoand Don Maloney swept down the ice on a lwo-on-one break withKspiiMiu taking a return pass from Maloney. who had drawnI'almatetT out of the goal, and scoring into the unguarded netPalmateer faced 49 New York shots

l.aiiin McDonald scored Toronto's first goal at 4 19 of theopening period, beating New York goalie Wayne Thomas withDon Maloney and his brother. Dave, in the penalty box for theRangers

Murdoch scored 1 10 into the second period, Dave Williamsput Toronto ahead again 2 33 later, then Anders Hedberg tied itfor New York with one second left in the second period.

mark in the 1%2-ti.i season and scored II goals over that spanBobby Hull of the Chicago Black ILiwks netted l i in equallingthe mark during the 196H-69 loison

The first goal by Bossy came al 4 54 of the opening period ona power play inside the slut liter he deflected Denis Polvinsslap shot The puck went under the iiulslictched glove of Wingsgoalie Rogie Vachon

Bossy's second goal, which moved him seven ahead of (iuyLafleur of the Montreal Canadiens. came at It:3] on a reboundof a shot that bounced off Viichons stick

"No question about it," said Hussy. 1 had the record on mymind 1 wanted to get it over as quickly as possible

"When it came so early. 1 said to myself. I wish I getanother right awuy 1 was thinking ;ibnut last year when I gotmy 49th It took another six games lielnre the 50th and 1 didn'twant that to happen again

Bossy will try and shatter the record Sunday night when theIslanders play the New York Hangers Sunday night at MadisonSquare Garden

Stefan Persson. who like Hussy is in his second year with theIslanders, tied a club record for consecutive games with assists

at seven by setting up the first of Bossy's two goals Potvin andBryan Trottier also share the mark

i I I-IITrottlcr.Porvin). IS 1? Penolty-Huber. Del.4 04

Second Perlod-3. Detroit Lobraoten 10, » Penolllei-Lotwoottn 041 i W.Nyttrom.NY.I W t unmet NY 10 04 Delioll benth. leivedb* Carroll I I V

Third Perlod-4. New York. Tonem 37 iPotvlnl I I f Pinol l let -Boi ly NV30, Howatt. NY. minor molor minor Hrved by Bony 1 le. Polonlch. Oet. malor

I 16 Nyttrom. NY. IS 46Sholionoool Detroit 104 I I M NewYorkr i t 4-19

Penguins i. Black Hawks IPITTSBURGH - A first-period score by Colin Campbell

proved lo be the winner as the Pittsburgh Penguins deleated theChicago Black Hawks

The goal, Campbell's second of the season, came off a slapshot at 11 41) of the period Campbell made the shot past goalieTony Esposito from tnside the blue line on a feed from GeorgeFerguson. Ksposito was screened by several of his teammates

The victory was Pittsburgh's seventh straight on home iceover the Black Hawks The team last won a game in Pittsburghon Nov 8.1975

Pittsburgh, which held a 47-20 edge over Chicago in the

Niw Ydrti HOW"T»TMlC

FltM Ptr lod-1 Toronto. McDonold M (Sutler, Solmlrtg). 4 IV Pt f lo l l l t t -Sltmr. Tqr, I 31 Don Molortey. NY. J U, Daw« Uolonty. NV. J » ; Boultttc. Tor.II 30. Oucnnvlllt. Tor. 13 M

Sicond Period I . New York. Murdoch I IMcEwen. Don Malonevl. t 10 1,Toronto. William* I* (McDonald], 1 43 4. New York. Heouero K (Dave Maloney.Vodnolil I* W Penalties-Nlluon NY s M. Boutette. Tor. S SI. Solmlng. Tor. 1 I*.Solmlna, Tor. I ) 30; Don Malanty. NY. Oooble minor . l l I t . Turntull. Tor doubleminor. 13 St. ThOCIUk. NY, 17 SI

TMrd Period-! , Murdoch » lOon Moloney. Etpolllol. 14 01 • . New Yorli.Fipoillol? (Don Maloney I 16 73 Penally Forrlth.NY. IV I t

Snotionaoal New York lo IV 14 4» Toronto? I IS—13Goalle*-New York.Thomai Toronto. Polmoteer A-I4.4IS

Islanders 1. Red Wings 1UNIONDAI.E. N Y - Mike Bossy took some pressure off

himself when he boosted his goal production for the season to 50by scoring twice en route to tying a National Hockey Leaguerecord as Uie New York Islanders defeated the Detroit

Bossy's two goals enabled him to tie a record for con-secutive goal -scoring games at 10

Andy BttllRatt <>f the New York Hangers set the original

Colt sophs, freshmenrun to championship

KAST OHANCK - Christian Brothers Academy's freshmanand sophomore track teams won their respective divisions inihc New Jersey Catholic Track Conference championship meetyeaterda) al Seton Hall University.

In the sophomore division. CBA's team scored 35 points,outdistancing SI Joseph's (if Meluchen. 23 points, and RoselleCatholic. IH I»J

John Cross won the 60 high hurdles in 8 2 and Steve Cookwon the 220 in 26.7 for the sophs

CBA's frosh team scored ill points, and capitalized on ClennHarscar s Urst-place i>-6 high jump

number of shots on goal, built up a 3-0 lead before the BlackHawks scored

Gregg Sheppard opened the Penguin scoring after 29 sec-onds of play He stole the puck from Chicago's Stan Mikita andsoloed in to beat Ksposito

SabreiI, t i p s 4LANDOVER. Md - Rene Robert let] his Buffalo Sabres out

of a four game losing streak by scoring two goals and assistingon two others to hand the Washington Capitals a defeat

The Sabres opened the scoring as Danny Gare scored his18th goal at 4 01 of the first period The Capitals came back totake the lead after one period on goals by Greg Polls and BobSirois

Gilbert Perreault scored a quick power play goal at 41seconds of the second period to even the score Washington'sTom Rowe and Sirois scored goals 59 seconds apart to give theCapitals the lead again before Ric Selling and Rick Martin eachscored to tie the game again

Robert broke the game open as he scored the game winnerat 14 5« of the linal period and scored the insurance goal on adeflection off his body at 17 09

Blalock leadsBlossom field

ST PETERSBURG. Kla (AP)-Defending champion JaneBlalock opened a three-stroke lead in second-round play of the175,000 LPGA Orange Blossom Classic, highlighted by SilviaBertolacctni's lour record-tying 29 on the front nine of the windblown course

Bertolaccini shot a fne-under par 67 for the second round ofthe Ladies Professional Golf Association event to move Intosecond place with a 138 Blalock, who shot a first-round M,added a 69 for a nineunder par 135

Bertolaccini, a 28-year-old Argentine who now lives inDallas, sank a 147-yard second shot to eagle the first hole, thenadded five birdies on the front nine She missed a two-and-a halfloot putt on the ninth hole to muff a chance lo break the recordshe now shares with Pat Bradley. Carol Mann and MarleneHagge.

She had two bogies on the back nine of the 6.109-yard courseST PETERSBURG. Flo - Here ore the u-cond round K d m lor I M ITS.tW

TIES NHL RECORD -New York Islanders MikeBossy, right, is all smiles as he's congratulated byteammates yesterday Bossy scored in his 10th-

straight game, with assists by Stefan Persson, left,and Denis Potvin, center, to tie a modern NHLscoring record. «rm.n

LPGA Orange BlottoiJone BlolockSilvio BenokxclnlSandra PollKottiy WhltworihJO Ann PrenticeDole LundqulstConnie ChlllemlJulie Stanaer••hyir-lnoAlOHandra RelnhordtPot BradleyLowoBauot,Judy (tonkinDonna WhlttAlice Miller

' l -U - l l l70-71— 141II >•—1411 I D - U 1

» 14-14]re-n-ionn-uj.nn-io'in-1437I71-1On-71-144

COLLEGE BASKETBALL SCOREBOARD Freehold Results• AST

Albany ptwrrnotc 117 Mount SI Morf i MBrockporf Si 74 Birmhomlon St S«

of n«-gl* Mellon '0 Wait. & Jeff 61or ton Newman 95 Lincoln Memorial 17•?nt Conntdltut U Sionehm »7ulDy 101 Bowdoin 94oncordlO N V t? SI rhoma.*quino\Honnet titul n . Rhode Wond }•>onntcttcui Coir ' I MiT MortiofKl St

Or la wore 94Uiiwllng 101D. ey el hi laabtiMMni *

oHiram W

•Klng'i UKings Point 10Lafoytfie «L eMoyne 71LIU 71

Movy VN*w York TtcniiOfwonta V M

FredontoM 77. OTBucknell I I

Bloomlield itSI Fronds. N Y M. OT

AlbflgM 41Boilon College n

Geneva 67Bobson 57

trinity, Conn 4SYale 79

John Corrotl 10f ordham 70

Stevens Tech S7Rider 69

Rochester nCatholic U 61Si Peters 57

Army 45Mar 1st 60

Buffalo 57

Potnt farkA*Potidom St HQuinnlpiacniHOch*Sl»r Tech 67Sacred Htorl 77it Bonoventure*'St John i 70St Joseph s. Pa . 57SI M k h o t l s U

I Scton Hail »Spring Garden 7]Syrocose 111r«mple wUtlco a.Vlllonova 77Wetttyon 7*Weslminsler Hwest Chester 44W Connecticut S7

w Liberty St MPloHsburoh St 61

Southern «Alfred 64

Brldo«(Wft71Conliiui 90. OT

Providence *1St Froncll.Pa .11

Vermont I IFDU ii

York, Po 66Coloole 67Doytor.63

Natareth. N Y HMoswthuietti 66

Amherst 61Pin Johnstown 71

Lrhiohi?E Connecticut S7

West Virginia 74 George Washington 11

Lander 116Mars mil 46MayvllleSi 76Mercer 17Mlititslppl St 6iMoreheodSIttMarrh Harvey UH CorotinoSt nOld Dominion S7Randolph Mocon 69Salem. W Vo 76Snorter VISC Spartonbufg «SE Louiilona SSTennessee 60U ol the South 91Virginia 1%Virginia Tech fJVo Wesleyonnw Vo WesleyanU

BluetieidSt MBuffolo SICoastal Carolina 17Coil of Charleston ME Tenn SI 107ErtfclneMGardner Webb 71Georgia 61jomet Madison f 1

W Virginio Tech 61al Clemson. ppd

Newberry UBoptlit6S

Tenn Tech 70Winthrop 67

Lenolr Rhyne 65FlondO 67. OT

Baltimore 46

ettone 10? ind'ono '

Jamestown 66Somtord 67

Louisiana St SII , Kentucky 91

Concord. W Vo 61Wane Fo»est 66

William ft Mary 54Loyola. Md 65

Wheeling 77Berry I I

Francis Morion MMississippi Coll 41

Auburn 55Pn.u.pla 71

Maryland -';Richmond VI

Chris Newport 74. OTW Vn Tech 69

MIDWfStAlaerson Brooddut 94 tilenville St 97Anderson 4f Franklin 61Cent Mlthlgontt E Michigan 65Chicago 41 Michigan Dearborn UDePoul 41 Morquette 60OePauw >t Wabash 14. OTFlndloy M Monchttter MGrace 65 Marlon, Ind U, OTHanover 97 Dedonce 77

Kent St 17Louisville nMichigan SI 76Missouri 73*N Illinois 71 .Nulrr DumeVlOhio U K)Oklahoma ft

Purdue 6'Ripon 109SI O la lHSteubenviiit HTarkio 90Toledo 57Trl St 17Wlnnonu St 69Wlsionsm 77Wli Green Boy S4Wittenberg 41Wright St 94Xavier. Ohio 71

Ball SI 75Tulone 71Illinois 17

lowo St. 67Miami. Ohio 59

. Lo Solle 70Bowling Green 71

KansosSl 57

Mich loan 59Monmouth. Ill 99

Concofdia Mrhd 14Aihlond 71Ottawa 75

W Michigan *fMarlon 61

Bemldli SI 64Northwestern 70

Wis Stevens Pt 39Copilai 60

Mo SI Louis 71Butler 77

PAR WIST

Air Force « O'""*' »ArllorM 15 Arliono SI JOUCLA 110 Washington SI IOiUtah SI Wyoming M

Sports TransactionsAmer .can L e i m

MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Sloned Jim Gantner.lntle.der.Nilleiwt Le«t«e

CINCINNATI REOS—Signed Mario Soto. pitcher, to a ant yeNEW YORK METS-NamedAlOsmundten bullpen coach

d J h F l h i t h L

r contract

ST LOUISbatemon. ond Ken Oberktell. Intlelder

MOCKIYNHL

NEW YORK ISLANDERS-RecollM Ate» McKtndry, leH wing. Irom FortWorth ol the Central Hockey League

State ski reportNEWARK - Here are the ski conditions on New Jersey's

slopes as reported by resort operators:Vernon Valley - good; 40-50 inch base, wet powdered

surface

IM Pec*.. 1 M. tl.Mt. 1 M 1Billy Baker (H Flllon) M 709 204 60Lucky Child (Palonolo) . 4 00] 40Nlcfc Volo (King Jr ) J *O

Trtfetle* 1 JU I l *4«M: P«ce. t M. l l . m , I M

Only Way (Kelly) 5 40 4 M 1 40Love Courier (Vinci) 140 4 40Happy Fella N <6uiierl 5 40

lrd Pw«. 1M, U.*M, I .H 4Count Thor (Lohmeyerl . 9 70 5 00] »Shavonde (King Jr.1 7 00SMPleasant Woveriy (Taforw jr i 4.10

IIKMHMUen: •*«*,. M,|t,IM, Iff

JutXtersKntaMIKetly) . StOJ 401.40Borone TheCrMt (Potauol*) . . 11.«4 MGreol Scott NlConsotl 3«

Indt I-I mMIM:P«C«. I M . M J M . 1:*4>

Grewilree Byrd (Maker) • 17 ft] • M l 00Right There (King Jr ) S.401.00Buying Time (McCarthy) 4 00

•MKt* 7 1 IM **4th f «ce, I M, UJM, 1 M

Drum Ma|or N (Prlmeou) 9 6 0 4 7 0 ) UOur Grodvole (Dancer) „ ] 101 00

Mailer «ill,|.n,Ji ,ludi7-4 tun

n>fKI.I>,HM,l:ULegolHIII IBIuml IX4H340We DoRomeo (King Jr ) 4 H 1 WTorport Carmel IM Flllonl. ] n

El*d« I-4I44W

Cortkmd Honover (Kelly) IllJtmInverlofi Bov (Cronkl 4M30OPoclngDonut IGlorglanntl ] | |

U«CM17<a.«Ml; P«ce, I M, 17.m i m

Perm Slate IMokert VM4O03XJlmi Willie (Morkt) 3.44)100p » COMO» iKiiin 4 n

• • • « • H I UMl: Pete. IM. u.m. IK I

FlreOoll Forward INUKOMl... ! « 3 K l 10Crwndon Boon (Kelly) S.4I4 30Main Morrli (lovlne V.» 3 4A

I ieOell lHHll»:P4K4].IM.tU«,l:H

DlllriLodlBorxKOrKil 4 K 1 M 1 HRockY Two (King Jr 1 1.M1.40ThunderbollChlplRlcco Jr.) t to

IrlteOe 111 IW M

SHREWSBURY N J SUNDAY FEBRUARY is. 1979 The Sunday Regfcter

UCLA fights off Cougars in triple OT^ . • W M h ( A P ) - B r » d "o"1"*1 . "«y Hamilton,

w*\m Vandeweghe hit on 10 straight free throws in the lastthree minutes last night to boost top-ranked UCLA to a 110-102

s ^ S i i r l h e w" i t sThe victory enabled the Bruins to at least maintain their

on*game lead in the Pactttc-10 Conference with two games togo The Bruins are now US in the league and 2 M overaU andhave not Ion to WSU since lM i The Cougars now are »-7 in theconference, 17-8 overall

The final score waa the largest margin for either team in theconteat

Led by junior forward Don Collins, who scored a game andcareer high ol M poinU, the Cougars scrapped all the way withU» favored Bruin* But only two of Collins1 points, both freethrows, came in the overtime periods

Holland paced the Bruins with 28 points, most of them fromlong range Vandeweghe added 20 and forward David Greenwood had 22

Ptrdie 17, Mltllgaa UANN ARBOR, Mich. - Purdue's Lee Rose says he didn't

coach very well But the way Michigan played, it didn't makemuch difference.

"H was absolutely disgusting," Michigan Coach Johnny On-said of his team's performance in the Big Ten basketball loss toRow's Boilermakers

"I've coached 2t years and I've never had my guys play likethey did tonight," Orr said. "I was totally disgusted with themWhen you're thinking about yourself instead of the team, I justcan't understand it."

While Orr chastized his players, Rose was scolding himself."We didn't play the clock very well," he said, "but I didn't

coach very well. I wasn't able to tell my players how I wantedthem to run the plays."

Vlrglila 75, Maryland 71CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - Sophomore Jeff Lamp, who

led all scorers with 32 points, hit a layup with M seconds left thatsent Virginia ahead for good and gave the Cavaliers an AtlanticCoast Conference basketball victory over Maryland's Terps

The triumph in the regionally televised game clinched thirdplace in the ACC for Virginia at 7-5 and relegated the Terps tofourth at M Virginia is 18-8 overall, Maryland 17-«

Maryland, which had trailed from the early minutes of thegame and once was down by 12 points in the first half, regainedthe lead at (VM with 6:06 left and the advantage then seesawed

Albert King, who led Maryland with JO points, scored on athree-point play to give the Terps a 72-70 margin with 2:44 left.but Lee Raker tied it 12 seconds later with two free throws

Virginia's Bobby Stokes forced a turnover by Maryland'sDutch Morley with I:M left and the Cavaliers ran the clockdown to M seconds, when Lamp sneaked in behind the Marylandzone and took a pass from Raker (or the winning layup

iMUaaa 71, Mlaacwla MBLOOMINGTON, Ind - Forward Mike Woodson scored 22

points and guard Butch Carter added a career-high 20 asIndiana blasted Minnesota a Big Ten game

The game was close through the first half, and a turn-around basket by Kevin McHale gave the Gophers their onlylead at 28-27 at the start of the final period

But Indiana went back ahead to stay on a basket byWoodson, and the Hoosiers steadily widened the lead the rest ofthe game. Indiana raised Its Big Ten record to »7 and its overallmark to 17-11

Minnesota, led by McHale's 18 points, fell to 5 11 in theconference and 10-15 for all games

The Hoosiers led by as many as five points during the firsthalf, but McHale. who had 10 in the opening period, pulled the< lophers within one. 17-M, at the intermission

V U U . . H 77, UMass MVILLANOVA, Pa - Sophomore forward Alex Bradley of

l-ong Branch scored 20 points to lead Villanoya to victory overMassachusetts in the final regular season game for both teams

VUlanova's win in the Eastern Athletic Association contestput the Wildcats' season record at 0-1 in league play and 14-12overall, while U Mass fell to 0 10 and 5-21 overall

Massachusetts overcame an early Villanova lead, earning a2215 margin with 8 M remaining in the first half Villanova tookthe lead for good six minutes later when center Marty Caron'sshort jumper made it 15 .13

VUlanova's largest lead, 53-Jd, came after a Kory Sparrowjumper with five minutes remaining in the game Sparrowfinished with 16 points while teammate Tom Sienkiewicz had 15Guard Brad Johnson led U Mass with 27 points

Nrtre Dane M, l.aSalk 70SOUTH BEND. Ind - BUI Laimbeer scored I t points night

as third-ranked Notre Dame put on an awesome second-halfoffensive display to overcome a I point halftime deficit andblast LaSaUe

Laimbeer scored i points in the first few minutes of thesecond half and controlled the backboards as the Irish raisedtheir season record to 21-3 with three regular season games toPlay

BUI Hanzlik added 17 points for Notre DameThe Irish trailed 13-32 at intermission after shooting only 37

percent from the floor in the first half But the Irish produced anIncredible show in the first 7ty minutes of the second half,scoring 32 points — including 13 unanswered markers — to sendthe Explorers reeling

Notre Dame had leads of 25 and 27 points, and with LaSalleunable to recover. Irish Coach Digger Phelps began wholesalesubstitutions with about 7 minutes left In the game

SelM HaU 71, Kalrklgh D k k l i u i USOUTH ORANGE - Seton HaU University, led by 42 points

by Nick Galls, trounced Kairleigh Dickinson University, prac-tically cinching an ECAC Metro Playoff berth for the 16 HPirates.

GaUs. the nation's fifth top scorer, ran his season total to 718as he shot If for 23 from the floor Marc Coleman had 12 pointswhile Howie McNeil topped the rebounders with 11

The Knights, who finished at 8-16, made a game of it in thefirst half which ended at 31 up Dan McLaughlin had 18 of his 23points in that time to keep the losers in contention

With Coleman and l.alis having three baskets apiece, SelonHaU opened the second half with a 22-D barrage to clinch thedecision

N.C. sute H, Wake Ftresl MRALEIGH. N.C. - Charles "Hawkeye" Whitney fired in 22

points and Kendal "Tiny " Hinder scored 19. including 17 in the

COLLEGE ROUNDUP

first half, as North Carolina State rolled to victory.over WakeForest in an Atlantic Coast Conferencne battle

N.C. State's victory forced a tie for last place in the league,and a draw will be held on Sunday to determine which team willface the squad with the No. 1 bye in the ACC tournament nextweek.

The Wolfpack controlled the game from the opening tap.jumping out to an (M) lead Wake Forest, paced by FrankJohnson's 15 points, closed the gap to four points, 8-4, beforeN C. State cruised to a 41-31 advantage at intermission

N.C State finished the season at 3-1 in the ACC and 17-11overall. The Deacons closed out regular season play at J-9, 12-14.the only league team with a losing record.

SI. Jtki's 70, Fr.vkleace ISNEW YORK - Rudy Wright came off the bench to score 17

points and Ron Plair added 14 to lead SI John's to victory overProvidence

Wright had the hot hand in a 21-2 SI John's spurt that gavethe Redmen a comfortable 13-18 lead shortly before the half,which ended witli the New York team leading 33-21

The Friars closed to within three points, at M-63, late in thegame, but that was the closest they could come to the Redmen

Rudy Williams and BUI Fields each had 10 points for theFriars, who finished their season at 10-11, the worst in Gavitt's10-year tenure at Providence

Mick. St. 71, lUInU 12EAST LANSING, Mich. - Playing his last home game,

Michigan State's all-time leading scorer Gregory Kelser hit 24points to lead a victory over IUinois that moved the Sparlansinto a three-way tie for first place in the Big Ten

Kelser scored 18 points and hauled down seven rebounds inthe first half as seventh-ranked MSU upped its conferencerecord to 12-4, matching Ohio State and Iowa

Michigan SUte is now 20-5 overall with two conferenceHarness remaining

The Illini, who were led by t-foot-8 sophomore EddieJohnson's 18 points, fell to 10-t overall and n-x in the Big Ten

Miss. St. OS, LSU 57BATON ROUGE, La - Center Wiley Peck scored 21 points,

including a breakaway swinging dunk shot and two free throwsin the final seconds, lo lead Mississippi State to an upset victoryover Southeastern Conference champion Louisiana State Uni-versity

It was Peck who put Mississippi State out in front to aUyfour minutes into the second half with a six-foot jumper

Navy 47, Araay 41ANNAPOLIS - Led by the scoring and rebounding of Kevin

Sannett, Navy broke a three-year losing streak in basketballwith Army, edging the Cadets in an uphill battle

Sinnett had game highs of I I points and seven reboundsArmy led 25-18 at halftime After four tied scores and six

exchanges of the lead, a three-point play by Chuck Greene putNavy on top for good. 45-43. with 2 21 left in the game

Manhattan IS, SI. Peler'i S7NEW YORK - Manhattan's Jo Jo Walters scored a game-

high 23 points to lead the Jaspers to victory over the Peacocks inthe coUege basketbaU season finale for both clubs.

The Peacocks led Manhattan 31-24 at the half before theJaspers outscored the visitors 11-2 at the start of the secondhalf Manhattan took a 35-33 lead with 17:14 to go on a top-ofthe-key jump by Walters

Dispute cancels Rossman's bout

WAITS FOR NOTHING -WBA light heavyweight champion Mike Rossmon of Philadelphiawaits In his corner for the fight to begin againstformer champion Victor Gallndez of Argentinayesterday In Las Vegas. Gallndez walked out onthe fight because of a controversy between theNevada Athletic Commission and the WBA overofficiating. The fight was postponed.

LAS VEGAS, Nev (AP) - Yesterday's scheduledWorld Boxing Association light heavyweight title boutbetween Mike Rossman and Victor Galindez was canceledshortly before fight time because of a dispute over thejudges

Bob Arum, head of Top Rank. I in . which promoted thefight at Caesars Palace, said the fight was canceledbecause of the Nevada Athletic Commission's insistencethat local officials be used

Galindez. an Argentinian who lost the title to Rnssmanlast Sept 15 in New Orleans, had asked that the WBAappoint two judges and one local judge, who under Nevadarules, would score the fighl But the Nevada commission,maintaining it had the right to name all three judges,appointed officials from Nevada

Arum, an an impromptu news conference beneath thebleachers at the hotel sports pavilion, said that the disputebegan when the WBA demanded use its own officials Hecharged that the Nevada Commission was a group ofamateurs that are ruining boxing in the United States

Rossman was visibly angry about the cancellation,saying, "It's gotten to where boxing Is up to the guys whosit behind big desks, smoke cigars and drink whiskey allnight

"Nobody cares about the athletes "Rossman said he didn't realize the fight was going to be

cancelled until he stood in the ring waiting for Ualindez"I thought he was just making me wait 15 minutes like

some fighters do," commented Rossman "If ho didn't wantto fight today, then I don't know when I want to fighl him "

GaUndez. who sat in his hotel room looking wistfully atthe pavilion where the bout was to be held. said. I though Icame here to fight for the World Boxing Associationchampionship We were deceived."

"All I want to do now is go home ."Rossman said he would have fought even if the WBA

had Us way and appointed foreign officials, but he added. "Ithink Galindez has had a lot of close decisions which he wonand it didn't happen with neutral officials

"I don't think foreign fighters should be able to dictate

to Americans which officials they use; American fightershave to go overseas and fight before foreign judges all thetime "

Asked If he were against the WBA, Rossman replied"I'm against them for doing this I'm against any organiza-tion that's not for the fighters

I just hope that what I'm saying now doesn't cause theWBA to strip me of my title I think they've done things likethat before "

Arum negotiated with both sides in an attempt to putthe the fighl on as scheduled However, he was unsuc-cessful

The WBA had raised the issue of judges Friday, but thestate athletic commission named its own judges and wouldnot back down

A grim-faced Gallndez stalked from his dressing roomand walked back lo his room at the hotel few hundred yardsaway. He was hounded by a group of newsmen.

Moments later Rossman, looking confused, was es-corted to the ring where he took off his robe and beganshadow boxing and doing other warmup exercises Folow-ing the announcement thai the fight was oft, he also left thebuilding

Later, Arum said, both GaUndei and Rossman, ofTumersviUe, N J . agreed to neutral officials. But theNevada Athletic Commission refused to budge from itsdemand that it name officials

At that point. Arum said, Galindez backed out"GaUndez won't fight this fight because he wants to be

recognized for the title," Arum said. "What they (theNevada Athletic Commission) has done is establish aprecedent where they won't aUow fights in Nevada."

Arum, shaking with anger, said: "Amateurs areabsolutely loose and are running the asylum "

He said that after the latest round of disputes, he hadjust about decided to get out of boxing.

"I reaUy feel this is the lasl thing I expected to have todo with boxing.' Arum said, adding he would lose $250,000because of the cancelaliun

Hinkle, Wadkins, Zarley tie in L.A.LOS ANGELES (AP) - Traffic jammed at the top of the

standings for the 1250.000 Glen Campbell-Los Angeles Open golftournament yesterday, with l.on Hinkle. Lanny Wadkins andKermil Zarley in a tie

The three deadlocked at 6-under-par 207 for 54 holes with thefinal 18 scheduled today in quest of the 145.000 first prize

Zarley. who said he was motivated by the memory of a goodfnend who died here Thursday, carded the best third-roundscore with a 18. while Wadkins. the first-round leader, shot a 60and Hinkle. the second-round pacesetter, had an even-par 71over the 7,02t-yard Riviera Country Club course

Zarley said he had been staying with a friend. Stan Anderson. who he met here about eight years ago and had beenstaying with him while in Los Angeles

"He came out Wednesday to walch the pro-am and apparently walked too much and died of a heart attack onThursday morning.' Zarley said "The funeral will be Monday1 really want to win this tournament for him "

Wadkins lost a chance to go into the lead alone when hissecond shot hit a tree and he had lo settle lor a 5 on the par 4

limshing holeMeanwhUe. Zarley limited both the 17th and I8lh to gain his

share of the lead, while a double bogey at the ninth hole costHinkle his opportunity for sole possession of the top spol

Fuzzy ZoeUer. who started the round just a shot behindHinkle, suffered double bogeys at the fourth and 17th holes andwent a shot over paf at 72 and a 209 total

Andy Bean shot a 18 over the par 35-36 course to finish inchallenging position at 208

"I just hope 1 play as well tomorrow (today) as I have thepast three days," Bean said

After two days of water-soaked fairways and greens, theconditions were better for the golfers as Riviera dried out Beanand the others noted the improvement

The lead went back and forth during the back nine betweenHinkle and ZoeUer before Wadkins birdied the 17th for a 1-strokelead. Then he lost It on the final hole as a crowd of 23.900watched the day's windup

Wadkins said. "I was hitting the ball straight but pullingterrible 1 changed putters for this round, but I'm still not doing

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - Americans VitasGerulaitis and Jimmy Connors will compete for the 1100,000 firstprize in a World Championship Tennis round-robin tournament

Cosmos rout FreeportFREEPOHT, The Bahamas (AP) - Juan Carlos Acosla

scored three goals and added (our assists yesterday, leading theCosmos of the North American Soccer League to a 131 rout of acombined Freeport All-Stars teams

today on the Cerromar courts, some 20 miles from San J uanGerulaitis beat fellow American Peter Fleming 6-1, 6-3 in

yesterday's second match to complete the round-robin phase

In yesterday's other two matches, Connors beat ItalianAdnano Panatta 4-6, 6-5, 6-2 and Romanian Hit- Nastase beatSpain's Manuel OrantesM. 6-4

Panatta was leading 5-3 in the second set after winning thefirst, but Connors won the next two games and then took thetiebreaker 7-4 before easily capturing the third Bel

very well."I missed four birdie putts from not more than 15 feet. My

best was at the 17th where I sank a 20-footer"Zarley carded six birdies, but had a bogey at the eighth and

a double bogey at the ninth, where he lipped one trap and hitinto two others

LOS ANGELES - Third round uorei In the 12M.W0 Glen Compbell Lot Anotles Optn golf tournomenl over (he Ijtm yord.porH.Rtviero Country Club Court*:ion Hinkle ^ 4 M U 1 - WLonny Wodklni " « " —Hermit ZorleyAndy BeonFully Zottller

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17

Rosen: Billy will return to Yankees

Uctrge SleMmuKr

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla (AIJ) - AlRosen, president of the New York Yankees,responding to contract queries made Thursdayby Billy Martin, reaffirmed yesterday thatowner George Steinbrcnner Intends to allowMartin to manage the club again in 1980

Rosen said Steinbrenner was not trying toavoid the former manager

"George Steinbrenner in no way has beenavoiding Billy or Doug Newton (Billy'sagent)," Rosen said at a news conference atthe Yankees' spring training camp "Therenever been any Intention on George's part notto keep his end of the bargain Billy is to be themanager in 1980 "

Martin was pressured into resigning as

Yankee manager last August after callingSteinbrenner a "convicted liar " Several dayslater, at the Yankees annual Old Timers Day. itwas announced he would return to run the clubin 1180

Martin ArrivesThe fiery skipper arrived al the Yankees

training camp Thursday, seeking to iron out acontract agreement with Steinbrenner thatwould enable him to return in 1980 However,Martin was unable to locate Steinbrenner andhe issued the following statement

"We (Martin and Newton) haven't had achance to talk to George "I'm sure when 1 orDoug sit down with George, we'll finalize thewhole thing, which 1 want to get done We've

been trying to get a hold ot him, but he's beenquite busy with his shipyards or something "

Martin, whose contract runs out this yenwas concerned by speculation that he wouldnever manage the Yankees again

- "That's one of the reasons I want to talk loGeorge." Martin said Thursday "1 want tofirm up the contract so everybody will knowI'm comi<1g~b8,ek and if I'm not, let's find out "

Although Rosen reiterated that Martinwould return to manage the Yankees, he addedMartin must continue lo be on his best behavior

"Every deal is a two-tiered thing, Husensaid "They (Steinbrenner and Martin) cameto an agreement as I understand it. that Billy

would conduct himself in thh best interests •>(the Yankees."

Alleged FightRosen then spoke of an incidenl in Reno,

Nev, in which Martin allegedly punched anewspaper reporter. Ray Hager. who wastrying to interview him

"Billy told George he was innocent of it.'Rosen said "He'll be cleared of it and Georgebelieves him. George had no reason not tobelieve what Billy tells him "

. However. Rosen added"Kven if Billy is innocent nf am charge! Qr

if he has to do something about making somekind ol restitution to this fellow, that s tanta-mount in uself lo being at fault in thr iation MyMutki

C4 SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25.1979

VICTORY SOUVENIR -Members of the Mlddletown South High Schoolbasketball team climb up to cut the net out of the hoop at BrookdaleCommunity College yesterday where they beat Red Bank Regional for theShore Conference title.

TAKES POSSESSION -Red Bank Regional's Danny O'Hern takespossession of a rebound yesterday as Mlddletown South's John Benbrookmoves In to defend In yesterday's climactic victory over the Buccaneers.

Middletown So. crownedas conference champions

(continued)

and shooting from the corners,particularly In the second half

"You trade baskets withthe Atkinsons and you're ask-ing for it, " said Long Branchcoach Jerry Matthews whoseteam won the consolationgame over Southern, 63-42

O'Hern was a standout offthe boards in the second halfagainst Benbrook, Hontantiand Ennen after Chris Rose,the Bucs' 6-5 senior center,was slowed up due to an ankleinjury.

Finally, Dwayne Lodge, theBucs top scorer, kept RedBank in the game in the firsthalf with 14 points after Mid-dletown had threatened toblow it open.

Mlddletown South openedthe game with a rush hitting onits first six shots from the floorto take a 12-0 lead

The Bucs answered with 11straight, however, before En-nen scored from underneath togive the Eagles a 14-11 lead atthe end of the quarter.

Leading 32-28 with 2:30 leftin the half, Montanti and Ben-brook sparked an Eagle surethat put thet them up, 42-30 atthe hall

"We just were not fillingthe middle in the first half,"Buc Coach Warren Booth lam-ented.

"We played well in the sec-ond half and had a shot at itnear the end, but we (ell shortMiddletown has a good team.They have five guys who playtogether."

Middletown took its biggestlead, 48-33, early in the thirdquarter, but O'Hern and theAtkinsons sparked a Buccomeback that had the crowdroaring

Two baskets by Vince and

three points by Dwightenabled the Bucs to close themargin to 4M2

Middletown went up, 57-48.with seconds to go in the thirdquarter on Hall's jumper

A long Red Bank shotmissed, but O'Hern with agreat second effort, grabbedthe rebound and put it in just atthe buzzer

The Bucs kept the pressureop in the fourth quarter andgot to win within a point, ISM,with three minutes left on a

rebound by Rose and VinceAtkinson's layup

Murray drove down themiddle for a key basket andBenbrook followed it up withtwo foul shots

Lodge and Vince Atkinsoncame back with baskets for theBucs and that set up the wildfinish

Benbrook and Harringtonhad 21 and 20 points, respec-tively, for the Eagles whileDwight and Vince Atkinsonscored M and 17 points and

Lodge had 16 for the Bucs who Walters had 16 for Southernlost only their third gameagainst 21 victories

Long Branch fell behind19-12, early in the second quar-ter against Southern, but the

n-*ftgJUlTS.OM.fi>4* 11.0 AKlmi4«i

7-4-li V Atfclnton H-H. L«*M 4-4-14.

Branchers scored 11 points in a „,<„;, ,.», TOTALSI» IM«row lo take the lead for good

MKMItlOwn SIM«

Leading only 31-29 at thestart of the third period, theBranchers scored 13 o(_ thenext IS points to break it open

Mike Alston scored 22points and Steve Zeiser added -I I I I lor the Branchers. Curt s X . HIM

MIDAIR SNARE -Mlddletown South's John Ben-brook gets a rebound yesterday at teammate Chris

Montanti (44) gets a hand In. Red Bank Regional'sDonny O'Hern arrives too late.

Eagles stake their claimBy JIMHINTKLMANNLINCROFT- Going into

yesterday's Shore ConferencePlayoff title game, there wereapparently some skeptics whorefused to acknowledge Mid-dletown South's claim as theShore Conference's top team,a fact that annoyed the Middletown players and coaches

The skeptics were nowhereto be found after the game,however, as the Eagles heldoff Red Bank to win the titlefor the first time in the historyof either Middletown South orMiddletown Township beforethe split three years ago

"We're the number oneteam in the Shore and we hadto prove it to our critics," Mid-dletown's 6-7 center. Jeff En-nen said

"We had to control theboards, which we think wedid," said John Benbrook. thegame's high scorer with 21points "We also had to keep(Dave) Harrington and (Jim)Murray back to stop RedBank's fast break."

Playing against Red Bank's

big men. Chris Rose and DanOHem, presented some prob-lems for both F.nnen and Benbrook

"We just tried to keep themboxed out, but Chris Rose is sostrong

"I can't put it into words,"Benbrook said "Jeff had lotake the high post while 1 hadto have the low post man whowas mostly Rose

"Coach Houston told me Infeel out the game He wantedto see how much the refereeswould allow

"I've seen Rose more phys-ical in other games, but I thinkhis ankle was bothering him "

Hall, the Eagles top scorer,was handicapped by personalfouls and sat out much of Ihesecond quarter and part of Ihethird, but Chris Montanti did anice job In his place

"Chris is the best sixth manat the Shore. "Hall said

Red Bank's late rallycaused some concern for Hall

"We let up a little on themWe thought we had the game,but we didn't"

Eagle gals make it complete day(continued)

"Yes, she (Gilligan) did itfor us She's just a clutchplayer," Smith said "But theyall played hard."

Gilligan. who went eight foreight from the charity stripefor the game, stepped up andconverted both ends of a oneand one with 2:36 left in thegame to tie the score at 41.

The senior point guardmoved to the line 36 secondslater In another one and oneand hit nothing but net to putthe Eagles up for good

South forward CherylSmack scored what proved tobe the winning bucket on adriving layup with 1:35 to go.but the Bishops kept the capac-ity crowd at the edges of theirseats when Gaye Lowensteinscored on a steal with 34 sec-onds showing

Tammy Strulz had a chanceto tie the game with 15 secondson the clock on a one and one.but missed her first attemptSmack hit nothing but air whenshe went lo the line with eightseconds to the end. but the

Inlander* recall McKendrxUNIONDALE. NY - Alex McKendry. a left wing, was

recalled by the New York Islanders from Fort Worth of theCentral Hockey League yesterday. Ihe National Hockey Leagueclub announced

Bishops could not get in posi-tion for & decent shot as thebuzzer went off

"You're never safe whenyou play Asbury Park"' Smithsaid, clutching the conferenceplaque tightly "Asbury Park'svery good I'd say it's been avery good year for MiddletownSouth"

The Eagles qot off lo a quickstart when they fed the ballinto 6-3 center Cindy Hook wholayed it up with only 18 secondsexpired.

Asbury Park then showed itsexplosiveness as it rolled offthe next 10 points for a 10-2advantage Center RosieStrulz led the charge with fourpoints

South could manage onlytwo more baskets in the quar-ter and trailed by six points

"One thing I told them wasnot to loose their composure,"Smith said "1 told them therewas plenty of time."

The Eagles came back onthe floor and promptly rolledof six unanswered points to tiethe score at 12 with 6:44 left.Smack and Hook did most ofthe damage from the insidewhile Gilligan drove down themiddle

"We tried to use our sizeinside, but we also wanted toslow them down and not letthem run. fast break on us "

The lead seesawed. Southtaking a 23-22 advantage at thehalf After Rosie Strutz con-verted on a three-point play toopen the third period, theEagles npped off eight un-answered points for a five-point lead *

A pair of Lisa Carriddojumpers sparked an U-pointBishop surge that carriedthem to a 36-34 lead A TammyStrutz follow shot at the buzzermade it 38-35 in Asbury's fa-vor.

The Bishops tried a stalltwice in the fourth quarter, buta Gilligan jumper and a Deb-bie Flatly layup cut Ihe Asburylead to one. 40-39. with 2:57left.

Gilligan, who totaled 20points, then showed off her foulshooting skills and in the proc-ess crowned a new queen.M m i n ta«m mi

GIHIoon * • M, Smock 3 * 10, Moofc7-0-4, Smith 1-0-7. Flatly 4-1 t TOTALSU-13-4SAiAwry P«w* 141)

fl Struti W - H . T Strut! H7. Svefl*4 M . Lowcmltln 7 IS, Hommorv 04-4.Corrl«o7-0-4TOT>LSISI3 4]Mlddttlowr, South * I ' 17 10 4SAUx/r»Por« I I 10 I t 1-43

Montanti. whose play com-ing off the bench has been abig factor in the Eagles' suc-cess this year, had another biggame yesterday with eight second-quarter points

"With Hall in foul trouble. Ihad to Uke the wing position,"Montanti said "I was breakingafter Red Bank shot and wehad three fast break layups inthat quarter

"The Atkinsons were toughwhen they started their running game." Montanti added" And we had to stop them ''

Jim Murray. Mlddletown's5-10 sophomore point guard,who is averaging about nineassists per game, noted an advantage that the Eagles hadagainst Red Bank

" "1 played on the same teamwith the Atkinsons andDwayne Lodge in the HighSchool Summer League," Mur-ray said "1 knew that theyhate to see a zone defense ''

Murray played jayvee lastyear as a freshman,but quicklymoved into the varsity startinglineup this season

"My main concern washandling the ball this year Theother four guys on the teamcan shoot and I think that helpsme since I have confidencewhen I pass them the ball "

Guard Dave Harringtonhad another good scoring daywith 20 points

"I didn't crash the boardsas much as in earlier games."said Harrington, a tremendousleaper despite his 510 stature"I had to stay back to defendagainst Red Bank's fast

Navy wallops Armysix different waytt

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Navy beat Army in six of nineevents yesterday at the ser-vice academies' annual wintersports competition

The midshipmen won thewrestling, basketball, squash,fencing, pistol and rifle com-petition while the Cadets tooktrack, gymnastics and swim-ming

break" "Middletown plays veryRose, who was slowed up well together They were the

due to a bad ankle and a virus, best all-around team we facedsummed up Middletown They're unselfish and alwaysSouth's success this year look tor the open man "

CBA's defensive display befuddlesRBCBy JIMHINTKLMANN

LINCROFT— Christian Brothers Academyplayed an almost perfect first half and hadlittle difficulty defeating Red Bank Catholic.6*44, Friday night in the final regular seasonbasketball game for both teams.

" That was about the best first half weplayed all year." CBA Coach Vlnnie Cox said indiscussing Ihe Colts 35-11 ha If time lead

"We were consistent and played great de-ttm. "Pat Driscoll had an outstanding first

quarter. "(14 points)CBA's tight manforman defense seldom

gave the Caseys an open shot and they finishedthe first half shooting only four of 22 from thefloor Eleven Casey turnovers also made iteasy for the Colts

Led OnceThe Caseys led only once, 20. on Mike

Jones' jumper, but the Colts ran off the nextseven points

Jones added another jumper. CBA broke itopen with 22 straight points. 10 by Driscolj and

8 by Marty Lutschaunlg.The Caseys played better in the third quar-

ter, but never could get closer than 19 pointsReserves of both teams then finished the game

Driscoll finished with 16 points andLutschaunlg added 13.

Mike O'Shaughnessy was the Colts top re-bounder in addition toscroing 11 points

Jones, a 6-6 senior center, did his best forthe Caseys with 1? points and seven blockedshots He was also the Caseys leading re-bounder Jack McKeon sqored 12f all in the

second halfThe two teams will play again Tuesday at

CBA in the opening round of the NJSIAAParochial "A" slate tournament.

"I have mixed emotions about that game,"Cox said. "Since we'll be playing them again sosoon.

"We won easily tonight, but it might be a lotcloser the next time (Tuesday) and we can't beover confident."

The Colts lifted their record to 18-5. RBCdropped to 11-9

Fliers nabRed crown

TINTON FALLS - Neptune High School swept thefinals of the Shore Conference Playoffs" Red Division byhanding Monmouth Regional an 83 71 setback on the GoldenFalcons' home court

Neptune took control of the floor from the opening lap,paced by a 25-point performance by Todd Holland, a strong18-point show by Carl Braggs. and a solid 17 point day byGreg Newland

But game-high scoring laurels went to Monmouth Regional's Jim Pinkney, who fired 14 field goals and 3 freethrows for a total of 31 points Matt Gnbben contributedanother 18 to the Falcons' cause

Neptune is 16-8; Monmouth Regional is 17-7M a U w i n i l , Karltan 51

HAZLET - Steve Bethune roared into action, connect-ing for 28 points to lead his Huskle teammates to victoryover the Rantan Rockets in the Red Division winners'bracket

Malawan took a slight first period edge and slowlyadded to construct the final margin of victory

Ken Thompson and Paul Clark had 17 and 16 forRaritan, respectively

Girls BasketballHAZLET - Manasquan High School played a methodi-

cal, steady offense to overcome Raman's press and take a45-3* victory in the finals of Ihe Shore Conference Playoffs"Red Division

"We had a bad shooting day," Rantan Girls BasketballCoach Mary Loew said "We couldn't buy a basket But I'dhave to credit Manasquan's defense for a lot of that Theyplayed an excellent man-toman '

Raritan trailed for most of the game as the Big BlueWarriors ran off four steady 10-pointplus quarters "Wehad a flurry in the third quarter when our press worked,"Loew said, "and we got within five points

"But then Manasquan stalled, and we couldn't get theball"

Carole Lee of Manasquan took game scoring honorswith 20 points. Jodie Angelo added 10 Lee shot a perfect 6lor-6 from the hne

Ann DeGennaro led Raritan (16-6) with 11Manasquan 11 12 10 12-45Raritan 5 7 16 8 - 3 6

Freehold 58, Maaalapai 48ENGLISHTOWN - Freehold took an early lead and

survived a late Manalapan surge to take fifth place in theChampionship Division yesterday

Freehold, paced by Vicki Roy's 16 points, led all the wayexcept when the Braves tied the score at 36-36 late In thethird period. Other Freehold leaders were Kathy McCann,14 points, and Lorna Williams, 12 points.

Mary Hunter. 16 points, and Jean Jacoby, 11 pointswere the Manalapan high scorersFreehold 18 .13 « 1 18 -58Manalapan 13 10 13 12 -48

In Red Division action, Keyport took a 50-37 consolationdecision from Monmouth Regional; and Ocean Townshipeliminated Holmdel, 48-40, in a consolation game.

In the White Division, Middletown North defeated ShoreRegional, 54-50, in the finals.

In the Blue Division. Southern defeated Keansburg55-36, in the winners bracket; and Marlboro defeatedHowell, 47-42. in a consolation match

SHREWSBURY, NJ SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1979 T h e S o w l s ? R c g M e T C8

Eight county swimmers capture honorsFour Red Rank RMinnal thru • —.- . - 9Four Red Bank Regional, three Rumson

Fair Haven Regional and one Uanasquanswimmer grace this year's version of the All-Shore Conference Coaches' Team.

Although senior Dana Morton la the onlyBuccaneer Individual (160-yard individualmedley) to make the team, Red Bank also listsMiss Morton with juniors Diana Kedrowskyand Beth Kingsbury and sophomore NancyMacConnell on the MO-yard freestyle relayarray

Rumson's Tom Kane, a senior co-captainwho hold* the conference record in the 200-yardindividual medley; senior Steve Knapp, therecordholder In the MO and 500-yard freestylesfor two years, and junior Nancy Wilson (100-yard bacckstroke) all have been named to theteam.

Manasquan's lone champion Is sophomoreJacque Poland, who scored her victory in the50-yard freestyle

Markers RaleToms River North was the dominant school

In the annual Shore Conference SwimmingChampionships last week at Ocean CountyCollege The Mariners placed members of two

relay teams on the elite list. Karen Wolff, whoalso won the MO-yard freestyle and 100-yardbreaatstroke, Monica Patterson Susan Kirby(also winner of 100-yard freestyle) and VirginiaMascher captured the MO-yard medley relay

The Mariner boys named Joe Ryan, WarrenBishop, Jon Boland and John Anderson lo the201-yard medley relay team. Ryan went on towin the 100-yard butterfly and Bishop took thelaurels In the 100-yard breaststroke.

Another Mariner, Bruce Boccta, a three-year vanity diver, wrap up the title for^iisschool at the annual meet.

Toms River South, the school expected tolake the conference meet, managed to placetwo swimmers and a diver on the team KarenFrtberg pulled In two events, the 100-yardbutterfly and MO-yard freestyle. Jeff Brining, afour-year varsity performer, captured the 100-yard backstroke, and Debbie Dickson gave theIndians the girls diving championship.

Ukewood High School's Miki Treumuth, atanker who Is listed among the 1(78-70 Who'sWho Among American High School Students,w*n the 50 and 100-yard freestyles tor theP l u m

O^Brien becomes a starafter days at Freehold

BUC FREESTYLERS -Red Bank Regional'! 400-yard freestyle relay team of, left to right, DianaKedrowsky, Dana Morton, Nancy MacConnell and

Beth Kingsbury captured the event at the ShoreConference Meet at Ocean County College lastweek.

By JONNI r'ALK

FREEHOLD - Many Mon-mouth County athletes go on tocollege to compete in sportsthey played In high schoolRuss O'Brien became a star ina sport his high school didn'thave

O'Brien, a freshman atGlassboro State College, willbe one of the swimmers In theNew Jersey Collegiate Cham-pionships at Monmouth Col-lege Feb 26 and 27 And hemay be one of the few self-made swimmers in collegiateranks

Freehold High School, ofcourse, does not have a swim-ming team. But that didn'tkeep Russ out of sports thereHe played two years of varsity

soccer and two years of varsi-ty tennis

However, swimming wasrattling around In the back ofhis head

"I had hoped they wouldstart a swimming team atFreehold," Russ said. "Therewas always talk about it, and Iwould get all gung ho for it.But I guess they just never hadenough backing for it." Free-hold Bora High School, likemost schools in the area, doesnot have a swimming pooleither

s u i t e d at clubRuss has been swimming

since he was about eight, start-ing at a summer club, Wood-haven, which eventually be-came the Freehold YMCAHowever, he quit the pool

when he was about 13."1 played basketball in

eighth grade, and I guess I wastired of swimming." Russ ex-plained. "But I wasn't tallenough for basketball in highschool. The urge to swim againcame when I was junior inhigh school."

Russ, who earlier hadswum in some invitationalmeets as an individual, startedto compete for the FreeholdYMCA in that junior year. As asenior, he placed second In theleague In the 100 butterfly andsixth In the 100 freestyle.

Up through that time, Russstill had not had any formalcoaching in swimming. "IIwas more a matter of pickingup everything naturally andwatching others than a case of

Matawan's Kresky leads all county bowlersMarc Kresky of Matawan leads all county bowlers with a 202

average This cool lefty is having one of his best seasons and atthe moment is the one to beat for perhaps the most prestigiousaward of all Winning the Monmouth County high averageaward puts a bowler in a position to be recognized as the bestamong his peers.

Last week Kresky rolled a 28T game and a ON series in theThursday Nlte Scratch League at Strathmore Lanes His 287game is one of our line score features this week

A survey of the county bowling establishments in the areaand found bowlers averaging 105 or better John Savage of RedBank is the only other bowler who has a M0 average withsufficient number of games to be properly recognized

Certain bowlers will score better in certain bowling centersWhere they can't score well they will find some excuse for theirinability to hit that particular house

Last year John Barrett could kick the ball down the lanes atAirport Plaza and get a strike But what he did in that houseunder those conditions was Just perfect for him as he averaged217,215. 215. 211 in four different leagues Nobody else could dowhat he did

There are many things that take in a combination of factorsas to why one bowler can score exceedingly well in oneestablishment but in any other

Other sports have similar type favorite situations Certaintennis players do better on a clay court but get their ears pinnedback on a grass court Baseball players can play or hit better incertain ball parks.

It is the talented skillful athlete who will adjust to variousconditions and make an adjustment that includes the mentalattitude to cope with different conditions The talented playerwill meet these various conditions and beat you: The untalentedplayer will only prove that under certain conditions he is goodIf the challenge will make him look bad, he won't play, or if hedoes play, rather than not be among the best he will drop out

M M J B M U I C e u t y Classic L e a g uDave Davis Lanes, Tinton Falls, will be the home of the

Monmouth County Classic League In September The ClassicLeague is accepting up lo 25-man teams limited to a »J5 teamaverage

Along with pro s(ar Davis, BUI Heggie of West Long Branchand Bob Bazydlo of Newark are the primary league organizersThe league Is scheduled to bowl on Wednesdays at the primetime of 8: JO. Interested individuals can contact Bill Heggie.

Teams already forming this Classic League total IS withsome bowlers coming in from Ocean and Middlesex counties

Davis has already adjusted his pro-tour schedule nextseason to be able to devote more time to promoting betterbowling attractions here in Monmouth County Davis, a mem-ber of the Brunswick Bowling Advisory staff brings more thanjust 10-pin knowledge to the area, he has the ability and freedomto art In order to make his lanes competitive lo the best on theeast coast.

T*n Deter Fires 717 SetTom Deter of Point Pleasant set the torrid pace Tuesday

with games of 23O-2J3-245 for a super 717 seriesin the ClassicLeague at Howell Lanes. For Tom this is his 10th 700 with a 740

LUKEFORREST

as his best ever The 38-year-old right-hander is one of thecounty's top bowlers averaging in the l»0s most of his 24 yearbowling career.

Deter has entered the Monmouth County Masters the lastnine years and twice has reached the finals finishing 10th in1071. In 1966 he won the Union County Masters and in 1(00finished in 2nd place

Other good Howell Classic scores include Tom Balsano(ON), John Sera (005), Charles Del Plato (M0). Steven Roma(020), Henry Von Saspe (110). John Ference (616). and LouColucct(614)

Angel* Ttrres Tips HimselfAngelo Torres is a 15-year-old ninth-grade student at

Kcansburg High School. Last Wednesday he set the individualhigh game in the Shore Conference Bowling at MiddletownLanes with a 244 game and followed with a 172 for a 410. At thetime this was his highest game ever.

Torres topped himself on Satuday when he shot a 268-569 inthe All-Star Junior League at Keansburg Bowling Center

Angelo admits to getting a little professional tutoring thathas helped his game. The youngster has just adopted to spotbowling and has learned how to align himself to the properposition He lias a smooth five-step delivery with good ballrevolution Carries averages of 154. 157 and 153 This Is hisfourth year in league competition

Torres is an avid baseball player, and is a member of threeteams in New York City where he was bom. and in one league inthe Keansburg Youth Association.

It would appear that Angelo Torres has the talent to be oneof the county's best bowlers. WAYNE BENNETT ROLLS

160-644Wayne Bennett tied the high game mark with a 200 game

this week in the Keansburg Classic. His 269 was the best part ofa 644 series Kevin Harrington had rolled a 269 earlier in theseason.

The league is tight with Club Miami and Keansburg Bowlboth tied for first place each with a 22-6 record. Sid Herzog leadsthe league with a 1(2 average while Kevin Harrington holds thetop series score of 092

WAYS TO IMPROVE

("Marie_ Kresky I/O

ONES AVERAGE

MONMOUTH COUNTY MIOM AVIRAgI LiAOIRSNAME LANESIMoccKroUi Slrommor. ,] John Sovooi Elm

Hywoy UHormotiy

ray fc

ACE

CLASSIC LEAGUE —Pro star Dave Davis, new owner of Dave Davis Lanes,Tinton Falls, and Bill Heggie, right are accepting five-man 935 average teamsfor the Monmouth County Classic. The league will start at 8:30 p.m. Wednes-day nights beginning In September.

learning from a coach," he re-called

When it came time tochoose a college, Russ lookedat all the state schools andthen picked Glassboro becauseit has had winning seasons inswimming for the last nineyears. It also has Coach TonyUrn,

"Coach Lisa has helped meimproved a lot," Russ said. "Iguess you could say the im-provement borders on the un-believable, that is, the im-provements in time have beenphenomenal to me."

Russ qualified for the statemeet at Monmouth College Inthe 500 and 1,000-yard free-styles When he first swam the1,000, his time was 11:14. In ameet against Temple lastweek, he did a 10: J8.7.

In the 500, he did a 5: JO lastyear; his best time this seasonhas been a 5:08 — a difference

. ol 22 seconds in a sport thatmeasures victory in split sec-onds.

Is ipnves TISM

He has also taken four sec-onds off his time for the 100,getting that down to 51

"I have pretty muchdropped the butterfly," Russsaid, "but I have also im-proved four seconds in the 100there. Now I am going tor dis-tances It is mainly my idea. 1enjoy it more than the sprintsand felt that I had more roomto improve there. When I swimthe 1,000,1 feel myself gettinga second wind about halfwaythrough, after about 20 laps."

If Russ's improvement andemergence as a swimmerwere no surprise to himself, itmay have been to Coach Lisa.

"I saw that he could swimnaturally," the coach said,"but I didn't know what hewould swim here. But he keptgoing out there and doing It,and he stayed with our three-t ime All American, PaulRudzitis. All of a sudden, Russwas a swimmer.

Fitare Plans"We haven't ruled Russ out

for the butterfly next year ," ,the coach added, "but next'year, I know he will be ourmain 1,000 s w i m m e r . Kwouldn't be surprised if hequalified for the 1,650-yardevent at the nationals nextyear."

Russ has no regrets about,the lack of interest in swim-ming in local high schools. "Ithought Monmouth Countyswimming was good althoughwe didn't have a team," hesaid. "The lack of (acuities hasa lot to do with it when itcomes to competing on a na-tional level. It (swimming) ismore of a sport in otherplaces."

A business major, Russ isnow 6-4,150, a kind of humanpendl in the water. And likeCoach Lisa, he has his eyes onnext year's nationals, too.

5a: KHz

STRATHMORE LANES FEB. 15 , 1979

< i m n Sorti5 Gory wolltn* Dovt Brotkan. .J Stov. EnwmMl*.• Jim Murphyf VIC Yourtg10 Bob Bolydlo11 stow. Emonutl*.I I Gino 5tronl.roI] More KiMkyu Ron MoMllo .IS Tot" Myim

» v JSMormon*Hywoy IsHarmonyP.rryi. ,.,Harmony .

IN < »°>(* Morcn.ni lu l lIN S John Klfr.fl IU0I

"A" LiACUC NI0H AVIHAOtLSAOIIItI R«W. Bortl.y IHtl1 Clno Slranl.ro IMfl1 Ea Korloon lu l l4 Ralph Marchtttl lu l l

ITRATHMORR TNU« NITf SCRATCH TOP SCORiS

WayneBennett 1/0

IBsMIODLITOWN "A" LfA*UIITANDINSS

imPro SIM* oh

KEANSBURG BwLG CTR FEB.

AngeloTorres

517

15, 19791

MIDOLETOWN LANES FEB. 14, 1979

AngeloTorres 119

Wi,

KEANSBURG BOWLING CTRV

17, 1979

I MMSol.town Lorm P1 Clam Hot3 Scott Fun.ro! Mom.-4 Capricorn AmvMm*nli5 RKI Bank Rtoflno4 Von VIM Auoclatn7CI. MTroafly CoI E.W.R.C.Tirvlat Wooco Agto Polntlno

10 H.lflk.'l M M Mort.l"A" L I A g u I W « i « l TOP K 0 R 1 I

1 Butch " "i Rotph) Ed KarlMo4 Lup. Ruftlnl.5 WiMporn wrofhef • Jr6 Frank Copaorelll7 Don GarrvhonI Gory tortftohiptt Mike Connlinr*

10 Ed Goldman11 Jo* Pttt.rwto

•Jich Stout*I Matwiwwtfcl... .

I I Non Word*

1 Wore Krwfcy1 Bruct SclMtvr.) Al Woodi4 Jim Smith..i John Geran* J*M Tretoto7 Fran* D'Amodfo, Sr• Aion su»t*f.,....;.

Other top scorn: Rich Kuinner (713). Bob Knapp iSchram (111). John Kuchorefc (KM). Front. Devlno. Sr 1

1?Ml2-M7-*9eKM Mt SWmmmwJOS MM inmm713 IOT 5 TO

Ml. Ed-Melhodo <3U). Mtl111. Mlfct Torn (301)

Joe r- —- --•• — - -.-<im, •oMmory Blonty 1175), Sandy Lopei . . . . . . w-—.. „ ,,,..Mochey (175). Judy MocPherton (113), Fron Whit* I7J ID ln-JM.mutmm-

HARMOHV CLASSIC STANDINGS• Reoltv pit

CotltwMardHrTtl.

I Bab M*ytr1 Mlk* Cinque) Wayne B*nnatt. ,4 Kffvlfl MarrlnBioi5 SW Hmog4 G«W HAOITOH*..,7 Lloyd Storms

K1ANSBURO CLASSIC TOP SCORIS

II RichII i d I

JPiij!H7'll}-14)-4)3n'mieitii11M1HM1U

t Bob McCarthy...10 Tooy FranclKMl.11 Jot T • •

Other top KOftii: Bob Por»n. (»7) . Rich Squeo (771). Jerry Scolio (3U1. FrankWlnWer UWKJIll, Joe Dleltkh (113). Wall Johnson (711), Rich Triettfcowskl (713).Mickey Scoromuti (711|. Tony Saatotoro (111)

HLIOHTtRS AT MONMOUTH LANISu

o-in-Mo1 Jo* MurnantI BUI Wll lhtlm (131c1 More* Btrordttco

3)4307174

• LUI JWAH SHOII LANIt-TOF tCOKIt..* Honnomferry Lombordl (144 ovg)John Montgomery (lUavat. 33*

Other topicorei Dflve rfapkln. (Mr), Albert DeLucIa (303 313). Sam AKh (337).e Yortrough 1301). Bill Van Brunt (711). C.I Zohnor (30.-314), Roberta Moftto19). •OMtnory Bloney D7S). Sandy Lopei (I7*>, Dobbto Hojeman ( W ) . Carol

Pat Zthoter

Adier Lumber CConnliiaro EitavatlnoHarmony BowlJomy ConstructionJniup Silk Screen.Corterel Sovlrto*Copflcofn Anius*intnt*"^^^"-"."--."«"*"^^'eiriiii'ai'i

KmkyRich Gronlto

SfftSSTT!:Walt SotmonGory Randolph.Other tap Korev

1333 SH). Kevl "Dave BrackenJim Murphy. .Beb BoiydloMore Kre«ky

I Clno StranttroMark Florlllo..Wolt "

Gary Bockgalupl

DAVI DAVIS DOUBLIS CLASSIC TOP SCORRS

Cf SHREWSBURY. N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25.1979

Sailboat Show crew to be announced todayThe attpper and crew of the first Atlantic Cout Sailboat

Show will be announced today by director Tom Casque at thethud day, for the Hth Jersey Coast Power Boat Show atConvention Hall, Asbury Park. Show hours today are 11 a.m. to

The show, which promised to set a record (or attendancewhen It opened on Feb. 17, was closed by Holiday's heavyaaowstonn, but Casque expected to make up for this partiallyon the concluding weekend.

The sailboat show, a new venture, has been completely soldout Casque said. It will run from March 7 to 11, also atConvention Hall

Newark C l ib Grtig S trug"As of Feb. I, we had SI paid up members," reports Ron

Jacobsen of Budd Lake, who ssys that at age 72 the NewarkBait and Flycastlng Club has gained a new lease on life and willprobably go on forever.

The dub, once a power in the state particularly on legisla-tive and management matters affecting fish and wildlife, is nolonger Newark oriented. Its membership is drawn from manynorthern and central Jersey counties and It now meets in theKingston Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge in Union.

The next meeting will be on March 6, when the slate'sexpanded marine fisheries program and possible salt waterfishing and crabbing license will be discussed by guest speakerBill Figley, a marine biologist. Figley, who works at the state'sNacote Creek Research Station, Absecon, will speak about 8p.m. The public Is Invited and the program is free

Jacobsen, past president and now publicity chairman of theclub, has done considerable digging into the records and dis-covered that the club was organized in the fishing tackle shop ofCharles Liming at 11 Ferry Street, Newark, in April, 1907

I wasn't present, for a simple reason, and I doubt that any ofthe present members were there either and for the same

HENRYSCHAEFER

reason. When I joined the club in the late 1910s it had quarters Ina houavwijhedid Bingle Inn property on the-MusconetcongRiver an! alsoat Brant Beach on Long Beach Island. The lateAlbert Krementi of South Orange was president His son, AMartin Krementi, Is one of the club directors.

Competitive bait and fly casting was a big thing with theclub in those days when its arch "enemy" was the PatersonCasting Club. Jimmy Salvato of North Haledon, whose Paterson(now Wayne) rod and gun shop was a sort of headquarters wascaptain of the casting team

Edward W. Janata was captain of the Newark club castingteam back in those days. Janata, who liv ed and worked inNewark, has been retired for years and is now living In Juno,Florida

Brtakdale Red BalMlag Crane Set"Fishing is a complex art; as your knowledge grows, so

does your need for equipment," said Richard Masluk, anassistant professor at Brookdale Community College, Lincroft,speaking of a non-credit course on custom rod building that hewill lead with James Makley of Highlands, a master rod builder

Classes will meet Tuesdays from 8 to 10 p.m for foursessions suiting March t.

The course costs %V> payable to Brookdale CommunityCollege, Lincroft.

According to Masluk. "The course will make fishing morepleasurable for anyone who loves It It Is a good winter projectfor boat owners and surf fishermen " Masluk owns 30 rods.

Participants will make rods to their own specifications.They will learn about diamond wraps, chevrons, varnishes anddeep-gloss epoxy finishes They will design their rods selectingtheir own blanks, guides, threads and grips

II Cdekrlttes at ExpnttitaTwenty-one national and local authorities will take part In

the fishing and hunting clinic at the second annual WorldFishing 1 Outdoor Exposition to be held at the Rockland CountyComm unity College Field House, Suffern, N Y , startingWednesday to continue through M arch 4.

The instructors include Lee and Joan Wulff, Milt Rosko,Ernest Schwiebert. Bobby Murray, Al Lindner, Leon Chandler,Vic Galgano, Lou Rossi, Jim Kenealy, Bob Jacklin, PeteBarrett and Ernie Schleusener.

Admission to the clinics, which start at 5:30 on Wednesday,is included in the 13 50 adult price of admission Children under12 get In free.

More than 80 tackle manufacturers are included among thehundreds of exhibitors that will (ill the field house Boats,motors, guns and other dquipment and accessories will be ondisplay.

Hours on Wednesday and Thursday will be 2 to 10 p .m,Saturday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., and Sunday, noon to7 p m . Parkingis free.

From the Garden State Parkway take the New YorkThruway (1-87) and go Just one more exit north to Exit MB(Airmont Road) and follow signs.

f

CODFISH TROPH? WINNER - Frank Shaw, direc-tor of the Massachusetts Department of Commerceand Development, Division of Tourism, presentsDollle Kaiser of Highlands with the first prize trophyfor her 70-pound three-ounce cod In the women'sdivision of the 17th annual Massachusetts Gov-ernor's Saltwater Fishing Derby. The presentationtook place at the sportsmen's show at HynesAuditorium In Boston.

Here's a gamey methodto get NFL draft on TV

Just about the only important thing the National FootballLeague does which does not get full television coverage is itsannual player draft — that system of acquiring new talent bywhich the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

There are a couple of good reasons why the televisionnetworks don't broadcast the draft: it is horrendously long, andit is boring. Just about all TV would be able to do Is show a groupof nobodies sitting at tables crammed with telephones whichconnect them to their teams' genuine masterminds in secludedbunkers.

The solution to that is simple; make the May draft into agame show. That should Interest the networks and also fit rightinto daytime programming.

The format to the game should be simple and exciting. Atthe same time, It should speed up the lengthy draft processwhich usually lulls everybody to sleep. Yet, the game would stillhave to allow the teams to fill out their rosters with innumerableprospects scheduled to be cut before the summer is over.

Need RepresentativeFirst, the teams will have to choose a brainy representative

to answer questions because questions are an integral part ofevery game show. At first, it was planned to have the playerstake turns at the questions in numerical order. However,because many teams have kickers who wear low numbers butcan't speak English, that plan was scrapped.

The network research teams could supply the questioncategories, and, perhaps, each team could designate a specialistfor each category. The Giants, for instance, might want to useOdis McKinney for geography. He is the guy who couldn't figureout why the Giants were taking a plane to Atlanta because hethought it was that city down the coast which has the casino.

If the team representative answers his question right, theteam then gets a shot at its draft selection. This, naturally,would be done In the usual NFL order — team with the worstrecord first.

After giving the correct answer, the representative wouldget a chance to spin a wheel which will tell him how much timehe gets to make his draft pick. If the wheel points to 30, he gels30 seconds. With the Giants' luck, they would hit a 1 everytlme.

That should be no hardship, however, If the teams have doneDielr drafTTiomework The real problem will come If therepresentative answers the question wrong In that case, hegets a buzzer, indicating a penalty pick, and has to make hisselection from the Ivy League. But please notice that no teamwill be cheated of a selection.

R»zeU> Gets l i lo ActIn the meantime, Pete Rozelle, commissioner of the NFL,

will select a "secret wold" in conjunction with the networkwhich buys the rights to this extravaganza. The host of the showwill engage each representative in conversation in an effort toseek out that word.

JONNIFALK

If anybody should say that "secret wold," O J Simpson willcome down from the ceiling to give the team a bonus pick Thatpick could be anybody on the Dallas Cowboys or PittsburghSteelers draft list.

The traditional NFL halftime entertainment could comeafter the sixth round, the halfway point This inaugural showcould feature George Halas and Lamar Hunt putting on apuppet show, and a repeat performance, by request, of theGiants' front four zinging "I'll be home for Christmas."

Woody Hayes might be invited to read selections fromRupert Brooke's poetry or referee a verbal duel between theMaras, Wellington and nephew Tim. The show could finish witha fly-by of the Philadelphia Eagles, the Atlanta Falcons, theSeattle Seahawks and the St. Louis Cardinals.

The second half of the show, which has to be a telethon,might feature free agents trying to sell themselves to thehighest bidder Members of the OPEC nations could act asauctioneers.

Double JeopardyIn the second half, any team which answers three questions

in succession will be placed In "Double Jeopardy." That meansthat It gets to swap two previous draft picks for any otherprevious draft picks.

Also, during this period of the telethon, fans will be allowedto phone in pledges to their teams for the signing of free agents.The Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders will man the telephones.

By the time the show Is over, and the draft completed, theNFL office would probably be going crazy trying to figure outwho belongs to what team. That should keep them busy until thetraining camps open. After all, they did manage to keep track ofall the draft picks George Allen traded off while at Washington

The Irony of the whole thing is that it probably wouldn'tmake any difference at all to the league.

Those teams which usually draft well would probably stillwind up with the best players. After all, they are the smartestanyway.

Choice of Perkins to postshows switch in Mara tactic

EAST RUTHERFORD (AP) - The knock on WellingtonMara has always been that the Giants owner would never beable to induce a capable man to be his general manager becausehe refuses to delegate full authority

But Mara has apparently changed.Five last-place finishes in the past six years and the Giants

conspicuous abscence from the playoffs the last 15. has con-vinced Mara that he must hire someone more than just afigurehead to run the team.

Andy Robustelli, a former Giants star, was the team'sdirector of operations the last five years. But he was "family,"and even Wellington's nephew and co-owner Tim felt that hisunde still ran the show.

The naming of Ray Perkins Thursday to take over as theGiants' fifth head coach in the last decade is significant proofthat the tide is turning in the House of Mara.

Yraag's ChoicePerkins was the choice of new general manager George

Young, who himself was hired only eight days before Perkins.

CHOOSEFROMMOST MODELS

A DAYPLUS 9tA MILE

HYER FORDno ftrtwtbwy few. (Cor. Sycamort) 7 4 1 - 6 0 0 0

The Maras had never considered Perkins before they hiredYoung. Dan Reeves of the Dallas Cowboys was their man.

Perkins was Young's man and the desire to hire him wasYoung's.

This indicates that Wellington Mara has conceded the nextfive years to George Young to let him turn the team around.

"It's a manifestation of that," Wellington conceded.The Giants family feud went public three weeks ago when

the Maras were unable to agree on Robustelli's successor.Young was a compromise choice who turned out to haveimpeccable credentials. But the pain of the public embarrass-ment lingers in Wellington Mara.

"We're in a very visible business where everything isnoticed. We live in a fishbowl, that's the problem with workingin a glamorous profession," he said. "Up to five years ago, I ranthe franchise. Hopefully, George will run it (or the next 10-20years. My happiness is not because this whole thing is over, butbecause we can start to work."

Young, the former director of pro scouting with the MiamiDolphins, doesn't see the hiring of Perkins as a victory In anearly power struggle with the Maras to show who's boss.

"My intention is not to take very much credit, there are a lotof people involved. I'd rather be in the background," Youngsaid. "We hired the best man available for the New York Giantsat this time.

N» E g t Prtblem ."I don't have to assert myself, that's not my bag. I don't

have any ego problems. My education gives me enough identity.I don't have an identity problem," he added,

Wellington Mara is willing to let Young and Perkins takecontrol for now and see what happens.

"The record of both of them as tremendous workers showsthey'll do what they have to," he said. "But now their heads areon the line."

GOLF DAY PLANNERS —The Red Bank MemorialDay Golf Tournament, slated for Hominy Hills InColts Neck, Is scheduled to take place on May 31.Proceeds will be presented to the Red Bank FirstAid Squad. Left to right, Robert Kllzen, Fair Haven,

treasurer; Robert Marks, Red Bonk, chairman;Joseph Hobko, Shrewsbury, secretary, and Theo-dore Lake, Shrewsbury, co-chairman, make theplans.

Who's tops in net arena?II who's at the top means a

lot to you, tennis in 1078 waspuzzling, or maybe even frus-trating. It's shaping up thatway in 1)71, too. And not justbecause Martina and Chrisand Jimmy and Bjorn keepturning the tables on each oth-er.

As befits a sport in whichthere is no central authorityand no decisive playoff, who'sNo. 1 is just anybody's guess

At least half a dozen en-titles and dozens more individ-uals tum out their own rank-ings, each based on widelyvarying criteria.

Fmr men and women,' lastyear was sharply divided intotwo almost equal parts .Martina Navatilova was prac-tically untouchable throughWimbledon, where she beatChris Evert. Evert, back ingear after a long winter off,took back her scepter aftermidyear, taking the U.S. Opena fourth consecutive time andbeating Navratilova threetimes In the fall, including theColgate Series championship.

The year 1978 head to head:Evert 3-2.

Evert finished the year ontop of the U.S. Tennis Associa-tion computer list and the Ten-nis and World Tennis maga-zines selections. Navratilova,however, was first on theWomen's Tennis Associationcomputer readout, the rank-Ings that In part determinetournament seed ings

In the first nail of 1178,Bjorn Borg captured theFrench Open (from GuillermoVilas) and his third con-secutive Wimbledon crown(over Connors) and appearedto be on a nonstop flight to theGrand Slam

Connors hadn't done toobadly himself early in the year— except against Borg. Con-nors looked anemic in his lossat Wimbledon. But he waspossessed by U.S. Open time,and it was Borg who lookedsick in the final. They split twomore four-man events in fall.

In 1178 head to head com-petition, it was Borg 3-2

But at year's end, Connorswas ranked No. 1 on the As-sociation of Tennis ^Pro-fessionals computer, by theU.S. Tennis Association com-puter, on the Grand Prixpoints list and was the 1978favorite of Tennis Magazine.

Borg got World Tennis' voteand the Player of the Year

A WARNING RHYMENEW YORK ( A P ) - T h e r e is

an ancient piece of race-trackdoggerel which offers advice toanyone about to buy a horse. Itgoes like this:

"One white foot,ride him for your life.Two white feet,give him to your wife.Three white feet,send him far away.Four white feet,keep him not a day."

award from the ATP memoer-ship — his fellow players

The magazines use panelsof editors and writers to selecttheir top 10. Tennis' five panelists each Vote according totheir individual standardsWorld Tennis1 three editors gettogether, examine statistpesand weigh in circumstancessurrounding wins and losses.Both make their lists only atthe end of a year.

The ranking most oftenused — the one you're most aptto see applied to a player innewspaper stories — is theATP computer designation forthe men. Connors has been atthe top of that list every weekbut one since April 1974. Theonly time he lost his footholdwas in 1977, when Borg edgedahead by a few points alterwinning a tournament in Bos-ton. Connors has kept the lidon the rankings through Borg's

three Wimbledon wins ,through Guillermo Vilas' in-credible 1977 victory string,through his own occasionalslumps

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Toland readies volume on World War I, . • • » l » l » MZENCWAJGJohn Totond, the rw

characters in the book," he

w !SSr t«Tp H*hV» Wh° PU><!d impw - American, English, Russian!, French

" A * I think these battle acenei are the best I've everwnxinL

Tdand has had a lot of practice writing about war Hisspectalty i> war non-fiction He won hi. PuliUer ,„ m for "The

£ 2 ZLZZZTot WorW War"wblch «*»**«Japan Other books of his are "The Last Hundred Days " TheDUtuger Dayl," and "Battle: Ihe Story of the Bulge "

Host recently he won acclaim for "Adolf Hitler " a hnni. wh«TJtad «U. "prohahly the Z T ' ^

A r r t 0 ^ 1 D o c u m e n U r y »' His Life," follow-1 * ? ' i B < l W i l ' commercial success

« »«u«l, and i t s been picked up for paperback byBfJUnttne, tte same company that did the biography, for a verygood price It's also been picked up in England already."

air. Toland has given two lectures at the National Archivesin Washington, D C , on the Hitler book, most recently lastNovember to a standing-room-only audience. He also spokeabout it on the Arlene Francis Show in January

"But no more," he said "They can read my books "Of the National Archives talk he said, "It was a riot, it sold

out weeks before, but it's the last time I'll ever talk about Hitler.I gave them all I had."

That war, for Toland, is over now. He's working on anotherwar, an earlier one.

"I'm Just finishing the second draft of the World War Ibook," he laid. "That will be published sometimes next year, byDoubieday.

"I got great cooperation with the book," he said en-thusiastically "1 found documents and diaries In London thathad never been used

"The chief of the General Staff, a man named Gen Wilson,a peppery Irishman, had a friend of his do the diary after hedied, but he left out all the hot stuff

"Of course, If everyone were alive there would be lawsuits.So," said Toland, "1 got the permission of the family and used it— Foche, Clemenceau, I got marvelous stuff on them. "I alsogot all the family papers, including the personal letters, of LordHaig, son of Field Marshall Halg," Toland said "I had to go upto Scotland to get it.

"And then 1 found Paul Maze, a Frenchman, who fought inthe war. He had gone to an English public school and wanted tofight with the English He is now one of the greatest painters inthe world.

"He was later a good friend of Churchill, taught him how topaint He's now 91 and one of the most Interesting charactersI've ever met. One of the most interesting running characters inany of my books."

Toland Is easy to encourage when it comes to talking abouthis work. After years of history, he still seems to love the men,both dead and living, and the events they helped shape, as muchas ever.

He spent a lot of time in the Imperial War Museum, wherehe made the contacts which led him to the families of diarists heused in the World War I book. He spent many months in 1171 andM77 going over the battlefields of France.

"I have marvelous stories on Germans and inside stories ofthe surrenders — how the Kaiser was reacting," said Toland"It's such a relief after World War II and Hitler. Even theGermans in this one are pleasant to write about," said thewriter, who was taken to task more than once, in print, for

The Arts

PULITZER WINNER — John Toland writespriie-wlnning history books with some regu-larity. He works on a manual typewriter In astudy, shown above, which Is strewn with moun-tains of neatly stacked books, all of which getcarted off to the attic to make way lor the nextbook's worth of research. He Is now researchinga book on Pearl Harbor.

INTERESTING CHARACTER - Toland, shownto the right outside his home, travels around thecountry giving lectures, more like Informaltalks, to audiences Interested In war non-fiction,his specialty. His talk at the Notional Archives inWashington, D.C., last November "was a riot,"and sold out well In advance. He appeared on theArlene Francis Show In January and now vows,"no more — they can read my books."

RESEARCHER - John Toland does all kinds otresearch for his historical reportage. Here he ex-amines a piece of barbed wire from a World War Ibattlefield in France. He crawled through the

having portrayed Hitler as a human being "like the rest of us,"as he said at one of his talks to a National Archives audience

But World War I is far from being Toland's last war."I've been working on and off over the past year on a new

book on Pearl Harbor," he said, shifting into high gear at thethought of a book still in the early stages of research

"The working title is 'Aftermath,' what happened afterPearl Harbor

"There were a number of investigations after it, and withthe new material that's available it's quite obvious that this wasa cover-up for what happened."

Typically, Toland has a new angle on the story"There were a number of Navy men who had retired who

came to me and asked me to write the book," he said. "They arenow willing to talk, because now it's safe They're retired andpeople who are in Navy Intelligence feel that they are no longerobligated — now It's no longer a case of national security

"Like all my other books, I start with no preconceptions,and whatever I'll find out I'll put in the book." he said

"All I can say is, it'll be the most explosive book I've everwritten!"

mvtpONpaMartajitrenches and over and under the wire to see forhimself what It was like. Doubieday will publish hisbook on the subject sometime next year. He's al-ready thinking about the book after that.

Toland has been working in this country, at the NationalArchives and through personal contacts

"In the last year, much new material has been released," hesaid "It's been sent over to the National Archives and I've beenstudying it, and there's some marvelous stuff

"I've never done this before — but material has come tome," he said. "I didn't come to the book, the book came tn meAnd people heard word of mouth that I've been doing this, and Iget these long distance calls from people who tell me pMfcastounding things, and now they're willing in talk

"There's some marvelous stuff over in Hawaii!" TheInlands are going to visit Hawaii in April John Toland's wife;Toshiko, and their daughter. Tamiko, will stay a month, and hewill continue there until June, researching on site the story ofPearl Harbor

With them at their Danbury, Conn,, residence this winter isMrs Helen Toland. 223 Maple Ave , Red Bank. Mr Tolanri'smother, who broke her leg on Thanksgiving

"She'd like her friends to know she's in very good spirits."said Mr Toland "But she's mad'"

OEBUNKER — John Toland, out-doors with his dog, loves to get thepersonal angle on his historical char-acters, which usually means goingthrough the family papers and talkingto chauffeurs and secretaries of thegreat and near-great. He's begun re-searching a book on Pearl Harbor andhis thesis is that "It's quite obviousthis was a cover-up," and that the in-vestigations which came out after theevent didn't tell all. He plans to dothat.

Stallones expect chip off the old fRock'By JACK O'BRIAN

NEW YORK - The Syl-vester StaBtaei expect a littleStallone II before "Rocky II"preems (late May) Mikam-a u i AU's "Freedom Road"TV flick is the costliest video-film ever - $7,000,000. Theold Loa Wallers' Latin Quarternightclub on Bdwy becomes anew second-floor legit theaterFeb 20, owned by Gene Kelly.Alan Jay Lerner, "Hair" In-flicter Michael Butler andOlivier Coquelin, first-everN Y . dlscotek promoter( "Arthur," co-owned by Sybil.Richard Burton's first wife).First attraction-is "Coquelco.'II live mummers in a multi-media opus The premisessank to the Times Square

Set painting exhibitin township library

MIDDLETOWN - Six decades of painting by local artistS Travers Neidlinger will beon display in the township li-brary, 55 New MonmouthRoad, during March.

To be presented are repre-sentative paintings by MrNeidlinger from the 1920s and1930s, which are watercolors ofhis travels in the Jerseymeadows and in Europe andIncluding the award winning"Russian Easter."

The 1940s will be repre-sented by a single oil from theartist's "Folio of DriftwoodGatherers," and his "Folio ofHounds and Hunts "

Works from Mr Neidl-inger's studios in Haiti.Barbados and Paris are to bedisplayed, representing hiswork from the 1950s. His 1960stravels will be shown in aRome collage and another ofPope John XXIII and the Con-sistory of Cardinals. The ar-tists will round out his displayfor the 1970s with a currentcommission painting of an Isn*lt landscape

dregs as a porn-palace andfailed; its new name will be"2! Steps," the number ofsteps from lobby to theaterlevel; seals 450 compared toLatin Quarter's 650

Time, Inc will launch a sci-ence mag. Esquire mag goesback to monthly editionsTV's commercial pitchman ElExlgeite (Carlos Montalban)is a true celebrity: received aletter promptly with no nameon't — Just his picture on aSavarin coffee label.. RlckardHarris easily won the playfullyWacky Award at Ihe GoldenGlobes prize ceremonies

'Member way back whenlobby drinks cost a dime0 Atthe Palace where "The GrandTour" defeated its InstantClosing to cadge three more

VOICE OF BROADWAYBdwy weeks before assaultingChicago, a posh rush is on for

champagne — at five bucks arap — bottles smaller than a"split" How's this comedyteam strike you' Willie Maysand Leo Darocher starringAug. 4 at the Concord - justbefore Willie's inducted intothe Baseball Hall of Fame twodays later at Cooperstown.

P»pe Joai Pail's book ofpoems (from a young period"By Karol Wojtyla ") will ar-rive next month from RandomHouse: "Easter Vigil and Oth-er Poems" Last time BraceD e n enjoyed a Bdwy run it

was as a taxi driver He starsin Bdwy 's i m m i n e n t"Strangers" playing SinclairLewis United Artists wantsSeal Conncry as an actor thisearnestly — he can produceand direct any of three flicksUA's offered if he'll star, allsince the smash "Great TrainRobbery"... One, and possiblytwo CBS brasahats await thecorporate snowball

Baltimore's Mayor BUIDoiaM Schaefer noted 'EubieBlake Week" as Eubie's 96thBirthday gift and heaped allavailable proud municipal hon-ors of his hometown honoree —

whose career began as the pi-anist in a local House ofFascination. Eubie swears "Inever went upstafrs!"

The heart-wrenching dra-matic underpinning of "ChorusLine" is a brilliant dissectionof (ears and hopes of theshow's ballet-dancing charac-ters resisting a future in otherlines of work The show's beenaround a couple of seasons andalready -It's spinning off thepost-prancing dreams of itscast: CUve (krque of the ori-ginal "Chorus Line" hasreached the next dream: he'sDinah Shore's new interior

decorator Shuffle off to thebank

"Whoopee," 50-year-old Ed-die Cantor frippery revived atthe ANTA Theater is acheerful, earful, earnest littlefun-show loaded to the pro-scenium with a bright cast ofyoungsters camping it up con-siderably short of Bdwy pro-fessionalism or slick modernmaterial. Its considerableshortcomings aren't the sort acritic should meataxe, the

songs are dated dandiesheaped in a huge helping ofextra hits not in the 1928 onginal

Waller Donaldson wrote allthe music. Gas Kabo all thelyrics except for "You," whichHarold Adamson concoctedThe songs aren't preciselyadroitly stuck into the plainlyinexpensive production whichbegan its rise from theatricall imbo at the geml ikeUoodspeed Opera House in

Connecticut, the very ineptdeployment nf the interpolatedditties gives the proceedingsextra campy silliness it doesn'tneed. William AnthonyMcGalre wrote the librettowhich has been streamlinedsome but not overly intelligently, and in the Kckh. Cantorrole romps the cheerily likableCharles Repole, whose simi-larity to Cantor has ban remarked in t ick, vehicle herides toward stardom

GRAND OPENING

COMINGATTRACTIONS

ART AUCTIONSUNDAY, Feb. 25 • 2:00 P.M.preview 1:00 p.m. with win* t choose

2.50 par coupls

NOSTALGIA NIGHTFRIDAY, MARCH 2CLASSES OF 85 THRU 89

THE M O D S WILL PLAY FOR YOUROANCINQ PLEASURE 9 P.M. - 1 P.M.17.50 PER COUPLE • $4.00 SINGLE

Brhg four own win* • AMonvMono

ST PATRICK'S GALA CABARETSAT. MARCH I T

CORNED K E F 4 CABBAGE - 7:10DANCING W/ THE KEN WAITERS ORCHESTRA 1:00 TILL 1:00

ttS.M per ooupfc - RoMnaHono by Moreti 12ENTERTAINMENT • DICK SALLEE - EMCEE AND MAGIC ACTS

LEN • PEOOY SAXTON - IRISH SONOSNELLIE PETERS - IRISH JIQ t WISH ROCKETTE8

102 Av». of 2 HIvorsRumaon

741-9323

_ tor line dining, your hostsJoseph A Anthony Corbislero|L Invtt* you to try their

EARLY^rTBIRD

SPECIALS Jevery Sunday from 2-5 p.m.

Includt*>M».MMt«rtM...

TWt « M "s ctela M tutrt.iVtMMmMw

If 'OH Or»H >uwmt%.

All Dlnncra torvod with Paata or Potato

6.50

X.ALL FOR ONLY

como I try our ItvlihWCONESDA. Y NIGHT BUFFET

842-9857eon Ave. Sea Bright,!

Opening March 5th11:30 to 2:30

Imagine' Everything you desire onBagel A Bagel with only 60calories An Overs^ed Bagel atThat'

You can find this eighth wonder olworld in the Winner Circle LoungeAt The Hilton Inn

To name a lew Bagel Wonders, wewill have Bagel and cream cheeselox. tuna salad, egg salad, shrimpsalad, turkey breast, ham. koshersalami, liverwursl and Spanishonion, hot corned beet, hoipastrami, melted cheese and ourown Ruben Bagel

Stop by our stable today lor a realbagel least

AT THE

HILTON IKK

Exit 105rden State Parkway

nd Hope Road,Falls. N.J

(201) 544-9300

ct SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1979

entertainment news for little people

The Puthcart Playen are coming to We$l Long Branch

CHILDRENPnkeart Playen, a professional reper

lory theater company lor young audiences,will give "Stretch..Grow.Here We Go" atthe Frank Antonides School, Locust Aveand Parker Road, West Long Branch, onWednesday.

"Stretch" is a collection of sketches fullof music and laughter. It's about physical,emotional and intellectual growth and ithelps children feel good about themselves

"Alakaiam Ike Great," a program spon-sored by the Monmouth County Arts Counciland the Monmouth County Parks System,will be presented today at I p m. and againat 2 pm as part of the Sunday SamplerSeries at Monmouth Arts Center, Red BankParents are welcome, too.

MI/SICJeat-Plerre Rampal considered by

many to be the world's foremost flutist, willgive a concert in Red Bank on Wednesdaynight, the final event in the Monmouth Coun-ty Arts Council's Spectmm Series He willappear with Robert Veyron-Lacroix in aconcert at the Monmouth Arts Center

"The Rtbber Bridegroom," a musicalcomedy, will open at 8:30 pm Thursday theGuggenheim Theatre of Monmouth College,

WHAT'SGOING ONMonmouth College Players and stuili-nisand senior citizens will receive discounts

LECTURESErlta J n g . star of poelry and fiction.

will appear at 8 p m Wednesday as an eventin the Brookdale Community College MetMthe Writers series She will appear in thePerforming Arts Center on the l.imroftcampus and read her work, discussing itinformally as she goes along Senior citlfMUand students will be admitted for half price

Mothrr Daughter Nlgkl at the Monmouth County Library. Freehold, is set for 7to I pm Thursday, when Dr StephenTarnoff, gynecologist, will run a workshopwith Mel Cohen, family counselor, and MrsRuth Duttweiler, parent effectiveness instructor Please register in advance

ARTJenifer Berrtnger will exhibit her art at

the Monmouth County Library's Eaitem

Branch. Shrewsbury, starting Friday, dur-ing library hours There will be a receptionon Saturday at the library, from 2 to 4 p.m.,to which the public is invited free of charge

A t.rwip Prhumaklig Sktw is ntiw onview at Thompson Park Visitor Center,Newman Springs Road. Lincroft, daily from10 am to 4 p m , with a special slide presen-tation daUy at 3 30 p.m Six New Jerseyartists, including Anthony J Migliaccio ofWest Long Branch, show their work

Lithographs and serlgrapks by Harm,brace. Dowden. Ward. Saito, Harper andCooper are mm on view at the Matawan ArtGallery, Houte 34 and Broad St, Malawan,daily from 10 a m to 5:30 pm and SaturdayIroni 10 a m to 4 p.m. (closed Monday ) Thesubjects all from Frame House Gallery,include wildlife, nostalgia, western, floral.iiiii'iiiiil. nautical and abstract works

THEATERTie Proposition will be the next per-

formance in The World of Performance.presented by Brookdale Community Col-lege, Newman Springs Road, Lincroft Theperformance will take place Friday at 8p m in the Performing Arts Center SeniorclttBnni and Brookdale students will re-ceive discounts

MOVIE TIMETABLE CINEMA 34Route 34, Aberdeen

563 3600

MON MOUTH COUNTYABERDEEN TOWNSHIP

CINEMA M -Lord of the Rings (PG) 2.

7:30,9:45STRATHMORE CINEMA I -

Califurma Suite (PG) 2.7,15,9:15STRATHMORE CINEMA II

Hugo the Hippo (G) 2, KingpftheGypsies(R)7,a

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDSATLANTIC CINEMA -

California Suite (PG) 7:15,1:15

EATONTOWNCOMMUNITY I -

Lord of the Rings (PG) | ,7 15,9:40COMMUNITY II -

The Brinks Job (PG) 2,7:20, 9:25

FREEHOLDMALL I -

Invasion of the BodySnatchers(PG)2.7 15.9:30MALL I I -

Superman (PG) 2,7 30,9 30MALL III -

The Brinks Job (PG) 2,7:20,9:35

HAZLETPLAZA-

Invasion of the BodySnatchers (PG) 2,7 20,9:30CINEMA I -

The Warriors (R) 2, 4, 6, 8,10CINEMA II -

Ice Castles (PG) 1:30, 3 30,5:30,7:30.9 30

KEANSBURGCOLONIAL-

Magic(R)2,7:30,9 20KEYPORT

STRAND -My Wife the Hooker (X) 12.

2:10,4:20,6:35,9:20; China Cat(X)l 05.3.15,5 30.8 10, 10 30

LONG BRANCHLONG BRANCH MOVIES I -

Invasion of the BodySnatchers (PC) 2.7 25,9.35LONG BRANCH MOVIES II

Lord of the Rings (PG) 2,7:15,9:40

MIDDLETOWNMIDDLETOWN I -

Superman (PG) 1:30, 4:15,7,9:45MIDDLETOWN II -

The Brinks Job (PGJ 2,3:55,5:50,7:45,9:40MIDDLETOWN III -

Midnight Express (R) 1:30.3:45. 6, H 15. 10:30

Area battlegroundto be discussed

MATAWAN - Mrs. Eliz-abeth Stives of the MonmoiithMuseum will present a slideshow and presentation on therevolutionary battleground inFreehold during the regularmeeting of the Matawan His-torical Society on Monday

The 8 p.m. meeting at theFirst Presbyterian Church willbe open to the public

ANNUAL

BOCKBIERFESTSAT., MARCH 17 t 24 • SUNDAY MARCH 18 ft 25

Special Entertainment with

THE SCHUBBPLATTERS(SCHIAEFFER FAMILY) (BELL RINGERS)

GERMAN BAND AT

Bachert's HofbrauhausFor Reservations 291-0224

S2 ffr p«rson depotit on part lit of $ or mon

SCENIC DRIVE ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

OCEAN TOWNSHIPSEAVIEW SQUARE CINEMAI -

Superman (PG) 2. 4:30.7:30, 10SEAVIEW SQUARE CINEMAI I -

Ice Castles (PG) 1:45,3:45,5:45-, 7:45,9.45MIDDLEBROOK 1 -

Oliver's Story (PG) 2,7:30.9:15MIDDLEBROOK II -

Animal House (R) 2, 7:15,9:25

RED BANKMONMOUTH ARTS ( INI IK

Death on the Nile (PG) 8RED BANK MOVIES I -

Lord of the Rings (PG) 2,7:15,9:40

Chorus readiesThe Mikado'

RED BANK - Tickets for"The Mikado," Gilbert and

Sullivan's comic operettawhich will be presented, April20 and 21 by the MonmouthCivic Chorus, are now on saleat the Monmouth Arts Centerbox office. -

William Gordon Pagdin.founder of the chorus, will beguest conductor for this 30thanniversary season AllanWallace is the director andWilliam It Shoppell Jr is music director

The full orchestra prod-uction uses a chorus of 65voices, professional scenery,costumes and local soloistsNew members of the chumswho will be performing In"The Mikado" include JeanSumrall, Neptune: Mary AnnK i n s e l l a , A v o n . SusanMaunsell, Colts Neck: MichaelStanton, Little Silver: ShanFriedmen, Rumson; PatriciaIZZO, Middletown LaurieMcOrmand Eatontown; AnnE Clark, Ocean; Mavis Trottand Charles Trott. AsburyPark, and Anne McCall, LongBranch

Bruce Wycherly, 93B WhiteSt., Eatontown. is ticket chair-man and tickets may bepurchased from him an as wellas through the box office

SUNDAYDINNER SPECIAL

$695Soup or Juice

Assorted Hot Rolls and ButterYour Choice of Entree:

Baked Virginia Ham with Cider Sauce

Yankee Pot Roast with Potato Pancakes

Broiled Half Spring Chicken with Glazod Peaches or

Broiltd Filtt of floundor with lemon Buttor

Potato and Vegetable Served Family StyleDessert and Beverage

Molly Pitcher InnROUTE 35, RED BANK. N.J. 07701

TELEPHONE: (201) 747-2500

RED BANK MOVIES I I -The Brinks Job (PG) 2.

7:30,1:30

SHREWSBURYCINEMA 1 -

Invasion of the BodySnatihers (PG) 145, 3:45,5 45,7:15,9:45CINEMA I I -

Warriors (R) ID RE-QUIRED 2, 3:50. 5 40, 7:30.9 20CINEMA 111 -

Ice Castles (PG) 2. 4, 6, 8.

MIDDLESEX COUNTYEDISON

MENU) PARK CINEMA I -The Great Train Robbery

(1'<;)I:45.3:45.5 45.7 45.9-45MENLOPARK CINEMA l i -

k e Castles (PG) 1:45. 4.

Corbton Clnerna Corp

Colonial

"MAGIC"Anthony Hoptilni

AnnMwgntALL SEATS 1. SO

MATINEE SUN. 2 PM

J>n* FondaRichard PryorBlllCoaby7:15 and 9:15

CAUKKisurra

STRATHMORETWIN -ssrssr1

so

(AIJHRMA1

SI 1TE

Kiddie ShowTODAY

HUGO the HIPPO

Sorry No Passes Accepted

SUPERMAN

* 1:45-3:45-5:45-7:45-1:45p u . .

«* the

ROBBYSON

* 2*0-3:30-8:40-7:30-1:20

nw k<m», .1 Tkt Wtkl

"THEWARRIORS" D S

"THE LORD OFTHE RINGS"Sun. 2 p.m. — Mot7:30 I 9:45 p.m.

FEB. U 8 P.MJEAN-PIERRE RAMPAL

NO SUNDAY 5 MPIER MARCH 4 |

" " "'"TV of" Otrl who refuted l « J|

to forgrt *hr wo* inter a champion.

11OBBY BENSO

li i l l .» in in in

SOMERSET COUNTYSOMERSET

RUTGERS PLAZA CINEMA I

Ice Castles (PG) 1:45, 3 45,5:45.7:45,9:45RUTGERS PLAZA CINEMAI I -

An Unmarried Woman (II)2:15,4:45,7:30,9:45

MPAA RATINGSG — General audiencesPG - All ages (Parental

guidance suggested).R — Restricted (Persons

under 17 not admitted unlessaccompanied by parent•dull guardian).

X - M a l t s Mly

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

ONEMA M l 0141 ' 1 . 5 0

tttRocky'on ice."OtoTft Anthony, Toronto Sun

WA dazzling delight."\eu> York Post

"Aims straight at theheart-and delivers."

^Newsweek

m i MW\ I* ll Rl - n ~ » < IOHN M Ml SI<rX)SAM> WHH MIM II I ( ASHES

ROBBY COLLEEN TOMBENSON DEWHURST SKERRJTT

JENNIFER DAVID LYNNIHOLLYWARREN HUFFMAN JOHNSON^iww.il, IX AAI PUK-il r~..m>.K>ll\ kl Ml M

C . I W « « K S KOW.IKUIMl.OFFXINALDWRM ^(.AlCl I HAIM

BAIM M M * MARVIN HAMUSCH«, BILL BLTUR..-. i.«»,.r»*mKlMI1MHIIIK

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AT COLUMWA PREMIERE THEATRES

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3ACADEMY AWARDNOMINATIONS

M Ih 'KM* si IT1

ALAN ALDA MK11AELCAINE BILL COSBYJANI FONDA WALTER MATTHAU ELAINE MAY

RICHARD I'RYOR MAWJIESMITH.•..-r--'- '•! I'

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Gas tank vs. think tank

PRESSURE MOUNTS — Fear of a repeat of this scene, a service station"guage" during the 1974 gos shortage, could be shaping U.S. Mideastpolicy.

ByNEDTEMKOt ir islUi SclMf e MMlur

BEIRUT, LEBANON - The gas tank, not thethink tank, could begin to shape Washington'sMiddle East policy

If Iran's oil shutdown continues, with the Arabworld reaping passible diplomatic dividends,energy-guzzling America would have to look in-creasingly to Saudi Arabia and other Arab oilproducers to power its cars and industry — andheat its winter homes

This is clearly the hope of many Arab officialsand diplomats, who stress that the United States'southern neighbor, Mexico, appears unwilling tooffset any eventual fuel crunch

The Saudis are ready to help, diplomats closeto their moderate regime believe, but at a policyprice: credible American pressure on Israel InMiddle East peace efforts

There are as many readings on the severity ofthe West's current energy shortfall as there aregovernment officials, economic experts and oil-industry executives But a few things are clear

— The halt of Iranian oil exports since lateDecember 1978 is draining some 5 5 million bar-rels a day from the international oil market —around 10 percent of normal consumption in thenon-communist, industrialized world By drawingon stockpiles and increased output by other coun-tries, the consumer states have trimmed the lossto between 2 and 4 percent.

— Although Iran's new leadership intends toresume production — at a lower level, probablynot exceeding 2 5 million to > million barrels perday — it mud first restore order

— Even if local oil workers return to the job,Iran's post-shah rulers may have to repair dam-aged or disused equipment and lure back foreignexperts who have fled before resuming substantialcrude production

While countries like Japan are relativelyharder hit, the United Stales is losing nearly amillion barrels of oil a day—some 5 percent ofnormal consumption—in Iranian imports Othercountries, principally Saudi Arabia, are makingup nearly half of the U S oil deficit

The situation, though not yet critical, is seri-ous, most US analysts agree If the Iranian crisiscontinues into early summer, when oil stockpilesmust be replenished for the colder weather ahead,it could get worse

A long-term shutdown, removing 7 percent ormore from consumer states' normal yearly crudesupplies, would also activate an InternationalEnergy Agency accord signed by Washington and18 other major industrial states Under the agree-ment, the members would have to impose con-servation measures and share the available oilU.S. Energy Secretary James Schleslnger said theUnitsd States might have to share from500.000-800,000 barrels daily

There is one obvious, if difficult, solution.

industry experts and Western economic analyst*explain a serious long-term conservation drivePresident Carter has met strong congressionalopposition in this area, although (he Iranian crisismay nuke conservation measures easier to sell

Still, any extended Iranian oil shutdown cannothelp emphasizing Amencan dependence on coun-tries most able to take up the slack - particularlythe Arabs, and specifically Saudi Arabia, theworld's largest oil exporter

Saudi Arabia promptly upped normal prod-uction by several million barrels in late It78 andearly this year — to as much as 114 millionbarrels per day — to offset the Iranian cutoff TheSaudis say they will continue to produce as muchas 1.5 million barrels daily for the next fewmonths, although selling-the portion they wouldnot normally be producing at higher prices

But should the crisis continue, senior Arabdiplomats believe, Saudi Arabia will press foranother type of price hike, this one diplomatic.

"The Saudis feel the (September 1(78) CampDavid agreements were unfair, In that theystopped short of Arab calls for genuine Israeliwithdrawal from occupied Arab land, includingold Jerusalem and real self-determination for thePalestinians." said an Arab diplomat in Beirut

"If the Saudis are going to help Washingtonmake up for lost oil, they want indications Presi-dent Carter is ready to help win these demands.'the diplomat said

The Sunday RegisterSHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY FEBRUARY 25. 1979 Business D

LOUIS RUKEYSER 2

STOCKS 3

REAL ESTA1E 4

Silvert's Furniture grows with the areaBy (ORSON KLLIS

FREEHOLD - Thirty-lour years ago. Harry Silvert wasselling sofas and bi'ds to the Freehold farmers who wouldwander into his store off the street

But now his fleet of trucks is delivering to places as faraway as New York City and Princeton, and Mr Silvert says lhalhis business is still growing

AS western Monmouth County expands. Bilvtrt'l FurnitureStore at 45 South SI has crown threefold to accommodate theincreased demand for furniture

The store appears small from the street, but a quick si milthrough the building reveall an unennding series of separatedisplay rooms thai dcmind men at/lention than Mr Silverthimself can give

As a result. Mr Silvert, in keeping with a family tradition,has welcomed his son tilt-mi, into the company, just as hit ownfather did some three decades ago

"My son has been with me for seven years," Mr lilveflsaid

"He's being groomed In lake over when I leave." he added(iienn Silvert. should he continue the family business, will be

the third representative of his family lo run the stoicIn 1939. a fledgling young businessman named Isadore

Silvert. who was fighting the start of the Depression likeeveryone else, opened I small furniture store on South Slreel inthis small farming rommumty

In those days, no banks were financing loans, so Mr SilvertSr helped many town residents by selling bedroom sels alcheap prices giving them long-term loans for improved (mancial times

The store then was I quarter of its present size, and soldonly to the local farmers who would walk into the store

Mr Silvert recalled Friday nights years ago when thestreets were packed with shoppers who had come in for theirweekly shopping spree Deliveries would then be made to thefarmers who lived in the borough

"Freehold was Ihe hub of the west then, and remained thehub until the shopping centers came in," Mrs Silvert said

The business continued catering 10 local residents until Iheearly 1970s, when Mr Silver! had been in full charge [or over .'IIyears, and western Munmuuth County began lo expand with theemigration of people from (he c/ily

The influx of the shopping centers on Route 9 in Ihe earls1970s almost brought the borough business district to Us knees

Hul a resurgence ,>f t n f downtown business district in Ihepast two years has local mere hauls buzzing, and Mr Silver) hasenjoyed the rising popularity of the borough

Mr Silver! Mid Dial he had the opportunity to move nil

3L .>* \M

SILVERT S MARKS GOLDEN JUBILEE - HarrySilvert and his wife, Evelyn, sit on a couch in theirstore on South Street, Freehold. The familyfurniture business was founded 50 years ago by Mr.

store to Koule 9 lo catch all the traffic from New York City andNe» Brunswick

Hut he decided against the move because of his pride in hislarge volume storeroom selection for walk in customers Build-ing a new store would have forced him to reduce his inventorybecause rif Ihe increased costs of constructing a new building

Sllvert's father, Isadore. It originally servedborough farmers and has grown along with the ex-pansion of western Monmouth County.

So Mr. Silvert remains in the borough, with his full acre ofstore space, preparing himself to step aside (or the newgeneration

The "new generation" is bringing new ideas into the store, asituation which stimulates some good-natured teasing betweenfather and son

Glenn Silvert's interest lies more in the design and decorat-ing field, a connoisseur's term for organizing the store displaysinto complete sets, setting them up as they would appear in aroom.

Customers in the past have bought individual pieces, butGlenn Silvert is trying to sell complete "rooms" of furniture tocustomers, by setting up such sets in the store as they wouldappear in a house.

"I'm looking for people lo say that they want to do over theirliving room, not to just buy one sofa." he said

While Glenn Silvert's tastes are causing some Innovations atSilvert's, the new emphasis has also required expansion of thestore into several different places in the borough

An putlet store fox more low-cost furniture was openedseveral years ago on Main Street, and Mr Silvert and his sonare reluctantly discussing the possibility of opening some kindof store on some land they own on Route 9

New directions had been followed before Glenn Silvertbecame interested in design, including an expansion from theearly American style that the store had pushed for so long. '

A new department in teen furniture was started severalyears ago, and has been popular, according to Mrs. Silvert.

The changing tastes have been accompanied by changingvalues, according to Mr Silvert, who claims that people todayare much more Impatient when shopping (or furniture

"I look back to the day when we weren't in such a big rush "he said.

To cater to the "now generation" as he called them. Mr.Silvert has opened his store later at night, and on Saturdays.

He has also increased his truck delivery force, so that hecan almost guarantee delivery on the same day that a purchaseis made

The moves are partly a service to the increasing number otwomen who are working today, who don't have any time but theevenings to do their shopping, he said.

"The whole buying tempo has heightened in the 1970s," headded

"But we hive taken these steps so that we can satisfy thainstantaneous urge," he said.

Mr Silvert has become a prominent fixture in the Freeholdcommunity in his lime here.

He had been active in the Chamber of Commerce, and wasthe past president of the Downtown Merchants Association.

His Involvement in religious affairs includes his position aspast president of the Freehold Synogogue. and past president olB'nai B'rith.

His wile, Evelyn Silvert, is the secretary o( the FreeholdArea Hospital board of trustees, and has been involved incommunity affairs for many years.

'Real good guy' Schulman citedBy BOB BRAMLEV

M1DDLF.TOWN - Sunglasses and soap.candles and cosmetics, blood pressure kits andbikini panties, tote hags stamped with animalportraits, leather goods watches and china frogs —all these and Pharmaceuticals too are lo be lound atMiddlelown Pharmacy the medical departmentstore operated in Campbell's Junction by HermanSchulman, Chamber of Commerce Businessman ofthe Year hen'

"The basic thing here is thai instead of runninga conventional drug store we run a medical depart-ment store, if it s a health need of the community,we like lo think we can supply It," Mr Schulmansaid His words are borne out by a comprehensivestock of surgical supplies in one corner and aconsultation room where hearing aids are fitted inanother

The surgical supply and hearing aid end of (hebusiness are Mr Schulman's special interests Withthe pharmacy firmly in the hands of two assistantregistered pharmacists and the merchandise saleshandled by a seasoned staff, the proprietor wants todirect his personal attention to surgical and sick-room products and equipment and testing for andfitting hearing aids, ;i service he has been licensedto perform since 1974

"Personally I'm trying to change directiontoward becoming a hearing aid dispenser — to workinto the surgical and hearing aid end of the busi-ness," Mr Schulman explained

The change in direction may be difficult. Asteady stream of neighborhood customers seems todemand Mr Schulman s ready smile and gentlyhumorous manner

Bom half a century ago in Linden, HermanSchulman was the fourth son in a family of four sonsand a daughter Young Herman grew up during IheDepression and he didn't like what he saw around

him Working in a produce market as a youngster,tie had a friend with a job in a neighborhood drugstore

"The pharmacist there told me that all duringthe Depression he had a job Thai appealed to me.all during Ihe Depression this man worked. MrSchulman explained

Graduating from l.indem High School, youngHerman won scholarships and completed his training as a pharmacist — I five-year course at KutgersCollege of Pharmacy In Newark — in 1951

Ihe same year he married Rhoda Feinberg,went to work in a local pharmacy and moonlightedin a bakery to make money to set himself up inbusiness

"I was living in Hillside and working in Irv-mgtiin I worked nlghtl in a bakery and days in thedrug store — from 12 30 a m until 10 p m It wasrough." Mr Schulman recalled

By 1954 Ihe young pharmacist had saved up alittle money and acquired a neighbor who solddental equipment

"The neighbor had sel up a dentist in Mid-' dietown and said he was doing very well So my

wife apd I drove to Middletown and found old manCampo putting up stores scrota the street We lookone right away." the pharmacist said

Mr Schulman opened the Middletown Pharma-cy at 80 I.eonardville Uciacl. opposite the formerWasherman's store and prospered Ten years agohe moved the store lo its present location in IheCampbell's Junction shopping center, expandingthe business significantly

"It's been good here The town's been good tome and the pharmacy's been good to me." MrSchulman said

The Schulman family has benefited as well Adaughter. Uem Schulman. 25. is a medical studentat Yale A son, Bruce Schulman, is at medicalschool in the Philippines Robert Schulman, the

youngest son. is a chemical engineering student atRutgers in his junior year.

A man of humility. Mr Schulman is a littlesurprised at the attention resulting from his awardas Businessman of the Year

"Its gratifying to get a pat on the back." hesays with ashy smile

A man of compassion, Mr Schulman believes inputting back as much as he can into a communitywhich has been good to him This year, in coopera-tion with the dean of pharmacy at Rutgers, heestablished a (500 annual scholarship for a studentof Middletown Township High Schools or Mater DeiHigh School who desires to study pharmacy atRutgers The recipient of the scholarship will beselected each year by the guidance departments ofthe schools

"1 went through school on a scholarship Some-one was there when 1 needed one," Mr. Schulmanrecalled

Apart from his professional activities the phar-macist is charitable. "He has never failed to donatetoys and merchandise to Middletown's charitableorganizations, " said Richard V Dill, chairman ofthe Chamber of Commerce selection committeewhich named Mr Schulman Businessman of theYear

He is a member of the Rotary Club and thechamber He was a charter member of Uie Mid-dletown Kiwanis and Elks Clubs. In CongregationB'nai Israel of Rumson. he serves as a member ofthe endowment and building committees. And forseveral years he worked in this area for the Israelibond drive.

Police Chief Joseph M McCarthy recalled thathe started a career as a rookie cop the yearHerman Schulman came to Middletown.

"Herman Schulman — yeah, he's a real goodguy," he said

»——T »i>Wii p»— *r Cart rttlmBUSINESSMAN OF THE YEAR — Herman Schulman ot Llncroft, proprietorot Middletown Pharmacy In Campbell's Junction, Middletown, Is the Mid-dletown Area Chamber of Commerce Businessman of the Year. "The town'sbeen good to me and pharmacy's been good to me," the pharmacist said.

The Sunday Register SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY H, 1979

A balahced budget a great idea, but..:NK* YORK - Not since the British set their torches to

the town during the War of 1812 has Washington been soburned up as it is over the audacious attempt to force on it aconstitutional amendment requiring a balanced federalbudget

It would be tempting to conclude that anything that getsthe politicians this mad can't be all bad But the suspicion inthis corner is that, once we've all gotten our jollies fromwatching the spenders squirm, there will prove to have beenless here than met the eye

Not that the movement itself Isn't deadly serious since apioneering resolution was passed by Maryland's legislaturein 1975, the National Taxpayers Union claims that 22 of thenecessary 34 states have backed the plan for a constitutionalconvention to produce such an amendment There seems tobe some dispute over precisely who did what — the Senate'sDemocratic whip maintained this month that only 14 statepetitions "in good order" had reached Congress — bul thesponsors insist that they will be over the top by summer

This newborn legislative interest in fiscal responsibility— albeit on the part of somebody else — is naturallyheartening to those of us who have believed (or years that itwas well past time to drain the red ink from Washington And

LOUIS

RUKEYSER

it is encouraging to have such recent converts as CaliforniaGov. Jerry Brown whooping it up from a position thatappears, somewhat startlingly, to be a pace or two to theright of Ronald Reagan (That Proposition 13 was someeducator, all right ) Bul one wonders precisely what all thissound and fury will signify, once the political winds blow on.

Don't misunderstand me There is scant disposition hereto take seriously the overwrought warnings of Jimmy Carter

("extremely dangerous") and Edward Kennedy ("a dark,ominous development") against a method of amending theconstitution — originating in convention, rather than Con-gress - that has never previously been used It was. after allgood enough for James Madison - and one wonders precisely what kind of "populist" would so fear bringing this powercloser to the people. The reasons for skepticism are lessapocalyptic, and they are three:

(1) A constitutional amendment requiring a balancedfederal budget would be a great idea, but

If it could be passed, it wouldn't be needed

The explanation for what is about to be It deficits in 21)years is not that congressmen are evil, but that they thoughlthis was the way to get re-elected The prevailing view hasbeen that while voters will bellyache about rising prices, theywill actually vote on the basis of the spending programsdearest to their individual hearts Get It across to your localcongressman that if he doesn't vote "no" more often he'sgoing to be looking for another job. and you won't need aconstitutional amendment to convince him.

(2) A constitutional amendment requiring a balancedfederal budget would be a great idea, but

It really wouldn't workA proposed budget can appear to be in balance because of

faulty economic assumptions - or just plain phony bookkeeping - and then go to pieces as the year unfolds Even ifwe could clarify what constituted a national emergency,justifying unbalancing the budget, we would be left withunexpected shortfalls in bad times - as relief spendingincreased and tax receipts dwindled Who would we sue -and to what avail'

(3) A constitutional amendment requiring a balancedfederal budget would be a great idea, but

The authentic problem is the level of federal spending.As astute an observer as Milton Friedman has recognlred

this by proposing an alternative amendment to restrict thegrowth of spending to the rate of increase In the nationaleconomy Otherwise, unrepentant spendthrifts might re-verse the entire intent of the budget-balancing drive, bybalancing the budget at even-higher levels - with even-higher taxes That's one balancing act we could do without

So this belated awakening to the perils of profligacy isentirely welcome But the proposed method of dealing with itis likely lo fall disappointingly short of a truly balancedassault on the Scarlet Fetters of Washington

Daw F. Hikn of Humsonhas been appointed sales man-ager for Advertising Age mag-azine through the 25 mid-western states Mr llahn willbe baaed at the company head-quarters in Chicago, and waspreviously based at the (rainCommunications New York of-fice

Mr Hahn joined Crane Com-munications Advertising Agein 1976 after several years withKalmar Advert is ing InF.nglewood Cliffs and the 01-taway Division of Dow Jonesand Co., where he was assis-tant publisher of the Danbury-News Times in Connecticut

Richard F. Martel of Ocean-port has been promoted to vicepresident of marketing atllecon Corp,Tinton halls

Mr. Martel was previouslysales manager of the com-pany's Flextlme Division, andwill head ihr newly organizedmarketing operalion , utilizinga product manager concept

In addition to his sales andmarketing background. MrMartel has had extensive engi-neering and manufacturing ex-perience and is a graduate ofthe University of Massachu-setts

Cart (Irilk) OF Matawan hasbeen named head of the Busi-ness Terminal Siftwtrt Sys-

tems Department al Bell Tele-phone I ,;ihs in Holmdel

In his new position. MrCirillo will head stored pro-gram design and developmentfor new Bell System com-munications terminal offer-ings.

A native of Brooklyn. N Y .Mi Cirillo joined Bell Labs in1969 He is a graduate ofBrooklyn College and has re-ceived a master of sciencedegree in computer sciencefrom Cornell University

BUSINESS BRIEFSTwo executives of the

Galileo Electro-Optics Corp,with plants in Wanamassa ana*Sturbridge, Mass, have besnpromoted to new positions inthe company Ronald B. l.rmobie has been named direc-tor of industrial relation's liehas been with the companysince 1973 as personnel man

agerKim C. Carpenter has been

named senior advertising andpromotion administrator, andwill supervise the adminis-tration of all advertising andpromotion-related activitiesfor the company

The Wanamassa plant man-ufactures high voltage diodes

and rectifiersM i c D i r i F. Lydei of

Belford, a full-time labor arbit r a t o r . m e d i a t o r andfactfinder, has beeir appointedto the Federal National Medi-ation Board's independentpanel of arbitrators, which hasresponsibilities for resolvinglabor disputes and collective

bargaining problems in the air-line and railway industries

Mr Lyden serves as an arbi-trator for the New JerseyState Mediation Board, whichworks to resolve labor disputesin private industry . and on thePublic Employees RelationsCommission (PERC), wherehe serves as both a mediatorand an arbitrator, for labttrdisuputes involving publicschool employees, police offilers and firemen

SOCIAL SECURITY•y JANES J. CAIVANO<). My ekeck Is deposited

dlrettly to my bank Do I havr• u ••Uly social security ol a

rkuge of address?A Yes If you have elected

direct deposit, telling us aboutyour new address will assurethat you gel any corresponilerue we send you

«. Wken my soi tuned 18,1MUIM social security that kewit attending college. Hiseketks continued but myeketk slopped. Wky?

A Social security recog-nizes a student's continued de-pendency on the worker'searnings Checks may con-tinue until the student turnsage 22 if he does not marry inthe meantime Your checks asa mother 'are based on havinga minor child in your care withthe presumption thai you areneeded in the home duringyour children's growing yearsOnce the child turns 18 thatpresumption is no longer con-sidered valid, and payments lothe mother end

Q My grandson kas beeilivlgg wllk me slice kls pa-ruts were killed In an autoaccident 4 years ago. He can-Ml gel benellts slice bis pa-rents kad io work covered bysocial security. Can ke gel so-cial security benefits wken Iretire In a few months?

A A grandchild may beeligible for social security ben-efits on a grandparent s workrecord if the natural parentsIK dead or disabled and if thegrandchild is living with and issupported by the grandparent.For more information, contactany social security office.

« I ktve Medicare medicalInsurance and I've beet underIke care ol a doctor for Ikepast lew monlks because ol •high blood pressure problem.U It a good Idea lo save Ikedoctor's bills aid send Ikem Inal one time?

A No. you'll get yourpayments (aster after youhave met the (60 annual deduc-tible, if you send those medicalbills in and then begin sendingall later medical bills in as yougel them, rather than lettingthem accumulate and sendingthem all in at one time.

Q. My talker, who's M, btktttaf aboil retlrUg, tailke's MrvMi about wktl kind Jol pipers ke'D need lo skowwkei ke applies tor social se-cutty retirement paymentsC M yoi tell me exactly whatfec'l need?

your father lo worry All hehas to bring with him when heapplies for retirement benefitsis his birth certificate, socialsecurity card, and latest W-2form. If he doesn't have allthose papers, he should applyanyway, because th people atthe social security office maybe able to suggest other proofthat would be acceptable.

Q. I'm 71 and I get monthly881 checks because 1 kave avery small income. Until now,I've h e n Uvlng alone, bat I'vebeen thinking about asking aIrleid I* move In wllk me soske cai kelp skare Ike ex-penses. WIU this make a dUferemce In Ike amount of mySSI ckecki?

X. It might, but whether ornot sharing your apartment af-fects your monthly SSIpayments, you must let socialsecurity know about thechange in your living arrange-ments They'll let you know ifthis affects your checks.

Q. Both my parents aid onegrandfather hive received so-clal security retirementchecks, aid when 1 retire at (2Mil year, I'll represent a thirdgeneration to become eligible.How does Ike benelll protec-tion I'll get compare with whatthey got years ago?

A. For one thing, benefitamounts are much higher to-day. The top retirement' checkas late as 1950 was only $45.60.compared with (489.70 in 1978— more than ten limes higher!

creased automatically lo keeppace with the rising cost ofliving In addition. Medicareprotection was added in 1965,and beneficiaries who wish towork can earn substantiallymore today and still drawsome of their social securityThe program has improvedconsiderably since your pa-rents and grandparents be-came eligible

Q. Our It-year old son haskidney failure and needs

eligible for Medicare1

A. A person under 65 whoneeds maintenance dialysis ora kidney transplant because ofpermanent kidney failure iseligible for Medicare if he orshe has enough social securityor railroad retirement creditsor is the husband, wife, or de-pendent child of an insuredworker Only the family mem-ber with permanent kidneyfailure is eligible for MedicareOther members of the familyare not

mm pMM l iMlx

PRETTY PLEASE' OPENS - Mrs. Carol Ka|, Middletown, is on the |ob ot her new beauty salon,"Pretty Please," 369 Route 35. Middletown. Mrs.Ka j has been a teacher of beauty culture for IS yearsand taught at Wilfred Beauty Academy,Wanamassa, and elsewhere She does all hair cut-ting and styling herself.

MEADE LEEDS & CO.

Certified Public Accountants

PERSONAL AND BUSINESS INCOME TAXAND ACCOUNTING SERVICES

Route 34Colts Neck, N.J. 431-4636

STOP!Don't fall for those $600 00 amonth Rental Ads ($21 95per day - no mileage) Werent cars lor less than hall olthat — comparable wheels— no big deals |ust plaingood sense — that amicrazvl

SCHWARTZCHRYSLER - P1TM0UTH141 W. Front SI. (Rt»)

RED BANK

747-0787

Htnry W. Block

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We ask the right questions. We dig for everyhonest deduction and credit We take thetime needed because we want to be sureyou pay the smallest legitimate tax. That'sanother reason why H&R Block should doyour taxes...whichever form you use. shortor long. ^

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLERED BANK -lOWFronlbt 741-2600MIDDLETOWN 1109 Highway 35 . 671-9314LONG BRANCH 610 Broadway 222-9039KEVPORT 100 Route 36 264-6986FREEHOLD 611 Route 33 462-5526

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«o In most major Sears • tow durinQregular itor* hour*

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HOMEOWNERS...

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Interested? Call or inquire at any ot our 14 offices in Monmouth andOcean Counties, There's one near you.

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Home Office: 600 Broadway at Norwood Avenue, Long BranchNew Jersey 07740 (201) 222-1100

14 Offices In Monmouth & Ocean CountiesMtmtwt F.S.L.I.C.

SHREWSBURY. N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1979 D3

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Lack of selling pressure is consolingBy ( N E T CURRIER

NfcW YORK (AP) - WhUf they wail for the clouds hangup

over the stock market to lilt. Wall Streeters are consoling

themselves with the thought that things could be much worse

In the past month or so the market has been hit with an

almost uninterrupted barrage ol adverse news — on Iran and

world oil prices, on inflation problems at home, and on lighting

between China and Vietnam

However, the optimists hasten to point out; stocks — though

subdued and generally weak — have run into VITV little U tin-

intense selling pressure that those events might well have

produced.

"To say thai the news has been very negative would be an

understatement," observed Jonathon Dodd at B,F. Mutton & Co

"The market continues to act impressively "

In the week just concluded — shortened to four trading days

by (he Washington's Birthday holiday on Monday — Ihe Dow

Jones average ol 30 industrials slipped 3 73 to 823 20

The New York Stock Exchange composite index lost 32 to

54.88. and the American Stock Exchange market value index

was down 60 at 162 55

Big Board volume averaged 24 27 million shares a day.

against 23 99 million the week before.

With three trading sessions left in February, the Dow shows

a loss ol points from its end of January reading of 839.22,

Analysts noted that the revolution in Iran, by itself, might

well have been expected to do more damage to the market than

that

Several things are clear," the Value Line Investment

Survey, the nation's largest investment advisory service, said

"There will be less oil available in the U.S., over the short

term at least, and ^hat oil is available will cost more Inflation

ui the US will be greater than previously estimated The

chances of a recession developing also have increased."

Yet Value Line maintained its longstanding bullish position

on the market outlook, asserting that "a mild recession is

coming, but the market is well aware of the possibility."

The market, meanwhile, remained relatively unruffled by

the government's report late Friday that consumer prices got

off to a bad start in 1(79, climbing at an annual rate of 10 8

percent ln January

When stock prices show little or no response to unpleasant

news, technical analysts often read it as a Upon that the next

move by the market is likely to be up.

But at the moment the optimism of many of these market

followers is tempered by doubts. Noting the sluggish behavior of

nearly all major stock groups lately, Alan R. Shaw at Smith

Barney, Harris Upham t Co. said: "We would be more en-

thusiastic if there were better evidence of group leadership "

As Robert J Farrell of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &

Smith put it:

"The plus is that despite unsettling news the market does

not attract selling pressure. The minus is that a market drifting

up on light volume with no concerted leadership is losing

technical strength."

Blumenthal China trip gains in scopeBy KRISTIN GOFF

NEW YORK (AP) - What was to be a

trade mission to China suddenly took on a far

broader scope this past week when Treasury

Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal embarked

on the trip carrying with him President

Carter's message on the Chinese war with

Vietnam

Administration officials cautioned against

expecting any exceptional gains'in resolving

thorny economic issues between the United

States and China in the course of Blumenthal s

nine-day visit

Those will be difficult and time-consuming

to negotiate in any event But the war creates

uncertainty about the ability of China to carry

out its ambitious multi-billion-dollar plan for

industrialization that has made it such an at-

traction to Western nations.

And because of the sensitive political tai-

lors involved in opening trade with China, if the

war is prolonged it could increase opposition Io

dismantling trade barriers between the United

States and China.

Businessmen in this country and in the

Orient week offer mixed assessments ol the

war's effect on trading plans

. "To my knowledge the conflict thus lar has

had no Impact at all on business relations nor is

Ihere anything forseeable." said Bill

Armbruster of the National Council Tor U.S.-

China Trade, a business group in Washington.

But he adds, i t all depends on how long the

conflict continues Hopefully it will all be over

soon and there will be a return to a relative

degree of normalcy If there is a protracted

war. it could be a whole new ball game."

In Hong Kong, businessmirti and bankers

reported that their oflices were as crowded

this past week with overseas traders clamoring

to get into the huge Chinese market as they had

been before the invasion

"Several hundred Hong Kong companies

are already in Joint-venture production in Chi-

na and hundreds more are in various stages of

discussion and ncgotiat ion I know many of

these companies personally and can detect no

sign of any real concern or hesitation," said

James D. McGregor, director of the Hong

Kong General Chamber of Commerce.

But another, who requested anonymity,

said the war would "certainly dampen en-

thusiasm in the immediate or short term It

will give foreign companies reason to pause,"

but added that long term effects could be

minimal if the war is over quickly without

involving the Soviet Union.

U.S. businessmen have lagged behind their

counterparts in Japan, West Germany, Britain

and France in negotiating billions of dollars

worth of contracts for machinery, factories

and expertise China needs for its planned in-

dustrialization Some experts are skeptical

about how significant U.S. China trade may

ever be largely because of the limited amount

of hard currency and exports China has to

finance its ambitious plans.

Blumenthal's trip to Peking is designed to

lower barriers to trade that have grown up

over the years Among top priorities is resolu-

tion of 1196 million in U.S. claims and related

Chinese counter-claims stemming from assets

seized after the communists look power in 1949.

The largest of those is a $53 million claim by

Boise Cascade Corp., whose subsidiary the

Shanghai Power Plant was taken over by the

communist government.

The issue goes beyond the settlement of an

old debt and it is likely that the U S will agree

to reimbursement at less than the full amount.

It effectively blocks US or Chinese ships or

planes from visiting each other's ports

A second issue, which like the assets ques-

tion will be subject to congressional review, is

whether China will be granted Most Favored

Nation trading status. The designation, along

with a trade agreement Is seen as significant.

because without it Chinese imports are subject

to U.S. tariffs of up to 300 percent

U.S. trade with China had been growing

rapidly even before President Carter's an-

nouncement of diplomatic ties. Two-way trade

last year reached $1.2 billion, far less than the

$7.5 billion in trade with Taiwan and an in-

significant amount compared trade with our

major trading partners.

In other business developments this past

week:

—A sharp increase in food prices sent the

cost of living up 0.9 percent in January, an

amount that would amount to an annual rate of

12 percent if it continued for an entire year.

Despite the sharp rise in the monthly consumer

price index, Barry Bosworth, a top adminis-

tration official, predicted that inflation this

year can be held to the 7 5 percent level the

administration previously predicted. Inflation

last year was 9 percent.

—Several major oil companies announced

plans to reduce allocations of gasoline and

other fuels as the impact of a shutoff of prod-

uction ln Iranian fields reduced supplies of

crude oil. Iranian officials said they hoped to

resume production soon, but it is unclear when

and how much oil that may bring on world

markets

04 SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1979

Advice to young couple on home buying• j DON G. CAMPIEU

In California, last December, the AVER-AGE lew borne sold for slightly more than

Ttut may be acceptable lor the familywtuct has jiut told a haute for a capital gain ofm,IM, bill what about the young family just•Mitingouf

Q. We ire t yeaag (taife (beta IS) will aaae-year-tat baby aid aiather •• Ike way. Ikavc »•«• cat af eaUege twa yean H I aadbavc a gaaa )a» <|lt,N«) *Ka a gted rtnaaay.We fcaytrilfly met* a bane ai we are carrmly nulmg a aae-beara«a apartmr at far KM a• M a aat t—'l tee aay teite la larawlagevei M R amey away ta rail receipts farIwa awrt betfraaau. With air tavligs (aaratK M ) mi taae M-lileretl kelp frtm airaunl i we eti auke a dewa paymrni. hatbtaat arten areaa* here, are a* alga tail wecart quMfy What tatiM we ae? - Mr.G.T.V. (8u Mega, ClMI.)

A. Instead of thinking in terms of THE

pertect house for your needs, I suggest youthink of this first home as an intermediate step- not the ULTIMATE house for you, but ameans of building up equity and learning abouthome ownership

In mid-December the Federal Home LoanBank Board — the governing body of thenation's federally chartered savings and loanassociations — authorized a new type of mort-gage that is tailor-made for people like you: thegraduated mortgage where monthly paymentsstart out lower than they would under a con-ventional mortgage, but then rise (and even-tually level off for the duration of the mort-gage) as your own income improves

The details of this arrangement still arebeing worked out, so you may get little in-formation, initially, when you start inquiringabout it, but keep pursuing it.

In one example cited by the Home LoanBank, a conventional 150,000 mortgage at »•£percent for 10 years would call tor monthlypayments of $420 — steep for you now Underthe new arrangement, though, payments dur

ABOUTREALESTATE

ing the first year would be $318 and wouldincrease in each of the first five years to (457,where they would remain for the balance of thelife of the loan

Now, under the "Rule of 60," you shouldspend no more than 1316 a month for principal,interest, insurance, taxes and maintenance (1Wth of your gross income). Let that be yourguide in shopping for this new type of mort-gage

q I an a wtdaw *f M aad ny kasbaadpasted away three years iga. I kave a Iwa-faailly k*ate thai we height 21 years aga at| l«,Mt Taday I I Is assessed at abaal SfS.IMaKbsagh we bad a kM at reiavatlag doae wklckbraagbt Ike east ap aaelker | i , M t ta 1 1 1 , * *Caald yaa explala I* me la laymia's laigiagehaw Back I waakt l ive la pay Ike gaveramealH I decide ta teU? I da aal kave Ike Mils far ikrrepairs tkal we did a i this kaase as my kas-kaad laak care af Ikal aid I caaaal flad aayMils -Mn J.P. (Elmwaod Park, N.J.)

A You will have to pay NO tax on the saleof the house Thanks to a change late last yearin the capital gains tax schedule the first$100,000 of gain in the sale of a house, at age 55or greater, is excluded from your tax bill Youcan use this provision just once in your life-time, however Since with or without the reno-vations and other capital expenditures that youhave made to the house, there isn't any taxliability, anyway, it is doubtful that the InternalRevenue Service will require proof

I • • a widtw, 71 years aid, llvlag alaaeaad wkk aa elate relatives I kave a VERY bigkaase - six bedrwus - aid kave Iheagklakaat eaavertlig It te aa apartmeat tf abaaltear ar five eae-bedraen lalts. Tke walag IsOK, a y lawyer says, id I I will cast abaalV*,m. wklck I kave hi CDs thai cane daw thistartar,. I I teems te me I eeaM make marelarame (that's my big aeed) frtm reals tkaa I'caald tram tke CDs Wkal da yaa Ikl ikT-Mrs.H.L. ( f in i te , N.Y.)

A At age 73 the chore of taking on the roleof landlord for a complex like this would beunwise

Sell the house and combine the proceedswith the money coming due from your CDs andput it all in a good brokerage's "unit invest-ment trust " (This is a portfolio of good, corpo-rate bonds sold off in "units" of about 11,000where the yield - better than » percent a yearcurrently - is paid out monthly )

Financially, you'll be better off And you'llalso have peace of mind

^Passive' solar-heated home cozy

Laird Parry and hi* solar home — it'» warm even in severe weather

By TODD CROWELB,, Christian Science Monitor

HIGHLAND, WASH - Outside it was 5 degrees abovezero. But the sun was shining, so Laird Parry turned hiselectric furnace off

With a little help from a wood stove, It was easy tokeep his solar-heated home a cozy 68 degrees

The Parry home here in this southeastern Washingtoncommunity of 30.000 people uses a "passive" solar heatingsystem, which means the house itself collects and storesthe sun's heat

"Active" solar systems require an array of solarcollectors, fans, pumps, pipes and other mechanical dovices to collect and distribute the heat

This winter, the coldest In the Pacific Northwest inthis century, is proving to be a true test of the design, saysParry, an engineer at the US Department of Energy'sBattelle Laboratory here

On days when it is both cold and overcast, Parrydepends on his backup furnace, but even in severe weath-er the Parrys have been able to depend on the sun alonefor heat

The house is designed to carry all the daytime healingload on sunny days above 20 degrees On this 5-degreeday, the sun alone healed the house to 69 degrees, and thewood stove easily helped keep Ihe indoor temperaturebetween 68 and 70 degrees

Parry's system depends on an 800-square foot, snulhfacing "Trombe wall," which absorbs the suns radiationand circulates heal through the house through naturalconvection The Trombe wall, named for a house of thistype of construction in France, is built of thick concrete ormasonry, with an outside glazing of plastic or glass andvents at the top and bottom of the rooms inside Cold air

enters through the bottom vents, rises and is heatedbetween Ihe wall and the glazing and re-enters the rooms,through the top vents

The house also has 10 inches of fiberglass insulation inthe ceiling and 6 inches in the walls to hold the heat once Itis inside

In the summer, a four-foot overhang prevents the raysof the high-angled sunlight from striking the wall

Parry says he is no! sure how much heat the Trombewall provides on cloudy days, since he has'no way ofmeasuring the partial heating accurately But he citesstudies at the University of Oregon that indicate such awall contributes some heat even on overcast days

"I would estimate that overall about 60 to 70 percent ofour heating load will be met with Ihe passive system." hesays

Parry, whose work includes lecturing at seminars onsolar energy, is convinced that passive systems aresuperior to active systems — al least in Ihe PacificNorthwest, where electnc power costs are so low com-pared with those in other pans of the country

"With a passive system you can't get into too muchtrouble With active systems you can spend a lot of moneyand have a disaster," he says

"About the worst thing that can happen to you withpassive is that you might overheat in the spring, and youcan solve that by opening some windows," he adds

He also thinks his house shows that the prospectivehomeowner does not have to be wealthy to build a passivesolar home His home, which was completed last September and is appraised at 172,000. cost about :> percent morethan a conventionally heated home And. that figureprobably could have been lower if U had not been the firstsuch home built in the region

REAL ESTATE NOTESTwo Freehold women who

report having accounted formore than 115 million in con-dominium sales over the pastfive year have formed a com-pany which specializes in the

sale and resale of con-dominium units They haveopened the Condo Mart at 1480Ocean Ave , Sea Bright

The principals are MarlaaarCaaghna, president, and Max-

CONDOMINIUM SPECIALISTS - MarianneCoughlin, left, and Maxine Rauch, principals In thenewly launched Condo Mart in Sea Bright, go overlistings.

hw Ruck, vice president.Mrs. Coughlin said that con-dominiums represent one ofthe fastest growing areas ofresidential real estate. "Con-dominiums are a very activeresale market," she said"They are growing in recog-nition as a desirable way of lifeand they are growing strongerevery year "

In 1(67, she noted, therewere about 500 community as-sociations — condominium andcooperative developments —in the United States. Now, shesaid, there are more than20,000 of them housing morethan 4 million persons

In the 15-mile stretch of thecounty shore from Highlandsthrough West End there areabout 1,650 condominium units,she said.

In addition to being vice,president and corporate bro-ker for The CommodoreGroup, Mrs. Coughlin also hasbeen sales manager for BoiseCascade's New York regionaloffice in central New Jerseyand general sales manager forTotal Building Systems.

Mrs. Coughlin is also therental and management agentfor Hudson Manor, a project ofthe Freehold Senior CitizensCorporation and the New Jer-

sey Housing Finance AgencyShe lives at 113 Hosier Drive,Freehold, with her husband,Edward, and five children

Mrs. Rauch, who holds areal estate broker's license,began her career in 1971 as asalesperson for Total BuildingSystems. She also has been asalesperson and general salesmanager for The CommodoreGroup. Mrs Rauch lives .at 43Longview Ave., Freehold, withher husband. Karl, and fivechildren.

Resemarte Sana of LongBranch has been named ad-ministrative assistant and willbe in charge of sales at Run-away Beach, oceanfront con-dominium in Sea Bright Theappointment was made byMrs. Addie Schofel of Deal,owner of the 60-unit condo

Mrs. Sarro has been in realestate sales and managementsince 1962, having moved tp theJersey shore from Long Islandin 1975. Most recently she wassales manager during the turn-about to sales success at East-pointe. the luxury high-risecondominium on Scenic Drive,Highlands. Previous to thatshe was sale manager forKaufman and B r o a d ' sParkland, a 1.200-unit single-family home development onLong Island

Lee Crawford Realtors,Middletown, has announcedthe appointment of GeieMilray as the firm's salestrainer. Mulroy has been a full-time Realtor-associate withLee-Crawford since 1976. He isa member of the Million DollarClub

The Alexander SummerCompany of Teaneck an-nounced that it will handleleasing of the Circle Plazashopping Center in Eatontown.Circle Plaza is at the

northwest sector of the Eaton-town traffic circle Major unitsof the 75.000-square-fool centerinclude Child World, ArthurTreacher's and LibertyTravel

The Summer firm alsoserves as leasing agent for theFreehold MaU.

GeaetUlray

NEW OFFICE — A.J. Dellormo Realtors has opened a new office In ocompletely renovated dwelling at 842 Broadway, West Long Branch. Inaddition to usual real estate services, a separate department has beenestablished to offer counseling on refinancing and to provide aid In obtainingcommercial and business loans.

SHOP VAC

$ 39 955 gallon wet dry

Monmouth Building Center777 Shrewsbury Ave., Shrewtbury

Come toFirst Merchantslor your VISA...

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ST

Merchants

27 CONVENIENT COMMUNfTY OFFICESMain Otict to Naptunt Btvd NcptuTW N J

KlDaANKISOBroMSl

HOLMMLHgwy SStLauiHtn

tATONTOWNMjw, 3S1 AffollRo

MONHOUTM HALLEMOMOwn

U M I MM. NO«'» U M < « • » • WIT AMU" • »OH*H\JM Cltf . KULLl .C<Xt« WCK . II «OH.MO« U.LAWM.kUMA|auAN*UAAU»«K>*MlUITONCOCiW«QIIOvt»OflTIWADmQtAVMWLLIV*fR * f l

Advertise in The Register

SHREWSBURY, N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1979 M

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERSCauiy'i real«

each

Iran •IllrUI•NhFrectoW.

AberdeenMr and Mrs Frank

CaMnaova and Mr and KreGaetano Maoara to Mr. andMrs liorrli Tetro, Block M,Loll.iSS.MO

Mr. and Mn Thomas RHim to John Kalli Jr. andLori A. Halno, 17 Maple Avemt,1U,m.

Jowphlne M. Gadino to Mrand Mn Paul Y.L Ham, 7Warren Drive, fK.OOO

Mr. and Mrs Peter Ran-daso to Mr. and Mrs. Charlesf Peraglne, BO IdolstoneUne, *4,M0

Mr. and Mn. Francis XSchaU to Diane E. Burton, IIWoodland Drive, CliffwoodBeach, (H,m

Allanlir Highland*Helen G Leslie to Mr and

Mra. Nicholas M. Poster, 11Grand Avenue, $M,000

EatontownMr. and Mrs. Guenther

Krueger to Norman Berweilerand Robert BerweUer and Judtth BerweUer, his wife, Block111, Lots47-M, $42,000

PhUlii It Schenk to Nr andMrs. Lawrence F Colwell JrBlock It, Lot 22,173,000

Mr. and Mrs William CScheurer to Mr and MrsJames H. Burks, a ReynoldsDrive, $54,000

WHAT'S YJH* HOME WMTH?Can row

— i ' | f * • • ' PrrftulMalr

• I

COZENS REALTOR•1J M w Road, Fak Hann

741-7«M

GEORGE

IllMENSEEAGENCY

Ik* Farm i Country

Horn* SptcioliitsIn

MonmouthCounty

462-3172ttt. M Cakl NMk

FreeholdMr and Mrs Hamesh C

Trlvedl to Mr and MrsRonald Lee Coales, 110 WestMaul Street. 155.900

Freehold TownshipKneler and Kirschenbaum

to Mr and Mrs Stephen AWortman. Block MB, Lot 20,$St\K»

Mr and Mrs Roger Corlissto Mr. and Mrs Steven Anthony Bibby. Block If Lot 11,Ho.no

Eaglenest HUI Corporationto Mr. and Mrs Larry SJamison. 41 Eaglenest Road,

tn.mSherman Auto Sales to

Sherman Motor Company, a

HOMES FOR AMERICANSHighland*

Mr and Mrs. Lauriti W.SmiUi to David R. GilUI andKenneth E Joel, partners T/AG 4 J Properties, Block «5. Lot11, $11,(00

Mr. and Mrs. JohnMensching to Mr and MrsWilliam I) Sullivan, Unit No41, Gravelly Point Beach,|ie,m

MHOtMDEl/COlTSNKXFw Complete fttol Eltott Strvlc*

EDWARD W.

COLLINS AGENCYREALTOflS

946-4144

... i i ... -1

fea

Fair HavrnMr and Mrs John G. Co-

lannino to Mr and Mrs BruceA Whltaker, 81 BrtarwoodRoad, $107,000

HolmdrlSAS Construction Company

to V&H Builders. Block 50, Lot47 5, $49,500

M.P G.S Associates toCoastal Group, Inc., Block4» 5, Lot I. Block 48, Lots 3, 4,«, 12, 13. 14. Block 416, Lots 1,I 02,3,4,5,8,9, $502,500

SAS Construction Companyto Hammcrcraft, Inc., Block50, Lot477, $49,500

SAS Construction Companyu> Hamniercraft, Inc., Block50. Lot 4711. $46,500

kean»bur|{Nargaret Villanti to Mr

and Mrs Luigi Vitone. Block101, Lot 37, $8,000

Mr. and Mrs Francis Johnson to Mr and Mrs Richard GJohnson. 45 Frederick Place.$40.(00

K i \ | > o i tClover Hill Enterprises to

Kennedy Mortgage Company,Block I, Lots 22 and 24. $77,000

*mmr FLOOR PLAN

THIS PASSIVE SOLAR HOUSK features a glass-enclosedsun garden wrapped by the living, dining and family rooms.On the siwond floor of this I ,S76-square-foot home are threebedrooms with a balcony, overlooking the dining and livingrooms and with a full view of the garden and terrace beyond.Solar energy is absorbed and stored in the wall and floors forheating. In summer, vents draw air but of the house by con-vection for natural cooling. For more information on PlanHA1087K, write-enclosing a stamped, self-addressedenvelope-to Charles Koty. 27 Barry Park Court, Searingtown, NY.. 11607

ADD ON?or move up...

CtU us todif lot

portion of Block 65, Lot 15$50,000

Robert A DeFlice andKatherine T DeFlice to,Mrand Mrs Carl Mello, 18 Johnson Terrace, $37,000

Mr and Mrs. Allen W Clayton to Mr and Mrs James FCollins. Rlock 105, Lot 56-3$14,000

HazlelEssie Construction Com-

pany to Mr and Mrs AnilAgarwal, Block 64A. UM 12.WJ.J05

Morris Tetro ConstructionCompany to Mr and MrsDonald C. Kramer, I An-thony's Court, $66,490

Mr. and Mrs. Leon Bluer toMr and Mrs Richard ('.MillerJr , 14 Coleridge Avenue,$57,000

Mr and Mrs. Robert KThompson to Mr and MrsJohn It Macaluso, 9 BriscoeTerrace, $72,000

Mr and Mrs Anthony JLuminoso to Mr and MrsJoseph J DIPasquale. 7Gerald Terrace, $61,000

Raymond C. Ullcy and Jean« UUey to Mr. and Mrs An-dres J Serra, 6 Erin Place,$65,500

Essie Construction Com-pany to Mr and Mrs Kevin MLavan, 5 Carlisle Court,$62,115

Essie Construction Company to Mr and Mrs RonaldCantor, 3 Carlisle Court,$65,115

Mr and Mrs. William JBegley to Mr and Mrs Wilham I, Shewar, 2H MasonDrive, $47,500.

\iusing About Moving?Call Us at...

CA,

AGENCY - REALTORS

741-4500SSS MOtMCT AVE.UTTtB tlLVM, N.J,

OVER TWO DECADESOF SERVICE. "

HERE'S THE ANSWERBy ANDY LANG

(|: — Ow kMie Is M aHMrele slab wllkNl a base-'neat. Tkere are ctverlags ofMe sari tr aawtker u (tows «lan rwas except tke aUUlyram, wMci was palaled wkeawe nuved la a lew years ag*.New we WMM Uke I* laslallresUUeat ftow We *a the fto*rot laal retB. Caa It be pat Mrtgkt tver Ike palat, wilei Isfairly well w»ra bat still taere?

A: — Generally, paint onconcrete must be removedbefore Installing tile There isalways the danger that thepaint might lift oft at somelater time, taking the adhesiveand tile with it. Since you saythe paint Is fairly well worn,there is a chance It might notcause any later trouble. But ifyou do not wish to Uke such achance rent a floor sander andtake off the paint that way.Tel) the dealer what the sand-ing machine Is being used forso that be can give you theproper abrasive for It.

Q. - Caa I cleai avaraliaed table wltb deaatared aleafcal w win M safteatk* (Intel?

A. - Yes to the first part ofthe question, and no to the

Q. - Waere caa I gel la-farmaUu abut bulking abMsr made of lags — s»rt ofaa ovrrslied lag cabin?

A — Every bookstore car-ries one or more books on thatsubject. Your library alsoprobably has a few One of thelatest books, "How to BuilclYour Own LOR Home " is by SBlackwell Duncan (TabBooks).

NEED CASH?Few Any RMKMI

• Horn* lmpfo«m*nt«

• ColMaa Tuition!loans Aim *»t,tiD*#toi Bulnmi VtnlutM

your hoM milt*m»l

f inrfOul H YOU Ou»Wy CHI AfCTodty Fo» v> Appomlmf i InThaPiivtCK Ot Yoti( Hop* O tn OutOHM

LOANS ARE BACKEDBY THE U.S. QOVT

ANTHONY FINANCIALCONSUl!»NIS

V 1704300 J

Sell your home directlyand save the commission.

All tht ntctltsry Itchnlqutt mill b»dltcuntd In d&ttll Including:

• Where When and How to Advertise• Market Appraisal• Open House — The Open House Law• Helping the Buyer Secure Financing• How to Buy Your Next House Wholesale

A Real (Halt Attornty will b« »ra»antSATURDAY 1:00 P.M., MARCH 3rd

ONE HARDING ROAD, RED BANK, N.J.SEATING IS LIMITED

PLEASE TELEPHONE FOR RESERVATIONSADMISSION $10.

A. Valente, M HowUnd Avenue(Apt No «),$a.M0

Claire Burgstahler to Big ZMarkets, Unit (-1, HarbourMansion, $71,000

Industrial Associates toBeveriee S. Kaminetzky, MA,448 Ocean Avenue, $28,700

Industrial Associates toHarold A. KamineUky, 1211,448 Ocean Mvenue, $211,000

Industrial Associates to Mrand Mrs Charles F Krippen-dorf, NA, 448 Ocean Avenue,$Z7,M0.

ManalapanMr. and Mrs. Henry Press

Barnhill to Mr and Mrs Rob-ert Wagner, Block 7705, Lot 11.$51,000

Eastern States Develop-ment Company to Mr andMrs. Charles Buda, propertyon Woodland Circle, $76,335

Mr and Mrs. Kenneth JoelGoodman to Mr and MrsHoward A llenschkel. 3211Meadow Green Circle, $32,000

Francis Petty to Mr. andMrs Richard L. Miller. Block78 (C-J), Lot 20, $5»,000

Mr and Mrs Lawrence TDelaney to Peter Vitale, 9 Cuventry Court, $8«,000

Eastern States Develop-ment, Inc. to Mr and MrsSteven II Kali, property onWoodland Circle, $84,081

MarlhoruCharles J. Leander and

Rernadine E Leander InCharles J Uander, Rlock 10.Lot II, $25,000

Mr and Mrs Nikolaus TSpiridcllis to Mr and Mrs BenNorman Rosenblum, 1 HudsonBay Terrace, $«,000

Masada Homes, Inc to Mrand Mrs. Michael JKarangelen, 8 ColtsbrookRoad. $67,490

Moorehouse-Verb Con-struction Company to Mr andMrs Carmine lovino, 18 NolanRoad, $13,150

Liberty Corners, Inc. to Mrand Mrs. Alfred Porzio, 16Carter Drive. I9H.550

little SiMr and Mrs. John Adrian

Conrad to Mr. and Mrs. Ray-mond H. Dougherty. Block 17.Lot 12, $76,900

Mr. and Mrs. John RBorges Jr to Merrill LynchRelocation Management, 18South Sunnycrest Court,$58,750

Merrill Lynch RelocationManagement to Mr and MrsEdward II Fenton Jr., 18South Sunnycrest Court,$59,000

l.oii|> BranchOceanside Garden As

sociates to Mr and Mrs. John

WORKSHOP

Mr. and Mrs. StephenJacobs to Mr and Mrs II NeilSmith, 112 McCutcheon Court,(125,000

Mr. and Mrs Kdward ItWoodruff to Mi and Mrs An-thony W Russo, Block 400, Lot7, $(5,900

Mr. and lire. John ATarpey to Mr and Mrs AlfredB Poto, 16 Glenoak Drive,I77.M0

Hendrick Comers Corpo-ration to Mr and Mrs RobertE SoeU, 25 Clubhouse Drive,$52,125.

Buddy's Auto Sales to Mr.and Mra. Thomas J. Chiapetti,7B Route J6, Port Monmouth,HMH

George Rich Company toMr and Mrs. Thomas An-derson, 20 Hamilton Avenue,Leonardo, $45,000

Angelo De Mattia to Mrand Mrs John Hernandez, 14TindaU Road, $57,400.

Investors and Lenders, Ltdto Mr. and Mrs. C BarbaraAlbert, Block 952. Lot 16.$19,000

Mr and Mrs Howard JGreenwald to Charles AKouvel and John 11 Kouvel,Block 36-22, Lot 2-2. $43,000

Mr and Mrs Walter ADavis to Kenneth Hobinson, 51Center Avenue, Leonardo,$47,000

Franbar, Inc to Mr andMrs John C. Murillo, 268 Forest Avenue, $63,000

Mr and Mrs Patrick MTotaro to Mr and Mrs. AlanaScardigno, (I OceanHoulevard, $21,500

Charles J Hesse, Inc toCC1, Inc t/a CountrysideConstruction. Block 1114, Lots7 and 8, $9,000

John J Konecni l» Mr andMrs Michael J Keigher. 17Field Avenue, $39,900.

Fox Hill Corfmration to Mrand Mrs Joseph Licata, 6Scenic Way, $88,600

S&K, Inc to Mr and MrsJoseph Coschigano, DeniseCourt. $112,000

Monmouth BrachFedco Contracting Corpo-

ration to Richard A Marit,Block*. Lot 4-11,$72,500

OceanAlma Messina to Mr and

Mrs Robert Saban, Block 33-('•13, Lot 76. $75,000

The William Marshall Cor-poration to Mr and Mrs. Ken-netii F Haas, 15 Old Weathersfiekt Road, $118,200.

Mr and Mrs. Richard LI.ayton to Richard D. Clark,146 Idlewood Avenue, $64,500

Mr and Mrs. J. Bruce DeLoche to Mr and Mrs Martin

Holfstein, IIS ElberonBoulevard, $M,00»

Mr and Mrs Kenneth Hanby to Mr. and Mrs. Alan Julian,II Overhill Road, $78,500

Mr. and Mrs. James E. De-Bard to Mr and Mrs. MichaelLederman, 1017 MelvilleStreet, $51,280

Mr. and Mrs William VThomas to Mr and Mrs RalphKraiem, Block 54, Ut 1-U,$105,*W

Progress Management tolrvin Builders, Block 8, Lot II,$H,500

Poplar Estates to EUen MKuhnen. Block 34, Lot II,$57,440

Mr. and Mrs Jeffery LHirschmann to Mr and MrsJeffery H Miller, 1305 TurnerAvenue, $37,000

Granada Estates to Mr. andMrs Howard D Silverman, 25Lambert Johnson Drive,$(5,155.

Granada Estates to Mr andMrs Ronald F Manik, 50Lambert Johnson Drive,$70,910

Eric Tepper to Joan Tep-per, Block 1-1. Lot III'. 12,500

RumitonMr and Mrs. Frank Koll to

Mr and Mra Glenn J Koll,Block*, Lotli,$2t,0N I

Mr. and Mrs. Sargent;Heath HI to Mr and Mrs Robert r. Reynolds, 78 Buena Vis-'.U Avenue, $1H,2W

OVB M TfAH MIUMSONFoi Expert Professional

Appraisal ot yourrxoperty, call

McCUE INC.REALTORS

842-2700For qualified buyers, we cangel 9W% mortgage with 20*down

WHAT'S If iJK HOME WORTH?Call Your

COZENS REALTORg 13 Rlwt Road, Fair Hmn

741-7IM

OrranporlMargaret R Uurnell and

Margretta R. Durnell toSeaside Investment Company,22 Pemberton Avenue, $15,000

Mr and Mrs. WilliamMiclulla to Mr and MrsFrederick A Dilione, Block 29,IxUs 26. 28, 30, 32, 34. and 36W,$45,500

Evelyne J Warrick to Ro-berta Leavy, 177 ComancheDrive, $79,900

Red BankPatrick A. Trimboli to Mr.

and Mrs. Ralph Soldo. Block54, Lot 37-C, $25,000

Mr and Mrs. Frank DeGen-naro to Martene Webb, Block(4, Lot >, $23,500

inloii IThe Borough of Ttnton;

Falls to Mr and MrsEberhard Gundel. Block 123,Lot 32, $3,000

John 1) Pittenger Builderto Holly Building Corporation,Block 147 (Portion of Lot 3-1),$•7,321

The Borough of TintonFalls to Stephen Gale, Block12A, Lots 2.4, and 6, $4,800

I tiion BrachMi and Mrs Howard L

Pearl Jr to Mr. and MrsBryan Judas, 1007 Harris Ave-nue, $50,000

Daniel C Snow to Mr andMrs Frederick I. HaU, Block251, Lot 21, $5,500

WCHI l.oiif! BranchMr. and Mrs. Uon M I'as

quariello to Mr and Mrs. EliHaddad. 14 Bridle Drive.$141,000

HUI Construction Companyto Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy.9 Primrose Lane, $64,525.

HUI Construction Companyto Mr. and Mra. Marty APicari, 4 Primrose Lane,

WHAT'S {0J1HOMIWOMHTCan Yaw

COZENS REALTOR• 1 * Mm Road, Fak Hmtn

741-7Mt

Public Notice!CLOSE OUT SALESHERATON GARDENS

ROUTES 33 & 537FREEHOLD, NJ

AT TWO LOCATIONS

SHERATON MOTOR INNROUTE 33

HAZLET, NJ

FIRST COME . . FIRST SERVEDSALE ENDS MONDAY AT 5 P.M

• FRIDAY 10-9 • SATURDAY 10-5 • SUNDAY 10-5 • MONDAY 10-5

747-3071 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.

MATTRESSES& BOX SPRINGS

Every piece brand new* in factory cartons. Trailer loads in the Motelparking lot! Bring your car, truck or station wagon . . . or we'll arrange fordelivery! Quantities limited. Not to be confused with Holiday Inn bed-ding. All merchandise guaranteed by the famous manufacturer! Buy onepiece or a truck load!

*Nonef Spiled • TWIN SIZE $38mFIJLLS|ZE $ 3 8

M QUEEN SIZE $38M KING SIZE $38

king and queen sizes sold in sets only.

be early for best selection...each piece, and U P ^ ^ ^ no phone orders please.

CHECK... OR S f l K o R . . . CASH & CARRY

BONUS OFFER. ADJUSTABLE BED FRAMEall steel construction, on casters, fits twin or full

I PREMIUM BEDDINGAt fantastic savings! Includes TWIN,FUU, QUEEN and KING sites

BIG, PLUMP BED PILLOWSComfortable, bouyant pillows that are £ — _ pallergy free Replace your old ones now1 > J . B BI

SHREWSBURY N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25 1979

Ante* Fer Salt

. M V I I X I - WTi. wMtr.'omatlc, pott*, i l tcr

•RMHSUKSW?

DOOGI

D — ttn, v *M. nwliToa I MV

aal'SL. t£i3?!im

2. Auto* For Sole

IMPAUk Wl - T « .

CHEVELlf Hot - T»g » i r , V * oukMt.iHIiMM.anniii

CHIVMM.IT KM auu.nu -

CHEVROLETM4 caagTrHII. M

•U4OI

}. Autos For Sole

NEED A 4-WHEEL DRIVE?Mutttr fMM 'mm!

Ready lor Immediate delivery

• BLAZERS • PICK-UPS• USED BLAZERS

No ruionabl* ottar rahiMd.

MULLER CHEVROLET-BMWH n U l l AUMIHC An., MaU»in

CrMMI Cowmlor * . A * OoonMon. thruFrl . f tVprxnimolo l l t lmo Mil. T-0

NEED A CAR?GET RE-ESTABLISHED

UP TO 48 MONTHS TO PAY

100% FINANCINGNo Co-Mtkon — No Glmmlcki

on MM Spot Approval it Quillllad

Cdl Mr. Banks 566-6120 or 6411

MBCH IXClUOf M l 1IKINMNG

aMa^a>aWalal >^BMa>>Ma^a^aHBal a^a^M

I Pmlw WttM - i cyl.. •*• . , tn. til. «i $ A I O C|<~a HWIml., *t | 7J

1977 MAUBUUAtIK - 1 *>.. V I Mil. Iran. P/l. P/l.ok coal.. Jl S74 M U I

1977 FORD MAVERICK

1978 MAUBU

1 or I I . 1irl. m PA. tA, II44t •*>.

•11971 CHEVROLET IMPAIA WAGON| V-l o k , PS M ok <oao. 14.411 laDai. 5795

1975 MAUBU

44o« »..». 6 cyl, O.I. tH. HI. SOU* » / V 9 5

EVROLET IMFALA WS - WO0MI.

HEVKH.ET VAN Hot - H M wrt

""" f t1EVROLET IMftLA - IWI Vary

CREDIT PROBLEMS• caafc? II r*wrt working, w* can

l « ) l l « l l r w H w m . «o montvPimnwrti •!•>••< la twit youf

. Many N«w •ntlOwoUty UM4_ . J* fJwm frwn Call Mr f rM>r

kfca at I O N M Pwttkx. JM Brood It .•d tHM 741 SIM

i n , AM ro#« mwiwoi ittcrkM, fMir-cvlrit«tf. M.MS mltm

» Tan 4 MV f m «tra.MDMCER SHERMAN DODGE

Rt M. Wall Towntfilpm\m

DODGE Htt - Slant-%\*. «rtwn«Mc.Hutkfrt tmtfv and Interior, AM/FMtree I track, tworvrttw) to to

mrowflt lnip*ctiM, « J M originalmHM Ono ownor U N H7-7471DODGE 1977 CUSTOM VAN - SlertooMjM-track, tobto. coftatat chain, letboa and more M M or tofct over

' with o traaV » i iowKX>GE .V77 MAXI VAN - I K , IS

Illemlns. tlnttd... Quick rtleaM

V-f. automatic transmissionboth with

v ml l«m .p«if« L M W ovottobtt

art u log ionCall MI tilt

8 Auto Financing

1. Aulot For Sal*

DODGE IfN V U - m fltir.lnmr W». H I irMiMI wim Juil

pOOQE ASM N

AM/FM

- Iffl, ItaM Ww*.iNwrlw. vMyl r«*f,

MM SSlf'nff'cS S2; WALIRU CtAUIC IW» -

3 S * S "FALCON FUTURA IN) - Ta* UMAR»IV MM - 4 L M mllai. I l l l

FIAT ULES AND SERVICE - M i a( M m C*rf. Map* AM.. DM tank

FIAT-fEUGtOT DEALER• ILL LANIARO'I AUTO U L E t INCnuwsi

MARK I V I f ? * - L l l i -U silver greymar Mil Intorlor, U4M mllti, encotton* conoltlo* I79M Coll & M n

FIRERlRD 1M7 - tonvortlbl* *•••L r tvt< WtBColl MBM

FORD LTD ifH - Faur-avor, •«cotlorrl •hop*. MJM mltot. tmoll v I.two barrel, H IM or bott i ' l « ) 1

Lallwri uM«H> Ai«lno

f71 GRAN TORINO - E»unning conolllon Damaaadi«lno MM O M t l l

FORD IMI CUSTOM - Four<*••>. —>TRUCK CAP long M . »7i Call741 j r a

jrjK~J0(/FM rwHo, two-door.

HONDA CIVIC i m - Hatchback Air.twipM. W

C«ll 4 7 I » P

JAGUARS NEW i m - Whttllna du

KITSON CHEVROLET COHwy »* Ealonlown

MIRILAMIOLA MOTORS INC

H i M i m Sprlnat Rd . Rtd BonkDodg« Dotiun XI 14U

I. Auto Financing

100% FINANCINGUp to 48 months to pay to qualified

buyer on any now and used cors in stock.

2. Auto. For SaleLINCOLN MARK IV IfflU N . MMMttMa. Call

HJ*»or ILINCOLN CONTINENTAL MARK IVIfN - EscollOfil condition, full*

* 1. NWCMM hiriMlilplHfc] color

O L D U t d i O - l i m Cutkn. Soprom* Cloulc conwtniblo. Pom

raysastts'11"PINTO rffTl - Caullaftt twtfv Md tif, Moo* malar wart •**< ofta

ITS- 7|7-*lff b**MhlW> *+PtVMOUTH FUtV III ifTI « E lcoltont caftoWan M»t ortor or tradttor pickup cOMtoorod Call afl»r S otall On SMI., SIMM,PLYMOUTH FURY SALON - t f » .Air. powtr ttttrlng/brakti. outo

"IC, vinyl 'ot, low mileage

PLYMOUTH OUSTER WS - Throe»p*«d, • •cellenl condition, 14,000mlrM. tour now tlrtt. two n#w mowtlraa. Aiklng OHO. >71 -4*13 afttr r p mond oil doy &**>*»¥•PLYMOUTH FURY III Iff! - Grow,•MOD orWnat mllot. arr, outtmotk.oowtr staorlnaybrafcot.^ood conill'Ion. oi*ini) HJO0 Coll RS-3S71PLYMOUTH 1f7* DUSTER - Automalic, powtr •ttorlna.. AM rodlo. rttwUrtnpiui mow*. ticoHtflt mochanlcal(ondillon, lntorlor/tR(«flor mint con•Won Oll l Call J4J- W*PONTIAC GRANVILLE - IfH, blut.olr, automatic, power itoor-lna/brok«»'wlndowt'ifali. AM/FMtapo.V-l. U. inmllt i U H ToxtMVt*tt t«tro

REO4KER SHERMAN DODGERl M. Wall Townthlp

Mf 1100CHEVROLET itTJ - El Comlno. JMonalna. olr, pewtr ttoorlna, radio, now<ubb»i. oood condition IJ100 Ul 2M0PONT I* AC GRAND PRIX — Iff*. Air,powor itotflng/brahoi/wlndowi, ovtrtim InvtiloO Atklng 13500 Call

PONTIAC IfoO - Vonturo. two4oo>.mony now pom, rodlol tlrot. lowmllOOM. i*ctlltnt condition Juilpauod Impoctlon Muti Mil AUIn«ilaW Coll IK*\H ottt» • p m

Powot

CALL

Mr. D. 364-9740Autos For Sole 2. Autos For Sale

* HJI Pupai IW DICMhd tin CWHHVtfll And Irfdtrtbutai li dotui'Iw t icHak i 11 andi n•or. painbi catli oi it*utcn. Ami [inn ini i.1 spark piny M bt fauM.anywrim

This mom v»i (fan1!h.ivi1 [it brim ''"' l " l[l[i' '•"' wvicc departrwni nthautnd mliti to replace thing* gap ihingi m tjioit ihingi|Utl chtUft till' nil .md tilui k 'lir K»>1 ITU fullliH Minpcheclt-upi

V n t n mon w PtugtM Dittd Wt^m it the .Amenci fh.it uhuili irt>m the gmund up n >4iacl * ig

Tlicrcuttcni xM |>CM'I V1«J Jno'r tune u Yiuiinvr

MARK IV - i»Irvo/brokti/wlndowt/ontonriajtoottMoon rool. cuitomli*d trim, loathttIntorlor, all illvor. Original jojnomlloi Evcolltnt condition AshingWHO E m , *[**_

MonrnouttiCrtiytlor Plymootti

Hwy U Eotoritoww M S WMUSTANG IMS ~ 'SI* cyllrtdor, automalic RttOPtly palnttd *44J Coll

{MUSTANG 1W7 Whit* with bluikroot 30? V4, powor liter Ing.

monool brakoi. outomafli 11,100 orI ont offtr. Coll afttr t p.m , M1-3O5I

NOVA I t7« - Eic*HonUondltlonTboitofftr.

can w-aulOLDlMOHLE - IfTO, CutlOti Su

CIOHIC lonwartlbli Pom._ Encollonl condition I HOC

I $7« or 747-2»0 Mr Fotoy.

Hie Daily Kjuisin

Classified Waydial

"The Action Line"

542-17001. Autos For Sale

2. Auto. Far Sol*P M K H 1*77 - Groan EicfIMMt con-

SKI. ffl'WiHir'-c> ""•Mk-vtrt SMRIMC. 14\4m.

Rt u mm TiantHf mtmRITTENHOUSE

LINCOLN MERCURY, Inc.n Mwy n rTS-l f OcOOW Twp

SHORE MOTORSvotvo-Triumph Daattr

Hwy B »ST AT ION CAR 1«M — Four-aaor FordFolrtono Now Soort Dlo-Mord ooftoryStorti ovory doy MM 7*1 |4«i;741 i m

STRAUI aUICK-OPELNINE ACRES ol Now m4 UMd CoriMwy U Ml »m Ki

THE FINEST SELECTION - 01 M land mod can In Monmautti CountyOvor 1 » olr (ondlllonod now COM InUach. McGLOIN SUICK OPEL INC.,$hrowt*urv Awo . Now Shrowibury

THUNDERt IRO 1171 - Loo4od. fullpowar V»ry aood londltlan 11400 Coll

TOP TRADE ALLOWANCE - SyfOfttMTVICO OOWNES PONTIAC, U Lowor Main S I . Motowaw. Sat-l lt*

T* ln Boro Motor* Inc111 Nowmon Spring Rd. Rod tankAMC! JEEP 747-aMO

VOLVO - I f f l , tME. towr^aaod. air,•unrool, AM/FM. I oath* i Inferior,powtr ttoorlnfl/btoko* WioB »7 » UVOLK&WAGEH~~1«7. - Supor BovtloSon roof, rodlo. radial t l r « . roally nlc*car, I I . I7J 471-71UVOLKSWAGEN IH f VAN - EKCttllonlcondlllon, IIJOB mllot on onglno nDoilt 17344171.* t B * P m

VOLKSWAGEN - IMf Out. Robullt

" * " " "W H E I A N PONTIAC BUICK OPEL

Hwy » FroohoW

WHITE TWO DOOIlf7S "I ILK.

CAOILLAC -

3 Trucks AndTrailersFOND BUCKET TRUCK

» working htlahtCall 143-0573

CHEVROLET 1171 - •'t ton. pick upEicollonl condition

Coii 717 sonCHEVROLET tLAZER - 1971 !mlln. fully loodod Colt doyi. 7474•vtl , 143-Otn Aih tor WayntCHEVROLET PICK -UP — W/L towVtxctllorit condition, runt wtll. muttMM H100 Coll 471 S4H Dftc iCHEVROLET PICKUP I»W. .1*t vilndor tnglne JiO. t.,000 mlln, nowoil pump, water pump ond brak«t WtSor btst otftr (all m i n iDATSUN 19// i;,JQO ITlHtt, foultMtd wllti cap U.S00 firm Hon.

FORD »TJ F ISO PICKUP - Fourwhttl drlvt. automallt, powor ttotrIng, JSI cu In onalno All Itrraln l lrtlRollbai, ihori bint. AM/FM ittroo,cuilomiiM In ond out. I?,000 ml(o*.Mult tot Roit oMtr ovtr U«0

Coll MrFORD BRONCO 1979 -Mulltr on Sun tvonlna

M7 -4 mRD 1*7S PICK-UP — v i . now tlroi.

brokrt. ond mart Porwltd ond Inwlottd cop MJOO 74lHk4S9

LPEUGEOTBill Lanzaros

tUMifU " PEUCEOT

334 Main St. Matawan 583-9000

GMC PICKUP 1*74 - SlHcyllntfor,ilandord low mlltt. 11.100 Coll

RANOCR CAP - Fit, • box): ttotfcIntulatod ond ponvllnf. cronk windowt. mint condlllon. MJS 741 14t*

TRUCK INSUNANCEU d l d b

WRECICER l»70 CHEVROLET CIO -Now drlvt chain, UMO Coll day77\ H07, 0»t. Ml two. |

2. Aulot For Sale

CHECK OUR INVENTORY BEFORE YOU BUY!

S"//7 n u JrLINCOLN MERCURY

NINE ACRES Of CAPS

Located dl intersection ol Hwy 35 & 36

and Parkway Exit 117

We are easy to reach Irom anywhere'

Tel. 2640500 Highway 35

KEYPORT, NEW JERSEY

1970 MAUBU4-*. HtWll. 4 c,l. o.l... mill. il..ri« t

oratn. 7).MS altii

1977 DODGE CUSTOM VAN»-4. m* p k oil i a i . M/IHI m m ntM»

HMCHUO - 4 ( , l . a.1..bra*H. N.4I7 lalki. w >21951975 CHEVROLET #

I M pkki/p. 6 •,!.. lla. !-.».«.. ml . >a>ik.>. M U M lap. 55 411 milti.

|, P/l.

1977 NOVA4.>. t i|l

IMM Krfiti.

1978 FORD f 150I PtCHIIf - t cTl. 4-iH. . P/l, M.0J1

4 Molorcrclt*CVCLf INWIUNCf

monuuj i R CYCIjf^StlRVICi, INC.p lan 4 J r d . A * « - L # » |

crCLIi»viCftlr*. A»

S AutoStrvlcts/Parts

CHI Sa*-W» oWor « a wVOLOttWAOIN I W I M M » - I * .NE I

Auto Rtnt/LOMtRENT A VAN - Law. Nw ratw Call

- % H M D . MWY » . Kov

7 Auto InsuranceAUTO INHIIUNCE

CALIPHOENIX M O K I t A G I - Famauitor law cod auto iwayrejig. I f

10 WantedAutomotive

t&C TOWINGHlontni prlcoi aatd Junk tori wontod

FOR YOUR CAROR LIGHT TRUCK

NEPTUNE MOTORS

m Hwy IS, NoptviM' i mil* So ol Aibvry ClrcloQUALITY CARS * TRUCKS

ALWAYS IN STOCK

CARS WANTED741 lor

JUNK CARSIMMEDIATE CASH PAID

CALL ROCCO, TPHS4

TOP DOLLARFOR U l f D CARS

LIPPIN MOTOR CAR CO , INC.Rt. M IgyfirtHo. N.J 7T7 UM

WE NEEO USED CARSlop dollar poM MULLER CMEVROLTT, Hwy M, Makwwn. Ill MM.WE RUY USED CARS AND TRUCKS

WE BUY CARStilt* orchock1

TOM'S FORDHwy l i KOVfJSTt

264-1600

Htlp WontedMale/Female

AIDES HOMEMAKER - HomoHooltt. a id * Full or port tlrrtt and Uhour duty No txporlonco nocouaryFrtt training caurio Earn hourlywoot* plm mnaofji Car and totoahonontcouarv. Call PamOly l> Chlldron »Sorvko. ttiW or WtMIMAID CONDITIONING MECHANIC -For olr condition toa ond hooting, compony Eiporloncod Ronoflti Call Mid«ait Mochonlcol. MJ 7199

ASSEMBLY .Will train Apply Motion SyitormCorp . *l RtoraWl PI , Shftwrtwry,N J , otl thrrwbwry A»oASSISTANT BOOKEEPER -porl«fK«4ing accu

n book*, oo payroll. Wlllftfldirltot Ropty to atoakkoan ot. Lana ifarvch, N.J

COCKTAIL WAITRESS/WAITER -Enporltncod only Call HJMM Mtwoon | n a.m.

2. Autos For Sole

ART PERSONNEL

INKINGEARN AND LEARN« r t tBTNMc* twn •

L. j " GONZER'SSS1t"J^»SSStCotl 142-3900

ml r M H M & t la umtai Way of"h Cauntv. all aanta Awa .

- N.J D T I I-tmtltv emoUytr M/F

CCNTHAL STATION OIVATCHf« -Wast Lana aranch aurtlor alarm cam•an iSBim alimdur lor aw. l>a»r»Sir k» 3 W S S lafatvla. DM.nvauah Frl . M . lltBMCLtllCM.

ATTENTIONCLERICALS

( norln al HM Hill Gro*^ LM.. hM aclarim uaiwlna for laiwiana wllti tatcllonl rKord-SooolM ana maH> ablllry plus flood typing (Kill*

If you hava thota aualHIcatlom. applytaafwaan I A.M. and * P.M.

PERSONNEL DKPTCharles of the

Rltz Group Ltd.Routa ». Hamaal. H.J.I W I Ml Wai EH. n l

Emial O»aonu«lty Emplayar M/FCLEANUP AND GET - Rooty fir•on Far outa ranfal ofMKy Fullllm*.

CLEEK TYPIST - Part tlmo (Oft collbatlt), for local i t » i « i cMilflod

•Illng o UUalloBa an •

3iSnotlct

5TCLERK TVPIST

Local otoctronlct firm In nood of poodtyptlt to worlx with purchatlng andinv*ntory control Somo phon* workand filing Involvod Starting tataryUliporhouf Plu» oil b4tf*.m» ContwtLlta Novmann

WRIGHT PERSONNELi n »rood St Rod tank 7474RM

COMPUTER OPERATOR

Growlnt Sowthorn Monmovth firmttwfclM p*ri4M with tolM accountingoiporionc* on mkil computer GroaTpolontlol NK rrpht IwHvlauol at oopartmont It now and ••pon«n9 StartingwHory tm par wo*k plui all btmoftH.Contact L I M Noumann

WRIGHT PERSONNELISJ Biuod SI Red Bonk /47 4IKCOOK - Port 11m*, l i am to1:M

A4 I Boochvl*w Ro)Koantowrf

COSMETICIANFar tlofant moke up .tore t iporloncoa only S aoy», no nl«ht» Eic*ll*nt talory Call Foe* Plac*.

COUNTER PERSON - AutomolU*Joa««r/Warohouto Mutt o« *>p*rl*rvc*d All banofltt Call Bill orPhil, H I 7 1(MOSSING GUARD APPLICATIONS- Now Ming r*c*lv*d Inawlr* Llrtl*Sll<r*r Polka O4jpt . 4M Protp*rt Ay* ,Llrtl* SllworDELIVERY PERSON - Holpor Dally. part tlmo Apply In portoft, Splwo*Frorltrt. Inc . W Avo Of Two Rl«*rt.

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST - 4W*iywoofc Koypori CnoftMCO prol*rrodRaply o*. QMt. fiU Dally Rotttttr.Hv»w»awfy, N J OTti.

t. Autos For Salt

See OurMid-Winter

BuysToday!

RED BANK VOLVO

[We can sell lor lets and give you

more. It's the people that count ..and

not the site of the store!!

• OVER 22 YEARS OFEXCLUSIVE SERVICE

Chick out "BOTTOM LINEbefore you buy anywhtn

Kit. S20 NEWMAN SPRINGS RD.

741-5881

SI. Help Wanted

HP*DCDTM. NYSIINItT"VJSSSDIIVU MITTWI

-r M a* r», |a<n>MI

Zi». H 00*1 ,"S? i . alja--!tanInj Mary O K par Hour Contact Llta

M M U M r M M l MaM I tm. la tmya • •

DUIVIK WAHTtO - CarlMM, mm Mva am tar «j

aa. Clrtrt r i m , Mw»

EKG TECHNICIAN• x y Doctor • alflca. •*> Mfty > MRaouma wllti ratorancat ta tan v mTM Dollv Kaalilar. IMawAunf. N janaiCLeCTHO MECHANICAL TICMMICIAN - Mtat rtod tdianwttca ond oo•rlrKu Call Mr tlaao»<, Uttm

mro* ta flv* y«art OMporlo

w* oftor a frtMrtd anvtroMnonl. fullyfowTpotHlw* iQtarlt, and an ottMrrtlv*

RapVy with rrwmt, tatary roawlr*monfi and ovdloWtlty to k i « - M .Tho^Dolly Roflltttf, Snr.wtbury. NJ

E l t l t 4 y r m/lASSEMRltR

RtPRIOERATION/MECHANICALSotf-itartor hi work from print* Ci

Cl I f mma hande* In m* M O of comma* hand•railnp mtm M M O T I M h*lp

* E l t Impwlt* Lab Inc ,\m Corll*. Av* . N*p*wv* Equal OpDorttMlty Emptoy*< M/F

C* •railnp mtm

M. App*y Eloctro Im\m Corll*. Av* . N*pDorttMlty Emptoy*< MEXPERIENCED - Part tlmo R«rh*lp Apply In perton at Th* SMrolooEXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER -

payroll

FIELD SERVICEREPRESENTATIVE

(BUILDING PRODUCTS)

s*%ix"tsr&TiwSing product* Wt oft*r o unlawt oppartunrty for o rfpoM.aH IrtolvMuolwith mochanlcal aatitud* ana Mimtarpwtry aWlltf. Work onwolvttj

mil _Jonoy A

. I* holpfwlonarattk. Mlf ttarttoa, ana «working on tnolr awn ond »thalr own H I M YOU must ao a

c a p y ob ork onvaiwottpoctlng, od|uttlng and carrocttnfpTaawdS and ot»*mwi*t whih hav*baan intailod at |ot> tttot tn

which hovt

locotod ' •»'

ond totitry tnoir comoiotnti. 'tutl time omptoymont. sNctllont wortIno condltloni. vthlclt, uniform.Salary comminiuratt with t ipartanca To apply call Jao Nari,

Equal Opportunity Imptoyor tk,9FIREWOOD

w-maFLORAL DESIGNER Florltr Mwtt

«• - hHI llmo. hi•lion, pay Coll i

FULL OR PART TIME - Hotp. •(art•mmaaMoly Apply in oorton or coilRon i Cor Wooh. Rl iSVMtdatotow*

IMC CLtANING PERSON -

GENERAL OFFICE WORKER - IBMkeypunch ••porlOftc* nocouarv P*r

~ Ulttan Norwood Olttrlbutfjriitpo.il

GUARD/SECURITYMidland Glatl Compafiy ha* lmrWOdipH aaanlnf hw a rotaontiwc In *vtawal to fill woconcy as a SecurityGuard Eiporltnca required SotaryalM liaoroi employe* bonafiH • •

Apptv In 0*rion. t a m to 11 noonMonday throoah Friday to

RORFRT (*OOK Security Ol 'Ktw

Midland Glass Co. Inc.

CLIFFWOOD AVE.CLIFFWOOD, N.J.

An eaual opportunity ompt«y«f mtt

1, Autot For Sal*

'78 PLYMOUTH

HORIZON4 dr, 4 cyl. 4-s(x) mnltrans, mnl stoenng &mnl front disc brakesAM radio, front wheeldrive, 12,178 miles.

'389576 CHEVROLET

NOVA4 dr. 6 cyl. autoIrans . P /S . P 'B .24.921 miles

'3295•75 HORNET

AMC 4 d i . 6 cyl. autotrans . mnl steering &brakes. 25.125 miles

'2195

78 CHEVROLET

CHEVETTEHatchback. 4 cyl. aulotrans . mnl steering &brakes. AM radio, aircond , 3,045 miles

'38957 6 DODGE

DART4 dr. 6 cyl. autoirans. P/S. P/B, vinylrool, air cond , 21,778miles

'349574 CHEVROLET

NOVA* dr 6 cyl. autotrans , P / S mnlbrakes. 38.992 miles

'2495

•77 VOLKSWAGEN

DASHER2 dr Hatchback. 4 cylauto" trans , mnl steer-,.ing & brakes, sun rool.air cond 25,663 miles

'49957 6 PONTIAC

FIREBIRDEspfit, V8. auto. P/S.P/B, buckets with con-sole, mag wheels, aircond 44 787 miles

'469574 DODQE

CHALLENGER

2 dr. V6. aulo Irans .P/S. P 'B. 51.884miles

'2395

77 TOYOTA

CELICA GT4 qyl. 5 spd mnltrans. mnl steering &mnl disc brakes.AM 'FM stereo withcassette, air cond ,15.550 miles

'5195•76 PLYMOUTH

VALIANT4 dr. S cyl. aulo. P/S.P/B. vinyl tool airconO. 34.820 miles

'34957 1 CHEVROLET

MONTE CARLO

2 dr. VB. auto IransP'S, P/B. air cond82.1 It miles

'2195

7 6 PONTIAC

GRAND Le MANS2 dr. V8. auto Vans ,'P/B, P'S. P.wind..buckets wv console.AM/FM stereo, aircond . 38.069 miles.

'399575 GREMLIN

AMri. 2 dr. 6 cyl. autotrans . P/S, mnlbrakes. 70554miles

'17957 1 CADILLAC

ELDORADO

VS. auto. P/S, P/B,P/wind , P/df -Molts,AM/FM stereo, aircond , 69,150 miles

'2295THE JERSEY SHORE'S LEADING CAR, TRUCK & VAN CENTER MV lees & Tax

Extra

*ONM0U-H«OCI.N(OUNtllH»»OiSt(HIV»OHI0lAll« ^ 1 | Hk J>l I • • ^ r" l P* ^ W fl^ofe j^^ I BP T

TOWNE-S- CIRCLE CHEVROLETC / H u V n U L t 1 "We will not be undersold.. . so why pay more ..."

YOU CAN BUY A NEW

VOLVOFOR LESS AT SHORE MOTORS

LARGEST VOLVO DEALER IN SOVTH JERSEY!

* HIGHEST TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES ANYWHERE• EXCLUSIVE ] YEAR, U,tM MILE WARRANTY

• TOP N PARTS DEPT. IN ENTIRE U.S.A.• AWARD WINNING SERVICE DEPT.

- • UP TOM MONTHS BANK TERMS• BEST CHOICE OF MODELS * COLORS ALWAYS

• FINEST BODY SHOP ft FREE TOWING• PROFESSIONAL SALES PERSONNEL - OVER M YRS. EXPER

SHORE MOTORS1WY. SS S28-7SM WALL TWI

VOLVO

ffjCome In and see us today ,

tor great buys on new and used carsYou'll like doing business with...

671-6200 641 Shrewsbury Ave. 741-3130 Shrewsbury62 Lower Main St.Matawan 566-2299

THE REGISTER

CLASSIFIEDADS

Lines asLOW as.

SHREWSBURY. N.J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25.1979

pet lineper day

D7

FAS1 f

542-1700

TCWV COMTROl CLHK -

KeypunchOperatorsAAATAWAN

FULL TIME(1ST SHIFT)

FULL & PART-TIME(2ND SHIFT)

•« M M limiiienii inning. i« •>» « I ff

wtyr **•e imping sCMF CORP. 583-3660

lew* •pyrtwilty —letgyof M/F

HMOWLIOCIAaH - K M C M .

•Me* fc » i«w; .Yw can !»• ocrlv tx

'«*"**' htM In ftrW < * f t lC i . WrH.

Y, NJ.. ffW,LMHItMRN - Wart at N>mt an ftw

LANDSCAPE WORKERS - F»r ptofittat "»* wwkwcH— crtwt A*rli uttaUt* Fall Pay rail 1MM4 on abilityMjMJMtlvltv Call J NU

LAUNCH OPERATOR Diesel

51 H tap Wanted

3).Ht»Wwrt»d

LEGAL SECRETARY

Lin INSURANCE MPMtENTATIVII - Opa.rtolt, |utl UwkMStarllnf Tkimiiin WIRII riu I

roMa morirt. u M M uMt

S fflflis

«#• raderimptrimc*. Un

MECHANIC LANDSCAM FOREMAN- Matt or tomato, with # M U * I kiwwlaaat an* M»*rto«K« to oawrot* andmawrtatn aajutammf ond work withkntacopt construction crmt Y«orroundipowlNIIII*. Coll Jo» Moroou

MIOICAL UCRETARY - Er«~Daci •fflci, tftv«f*lfl»d dull** willn PtK«anabt«, rttponilMa. typingi-Frl . M . W x l t i w m . to Bo.

Tl D l l R t l S h b

MEDICAL AUISTANT - Physicians•met. p»Kt tlmt 1:31 p.m lo 7 M ortotor «AM. througti Wed., busy officeSon* itiwm* lo • « • v Ml, TtM DallyHOWw, Wwwtwrv, HJ 07701MEDICAL KECfPllOMIll - Full

SZgaaas_ , ond tntlHWloitlc Writ* to SouG MO, The Dolly Register Shrewsbury,

MESSENGER - CBf UN portTlm*•piHlwiu approximately l i N h t g i i aw » O « P « hour, plus IS cents p«rmile, How* flonlMo, weekdays «*)[

domoa* Call U l mo. Eit i f f 0 * * *

MURSf RN M/W - 1M a m to 1:11p.m , 1-4 day* a WHIL, alternate w*e*onda. toactwltw ICF W-9IM. 10 o m•o I p.m

PART TIME - GtfWfal a wand flack work AM *r F M Aaaly InHf lW. K M U ' i , 44 A * * ! SI , Ylnton

51. Htlp Wonted

LOOKING FOR ADDITIONALINCOME?

Were looking lor the right person to take charge ol allhorn* rjehvefy in the City ot Long Branch if you'reinterested, call

The Dally/Sunday RegisterCirculation Department

542-4000Ask loi Bob McKnlghl

51 H.lpWantM

NEW JOB OPPORTUNITYWould you en|oy working in a new pleasant ultramodern air conditioned office? Parking availableLiberty Mutual Insurance Company, a nationallyknown insurance company, is considering the Middtotown Tinton Falls area as the location for a largeregional office To help us make a final decision wemust determine the availability ot office employeesThere will be immediate iob openings

JOB OPENINGS INCLUDE:e TYPISTS e RECORD CLERKS

e WORKMAN'S C O M P . PAYMENT CLERKS• GENERAL CLERICALS

Applicants with high school diploma essential E»penence is not necessary Company will train 5 lulldays (8 15-4 30) If you are interested answerv/rthin 5 days furnishing (1) educational back-ground (2) previous experience it any (3) addressand/or phone number

WRITE T O MRS. SICCARDIMFUM

240 South Harrison StreetEast Orange. New Jersey 07019

71. MerchandiseFor Salt

71. MerchandiseFor Salt

DISCOUNTS FORSENIOR CITIZENS

NURSE M/WIV Trtercpist

RIVERVIEWHOSPITAL

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENTAHanHan: irando OaaWt

Union SI. Radftanh, N j741->mr E*t. m

Eawoj OapartiwHy Emplayar

PART-TIME SALESMan » wabtfiaaHii-y and Mwrtiwtcaiparltrvct pratarrtd Apply In aarto.or phona 7*1 SIM lor appofntmaflt

NATELSONSBrood ond Front SH , Rtd ton*

PART TIME - tvt drlvtr. prlvoMKhaal, will trotfi U par ho l i t i

artajaw M p.m.PART TIME -- VaKri car porfcaf M/WH w n H a m , M p m Con work oil orpart C41H Manaoar, M M m .PART-TIME - Dallvary pirVon

t d avtnlnga Mutt hovt own corApplv In ptrion, Oannv'i Pino 1 S oMAyi at lona,

TIME CLERK CHclarti Imr Eotantown ao n

rasumt or toll K Koivlvo U SouthJaflarion a0 . wMppony. N.J H7-tM0

PART TIME TYPIST

Rad lank firmoccur oft typfit to work Saturday* only,ataMhour Any Will train on mini computtr Contact U M Ntwnonn

WRIGHT PERSONNEL117 •rood St Rad K M * Won

PRICING - PffpotiMi inventor,maintain stock levels, control track otderi and work with purchasing ogomEipt'itfutd onlv latot ond service cconstruction equipment c oi

PROGRAMMER/ANALYST - Tlftdof commuting? Highly challengingPMlllon available for o senior .yitermanalyst lo design ma|or tyitem for anInstallation undergoing expansionJJVi howr work weeS, liberal benafltttend r n u m to tot NUT, Th« DallyRegister. Shrawtfcury. N J . 0/701

Manmaufn Caunty Making par ton withtadwlcal kacttorawnd * mparviM 4 sMwpacfaxt Mufi bt tomllior with in* otmlci-atcapai. mlcromatan. collpan,andtaoWtloraodWoaofinf, willpoyua> la H 3 J M All baMflfi Contod K d

WRIGHT PERSONNELIS7 irood SI Rtd tonfc 747-MMRN OR I P N |M>WI

l l h i y H rSB.

51 Help Wanted

0HI*n Strvictl h « t»>mpo'»rylobs (hat win ipoti you Sacrelanes. 1rP<its and other officejobs Top pay, work when,where, you want Benefits Nofat Fm brush Jp»

SI.HttpWonltdOUALITV CONTROL - Intpacto* Eiptrle*c«4 anly With macltanl-cai/ajactrical aacharawrtd

mfiuXiii ttrtx/iSCajiat OpurtiiaW,' emplayar M/f

QUALITYASSURANCEINSPECTOR

Cnarln of tha Rlti Croup Ltd U teaktfif • QA Lina iMptdar for ttM•Mfl. ! P M I AMnave QA Inipacilna txparItnca. prtltrably In tttt casmatfc or :ir phormacatftlco

Intarattad opptlcanrt ihould contact:PERSONNEL DEPT

Charles of theRitz Group Ltd.

Route U, Holmdol, N J OTTOM440M, Exl H I

aajual opportunity amployar m/fREAL ESTATE SALES - SaHconfl*rfit. Motowon oraa ratMant naadad Inour raiMantlol talaa tfapertmant CoiRich Grimm, SMS—.

REAL ESTATE SALES

ast In odvtrtlt(no, Iralnlrtg ond ftnonkil progrom. Opanlna In Mlddlttown

ond Ocean Twp.MELMEO AGENCY tfitijiREAL ESTATE - Sale* associatewonted for ana of Mlddlatawn'i laodlngooanclti Copobli ot hondllrtg •*tcutlvt cllanteU, full tlmt onlyLlcanta a must Eiperlenc* htlpfulbut not nactuary Sophlillcatad mar

cMttown

REAL ESTATE SALESWheion Realty Group. Atlantic HighMods offlt * hat opening for full limelicensed salespeople Call » l M0J foInterview.RECEPTIONIST - For busy medicooffice Experience preferred 4frhouweek, alternate Sat Mall return* loMatawon Medical Associates. 113 MainSI . Matawan, N J.RESPONSIBLE Efficientpttrlertted parson preferred, lo work Ingift tnop Knowledge o( Hobrtw "Jewish helpful Port tlm* Coll HI „for full portlculon or apply In personany day except Sal al The Gal* Weif474 Brood St., Shr*w»t>ury. N J

SALES CLERKExcellent opportunity tor people witgood public awareness and outgolrvMfioooil t l t i Morning through loothour llme» available Food dltcourthflexible hour* plus on (for mi providedFor details, call Manager, betweenond 5 p m dally. ?47-1355 Friendly Icdo

ShoDH F

747 BrE

endyod SrC Shop.

Shrewibury An Equal OpportunltEmployer M/WSALESPERSON - Portion availablewltti rapidly growing food companyOpportunity tor orlghl Individual teefcIng o future In tale* Mutl ipaok lloiIon Salary open Sand ntumi lo BoD-1H, The Dolly Ragliter, ShrewsburyN J , 07»l

SALESPERSON

p m Dunkln Doftutt, aUHwy IS. M M

•kingCOpobl* t u i v n lor their bvty officeDivert* petition, at It o imo.il firmP rev lout **perl*nc* In Insurance norequlrtd. Mutt be good typlit and havdictaphone experience Starting M Mp*f week Conrad L I H Neumann

WRIGHT PERSONNEL1ST Broad SI. Red Bonk 7*7-0.

SECRETARV/KEYPUNCH

oreo. good typing ond keypunch obit

51 Help Wanted

FIATAUTO ACCESSORY INSTALLER

Pan-time. 5 p m to 9 p m Mon through Thurs . all day SalAmerica's largest exclusive Fiat Lancia Dealer .Must haveown tools $4 per hour plus incentive

W M i e contact fl. Utughtt,t e f t m n TO a m end noon, 74< (S76

LANCIAMOTOR CORP

, 3 H Maple Am., Red Bank,

l.Htlp wonted

RN's(AA/F)DEDICATED TO THEART OF CARING

RIVERVIEWNEEDS YOUCOME GROW

WITH USIM SaV-bad, modern, progressive

Central J*rt*y community hotoltol ItMaking protoulonal. career-orientedndlvlduolt to |oln Mr nursing itoffallowing optnlngt available Im

CRITICALCARE RN'S

ull and pan lime itafT openings foII ond I I I thlftt Previous ICU onicu experience preferred

AAED/SURG &Orthopaedic RN'sull andparil ime openings on 1-11 ondW thlftt Prevlout experience preerred, but new graduate, entour~ apply

lory commensurate with «ip»rL.._d educational background. *nteniiv«naflts pockagt {Include* Ire* dentam l . thin differential, tuition f i lm

jriement ond pleosont wor* •motpher* Call or apply;

RIVERVIEWHOSPITAL

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENTAttention Brtndo Gaddlt

U Union Si Red Bank, N741 2700. Cit M0

•tjHBl Opportynlty Employtf

""MANAGERTRAINEE

i management pailllon con be yourftor i l l montht tpeclallitd training

Earn up to lli-OTO to Ui.000 a year Imonogement We will Mnd yov ttchool for a minimum of two wtefct

u m m paid, troln yow In the flelwith a guaranteed Income to tlart, M Ing and tervlce In ettaWlthed ocountt Need to hav* a good car. beondabi*. be amblt loui and

greulv* Hotpltallration, Mo|or Mcol ond exceptional profit tnarlng _.tovlngt program Coll now for an op

ilntment

F. Getz264-2400

all Tuet through Thurt., 10 la 4 p.m" - « ! Opportunity Company M/F

SECURITY GUARDSitperlence preferred Saocoat) Prod

uctsT Port Monmoulti WtmSECRETARY - Actlva real estate of

ct needs bright, alert person witht oni l il t

iood tleno ani typing U l l i * to m

ond gr*«1 our clientele Call tar <•ointment, Stl 1MB

n, Tonys Mobil,e Awe , Red tank.

SMBET METAL MECHANIC - Par aT

SUPPLY PERSON -edja of snipping ond receiving, pip.Itflnas, iHrtl, bolts ond foals required

Mmt/hoveworeheuM experience Appf m person I t Soocoost Producti. Incnort Road. Port Monmoufh No lelt

hn persontort Road

phone callsWITCHBOARO OPERATOR - Nigh

shift, 117 a m Three or four day. p«ree* Long term T4I-47W,RAVEL AGENT Z F«p*rlinL»d Rt

J l w confidential. Bo. M M , Langkronen. N.J 07740

J'10RUCK MECHANIC -

RUCK MECHANIC - igood working condilloni __potd ben«tlH Wooet bated on •;partonct. Rtftranctt Perth Ambay4434117.

51 Help Wonted

AUTO — TRUCKPARTS

ASSISTANT MANAGERA u l O / T r u t k p a r t idealer/ware home Job with

Komiilng future in lastest growB ports outlet in Central Jertty

oreo AH benefits, vacation, elcMinimum t iprr i tn te three yeorsApply Irr person

SCHWARTZPARTS

HBWe.tFrontSt.R»d Bank

51. HtlpWonfdTUTOa - Mien SchMI trtahmon. Ene

mi Mp)7«" — h " t a ^ o

TVPIJT

muS k* BMd ryplit with tlrong molt.•Willy AWdWioan woo. NO fit.

• 11* I.A I TEMPOaARIES

m aroM si MB m n

- 4-* "-""-assUTILITY PERSON - For custodialmaintenance work In the Union Beochtchoal system F f t i

ork In the Union BeochFor Information coll

WAITRESS/WAITER - (Cocktoll ondrood), pwi-llme. two yeors experiencerequired Apply » person after 4 p m ."• ' Mon., Long Johns Ltd , I I iaach

I., HtfMqwoVWAITRESSES/WAITERS - Mutt betxparlenced Apply In person, RenDinar, 117 West Front SI , Red Bonk

'ATCHER ANO SHUTTLER - Moleor femola Experience preferred, butwilling lo leoth those willing lo learnthe trade Apply Porte* EmVoldery.101 Hwy liTKeypori.WORK OVERSEAS - Auitral la,Africa. South America. Europe, etcC o n s t t i o , Sales, Engineer»,Clerical, etc MOM to IS0.O0D* t i -

KnMS paid For Employment Inimol lon wri te . Overseos Em

ploymtfil, BON 1011. Boston. Ma 03103WRECKER OPERATOR -Weekends,days ond nights Experience ond

ired A l I persn

52 Babytlttlng/ChlldCare

71 Merchandise ForSalt

71 MtrchondUtFtrSole

3 LINES5 DAYS

$3.00MILY AOS COM M im t far raw aulcklytar tale ONLYh h W t

al I M . I I • No Mbofor* ovolrotlofi

Ho ckoneti M com*rove sofnaTning to eat IT rnane

542-1700THE DAILYREGISTERCLASSIFIED ADS

BEDS - Two twin itie mattroMM andDON tprlngt with trarnet ond hoodboard CaTfafviM.

BABYSITTER - Mon Frl , I :1M:»p.m Two boyi Own trantportallontoll before 1 pm or otter 7 p.m.

53 Domestic Help

HOUSEKEEPER/BABYSITTER -Five eorly mornings, Mlddletown

471 7J4t on«r ] p m

54 Situations WantedFemale

BABYSIT — In my horn*, imakdavtExcellent care and good mealiHumton area Call •« , PO-OlliBABYSIT — In my horn*, weekdoyt,•»celt*nt core, Port Monmouth arcoColt bttwitn M p.m., 717-7114.H O U S E C L E A N T N G - Sat. anfySpaakl Sponlth, Italian, a llftl* Engllth Coil 747mt.NURSING CARE In the home, lorthe tick, elderly Invalid or hand)copped Enptrnnted Coll S4J-eiMWILL 1ABYSIT in my home. RlveiPlaia area Will pick up from LJncroftarea Coll I41-M71

55 Situations WantedMale

BOXES - Corrugated Pocking tup

Sles for industry and Moving andrxoge Coll W4m or 4*Ma7»

CERAMIC CHRISTMAS C L U t - Artabout our vary unique Christmas taa-ckris Discounts on greanwore, firingand suppllet All year round DovtCeramic*, IW First A M . AtlonllcHtohlonds, m i m' MAIN [ INK r f N( IH(, Surplus HIquality vinyl clod Must sacrifice »cents sa ft Installed with top rail, 100minimum Term* arranged. JaM*l7.CHINA SERVICE - U. polr . i i™ fireplace occeisorles. badVoom sef, TV's,electric bad and choir, miscellaneous717 l U t

Daily-Sunday

REGISTERClassified Ads

as low as

43 cents

For FAST RESULTSAT LOW COST

phone

REGISTERClassified Ads

542-1700Toll Free from Motowon Area

566-8100Toll Free from Mlddletown Areo

671-9300

windows, ceramic tiles, etc Corp.try, shelves bum. Coll 747 3t41

57 Day Care/NurserySchool

, HnOfOVfOn. Me Orjov

DESKS. FILES - Tablet, chain, oddIng mochlntt , typewriters, offkeeqwlpment, etc. at bargain prke i Newor ut*d A A.C DESK OUTLET, i mRt M, Oofchurtt Q1-IW0.

131. Houses For Sole

DINETTI U T - Tab**and •!• c M r i ,

DISHWASHER - IWpalirt Ihrea-cycle. ovocodo. partafcle 175 Call741 1447.DRUM U T -

J3ftfl.motchlna curMtna. mini candtflanFour uptialetarad arm clialrs Walnutcoblnetbor. (lfv. htgh. M" wtda, 17'deep! Coll f l a r e pjw., 747-4WFOR BEST BUVI IN PIAMOS ANO

ORGANS CONSULT MAX LEWISTUSTING

FURNITURE - New moMreseet.t » « . dlnathn, Ut, rtalrs, Ill.tS,tables, l i f t s . K O SHARP SFURNITURE. 17S Hwy M, WeslKeonsburg Call afler I p.m , 1i«WV

FURNITUREFurniture ot a fraction above cost Anynomt b>ond ovollobJt such ot Bennlngton Pine. Pennsylvania House.

e. Henredon. Boker,.. Jantvry, and many,

many more For more Information.all weekdays l i t p jn .

721-MMFURNITURE CATALOG

iERVICE OF M JFURS - Ntvor worn, mink and loath*porti coat, muokraf ladial ana' athart.i i i n 10 ond I I . lacrttko Mual M loonto bo jpproclaiod Call Iq -MTI .FURNISH - Vauf homo at LORR A I N E S NEARLY NEW Owolltyplocot. unbollowoWo prlcoB-mutl too)M VondorWIt Aw*., Loonoroo (boMnd•o> IOn ico ) ,» l4a7 l Tuoi . . . . . > 10*0 t : » ; Wad. Ihraofll Sal.. I M .FURNISHING ON A LOW BUDGET?

Chock MOUSED FURNITURE CENTER OF RED ftANKFIno furniture lor

G.E - S«H cleaning rant* , vary goodcondition I12S.

Call I43MI4

Itnlihlng, U0 KltctMwhile. (W M4 7OB4GUITAR lfaO - Gibson S G . new tretwork, reflnlthod Utt firm Coll after •p.m , 4*5-W7t,

71 MtrdtandiMFcrsal*

HAMMOND & BALDWINPIANO AND ORGAN

CENTEROMUan ol <

PMBO HOMODM vow know

We Art N.J.'S.Larpest and Oldest

Piano Dealern ond Homlln. KlWbaW. Sohmor|»I . Ka -o l , lcnako.Evorott.Ca.

M , Haf^avvm a^d r%9Ff%r ptassaeLARGE DISPLAY OF

GRAND PIANOS.M MAIN STREET

ASBURVPARK, M J tTTiI

Opan daHy I to t , Sat Mil -

LUXURiOUiBCDROOM I I T - H t *duren niahogony, torgjat twto baeM vHh

-wan. OvMandhM

choir, excellent tC1I aftar 4 p.m., M.-HM

MEDITERRANEAN - WrtyfjW «ron

MOVING SALE - f o W i w t lmica kltchan tobte, *•• toatolrllne def kennel, dollhem*.etc I4J4CM

ORGAN - Baldwin, with Fun Machineboakt, bench and built (« racorde.Artlwf %m. Call aftof * p.m., W4MB>

Pianos & OrgansLott of Chrlttmas Trade-in*

Player Piano Set*

The kKgett MkKtlan-in any a r k *rang* New or Utod. W*

Sell, Rant, Move or Buy Give Nw bettService. And •hwwyt

a smile Put a Illtle Mutlc In your (IteCall us.

EH___EAN COUNTY MALL

More Closslfled

IBM TYPEWRITERSRENTAL $19.50 per mo.Rent with aptlan *a buy 171-017KENMORE ELECTRIC - Ctothetdryer Eicoltani condition AaproiImotely ] yeon old. S i t . 4fMaW.

OLOR RIVIERA BLINVERTICAL BLINDS

W% OFF LIST I

i HOUSfc FURNITURE SALE -er, Captain's table and chain,

Ul . Housts For Sale

61 BusinessOpportunities

ARE YOU TIREDOF GETTING STARTED

on me tall end of every Fontttk Bullnett Opportunity? We will train youhow lo apply thlt ipecial Silicon Poilthon automobllet A very eoty and tr* I

BREATHTAKING COASTAL VIEWPicture this. 2 Story fireplace and wrap around tiered staircasew artist skylighted balcony, plus 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, workroom, play room, dining room—truly the right home lor the•contemporary- lover! $135,000 Call and see it todayi

7 BEDROOMSLarge living room w/lireplace. dining room, 2V countrykitchen plus separate 2 bedroom ranch w/fireplace Could bea money maker! $59,900 Give us a call and we'll be glad toshow you1

Ul Houses For Sale

"BV« O#MMI gJfdjra 1W fmttl"

REALTORS 671-3311Anrv# r* f i i j

mandout profit operation. Never ailock wotan In the auto Industry Set up•our oreo today Coll Mr Worren,i l l M41U0, or writ* CLIMATESHIELD, US Buill*ton Ave .Feaitervlfle. Pa 1*047.

A KNOWLEDGEABLE - Individuallocking a serious Investor for o tan-lostlc venture Into the world otchoosecofca. Wholesale ond retail, fullpartnership offered Call after e p m ,James Hughes, tM-e in Serious Inqulrlet only pleas*.EARN EXTRA MONEY M -SWperMOmailing circulars Frea Inloi mollonWr i te : S T . Enterprises, SAIOZBenfbouafi E, Houston. T» Jtm

SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOMEBE YOUR OWN B0SS1 •

DELI'SUB SHOP tor sale, cleon, compttttly redecorated. In excellent loco(ion. to car parking lot Asking tt0.000

p.m call 741 17*1

CLASSIFIED

BUSINESS DIRECTORYA DAILY GUIDE

Of BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR NEEDS

63 Money To LoonCREDIT ASSISTANCEAGENCY-Homeowners

Bod credit? Mortgage problem*1 R*tflctod by your bonkt ond lending Inttltutioni? Judgements, lleni an yourproperty? We guarantee to clean upyour c t d l t and make you credit wor-thy Coll WJe-tM Of tai-IOai.

LOAMS BY PHONE!Secondary Mortgage Loon*TOLL FREE: t f c l 47JU7*

AERCHANDisF

. McrchandlieFor Sale

OAK HILL - DUTCH COLONIALStately home nestled amongst (all shade trees on a largeprivate professionally landscaped lot, 4 master-sizedbedrooms, 2Vt baths, private studio with separate entry,professional decor, magnificent family room with lull wallfieldstone fireplace Huge 23x15 master bedroom with sepa-rate dressing room and walk-in closet Large formal diningroom, country kitchen, full finished basement, central airconditioning, much more Call today for details

FOULKS- %ffP R E S T O I M AGENCY

2 WOODIAND DR.R E A L T O R S

671-9494 MIDDLETOWN

CHECK THIS LIST OF MERCHANTS WHO ARE

OFFERING SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNTS DAILY

PHARMACIES RESTAURANTSRED OAK DINER

l txD1STr2.{.'i.S!iaS '

•AY1H0HE PHA«M»C» I»l JtWPAA Program Frro Dollvorr

roPloM.AllanllcMlgl.lor.oi

OLDE UNION HOUSE19% Discount to Senior CltUem

ONOUR EARLY BIRO SPECIALS44 P.M. ONLY

11 Wharf Ave . Red Bonh U2 7*75

PALACE DINER

RADIATOR WORKilVo BANK BADIATOR W0««SAuto Air Conditioning » CoolingCXSiim All Minor Auto Rn«l'>

i tn taca in l to All Sfnlor CllUtni

TIRESCROWN TIRE MART

• -mlarCH'nauth,

Shrewtbury Av* , Tlnlon Falls.747 tWO 40 )rd Av* , Long Branch

ADDING MACHINESTYPEWRITERS

A OPE US - Tyvewrtteri. Calculators,Mia , troded. reaolred.

DISCOUNT prices

ALTERATIONSCARPENTER RETIRED - tatVl•mall and medtumtli* |oM. CompleteInferior remodeling M O I C « Pon*lingKltchtn coblnett Room odd"t<ont'ftcr*ollon rooms, rttlnlihlngbaofcCQH*. Armitrong chondvller c*llIng*. Fro* advlc* and eitlmatei. Goodwortmonshlp Coll onyilme, JJt JJ» or

TAXSERVIIK

Income Tax Preparedr home or office. Aecurr- -

Eipori Ta i Sarvlc*M4-I5S3

INCOME TAX RETURNS - Federal

A E E D e utxparty priparid In yaw home. Reoeanable Ma. RELIABLE TAX SER-VICE. Call UHtrV

TAX RETURNS - tPtrsonal ond BullMM). At yow convenience In your

or my orflc* by CPA, TtMiat.

PAINTING ftDECORATING

INTERIOR PAINTING - Beautifulpaint |obs don* by Eddie I patch ailcrocks and teoi all ttoint My work lineot and cleon, ond your nout* willtook beautiful. For fr** *tllmote, callEddie ot 471-4403

PAINTING AND DECORATINGCarl B. Jon*t Fully Insured

For fret wtlmotoi call P*-HMPAPERHANGING AND PAINTING -Inferior and anterior, fully Insured,work guaranteed Free etMmott Coll

ROBERT GIARD PAINTING - In-te*lor, exterior Free *stlmat«i FullyInsured. Folr Mown. 747-)171TAD ROOFING/PAINTING - In andout houtaaalntlnt and ropolri FreeMtlmatoi. 7I7-4JBB or 717 n»*

WILLIAM J. CLARKi t i t i Resldentlol

l N tl

WINTER SALE10x11. roam, two coats paint. U0.

Quick, clean, quality workWALLYS PAINTING, l t l l l f l

MOVING A STORAGEMOVE WITH NICK - For leu Freaettlmotes. Senior rates, olio willtrgvt.. Coll anytime. S*4-flW

MISCELLANEOUSLIGHT HAULING — Ctltort. itccleaned out. Junk can hauled awayCall Jon* B. 747 WM attor * p.m.

ROOFING* SIDINGOOFING AND SIDING - Froo » t l

natot. Olton Roofing a. Siding Co CollU Soil or U l i m t i l H03

SACCO'S ROOFINGVe ore experts In our field, room re<nodelrno, attic fan Installation, attictolrs. .form t, screen windows, roofepoln.etc Coll eJI JH7 for Free Estl

TRUCK ft AUTO»«jNTAL

FORD RENT A CARFAIRWAY FORD

Dally - Weakly Monthly

USED AUTO ft VAN RENTALSV A DAV/V07 MILE

CALL T O L L F M i l B M n - M K

AV/S

ANTIQUESture. 1MB. Pair of

chair frome1

BlU* Tiffany'type fixof lompi, UO Pair ot

•ino choir fromet, HO. Stov*.iWTW tomp, slOO. Call MI-JfTf

ANTIQUE PIANO - Earty tfOO'sLenai uprlghl erond. OW hloh bye4"K»V.r- Sound board excellent.good tone, slightly thars. Ebony woodcabinet with casters, motchlna. ttoot1I0O0 S43-4SMANTIQUE OAK FURNITUREAreo i targeil and finest stlectlon ViSquonkum-Vvllowbrook Rd . FarmIngdalc. n*at to Howell Park.

McLAIN. O0W7I O days,APARTMENT SIZE REFRIGERATOR- Dependable ond eitremly oulelFirst UO tok*t It ftl-4410.

IM . CommercialRentals

999999199.9999ml

nmnmwvmsna21.000 sq tt , ' lloo: 9 000sq tt, 1 llooi 1T000 sq It.)tailgate loading railroad sid-ing pnvatt pniking. air condi-tioned, 'spnnklered Publictransportallon

747-1100

YOUR FAVORITE THINGSA fireplace in den, dishwasher ft freezer in kitchen, 4 br/2Wbaths plus much, much more11 All can be yours in thisWOODMERE COLONIAL Low. low taxes, desirable areaAsking $89,900

THE OLD AND THE NEWSuperbly combined in this charming FAIR HAVEN COLONIALSpacious, bright country kitchen with bay window & pantryNew bathroom & new plumbing Fruit bearing trees include;apples, pears, peaches, cherries and grapes Large, privateyard $54,000

TASTEFULLY DECORATEDThis 3-bedroom home features quality carpet & interior trim Ithas everything you want and a price that you can affordOwner was an interior decorator Asking $39,900

ALL IN THE FAMILYwill enpy this OCEANPORT RANCH 3 br/2 baths, fullfinished basement with workshop Large den with 26' brickfireplace The slate foyer entry leads into this beautiful homethai will meet your family's requirements Why not see thishouse today? $91.500

YESTERYEARThis large COLONIAL is one ol a kind in OCEANPORT Takethe quality and style ol yesterday s home and add the modernconveniences ol today's living This home often the best ofboth! The careful remodeling preserves its antique charm 5large bedrooms/2W baths. Great location and priced at$90,000

54 BROAD ST.RED BANK, N.J.

ol Cf l t r t f air. Iwol. privet, park-ing. .Icvotor, lull lonllorlol wr-vlc. Include. Prlmt location

747-1100

RUMSONREDUCED!

Mint condition "Executive'home in area ot $200,000homes Asking $179,900Owner has bought anotherhome & will consider rentingwith a contract or on amonthly basis Please can lordetails

GloriaNikon

REALTORS

1

"Ani Sit* HOUM 1Gwxfefl Under Th* Sun..."

D0N7 WAITA terrific ranch on a ti aeleof beautiful trees ft Ian*scapmo 20' LR. W/FPLO,DR. KIT 24' den ft 4 Br$Top location Good school*Shouldn't lasl Ionia -atI M . M 0

STUNNINGWATURONTOUTSTANDING

VIIWSBeautiful 4-BR. 2 bath Ranchwith LR. DR. kit, tarn rm.w/wet bar, workshop & tunfinished basement 115'bulkhead, floating dock,marine RR w/winch & pool$121,000.

UV1UMA KING :

With 6 * acres of beauntblproperty with brook in one ofMiddletown's finest loca-tions A 4-bedroom. 2tt bath,almost new Colonial Centralair. fireplace, and more VVehave the key AskingI1M.S00

UT IT mownThe 24 hour service at Chan-nel Club Towers will remtt tor you Move into thbsumptuous 17th floor 2 BRcondo and really enioy K*urious Irving 25' LR, ORKIT . 2 baths $134,00*.

LUXUDOUSWATHRONT

Only 1 yr old Mansard stylehome in Rumson 26' LR,DR. fabulous custom kit, denw/tpic ft beamed cvitjngCenter hall floor planw/expansrve toyer 4 g f l t2V, baths Great array ol fea-tures & 87' ot bulkheadkig$231,000.

WE CAN HELPYOU ANYWHERE

IM THE USACtll...

842-6009

M SHREWSBURY. N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25. 1979

Tell 100,000 Daily Register readers!Sell It! Quicker than FAST!

DIAL THE CLASSIFIED ACTION LINE 542-1700CALL TOU REE FROM MATAWAN AREA 5664100 CALL TOU FREE FROM NUDDUTOWN AREA 671-9300.

71.1Per Ml*

POUHVIIKM - CMWWM

** CO D I M . aM aa*>

I I T A T I OFFICE

x!istm

•IMWRRATOaS - I n k l K .

StfteAXT*.

m»Cmmru Recorder MM* Inttnwl' j y y - t«ffjf wtlh ihtoWer•7 PPaOaW HVy WniBO anOOTang- ^lOTf"

ta. wanrfr ar an

M(M H Mar « camartar and•an d m « aw****. C»H avar tt Ja»,J",««" ~ r~ — *<*> Call

WIMMINO POOLS DISTRIBUTOH -N t o 4 to 4tapaM at hrona iww. It'a « l l l « l l l l faah. emu.*

•aMaEkT tacM. RNar and In

THt UICD FURNITUREm lurmtory Ay... Mmm im mm «K w»

TIREt — Rla-ll. wwail.. an vaaoflaw. T M HHWI aw. tea raeulor. like•m. m a—. »•*•!.,

) HI a OHMI laiaaa.il. MoatT UO Spaak» ap lx i Turnlaal.. 1 »

RAPMYCOMPO1EB -

E - waaM wha>l taw. IJ aM law darn. Walar bad anS. kaataa. IIS*. Laatkar iota.

Ha «|w. a r a r t caja;, JIM Many( M M M a i M nomt IU levJ" A l H K t AMD DRYERS - Buy tectorvdlrocl.MionHup One ytor ooor•MM. Frot dolrvtry. Roboti Nrnt t ,

WATH iCD - tMten ill*, with

tarr^lJ!"WHEEL CHAIR - Evaraat J«nnina».n » • aM, a»callanl condlllon 1X0ar Mat a»V. Ml OMWROUOHT IRON CHAIRS - LiquorMara MaM.. Mat. olltr Call ».To7ttatH»l .aaHa.Rat l? < K G.o«

111. HtaMt For Sale

71M«fdNMdrMFor Sal*

ZENITH - «T* Color TV, t » .T4« HI-FI, OS

C«H trttr Jjrn , SMU

73 Garage SaltiYard SaltsM B BANK - I I Rocfor P I , tun.Mon , t * O.m. Air conditionerfc--H i. . •• - - - - - • • ' - - - " - - -

7S Form Equlpmtnl

14 MUrdtondlM

- Or Ml Fl. caaHH la M U M

TURN YOU! DIAMOND! INTO

)»1. AportmtiURED RANK - TaJII altraam. plui

W44M STATI MENTALS Bk.

104 Winter Rental*SEA MIGHT - Newly carMtrt,lurnlttVMl. •fllclvncy aportrMnh andn»l»l until Dol ly. --'•rate* Motd ufvk*/dlWind* Motal, U1 1U>

ifllO. aflw Voccupancy ISW p«r month

RIO BANK - FwraWwd, OSt Include!uttlrhet Month I tecurlty requiredAdult prettrfed No pel* AvalloM*(March I Call after 4 p.m , ui 4Mb

77 Ptli And Livestock

Advanced And BtglnnersDOG TRAINING

aval and Sal l lUllnam*rt CawiFWlaH pas Club

•EAUTIFUL IRISH SETTER - Pvrabrad. Otaat wltti kMa. AKC All tfwttUltm. HVlaMy

FEMALE UTTER

FREE PUFFICt - Hall Irlih SaltafNaH Oarnan Miapaird, Raad «ll» kkk

FREE TO OOOO HOME - Fan>aM.pray and ahHa cat. law yaari aid.afayad. haiiat fcamH. « l ¥ l l l .GOLDEN RETRIEVERAKC. Shah, wajjuait Jan. I

GOLDEN RITRItVERIA«, «•£••«•. * -

HOUSE - Quarter I W M Wtofoufhtred» I l ly, tlprv y tOv t , Cnv^rTllin WfWI f n i P j

vOOajTllwt fflOVOT, eMCOHtn. OCtfOnilOl

for m—> tf tvonttn* WM.. 4 & M M .

LOVE IS ALL THAT S HEEDED -For yaw lo hove thlt cuddly, i f monthold, temol* Pull Poodtt Gentle, terrifle with dtlMren, ipoyed and (rainedColl 741-4*17

POODLES - T we O—r.*j|| toy motet.AKC, WgM woofci aid.

Call m-HIt

AKC QUALITY - Tay Poadlti.

Xkot rnalll. Mvan waakt aM, Raouand vary •mall-oooad Only i IJi

lull MI 3111TI MO! H V HAY - Goad quality. I I »

•3 CBs/EI«ctronlctHOME BASE KRACO - CB. with onleono Eictllent condition. Himmonlhi old tM . A»fc (or Pool, UI 5411

64 MerchandiseWonted

LITTLE SILVER3-beoroom ranch in primelocation Maintenance freebrick & aluminum sidingRpacaaM with thermal doorsFull bt fsamenl Rearenclosed porch with skylightkx plant lovers Extra largelot tor privacy, yet nearschools, shopping, etc Allthis lor $72,900

IAoancStBT

- MALTOHS

L B » - 741-9100

AAAAAA - LIQUIDATE UNWANTEDANTIQUES, JEWELRY. RUGS, FORCASH

INTERNATIONAL GALLERIESI * E. Na-mon Seringa Rd.rt7474IW

ALL LIONEL TRAINSOf Flyar. Tap can a»ranal taVBrjANTIQUES - All >lndt, bauaM lar lapcaah HAary JofM Rooaevall Anttayal,W EaU Rlvar Rd . Rumion. HMI IT.Mamaar Approltart Auocloilon ofAmarlco.ANTIQUES - GATEWAY AN-TIQUES. Rl. M and Hamattaod Avt.,

AVOID THE GARAGE SALE HASSLE- Top dollar M M tor your unwontedWomTcoll l o f i w oftor > p.m.BASEBALL AND OTHER - N«n-flpor1

>.m..taBprlCM

131. HouiM For Sale

101 Apartment.

RED BANK - Fumllnad thrta room• •II I In rma raudanllal orao. oiluhimaa. i»a pata Call »!•»»•RIO BANK - Unfurnllnaathraa roomHJilltl III ill. 177S par manltt IncludinguHlrNai. Ht pah Sacurlfy ana rafaraKairaau4ra< in»uln KSouttiSlr..!

AAA RENTAL SERVICE - N n ran•all a»lly itavar a faa lar lananl"TP" aataWOajf 4atV0 aaa pa H TaVa9fJ h O T a n *JaTO

UpWi T f ICHER AGENCY. RE-AL TOM. W O r t A O

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - UnrurrtWwBj thr«*>-rMin •vartmtnl Immi<lt*> occuiPWKy. LHMr rdtrtnett<md McwrHy r •+* ' • * All utllltlts tndwctM. m m* m«<tti. Coll ftot>

sar-Sag" "to-" •»-ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - One^•Illlllll

MtVcoH«f,

om *9arttfwt1 mm trofiKmlMt CatrfiaMttsfi. 133$ p#* mi«cijrttv> rthrwncMt, Avolt

W. BOVA INC., R*

dVCaKBtfjair WOll-N>-aVaMI COfpajtlf>fJ. ftUlf

Mta pto onW tm,

TOWN - L o r * cfflcttmcy,iMltfip BfltfaVtCaii afHUtHllH S t l v

»TATCTRENTALS »t»HAZLET - Twt^MdrMtn, rMtfy M*wt. htM trot, anly IMS7474414 STATE RENTAL) Bkr

HIGHLANDS — Vm

win* ' STATE RENTALS IHIGHLANDS —HIGHLANDS sp«ov*>tBartTMH n w ov«lk*H. f « tubmg. LocaM ki private, modarn c<pt«M wltti rtrrltk vltm of wcttr iN M York

HIGHLANDS - OM-Mdrootn apartirwnt. Imnwdki** occuMncy, no pffhl l f l i n« * f I or MJ I4IJHIGHLANDS HILLS - Oncbcdrwa#*f view, i l l* baft), no p«tiiti-san.KEANSBURG — Boochvltw Gordeni.ooeand twobvdreofni, IZUandup Onilte parking Hoot, hoi woter ood cook

KEANSBURG -flnt floor, hone or tw« c

decorate*.. lultoble tori n - * io

KEANSBURG - Thro* modern nhoot ond hot w«ottr wpplltd RioMt. No ptti . 717-tBWKEYPORT - Two bedroom,moattod. yord for kMs, htotjioM, « l imooth»«J.W-»Q4

d for kl«to, toijwW, USTATE RENTALS Bkr

KEYPORT CLUB VILLAGE - " " •bMroom evartnvtnti, U N month plui\V H M t t v Colt bctwtcn * S

MATAWAN — On Rt. 14. avollabi.April l i t . Bedroom, living room, Mich•n bailvoom Sccrltv and I M M

MATAWAN — Ona-lMdroanit1

MODERN APARTMENT - H«ottruim,uitullQO B«t Him ta call Mfor t

UXURY TOWNHOUSE_.._Fowrw, N.J. AvoirflWe bennrotn

Mordi 1 ond Iftfl. Two-bedroom, dining1 —ro im. laundry room.fom-iroom, IV-bothi, wollI, dlthwothor, rtfrlf

• EO BANK » RIVERSIDE AVERIVERVIEW TOWERS

"THE VERY FINEST INLUXURY HIGH RISE'

Overlooking the Hovetlnk Rlvor

We wont you r... To help wi keep rent! otthtlr lowotl. By maintaining 100X occuoancy wo are effectively ktoplngrent! low. Studloi itortlng at W7S, onebedroomi itorilng ot t344) two

(roomi itartlng at ISOO Ihre*

a w » m * i r pflee •pan itrven davi aClccene at Ml 741 i m

Central air and hoot, got cooking,bolcoort*. J4-ho*K doormon, TVtacvrtry. iwtmmlno pool, Mvno, moflno,afw »m*irr<pvnd parking Rtnto. «ffl d a « • « • Coll BobmRED BANK - 4Vh-S •oaclowt roomi,luxury Mah-rlM building Coll W3-4USbetween 7-f p.m.

ID BANK — Studio and otw otdroomHUnonh avaJpoWe GREENTREEARTMENTS. S » Spring St.. Red

131. H ousts For Sale

SEA BRIGHT - Owtajner tufnlihedafwtdM and tRecutlvt writei HorbourPottrl, \m Oceon Av* W 1151

SEA BRIGHT ~ LtiHury gorden apwtmaul t l t cloning e e n r e t l f a tg g•Nftnwathtf. wall to woll cofp«llngvadrt Harbor. I I . Oceon Avt . SeaBrtaW Call after i p m • M J ^ l lSEA BRIGHT - Two bedroom., waitto-*all carpetlna. IMS per month pluie*ertrlt Coll * J W * J

SEA BRIGHT - Two room turnlthtdUMartment. HIS per montti (nrtudlooutllltlet. Secwrltv required CollM H I N . After 4, 74I4M0

SMALL — Fwrnlihed oparlnienl Ctntrolly located Reatenoble Adultionly No pett 7411111TWO Mautltul aportmtnti. downtown Red Bank USO a monm ptutirtllltlt. (oil 747 4SSJ

WEST END Ont bedroom upa.tment, ocroti from oceon l l f i permonth year round SAND CASTLEAPARTMENTS. 400 Oceon Blvd Wil lEnd I » 1735

WEST E N D - L o n g Branch Lotgeiv.room, otr condlltonto' garden opartment, I W Individual polio tncludeiparking One block ocean, oduit. pit-Wfed. no pvtl W Green* Avt .—1-.I4S

WEST END - Three room oportmtnt.tiled bath, near ihopt ond beath Callafter 5. 741 $713.

102 Houses For RtntBEL FORD - Two bedroom., full boierrwit, |ml remodeled UU. plu* utlllt l t i and Mcurlly W SUS or 431 4171ofltf * p m, .BELFORD Twobedroom. lenctd

' tor kldv watMf. caraetSTATE RENTALS Bkr

EAST KEANSBURO One ond Iwobedroom hornet, IIWto 1300 per monthplu. ulllltlti Annual least plui tecrty, refertnees ftqulred OccuponcyWorth V Aik tor Peggy, 17 4*00HIGHLANDS - Ont bedroombungalow, yord, bowrntnt. (lean. 1100747W4 STATE RENTALS BkrKEANSBURG - Neor Hwy M Fiveroomi, lilt bath, U » ptui utlllllt.Lease, \vt monthi itcurlty, no pel.4fS->T*3LAURENCE HARBOR - Twobedroom ronch. batement, yard, %Hl7474414 STATE RENTALS BkrLONG BRANCH - Three bedroomaaroye, yord tor kldt, extra., 13»747»4i4 STATE RENTALS BkrLONG ~BRANCH DUPIEV - Thr«

droamt, living room, dining roomichen, 1300 per month plui UI IMI I . I

No pet* 2» 74f3MANALAPAN Thrtt btdroomranch, oarage, yard for hldt. pcti, ww

MW STATE RENTALS Bkr

MIDOLETOWN - Four bedroom,two bam, lomlly room, ooragt Atklng

per month. Immediate occupancyM, r t l t rent t i and tecurlty r*

Call Bob Dawion, Century 71Ryon Agency, 747 WOO

PORT WOMMOUTH Bungalow .190per monm, security required

mowRIVER PLAZA - Thrto-bedroom Calltomla Contemporary on water, USO amonm p\\n utlTlHw. Coll 747-41MSHREWSBURY - Two*edroom, llvIrvgioom. kitchen, bath, fully rarpeted,S390 per month plui utllltlti. Call14) 00U _UNION BEACH - One bttfroi

II I D

103 Rentals To ShareATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - Short llvtroomi, rent low, on but lint ond tnopping. Coll 171-0744.

ROOMMATE WANTED - To thort(twee-bedroom home with two peopleColl afttr | p.m., 747-Mlfr

104 Winter RentalsMOUNT POCONO - Four-bedrctwo-bom Chalet Fireplace. PrlQOII court*, tennli court., beach andcountry club. Cloie to all row *

131. HOUIM For Sale

NAVESINK. Restore your own colonial The potentialis here 3 bedrooms, den. tireplace and nice grounds$46,900

ELLEN S. HAZELTON, Realtor11 West River Road, Ruinson

842-3200

WATERFRONTHighlands shore Cape Cod Colonial in perlecl locationlor boat lovers Two bedrooms down wilh large roomson second tloor. Extra large garage, double corner lotGet ready lor summer breezes! $34,900 ' .

JOSEPH G. McCUE30 Ridge Rd. 842-2760 Rumson

w BE READY FOR SPRING...in this 4 bedroom 2'/J bath Colonel with paneledFamily room with tireplace, central air conditioning andmore Beautiful grounds, excellent Fair Haven location.$107,000.

CIRCA 1850Tins charming Little Silver larqihouse teatures 4bedrooms. 2 lull baths and lamily room with used bricktireplace Many beautiful trees and shrubs on a deepsecluded lot II can be yours lor only $73,500.

RUMSON WATERFRONTJUST LISTED new Contemporary with live bedrooms, 2ftbaths, three fireplaces Energy etlicient house-ready lor solarheat Low maintenance, yet many luxury teatures Deep waterbulkhead Main rooms, decks & patio overlook watei$1*7,100.

YES, WE HAVE MOflTOAQE MONEV AVAILABLE: IV.%

WITH M % DOWN TO OUR QUALIFIED BUYERS.

KERBAGENCY

Al you need to knowin Real Estate.Hfilmrm ffrjlty A-.MK.JU".fj-Ti a4ti.rrmfcprnaVt.ri.•mnrd jnd aprrjlrd

•36 RIVER ROAD, FAIR HAVEN, N.J.

741-4477 DB OPEN 7 DAYS

OH, WHAT CHARM!Hl.lorlc andtttoutlM Sycomore Avenu*. Shrowibury Victorian colonialWith3 * tMdrooffli, Ibattii, I f i r tplactt . very rfiod#rn hltcMn or»d familyroom plus dining room wparquet floors V'i acre, ot lond Even antlrvator' 1145.000 S**H now'

RED BANK BECKONSTower Hill orra. Oldtr 3 iiory colonial with ] btdroomi, llvlna room withfireplace, formal dining room, full boicment, IM ' o>*p lot Home need,updating ana hos grw l potential Settling on *<itotr Only l lf .wo (a l ltoday.

10* Furnished Rooms• EDROOM - Fwrnlilwd with botti

MIDOIETOWN - Roam with ptlvaltbath Kitchen prlvllMM. Woman onlnon-wnokw m / t w , W-tltt.MEO BANK - Lara* Isvily roomHlcdy turnftfwd, prlvot* •ntronc* andpwhirio M-*M0 or Ml 37MREO IANK — Room, w t •! michtnand both, .ultabfc tot atntltman. nMitporklno. rwoi all WSXTt B«tf ) _RED BANK ~ Good locatton, parklnfl,prlvutt home, no hltchen pflvllvwomon only T4I-H71

108 CommercialRentals

teorctt center. Red Itwo. throe, tour roomi ar lar M I ULow rent Full Mrvlcei. l « l h t )BR ICADOON P R O F E S . I O N A LBUILDING - Mlddletown Doctor ioffice ovallable, ampl* parking, oilutllltlet. Ideal location for Pedloff'c lan, Of I h o d o n l l i l . Sura toDermatologlit Will oiler to time teonl Six other doctor, presently locatedin OulMlng Doyt. 741 liS4, -

wi moDOWNTOWN RED BANK - Prim*office tpor* wltti on itte parking On*block to Brood ilreel and Hoipltat Williompl*l* lo your requirement E l«linTve ogent Vm M " • will divide1 all*, to Wit CENTURY 11 CoiemAgency Aik for Mr Cottm oiNettlei, H I 741 7U»,

MATAWAN Rl M, lain* aftkc withpflvoltorflce, I0O0U fl . ulte of threeadlcet: 440 M) ft Prlval* entroncai.ompl* parking Ideal for Inwronce o>travel aoency Immediate occupancy

coii mm*OFFICE SUBLET — Ft.ri.Uhcd,monlti to-month: rve leow rt* i * iuryM>rewiburyorea, U»l i 1*1 U7S. MonIhrowgh Frl

RED BANK Ml Brood St . ntxt toColonial Bank, Irnl lovely Brood Slr**thome now available for profeiilonaloccupancy New owner* will modify lowit* Abundant off Itreelporhlng CallWl OS00, Mr lairdRED BANK - HOU.« with offlt*proleulonal perion, four bedroom.,prime location. H Plnckn*y Rd., ' 'off Brood St Call Laird Eflli, 3 tH

building Will divide and Improve lotulte on long -term leaie On ilte parkIng Coll Owner. Wolter Zlmmerer ISon. M* 1400 or V*»4J1?

RED BANK - 117 Brood St One ofHt«twite remaining In Red Bonk'i lorgeitllnonclal/profeulonal center Thrtroomt plui itoroge, 7*0 u . fl Carpetair, ready to move In I4S0 per monthplui utlllflei Call Owner, Waller 71mmerer k Son. 94* 1400 or f4*43UREDBANK- 140 Newman Soring* RdUp to 4o» M, ft available for officeloillltl*, or ofllce laboroto.y Willdivide to mil* on long-term leoM Ampi* on i l l * parking Coll owner. WallerTJmmcrer & San, f4e MOO or 9W 4717RED BANK - U I Broad St TOO M, flcomorlud ot private ofllce and ihylighted oftlc* with itoroge claietiCarpel, air conditioning, decorated.reody to move In USO per monlti In(ludlng oil utlllllet Coll owner. WallerZlmmerer 1 Son, Me MOO or t*4 4313Hi t ) BANK - 111 MonmoulhSI Singleroom office of approximately ISO M flavailable with carpet, air. decorated,reody to move In. I t U per month onminimum one year loaie Includingheat, water, plui electric Coll owner.WolUr Zlmmerer 1 Son, f4* MOOWM1H.

RED BANK - Profotilonol building,71 EOlt NOiq H avoMablc MonhTBetween Brood St ond Rlvervltw Hoipltal 747-1004.

SYCAMORE PROFESSIONALBUILDING

Only one wit* 11100 m ft.) Dili available In ultra modern addition to wellMtobllihed proftulonol building Lototed on Sycamore Avt In TintorFallt, ad|o<enl to Parkway Ready forImmediate occupancy Unlimitedporklna Beoulltully lanaicaped Medlcal Spoclaltlei only. Will flnlih to lul

131. Houses For Salt

C /(DESKAVITZ

AFFORDABLEMere i 0 orond M W . tour-btdroom Colontal. Th* ponofMaity it tokot will I Mr * own fhore'k 7V* batt». fireplace

Vawnlly room, o*eooni ointng roomand more Offered at HSJM

OVER 30But II can be trusted! Trmted to tMcomtorioWe and o* a r*a«onable priceThree large bedroom., carpet*d livingroom ond dining room, updoted kltchonand full boiemenl Give ut a call.US.MO

SCHOOL-CONSCIOUS!I Wi lour-bedroom Colonial thould Inlereit you Jutt a hop, iklp and a |umpfrom one of the Shore1, beil elementory ichooli Thore'i a nice CenterHo/i, 7Vi bafht. den with ftroploce ond.moment Offered at (117,000

$62,500_rd-l« find n

morkel Coll lo Inipec1

three bedroom home todaylocation Flreploce In living room, M Ooral* dining orto ond lovlly grounaiWe r*commer>d Immedlot* reiponi*

ARMSTRONG741-4500

OPEN TDAYS

LITTLE SILVER - Htm HlHnf Powr-•odroom, tw««ofh Connwl CountrykrlcMn. llv.nf room ond dlnlna room,family roem, beiemtnt, deck,•crooned porch and prlvow troooUot oncul de MC Juno occupancy Sn |. Coll

"MatLITTLE SILVER

OFFICE EXCLUSIVEJUST LISTED

Mint homo In prime l i r t i * Silver orooon O5rt*1 C U K E - M C This '

A L C U E N I *• CQ . INCREALTORS

tt Hwy U Keytort m MOO

ASSUME 7%Better hurry on ml. one. ond keepthoM monthly payment! low Fourbedroomt, large living r ,oom and eat In kitchen plui cten Quit t F '

inguiet

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS - teovtlfutly decorated ronch Lorge livingroom, three bedroom., ceramic bath.

d t I k i t h l t h hmoden eat In k t c h e ,owl. detached extended twb ca ou'oaond office Ideal for butlrtei. rental14I.SO0 Prlnclpoti only Call after 4p m 7t1 OMS

ATI ANTIC HIGHLANDS

S51.900Roomy Three Bedroom Ronch

Accommodating Room Dlmentlon.Step Saving Eat In Kitchen

Hardwood FlooringPlenty of Clotet Space

Lovely ("ui'de Uc Location

WHELANREALTY GROUP REALTORS25 Rt M, Aftontk Hlghlondi

291-5402ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS- Two torn!ly, mint condition Mony entrot, mutttee UeOOD Jfl HO evet . Sat , Su

oomoroofn. noctout and oiry tot Inirtctten ond) charm aaloro. Don't panup th* opportunity of previewing thlihome Reallideally priced at I7T,HB

CAMASSA AGENCY INCREALTORS MLS

4 Portttr Av* . I ittl* illv»i747-9292 DAYS OR EVES.

i one Branch

FIRST COME...FIRST SERVEDThis Can't Last!

Two-ilory. three bedroom, t^ooth,Formal dining room, two toi garage.*ull boiemenl. uptown location Mi

CAMASSA AGENCYRealtors

m-tm BMWI

LOOKS GOOD OUTSiDEAnd I M W . II look! lu»l grwt Mdv. Inlondlllon Cuilom bulll Colonial on acul-a>toc In rxaillgoui araa ol R«dBon> Sup..lor comlrucllan will.hnt.rul ovfollt CaiMrol olr condlllonIng ond vacuuming ty.ttm. woll lowoll corpailng dowmlalrt and hardwood lloori upilolri Full bowm.nland Wit oown tloln lo otllt Llk. rw«

ERANAVESINK ASSOC

LOVELY LINCROFTJu.t lilted, ttvree bedroom, twobottiranch. Central air, aluminum tidingattached two < or oarage, flreplo<t finlihwd baMtnenl Aiding I/J.W0

Little Sliver Realtycorner of Morhhom and Proipecl

741-0950MATAWAN - Two lamily, noai ihopplrtg and ttimtporlailon Immedlat*pot l t i l lon liJSOO STEP, l INGUcCANN, P.EAL ESTATE B»OKFR

110 Wanted To RentRENTALS - Ytorly or winter. T inanti are eoger to rent ImmediatelyCoH 43H0n, Mm. Frl- Wo f t . _SINGLE MAN - 30 yean old. em

Ded, teefct yearly bungalow rental'47 e m Sunday. •

W [ A I F ', I A T i

131 Houses For SaleA FANTASTIC BROCHURE - Ofhorn*. In Monmoutn County! It \ your iIf you write or cairBetty Ron Aoency.117 Rl U, Keypori. N J 0771S Phone

A GREAT STARTER - Two-bedroomhomt with aluminum tiding, modernkitchen, dining area ond baiement, onquiet Leonardo i t r e t l SH.VOOKlRkVAN COMPANY, Realtor,Ui *1K

A OREAT DEAL " WIfour bedroomi, 25" living room withflreplaci, 14' formal dining room. IS'

cor oarage, l i t ' lot. entrot

G

COLONIALHegonl llreplace.

_ n . two bothi, onierti.lie dining room, lull batement an

two cor oarage Aiding ISf.tOO TWINBROOKSItEALTV, 471 *414FIREPLACE~ ' usThrtt tnormoui bedroomi, livingroom with fireplace, 14' formal diningroam, 14' eatln iclence Mlchen, applloncei, low tOMtt

AAELMED AGENCY•71 J4A0 4 f lMW

FLORIDAJUPITER-TEOUCSTA

Hobo SoundRAYMOND C MOAGLAND, ASSOC

Eve* (MS) 747 « UTequotta Proportlei. Inc

PO BoVl447Rooltori, MLS-Toquetto

FLORIDA CALLINGBuy now for the futur*. Hornet, duple*t t . aportmenti Wt will rent It for youEd Conway. Auoc . Dovt Roalty Incm i E. Oakland Pork Blvd. Fti^d?ro? l t!_F!oJ!!*'5**:?^__- _

HALF ACHE IK'SFour mouiv* bedroomi. 73' livingroom, formal dining room, icltnce oofIn kitchen, 71 Florida room, tamllyroom with tlreplact. two batht. twocar oarage, flnlihtd baimtnt with wel"~W, mony extroi

MELMED AGENCY67) SW 4f] MOO

HAVE BUYERS-NEED LISTINGSCall the Kerr Aaoncy, Inc

4Jt River Rd.. Fair Haven. 7414477HAZLET — M ' Bl- l tvt l . UT.ffM,Aluminum ildlng Deod*nd itreet10% down, financing available717 3300

HAZLET - Now fhreebedroom Wlevel. Sim lime to chooM colonUl . fM. V.W VAHDERBECK ACENCY, 4H-I6H,

HAZLET~- Thro*-bOdroom twoilorywith country kitchen Convenient locoHon. IttjOO. V.W VANDFRBECKAGENCY, 4M 1000

HEADLINE

In Immoculjtmony «*1rm Includ* on ritovt ground15X36 rtoublt^Cth pool mil* equim«nt ortd outilcM tiwwtr Lorpc wolIn cloMti In btoVoomi IJt.WB

We open doors lor you!"

REALTORS 741-5212

A GREAT STARTER - Two-tMaroomhomt with olumlnum tiding, modarnkitchen, dining arM end baiamtnl Onquirt Leonardo » l r« . l IK . tooKIRWAIf CO. REALTORS, 143 4JS0

131 Homes For Sole

CATCH THIS ONE ,NEW WATERFRONT listing on Dead-«nd alr»el In RumsonEstate area Over 1 Vi acres with boat slip and tall trees Fourbedrooms, three baths, large bright living room with fireplace,formal dining room, eal-ln kitchen, den with window walloverlooking waler. Asking $192.500

91 E. Rlvtr Road

RUMSONrumsonrea l ty 842-1894

INCOMERUMSON

Live in one and rent the otherOf have two income properlies Two two-bedroomapartments in good location.CaJI to s

s in good li»6»,500

STARTER HOMElurn your rent into equitywith this three-bedroomhome in excellent conditionConvenient to everythingCal! lor details 153,000.

ENGLISH TUDORStorybook home in Little Sil-ver leatufes lour bedrooms,2Vj baths, living room, lamilyroom, dining room, kitchenwith breakfast nook Allplanned tor both .urinal •en-tertaining and family enjoyment Call for appointmentS125,000.

WILLIAM D.

RYANtiEALTOR

62 tUpl, An., Fto Bank

747-3500

IMAGINE EIGHT ROOMS ~ For Matmon t»xm Four-tetfroom Colonial,complfttlv r«furblth«4 with ntw bolt.ond ntw kltcrwn. Excvlltnt rviidtntlolocailon. ytl convtnltml ta tcttoolithopfrift nd I o K t l n C l l l

ihopplnf ond troniporioilon Call today for appointment 141,S00 CENTURY 31 McGOWAN RYAN, RealtorP4 Rlvtr Rd, Rtd Bonh. 74T-1Q0O

INVESTORS DELIGHTFolr Haven atdtrly owner no longerable to live atont. Living room. Mdining room, two bedroomi, full cellarand goroge In poor condlllon Deep lotNooth remodeling plui hot expansionpoulbllltlei Rote buy al U 4 . &

JEAN IRWIN, RealtorMARINE PARK RED BANK

842-4188KEANSBURG - Ranch. O<pay 11000 tciwardi doling f t* Rtmodeled tour nice roomi, full bath• ledrk heat. U K down FHA tub,ect loopproval jn.SW. ALSO - Four roomranch, gal heat, llt.000 CHATEAUREALTY, 1)} Carr Av* ,717 SOU

131. Homes For Salt

• EWOOELCD L I T T L I « T L V E «FAUX MOU»E - Sauar* »«l"« r j»J .akiMa raam. caualrr Indian, I IX I Ia»T)aiir«a*aarm. V n b » b l l

MIDDLETOWN - Send tor owr "Shoreand Counlry Living" bfactturt, piti.de»trIpitoni, prlcti on ovollobi*

M. APPLEBROOK RI=ALtC"*Dt l i . MlddUtown. 4J1 HOt

MIDDLETOWN VI I I AGEBrook view roncti, three bedroom*,lovely warm rodlanl heat, rolu *heortfi. old brlcfc (Ifeplot* oaraa*Coil tor more Information A.kingU],f00 Inn won't latl PAUL PBOVA INI , Realtor *M 1M4 Open•vtn anyt

MONMOUTH BEACHA gr*al family ham. art o dMd«r>(lflratl Four badroami. 7W) bairn AK M ' M lavtl In movaln cOAdlllo.wiwt attr ocllvt dacrotlna faelvr.i rjmlony nlrat Artlng IJTtmCROWELL AGENCY

741-4030

RUMSON VICTORIANOverlooking NovtlJnfc River

ur btdroomt, nowty torpeted den_ J llvlnt room with FronkKn tire4oc«, koro* formal dining room withnarWc nroploce, huat modern counry kllchen, hondcrofted cablnetltony amofilllot IM7.J00 Prlnclpoli

RUAASON COLONIALThree bwkoom, two both chormerModern klchen with tweokfott area,home ho* received loft of TLC AtklngI45.0M

Little Silver RealtyCorner ot Marhhom and ProttWl

741-0950RUMSON AREA - Stnd tor our-Short ond Country Living " brochure.

plci. de«rlptlooi, prlcei on avollabt*Krrrm AP>LEBROOK REALTORS,1) Avt of Two Riven, Rumion.

t41IfO0

SPIRAL STAIRCASE

i thii tmcnhlna entrance hall overjoking more man three o c m ofRumion properly Banquet ilte diningoom, lovely formal living room, tunoom, den, iolnl Chorlet Kitchen, end

aturprlM room thai beoti l o t Vegoi'Mony bathroom flKtvtet, a ont of o

Ind including o Muno and whirlpoolmoanlflconi home hoi a Carriage* wlm two apof tmenti lo pov your

taxei A home you and your familywould be proud to own Coll ut

CENTURY I I McGOWAN RYANAGENCY, Realtor. 714 River Rd RtdBonk. N J 747 m >

Wttt I oog Branch

AFFORDABLE RANCHwo-btdroom. large both, tat In kltch

en. I* living room, deep loi with roomfof ••pantion, encellenl condition VAno down/FHA low down paymtnl toqualified buyert. Low W l

Just Reduced By Si0.000our btdroomi, IV. tiled battn, I fH>it*r bedroom, eal In kitchen withOik in pantry, I t living room, formalInlng room, den, floor lo celling fir*tiK*. maintenance t'te enlerlot. ov

erilt* property wltti lubdlvlilon poiHrie Coll tor detain

ENJOY LIFE...

onitriKtlon ond doubt* doof entronce.23 living room, four bedroomt, IV.bath,, ikyilghl. lerlnkler lyitttm andmuch, much more' Offtrtd at HH.0W

CAMASSA AGENCYRealtors

OCEAN TOWNSHIP- WayaHttWoodiand Long View Vlllaa* Eloyont newhorntt from II10JB0 Coll flfW

OLDE SHREWSBURYHood mom room? How about thli flv*bedroom. IV,-tooth home on auitt ttrtttin grtot neighborhood Walk to tbopping ond ichool Private, fenced yardAifc"r>g UMOO

Little Sliver RealtyCorner of Markham ond Proiptct

741-0950OLOER TWO STORYr COLONIAL -Living room 17XU, flrtptoct, I1XUdining room, model kitchen, don or tunporch. fhr*« bodroomt. two Urthi, newnoortng ly i i tm, now pmt^omgr TWO COIgoragt bawmoni. Batoboord Hot waterhoot TaxotlBB. MMdlotewn locationnoor trontporiotlen ond marina E icolicnt condition, UV.ttO LAWLEYAGENCY. REALTORS. JlloJIJ. iM3 ssn

PAMPERED BYPARTICULAR PEOPLE

And every room loaki It, In fhn tup*four bedroom Colonial illwotM on hka c t In on* ol Mlddlttown • moil d*tlrobl* oreai Oourmel tat In kitchenwith no wai fioo< and Hiectacular fullwoll firtploce In the beamed famllroom ore luit a few of the fine ftatur*of thli mint condition home. Cowntriliving within walking dliionct to Mlfldtttown rotlrdod notion Buyeri proladed by ont year warranty plonliif.fOO

ERANAVESINK ASSOC.

independently Ownod

671-0600RED BANK - Family neighborhoodThree bodroom, two full oothi. blroomi. loti of d o i t f i . nlct yord, fuiboiemenl, nicely decorated,town ond Irontportatltn 'only. W5.TO 471 7141RED BANK

ONLY $48,500!led In o great fomll<

hood, thli three-bedroom Curn'

H«H LIVING ROOMFORMAL t4n)1V. DINING ROOA

KITCHEN WITH PANTRYFULL DRY BASEMENT

NEW FURNACENEW ROOF

ENCLOSED PORCHMUCH. MUCH MOREi

Owner may coniMorFHA AND VA

Buyent

to. wan iPrlntlaol

THOMPSON AGENCYKm Eiioi. sim. ins

741-0700• ED BANK

$1,200 DOWN?Thai i all you need tn a down paymtrIf you art a qualified buyer tor thsalld thrtt bedroom Colonial wlttiliving room, dining room, eatln kltchen and enclosed front porch Paymenttor the quollfled buyer ihould be undtWO ptr month, ond that include, tnla**.!THOMPSON AGENCY 741-On»

Anothtr Daily Ugitttr classified strvic«

NOW....YOU U N TELEPHONE

YOUR CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING

ON SATURDAYS( rMl:NtJR. I t r i :MPJL

TOtr t lUM«OflO»T'S WiTKM

The Daily RegisterONC WOUTW f U U • tHDEWMimr. NJ

Call ttw classified action line

542-1700R*gulatOttlc* hour*, Mond.y thru Friday

Ul.HOMH«F>rSaltM. MOIHK DAUCHTE*

TMi McaiHartalrr wall UK Mm. MKata> .M< lallniaWlara. Flnl

l « » • raam. hram «mmt raan.1

131 Hou.e. For Sale

REALTORSOffice« n e o _

WtlT LOHO iRAMCH

NEWLY LISTEDMov* rlahl Int. ttili four **<* oom mlrrlranch Carat Ml In Mtdian. laaai at,aomlo, njgrawliw lr»r,ll» Prlca. al

MMCAMASSA AGENCY INC.REALTORS MLS

4 r>arh«r Aw. . I m l . Ulvar

W DAYS ORjyf132 CondomlnlumiTown HouMt

— Une a j I W I W Wlfa.view. onlV SSJ.m CENTURY I IOCEAN REALTY, S4HTW

KS2"-lsSff.vtStrtJ5 AM-??:Kalttari. W-«IU. -f% UUtft.

IMAOOW LAKiL0v.lv Ivy maaal. tar. ba*aaim. Iw.bawM. taaclaui llvlnaroam. rarftaaf» klHM. Onl. tu .« . »•_M« • * "

747-4100

131 Income PropertyRED RANK- R Rl j l l»f>HH•far* wltti rw.»a*m ayarhnaM ara)

137 Lot»*Acreoge

M Ma,.,, ri immmi111 Special Notice*

THE DIVORCE SYSTEM• Oatnol.uHrJt.orc.a NO attOfTMy'R RMta No oftlca vi.Ki• Do H m rourMMa Pronn and guaranteed

DIVOHCI KITUndarITS

For htM HtaraturaAmark Inc.

CRN 2U-0N* or WiHaP.O. Boi 3HC

Ora«MI, N J 07MI

*••*«•««»«

Make It YourselfHot-Pot Holder!

Hin| het ntii the stow -slii's hind), hilplul. bright1

Old luhioned gul hn skirlbuttons oil lo become I pot

I holdei Crochet ol rug firn in 2.colors Clnei hostess giftI b i u a i seller. Pittem 704ijsimplM»lolk)« directions

tl.JO Iw etch piltein Add 40twch pattern la first-class anmul ind handling Sw4 kt

louro What la r

NM«tcraf1 Dtpt. 61Tlit Doily Itgisttr

• a 1(1. OM ChtlMi SU, Nt*••A, NT 10011 mm km,,MaVm Dp. rattan Dank*.NEW FOR 1979' NU0UCRAF1CATALOG Hundieds ol beautilul things to make1 3 freepatterns inside Send 751

Printed PatternFabulous Fit

Perlecl proportioning loithe shorter fuller figure agentle cum of neckline softlytied, iiglin sleeves and an euiIII through the midriff A must!

Printed Pattern 9087 HalfSues 10V>. |?H, m, 16H.I8W. ?0rt. m Sue 14H (bust37) takes 3 yuds 45inch fabric.

Send S I M Iv uch pattim.Md IM tor Mch pattern Infirst class airmail, handling.Sand to:

MARIAN MARTIN

Patttrn Dtpt. 420

Th* Daily R.gi.ttr

Z32 Wtst l l th St., O n York, KY1001L Print NAME, M M E S S ,ZIP, SIZE and STYLE M I M I E D . v f 'All Ihe new clothes »ou need loryour busy lilt are in out SPRING-SUMMER PATTERN CATALOG1

Dresses, lops, skirts, pants, wsts,lackets Plus SI 50 tree patterncoupon Send 751

»•*««•»••*•»

9087

• • • •

ADULT EDUCATION PROGRAM

OF THEMONMOUTH ADULT EDUCATION COMMISSION

SHREWSBURY NJ SUNDAY FEBRUARY 25. 1979 T h e StUldUy R e g M e r O t

SPRING TERM 1979CLASSES START: March 12,13,14,15 (unless courseREGISTER: descriptions otherwise indicate)

By Mall Until March 9, 1979, P.O. Box 502,Eatontown, NJ . 07724

In School: Registrations will be accepted ateach school the first night of classesfrom 6:30-7:30 P.M. provided thereare openings for additional students.

In Person: At the MAECOM OFFICE, 1 MainStreet, Eatontown, (third floor) week-days between 10 A.M. and 4 P.M.until March 9.

At Monmouth Mal{: March 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, WeekdaysNoon-2 P.M. and 7-9 P.M. SaturdayNoon-9 P.M.

INFORMATION: Call 542-3439

A Multi-SchoolDistrict Consortium

School DistrictH«nry Hudion ttgionol

long I r ouch

Monmouth Regional

Ocean Township

Rod lank Regional

SuperintendentMr. Jouph lick

Mr. H.A. Kortyii.n.,i

Dr. Frank Volp*

Mr. Robtt l Maken

Dr. Donald Worn. t

REGISTRATION FORMM | u , Total Fn Enckmd tMra. ( P I M M m«k« chw* p«y«bl« to MAECOM)»*r • This It myllrilcourw with MAECOM

(PLEASE PRINT) n I h m latwn MAECOM Couna(i) txloteLOCATION

Addr.it "* • • " I * [ i Sil.MII. • .ZloCod. Monmouth Rag. I) Ocaan Twp. D

AiburyPwttO Horny Hudson DMom. Phono U»gBr.nchD

Return this form with check enclosed toBut. Phon. Date MONMOUTH ADULT

EDUCATION COMMISSIONCOURSE....' P O - Bo" W J ' EATONTOWN, N.J. 07724

CIRCLE DAY/NIOHT M T W Th F S

THIS SPECIAL SECTIONFURT ER INFORMATION CALL 542-3439££

SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWINGCIVIC MINDED FIRMS AND INDIVIDUALS

MayorHenry R. Cioffi

CITYOF

LONGBRANCH

COFERMEMORIAL

HOMEJamot H. Color Si. Mgi

Jamot H. Colat III, Olractoi140 Shrawabury An., Rod

Bank7471124

BIOOMFIELD-COOPER

FUNERAL CHAPELL. BloomlMd 1

S Coopor. M.nag.»2110 SI Hwy 35

OCEAN TOWNSHIP4934143

FRANKLINSTATE BANK

Slate Hay No 35• DoaIRd

Ocaan 531 «»03

BAYNTON'SFloor Fashion Contor

A* T/petof Cirptttrtg

i Vinyl FlooringRod Bank747 3176

MAINSTAYFEDERAL SAVINGS

I LOAN ASSOCIATIONRod Bank741-0663

NORWOOD T.V.& APPLIANCE

COMPANY285 BroadwayLong Branch

222-6270

CITYCOUNCIL

City ofLong Branch

BOROBUSSES CO.

Rod Bank, N.J.741-0567

SKI HAUSOcaanport An.

Llflk Sllv.r•42-6666

Happy Skiing"

SEABOARDSERVICE

Long Branch222-5151

TANG'SCHINESE-AMERICAN

RESTAURANTBROAD ST.RED BANK7414060

P.J. CustomsSpecializedCabinetry

Formica iHtnlwood Unlit

SptclMllil123 N. Broadway

Long Branch22MSM

JOHN GUIRECOMPANY

FUll 0H-HAMW000lAWMtCAWOtHIWWS

LONG BRANCH222-0612

ANDERSON& CUTAIO

FUNERAL HOMEJohn Cutato, Managai

27] Broad StraolRED BANK747 5500

VALENZANO'SOfflCE EQUIPMENT

t SUPPLIES219 Locuti AnnuoWaal Long Branch

2290278

ROBERT A.BRAUN

FUNERAL HOMEEATONTOWN

Robert A BraunDlr 1 Own. i

M2-O363

MONMOUTHSAVINGS 110AN

ASSOC.Had Bank Fair Hann

Jack H. Ruda

AVALONDRESS MFG.COMPANY331 BROADWAYLONG BRANCH

EAST JERSEYSAVINGS 4

LOAN ASSOCIATIONOffiCM

LONG BRANCH 222-0558DEAL-531-1550

COLTS NECK-431-1200

SHREWSBURYSTATE BANK

Whtn Good Nttghborimake Good Btnktrt

Mambar F.D.I.C.4«5 Broad SI., Shrawabury

6427700

JOHN P. CONDONFUNERAL HOME

27 Third AnnuaAtlantic Highlands

Ml-0234

JERSEYSHOREBANK

Long Branch-Waal EndOcaan Twp-Balmar

670-9000

MARINEVIEW

SAVINGSAtlantic Highland*

Llncrofl671-2400

WHEELOCKSIGNALS

INC.273 Branchport An .

Long Branch222-6660

four Htlghbchood Ofhr

OCEANDODGE

1606 Hwy. 35 Oakhurat531-6100

SHADOW LAWNSAVINGS 1 LOAN

ASSOCIATION14 Cormnlont

LocationMain ONIca222-1100

MAHNSBROTHERS

BICYCLES266 St. Hwy. 35

Eatontown542-0030St. Hwy. 34

t Botmar Blvd.Wall Town.hlp

661-2466

CRATE'SWINE & CHEESE

SHOP747-146S

WN.BrMgoAnRED BANK

DORN'SPHOTOSHOP

Rod Bank747-2273

COLONIALFIRST NATIONAL BANK

Mambor F.D.I.C. andFidelity Union

Bancorporatlon741-1000

Where Good ThingsStart To Happen...

UNITED COUNTIESTRUST COMPANYTW. laat l « II ! ~ . HM4I

542-6300

KEITH SMYKAl CO.Mat U* to l m |

197 WallW.L.B.

222-5295

St.

SERPICO'SOFFICE

EQUIPMENT CO.101 Monmouth St..

Rod Bank747-0465

COMPLIMENTSOFA

FRIEND

ZOUBEKTRAILER SALES

& RENTALCOMPANYLITTLE SILVER

- 747-4151

137.

AlLANTIC HIGHLANDS - lOftrttt. onbut ILM. MOT tdwoli cenlrol>v to

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1M Mobile HornetHKJ5 Wl Two bedfoomi, lo.getlMMt. titelieni condition IIO.MO Call

U i A Holly **Of» MoWl* Hon.*>•! ar*o Tinout In llvlngroom rwoM m , lentrgl air. (will In f in» MMBD Call 731 MJ7

GARDEN PARK MOBILE HOMES -Bethany ltd . Hot ktl Adult pork Wouto chopping and N Y but J** 3»H

140 Real Estate WontedLISTINGS OF BETTERHOMES inKaanibuig Middletown Ha i le lHoimdel artd THE SMOl Kl) AG€NI V. 174171

MAtAWAN I 1ST WITHCentury H Van'. Agency

MINI

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747-1010

THE FLOCKFUNERAL HOME

John W FlockAnn M. Juska

DirectorsLONG BRANCH

2220202

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77S-4I23

LITTLE SILVERCLEANERS

andLAUNDERERS

J.F. KIELYCONSTRUCTION

COMPANYLong Branch

its AAccessories

DINGHY S - EH: ttlmnw. Dyer

.—J ywur fM>t dtnftiy at BOAT HOUSE.you don I wont a ( M i r 1131 Ocean

A » wo evtfN urnfiEVINRUOC W« - • • M P. tMfthaft,HahltV o n . MtMM>at motor U N

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SERVICE CENTER

FLAGSHIP MARINEMunicipal Marlnt Bailn

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291-5600

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATEStW l I t ! I ROM MATAWAN A I M SM 1100

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CORRECTIONS- iW l day I• • \" • i . i .

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">.shed Rooms107 Nu'Smg Homes108 Commercial Rentals109 Buildings Gat agesi '0 Wanted To Rent

'30 Open Houses .tsesfo*Sare

I 7 Condominiums' A nouses

nine PropertyProperty

"i-netcial Ptopeftyi sinai P'openy'•. 3nd Acreage

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L ENT1E MARINA - F«r RarHw BariMoflMff Ift-M( M r M « Mfvlt* tor

IVMAN - MA>O a nDwranautic. i M t w wtwtor.OMC. ei Lumttf. MWIIM

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MOTOR HOMEi FOR RENTFREE MILEAGE » INSURANCECALL AND CHECK OUR LOW.

LOW RATES m+m • •WINNHMO Wn ~ E.lrat aaaat

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atloA AM Centen, til H43

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J42-1500TOP SMOKING - Par life WithoutitttOVawl or wclflht aoln Frtt Jt t

writ and t r M <on*ottotlon» AM Ctn«\. UiVM- _

WANT A RECORO - Ot your ofrktoluplo-dale Social Wtutiry jMymdntionlrlbutvd plut booklet on S S Bernt» SendW. For detail, and order farhi

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WINNHMO WnMil Aiklni tllJat

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10 Lost A Found

'ANTED - SB ovtrwetgnt m.n andncn NonortMrtM approoch PY*lorwlly mpervlMd GuoranHwiit vou oootlty I Mutt be IS or mafe

overweight 3 Mu»t be o*t»uln«

213 InstructionREAL ESTATE

M lSate. Ik

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UTOR - After schoolwbtecH, now throwgntort Kattiy ot 47IS45.

el*m«htwvmmn Gen

32 Long Branch ».NOTICE OF

SPECIAL PUBLIC MEETINGA Special Publk Mevtlna of ttw

ong Bronch Board of Education winbeheld on Mondoy, February H. 19/fat

30 p m In Ihv Cafeteria ol Ihe Junlotigh School

The pu'pote ol the meeting will bereview at Financial Planning and to

adapt a resolution to hold a dafcedvecuiivc union io rmtu.i pcrt«nne<

matten following th« Spfcial PuMliMeeting and to dlicuti any other matert which may come up thai rvqwlre-

d action

DONALDJ VAN BRUNTUcritarf

Long Bronch Board ot Education.• WvilEnd Cou.t

Long Branch. New Jersey.

2U Middletown , ;NOTICE OF HEARING

Pleate take notice that th« under,laned hoi applied to the PlofMIno,

Board ot Ihe Township of Middle town,w o, to permit applicant to Subdivide.Lot 71B t2S Into three lot* on prefnjiet

«rn a. Block 7M Lot D B l I S o n thtj.Map

A copy of the appilcallon hoi been*lied in tne oftite of the TowMhip*" k, and may be Inspected . . *

A public (waring will be h«Jd onMonday evening. fh« 11th dav* otMorch. I t n , ol J » P.M. at TowjithipHoll. Middletown. New Jertty, o»wfinn lime you may opp*o> eUh*w inptrton or by ogenl or attornef ana>r*Mnl any objection which yatr wtty,

April 2Medicare ideadline;:

ASBURY PARK - IHsipkeligible (or. but who tki «pihave. Medicare medical Indrriiinr prolectiun can enroU farit through April 2. James JCaivano. social security, dis-trict manager here , an-nounced

Those eligible In sign upduring the 1079 general en-rollment period include people65 and over and disabled peo-ple who have Medicare hospi-tal Insurance but failed to signup when they were firsteligible or who once had thisprotection but cancelled £t

Protection will start J uly J,1978, (or those who sign uj)during- this time. Mr Caivaaosaid

People who sign up dururgthe general enrollment period,may pay a higher premium Ifthere was a period of 12months or more during whirtlthey were eligible for medic*)insurance but did not have ill

Kven so, W.-Oivano saiil,medical insurance representa real bargain because theFederal (iuvernment paysover % of the total meilicilinsurance premium out of gejLeral revenues

Medical insurance helpspay the cost of doctor bills andfor other services and suppliesmil covered by Medicare hos-pital insurance

Full information abojilMedicare can be obtained atthe offices located in AsbufJPark. Bnck Township andToms River The toll free tele-phone number Is 880-272 111U

D « The Sunday Register SHREWSBURY, NJ SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25 1979

Coed vessel docks at Leonardo pier

59 women sailors make Navy history•jf WARREN RICHEV

LEONARDO - Seaman Apprentice Margaret Kaydown'! get aeasick anymore

Not rince her first day at sea Feb 12. when she andMother female sailors made NavaT history, has the IKyear-old Grand Rapids, Mich , high school graduatefelt dizzy and yearned lor dear old terra firms

Mils Kay, one of the youngest female members ofthe first coed crew assigned to an oceanbound shipother than a hospital vessel in the history of the Navy,took part in another Navy milestone Thursday andFriday as she, her fellow female sailors and about 6H0male sailors aboard the USS Vulcan cruised fromhomeport Norfolk, Va , to the Earle Naval WeaponsStation pier here The ship, which during a Feb. 1214Atlantic cruise became the first coed oceanboundNavy ship afloat, became the first coed Navy vessel totravel from one port to another upon its arrival here at2 p.m. Friday

The Vulcan, described by ship's Captain Harry ASpencer Jr as a 330-foot by 70-foot, H.OOO-ton "Moatingship yard," was dispatched to Earle pier on a three-week mission to do repair work on the ammunitionships Nitre and Suribachi, both docked here.

The repair ship, commissioned in 1941 for theNavy's Atlantic Fleet, is usually confined to docksiderepair work at Norfolk, and would normally not attractthe attention of 28 reporters, representing 13 variednews media organizations But after roughly 60 womenreported for duty aboard the Vulcan late last year, theship has become a showcase of women working in themale-dominated Navy.

Vulcan Executive Officer Charles Keithley saidthere was "surprisingly little opposition" from thesailors to having women join the crew And he addedthat the coed crew was " working out well."

Seaman Apprentice Kay, who handles all the pa-perwork for the Vulcan's Food Service Division, saidthat she joined the Navy less than two months afterher high school graduation and that she didn't havemuch difficulty adjusting to Navy life aboard the ship.

Miss Kay, who lives on the ship even in port withabout 20 other female sailors, said she was alreadyaccustomed to sharing a room because she grew up inGrand Rapids with four sisters and seven brothers.

The 18-year-old said that the only real adjustmentwas getting used to enduring what seemed to her "likehaving thousands of eyes on you all the time."

She said that she had accepted the fact that inNorfolk as on the ship she as a female sailor would begreatly outnumbered by male sailors.

"It's a normal situation in the Navy to have moremen than women you just get used to it being in IheNavy," Miss Kay said

The seaman apprentice said that she joined theNavy specifically to gain educational benefits after herrelease from the service And she stressed that she'snot in the Navy to find a husband

Miss Kay said she intends to go to night school inNorfolk until she can attend college full-time to worktoward an accounting degree.

The Grand Rapids teen-ager said she goes on"occasional" dates with sailors of the opposite sex.

"Sometimes you just get tired of there being somany men around," she said, adding that at thosetimes she retreats to the women's quarters where shesaid the women are supportive of each other, sympa-thetic, and close.

Miss Kay said some women crew members havehad difficulty in their jobs because of "sexist" at-titudes of some of the crew members and some of-ficers

She added that she's occasionally had to endurecatcalls and whistles. "Sailors will be sailors," sheexplained with a smile.

Miss Kay said that most of the women on the creware not radical women's liberationism. She said themajority of the female sailors don't have a chip ontheir shoulder to prove they are equal or better thantheir male counterparts, adding that most of the

Im4mr **«ultf Pfctttt By D«vl K h H N

YOUNG SAILOR - At 18, Seaman ApprenticeMargaret Kay of Grand Rapids, Mich., is one ofthe youngest members of the history-makingcoed crew of the USS. Vulcan which arrivedat the Earle Naval Weapons Station pier atLeonardo on Friday from its home port of Nor-folk, Va.

women simply "like Hint jobs in the Navy and areinterested in what they WOOtni "

Operations Specialist Mary Kelly, one of 15 mar-ried women on the Vulcan new, said she wasn'tintimidated working in Ihe traditionally male at-mosphere on the ship, and she added that she enjoyedIhe challenge of her work

• Mrs Kelly, SO. said she's married to a retired Navyman and has a nine-year-old son

The Operations specialist said she began her mili-tary career as an 18-year-old recruit in Ihe Air forceMrs Kelly said she was forced to leave Ihe Air Forcewhen she became pregnant

She explained that after the birth of her son shedecided to pursue a Navy career

Quartermaster l.md.i Coffell. the 214-year-oldwife of an ex-Marine she left at home in Norfolk, saidher husband is not worried aboul her being assigned toa ship with 600 sailors She said her husband is moreconcerned about her safety and Ihe danger of being ona ship at sea

The Vulcan is mil a combat vessel and is notoutfitted with heavy guns The ship is one of six Navyships with coed crews and the Navy has plans toincrease to 21 the number of noncombatanl ships withcoed crews by the end of fiscal year 1979

Congress has forbidden female sailors from beingstationed on any combat vessels fur more than ISOdays or bound fur battle duty

During its three weeks of repair work here Vulcancrew members are expected to put in about 6,000 hoursof work on the Nitro and about lu.OOOon Ihe Suribachi.

According to the Navy Ihe Nitro sustained damagewhen it encountered a slorm on a return trip from theMediterranean Sea •

CAREFUL NAVIGATION - Operations Speclallst Mary Kelly of Cleveland plots the entrance to Rarltan Bay. Mrs. Kelly, 30, Is one ofIS married women on the Vulcan crew. She

said she wasn't Intimidated working in the trad-itional male atmosphere on the ship and sheen|oys the challenge of her work

COED VESSEL — The USS. Vulcan, theNavy's»first coed ship to undertake an oceanvoyage, Is tied up three miles otf Leonardoshore at the Earle Naval Weapons Station pier

The 530-foot vessel traveled to Earle Friday todo repair work on two ammunition ships at thepier.

a t Keonsburg M» KeaniburgU L H N f t SMITH PA

""HSTREETURO.N J (- 14*3

ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFFSUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY

CHANCERY DIVISIONMONMOUTH COUNTYDOCKET NO. F 7*07 71

PlaintiffBOROUGH OF KEANSBURG, AMunicipal Corporation In tht Countyol Monmouih ond State ol New Jersey

m Keonsburgtromplalntlff's tax lientltlei

The action is broughl ogalnst the land only,and no personal judgment may be entered there

DelendonHCIVIL ACTION

OF TAXVIEN TMBlock 13. Lot 11Assessed to John Floyd Hoddow; andother londiBY BOROUGH OF KEANSBURG

TAKE NOTICE THAT AN ACTION. INREM, hoi been commenced In the SuperiorCourt Of New Jtcwy by the filing ot 0 Complainton February 7, 197V and an Amended Complolnton February 11,1*7* to foreclose and lor ever barany and all r Ignis ot redemption ot the parcel! ofland described In the lax foreclosure list below.

'Any person desiring to protect o right titleor interest In the described land or any parcelIhereof, by redemption, or lo conletl plaintiff *right lo foreclose, may do so by paying th>omount lo redeem at set forth below, plui inleresl to the date ol redemption, and such costsas the court may allow, prior lo Ihe entry of Ihejudgment therein; or by tiling and *er«tng anAnswer lo Ihe Complaint setting forth Defendonts defense within 44 days after publication ofthis notice

In the even,! of (allure lo redeem or onswerby any person hawing the right lo redeem oranswer, such person snail be forever barred ondforeclosed ot all his right, title and Interest andequity of redemption In and to the parcels ot landdescribed In the following foreclosure lltt

The following liacopy of Ihe lax foreclosurelist showing the lands ogolmt which this action \sbrought PUBLICATION DATE February 75197?

DAVID ZOLKINAttorney for the Borough

of Keansburg, The Ploinllflherein

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I.KONAKUO - Despite a predictionand protest by a concerned Navy wife thatthe coed seabound U.8.S. Vulcan wouldbecome "a floating brothel. " Ihe ship ar-rived on schedule at the Karle NavalWeapons Station pier here, with all 59[emak cr»» imQIMn alive and as dedi-

•caled lo their work as everFemale members of the 740-sailor crew

luuk exception lo iho Navy wife's objec-*lions which were in a letter published inIhe Navy Times, slating emphatically thatthe only relationship between male andfemale crew members on the ship is aworking relationship

(rev. members privately, however,have said some intraship dating is occur-ring and. according to a sailor, crew mem-ben have engaged in sexual activity onthe ship on at least two occasions sinct'December

The Navy provides female sailors withfree birth control pills when requested.according lo a sailor

" l fyou wanted to [ool around you couldprobably find a place lo do it There are allkinds of liltle closets on the ship," saidMike l'aradee. 24. from New London,Minn Bui ihe majority of the guys wouldnever dire try anything. It's not worth i t . "

According to the Navy, two male sail-ors are awaiting court-martial as a resultof a midnight "practical joke" in whichthey entered the women's quarters for afew minutes.

One female sailor said she was awak-ened shortly after midnight when one ofthe sailors was "biting my ear "

The sailor, who declined lo be indentified, said the male sailors woke many ofthe women in the berthing area because oftheir laughler

She said that none of the female sailorswere molested, and she said the incidentwas "just a practical joke "

Vulcan Kxecutive- Officer CharlesKeithley said Ihe two men were beingcourt-martialed because they both had hada number of previous disciplinary chargesagainst them

A third sailor suspected uf entering Uwwomen's quarters with Ihe (WQ, uil l f.i< ran informal hearing, the executive offli nsaid He said Ihe third sailnr «as pelmuted lo remain on the Muii

The incident, which occurred laslweekend, was not Ihe first attempted shipstyle panty raid on the Vulcan

in December two other mile tailorawere court-martialed for allegedly sneaking into the women's quarters on Ihe Vulcan. According lo • female laUvfi whosaid she slept through Ihe mcideni. the twosailors entered the women's quarters andfelt Ihe leg of a sleeping female* Balloi

Though members of the crew do referto the Vulcan as Ihe "Love Boat," after'Ihe television program, and though thereare rumors of a June wedding as a resultof a shipboard romance, female tallonhave said that on the Vulcan businesscomes first

"It'B a place of business, a femalesailor said. " I t 's a Naval vessel, a shipPeople are mature enough to realize thatthis is not the place to public]) showaffection "

Executive Officer Keithley said thatIhe 680 male crew members were given afour-hour "awareness seminar" prior lothe ship's departure from Norfolk. Va ,Thursday The executive officer explainedlhat Ihe purpose ol Ihe seminar was: tooutline what would be expected and notexpected of the sailors and to discuss Ihe"new element of shipboard life" in having

women aboard

He said the women underwent the usu-al one-week indoctrination period given loall new seamen.

In order to house the 59 female sailorsa section of of the men's quarters wasprepared by weeding a special wall over anair space which was open between the twoberthing areas.

The door leading between Ihe men'sand women's quarters is locked For safety reasons, however, there are three otherentrances to the women's quarters

EXPLAINS PROCEDURE - Vulcan Executive Of-ficer Charles Kelthlev said 680 male crewmen wererecently given a seminar to outline what was ex-pected of them in the "new element of shipboardlife" in having women aboard.

The Sunday RegisterSHREWSBURY, ( J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25. 1979 Lifestyle COUNTY FARE 2

ANN LANDERS 3

HERE'S TO HEALTH 4

Susan Leahy scores as Cosmo Girl• j LINDA ELLIS

FREEHOLD - Susan Leahy takes arefreshingly realistic view to being a sexobject

Newly named as a cheerleader for theCosmos soccer team, the leggy blonde isaiming at an acting career

"And for that I need as much exposureas I can get," the 19 year -old townshipresident declared

The Cosmos organization, following thelead of Dallas Cowgirls nomenclature,also takes a realistic view of Ms Leahy'sJob description

"We aren't called cheerleaders; we'rejust called girls, Cosmos Girls," the beau-ty-contest veteran said "We don't reallycheer; we dance. We'll be doing disco andjazz dancing."

As part of the selection regimen forCosmos Girl hopefuls, the more than 200contestants in the January weedouts hadto attempt a marching routine, cartwheelsand splits

They also had to say, out loud, "Why IWant to Be a Cosmos Girl." Ms Leahy'sanswer indicates she's not only a fledgling

w

actress but potential political material aswell

"I said it would be a lol of fun, andbecause 1 want to be an actress, whatbetter audience could I have than the fanswho come to the Meadowlands7" MsLeahy recalled

"I'm certainly not in it for the moneyOut of the ll!> we get per game I have topay my travel expenses to all the practicesand games It's really a great opportunityfor me, though I don't mind the flS, andthat's all the Dallas Cowgirls get It'sobvious no one does it for the money "

Right now, Ms Leahy is practicingfour hours every Monday night, learningdance1 routines The Cosmos kick off in

• •liiltr Hwu kv DM Lcrrii

TOOTH IN ADVERTISING — Susan Leahy, IV, of Freehold Is one of theCosmos Girls, and part of her schedule Is keeping her smile In shape. A pushfor her acting career Is the reason she tried out, she said, as she smiles herefor her dentist, Dr. Donald Morris of Lincroft.

April, so she expects that in March andApril the practices will become muchmore frequent

"We learned the Cosmos' song our firs!day of practice," the 1977 Miss New JerseyWorld said "It wasn't very hard We practice jazz dancing, and we'll be doing somedisco, which 1 already know '

From among the 16 regular CosmosGirjs and the 16 alternates, Ms Leahy wastapped to appear on a sports magazinecover this spring with the Cosmo withwhom any woman would like to pose Sheand Georgio Chinaglia will grace an up-coming cover of the magazine, the nameof which she can't recall.

"That's really a break, bein£ in themagazine with Georgio," she bubbled"My manager is really excited aboutthat"

Ms. Leahy's manager, a woman withoffices in New York, is the person whoadvised her to try out for the Cosmos Girlsin the first place.

"She said the publicity would help, andshe's usually right I really trust her," theFreehold High School graduate said" "I'vereally had bad luck with agents when Iwas trying to break into modeling, so nowI'm really glad to have a manager who canhandle all the different agents I wouldhave to deal with myself.

"I wasn't very good at that, at who totrust as far as agents, and I had some bad

luck and bad experiences in modeling Allthat's in the past, though, and we reallyare optimistic about getting me on com-mercials "

Ms Leahy, without a doubt, has thekind of smile that makes you want to knowher brand of toothpaste.

Asked how her manager describes matsmile when trying to sell it, Mrs Leahylermed it "a commercial smile "

Combine that with this young woman'sdisarming honesty and you've got some-one who could probably sell Mexican natu-ral gas to energy czar James Schlesingerat this year's prices

"I really hope lo break in that way,through commercials, and then eventuallyget into soap operas," the Cosmos Girlsaid. "Then. I hope, movies."

Ms Leahy's has played schoolgirl soc-cer in Freehold and seen Cosmos gameson TV Her cheerleading was limited loeighth grade, but then, remember, sheisn't billed as a cheerleader

Ms Leahy's (and her manager's) theo-ry is that you can take all her beauty titles— Miss Sea Queen, Miss Ocean Beach,Miss Manasquan, Miss Benihana, askateboarding title and even Miss NewJersey World — and they don'l mean muchwhen stacked up against her upcomingphotoplay with Chinaglia.

Soccer could make her a star — or atthe very least, a commercial call regular.

Shi1 hopes for some talk show ap-pearances and has already been in-terviewed more times than she can recall.

You begin to understand why shedoesn't feel exploited She feels, she said,lucky Ms L^jthy, brings sloe-eyed babyblues, a five-foot-seven-inch, 134-poundframe and that smile into the game andoul "I II she'll get the publicity she needsfor her professional plans.

The squad is being fitted for jumpsuitsin blue and white, and there will be at leastone outfit with shorts Ms Leahy has nointention of getting embroiled in any conIroversy about posing in the nude for amen's magazine That's a big issue in prosports cheerleading, and she'll avoid it bysaying tin

"I'm not really nervous about being aCosmos Girl, although I've never doneanything in front of 80,000 people before,"Ms Leahy said "I think having 15 othergirls nut there on the field with me willmake it okay I'm really looking forwardto the first game "

Between practices, she goes-to cornmerclal auditions and a strenuous round ofdance, voice and piano lessons. She's triedout for a gum commercial, a diet colapitch, a curling Iron spot and aMcDonald's ad. No luck so far, but she'sconfident.

"Before 1 was seen by an agent at theMiss New Jersey World contest I wantedto be a dental hygienist," she said, flashing <that "commercial" smile. "But not any-more. I'm going to make it."

Art of children uncoversgerm of creative impulse

By DIANA LOEKt HKK the form of exhibitions 01 children's art from around IheI trlsllai Science Moallor

NKW YOHK-Anyone whu spends lime looking at artshould occasionally turn In (he art of children for bothrefreshment and perspec Hie

In the art of children one finds undisguised and uncontrived the embryo of the modern movements—abstract,expressionist, impressionist, surrealist, etc —and the germof the creative impulse One uf the first benefits we adultsare reaping from the International Year of the Child takes

'Youth Studying" (Tanzania)

world.Under the joint lille Pictures From a Small Planet" one

such exhibition recently opened in the visitors gallery of theI 'niled Nations General Assembly through March 16.

The show is supplemented by a.M-picture exhibition uflwi> of its themes, work and play, at Gallery 1199 here

Sponsored by the US Committee for UNICEF andfunded by Binney 4 Smith, Inc., makers of Crayola t'rayons,the exhibitions will travel extensively throughoul this coun-try

Created by children from 5 to 15 years old, all the picturesin these shims are taken from UNICEF's 10,000-piece per-manent collection of international children's art, maintainedby the US committee's Information Center on Children'sCultures. . •• ••

Director of the information center arfU organizer of theart exhibitions is Anne Pellowski. who has traveled to morethan 200 countries to collect the broadest range of art createdby children Miss Pellowski also is an authority on interna-tional children's literature and non-print media for childrenIn keeping with I'NICEF's educational objectives, an il-lustrated catalog with related classroom and family ac-tivities accompanies the show

At the recent opening of the UN. exhibition MissPellowski explained that about 90 percent of the pictureswere solicited over the past 10 years "from almost everynation on earth and from subcultures within nations."

Sometimes children submitted their own works, some-times teachers sent them in and often Miss Pellowski trav-eled into remote areas of the world herself—places wherethere were no schools-and distributed art materials to thechildren to gather works for the collection.

The children were given no special instruction but en-couraged to portray the culture, environment or socialaspects of their lives. Miss Pellowski said at the opening;

"The major criterion (for selection) was how well thepicture represented the physical aspect of culture or theinner spirit of the culture If there were 20 pieces from acountry and one depicted the very specific aspects of Iheculture, we would choose that one even if it was artisticallyless interesting. The only instruction we gave the childrenwas to depict their lives ".

Among the themes that children choose most commonlyare travel, music, work, play, religion, nature, animals,family, school, farm or village and city life.

Miss Pellowski has discovered that certain themes areuniversally favored

"We coulB hold a whole show on animals and family,particularly Ihe classic family portrait, and. surprisingly,religion," she explained "There are a high percentage of

"Rubber Trapping" (Sri Lanka)religious paintings both from traditional cultures and in-dustrialized ones "

At the other end of the spectrum paintings that directlydepict emotions such as fear or sadness are rare, is areabstractions

Perhaps the most striking impression to emerge fromthis exhibition is its universality Regardless of country,lulture or economic circumstance the children are pre-eminently citizens of the shrinking world, the global village-

"I remember a tiny village in Senegal where there wasno school," she recalled "I was painting with the childrenunder a tree One child was painting what looked like a boxerand I realized to my astonishment it was Muhammad All.

See Kids', page E2

~'Fuh" (Greece)

RaftMtr *»>• kv Carl Fwhw

BEAUTY QUEEN — Susan Leahy, model and new-ly-named Cosmos Girl, Is a veteran beauty contes-tant, having won several crowns, Including MissNew Jersey World two years ago.

AT WIT'SEND

Pairing upof people

By ERMA BOMBECK

It's coming, and no one can stop itI'm talking about the pairing up of people who share

common attributes The division ol smokers vs non-smokers,joggers vs non-joggers, drinkers against teetotalers, those withexact change and those without

Now it's a college in Maine which, in the hopes of cuttingfuel bills, is asking students whether they're normally cold-blooded or hot-blooded Once the division is made, all the cold-blooded students will be placed in the heated dormitories andthe hot-blooded ones can sit by an open window and perspire

Forgive my optimism, but I think this is definitely abreakthrough in the War of Differences The reason why wehave had so much trouble with human relationships in thuscountry is we try to force mismated people into understandingone another

In the luture. I'd like to see an application for a marriagelicense (circle the response that fits best) that spells it all out

Snorer. NonsnorerElectric Blanket: 3,5. over 7Kidney capacity on vacation 4 hours. 8 hours, two days or

moreRate in order of their importance birth of (wins. Super

Bowl, wife's birthday, boat showDinner Response: 1 don't care, I careReads in bed, sleeps in bed, eats in bedClips magazines and newspapers, does not clip magazines

and newspapersAnswers phone when it rings. Does not answer phone until

he is summonedFeeds dog at table, Does not feed dog at tableBelieves it is better to curse the darkness than to turn on a

light, Believes there is a place in society for electricityCraves quiet. Sees a challenge in CB staticWhen he gets a cold, Believes he will get well, Believes he

will never get wellExpects change from money he has given out. Does not

expect change from money he has given outBy golly, just the excitement of knowing that someday

husbands will be divided Into those who turn their socks rightside out before throwing them In the hamper and those wholeave them In little balls just gives me goose bumps!

E2 The Sunday tjCgMcr SHREWSBURY NJ SUNDAY FEBRUARY 25.1979

COUNTYFARE

WEDDINGS

Site-seeingtheir dreamfor a dump

By MARGUERITE HENDERSON

It's only a dump site down behind the Shipwreck Inn, butthose who care about kids in Keansburg visualize It as abaattaUQdd

Time caring people Include John Berger, president o(Keansburg Youth Association (KY A) and his wile Carol, who ischairman of Saturday's 8 p.m. party In the New Point ComfortFtrahnue, Carr Avenue. It's a fund-raiser to turn the dump into

Plans call lor an open bar, roast beef dinner (the boys fromthe flrehouse are donating their culinary services) and dancinglomuakbyJui'Cniiitn'.

Now 1 dance for a dump may sound klnda strange; but wehave II on good authority that residents of Kennebunk, Maine,have turned that sort of benefit Into an annual parade andouting! Anyone for the title "Miss Landfill?"

Well, the whole thing sounds like lots of fun for a causethat's close to home and close to hearts. Other "slte"seenInclude Daniel Jelenlcwiki, director of the recreation com-interim, commissioners Robert Brown and Ralph Wilson, andMrs. Helen V. Hill, a recreation department leader. Mrs. Hill,ahem, sounds like a natural In this situation.

Reservations may be arranged by contacting the John F.Kennedy Community Center on Carr Avenue.

Upstairs/downstairsThose downstairs at the K of C HaU, Freehold, kept their

eyes on those upstairs.And those upstairs kept their eyes on those downstairs.And If you think that sounds pretty tricky, you're forgetting

the marvels of closed cirsuit TV. That was an innovation at thisyear's benefit bash sponsored by the Freehold Knights ofColumbus; the system permitted everyone to see who tookhome the gifts, all donated and all delightful.

•* Assemblyman Walter J. Kozloskl was chairman of this thirdaawial cocktail party to aid special children. He and his wifeLouise were among tome MO guests. Proceeds, tallied at HMOare to j o to the Monmouth Association for Retarded Children,Children's Psychiatric Center, Mmimouth Associaton for Chil-dren with Learning Disabilities, and to the Holy InnocentsSociety to provide religious education to retarded children in St.Row of Uma and St. Robert Belia.rmine parishes, Freehold

P-PPPerfectThere were persons In profusion and a plethora of pasta at

the posh Pollak partyThis season, the auxiliary to Pollak Memorial Clinic, Mon-

mouth Medical Center, gave their fund-raising brunch an Italianfeast theme.

And that brought out the best of lasagna, baked shells,sausage and pepper, meal balls, marinated mushrooms, and on,and on, and on. The party was in MMC's Auxlllary'HaU.

Guests included Regina and George Carter, Mr. and Mrs.James Ctavaglia, Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Angellllo, Mary and DonBrewer, Honey and Ken Roonan (she's auxiliary president)Mrs. Elaine Spellman (a brunch chairman) and her sister Mrs.Florence Weingartv Mr and Mrs James Sherman, Richard andEdna Predmore (she was the other chairman), Mr. and Mrs.George Lambert and Mrs. Isabel Marshall.

Also, Dorothy arid Robert Manson, Mrs. Mae Munch, Mr.and Mrs. H. William MuUaney, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Azzolina,Mrs. Vincent Roache Jr. and James Alavator, Edna and JoeHage, Mrs. Dottle Roeher, Marty and BUI Suter, Mr. and Mrs.Ronald Gniber and Mr. and Mrs. Michael Pizza.

Temple auctionTemple Beth Ahm in Aberdeen is planning a gala auction. It

wlD be March 24 at 9 p.m in the synagogue, 550 Lloyd Road.Viewing of viewable items will begin at B p.m. Some of thethings you can't see, though, Include trips to Florida andVermont, a weekend to NVC, and catering company meals!Abo up for bid will be tickets to Broadway shows and sportingevents, furniture Items, televisions, etc.

Tickets, nominally priced, cover lavish desserts, colfee andchampagne. All are Invited and may make reservations bycaffing tbe temple office

DIPPING IN — Richard Predmore, Middletown, gets the best of attention atthe Pollak Auxiliary brunch, from his wife Edna, right, and Mrs. IrwlnSpellman, Holmdel, who were chairmen of the event held In Auxiliary Hall ofMonmauth Medical Center, Long Branch. Italian fare was featured.

GIRL TALK - Engaged in a bit of chit-chat at the Pollak Auxiliary party are,left to right, Mrs. Robert Weingart, Rumson; Mrs. Vincent J. Roache Jr.,Tlnton Falls, and Mrs. George Lambert, West Long Branch.

Rhodey-Henrickson

RED BANK-In St. James Roman CatholicChurch here Feb. >, Miss Maryann Gail Hen-drickson, daughter of Mr and Mrs John GHendrickson, 74 Maida Ter, Middletown, wasmarried to Michael Charles Rhodey, son of Mr.and Mrs Robert C Rhodey of Timonium, Md.

The Rev Frederick Valentino celebratedthe nuptial Mass. There was a reception inGibbs Hall, Ft Monmouth

The bride had her sister, Rulhann G. Hen-drickson, as maid of honor Also attending thebride were Bridget Braun, Glnny Clabby, RaniMetherate. Gail Michaele and Judy Holmes

Douglas I Rhodey was best man for hisbrother Ushers were Christopher Watson,Spence Jeffries, Jerry Faraino and JameeMalamatis

Mrs. Rhodey was graduated from Red BankCatholic High School and the College of NotreDame of Maryland, Baltimore. She is a teacheremployed by the Hazlel Township School Sys-tem

__,'-, —

MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL RHODEV

Mr. Rhodey is an alumnus of Dulaney HighSchool and Johns Hopkins University, Balti-more, and is territory sales manager for Coca-Cola USA He and his bride will reside inMystic Island

RUMSON-Madelynn Schooley Abel andWilliam H Carty Jr were married yesterdayin the First Presbyterian Church of Rumsonduring a ceremony conducted by the RevFoster C Wilson Jr. There was a reception inIlvento's West End Manor.

The bride, who is employed by ShrewsburyState Bank, is the daughter of Mr and MrsWilliam J. Schooley Sr, 52 River Ave , Mon-mouth Beach. She Is the granddaughter of MrsWilliam I) Ashmore of Red Bank, and MrsMaxwell B Smith Sr, Monmouth Beach

Carty-AbelThe bridegroom is Ihe son of Mr and Mrs

Frank Jordan, 441 Broadway. Long Branch,and Mr Carty Sr , Aberdeen, Md He is thegrandson of Mr and Mrs Oliver J Berardl ofMaryland. Mr Carty is employed by Mon-mouth Chrysler-Plymouth of Eatontown and isattending Brookdale Community Col-lege,Lincrofl. ' ,

The couple had Miss Maureen Maloney andWilliam P McC.rath as their honor attendants

Mr and Mrs Carty plan a skiing trip toKillington, VI

Sileno-LivingstonRED BANK - Miss Vicki Lynn Livingston, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs Harry J Livingston, 115 Hollywood Ave , West LongBranch, was married Feb 18 in the First Presbyterian Church,Tower Hill, to Joseph Paul Sileno J r , son of Mr. and Mrs Silenoof Milwaukee, WIs The Rev. Jonathan Miller officiated

Lisa C. Cantlin and Wendy L Livingston were the bride'shonor attendants

Thomas F Church was best manMrs Sileno Is an alumna of Shore Regional High School,

West Long Branch, and received a BA degree cum laude fromthe University of Miami She is a marketing manager at MillerBrewing Company in Milwaukee

Mr Sileno attended Arizona State University and Is a self-employed real estate broker and builder His companies areJoseph P Sileno Real Estate and Sileno Homes II in Milwaukee

Mr and Mrs Sileno will reside in Glendale. Wis, after awedding trip to Hawaii.

ENGAGEMENTS

Llse Asa Rwea

Howard-RosenWARWICK. N. Y - Mr and Mrs Bernard

H Rosen here, rormerly of Judith Road. LittleSilver. N. J . announce the engagement of theirdaughter. Miss Lise Ann Rosen, to WilliamSpencer Howard 3rd, son of Mrs ElizabethChamberlin Howard, 676 Little Silver PointRoad, Little Silver, and William Spencer How-ard 2nd of Chatham. Mass.

Miss Rosen attended Endicott College.Beverly. Mass, and was graduated fromStuart School of Business Administration,Asbury Park She is a secretary employed byMann Enterprises, Sea Bright

Mr. Howard is an investment broker wilhFirst Jersey Securities, Red Bank

DuFresne-CannonHOLMDEL—Announcement is made by

Mr and Mrs John Cannon, 35 Winding Way, ofthe engagement of their daughter, Miss JillAnn Cannon, to Randy Michael Du Fresne, sonof Mr. and Mrs Theodore DuFresne of PuntaCiorda, Fla

Miss Cannon and her fiance are alumni ofthe University of South Florida. Tampa. She is

JUlfi jiditk Mint

employed as a claims examiner by FoundersLife Assurance Company of Florida, Tampa,and Mr Du Fresne is a claims representativefor Aetna Life and Casualty Company, Tampa

KUMSON-TheHev I)r and Mrs GeraldS Mills. 4 Circle Drive, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Judith Eliz-abeth Mills, to David Alan Lowry, son of Mrand Mrs Laurence D Lowry of Pittsburgh.Pa. A September wedding is planned

Miss Mills is a graduate of Far BrookSchool, Short Hills, and New Providence HighSchool She and her fiance, an alumnus ofChartiers Valley High School, Pittsburgh. <jxpect to be graduated in June from Burkm IIUniversity, Lewisburg, Pa

Al Bucknell. Miss Mills is a member of PhiMu sorority; Omicron Delta Epsilon, nationaleconomics honor society, and Pi Delta Phi,national French honor society

Mr Lowry is a student member of IheAmerican Society of Mechanical Engineersand the American Society of Healing, Refrig-eration and Air Conditioning Engineers. He isalso a member of the Bucknell table tennisclub.

KNIGHTS' AFTERNOON - K of C stood for Kind ofCongenial at the third annual cocktail benefit spon-sored by the Freehold Knights of Columbus. As-semblyman Walter J. Kozloskl, left, party choir-

man, and his wife Louise, join guests Ed Lewis,Freehold, and Mrs. Bert Rlfpenburg at the event.Proceeds of 14,000 will aid children with specialproblems.

Kids' artdisplayed

(continued)Looking at the painting there was nothing to suggest where itcame from."

Hut there is ;. mil her dimension of universality as well Ithai seems to derive more explicitly from the nature ofchildhood.

The pictures reflect an acute sensory awareness to color,light, shape and atmosphere, a kind of purity of perceptionthat is all too often lost as we "mature." Each of thesepaintings is in some sense an act of discovery, and the moodis one of delight, rending us that the ace of creation Isessentially a Joyful one.

Equally impressive Is the fact thae within their univer-sality the pictures evince distinguishing ethnic, regional andnational characteristics, such as a Belgian grape harvest inwhich the grapes cluster like bits of lace, a Tokyo streetscene in which the style is as Japanese as the content, anunderwater scene called "Greek fish" in which the palette ispure Aegean or a Byelorussian illustration of "Little RedRiding Hood" which reflects the Influence of Russian folkart.

The so-called "international style" In which no regionalcharacteristics are discernible is fashionable in contem-porary art circles, but an exhibition like this makes usthankful that we have children to remind us there is nothingmore international than our humanness and no more vividway of expressing it than through our personal heritage.

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SHREWSBURY. N J SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1979 E3

BUSINESS - StephanieWinston loves helping people straighten outmelr messes - whether It Is unclutterlng theirclosets, desks or kitchens, or revising a falteringproducion system at the corporate level

Disorganized? Here's helpBy MARILYN HOFFMANCkritUii SdtKC Mwdter

NEW YORK - Stephanie Winston loves helping peoplestraighten out their messes, whether it is uncluttenng theirclosets, desks or kitchens, or remedying (altering workproduction system at the corporate level

What to one person may look a hopeless shambles is, toher, but a delightful challenge to apply her "organizingprinciple" (also the name of her one-woman consultingfirm) to set both individuals and companies on their way toorder, smooth functioning and peace of mind

Five years ago, Miss Winston, who graduated fromBarnard College with a degree in political science, resignedher job as editor and assistant to the president of CrownPublishers, Inc , to launch herself in what she terms "theorganizing business" She realized one day that manyhighly intelligent people had never learned to organizethemselves, their papers, money and possessions, and wereconstantly feeling miserable and helpless in their disarray

That's when she began her rescue operation. As aconsultant she was objective, local and considerate enoughof human frailty to understand why people sometimes clingtenaciously to accumulations of papers and possessionsShe began to hire herself out at f 100 a day to help peoplerethink old habits, revise non-working systems and declut-ter their premises. City Councilman Carter Burden was herfirst client, with a request to revamp his library.

From then on, she dug out one person after another whowas mired in some phase of disorganization She finds that

without doubt, paper — letters, bills, communications andinformation of infinite variety — "is the single greatesthuman irritant."

She helps clients see that "paper" must assume its truefunction in our lives It must be a cue and a trigger foraction and not a smothering weight There are only threethings that can be done with a piece of paper, she remindsus It can be thrown away, acted upon (such as writing aletter or making a phone call) or put away in a temporaryor permanent holding position

One client pleaded with her, "Don't mistake my pastaway My life, history, isn't these papers "

She must reassure people that nothing of real value tothem will ever be thrown out. and they, themselves, willmake those judgments

Today, Miss Winston is moving largely into the corpo-rate field, where her fees run from 1200 to 1250 a day andher clients include troubled departments at such companiesas Pan Am, Citibank and Xerox. In each case she analyzessystems and works directly with people

She directs her organizing help to individuals nowlargely through lectures to groups, classes she teaches atuniversities and the YWCA, and Ihrough her book, "GettingOrganized," published last fall by W.W Norcon A Co attin u:. It us a nuts-and-bolts, how-to-do-book, which issubtitled "The Easy Way to Put Your Life in Order." ItRives the basics (or managing money, paper and storageand tells how to order the rooms ol a home

In the expert organizer's own office/home, a studio

apartment in New York, all is not apple-pie neatnest "Ihave to work at being neat, but I am naturally oranizedAnd yes, there is a difference between the two," themaintains "Some people who are pristine neat still can'tfind things In their files because they haven't been logicallyarranged'.

The trick to belfg permanently helpful to people is tocome up with systems so simple that they will stick withthem. Some people, she finds, still are living out a guiltydefiance of parental authority, having to do with cleaningup their rooms when they were children They keep theirlife chaotic in the belie! that order means entrapment orloss o( identity

She defines "being organized" by a series of questionsDo your systems work' Can you (ind what you want and dowhat you need to do within a reasonable period of time? Doyou (eel your life is obstructed because you aren't suffi-ciently coping with papers and things?

The sense of obstruction has to go.To get organized, she advises, you have to listen intent-

ly to your own internal logic about where things are mostuseful and what to keep and what to throw or give away.

You must bring big problems down to solvable propor-tions and then hit away at them little by little You mustkeep the most frequently used Items readily accssible andplace objects where they will be used

She says that most of her clients keep the new ordergoing because they understand the systems — and becausethey want to

How to help children adjust to divorceOver a million children watched their parents split up last

year How can parents help children to adjust lo divorce1"Here's a chance to test your views on this subject with tomeexperts

1. Divorced parents can help their kids it they forget aboutthemselves and concentrate on the youngstersTrue ( ) False ( )

1. Because they're preoccupied with their own problems,teen-agers suffer less than younger children when parentsdivorceTrue ( ) False ( )

J It's helpful to the child If the parent who leaves home in Idivorce stays away from the child for at leasl a year in order tubreak the child's dependencyTrue ( ) False ( )

4 There's no way in which divorce can IffMt a child in apositive wayTrue ( ) False ( )

5. The child who appears not to care or Hi !><• involved in adivorce situation may actually be in the most troubleTrue ( ) False ( )

J Children who receive infrequent visits from a divorcedparent because of geographical distance suffer more than

DR. JOYCEBROTHERS

children whose father or mother lives in the same communityTrue ( ) False ( )

7 Most children of divorce receive outside help from adultsin dealing with the crisisTrue ( ) False ( )

K ( hildren need lo be prepared for divorceTrue ( ) False ( )

ANSWERS1 FALSE Parents can help their children by working on

themselves and learning how to deal constructively with the

anger and resentment that they (eel toward each other Theycan help their children if they avoid passing angry, hostile(eelings about a spouse on to the children

2. FALSE. Adolescents suffer just as much as very youngchildren but often try to mask their feelings or to deny themaltogether Researchers have found that, seeking comfort,lonely divorced parents tend to lean emotionally on their teenagers to try to get them to take sides Often, wanting to behelpful, youngsters fall into the trap of conflicting loyalties Thisis damaging and may arrest their emotional growth

3. FALSE. Judith Wallerstein. a University of Californiachild psychologist, says that it's important for the parent who'smoved out of the house to pay frequent and regular visits to thechild as soon as possible She has found a direct relationshipbetween the child's self-esteem and the maintenance ol a goodvisiting relationship with the absent parent

4. FALSE Divorce poses stress (or kids but. although weonce thought children do best with little stress, we now knowthai stress can have an expansive and strengthening effect on achild's personality Divorce needn't be a catastrophe lor thechild if parents are aware of the child's feelings

5 TRUE Dr Jack Westman. professor ol psychiatry at theUniversity of Wisconsin, feels that even though upset, the child

who is responsive and involved In the divorce situation mayhave a healthier reaction than the child who doesn't get involvedor who appears to be untroubled in it

6 FALSE. Dr. Judith Wallerstein, a psychologist, found thatchildren who received only infrequent visits from the absentparent because of geographical distance were less damagedemotionally than those whose absent parent lived in the samecommunity In the latter case, the child felt abandoned, castaside, and personally unworthy of the missing parent's love andattention.

7 FALSE While many children(need outside help duringthis difficult period,(psychologist Wallerstein found that onlyfive percent of the 131 children in her study had any outside helpin dealing with the crisis. She also found that during the Initialmonths of separation, half the mothers and two-thirds of thefathers weren't available to the child to give him the support heneeded

8. TRUE. Children need to be prepared in advance so they'llknow what lo expect They need to be reassured that bothparents will continue to love them and to see them. They need toknow that the problems that exist are between mother andfather and in no way result from anything the child may havesaid or done

A word of warning to teen-agers on drugs, drinksDear A n l .udrrv It Is Im

pntMl Ikat y«a prill IMs let-ter berraae I speak far a ki tltee»—•gen wk* daa'l laveUK gals I* write. I'm a 14year-*M wk* snakes pit,driaks beer u 4 wklikey, aadfees (tker drugs

F*r Mine reasM Ike rest *lIke world c tuUfrs i s scumaad (key treat i s that way.Adalts Iklak kMs gel high u ber—t aid fit atoig wltk tke rest•I Ike gaig WRONG. We grlkit* betaase we wait lo NoMe Mas a gia I* Mr headsaad makes i s do It.

I've kera smoklag pol sinceI wat 11. I smoked cigarettesIMT yean kefare tkal. I quithecaase I IMWI Ml It was amedical fact thai smaklagubarco was mare daageroasla yMr keaMk tkaa smokingpat. Sa, leave as potkradsataae aid worry about yoar

trivet. I Iklak Ike jocks kavemore ol a problem than we do.- HMIa' High la Kvaasvllkvlid.

Dear Kulin High Betterput on your crash helmet —you're heading for a (all Andwhen it h a p p e n s , we"•quint" IM the ones'whowill pick you up and try to putyou back together

As to why you get spacy. itcliM'sn I matter whether il waspeer pressure or your own persnnal decision The results arethe same Fried brains, nervesshot, motivation nil. yearswasted

I (ind it interesting thai youquit smoking cigarettes because you learned they *erebad lor your health Pleaselook into whiskey and thoseother drugs you are doingAngel dust' Cocaine'' Hash7

Acid1' Uppers and downers'

ANNLANDERS

Maybe these won't give youlung cancer but they can do anenormous amount of physcialand emotional damage. Angeldust can kill you — or makeyou kill yourself

Stop being such a wise guyand go to the nearest drugabuse center and get educatedbefore you end up O.D d in amorgue

Dear Ana Laaders: I Idroli

fled wltk Ike girl wk* feelshumiliated because she's fal.I, too, am rating myself sick. I•flea cry art kale myself (ormy lack ol will power. I leelpowerless, loaesome and de-

pressed.Bat I agree wltk you. I doa't

deserve pity and I don't wantIt.

Five years ago 1 was la thesame spat ske's la now. Ilooked like a baby hippo andkept rating everything tkatdidn't bite me first. II look metwo years to control mymonth. Finally I sked aU thoseunwanted pounds (So manyI'm ashamed lo tell you theexact number.)

Six months ago I left tkecountry and was separatedtram Irlends aad relatives. Istarted I* eal again and gainedeverything back. I (eel norriWe aad worthless, bat I'm

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ready lo get trim once again -and I'm determined I* da It.

I realize I Med psychiatrickelp aid I'm gettlig II. I ei-peet IIU take laager Ills lime,but I'm nol dlsnaragrd. Iknow I'll track my goal

Se once more, Aai, Ikaakyou lor refusing I* feel sorrylor us failles. Sometimes weneed some lerdllng I* getgoing - aid yoo. give It I* me- Mil go*d. - Fal Bal Hopeful

Dear Hopeful: Your ap-proach is sensible You aren'tgoing in for any of those kookydiets. You're getting pro-fessional help. I'm betting thistime you'll stay slim per-manently Cheers!

What's prudish' What'sO K ? If you aren't sure, youneed some help. It's availablein the booklet: "Necking andPetting - What Are the Lim-

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Washington State I)Apples

Each year around this time Delicious Orchardsintroduces a delicious addition to our range of freshproduce: Washington State Ap0les!

Washington State Apples are harvested in theNorthwestern part of the state. They are of the Red andGolden Delicious variety, yet something about theinvigorating climate in which they're grown makes themunusually sweet, crisp and juicy.

-^ Famous as great eating apples. Washington StateApples make marvelous apple desserts. Try them in anapple compote with apple brandy . . . in AppleCharlotte with apricot sauce. Or in unforgettable French-inspired dish called Apple. Spinach and Pine Nut Pie!

Let Delicious Orchards Show you how . . . to bring outthe best in Washington State Apples!

Washington State Apples Red & Golden Delicious. 39c it>Cherry Pie $2.75Caro Chocolate Covered Cherries $1.99 3v> oz

Imported from Spain $3.99 a otApplesauce Cake, piom $1.03 each

Sugar Cookies $1.05 packageMince Pie, frozen $2.59

Ptices apply

February 22 - 28

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*J

14 TheSaadayReflhlef SHREWSBURY, N.J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25,1979

Back pain has a wide variety of causes^•»» „ " • ' In <tn i . Am. * _ . * A J U _ _ >. M . A I f .mnt l aufalinnc with tKpir ffPTTTlti • !¥> SOnWlif

B; DB. IBV1N J. POLE

t). WBI1 lack knee he* tactarte? I have ka< B tor twt•Ml a Ike UK at* B h fetta* • •"«• Ntw I eaal

n a p k wert U J M R . W.D., Fik- HaveeA. TniUnent lor backache depends on the cause You

really have to nod out what the problem Is before anyone canoutline treatment. Back pain It a very common complaintbat It come* from a wide variety of causes from strictlyphysical, lorn ligaments, broken bones, slipped disc, to thestrictly emotional, tension from problems at work or athome. Back brace helps some types of backache, but this Isone problem that really needs medical attention, especiallyafter two years.

M. HaKClmH l«f — reaaaa I get a mile twltta aider • •rfcjht eye aear Ike MM. There are HUle Jerky BoveaeaUalIke s w k there bat * fees away la a few secMi* wBbeatMjlhfcu hi It* way (4 ireataeal What klal *f ascler «• I*ae tor thai? Mr A.P.P., EataaWwa

A Nerve and muscle twitches are usually treated by ammh&l. a doctor who specialize! in diseases of toeservous system If you have no other twltchy areas on thebody, don't worry about it, too much. There is a tiny smoothnaude hi the area you describe which U controlled like theheart muscle by the autonomic nervous system, not conIroOed directly by the brain as most of the muscles are. It

HERE'STO HEALTH

will twitch sometimes under stress, or occasionally If youcome hi contact with something you're allergic to.

« My t-;ear-eW h » hart his kg ta the lee last week. Weleek mm I* U* keesaui where they saM they tbtagit hesaKM have a frartare hit weaMa't he able le IcD far a few•ays. He had aa i ray aad that akta't help Mlv* the pnMem•aw eaa he have a fnetwe (they're treaUag hi* far tar)wBh a Mimali-rayT U.S., Keaasharg

A. Sometimes an x-ray done Just after a fracture won'tshow a break, especially if it is a small one in goodalignment Doctors wait a few days for the healing to begin.That shows quite well on the x-ray. In the meantime, the safe

thing to do It do treat your child as if the bone wenfractured That will prevent further damage Iff a lot betterto keep him quiet a few days aow than U> *i a seriousproblem later.

q What Bight tare a»y arme a bright greea eater? I feelweB bataaatethMsaete that ester N.EJ., Little Slver

A. The chlorophyll which is taken in gum or mouth-cleaning kneng.es have been reported to appear in urinegiving a bright green color If you use such preparations thatcan account for It. If not, you had better see your doctoralthough I can't suggest any cause other than chlorophyll' Q. I aasVialaai there b a way U cheese the sri •! year

baby by Usaatg mlereeane agakut evamttaa. Slaee I eaa 1*11rather daaety whea I evalaie I weaht Bke u try this metteelWhat M I da? Mrs. W.M., MiUwi.

A Some years ago there was a theory that spermcarrying the potential to develop males move faster thanones for females. It was considered possible to time concep-tion shortly after ovulatlon to produce males My memorymay be hazy about this. In sny event, this technique was notsuccessful.

Q. My .teeter aua> Ike dlagaaaki el vaglaal mleeilee atMs office the ether day wttheat euMlamg aie. He evea wasable to describe the gerts which eaased II tress merelyeiaatfalag a laeriaaea at aiy ariae. He seat me to saygyaeeategW wha eawmrred. Haw did he de this? Mrs.C.F.A., l|alawaa

A. Vaginal secretions with their germs are sometimesfound under the microscope In a urine specimen. One com-mon vaginal infection Is caused by a germ calledTrichomonas which is quite readily Identified under themicroscope. So are yeasts, but these are a little harder tospot No mystery: You had the germs plainly In the urinespecimen.

Q. My darter says that I mast ase anch mere asthmamedkme becaast I smefce. Is he leUag sae this JsM to gelme to star tmekag? Mr. C.L.D., Oeeaaawt

A. No, he is not. There is good evidence that cigarettesmoking diminishes the ability of the liver to break downtheophylline, a medicine quite frequently used to treatasthma. Besides, I can't think of any good reasons for anyoneto smoke, particularly someone with a lung disease Yourdoctor would be right either way.

«. Every time I like aspirm, I get a WUe red spat Ike sheaf a dlaM aa my right wrtot where a watch weaM gs. What himta aad what eaa I da ahaal B? D.F., Malawaa

A That might be what doctors call a fixed drug eruption,a rash from a sensitivity to a medicine which recurs in thesame (fixed) place each time you take the medicine. Theobvious thing to is avoid aspirin and, if aspirin is the culprit,that should solve the problem

Headers may scad tjiesUaas to Dr. Pa* by addressmgthem to him la rare af Ihls aewsaaper.

Tax advice for singles who have childrenBy RAE LINDSAY

A divorced friend of mine who has two children will be filinga "real" Income tax form for the first time this year. For somany years she was married; then when she attended collegeafter her divorce she had no income except for alimony

When the divorce papers were drawn up five years ago heraccountant husband arranged to claim the kids as dependents -this didn't matter much to Jess although she has alwaysprovided more than half their support, drawing on her alimonyfor her kids' needs in addition to rather small child supportpayments. Now those exemptions ($750 each in addition to herown — 11,000 per exemption in 1179) can mean a significantdifference In the amount of taxes she'll pay based on her hard-earned salary as a family counselor, plus her alimony

Jess's case is so typical, I asked Michael Savage to com-ment on It In his book, Everything You Always Wanted ToKnow About Taxes But Didn't Know How To Ask (The DialPress, 1(71), he devotes two chapters to such problems andcandidly admits that "the question of which divorced parentclaims the exemptions for the children can get rather com-plicated." Although the general rule is that the parent who hascustody claims the exemption, "the parents can change this ruleby an agreement contained in the divorce decree."

FIRST PERSON,SINGULAR

"If they agree that the parent without custody is to claimthe exemption, the tax law will recognize that agreement if thatparent contributes at least $600 per year toward the child'ssupport.

"In addition, the parent without custody can claim theexemption, even if there wasn't a prior agreement if he canshow that he contributed $1,200 toward the child's supportduring the year and if the parent With custody cannot prove that

he or she contributed more than the other parent did In such acase, both parents may have to submit itemized statements tothe IRS."

My friend Jess, and others in her situation, will either haveto have an understanding ex-mate, or prepare to battle it out asto who claims the exemptions.

But that's not the end of the problem. Jess's kids are 7 and 10and therefore any expenses spent for child care can be creditedagainst her taxes, provided the children are recognized as herdependents. The amount of child-care credit is 20 percent of thecosts of babysitters, nurses or household help (or day-carecenters) — up to $400 for one dependent, $800 for two or moredependents. Jess spent $3,000 on daytime and night-time sitterslast year (her counseling involves evening appointments), andthis should allow her to claim a credit of $600 Until 1976,however, she would not have been able to since the children arelegally her ex-husband's dependents. Now, however, accordingto Savage, anyone who has had custody of the child for thegreater portion of the year (provided the child has receivedover half its support from the parents combined), can claim thechild care credit

Savage also noted that the dependent for whom you claim"child-care" tax credits doesn't necessarily have to be a child

The caretaking costs for any dependent 15 or over who cannotcare for himself, whether an infirm parent or grandparent forwhom you're providing nursing care or household help, can beclaimed as a credit against taxes, up to the limit of M percent.

Michael Savage outlined one area where single people canenjoy greater tax credit than married people: home ownershipFor 1V79, he said, "a single person with $20,000 of income will beIn the M percent marginal bracket - that means that M percentof the top portion of his or her income will go to taxes. Amarried couple with $20,000 of income is in the 24 percentbracket When you buy a home or apartment with a mortgage,the interest deductions you claim come off the top of yourincome A $1,000 interest deduction saves the single taxpayer$J40 in taxes It saves the married taxpayers only $J40 "

Now, there's a break The government actually discountsmore of the cost of a home for single people than for marriedpeople with the same income

So, single parents — after you've won the battle of who getsthe children's exemption and who gets the child-care credit,look into the joys and tax breaks of owning your own padHaving enjoyed this advantage for four years, I warn you rightnow gardeners, heating repairmen, snow shovelers and refrig-erator fixers are not tax deductible'

Has plain old courtesy become a thing of the past?I have written several '

articles on plain old courtesy:This seems to be a thing of thepast

When I was on my way towork this morning, it waspouring down rain and, ofcourse, there were peoplestanding on the street waitingtor the bus.

The water was over thecurbs - yep, you guessed it,the cars were driving by at ahigh rate of speed, not caringthat they were drenching thepoor people standing therewaiting in the rain.

I don't really know if thepeople mean to be dis-courteous or if they are just insuch a hurry they don't stop tothink.

In either event, I'm surethese people are In the minor-ity and not the majority.

Hugs and kisses to y'all -HeloiseDEAR HELOISE:

Do you have a hard timekeeping up with stray buttons?

It seems that after everywashday I find a couple ofbuttons in the washing ma-chine. But I took care of that!

Now I have a safety pip onthe top of my washing ma-chine. When I find a stray but-ton, I simply slip it on the pinand close it

When I do my ironing (Ishould say when 1 am forced todo my ironing), I pin the safetypin on my ironing board alongwith two or three needles

threaded with different colorsof thread and when 1 comeacross the garment with themissing button 1 can sew it onright then and there

Also cuts down on nagginghusbands about missing but-tons and makes for a betterday. — Jackie LawrenceDEAR HELOISE:

I enjoy your column andlook forward to it every day.

We all have rubber bandsand twistems all over ourkitchen cabinet drawers.

Well, I solved this by gettinga plastic pill container aboutfour inches long and two in-ches round. I put my twistemsinside and the rubber bandsaround the outside.

Sure saves a lot of time

HINTSFROMHELOISE

when you are in a hurry andneed them. — Mrs EstherSzabaDEAR HELOISE:

Why have dusty-lookingblack or navy cotton dresseswhen it is simple to put bluingin your rinse water for thesegarments and keep them atrue black or navy.

This is fine for cotton Tshirts or dark slips also.

Hope this hint will perk uptired blacks and blues for oth-ers. - Mrs. GoldsmithDEAR HELOISE:

I can't walk by myself and Ifind a walker inconvenient, so

I bought a small grocery cartand had large initials made topersonalize it.

I can now make my beds,take the soiled laundry to thewasher and do the washing. 1Can take my dishes to andfrom the table. 1 can even takemy letters and drop them inthe mail chute on our frontdoor.

I place a box on the smallshelf In the cart and put rubberbands, paper clips, pens, pancils, scissors, dust cloths, etc.,anything that I might need

"It ain't easy" but it suremakes me feel self-sufficient.

and that's what countsMildred Dodek DEARHELOISE:

You know how tools oftenget rusted?

Well, not anymore All youhave to do is put moth balls ormoth crystals in your toolchest or tool drawer

It helps dry up the wetnessor humidity and your toolsdon't get rusty. - Annie Spott

Sure sounds worth a try tosave thoses tools Be sure andkeep the moth balls away fromchildren — Heloise

THIS COLUMN is writtenfor you... the homemaker IIyou have a hint or a problemwrite to Heloise in care of thisnewspaper Because of the tre-mendous volume of mail,Heloise is unable to answer

Individual letters She wlU, tions in her column wheneverhowever, answer yourques- possible

"A GIOtGl F. $11GHT ANTIQUES SNOW"

THE JtlSEY COAST

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BmmBaBimmmBBiammsmimsmimii

. Mabwanis in for a loss.Lean Una meets Man. at 7:15 p m and Wad.

at 9:15 a m at Washington Enghe Co^tekaon SICentral JerMy BAYM) MstWMn, NJ.

Lean Line takes a psychological approachto loeinq^oW w l t ^ r w d u ^ u n t w r s l t y tested

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Backed up by an easy-to-live-wtth diet that even Ms youeat spaghetti, bagels, lox and peanut butter

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Bring ki this ad and pay only $550wnen regnaering of re-regmenrtg.

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••ass Expire* Much 31. 1979

pM*Ctfltor. Community Km.. ll*w*r Itvtl). W*o\

FASHION UPDATE - Fabrics with a new twist lend themselves to dresses Ina sportswear mood. These two. In textures that highlight the narrow body-revealing clothes coming up for spring, are a velvety velour, left, onceassociated with beach and bath, and a nostalgic nubby boucle, right, re-juvenated and revitalized for today's trendy styles. Both have-clearly definedwaistlines and high side silts and focus on simple casual styling. (From theTracy dress collection.)

MSp.mJACKSON—JockMn Townihlp Fir*Co No 1. Ntw Protptct ltd . Mm. at7:IJp.m.LITTLE SILVER-Llftl* Sllv«r FlrtfcovM. Protiwct Av*.. Tut. at f: IS am ft 7 IS

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•tU:»«.m

LONG IRANCM-VMCA. <M I f n d n r , Tlwr.« 7; IS »,mMAMALAPAN-StoMach'l DM.Itort , Community Rnv. Hi. f. Tut. ol t:Mp.m.MANAMUAN—Eftgmf Co. No. 3, Porfctr Av*., Tut. otf: 15 am 17: IS p m. & Wtd

MATAWAN-WaNngtOT Enaln* Co.. Joction St. IbttilnO Cnrtrol fnn »on»}.M M . at 1. IS p.m. 1WM, «t»-IS o m .MIDOLETOWN-Chrlit Episcopal Ctiwrch.tl Kings Hwy., Tlwr. ot7: ISo.m.MOROANVtLLE-Rob*rtlvlll« SIM* Clwfcft. CnufCti R«. A T*mmt RH . Tut af•: ISo.m.NEPTUNE CITr-Unltod Fin C*. No. I, Manorial Horn*. Lourtl Am., Tlwr ol» \Stm.»7 15pm.JACKSON-Jochjon MrcM Club. Routt S7I. V, mil* m l ol CotnllM Fir* Dog).,Wad ot 7: IS p.m.

Indian Allen Winter SaleNow's the time to create that room you want.

6 days

Sale ends March 3

Save 10% to 20% on a superb selection ofAmerica's favorite furniture and home fashions.Don' I pas* up this wonderful opportunity to enjoy exceptional vahiei on abeautiful collection of Elhan Allen furniture, floor coverings, draperies,lamps, docks, accearaies. and sleep sets. Savings for every room. H' s herenow — everything you need to create that room you want.

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s qilNOAY FEBRUARY 25,1979 The!

Joy of old-time cookstoveBy ELLEN BUGGLES

rirtattH SdeMt HMlUrNEW BOSTON, N.H - When the wood-bumum

cootatove was hooked up to the chimney in thekitchen ol our home that mid-October day we knewwe had made real progress

No, this step didn't take place in the 1800s. It wasjust a year ago, when we were in the early stages olrestoring our long-neglected, tumble-down colonialhome here.

For six months we had been without a kitchen,taking our meals "out" at restaurants or friends'homes, or cooking on a two-burner electric hot platein the living room

Because more structural work had to be donebefore the electric range could be wired in, theheating system could be installed or the hot-waterheater could be hooked up, we quickly had to learnhow to use our cookstove for warmth, cooking andheating the wash water

Now we wouldn't want to be without our oldblack Glenwood, and especially enjoy the coolerweather when we keep the stove going full time

What a good leeling it is to warm yourself, dryyour clothes, heal your home and cook your food, allwith one source And seeing smoke curl up from thekitchen chimney and knowing there's a stew, oreven a pot of boiling water waiting, is a friendlysight afler an afternoon of skiing

We try to do all our cooking on It, which is easyonce we "train" ourselves each fall to not use theelectric range Instead of turning dials to change thetemperature, we've learned lo simply move potsaround from hotter to cooler parts of the stove andopen and close drafts lo control the fire

If you're in the market for a wood stove, I'd liketo recommend you choose one with a flat surface forrooking, though not necessarily a cookstove Theentire surface is about the same temperature, so weraise our pots and pans away from the heat ontnvets when things begin to boil

We started looking for a stove seven years ago

when we were first married We found it in ajunkyard, hoping some day to have a home to set itup in. At the same time we began collecting dif-ferent utensils, tools and the few missing parts ofthe stove, so that we would be all ready to go whenthe time came.

Friends who are young parents often ask meabout the dangers for children when there's a hotstove in the kitchen With my daughter Jane, westarted early telling her that the wood stove was hotand that she should stay away and not touch it Wewould hold up our hand and say "hot."

This worked well from the time she was sevenmonths old She'd hold her hand up to the stove andtry to say "hot," too In her walker she'd stay a footaway, pointing and saying "hot "

Now that she's toddling, she sits down ratherthan get too close I feel very comfortable havingher in any home with a wood stove, even though 1have heard stories of it being a problem for otherparents

Friends, whose only heat and main cookingsource is a wood-burning cookstove, helped us setours up and showed us how to use it

As former "city slickers" we had a great deal tolearn: how to cut trees (and which ones to takedown), how to split wood (the easy way), how toseason and store it, how to start a fire, how to set thedampers to get the most from our wood and finally,my challenge, how to cook with it

Three cookbooks also have turned out to be veryhelpful, supplementing what our friends taught us

"Mrs Restino's Country Kitchen, The CompleteWood Stove Cookbook" (Quick Fox Pub. |7.95) is acomprehensive book written by Susan Restino, wholives on a remote farm in Nova Scotia Following anintroduction to the wood stove, which tells youeverything from the working parts of the cookstoveto tools and accessories. Mrs Restino shares withthe reader her experiences in growing, canning,freezing and drying food, and lots of recipes

"The Wood Cook's Cook Book " by Sarah DHaskel (Cobblesmtth Pub »3 95) also has a section

on the use of a wood stove and includes interestingnotes and recipes from friends and neighbors Oneof our favorite recipes in the book is claimed to be"excellent if you have to chop wood, clear fields,

hike to work or do anything lo burn up this breakfast" And it is

' FARMER'S BREAKFAST4 large eggs4 slices of bacon1 onion, chopped2 medium potatoes (boiled and chopped)Salt and pepper to tasteLay bacon in a cold skillet and cook over a

medium fire until crisp Remove and drain on apaper towel or bag Save 3 tablespoons of the fat andsaute onions in it until soft Add potato, and cookuntil browned Remove pan from fire Crumblebacon into the pan Beat eggs and add Add salt andpepper Over a medium fire, cook as for an omeletSprinkle with parsley This makes a big, clumsyomelet Serves two hungry people

The third book is "Woodstove Cookery, Al Homeon the Range" (Garden Way Pub |5 95) by JaneCooper The first part of this book also talks aboutthe use of a wood stove and includes recipes andhints from friends and neighbors of the author"Grandma kept several washed eggs in the teakettle Instant lunches for hungry kids If we didn'teat them quickly she fished them out with a slottedspoon and stored them to eat cold or used them inpotato salad " — Shirley Sweedman, Max. Minn

A good recipe in this book is September Stew:i n the late summer, take a deep heavy pot or

frying pan, put a little oil in the bottom and sautesome onion and ground beef (one-half to one pound)Then put in layers of vegetables, according to howlong they need to cook — green beans, squash,tomatoes (green or red) and whatever else thegarden grew too much of — putting the toughest unthe bottom. Put on lid and let it cook over low heatuntil vegetables are lender There is no liquidadded " —Audrey Lyle, Alsfead, N H

Divorcee is urgedto spell out facts

By EMILY Wll.KKNNDear Emily: My husband and I have a

hieMUy dlvwre but Ikerr are a few problemsBCCIBM we're Irieids, ke seems to feel Iree ladrep la uyt lme to see the cklklrti. So far, tkiskua' l beei embirrus l ig bat It C H M be. Hawd* I handle It? - Mi. Ei

Dear Ms Ex Try a friendly approach,stating clearly that you'd appreciate a tele-phone call before he drops in If that doesn'twork, let your attorney spell out the facts ofdivorced life for him

Dear Emily: I'm g*ng • • a business tripwith my best, who la married. He dictated thetetter oi httel reservaUmu aid asked tar ad

r * « u . II haa me a littk worried. What

A NEW YOU

Dear Ellen: If your boss has a gleam in hiseye, phone ahead and ask for a room onanother floor On the other hand, if there's a lotof business involved with the trip and yourservices will be needed a great deal, adjoiningrooms could be a business convenience Whatyou have lo decide is whether your boss meansbusiness or lunny business

Dear Emily: We have two family eventsrtmlMK ip a birthday party aid » e igagemril party. I wait Mr close Me ads a idrelatives l» celebrate both with as but I doi'lw i l l them U brtig presents How caa 1 haadlethis? - Mrs. D.

Dear Mrs I) Just add this phrase, nogifts, pleas*'," to your invitation It tells thestory

Dear Emily: Is II proper for teea-age chllI R I to call family frleads by their first names?

Old KaskloardDear Old Fashioned The answer In this

depends on the friends If they tell the childrento call them by their first names, there's no

problem If not, Mr Jones or Mrs Smith arepreferable because the titles show the properrespect of the younger generation for the older.

Dear Emily: I had my first cocktail partyaid II was a disaster because people stayed loolong and drank loo much How can I avoid thisnext time? - Herb W.

Dear Herb: Make your invitation specificas. for example, "from 6 to H p in About 20minutes before the party's due to end, stopserving drinks and start putting things away,signaling the end is in sight

Dear Emily: I read somewhere that II Is aolgood manners lo read In a restaurant. Waal'syoor oplalon? - A.B.

Dear A.B If that were the case, I'd havespent a great deal of boring time staring atsugar bowls and other diners When diningalone in a restaurant, it helps to have somthingto read to pass the time between courses

Dear Emily: I'm engaged but my fianceseems to spend loo much lime flirting with mygirlfriends Isn't this bad manners0 - Trou-bled

Drai Troubled Never mind bad manners— II could be a bad dmen for the future If yourfiance has a roving eye, best discover il andperhaps reconsider your decision At thisstage, he should have eyes only for you

Have an etiquette question? Drop a mile tome. Emily Wilkens. care of this newspaper andlet me answer it in this column Because of theheavy volume of mail. I'm sorry I can't reply toindividual letters.

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Ef The Sunday Register SHREWSBURY N J SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 25.1979

Kristel cooks by color rather than tasteBy JOIN A BUN N

UNIVERSAL CITY - "Food in Americai good lovers," said international

, Sylvia Kristel, between taping* nfthe qew movie, "Airport 71 Concorde '

The Dutch beauty, known worldwide as the•tar of "Emmanuelle," finds little to please thepalate in hamburgers, French fries or otherordinary fare served In American restaurants

Sylvia, who has a beautiful apartment inParts, commented, "The French have no hangups about salt, sugar or spices Here peoplewould rather run than have a good meal 1don't like saitless food, alcohol-free beer, dietcolas or artificial sweeteners I like to eatoriginal stuff

"I read an article in a magazine in whichthe writer was complaining if you buy deep-fried potato chips, you cannot be sure they willbe real potato You're more likely to getcardboard."

Sylvia is highly opinionated and open Onthe subject of men, the actress quickly ad-mitted, "I haven't experienced having anAmerican lover because I don't like their ap-proach somehow Most American men arenaive; their conversation is superficial Theyare clumsy and don't know how to handlewomen at all. 1 like Englishmen because theyare witty and Belgians because they are notvery serious but lh«y like the good life and goodfood." "

Sylvia has been strongly influenced by herlong relationship with Belgian filmmaker HugoKlaus. Her mentor taught her to avoid boringparties and people who are not interesting

She seemed a little homesick for Paris "Ienjoy living in Hollywood It has a certainamount of street life

But in Paris, you always see people walkingaround with a newspaper in their hands orcarrying a big baton of French bread "

The slender actress said she could not eatFrench food every day. "Their food is verygood but too rich. I would become loo round "

She enjoys cooking. "1 always mix colorsrather than tastes I like a plate to look ex-tremely good." That's probably why she enjoysthe preparation and presentation of Japanesefood She recently acquired a Japanesecookbook

"I prepare shabu-shabu You boil thinlysliced beef in hot chicken broth It's based onthe same principle as suklyaki, only servedwith one or more sauces."

(Traditionally, the beef and vegetable dishis cooked by plunging thinly sliced beef andvegetables into a simmering sauce beforedunking in a pungent sesame seed and soyasauce.) ' |

"It's so good and simple: you just washyour vegetables and slice the meal and makethe sauce. You can use any kind of vegetableyou like I haven't prepared it here becausewhen I come home at night I'm exhausted Idon't fancy going into the kitchen. Besides,when I open the refrigerator door, there Isn'tany stuff I like to cook with."

Currently, she's staying with an Englishfriend who enjoys cooking English fare: lambor pork chops, potatoes and gravy. "I'm notvery fond of meat," said Sylvia, "only when it'ssliced very thin like the Italians prepare veal "

Sylvia is a cookbook cook She's a devotee

CELEBRITY «£COOKBOOK

of the new French cooking "It's based on theidea that everything should be cooked al denteSometimes 1 prepare rabbit or duck Cooking isnot my main interest. I enjoy it from time totime. When 1 do, I spend the entire day in thekitchen preparing the food However, if thequality of the meat is not good, I hate it. I getvery angry and won't go into the kitchen forthree weeks "

Sylvia sometimes cooks up a huge pot ofbouillabaisse in the true Marseille manner,with several varieties of fish (including eel)flavored with wine, saffron and a dash oforange peel to add zest to the aromatic fishstew But for the most part she loves simplefood "I am very satisfied just to have alicauhful piece of cheese or a very good wine orsome lovely croissants The Dutch could nevermake them asjjood as the French because theyuse water instead of milk and they become looheavy "

Sylvia is very optimistic about trying herluck in America but is unlikely to buy a "cas-tle " in Beverly Hills, even if she becomes asuperstar here "You have to keep things Inperspective but some young starlets here don'tknow that. They don't realize that after twoflops, they are out And then what do they dowith their palaces?"- "You should stay what you are and never

believe in the stability of your career The funabout this profession is that it is very exciting.You could collapse or go upwards overnight.I (I like to be a star instead of a working actressbecause I'm lazy. By that I mean, making onefilm a year like Streisand or Eastwood. Thatwould give me the time to do the things thatreally interest me "

Sylvia grew up living in a hotel in Utrecht,Holland, owned and operated by her father.She is a voracious reader and speaks French,English and German fluently She's not upsetby people who might confuse her with herKmmanuelle role

The recipe for Sylvia Kristel's shabu-shabu,complete with detailed directions for preparingand serving, follows:

SHABU-SHABU(Serves 8)

For the sauce:3 ii/s white sesame seeds, available in

health food stores or Oriental food shops1 cup chicken stock% cup soy sauceI tsp sesame seed oil, available in health

food stores or Oriental food shopsy^ tsp minced hot red peppers, crushedI1 lisp lemon juice or vinegarTuasl sesame seeds in dry, heavy skillet

How to tellif you're fat

i

By BARBARA CIBBONSFat is...AGE S - Being the biggest little kid in

kindergarten Being called a "bully" if youhit back and a "cry baby" if you don't.Being called "Fatty" instead of your realname

AGE I I — Looking big enough to be injunior high instead of the fourth gradeGrownups who expect you to act as old asyou look Learning lo fight since you can'trun. Or learning to hide since you can'tfight Using any excuse to get out of gym.Gelling out of gym because you can't get agymsuit in your size. Hiding in the arts andcrafts cabin at camp, even on sunny days,so you don't have to play Softball Being thelast chosen on any team Dreading the an-nual "weigh-in" at the school nurse's officeBeing the only girl In school who looks likrshe needs a bra Being the only BOY inschool who looks like he needs a bra

AGE 15 — Being the only girl in schoolwho actually DOES wear a bra Or DM onlygirl on the beach not wearing a bikini. Nevergoing to the beach Clothes shopping whereyour mother goes, where they have yoursize. Buying your jeans from a mailordercatalogue because the stores in town don'thave your size. Never wearing jeansGrownups who expect you to act like a 211yeas, old because that's how old you look,then treat you like a 10-year old when youdon't.

AGE n — Not getting into Ihe rightcollege. Not getting into ANY college Notgetting a job (because you didn't go tocollege.) Never having any dates Havingthe person you're crazy about ask you to fixhim up with your best friend Not having afriend Saying you caiTt "stand disco musicso you don't have to go (after all, who'ddance with you!) Really hating disco music,for the same reason Being the only personyou know who doesn't ski or play tennis Notbeing able to learn, (because first of all,what could you wear?). Never, ever, havingthe right clothes for anything. Saying youdon't care

AGE is — Being married to the firstperson you ever went out with Not beingmarried, because so far you've never goneout with anyone. Being assigned to the com-pany mailroom, despite your high score onthe aptitude test Being eight months preg-nant and nobody notices. Nat being able to

THESLIMGOURMET

gel pregnant.AGE 31 — Being the oldest person in the

mailroom Then Ihe youngest person in yourcompany to flunk an insurance exam Auto-matically being given the biggest piece ofcake, at company birthday parties. Stillwearing maternity clothes, months after thedelivery Being mistaken for the baby'sgrandmother.

AGE IS — Being mistaken for your hus-band's mother Or your wife's father. Oryour father's brother Still going to singlesbars, because you're still not married.Being married and having your spouse goto singles bars. Being the oldest person stillin the mailroom Becoming the family pho-tographer so you don't have to get in thepicture.

AGE « - Feeling like you're 50 andwishing you were GO so you could quit themailroom. (living up on singles bars. Notbeing able to get insurance, and really need-ing il. Being told to lose weight (and give upsugar) because you're diabetic.

AGE M - Being told to lose weight (andgive up salt) because you're hypertensiveBeing told to lose weight (and give upliquor) because your triglyceride level ishigh. Being told to lose weight (and give upeggs, buUer, cheese, steak, bacon, fattymeats) because you've .got high cholesterolBeing told to give up smoking, and bi'ingafraid of gaining even more weight. Won-dering what will happen if you lose your jobin the mailroom. Worrying if you'll live longenough to see you kids through college.

Lose pounds the painless way! For fivedays of delicious dining, plus diet tips andrecipes, send a stamped, self-addressed en-velope and 35 cents to THE SLIMGOURMET DIET, in care of The Register,Sparta, N.J., 07871.

over low flame, shaking and stirring seedsoften to prevent burning Then crush seeds inmortar or pepper grinder Combine chickenstock, soy sauce, sesame seed oil, crushed redpepper, lemon juice and ground seeds in skilletHeat through, stirring to blend well Sauce canbe made in advance, refrigerated three or fourdays before using.

For the shabu-shabu:2 lbs. lean, top-grade steak, cut on slicing

machine to thickness of bacon12 large mushrooms4 carrots, well-scrubbed12 spring onionssmall head of Chinese cabbage6 stalks celeryMi lb bamboo shoots, fresh preferably, op-

tional1 piece grilled bean curd, yakidofu (about \

lb) , (available In Oriental food shops, manysupermarkets or health food stores)

1 oz. Japanese horseradish, wasabi2 qts chicken stockSelect only the most tender beef and have

sliced by butcher Prepare vegetables by washing well. Cut stem ends from mushrooms iftough: slice In halves or leave whole. Chopscarrots diagonally into >4-inch slices. Cutspring onions, including green tops, diagonallyinto 2-inch pieces. Cut cabbaqe into 3-Inchpieces. Slice celery diagonally into % inchslices. Parboil bamboo shoots until barely ten-der; If canned, drain well. Cut into \ inch thickslices. Drain bean curd and cut into 1%-lnch

squares. Arrange vegetables and meat attrac-tively on large platter.

Heat stock and taste to correct seasoningPour into a donable (earthenware casserolewith lid, which is glazed inside, unglazed out-side and can be placed over direct heat) orother large, flame-proof pot If possible, placepot over a portable gas ring or hot plate incenter of dining room table Heat must be hotenough to keep stock at slow boil Give eachguest a pajr of chopsticks or a fondue fork, abowl and small saucer of the dipping sauce Letguests spear their meat and vegetables andcook in the simmering sauce to desired done-ness The meat and vegetables are then quicklydipped in the sauce and eaten immediately Donot overcook beef or it will be stringy, dry Addmore broth from time to time as needed.

Mix horseradish with small amount of wa-ter to form smooth paste Have on the sideextra soy sauce, lemon juice or vinegaY and asmall bowl of wasabi horseradish so each gueslcan adjust his sauce to taste When all the meatand vegetables are cooked, the broth can beused as a soup Plain cooked rice can be servedwith the shabu-shabu to complete the meal.

AFTERTHOUGHTS: Sylvia's shabu-shabuis an interesting, low-calorie main dish, ap-propriate for family meals Or for more formaloccasions. Half the fun is the dunking andcooking. The donable is relatively inexpensiveto buy at Oriental shops and adds to the festiv-ity If desired, a second sauce can be preparedfrom minced fresh ginger root and soy sauce

SYLVIA ERISTEL

The sesame seeds and sesame seed oil give apungent, nullike flavor lo the sauce Freshlygrated horseradish is preferable to the prepared type In all Japanese dishes If fresh rootsare not available, use canned, dehydratedwasabi, mixed with small amount of water Inform thin paste

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\ . ; • ; , , . w ^ . ^

>uthi^^Magazine of The Sunday Register

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Winterbeauty

V. Mini Page Pull-Outs

THE GOSSIP CORNER By MARILYN AND HV GARDNER

You needn't lend Nimoy an earI) ll.-»..ki nun ttat I n • • L- minfnla i l I H f n t m 4 ' kl

Q: Leonard Nimoy proved his versatility In"Invasion of the Body Sualchers." But he'llnever be forgotten at "Mr. Spook," the manwltk thr high pointed earn la "Star Trek,"which will toon be a movie. In between filming,I read that ke toured la a one man tribute to thepainter Vaa Gogk, who oace cat all his ownear. I nave twa questions: Does the actor,whose ears made him famous, feel tomekinship with Van Gogh? And whatever hap-pened to Nlmay's ears? — A. Kelly, NewOrleans

A: Spurk is no spook H f ' l a brilliant,knowledgeable person who also happens In bean actor's actor, and has proved it in everymedium of his craft — in TV and on the Hag*.in comedy, drama and musical roles onlyrecently, he earned a masters degree at Ann-och College He lectures on the subject ofscience fiction at U S and Canadian univer-sities

Still married to the same woman he madehis bride 25 years ago, actress Sandi ZobeT,Nimoy is a talented writer and photographerThree of his books have been published, incluiling his autobiography ("I Am NOT Spock'")and two others — one photographic and theother on poetry he's penned

Now about your "ear " question — when weinterviewed Nimny on TV, we asked him, playfully, what he did witb his old ears. He smiledand said: "The makeup man who designed andmade them was a genius Me made not one panof ears but more than a dozen One pair,properly autographed by him. was mounledand now hangs in my den."

ABZUG: Blames brother Billy

Q: What's the reason Bella Abzug gives forher being llred by President Carter? - Mrs.Mark Richards, Seattle

A: " I think the president had a bad day atthe office," explains Bella (It was the daybrother Billy made headlines with his offensiveArab-vs-Jew remark). "And instead of kickingBilly Carter," she says, "he kicked me "

t(: In which one of his many movies didCharles Boyer utter that phrase Impersonatorsquote him as saying — "Come wit me to zeCasbah?" — Henry IMitton, Pittsburgh

A "Though they insist it was in 'Algiers,'"Boyer once told us, "the fact is 1 never saidthat in any of my films I finally didn't bother li>deny it — I thought it was good publicity!"

NIMOV: Ears to spare

<(: I was startled to read the other day thatthe beautiful Lena Home has passed the age ofM. Does she prefer the company of youngermen? And how does she feel about growingolder? — Georgette Brown, Columbus, Ohio

A: The American Beauty (a perennial)faces Ihe Biasing years wilh her usual sense (ifhumor "1 can'l wait lo gel my Social Sccurily," she says "I've been working all my lifeI'm so glad I'm getting lo Ihe poinl where I canCOllecl some of II I had lo wail a long lime higel there " Though she prefers older men.Lena candidly admits, "The men I'm BllractsdKi want younger women Of course, there couldbe a young eat, but I'm very hip lhal a lot Olthat kind of attraction mighl be because hewanls a hltle money or something Which isfine, i s long as It's rigid out thare If we bothundersland where It's St." '

«»: With the stark reality of so many oftoday's movies, I sometimes long for the dayswhen Hollywood was Just a land of fantasy. Doyou remember those days? — Mrs. Sophie J .Slaten Island. N.V.

A: Indeed we do And Ihis recollectionabout Ihe late ItUdlO gUnt, -lack Warner. Is agood Illustration n comes from Justice Thendore K Kupfcrman. who tells of once BikingWarner, "Do you remember when we wen' inyour legal department in New York anilRonald Reagan was one of your name stars''Ills answer, •ill course -Well, whal do youthink of Konald Keagan for prMdenl?"Warner paused and Ihoughl a moment andanswered. "No Kiibert Itedforil for presidentKonald EWMgaji CHI play his father "

Q: About the marriage of Christina Onasslsto her Soviet husband, what are Ihe chances ofII lasting? - C. I... Glendale, Calif.

A: They say a picture speaks louder than athousand words And in a recenl photo of Ihenewlyweds taken outside their home in Paris,Christina looked absolutely radiant

Send your questions to Hy Gardner, "GladVou Asked That," care of this newspaper, P.O.Box 11748, Chicago, III.. ( M i l . Marilyn and HyGardner will answer as many questions as theycan In their column, but the volume of mallmakes personal replies Impossible.

if Drugs are being smuggled In from Chi-na, and I've read that they're using more whileKuropean girls these days Instead of Chinesegirls as couriers. Do you know why? — CarlPerran, Las Vegas

\ Because one of Ihe methods the smug 'gien use is to stuff the WOmCn'S under weuWith drugs so they look either pregnant or likethey hive ample bosoms And most Chinesewomen are tOO pOtlte lit wear stuffed In.iwithout arousing suspicion

Q: Does genial Tom Lasorda, manager ofIhe Los Angeles Dodgers, still feel lei downbecause his team lost lhal heart—breakingWorld Series to the Yankees? - A. Marsh (aformer Brooklyn diehard transplanted lo LosAngeles).

A Tom compensate! by taking inventory ofthe KUIKI things lhal have happened lo himthrough the years "My good luck has been soFortunate," Tom says. "II all seems like adream I keep wondering when my mutheiwill shake me awake and say. Miller gel upson, or you'll be late for school!'"

(): Settle a mild family dispute. Which IsJimmy Carter's favorite spectator sport —football, baseball, basketball, golf, tennis orwrestling? - Mrs. R.A., Voungstown, Ohio

A: None The president enjoys watchingstock car racing His mother Is the wrestlingfan in the family

<|: I remember a spy KBI movie In the ItSSsbul can't think of Its star or title. One hint:there was little or no dialogue and Ihe aalysounds you heard were background noises andsome masle. I wonder what goes on In anactor's mind with the absence of a script? —Mrs. Horeare M., Pkoeali, Arli.

A The picture was "The Thief (1952) AndIhe star was Hay Milland Kay explained thaiduring the filming of one of those long, silentBCenes trnp only thing he could think of wasdevouring a juicy steak after the director said:"That's all for now!"

OALI: No time l» skoal

Q: How come Mukammad All has stoppedhis " I am Ihe greatest" routine? — FrankThomas, Jersey City

A "This ain't the time no more to shout.1 in ihe greatest,7' explains Ah "Just like it's

not the time for rock 'n' roll There's a differentbeat No more Hap Brown and gcMhc-honkystuff " Reflects the first man ever to win theworld heavyweight championship three times:"It's a new time — a new season "

Mo n mouthThe Maguina of Tha Sunday HagKMr

Role of judges —What is the role of federal judges? And where does theirjurisdiction begin and end? The Associated Press takes anin-depth look at the situation nationwide as today's leadfeature story. J

Winter's dress —Photo Chief Don Lordi takes over today's cent^pldshowcase with a photo essay on winter's white owssSnow and cold weather has its drawbacks, but it can bebeautiful. too.asMr Lordl's photos show • - »

Facing the Camera —Decisions, decisions. All ol us have to make them, sooneror later What is the biggest or toughest decision you'veever had to make? That's the question posed by inquiringphotographer Carl ForinO. and eight Monmouth Countyresidents provide their answers. It

Bmckgammon U Horotcopt 12Book* M Kid Stun. 10CB Bntk T Music TChm M Pitt mnd P*opl» 11Coin* 11 Photography 10Croitword Punlt IS Rolling Stoni 5Dlmgrarvlttt IS Sfmpt 11Dining Out. U Tnvl. t

ON THE COVER

Some phases of winter arewithout beauty, but Chief Pho-tographer Don Lordl's camerafound a great deal of beauty,starting with our full color cov-er photo dockslde at theNavesink River in Red Bankbefore tins week's big snowfalland In today's centerfold afterwinter dressed Itself In white.

Federal judges:What istheir role?

By Kit HARD ( AKKI I IAtwcUlcd Press Writer

Murray M Schwartz probably couldn't beelected to the humblest public office In Wilm-ington, Del, these days, and least of all to theschool board.

But there's no doubt who was in charge ofthe local public schools in and around Dela-ware's biggest city last fall It was Murray MSchwartz

US District Judge Murray M Schwartz,that is

He's one of a number of federal trial judgeswho, hardly known outside their jurisdictions,have run state prison systems, schools sys-tems, and mental institutions, who havewielded power over state agencies and policymakers that critics of the trend have calledgovernment by judiciary.

By Schwartz's say-so, 11 separate schoolsystems In Wilmington ceased to exist Nowthere Is one

By his orders, 21,000 students boarded busesthat would take them to new schools, teacherswere assigned to new posts, and administratorsscrambled to comply with procedures he hadlaid down

It fell to Schwartz to fashion a desegrega-tion plan, a Job not conducive to popularityWhen a Wilmington civic group honored htmwith a good-government award, protesting let-ters poured In to the local newspapers.

Schwartz, like some 500 other federal trialjudges, Isn't In business to win friends. Thefederal judiciary - the trial Judges, about 150appeals judges and the nine members of theSupreme Court — stand apart from the othertwo branches of government In court, some-times the will of the majority must yield.

Federal judges cannot be voted out of of-fice They were never voted In. They holdlifetime employment security; a federal judgecan be removed only by conviction after Im-peachment, but only four judges In the nation'shistory were ousted that way.

"Equal justice requires Impartiality andimpartiality requires freedom from pressure,"says Chief Judge Irving R Kaufman of the 2ndU.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In New York'This is especially true under a written Con-

stitution guaranteeing for the ages certainrights to Individuals even against democrat-ically determined actions of the majority."

Pew legal scholars or politicians wouldwant to see the Judiciary's independence Im-paired, but there's a growing discussion amongthem, and among many citizens affected bysweeping judicial orders, about the power ofthe Judiciary and particularly federal trialjudges.

Have their broad interventions carriedthem beyond their proper role and allowedthem to escape the system of checks andbalances? Has "Judicial activism" producedJudges who no longer merely Interpret existinglaw but work aa social engineers?

"Until modern times the most importantexercises of the judicial power have beennegative actions, limiting the scope of govern-ment," says Kaufman

"In recent years, It seems that the JudiciaryIs acting as an accelerator rather than as abrake. In the last few decades the courts havegiven broad construction to affirmative person-al rights and manifested an Increasing willing-ness to articulate and implement new ones."

The accelerator phenomenon is easilytraced to the Supreme Court of the lHOs and'60s under the late Chief Justice Earl Warren.But the nation's highest court today Is, bycomparison, more constrained.

"What is novel about contemporary Judicialactivity ... involves not Judicial activism of theSupreme Court In creating new rights butjudicial ingenuity of trial courts In creatingnew remedies for accepted constitutional orstatutory rights," says Harvard law professorAbram Chayes

It Is the Ingenuity of these remedies andtheir detailed prescriptions for state or schoolofficials that has caused much of the con-troversy.

I

U.S. District Judge Frank Johnson in earlyWit assumed virtual control of Alabama's pris-on system.

Acting on a lawsuit filed by state prisoners,the Montgomery-based Judge ruled that"filthy, overcrowded" prison conditions wereInflicting cruel and unusual punishment onInmates by fostering "rampant violence" and a"Jungle atmosphere."

Johnson ordered wholesale administrativechanges to "clean up" the state's prisons andrequired state officials to report their progressto him every six months. ,

In a similar suit involving conditions atstate-run mental hospitals, Johnson four yearsearlier gave Alabama officials a list of 84minimum standards the hospitals must meet.

The year before Johnson's ruling, Alabamaspent |14 million on Its mental institutions. Theyear after his ruling, the expenditure increasedto 158 million.

US. District Judge Orrin Judd took chargeof day-to-day operations at New York's 3.000patient WUIowbrook mental hospital in 11)74after finding that the state had violated theconstitutional rights of the patients.

Judd's orders to administrators, specificdown to the quantity of toilet tissue that had tobe kept In stock, increased the hospital'sbudget from $2» million to fM million.

Detailed remedies are now common, espe-

JUDICIAL ROLE — U. S. District Judge FrankJohnson is one of the federal trial judges whoseinterpretation of the judge's role has arouseddebate In 1976 Johnson ordered that Ala-bama s prison system be cleaned up. Earlier hehad lain down minimum standards tor the state-run mental hospitals. More and more the ques-tion is being asked: Do such actions overstepthe role a judge is supposed to play?

dally in school desegregation orders. In Bos-ton, U.S. District Judge W. Arthur Garrity'splan Included specific bus routes.

Other rulings also raise tempers and con-troversy.

In 1»7«, U.S. District Judge William W.Justice of Tyler, Tex., effectively ended timberclear-cutting in Texas' national forests until anadequate environmental Impact statement wassubmitted. Previously, the Judge had orderedstate education officials to Investigate com-plaints about school symbols that allegedlythreatened rectal harmony. State officials sub-sequently ordered team names like "Rebels"dropped and banned the playing of "Dixie" atathletic contests.

Last month, U.S. District Judge FrankMcFadden of Birmingham, Ala., ordered theTennessee Valley Authority to move Its head-quarters from Knoxvllle, Tenn, to MuscleShoals, Ala., ruling that a 1(33 law mandatedthe transfer.

It was the 1»77 ruling of U.S. District JudgeLuther Bohannon in Oklahoma City that forcedthe government to modify its ban on Laetrile, asubstance some believe can be used to treatcancer. Laetrile doesn't work, the governmentsays, and the case is under appeal.

"This phenomenon can be seen In the statecourts but Its prime seat is In the federaljudiciary," says Chayes, the Harvard legalscholar

"These new remedies, at the extreme, takethe form of elaborate plans for the desegrega-tion of school systems and the operation ofprisons or mental hospitals.

i "And short of that, they Involve the courtsin the management of the environment,restructuring of economic markets, corporateand union governance, the policing of creditand employment practices..."

A Yale law professor, Ralph K Winter,notes that "much of this Intervention is, Inpractice, unrevlewable."

"Because of the caseloads of the SupremeCourt and the courts of appeals (and) the factthat trial court Judges have broad discretion tofind facts and shape remedies, adequate ap-pellate review may never occur."

Winter sees growing Judicial power and Itworries him.

"Judicial footprints are found all over thepolitical landscape," he says. "We are gettingaccustomed to the exercise of an expandedJudicial power and to a changing view of theproper Judicial role."

Winter's Yale colleague, former SolicitorGeneral Robert H. Bork, agrees, and warns of"the dangerous consequences of the era ofjudicial activism that began with the Warrencourt and has not ended yet."

"Courts who have moved away from con-ventional legal materials ... can only decidepolitically," Bork sayi.

" I t is, moreover, an unsatisfactory form ofpolitics, one hidden from public view because... Interest groups have little or no access to theprocess and no power to censure those respon-sible for the outcome," he says. "As legisla-

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I

I

Black jews in New JerseyBy DAVID TRKADWKL1.MUI.LICA TOWNSHIP

(AP) — Rabbi Abel Respes isaccustomed to strangers doing.1 double take when they passhis synagogue in this quietcommunity in New Jersey'spinelands.

"Adat Beyt Mosheh Con-gregation" reads the sign nutside the handsome building —in English and Hebrew Butthe faces of the worshippersare black

Respes led his followershen* Iti years ago from a NorthPhiladelphia neighborhood 40miles to the west that ex-perienced dramatic povertyand crime after undergoingrapid racial change

"We pooled our resources tobuy the land and build ourhomes and the synagogue,"Kespes. 59. says "We livesomething like people in kib-butzim Mortgage and utilitybills are paid through a collec-tive community lax "

The synagogue, which stillattracts worshippers from theold neighborhood across theDelaware River, seats more(han ISO people and boasls Ispacious classroom, a well-equipped kitchen and a booklined study for Respes.

Across the street are fiveimmaculate ranch-style homesoccupied by congregants. Twomore houses arc planned forfamilies waiting to join thesmall settlement of about 40residents.

All but two of the familiesare related to Respes He andhis wife, Sarah, have 14 chil-dren, eight still at home

ADAT BEYT MOSHEH

SABBATHFRIDAY EVEN!SATURDAY MORN'

man miWELCOME^

Rabbi Avel Respes stands in front of the sign which identifies his congregation to passersby inMulhca Township Respes believes his roots reach back to the f5th Century, and a group ofblack Spanish Jews who were forced to renounce their faith

"We're not a cult," Hespossays, adding that the con-gregation's ultimate dream isto emigrate to Israel

*To meet instant citizenshiprequirements, Respes and theother men. women mui chil-dren underwent formal rites ofconversion to Judaism in 1971

Itespes grew up in NorthPhiladelphia and worked atodd jobs after dropping out ofschool in the 10th grade Al U,ho was a food processor al theCampbell Soup factory in

Cam den"One Saturday night, I

didn't go out to the bars asusual," he recalls I was lyingin my bed about midnight andwas half asleep when I heard aVOlcfl saying, 'Seek (Jod.'"

He stumbled on a Jewishreligious bookstore and devoured Knglish translations ofancient scriptures, theTalmud, Jewish history andany else about Judaism hecould get his hands on. Hefinally even mastered Hebrew

on his ownAfter learning of the Mar

ranos — 15th century SpanishJews who wen1 forced to renounce their faith but con-tinued to practice secretly —he became convinced theywere the root of his Spanishname

"My father, who read (heBible but never went tochurch, once told me when IWil 13 — and should have beenbar mitzvahed — that we weredifferent from other Negroes

We were Jews"When I was reading to her

from an Knglish Bible on herdeathbed, 1 remember mymother turning her face away,saying, Our Bible was writtenin a different language '"

Kespes says his grandmother never ate pork andonce told him, "Our peopleworshipped secretly in thepast "

"'Not all slaves brought tothis country were from WestAfrica." he says "Many ofthem were descendants of theMarranos who fled to NorthAfrica during the Inquisition

Kespes rounded Adat BeytMosheh Congregation in I **;» IMembers follow traditionalJewish law Families practiceAriel Kosher dietary rules andmen and women arc segre-gated tn the synugoge duringservices

Kespes' 19 year old son,Manuel, turned down an ath-letic scholarship to college beCftflri) he refused to run trackmi Saturdays — the JewishSabbath

Al the synagogt* school, stu-dents study Jewish history andcustoms and Hebrew Kespesteaches the sessions four afternoons and two nights a weekSome adults attend

K»'s|M's says the panel ofthree New York rabbis whoperformed the congregation'sconversion ceremony nineyears ago also tested his schol-arly knowledge

"They told me my knowl-edge was superior to manygraduates of Yeshiva Univer-sity "

What is roleof judges?

(continued)tures, in other words, courts art' inaccessibleand unresponsive." r

Kaufman counters such criticism by stress-ing thai, "It is not enough for justice to bedeclared The judge must assure (hal justice isdone."

Hjrticc Knnis, legal director of the AmericanCivil Liberties Union, also disagrees with Win-ter and Bork

"Most instances of judicial activism arise inconflicts between the government and individual citizens." he says. "The chief role of thejudiciary Is to protect individual rights ggainilgovernment, so judges are doing their constitu-tional duty in taking such action

Knnis adds: "We're In a time of scarceresources. Many of the controversial cases incourts involve the allocation of taxpayers'money — how much is going to be spent. Oftenthere is strong majority sentiment on the other.side."

I'arl of federal Inal judges' power is thebroad discretion Ihey enjoy

U S District Judge Juan H, Torruella InSan Juan conducted an official court sessionunder water last year — donning a bathing suit,fins and snorkel gear to observe bombardmentdamage to reefs and sandbars off Puerto Kico.The judge was presiding over a Uwsuil fih-iiagainst the Navy by a group of local fishermen

When the Olin Corp pleaded no contest lastyear to charges of illegally selling arms to theRepublic of South Africa. U.S. District JudgeRobert Zampano of New Haven. Conn., couldhave assessed a 1510.000 fine Instead he ordered the company to donate $510,000 to NewHaven charities.

Last year also, U.S. District Judge CharlesR RicheV of Washington, D C , ordered thedestruction of a criminal defendant's record of

DESEGREGA TION — Students troop oil then school bus at a /upior high school in suburbanWilmington. Del, at the beginning of classes last tall Then busing was part ot a detaileddesegregation plan tor the area's public schools tashioned by U S District Judge Murray MSchyiarti Such "judicial activism' is bringing charges that /udges are rio longer interpretingexisting law but are working as social engineers

Indioynent, MTUl and conviction in a qarcotlcacue • .'

Hichey said he was shocked by the govern-ment's "flagrant illegal activity" in prowCUtlng the defendant and ordered that no traceof the prosecution survive

The trial judge's discretionary power, combined with the complexities of a society withmany clashing interests and vast new fields forthe exercise of judicial review, has given riselo complaints of an "imperial judiciary." aphrase used by former Solicitor General llorkin a speech in Washington last December

Harvard's Chayes, however, doesn't readthe trend that way Judicial activism, he says,

docs not reprennl an effort by judges, leialong Ihe judiciary as a whole, al self aggrandtemeni "

"On the contrary, the district judges I havetalked to seem as uncomfortable as (some oftheir critics) al some of ihe things they findthemselves duing

Few would disagree, however, with JohnMarshall's assessment of the judiciary's im-IMirl in American life Years before he becamechief justice. Marshall told fellow Virginiansconsidering ratification of Ihe Constitution

"The judiciary department comes home inUs efforts to every man's fireside; It passes onhis property, his reputation, his life, his all '

ROLLING STONE

Locorhere has new disco imageBy JOHN SWKNSON

"Disco Continental." shrieks Dennis Locor-nere in response to an observation about hisnew hairstyle A few years ago the singer'sliin«, stringy hair was as much a Dr HookIrademark as cofrontman Ray Sawyer'scrushed cowboy hat and eye patch. Rut with hisnew blow dry look and onstage dancing, Locor-nere fancies himself a contender for JohnTravolta's throne " I used to be the twistchampion in school." he says with a laugh, " Iwas the only one who could twist all the waythrough Joey Dee and the Starlighters' Shout'twtct without gelling a pain in my side

l.ocorriere's disco jokes are true to formDr Hook is u group that will try anything Theyonce posed as a glitter rock band and played awarmup set without being recognized — at ashow THKY were headlining On their currenttour with Sha Na Na. they grease themselvesup in mock Kitties garb for encores And theirstage unties always baffle audiences expectingto hear such hit ballads as "Sylvia's Mother"and the recent Sharing the Night Togetherl.ocornere. who sings those ballads, playsstraightman Ip Sawyer, who runs around the•tag! like a madman, leers mischievously atIhe crowd, yodels, whistles — anything to get areaction

"We never got backed into one category,"l.ocDiriere says on a rare off day during theoiinil s grueling lour "We just play all kinds ofmusic We can put on a good-timey country-nallatl show at the Grand Ole Opry and thenplay a bikers show in Pasadena We playaudiences where Hell's Angels are screamingTor 'Only Sixteen' and somebody's grand-mother is screaming for Freakin' at theKreakers Ball ' "

At one time the band's eclecticism nearlykilled off Di Hook The group went bankruptnot long after its early Seventies hits, "Sylvia'sMother" and "The Cover of Rolling Stone "People thought we were two different

groups." Locorriere explains. ''It got to thepoint where we were doing three or four gigs aweek earning $1,000 a gig and it would cost us(4 'Mm a week to stay on the road "

After the bankruptcy, the band decided tostart from scratch instead of packing it in "Wesiii everybody down." l.ocornere recalls, "andsaid. Now that we're bankrupt, if anybodywanla Id leave us the perfect lime ' But we allbelieved it would work again. You can makebelieve you're chickens, you can make believeyou're Martians, you can make believe you'reandrogynous, but you can't make believeyou're friends, especially under duress likelhal "

Five nf Ihe group's seven members arefrom the same band that recorded the first DrHook album in IB72 Keyboardist BUI Francisplayed with Sawyer in pre-Hook bands downSouth Guitarist Kik Klswil and bassist .lancei,.<i I.ii joined after manager Hon Haffkine gotIhe group a recording contract based on its

RECORDS

OR HOOK — Members ol Dr Hook are, from toll, Jance Gariat, Bill Francis, Rlk Elswlt. RaySawyer. Bob "Wllliard'Henke. John Wolters. and Dennis Locorriere

version of "Last Morning," the theme songfrom the movie "Who Is Harry Kellerman andWhy Is He Saying These Terrible Things AboutMe?" Those difficult early days helped forgethe camaraderie that has kept the band togeth-er "When we started," says Sawyer, "we wentfrom making $60 a week in New Jersey bars towoodsheddlng in a Connecticut house, reallyliving hand to mouth We used to have to gettogether to eat or to smoke a joint, cause therewas always just one "

When the band made the demo that got DrHook signed to Capitol after the bankruptcy,one of the songs was "The Millionaire." whichLocorriere admits was a strange selection"We were singing, 'And I got more money thana horse has hair.' and the engineer was saying,

'If we don't get another 150 we'll have to closedown this session .'"

After stiffing with its first three albums forCapitol, Di Hook rediscovered its success for-mula with "Pleasure & Pain." Aside from"Sharing the Night Together," there are a

couple of humorous tunes and even a disco cut,"When You're in Love with a Beautiful Wom-

an.""We didn't do it as a joke," l.ocornere

insists "You can tell what songs of ours areparodies and what ones aren't 'You Make MyPants Want to Get Up and Dance' is not a lovesong. A few years ago people thought every-thing we did was a parody. They assumed thatSylvia's Mother' was a parody of a love song,which 1

Best selling records of Ihe week based on Cashbox Maga-zine's nationwide survey:

1 "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy," Rod Stewart:' "Fire.1 Pointer Sisters3 "Le Freak "Chici "A Little More Love," Olivia Newton-John5 "I Will Survive,1 Gloria Gaynor6 "Y M C A," Village People7 "Too Much Heaven,' Hce (icesK •Lottt Love," Nlcolelle Larson9 "Soul Man." Blues Brothers10 "Shake It" Ian Matthews

Best-selling Country-Western records of Ihe week based onCashbox Magazine's nationwide survey:

I "Every Which Way but Loose." Eddie Rabbitl> Hack on My Mind Again," Ronnie Milsapi Come On In," Oak Ridge Boys4 Why Have You Left the One You Left Me For." Crystal

Gayle5. "I'l l Wake You Up When I (let Home," Charlie Richfi "Tonight She's Gonna Love Me," Razzy Bailey7 I Just Can't Slay Married to You," Christy Lane5 "Kverlasting Love, ' Narvel Felt9 "If I Could Write a Song as Beautiful U You." Billy

Crnddoek10 "Send Me Down to Tucson," MelTillis

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TRAVEL

Packing for one-suitcase jauntBy JANE MORSE

He was a (at man with thinideas So he tiled to squeezehis way through the under 10inch space between our tworestaurant tables. He (ailed,but in the process succeeded inknocking over my bottle of redv/fne Its contents followed thelaw of gravity and cascadeddown the full length of mydress, stockings and shoes

Naturally, It was my whitedress

I've noticed that not manywomen travel with whitedresses, and they may have apoint If you haven't scheduleda disaster, wearing white maywell provoke one However,and this is a big "however,"( I ) I've had more troubleswith green, (2) white Is won-derful when you need some-thing that works in all seasonsand (3) this particular whitedress makes me (eel good.

The last two things are, Ithink, key Men may not un-derstand it, bul working out awoman's travel wardrobetakes more'than 10 minutes,and a quick flick through yourcloset.

Right now I'm playing"Around the World In One Suit-case." I am going from ex-treme cold to extreme heatand will be on the move forperhaps four months I will beriding buses that also carry afew live chickens and occa-sionally dining at places thatstill have six-page menus andwine stewards. It took me sev-eral weeks of preparation, sec-ond thoughts, third thoughtsand fourth thoughts to finallyget together what seemedmost likely to succeed, but Idid it, and so far I haven't hadlo shed a tear

A k mi i-.li crochetedbeige wool sweater-coat wenton the list at once. Like asweater, it never wrinkles, ac-cepts being squeezed Intosmall spaces and goes withalmost everything. It alsomakes a good pillow or a goodblanket. In short, it does all thethings I want it to, and anyonewho attacks It with red wine,chewing gum or blobs of anysticky stuff may pay with hisor her life

The white dress is anothergo-anywhere item. I shouldadd that it's double-weight cot-ton T-shirt material that youhave to look at twice to tellfrom wool jersey, and both Itand I were ready (or theclumsy fat man. I carry somesoap powder that really doessoak out most stains. My T-shirt dress laps it up amd dripsdry without need of ironing.Strangely enough, It alsoseems warm in cold weatherand cool in hot, and since it'stent-shaped, I can make Iteven cooler by wearing It un-belted.

I also have a gauzy blue,puckered cotton tent dress thatwon't .work at all in coldclimates, and a black crepetunic that almost crawls In hotones. Well, nothing's perfect.In the end, I decided that eachhad earned this trip by having

previously made me feel goodwhile wearing It. On the whole\ favor anonymous-lookingclothes for travelers, but onceIn a while It's comforting to bedist inguished f r o m thewallpaper or look slightly bet-ter than the chair you're sit-ting on.

Two cotton—that looks likewool skirts, two cotton blouses,two T-shirts, four sweaters(one a cardigan), a corduroyblazer and one pair of jeanscarry the real load and total upto all the outerwear I have.Along with one full-length, per-manent-press cotton robe, oneset of thermal undeithings. asmall collection of stockings,scarves and so forth, the wholelot weighs 30 pounds. That'sincluding the suitcase and(confession of failure) fourpairs of shoes and a secondhandbag.

Ai'tually. I'm not sure thaifour pairs of shoes are an in-dulgence. My motto is takecare of your feet because youneed them to take care of youEven shoes you'd swear fit likea second skin get perverse onlong trips and start pinching orstop supporting. You have tobe on your guard and ready tocall up reserves.

A second handbag is purevanity. I hate carrying a sporty red-brown bug when I'mtrying to look grand in the eve-ning in my black tunic or thegauzy blue dress.

So far I've also reproved alot of my old favorite rules, towit:

• Thick stockings are easierto pack and carry than bootsYou may miss the boots a littlein cold climes, but you're guar-anteed to hate hauling themaround in hot spots

• Certain scarves are worththeir weight in gold. I have onethat's tablecloth size It's astole, a neclTsrarf, a bathingMil cover I can, if forced,wrap it to make a floor-lengthunderpinning (or my tunic

• These days you can goalmost anywhere In jeansdressed up with a blazer

• T-shirts make fine night-gowns (So why carry both?)

• If you find your vyardrobchas naps, you can fill them InAn amazing number of othercountries have shops and peo-ple who wear clothes

• .11'welly is expendableScarves work just as wetl andif they don't, maybe belts willOf course, some scarves makebelts too, and nice mldtrlp ex-periments when you're desperate for change

• Layering is lovely. Alsopractical. Two slips under a

cotton skirl equal a woolenskirl

• In hot weather and cold,long sleeves work better thanshort ones

• Travel today requires littlein the way of dress-up clothe*Don't waste space on them un-less you're absolutely sureyou'll need them — and thensee if adding a scarf can't getyou through.

• When undecided on whatIn lake, (all back on the."feelgood" principle: Plying be-tween two European capitals,my British seat-mate blushing-ly admitted that she was trav-eling with six suitcases. I 'd 'rather die or stay at home, butfor her it was surefire insur-ance for a good time And shecertainly looked terr i f icopyrtght 1)79 by Newsday. Inc

MUSIC

Caldwell cuts heart-shaped discBy MARY CAMPBELLWould you believe thai out

nf the slough of despond couldcome a red vinyl, heart-shapedrecording'

Believe it In the recordbusiness, almost anything Ispossible

In this instance. BobbyCaldwell broke up with his Cal-ifornia girlfriend and also de-cided he was never going togal anyplace as a song writer-singerguitarist Depressed, hewent back home to Miamithinking he'd go Into the con-struction business with hisfather

Hut he didn't quit writingsongs One of them. "WhatYou Won't Do for Love." wasreleased early this year in twoforms, the usual black vinyl 45.nut a red vinyl cut In the shapeof a heart The grooves. o(course, are still In a circle and.1 lone arm lands on and playsthat one exactly the way itdoes the round record

Ry the week before. Valen-tine's Day. C'aldwell says, thered heart single had sold200.000 copies He says."They're expensive They hadto cut a die for the heart shapeF.ach one costs about I I 50 lomake The dealer's cost IsW3K The suggested retailprice Is $5 HI and most dealersare selling them for M soThey're selling like hotcakes '

As far as Caldwell knows,his Is the first sing|e record lo

be shaped like a heart.The song, however, Is not »

happy love song Caldwellsays, "What the song Is de-scribing Is the situation of aguy hopelessly in love. It's thethings he finds himself doingfor love which he wouldn't nor-mally do And the person he'sbecoming, because of it. Isn'thimself

"It's a plight a lot of peoplehave gone through

"The vocals are alluringIt's a sensual song, a ladles'song, a love song, a ballad, agroove tune."

The situation which in-spired the song and the rest ofthe songs on the I.P. "BobbyCaldwell ' onTK Productions'clouds Records, he says, "wasa point I had reached in a loveaffair where the only solutionwas to end It, I was the onewho ended It. against herwishes. 1 thought Now 1 feeldifferently

She wasn't loving as hardas I was I loved her so muchthat it hurt '

Now, he says, instead of thegirl being angry at hlme forwriting about them, she hastelephoned to say she feels im-mortalized in song

The album was No. 51 onthe best-selling chart of Feb10. "What You Won't Do forLove" was No 30 on the best-selling singles chart Bothwere climbing. The next singlereleased will be either "MyKlame" or "Can't Say Good-bye."

.

Bobby CaMwell

"What I 'm all about."Caldwell says, "Is writingMings to appeal to the massesTo me. popular song writing isalways going to have a placeKads and gimmick songs willcome and go and popular songwriting will always have aplace KVIMI in the midst of thisheavy disco time. Billy Joelwrites songs reminiscent ofCole Porter Joel's writing. Ifeel, has greatness at timesIt's the kind of greatness 1strive to achieve.

"My songs can be recordedby virtually anybody Hall andOates could do them and TonyBennett could do them It Ismaterial I feel can leave amark in music."

Lou Rawls is going to re-cord his "Love Wont Walt."the B side of his current single,Caldwell says. The CurtisBrothers have recorded four ofhis songs for an album on theArc label, to come out inMarch

His goal. Caldwell says, isto write a song or songs forGeorge Benson.

Caldwell, who is 28. wasborn In New York and movedat four with his family to Mi-ami. From teen years, healways had a band. As a teen-ager, he wrote the backgroundmusic and his band recorded itfor the Miami-made movies"The Alligator People," " IWas a Teen—age Ghoul" andits sequel, "Ghoul on Cam-pus " The pay was lunches

"I had hundreds of bands. 'Caldwell says. "For sevenyears in Los Angeles we didnightclubs and some show-casing to try lo find some kindof record situation. The LiveJive Band played a chain ofclubs called the Red Onions.We made a good living butkeeping six guys together wasgetting too much for me.Squabbling over my songs andthe place they had in the bandgot lo be too much for me. Ithought I could starve a lotbelter alone and write better,too.

"The lead singer had ourpay in his shin pocket and lostit. so I used thai as the laststraw, my way of getting out."

Caldwel l asked somefriends for money and made ademonstration record for A 4M Records. I t was "ThisHouse Is Rocking." A 4 Mturned It down. Henry Stone,president of TK Productions inMiami, happened to hear itand he distributed II. It be-came a regional hit in Miamiand several other Easterncities.

After Caldwell went back toMiami to live In 1*77, his moth-er showed him a newspaperarticle about TK Productions."I'd had heavy criticism fromthe family. They had sup-ported me in music but eventhey felt you can't spend therest of your life trying; you'vegot to do something. And I wasthinking I wanted to be a realperson; I've got friends 35 whoare still hanging around tryinglo make it In the music busi-ness.

"Still, it was my Mom whoput the article in front of me."

Caldwell took "a collectionof songs of the past two years"to the TK office, where he wassurprised to be given a return-Ing hero's welcome. The fol-lowing week, contracts weredrawn up. •

He started by re recordinghis demonstration records, butthat didn't seem to come to-gether so Caldwell wrote 25new songs of which he chosethe nine best for the LP.

Caldwell says, "After sevenyears in Los Angeles, It was allin my own back yard."

CB BREAK

Change could make 'skip' legalBy MIKE WENDLAND

Backers of the drive lo carve out SSBonlyfrequencies Just above the present 27 MHz CBband are calling for another major changewhich — If adopted — would greatly legitimizethe way CB radio now functions

They say the FCC's long and frequentlydisobeyed regulation prohibiting "skip talk-ing," or long-distance conversations of over 150miles, should be dropped.

That rule was enacted back in the late1950s, when the CB service was being for-mulated. Its main purpose was to encouragelegal operation For back then, it was Illegalfor CB to be used for hobby-type, or chitchatcontacts

Ry making only local contacts permissible.Ihe FCC felt it was clearly demonstrating thatCB was only to be used for local, business-typecommunications. The only problem, of course.was thai nobody listened.

Like it or not. the CB service became ahobby band, sort of a poor man's amateurratio In 11)75, the FCC reluctantly dropped therule prohibiting hobby communication!;

For little good reason, however, they keptthe anti-skip talking regulation.

Again, no one has paid any attentionCBers are talking to whomever they please,

no matter where they are located And youreally can't blame them.

Now. the FCC Is being urged to drop thatoutdated prohibition. While tn the past mostFCC staffers turned a collective deaf ear

loward CBers' pleas, things have changed Thehams have lost their monopoly on Ihe FCC Upuntil very recently, all nl the FCC's top policy-makers were hams. Their attitude was that If(Hers wanted more privileges (hey shouldbuckle down and get their amateur ticket

Now. the vested interests of the hams aren'tas preva'ent as they once were. The FCC's top

Golly, hearing 36 radio checks in one hourmust be some kind or a record!

administrators are more committed to person-al communications per se, rather than justamateur radio. And the anil -skip rule just mayfall by the wayside.

If so. it would be a natural companion to theproposed sideband-only CB band, which SSBgroups want to see created above the present40 channels at 27 405 MHz.

If you think the skip prohibition should go,or, for that matter. If you think It should stay,write the commission, at l i l t M Street N.W.,Washington, D. C , 20554

Q. What kappeaed I* tfte FCC's F M pro-posal? Has I I beea scrapped? - H. R., ABea-law*, Pa.

A. No, It's very much alive. The FCC Isconsidering two CB radio proposals. One wouldadd another 40 channels to the present 27 MHzband.

We've been talking about that plan in thiscolumn for the past few weeks. Those newchannels would be for sideband transmissionsonly. The other plan would create a totally newCB band at UHF frequencies, up around 900MHz. That band would use FM transmissionsand would be in addition to the present 27 MHzfrequencies. Present equipment, while notusable at 900 MHz, would still be suitable foruse on the old band.

(Cot a CB gripe, compliment or mggesttoa?Write Mike Weadlaad, CB BREAK, care of TheRegMcr. AU letters mast be sigaed > B d aresubject U mlaor edluag.)

Winter's all dressed in whiteHolmdel Park

Pinebrook Road, Tinton Falls

Photography

ByDon Lordi

A young skater finds the going rough at Holmdel Park-

Sycamore Avenue, Tinton Falls

Shrewsbury Drive, Rumson

Longstreet Farm, Holmdel Sycamore Avenue, Tinton Falls

PHOTOGRAPHY

Scout gets a rare opportunityBy IRVING DESFOR

Nineteen-year-old EagleScout Mark Lienmiller returnsshortly from a three-monthtrip to the Antarctic, where heparticipated in scientific andphotographic work In theSouth Pole region.

It Is a onceina lifetime ex-perience: to be chosen fromthe country's more than 5.00(1Boy and Girl Scout applicantsH the third Scout in 50 years toi:<> to the South Pole: to have acomplete kit of precisionphotographic equipment madeavailable for your use: to re-ceive a crash course In photog-raphy by experts; and to beinvited to appear on networktelevision to recount ex-periences and show picturesyou have taken.

All this is happening to theGeorgia Tech student, thanksto unpredictable fate whichcombined the exemplaryachievement of an Eagle Scoutwith the inquisitive efficiencyof the communications fieldand the supportive heart of ourfree-enterprise system when aworthy goal was involved

The tradition of a scout onthe Antarctic expeditionsstarted with Eagle Scout PaulSiple In 192H. He was chosen asCommodore Richard Hyrd'sorderly and part-time photog-rapher when a 70-man teamleft New York for a two-yeartrip to the South Pole region. Itwas a historic voyage with dis-covery of Little America. Sipie's photographic equipmentconsisted of two motion-pic-ture cameras and severalthousand feet of film

Almost 30 years later, in1957. Eagle Scout RichardChappell was selected as a jun-ior member of the U.S. In-ternational Geophysical Yearworking party. He took pic-

POLAR PLATEAU — A South Pole adventure is beingdocumented by Eagle Scout Mark Lienmiller. selected to ac-company a scientitic expedition to the Antarctic lor glaciologicaland geological studies Here's one ot the views ot a polarplateau near the Darwin glacier base

lures on (he trip but more as ahobbyist than as a documenta-tion for the record.

In commemorating the 50thanniversary of Byrd's historictrip, the National ScienceFoundation Antarctic Scien-tific Expedition planned par-ticipation by a scout A na-tionwide search for the bestqualified Girl Scout or BoyScout was conducted and 58finalists went In Washington.D C , In 1078.

With the announcement ofl.ieniniller's selection, thechannels of communicationgot busy. I I isn't surprisingthat a television news programwould be interested in havingIhe youth appear to discuss hisexperiences. "Good MorningAmerica," of the ABC-TVnetwork was first to contact

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Hoy Scout headquarters andIhen Mark himself in AtlantaHe agreed tn appear on theprogram on his return fromthe Antarctic early in March

In this visual age. It wasconsidered appropriate lhalMark be supplied with ad-vanced cameras and ac-cessories to document high-lights of Ihe South Pole adven-

ture, but the program's budgetcouldn't stretch that far.

The network consulted Pe-ter Brown, a specialist In thephotographic field, and heknew exactly where to turn forexpert advice and help.

Ills first call was to Arthur(ioldsmith. editorial directorof Popular Photography maga-zine Goldsmith got the maga-zine's key editors together fora consensus im the equipmentneeded for an Arctic trip. Theeditors, experts in (heir re-spective areas of photography,limited the equipment to whatwould be multifunctional andwithin weight limitations

The final list came to two35mm SI.R camera bodies,four lenses, four filters,,onestrobe-flash unit, a case andcarrying bag Oh yes, onething mure; 100 rolls of film incolor and black-and-white, thisfrom Ihe magazine In addi-tion. Goldsmith volunteered toput the entire staff at Lien-miller's disposal fur a one-daycrash course in photographyand in Ihe use of the equipmentinquired.

Peter Brown's next callwent to Joseph Abbott, ex-ecutive at Nikon Inc. The lat-ter heard the story and foundIhe goal a worthy one Then heand his staff chopped red tapenil" confetti In two days. theequipment specified was madeavailable

"Good Morning America"flew Lienmiller to New Yorkfor Ihe crash program In Iheuse of Abbott's Nikon equip-ment at Popular Photography

By the end of last October.Lienmiller wa> al the DarwinGlacier Camp charting andphotographing glacial featuresof Ihe West Antarctic IceSheet. In November he headedfor the Byrd Glacier, one of Ihelargest, the second fastest andmost dangerous ice cube In Iheworld. In early January, hewas scheduled for Ihe Hoss IceShelf which dams up the Byidand other glaciers. After thathe was headed for MountKrebus, an active volcano, aSouth Pole station and ex-periences aboard an I CObreaker.

A first set of photos and aletter from Lienmiller went byhelicopter to Ihe main DarwinCamp where it was trans-ferred tfo another larger heli-copter for passage to theMcMurdo Island base wherefriends would dispatch It "10Ihe world "

"The scenery is awesome.Mark says. "That's the onlyword for It a combination ofprimitive ruggedncss andbeauty."

When Lienmiller returns locivilization and appears on the"Good Morning America " pro-gram. I want tn hear and seeIhe finale to this story

Dltgramlest

wnftt word do you • • • wh#nyou put Mill paf* up to amirror?

YJIIA1 HTOOT

1. Inventions

2. Alrpl.n.

3. Automobile

4. M.toh

9. Motor

6. Compiu

7. Camera

a. Cannon

9 Blcycl.

10. Balloon

11. Telephone12. Telescope

13. Barometer14. Atomic bomb

19. Television

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Riddles1. Two baseball team* played *• What did on* grape say to

a gam*. On* team won but the other grape?no man touched baa*. Howcould that be? '- What Is

2. Why wasn't the elephantallowed on the airplane?

3. What kind of party doprisoner! In jell like most ofall?

What Is the differencebetween an Ice cream coneand a bully?

Why watarrested?

the dirty kid

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SU3MSNV

PETS AND PEOPLE

Ideas for fish tank placementQ DEAR ALICE: AU Ike petty rack, u d

•raameats I tec IM pet shops l,mp< me I* baythem l.r a y goktflsk S i m r w caalleaed mrmy Idea l i aol good Why It thh?

A. If you get your colored rocks, ornamentsat a reliable aquarium shop I am sure all willbe safe for your pet. Unknown rocks you gatherfrom mountains or fields can be poisonous tofish

When you get these Items, place them in thetank in such a way that your fish cannotbecome trapped behind, or in the case ofcastles, within them which often happensAvoid sharp edges upon which the fish caninjure themselves. This is especially Importantin the case of telescope-eyed fish, Celestials,and the Bubble-eyes. AU are very susceptibleto eye injury.

4- DEAR ALICE: How H H will Mr babygalaea pigs be u l of Ike aesUag b*>? Oarfamily Is t* excited for Ike big day.

A I'd say they will be out and traveling withtheir Mom within a few hours after they are

born. After they are three weeks old, separatethe male from the female babies. They arevegetarians and will eat all kinds of greens orfruit, rolled oats, bread and rabbit pellets .Keep fresh drinking water handy at all times.

4 . DEAR ALICE: WoaM arapaactare kelptar aid dog? Joaalkaa hai beea gtvea all otheraids for bit kealtk aad aethmg warks.

A. I have heard of many accounts whereacupuncture did help pets. There are 94 prac-ticing veterinarian-acupuncturists In the Unit-ed States today. For Information write to H.Grady Young, D.V.M., Acupuncture Society,P.O. Box K8. Thomasvtlle. Georgia 317*2.

4- DEAR ALICE: We're •bcdleicr aaUwith aar three UUIe wire fax terriers. They'vebee* krtaglag kome lac pakrti toward thrlrdegrees la Ike tralalag classes.

WoaM yoa tell as wkere Ike Ualted SlatesDag Oaeaieacc eaataettUau will be kekt thisyear as we ptaa to attcad.

A. This big event will take place inl.ynchburg. Virginia, on May 28-27 It will be

followed by the Western Regional in Houstonon July 28-» and the Central Regional In WestAllis, WIs. on Oct. 17. Top winning canines willqualify to compete In the 1980 Gaines UnitedStates Classic December »•» in Atlanta. Com-plete details on all this will be given by writingto the Gaiifts Dog Research Center, ISO NorthSt., White Plains, New York 10MS

4. DEAR ALICE: What kas developed lacystitis la eats?

A. It Is moat common In neutered males butfemales can get it, too. A male cat, livingindoors, eating a dry diet Is moat likely, asreported, to develop feline urollthiasls syn-drome. The cause Is not known. AU cats need todrink water as it flushes the kidneys and dilutesand removes the stones (sand) that form withthis disease. Many cat breeders refuse to usedry cat foods and feed fresh, ground beef, at abasic diet as cats need fat In their diets dally tolubricate the system and help rid the hairballsthat form. A bit of soft butter, or marjarine.salad oil are suggested daily.

COIN ROUNDUP

PR firm helps sell Russian goldBy ED ROCHETTE

In addition to six series ofsilver commemorative coins,the Russian government willbe offering nix gold and fiveplatinum coins for sale to theAmerican public The pro-ceeds from the sale of thesecoins will help underwrite theiiisis of the XXI I Olympiadscheduled for IftKOin Moscow

To help promote the sale ofthese special coins, the NewYork public relations firm ofBursonNarsteller has comeup with a subtle approach,geared to the increasing con-cern of many Americans overthe value of the dollar Moreand more people are buyinggold, at least in small quan-tities, as a hedge againstfurther devaluation of tht*dollar through inflation TheRussian Olympic gold coins,like krugcrrands, offer themthe opportunity These legallender coins contain exactlyune half ounce of gold

The Russian Olympic gold.Hins have a face value of 100roubles, about IMS US. They

are available in both proof anduncirculated condition, but thepremium that one pays for thisgold is high — at least (200 perounce

However, the coins have an-other appeal to the Americanpublic An expected I I millionfrom the sale of these coinswill be set aside for the U.S.Olympic Committee to help fi-nance U.S. participation in thegames. This figure representsan estimated three percent ofthe gross sales in this country

Numlnter, the free-worldcombine that handles the saleof these coins in Brussels. NewYork, Paris, Toronto and To-kyo, has just announced therelease of the second gold coinin the series of six Maximummintage is the same as that ofthe first issued last June —1.10.000 pieces.

The piece is approximatelythe size of a U.S. halfdollar.The reverse design depicts thestadium at Krylatskoye,U S S R , where a specially de-signed canal will be used forthe rowing and canoeing

OLYMPIC GOLD — 77» sec-ond In a set ol six gold coinscommemorating the Moscow1980 Olympic Games hasbeen released The coin de-picts the new stadium atKrylatskoye where a specialcanal will be used tor the row-ing and canoeing events Thecoin contains one-half ounceotgold

events The obverse, as withall the commemorative coins,shows the state emblem alongwith the face value

Collectors desiring furtherinformation about these Issues

or where to buy them canwrite to the Moscow 1980Olympic Coin Programme. 857Third Avenue, New York. N Y10017. Some of the Issues areavailable through coin dealersaround the country, while oth-ers can only be purchasedthrough mall subscription.

. Q. - Ceald yaa (ell me Ikevakw of a Trade Dollar dated1 I 7 I 7 - S . M . H . , Hallaadale,ria

A. — Trade dollars were is-sued for use In the Orient from1873 through 1878, although afew proofs were made through1885 for collectors In 1878 onlycoins bearing an "S" mint-mark for San Francisco or a"CC" mintmark for CarsonCity were issued for actualtrade. The mintmark can befound on the reverse centeredabove the word "TradeDollar " In very fine conditionthese list for $57 50 for the SanFrancisco and $210 for theCarson City. If no mintmark ison the coin, you have a proofwhich lists for $1,400 in choicecondition.

4. - I kave a Series 1(74 l i tbill wltk same at the lace prun-ing backwards aa Ike back.Waal laformatloa eaa yaa givemi- aboal this M I P - A . J . C ,Habbard, Ohio

A. — With the Increased de-mands on the printing facilitiesof the Bureau of Engravingand Printing, quality controlhas decreased. Your note isconsidered a paper money er-ror, caused when a portion ofthe sheet previously fedthrough the press was notproperty aligned — resulting inthe impression being printedon the press blanket. This Im-pression was offset on the backof the next sheet being fedthrough the press. It Is worthabout 145 in extra-fine condi-tion to a collector of papermoney errors.

4 . — I kave a I7M esradocola I ran Portagal. Caa yaagive me the price raage far a yeala?-C.D.P. t Marietta, Ga.

A — I would need a pencilrubbing since varieties existwith values ranging from $20to $1,000.

STAMPS

Bhutan issues new series of seven stampsBy SYD KKONISH

Many countries have beenaCCUNd of issuing too manystamps But not Bhutan. Thelast time this small country inI he Himalayas issued a stampwas two years ago. Now it hasreleased a new set of seven tohonor special events of thepast two years.

The first stamp marks the25th anniversary of QueenElizabeth I I and bears a smil-ing portrait of the monarchThe souvenir sheet featuresWestminster Abbey and theSilver Jubilee symbol

The second stamp hails theAmerican Bicentennial andshows the Liberty Bell Thesouvenir sheet Illustrates the

American Lag and theRhutancse flag

Another .stamp celebratesthe 100th anniversary of thetelephone with a portrait ofAlexander Craham Bell andhis first phone A fourth is atribute to Lindbergh's flightacross the Atlantic and showtithe Spirit of St. Louis flyinglow over the waves. Thesouvenir sheet has theLindbergh plane landing at LeRourget Field

A fifth stamp is dedicatedto the Olympic dames and de-picts an archer, the Olympicsymbol and the BhutaneseSports Seal The souvenirsheet features a shot putterwith Olympic symbol and

Olympic torchThe sixth stamp Is for the

anniversary of the zeppellnwith a design of u zeppelinducking The last stamp in theset honors the Nobel PeacePrizes and bears a likeness ofAlfred Nobel

All the stamps in the sethave the same value and canbe purchased at your localstamp dealer.

Those who specialize Instamps of Great Britain willwelcome the latest edition(Winter 1078) of "Collect Brit-ish Stamps" by Stanley Gib-bons This checklist of thestamps of Great Britain beginswith the first stamps of 1840and ends with the issue of the

bicycle commemoraltves ofAug. 2,1078

The catalog also featuresfirst-day covers, gift andsouvenir packs, regional issuesand War Occupation stamps ofGuernsey and Jersey, postagedue and official stamps, post-office picture cards — all infull color.

It Is available at your localdealer, or you may write toStanley Gibbons. Ltd., 601Franklin Ave., Garden City,N Y . 11530.

The East African govern-ment of Tanzania com-memorated the /5th an-niversary of the WrightBrothers' powered flight witha set of four stamps.

FACING THE CAMERA

What is the toughest decision you've made?By CARL D. FORINO

Mrs. Hrary Serial, Atlantic Hlgklaadi"Whether I should have stayed In business

or to go out of business I decided to stay

Carol Marion. Leonardo"The most difficult decision that I ever had

to make was whether I should be a workingmother or not.' I decided not to work."

Mrs. Heary Serial

John Clark, Malawan"Whether I should have dropped out of

college or to continue with it. 1 decided to dropout, but now I wuuld like to go back '

CaralMartoa

(•forgr Aadersoa, Hazlrl"The biggest decision that I've ever had to

make was whether to change Jobs or not I didchange

• dark Gvmit Atdentm

Jaaet Ratnwvlck, Mlddlelowa"The most difficult decision that I've had to

make was whether or not I should have had myfirst child. I decided to have it.

(•!•> FtraaMo, Ocranporl"Whether or not I should have moved back

home. I moved back for now "

Jaaet Ratmevtck

Dang Vanord, East Keansbarg"Deciding on what to study in college It was

between studying to be an M.D. or to study forneurology. I decided to go for the neurology."

Gku Kornabt*

Brian Kolev. MMdletowa"Whether I should go to college or not I

decided to go and I'm still going and will keepongoing."

DoagVaawd BriaaFtley

HOROSCOPESUNDAY, FEB. IS

Bom today, you are deeplyconcerned with human behav-ior. The question of motivationunderlies all your studies intoother things, for you firmlybelieve that motive — inten-tion — is more Important in thelong run than the actual deed.

To see what is in store foryou tomorrow, find your birth-day and read the correspond-ing paragraph.

MONDAY, FEB. MPISCES (Feb. lt-Marck M )

— Look to the future and youwill find a blueprint alreadylaid out for you. Make yourselfwelcome at home.

ARIES (Marek 21 April I f )— A meeting with progressivetypes should be enough to in-spire you to aggressive behav-ior and a step forward.

TAURUS (April It-May N )— Your immense attractionfor members of the oppositesex makes it easy for you toget at secrets you shouldn'tknow.

G E M I N I (May Zl-Jaae M )— Trivial things take more ofyour time today than you canafford. Don't allow frustrationto build to anger.

CANCER (Jaae ll-Jaly H )— Resolve difficulties with anold friend before you attempt

to lay a solid foundation with anew one.

LEO (Jily H-Aag. I I ) -Personal success is muchmore likely than professionalsuccess at this time. Be pre-pared to make a quick change.

VIRGO (Aag. a-Sept. « ) -You should be able to setthings to rights on the em-ployment scene today. Work atseeing eye to eye with yoursuperior.

LIBRA (Sept. n-Oct. B ) -So long as inquiries are tactful,you should be able to gain theinformation you're after.

SCORPIO (Oct. 8-Ntv. 11)— Seek alternatives to present

circumstances. Don't allowyourself the luxury of quittingoutright

SAGITTARIUS <N.v. 22Dec. I I ) — Good news from adistant relative brings peace ofmind and physical relaxation.Rest on laurels at eve.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Ja«I I ) - Splendid results forsplendid efforts. You mayhave a chance today to demon-strate a new - and distinctive— talent.

AQUARIUS (Jaa. M-Fete.I I ) — Courtesy, good manners,consideration: these make thedifference between accep-tance and rejection today.

DINING OUT

Stirny's offers good food valuew

By KI.I.HN andKM HARD WALD

HUMSON - Kirsl, therewen bathtubs full of whiskeydumped into Ihe NavesinkHi.it was during Prohibition Ifynu hava • fi'fllnn af di'ju vuhere at 42 Avenue 61 TwuUven, Hmnson. it'i bectiutyou've prohably been herebefore — under differentKtllMI and under differentnwners Stirny's — A Rcstau-runt I'lace — haK taken overVMIM elan

This restaurant has been astirnweiss family enterprisesince mid summclilf I»7H Youprobably remember (leorjteSnuffy " Siirnweiss, the Now

yofk Yankees secondbamnan later traded In UwIndians, who was killed when atrain went through an opendrawbridge and plunged intoNewark Hay some 20 yearsnun In memory of Iheir dad.Hun is a caricature of an I ndi.MI on tin' liii i'.*- sign oulside Ihei. '.mi.mi and on the menusKdriic. the owner and man-ager, I'ete at the bar. SusanIhe gracious hosless. Kalhy inIhe kitchen and Joe, one of Iherooks they're all ready tomake your visit to Stirny'swarm and friendly

Discreetly, on Ihe menu, weare lold that the interior is byCalifornia 1'rvaUon.s. of KedHank The large, beautifullycarved redwood bar could onlylie a California import In fail.Kddie had to send a truck toCalifornia especially lo obtainthe massive slabs of redwoodfrom which the bar was fash-ioned There is plenty of elbowroom at the bar and Ihe adjacent dining room seals approx-imately 100 guests ( i i /v .redwood-topped tables are setintimately by the flowing fireplace A large skylight brightened by hanging plants addsinterest lo the room

The menu is intriguingWhile then are the standardsteak and roast beef offerings,you may be templed by one ofIhe mote exotic sounding cle

IHIBUTE TO DAD — The lamily ot the late George SnuttySiirnweiss. a onetime New York Yankees second baseman andJ945 American League batting champion operates Slimy s on

Avenue ol Two Rivers. Rumson Stirnweiss was later traded tothe Cleveland Indians and there is a character ot an Indian on alarge sign outside the restaurant and on the menus

scnplions of dishes such asHeef Oscar ($«95) - • choicesteak lopped wilh king crabmeal in a mild while sauce.Koquefort shrimp sluffed sole($7 95) and Shrimp Camaroncs

(which translates into shrimp,shrimp. $7 Dili. Panamashrimp sauteed in garlic bulterwith mushrooms, olives,chives and lomatoes

There is also an extendedblackboard menu Indicatinglhal evening's special offer-ings escargols. for an ap-petlwr (131ft). Coquille StJacques ($KU5) and ChickenToronto, cutlets with bacon.swiss cheese and hollandaisesaucc(|7 95) These, accordingto our hostess, were"gourmet "

In the post-Julia Child andCuisinart era. this word —

gourmel — has hern bandiedaround so much as to becomealmost meaningless After all.gourmet simply meanscarefully selected and pre-pared food and wines to delightthe palate Therefore, all foodsserved should theoretically begourmel in quality and prepa-ration, not just those disheslhat are elaborate or originatein classic Krench cuisine. Re-grettably, this is very seldomIhe case

While mil "gourmet,"Slirny's offers good food valueAll entrees are served with acomplimentary soup and saladbar. baked potato, corn on Ihecob (in season) or acornM|iiiish linked with brown sug.ii und butter, an old familyrecipe

The soups, onion and Cana-

dian Cheddar cheese were tooprocessed for our taslc, butWarming on Ihe cold winterday of our visit Assorted vege-tables: beets, green peppers,onions, macaroni salad, potatosalad, cole slaw and tossedgreens completed Ihe saladbar

An inleresting variation ofa salad bar is offered at lunch.Assorted cold cuts, breads andvegetables are available forone In make their own lunch-time sandwich or sandwiches,depending upon Ihe extent oftheir appetite The lunch-limesandwich bar. which includessoup, Is priced at a reasonablert.n

An order of roast beer m mmedium rare and wilh thehone on, as ordered; at $7 !i:> itwas a substantial portion, ofacceptable quality, worth con-sidering Perfectly freshbroiled sea scallops ($H95) inherbs and lemon butter were,unfortunately sandy, this timearound

Two interesting concoc-tions thai would appeal mosil\to those with a sweet loolhwere boneless chicken breastssluffed with chopped applesand walnuts (IB OS) and Tahi-tian chicken, boneless breastsmat mated in a soy and gingersauce (15 95)

Talutian chicken, withchunks of sweet, cannedpineapple and a nice gingery,soy -based sauce was served onI bed of drowned rice Thisdish is prepared by first broil

ing the chicken breasts andIhen adding the sauce. Broilingleft Ihe chicken a bit dry andovercooked But, the overalldish was agreeable. Steak Ta-hilian and Shrimp Tahilian, al-though we did not samplethem, are similarly prepared.Chicken breasts with choppedapples and walnuts were sim-ply too sweet and syrupy loenjoy.

Desserts are the usual icecream and an ordinary cheesecake, but also Include bananasKoster For those of you whoadored banana splits as kids(and adults), this Is a sophisti-cated version Traditionally,the bananas are gentlywarmed in bulter, brown sugar and liquor and then placedatop vanilla ice cream with thesauce spooned over all

We are advised that a newchef is joining Ihe kitchen staffand an expanded menu is Inthe works Dinner js serveduntil II |i m and sandwichesare available at all times anduntil 12 .10 a m , making this agood afler-lhealer choice. Thesandwich selection is varied:hamburgers (12 50). barbequed spare ribs (13 50), grilledKuben sandwich ($2 95). andcithers Brunch is served onSaturdays and Sundays fromnoon until 3 p m

Slirny's Is a busy place andcrowded on weekends. Reser-vations are not accepted, but alarge party of eight or morecan call several days in ad-vance and arrange for a tableDress Is casual.

imir»iiwtcii»i»nc«iHiiM

COZY DINING — Peter Stirnweiss acquaints Mr and Mrs Lee Gossett ol Shrewsbury withsome ot Stirny's specialties. The refurbished dining place features a large, carved redwood bar,redwood-lopped tables and a skylight brightened by hanging plants

STIRNVS - A RESTAURANT PLACE: 42 Avenue of TwoRivers, Humson, (201) H42-1315Prices: Kntrees include soup and salad bar. ranging from15.50 for London Broil, 15 95 for Tahilian chicken to $9 95 forBeef Oscar; sandwiches, $2.50 for hamburgers, cheesedog$1.75. and othersCredit: All major credit cards accepted.Hoars: Open daily 12 p.m. to I 30 am , Saturday and Sundaybrunch from 12 pm to 3 pm ; dinner served till II p m.;sandwiches till 12:30a m No reservations acceptedReviewer remains unidentified until caeca has been paid.

BOOKS BACKGAMMON

'Beautiful Girl' is16 perfect stories

BEAUTIFUL GIRLBy Alice Adams. Knopf. 142 pages W.M

i "Beautiful Girl" is one of those rare culler-tions in which all of the stories are perfect

Of the 16 included in this collection, not onecan be singled out as being better, than anyother Alice Adams has a fine, rare latent andshe shows it off beautifully in these writings.

Three of the stories deal with one family,the Todds The first "Verlie I say Unto You,"introduces the Todds when the parents areyouthful and their two children are quiteyoung The time is the 1930s, and the story tellsof love and of death

"Are You in Love?" shows the Todds a fewyears later. The parents are older and less thansatisfied with their marriage The children arcgrowing and Miss Adams captures the themesof aging and adolescence superbly. The finalstory, "Alternatives," deals with death andregeneration The elder Todds are dead, thechildren grown and unhappy with their lives.but one survivor, Todd's second wife, is contentwith what has happened and what is to come.

"Beautiful Girl," the title story, deals withthe theme of vibrant youth that turns sour asthe years pass The opening line sums it up"Anlis Bascombe, the tobacco heiress, who 20years ago was a North Carolina beauty queen,is now sitting in the kitchen of her San Francis-co house, getting drunk "

Those who have not read Miss Adamsshould, and they would be making a wise moveby starting out with this fine collection ofstories.

Phil ThomasAssociated Press Books Editor

NATIVES k STRANGERSBy Leonard Dluerstela, Roger Nichols,

David Relmers. Oxford University Press. J33V$Our purpose in writing this book," the

Best ReadSHREWSBURY — Books in demand this

week at the Eastern Branch of the Mon-mouth County Library on HI 35 were:

FICTION1 — "Overload," Hailey2 — "Second Generation," Fast3 — "Evergreen," Plain4 — "Unnatural Scenery," Canby5 — "Fools Die," Puzo

NON-FICTION1 - " B y Myself," BacaU2 — "Mommie Dearest," CrawfordJ — " Jackie, Oh! "Kelly4 — "To Live Until We Say Goodbye,"

Kubier-Ross5 — "Distant Mirror," Tuchman

THE IDES OF APRILWe certainly do not pretend to be H * R.

Block when it comes to income taxes, andwe cannot give formal assistance in com-pleting income tax forms.

However, for the individual or the busi-ness taxpayer, the Eastern Branch can of-fer a comprehensive collection of incometax forms, explanatory publications andbooklets, and professionally published taxservices which will be helpful in answeringthe most common types of questions andpossibly shed some light on even highlycomplex tax problems.

From the ever popular publications, No.17, "Your Federal Income Tax," and No.3J4, "Tax Guide for Small Business," to thetechnical analyses of the Commerce Clear-ing House's "Standard Federal Tax Re-porter," the scope of the tax collection isquite impressive.

Both federal and state forms and publi-cations are included in the collection. If thelibrary should not have the particular itemyou need, remember the tax form toll freenumber, 800-242-0249, and the location of thelocal IRS office, 601 Grand Avenue. AsburyPark.

FRED OSER

authors of "Natives & Strangers" note in asuccinct preface, "has been 10 emphasizethe role of blacks, Indians and immigrantminorities in the transformation of the colonialsociety into the nation of the 1970s

"We have concentrated on the main Ihemeof economic growth and how ethnic minoritiesplayed a role in that development."

Their theme stated, the authors pursue itfrom the arrival of the first colonists in Ameri-ca up to the present day and the result is astory with a panoramic sweep that deeplyinterests the reader while at the same timeeducating him in relatively little-known his-torical facts about this nation.

Agriculture was the nation's first absorption — leading to the use of slaves In someparts of the country — but it was not longbefore commerce and industry began to growvastly, especially in the north

To run the mills, to build the railroads, toput up the skyscrapers, and to do the jobs thaimany of the older settlers thought beneaththem, hands and backs were needed

The only place to get this necessary laborforce was from overseas and. as an example,between 1HI9 and 1K40 some "743.000 foreignersreached the United Stales " Most of these wereIrish, but as the years passed millions of othersfrom many nations — driven by famine, per-secution, the desire to better the quality nf life— flocked here.

The story of what happened tn these manypeople and how they were absorbed is toldcarefully and well In this book

Phil ThomasAssociated Press Books Editor

THE SEA, THE SEABy Iris Murdoch Viking. Ml pages, t l l . HWhether the ideas came first and generated

the plot, or whether the plot came first and theideas sprouted naturally along the way doesn'tmatter. Iris Murdoch's new novel, "The Sea,The Sea," is rich in both narrative and thought,finely blended and making a book well worthgiving one's lime to

Charles Arrowby is an older, successfulplaywright and director who, though still in hisprime mentally and physically, decides to re-tire. He leaves fame in London for an isolatedretreat by the sea, loftily In search of a "mysticmonaslicism." He will have time to write hismemoirs, he thinks Bui the memoirs he en-visaged don't get much past the first para-graph or so.

It's as if beginning to reach down into thedepths of the past arouses life itself, not Just oldmemories, and immediately Charles' retreatstarts to be invaded by disturbing omens andvisions, and then by people themselves — oldacquaintances, old loves, neglected family.The past becomes the present, and new actionkeeps changing his assessment of what the pastreally was and even what the present is.

And the outcome is that this mature, sophis-ticated, man mostly painfully but sometimesamusingly begins to know himself and to get aglimmer of an idea of how complex and deli-cate, how disconcertingly two-sided personalrelationships are. What comes Into play here isthe Iris Murdoch special theory of relativity —"causality" — the inexorable interplay of goodand evil forces, represented In various ways:symbols and visions; actual dramatic events;and religious philosophy as reflected in the lifeand death of James. Charles' mysteriouscousin.

Charles, who writes In the first person. Is aninterestingly self-obsessed character whodoesn't hesitate to tell us all The detail is- well-judged and welcome, it does all go together toform a fascinating whole.

The intended leisurely memoir turns into anastonishing — to Charles as well as to thereader — diary of events, changing and un-predictable as the sea itself. The sea is alwaysthere, described as a physical presence, as anelement forcing the course of the story to takesome jolting turns, and as a source of symbol-ism that is both profound and primitive

JOM BrumklllAssociated Press

* 1979 L A Times Syrtd / * . . . j i q p i p ~ \

You, White, roll 4-1 in thediagrammed position How doyou play it?

There are several possibili-ties, but only two need to beconsidered

You can hit ihe blot onBlack's five-point and also theblot on your own two-point.This would leave a blot in yourhome liiuril. but Black wouldhave three men on the bar.and you should have no trou-ble getting in even if Blackhits your blot

The other choice is in makeyour bar point, moving the onefrom the eight-point and thefour from your 11 -point

I prefer to make the barpoint because your five-pointprime (blockade) will holdyour opponent hack and forcehim to push his men over in

WHIN S IMIMI H' IAHII

CHESSCHESS MASTER

By George KoHuowOII i l r r n l i o u l Cken Muter

PROBLEMBy M. Zlewskl, Poland

WHITE: fWhite to play and male in

two moves Solution belowOOPS!

It's rare to blow away anopponent in correspondencechess — In 14 moves! Thiscould serve as a lesson to youpostal players ... analyze,analyze, analyze.

WHITE: R. Marriott

BLACK:1. P-K42. P-Q43 N-QB34. P-KS5. B-Q2«. N-N57. P-QN4B.Q-N48 N-gtch10. Q-B411, PxP12 Q-R6ch13 BxNch14. P-87 mate

N. ArnoldP-KJp-q*B-N5P-QB4PxPB-B4B-N3P-NJK-BlP-B3BB2NxQK-Nl

his home board so that he is nothreat even if you eventuallyleave a blot

The trouble with hitting an-other man is that you slow himdown, improving his timing fora back game. If he is not forcedto push his men over in hishome board, he may be moreof a threat Black is in badshape either way. but he isslightly more likely to lurn thegame around if you hit anotherman.

(Would you like to have Al-fred Sheinwold teach you howto play backgammon? A 12lesson booklet will be on theway to you when you send SOcents to Backgammon, TheRed Bank Register. P O Box1111, Los Angeles, Calif

1.2] .451.7.11III11

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P-K4NKB3BN5NxN04l't)3R-gB4P-B4PK5. BxPch. PxP

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: KasparovN. Royiman

I'MN-QB3N-Q5PxNB-B4PIJB3P 0 3N-B3PxPKxBQQ4PxPII-KNIB-K2R-N3HKN5R1-KN1PKR4Q-QIB-K3B-Q4KN2(b)PxBK HJ|c|PN5 •KxPResigns) d)RxB; 20NxP.

(b) Hopeless, but 22.. PxP;P-R5 wins for White.(c) Or 24.

RxN;B-B3; 29. NxB,

(d) 28. R-Nl Is intended.and Black cannot do muchabout it. If 27 BxN; 28. 0-K6ch, BB3; 29 RxBK4, etc.

The solution to the problemaboveK3N7

mate; or 1d.ch and

...P(J4ch; 2. N-mate; or I P

QJch; 2 N-K7d.ch and mate.etc

Gamespeople play

CROSSWORD BAY IT ISNT SO

BRIDGEBy Alfred Shelnwold

"If I could lee through thei ,ii rji I'd have mado thisM i d . " South lamented "Howcould I ppsilbl) Kl|t'ss h°w ttrpla) i ho trumpi?

Ka.-i look tho top hoartsand ihe <iro nf clubl Kaslthen led M o t h e r club, andSouth needed tho rest of tho.Inrks.

It didn't take long Southled the i c e and k ing ofspades Down one.

How could South guess Ihotrump position?

IDENTITY

The important clue was'hat K.ist wasn't Santa Clau.1.

When West led the Ihree ofhearts and next played thodouoo ho was obviously out ofhoarts Why did East switchto clubs'

If K.isi had Q x x or J i nor I wo low trumps he wouldsurely lead a third heart. Hewould switch to clubs only ifho had Q-.r-x or Q J - x x oftrumps and didn't want Southto discover that West couldn'toverruff

Since no other explanationmakes sense, South shouldwin the second club in dum-Bl) .Hid lake an immediatetrump finesse If necessary,he can return to dummy witha diamond to repeat Iheflnene

Kast dealerlioth sides vulnerable

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flock29 Pariah30 Eaeygait32 Silkworm33 Disease

fighters36 Possesses37 Auld lang -38 Miser's

protowm38 Card game42 Of ribs44 Deadlock46 This: Sp.48 Off one's

oats49 Two four-

somes60 Merino

products52 Ledger

Items67 Pioneer

auto maker69 Green

parrot60 Bogus

jewelry63 Palms66 Inundates

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events71 Georgian

Russian72 OWtlme

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song88 Crooked road89 Th« birds91 Philippine

peasant

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jacket orlaced

109 Golf begitems

110 Bogussystems

South W M II <P Double PassPass 2 * PassPass 4 • All Pass

Opening lead - <v> 3

DAILY QUESTION

Partner opens with onediamond, and the next playerpasses You hold: • 4 V 3 2O 10 7 6 5 2 • 10 6 r> 3 2.What do vou say?

A N S W E R : Bid two dia-monds This is a ghastlyhand, but the five trumps andthe side singleton should beuseful . You may have tostruggle to keep partner frombidding a slam1

(A POCKKT 0 U 1 D B TOI U U I M . K written by AlfredShetnwold Is available de lyour copy by sending I t 25 toihe Red Bank Register. P.OHnx 1000. I.os Angeles. Calif90053 )

DOWN• 1 WWII

veterans2 Ben Adhem3 Uptight4 Servsnts

of old6 Soak6 Sailor's

way: abbr.7 Chinees

stable boy8 "The - got

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10 Perform afunction

11 Cries12 Anger fit13 Fancy

issue: abbr.14 Actress

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16 Head: ft.17 Betrayer18 Anesthetic19 Reporter's

question20 Spooky21 Terror26 Criticized31 Unit34 Col. course35 Move from

side toside

37 Retail man38 Acts sur-

prised39 Service

dub40 Stan's

sidekick41 James III43 Rips44 Felines

45 Gambler'schit

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as chaff61 Room: Ger.53 Planter's

purchase54 Retract66 Refrain

syllables56 Lose* to

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excuse, InEngland

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field70 Stan or

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rubber*118 Discontinue120 Through:

pref.121 loch -124 " - Little

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book126 Kind of

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abbr.A u w e n

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114 Secondhand118 Square

mater119 "Cap'n - "122 Placee123 Sweet one

of song125 Repelrshop

item127 Meerschsums

133 Against134 Miss Adams136 Bad137 Damp place138 Consanguin-

eous141 Touch

ground146 Former

Italianmagistral*

147 Math concept;161 Put up "162 Finland

yews153 Saudi -164 Six-line

stanzas166 Liberates156 Malayan

island•a page I t

128 Love129 Morse and

others130 Choose132 Great works133 Robertson

th* actor135 Mlscha -137 Printing

direction138 Declaim139 Sponsorship140 Gaelic142 - Eban143 German veto144 Haul '146 Sautt -

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stooge*148 Forty wink*160 Aetna*

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32 Depot: abbr.

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46 Tender toth# touch

46 Currantstyle*

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80 U.S. timezone

if THE NEW JERSEYEASTER SEAL SOCIETY

AT •

fjmonmouth mallrU WYCKOFF ROAD AT THE EATONTOWN CIRCLE

FRIDAY and SATURDAYMARCH 2nd & 3rd

COME TO THE MALL'S MID-LEVEL, RITE AID COURTTO CHEER ON YOUR FAVORITE COUPLE AS THEY DANCE

TO RAISE NEEDED MONEY FOR THE EASTER SEAL SOCIETY.

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

FRIDAY 7-9:30 P.M.* and SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

•The public will not be allowed in the Mall between 9:30 P.M. and 9 A.M.

By BETTY DEBNAM FEBRUARY 25, 1979

A Texas player shines!

Big Kick for U.S. Soccer

Joey Scamardi with his medal t•hows he took part in theinternational "Kick Me" contest. All orthe 16 boys that took part got a medallike thid one.

Houston, Texas — "When Ifirst started soccer, there werenot many clubs. A lot of kidsdidn't know what soccer was,"champ Joey Scamardi told TheMini Page.

That was 7 years ago. Nowkids know what soccer is.

Joey practices as many as1,000 headers (bouncing theball on your head) and 2,200kicks in a workout.

Buenos Aires, Argentina —Soccer is a sport that is usuallyplayed well by players fromcountries other than the U.S.

But the U.S. is fast turning outgood soccer players. ,

Joey Scamardi, then age 14, -proved this in August of lastsummer.

He came in third in theworldwide "Kick Me"contest.

He competed against 15 boysfrom Argentina, Brazil, Canada,Chile and Holland.

At one time he was leading witha score of 148. Then two boys fromArgentina each came up with ascore of 149.

These two held a runoff for firstand second place.

But the fact that Joey placed sohigh is certainly a big kick forU.S. soccer.

International "Kick Me" contestwinners. Two boys from Argentinaand third-place winner Joe Scamardior Houston, Texas. Joey was only onepoint behind the two top winners.

Why soccer is BIG in the U.S.A.A few years ago, the soccer superstar

Pele came to this country and played for aU.S. team. Although he is no longerplaying soccer in the U.S.A., he did callattention to the sport.

Soccer-is also cheap to play. It takes aball, a flat field and a couple of sticks forgoal posts.

Uniforms are shirts and shorts. Andsoccer is fun for a kid of any size.

World CupThe international "Kick Me"

contest was held during the1978 World Cup.

The World Cup is a contestbetween pro soccer teams fromall over the world. It is heldevery four years.

Last year's winner wasArgentina. The next WorldCup will be held in Spain in1982.

How many timescan you keep theball bouncing onone Toot?

"Kick Me" ContestSoccer's "Kick Me" contest is to soccer

what "Punt, Pass and Kick" is to football.It's a yearly skills contest sponsored by

Coca-Cola.Kids 16 and under compete.They must juggle the ball with their feet

and head without letting it touch theground or their hands.

They must kick to a goal and they mustdribble the ball.

•How manytimes canyou keepthe ballbouncingusing yourhead?

JVI iru

Rabbit SaladGet an adult to help you grate and chop up someof these things.

You'll need:• 1 cup grated carrots• 1 cup chopped celery• 1 cup chopped apples

• xh cup raisins• 3A cup mayonnaise• '/> teaspoon salt

What to do:1. Mix all ingredients.2. Chill in the refrigerator beforeserving.3. Serve on a bed of lettuce.Serves 6 people.

"UPS

Supersport: Giorgio ChinagliaSome soccer fans probably

think Giorgio Chinaglia hasa "bionic" foot.

During the 1978 season, theNew York Cosmos forwardbooted 34 goals in 3d regular-season matches.

That gave Giorgio theindividual scoring title forthe North American Soccer League.

Giorgio was a star in Italy before joining theCosmos. He recently became a United Statescitizen. He is 31 years old and is married. Hehas three children.

He is involved in other businesses. He isdeveloping real estate in New Jersey. He alsoendorses foods and sporting-goods products.

Now your children canenjoy our easy how-torecipes in book form.

Throw away your TVdinners — throw awayyour TV! — the kids arethe kitchen and they'recooking with class.

in

From beverages to desserts, fromappeleasers to plum-deliciouspinlcliiiKH. this handy cookbookwill make its owners tin- firm onthe block in culinary reputation.Here are recipes line an companyfare but eMV enough to he kids'stuff. (Spiral bound* 128 pact's:7x10.AI.I.OKIIKHS AKK I'OSTI'AID

i l'lease send copies of' "Th« Mini Page Kids-

Cookbook" nl $•!.;•."> per copy.Total Amount KudosedNAMK - .ADDKKSSCITY . _ ,. STATK , ZIP.Send ytnir t'hi'rk <»r nmnc\ urtit-r withshtpftmn inntrurtittif* t<>"The Mini 1'aue Kids' Cookbook1

I- II till." IU*W*p(l|HTl>700 S q i i i M ' Kil M I H M H I I . KJIIIHUK IJ.JII-'

Go letterto letter.

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Go dot todot andcolor.

• it

The teamsof the NorthAmericanSoccerLeague

Atlanta Chief*

California Surf(Anaheim)

Chicago Sting

Dallas Tornado

Detroit Espress

Ft. LauderdaleStrikers

WashingtonDiplomats

VancoverWhltecaps Tulsa Roughnecks Toronto Metros

Tampa BayRowdies

Soccer...the Waking Giant

A soccer victory — Werner Roth, the captain of theNew York Cosmos, waves a Soccer Bowl trophythat his team won last year by beating the SeattleSounders. The Cosmos will be the team to beatthis year.

Soccer, the most popularsport in the world, nas beenasleep in the U.S.A.

But soccer is waking up.

And kids are doing thewaking.

Kids are playing the gameby the thousands.

Kids are now hoping to winsoccer scholarships tocollege. Many are dreamingof turning pro. Many justenjoy the sport.

Kids are dragging theirparents to pro games.

Kids are causing thissleeping giant to become amajor sport.

Watch for soccer onnational TV (ABC) startingthis spring.

There are other soccerleagues in this country, butthe biggest with 24 pro teamsis the North American SoccerLeague.

The league is wide-awakefor the pro soccer seasonstarting this month.

Is there apro teamnear you?

Seattle Sounders

San JoseEarthquakes

San DiegoSockers

Rochester Lancers

Portland Timbers

Philadelphia Fury

ULAZTfCS

HoustonHurricane

Los AngelesAztecs Memphis Rogues

Minnesota Kicks(Minneapolis)

New EnglandTea Men New York Cosmos Oakland Stompers

SOCCER mmtmWordB about soccer are hidden in the block below. See ifyou can find: soccer, ball, player, kick, coaches, referees,field, offside, game, heeling, heading, defensive,thrdw-in, goal, center, pass, run, goalie, linesman,forward, circle, offensive and block.

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'ALPHA BETTYCanyou read these words that start withthe FR blend?

frightened Frenchman

freeze

We did not label one of the FR words.Can you find it?

John Travolta—superstar of films, TV and recordsToday, John Travolta is

one of the biggest, if not thebiggest, stars in showbusiness.

It takes a lot of people towatch out for his booming *career.

He has managers, agents,lawyers, business advisersand publicity people.

Most of his fans first sawhim as Vinnie Barbarino inthe TV series "WelcomeBack, Kotter."

But he started acting waybefore then.

John Travolta aa Vinnie-Barbarino in"Welcome Back, Hotter."

Travolta is one of sixchildren. He becameinterested in acting becauseof his mother. She was anactress and drama teacher.

He was "discovered" by anagent at the age of 16. Hewas acting in a play in hishome state of New Jersey.

His successes include twosmash hits, "Saturday NightFever" and "Grease."

His hits also includeseveral record albums.

He spends what free timehe has flying his ownairplane. UPS

le-Ie-JoAll of the words in this puzzle end with theletters "ight."

Across ^1. Turn on the

2. Turnnot left.3. Close-fitting.4. When the sungoes down.

L

NMOa Down5. The sun is6. Ability to see.7. Sudden alarm.

8SOH3V

Color by

3

See if you can find: span •button • teapot• word "Mini" • bcttle •" 2 flowerpots • leaf• toaster • light bulb • cup • 2 cooking pots• pencil • letter "B"

Luis Lopez of Baldwin Park,California. He has threebrothers who also playsoccer.

Luis Lopez:Record Breaker

Luis Lopez set a worldrecord.

He juggled a soccerball 16.219 timesnonstop. He used hishead, feet and legs.

The record-settingevent was seen byseveral California youthsoccer officials. Luiswas practicing for thenational U.S. "KickMe" contest held inAugust.

He didn't win, but hecertainly put on a show.

His record exceeds therecord listed in the"Guinness Book ofWorld Records" by 3,000contacts. cum

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