16
SCOTCH PLAINS THE TIMES FANWOOD VOLUME 26- NUMBER? SCOTCH PLAINS-FANWOOD, N.J. FiBRUARY 17, 1883 25 Cents ST. BART'S HOLDS KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION 3/8, 9, 10 St. Bartholomew's School will hold registra- tion for Kindergarten, September, 1983 on Tues- day, Wednesday and Thursday, March 8, 9, 10 for residents of Scotch Plains and, Fanwood Registration will take place from 9 am to 12 noon and from 1 to 3 pm in the A.V. Room. The child must be five years old on or before November 30, 1983 and must be brought to the school at the time of registration. The following documents must be presented on Registration Day: Birth Certificate, Baptismal Certificate (unless baptized at St. Bartholomew's) and up- to-date health records. ASHBROOK ANNUAL FUND RAISER SET FOR FEBRUARY 26TH The residents of Ashbrook Nursing Home are sponsoring a Chinese Auction, the proceeds to be donated to the American Heart Association. So HAVE A HEART and help Ashbrook help the Association during the February annual fund raising month. The residents are looking for contributions to be auctioned off. If you have any such items, please contact the recreation department at Ashbrook, 889-5500. Date of the big event is Saturday, February 26 from 1-3. Come join the fun. LITTLE LEAGUE REGISTRATION FEBRUARY 26 & MARCH 5 The Scotch Plains-Fanwood Little League will hold registration for the 1983 season on Saturday, February 26 and Saturday, March 5 at the Scotch Plains Municipal Building from 10 am to 1 pm. Each child must be accompanied by a parent or guardian and must present a birth certificate. Children born between August 1, 1970 and July 31. 1974 are eligible to play this season. Returning players as well as new players must register. New players will be asked to participate in a tryout which will be held on March 19th. Details will be provided at registration. If you have any questions call Les Keely at 889-5713 or Mike Michalisin at 233-1994. HOLY NAME SOCIETY LAUNCHES SPRING PAPER DRIVE The Holy Name Society of the Church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Scotch Plains, and the Knights of Columbus will conduct a used newspaper drive on the 5th and 6th of March. Please save your old newspapers, tie them in bundles and bring them to the Church parking lot at 1571 Martine Ave., South, between the hours of 9:00 am and 2:00 pm. Please • no magazines or slick inserts. BOOK DISCUSSION MEET MOVED TO MARCH 22 The Fanwood Book Discussion Group will not meet on Feb. 22nd as anticipated. The discussion of Anne Tyler's "Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant" has been moved to Tues- day, March 22nd, 7:30 p.m. in the Fanwood Memorial Library. This should give everyone ample time to aquire and read the book (due out in paperback on March 1st). Mayor Larry Newcomb rides shotgun with P.W. snow crew Newcomb's Notes cancelled. We will be night after the regular holding other sessions council session. Just as the snow meeting on Feb. 15. to discuss those These changes in the storm altered the lives That did not happen, in changes and infaet we law include a provision of" all of "our citizens, part because of the discussed some of that would allow Coun- the Blizzard of '83 ef- storm, and in part those changes Tuesday Plcuhc mm t» pn 8 e i6_ footed the Township in because of changes in many ways besides the the laws effecting necessity of plowing municipal budgets the snow, from enacted last month, postponed meetings Your Council had dates to the 1983 scheduled a special budget. meeting to discuss Last month we an- those changes in the nounced plans to in- law last Saturday morn- troduce the Townshp's ing. Obviously that 1983 budget at the our meeting had to be N,J. blames Fanwood for bridge repair delay by Liz Gautler Weblo Cub Pack 277 from McGinn School opened the Fanwood council meeting with the Pledge of Allegiance on February 9 to an au- dience of two. The scouts, accompanied by Scoutmaster Carl Anderson and Den Chief, Eagle Scout Tim Peeney, told Mayor Ted Trumpp and council about some of the ac- tivities they had under- taken as projects. Mayor Trumpp com- mended the boys for their service to the community. Councilman Dave Charzewski announced that Joel Whitaker was elected chairman of the Planning Board and Robert Thayer elected vice chairman. Thayer was also appointed Planning Board liaison to the Environmental Commission. Councilman Doug Clausen read a memo to the Mayor and coun- cil from Police Chief Anthony ParentI which detailed a conversation Parent! had with the Union County engineer regarding the condition of the Terrill Road bridge. In the engineer's opinion, the bridge has deteriorated to the point where it should be closed. According to the memo, the New Jersey Department of Transportation is blam- ing the Fanwood government for pro- Please turn to page 16 Scotch Plains Rescue Squad starts 46th year of service Pictured above, left to right: Ed Fiedler, 1st Lieute nant; Ray DeMarco, captain; Ed Sorge, president Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its annual installation and awards dinner at Snuf- fy's Restaurant in Scotch Plains recently. The newly installed of- ficers for 1983 are as follows: president, Er- cole Sorge; vice presi- dent, Nancy Miller; secretary, Chet Batog; treasurer, Harold Hill, Jr.; captain, Ray DeMar- co; 1st Lieutenant, Ed Fiedler; 2nd Lieutenant, MattZeleski. Delegates Please turn to page 6 The subject is lions... and roses on Waldon Road Artist Peter Ure got inspired while shoveling snow over the weekend and sculpted the two lions on either side of the driveway at his home on 20 Waldon Road in Fanwood. In addition, Peter made a snow rose and even tried to tint If pink, but the warm weather melted the coloring through the snow. Please turn to page 3 Fan. Planning Board starts hearings on firehouse - again Approximately 35 people attended a lengthy public hearing for the proposed Fan- wood firehouse on Monday night's Plann- ing Board meeting in the Community House. Borough Attorney Frank Blatz started the proceedings by calling Richard Berry, architect for the project, to the witness stand. Robert Kraus, at- torney for the Watson Road residents who fil- ed an appeal to the Planning Board's ap- proval of the Site Plan and Conditional Use application in December, 1981, cross examined Berry, as did former Councilwoman Please turn to Kuran named Jaycee award winner for *83 Patricia M. Kuran of "The selection com- Fanwood was named miteee, Kent Rollison, and r the 1983 recipient of Randy Klimek the William D. Mason Distinguished Award given by the Fanwood- Scotch Plains Jaycees. According to club president David W. Pickering, the award was established in honor of the late Bill Mason., 1964-1965 Jaycee president, who was an example of a dedicated and active community leader. The award is presented an- nually to a citizen who has exhibited meritorious community service and leadership. PATRICIA KURAN

New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    4

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

SCOTCH PLAINS THE TIMESFANWOOD

VOLUME 26- NUMBER? SCOTCH PLAINS-FANWOOD, N.J. FiBRUARY 17, 1883 25 Cents

ST. BART'S HOLDS KINDERGARTENREGISTRATION 3/8, 9, 10

St. Bartholomew's School will hold registra-tion for Kindergarten, September, 1983 on Tues-day, Wednesday and Thursday, March 8, 9, 10for residents of Scotch Plains and, FanwoodRegistration will take place from 9 am to 12noon and from 1 to 3 pm in the A.V. Room.

The child must be five years old on or beforeNovember 30, 1983 and must be brought to theschool at the time of registration. The followingdocuments must be presented on RegistrationDay: Birth Certificate, Baptismal Certificate(unless baptized at St. Bartholomew's) and up-to-date health records.

ASHBROOK ANNUAL FUND RAISERSET FOR FEBRUARY 26TH

The residents of Ashbrook Nursing Home aresponsoring a Chinese Auction, the proceeds tobe donated to the American Heart Association.So HAVE A HEART and help Ashbrook help theAssociation during the February annual fundraising month.

The residents are looking for contributions tobe auctioned off. If you have any such items,please contact the recreation department atAshbrook, 889-5500. Date of the big event isSaturday, February 26 from 1-3. Come join thefun.

LITTLE LEAGUE REGISTRATIONFEBRUARY 26 & MARCH 5

The Scotch Plains-Fanwood Little Leaguewill hold registration for the 1983 season onSaturday, February 26 and Saturday, March 5 atthe Scotch Plains Municipal Building from 10am to 1 pm. Each child must be accompaniedby a parent or guardian and must present abirth certificate.

Children born between August 1, 1970 andJuly 31. 1974 are eligible to play this season.Returning players as well as new players mustregister.

New players will be asked to participate in atryout which will be held on March 19th. Detailswill be provided at registration. If you have anyquestions call Les Keely at 889-5713 or MikeMichalisin at 233-1994.

HOLY NAME SOCIETY LAUNCHESSPRING PAPER DRIVE

The Holy Name Society of the Church of theImmaculate Heart of Mary, Scotch Plains, andthe Knights of Columbus will conduct a usednewspaper drive on the 5th and 6th of March.

Please save your old newspapers, tie them inbundles and bring them to the Church parkinglot at 1571 Martine Ave., South, between thehours of 9:00 am and 2:00 pm. Please • nomagazines or slick inserts.

BOOK DISCUSSION MEETMOVED TO MARCH 22

The Fanwood Book Discussion Group willnot meet on Feb. 22nd as anticipated. Thediscussion of Anne Tyler's "Dinner at theHomesick Restaurant" has been moved to Tues-day, March 22nd, 7:30 p.m. in the FanwoodMemorial Library. This should give everyoneample time to aquire and read the book (due outin paperback on March 1st).

Mayor Larry Newcomb ridesshotgun with P.W. snow crew

Newcomb's Notescancelled. We will be night after the regularholding other sessions council session.

Just as the snow meeting on Feb. 15. to d i s c u s s t h o s e These changes in thestorm altered the lives That did not happen, in changes and infaet we law include a provisionof" all of "our citizens, part because of the d iscussed some of that would allow Coun-the Blizzard of '83 ef- s torm, and in part those changes Tuesday Plcuhc mm t» pn8e i6_footed the Township in because of changes inmany ways besides the the laws e f f e c t i n gnecessity of plowing m u n i c i p a l b u d g e t sthe s n o w , f r om enacted last month,postponed meetings Your Counci l haddates to the 1983 scheduled a specialbudget. meeting to d iscuss

Last month we an- those changes in thenounced plans to in- law last Saturday morn-troduce the Townshp's ing. Obviously that1983 budget at the our meeting had to be

N,J. blames Fanwoodfor bridge repair delay

by Liz GautlerWeblo Cub Pack 277

from McGinn Schoolopened the Fanwoodcouncil meeting with thePledge of Allegiance onFebruary 9 to an au-dience of two. Thescouts, accompaniedby Scoutmaster CarlAnderson and DenChief, Eagle Scout TimPeeney, told Mayor TedTrumpp and councilabout some of the ac-tivities they had under-taken as projects.Mayor Trumpp com-mended the boys fortheir service to thecommunity.

Councilman DaveCharzewski announcedthat Joel Whitaker waselected chairman of thePlanning Board andRobert Thayer elected

vice chairman. Thayerwas also appointedPlanning Board liaisonto the EnvironmentalCommission.

Councilman DougClausen read a memoto the Mayor and coun-cil from Police ChiefAnthony ParentI whichdetailed a conversationParent! had with theUnion County engineerregarding the conditionof the Terrill Roadbridge. In theengineer's opinion, thebridge has deterioratedto the point where itshould be closed.

According to thememo, the New JerseyDepartment ofTransportation is blam-ing the Fanwoodgovernment for pro-

Please turn to page 16

Scotch Plains Rescue Squadstarts 46th year of service

Pictured above, left to right: Ed Fiedler, 1st Lieutenant; Ray DeMarco, captain; Ed Sorge, presidentMatt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant.

The Scotch PlainsRescue Squad held itsannual installation andawards dinner at Snuf-fy's Restaurant inScotch Plains recently.The newly installed of-ficers for 1983 are asfollows: president, Er-

cole Sorge; vice presi-dent, Nancy Miller;secretary, Chet Batog;treasurer, Harold Hill,Jr.; captain, Ray DeMar-co; 1st Lieutenant, EdFiedler; 2nd Lieutenant,MattZeleski. Delegates

Please turn to page 6

The subject is lions...and roses on Waldon Road

Artist Peter Ure got inspired while shoveling snowover the weekend and sculpted the two lions oneither side of the driveway at his home on 20Waldon Road in Fanwood. In addition, Peter made asnow rose and even tried to tint If pink, but the warmweather melted the coloring through the snow.

Please turn to page 3

Fan. Planning Board startshearings on firehouse - again

Approximately 35people attended alengthy public hearingfor the proposed Fan-wood firehouse onMonday night's Plann-ing Board meeting inthe Community House.Borough AttorneyFrank Blatz started theproceedings by callingRichard Berry, architectfor the project, to the

witness stand.Robert Kraus, at-

torney for the WatsonRoad residents who fil-ed an appeal to thePlanning Board's ap-proval of the Site Planand Conditional Useapp l ica t ion inDecember, 1981, crossexamined Berry, as didformer Councilwoman

Please turn to

Kuran named Jayceeaward winner for *83

Patricia M. Kuran of "The selection com-Fanwood was named miteee, Kent Rollison,

andr

the 1983 recipient of Randy Klimekthe William D. MasonDistinguished Awardgiven by the Fanwood-Scotch Plains Jaycees.

According to clubpresident David W.Pickering, the awardwas established inhonor of the late BillMason., 1964-1965Jaycee president, whowas an example of adedicated and activecommunity leader. Theaward is presented an-nually to a citizen whohas exhib i tedmeritorious communityservice and leadership. PATRICIA KURAN

Page 2: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

mCO

3

m

UJ

UJ

Police News

cFANWOOD

On Wednesday, Feb.9, a customer at theSunoco Service Stationon South Avenue filledhis tank with $20 worthof gas and drove offwithout paying. Thematter is under in-vestigation.

Police were called toa Montrose Avenueresidence to quell adisturbance on Sunday,the 13th. A knife wasconfiscated from a16-year-old Toms Riverjuvenile who wasvisiting the area. Com-plaints are pendingagainst the youth.

A fire alarm at 4:11a.m. early Monday mor-ning brought police toanother Montrose Ave.residence. The 20-year-old son of the ownerwas using oil lampsand candles to supple-ment heat in his roomwhen the fire ignited.The fire was extinguish-ed before firemen arriv-ed. While at the scene,police confiscated alarge quantity offireworks in the son'sroom.

Lt. Robert Carboysaid the departmenthad received severalcomplaints againstjuveniles who were cut-ting across private pro-perty on their way toand from school. Hewould like to warn thechildren not to useprivate property, whichIncludes the railroadtracks, for walkways. Inaddition to being ex-

tremely dangerous, asis the case of therailroad area, an ap-pearance inmagistrate's courtcould result if thejuveniles continued toignore property owners'warnings.

SCOTCH PLAINSAn armed robber

held up the Burger KingRestaurant on Route 22at approximately 7:30p.m. on Wednesday,Feb. 9. The gunman,flashing what appearedto be a ,30 caliberrevolver, forced theassistant manager togive him money fromthe deposit bags, walk-ed out the door and fledon foot east on Route22. Police are lookingfor a black male in hislate, 20's, with closecropped hair, wearing achecked trench coatwith dark pants anddark rimmed glasses.

On Thursday thepolice received a callaround 9:30 a.m. from a13-year-old girl who hadreturned home onWashington Ave. with afriend to pick up someschool books. The girlnoted a green van in thedriveway of her homeand called police froma neighbor's home.When police arrived,the van had been mov-ed inside the garage.Entering the home witha key from theteenager, police sear-ched the home andfound a suspect, KevinG, Brown, 23, ofPlscataway, hiding inthe attic. The van wassearched and Brownwas arrested forpossession of stolenproperty, some ofwhich was taken in

previous burglaries.Friday morning

Coles Sport Shop onFront Street called tosay a juvenile hadtaken $10 from thestore and ran out, goingdown Front Street.While on patrol OfficerFred Brown noted ayoung man answeringthe description andpicked him up for ques-t ioning. At head-quarters the youth ad-mitted taking themoney and turned thebill over to police.Larceny charges will beproffered against the15-year-old ScotchPlains juvenile.

Later that evening acaller informed policethat a dog was attack-ing a woman at 1561Front Street. OfficerRichard Palentcharresponded and foundJoanne Thompson, 25,on a porch railing, try-Ing to dislodge a pitbulldog who had pulledoff her boot, and wastrying to pull her fromthe porch rail by theother leg. The womanwas screaming, "Shootthe dog!" when Palent-char struck the animalthree times with hisnight stick. Having noeffect, Palentchar drewhis service revolver andshot the dog at pointblank range. The doglet go of the woman,and lunged for Palent-char's throat. The of-fice shot the dog againand the animal con-tinued to attack Palent-char, A third shot killedthe animal and thewoman was taken toMuhlenberg Hospitalby the Rescue Squadwhere she was treatedfor dog bite wounds

Eagle Scout Tim Peeneyhonored by Trooo 33

On Monday evening, began with the presen-tation of Colors and the

LOST OUR LEASE

GIGANTIC SAVINGSON EVERYTHING IN STOCK

DWasher-Dryers• Refrigerators • FreezersD Stoves • HeatersD Microwave OvensD Clocks • Clockradios

AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE!

SCOTCH PLAINS APPLIANCECENTER

435 Park Ave. Scotch Plains 322-2280(across the street from Police Station)

WE WILL STILL BE DOING OUR REPAIRSERVICE

February 7, Boy ScoutTroop 33 of Fanwoodconvened an EagleScout Court of Honor attheir sponsoring in-st i tut ion, FanwoodPresbyterian Church, tohonor their newestEagle Scout, Timothy J.Peeney. Tim, who is inhis junior year atScotch Plains-Fanwood High School,is the son of Mr, andMrs. James D. Peeney,Fanwood. He plans toattend college and pur-sue a medical career.

The Eagle ScoutAward is the highestachievement award inScouting. To reach thisgoal, a boy must earn atleast twenty-one meritbadges includingeleven requiredbadges. In addition,while a Life Scout, aboy must plan, develop,and give leadership toothers in a service pro-ject helpful to hisreligious institution,school, or community.Tim selected as hisEagle Project the clean-Ing and painting of theFanwood Railroad Sta-tion. He has received aletter of commendationfrom the New JerseyTransit Corporation fora job well done.

The Court of Honor

and released. The dog,belonging to herboyfriend, was named"Renegade".

Early Monday morn-Ing police receivedseveral calls fromresidents on GrandStreet stating their carshad been entered andvandalized. Policeresponded and found a13-year-old ScotchPlains paper boy in theact of removing a radiofrom an auto. They confiscated severalburglary tools from thejuvenile and remandedthe youth to theJuvenile DetentionCenter in Eliiabeth.

Pledge of Allegiance tothe Flag, followed byan Invocation by Rev.Bernard Johnson and awelcome by TroopCommitteeman JoeKnapp. Father JohnLester of St. Bar-tholomew the ApostleChurch was the princi-ple speaker. His topicwas Genesis, he drewthe analogy of thewonders of nature andthe appreciation thatScouts have of itthrough their outdoorprogram.

Tim was presentedfor this Eagle Award forhis former Scout-master, Dick Payne.Payne was Scout-master of Troop 33 atthe time Tim joined thetroop after completingthree years as a CubScout with Pack 277earning the Bear Badgeand Arrow of Light, thehighest Cub ScoutAward. The meaning ofand requirements forthe Eagle Award wereaddressed by Advance-ment Chairman FredKramps.

The award was madeto Tim by Lester Fried-man, Distr ict Ex-ecutive, and ClaytonKynes, District Com-missioner of the Col-onial District of Wat-chung Area Council.Both Senator DonaldDlFrancesco andMayor Ted Trumppwere in attendance atthe ceremony and gaveTim their personal con-

TIM PEENEYgratulations,

To close the presen-tation, Tim gave hismother an Eagle lapelpin and his father anEagle tie tack symboliz-ing the involvement ofthe total family in hisa c c o m p l i s h m e n t .Those in attendancesaw a unique scoutingprogram which includ-ed an Ini t iat ionceremony, the transferof two scouts fromanother troop and theadvancement of scoutsin every rank inscouting from Scout toEagle.

the ceremony wascompleted with thesinging of Qod BlessAmerica and benedic-tion by Father Lester.The members of Troop33 and their guests con-gratulated Tim and hisfamily at a receptionfollowing the Court ofHonor.

CORRECTIONThe office of the

Thomas Colavito firmcalled to say that the In-formation on grass clip-ping service pick-upwas erroneously givenby a customer at theFeb. 5 Listening Postmeeting in ScotchPlains.

The firm's policy istwo bags of grass clipp-

ing twice weekly atcurb side April throughOctober 31 instead ofone bag weekly April toOctober as stated. This

service is in addition tothe one bag Includedwith normal garbagepick-up, and is $31 forthe season, payable inadvance.

ftft

ftft

S3*

A PARK-LIKE AREAwith lovely shade trees and property for children's play surrounds thislovely spacious home, just listed in beautiful south Scotch Plains. Largefamily room with fireplace, 4 bedrooms, 2Vi baths. Retiring owner asking$1S4,B00.

BARRETT & CRAIN

- *

• • • Realtors"Three Colonial Offices"

2 New Providence Rd. 43 Elm Street 302 E. Broad StreetMountainside Westfield Westfield

233-!8qO 232J18OO 232-6300SERVING WESTFIELD, MOUNTAINSIDE, SCOTCH PLAINS. FANWOOD

SOMERSET COUNTY.. HUNT^RDON COUNTY and VICINITY

ftftftftftftft

Page 3: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

S.P, woman top winner intrip to Italy contest

VIOtETTA AGQGILLAVioletta Acooella of

Scotch Plains won atrip to Italy for two plus$1,000 In a recentNormal cooking con-test with her recipe for"Sliced Eggplant Mold-ed with Pasta",

Much l ike thefamous Pillsbury Bake-off, ten finalists wereselected to preapretheir dishes In the Rain-bow Room of the R.C.A,building In New York.Contest judges FredFerretti (New YorkTimes), John Mariani

(Attenzione and Food &Wine), Marie Bianco(Newsday), AnnaTeresa Callen(cookbook author) andCarlo Monelli (generalmanager for AlitaliaAirlines) selected threetop winners of whichAcocella was namednumero uno.

Accocella and hus-band Tony from Tony'sPharmacy In ScotchPlains, were interview-ed last Sunday onChannel 47 WNJU TV.She Is now in the pro-cess of wr i t ing acookbook, togetherwith daughter Marlsa,an art director for anadvertising agency inNew York, whichshould be releasedsometime during thesummer.

The Acocellas planto use their winning tripto visit relatives in Italyand co l lect morerecipes to be Includedin the forthcomingcookbook.

Acocella's prize win-ning recipe can befound in the CookingCorner column of thisIssue of THE TIMES.

Mental Health Players giverave performance at Terrillby Sheela Peace Zipern

S.P. man receives awardfor Narcotics program

SPFHS Music Dept. tosponsor Marathon of Music

front squad from Scotch Plalns-Fanwood RaidersMarching Band performs at Columbus Day paradein New York City,

The Scotch Plains-Fanwood High SchoolMusic Department, inconjunction with theMusic Booster Associa-tion, will be sponsoringa Marathon of Music onSaturday, February 26.

The entertainmentwill begin at 8:00 AMand continue for tenhours with perfor-mances by all of themusical groups in theschool as well as thefront squads which arepart of the MarchingBand. The marathonwill be the last majorfundraiser of the year,and each participant isexpected to obtain a

promise of a total of$30 for various spon-sors with pledges to becollected after theevent.

The public is invitedto come to the highschool any time duringthe day to enjoy thevarious presentationsand to support thestudents efforts. Themoney raised will beallocated toward theMusic Booster totalbudget of $43,000 ofwhich a substantial

por t ion wi l l benecessary to pay for an

evaluation to be attend-ed in Ocean City,Maryland, April 28-30.

"Why do your kidshave to wear designerjeans? What's wrongwith K-Mart Jeans?",were some questionsasked by youngsters oftwo 'fathers' portrayingopposite philosophiesto a rapt audience lastWednesday evening atTerrill Middle School.Kids attending the per-formance of UnionCounty's Mental HealthPlayers wondered ifone father's emphasison the 'right' clothesbecause he could af-ford them, was like'buying' friends for hisson.

People came towatch the troupe, spon-sored by Terrill's P.T.A.and the N.J. MentalHealth Assoc, which iscomprised of healthcare professionals, por-tray problems fromeveryday life and so do-ing, involve the au-dience In the processof discovering theirown views on variousissues.

The players were in-troduced by the coor-dinator for Union Coun-ty, Marsha Katz, She ex-plained role-playing asa technique to exploreproblems. Many of thedilemas of contem-porary life were goingto be highlighted, shesaid, typical of themodern condition.

In the first skit per-taining to latch keychildren, Fanwood resi-dent and mental healthplayer, Carol Nortonportrayed the principalwho cal led two'parents', Morgan Mur-ray (a mental healthworker at Fair OaksHospital) and KimSchlough (a police of-f icer) together todiscuss their chlldrens1

vandalism when leftalone after school. Thenarrator stopped that' s i t ua t i on ' to ask

parents if they knewwhat activities theirchildren were involvedIn when unsupervised.Was trust earned andthen given, or given,and then earned? Theplayers stressed it wasnot a topic for judg-ment but to open uppeople's thinking.

Throughout thedesigner clothing pro-blem between the two'fathers', Bill Haydenand Dan Lanigan (bothwi th Fair OaksHospital), children Inthe audience express-ed surprise that onefather would f indstatus through buyinghis children only "thefinest". It was clearly Il-lustrated how childrenbecome pressured bymany factors and haveto learn the differencebetween needs andwants.

One of the players,Kathie Crescenzl, anR.N., portrayed arecovered alcoholicand was 'interviewed'by Ms. Katz. She ex-plained how terrible lifewas for her family whenshe was drinking andhow she abused herchildren. Kids In the au-dience were askedwhat they knew aboutalcohol ism andteenage alcoholismwas discussed. Adultswere challenged as towhether they could

-stop having even asocial drink.

All situations wereexpertly portrayed withemotion so genuine theaudience could nothelp but respond. Asthis was the first timethe players had per-formed for children andadults, the troupe ex-pressed pleasure at theresponse and Inputreceived from ScotchP l a i n s - F a n w o o dstudents.

RESTAURANT& LOUNGE

GRANDOPENING!

Perfect Continental Cuisine

WEDNESDAYIS LADIES' NIGHT

THURSDAY IS MEN'S NIGHT8 P.M. 'til Closing,..Enjoy Your Second Drink

for ONLY SO Cents!

Live Entertainment & DancingWed,, Thurs., Fri, & Sat,

Happy Hour Weekdays 4-6:30"You're always in the pink at Jackie's"

F1985 Rt. 22 West • Scotch Plains • 322-1780{rear_eiitraneej)ehliid McDonald's. Take overpass)

m

m

35

>3

CD«

Edward F, Kwas of Scotch Plains, AssistantRegional Commissioner for U.S. Customs Opera-tions in New York, was the recipient of theMeritorious Executive Award for his establish-ment of an effective narcotics enforcement pro-gram,

Kwas instituted measures to streamline and Im-prove operations In the New York region, thus sav-ing the department nearly 3 million dollars In man-power savings. As a result of his program, recordsetting narcotics seizures have been affected,serving as a model for enforcement methodsthroughout the Customs Service.

Left to right, Kwas is congratulated by Customsofficial John lellizzi, right, after presentation byPresident Gerard Carey, center.

The subject is lions,,.Continued from page 1

Peter is a 1978 graduate of Scotch Plalns-Fanwood High School and a graduate of the duCretSchool of Arts in Plainfield. He is employed byBarry's Frame Shop In Plainfield,

I Repairs Are Our Business\A.M, AUTO CENTER,INC,

•Complete mechanical service•Body repairs - WKI.DING•Class work•Toeing• N.J. State Re-inspection

FOREIGN • DOMKSTIC233-2651

4LI Smith l.lnu-rSf.t

It's Diet Time...Oil Bill!

98$98$CASHCASH

200 GALLONMINIMUM

200 GALLONMINIMUM

ARCOPREMIUM OIL

232-2234

Page 4: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

rti

DCmUJ

UJ

5

UJ

A view from

Liz Gautter

Letters to the Editor

WINDS OF WARWell, I did it. I got

myself hooked on "TheWinds of War" eventhough I have neverread the book, andRobert Mitchum was anemotionless stick andAM McGraw was stillplaying "Qoodby Col-umbus" and PeterGraves (my, hasn't heaged, though?) was thelast person I would everoast as a romanticfigure capable of steal-ing the affections ofPolly Bergen (anothermiscast character witha capital M).

I didn't intend to gethooked. I was just go-ing to watch the firstepisode to see what allthe shouting and ex-pensive ads for the sagawere talking about. Andeven though the horren-dous casting jarredone's sensibilities, Icontinued to watch, if Iwere home, and follow-ed the panorama to thelast d isappoint ingchapter.

As the story unfold-ed, I kept asking theB.F. (Big Fellow) ifsuch-and-such reallyhappened, and werethe eventschronologica l ly inorder, etc. He, beingquite a history buff,turned to me and said,"Where was your headduring the war?"

I'll have to admit that

JUST A BREEZEit wasn't on the impen-ding doom in Europe. Iwas more concernedwith the glamour andexcitement of seeingthe hometown boysjoin up and just waitingfor the United States todeclare " w a r " ,whatever that was. Anda little later standing inline for nylons andcigarettes and buying10$ Savings Stampsand trying to wangle alittle more meat fromthe butcher (yes,Virginia, there weren'tany supermarketsthen), took all my atten-tion.

Another thing that,bothered one with"WOW".

I didn't recognize thewomen's apparel at all.Polly Bergen's designer1940's clothing didn'tlook like anything Iwore. Still I watched.And that is exactlywhat ABC hoped all ofAmerica would do.

I'll have to forgiveRobert Mitchum,though. His lack ofemotion stemmed fromhis desire to hide hispot belly with designerNavy uniforms. That'swhy he couldn't smileor react. He was justtoo concerned with hisdeteriorating physique.I understand that.Aren't w | alj^

The Scotch PlainsPublic Library will beoffer ing Children'sf i lms on Saturday,February 19 from 10-11a.m. for children ages2V2-12. Children under5 must be accom-panied by an adult.

The following filmswill be shown:

Strega Nona, DragonStew, The Wild Swansand It's So Nice toHave a Wolf Around theHouse.

Story Hour for pre-school children will beheld on Wednesday,February 23 from10-10:30 a.m. and from1-1:30 p.m. Story Hourfor children K-2 will beheld on Thursday,February 24, from3:45-4:15 p.m.

Firehouse...Coniinued from n;mt- IPatricia Kuran, actingas her own attorney.

Borough Clerk DanielMason, spokesman forthe Mayor and Council,took the stand to ex-plain the changesmade to the originalSite Plan. Much of thediscussion was con-cerned with the safetyaspect of the "passthrough" driveway that

All programs requireadvance registration inthe Children's Room.

The second half ofthe lecture on "CareerPlanning" sponsoredby the Donn CarolAssociates will be heldon Wednesday,February 23 at 7:30 p.m.in the downstairsmeeting room.

The Scotch Plains-Fanwood Arts Associa-tion will hold their an-nual artwork displayfrom February 23-26 inthe downstairs loungearea during Libraryhours.

We would like to re-mind our patrons thatthe Library will be openon Washington's Birth-day, Monday, February21.

will lead from the pre-s e n tpolice/employee/visitorparking lot to the lowerlot that will be used ex-clusively for firemenresponding to firealarms.

The hearing adjourn-ed shortly after 11 p.m.to be resumed February24 at the regularlyscheduled PlanningBoard meeting.

Dear Editor:On Friday evening,

February 4, we spentabout two-and-one-haif-hours (along with a fewhundred other parentsand students) at theScotch Plains-Fanwood High School.Since there appears tobe no shortage of peo-ple ready to tell uswhat's wrong with ourschools and our com-munity, we feel com-pelled to tell yourreaders aboutsomething that's right!

The occasion wasthe 1983 "Pops Con-cert"; an annual eventsroduced by the highschool Instrumentalmusic department toprovide an opportunityfor the various musicalgroups (e.g., marchingband, wind ensemble,etc.) to display thefruits of their laborswhile, at the same time,ra is ing a fewdesperately-neededdollars to help defraythe expense of sendingthis group to competi-tion in Ocean Cjty,Maryland, in April. Theresult was an eveningboth entertaining andexhilarating.

Under the carefultutelage of Mr. VincentTurturiello and Mr.Robert Brown (in-strumental music), andMrs. Carol Gecchineand Mrs. LaurieWellman (color guards),more than 300 studentsfrom 9th through 12thgrades have congealedinto a highly disciplin-ed, ta len ted , anddedicated assemblageof musicians. Our highschool marching bandwon nearly every com-petition it has enteredthus far this seasonand one need only towatch and hear a singleperformance to unders-tand why.

The high school in-strumental music pro-gram is one of thethings that is definitelyright about our schoolsystem. On behalf ofour fellow parents andresidents of our com-munities we would liketo thank Mr. "T" and hisassociates for giving ussomething to be proudof. Their efforts havebenefitted our com-muni t ies and ourschools but, most Im-portant of all, theirtireless dedication has

benefitted our childrenand for that we aremost thankful of all.

Sincerely,

Martha & Fred Hafer

Dear Editor:I'd like to discuss a

subject very close to allof us • TAXES. LastAugust, Congresspassed a sweeping newtax law which receiveda lot of attention in thenews media. I think It Isa reasonable assump-tion that most in-dividuals are not awarethat one section of thislaw gives the govern-ment permission to dipinto their savings ac-count, whether the in-terest on their savingsis ultimately subject totax or not, I can assureyou, it does.

And as a result ofthat legislation, on July1 the federal govern-ment will begin requir-ing all institutions thatmake interest or divi-dend payments towithhold 10% of thosepayments for federal in-come taxes and paythis money to the Inter-nal Revenue Service.What this amounts to isthat each and everyonewho receives such in-come will be requiredto make a mandatoryinterest-free loan to thegovernment until youfile your next tax returnin April 1984. You willhave no choice in thematter, and it will costyou the money in lossof interest.

It means that youand I and all the otherAmericans who are sav-ing for the future willlose a lot of money. Ithas been projected thatyou and ail of the othersavers nationwide willlose an estimated $1.5billion in the last half of1983 alone, and morethen $3 billion in 1984,since withholding willdeprive you of 10% of

Please turn to page 11

The Times reserves theright to edit or reject anyletters to the editor foreasons of good taste, clari-

ty of thought or space. Thebetters must bear the full/lame and address of thewriter. Names will bewithheld upon request. A ti-gress: Letters to the Editor,The Times, 1600 E, Second[5/., Scotch Plains, N.J,

CALENDAR OF EVENTSThurs., Ftb. 17 - 7:30p.m. Scotch PlainsBoard of Adjustment.

Thurs., Feb. 17 • 8 p.m.Board of Education,Terrill Middle School.Thurs,. Feb. 17 • 8 p.m.Fanwood Board of Ad-justment.Thurs., Ftb. 17 - 8 p.m.Fanwood RecreationCommiss ion, Com-munity House.

Wed., Feb.23-7:30 p.m.Scotch Plains PlanningBoard.

Wed., Feb. 23 - 8 p.m.Fanwood Shade TreeCommiss ion, Com-munity House.

Thurs., Ftb, 24 • 8 p.m.Fanwood PlanningBoard.

REPORT

FROMWASHINGTON

by #

Congressman

Matt Rinaldoi2th District. New jersey

There is a good possibility that Congress willonce again fail to meet its deadline for passingthe budget regardless of whether Deomcrats andRepublicans agree in part or not at all with Presi-dent Reagan's spending proposals.

The reasons are not entirely political, it is simp-iy that the budget system does not give Congressand its various committees sufficient time to gothrough the massive $848 billion budget and toperform the necessary oversight chores beforethe new fiscal year begins October 1.

Over the past six years since the Budget Actwent Into effect, Congress has missed the targetdates for passing appropriations bills all butonce. In that period, 15 continuing resolutions-which provide for stopgap spending at theprevious year's level -• have been enacted In orderto prevent the shutdown of government agencies.

With less than a month before the past fiscalyear ended, Congress still has not enacted asingle appropriations bill for fiscal 1983. Mean-while, state and local governments and federalprogram managers, whose planning depends onCongressional appropriations, were left in aquan-dry.

The most experienced budget experts in Con-gress agree that the budget system is not workingas well as might be expected. It encouragesoverspending; allows obsolete programs to con-tinue to be funded long after they have outlivedtheir usefulness and makes long-range planningdifficult.

The budget process also can be blamed for en-couraging administrators of federal programs tospend all the funds appropriated for a given yearrather than show a surplus and risk a budget cutin the ensuing year. As a consequence, few agen-cies will leave unspent funds in their accounts.

Congress cannot be expected to authorize, ap-propriate, evaluate and give proper oversight to abudget totaling $848 billion within the time con-straints of one year. Yet it is expected to, while atthe same time focusing on other important na-tional and international problems.

This problem was magnified during the lame-duck session of the last Congress when membersof the House and Senate had limited time In thefinal days before adjournment to study and voteon $420 billion in appropriations that affect thelives of every American and our economic future.Many special interest amendments were attachedto these spending bills, and authorizations weremade without thoughtful and considered judg-ment. It was, In short, a poor way to run the coun-try.

it did prove to be an enlightening experience,however. A number of members of the House andSenate realized the necessity of a two-yearbudget cycle and are proposing a biennial spen-ding program. I support the idea and am suppor-ting jhejwo^yea^budget bill in the House.

S THE TIMES &Published ovary Thundiy by Fosler Publications

DONALD A, FOSTERLIZQAUTIERSHEELA PEACEZIPERNMARY ANN FOSTERSUE SZEMESAUDREY UPINSKIMILIDA FERENCE

PublisherEditor

Contributing EditorBusiness Manager

Advertising ManagerProduction Manager

CirculationTHE TIMf S (USPS 465.200) is published every Thursdayfor $9 per year, $11.50 out-of-state by Foster Publica-tions, 1600 last Second Street, Scotch Plains, N,J.07076, Second-class postage paid at Scotch Plains, N.J.POSTMASTER Send address changes to THE TIMES,P.O. Box 368, Scotch Plains, N,J. 07076, 322-5288,

. v .v .•:::. •.v.v.v.:

Page 5: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

HONOR ROLLmOR IOD

in all

;TERRILL MIDDLE SCHOOLROLL-SECOND MARKING P I

1882.83 SCHOOL YEAR•"DISTINGUISHED HONOR ROLL • "A"subjects.*HONOR ROLL • At least two A's and no gradelower than "B" in major subjects, at least " 0 " inother subjects.***QRADE 8: Richard Fisher, Sue Ann Gormlev,Ellen Kim, Nicholas Loizeaux, Linnea Makm, JoyStorch, Jill Wanat, Kevin Worth, Leigh Zarelli.•GRADE 8: Alicia Abbott, Marybeth Blake, DavidBlitzer, Colleen Bloch, Swati Sodas, LomeBrowne, Scott Oanady, Diane Connelly, RobertCriscuolo, Kurt Dambaugh, Julie Davidson, MarieDelfino, Christopher Fears, Christopher Fischer,Amy Qolombek, Karen Hansen, Shawne Hams,Lillian Hsu, Elizabeth Huey, Debra Jones, KarmKelly, Amy Kipp, Gregory Knapp, Gregory Kondak,Christopher Lawlor, Jo Anne Lies,-Cathy Lumetta,Patrick Mahoney, Carolyn McCann, Karen Metz,Rebecca Naragon, Jana Price, Robert Puitorak,Amanda Richey, John Roeser, Kathryn Ryniak,Betsy Smith, Rebecca Sneed, Sheila Thompson,Janice Tupper, Nancy Turner, Stefanie Under-wood, Laurie Weitz, Casey Woodruff.***GRADE 7; Patrick Ancipink, Linda Ballnkie, in-grid Baumans, Erin Brennan, Alan Brown,Michelle Campion, Matthew Cevallos, CharlesChoe, Amy Detgen, Jennifer Emery, Paula Farn-sworth, Patricia Qormley, Robert Kloss, PaulaJean Me Gann, Kristen Migliaro, Kathryn Morse,Jonathan Wecker, Edward Welsh.*GRADE 7: Thomas Seattle, William Behun, BrianBioch, Terry Blom, Michelle Bregy, JeffreyBronikowskl, Matthew Clancy, Anthony Cuc-curullo, Jonathan De Fouw, Allison De Gennaro,Tracy Di Francesco, Peter Donahue, StephanieQevirtz, Frayanda Glover, Keith Harris, StevenHolmes, Michael Hughes, Brian Jaozko, Con-stance Kaplan, Randi Katz, Tia King, Jeffrey Klein,Erin Knudson, Patricia Kravitz, John Lee-Tin,Elizabeth Lipnick, Simone Manigault, Patricia MoQuire, John Mlozewski, Karen Moller, MichelleMorello, David Mundy, Bethany Nadel, ConNatoli, Heidi Quijano, Marshal Peris, JacquelineReid, Stephanie Reimers, Lynn Resnick, AlyseRothman, John Sartor, Keisha Solomon, LaraStepleman, Darren Tanaka, Robin Weitzman, AmyWinetsky, Mark Winey, John Youngblood, MaryZeller.

***GRADE 6: Sabrina Blake, Amy Callegher, Jen-nifer Chung, Stacey Flattery, Eugene Kim,Jonathan Levitt, Andrea Prato.•GRADE 6: Natasha Begg, Derek Boen, Aiexsan-dra Buckley, Cathleen Butler, Brian Camfield, Jen-nifer Clrillo, Lisa Clark, Susan Crawford, MichaelCuccurullo, Ian Davies, Troy Dean, Lisa De Felice,John Di Nizo, Lori DI Rienzo, Man Ehrlich, JenniferFears, Linda Fink, David Foy, Renate Garretson,Marvin Green, Alisa Gregory, Wendy Gross, TinaGuarlno, Roy Gutterman, Katherlne Hiltz, LisaHorwitz, Kathleen Hughes, Monica Hummert,Scott Keegel, Allison Kelly, Christopher Kresge,Christopher La Ganga, Michael Lagey, KathermeLangenfield, Kendra Larkin, James-John Maccan,Kathleen Mager, Michael Mannix, Eileen Mar-mora, Michael Martin, Christie Me Evoy, CarlaNusbaum, Julie Price, Bradford Rezza, ManeRiginos Beth Rothman, Shannon Schnackel,Erica Simmons, Jennifer Snyder, Grace Sood,Kerry Sullivan, Stacie Urbaoh, Andrea Waters,Jennifer Welseman, Karin Welsh, Kristin Welsh,Michelle Wiley.

Archdiocesan Council to meet

Hardwick to address S.P.Republicans on gambling

PETERSONRINGLE

Assemblyman ChuckHardwick will addressthe subject of "CasinoGambling, Its Effect onSociety's Already Pre-sent Problems", at theregular monthlymeeting of the ScotchPlains Republican Clubon February 22. Themeeting is held at theQueen Ciy Savings(formerly Capitol Sav-ings) building on SouthAvenue in Fanwood at8:00 pm.

Assemblyman Hard-wick is responsible forthe establishment ofthe two-week-old NewJersey Office of the Na-tional Organization ofCompulsive Gambling,based in New York City.The Trenton office,whose hotline can bereached by dialing

You don't have towriter to enjoy these

paid

be afacts

The highest price everfor a signature on the

800-GAMBLER, Is theresult of AssemblymanHardwick's foresight inputting $60,000 for theOlfice in the StateBudget. Funding hascome through • theDepartment of Health,and paral le ls thealcoholism program.

Additional moniesfor the gambling pro-gram are directly at-t r ibutab le to theAssemblyman, who hasbeen able to earmark$75,000 from the Lot-tery, and another$200,000 directly fromthe casinos for thiswork.

Refreshments will beserved at the meeting,which Is open tomembers and potentialmembers. *

opon market was $100,000for a brief receipt signedby Button Gwinnett (1732.77), one of the 56 signa-tories to the Declaration ofIndependence.

m

m

m09

COOoW

NEWLY LISTEDCLASSIC COLONIAL CAPE OFFERING; 4spacious bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living anddining rooms, 21' family room w/graenhouse;custom built-ins and cabinets throughout.Beautifully landscaped lot with fenced 18 x 36 in-ground pool topped off with well-lit patio andcabana. First time offered in Fanwood at $119,500,Call Kitty Lynch for your appointment.

PETiRSON-RINGLE AGENCYRealtors-Insurers

350 Park Ave. 322-5800 Scotch Plains

St. Bartholomew theApostle Rosary Socie-ty, Scotch Plains, willhost the quarterlymeeting of the Union-VVestfield Dist r ic tCouncil of the NewarkArchdiocesan Councilof Catholic Women onThursday, February 24,

following the 7:30 p.m.evening mass andBenediction. Reports ofthe activities of af-filiated societies will bepresented.tagl ia istholomewpresident.

Etta Bat-St. Bar-

s Rosary

FUNERAL HOMEThomas M. Kaiser, Manager & President

mes F. Connauflhton * Directors * Harold W.Wooffward

155 South AvenueFanwood322-4350

400 Franklin PlacePlainfield7564848

PRICESTHURS..

n iN Itemst right to limit quantities

Include sales tax

WASHINGTON'SBIRTHDAYUALUES! -

U B U M OH WINE . WOFWCXGIFTS TOW ANT OCCASION

PAULMASSON

HEARTtBEAM SHERRY

AMARBTTODI

&ARONNO

LIGHTRON

RES!P£NTI

IHPOHTiDFRENCH

CHAM0RDLIQUEUR

^ F

MOUTONCADET

WHITE ' /DELNHARDXOreen Labcll

IMPORTEDITALIAN

CELLABIANCO

:ARROS

CHABLIS

OFF THE FLOMSCHMIDT'S

BEER1} a can

OFF TMI FLOOISCHLITZ

BEER13 oi Lossf Cant

FANWOOD LIQUORSF? mm Delivery

Fanwood, N.J. 61 South AvenueTHIS STORi IS INDEPENDf NTLY OWNED & OPERATIC.

Page 6: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

Arts Association to holdannual show 2/24, 25, 26

February 24, 25, and

DC<

00mu.

LU

5LU

I

to

26 are the dates set forthe Scotch Plains andFanwood Arts Associa-tion Annual Members'Show. This arts andcrafts show will be ondisplay in the lowerlevel of the ScotchPlains Library locatedon Bartle Ave. It will beopen to the public dur-ing regular libraryhours.

This year, thecategories include oils,watercolor , mixed

INVESTOR'SCORNERmedia and crafts. Rib-

bons and cash prizeswill be awarded In eachcategory. Judging theshow will be HarryDevlin of Mountainside.The judging will be onFebruary 24th

Some of the top local i D o n < t l o o k n o w b u t t h e r e a r e s o m e v e r y e n c o u r a 9 'talent wi l l be ln8 s i S n s t n a t t n e e c o n o m y n a s bottomed out andrepresented • don't t n a t P°s ' t 've signs of a strong economic upturn are

FredJ,byChemidlin

Middle school math studentsset records on league tests

miss the show. Therewill also be a "punchparty" on the afternoonof the f inal day,February 26. Ruth Gun-ther is chairman of theshow.

Temple Israel to holdHebrew literacy classes

For the first time atTemple Israel of ScotchPlains-Fanwood theMen's Club will spon-sor a unique Hebrewl i teracy program,"Aleph-Bet You Can".This course will teachparticipants to read theHebrew of the Fridaynight service in twelvesessions. Classes,taught by lay members,will have an informal at-

manycon-

mosphere, andwill be held ingregants' homes.

A choice of classeswill be offered, cover-ing the same lessonseveral times a weekduring evening ordaytime hours. Classesbegin March 14th.Please contact theTemple Off ice(889-1830) to register byFebruary 28th.

GOLF & TENNIS IN FLORIDAAND HILTON HEAD!

SKISUGARBUSHIFull or Time Share ownahlpfor Vacation or Retirement.

Call for InformationWe Do No Selling

H. Clay Friedrichs, Inc...,.anwm.rm Call For Information

G.E. Quality Dishwasher

appearing. New car and housing sales have movedup sharply in recent weeks. Pent up demand andlower Interest rates are helping to revive this market.The past few years cash has been king but rightnow quality common stock with good yields ap-pears a very attractive alternate.

The strong stock market rebound the past sixmonths is taking a well deserved breather but lookfor new highs soon! Per share earnings could bevery strong come summer and next fall and to doubtthe momentum of the market now would be fool har-dy. For individual stock investors, the next twoyears will see much volatility in the price of shares.If you don't have the stomach for sharp price sw-ings, a good stock fund may be the answer. Don't letprocrastination deter good financial planning.

There is still time to save some money on your1982 tax return by establishing your IndividualRetirement Fund account before April 15th or theday you file your return. Don't miss this only oppor-tunity left to save on '82 taxes. Once missed, neverregained. If you've completed your 1982 IRA con-tribution, now is the time to make your 1983 deposit.My experience shows that a Mutual Fund Group ofFunds offers the most flexible vehicle for your IRAaccounts. "Paying yourself first each month" is stillthe way to accumulate capital for future use. Ittakes courage and persistence but the rewards areworthwhile. Saving 10% of your income and"tithing" 10% of your income to your church andfavorite charities is still the best financial advise forseeking material, spiritual and emotion balance inyour life.

For those readers who are approaching retire-ment in the next five years, it would be most prudent-to begin now, If you haven't already, to investigatethe many alternatives to investing their money. Thesweeping chances In society today, both in life-styles and investment products, makes it imperativethat you seek counsel and direction. Many goodbooks and adult courses are available to provideyou with this information. Without some peace ofmind in these areas, many retired folks will be hardpressed to enjoy their golden years of life.

Squad...Coniiniicdl'rnm pauc 1

are Nick Wowchuck,Dan Sullivan and MattZeleski . Al ternatedelegates are Sue

and Nancy

Left to right: Park Middle School students RaySuranjan, Laura Ferguson, Otto Nlediwiecki,Kathy Kraus, Peter Gregory and Chris Costeilo.

Middle school math mathematics in thestudents have shown 80's. in the Continentalstrong talents by Math League, for exam-establ ish ing high pie, of 240 participatingscores on nationwide schools nationwide,math league tests. Scotch Plains-Teachers at Park and Fanwood's eigth gradeTerrill agreed to offer ranked in the top 10 onthe contests in all level the second test of theone classes. There are series; grade seven in •three contest leagues the top 7, and grade sixin all, including the In the top 16.Cont inental MathLeague from New York,New Jersey MathLeague and SigmaTests, originating inNebraska. Two are na-tionwide, and the Parkand Terrill studentshave come throughwith flying colors. TheSigma tests are givenbi-monthly for a dura-tion of one-half hour, In-volving solutions ofeight problems; and,Continental tests aremonthly with twentyminutes alloted tosolve six problems. TheNew Jersey League Isoffered one time duringFebruary.

The results havebeen dazzling, as thestudents have shownstrong capabilities inproblem-solving, whichIs the emphasis in theUnited States for

Seventh gradersLeigh Zarelii and BillSehun of Terrill are toplocal scorers with threeperfect papers to date.At Park, that honor isshared by PeterGregory and Ray Suran-jan. Other leadingscorers thus far thisyear have been OttoNIedzeiecki, grade 6;Laura Ferguson andChris Costeilo, grade 7;and Kathy Kraus, grade8 of Park MiddleSchool. At Terrili Mid-dle School , highscorers were Tom Beat-tie and Jon Wicker,grade 7, and Ellen Kimand Lillian Hsu, grade8.

Most tests will begiven monthly andmedals and certificateswill be awarded inJune.

GE 30" SELF-CLEANINGOVEN RANGE

4-CYCLE BUILT-DISHWASHER• Durable Tuff-Tub'

interior, with 3-waysound control

• Energy Saver Dry option• Contemporary high-gloss

let-black door panel

GetOurLow

Price!

Model JB SOOGW

With P-7* self-cleaning oven system.Two 6" and two 8" Gal rod® surface

heating units. Digital clock, automaticoven timer, reminder timer.

GET OUR LOW PRICE!

The rescuecompleted their 45thyear of service with1,177 calls, one being, aspecial delivery of a 7Ib. 6 oz. baby girl. It is avolunteer organizationdedicated to aiding thecommunity in emergen-cy situations.

Clinic to hold annualsquad dinner meeting March 21

The Union County elude a presentation byPsychiatric Clinic will the N.J. Mental Healthhold Its Annual Board Players. Interested per-Meeting-Dinner on sons should contactMonday, March 21,from 6:30 p.m.-10:30p.m., at L'Affaire, Rt.22, Mountainside.

The program will in-

Tom Ludlow, ExecutiveDirector, at 756-6870 forinformation and reser-vations.

WESTFIELD'S ONLY GE DEALERFOR MAJOR APPLIANCES

143 E, BROAD ST. WiSTFiELD* 233-2121Opon Dally 9 AM - 6 PM • Thurs. 9 AM - 1 PM

CONFUSEDABOUT MONEY?

ASK FOR A FREE COPYOF OUR CURRENT MARKET REPORT

We offer excellent service, an informal atmosphere and a common senseapproach to saving and investing hard-earned dollars in today's complexworld of high finance.

•STOCKS•BONDS•MUTUAL FUNDS•ANNUITIES•MONEY MARKET FUNDS

•MUNICIPAL BONDS »•KEOGH & IRA ACCOUNTS•REAL ESTATE•OIL & GAS•TAX SHELTERS

322-1800FAMILY INVESTORS CO.

Since 1960Corner of North & Martine Aves., Fanwood

Page 7: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

What's Fbr Dinner ?ShopRiteHas The Answer

The MEATing PlacelWITH POP UP TIMiR §-7 LBS.

Oven StufferPerdue Roaster

FORMERLY GROUND CHUCK, NOT LESS THAN

80% LeanGround Beef

The Produce PlacelID1AL FOB THE SCHOOL LUNCH BOX

SunkistNavel Oranges

What's For Lent?

PACIFIC KINS MIDIUM

Fresh Oysters*. . . IS S1.79GRADE • A , NEW ENGLAND, F R E S H ^ ^

Fillet Of Hake*. . .X»"2.19GRADE " A " . FRESH NEW ENGLAND***

Codfish Steaks* . * , s *2.19INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FR01EN. ARROWTQOTH

Flounder Fillet lb.»1.19PROIEN CR¥ITAL1AY, FAMILY SHI

Stuffed Clams ^?'S1,99INDIVIDUALLY QUICK FROZEN, PEEUD £ CLEANID

Frozen Shrimp. . . . T '2.99•FI1ESH SEAFOOD AVAIL BEGIHNIHC MON FEB 14.

1113. IN STORES WITH SEAFOOO DtPTS

TWIN PAG. PERDUE FRESH fTrn

Cornish Hens . . ®).,6S1.17

WHOLE WITH THIGHS * F5"!

Chicken Legs . . . i&). . . .B.67*WHOLE WITH RIB CAGE — w .

Chicken Breast. .(__). 1 , 1 7FROZEN VEAL DELIGHT STEAKSWITH iEEF, ITALIAN BREADED

Veal Steaks B M.49WITH1IIF

Breaded Veal SteaksWITH HIP

Cubed Veal Steaks

n.s1,49

sM.79

Chicken Thighs. . .ALL DARK MEAT ,

Chicken Drumsticks (

CRY-OVAC, POLSKA STYLE

ShopRite Kielbasa. .BONELESS , „

Beef Chuck Steak M

,B77*

,B*1.89

FROZEN, SKINNED 1 DEVEINEP

Sliced Beef Liveri l E F 1HQULDER «-s _

London Broil @©,BS2.17

lONELISSiEEF •——\

Shoulder Steak . . .OiB,bs2,27iONILISSCHUCK * - - * -

Beef For Stew . . . ,l! iks2.17WHYPAY^MORI

Mr. Turkey Kielbasa, ,„ *1.5 9DELICIOUS

Smoked Turkey Ham . iBs1.99

HILLSHIRE SMOKED PRODUCTS

POLSKA STYLE

R e g u l a r K i e l b a s a . . . . iB * 2 . 1 9POLSKA STYLI. FAMILY PACK

Hillshire Kielbasa *2.09HILLSHIRE

All Beef Kielbasa ,BS2.19

HILLSHIRE. SMOKED

Beef Sausage iBs2.19

IMOKID SAUSAGE

Cheddarwurst ib*2,59The Grocery Place!

Fresh Bake ShoppeiREGULAR OR NATURAL

Lincoln"WHAT'S NIW AT ShopRllt?" WHITE OR

ASSORTID SUPER ASBORIINT EXTRA STRENGTH

ShopRitePaper Towels

LARGE m i l l FLORIDA WHITE

Seedless Grapefruit. .lOO'.GOQDJATINQ

Fresh M u s h r o o m s . . . . . , B 9 9 *LARGE I I SIZE, SUNKIST

Navel Oranges B.,,,99*IDEAL FOR STUFFING OR STEWING. CRISP

Green Cabbage iB 17*100 SIZE. NATURALLY FRESH. FLORIDA

Ju ice Oranges . . . . . 1Gi o ,99 e

NORTHWEST MOUNTAIN

A n j o u P e a r s . . .WHY PAY MORI

Fresh Spinach Kao SIZE

P a s c a l C e l e r y . . . . . . . , „• . . 'THE •SALTERNATIVI". 100 SIZE

G o l d e n L e m o n s . . . .T ANGY SCALL1ONS. (4 iUNCHlSi OR

Zesty Radishes 4 ' ^ 99*The Plant Place!IN FLOWER, DAISTTVPE FLOWERPLANT OUTSIDE IN THE 5?RING

4 " PottedCinnerariaASSORTED VARIETIES. MEDIUM LIGHT i l N I

Dief fenbachia . . . . . « * 2 . 4 9VERY HARDY NEW VARIETY. "STHAP LEAF 8" CALADIUM

Hang ing Basket . . . . e a " 5 . 4 9The Dairy Placel

WHY PAY MORE

8" Cherry Pie, . . .WHY PAY MORI

Crumb Coffee Cake. ,O8,S1.29"Your ShopRite Frash Bake Shoppespecializes in personalized decoratedcakes for Holidays, Birthdays, and allspecial occasions!"

The Appy PlacelSTORE SLICED. ShopHil. AMERICAN.PHOVOLOHE. MUEN5TER OR

MozzarellaCheese *

STORE ILICID. VIRGINIA SMOKID

Cooked Ham <..«." 1.49!BY THE CHUNK) IMPORTED

jarlsberg Cheese . . , ,bs2.99

TUNA. SEAFOOD, SHRIMP OR

Crabmeat Salad ,BS2.99

STORE SLICID. IHopRMs

Chicken Roll. n «M.29The Bakery Place!SAVE 20\ ShopRite

Hot CrossBuns

White Bread 2B

ihopRite Cherry Pie . . '

JarvishRye Breads . . . 1THOMAS TWINS-PACK

English Muffins WASSORTID VARIETIES

ShopRite Pretzels .

tt 59*

WITH THIS COUPONONEMl l ' lOZ CAN OF CHUNK LIGHT

IN OIL OR WATER

Star-Kistf Tuna

25*Coupon gooa II my Shopflilt mirkel limil gnt ptr llmily

n 1 1 Eneeiiif Sun Fe6 13, inruSii Ffb 11 118]

LAUNDRY

TideDetergentIN OIL OR WATER. CHUNK LIGHT

Star-Kist Tuna 'XS169e

COFPII

Chock Full O' Nuts . . ^ M , 9 9ALL VARIETIES, CARNATION

Hot Cocoa M ix . , . , , , I?,' 9 9 e

INSTANT COFFEE

Maxwe l l House . . . . T * 3 , 9 9KILLOQO'SCIBEAL

Rice Krispies 1S?-99*IN OIL OR WATER, SOLID PACK

ShopRite White Tuna . . T^89e

ALL VARIETIES. EXCEPT WITH NUTS. RTS

Pillsbury Frosting . . . JrU 99e

COMSTOCK LITI OR REGULAR

Cherry Pie Filling J;l(y,99e

ALL VARIETIES. DUNCAN HINES

Cake Mix 'iV.1; 79'Health & Beauty A i d s i ^HilROilTUSSIN PE, CF OR DM

Cough Medicine. .CONTAC

Cold Medicine BVoels2,99

REGULAR OR UNSCENTIO. DEODORANT

Ban Roll On 2i;rs1.99STOMACH MEDICATION

Mylan ta L iqu id . . . . . i r s 1 . 9 9

\J^-J WITH THIS COUPONONI(1)10-OZ I 0 J O F ANY VAR1ITY

ShopRiteGranola Bars

89°aai ti H\y IhopRile market Limil ane pe( family

Sun , FtQ U,ifiFuSal Fefl 19 1SS3

SAVE 30'

JOHN MORRELL

SlicedBacon

roll of 50sheets

SnopRiH WHOLE MILK OR PARK SKIMWILD FRUIT. ISLAND FRUIT COCKTAIL. ^ _ _ ^ ^ „ Di#«nMn Pdnni-n 316 S*» A ARID OR LOW SUGAR FRUIT PUNCH J I M ^^^gf*- r f l C O l l a W 1 1 6 6 5 6 . . . . com £ , 9 9Uaufa l l an V^_k^___ l^ ' SnapRll* WHOLE MILK OR PARK SKIM

P u n c h " \-v" W ^ S F Mozzarella Cheese ^*2.19I ^ U I I V r l l OZ. COn _ _ YOGURT#U SPAGHETTI. • ( THIN SPAGHETTI OR #3S ELiOWS C..jk«* — ' I _ . „ 8-OJ Ar i fShopRite Pasta 4 ^ 9 r S j w r t n L o w . . . . . . 4 e e n l s 9 9 -MiE & Cheese . . . . SW;St99* Orange Juice "JB1 M .29WHY PAY MORE Tks DAI I DI_^A|

Mott's Apple Sauce . . „",.? 89* T h e D « » P l a c e l

• IDS SPAGHETTI. «109 THIN SPAGHETTI OR <M 11 CAPELLINI

San Giorg io Pasta. . . . . " £ 4 9 "330 COUNT, 1PLY, AJJ, VARIETIES. MARCAL

Bath room T i ssue . . . . T I 7 9 "ALL VARIETIES. 2-PLY^WHITE CLOUD CANNED

Bath room T i s s u e . . . . p i o l 9 9 * M o h a w k H a m eibB»9.49TODDLER JOHN MORRELL

Pampers Diapers. . . BO4»ol57.89 Meat Franks. l?9B9*WHY PAY MORI JOHN MORRELL

Marcal Towels " ^ r 49* Beef Franks P4 99s

RIDIMIX GRAVY. ShopRite 2 1 ' . PROTEIN IMPORTED

Dry Dog Food !_'|S2.99 Dak Sliced Ham ^*3 ,49General Merchandise^H The Frozen Food P l a c e H

c S g i r S r ? : . . . ,.»7.99 Agpje Jutoe^^ 'S?59-SIIS"""°-B "S1VIB" C h e e s e Ravioli K'M.29

PARTY PACK. IATTIR DIPPED OR DUTCH FRYE•Avail inllmilidBUirninesiniloriiinalnormilly WeaVer ChiCken *pk9**1»99inniUEiiniiiniii'unniii'S^ii nV^li'tn i i n r a n i ^ u ASSORTED FLAVORS ELI2AIETH YORK

^'.v;:.!.'.1'.1;.:.'.1?."!...•e-:.;:r'i.;'"s.:..;;:..i»... I c e C r e a m 1

S1,??1S1.89

ShopRll.SOLEOR

FlounderFillets

Fresh BakedCherry Pie

We're Not Just A Supermarket.. -We're ShopRite

m

sm

mm3

>

In ordir lo assurt i suHiciinl supply ol i i i iS i l imt for i l l our euiiomtri. we mull reserve Ihi rijm lo limit Ihi pyrchii t to units ol 4 ol my met items encept wliere olhe.wiK noted^ ' l r"P<jnsitlie tor ' " " B " ^ . 3 ' ! " » " , . , ,•is eflictivi Sun , Feb. 13, thru S i t . Feo, 19,1IS3. None sold 10 other retailers or *,hoHilllrs. Artwork doei not nic l iHf i ly represent Him in sale, it is lor (upliy purposes only. Cojiynohl WSKEFERN FOOD CORPORATION 19B3.Prices iflictive Sun

Page 8: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

so

CC

3DC

mLU

SOCIAL TIMESJanet Sue Hooton engagedto wed Roger C. Fell

Kathleen Anne Walzer tobe bride of Jay Garbert

KATHLffN WALZiR AND JAY GARBERTMr, and Mrs. William

C. Walzer of ScotchPlains have announcedthe engagement oftheir daughter KathleenAnne to Jay Garber,son of Mrs. ConnieGarber of Newark.

The bride-elect is agraduate of ScotchPlains-Fanwood High

School and GlassboroState College.

Her f iance is agraduate of ColonialHigh School, Orlando,F lor ida. Both areemployed by All StateLegal Supply Co. inCranford.

A June 1984 weddingis planned.

S.P./F. UNICO scholarshipapplications due March 1st

The Scotch Plains-Fanwood Chapter ofUNICO announces thatthey will be awarding$6,000 in scholarshipaid. Top prizes includetwo $1,000 awards, two$750 and five awardsfor $500 each. Qualifiedseniors must attendScotch Plains-Fanwood High Schoolor Union Catholic Hiah

School or reside in thetowns of Scotch Plainsor Fanwood.

Applications can beobtained from theGuidance Offices, andmust be postmarked byMarch 1st. Mail your ap-p l i ca t ion to SPF-UNICO, P.O. Box 10,Scotch Plains, N.J.07076.

THE BEST IN CITRUS NOWAT THE

FLORIDA FRUIT SHOPPE226 South Avenue

Fanwood, N.J, 07023Phone 322-7606

California Navel Oranges 12 for 1.00Florida Temple Oranges 5 lbs. 1.7SPink Seedless Grapefruit 6 for 1.00

Don't forget to look at the array of interestingitems for good eating including:

Whole Grain Breads by the Baker(Wed. & Sat.)

Gourmet Coffees includingWater Processed Deeaffinated

Our Own Freshly Ground Peanut Butter(nothing added) 14 oz. 1.49

WITH THIS COUPON

39C OFF

ONE CONTAINER PEANUT BUTTER|

SPT

COUPON

CHIT CHATAndrew Crofton of

Scotch Plains, afreshman majoring inengineering at WestVirginia Wesleyan Col-lege, has been awardeda scholarship for theSpring Semester. An-drew is the son of Mr.and Mrs. Harry J. Crof-ton.

• • •Airman Ronda Y,

Huff, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Earl P. Sim-mons of Scotch Plains,has been assigned toSheppard Air ForceBase, Texas, after com-pleting Air Force basictraining.

• * •Bernadette Ventura

of Fanwood has beennamed to the Dean'sList at Buckneli Univer-s i ty for the f i rs tsemester of the 1982-83academic year.

• * •

Marybeth Geary ofScotch Plains has beennamed to the Dean'sList at Virginia Techduring the fall quarter.

• • •

Uzabeth A. Parti, ofFanwood, recently par-ticipated in the winterExtern Program offeredby Ilizabethtown Col-lege in conjunctionwi th par t i c ipa t ingbusinesses and in-dustries. LIzabeth is asenior majoring inmarketing.

She is a 1981graduate of ScotchPlains-Fanwood HighSchool.

• • •

Gary P. Kane ofScotch Plains, hasbeen accepted for fall,1983 admission toWidener University,Chester, PA.

• • •Russell Geyer, son of

Mr, and Mrs, RussellGeyer, Sr., has beennamed to the Dean'sList at the duCretSchool of the Arts inPlainfield.

• • *Marine Lance Cpl.

Ralph G. Lukas, son ofMr. and Mrs. WolgangJ. Brock of ScotchPlains, has returnedfrom a deployment toFort Pickett, Va.

He is a member of3rd Bat ta l ion , 6thMarine Regiment,Camp Lejeune, N.G.

• * •

Airman Brian W. Me-Cauley, son of Mr. andMrs. Joe Clader of Fan-wood, has graduatedfrom the U.S. Air Forcefood services course atLowry Air Force Base,Colo.

McCauiey will nowserve at Davis-MonthanAir Force Base, Ariz.

He Is a 1980 graduateof Scotch Plains-Fanwood High School.

• • •

Christine D'Amato,daughter of Mr. andMrs. Ray W. D'Amato ofScotch Plains, hasbeen named to theDean's List at the Col-lege of Health, Univer-sity of South Carolinain Columbia.

• * •

Mothers* Center to sponsorTime Management workshop

The Mothers' Centerof Central New Jerseyw i l l sponsor aworkshop on TimeManagement wi thguest speaker LillianSwider on Monday,February 21, at 8 pm atthe Westfield YWCA,220 Clark St., Westfield,in Room E. Swider willdiscuss how to managetime and juggle respon-sibilities to home andchildren and still havetime for yourself.

Swider, who has anM.A. Injgounseling and

Group Process fromSeton Hall University,is a consultant tobusiness and indepen-dent clients in the areaof Management andCareer Development.She provides counsel-ing services in the areaof job hunting techni-ques, resumes, life-work planning andmanagement techni-ques.

The workshop is freeand is open to thepublic.

NEWMANAGEMENT

•New Menu•Salad Bar

OLDIES NIGHT2 FOR 1 COCKTAILS

4:30 till Midnight

JANET HOOTON AND ROQIR FILL

Mr. and Mrs. JohnHooton, Jr. of Fanwoodannounce the engage-ment of their daughter,Janet Sue to Roger C.Fell, son of Mr. andMrs. Arthur Fell of Fan-wood.

The br ide-electgraduated from ScotchPlains-Fanwood HighSchool and received aB.5. degree in Educa-tion from Trenton StateCol lege. She isemployed as a teacher

by the North PlainfieldPublic School system.

Her fiance graduatedfrom Scotch Plains-Fanwood High Schooland received a B.8.degree in Business Ad-ministration from Tren-ton State College. He isemployed as an Ac-count Executive by TheHome Insurance Com-pany in New York City.

An October, 1983wedding is planned.

U.C. Vo-tech students seethe world in Atlantic City

Several instructorsfrom Union CountyVocational TechnicalSchool in Scotch Plainstook their students onthe equivalent of a triparound the worldrecently.

Instructors WilliamWyatt, Major ApplianceRepair, East Orange;Frank Mai, Heating,Venti lation and AirConditioning, Clark; Ed-ward 5eery~ ElectricalShop, Clark and RobertKel ly , VendingMechan ics , BoundBrook; organized thefield trip to the Interna-tional Air Conditioning,Heating, RefrigeratingExposition. The showitself, held in AtlanticCity, was sponsored bythe American Society ofHeating, Refrigerationand Air ConditioningEngineers.

Hundreds ofmanufacturers from allover the world weregathered togetherunder one roof, allow-ing the students to seemore in one day thanthey could have nor-mally seen in a lifetimeIn the field. Highlightedwere electronics nowbeing used in the fieldsof energy managementand conservation.

Bill Wyatt summedthe show up by saying,"This is the biggestshow of Its kind in theindustry. It has allowedus to teach ourstudents more in oneday than would havebeen possible in mon-ths in the classroom, byexposing them to ac-tual working models ofall types and sizes ofequipment."

15 South AvenueScotch Plains/FanwQQd, N J322-1910

Start vegetable garden NOW- indoors, of course

Home gardeners whowould like to learn togrow their ownvegetable transplantsindoors are invited tocome to the UnionCounty Cooperative Ex-tension Service onWednesday, February23 at 1:30 p.m.

Joyce Rita Mulhall,Program Associate inAgr icu l tu re , w i l ldemonstrate how togrow the seedlings.

Topics such as soilmix, variety selectionand lighting will bediscussed. The pro-gram will last approx-imately one hour, andIs free. Please registerby phoning theCooperative ExtensionService at 233-9366.The Cooperative Exten-sion Service is located

at 300 North Avenue,East, in Westfleid.

Page 9: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

S.P. Woman's Club NewsOn Wednesday,

February 9th, themembers of the ScotchPlains Womans Cluband their guests hearda program entitled,"Voices From The Kan-sas Frontier",

This program wasput on by club memberMrs. Jerome Hein whoturned back the pagesof time and describedin detail what pioneerwomen went throughon the Frontiers in earlytimes.

Additional highlightsof the Februarymeeting included thefollowing:

A presentation to theclub of an Americanflag and stand made byPost Commander CarlAxt on behalf of theScotch PlainsAmerican Legion PostNo. 209,

The program con-tinued with a report bythree representativesof the Scotch Plains-Fanwood High SchoolChapter of theDistributive EducationsClubs of America,

(DECA), These threepeople told about theDECA Club and whatthe club is doing aboutthe prevention ofshoplifting throughoutthe area.

At the regularbusiness meeting con-ducted by Club Presi-dent Mrs. HenrySchwlering, it wasreported that Mrs.Schwiering and ClubFirst Vice PresidentMrs. Thomas O'Qor-man attended the Presi-dent's Council of theNew Jersey Federationof Woman's Clubs Bi-Annual meeting whichwas held in Carteret.

It was announcedthat the Drama Depart-ment, chaired by Mrs.Christian Ballantyne, isin rehearsal for theSixth District DramaFestival to be held onMarch 10th, in NorthPlainfield.

The Afternoon Teawas prepared by theHospitality Committeeupon the direction ofFebruary ChairmanMrs. George Loh.

Jaycees* scholarshipapplicants due March 1st

United Way sets *83 goal

"The Fanwood-Scotch Plains Jayceesremind graduating highschool seniors that ap-pl icat ions for thechapter's 1983 CharlesSchadle JayceeScholarship are to bereceived by March 1st,"noted Gary Lanzara,this year's scholarshipchairman. The $1,000scholarship Ispresented annually bythe Jaycees to agraduating high schoolsenior frorn^ Fanwoodor Scotch Plains whohas met the organiza-tion's selection stan-dards of academic ex-cellence, leadership

Art show for high schoolstudents Feb. 26 - Mar, 4

Frank Fa lo t ico ,Assistant Director ofthe du Cret School ofthe Arts, has announc-ed that the Third An-nual High School Stu-dent Art Show will beheld February 26ththrough March 4th.

The show is open toall New Jersey HighSchool Students intheir Junior and Senioryear. They are eligibleto submit one entry ororiginal art work fromtheir chosen medium;excluding hand-crafts,sculpture and pottery.Receiving for the artwork will be Thursdayand Friday, February10th and 11th from 9:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Open-

ing Reception andAward Presentationwill be Friday, February25,1983, 7:00pm to 9:00pm. Over $2,500.00 Inprizes will be awarded.

Students requestingfurther informationabout the competitonor to obtain entry formswrite the du CretSchool of the Arts, 1030Central Ave., Plainfield,N.J.' 07060 or phone(201) 757-7171.

The Gallery will beopen for the public toview the art work from9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Monday through Fridayand 1:00 p.m~ to 4:00p.m. Saturday and Sun-day.

College Club scholarshipapplications due March 1st

March 1 is thedeadline date for com-pleted applications forscholarships from theFan w o o d - S c o t c hPlains College Club.

Applications for highschool seniors can stillbe picked up in theScotch Plains-Fanwood High SchoolGuidance Department.Current col legestudents who wouldlike to be consideredfor scholarships canpick up their applica-t ions from AngelaHopes, Chairman of theCollege Club Scholar-ship Committee. Hopescan be reached at754-3811.

Col lege Clubscholarships are of-fered annually to youngwomen who reside inthe Scotch Plains-Fanwood area,regardless of the highschool or college thatthey attend. Applicantsmust either plan to pur-

sue a baccalaureatedegree or be presentlyattending a college oruniversity. Financialneed is a considera-tion.

and community ser-vice.

The award is paid intwo installments, Isavailable to any resi-dent high school seniorwho is.pianning furthereducation at an ac-credi ted col lege,universi ty orvocational-technicalschool.

Applications may besecured through theDirector of Student Per-sonnel Services atScotch Plains-Fanwood High Schoolor from Gary Lanzara,175 Burns Way, Fan-wood.

Arts Association acceptingscholarship applications

The Scotch Plainsand Fanwood ArtsAssociation will awarda $200 Scholarship anda $100 Scholarship to aselect art student Inthe area who is major-ing in art at an ac-credited two to fouryear college or voca-tional institute.

Applications will beconsidered on thebasis of ability, poten-tial, and the individualneeds of the student,not necessarily onfinancial needs.

Application must besubmit ted to theAssociation by March15th, and must include"an autobiography andreferences. The appli-cant, with a portfolioshowing a represen-tative sample of work,must be available foran interview with theScholarship Committeeat a mutually agreedupon time and presentsome of the work at theGeneral Meeting inMay.

Address applicationform to: ScholarshipCommittee Chairper-son, Scotch Plains andFanwood Art Assoc.Inc., P.O. Box 323,Scotch Plains, N.J.07076. Due date of ap-plication Is March 15,1983.

For many people,1982 was a difficultyear. Thousands oflocal people foundt h e m s e l v e sunemployed and strug-gling to make endsmeet and keep theirfamilies together. Manyof these people turnedto United Way agenciesfor help such asemployment, familyand legal counseling,food and c loth ingassistance and daycare for their childrento name a few.

The agencies thatprovide these vital ser-vices depend on theUnited Way for finan-cial support so theycan meet the ever in-creasing demand fortheir services.

This year, the UnitedWay hopes to raise

$507,343 for localresidents andbusinesses and thenredistribute it to 27human service agen-cies. The • money willhelp people keep theirfamilies together, findnew jobs, know thattheir children are welllooked after and putenough food on thetable to feed theirfamilies.

The support of localpeople and businessesis vital to this year'scampaign. They candecide what type ofyear 1983 is going tobe.

Please support theUnited Way. Donationsmay be sent to: TheUnited Way, 4 GroveSt., Plainfield, N.J.07060.

m

m

mDO3

>

CO

FLOWERSFOR ALL OCCASIONS

Let Us Design YourSPRING ARRANGEMENT

IN YOUR CONTAINER...OR IN OURS

North Ave. atHetfield Ave,

Parking in Rear

232-6755

WHATYOUSHOULDDO. .

If You Smell GasYOU—AND 1V1RY MEMBER OF YOUR FAMILY SHOULDKNOW THIS: (Even if you don't have gas service In yourhome).Natural gas has a batter safety record than any other form of energy and youcan help to keep it that way by using it properly and by knowing what to do ifyou smell gas, whether the odor is in your home, the building you are in—oreven outdoors. The odor of gas—indoors or outdoors—indicates potentialdanger.

Natural gas itself has no odor. A harmless chemical is added which gives offthe characteristic "gas smell" so you can easily detect a gas leak. If you eversmell faint whiffs of this odor do the following:

1. Check to see if a pilot light is out, or if a burner valve is partially turned on.If you cannot find the source of the odor, call us at once. Open windows anddoors to dissipate gas.

2. Never light a gas appliance if a strong odor of gas is present—and neveruse matches to look for gas leaks. Avoid operating any electrical equip,ment—including light switches or thermostats.

3. IF THE ODOR IS EXTREMELY STRONG GET OUT OF THE BUILDINGIMMEDIATELY AND CALL US FROM A NEIGHBOR'S PHONE,

A GAS ODOR CAN OCCUR IN A HOME OR BUILDING WHICHDO1S NOT HAVE GAS SERVICE.If this happens, open all doors and windows and call us at once. Do notoperate any electrical equipment, including light switches or thermostats. Ifthe odor is extremely strong, follow step 3 above.

A QAS ODOR MAY BE PRESENT OUTDOORS.If you detect a gas odor outdoors do not try to locate the source but call usright away, iven though most outdoor "gas odors" are caused by other rea-sons, we will investigate them immediately.

USE THISTOLL-FREENUMBERFOR GASLEAKSONLY!

800-492-4009DAY or NIGHTIncluding WeekendsAnd Holidays

Use this TOLL-FREE number FORGAS LEAKS ONLY. Company represen-tatives are always on duty to respond togas leak calls. For everyone's safety, donot use this number unless you arereporting a gas leak. Our representa-tives will not respond to other types ofinquiries on this line.

There is no charge for the investiga-tion of gas leaks. Take a few moments

now to jot down this number with yourother emergency phone numbers suchas police, fire and medical.

If you have any questions regardingappliance service, billing or meter in-quiries use the following numbers: Inthe Union and Middlesex County area,289-6400 toll free; in Hunterdon, Sus-sex, Warren. Mercer and Morris Coun-ties, 800-242.5830 toll free

Elizabethtown GamA National Utilities & Industries Company

Elizabeth, New Jersey 07207

Page 10: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

<£00LJUU .

WUJ

3LUX

Elks Hoop Shoot winners

Vivian Young joins Comosas Asst, Director of Sales

VIVIAN YOUNG

Vivian Young ofScotch Plains has join-ed the sales force ofthe Cosmos Soccer

Park Middle wrestlerspin Wardlaw to mat 84-6

The Park MiddleSchool wrestling teamcompleted their seasonwith a crushing 84-6 vic-tory over Wardlaw-Hartridge last Thurs-day.

Mark Fallon startedthe rout with a pin at 77lbs, after a loss at 89lbs. Park thenregistered 9 con-secutive pins by MikeRobinson, Mike Don-nadio, Rick Mareovee-chio, Jim Chiarello, Jor-

dan Nadell, Brian Bird,Kevin Sioola and TomWeinart. Ralph Sorren-t ino concluded an

unbeaten season for aneighth grader with aSB-second pin.

Duke Labasi, JoeDoyle, Chris Cutneyand Ed Dupuy receivedforfeit victories forPark. Most of the Parkwrestlers will pursuepost-season titles withthe Scotch PlainsRecreation team.

CLEARANCESALE

• Parkas Jackets &Ski Pants

•Ski Gloves - Mittens• Ice HockeyEquipment

• Winter Headwear• Warm-up Suits

Full Line OfSporting Goods

Dreier's322-7788

Blue Star Shopping Center/Rt. 22, WatohunaH r t M M K m r Ch.rge . Open Dally 9:30 • 9:H

Soccer Association to holdCarlos Alberto Clinic 3/6

Club at 75 RockefellerPlaza, New York City,as Assistant Director ofSales.

She is responsiblefor ticket sales Ingeneral particularlyseason tickets, groupsales and preliminarygames.

Young is the founderof the Scotch Plains-Fanwood Soccer Cluband served as the Presi-dent from May 1977, it'sincept ion, unt i lNovember, 1982.

She was electedEastern Regional VicePresident of Mid-NewJersey in June of 1982and appointed aDistrict Commissionerwith the New JerseyYoung Soccer Associa-tion.

The Scotch , Plains-Fanwood SoccerAssociation is sponsor-ing a special clinicfeaturing Carlos Alber-to of the Cosmos, TheCarlos Alberto SoccerClinic will be Sunday,March 8, from 2:00 to4:00 pm in the ScotchPlains-Fanwood HighSchool new gym-nasium. Full participa-tion and admission, in-cluding a Carlos Alber-to tee shir t andautographed picture, is$5.00; general jidmls-sion is $3.00. Ticketsmay be purchased atthe door and will be us-ed for special doorprizes and raffle. This isnot a fundraiser, but agreat chance to learnsoccer from one of thegame's greatestplayers.

The clinic will beconducted in five partsstarting with a com-plete warmup. Part twowil l be worked ingroups to cover pass-ing and trapping usingall parts of the body.

Dribbling, heading,shooting, and throw-Inswi l l be taught inseparate stations inpart three. The fourthpart will have smallgames to demonstrateposition on the field.For a finale, Carlos willanswer questions andbe ready for autographsand pictures.

Come and be a partof this great local soc-cer event.

CARLOS ALBiRTO

Snow postpones MidgetBasketball League action

Snow cancelled lastMonday's ScotchPlains Recreation Com-miss lon 's MidgetBasketball League ac-tion.

As the season drawsdown the 76'ers arestill undefeated at 6-0.

Second place is beingfilled by the Royals whoare 4-1, while 3rd placeis being held by theRockets who are 4-2.The Nuggets remain in4th with a 2-4 record,with the Knicks (1-4)and the Hawks (1-5)right behind.

Hawks upset Rockets 17-12The big news this

past week In the ScotchPlains Recreation Com-mission's Pee-WeeBasketball League wasthe upset victory of theRockets by Alton Mc-Coy's Hawks, 17-12.

Other action saw theKnights remainunbeaten as theyoutscored the Nets

Front row, left to right: Kevin Keegan, Rene Gar-cia, Johanna Nolan, Marie Nardone. Back row:John Keegan, Jerry Diskin.

The Scotch Plains-Fanwood Elks #2182held its second annual"Hoop Shoot " inJanuary. This yearscompet i t ion wasorganized with the helpof Charles Kl ine,Physical EducationChairperson of theScotch Plains MiddleSchools, and held atPark Middle School.

The winners of thecompetit ion in thefollowing age groupswere: Gir ls 12-13,Johanna Nolan; Boys8-9, Rene Garcia; Boys10-11, Kevin Keegan;and Boys 12-13, ^JohnKeegan. Theyrepresented ScotchPlains-Fanwood in the

Central DistrictContest held at LincolnSchool in New Pro-vidence In January.

Kevin Keegan tooksecond place in hisdivision. Maria Nar-done, second placewinner, replacedJohanna Nolan who In-jured her hand and wasunable to compete. Thewinners receivedtrophies at both com-petitions.

Jerry Diskin, YouthActivity Chairman, whowas assisted by BobHesterfer and MikeWatson, wishes tothank all who par-ticipated and Mr. Klineand his assistant.

Friedrichs adds Vermontproperty to Time Sharing

17-11 in the 2nd half totake a 30-17 victory. TheSpurs edged a toughJazz team, 35-27.

League standings:Knights 8-0Jazz 5-2Nets 5-2Spurs 5-2Hawks 1-4Rockets 1-5

WUIDLAW-HARTRIDGE

A college-preparatoryday school

that offersgirls and boyschallenging

academic programwith excellent athletic andextracurricular activities.

Grades 1-78-12

Saturday, February 28,1983, 8:30 a.m. Please

contact school for dateand time.

KindergartenBy Appointment

GRADES K-7 GRADES 8121040 Phiinfield Ave. 1295 Inman Ave.Plainfield. NJ 07060 Edison, NJ 08820

756-0035 754-1882

Eagles at Sugarbush,Swedish designed skichalets have been add-ed to the product line ofthe H. Clay Friedrichs,Time Share Division.

Unique in size, theyare the first "designedfor time share" units inSugarbush Valley, oneof the prime year roundvacation areas In Ver-mont. They offer 2,000sq. ft. of living spaceand sleep 8 people.Each unit is an in-dividual home and con-tains 2 baths, a sauna,fireplace (w/wood), andan attached garage.

'/This is one of thefinest vacation pro-ducts I have seen",said Hank Friedrichs,president of H. ClayFriedrichs, Inc., "and inone of the most popularareas in the east, forboth skiing and sum-mer fun. We are seeingan unprecedented in-terest in these units,and are running 12 to 15

appointments a weekto explain the timeshare concept, providefull information on theproject, and arrange forinspection trips."

"Most of the peopleresponding to directmail and advertising

are familiar with timeshare through friendsor relatives, or alreadyown vacation time,wherein you buy onlythe portion of a home orcondominium that youactually can use. It canalso be traded within avast international net-work of resorts. Eaglesat Sugarbush is warran-ty deed ownership.

The Friedrichs officealso offers time sharingand full ownershipunits in many Florida

locations, on HiltonHead Is land, andShawnee on theDelaware. Persons in-terested should con-tact the Friedrichs of-fice, Time Share Divi-sion at 322-7700.

654-8888

Complete Phone Selection & Accessories

Hours: 10 till 6Thurs. till 9

229 North Ave, W.Westfield, N.J

''.'.''.''.'/.'••'.'.'.'.•.V.'.• " . * . . * , ' , V7i*»'.'.'j V fr?'Vf v i. A f >: K v. V.YMV, K ?;•« v. v, /. r. f. w , 't

Page 11: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

LETTERS...Continued from page 4the earnings which arenow added to yourbalance through in-terest crediting andcompounding.

Financial inst i tu-tions throughout thecountry strongly op-pose this newwi thho ld ing tax,because it is un-necessary and unfair tosavers and investors. Itis unnecessary

because once your taxliaibility is determined,if additional taxes aredue as a result of in-terest income, youalready pay taxes onyour savings interesteach year when you fileyour federal income taxreturn. It is unfairbecause it will clearlyand positively loweryour interest earnings.In short, it is a poorlythought out law whichshould be repealed byCongress.

What can we doabout it? The advan-tage of living in ademocracy is that in-dividual Congressmenand women generallycast their votes inresponse to the will ofthe people. If there is astrong enough protestabout th is unfairwithholding law from,the people back home,our congressionalrepresentatives andsenators will vote torepeal wi thhold ing.

What you can do iswrite to your con-grtssman, write to yoursenators, and tell themyou want withholdingrepealed.

Tell your represen-tatives in Washingtonhow you feel about theg o v e r n m e n twithholding from yoursavings account for aninterest-free loan. Tellthem that this is a badlaw which should neverhave been passed inthe first place.

them to repealwithholding before itgoes into effect on July1.

Only by letting yourvoice be heard can thisexisting law be repeal-ed. Personal com-munication is of ut-most importance. In ad-dition, financial institu-tions nationwide areproviding petitions andindividual forms in theirlobbies to further thedelivery of themessage. If you£ bank

or savings and loandoes not have forms orpetitions for your use,please feel free to stopin at any office of TheSavings Bank of Cen-tral Jersey in Plainfield,North Plainfield, SouthPlainfield, Middlesex,Warren, Scotch Plainsor Lawrence Township.We will be happy tosupply you with formsand any further infor-mation you would likeconcerning this effort

Please turn to

m

m

003

>

3D

— t

MARTIN'S FURMIfURE CLARK& GREENBROOK

STOREWIPE CLEARANCE 4 PAYSc

FRI., FEB. 1810 to 9

$749

MASTER BEDROOM SPECIALS JMANY MOjtfc T 9 i H m t t nWMFAMOllJ NAMES

Stanley, Bassoft, Lane, lurlington, Drew^ Broyhill. Pulaski, Sumt«r, Hooker, National,Bernhardt, Manor House, Singer, Amer. Drew, Riverside, Mt. Airy, Kincaid, Sugar Hill,Amir, of •Martlnsvllle and many others.

6 P C . C O L O N I A L Muter Bedroom in Dark Pine by Singer7 draw triple dresser, hutch mirror, S drewwchest Queen size HDBD. & 2 nlte stands mft. II»t $f 4f

6 Pc. CONTEMPORARY ».««Be*...In Oak by C«leman 72" door triple drasser, landscape mirror door ehest,

panel HDBD. ft 2 nlte Hand* mfg. list $1849

6 P C . C O U N T R Y O A K Master Bedroom by Kjncaid44" dear triple dresser, landscape mirror dear chest queen size panel HDBD. t 2 nlte stands ^ a B Bmfg. list $1149 M M M

6 Pc. ORIENTAL M..I.. B.* . . .By Sessetf with Oriental Design ft Art 73" door triple dresier, tfl mirror ormolre, queen il«»HOSD. t 2 nlte stands, mfe, Ilkt 11729

6 Pc. EARLY AMERICAN H...., B.<u..mIn Maple by Hooker 70" do«r triple dresser, lighted hutch mirror, queen slie bed t2 nHe stands mfg. list S1V39

7 Pc. EARLY AMERICAN M»I.. B.*....y by American Drew U" drawer triple dresser, pedestal landseape mirror f 1 fkAiMchest, poster b«*i t 2 nlte stands, mfg. list $2249 • *m~* '

7 P C . C O L O N I A L Master Bedroom in Honey Pine by Kincaid $" triple dresser, hytth mirror, door ehest quean slie bed 12 nlte stands mff.Jlst>214<

1329

CEDAR CHESTS by LANE • •a

SAT., FEB. 19JSUN., FEB. 2010 to 6 ]12to5MON., FEB. 21-10 to 9-

SOFA-BEDS")BenedictCoatemporaryTight Back, QIMB Sin $ J Q Q

499

599

599

ClaumontTwin Size

Stewart-Contemp.Queen S u o , mi,, ii.i u««t

Dale-flu btitb u t , QIMB SI. m*,. im %<m

The Gift That Starts The HomeHUOE SELECTION at 3 0 % OFF

The Perfect Valentine Gift

Colonitl Maple19 239 JUUned White & Gold

Traditional Pine SOQQmfg. list S435 Mtf

BIAUTYRIST&ANMIVIRSARY

MATTRESSES ft BOXSPRINGS

30 % OIF tt- I9M

50 %

Models

mfg. Matt, ft Box, 1912list Floor Sample* Models

Coutrf Oakmfg. list S45f

Traditional Oakmfg. list MSf 319 Colonial Pint or Maple SO 1 n

mfg. list $41? 4151

RECLINERSLa-Z-Boy - BarcaloungerFlexsteel & Catnapper

Large Sel«ction

From 99 S489Swivel Recliners, Rocker Recliners

3 Pos. Recliners& Wall Hugger Recliners

MARTIN'S FURNITURE t67 WESTFIELD AVE., CLARK 381-6886 350 RT. 22 WEST GREENBROOK 356-8818

DAILY 10 to 9 SAT. 10 to_6^LJN.J2jq 5

Page 12: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

<ECOLU

u,to*LU5LU

CORNER

This week we haveVio let ta Acocel la 'sprize-winning recipethat won her a trip to Ita-ly and $1,000 spendingmoney. Don't try toomany substitutions oryou will not get theaward-winning flavorthe dish is supposed tohave.

SLICED EGGPLANTMOLD WITH PASTA

2 med. sized eggplants,trimmed but notpeeled

flour4 eggs, beaten with...

2 tbs, freshly grated

Parmesan cheeseVi Ib. fresh pasta,

penne or spiral(spinach or tomatopasta)

Vi Ib. Italian breakfastsausage (luganega),peeled and crumbled

3-4 shallots, finelychopped

Vi Ib. mushrooms,chopped

6-8 slices prosciutto,cut in julienne strips

Vt c. peas (can befrozen) cooked withpasta

11/z cps. cubedmozzarella

2 tbs. freshly gratedParmesan cheese

1 c. heavy cream plus2 tbs.

1 c. tomato sauceCut eggplant

lengthwise. Flour anddip in egg andParmesan mixture. Fryin hot oil and drain wellon paper towels. Ar-

range eggplant sliceson 4 2-cup souffledishes and reserve therest of the slices for thetop.

Saute shallots in 2tbs. butter, addmushrooms andsausage. Add 2 tbs.Parmesan cheese andheavy cream. Add pre-cooked pasta and peas;heat through and turnoff heat. Add prosciuttoand cubed mozzarella.

Fill the eggplant lin-ed souffle dishes withpasta mixture, pattingdown lightly. Coverwith remaining eg-gplant slices. Coverwith foil and bake In apre-heated oven 375°for 30 to 35 mln. Afterremoving from oven, letsit for a minute.

Turn on to plate andspoon some tomatosauce over center ofmold.

Arts Centeroffers courses

The Watchung ArtsCenter, on the circle inWatchung, will offer 18courses and 2workshops in their Spr-ing semester beginningSaturday, February19th. On the 19th andagain on the 26th, from9:30 to 12 noon, RuthWilson will conductworkshops in water-color techniques.Highly acclaimed andwidely known in thisarea for both her ar-tistry and teachingability, this opportunityfor the intermediateand advanced water-colorist is not one to bemissed.

For information call753-0190 or stop by theCenter Monday-Friday10-12 and 1-4 pm.

Historical Society to tracemeaning of grave stones

How to set your own

bankers hoursSimply use THE EXCHANGE*

THE EXCHANGE, United National's24-hour automated teller machinenetwork, is now in operation atsix of our office locations. It marksthe end of the lunch-hour lineup,the ten-minutes-to-closingscramble and the Friday after-noon traffic jam.

All you need is a UnitedNational EXCHANGE card, then themachine keyboard becomes yourneighborhood banker, day ornight, weekends and holidays.THE EXCHANGE can perform manydifferent banking functions,and in less than thirty secondsfor each job. The machine is colorcoded to make your transactionsfast, smooth and simple. For yourprotection, you get a secret codewith your card. THE EXCHANGEgives you step-by-step-instruc-tions which are spelled out onan easy-to-read screen. And youreceive a record for everytransaction, too!

Thousands of your neighbors have already received theirEXCHANGE cards. Join them. Come in today and apply for your card.

And don't forget to ask for your key to convenience.

•EXCHANGE MACHINES ARE LOCATED IN BniDGEVVATER. FANWOOD, GREEN BROOK,

MAIN OFFICE PLAINFIELD. SOUTH PLAINFIELD AND WARREN.

United National BankBANKING OFFICES: BranchburB • Bndgcwntcr . Fanwood • Green Brook

Plninficld (4) • South Plainfield • WarrenHUNTEnnoN DIVISION. Annandale • Bunnvalc • Califon • Qldwiek

TRUST OFFICES; Plainfield . Bridgewoter • Annnndale

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

Debbie Michael takes aA program tracing

the meaning andhistory of early Col-onial grave stones willbe presented at theTuesday evening, Feb.22, meeting of theScotch Plains-Fanwood HistoricalSociety. William Wragaof North Plainfield, ahistory and Englishteacher at Green Brookhigh school, will showslides and rubbingsfound in some of theold . New Jerseycemeteries.

In 1982 Wraga wasawarded a teaching

rubbing in old cemetery.grant from the NewJersey Historical Com-mission to survey earlyburial grounds in thestate. He feels that stu-dying the old gravemarkers has helpedstudents in his historyclass become moreaware of the historicalevents that took placein the area during Col-onial times.

This in terest ingmeeting is open to thepublic and will be heldat 8 p.m. In the Curranmeeting room of theScotch Plains PublicLibrary.

School Lunch MenuMon,Feb.21 School Closed

Tues. HamburgersFeb. Or22 Bologna Sandwich

Vegetable ieef SoupPotato Roundsluttered Peas

Wed. Spaghetti w/Meat SauceFeb. O r

23 BL w/Ghesse

Minestrone SoupGreen BeansFruit

Thurs Steam Urns Tomato Soup w/CroutonsFob " w/CheeseOr Buttered Corn24 ' Chicken Roll Sandwich P o t a t o Ch 'Ps- F r u i t

Fri. Pl«a w/CheeseFeb. Or25 Salami Sandwich

Clam ChowderHealth SaladApple Juice, Fruit

TIFFANYOPEN DAILY 8:30 am 'til 10 pm

SATURDAY 8:30 am to 9 pmSUNDAY OPEN 9 to 6

•RUSSELL STOV1R CANDY•HUDSON VITAMIN PRODUCTS

233-2200FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY

Ample Free Parking1115 South Avfi. Wftst * Wastfielri

COMPARE BEFORE YOU BUY

HILLSIDE CEMETERYWOODLAND AVE., SCOTCH PLAINS

756-1729Mailing Address: P.O. Box 747

Plainfield, N.J. 07061

All Lots Sold In Fully DevelopedAreas And Include Perpetual Care

Payments Terms ArrangedOffice on Grounds Open 9 to 4:30 DallySaturdays 9 to 12, Telephone 756-1729

Page 13: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

Boy Scout Troop 111 NewsScotch Plains Boy

Scout Troop 111, spon-sored by The LionsClub, displayed theirski l ls and staminarecently at the Wat-chung Council Klon-dike Derby. Competingwith stiff competitionof about 60 othersledge patrols, Troop111 Eagle Patrol cap-tured s ix th place.Especially noteworthyabout the accomplish-ment was the fact thatthe patrol had only 4members comparedwith other patrols com-prised of 8-10 Scouts.

Senior Patrol LeaderJoe DiRienzo, PatrolLeader John Keenoy,Assistant Patrol LeaderRobert Eggleston andScout Andrew Sheltondisplayed fort i tude,strength, skil l andcourage as they cross-ed the finish line. Othermembers of Troop 111participating in thisyears snow driven der-by were MarkSwindlehurst, GregMuller, Kelly Keenoyand Michael Martin.Lending assistant andsupport were Scout-master Joseph DiRien-zo, Carter Wilson, EdClancy, Wells Perkins,John Keenoy andJustine DiRienzo.

In other regularlyscheduled activities,Troop 111 has enjoyedcamping experiencesat Camp Watchung,Camp Winnebego,Camp Alpine, Camp

hiking and camping inThe Pine Barrens.Some campouts in-volve individual cook-ing, while others em-phasize patrol or troopcook ing . Shelterfacilities have includedtent, lean-to or cabins.

Upcoming events in-clude a day trip to theUSS intrepid in NewYork City with a possi-ble contrasting stop atthe South StreetSeaport. Star, Life andEagle Scouts wi l ljourney to Camp Sabat-Tamarack as well as

tis in the Adirondacksfor a winter campout.Plans are being for-mulated for a beach ex-perience at SandyHook, Battleship Doverin Fail River,Massachusetts, U.S.Naval Academy, the"Great Canoe Race",and a major camporeeat Camp Watchung inMay. Eagle Patrol willalso enjoy patrol camp-ing at state parks.

On New Year's DayJoe DiRienzo, MikeMartin, Kelly Keenoy,John Keenoy and SteveOakley were invited to"Present the Colors" atthe Fanwood BoroughCouncil Reorganizationmeeting. For their ser-vice, each boy receiveda letter ofacknowledgement fromMayor Ted Trumpp.

The Troop will againdeliver telephonebooks in April as a fun-draiser and in June willonce again organize agiant flea market at theFanwood Train Station,

Current Webelos in-terested In joiningTroop 111 are cordiallyinvited to visit a regulartroop meeting anyTuesday, 7:30 pm atMcGinn Scool. CallScoutmaster JosephDiRienzo in advance fordetails. Any boys whowill complete 5th gradebut do not haveprevious Scouting ex-perience are also en-couraged to join BoyScouts. Boys new tothe area wishing totransfer their member-ship are most welcometo learn more aboutTroop 111. ContactScoutmaster DiRienzoat 889-2386.

Resolve presents programgoals to area groups

Ohnsorg promoted at AT&T

RESOLVE, INC., acounseling agency pro-viding services foradults, adolescentsand children, located InScotch Plains,presented several pro-grams to local groupsduring January.

Executive DirectorNancy Pizzi aquaintedthe Scotch Plains-Fanwood Rotarianswith the agency at aweekly luncheonmeeting of the Club atthe Charter HouseRestaurant, The RotaryClub makes a generousdonation each year toResolve to help supportservices aimed atyouth. Pizzi also gave atalk on "Sel f -Awareness" to 20employees of UnionCounty through theUnion CountyEmployee AssistanceProgram.

Lucy Sweeney madetwo presentat ionsabout Resolve toteacher LynetteBirkins' psychologyclasses at ScotchPlains/Fanwood HighSchool. Approximately40% of clients servedat Resolve are underthe age of 18. Sweeneyis pursuing post-graduate training atThe^ckerman Instituteof Family Therapy inNew York City.

Resolve, Inc., aprivate, non-prof i tcounseling agency, hasbeen located in ScotchPlains since 1974 andprovides a variety ofservices including; in-dividual, family, maritaland parent-chi ldcounseling. In 1982,240cl ients ut i l izedResolve's services •50% from ScotchPlains, 25% from Fan-wood and the re-mainder from surroun-ding towns. Client feesare set on an ability topay basis. The agencyalso depends on fun-ding from other localservice organizationsto continue to provideservice.

Resolve has a tern-porary location in tfieTerrlM Road BaptistChurch, and the agencyis looking forward toestablishing Its ownpermanent locationthis year. A permanentlocation and continuedfunding for operatingexpenses are toppriorities for the agen-cy and its Board ofDirectors, and vigorouscommunity support isneeded.

For further informa-tion about Resolve,please call 322-9180.Resolve's mailing ad-dress is P.O. Box 173,Scotch Plains, N,J.07076.

WILLIAM OHNSORQWilliam M. Ohnsorg

of Scotch Plains, hasbeen promoted to divi-sion manager in net-work planning anddesign at the AmericanTelephone andTelegraph Co. in Bask-

ing Ridge, N.J.A district manager in

network planning at thetime of his promotion,Ohnsorg joined AT&Tin 1973 as an engineer-ing staff specialist intransmission engineer-ing. He began his BellSystem career in 1970as a member of thetechnical staff forsystems engineeringwith Bell TelephoneLaboratories.

Ohnsorg holds abachelors degree inphysics from LehighUniversity and mastersdegree In electricalengineering andmanagement fromPolytechnic Institute ofBrooklyn and PaceUniversity, respective-ly-

m

9-n

s>5

OBITUARIESLillian P, Jurgelowicz

Li l l ian P.Jurgelowicz, 72, ofScotch Plains, diedMonday, February 14,1983, In the Bay ViewConvalescent Center inBayvllle. She was aformer resident ofJersey City where shewas born, and lived inScotch Plains for thepast 20 years. She wasa member of St. Bar-tholomew the ApostleRoman Cathol icChurch.

She is survived byone daughter, DelphineL. Sicola, Scotch

Plains; three sisters,Veronica Muller, FairHaven; FlorencePlatkowska and IreneWernicki, Spring Lake;two grandchi ldren,Donna Lynne and PaulT. Sicola.

A funeral mass willbe held at St. Bar-tholomew's on Thurs-day, February 17. Inter-ment will be In HolyCross Cemetery, NorthAr l ing ton . Ar-rangements are byMemorial FuneralHome in Fanwood.

LETTERS.,,to repeal the law towithhold taxes fromyour savings interest.

Act NOW, while westill have time.

James W. AllenPresident and Chief

Executive OfficerThe Savings Bank of

Central Jersey

WE WANTYOUR BUSINESS

TENNIS ANYONE?Intertain your friends and stay in shape on this regula-

tion size all-weather tennis court. Sitting prettily behind thisluxurious ranch home on over an acre of land, it can befound on a quiet cul-de-sac located on the prestigioussouth side of Scotch Plains.

This four bedroom, three bath home boasts a 30-footfamily room with brick raised health fireplace. All thaamenities including central air, underground sprinklersystem and burglar alarm are found in this lovely andliveable fine home. Offered at $188,900.

Individually Owned and operated

All You Need to Know in Real Estats]

• • ' • • • • Thru March 31. '83

ANY PHASE OFTREE CARE

(EXCLUDING SPRAYING)PRUNING •REMOVALS •FEEDING, ETC.INSURE HEALTHY, GREEN

PLANT LIFE!with

WINTER PROTECTION SPRAYSAVERAGE 5000 square foot Yard

ONLY$24°°- We'll Help Protect Plants Against Damage Due

Winter Kill •Transplant Shock • Windburn • Drought • Air Pollution

Horowitz inc.

Executive Real Estate • Builders265 South Avenue, Fanwood, N.J, 07023(201) 88J.6600• EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNEDl

FREEESTIMATES 232-6755

590 North Avenue • Fanwood, New Jersey 07023

'COMPLETEINSURANCE

Page 14: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

r-.

>•

amLU

ssLU

One Flew Over the Cuckoo'sNest at NJPT till March 12

Casting Call

One Flew Over TheCuckoo's Nest, a playby Dale Wasserman,based on the noval byKen Kesey, will open atThe New Jersey PublicTheatre February 11thand will run for fiveweekends, c losingSaturday, March 12th.

One Flew Over TheCuckoo's Nest is theaccount of a devil-may-care rogue who con-trives to serve a shortsentence in a mental in-stitution rather than athard labor on a prisonfarm.

He takes overthe ward and ac-complishes what themedical profession hasbeen unable to do.

One Flew Over TheCuckoo's Nest will runFriday and Saturdayevenings at 8:30. Ticketprices are $6.50 forcenter seats, and $5.50for side seats. Seniorcitizen, student, andgroup discounts areavailable.

For further informa-tion or reservations,please call the theatreat (201) 272-5704.

Regal Productionswill hold open audi-tions upstairs at theCharter House, 15

South Ave. (off TerrillRoad) Fanwood, onMonday and Tuesdayevenings Feb. 21 and 22starting at 7:30 p.m.

For the next severalDinner Theatre plays alltypes are being audi-t ioned, especial lymen and women whocan play age ranges 30to 50. Please bring pic-tures and resume if youhave them.

Regal Productionsdoes four plays a year,each one running threemonths with weekendsand matinee perfor-mances. There will bepay for performances.

Some of the plays'under considerationare: "Second TimeAround", "Norman IsThat You", "RomanticComedy", "Bell, Bookand Cand le" andothers.

If there are any ques-tions please call RegalProduct ions at889-5044.

t Ai . i i v'fc,

NY5H STOCKS

r i ffday tailed 188! "ariad to have behindsnsreholdfrs the «••"

Howe p i

We interrupt this newspaperto bring you a word fromour Loan Department...

Uec-'Inet

wide r-i-nmtludifif

A-A >- P

as» America! value in.i: NA-DA',,iT-lbf-Cfliif!

•oyr/torpresults o!

in man;•.* iaff rn

un4 in p•w «»rdersowing .i

OU'

caSiuton V,u>vf:,.

,-bsve «n<i plan;v K -KCC

irra. M?vvi-ss listcr-rcenBnti-f

torkef. ,vr oeni

We'll speed you through the paperwork and send youon your way with the money you need for any

worthwhile purpose.• PERSONAL LOANS available to qualified

borrowers in amounts from $1,000 to $20,000,Maximum term Is 36 months.

• AUTO LOANS for new or used cars In amounts upto $20f000. Payments can be stretched out to48 months on new car purchases, 36 months onused car purchases.

• SECOND MORTGAGE LOANS for any goodpurpose, and HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS up to$100,000, with 30 years available for repayment.

• FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS to help you purchasethe house you've always dreamed of.

The Saymgs BankOF CENTRAL ** JERSEY

Unique Teller 24 Hour Banking locations:

MAIN OFFICi • PLAiNFIiLD102 6. Front StreetWARRiN OFFICiPheasant Run PlazaMIDDLESEX OFFICi444 Union Avtnue

SCOTCH PLAINS OFFICE437 Park AvenueMiRCiR MALL OFFICERoute 1, Lawrence TownshipSOUTH PLAINFIELD OFFICI2325 Plainfield Avenue

*, TSav

Ofhsf Offices:PLAINFIELD -1320 West Front Street • NORTH PLAINFIELD • 28 Craig Place

(201) 755-5700 (609) 452.2633

ee MEMBER FDIC EqualHousingLender

ESTABLISHED 1BM

us" andmny i<i t the ffiscal vet wi l lMat helie full j

>U will tmii atitaBrwi'*clon 0

ear, eajn, andper cmfirst ft

h sales1255.9 idroppedn,

hosercscoinpai

IS pur tj'th in s(tended daJ circi

vtn As;

MA const;sost airr,'ie lasl iaoA deve!p 15 per t

e, at a li•nomies iAmm s»iatnpany*ss »i fii' group.

msrtett

onactor»: 1d changwith i

i; drasof curt

j

i with |88the prev?, Reveragainst j

B year oa

irninp tot&re, Bwnp

*. it\

pproved* to bo is

sbairman

-fS

TOHK iAn - in warmly en»r«eint; <?K-, L-usLiess oho ,« expnncin); I'J-

up proper conirols to protect t.v^rlfnitiu<4 rXivmnir.z firm sav.-»

f cjaraplt, a personal computerg&'Jon. ami cro^s checking, of data pmem

dusits. The derical worker siuing at a terminalperforms many »t Hit functions that used to b« honhv several peuple—SUCH »S pr«|ramm««, syat

The Mercy Guild ofMount Saint Mary-Academy will hold theirannual luncheon

fashion show on Satur-day, March 12, at theLandmark Inn, Route 1,Woodbrldge. A musicalfashion product ion,"Dreams, Fantasies,Furs and Fashions", willbe presented by Moana.

Reservations only.Tickets $17.00. CallMrs. Qarlatti •545-5769.

* # *

Kuran.,,Continued from page 1Scott Link, were facedwith a difficult decisionbecause of the outstan-ding caliber of peoplewhose names weresubmitted," Pickeringcommented. "It is grati-fying to know so manypeople give ofthemselves freely tohelp others."

Some of Kuran'soutstanding activitiesincluded the produc-tion of Fanwood's "Pro-perty MaintenanceCode" which was label-ed as a "resident'scode" in a Courier-News editorial andwhich served as amodel for several othercommunities.

Whi le she wasliaison to the En-vironmental Commis-sion, her special con-cern for the environ-ment led to the pursuitof Green Acres fundingfor conservation pur-poses. She also leftvolunteer assistance tothe production of Fan-wood's "Na t iona lResources Directory"which was published in1976.

During her tenure asFanwood Coun-cilwoman, Kuran in-itiated the drive to save

RAIN, the originaldramatic version of thestory of "Miss SadieThompson " bySomerset Maugham, willbe presented by theStony Hill Players eachFriday and Saturdayevening from February25th through March19th.

Call for tickets at464-7716. Theplayhouse is located onthe Berkeley Heightsline on the corner ofMountain Ave. andHlllcrest Ave.

• • *the Carriage House, atno expense to the tax-payers. She alsochaired the committeethat secured theoriginal grant for thestudy of the renovationof the downtownbusiness district.

Kuran has been alifelong resident ofUnion County and haslived in Fanwood since1960. She is a graduateof Rutgers Universityand the RutgersGraduate School ofCommunications, Infor-mation and Library Ser-vices. Since 1970 shehas been employed bythe Plainfield PublicSchool System as' ateacher/librarian.

On Tuesday evening,February 22, theJaycees wil l honor"Pat" with a cocktailparty starting at 7:30p.m. at the CharterHouse in Fanwood.There will be a $6.50cover charge which in-eludes hors d'oeuvres,and a cash bar. will beavailable.

If you plan to attend,call Dave Pickering(322-8974) or RandyKlimek (322-6439). TheJaycees must have anaccurate head count sothat they can accom-modate the guests.

Rock and blues guitaroffered at adult school

A course in rock and'blues guitar will be oneof the new additions tothe spring session ofthe Scotch Plalns-Fanwood adult school.This intermediate-levelclass will be taught byEva Barkalow, an ac-complished guitarist,

who has been teachingguitar for five years.

Interested teenagersand adults should con-tact the adult school at

,322-7718 as soon aspossible, as enrollmentwill be limited. Classwill begin on Monday,February 28th.

Page 15: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

classified rate: 25<c per worddeadline Tuesday 5 pm

322.5266

HELP WANTED HELP WANTED SERVICES

NURSES RN'S11:00 P.M.-7:00 A.M.Other shifts availableEMERGENCY n RDEPARTMENT U D

Medical/Surgical Ex-cellent Salary andBenefits, For informa-tion call:

(914) 856-5351Ext. 248 or apply In per-son personel depart-ment.

MERCYCOMMUNITY

HOSPITAL160 E. Main St.

Pt. Jervis, N,Y. 12771Equil opportunity imployir M/FCOLOR ANALYSIS . Consul-tant business opportunity.Training and certification infashion color consulting,make-up, wardrobe, colortechnique. Small fee.Unlimited income • 664-69BB.C-877 L 2/17

TiENAGE BABYSITTER afterschool on some weekdays.654-6006.C-876 Pd 2/17

Part-time telephonecalling to offer interiorlandscaping, Must berapid caller. We provideall leads. No experiencenecessary. $4.50/Hr. In-terview Saturday, 10.00a.m. No appointmentnecessary. Parker In-terior Landscaping,1325 Terrlll Road,Scotch Plains. N.J,

FANWOODRACQUETBALL

CLUB &FITNESSCENTER

Local club requiresenergetic person tosupervise staff ac-t iv i t ies , desk pro-cedures, t imes c h e d u l e s ,maintenance and pro-gram, etc. Please directinquiries and resumesto Fanwood Racquet-ball Club, P.O. Box 163,Fanwood, N.J. 07023.Only written resumesconsidered.

"HUSBAND FOR HIRE"HOME REPAIR

Specializing in:Interior & Exterior Painting, Win-dows, Sheetrock, ConcreteWork, Driveway, Sealing &Bordering and Most Odd Jobs.

"No Job Too Small!"Call Joe At

322-9455AUTOS

FOR SALE

SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS &TRUCKS AVAILABLE. Manysell for under $200. Call312.742-1142, i x t . 8174 for in-formation on how to purchase,C-BBS Pd 2/17

Jeeps, Care, Trucks under $100available at local governmentsales in your area. Call (refun-dable) 1-619-569-0241 ext. 2602for your 1iB3 director. 24 hours.G-B7B Pd 3/3

LEGALSTOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

NOTICE is hereby given that at ameeting of the Township Council Of theTownship of Scotch Plains, held in theCouncil Chamberi in t h i MunicipalBuilding of s l id Township on Tuesday,February 15, 1983 there was introduc-ed, read for the first time, and passedon such first reading, an ordinance, atrue copy thereof i i printed below; andthat la id Township Council did thenand there fix the stated meeting of saidTownship Council to be held on theevening of Tuesday, March 1, 1BB3beginning at eight-thirty o'clock as thetime and the said Council Chambers asthe place, or any time and place towhich I meeting for the further con.ilderatlon of such ordinance shall fromtime to time be adjourned, and all per-sons interested will be given an oppor-tunity to Be heard concerning such or-dinance.

The said ordinance as Introducedand passed on first reading asaforeiald is in the following words andfigures:

AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZINGPRIVATE SALE OF TOWNSHIP OWN-ED RIAL PROP1RTY

WHEREAS, the Township Council otthe Township of Scotch Plains believesthat it would be in the best interests ofthe Township to «ell the Township own-ed real property on or about BrisbainePlace, known as block 155, lot 1 andblock 154, lots 3 and 4: and

WHEREAS, th* aloresaid propertiesare no longer needed for public use;and

WHEREAS, thB aforesaid propertiesare less than trie minimum size re-quired for development under theMunicipal Zoning Ordinance and arewithout any capital improvementsthereon and there is more than oneowner with real property contiguousthereto; and

WHEREAS, the Township Councilhas determined that the fair marketvalue of the aloresaid properties andthe minimum price which will be ae-

LEGALSeeptad therefor* Is $2,800.00; «nd

WHEREAS, The Township Councilhas determined that said properties besold jointly and there»fter merged bydeed; and

WHEREAS, the Township Couneilreserves the right to reiect all bids ifsaid bids do not represent an offer topurchase all three properties jointlyand simultaneously therewith, and

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDAIN-ED, by the Township Council of theTownship of Scotch Plain», UnionCounty, New Jersey, that the TownshipManager and other appropr iateTownship Officials are hereby authoriz-ed to of f i r the above mentionedTownship owned properties for privateiale to the owners of contiguous realproperty in accordance with N.J.S.A,4QA:12-13 for a minimum price of$2,800.00, which properties shall beSold jointly as Inseparable parcels ofreal properly to the successful bidderOf all three parcels.

BE IT FURTHER ORDAINED, that adeposit of $280.00 shall be required tobe submitted by all bidders with theirbids and that, upon acceptance of anybid, the time for closing of title and pay-ment of the consideration shall ba fixedfor the earliest reasonable date.

BE IT FURTHER ORDAINED, that theTownship reserves the right to acceptthe highest bid reeeiv«d or reject any orall bids, in its sol* discretion.

BE IT FURTHER ORDAINED, that anadverti»ement regarding this sale bepublished in an appropriate newspaperpurluant to N.J.S.A. 4QA:12-13 and thatoffers for the properties may thereafterbe made for a period of twenty (20) daysfollowing »uch advertisement pursuantto law.

DAN'S PAINTING &DECORATING. Interior, Ex-terior, Free estimates, in-lured. Call 889-8200.

D & D PAINTERS"- Intsrir,-Exterior decorat ing,paperhanding-home repairs.One room - whole housereasonable rates. FreeEstimate. 755-7910. 561.2427after 5 p.m.C.857 L T F

A Better Way LANDLORDS nocost to you. We screen andqualify tenants. No charge. Noobligation. Licensed realestate broker. Call the BURSTAGENCY, 232-9401.C-789 L TF

TONY'S TV232.6900 752-4016

25-yrs. experience.TF

ROOM TO RENTBerkeley Heights Area.

175,00 per month & Utilities,Full use of kitchen & livingroom. Share bath w/oneother, 1 month security,.Storage area available,Call647.0387 between 6-9pm.

ANTIQUESBACKROOMANTIQUES

Joan, Paula, Lorraine& MaryLou

39 i !m St., Westfield854.5777

Wednesday thru Saturday10-5

Thursday 10-9Buy-Seli

FOR SALEWurlitzer Organ/Conn Sax-aphone. Both In excellentcondition. MUST SELL Call647-1206 or S4&3836.

LEGALSTOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT

At i regular meeting of t h i Board ofAdjustment of the Township of ScotchPlaini held on February 10, 1983, thefollowing decisions were rendered:

Granted t h i appsi l of PAUL VERCIK,1930 Lake Avenue, Scotch Plains, per.mission to allow dwelling which wasconstructed in 1980 on Block 313, Lot22, 1930 Lake Avenue, to remain in itsexisting location, contrary to Section23-3 4A, Paragraph A, Column B (Insuffi-cient side yard).

Granted, with conditions, the appealof PAUL VERCIK, 1930 Lake Avenge,Scotch Plains, permission to completean In-ground pool, on Section 23-3.4A,Paragraph A, Column 8 (Insufficientside yard).

Granted, temporary permission, tothe appeal of CHARLES HAYiS, 2009Bartle Avenue, Scotch Plains, for per-mission to retain the use of a mobilehome i s a temporary residence onBlock 84, Lot 13, 2009 Barlle Avenue,contrary to Section 23.3.B (Use notallowed).

Granted, with conditions, the appealof THOMAS A. RlCCIUTI, 2005 GrandStreet, Scotch Plains, permission touse a vacant lot for parking on Lot 4,Block 24, 435 Terrlll Road, contrary toSection 23.3.11 of the loning or-dinance. (Use not allowed).

Granted temporary permission, withconditions, to thB appeal of IULA andCHARLES ANDREWS, 441 HunterAvenue, Scotch Plains, to share theirsingle family dwelling with disabledveterans under the Residential CareProgram ot the United States VeteransAdministration Medical Center atLyons, Niw Jersey on Block 37, Lot 13,441 Hunter Avenue, contrary to Section23-3.8 of the ionmg ordinance. (Use notallowed).

Denied the appeal of SAL J. BUC-CELLATO, 119 Stanle Glenn Road, Wat-Chung, N.J. for permission to use se-cond floor apartment on Block 50, Lot9, 1953 Westfield Avenue, ScotchPlains, contrary to Section 23.3.9. (Usenot allowed).

The files pertaining to these appealsare in the office ol the Board of Adjust-ment, 430 Park Avenue, Scotch Plains,and are availabls lor public Inspectionduring regular olfice hours

Anl t i Tierney, Secretary toBoard ol Adjustment

THE TIMES February 17, 1BB3

FEES. 28.28 L-791

TO PLfiCE YOUR BP ON THIS PflOlCALL 322-5266

FOR CIVIC.flCTIVmiS FRII LISTINGINFORmflTION mUST BE AT

THi TimiSBY NOON OM mONDflY

16OOI,SiCONDST.,SCOTCH PLAINS

SERVICES

FUEL OIL150 GL. MINIMUM

SERVICE AVAILABLE

ANNIS9 Fuel OilServices, Inc.

847.7555 or 753-1622

SCOTCH PLAINSCYCLE CENTERBicycles • Mopeds

AccessoriesSales and Service

AH Makes & Models2 Factory Trained

- Mechanics

1814 E. 2nd ST.SCOTCH PLAINS

322-1776

Call mefor real value inHomeownersInsuranceI can make your homeownersinsurance more affordable withcomprehensive, economicalcoverage from State Farm.

That's homeownersInsurance ,the State Farm way- PtuIERT DIWYNGA1BT M * 311-4373

141 SOUTH AVINl i i « * . M3-SK§FAHW00D, N J . 07023

STATE FARM FIREand Casualty CompanyHome Office: Bloomington, Illinois

if*tf fain

LEGALS

NOTICE

ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE LICENSE

Take notice that application has

Mn made to t h i director of AlcoholicBeverage Control to transler limited

holetale license H340Q-2S.BBa.OQ1.Heretofore issued to Domalne import!,nc. t / i same trom premises at 2568"lalnlield Avenue, Scotch Finns, N.J.I7078 to 1094 Globe Avenue, Mountain.

iide, N.J. 07082.Andres B. Arribas, 1182 Maple Mill

Road, Scotch Plains, N J. 07090,Stockholder holding more than 10% ofhe stock i n d preiioent ot the corpora.

ion.Objections If iny should be made im-

mediately in writing to the Director ofAlcoholic Beverage Control.

DOMAINI IMPORTS, INC.2568 Plainfield Avenue

Scotch Plains, N J . 07076

THE TIMES: February 3,17, 18B3FEES: 12.04 L-7B1

NOTICl

Notice is hereby given that at a'egular meeting of tfie Township Coun.ii of the Township of Scotch Plains,leld on Tuesday evening, February 15.983, an Ordinance entitled;

N ORDINANCE TO AMEND OR-IDINANCE NO. 80-18 ENTITLID "ANQRDINANGl APPROPRIATING THESUM OF $24,000,00 FROM THECAPITAL SURPLUS ACCOUNT AND!T10,1B2,00 FROM T H I N I W JERSEYDEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATIONFOR THE ENGINEERING, DESIGN ANDSURVEY WORK IN CONNECTIONWITH T H I WEST BROAD STREETRECONSTRUCTION" TO PROVIDE ANADDITIONAL SUM OF 140,000.00 FORTHIS PROJECT WHICH IS TO BE AP-

'ROPRIATID FROM THE CAPITALSURPLUS ACCOUNTwas duly passed on second and final

eading.

TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

Helen M. ReldyTownship Clerk

T H i TIMES: February 17, 1983

FIES-14.00 L-798

EXTERMINATING

Ffm EstimatesPrinted Specifications

Unmarked CarsPest Control

All Wojk Done toV & FHA Speeillcatloni

FOR SERVICE CALL

322-6288

LEGALS

NOTICE

Notice is hereby given that at aregular meeting of the Township Coun-ell of the Township of Scotch Plains,held on Tuesday evening, February 15.19B3, an Ordinance entitled:AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND OR-1

DINANCI NO. 80-31 AS AMENDED BYORDINANCE NO. B2-20 ADOPTID ONJULY 13, 1882, ENTITLID "BOND OR.DINANCI TO AUTHORIZE THE CON-STRUCTION OF DRAINAGI IMPROVE-MENT TO THE EAST BRANCH OFGREEN BROOK. IN AND BY THETOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS,UNION COUNTY, NEW JERSIY, TO AP-PROPRIATE THE SUM OF 1534,000.00TO PAY THE COST THERIQF, TO AP-PROPRIATE A DOWNPAYMINT ANDTO AUTHORIZI T H I ISSUANCE OFBONDS TO FINANCE SUCH AP-PROPRIATION AND TO PROVIDI FORTHI ISSUANCE OF BOND ANTICIPA-TION NOTES IN ANTICIPATION OFTHI ISSUANCE OF SUCH BONDS" TOPROVIDE FOR A TOTAL APPROPRIA-TION OF $830,000.00 TO PAY TH ICOST OF THI IMPRQVIMINT, ANDTO APPROPRIATE T H I TOTAL SUM OF141,500,00 FOR DOWNPAYMINT INCONNECTION THEREWITH,was duly passed on second and finalreading.

TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

Helen M. ReidyTownship Clerk

HE TIMES: February 17, 1983

FEES:1B.2O

NOTICE

Notice is hereby given that at aregular meeting of the Township Coun.cil of the Township of Scotch Plains,helfl on Tuesday evening, February 15,1B83, an Ordinance entitled:AN ORDINANCI TO AMEND CHAPTERXVI OF THE REVISED QINERAL OR-DiNANCES OF THE TOWNSHIP OFSCOTCH PLAINS, COMMONLYKNOWN AND CITID AS THE STORMWATER CONTROL ORDINANCI.was duly passed on second and finalreading

TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

Helen M. fleidyTownship Clerk

THE TIMES: February 17, 1983

FIIS:9.80 L-794

READAUTO PARTS

1832 E. Second St.Scotch Plains, NJPhone 322-4043

MACHINE SHOPS:00 AM • 8:00 PM Men.-Fri,

8:00 AM • 5:00 PM Sat.8:00 AM • 3:00 PM Sun.

YOUNG PAINT& VARNISH CO.

Headquarters forMuraib Paints

Complete line of wallpapers(400 BOOKS)

Mon-Sat M m • 5:30 pm

South Ave, & Terrlll Rd.322-1666

LEGALS

NOTICE

Notice Is hereby given that at aegular meeting of the Township Ooun-

il of the Township of Scotch Plains,held on Tuesday evening, February 15,

983, an Ordinance entitled:AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND GHAPTIRXXIII OF THE LAND USE AND

DEVELOPMENT QROINANGISOFTHEOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS,

MORI PARTICULARLY SECTION 23-3.2ROVIDING FOR THE ZONING MAP|

OF THE ZONE REGULATIONS OF T H ITOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS SO

AS TO PROVIDE FOR THE PLACEMENT OF CERTAIN VARIOUS LOTSA/ITHIN THE R3A ZONE.was duly pat ted on second and finaleading.

TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAlNS|

Helen M. ReidyTownship Clerk

HE TIMES: February 17. 1983

FEES. 12.04 L.7B3|

NOTICE TO B1DDIRS

Notice is hereby given that sealed•Ids will be received by the Township

Council of the Township of ScotchMains, in the Municipal Courtroom,'ark Avenue, Scotch Plains, Newersey, on March 31. at 11:30 amirevalllng time, to provide a price for

which the Township can purchase oil

nd grease and garage supplies duringhe calendar year.

Specifications, forms ot proposalnd contract may be obtained at the Of-ice of Public Property, 2445 Plainfield

Avenue, Scotch Plains, New Jersey.

All bids must be accompanied by eer-illed check, cash or bid bond in theimount of 10% ol bid submitted.

The Township Council reserves theight to reject any and all bids, and toiccept that one which, in its |udgment,iest suites the interest of theownship.

All bidders are hereby advised thathey must comply with the re-crements ol P.L. 1i75,c, 127 P.L. 1B77.33.

TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

HELEN M. REIDY,TOWNSHIP GLIRK

HE TIMES: February 17, 1BB3

FEIS:1S.BB >--79fl

Page 16: New THE TIMES · 1983. 2. 17. · Matt Zelesky, 2nd Lieutenant. The Scotch Plains Rescue Squad held its ... is the case of the railroad area, an ap-pearance in magistrate's court

<ECDUJu.(0UJ

sUJI

LEGALS

PUBLIC NOTICE

The ordinance published herewith(W3-0Z) was introduced ind passedupon first reading at the meeting of theCouncil ol the Borough el Fanwood Inthe County ol Union, New Jersey, heldon February 9, 1983, It will be furtherconsidered for final passage, afterpublic hearing thereon, at a meeting ofsaid Council on March S, 1983 atBorough Hall, 75 North Martina Avenue,Fanwood, New Jersey, at 8:00 p.m., indduring the week prior to and up to andincluding the date of such meeting,copies ol said ordinance will be madeavailable i t the Clerk's Qffiei to themembers of the general public whoShall request the same

DANIEL J. MASONBOROUGH CLERK

BOROUGH OF FANWOODORDINANCE #83.02

AN ORDINANCE CREATING CHAPTER84, FIDDLERS AND PEDDLER'SLICENSES, OF THE CODE OF THEBOROUGH OF FANWOOD, NEWJERSEY.

Be It Enacted by the Mayor andCouncil of the Borough of Fanwood inthe County of Union, as follow*;

Section 1, Chapter 85. PEDDLERSAND PEDDLIR'S LICENSES.

Section 64-1. Definitions.(a) Peddler means a person common-

ly referred to either as a peddler orhawker, who goes place to place andcarries with him food, goods, wares,and meehandise for the purpose of sell-Ing and delivering them to purchasers,

(b) Peddler's Agent means anyonewho engages in the business of a ped.dler from a licensed vehicle, but who isnot the owner or lessee of the vehicle.

jc) Food Peddler means a peddlerwhose activities are limited solely tothe sale or distribution of food itemsfrom a truck, van, cart or other type ofvehicle.

LEGALS

Section 84.2, License Required.(a) No peddler, peddler's agent, or

food peddler shall offer for sale anygoods, wares, merchandise, or foodwithout first obtaining a license fromthe Mayor and Council or their officialdesignee.

ib; This section shall not apply to:(1) Distributors of newspapers, or

written malter dealing solely withreligious, educational or similar sub-jects not of commercial nature;

(2) Persons selling or distributingfood items in sealed containers eitherfor sale on a regularly scheduled luturebasis to the property resident or fororganizations that have qualified for ex-emption under the provisions Of theNew Jersey Sales and Use Act, R S.54;3ZB.B, which latter provijions maybe waived by the Chief Of Police if suchsale or distribution Is temporary innature and for a charitable purpose.

(3) Peddlers who have sub-eontractedselling space from a duly constitutednonprofit corporation which Is engag-ed in a charitable one-day event (i.e.flea market).

Section 84-3. License for Vehicle.(a) If a peddler operates more than

one !1) vehicle for peddling, a separatelicense shall be obtained for each vehi-cle.

(b) No more than two (I) licensesshall be allowed for any one (1) owner.

(e) No license shall Issue until saidpeddler produces evidence of valid, cur-rent automobile Insurance coverage foreach vehicle to be licensed.

Section 84-4. Application for License,f,a) The application for a lieense shall

be In writing and signed by the appli-cant. It Shall be accompanied by a feeof Fifty (ISOiOO) Dollars and filed withthe Borough Clerk at least four (4) daysprior to a Regular Council Meeting.

(b) The application for lieense shallstate:

(1) The name, age and permanenthome address Of the applicant;

(2) Be accompanied by a certificatefrom the Board ol Health for each vehi-cle if food Is offered for sal»;

LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS

(3) The number and nature of any ar-rests or convictions;

(4) The purpose of the license;(5) The nature of the merchandise to

be sold or offered for sale.(6) If a vehicle Is to be used In con-

nection with the business, a descrip-tion of the vehicle; and evidence of cur-rent automobile Insurance must bepresented.

(7) The names of two (2) reputablecitizens to whom reference may bemade as to the character and fitness ofthe applicant.

Section 64-5. Grant of License.(a) The Mayor and Council is

authorized to grant a license under thisarticle to any person:

(1) Of good moral character;(!) Who h is never been convicted of

a crime JnvoMng moral turpitude, or avloiatiorTof any Stale or Federal law, orany disorderly cbnduct provision; and

(3) Who has compiled fully with thisarticle.

Section 048. License Duration.(a) A peddler's license shall be

issued for tho period of one (1) yearfrom March 1 to the last day ofFebruary of the following year.

Section 84-7. License Transferability.(a) These licenses shall nol be

transferable from one person toanother person,

(b) If a peddler ceases to use the vehl.cle described In his license and desiresto substitute another vehicle, he shall:

(1) Notify the Mayor and Councilthrough the Borough Clerk;

(2) Furnish the Mayor and Councilwith a description of the vehicle to besubstituted, together with evidence ofvalid, current automobile insurancecoverage.

Section 84-B. Display of License.(a) The license Shall be carried upon

the person of the licensee at all timeswhen the licensee is engaged In thelicensed business;

(b) In the case of a peddler with avehicle, the license shall be displayedupon the vehicle at all times when thevehicle is engaged in the licensedbusiness.

Section 64 9. Conduct of Business.(a) No licensee or licensee's agent

shall sell or offer for (ale any goods,wares, services, food or merchandise atany time other than B;00 a.m. to 8:30p,m.

Section 84-10. Entry Upon PrivateProperty.

(a) No licensee or licensee's agentshall enter any private properly for thepurpose of selling or offering for saleany goods, wares, food, merchandiseor service If the property owner has In-dicated by posting or other notice hisdesire to prohibit such entry.

Section 84-11. Restrictions For Con-duct of Business

(a) The licensee or licensee's agentwill not conduct its budness within fif-ty (50) feet of any municipally ownedproperly, other than a public park.

(b) The licensee or licensee's agentwill not conduct Its business within twohundred (200) feet of any other retailerlocated in the borough, who is engagedin selling the same product as thelicensee;

(c) The licensee or licensee's agentwill not conduct its business within onehundred (100) feet of churches orchurch property on Sundays prior to1:30 p.m.;

(d) Licensee or licensee's agent willlimit the time he remains stationary totwenty (20) minutes and must move aminimum distance of fifty (50) leet ateach time interval.

Section 84-12. Violation.Any person who shall violate any pro-

vision of this Chapter shall, upon con-vlctlon thereof, be punished by a finenot exceeding Five Hundred (SSOO.)Dollars, or by imprisonment In thecounty jail for a term not exceedingninety (80) days, or by having a licenseissued hereunder immediately revoked,thereby necessitating the cessation ofany peddling, or any combination of theforegoing.

Section 2, This ordinance shall takeeffect ten (10) days after final passageand approval as provided by law,THE TIMES: February 17, 1883FEES: 82.40 L-788

RESOLUTIONTOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

WHEREAS, the Township Councilhas determined that it would be in thebest Interest of the Township to enterinto an Agreement with CommunityEngineers, Inc. to provide the Townshipwith engineering services related to theeast branch of the Green Brook andWest Broad Street; and

WHEREAS, the cost of Said servicesfor the east branch of the Gr«en Brooksnail not exceed $51,048.71 includingamounts previously paid hereto, andwith respect to West Broad Street saidcost Shall not exceed $62,300,00 in.eluding amounts previously paidhereto; and

WHEREAS, the Director of Financehas certified in writing to the TownshipCouncil (which Certification i» annexedto the original resolution and whichshall be In the files of the TownshipClerk) that there are available funds topay for those services not to exceed theamounts set forth above; and

WHEREAS, the Local Public Con-

tracts Law (N.J.S.A, 4OA:11-1, et seq.)requires that the Resolution authoriz-ing the award of a contract for profes-sional services without competitivebids must be publicly advertised; •

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT R1SOLV-ED by the Township Council of theTownship of Scotch Plilns, UnionCounty, New Jersey, that the Townshipenter into an agreement with Communi-ty Engineers, Inc. for the engineeringservices required.

THIS Contract is awarded withoutcompetitive bids as a "professional ser-vice" under the provisions of said LocalPublic Contracts Law because said Ser-vices are rendered or performed by per-sons authorized by law to practice arecognized profession, which practiceis regulated by law, and which practicerequires the knowledge of an advancedtype in the field of learning acquired bya prolonged, formal course of specifiededucat ion and Ins t ruc t ion , andbecause it is impossible at this time toknow the exact dimensions Of the ser-vices to be performed and the exactnature of the various tasks to be per-

formed, and accordingly, the servicesto be rendered cannot reasonably bedescribed by written specifications,and additionally, because the said ser-vices are of such a qualitative nature aswill not permit the receipt of com-petitive bids due to the subjective dif-ference In the work product of such per-sons and tho fact that the ethical re-quirements of Such professional willnot permit such bidding.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that thisoriginal Resolution, with the Director ofFinance's Certification of AvailableFunds, be kept in the files of theTownship Clerk.

A copy of this Resolution shall bepublished in The Times as required bylaw within ten (10) days of its passage.

TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

HELEN M. REIDYTownship Clerk

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that theTownship Council of the Township ofScotch Plains will introduce a resolu-tion declaring the gypsy moth a publicnuisance and requesting the NewJersey Department of Agriculture to In-stitute a gypsy moth control program,

at 8:30 p.m. on March 1, 1983, in theCouncil Chambers Of the MunicipalBuilding, 430 Park Avenue, ScotchPlains, New Jersey. All interested per-sons are Invited to attend and be heard,

or they may address their comments inwriting to the Township Council prior tothe meeting.

TOWNSHIP OF SCOTCH PLAINS

Helen M. Reidy, Township Clerk

THE TIMES: February 17,1983FEES: 35 58

THE TIMES: February 17, 1983

L-795 FEES: 10.08 L-786

Mayor,,.Continued from page 1cil to spend up to 7.5%more than last year vsthe 5% Increase inspending al lowedunder the previous CapLaw, Since we had tospend more clearingthe snow this pastweekend than we hadbudgeted for snowplowing for the entireyear, and more than wehave had to spend inseveral years, it maymake sense to take ad-vantage of the changesin the Cap Law thisyear. A second changein the Legislature willallow us to introduceour 1983 municipalbudget on March 1 oreven March 15 and stillmeet the various state-Imposed deadlines.

Of course the mostobvious effect of theblizzard was to ourstreets and thenecessary work ofclearing them. Whilesome called Town Hallwith concerns aboutwhy their street hadn'tbeen plowed to theirsat isfact ion, I feeloverall the job done inScotch Plains wasoutstanding. From the

start of the storm Fri-day morning to the endof the snow fall in theearly hours of Saturdaymorning some 22 to 23inches of snow fell inScotch Plains. Windsgave us drifts of asmuch as four feet deepIn places.

Our men began battl-ing the snow stormabout 2 pm Friday after-noon, first by saltingand sanding, and thenby plowing. We hadtwelve town-ownedvehicles on the roadand an equal number ofcontractor's vehicles inact ion. These menworked round the clockFriday night and intoSaturday afternoon,stopping about fivehours, and then workedInto the wee hours ofSunday morning.

Friday night I rodewith Public WorksDirector Ray D'Amatoin his four wheel drivevan from about 11 to3:30 am. The van whichalso is equipped toplow was being used asan emergency vehicleto assist the plows thatgot Into trouble. Duringthose hours I learned agreat deal about plow-

ing, how we split up thetown into sections withteams assigned toeach section and aboutwhy some streets areharder to plow thanothers. Plows alwaystry to make left turnsrather than right turnsas right turns tend tohave the snow come offand pack under thewheels of the plow. Notso on a left turnbecause of the angle ofthe plows.

We have some 130cul-de-sacs and deadend streets. Severalblocks of a regularstreet can be plowed inthe 15 to 20 minutes ittakes to clean the endof one cul-de-sac. Thusthose of you living oncul-de-sacs usually findyour block to be one ofthe last blocks in townto be cleared.

Normally when wehave con t rac to rs 'vehicles working, wepair them with a towntruck because the towntrucks have two-wayradios and can callheadquarters if theyhave a problem. Snowplowing puts a tremen-dous burden on thegears and brakes; bat-

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDSBOARD OF EDUCATION

Of theSCOTCH PLAINS-FANWOOD

SCHOOL DISTRICTUNION COUNTY, NEW JERSEY

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THATsealed bids will be received by theBoard of Education of the Scotch

lalns-Fanwood School District, UnionCounty, New Jersey, for the following:

Home Economics Bid 19B3-1984Printing Bid 1983-1984Phsylcal Education Bid 1983.1984Bids lor the above will be received at

the office of the Board of Education at2830 Piainfleld Avenue, Scotch Plains,New Jersey 07078, at the following(Prevailing TimejS)):

Home Economics Bid, Friday, March18, 1983 at 2:00 P.M.

Printing Bid, Monday, March 21,1983at 2:00 P.M.

Physical Education Bid, Monday,March 21, 1883 at 2:30 P.M.and will be publicly opened and readimmediately theretfter.

If bid exceeds S1Q,QQ0.QQ. biddermust be prequaiifi«d by the New JerseyDepartment of Treasury, Division ofBuilding and Construction, prior to datethat bids are received. Any bid submit-ted under the terms of New JerseyStatutes not including a copy of a validand active PrequallficationiCiasslliea.tlon Certificate will be rejected as be-ing nonresponslve to bid requirements.

Bids must be made on the proposalforms in the manner designated,enclosed In a ^pnfjfute spatpd envelope

with name and address of bidder andwork bid upon noted on the outside,and must be accompanied by a Cer-tified Check, Cashier's Check or BidBond drawn to the order of the Board ofEducation for not less than ten percent(10%) of the amount of the bid, but Inno case In excess of S20.000.00, andmust be delivered to the Secretary ofthe Board of Education, or tho Board'sdesignated representative, at the aboveplace on or before the hour named. TheBoard of Education assumes noresponsibility for bids mailed ormisdirected In delivery., No bid may be withdrawn for a period

Of sixty (60) days after the date set (orthe opening th*reof.

The right is reserved to reject any orall bids to waive informality in the bid-ding if it Is in the Interest of the Boardof Education to do so.

Bidding shall be In conformance withthe applicable requirements of N.J.S.A.18A:18A-1 eq set., pertaining to the"Public School Contracts Law".

All bidders are placed on notice thatthey are required to comply with the re-quirements of P.L. 1975, Chapter 127.

BY ORDER OF THEBOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE

SCOTCH PLA1NS-FANWOODSCHOOL DISTRICT

UNION COUNTY, NEW JERSEY

Richard J. Marshall, Secretary

THE TIMES: February 17, 1B83FEES: 34.72 L-790

teries can go bad andtransmissions don'talways hold up. GaryArmbruster, themechanic in our PublicWorks Department,was a very busy man.

A second plus of hav-ing radios In our trucksinvolved the RescueSquad. If needed in asnow emergency, thenearest plow is dispat-ched to lead theRescue Squad into andout of a call.

Two major problemswere parked cars andabandoned cars. Park-ed cars made plowingmore difficult duringthe storm. Also whenthose same cars weredug out it resulted inmore snow being putback on cleared or par-'tially cleared streets. Abigger problem wasabandoned cars, andwe had several. Thesenot only made plowingdifficult, they were apositive safety hazard.As soon as possible,these cars were towedto either Town Hall orthe Southside FireHouse. Before the carscould be retrieved, theowners had to pay thetowing bill and were

PUBLIC NOTICE

The ordinance published herewith(#83-01) was introduced and passedupon first reading at the meeting of theCouncil of the Borough of Fanwood inthe County of Union, New Jersey, heldon February 9, 1982. It will be furtherconsidered for final passage, afterpublic hearing thereon, at a meeting ofsaid Council on March 9, 1B83 atBorough Hall. 75 North Marline Avenue,Fanwood, New Jeriey, at 8:00 P.M., and

during the weik prior to and up to andincluding the date Of Such meeting,copies of said ordinance will be madeavailable at the Clerk's Office to themembers of the general public whoshall request the same.

"DANIEL J. MASONBOROUGH CLERK

BOROUGH OF FANWOODORDINANCO #8301

AN ORDINANCE APPROPRIATING$18,000.00 TO FINANCE THE COST OFONE AND ONE USED POLICE VEHICLE

FOR BOROUGH USE BY AND FOR THEBOROUGH OF FANWOOD. NEWJERSEY.

Be It Enacted by the Mayor andCouncil of the Borough of Fanwood inthe County of Union, as follows:

Section 1. The title of this ordinanceis Borough of Fanwood Ordinance No83.01.

Section 2. The Borough of FanwoodShall undertake to acquire one new andone used police vehicle for use by theborough Police Department, togetherwith the accessory apparatus andequipment necessary and suitable forthe use thereof at a total cost of118,000.00.

Section 3. The sum of SIB.OOO.QQ ishereby appropriated from the CapitalImprovement Fund for the payment ofthe cost of such vehicles and equip-ment. The entire cost of such purchaseShall be met from the Capital Improve-ment Fund,

Section 4. This ordinance shall takeeffect ten (10) days after final passageand approval as provided by law.

THE TIMES: February 17, 1983FEES: 25.48 L-788

given a ticket besides.Despite all this by

Sunday afternoon adrive around town andup and down many ofthe cul-de-sacs showedevery street to be openwith many cleareddown to the bare pave-ment. With New YorkCity still talking abouttotally closed streetsand only partially openmajor parkwayselsewhere in New Yorkand New Jersey, I thinkyou will agree our men,both regular employeesand contractors, did avery good job under try-ing conditions.

Fanwood,..Continued Irom pace Icrastinating if the statewithdraws the projectto rebuild the bridge.Clausen reminded thegroup that Fanwoodhad been trying for fiveyears to get the state'scooperation to repairthe bridge, but to datehas had no direct com-munication from thestate. Councilman BobRau, Jr. suggested thatrepresentatives fromthe state be invited tothe next council agen-da meeting so that thematter could be solved.

An ordinance toamend the definition of"Department Head" inborough's personnelpolicies manual wastabled in a split vote.

The amendment defin-ed department head asthe Borough Ad-ministrator, Chief ofPolice, Building Inspec-tor and Director ofPublic Works. Coun-cilman Clausen notedthat "We don't have adi rector of publ icwo rks , " and com-mented that the or-dinance should havegone through thebudget and financecommittee, not thepublic works commit-tee.

Mayor Trumpp calledfor a vote to table thefirst reading of the or-dinance and nay voteswere recorded by Coun-oilmen Paul Abbott,Loren Hoilembaek andAndrew McDonald;Counci lmen DaveCharzewski , DougClausen and Bob Rauvoted yea to table themeasure. MayorTrumpp cast thedeciding vote by alsovoting yea.

Rabbits and cats both washtheir faces with their paws,but a rabbit uses both pawsat once and the cat onlyuses one paw at a time.

"Time is the greatest inno-vator." Francis Bacon