· 5/31/1979  · "t- • '•'- "t page 18 cranpord (n.j.) chronicle...

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"T- '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, WEW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that, SF you can really save at Baron's Reg. $10.00 ALfTlflY DEEP miST mild Skin Freshener Reg. $7.SO flLfTlAY DEEP miST " Riolsture Lotion JIC oo Reg. $1.59 POND'S DUSTING POWDER 99* Just Arrived! Travel Sizes PflNTENE PRODUCTS UORnTPoTiDORE or Garwood I b*. amended . . v . ' BoroUBh Clerk supplement to read at follows; "*NB.b"DINANC:E TO""AMEND ' SECTION Vi CHAPTERS^?- CHAPTER S OP THE REVISED Article! DOQS DRUG STORE 34 Eastman St. Cranford 276-6100' ordinance which the lollowlno It « copy, WMlntrodoe«t rttd-amjl-p»»Mtd, on flr»t r«*dln0 by the Council ot the- Boroooh ol^OarwoqAattmMtlnoheloI IRON-ON When you purchase PL12 or PL316 PowerJock*Rule. will further consider the oame tor.Unal B.Y PROVIDING FOR A.. PENALTY that the said Council will further passaoe on the 13 day of June 1979. at FOR LATE PAYMENT OF LICENSE, consider the said Ordinance for final «:M p.m., In th« Council Chamber, ..AND REGISTRATION FEES AND passage on the l « h day of June, 1979, at Municipal Building, Garwood, New "T*EVISINO OTHER" SECTIONS OF .1100p.m. Boroooh Hall, KenllwoHh, Jertey, at which time and place any SAID CHAPTER TOj XONFORAitr J r0-TNewJerseyr»twhlchtlmeandplaceahy perton who may be fntemtad therein APPLICABLE CAW. ' person .Who maybe. Interested therein will be given an opportunity fob* heart 16 IT ORDAINED by the Mayor and will be givf n )in npnortwnlty tofae-Wfd- concernlnfl ula ordinance. Council of the Borough of Garwood that concerning said Ordinance. ~ BorqUQh_clerk_ "--"—'—' and WHE REAS, It Is In the t»st Interests of' the Borough of Garwood to enter IntA such an agreement, . . .. NOW, THEREFORE,. .BE-—IT- ORDAINEQ by the Mayor and Council of the dorouplrof Oarwooid, tht;t^: ttttld"A reement Borough Clerk - . RROPOSED ORDINANCE NO.-W-W— AN ORDINANCE TO REPEAL ORDINANCE NO. tl-3 AND AMEND ot Modify Interlocal Services "aafed December f£^f97 aafed December f£^f97^?ortfS Purpose of Inserting a_D«crlptlonof Actwltl»s"fo('tne""F!fth"Ve«r Urban" County Community Development Block.. Grant Program," a copy nf w hl| - h 'f EXEMPT"! : ^EETH«Fe^f r bOGr- ELTM1NATE""THE""POSITT6N OF T" . WORKING F=0REMAN "OF THE The person applying (or the license TRAFFIC CONTROL)-PARKS AND and registration tag thall pay to the RECREATION DEPARTMENTS. Borough Clerk' • fee of UJO for the . BE IT ORDAINED by the-Governlng _ licensing of each dogartd such additional god^ trf-Hw porpi'gh o/ tt»nHwor>t' =f«mlm tlie reultluHuii lau,^rprflVlged iECJJOK_LItaLfjrdlnanc« No. 41-3 tar by state law. Each license and tag and all amendments thereto be and' the shall be renewed annually, and for each tame are hereby repealed, annual renewal, the fee tor the license SECTION 2. That Ordinance No. 79-5 and for the registration tag thalj be the . be amended soas todelete therefrom the _ sami»_a^Jqr_t.hej>rlgln»l_JlceflM «nd .'provision for comperisatlo*Mor-Super' Mayor and Borough Clerk In accordance with the provisions of taw, and •'-.-' BE IT FURTHER ORDAINED that this ordinance ishall take effect Immediately upon .Its ennrtmtnt. CRANFORD CLEAN-UP WEEK IS NOW HEREI THROW OUT ATTEST, DORIS POLIDORE, Borough Clerk Dated: May U, \m Fee; * 19.33 SALE •5.75 ALBAN-LEWIS 109 N. Union. Cranford 276-0866 \ Charmglow and Ducane.:: The Great Outdoor Machines fV6 reglifraflon tag. Said llceniel, reglstra tlon tag' and renewals thereof shall expire on the last day of January In each year. A penalty charge of.* 1.00 shall be hmpoted aooln»t any person who shall fall to make application for and receive the. aforementioned llc*n»« and registration by the last day of January of each year. Said penalty charge shallbe In addition to any other penalties authorized bylaw or by the provisions of 5-17 following. Only one license and registration tag shall be required in any license year for anydoo owned In New Jersey, and such license artd tag Issued,by any other municipality shall be accepted by the Borough as evidence of compliance with this section and Section 5-3. Dogs used for guides for blind persons d commonly known am'seeing eye' dogs shall be licensed and registered as other dogs'as hereinbefore provided for,* i—exeept-fhat the-ownenor keeperoMuclv dog shall not be required to pay any fee therefor," "513 CANVASS OF DOGS: REPORT Any person appointed by the Governing Body shall annually cause a canvass to be made of all dogs owned, kept o'r harbored within the limits of the Borough, In accordance with NJSA 4:\1 15.15, as amended." "517 PENALTY Any person who shall violate any provision of Sections 5-3, 5 3,5-4, 5 6, St. 5 9, J U or 5-14 shall, upon conviction, be liable to a penalty of not less than 15.00 nor more-than WO.pO for each offense, to be recovered (n the name of the Garwood _ Boatd_af_Heallh-otJn_Jhe-jiame of Borough of Garwood, as the case may be, except that Ipr a first offense, tho penalty shall be not less than si .00 nor more than tSO.OO to be rocovored as aforementioned." —Section 3: AIL ordinances or parts of ordinances Inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed. Section 3: The within ordinance-shall take effect upon final passage and publication In accordance with law. John J. McCarthy Mayor Attest: Doris Polldore ,, Borough Clerk Dated: May 34, 1W Fee: J31JK , CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY BOARDOF ADJUSTMENT The Board of Adlustment (Zoning), Township of Cranford, County of Union, New Jersey, will hold a public hearing on Monday, June 4, 1970, at 8;)5 p.m., preceded by a workshop meeting at 7:45 p.m., In the Municipal Building, to consider the following: 14-79: Application of CARMEN M. TELLERI for a variance -from the requirements of Section 24-48(d) of the Zoning Ordinance to permit the construction of a Wood deck and partial shade overhead With less than r.equlred rear yard on Block 504, Lot I, known as 637 Lincoln Park East. 15-79: Application of ANTHONY CRINCOLI for a variance from the requirements of Sections 34-17(b) and J4- 17(h) of the Zoning Ordinance to permit the construction of a two car garage and storage loft area with less than required side yard and additional height on Block 198, Lot 47, known as 303 Balmlere Road North. 16-79: Application of WILLIAM LeMAIRE tor a- variance from the requirements of Section ]4-48(c) of the Zoning Ordinance to-permit the construction of a fireplace chimney with leu "—'- ——"—-*•-'•"-• -'- J -- -•*-'• visor of Parks, playgrounds and Traffic Control Maintenance. SECTION -3; Paragraph 5-41 of the proposed Code of ,the Borough of Kenilworth be and It hereby deleted, SECTION 4. This Ordinance shall take effect on August 38, 1979. APPROVED: LIVIOMANCINO, Mayor ATTEST: Margaret Adler, Borough Clerk Dated: May 34, 1979 Fee; 113.44 ~ " . ~ BOROUGH OF GARWOOD GARWOOD, NEW JERSEY PROPOSEDORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE Public Notice Is hereby given that ah ordinance of which the following Is a copy, was Introduced, read and passed, on first reading by the Council of the Borough of Garwood, at a meeting held May 33, 1979, and that the said Council—. J will further consider the same wnifUfl" passage on the 13th day of June 1979 at 8:30 p.m.. In the Council Chamber, Municipal Dulldlno, Garwood, New Jersey, at which time and place any person who may be Interested therein will be given an opportunity to heard concerning said ordinance. _ Doris Polldore, Borough Clerk AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR AND BOROUGH CLERK TO EXECUTE AN AGREEMENT WITH THE COUNTY OF UNION TO' MODIFY THE INTERLOCAL SERVICES AGREEMENT DATHD DECEMBER 15, 1974. WHEOEAS, certain Federal funds are potentially available to Union County under Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, commonly known .'-as Community Development Block Grants, and WHEREAS, It is nBcesSaryTdlfrHeW" an existing Interlocal Services agreement for the County and Its people to benefit from this program; and WHEREAS, an agreement has been, proposed under which the Borough of Garwood and the County of Union In' cooperation with other municipalities will modify an Interlocal Services Program pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:8A-l; and ..... '. ..•.. CAR FIRE Cranfofd : fireWien ex- tinguished a blaie in the ignition system ofa car owned by Brant Eltringham, of US New St., on Sunday. ,J- YOUR OLD BEDDING! FIX YOUR BACK BEDDING SALE 7" I -~i — - ~^'—,-'-'Jr- ' - " " - - . , - * - - •>• ; r : Kenilworth SettTerif A* Polls .Tuesday .1 4j£j€5 l&-1 /- - -- .- . f VOL. «6 No. 22 Publishml V. very Thnrsrlay Serving Cranford, Kenilworth and Garwood -tfSPS l3tiauaSecondTTass~Postage Paid Cranford, N. J. 20 CENTS ROOFING & CARPENTRY • Free Estimates All Work Guaranteed 10 Years "Experience KEITH BAKKER 276-0042 wheels * CADILLAC MStQRD- BRAKES-DISC 29.76 TWIN SIZE 39"x75", en. pc. LAVISH MULTI-OUlfrriNO Magnificent fnultl-qullted premium bedding at a fabulous low price. Hundreds of tempered steel, firm Innersprlng colls, deluxe upholstered comfort. „ , ... - AMD ::; BOX SPRING SALE . pc. Pick-Up Or Delivery Available WE ALSO REMOVE THERAPEDIC MAT TRESS 3 wheels 2 wheels 3 wheels vt.it *CHEVY + ALL AMERICAN *CARS * —While You Walt— 3-wheels *»;76 i to,HMOM *%pH mmim* i I I. Blmore Aye. Cor. Crlto Ml. St. -k Z Ceoroe.l, H«yw»y Clr, HI )»J44 + OTHER MODELS, FIRMNESS & STYLES IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OR PICKUP em's Furnitu 8 EASTMAN ST., CRANFORD jposito CranibrdMovte ~A^« •tffasromce^— —-2/1 ALSO-QBEN-MON. r -THURS, r FRI>, ? tll 9PJMI- BRING AD IN & RECEIVE A FREE USEFUL GIFT JUST FOR THE ASKING Changes Draw Fire 5:30, Sat.'tM 1, -Closed Silo. '• PRE-SEASON SPECIAL NOW THRU JUNE 2 OFF Wo Muss*No Fuss'GreafCharcoaTTTawF Give your family that great charcoal taste of outdoor cooking and save 10% off the regular price with these earlybird specials Irom Elizabeth- town Gas. Available lor either propane or natural gas, these grills give you all the pleasures ol patio cooking and none of themess. No dirty charcoal briquettes to handle or store- 3230 no lighter fluid to fool with and no waiting for that perfect fire. This exciting offer includes delivery to your home and a lull one year warranty. Make, year move now to clean, dependable gas. Oiler expires June 2nd, 1979. Sportsline byDucane Finally, an outdoor gas grill with SMOKE- LESS BROIL! Ducane's unique Rotls-A- Grate" keeps the grease In the drip pan and out of the air — all that escapes is the delicious.-arorrta of outdoor cooking.. The special burner design gives you'a big 310 square inphes of evenly heated cooking surface", witrv rib hot spots" common "to ordinary charcoal grills™an.d the Ducane grill does it ; at a fraction of the coat! the attractive arid durable design of this grill, will add a great touch ,tq your outdoor cooking area,^AII electrical components- are UL approved, Long the leading name in effortless out- door cooking, Charmglow now gives you the convenience of your kitchen in the beauty of the great outdoors with their Model 3230. The 3230's money saving dual control lets you use the entire 461 square inch cooking surface or just half of It, 'and you can, adjust the easy to read con- trol for the perfect flame height. The fool- proof Channlile automatic igniter makes lighting the 3230 as easy as pushing a .button. The versatility and dependability of the Charmglow 3230.will give you out- door family fun for years to come. Avenue. I7^»: Application of ARTHUR & YVONNE KIAMIE for a variance from the requirements of Sections 24-4S(b) and 24-48(e) of the Zoning Ordinance to permit the subdivision of property 100 feet by 100 feet Into two 50-foot by 300- W»Wot»H>ne-loMias~ext»tln<rrmlo'ence- and the other lot Is vacant on which applicant proposes to build a single family residence on Block 595, Lot U, knowrKas 10 Cranford Terrace. 18-W: Application of, JOAQUIM COSTA far a variance from the require- ments of Sections 24-45 (c) and 24-45<d) of the Zoning Ordinance to permit the construction of a n$w garage with less than roqulred'isldo and rear yards on Block 213, Lot 45, known as 44 Richmond Avenue. . 7?: Application of SHARON HOWARD, T A CHAMPION ACADEMY OF GYMNASTICS for a variance from the requirement) of Section 24&5(a) of the Zoning Ordinance to permit the noncqntormln.a_UM,_Qf an—tatfstlng- —' building for a gymnastic facility on Block 604, Lot 1, known as 1 Baltimore. Avenue. i 20-789: Application of CAROL WESOLQWSKI for a variance from the requirements of Section 34-17 (h) of the Zoning Ordinance t6 permit construction of an addition to existing garage with -lest than iequtretf~»td8 yarn" on' Block *U, Lot 7, known as 49 South Union Avenue. . At. the above .time and place, opportunity will.bo.,p,lvon_to. all porsons who wish to be heard. •_. .. BvOrderof.r BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT 336 CENTENNIAL AVE. CRANFORD, HEW JERSEY SALE PRICES EFFECTIV/E THRU THURSDAY," iMAV 31,.1W» , WOOD DECK KIT HARDWARE These kits include enough hardvyare for ^ deck sizes listed below, jumg*'' j* 10'x20' kit $59.95 - $59.95 6 Ground-Saddles & IB PlnioJSaddlei Ground Saddle 25'x20 ; kit $79.95 9 Ground Saddles & 21 Plain Saddles ~ BRING xm OUTSIDr IN WITH WlNDdWS !"* l l[ a . ted ?reenhou5e wlhdqws bring light, air; M^fy&ff^~- ••-. They Also ftan: •from-Jeft^ Ed (Beellne) Murphy, Charlie (Shlrtman) Fertonardo, Stu (Puffer) Awbrey, Ron (Ump) AAaf.0ttai-LG.ene . (Trallblazer) Marino, TonV (Tapebuster) Haydon, Barbara (Stretch) Brande, Jean (Hlgh^+epper) Blume, Esther (Sidestripes) Relmllnger, Henry (Marathon) Dreyer, Kim (Wuzzle) Awbrey, Bev (Pubs) Awbrey, Ray (Easy Racer) Molnar and Jim (Beneficiary) teon. For trut story of the race see memoirs when all are retired, For Interim results see Page 3. Greg Priee-agreed to take picture after seeing officlaldcrrT and journalists combined in violation of .one way traffic sign. For a preview of the upcoming race, see Pages 2 and 3. By STUARTAWBREY Cranford's Zoning Board of Adjustment took a hon-conformirig view of the proposed L-realignment- of residential zoning in Cranford this week. Members of) the'board, which deals with landowners seeking relief from zoning restrictions, characterized the pending changes as inconsistent, confusing and legitimizing non-conforming use of property. Their sister body, the Planning Board, which had included the new zoning in the massive land development law, stoutly defended its handiwurk as scientific, defensible and "reflecting the real world." The controversy erupted during a full dress joint meeting Tuesday night involving the two boards, the Township Committee and the Board of Education. The argument expanded beyond questions of enforcement to include accusations that the changes in zoning would alter the residential characteristics ..ul Cranfprd by encouraging higher density iri housing. Instead of the, three residential zones now in effect, the township would have eight .different Lypes of zoning districts for 'residences, ranging 1 from single family dwellings to apartments. A map of the proposed ordinance is on Page 12 of this edition. Amap of current zones is on Page '13. u Stirring of discontent over the residential zoning portions of the 200-plus page or- dinance, which had been expressed privately in recent days came out in full force before andamong the amassed of- ficialdom. Steering the officials page by page, title by title, of .the ordinance, Mayor Raymond S. Molnar, the moderator, arid John Duryee, the. interpreter, dealt with technicalities;' refinements and explanations until they arrived at Article VI: Zoning. Timothy O'Leary of the Board of ' Adjustment -said the variety of zones in small areas of town appeared to be "spot zones" that would make it ^ "damn near impossible to fiffd bill if a property is on one zone or another." He said it would be dif- ficult to hold to an ordinance and wondered if the newordinance would result in a complete breakdown in all zoning here." Ralph Taylor, former attorney for the zoning body, called the change a "repressive step" and "a stamp of approval of 50 (ool lots." Highly agitated, Taylor said the zoning areas had been "gerry- mandered" and .said-"the new scheme encourages denser residency." O'Leary and Taylor are chairmen Of the Democratic and Republican municipal comrrtittecs, respectively, but both said they GOP Primary? 1st In 21 Years The first primary battle among Cranford Republicans in 21 years culminates next Tuesday at the polls when GOP voters will choose Bob Biach or Dick Salway for the party's nomination for Township Com- mittee. John Coburn is running unopposed for the Democratic nomination. On the Democratic side, one local and one county primary contest have emerged. In Kenilworth, : John Ueltzhoeffer is challenging incumbent Livio Mancino for mayor. Incumbent borough council members Mary Kelly and Richard McCormack face challenges from Gary -Rowinskj^andMarioDiBeIla.S|eedetails on •Pget& ; \ ' g ,., : . ;; .. Harold Seymour pf Cranford seeks otUiUo:i^itetetih^tb'i!te'i|i hotnUiaUon:iorirteTetectioh^\tb.,i!te.vi|qi|i>a<. County Board of Chosen FreehoiaerS'-witft Everett Lattimore and Thomas W. Long'. Robert Ctalispan anfi Kligpn. fi V l l l i merits are on Pages 4 and 5. The only other jobs oh the line this year are for the State Assembly. In the 20th district, William A. Cambria of Cranford and E. Jonathan Bell of Hillside are running for the two Democratic nominations and Chuck Hardwick and C. Louis Bassano, both Republican" incumbents, are seeking nomination for re-election, also unopposed. The polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Cranford's 32 districts remain the same as last year, but polling places have been changed in two districts, the 20th and the 28th. Both polling places for those, districts used to be in Roosevelt School, but the 20th has been shifted to Orange Avenue School arid the 26Ui to;tifcte-Municipal "-feuUdligo•:•:•.•;. ;y.;\-:r-vV. ';.:•••-••.••>•:,.. . Voters will also be choking members of "'their respective party committees. As in the past, a number of vacancies exist; News Of The Future See Pages 1213 New Zoning Map (And The Old) Master Plan Highlights Of New Ordinance The Debate setting.for. decorative plants bron/e. Nine si/es available an'd per Tect Auailnbleirt whitir atid paled: Fee:, t . Theron_Wiek May 34. W79 i BOROUGH OF KBNIl,WORTH K6NlliWORTH,NEWJ6RSEY PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby given that f t t H l l l H ^tToramSriWBfT»hlctr<H copv Wai Introduced, read and passed on first reading by the Mayor and Council ol the Sbrouoh.of Kenilworth, at i ' meeting on the J2nd day ol May 1*79, and Th'is is the sehson for BLACK CARPENTER ONLY !2ffc A BLISS EXTERMINATOR COMPANY ONLY -the Forever door HIS 149 95 GUARANTEED 1 T».3i^ • w w to last for as long as you own your home Includes all hardware Pro-hung'or eaiv installation Has security koylock too! Pits most standard doorways \ • SELP STORING combination screen an& window • 45% MORE HEAT RETENTION THAN ALUMINUM POORS ' 65 Lbs. of SOLID DURABILITY 1 V," thick • COLONIAL CROSSBUCK DESIGN •"WtfbDGRAIN TEXTURE • MADE OF RUGGED "SPACE AGE" MATERIALS NO MITERED CORNERS to loosen of separate Elizabethtown Gas A National Utilities <Hndustrles Company , Wb]t-waH2-,U&a-0UL-easy. credit'terms or. your Master ChKtfge Card. ELIZABETH SS9-5000 : •• bill* 1 3 0 1 mIpn IkuM lAd fn III 9pm Sit 9 0Olm.4'.)Orim WESTFIELD 280-5000 OKlyUdiwt 'Huit HI 1pm, p J0IM HOpn PERTH AMBOY OH.i J09-i)QO0 D»l>> )0 Jnr 5 pm '" Ml 9pm t)U(Jd ortlv in iin [SECIff ' " LJKit HRC1WN AVt' (Oft G'ffn Si tttti HI I 9 Crrtli .'89 500(1 Dj.ly 1 JOj m 4 10ftHt' iClotrd l>ruidjysi SlTViriM I'V Eli.MMOttltilrtr PHILLIPSm ST SUSSEV COURT'V MALL' FtT 208 363-2830 Duly 10 i n ] m - iCIoud Sjlmdiyil '"' 0»V H » * l tW}M •T..IS s Is Clean Energy For America's Future : Use It Wisely perfect for slorlhQ all those lawn & garden tools, bikes, Idwnmowers, etc Comes complete with PREMSSEMBLED ribs, 5 / 8 " Textured III Siding, lumber, root shingles, all necessary nails, hardware and easy to follow assembly instructions' THE BIG BARN SALE it Full Size Model on Displa\T 8' x a' 8' X 1O'_ ONLY ONLY' 34S°° *399°° prices Include Floor Assembly < Pblgnarii" services marked Memorial Day hece; but there and Katie Conway. Mary Beth's father, the mayor, in a brief were moments of surprise and awe, too. Shots from firing address spoke of need to work for peace He said that "War squad surprised Mary Beth Molnar as she deposited wreath for those" lost at sea. Parade fascinated Mandy Crane, Matthew and Michael Conway, Brady King, Paul Nizolak address spoke of need to work for peace. He said that "War is the poorest way to settle anything. We hope that we who survived will learri thelesson so that they will not have died irv-vain." Photos by Greg Price. .^ PTC To Award Nine in the Democratic primary as "Indepen- dent' Democrats of Union County." Tlie winners will run against Jack Meeker, Blanche Banasiak and Frank H. Lehr, all unopposed in the GOP primary. _T.he contest between Salway and Biach has. been low keyed and gentlemanly, ..though.Jhe two candidates have waged decidedly different campaigns. Biach has been reminding Republicans that he came within two votes of winning a committee seat Jast fall, and he says he deserves another try. He also has spoken out on various issues in his public statements. Salway, who is supported by numerous party regulars and past officeholders in hi§ first bid for office, has' emphasized their rit Both mnn hnvo _ayektefh- "will be~7illed by write-ins. There is one contest, among Republicans, in the 7th District. The Juul Neilsens represented that area for many years, but are retiring from thecqrnrnittee. Richard A. Johnston ariSTPauIa A. JoEnston of 101 Spring Garden St. seek election as part of the Regular Organization Republican of Union County, and W. Jay White and Patricia A. White of 36 Greaves PI. are running as "Reorganized Republicans for^g Better Cranford." The Johnstons support'Salway and the Whites suppoxt.Biach, but the Township Committee candidates said the competition was coinci- dental and not directly related to their primary campaign. If Seymour wins rehomination, Cranford will be represented in each of the three LANDSCAPE TIES CREOSOTE SOAKED 6" X 6" x 8' » ONLY . STOCKADE lEHGlfl •^'•B'.'Nijgh^jB^sa^ 0 ! Hitjh x 8' Sectiad ' Nine^enitirs of Cranford High School ?. have beendesignatedas^ipiente'^a^ total of $5,850 in scholarships by, the senior educational committee of the^. o Cranford Parent Teacher Council. They are: . Scott Buchanan, of 618 Lexington Ave,, who" will attend Brafdley University and plans to major in music. Marianne Caprio, of 35 Roselle Ave., who plans to enter the Muhlenberg Hos- pital School of Nursing. •? Robin Douglas, of 45 Brookdale PL, who will pursue a career in the arts at GJassboro State College. "Jody Ehrich, of 48 Concord Ave., who -plans^to enterCornell University and major in food sciencer- , ^ Audrey ElwertowskJ, of 301 North Ave. E,, who will be pursuing business administration and accounting at -Pennsylvania State University. Victor Lindberg, 6f 1012'Orange Ave., who will be a mathematics/ major at the Universithy of Scranton. Nancy McGrath, of 5 tuxedo PJ., who has chosen th&fleldbf animal behavior and will head for Bucknell University. Marilyn Prout, of 21 Cornell Rd., who plans an accounting major at Douglass College. . „. . . John Zebrowski, of 308 Stoughtot) Ave., who will study, business. M engineering -at Rutgers University. r 1 -—TtoergrantS this year are being; given'" in honor of Mrs. Ruth Janovsik's 50 years of service to Cranford schools. The grants awarded each year to Cranford High School seniors are made possible by donations from each of the PTA's proceeds from the Scholarship Ball, a jazz concert, and The Chronicle subscription drive. Prior to 1964 each school awarded its own scholarship. At that time the PTAs combined to form a scholarship*^ committee., This combination, plus! participation in the Scholarships- Clearinghouse, has resulted in a more efficient and confidential system for processing applications, reports the committee, which is now known as the ' senior educational grant committee of the PTC. In the past is years a total of $46,383 "Has been awarded to 120 CHS . seniors. Members of the committee are: Nancy. Snyder, CHS.; Connie Pentz, Orange Ave.; Hana Cofsky, Hillside Ave.; Janet Silcox, Bloomingdale; ThelmaHBaechtold, > Brookside; Nancy DiBella, Lincoln; Joann Downey, Livingston; Janice Minion, Roosevelt; Lynda Hopler, Walnut. The seniors were scheduled to be introduced to the PTC at a meeting , ioday. - ..-,:...•.-•-.• ',•..-.•••;.;- •; - jDDegree Det. Sgt. Stephen D. Schlapak will receive a Juris Doctor degree from New York Law* School Sunday. The 17-year veteran of the Cranford * Police Department is deputy commander of the investigative division. A 1956graduate of Cranford High School, he earned an A.A. degree from Union College a,nd a B.S. degree in public safety administration from William Paterson College. He also has studied personnel management and administration at "Rutgers University. Schlapak has been cited on six occasions by the police committee for outstanding . police work. In 1966 he received a special commendation from the Union County Grand Jury recognizing his outstanding effort in the investigation of a fatality. Only two such commendations have ever been -awardJiWrJEIe was promoted to detective in 1967; Schlapak resides In Cranford with his wife Joan, daughter Deborah, who is attending Wagner College, and son Joseph, direct attacks on eachoiher that" might be damaging to Republican chances to take the seat and thus regain themajority on the Township Committee next fall. ^ Summaries of their pre-primary state- pEtJtiorriiext^rfaTir loeal, county and state. The last GOP primary in Cranford was in 1958 when C. Van Chamberlin topped Raymond Kirwa.n and Mrs. Doris C. Johnson. He later became mayor. were' not speaking tor their parties or in- Jjecting politics into the zoning dntuttn. WTIJIanTTIoIzapfeil, Planning Board at- torney, said that the board "used scientific bases to fit zones into what was actually there. We don'.t s§e a great deal ol breaking down of zoning."". "The zones are reflective of what's tfiere," amplified Duryee. "I find it unacceptable," O'Leary per- sisted. Thomas O'Brien, a Planning Board member who served before on the Board of Adjustment, said he was sympathetic to the •criticisms"you..take a nonrconforrning use and legitimatize it," he said. "We get wrapped up in the statistics of zoning." Bernice Shor, a Planning Board member, argued for the new ordinance as "extremely defensible." She and others challenged —assertion—that—the—new—rones— < . . . Dips All Around Us The population of everv municipality in Union County except Berkeley Heights has declined since 1970, accordijag-lo, the latest U.S. Census statistics. "^ Cranford has dropped 5.3 per cent, Kenilworth 5.5 per cent and'Garwood 7 per cent. Neighboring Winfield had the largest decline in percentage at 9.6, which represented a loss of"2li citizens. Berkeley Heights registered an oh-so-slight gain of half a per cent, or 66 citizens. The census statistics are estimated for 1977 and have already been factored into revenue sharing formulas,* including an amended state distribution for 1979. By this account, Cranford officially has 25,924 citizens,, a drop of 1,467 from the "beginning of the decade. ;•• ,;-••'•' Kenilworth opened the 70s with 9;165' residents and by the latest tabulationiias 517 (ess, for a total of 8,648. Garwood has lost 373 citizens; down from 5,260 in the decennial census to4,887 in the latest estimate. The tabulation confirms demographic reports that population is shifting from urban and suburban areas toward more exurban^r r'ural locales The decline in population isn't necessarily commensurate with A drop in political clout. In the 20th Assembly district, for example, the estimated total drop in people is 5 per cent, but thedistrict's rank in population moved up from 34th. to 29th. This means that other districts declined in population more heavily. a Cranford and Garwood are part of the 20th and Kenilworth is part of the 22d, which lost 4.4 per cent population but stayed 27th in rank. - ' Some other declines in citizens between 1970 and 1977 include: Westfield, down 3.7 per cent; Union Township 5.7; Roselle Park, 6.4; Clark, Springfield, Summit and Fan- wood, 5.6each; Plainfieid, 6.7; Rahway, 4.3; Elizabeth, 7.9; Linden, 4.1. "represented "spot zoning." Members of the Township Committee, which will continue deliberation of the or- dinance Tuesday, pointing toward final reading and passage June 12, listened but for the most part did not enter the fray. The decision is ultimately theirs. Duryee said the debate was "basically a question of philosophy." The philosophy of the subcommittee that worked on the or- dinance was to reflect neighborhoods as they are, not as they might or should be. The philosophy of O'Leary was that the township government should zone for what it intends a neighborhood to be, not what it is at present. Duryee said that the ordinance attempts "to establish zones that reflect existing conditions, so that zones can become defensible." More comments from the meeting are contained on Page 13, along with some^rf the other items in the ordinance. " —•—- Chronicle Honored 19.50 Buchanan ,'• x ' Douglas < The Chronicle received tWo first place journalism awards from the JNew Jersey Chapter nf S'g^" nU^Jlii5^{t^f New Jersey and judges were Pennsylvania journalists. There were only seven t4 Posts Only 3.75 80. "V*! YOUR COMPLETE HOME IMPROVEMENT HEADQUARTERS PANELING •MOULDINGS MILLWORK TOOLS ELECTRICAL. & PLUMBING SUIT II!-. 1 v- McGrath l^4 Zebrowski Professional Journalists. \ The hononer-presented at the Eagleton "Institute were for reporting under pressure of deadline and for opinion. The reporting "award pertalhed to the bulletin aboutrtjrer first murder ln i Cranfordirt2l 1 years and the opinion cltatioq was for an editorial about :theTtownhauses'ahd Green Acres park on. Springfield Avenue. The competition covered all weeklies in In the daily newspaper competition, the Courier-News of Bridgewater was first in deadline reporting,, and The Record was first in opinion. Bill Earls of Cranford earned a second place honor (or feature writing for a column in The Daily Journal. He is currently writing for the Community Paper, a tabloid being published by News- paper Guild members striking the Elizabeth daily, ._• A mani In a wheelchair has challenged the rouyhest-fleld In The Chronicle Run. He's taking on all comers In the six mile race In IhtJune 3 ©vent. He's Gary Pattl of «ttte^eda|—Nautllosirr Cranford. Gary jtay*. he'll offer- a free workout at GoldHWedal Nautilus' to any racer who comes In ahead of him-In the event. Watch•out.fdr his musclas. \ ' ; ' M - / ' « r^n-r. :•)•'•:•'•'- ^^?«,T'f&r^"i*'i***;.,+iiJ!s><-^r><Ur:;~i : i:*~n;~~iX- ilu,.». ..w w.;.^-. •) . .!.jftr^;'; . ^ ...«,... .•.7l..«...,,,.^ .... ,«) .«,, \. .';>

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Page 1:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

" T - •

'•'- " T

Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday,

LEGALSBOROUGH OF GAR WOODGARWOOD, W EW JERSEYPROPOSED ORDINANCE

PUBLIC NOTICEi hereby glven-that,

SF

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ALfTlflY DEEP miSTmild Skin Freshener

Reg. $7.SO

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Reg. $1.59

POND'S DUSTING POWDER99*

Just Arrived!Travel SizesPflNTENE PRODUCTS

UORnTPoTiDORE or Garwood I b*. amended. . v . ' BoroUBh Clerk supplement to read at follows;

"*NB.b"DINANC:E TO""AMEND ' SECTION Vi CHAPTERS^?-CHAPTER S OP THE REVISED Article! • DOQS

DRUG STORE34 Eastman St. Cranford

276-6100'

ordinance o« which the lollowlno It «copy, WM lntrodoe«t rttd-amjl-p»»Mtd,on flr»t r«*dln0 by the Council ot the-Boroooh ol^OarwoqAattmMtlnoheloI

IRON-ONWhen you purchase

PL12 or PL316PowerJock*Rule.

will further consider the oame tor.Unal B.Y PROVIDING FOR A.. PENALTY that the said Council will furtherpassaoe on the 13 day of June 1979. at FOR LATE PAYMENT OF LICENSE, consider the said Ordinance for final«:M p.m., In th« Council Chamber, ..AND REGISTRATION F E E S AND passage on the l « h day of June, 1979, atMunicipal Building, Garwood, New "T*EVISINO O T H E R " SECTIONS OF .1100p.m. *» Boroooh Hall, KenllwoHh,Jertey, at which time and place any SAID CHAPTER TO jXONFORAitrJr0-TNewJerseyr»twhlchtlmeandplaceahyperton who may be fntemtad therein APPLICABLE CAW. ' person .Who maybe. Interested thereinwill be given an opportunity f o b * heart 1 6 IT ORDAINED by the Mayor and will be givf n )in npnortwnlty tofae-Wfd-concernlnfl u l a ordinance. Council of the Borough of Garwood that concerning said Ordinance.

~ BorqUQh_clerk_ " - - " — ' — 'and

WHE RE AS, It Is In the t»st Interests of'the Borough of Garwood to enter IntAsuch an agreement, . . ..

NOW, THEREFORE, . . B E - — I T -ORDAINEQ b y the Mayor and Council

of the dorouplrof Oarwooid, t h t ; t ^ :t t t t l d " A

reement

Borough Clerk- . RROPOSED ORDINANCE NO.-W-W—

AN ORDINANCE TO REPEALORDINANCE NO. t l -3 AND AMEND

o tModify Interlocal Services

"aafed December f£^f97aafed December f £ ^ f 9 7 ^ ? o r t f SPurpose of Inserting a_D«crlptlon ofActwltl»s"fo('tne""F!fth"Ve«r Urban"County Community Development Block..Grant Program," a copy nf whl|-h 'f

EXEMPT"!: ^ E E T H « F e ^ f r b O G r - ELTM1NATE""THE""POSITT6N OF

T" • . WORKING F=0REMAN "OF THEThe person applying (or the license TRAFFIC CONTROL)-PARKS AND

and registration tag thall pay to the RECREATION DEPARTMENTS.Borough Clerk' • fee of UJO for the . BE IT ORDAINED by the-Governlng

_ licensing of each dog artd such additional god^ trf-Hw porpi'gh o/ tt»nHwor>t'=f«mlm tlie reult luHuii lau,^rprflVlged iECJJOK_LItaLfjrdlnanc« No. 41-3tar by state law. Each license and tag and all amendments thereto be and' theshall be renewed annually, and for each tame are hereby repealed,annual renewal, the fee tor the license SECTION 2. That Ordinance No. 79-5and for the registration tag thalj be the . be amended soas to delete therefrom the

_ sami»_a^Jqr_t.hej>rlgln»l_JlceflM «nd .'provision for comperisatlo*Mor-Super'

Mayor and Borough Clerk In accordancewith the provisions of taw, and • ' - . - '

BE IT FURTHER ORDAINED thatthis ordinance ishall take effectImmediately upon .Its ennrtmtnt.

CRANFORDCLEAN-UP WEEK

IS NOW HEREITHROW OUT

ATTEST,DORIS POLIDORE, Borough ClerkDated: May U, \mFee; * 19.33 •

SALE•5.75

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The Great OutdoorMachines

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reglifraflon tag. Said llceniel, reglstratlon tag ' and renewals thereof shallexpire on the last day of January In eachyear. •

A penalty charge of . * 1.00 shall behmpoted aooln»t any person who shallfall to make application for and receivethe. aforementioned llc*n»« andregistration by the last day of January ofeach year. Said penalty charge shallbeIn addition to any other penaltiesauthorized bylaw or by the provisions of5-17 following.

Only one license and registration tagshall be required in any license year foranydoo owned In New Jersey, and suchlicense artd tag Issued,by any othermunicipality shall be accepted by theBorough as evidence of compliance withthis section and Section 5-3.

Dogs used for guides for blind personsd commonly known am'seeing eye'

dogs shall be licensed and registered asother dogs'as hereinbefore provided for,*

i—exeept-fhat the-ownenor keeperoMuclvdog shall not be required to pay any feetherefor,"

"513 CANVASS OF DOGS: REPORTAny person appointed by the

Governing Body shall annually cause acanvass to be made of all dogs owned,kept o'r harbored within the limits of theBorough, In accordance with NJSA 4:\115.15, as amended."

"517 PENALTYAny person who shall violate any

provision of Sections 5-3, 5 3,5-4, 5 6, St.5 9, J U or 5-14 shall, upon conviction, beliable to a penalty of not less than 15.00nor more-than WO.pO for each offense, tobe recovered (n the name of the Garwood

_ Boatd_af_Heallh-otJn_Jhe-jiame ofBorough of Garwood, as the case maybe, except that Ipr a first offense, thopenalty shall be not less than si .00 normore than tSO.OO to be rocovored asaforementioned."

—Section 3: AIL ordinances or parts ofordinances Inconsistent herewith arehereby repealed.

Section 3: The within ordinance-shalltake effect upon final passage andpublication In accordance with law.

John J. McCarthyMayor

Attest:Doris Polldore ,,Borough ClerkDated: May 34, 1 WFee: J31JK

, CRANFORD, NEW JERSEYBOARDOF ADJUSTMENT

The Board of Adlustment (Zoning),Township of Cranford, County of Union,New Jersey, will hold a public hearingon Monday, June 4, 1970, at 8;)5 p.m.,preceded by a workshop meeting at 7:45p.m., In the Municipal Building, toconsider the following:

14-79: Application of CARMEN M.TELLERI for a variance -from therequirements of Section 24-48(d) of theZoning Ordinance to permit theconstruction of a Wood deck and partialshade overhead With less than r.equlredrear yard on Block 504, Lot I, known as637 Lincoln Park East.

15-79: Application of ANTHONYCRINCOLI for a variance from therequirements of Sections 34-17(b) and J4-17 (h) of the Zoning Ordinance to permitthe construction of a two car garage andstorage loft area with less than requiredside yard and additional height on Block198, Lot 47, known as 303 Balmlere RoadNorth.

16-79: Application of WILL IAMLeMAIRE tor a- variance from therequirements of Section ]4-48(c) of theZoning Ordinance t o - p e r m i t theconstruction of a fireplace chimney withl e u "—' - ——"—-*• - ' •" - • - ' - J - - -•*-'•

visor of Parks, playgrounds and Traffic •Control Maintenance.

SECTION -3; Paragraph 5-41 of theproposed Code of ,the Borough ofKenilworth be and It hereby deleted,

SECTION 4. This Ordinance shall takeeffect on August 38, 1979.

APPROVED:LIVIOMANCINO, Mayor

ATTEST:Margaret Adler, Borough ClerkDated: May 34, 1979Fee; 113.44 ~ " .

~ BOROUGH OF GARWOODGARWOOD, NEW JERSEYPROPOSEDORDINANCE

PUBLIC NOTICEPublic Notice Is hereby given that ah

ordinance of which the following Is acopy, was Introduced, read and passed,on first reading by the Council of theBorough of Garwood, at a meeting heldMay 33, 1979, and that the said Council—. Jwill further consider the same w n i f U f l "passage on the 13th day of June 1979 at8:30 p.m.. In the Council Chamber,Municipal Dulldlno, Garwood, NewJersey, at which time and place anyperson who may be Interested thereinwill be given an opportunity to heardconcerning said ordinance. _

Doris Polldore,Borough Clerk

AN ORDINANCE A U T H O R I Z I N GTHE MAYOR AND BOROUGH CLERKTO EXECUTE AN A G R E E M E N TWITH THE COUNTY OF UNION TO'M O D I F Y THE INTERLOCALSERVICES A G R E E M E N T DATHDDECEMBER 15, 1974.

WHEOEAS, certain Federal funds arepotentially available to Union Countyunder Title I of the Housing andCommunity Development Act of 1974,commonly known .'-as CommunityDevelopment Block Grants, and

WHEREAS, It is nBcesSaryTdlfrHeW"an existing Interlocal Servicesagreement for the County and Its peopleto benefit from this program; and

WHEREAS, an agreement has been,proposed under which the Borough ofGarwood and the County of Union In'cooperation with other municipalitieswill modify an Interlocal ServicesProgram pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:8A-l;and ..... '. ..•..

CAR FIRECranfofd: fireWien ex-

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Polls .Tuesday.1 4j£j€5 l&-1 /- - - -

. - . f

VOL. «6 No. 22 Publishml V. very ThnrsrlayServing Cranford, Kenilworth and Garwood

-tfSPS l3tiauaSecondTTass~Postage Paid Cranford, N. J. 20 CENTS

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Finally, an outdoor gas grill with SMOKE-LESS BROIL! Ducane's unique Rotls-A-Grate" keeps the grease In the drip panand out of the air — all that escapes is thedelicious.-arorrta of outdoor cooking.. Thespecial burner design gives you'a big 310square inphes of evenly heated cookingsurface", witrv rib hot spots" common "toordinary charcoal grills™an.d the Ducanegrill does it;at a fraction of the coat! t heattractive arid durable design of this grill,will add a great touch ,tq your outdoorcooking area,^AII electrical components- •are UL approved,

Long the leading name in effortless out-door cooking, Charmglow now gives youthe convenience of your kitchen in thebeauty of the great outdoors with theirModel 3230. The 3230's money saving dualcontrol lets you use the entire 461 squareinch cooking surface or just half of It,

'and you can, adjust the easy to read con-trol for the perfect flame height. The fool-proof Channlile automatic igniter makeslighting the 3230 as easy as pushing a

.button. The versatility and dependabilityof the Charmglow 3230.will give you out-door family fun for years to come.

Avenue.I7^»: Application of ARTHUR &

YVONNE KIAMIE for a variance fromthe requirements of Sections 24-4S(b)and 24-48(e) of the Zoning Ordinance topermit the subdivision of property 100feet by 100 feet Into two 50-foot by 300-W»Wot»H>ne-loMias~ext»tln<rrmlo'ence-and the other lot Is vacant on whichapplicant proposes to build a singlefamily residence on Block 595, Lot U,knowrKas 10 Cranford Terrace.

18-W: Application of, JOAQUIMCOSTA far a variance from the require-ments of Sections 24-45 (c) and 24-45<d)of the Zoning Ordinance to permit theconstruction of a n$w garage with lessthan roqulred'isldo and rear yards onBlock 213, Lot 45, known as 44 RichmondAvenue. .

1» 7?: Application of SHARONHOWARD, T A CHAMPION ACADEMYOF GYMNASTICS for a variance fromthe requirement) of Section 24&5(a) ofthe Zoning Ordinance to permit thenoncqntormln.a_UM,_Qf an—tatfstlng-

—' building for a gymnastic facility onBlock 604, Lot 1, known as 1 Baltimore.Avenue. i

20-789: Application of CAROLWESOLQWSKI for a variance from therequirements of Section 34-17 (h) of theZoning Ordinance t6 permit constructionof an addition to existing garage with

-lest than iequtretf~»td8 yarn" on' Block*U, Lot 7, known as 49 South UnionAvenue. .

At. the above .time and place,opportunity will.bo.,p,lvon_to. all porsonswho wish to be heard.

•_. .. BvOrderof.rBOARD OF ADJUSTMENT

336 CENTENNIAL AVE.CRANFORD, HEW JERSEY

SALE PRICES EFFECTIV/E THRUTHURSDAY," iMAV 31,.1W» ,

WOOD DECK KIT

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Ground Saddle25'x20; kit $79.959 Ground Saddles & 21 Plain Saddles

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They Also ftan: •from-Jeft^ Ed (Beellne) Murphy, Charlie(Shlrtman) Fertonardo, Stu (Puffer) Awbrey, Ron (Ump)AAaf.0ttai-LG.ene . (Trallblazer) Marino, TonV (Tapebuster)Haydon, Barbara (Stretch) Brande, Jean (Hlgh^+epper)Blume, Esther (Sidestripes) Relmllnger, Henry (Marathon)Dreyer, Kim (Wuzzle) Awbrey, Bev (Pubs) Awbrey, Ray

(Easy Racer) Molnar and Jim (Beneficiary) teon. For trutstory of the race see memoirs when all are retired, ForInterim results see Page 3. Greg Priee-agreed to take pictureafter seeing officlaldcrrT and journalists combined inviolation of .one way traffic sign. For a preview of theupcoming race, see Pages 2 and 3.

By STUARTAWBREYCranford's Zoning Board of Adjustment

took a hon-conformirig view of the proposedL-realignment- of residential zoning in

Cranford this week.• Members of) the'board, which deals with

landowners seeking relief from zoningrestrictions, characterized the pendingchanges as inconsistent, confusing andlegitimizing non-conforming use ofproperty.

Their sister body, the Planning Board,which had included the new zoning in themassive land development law, stoutlydefended its handiwurk as scientific,defensible and "reflecting the real world."

The controversy erupted during a fulldress joint meeting Tuesday night involvingthe two boards, the Township Committeeand the Board of Education.

The argument expanded beyond questionsof enforcement to include accusations thatthe changes in zoning would alter the

residential characteristics ..ul Cranfprd byencouraging higher density iri housing.

Instead of the, three residential zones nowin effect, the township would have eight

.different Lypes of zoning districts for'residences, ranging1 from single familydwellings to apartments. A map of theproposed ordinance is on Page 12 of thisedition. A map of current zones is on Page

'13. uStirring of discontent over the residential

zoning portions of the 200-plus page or-dinance, which had been expressedprivately in recent days came out in fullforce before and among the amassed of-ficialdom.

Steering the officials page by page, titleby title, of .the ordinance, Mayor RaymondS. Molnar, the moderator, arid John Duryee,the. interpreter, dealt with technicalities;'refinements and explanations until theyarrived at Article VI: Zoning.

Timothy O'Leary of the Board of

' Adjustment -said the variety of zones insmall areas of town appeared to be "spotzones" that would make it "damn nearimpossible to fiffd bill if a property is on onezone or another." He said it would be dif-ficult to hold to an ordinance and wonderedif the new ordinance would result in acomplete breakdown in all zoning here."

Ralph Taylor, former attorney for thezoning body, called the change a"repressive step" and "a stamp of approvalof 50 (ool lots." Highly agitated, Taylor saidthe zoning areas had been "gerry-mandered" and .said-"the new schemeencourages denser residency."

O'Leary and Taylor are chairmen Of theDemocratic and Republican municipalcomrrtittecs, respectively, but both said they

GOP Primary?1st In 21 Years

The first primary battle among CranfordRepublicans in 21 years culminates nextTuesday at the polls when GOP voters willchoose Bob Biach or Dick Salway for theparty's nomination for Township Com-mittee. John Coburn is running unopposedfor the Democratic nomination.

On the Democratic side, one local and onecounty primary contest have emerged. InKenilworth, : John Ueltzhoeffer ischallenging incumbent Livio Mancino formayor. Incumbent borough councilmembers Mary Kelly and RichardMcCormack face challenges from Gary

-Rowinskj^andMarioDiBeIla.S|eedetails on•Pge t& ; \ 'g ,., : . ;; ..

Harold Seymour pf Cranford seeksotUiUo:i^itetetih^tb'i!te ' i | ihotnUiaUon:iorirteTetectioh^\tb.,i!te.vi|qi|i>a<.

County Board of Chosen FreehoiaerS'-witftEverett Lattimore and Thomas W. Long'.R o b e r t C t a l i s p a n a n f i K l i g p n . f i V l l l i

merits are on Pages 4 and 5.The only other jobs oh the line this year

are for the State Assembly. In the 20thdistrict, William A. Cambria of Cranfordand E. Jonathan Bell of Hillside are runningfor the two Democratic nominations andChuck Hardwick and C. Louis Bassano, bothRepublican" incumbents, are seekingnomination for re-election, also unopposed.

The polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8p.m. Cranford's 32 districts remain thesame as last year, but polling places havebeen changed in two districts, the 20th andthe 28th. Both polling places for those,districts used to be in Roosevelt School, butthe 20th has been shifted to Orange AvenueSchool arid the 26Ui to; tifcte -Municipal

"-feuUdligo•:• : • . • ; . ;y . ; \ - :r -vV. ';.:•••-••.••>•:,... Voters will also be choking members of"'their respective party committees. As in thepast, a number of vacancies exist;

News OfThe Future

See Pages 1213

New Zoning Map(And The Old)

Master Plan

Highlights OfNew Ordinance

The Debate

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BOROUGH OF KBNIl ,WORTHK6Nl l iWORTH,NEWJ6RSEY

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Pblgnarii" services marked Memorial Day hece; but there and Katie Conway. Mary Beth's father, the mayor, in a briefwere moments of surprise and awe, too. Shots from firing address spoke of need to work for peace He said that "Warsquad surprised Mary Beth Molnar as she deposited wreathfor those" lost at sea. Parade fascinated Mandy Crane,Matthew and Michael Conway, Brady King, Paul Nizolak

address spoke of need to work for peace. He said that "Waris the poorest way to settle anything. We hope that we whosurvived will learri the lesson so that they will not have diedirv-vain." Photos by Greg Price.

. ^

PTC To Award Nine

in the Democratic primary as "Indepen-dent' Democrats of Union County." Tliewinners will run against Jack Meeker,Blanche Banasiak and Frank H. Lehr, allunopposed in the GOP primary. —

_T.he contest between Salway and Biachhas. been low keyed and gentlemanly,

..though.Jhe two candidates have wageddecidedly different campaigns. Biach hasbeen reminding Republicans that he camewithin two votes of winning a committeeseat Jast fall, and he says he deservesanother try. He also has spoken out onvarious issues in his public statements.Salway, who is supported by numerousparty regulars and past officeholders in hi§first bid for office, has ' emphasized their

rit Both mnn hnvo _ayektefh-

"will be~7illed by write-ins. There is one• contest, among Republicans, in the 7th

District. The Juul Neilsens representedthat area for many years, but are retiringfrom thecqrnrnittee. Richard A. JohnstonariSTPauIa A. JoEnston of 101 Spring GardenSt. seek election as part of the RegularOrganization Republican of Union County,and W. Jay White and Patricia A. White of 36Greaves PI. are running as "ReorganizedRepublicans for^g Better Cranford." TheJohnstons support'Salway and the Whitessuppoxt.Biach, but the Township Committeecandidates said the competition was coinci-dental and not directly related • to theirprimary campaign.

If Seymour wins rehomination, Cranfordwill be represented in each of the three

LANDSCAPE TIESCREOSOTE SOAKED

6" X 6" x 8'» ONLY .

STOCKADElEHGlfl

•^'•B'.'Nijgh^jB^sa^

0! Hitjh x 8' Sectiad

' Nine^enitirs of Cranford High School?. have beendesignatedas^ipiente'^a^

total of $5,850 in scholarships by, thesenior educational committee of the .

o Cranford Parent Teacher Council. Theyare: .

Scott Buchanan, of 618 LexingtonAve,, who" will attend BrafdleyUniversity and plans to major in music.

Marianne Caprio, of 35 Roselle Ave.,who plans to enter the Muhlenberg Hos-pital School of Nursing. •?

Robin Douglas, of 45 Brookdale PL,who will pursue a career in the arts atGJassboro State College.

"Jody Ehrich, of 48 Concord Ave., who-plans^to enterCornell University andmajor in food sciencer- , ^

Audrey ElwertowskJ, of 301 NorthAve. E,, who will be pursuing businessadministration and accounting at

-Pennsylvania State University.Victor Lindberg, 6f 1012'Orange Ave.,

who will be a mathematics/ major at theUniversithy of Scranton.

Nancy McGrath, of 5 tuxedo PJ., whohas chosen th&fleldbf animal behaviorand will head for Bucknell University.

Marilyn Prout, of 21 Cornell Rd., whoplans an accounting major at DouglassCollege. . „. .

. John Zebrowski, of 308 Stoughtot)Ave., who will study, business.

M

engineering -at Rutgers University.r1-—TtoergrantS this year are being; given'"

in honor of Mrs. Ruth Janovsik's 50years of service to Cranford schools.

The grants awarded each year toCranford High School seniors aremade possible by donations from eachof the PTA's proceeds from theScholarship Ball, a jazz concert, andThe Chronicle subscription drive.

Prior to 1964 each school awarded itsown scholarship. At that time the PTAscombined to form a scholarship*^committee., This combination, plus!participation in the Scholarships-Clearinghouse, has resulted in a moreefficient and confidential system forprocessing applications, reports thecommittee, which is now known as the

' senior educational grant committee ofthe PTC. In the past is years a total of$46,383 "Has been awarded to 120 CHS .seniors. Members of the committeeare: Nancy. Snyder, CHS.; ConniePentz, Orange Ave.; Hana Cofsky,Hillside Ave.; Janet Silcox,Bloomingdale; ThelmaHBaechtold,

> Brookside; Nancy DiBella, Lincoln;Joann Downey, Livingston; JaniceMinion, Roosevelt; Lynda Hopler,Walnut. The seniors were scheduled tobe introduced to the PTC at a meeting

, i o d a y . • - . . - , : . . . • . - • - . • ',•..-.•••;.;- •; - •

jDDegreeDet. Sgt. Stephen D. Schlapak will receive

a Juris Doctor degree from New York Law*School Sunday. The 17-year veteran of theCranford * Police Department is deputycommander of the investigative division.

A 1956 graduate of Cranford High School,he earned an A.A. degree from UnionCollege a,nd a B.S. degree in public safetyadministration from William PatersonCollege. He also has studied personnelmanagement and administration at

"Rutgers University.Schlapak has been cited on six occasions

by the police committee for outstanding. police work. In 1966 he received a specialcommendation from the Union CountyGrand Jury recognizing his outstandingeffort in the investigation of a fatality. Onlytwo such commendations have ever been

-awardJiWrJEIe was promoted to detective in1967;

Schlapak resides In Cranford with his wifeJoan, daughter Deborah, who is attendingWagner College, and son Joseph,

direct attacks on eachoiher that" might bedamaging to Republican chances to take theseat and thus regain the majority on theTownship Committee next fall. ^

Summaries of their pre-primary state-

pEtJtiorriiext^rfaTirloeal, county and state.

The last GOP primary in Cranford was in1958 when C. Van Chamberlin toppedRaymond Kirwa.n and Mrs. Doris C.Johnson. He later became mayor.

were' not speaking tor their parties or in-J j ec t i ng politics into the zoning dntuttn.

WTIJIanTTIoIzapfeil, Planning Board at-torney, said that the board "used scientificbases to fit zones into what was actuallythere. We don'.t s§e a great deal ol breakingdown of zoning."".

"The zones are reflective of what'stfiere," amplified Duryee.

"I find it unacceptable," O'Leary per-sisted.

Thomas O'Brien, a Planning Boardmember who served before on the Board ofAdjustment, said he was sympathetic to the•criticisms"you..take a nonrconforrning useand legitimatize it," he said. "We getwrapped up in the statistics of zoning."

Bernice Shor, a Planning Board member,argued for the new ordinance as "extremelydefensible." She and others challenged

—assertion—that—the—new—rones—

< • . • . . •

DipsAll Around Us

The population of everv municipality inUnion County except Berkeley Heights hasdeclined since 1970, accordijag-lo, the latestU.S. Census statistics. " ^

Cranford has dropped 5.3 per cent,Kenilworth 5.5 per cent and'Garwood 7 percent.

Neighboring Winfield had the largestdecline in percentage at 9.6, whichrepresented a loss of"2li citizens. BerkeleyHeights registered an oh-so-slight gain ofhalf a per cent, or 66 citizens.

The census statistics are estimated for1977 and have already been factored intorevenue sharing formulas,* including anamended state distribution for 1979.

By this account, Cranford officially has25,924 citizens,, a drop of 1,467 from the

"beginning of the decade. ;•• ,;-••'•'Kenilworth opened the 70s with 9;165'

residents and by the latest tabulationiias 517(ess, for a total of 8,648.

Garwood has lost 373 citizens; down from

5,260 in the decennial census to 4,887 in thelatest estimate.

The tabulation confirms demographicreports that population is shifting fromurban and suburban areas toward moreexurban^r r'ural locales

The decline in population isn't necessarilycommensurate with A drop in political clout.In the 20th Assembly district, for example,the estimated total drop in people is 5 percent, but the district's rank in populationmoved up from 34th. to 29th. This means thatother districts declined in population moreheavily. a

Cranford and Garwood are part of the 20thand Kenilworth is part of the 22d, which lost4.4 per cent population but stayed 27th inrank. - '

Some other declines in citizens between1970 and 1977 include: Westfield, down 3.7per cent; Union Township 5.7; Roselle Park,6.4; Clark, Springfield, Summit and Fan-wood, 5.6each; Plainfieid, 6.7; Rahway, 4.3;Elizabeth, 7.9; Linden, 4.1.

"represented "spot zoning."Members of the Township Committee,

which will continue deliberation of the or-dinance Tuesday, pointing toward finalreading and passage June 12, listened butfor the most part did not enter the fray. Thedecision is ultimately theirs.

Duryee said the debate was "basically aquestion of philosophy." The philosophy ofthe subcommittee that worked on the or-dinance was to reflect neighborhoods asthey are, not as they might or should be. Thephilosophy of O'Leary was that the townshipgovernment should zone for what it intendsa neighborhood to be, not what it is atpresent. Duryee said that the ordinanceattempts "to establish zones that reflectexisting conditions, so that zones canbecome defensible."

More comments from the meeting arecontained on Page 13, along with some^rf theother items in the ordinance. " —•—-

Chronicle Honored19.50 Buchanan ,'• x ' Douglas <

The Chronicle received tWo first placejournalism awards from the JNew JerseyChapter nf S 'g^" n U ^ J l i i 5 ^ { t ^ f

New Jersey and judges were Pennsylvaniajournalists. There were only seven

t4

Posts Only 3.75 80. "V*!

YOUR COMPLETE HOME IMPROVEMENT HEADQUARTERSPANELING •MOULDINGS • MILLWORK • TOOLS • ELECTRICAL. & PLUMBING SUIT I I!-.

1 v- McGrathl ^ 4

Zebrowski

Professional Journalists. \The hononer-presented at the Eagleton

"Institute were for reporting under pressureof deadline and for opinion. The reporting

"award pertalhed to the bulletin aboutrtjrerfirst murder lniCranfordirt2l1years and theopinion cltatioq was for an editorial about

:theTtownhauses'ahd Green Acres park on.Springfield Avenue.

The competition covered all weeklies in

In the daily newspaper competition, theCourier-News of Bridgewater was first indeadline reporting,, and The Record wasfirst in opinion. Bill Earls of Cranfordearned a second place honor (or featurewriting for a column in The Daily Journal.He is currently writing for the CommunityPaper, a tabloid being published by News-paper Guild members striking the Elizabethdaily, ._•

A mani In a wheelchair has challengedthe rouyhest-fleld In The Chronicle Run.He's taking on all comers In the sixmile race In IhtJune 3 ©vent. He'sGary Pattl of «ttte^eda|—NautllosirrCranford. Gary jtay*. he'll offer- a freeworkout at GoldHWedal Nautilus' toany racer who comes In ahead of him-Inthe event. Watch•out.fdr his musclas.

\• ' ; • • ' M - / • ' « • • •

r^n-r. :•)•'•:•'•'- •^^?«,T'f&r^"i*'i***;.,+iiJ!s><-^r><Ur:;~i:i:*~n;~~iX-

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\. .';>

Page 2:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

Page2 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday. May 31.1979

Now isthe timeyou needa RELIABLECOMPANY!

230 Centennial, Cr.276-9200

"Nothing Counts Like Service'

The Run Is Of KENILWORTH Funds Passed For 2 Streets

J_M1LE

RUN

BUN

.Th'et; TownshipLCornnjitteethis week approved a bondordinance providing . forreconstruction of parts ofT a n d ; Stmightnn

sgld that improvement had.been considered for Grant andiorcHister Avenue,.too,.but"because of limited capital

The Chronicle Run begins at12 noon Sunday at the Parkinglot opposite the Municipal

" i ^ i i d i r i g r R u m i T T r T lin from 11 a.m. on.

Registration forms areavailable at the newspaperoffice or the CommunityCenlerand at the race itself. A$4.50 fee covers entry in allraces phis a T-shirt, thoughlast minute entrants mighthave to wait several days untiltheir T-shirt can be madelater. A $1 fee covers entry inthe first event, a one one milefun run. T-shirts are $2.50extra.

Members of the CranfordYocith Council led by youthcoordinator Charles Fer-tonardo will' administer theregistration and be posted at

—key..spots along the routes.; -The second evfent, at ap-

proximately 12:30 p.m., willbe a three mile run. At ap-proximately 1:30 p.m. thefinal event, a six mile race,will begin.

Awards will be given tomale and female winners inthe fun ruh and to first andsecond place finishers of thethree and six mije, races."Alsor first place medais~wtllbe given in four age categoriesmale and female in the three

. and six mile races.-The race will be held rain w

shine.

RUM * avenues..'Engineering plans are being

reviewed by the state govern-ment and • the soonest xoti

rebuilt;.and theprioritywentto James and Stoughton.,

struction would begin is in amonth, Mayor Raymond S.tyolnar said. - ',

: James Williams said It was"a slap in the face." that GrantStreet,--where-he-Hveavrhas-been ignored. Gene Marino,public -works-commissioner;-

FREE LOLLIPOPSAt the suggestion of Leg

Awbrey, all elementary schoolage children who finish any ofthe races Sunday will: receive

f l l l l : " 'pt

StoMff*wourt AVE . , i ; "

1 <: RAN; ODD

MOVERS

—^--z^^—^a—w» m.=—«««—~vS—&

FOLLOW THE LITTLE BLACK LINES - .Here are theroutes the runners will follow this Sunday In TheChronicle Run. The solid line is the six mile^rourse. Thelarge'dotted line is. the three mile course and the smalldotted line is the one-mUe -fun run. All the courses

overlap, with the three and six mile races beinnnlng atthe North Union Avenue entrance to the municipalparking lot and ending at Springfield Avenue. The funrun starts and ends at the Springfield Avenue entranceto-the parking lot.

New Look In Ads: Designed At CHS

SHAPIRO'SSHAPIRO'S

For Best SelectionOf. Children's Wear

By 'Health-TexGirls From 3mos. To s\le 14Boys From 3mos. To size 8

-SHAPIRO'S19 N.Union Ave

Cranfordi _27&.-_32ZQ.;

If you think you're seeingsomething different in the look'and content of ad-vertisements in this issue,you're right. Many of themwere designed by a com-mercial art class,at CranfordHigh School Under the direc-tion "of Burton Longertbach.

The ads, which in manycases reflect racing themes -around next Sunday's run,capped a year-long learningprogram for 22 students.

Longenbach and the news-paper staff coordinated theeffort through which partici-pating merchants and thenewspaper were able toprovide what he called a"practical experience" for_the_.students.

Each of these advertise-ments represent the support ofa Cranford merchant whoagreed to, buy space, saidBeverley Awbrey, publisher."We'redelighted that so many

of them supported the uniqueand worthwhile project."

Longenbach, with thecooperation of RogerSchreiner, graphic arts in-structor, prepared thestudents starting last fall insuch basics as letter, transfertypes, line drawings and mockads. The sequences led to theactual mechanicals that arepublished In this edition, Eachof the ads carries the name ofthe student. Here is a list of

them together: Lisa Baytola,Tamra Black, Susan Blunie,Barbara Bowles, __MaryCymbaluk, Keith Daniels,Christine Gordon, pawnGrosso, Andrew Helm, JaneJames, Peter Jesse, TimothyKettler, Linda' Lagasse,Andrew JLetiecq, John LoGuidice,'Mary" McCarron,Mitchell Gordon, Lisa Polsky,Traceyr ~TROSS, KarenStobierski, Christine Youngand Karen Fierro.

JOININ THE

FUN!

RacerslBmtTheCap?In Week's First Jtun

Thursday, May 31,1979 CRANFORD (N.JJ CHRONICLEPaga*

The "Beat the Caps" Racetook place on Memorial Dayas a prelude to The Chroniclei t ^ h i S dun^hiHSimdayr

It!.,wtts run between mem-bers of the newspaper staffand township officials. It washeld in closed session so as to

_ayojd _anyi£mbatEassment- to..sedentacy_journalists andgovernment Officials.H

AD DESIGNERS froipCranford High Schoolcommercial-art~cteissr7jbttogether many ads thisweek In project supportedby Ibiqal rner?hjBrtt»-At left,I n s t r o c f .off;' B o t tLongenbach reviews

"Itlt jstra+torrijy"—Tratcy—-Ross,with-Barb Bowlesat far left. Above, hereviews type options withChristine Young.

For the exceptional

Our 100y« cottonlisle aforts are all

QA patented process

that* assures *youthat our Cross Creek

shirts will not shrinkout erf .shape

with washing.

00

1 1 N.arth Union Awmuc Cranford • Phone 272-5350,- m' J i r«ar

•»£>.•«•<.•..),•..••..• ncmctftCORftCR

CHS Summer Session To Begin 20th Year

Crawford Sport38 North Ave.

»Opp. Firehouse 276-

HpweverjaTTeporterpltogether some details of thefete:

The race was billed as adouble marathon to be run,and re-run, over 42 miles ofCranford streets. However,this figure was reducedsteadily in negotiations. Thefinal agreement was to run abne-twentieth marathon.

Upon' seeing a true runner

but.the prlcea that sayfactory outlet!!

JWtd

AT LEAST

OFF REGULARBETAILPRICES .. - •

p p j9e<xstman St., tranfordOPB}4 IO -6 . , THURSDAY TILL 9

A

Henry Dreyer Jr., corti-mitteeman, arrived with ablue T-shirt. He said hewanted to publicize a c-prtainfarm in Cranford. The name ofthe farm was on the back ofthe shirt. Source^ "say it wasnot Ditzel's Farm. When toldthat the photographers of ohe-tweritieth marathons- onl rshoot the fronts of shirts, heagreed to put on a Chronicle

TRun shirt.The sons of Henry Dreyer

Jr. expressed disappointmentthat the/un didn't last lodger.They said it should have heena real marathon. However,their lather and all the otheradults in the race were said tohave smiled broadly_at thenegotiated'breVity of the race.

The race was run as a pre-liminary to the upcoming

"ATTENTION

when you care enough lo eal The Best!

104 NOflTH UNION AVENUE. CRANFORD NEW JERSEY

276-9866

_ _ — — j . __ —~.w ......wxw theTealtbjngrwlll raise money-pwmp^Hhat-thernewspaper for the Recreation Depart-staff should run a three-legged ment. The money for a fun and" ™ -MIWI* tur. government '"•— '

two-leggedwas

ould runrace -whihv therunners ran a w lrace. This handicaplaughed off.

The race was delayed whenthe runners looked up from thestarting line and found them-selves pointed the wrong wayon a one (way street. Thepublic safety commissioner,Ron (Umps) t Marotta,allegedly intervened with thepolice department to keep theentire contingent from gettingtickets.

. The money for a fun andfitness course will-fit outsidethe budgetary "caps" im-posed by the state.

The real runner in the race,Tom Haydpn, showed thatyouth and graining will notonly endure, tjurprevail. Hebroke the tape at an un-disclosed location on River-side Drive.

Haydon couldn't lose. But.there were energetic runners-up. Indeed, the Two M's, GeneMarino and Ron Marotta,posed a serious challenge just

nerrAsked the next day abouthis strong showing, Marinosaid that he had figured outhow to win the next time-divert Haydon off Riverside

Dreyer Jr. and Jean Blume lead "the pack" in then • i r. -J B e v A u b r e y ' ?-ay Molnar and Esther Reimllnger.

, , . „ „ , " . - - C ™?n «uR?n T s h l r t s f o r completion of course covering one fivehundreths of marathon. Photos by Greg Price. _

-linear-leading; several' other Molnar^rfiayof," \yas said torunners, that illegal way. have told them that the

"I'll do anything to beat the T o w n s h ' P Committee had justcaps," said Murphy, P a s s e d a nordinance making:itexultantly. He almost won.

Barbara Brande, com-aydon off

and into the river. mitteewoman, "reportedly

administrator, but he nearlycaused an uproar. Murphywas a dark horse because hehad a big black cigar at thestarting line and nobody tookhim seriqusly. But when therace began heHdarted into aforest along a path that ledmore directly to the finish

Aghast at the scene,residents of Riverside Driveprotested that the racers weregoing the wrong way on theirone way street. Raymond

ga two-way street, not for therun but for constructionpending on SpringfieldAvenue.

A more hopeful crowd ofcitizens who had got wind ofthe race and wanted to open itto the public waited in vainfurther upstream. They weredisappointed. One of themaccused the government of aviolation of the runshine law.

OOK YOUR BEST IN PHE RUN

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED

MUST. REDUCE. INVENTORY-

EVERYTHINGGOES!!

RENEE FABRICS8 Nonunion Avenue * Cranford

On«n Hoo Jhiu t i l 9 30 i 30 Ihu., i.l B 30

The Cranford High SchoolSummer Session will be held(pr'the 20th year this summer., 'Classes Will be conducted at

-the-bigh- School-for students -currently enrolled in grades 9to 12 inclusive. Any incoming9th grader may take courses'for .personal improvement—

with no credits countedtoward fulfilling graduationrequirements. Classes will runfrom 8 a.m. to 12:30 p,m.

Classes will begin" June 2sTand continue until August 3.No classes will be held on July4 and July 20.-•A wide variety of courses

Jog on TJVB

for awideseleand

| Buy some towait for tOpen til "POOp"

EONETTE

of newspapersines.

while yourun to starton Sunday

may be taken. It is hoped thatall courses listed for theSummer School will be of-Xered.. HQwev.et,_if_.there_-is_insufficient enrollment in anycourse it will not be offered.

Course offerings include;60 Hour Review Courses:

English I. II and HI; French I

Algebra— - 1 , - - Geometry^Mathematics -III,—Inter-mediate M,ath, U.S. History Iand II, Physical Education I;II, III, and IV. A 30 houroriginal credit course, willcover the classroom phase ofdriver education and 6 hourcourse wfll cover the behindthe wheel phase. There will be90 hour review courses incollege biology and collegechemistry.

Sixty hour review andoriginal credit courses wjllcover: . Art of Writing.( Composition (10-12);Developmental Reading (10-12)., Sports in Literature (10-12), Typing I, II, III and IV (9--12), Drawing (9-12),Crafts (9-12), Dramatic Arts (10-12),

Public Speaking (10-12),Introduct. to Psychology (11-12), English IV (12), Painting

W d f l 1 2 V G h i(H2).

There will be 120 houroriginal credit courses in U.S.History I and. II. (10-12),Environmental Science (9-12)and Aiitn Merhnnlfi^I ( I f e l ^

Cranfo^d^StudentB. Fees for-non-residents are paid at thetime of registration, '••'.- ^

A summer session brochurecan be obtained In theguidance office of the twomiddle schools and CHS. Toobtain any further in-formation, please call thesummer school principal at272-9100, Extension 255-

tea

A R M Y & NAVY• STjOJRUS ,... _30 S. Union Ave., Criinford

27«-0V«O

•Can JQG!

IF YOU WANT THE LATESTIN SPORTS BOOKS . . .

j OGr INI TO SEE US I

Th©

PRE-RUN CLINIC last Wednesday night attracted about 65 people to CommunityCenter to hear Dr. Ralph Oriscello, Cranford cardiologist and running enthusiast, andEd Bellnsky, administrator In Hillside Avenue School and Boston Marathoner.

1ICJSttwdeitts Cited Ecwe Activities.--Donna Bryant of 417 Brook-side Pi., Donrialee Dolin of 40Keith Jeffries Ave.» Lorraine'Kaprosch pf^'BjoomirigdaleAve., and Theresa Kennedy of

BOOKSTORES 92 North Ave. W. 276-0390

iTPkwy. are among10 students at Union Collegewho were; honored for theirparticipation in extra-curricular activities at the.college's annual class nightceremonies May 24.

Union College keys,awarded on a point system foractive participation- .andservice to the college and thecommunity, were presented toeight full-time and two part-

Miss Bryant served astyping editor and featureeditor of The ScrolJ4 thecollege newspaper, and

college radio station, on thegraduation committee, thesocial cultural committee andthe campus ministry?*

Miss Kaprosch was

and dinner dance committees.Miss . Kennedy was

secretary and presMtent of theStudent Government

treasurer of the CollegiateSenate, the student governingbodyTfor p^art-time students,and was a member of theCollege Council and the social

. . ..-, , FIRST PRIZE went "to Tom 'Haydon who will \toearAssociation, a rtantraentatoe—premler-^nomber -fn—Sondays-ronr-AAayor—Molnart 0 ."f.,. e?"™".0"8' policies presents first of the numerals donated by Adidas for thecommittee of the board oftrustees from SGA, andparticipated in the BenevolentSociety and the blood drive.

cause.

• j ^ 0 ',w*v

•• « - •

WHY

and so' "P '" 'and s'ylo noml

~* • . - • • ••»

fURHlTURE

Race AttractsY outh Coumicil 111 School Paper Underwriters

Cranford's Youth Councilhas been featured in "The.Devil's Advocate," thestudent.newspaper at Basking Ridge

The article begins with thisline: - "One problem thatBernards Township studentsoften face is the lack of some-thing to do outside of school.

blood drive;-!-•- Miss Dolin was both fresh-man . and sophomorerepresentative to the; StudentGovernment Association,

served as,disc jockey for the

GRADUATION GIFTSTYPEWRITERS-CALCULATORS

MOST; MAKES & MODELS '

SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS

h

•:•', i . v i - •'•!'*

If;

Office PnNlucth Inc.

20 Eastman, Cnin276-%00

JOGGING SETSTERRYS

SHORTALLSDENIMS

SHORT SETSVELEURS

POLYCOTTONROMPERS

- O V E R A L L S

•THE UPSTAIRS DOWNSTAIRS102B N Union Aw« , Cranlord

Opun Dolly nil 6. Thursday till 9

.A

N E W ! FASHIONS IN TERRY BANDEAU

TERRY BAHDEHU.KEYHOli NECKWITH COMTRtSTKB TRIM

.• w<4

Ul ..-.-..,..,;:•.;•••- / . • • i . . , . . : . . / i - 1 t | . . a \

& - . - . • • / . ; • . : • • • / : • • , ' U -

RACING MULTI^TRIPE X

^ .WHITE wm//\

\ V R M S ^ ^^4s.rtl (L

1 ^ $11.00-

\ / / / \ |

M

w%^Z / / '

ROMPERS

W' 'vwl

v.

Tartar Moves

To The Coast-The Township Committee

accepted the_ resignation of_Gerald Tartar as chairman ofthe Committee on Aging.Committeevcoman BarbaraBrande said that Tartar'sdeparture is "a real loss to thecommunity."

Tartar, an insuranceexecutive here, is moving toSan Diego to go into theconstruction business. He alsoserved Cranford as presidentof the Chamber of Commerce.

Many suburban communitiesare attempting to solve thisproblem' by introducing YouthCouncils and recreation.centers-"- _ • •

The article goes on to quoteWanda Chin, the councilsecretary here, about theactivities involving secondarystudents including marathons,m&yie nights^, coffee' houses,trips to concerts, and rollerrinks, dances and open cen-ters.

Most of the expenses of TheChronicle Run are being metby companies, which meansthat most of" the proceeds willgo to fitness course here.

Adidas" has provided the 'racing numbers. Meeker-Sharkey and Moffatt, theinsurance firm, has joinedReel-Strong Fuel and theCranford Hotel in un-derwriting T-shirts. Theirnames will be on the back ofthe shirts. The Straight ArrowClub has donated the prizes.

DO1SORAn anonymous donor has

contributed $25 to the Fun andFitness installation supportedby The Chronicle Run. _~i_

V '

TourCycles

105 N, Union Ave.Cranford N.J.

272-9751

r;^ ^:'p^pf! • • • • ; . • , • • • > , - • - • - ; : ' " • - : . y - , -

'. .. '4' :•- i -r:;r\ ••••r^-r.

9 w< y t . », y » >*~

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FOR MEN aWOMEN

_ 276-7566OPEN,?-9M0N..RU••• •V:: • • > - « . S A T ;

MEMBERSHIPPLANS

18 N. UnionCranford

TheFour Season

Fuel Company

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Attic Fans!

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Page 3:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

•mi*

' , '. .[_.: '._ : . . • .- • " . : ~

Page4 CRANFORD (N.J.)CHR6NICLEThursday. May 31.1979 _ ~"~ , ~ ", !

Kamelka To Head Council Salway Cites Slip pprtEstelle Kamelka of Cran- treasurer. l?^^^*v»' " Tl*"*^J^'-'^k£l?iii"«^il«'

ford has-been-installed-as -The 79 members of cdunctl JT FtWH—:lrxl.T©e~ vJxTlXJlillSpresident of the Union County represent the 21 municipal- _:_•-.-Home Economics Extension i ties in Union County and Richard J. Salway^ candj- taxpayers. As a result, 1 have _rvmnril — L^I_—assists-tbe-Hama-Economtce—dat^o^he^dwnsiup :^nir^^

Other of ficewlnstalled were Extension Service1 to plan, mittee in the June 5 primary, which are common to a .crossJo Ciullo, first vice president; promote and evaluate the has received the commitment section of people. The mostMartha Boho, second vice educational home economics of Township Committeemen predominant coucetns;.revolvepresident^ Mary-Kniaaukr-pFograms-of-the Cooperative -Henry -TE>reyer—and—&ene—aTonrrcha laclrof sensitivity to

^

secretary, and Pat Rand, Extension Service.

JERRY'Shoe

air

ShottU CH 1201' ^76 -4788

106-N—UHion-Ave-CianfcTrd N-J U7O16

Marino and Township Clerk the human needs within the"Wesley Philo. township and 4he Jnability to

At a rally of Salway sup- deliver services which affectporters, , the current GOP our quality of life. To corn-officeholders Said in a joint ment briefly,Xbelieye«seniorstatement: "We believe Dick citizens require convenience,Salway has excellentqualifications to be a Town-ship Committeeman. Hispersonal background,professional skills and civicactivities make him the mostcapable candidate to address required a partnership bet-the challenges facing Cran- ween the businessman, theford. The vigor of his cam- consumer and the township."paign and his broad base of Salway also called on-Ohe 'jAWSvTACKLES.TRUM<- Fireman Steve Pattersonsupport, particularly among Planning Board to considerRepublicans, adds to his seriously the public commentselectibility in November. We with regard to the proposed

- look forward to serving with Master Plan and encouragedDidc" - '

transportation and value fortheir dollars. Young peopleneed . to. lha_ve_.__.iheiErecreational opportunitiesmatched with their interests.The Central Business District

VNHS Visits Up By 22 PerCettt_— ,.B ., .. -year, the annual lepuit t>ay&. supervision,- ia-a-ylablft-Servlces reports that home Mrs. Hugh Delano of native to institutionalizationvisits in 1978 were up 22.4 per Cranford is president of the 'and hospitalization, especially

-L - — .-^—_i. for senior citizens.'V

BIKE RECOVERED. " Orcliard St., got her's back, ItSeven bicycles were was recovered by Plainfield

reported stolen in CrjnjjOrd ^ti^^Sa\MX(&y:i^J[iye^day&-during T^ceMt~(JaySn3ul one after it was taken- from her

lucky owner, Jane Roth, of 9 garage here.

cent over 1977, agency.ltfr rRTOemaTy~CtfCi

agency serving .15 com- executive director,, said the visits, VNHS services includemunities in this area made growth in Visits "is significant work with teen parents,96,500 visits hy staff nurses, because It portrays our children and adults who

"physical therapists, speech' continuing growth and—require "periodic attention intherapists, social workers'and illustrates the fact that home the home by the agency'scommunity health alde«_ lasbf-heaTth care, under professional or "para-profe

professional medical sional staff members.es-

neW'Tlteav'lng" Hurst

'JawsQf-Life^ Drive

1O% OFFon

summerneeds

timexwatches

suntanlotion

sunglasses

DRUG STORE34 Eastman St. Cranford

276-6100

LeadNJ.Squadron

MICROWAVE OVEN ONLY

RANFORD RADIO INC26 Eastman Street

OtinfordModel REH 7300 276-1777

In accepting the support -of pate in public debate regar--the elected Republicans, ding the Land Development T£ £*ng*nd>GSalway said, "I am thankful Ordinance.' M\ "%*\->11>"dfor the confidence of these He concluded by saying he . " _._ _-, l._ •-township officials and an- would campaign vigorously on The "Jaws 6(#LifeIT cam- equipment,ticipate a team effort in ad- these and other issues until the paigri has reached its goal and Kaplan said that the successdressing the issues which are November election. He the lifesaving tool is now of the four week campaignof importance to Cranford thanked his supporters for operational in Cranford. illustrates that "when peopleresidents." their help and encouraged all Fire Chief Leonard JDolan are involved they can get

"During this campaign I registered Republicans to vote and Marvin Kaplan, president things done." He noted thathave spoken with hundreds of on June 5. ' of the Cranford Rotary Club, support came from industry, ..Kenneth H> Beeber of

called the campaign an business and ordinary Cranford has been installed as"outstanding success" and citizens. educatibnal officer of Nor-thanked contributors to the • them New Jersey Power$6,000 project? -• "I'm thrilled at the com- squadron, a unit of United_Dolan arid Howard .SiegeJ,-jnuniiy.j:esBOLnseJ_echoed- states Power Squadrons, thehead, of the Rotary's com- Dolan," who announced that nation's largest privatemtinity jse.rv.ice_..committee, . the.. fire' department .would boating fraternity,reported that the fund had conduct a demonstration The installation took place$5,300 in cash and enough downtown during Founder's during a Change of Watch-pledges to meet the cost of the Day Jn June. dinner'.' dance held 'at the

Chajitlcler Restaurant. •District Commanded HermanJ. Ritscher conducted theinstallation.

Beeber joined NNJPS in-1961 "and ,has served aschairman of the squadron'ssail course and as a memberof the Piloting, Seamanship,;Northern Lights, Educational,and Executive Committees.Most recently, he served asassistant educational, officer.He has completed all USPScourses and is a recipient ofthe. Nelson Award which the'Squadron presents for out-standing educational achieve-ment. ' ,

A graduate of NorthwesternUniversity, Beeber is an'electrical engineer. He and hiswife, Muriel, who is a memberof the Northern Nauticals, thesquadron's .ladies auxiliary,,

1 -do their boatIHg~oUt 'ofvrMorganrvv.'- '^jfe*:-VO-1'^; '.; Founded in.11936, Northern

:. New Jersey Power Squadronis dedicated to the promotion^indTsncouragemeHtotskiinir.

the ar ts :«f—navigation;—seamanship, and small boathandling. It fosters fraternaland social relationshipsamong men Interested inyachting and stimulatesmembers to increase theirknowledge through- selfreducation and participation inmarine-sports activities andcompetition.

RUN IN FOR THE

WE TAKE DELIVERY ORDERSBY PHONE -CREDIT CARDS AREWELCOME -WE HAVE WIRESERVICE .'.-,?

'i13NUnion.TCra'nlord'

276

Biach^.Reminds'Every Vote Counts'

—BobUlach, wlw last fall lostthe closest race for TownshipCommittee in Cranford'shistory, reminded his fellow3 ^ M i

"orTJunelsth. The future hope ofour ^party rests on (hedetermination of Republicanstoy get out and. jvote._JByWercIs7ngTHeir~rfght' to votethey will have made knowntheir 6wn choice of q can-didate by way of a prjrmary

really does countsHis understated appeal for a

large GOP turnout in theprimary next Tuesday, in election. I have initiated this

-jwhichhdisseeking! the party's- contested primary in ordernomination for next fall's that rank and file Republicansrace, said his two vote loss to a

Victor D E N N I S Realtor276-7618

:2ALDE1N STREET CRANFORD

Run Your Phbtos FromThe Fun Run

to Photo plaza fo_rFinest Quality

/

KOOACOLOR.PHOTO PLAZA

ANOCOMPATIBLE

FILM

JUMBO SIZECOLORPRINTS

ON KODAKPAPER

R.US COST OF" DEVELOPING

CANDIDATE WITH TWO ENDORSERS - DickSalway with Gene Marino, left, and Henry Dreyer Jr.

nFrench Students BegiInt'l Correspondence

Seventeen students from following students: KathyMrs. Mary Olsen's French Cullinen (Belgium), Kevinclasses at Hillside Avenue Claypoole (West Germany),Middle School and at Cranford Lori Finkelstein (Israel),High School have begun an Thomas Goertz (West Ger-active "correspondence with many), Donna Knightother students from 11 (Spain), Genelle McMahoncountries around the world," (Ireland), Christy Vorol>

''Having a penfriend is a .(Lebanon), George Kfcchmerhelp in practicing a foreign (Austria), Sally Liberiolanguage in a very real and (Belgium), Linda Paceinteresting way," Mrs. Olsensaid."~ The International YouthService, located in Finland,was responsible for arrangingthe pen-friends. Students werematched on the basis of age,sex, hobbies, and languages

'POP' GOESTHE LID — New tool helps cut metal fromaround trapped victims. Firemen "and Rotary1 Clubcoordinated fund raising for the Instrument.

ggstudied. In most cases, theforeign pen-friend has studiedFrench for an equal number ofyears as his orjier Americanounterpart. *The initial correspondence

was_begun by the Cranford"group" "which Includes the

(Togo), Mary Severe(Franco), Thomas-Zoeller-(Austria), Terrilisa Bauk-night (Canada), Nora Braun(Italy), Leslie Chapman(Belgium), Diane Hagopian(Canada), Frances Kimm(Italy).

Three PayFines ForAssaults

• •

•iiu

15

I

ONE DAYSERVICE

• no ««. ut*t - - .

UNCONDITIONALGUARANTEE

STOP AT PHOTO PLAZA FOR ALLYOUR PHOTOGRAPHIC N^EDS

DhOtO 10 Alden Streetplaza Vimiz

Fisticuffs proved costly fortwo people accused " of

Tavem^heftResults. In

ACHIEVE RS_HONOR€D' — Glarence_:Pe(io,:-eightdirector of -Manufacturing for:"A^reJC^.^gZIaaSIa-..-...,

Avenue East last March JO. . awards foAAaureen Savage, teacher atOrange^Aven,ue_ sentenced to an 4ndetermimrte-S c h o o l a n d D a n t e P C l o l o f U i t e d C t i e T u t. Municipal. Court Judge

James M". Bell levied a fine of$515 against-Richard Marotta,"of 9 Filbeft Lane, Union, forassault ahd battery. The/

School, and Dante P. Crlsonlno of United Counties Trust sentence in the New JerseyCo. here, for their participation In "PrO|ecTBuilriess." Reformatory for larceny atThe program fits tnto school CUrTlculunrTancI enables the Cranford Town tavern atstudents to relate Individual skills and abilities to-415 Centennial Avenue last

_andcomplaint was signed' bf experience", through exposure, "to" fhVbusl'neisS' - Superior Court JudgeElizabeth Gouveia, of theNorth Avenue - addross.Marotta filed a similarcomplaint against herrelative, Kenneth Gouveia, of9 Grove St., and he was fined atotal of $35. Maj-otta was foundnot guilty of an assault and

c o m m u n i t y

Affirmative Action SessionHeld for Staff

p gEdward W. Beglin Jr. im-posed- sentence, after _ -Ga^yShelton Oates, 18, pleadedguilty to the charge. He wasone of three men accused of

Ul

" A FULrSERVICE SHOP""1.2: •Expert Cutting -i...:.. • ,,«:a.....v.:z :

—^itidivWinr rta^iiTFacljf|r~• Hair Removal by Waxing

(New Gentle Method)• Make-Up

31 South Union Ave. Cr.

276^7603

TTnceasing andTuntiring effortsin the general election this fallif I receive their endorsement

Democratic incumbent major^'should be -sufficient inspireaTfon • for registeredRepublicans to come out andvote next Tuesday. The largerthe voter turnout, the broaderour party's base will be. I havediscussed issues, madeconstructive recommenda-tions, and worn out lots'of shoeleather in order to personallymeet the majority of myfellow Republicans at theirdoorsteps. I need their supportif I am once again to be theRepublican candidate, for theTownship Committee.: zJn affinal press- statement,Biach jjl_edged_^'the_jajne

T T n c i d T t i i f f t

thosTof usYn'the CRANFORD WILL BE:well represented pn ballots in this area next fall, arid here'sn Partv who w h y : Ha r o 'dJ. Seymour Jr., standing, is running for-re-election as county freeholder,ind need their in- °^ Coburn, left, will be the party's candidate for Tqwnship_.Committee and Bill

Cambria, right, is running for State Assembly. Those are the only jobs on <he ballotthis year.

Three Local Democrats On BallotSeymour is the only one of

the trio facing a primary test.But neigher he or partyprofessionals rate the chal-

lepge of two candidatesagainst him and two otherincumbents as likely forsuccess. »

are

YOUNG-ARTISTRY: Mia Vinacour, of 12 Van BurenAve., completes a linoleum block art print at Far BrookSchool in company of her mother, Karen, center, andart teacher Virginia Snygg. It was part of open house atthe Short Hills Institution.

Awn.... Solar Panels Put ToVester St.

may participate in this mostdemocratic form of candidateelection."" "i'l sincerely urge those

independent voters who wouldlike, to support me in theRepublican primary to do soby simply declaring theirintentions at their respectivepollingSplaces," he said. "Tothose independents I say thatthere are

welcome and need their in- o n in Coburn, left, will be the party's candidate for Townshigjlornmittee and Billterest and support if the Cambria, right, is running for State Assembly. Those are the only jobs on the ballotRepublican Party.is to grow t n i s v e a r -arCd flourish in Cranford..Independents please note thatthe - Republican" standard-bearer is being chosen by the When the voters of Cranfordmost democratic form of go to the polls this November,public participation, the chances are they will have an

unusual opportunity to votefor candidates from Cranfordat three ""different levels ofgovernment. Making thesituation even more extra-ordinary is the fact that thethree Cranford residentsall from the same party.

Democratic . standardbearers this year includeWilliam Cambria.... candidatefor State Assembly; HaroldSeymour, seeking re-election

inion eoantyTreefiolcand John Coburn, Democraticcandidate for the TownshipCommittee,

" the fact that we have threecandidates from Cranford onthis year's ticket is no fluke,"says Timothy O'Leary,Cran fo rd Munic ipaDemocratic Committee chair-man. "Rather, it is an affirm-ation of Cranford's increasedprominence in both countyand state Democratic circles,as well as a tribute to thecaliber of people who areinvolved in Democratic ac-tivities in our town. We arefortunate to have a largenumber of bright, dedicatedand involved people who havebeen-and will be-attractivecandidates at various levels ofgovernment."

"When they vote inNpkremb;er; the people of.Cranford Will have a choice ofvoting for people who know

eaRealtor - Notary Public

106 N. Union Ave. Cranford272-4020

BARNETTWINES

EASTMAN

LIQUORS

., CRANFORD

Meeker,

BeT1> 17 N. Union^ - c — _ Cranford fPharmacy 276-0002 |

* Robert "Cermele has joinedthe small but enthusiasticgroup of local residents whoare experimenting with solarenergy. His solar collectorsare right out on the front of hishome on Sylvester Street.

Cermele, a teacher, and LouBock, a friend, installed hissunpowered hot water systemlast August, "It took twoweeks," he recalls. "The

CommunityCollege.

His hot-water system worksthis way: The three solarpanels on (fie roof containcopper pipes containing solarfluid covered by glass. Theheated fluid is pumped to amuch smaller storage tank inthe basement. An exchangerconverts the heat to hot water,which supplies hot water forthe house. The solar fluid

taking $270 in, cash and $62 Inchecks,from a cash register at

The Cranford public school committee: Lissa Brown, the tavern, where they werebattery complaint by Kenneth staff attended a workshop on Shirley Daniels, Carol arrested. Charges against oneBouveia in the, May 1 court affirmative .action last Fedoryk, Welthy Gargcs, were dropped and charges

Thursday afternoon. Dr. Constance James, Margaret against the other, Garyhearing.In another case,. Judge Bell Deborah Patrjdge.-Wolfe of KotlalrrFraBkiyn Preston and Holmes, oif Roselle! await1 Mnv 1H fiiwrl .Inhn Mailnn a DrnnfnrVI "I nrnfooanr nt DnnoM Cnlnolln • i u__^:^«

',';•; i!:isil

-Boys & Girls Jeans sizes 4-f 4

Boys Slack & Short Sets sixes 2t-7

Spring Dresses sizes 4- f4

All Jackets(windbreakers & Baseball)sizes4"f4

Deb 'n Heir27 N. Union

on May 15 fined John Nailon, aformer Irvington resident,$250 plus a suspended jailsentence for assault andbattery. The complaint wasfiled by Judith Metzger, of 250North Ave. W., who-said hestruck her while they wereidi i l

Cranford,1 professor of Ronald Spinella.education at Queens College,was keynote speaker;

The purpose of the work-shop, according to BurtonMandall, affirmative -actionofficer, was to provide timefor the staff to hear about and

riding in_a. car along North discuss equal educationalAvenue on May 5. - opportunities for all.

The staff was divided into ioLONGI FIRST discussion groups led by

Michael Longi is" the first experts in the educationalsenior citizen to head the field. Hosting each groupCranford Committee on- session were members of theAging. . school district steering

\ ,

•J.

•'•' ' • •' ; • ' ,

' . ' ' - -

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1 ' . ' - • - .' • • , (

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tfj •••••'

. • " ' • , • . * r ' •. • '""•

pierced !Sapolin Latex

Sapolin LatexTRIMSHUTTER

place torun

when i|ou

N Unioh/Cranford, 27^2540 •ifomMTitO. Closed '"-J

to see you...•" (f^ 13 J\ iWl CT f \ D l*%v^ n~* iii i r \J \ \J

IDPTJdlANSServing you for 45 years -•<

14 N. Union Ave., Cranford276-7144

Closed on Wednesday

...Wini the

Chronicle

Run

hardest part was putting the £irculates..back to the roof^nd-three""solar panels which the process repeats. Duringweigh about 140 poundsapiece, on the roof." The solarpanels lie on the roof of hishouse, and the pipes lead to asmall- storage tank in thebasement.

persistent cloudy weather theoil backup systemautomatically takes over.

atujl care about"Cranfor4fand-cari, represent our town andoujrjnteresjs.. J J L bo£t _ thecounty-and the -state.' I amconfident that they will findthis prospect most ap-pealing," O'Leary concluded.

TWOIIONOHEl)Two members of the ad-

ministration at Union Collegehave been elected honorarymembers of lota Xi, the OnionCollege chapter of Phi ThetaKappa, said Joan C'alhoun.president of the chapter.Leonard . .T._. Kreismun .ofVVesllield, vice president foracidemic affairs, and J.Harrison Morson ol Edison,dean of student affairs, werei4wled ap honopai'y members.

MoffattLIFEGUARDS

''You might say I did it as a.patriotic venture," saidCermelc1. "I wish the countrywould subsidize solar the wayit does nuclear, because solar

-is the--way the country willeventually have to go."

Cermele's system supplierapproximately SO per eent oFthe hot water in his house, andhe uses an oil backup system.

"I look forward to the day,"said Cermele, "When I canconduct electricity from myroof."

Cermele spent $2,000 on his

received $900 with a com-bination of the state grant andhis tax credit.He expects tosave about $90 a year in fuelbills.

"It should be made clear,"said Cermele. "that solar isnot yet economically soundOil is still cheaper. When oilgoes up to $i a gallon it willstart' to pay back."

Cermele is a professor at

You will alwaysbe a winner

with us.

Ifc REALTY WCA\ g.g. NUNrill "A World of Diffi'II181 North Ave E.,(" CALL..276-

Difference"Cranford8110

E«ch oHIct Indcpondtntly owntd.

CLASS OF '79ty YourJ3raduati6n Portraits Done Vbur Way!

With Portraits By

CRANFORD STUDIO

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"We guard the goodthings in life."

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PROVIDENTMUTUALi " [• INSURANCE COMPANY' .. : " ' i ; ADFLPHIA .

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Page 4:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

• - • ' * '

- /£•

Page6 CRANFORb (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, May 31,1979

Chief: - -Gas- Hoarders.ml Pose A Danger Here^ ^ i ^ ^ = = = M a W ~ I t > c ~ a l residents arc nhtt+Hln<fcftthMiLjliim_!rtinrrresidents arc

g gasoline in illegalcontainers and in illegalamounts, Reports Fire Chief

narri Dnlnn

WALLACESTERLING OPEN STOCK

All Wallace Patterns

Also includesWove, Grand Colonial.Komanri* ol the Sea, old AilanuiSheruidoah, Spanish Lace.Sira'divarl. Grand Victorian.And Tunic Puiicms: Beauvnlr.I lannah Hull, onslow

Example:GRANDE BAROQUE

3Pc\ Place Setting . $231.25 $115.63Cft'ilSfXXMT I'lilCC KllHf & R>rk)Teaspoon, o p e n Stock . . . . 61.50 3O.75Tablespoon, Open Stock .. 181.75 9O.

Store Hours:., Tues., FH. 9:30toS:30

Thurs. 9:30 to8:30Sat. 9:30 to 5:00

Closed Wed.

In an effort to forestall whathe-sees as a dangerous customer,situation, the chief this week JResldents in any kind of asent letters to all service dwelling are'' not allowed tostations reminding them- of- store-mere than" ffve^gallonstown ordinances about- without a permit, he said,storage. . Under a town ordinance.

—H«-4oldMhem—that-Hhey Doiair^d—thsr^quite acannot dispense gasoline into few" residents have been

hoarding gas and that "weheed to protect people againstthemselves." He says theslightest spark can set off anexplosive fire and that onegallon of gasoline has theexplosive force of eight sticksof dynamite. Two boys wereinjured in a gas ignition in-cident last week.

The fire department is in-cluding a treatment ofgasoline dangers in itsregular fire safety programsin the schools,

Dolan warned that thetownship will prosecutepersons who sell gas: forunapproved containers. Themaximum penalty for thisviolation is $200 or 90 days injail. Safe cans include theseelements: metal, maximumof five gallons, spring closinglid, spout cover' and clearmarkings.

Sv^^C&iMki

UCTI Students Are in *Who's Who Thursday, May 31.1979 CRANFORD (N J j CHRONICLfc Pagtf?

Seven Cranford residentsare -among 43 students fromUnion College and-thtioir

safety "containers^- and inamounts of no more than twogallons per container and withao-jnori-than-an-aggrega1

amount of five gallons per

Scofcht "Plains, who wereselected for inclusion in the1978-197? edition of Who's WhoAmong Students in American-Jtintof ConggesT" ". , """

They include Joan Calhoun,4 Fifth Ave.; Donna Lee Dolin,40 Keith Jeffries Ave.; GaryHennessy, 13 Grove St.;William Pearlman, 24 HerningAve.; ""

Government Association was F r i s b e e C l u b a n d t h e S G A

ekjcjedlreaiurer to the SGA intramural volleyball team. A

tepresentaTIveTShewasaoW-^v^^s teaching assistantjockey on the college radio i n psychologystation WCPE. and was £ £ S c h i«* 0 w a s a s t u d e n tnominated to represent New, l n t h e lhrm.year cooper-ativeJersey.coffl.n^uii^coUeges^T — i n " profesionalNew Jersey for the. tuition aid n u r s i n g c o n d u c t J by Union

six years, ~ •• • —

of St. Michael's Choral Society Kg?and Is a member ol th Kioto M l s s a Switzer

SIGNS AND LINES — Posted oiVgas pumps are-signsIndicating $8. purchase limit at Exxon Station onOrchard Avenue, left, while cars line-up, right, fqr gas

St Amoco Station on Springfield Avenue. Photos by TomHaydon.

byJOANVARANELLITHAT SPECIAL SUMMER

Every four years thepeople of the world looh to.one city where the best Inthe world gather to teattheir athletic skills againsteach other. These compet-itors prepare years ' Ihadvance for that onespecial summer.Now It U your turn to pre-pare'for the 1980 OlympicGames to be held Jn Mps-cow. Reservations arelimited and ofiPalready-

tlllng-outrTours-ar&wt-ttpr-to Include 15 to 22 days Inthe Soviet Union with 6nights In Moscow to viewOlympic events,magtne—the— color— and—

excitement. Picture vour-self cheering our UnitedStates teams on. Come toVaran's Travel Agency andmake your preparation*for the special summer of1980.

Gas Abounds Here But Don't Tell DriversBy TOM HAYDON

Drivers swarmed „ toCranford gas stations Friday,preparing for the holidayweekend as lines of cars at

stations, though sometimes inlimited quantities as morethan half the stations sur-veyed by The Chronicle wereallowing only five or eight

pumps extended into the dollar purchases,streets. For the station attendants,

Gas was available at many imposing the limffer was a& •

Squad: Gas Costs RisingIn its request for con- traveled ^23,178 miles

tributions fqr its annual fund altogether,raising drive," the CranfordFirst Aid Squad has noted thai '•_ MarLlya J31U£k,smanoL theinflation is sending pjqtefo^BqHWfTre^^up. Rising costs of gasoline for a door-to-door canvass will not

lesson in human nature asmany drivers argued aboutthe limit .or tried to get morethan allowed!

"They try to distract you sothe pump will go over $8," saidone attendant at the Exxonstation at North Avenue andOrchard Street.

The simplest way for mostpeople to get around the limitwas.to drive around the block,and join the end of the line.

The drivers also, found moreto argue about than just thepurchase limits,

extra 4,00(fgallons to be takenfrom the allotment for Juneand used now. Workers thereexpect that unless an extraallotment is again obtained forJune, the station will run drybefore the end of the month.

There was no limit onpurchases at that stationmany customers were buying$14 and $15 of gas to fill tanks.Oneiwck driver early FridayQiorning bought 40 gallons inwhat - the station employessuspect was a special tank.^ l l ^ K V O O i l

ambulances was specifically becited. '- • '

The squad made a total of1,781 calls during the past

held.

y Tcontributed. The ambulances

this year- andrequested that contributionsbe mailed to Cranford .FirstAid Squad Inc. or dropped offat the headquarters on Gen-tennial Avenue.

an attendantStation on North Avenue.

"One customer will say 'Iwas here first.' Another onewill say 'No. I was here first,"Hip ynnng >nnn

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The total bite put on theowners of Cranford 1 barkerswho didn't register them was$2,450, reports MunicipalCourt Clerk Evelyn Chamber-lain.

Altogether 245 residentswere given summonses forfailing to license their dogs,and- the fine was $10. Theowners also had to pay $4.50for a license, and a $20 fine iftheir registration was over-due. The door-to-door canvassorganized by Police Lt HarryWilde and carried out byschool crossing guards tookplace over an . eight weekperiod.

JEFFERSON REUNIONThe 1939. graduating class

from Thomas Jefferson HighSchool in Elizabeth; >{pcelebrating its 40th an-niversary which coincides

the_scJhoQlJtself_A committeehas made arrangements tocelebrate the reunion at theVilla Roma at 766 LidgerwoodAvenue on Tuesday, June 5,1979 at 7 p.m. Reservationscan be made by sending acheck to The Class of 1939Committee, P.O. Box 634,Elizabeth, -New Jersey 07207.

____L

Viet Vets Citedr > • : . . • t

A resolution by Freeholder era veterans for their serviceHarold J. Seymour, Jr., to America-both in thedeclaring the week of May 28 military in wartime and into June. 3 as "Vietnam their communities as returnedVeterans. Week" was adopted civilians. I urge your activeby the Union County Board of participation and that of yourChosen F r e e h o l d e r s , community in this ob-Seymour, a decorated Marine' servance."Corps veteran, served in bothWorld War II and the KoreanConflict. He is a past all-statecommander of the Veterans ofForeign W_ars.

Seymour said: "Thisnation's moral debt to Viet-nam era veterans —stillremains outstanding. Theyserved their country during apainful time ln a bitter war.They returned home to''•:• acountry, divided over the war.They never received thewelcome we showered upoii l d p , w a s ^H~d $5/10 wturning - t e ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ p ^ ^ S , ^yet fully-r^^SS^^.m^^m^m

Woman FinedFor AnnoyingPhone Calls

A Cranford woman has beenfound guilty, in MunicipalCourt;of making annphone calls to a Wan who livin e a r b y . - : ••• . . „ • " , • . .'.; ';•-•:'".:•"

Melya Bteler, of 592 Brook

plaining the temperanttfitofthe people, waiting in line.

"It's just crazy today," hesaid. Business had been sogood that day he had not had abreak from noon to 3:30 p.m.,as a steady stream of carsdrove into the station.

That was one stationscheduled to open every dayduring the three-day weekend,but the company had orderedthat no more than 4,000gallons be sold each day. Thatstation had received a supplythat day, Friday and expectedanother one this Tuesday.

Most stations were notreceiving supplies as often,*such . as Larry's Texaco^oiiNorth Avenue, which got ashipment May 22 and does not

- expect to receive another untilnext Monday, June 3.

Ih preparation for the longperiod between shipments,that station had requested an

gwas sold" there in a day. By 4p.m.'1,200 gallons had beensold.

Some stations were runningempty Friday, such as the

_Atnoeo-StatioiLon-SpringfieldAvenue, which Jwofwit ofregular before 4 p.m., evenwith a five dollar limit. Carswere still lined up there,however, for premium.

A shipment of .gas wasscheduled to reach were theprevious day, but an employesaid shipments had not beenarriving on schedule, aproblem other stations werealso having.

"Maybe next month peoplewill drive a little bit less andwe'll get through," a workerat the Texaco station said.Then he added, "but theAmerican public is spoiled.They won't cut down." Hefrowned, realizing theproblem would probably getworse.

He had ohe~small ~con^solation, knowing that hedoesn't qdd to the problem.' Herides a bicycle to wbrfc every-day- ';..

PI AreV»So. 335 oifthe V F

Photo :.by Greg Price^ 9 ft V eSamolyk was master of ceremonies.

T^aTITTerTTand Mark Wellet,1225 Orange Ave.

Mjss CaJhoun,\a liberal artsmajor, held a Union Collegetrustee scholarship, waselected to the president's listfor academic excellence, andwas acting president of PhiTheta_ Kappa, the national

.honor society for two-yearcolleges. She was a member ofthe Modern Dance Club.

AJiberal arts major, Miss

fought in Southeast Asia fortheir service and sacrifice.Vietnam Veterans Week of-fers the people of the county ofUnion a timely opportunity toconvey our honor and ap-preciation.'*

"I strongly urge you to joinme in recognizing Vietnam

A truly unique gift for

The complaint was signedby Albert Forsythe, of 506Gallows Hill Rd., who saidthat Miss Bieler called himfrequently at all hours lastMarch and .hung up withoutsaying anything. On. one dayaWne, he logged 31 such calls.Investigators from thetelephone company traced the^_

Man Sentenced For Br^k-ins^.An,.Elizabeth-man—has sentenced by Judge Edwardreceived a suspended~m- FegliK May l i : HeTodk"$175tence and placed on probation from the station and wasfor five years for break-ins at caught the same night at thethe Cranford Hess Station and tavern by Garwood police,Jack's Tavern last October 13. Bob ' Clarke, assistant

: prosecutor, said §tar|Jng was-Cornelius-Starllngy-of—1S^ ^Bo^tfrnrakerresUtution forJacques St.i: pleaded gulltyisni- damages. He entered~boththe entries April 23 and was places through roofs.

included in the hearing beforeJudge Bell.

Thief Strifes. . . . . . • - : • * " • • . I

colorful, conversation-makingl

Royal DoultonCharacter Jugs r

Gas StationThe Vantage Petrp station

at $<)uth and Lincoln _Avenue_East was victimized twice lastweekend. On Friday an un-dertermined amount of cashwas reported-missing from a

' desk drawer. Sunday nightsomebody forced their way inand 'tried unsuccessfully tobreakTnto a safe, Nothing wasreported missing,

A home was also victimizedFriday..Police said that aftertrying without success to gainentry through a front window,a burglar broke into the Mazurresidence at 103 WilshireDrive through a rear glassdoor, A total of $320 incur/ency was reported stolenfrom .the. master bedroom.Nobody was home at the time.

5r-6«n»rirllintlit

Cranlotd pj-ofiwiioi

Why Isn't your dentl»t'»« punc-tual, at ho want* you to be? Whyrnust ypu occa»lonally-hauB to-wait- past your appointmenttlm»—oven though It nrisy h«v«been set w««k» or month* Bgo .—and why, If you miss an ap-pointment and (ail to call Inbeforehand, does your dentlttand his entire staff look dag-gers at you on your next visit?

Most dental office* are run Ina very professional manner, ona tight schedule, with eachavailable time-slot being filledthroughout' the entire day. Sobusy are most dentarVfflcMthat dentists are hl(jh on thelist of stress-induced healthcasualties in the areas of highblood pressure, heart attacks,etc.'

If you are kept waiting paityour appointed time It Is prob-ably for a very good reason,The doctor schedules the lengthof time each patient may haveby the services, that must beperformed on that visit. But,there Is no way to tell In ad-vance when a patient may de-velop temporary problems thatwill require him/her to remainunder the doctor's watchful eye

is bit longer than was planned.Extraction*, as an example,«gmetlm«e require-extra,-time-consuming care, Understand-ably, no patient can be( sent outInto th« street still needingclose attention Just because'theclock shows his allotted timehas expired. ' '

But," your time Is |ust as Im-portant to you as the next pa'tlent's Is to him? Of course ItIs, and your dentist knows that

•being away from your lob orhome may be costing you morethan just his fees; this Is whyhe bends every effort to keepthings flowing smoothly and on

. time. This Is why each patient'spunctuality Is extremely Impor-tant and why, if you are latefor or miss an qpnolntrrtent, Itadds to the unavoidable sched-uling problems the dentist al-ready must deal with, creatingproblems, you never see.

Being thoughtful of your den-tist's schedule can pay div-idends In the event your familyhas a dental emergency . . •and the next time you're shortof time and want to be "worked-in" for a special need.

Courtesy Is a two-way street!Jlady«rtlt»m«nt) •

vigorously modQljed with great deta|{, andmeticulously hand painted, DdultonCharacter Jugs are famed trje world over.Attractive, useful "holders" on his desk,warm touch for his de,n. Wonderful gift forfather. . . and he'ifsBre" to st&ri his owncollection.

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Women Win All Awards^ Graduate atUC

representative to the Student

.. An electronics- 7 „student at U.C.T.I., Hennessywas a member of Tau AlphaPi, national honor- society,held a partial scholarshipfrom Lockheed and tutored infreshman e lec t ronicstechnology. He was active inintramural softball.

Pearlman. a liberal artseducation ' major, was asophomore representative tothe Student GovernmentAssociation, a rnember of Jhe_SHTdent-TacuIty RelationsCommittee, the College

Mrs. Seeman, also enrolledin the three-year cooperative

:progrHmrriirr~pr otesslunaPnursing, made the dean's listand served as a teachingassistant as well as per-forming. _as_..^a_ L^N_. at.Elizabeth General Hospital."Active in- civic work, Mrs.Seeman has been aDemocratic- committeewo-man, a Cranford DemocraticClub officer, a PTA officer, aGir-1—Scout—Leader—andpresident of a bowling Jeaeue.

Advertise It In

JUST *1CALL 276-6000 TODAY!

Women captured all theawards at Union College's 45thcommencement exercises lastnight at the Cranford Campus.Associate degrees wereawarded to 454 graduates.

The college's top honor—thePost-Day A. W" rrl—vupnt^nMiss Theicesa Kennedy of 6Balmiere Pkwy. w"hile theAlumni Prize, which goes tothe class valedictorian, wasshared by seven women—allwith perfect 4.0 averages:Mrsr—Betty"—BoTvlbjf 7 ofMountainside, Mrsr Nancy H.Byrne of 224 N. 24th St.,Kenilworth, Mrs. Janet E. G.Corcoraftof 31 Broad St., Mrs.Suzanne Grosz of HighlandPark, Mrs. Jeanne C. Mageeof Westfield, Mrs. Bonnie Win-gate "of Westfield, and MissDale A. Quinn of Westwood.Six of the co-recipients aremothers of two or morechildren;

The key commencementspeaker also was a woman.Dr. Ursula Schwerin, a 1944Union College drop-out whohas since gone on to earn threeadvanced degrees and becomethe first woman president of aNew York City communitycollege.

Dr. Augusto Salvatore,chairman of the Union Collegefaculty, and Prof. FarrisSwacknamer of the college'schemistry depar tmentpresented Miss Kennedy with

1978-79 academic year aspresident of the StudentGovernment Association. She -also served as the,association's secretary andthe SGA representative to thecollege's board of trustees

The commencement saw theawarding of some 400associate degrees to studentsof the Cranford campus andanotheF 54 associate in sciencedegrees to graduates of thecooperative _nrogram—in

mittee. A liberal artseducation major, MissKennedy participated in theBenevolent Society and thecollege's blood drive.

In her commencementaddressrDr. Schwerin told thegraduates: "If ever there wasa day on which to stressideals, or to speak of prin-ciples, tog!ay__is_that day,tonight is that night. "The goalof "persona) fulfillment" is anideal that goes beyond mereachievement or success. Eachgraduate, she said, must findout for himself-what his ownpersonal ideal is.' "A bit of idealism on all ourparts will take us a long way inattempting some newresponses, experimentingwith alternatives, and findingindividual lifestyles which arecapabje of bringing us per-sonal fulfillment," she con-

professional nursing con-ducted jointly by the collegeand the School of Nursing atElizabeth General Hospital.Of the total graduated, about75 -per <>ent are going on tosome 50 four-year colleges anduniversities throughout thecountry.

Dr. Schwerin told thegraduates that the keyelement that always triggeredfurther success for her hasbeen inquisitiveness. "Itbegins with questioning my-self, my knowledge, my ex-perience, my-. overall com-petence, my motivation. Itextends to inquisitivenessrelating to concepts andpeople. I have learned toquestion and probe, to informmyself, and I have learned torely on myself rather than toaccept at face value the edictof groups," the communitycollege educator said.

) 't t c / >» i

fur Onoppe is

<g We invite you to stopin and see

Motorcyclist Injured Here

• Pastry • Pies • Cakes• Our Own Butter Cookies

• Breads • RollsNo Preservatives Added

A motorcycle driven byRobert Stauffer, of 219 Hillside

best represBTrts-the'ldSflsnaUnion College. , ; -

Miss Kennedy served for the

South Avenue Saturday. ,

police said Stauffer con-_{inueddQWJi.the road about 100

feet, stopped and looked at his

injuries, while the driver ofthe car also got out looked athis vehicle and then departed.Police, are searching for thedriver. Staui'fer was taken to"

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-Op«ff»-T«e»^SB»r^AWHo*PM^Sundays 7 AM to 1 PM Closed Mondays MAJOH CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

He believes in Craniord. We believe in him.Dick JohnstonLinda ThornGerry HirtzelMarlene RobinsSue Kenny -~>Jack McVey 'Carolyn FinneganPolly JohnstonBob O'SullivanJames E. RobinsPaul T. LaCortePat HinsenkampEdward K. GillWesley Philo .Ralph H. LuettersRobert E. SoriimerladHenry Dreyer, Jr.Ross HirtzelAnn BruntonKathy NowickiCarol Mattls

MSNicholas St?Jblih"LaC6rteWilliam Finnegan IIIMichelle C. RoweLaura McEwenMarge MorrowDale JonesSusan VailJules LusardiJoseph HanlonMay KoehleriCarol Dreyer,Ruth PringleJohn E. MattsonBarbara DiMarcoRichard C. WallerHank KoehlerMartha DreyerTodd TorgersenRichard Anderson 'Paul HampsQnGene Marino - —

Jackie McVeyJoseph A. Rowe, Jr.Pred^WilhelmsCharles Stevens, JrTJack SleckmanKen KonegenThomas G. O'ReillyJeanhine R. RoweBecky WilhelmsBob KennyBarbara GinsbergMarie BruntonTim KornerMary SayreLouise LoreyDon NowickiRon BimBobMattisCarol M. Amesen

- Bob Curtis ..Walter KoehlerKenneth Gursky

Nancy Van WhyRob Gabel

Mary KopickiMrs. Felix DeFabioWilliam H. FortenbaughAudrey R. LuettersBarbara Parfltt jAnne Anderson 'Courtney Juul-NielsenJim Vail . '.Douglas McEwen -•Phil MorinJoseph A. Rowe, IIICindy Sleckmana FriendTrisha ParfittJoan SteeleKay CurtissPat Lusardi'Ray SteelePaul DeMarco/Mike MorrowMary Ann JonesTed Torgersen, Jr.Marion HanlonRoberta1 Morin

Fred J. Spotts, Jr."Joanne C. 0'RtfillyDavid BiunnoKaren El KouryJohn DreyerMary GoodfcllowJoan OfficerLee McLemoreTed.TorgersenGerry MattsonFrank SayreBarbara PahrenBruce DickersonEd RobinsonJean MessingerJudy SmithRobert Douglas, Sr.Scott Van WhyPat ScaturoKathleen AnclienTony BiagoGinny PalumboSandy SturaAnthony J. Smith

Malcolm PringleChuck GoodfellowClaire TorgersenLouise Biunnoa FriendDavid OfficerRichard L. QuackenbushHarold V. Wait, JrJohn Van BruntBarbara EngelHubs PahrenKaren SalwayRobert DouglasHoward MiliusBarbara McHughFyfe DollarJohn ZeiglerKen FitzgibbonCindy Hegna

-tBSfcald D. PeURichard F. JonkoskiNancy IWengeBarbara BiagoValerie Flinn

Richard J. SalwayMy background, family, and involvement in Cranford provideme with the perspective required to- address the needs andconcerns, of Cranfordl To meet these challenges, I wouldappreciate your'vote on June 5th. Thank you.

HJVisenkarnp, ^lye Dick Salway thialr vote of approval-

A FAMILY MANThe Salway family: Karenr-Rlcky, Anrre~arrcl~PK:RT

Mary SalvatorielloJohn Kopicki^Joan Juul-NielsonSu&an KaiserMonica O'BrienGeorge McDanielBud BrownHenry HinsenkampFrank PalmieriScott TaylorDorothy KoehlerNorm HegnaPat O'Brien 'Ruth Marino("lair W. Flinn, Jr.R. WhitelockBarbara DouglasDon SmithPhyllis DollarJoe AnclienTony PalumboMadeleine Van BruntGloria DickersonJim McHughBob KnissJudy LoderstedtMrs Harold V.Wait, JrMike ScaturoBeltie RobinsonCarole Brown

..Rich O'BrienJanice ZeiglerHocco SalvatorielloTom O'BrienStephanie TaylorGary SturaJanet KnissElaine SlaterAnn GabelJames DouglasHubert E. BreslerPatrick J McDonoughPatricia Gursky

-Ralph P. Taylor

CHQICEItQR TOWNSHIP COMMITTEEA on June 5th • The Re can

Page 5:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

}• '

ti

l-t:

Pag?8CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, May 31.1979

EditorialsA Key To The Future

ViewpointPlanning BoatA Worked Well

Asestimated Wcost about $3l,pQ0. The presentoffice rental cost te>4,40O^aiMaUy.

Chtoral Society:

"local concern rapcess to"CfgnforcPsagenda fOTntfifeBjtUre local concernrapcess wwuu. ruihas been approached thoughtfully in a supermarket, it says. Theand persistently through thearduous process of meetings andhearings that have led to themaster plan.

This is no pie-in-the-suburban- - F - - .sky document, By mandate,,.,the c .service businessesplanners- set-but to create-some-^ wward—trade~or--m

market could havea supplementalbenefit of drawing people to theretail center. The plan alsoaddresses one of the perceived soft

the core: the trend f J

To the Edi to r : ' " ' - • ' L~_J ~~~^The League oFWomen Voters has had as;

its local program, the monitoring of theformation of the Cranford Master Plan.Either I, Ruth Yablonsky, or other membersof our committee- have "attended everymeeting of the Planning Board at which the

ris

By Arthutindir^MLBurdltt office rental cost w •t.wu^u^u-"?-r&Yearsagft—^.-..L..— -. j — -patrolmenFrankXSarusoandTom Woods

thVmSetings was opencomment was

IIIQUD,, U b VIIOV «*1. .%»V*H( • T****** O ™

consultants. Other organizations in Crah-ford, particularly the Chamber of Com-merce, have also contributed their recom-

~mendationB7'*——~ ' ' ' '" .At this time we would like to thank the

Planning BoardTand Tom March for theirwillingness to hear and'evaluate our sug-gestions. Some of these suggestions havebeen incorporated intothe^lan. TfreEWVIs'-•-*— — ---'^TrnowTm-^etherTjr-mrtrttr

anniversary in the prjiest-casionofh o c i d , 1 : , . , , •• . . - • • ••••:.•

•• • • •'• : . ' • - J O y e a r s , . . . ' / • •

- the-largest- graduatingrclass in the~3S-.year history of ttaion-'Coilge, 179 students,will be awarded degrees. - " .

•• . • . . • " • • ; ; 2 0 y e a r s ."• : • : • . • , . . • • ' .

:_CranfoirdjDiafflatlc Club, marjcs its 40th

Contract awarded^fo^Jnienptipnal Har-vester fora utility truck torW'£b<x*tertank and body was bought from Trautwfein

Presbyterians Confirm

thing workable. Ambitiousfuturists might find the planpedestrian, but it is anchored inrealitiesjof limited growth that thetownship must face. Most of theland is developed. Cranford is"stabilizing." We are getting older.We need fewer facilities for theyoung. The people who live herewill tend to be more professional,with larger incomes. There is lessdemand for industrialmanufacturing facilities.

In isolating the issues thatCranford must face, the PlanningBoard and its consultants foundthat the residential texture of thetown will be static but there will bepressures on the downtown, andthey honed in on the center.

You don't have to go too far fromhere, to suburbs as well as cities, tosee what happens when themarketing center erodes. Thedowntown is more than a place toobtain goods and services: it is thehub of much of the social andpolitical life, too. To their credit,

i \

goods. It addresses' that throughzoning for retail and services,through development of the Cleve-land School site for both stores andoffices, through ideas for improv-ing'the vistas by trees and plazlas.

We find that thrust towardcreation of a "competitive village"worthwhile. Nobody is looking forthe township to become a concretepad of a mall; but the improvementand maintenance of a vital andattractive center is not onlycompatible but necessary to theessentially residential nature of thecommunity. We don't need a gassqueeze to tell us that, but _theshortage reinforces the signific-ance of things^ close to home.Indeed, Cranford's proximity toevery form of transportation shortof the rickshaw makes oursituation even more attractive. "

at least monthly since September, 1978, ourLWiLmembers have been ,the only membersof the public present. We regret that morecitizens of Cranford did not avail them-selves of the opportunity to make tiielrviews known during, the earlier formativestages' of the Plan.

The meetings, and the progress of theplan, have been extremely well coveredhowever, by Tom Haydon of The CranfordChronicle, which has g^y^nihe Master Planarticles a prominent place1 in numerouseditions. In November, the LWV held a

diamonds with three additional units nowin

mejeting,wJiichJwaf.Qpeii_to_Jhep4.which-many of therconcepts on which the

Once itis adopted, o_,Final Plan and come to consensus oh itsapproval, •

For now,. however, we. commend thePlanning Board for its dedication and effortin weighing the alternatives presented to

i-ibem by the consultants. Many difficultdecisions had to be made! and the PlanningBoard madethose decisions openlyand withthe best interests of Cranford always cpn-s i d e r e d . • • ' • ( . - .

. , Barbara, Greer_____l_r_^-^-^JU^lrE«)gramGnairr

Cranford League of Women Voters

TheTeft arn) of Ann arfe -Woods wasamputated to save her life from gan^enewhjrt followed a broken 4b0W_rewived ta afaU from a ponyln KenUworth. iS te jsjhe.

Tlaaglhtef'orPdti'olmanrTom Woods.1"- r • • • . •• • . . - • . • ' • '• S O y e a r s : . '••'••' • • ' • • /

' Mew tfrocerv. Union Kood Store te i t '^ * n^ward, Briede is franchise

fEditpra.iiotei rather John eB tab 1 i s hm e Jnt a n d spent many hours W yearsOatea recently celebrated his continuance of thjs past as the orchestral25th ordination as a priest, exceptional organization, consultant, has most recentlyHere.is a retrospective "of the there are othetfi_wbo—have -beenguest-conductor-^eryinig-"Sk. Af t e t ed f^h^ Ws finest moment in thiswhich haTbeen central to h\s Society, both in their ability seasons spring concert Withwork in recent years. The and in the eyes of the public, his conducting ofwriter. U president of the Rene Ofabbai, assistant Tchaikovsky's , "March

Slave."-A-standing ovationwas given as Fa ther Oates at

the.

that Specht and Edward Wallace,

William E. Shepard, of 418 Orchard Styreceives his bachelor of divinity degree.*•• • . . • ' . . ' . - 3 0 y e a r s ' ' ••>• '••'•-. , '

William Gourley qf 29 Retford Aye.nominated president of the Lions' Club.

dranford Boosters Club dinner May 26..Mrs. Nicholas A. Tomasulo, of 371 E.

LincOl n ,-• Ave., is Kiwanis Club's fourthWoman of the Month.

• - . . ' • • 4 0 y e a r sTotal of 110 Homes to be built on the

_jteaJtjtejgtneadeJHi|IsJejtelopmflnt on the old

Support For Mrs. AlldianMr

Achieving some of these-goalswill require leadership" andcooperation among the business

ponuuai iuC) w u . xV , aricf governmental communities.the planners remained attentive to Implementation will not be easyCranford's center. As the but it fs crucial if we are to attendconsultant, Jerry Lenaz, said, "thedowntown is the key to Cranford's

To the Editor: . - .The proposed transfer, of Mrs. Alice

Alldian from Cranford High School, whereshe feels her talents are best used,.to aposition in which she, will have to travel toHillsjde and Orange Schools hardly seems toreward the efforts of a teacher who has

' developed qneT>r the most outstanding'Lathi: -prbgrahj.sJn the state. ' .

At a time when morale is at a low ebb—among the faculty and students at CranfordHigh Schooly-it-would—seem-Hhafr theAdministration should make every en-

deavor to stem and change this trend. Oneway, it would seem, would be to attract-andkeep teachers of superior ability.

Many parentsJmd students Would agreethat Mrs. Alldian is such a teacher and thatCranford High School can not afford to loseher . ' " -• ' - v ^ ~~-

WehopcthaLMrs. Alldian,will continue asa full time Latin teacher at the High School,a position she--has tilled in a superiormanner for so many years.

••-•••• Char lot te p . H o g a n-7 Holly St.

f^XZfi L I I C l J U V i f l U l i i f i kX tf^VJ-MAWjUH aar » » » . . - - - • -—-.——

Ludlowfarm of-ObadiahLudlow,dated.1720.Mr. and Mrs, T. V.-Albert live .in> this oldLudlow homestead at Brookside andDivision Street. ' '

The townshlp^eeks ideas on the use ofGrant School for township offices and for thepolice department. Alterations are

Nature Notes

eoyearsClean-up work is under the VIA. For or-

derly collections, each of 11 zones has itsown captain and lieutenant.

".• •,• ..'• ' •'" 7 0 y e a r $ . . • •A.M. Shaprio to build a two-foot extension

to his store ,on Union Ayenue. (Store isi stillin operation.) •

• ' • - • - , - • S O y e a r s • , ,• •

Dean Mathey 's bike and James R'wgers'horse collide at North and Eastman with no

~lHjuriesi except to"lBeT51Re. : ^ -Wusettes of the Presbyterian Church

discontinue renting out the chapel. TherewilPbe no moderate-sized hall availablesince the Opera House is too large and its $25charge is too much e^ce'pt for the mostambitious affairs.

By DENNIS JENKINS „ LJ._^_^-^-_r-v--r, = ——From a buddlng~c1ioTF~in~eitcf^ baclcgrouna and, Yurochko embraced at1972, The. St. Michael Choral S151!,'^"88 bfo<i$it ^ e Choral conclusion of the piece.Society-has developed in to-a^^ ' f^ . to , new—heights H)f " 4

nat ional ly accla imed mus>calachievementbfwhichinstituUdn for the revital- / a J h e r O a t e s M v e r v I?roud-

and enrichment of The present accompanist isMadame Marie Mercier.Through her patience andt r a l n l n g the choir members,hflth old and new have gaineda b e t t e r appreciation of the

i t h f

liturgical music. AH creditand recognition for this trans-formation" is owed to Rev.John Oates, associate pastorof St. Michael Church. After . ,.years of musical development music they performat Sacred Heart Cathedral in M r s - Barbara Krause,Newarkr Father Oates was ?°P r a n o soloist, has graced

„ asked-by-MonsignorJohn-F:rtn«rconcertrlJI'«J8FaTn"sDavis, the! _p_astor of St.Michael lo" come ^and re^institute the spirituality andmeaningfulness to the Masseshere.

So many great talents havecongregated amidst theresounding halls of St.Michael Church, it sometimesmakes one wonder what it is ANNIVERSARY — Rev.that they seek or desire. They Martin Joseph Silver, w/hodesire one thing: to be afeeder musically to they eculturallife of the community

spent 11 years at St. AnneChurch in Garwood, will

- - o n

various occasions with hermusical talentr andexcellence. A trained,professional in her own right,she feels that her solo

how. With_ thjs _7VaSier Oates'catronly expectcontinued success anddevelopment of the Choral

A Recipe For Birdsmagnolia, black throated blue, Black-

Without hesitation, Father f.^u-P'L8111"?"18 w i t h S t

Oates accepted the offer. He M i c 5? e l h a ? **«* "«** re-star>d developing the choir w ^ i n g and gratifying,with one thought in mind: R o b e r t Yurochlro. who hasestablishing a choir that wouldglorify God and rekindle themusical embers that had onceresounded through ' allchurches and' cathedralsthroughput the nation. With

thanksgiving at St.Michael Church inLyndhurst, which he has

Society and Orchestra. It is served since 1968 when heleft St. Anne, followed by adinner-dance at the White

Twenty youths Will be_com- Karen Dollar, James Dusch,missioned and confirmed irito Glenn Engemanri, Carolynmembership in the church as Galbraith, Linda Gingery,piu± _oi~the- Pentecost-Com- - Barbara Glucksman, James"munion service at 11 a.m. Hansen, Jeffrey Krugh, KimSunday at., the First Kreutel, Robin Lebers,Presbyterian Church. Jonathan Letiecq, Darlene

After completing a year- Miller, John Munster, Karenlong Cora miiiisi-JO^W-g Paterson, RichardPreuss,Education Program

-ineluded-six—Saturday—worfc^-shops, two overnight retreats,

visit to a_-P.£esbyterymeeting and a mission tour ofElizabeth. The youth wereexamined for membership bythe session on May 20.

The following,-after sharingpersonal statements of faith,were voted into membership:Pamela Baublis, KarenBuchanan, Maureen Carney,

Calvary ConfirmationService Celebrated

Thursday. May 31,1979 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Page9

| Hard wicktoiSpeaKT""at

has had a sponsor duringthis program—who—will—i;troduce them to thecongregation iw~Sunday'sservice. The program is leadb'y Kay Cronk, the chunih's K l a s e

assistant in Christianeducation. Also on its staff areRuth Pringle, Karin Burk,Rev. George' Pike and Rev.Paul

Assemblyman ChuckHardwick (R-Union) will b<the keynote speaker at' thefinal meeting of the RedeemerLutheran Parent-Teacher

and patriotic songs were the; order of thefor the Memorial Day celebration of the Helen

Baldwin Nursery School of the FirstPresbyterian Church. Students from the schoolpictured are standing, from left; Heather Kuslv,Andrew Yen, Nicky Lettieri and Jennifer Jo Appicie;sitting: Michael Gall, Kristin Monahan, Moses Siregarand Michael Gustavson. The teachers for the class areVirginia Schultz and Alice Gill. -

through the support of musiclovers everywhere thatFather Oates' dream willcqnt|j>ue to grow and one daybecome reality in thecommunity.

Eagle ManorBlpomfleld.

in

At a special single service at10:30 a.m. on Sunday, thecongregation of CalvaryLutheran Church will hold acelebrative service of Con-firmation for 13 young people.

ObituariesRobert

baton in hand, Father Oatesspent endless hours on thetelephone, visiting "the area

LaGraceServices for Robert

Suspects Heritage Corridorbaby bird. suggest the

success."The plan addresses a primary

to the quality of life in a stabilizedtown with the same ardor in whichearlier generations approached it•with an eye toward growth.

Hoist On A PetardOne of the better lines of the 1970s

was uttered by George C. Scottplaying a slirgeon in "TheHospital." With the institutionfalling apart around him, he wasasked why he keeps working."Sorriebody has got to beresponsible," he said. In a narcis-sistic decade, whose passage weshall not lament, there has beenmore emphasis on rights than onresponsibilities, and whenresponsibility comes back intovogue, goodness knows how We'tegoing to sort it out from amid theorganizational and bureaucraticbaggage that has been heaped uponus. A case in point-might be that of

assignment of teachers, certain toinclude some of lesser talent thanMrs. Alldian. As we used to say inChicago, the Rome of/America, theBoard of Education is hoist on" itsown petard. -

So here we have two differingperspectives on responsibility, oneindividual and the otherinstitutional. The school board willhave to make a decision forexception, and open Pandora's box,and Mrs. AJldian will have to makea decision to go or Stay, and underwhat terms. In most currentorganizational circumstancesindividuals don't get to choose theterms.

To the Editor:.This is a belated reply to Mr. McArthur's

defense of the Heritage Corridor's actioh orlack of it on the "Oakey House." I have noknowledge, of the current trustees, but I do^know that I was one of many workers as wellas trustees who abandoned the corridor indismay after investing substantial amountsof money, time arid effort in~what webelieved to be a worthwhile project.

I also know that I and at least several ofthe others left with a suspicion that theCorridor was a sham to promote privateinterests. Unfortunately, the trustees main-tained a veil of secrecy even among them-selves and we were unable to find any legal"recourse to permit an in-depth review. As anon-profit corporation, the Corridor isvirtually immune to the law.

What a surprise to read that the mill parts

stored/in theremoved to "a restoration in Clinton,Jersey." There are two restored mills inClinton, one on each side of the dam. Is itpossible that the*, other is really on|y near toClinton?

Please refer to the Elizabeth DailyJournal article from August'23, 1975, whichsays in part: "The Heritage Corridor grouphas acquired, through donations, an earlysawmilK.together with a cider mill andtransported to Cranford by volunteerlabor." . • • -*"•

There are many who would like to learn bywhat authority the Corridor is disposin^ofthis equipment, and to whom, and how—Bygift or sale?

Roger Goods.peedDuncanville, Texas

Schecter Will Sei

teacher who is bucking an assign-ment for next year that would haveher teaching part-time at a middleschool. No ordinary pedagogue,shehas put CHS on the map in Latin—

,j Schools—are—hardly—alone—in-experiencing pressures by peers,or outsiders wanting in.Corporations and other largeinstitutions have bureaucraciesthat tend to reinforce the accent of

• To the Editor; . ..-.: ; , vYt>wrlront page story and editorial of May

17 are in the American tradition ofiweicomirig neighbors into the community.Solomon Schechter Day" School has beenlooking for a home of its own for manyyears. We feel blessed to haveioundajichool-

~~as beautiful and as well maintained as theRooseVeltrSchool; we feel deiubjy'blessed tobe moving into a community "like Cranford.

Our student body, which numbers 300children in grades kindergarten through 12,and our dedicated faculty are very excited

about moving ISBVthis new facility andhaving the opportunity to continue in it thetradition of excellence in education to whichwe all are committed. We look forward tobeing a part Of the Cranford community, anasset of which you can be proud. We shalloffer our Hervicea_to_VQU-and-reach-out-toyour citizens. !

care of him.' If norie of the above is ap-plicable, keep the bird warm and feed himabout every 20 or 30 minutes from sunup tos,unset.

Here's a recipe:M. Can KeH-J Ration dog Foody4Can Hi-Protein Baby Cereal

°1 Hard boiled egg yolk3 tsp. Applesauce2 tsp. Dried flies (optional but available at:

pet stores) .25 mg. Vitamin Bl,, (see your local (drug;

store)8 drops MultivitaminsWarm waterMix ingredients together just until moist

with the consistency of very think oatmeal.UseIhelfigfetid of a toothpick to feed thebird with. Good lufck. •-•• •

With the help of Dot Beach on ColumbiaAvenue, Glenn Prinz from BloomingdaleAvenue and Brian Raftery on HamiltonAvenue, the Cranford1979 list has risen to-125 species. Thece were many birds alike on

. all: three; lists - kijldeer, great crested^flycatcher., 'pewfee,; Swainsbri's thrush; >' blue'

gray gnatcatcher, prothonotary,

Brian tallied 21 different war-blers. The warbler migration throughCranford has been spectacular this spring.My best day eyer was 23 members of thefamily.

Sharp eyes have seen all 6 species of vir-eos that are likely to be seen nearby. Out of

:• 38 possible warblers, 28 have been spotted.There are some birds that may appear in

* the fall and Hddjo the year's total. Greategrets generally come north to vacationafter their housekeeping duties are over tothe south of here. U this winter is coldenough, someone may spot redpolls and pinesiskins on their feeders as the year draws toa close. ' ' ' , '-•"

Only three species of ducks have beenspotted this spring. Eight species have beentallied in recent years. No-one has reporteda yellow billed cuckoo yet and they areusually seen on their eay. thfough. Rubythroated hummingbirds are nearly alwaysspotted somi) time; af,ter red, flowers begin to

. bloom, the hermit thrust is missing and heis generally seen along with his cousins.Another 12 birds would put Us over test1 year

-^and set a new record so keep looking.

high schools and colleges in an LaGrace, 72, whp: owned theeffort to ignite the embers produce concession in Bob'sonce more. Market store here, were held

With a small group.of about T u e 8 d a y a t the Dooley30 people, he conducted his Funeral Home, 218 North Ave.first performance in 1972. It w R e v R o b e r t j P a y n ewas the golden jubilee mass pastor of the United Methodist N o r t h

for the Most Rev. Thomas A. church officiated. Interment » - - ' -Boland, S.T.D. The praise w a s a t Graceland Memorialand compliments that Father pa rk. i

i d l ddd / L ^

Mrs. Emma B.Harms

Funeral services for Mrs.Emma B. Harms, 82, of 1227Tyler Ave., Totns River,formerly of Cranford, wereheld last Thursday al ,theDooley Funeral Home, 218

pOates received only proddedi t d hi l

LaGrace died^Saturdaylhim to expand his personnel a t his home at 37 Myrtle Street

and repertoire. In 1974, he a f t e r a io n g jjiness.directed the first Spring - Retiring from the MonsantoConcert of the Choral Society chemical Co., Kenilworth inand Symphony Orchestra tothe works of Bach, Handel andAnton Bruckner.

Two years later, inobservance of the bicentenni-al, Father Oates scheduled

Thank you for your warm words ofw e l c o m e . . . - , • •

- GoldaOchPresident, Board o{ Governors

-K do It: .spelling IeM(i. Willy wrote: ••GreaUul

her pupils^earned 37 trophies last the Seventy ^ward^qnal i t r andyear alone—and Jher threateneddeparture over this reassignmenthas ' generated alarm amongparents who have seen childrenflower in this traditional subject.But hold on. If the Board ofEducation reverses the involuntaryassignment, mten the teacher's

Lim-to .every- other involuntary

To the Editor:The Cranford High'School PTA Executive

Board here questions the recent puzzlingdecision of the Board of Education on thestaffing of the Assistant Principal positionnow so ably and amiably filled by MichaelBlasucci.

In September we will add more than 800new students—half of them young 9thgraders—to make Ctanford High School afour year'schWTrthuOatf of the studentswill be new to the building, and so tooa nothor 25 per cent of the staff. These peopleneed, as does the personnel returning, thesure hand of experience to guide them. In aposition where there has already been muchtoo much turnover, it is imperative-topresent a solid, united front in the mainoffice at this time pf transition.

We do not question that Dr. Lukash mayhave the potential to grow into the~position,

security. The thrust is , notirresponsible but it poses a threatof mediocrity. Add that to thedepersonalization and dehumagiz-^atioh4hat-ab6und itHaf ge buf eaxi-cracies, and it's no wonder thatgood people leavfe. This will go onas long as institutions fail to

jreniemBer^that^they-existr^o-serve"peopleH*ot;theotheirway-arotindr

Care For An Art Teacher, To the Editor:

Thefe-are many fine non-tenure teacherswhose dismJssaJjiilLbe-JiJQsa-lQJhfi-Crait--

TdTa:scfiools. However, the staff of OrangeAyenue School deeply regrets the riffing ofBarbara Lesniewski, a tenured art teacherwho hasibeen a valued member of the stafffor, six years. It seems incredible that her

the same

is Fathermeeting at which slides of her latest art Time. ^ ^ ^ t , ; ^ iA uexhibit were shown, recognizing her unusual May 9 ( ^ ^ ' ^ " | S 4 £ ^...nt. -tTTjim _» »ui_ „«„ i«..«i Rnroute to the cleaners. It was only tenwith students at this age level.

As the Board of Education was able tooffer Barbara J es_niews.kl_ a part-timeposition, it is Tfard to Undersland why the~additional dollars could not be.U " "

enroute to the cleaners..It was only ten (days earlier, she said.' 1 !

May 9 (it:43 p.m.)—strange,mahJa:white,,• j . . : r^c^^:-f j , j^ugg a backyard and;

student who is so absorbed withjcholar-Jr^WpHhir^aturmywCTunr^

closing hour in the stacks at UnionCollege^ He trails police who find a manwitti key to extricafe him,

?'03 fl-Wi'>

Btic; dedirflferTeacTierinof the Cranford schools.

lay II T6:41local inn to discoi

ntroom is com-

impty^rUed,

rrnnfarri-Awnup thpjttrcot-marlccrT-timtis. Markers might not be too visible, but as

after 18 years of service,Mr. La Grace then worked forthree years for the AtlanticMetal Co. in Springfield.

He also managed theproduce department at the

two spring concerts, one at St. former Charles Kutz Market,Michael, the other at Sacred a n ( j o w n ed the produce con-Heart Cathedral. In addition cegsion in Bob's Market atto many patriotic pieces, Walnut Avenue for 10 years.Father Oates acquired the _ B o r n i n . N e w York City, he.talents of Jerome Hines of the jjve(j | n Cranford for 50 years.Metropolitan (tyera tri H e w a B a member of theperform. According to Hines, united Methodist Church,the Choral Society and Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Orchestra could give no Margaret Simon LaGrace;greater- gift to God than the two* sons, Robert and John,performance of that evening, hnth nf rfrnnford; tt'tfanghfe'tL

—SinceHhenrthirsociBtjrhflB j^jra. Anthony Colaneri, of_es|ablished a constitution and qranfordj twoJ^hjsraj.Jack,.by-laws to govern its 65-voiceTL^raceoTStateh Islajid andorganization. Additionally, Charles LaGra'ce of Tarzanai ~*they have performed almost Calif.; three sisters, Mrs.the entire specter of musical An n a Accardi and Mrs. Veraachievement. They have Bonnano, both of Statenappeared/ twice on national Island, and Mrs. Jean Segertotelevision, received a write up of Union, seven grandchildrenin Sacred "Music Magazine, and a great-grandchild,performed for first masses for , , .newly ordained priests, IML.^ M l i v r l l i aperfprmedj full I ^ i n J M a s ^ J f i s ^ A - i * J L ± * * V - •.=

~ with fuiTsymphorijLorchestra-and pipe organ in celebrationof Father Oajtes -25thAnniversary in priesthood and

; sung for various

W.,r-with Rev..Arnold J. DahTquist, pastor ofthe Calvary Lutheran Church,officiating.

Interment was in RosedaleMemorial Park and Rev.Dahlqulst read the committalprayers.

Mrs. Harms died May 21 athome after a long illness. \

Born in Jersey City, shelived in Newark many yearsand resided in Cranford 10years before moving to TomsRiver two years ago.,- Mrs. Harms was a retiredhousekeeper at the EastOrange Veterans Hospital.Her husband, Helmuth A.Harms, died in 1974~

Surviving is a brother,Jacob Schejbal, with whomshe lived.

Mrs. Gae M*

of the Alliance Church.Surviving are her husband,

Harry P.1-Higgins Sr.; twosons, Harry-P. Higgins Jr., ofCranford, and Thomas Lund,of Edgewood, Md.; adaughter, Mrs. MargaretBatemen of Rutherford; twobrothers, Richard Anderson ofNew York City and EdwinAnderson of Port St.' Lucie,Fla.; 13 grandchildren and 7great-grandchildren.

Friends may call Thursdayand Friday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to9 p.m.

Patrick J.Giblin

Through this rite they af-firm their baptismalcovenant. Those who havecompleted three years ofspecial preparation for thisevent are: Scott Applegateand JVIarc Sirockman ofCranford; Kim Czander, JohnMartin, Brian McCarthy,Stephen Ribecky, EllisRowland, Richard Spear,Rosemarie Thomas , andDebra Zimmer of Westfield;Kenneth Jones and MarkLefebvre of Clark and Paula-Fernstrom of Scotch Plains."

Mr. Douglas Nordstrtom ofCranford, president of theChurch Council, will assist thepastor during the service andwith Holy Communion. Theconfirmands will be in-troduced by Council vice-president, Dr. HarryDougherty of Cranford.

Community ChurchTo Host Bell Ringers

Paul Chur£h.Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Mary Kuchta Zalinski; twosons, George R. and MichaelR., both of Kenilworth; asister Mrs. Catherine McKeonof Elizabeth and two grand-daughters.

Harry LiSooeyFuneral services, for Harry

LiSooey of Cranford, theformer owner of the Dragon

held Tuesday at the 'Haberie—Following the service there year. Since.then the memberand Barth Colonial Funeral will be a reception for the ship in the organization has

confirmands and members in grown and this season aFellowship Hall. complementof 32 singers and

KENILWORTH- The CredoChorale and the Carillon andFestival handbell ringers, agroup of 32 high schoolstudents from Beaver, Pa.,will present a concert at theCommunity United MethodistChurch Sundayvat-3. p.m.

The musical ensemble fromthe~Park United PresbyterianChurch, Beaver, Pa., willbegin its eighth annual tourthis season on Friday. Themusical ensemble of thirty-two presenting concert inNew Jersey and- Penn-sylvania.

The Carillon Ringers werefirst organized in 1971, whenPark Church acquired its firstset of 37 Schulmerich hand-bells, and undertook the firsttour to New Jersey that same

A funeral mass for PatrickJ.Giblin, 76, who lived with hisdaughter, Mrs. TheresaSullivan, was offered May 22at St. Michael with Msgr. JohnF. Davis, pastor, officiating.

Interment was in CalvaryCemetery, Paterson, the citywhere Mr.. Giblin had workedfor many years for StandardBleachery. :

A native of CountyRoscpmmon \ in Ireland, hesettled in Passaic in 1927 andHved in Clifton fot many years ^ b o e y *before coming here three • '

Home, Union. Interment wasin Hollywood Memorial Park.

Mr. LiSooey died Friday inOverlook Hospital after a longillness- He was 79 years old.

Born in China, he came tothis country and settled inNewark in 1918. He live/i in . ' ' o u r l

Cranford for the past 11 years. y.'|'_:-.Df

He owned and operated theDragon Restaurant since 1947in Union and later in Roselleuntil retiring five years ago:

Mr, LiSooey was a formervmember of' the Union Lions,.Chlb and War Dads of Union.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Osceola CommunicantClass Joins Service

Fourteen young people, who

receive their first communionSunday at the Osceola Churchwill participate in Rev, RobertR. Kopp's sermon entitled,"The Meaning of the ApostlesCreed."

Karen Kowalenko, Valerieand Tracy Amon, WilliamBurkle, Chris Ficke, JamesCorley, Douglas Oxley andElizabeth Dalley.

72 INCHESThe proposed new land use

communicant class will ex- ordinance covering places of

ringers, accompanied by fouradult chaperones, directorand accompanist will partici-pate in the tour program.

Since the first tour in 1971,the group has performed in 16states and two Canadianprovinces.

This "season, following theannual tour, the 19 memberFestival Ringers will travel lothe University of Maine toparticipate in the SilverJubilee National Festival ofthe American Guild of EnglishHandbell Ringers.

BillingtoiiHeadsFund

George F. Billington, ofCranford, president ofElizabeth General Hospital,has been elected president ofthe Tri-Hospital Fund ofElizabeth.

He * succeeds Sister .Margaret Doherty, ChiefExecutive Officer of SaintElizabeth Hospital, in theposition.

The Tri-Hospital Fund ofElizabeth is a non-profit

lid

y rp.m. at the Westfield church.

Hardwick's topic will be "IsThere Room for Religion in•Politics?"dHe isa member ofCalvary Lutheran Church,Cranford.

P.T.L. president Jim Daywill/preside at the dinner-business meeting whenelection of officers for the 27thyear of Redeemer LutheranSchool will be held.

Richard S. Salecker,Redeemer School principal,will lead the devotions. Mrs.Peggy Frederick and Mrs.Carol Vesey are in charge ofarrangements

Hardwick hds beenpresident of the churchcouncil at Calvary Church andserved on numerous civicboards representing his

-constituency.

hil<frWestfield,

3n_

plain part of the creed during, .worship and publlci assemWy,-.).c .~ -—!— T, places'; would require bije ;

parking spot_ for each.. threethe 10 a.m. service.

The members of the classare

B financial assistance toBrothers, \ Elizabethand Saint "Elizabeth

Chuck Hardwick

Counselors

To Discuss -v

Relationships"Making a Good Thing

Better: Enriching Relation-ships" will be the topic of atalk by Betty and Fred Ward,marriage counselors and wex.therapists, at; Summit AreaUnitarian Church, Sunday at

municantChurch

of St.-Othcr-Obituaries-on-page -H>--

Donna Rudyah, Michelle andDonna Kolaetis, Susan_nnd

H p g peach 72 inches of seating spacewhen. benches are' used.

69, of Hohokus,formerly of Cranford, was

Surviving are twd otherdaughters, Mrs. Marie Canici

, . . . . 'of Ringwood and Mrs.offered Monday at St. Gabriel K a t n i e e n VanDuffelen ofChurch, Saddle " River. C l j f t o n . a s o n Patrick J. Jr.,Interment was in BrooksideCemetery in Englewood.y

She died

i

gat home last

; ,of New York; two sisters, Mrs.Catherine DeLamater ofHollywood, Fla. and Mrs.Mary Duffy in Ireland, and

organization, the three hos-pitals combine their fund-raising efforts and shdre theresults.

RESCUE SCHOOLTheodore Weathers of

Cranford and Robert DeSantiof Kenilworth have graduatedfrom the Heavy Rescue Schoolof the county Civil Defense.

Ward is a Unitarianminister and Director of theU n i t aLriaja _ _ _ Jlnhier^ai i s tCounseling and EducationService in New Jersey. He andhis wife have developed andtrained teachers for theCouples E n r i c h m e n tProgram,1 which is-now'beingoffered throughout thedenomination.

Hellegers•Services—for-Mrs.- Phyjlis^

^SX^S'lStSS^ "ine -dchildren.

- - — — — (Sorge ~W.Shewas a parishioner ofMichael Church._JHer..- husband,Ferro, is president

TOje Cranf orb Chronicle

Kosalle Gross

Stuart Awbrey EditorBeverley Awbrey Publisher fc

„ News Editor— Advertising

Mary Becker Advertising Sales'"Kloise V. Wall Business ManagerSally Blood Production ManagerAudrey Beclt Circulation ManagerJean Blumc Classified Ads

The Cranford Chronicle, formerlyCitizen and Chronicle, is publishedevery Thursday by Awbrey Com-munications in New Jersey-Jnc.i acorporation at 21-23 Alden -Street,

""" 07016. USPS I3fiB0<L_Member AudiFBureau of Circulation,

Niiw • Jersey Press AssociationCranford Chamber of Commerce.

Subscription rates by mailpostpaidbnb-year, within Union County, $7.50; inN. J., $8.00; elsewhere in U. S., $11.50;overspas, $16.00. ,

All^ajerial copyrighted 19 9 byA.C.l^J,'' Inc. Oftfieial ^ws^^coiyforCranford, Kenilworth ?mrcLvGarwobd,Second Class Postag3; Paid-#t Cran-ford N.WJersey, 07016, Tele. (201) 270-6Q0O. • . ;,

mor do-we disrespect his academicachievement or his administrative ability atthe elementary level. However, in the bestinterests of the students, to whom both thePTA and the Board of Education arededicated, it would seem advisable to retainin this sensitive position a man of demon-strated ability and experience— —

Last September Mr. Blasucci accepted onshort notice the Acting Assistant Principalassignment in addition to his chairmanship

- of the business department. In poth roles hehas proved himself to be an:efte<!tive andefficient administrator, and also a graciousgentleman with a distinctive style. Hemeshes well with the leadership- team ofRobert Seyfarth and Henry Doscher. He hasestablished cordial rapport with teachers,and he is respected by students and parentsas decisive yet fair.

We are impressed with Mr. Blasucci'sintelligence, his, knowledge of school andcommunity issues, and his apparent sen-sitivity to the developmental needs of theyoung people whose lives he touches.

Clearly Mr. Blasucci's 13 years of leader-ship experience at the secondary, level asteacher, coach,' assistant, principal - and

1-p^inoTpalin the challenging milieu that isJersey City prepared him well for Cranford.And 13 years there bespeaks a communityloyalty, a commitment to his people. We donot foresee him, using Cranford as just astepping stone in. a dash to professionalprominence elsewhere. • f

Inasmuch as Mr. Blasucci had weendeemed competent to the satisfaction of his•^valuators; it would have seemed just arid

" proper to continuehim in the position) ""-"'

-'howeVer, want our feelings to be heard. Andwe feel that, this decision shoufd be re-examined. , ' - , I ' .

Abbie Sassi, Secretary.Cranford High School PTA

Two PollingSites Change..

Next Tuesday is primary election day.Polls are open from.7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Crmrford's 32 election districts remain "the sameas last year but two polling places have been;shifted frtyh Reosejjelt School. The 20thDistrict' vMsm ballot at Orange AvenueSchool and « & 28th at" ;the Munic palBuilding: Here's* a" rundown oF-polhnglocations by district number and sita:-I. Free Public Library ,

Walnut-Avenue SchoolMunicipal BuildingCranfotd-Cnmrnunity-CenterLincoln School _; fLivingston Avenue School....Grantord Community ieeriter

Bloomingdale Avenue SchoolOrange Avenue School '

.„., ,Walnut Avenue School .I1. • Hillside Avenue School:12. Bloomirigdale'Avenue School13. Lincoln School14. Livingston Avenue School16. Free Public Library

. 16- Cranford High School17. Brookside. Place ~

• •". (This letter was"sigried by 37: • • ? - ' • ~ members of the staff of

; Orange Avenue Middle School)

- : . V . r ; " V ' ; • ; * - ; ' T h eTo the Editor:. ,. -

We, {he kindjgrgarten parents of WalnutAvenue SchoWare greatly disappointed tolearn of-^he. dismissal^- Mrs. SandraWilliams, our children's teacher. Aware ofthe necessity to consolidate personnel due todecreased enrollment, .we realize that jein-statement of Mrs. Willianis isjmpossible.HovveveFrWe^dolwanttb express our sincereappreciation and( highest .regard; for this

SfeSWw^paint riamcTol' fayorite singers on a localbridge'and ilee before authorities arrive..If they're caught, the judge wljl give them

^in^f^awn~aTgumraii^DWtek«s : :

a walk to cool off, 1May 13 (3:54 p.m.)—Five gallon drum of oil

spills' over residential intersection.

Teacher Helped At Waliuitoutstanding teacher, Not only was this h ^ a b i j i t i e s . With her extensive educationalfirst kindergarten class, but it was atergeT^background and" years .of expediencegroup ot children which Mrs. Williams took

- change of in September, She met each childas an individual and .with each one, quicklyestablished a warm and understandingrelationship, She has accepted each child athis own level and has worked very hard toexplore and develop the childfeh'semotional, and intellectual needs and

2.3.4.S.6.7.8.9,

10.,

advertising . the position? The Board'minimized the,' importariMjJgtfi, cjassrpdmexperience by-reducing the requirement to a,mere three years. And they added : thedoctoral degree as a criterion despite the.fact that no other administrator, save theSuperintendent, has that qualification; ,,Ifintended to cut all candidates and toernploy•but one and no other, it \vorked,> But doesittruly serve the needs of the schj ol and the,students therein? ,-.;4-i-i*-i£-s^..- .;-

We w6uld not like to see either man .o/1Crnnford High 'School hurt, jWe do,

.19: Union.College; 10 5 Orange Ayenue School.

2L , Lincoln: Schoo}22. BrookSidePlace School23. Grahford High School .24. Union College .25., Walnut Avenue School26, Municipal Building

28,.29.

•*•;• 3 0 .

heE_aD»Jr&e. "^trac..„.

teaching nursery school, she has: instilledour confidence in her ability to recognizeeach child's individual personality. Wegreatly appreciated her willingness toparticipate in formal and informal con-ferences and have learned much, from,herabout dealing with our children's problems.

There is no doubt that our children will;enter first gw.de havir/g had the bestpossible kindergarten preparation Theywill miss Mrs, Williams and so will we, butwe rest a.t ease having shared a year of ourchildren's lives with a wonderful teacherand a lovely person leased Parents-

Walnut Kindergarten

nursing-homes in lhe~aTeir~ rWhile .Father Oates has Creative Art Club, were held

been the guiding light to'the Saturday at the Dooley~7 Fyneral Home, 218 North Ave.

J Ferro Jr ofRobert

-up Picnic

L—_^—~T-nlMrs. Hel egers died last

Thursday at Muhlenberg Hos-g a ,w o r th and Mrs. Beth

Q u i g l e y of WoOdcliff Lake;

. -no Bfeabethr^nternrent^Wtfsw™ st. Gertrude Cemetery.

Mr. Zalinski died Saturday.. Elizabeth Hospital after

pnfefp^BUitding •.Walnut' Avenue SchoolOrange AvcnuevSchool

: Livjngston'Avenue"SchoolvLWiftgs'on Avenue School.; .'(p

It was GrianTp>raTs vveek Inworries abbyt EiaS'SriOr.tages,; Statejfito governor's

|Mi*sJRlQht;^l'

BbarUtfrralrrn* sar»dr,a Weeks arid RI<;harc/Q,Laube, blkeway coordinator forthe transportrftlort;, adMcy. 'In ' a separate .statement released statewide,

&Q'sTbikbWaV was eltecbby the state: agency, is the largest.in .Nfew. Jersey

was CraHTpHTs yveek In Tretit.on/and foe, good .t'easons that went beyona; lei about das shortages; State Senate Rre&jdettt Joseph..T..^Merilnp wrwleSgbvernWsjQfitilce for proclamation about'.BljycM. Week,andJ.ts jheme ofleJRlQht; . His c/6mpafiy Included, from left/ Cranford, Police 5g,t;. Tndmas Ea/ D.W. Gvy?nn oi the State Department of Transporta^tioni Cranford Bicycle

CommunityCalendar

Sunday, June J -. • ——Noon - Youth Council Chronicle run

starts at parkingWpVfla 1 "~~~Monday, Juije 4

vlla,m - Senior Citizens Monday Clubexecutive board meeting

8,IS pm - Board of Adjustmentmeeting at Municipal Building

-Tuesday-June S"~ <—— ' - "7 a m 4o 8 p m - Polls opeh for

primary election _7'3(r pm - Township Committee

workshop at Municipal Building. >Wednesday, June 6 \

7:30 p m - BJngqat Temple Beth-El8 p m " Planning Board meeting at

Municipal BuildingThursday, June 7

lC&^toftta££ Combined social forMonday and Tuesday Senior CHteettClubs —

* 10 pm - Bjngo at St Michael;choo< Hall

United Methodist Church willhold its annual sign up andpicnic on Sunday, June.3 atNomehegan Park starting atnoon.

AH prospective cubs now insecond grade and theirfamilies are invited to attendto sign up for the fall CubScout Program and to enjoythe picnic. There will be theusual picnic happenings, withfood; games and fuji to beprovided by the pack. Its achance to introduce the new

Church, of-at the service. Inter-

ment was in Laurel GroveCemetery, Totowa.

Born in East Or_ange, Mrs.Hellegers resided In Cranford22 years,

Graduate of the TraphagenSchool of Fashion in New York

a pqrtr.aitartg

was also a

ir Children FreeAgency.

and nine grandchildren.

Mrs* Grace C.Higgins

Services for Mrs. Grace C.

the Gray Memorial FuneralHome, 12 Springfield Ave. at10 a.m. interment, will be inLake Nelson Memorial Park,Piscataway."Mrs. Higgins died Tuesdayin St, Barnabas Medical

years ago, living there until ayear and a. half ago, when hemoved to Kenilworth.

He retired in 1969 as awelder for the Electro-Dynamics Corp., Avenel,where he worked for morethan 15 years.

Mr. Zalinski was a com-municant of St.-Peter and St.

>OU E " 1 singers from Oral Roberts University will present a concert afS c h o o , - j 9

u n e , , a t 8 p . m . s p o n s Ored by St. Mark's AWE church.

Hillside Hidilh; P « « lJUNK li at 8 P J .

Sponsored B-y —

St. Mark's A.M.E. Church8 High St., Cranford

SUMMER CHORUSRegistration for member-

ship in the Diamond HillSummer Chorus will beTuesday, June 12 from 7:30 to9.30 p.m. at the PresbyterianChurch, South Street and

Springfield Avenue, .NewProvidence. The chorus willpresent Mozart's "Requiem"July 26. Call 763-4762, Mondaythrough Thursday from.6.to 10p.m.

CniXd UniM IWethodiiF f ^ ,f . 3 ™ M £ - [ She'was^n in New YorkChurch gsually on the second g™'«„• P e n d e r of Annan- City and lived, in MiddleFriday of each month. Contact D|" a «• s X d e r

M r ° 8 . Vnice Valley, before moving toRon Bagle 272-6636 or Fran •J8"?' J, £ " ^ e Sebago, Me. Cranford 12 years ago.WoodHng 272-4970 for further " ( X w grandsons. ' M | S ' Hiffll.ns.was a memberinformation. •

DEDICATED TO DIGNIFIEDSERVICE SINCE 1897.

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

. GRAY, JRr—DAVID B.CRABUSL

WILLIAM A. DOVtE

Call or come in.Let's compare.

LIFE HOMEOWNERSAUTO BUSINESS HEALTH

INSURANCE .backed by "Good Hands" service.

Maybe we can save you some money.Phone or visit our local office.

215 Birch wood Avenue - Suite 1Cranford 272-3200

/instateYou're in good hands

DOOLEY.FUNERAL HOME

2V8 NORTH AVE., W. 276-0255

Allstate Life Insurance Companyllstate Insurance Companies Northbrook

t Funeral llome...nf homelike utniosp%>re, completelymotlern, »ir conditioned, ojffstreet }»irf%{! fueijjftit'H.

jilsfi ^ — .

DOOLEY COLONIAL'HOME

S.S6-WV^btfjold[Aye., We<itfield

•:, ;• 233-0255

• T,\

Page 6:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

I •

Page IOCRA.NFORD (N.J.) CHRDNICLE Thursday, May 31.1979

39 Honor MeinlrersCarln Cohen,-daughterof long independent study

Mr. and Mrs, HardlJCoherTOf—project. Baron's recently437 Manor Ave,, is on -the completed research paper

was entitled "Misfeasance,malfeasance and nonfeasancein:oIfice,".aaBxaminatipn andanalysis of political corruptionin America from 1960 to 1978.

Brunswick. She is a freshman jazz concert at the BostonwnH-tlhP!''rfnngM«>r-nf-Mf p"» college. He is the son of Mr.M ld f

dean's list at CornellUniversity where she is agovernment mdjor. ..with.. astrong interest in languages.She writes regularly for thecollege newspaper, CornellSun. ^

Gregory John Olson, son ofDr. and Mrs. John A. Olson ofBrant Beach, formerly oTCranford,—was—awarded ,ascholarship by the educationdepartment of the graduateschool of Duke University,North Carolina. Thescholarship is based onOlson's previous academicachievements. He is.one of sixto receive this scholarship. Hewill begin his studies inSeptember at Duke toward aPh. D. in education with anemphasis oh administration

Mrs. Rohald~MBi!uf: of 03" and MrsrJoseph Gallantof 1:Wilshire Dr. , V •'. " - Wade Ave. and is majoring in

Linda O'Brien was elected applied music.recentiy-toP-hiBeta Kappas In—James P.Xyach, son of Mr.September she will, begin and Mrs. Stephen J. Lynch ofgraduate work arWashington; Cranford and a 1975 graduateUniversity in St. Louis, Mo., in of Cranf6.rd High, was electedthe clinical psychology PhD. editor-in-chief of Cardinal

Marston, former U^ S.~ at- program. She-was_awattleoVaJPointsJheLstudent newspapertorhey for Eastern Penn- full four-year tuition a t Plattsburgh Statesylvania; representatives of remission scholarship there. University College in New

' " • " WnfivTr nnrl York where he is a junior

Robert Ck SeyfarUi, prin-clpal of Cranford High School,announced 39 students were

Margaret Randall, treasurer, JqanJ Laezza, J SWpjienand Nancy McGraUi, tutoring MarKowTchrJarnes McThlyre,'

nts were coordinator- truest- speaker—eynthia~ Montef uscot Mark

i clirecfbr of manuTacTurlng Despina Pra 1 Kclirecfbr of, manuTacTurlng,Mobay Chemical Corporation,P M f Division. | " 1

The prepartion of the reportincluded interviewing David

Services Administration, andSamuel Dash, former chiefcounsel to the Senate Water-gate Committee.^[Baron's research showedthat there is a movementthroughout the country to passstringent, enforceable etnics-laws at all levels of govern-

o r s William F. O'Brien of 3 majoring in communications. .Roger AVe - Greg' Rehbeiir, son uf Mi.. Austin;

Cory S. Ackerm^n, student and.Mrs. Frederick Rehbeinconductor of the LehighUri- of Cranford, joined Tau Kappaiversity '.'Marching 97" and Epsllon Fraternity at Bently.Concert Band was awarded College. ». . .

Laurel R. Prlngle wasrecently elected to phi Beta

Honor Society at ceremoniesM a y - 1 7 . : - ' ' : ; • • • • - - . •

Selection ia based:, on.. ex^...cellence in scholarship, -leadershipT^character,_and- SeniofS: .Lservice to school and com- 'Robert Bakerian,munity. - —

The induction program wasc6nducfed"bynwrark T^ovellp,president of the high schoolchapter of the National Honor

ThomasCook, Keith Daniels, RobinDouglas,- Patricia' Downey,Audreyfilwertowski, PamelaFrodeUy, Alison Heick, Jane

Jahii, Holzapfel,chapter of the National Honor g n , ^ J ^ _ _ H o I z a p f e

TSespina Prassas, 1 KarlnPrussaki Judith Schneider,Carplihe Waters,-.CraigWeiner and John Zebrowskir

Juniors becoming membersare: Patricia Ballman,Theresa Capoblanco, LauraCauzrPeter Durr^ingrRichard-Mandel, Henry Matlosz, PeterMurad, Robert Nelson, Jiavid i ^ p

: s l s t e a w 1 i y ^ h e W i i r ~ ^ ^ r e w ^ T ™ t e f f l ^ — w e g o e y — t ^ e r r y , ^ ^ v^ J t a s M i i ^ ^vice—president^""™^ POINT fo^e^^}^Day^r^ce^was^

ZONING MAPTOWNS HIP OF

Serving Cranford. Kenilworth and Garwood

Thursday. May.aO97iL..

Prout, secretary, Mary Kukura, Wagenblast.

Policemen Earn B.S. Degreesthe Dr. T. Edward ShieldsMusic Gup at the annual PopsC t tl Thi d

^ ^ ; y ori the lap of her uncle/HenryJf}r.eyer~3f'., township comrnitieemah, on dais with the

r irand marshal, EdGIII. Ceremonies honored fcjl wardead. Photos by Greg Price. ';

Concert recently. This award Kappa, at Bucknell Uniyer-

ment.and curriculum. Olson Jlm_-McNama*a_oi_presently practice teaches at ford, son of Mr-r andWestern Carolina Universityin Cullowhee, N. C, where healso received a scholarshipthis year for having thehighest academic standing.He will be graduated fromWestern Carolina Universitythis spring with a teacher

^ Cranford Detective James.. „ f ,„. . , . Washbotirne and Officer

is presented to the senior who srty. One of eight juniors ,William Thermann werehas made the most outstand- elected this year, she is a!976 g r a d u a t e d . from William"

to the graduate of Cranford HighSchool .iffii is majoring uj

Mrs.James McNamara of WalnutCreek, Calif., formerly ofCranford, has been acceptedto the University of SantaClara, Calif. He is graduatingfrom Roselle Catholic HighSchool.

Robert J. Shusta. son of Mr.and Mrs. Carl T. Shusta ofG a r w o o d , a t t a i n e ddistinguished student statusfor outstanding. academicachievement for • the fallsemester at Purdue

ing contributionsj i n i v e r s i t y__ m u s i c

g from WPaterson College May 24 with

B.S. degrees in criminaljustice adminiBtratibn.^JVashbSiirne is a 13-yearveteran with the PoliceDepartment presently

assigned to the detective,bureau. He rhas receivedseveral citations for out-,standing police work duringhis career. His . mother._is_

Parking, Enforcement OfficerPlUmblnfl SUb-Cod* O«fcl»lPrincipal Clerk 'Raolstrer of Vital .statistic* • - : • • •sanitarian • c l a n ISenlorvAccount Clark''

7.H3M4MC.00

,»,oao.ro

Organizations. Cory also hadreceived the Jonathan B.Elkus Freshman Cup for out-standing music ability andleadership, .A-member of thesenior class at Lehigh'sCollege of Engineering andPhysical Science, Cory is theson of Mr. .and Mrs. ReubenAckerman of Cranford.

Jonathan S. Grccnbergcompleted his freshman yearat Duke University in NorthCarolina where he was namedto the dean's list and Phi EtaSigma, national freshmanhonor society. A graduate ofCranford High School, he isthe son of Mr. and Mrs.Marvin Greenberg of 2 GreenCt.

Stevens Institute ofTechnology, Hoboken, placedPhuong T. Dand of Cranfordon the dean's list for the fallterm. He is a senior.

The dean's list for the winterat Susquehanna Universityincludes Nancy Fitzgibbon,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Fitzgibbon of 19Dartmouth fid. She is agraduate of Union CatholicGirls' High School.

Cadet Colonel Thomas C.Maffey of Cranford' wasawarded the Superior CadetAward at St. Peter's Collegeby the Department of the

•M-JJ 1 1 • 4* Ti 1 • ' Army. He was designated the

Buddie s i r o m oelg^um^0 1- cadet f°r tne senior

certificate. He hajs-a B.A.degree from Grihnell Collegein Iowa where he was electedto Phi Beta Kappa and theFriars. An alumnus ofCranford High School, he ismarried to the former Joan .University, Indiana,. He-alsoRankin, formerly of Cranford was inducted into the PhfEtaand WestfJeld. The jcouple, Sigma honorary freshman andhave a 314-year-old son, Kale, sophomore honor fraternity,

Gary Mark Illein, son of Mr. of which he is Mstoriah,and Mrs. Anton Illein of 263 Barbara Jeanne Engel of 20Pil\e Ave., Garwood, is on the Hillcrest Ave. was named todean's list at New JerseyInstitute of Technology. Amechanical engineering.major, he was nominated byUnion Carbide for activestudent membership in theAmerican Society ofMechanical Engineers. Hewill graduate in December.

Andrew M. Baron of 405Walnut Ave. was one of twoDrew University sophomoresreceiving approval lastSeptember to pursue a year-

the dean's list at Seton HallUniversity^ with a perfect 4.0average. She is a senior in theschool of business.

Shari Brown, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Thomas Brownof 211 Cranford Ave. was onthe dean's list last semester atDouglass College. She is ajunior majoring in Englishand public relations.

Uene Mazur made the fallsemester dean's list atRutgers University, New

Memories of New

Michael J. Sternick ofCranford was initiated intothe Lehigh University chapterof Beta Gamma Sigma, honor-

• 4 * -

More than 40 Cranford High activities such as drives to-Schpol students were hosts Watchung with picnics wherelast month to teens from we played Softball and friabee,Belgium in a pilot program bowling, and roller skating.sponsored.by,Sabena Airlines Shopping was an importantan& the Belgian* Ministry 61 part of thfefv feVbwauisfe ^ib rCulture and Education.Hie Belgians could not get overttte into 'the College'-.'of-, Health,local end was coordinated by cheap prices of down vests, Physical Education andthe American Field Service jelans, sneakers, and recordClub of Cranford High and its albums. "• '

of Mr. and Mrs,.Malcolm S.Pringle of-"92 Belmont Ave,she also was elected to theuniversity's chapter of MortarBoard vfor outstandingscholarship and service.

Kevin Keyasko ofKenilworth is on the dean's listat Fairleigh DickinsonUniversity, Rutherford,

The University of Michiganawarded class honors foracademic achievement toEvan Watklns . John , of 40Manor Ave. and LaurenMarian Mlchals of 103 HollySt. Both are enrolled in theCollege of Literature, Scienceand the Arts.

Scott Larry Maler, son ofMr. and Mrs.- Paul Maier ofSamoset Road, was accepted/or fall admission at WidenerCollege in Chester, Pa. He, is .enrolled in the exploratorystudies program*

Mary Harrington was one ofseven senior fine art majors atOhio Wesleyan University Wjhodisplayed works in the recentsix-day art show. She is thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H.Harrington of 325 Prospect

A v e . . ' , • • • : • • • . -

Laura I: Kramer receivedthe Herman Josephs MullerPrize, awarded to the out-standing senior major in thedepartment of music atSkidmore College. She is the^daughter of Mr, and Mrs.Charles Kramer of 30 Prin-ceton Rd.

Barbara J. Selgel of 32was inducted

Aborn To UCPoslEdward Aborn, formerly of

Cranford, a trustee emeritusof Union College, has beenreelected president of theboard of trustees of the UnionCollege Foundation.

The board also reelectedSturgis S. Wilson as vicepresident; Dr. Albert E.Meder Jr. as secretary andDr. William H. McLean astreasurer. / •

Aborn, Wilson, Meder,McLean, George S. Sauer andJ. Kenneth Boyjes' werereelected'. to the "board oftrustees. .

Wilson, Sauer, and Boylesare trustees .emeriti andMeder and McLean aremembers of The Board ofTrustees of Union College.

The Union College Foun-dation, an independent,

Wilde Speaks

To Statewide

Police GroupCranford Police,, Lt. Harry'

Wilde will address the NewJersey Narcotics Enforce-ment Officers Conference in :Atlantic City next week. Hewill speak about enforcementand "administration to the

educational and charitableorganization, was establishedto further educationalprograms at the school. Jtseeks funds to meet needs ofthe college that are not fullymet by current funding. ,

Matlaga.Thermann was appointed .to

the department. in Aprjl 1973.He is a graduate of CranfordHigh School and- has an A.A.degree from Union College.1He is also a coadvin. CranfordPop Warner Football. He Jgthe son of Mr. and Mi's, AugustThermann.

U.HJMB,1O«.1O

• «,IM.10

11M7M20,954.701

senior-CUrk-Typlstsuperintendent'Of;.Public W o r k * •••.:• \ , 'Superintendent ofRecreation..Tax Assessor • "' . 'Tax Collector and y ,

.' Searcher'.- ' . . . - . ". .- .'Township AdministratorTownshlpjMtbrney ~Township clerk (Part-Time)Township Engineer & •Director of Public Work*Township Treasurer

7.0SSM

JI0.2UJO9,020.70

•-. 9.0M.70

\tMMT20,954.70

U N I O N C O U N T Y , N E W J E R S E Yof this

T4.471.M.. •UAli.OO •IB,«O).OO '3,400.00 •

UAUM

LEGALS' TOWNSHIP OFCRANPORD ' ••

' . _ CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY _ ...I PROP0SEDORDINANCENO.W14 - -

AM ORDINANCE TO ESTABLISH A SALARY POLICY FOR AND TO PIXSALARIES OF CERTAIN OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES OF THE TOWNSHIPOF CRANFORD FOR THE YEAR 1W». _ . •« . •....-," Section1. TlwannUal ISHrlersf thtf (ollowlrto olflcsrs and employiw of the-Township of Cranford for tha year 1979 shall be as hereinafter set forth oppositeIhalr i-e»pectlv« classification.

W.3M.00' , 34,535.40

3,000.00

3f.S02.001IJWJ.0011,S<7.W

Section t. The salaries for part-time and temporary employees shall* be a ihereinafter tat forth opposite each respective classification,

CLASSIFICATION ' 5 Z f ~ PERWEEKor HOURLYRATEAccounting Clerk -* - . 3.00 - ' '«.ooAdult League Official -. - . - .-.-.•• ,•per oatne '4.00 - 13.00Adult-L*»6ue Scor«f-<—:- — _ . . . - •

• Tinier-par gameAssistant RecreationIrutructorper hourA l t f i i t S I H P

1.50 4.00

MkheUeRowe WaS Inducted

adviser, "Doris Lausten. "We tried to make time—The Cranford students will stand still- We seemed tovisit their new friends on the create a rtime of own.second'leg^of""the~exchange—Especially when itcame to thewhen they fly to Belgium at parties—•'Days seemed to driftthe endm June. into nlgFfs and each night,

Here are some impressions spontaneously, another partyof the eight-day stjjy Lhere by was on the schedule andElizabeth Canevari, one of the another learning experience,participants. When they began, they were"

"Crowded together at the strictly in the Americanbus stop, the constant chat- fashion - all of us kind oftering grew to greater in- standing around,_walking andtensity. Suddenly- a^'-shriek--talking^ Wile,r-playing somefrom sorrfeone within the ping pong or listening tocrowd rang out. "They're records. The Belgians createdhere!," and as though we were a more informal mood. They,a bunch of groupies waiting began singing and dancingfor Jackson Browne or Jerry and pluying gamea. Their type

group which includes federal!r-i «_ »w. r. » »r J 1. state and local officers..».. "

^ r f ? W.>^i, or ^ """I W »»<"»)«*Recreation Honor Society at Cranford was on the dean'sPennsylvania State Uriiver- Jist last winter at Jacksonville

made the dean's list Universityr

CLASSIFICATIONMember of TownshipCorhhrtltte*—:~ ~ 'Account Clark 'Administrative SecretaryAquatic* Director,Assistant CustodianAssistant Superintendentof Public WorksAssistant Jo TownshipAdministratorAssistant to TownshipEngineerAssistant TownshipAdministratorBus DriverChief of FireChief of PoliceClerk . • •Clerk-DispatcherClerk-Typ-(«fCommunity DevelopmentOfficerConstruction Code Official& Zoning officer -Court and Violations ClerkDeputy court andViolations Clerk • 'Deputy Tax CollectorDeputy Township-ClerkDirector of FinanceDirector of Parksand RecreationDirector of PublicAssistance (Part-time)

1 Dispatcher (Public Safely)Electrician . •

• Englnearlrlg AlcMi| : •. v,.nExecutive Secretory

"; F o r e m a n " ! •' . • • •" • • •••' '•.Head custodianLaborer I ' .Laborer I I -Municipal JudgeMl'lliij p

PER ANNUM

1,000.6a7,055.10.

U.IIO.M4,500.00

UMSM'

14,671.80

14,671.60

14,«71.B08,109.10

2I,857.»34,034.00

7,055.10• 7,435.(0

7,055.10

TS,315.3O

17,374.50ll.S47.°0

10,384.308,539.30

1,400.00 .8,810.00

- 13,987.00 '18,403.1609,409.^0

•'7,388.80

1B.403.0O.

19,403.00

30,954.7010,384.3039,303.0039,303.00

8,810.]O—9,354~.8Oe,ei«.io

19,393.00

30,954.70R471.80

150.00 •3.00 •1.85 •2.50 •l.W •2-.50 •1.M :•

250.004.00.00

. . . . s.005.005.004.00

3.00

3.00

. 2.50

100,00

10.00

4.00

10.00

150.00

18,403.00

18,403.00.

1,040.008,195.30

11,440.009.030,70

.10,914,1013,839.4039,303,00*

33,857.00

1,430.0010,108.6014,435.30

. 11,547.90

10,384.3610 /9laVl0:j

'13,987.00

8,411.309,409.40

1},OI3,00'

in the fall and winter-terms Jana JPolsky of. 995and graduated'May 26 with a-Springfield-Aye.- -was-one-of

-B-.-S.-in recreation and parks.' f i"° «»•">—*»•• f °» »««»^I«J-

Oberlin College announcedthat Barbara Welling Hall waselected to Phi Beta Kappa.She Is the daughter of Mr. andMrs. Homer J. Hall of 310Prospect Ave, and is majoringin classics. . •

Maryellen Byko, a junior

:\J.

13,188.8013,530.00-i«400U)Ov

AMltfaiit SwIrH Poprwigr.(4 days per week-50 hours)Attendant-par hourAdmission Clerk-per hour •Clerk • . . - , ~ r • * - , . • . • ' •C lerk T y p l * t . • , ' • • • ' • ,Laborer .'••."' ' 1 'L i f e GUard-per hour •Recreation Instructor-par hour ' ' . ' • • •Recreation Maintenance- . 'parttlmeper hour • .'Recreation Supervisor •part-time - per1 hour-Refreshment Stand Manager-Swim Pool-par wk, _ •' :swim pool Manager . :(4 days per week-50 hours) 2OoftVj - 300.00

section 3. The annual sulary for the attorney shall b« asset forth opposite tharespective classification. In addition to said salary, the Township Attorney shallbe entitled to receive compensation for additional tervlcerreridervd, as may beauhWIxed by the Township Committee, with such compensation sublect to thaapproval of the Township Committee. . . .

Section 4; TheMlarIM and compensation set forth shall fa/payable bl-weakly.section 5. In the event any such off leers or employees shall die, resign or b«

dismissed during tha year, the penon selected to fill his position or office shallreceive salary for th* balance of that y«ar as may be determined by Resolution ofthe Township Commlttwt, '

Section 6. All ordinances or parts of ordinances InconsUtent herewith arehereby repealed. " . , - . . . . - • , ...,.•. . . . : \ . ,, . . .

Sections. Thli ordinance shall be retroactive to January I,-1»7» and shallbecome effective upon publication after final passage ln,the manner provided byl a w . " • ' • • • '

. • • • " . - • . • • r Raymond S.Molnar' ,. " . , • chairman of Township Committee

' A T T E S T ; " ' •• • ' ' ' , ' " ' •'Wesley N. Phllo ;Township Clark . . ,- . . • ...' :

' • ' " • • • - • . ' N O T I C E • • - - , . .

The foregoing ordinance was Introduced and passed on first reading, at arriwting of the Township Committee of-the-Tpwnshlp of Cranford, N.J. on

/Tuesday, May 21 197* and will b« considered for final pkssaW/ after publichearing at another meeting of said Township Committee>t Municipal Bulldlrio,

. Cranford, N.J. on Tuesday, June 12,1979 «t »:O0 o'clock p.m. (prtvalllftO time).- : - - - V " . . , • . . ' . - . • . , . • > . • • : • : • • . r - 1 - " - 1 • ,-• . :..!••..: ' • • • • • - ' . - . - . ' ' . W e s | e y N . P h l l o

• •-" : ' " •.••"""" •• * • • ' ' ' • - - ' . — .-•-•' r ; . • - - ' • • • T o w n s h i p C l e r k

Dated; AAay 31, l»7« " > * ' ' •-" vFeei 178.40. .T T ' '•l'"-,. - ' • :':

R-l Central Business Retail DistrictB-2 Central Business Service DistrictB-3 Neighborhood BusfnǤs Dls^rjct - .CM Low Density Office Building District

O-2 Medium Density Office Bulldlna DistrictO-3 High Density Office Building District .

ll'l ? . m ^ Research, Office and Industrial Districtl-2 Selected Research, Office and Industrial District

EO Education District

' :?.\

five , students ' at Montclair: State College to receive theT e r e s a " DeE^/coriazascholarship. She has a doublemajor in Spanish and broad-casting.

" " AC1NG TOPIC ~~"A free program entitled,

"Aging-Myths, Facts ,Challenges," will be offered tothe public at Rahway Hospitalat 7:30 p.m., Thursday, June14th. Alan Kleederman, M.D.,will, moderate, a paneldiscussion on the phhysical/

of parly caughtrespecially

psychology major at Gettysburg Colleger was -named to-the dean's list for the fall andwinter- terms. She is the

jdaughtec._ol. M.r, _and_ Mrs,Robert M. Byko of 29A

z:SprlngfieldAver

Linda Duckworth, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Duck-worth of. HI WadsworthTer., emotional, and social aspectswas elected to. thev CanUnal Of aging. Call ill.4200 fdrK d J E L M J e U L -information.--.

-Christiiia—be«iGarcia; we rushed to the" busthe instant it came to a halt,immediately we beganpeering" into thelooking for- 'iJOur—Belgian." ^nore-or-less^the-beat-of-th&T.oiifsiaria.-.St.ate Unltteraity

i ' J L M i J i i

Roanoke College in Salem, Va.CardinaFkey is^ a nationalJjOPOj* AQciety tecognizingwomen with outstandingrocords of ccholnrfihiP' ntid^ME—is—a—national honor-fraternity for excellence in

LEGALS

Oil THlquickly, especially a dance- daughter of." Mrs. Lindagame-called "La Bamba." Herman of 309 Casino Ave., mathematics. _...:•-••

windows-This 1s a Tningling-gamerrJone- accepted a- research-grant at : j-Hartwick- - College -An-- • - •-- — iQngoUta", N. Y.. presented the

-PLANNINOBOAKDnnpni ir.u OF B A » W 0 P P

U N 1° LEGALNOTICC ..•-',•:•'•>/ .

UNBELIEVABLIEyeryoite Is talking about

The last word in Discount ShoppingClothes

Within a short time we wete^€ha Cha. .... .„_._.:. _ _.__'. _.wJth-gtudiesJbegiiinillg:JuneJL modernacquainted with our guests The overall persbnalitFes^ne is a graduate oTCraniord

projected from the students of High .School, class Of1975^andthe two countries was vastly

. psented eand classical

meeTlno 5!"<h"«^"Garv^p)iinnrrfi)BBard -held en May a - i w i : ? :£•-:•/ V'

and on our way home."Our guests would bfr-here

for a full week and during thattime would try to see as muchof our area as possible andparticipate in a few basketballand volleyball games. Thestudents were from the townof Hoboken, a suburb ofAntwerp, Belgium.'We wouldtry to learn as much- aspossible about ..this new

'country to prepare ourselvesfor our trip to Belgium inJune.

"On the evening of the firstday, a party was given by thefamily of Bill Meyer. Thefollowing days were, jammedwith trips to Washington,D.C., Great Adventure, NewYork City and with other

different. Although the twonever conflicted, the charac-teristics were distinctivelydifferent.^ Occasionally aBelgian would openly show hisemotions, show more enrthusiasm or try to steal someof the limelight. TheAmericans were more con-strained but adaptable. Theyall enjoyed our music,especially, disco.

"At the end of our eightdays, we once again stood atthe bus stop with tears in our•eyes and memories in ourhearts waving good-bye tonew friends who1 had intro-duced us to a new (but older)culture." • • " ' . '

l anguages ~awaTd7'*torTCecilia=iH»"e«pT>?nnoTi ortnventttmoTinnnis**— -<Mnrb l ln rlnnohtpr nf Mi* nnrl known as Block 31. Lot 32 of the Tax M»p^ a C o ' ,a7?, ,1?' T i , &Jra oftha Sorouoh on?arwobd IsWebv .

a cum laude graduate of Fair- Mrs. Ronald Macklln of Colby, approved with the understandind thatUniversity, Lane: The award is given to

the student with outstandingB;S.leigh DickinsonMadison, with apetroleum geology.

Betsy Pctrlck, daughter ofMr. and Mrs.L. M. Petrick of305 Prospect Ave., wasinitiated into Kappa KappaGamma Sorority at OhioWesleyan University,..

Berklee College of Musicfreshman Joseph N, Gallant,was a featured bassist in a

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performance in that field. Thesenior French major also waselected into the HartwlckHonor Society representingthe top 10 per cent of thecollege.

Six area residents wereinitiated into Phi Kappa Phi,national honor society, atKean College. Studentsinitiated with a grade point,average of 3.7.9 and.aboveinclude Geraldlne Conroy,Margaret Poogan and JoannKlein of Cranford, and ElainePerrotta^—^of-•—Ctarwood.Master's degree candrdateswith a 4.0 average also were

Jnithjted.., They includeMildred Pratt and ftorothyBurak of Cranford: "•

'•'. Carl L. Rinaldl of Cranfordwas inducted into Lambda MuSlgmai marketing honorary

''fiooie'ly.-.at l-ehigh, L'rjiversilj!.

the applicant appear before ths ZonlnoBoard of. Adlustment (or any variancesthat mloht be necessary beforecon&truaion ~ls started - and thisresolution Is also contlnfient upon theapproval of the Borough Engineer.

Joan C. Kulta,Secretary

Datod: May 31, 1979Foo: $«.73

' LEGAL NOTICE r

Take notice that application has beenmade to the Township Clerk of the Town-ship of Cranford to transler toCranoHlce.liVc, trading as The Office,for premises located at 3-s Soylh Avenue •West, Cranford, New Jersey, thePlenary Retail consumption License No.30p3-33-008-oj)l..Jieret«far,«,ls»ued .to iDonadasa, iVic, trading ak The LodoV..for the premises- located at 3-5 Sttuth'Avenue West, Cranford, New Jersey... Stockholders of cnjnofflco: ,-

Mr^ Alan Jeffrey Beers ;;R No. 1 -.Talmadge Roild ..Mendham, N.J. 079.4S ' ;" \ . rMr. John 0 , . We lch , J r , ;•'. .•''.10 colonial D r i v e . ; • -.'.-•'"• 'Basking R l d g a , N . J . 07900Dr . John P , H o r t o n ' ' ' ;.;•••-.:;.O v e r l e l o h R o a d '/.•'•' '•'•.. •.'• • • ' , ; : - V '•,'.' ••;•-

Ob|ectlons«Jf- anyC »houl«l be' made •Immedlsttly ntsM»lilno to; Wesley N .Phllo, MunlclbsTtierk of the Township^

O f ; C r a n f o r d 1 , •'' :,. . : - . ; " - • . • • . ' • , , ; • ' • - - ,

'• • • ; • - . - • . • , -,'• • . • • ' • • . • . • • ' . • > ' • . , C r t n o / f l c e , m e , ..

. ' M South Plnl«yAv«nue» • • Basking Kldoe.N.J.Omo

DateA. M»y U and May.St,: I97», ',. .:'•

Cranford Chronicle#5o P e r Y e a r

JUSTCALL

RARE ' i

276r6000

jEW" MIDNIOMt *HP;»' A.iMVejpANT t.t>i VRJl

'"'•OLD,. Wp.STIS.RN', S ;'N|eRn;Le.;pVNH,

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Every thing Is at least

SITMMER DRESSES

:iit W P ••;•»»••.¥ Jays;-:' $1,5

,..$21 ,-0^'iaiflrter'dept.store's ''••'• \y

:0.llGrmeprarid'get g^quaiiiieu\ with our staff. They'iff^^di^itf^i:'.'".-. 'fait Jitit pushy.

SO.'/!?*tinilc^rqimcrit that say j)owi(j#$% 'i$icei\t}iq( sayfaHo^Oujkty/'' - a v ^ . ' ^ V >^^r<^ '..: ••''•**mm'*mmmim£~'/"t' • "iaka*..'.'''^ial - "^mmirmm'yJairm

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y Detached Residence DistrictR-2 One-family Detached Residence DIstHctR-3 One-famlfy Detached Residence DistrictR-4 One-family Detached Residence DistrictR-5 One and Two-family Residence DistrictR-* Townhouse Residence District

R-7 . Garden Apartment Residence District

R-8 Apartment Residence District

Page 7:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

Pagel2CRANFX)RD(N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, May 31, 1979

Here Are Some ElementsOf Proposed Land..Use. Law

~By TOM HAYDONand- the cenlralHbuslness:disffict,STUART AVVBREY the board proposed a zone

Cranford's proposed land with strict building require-hteflts-that-aWows-a-four-stery-

Centermial by Hillside AvenueSchool. This area has alsobeen rezoned -for residentialuse::

- - published-on- -the-preceding-office facility wttht»-ftrst-floor-- Fmther zoning ~<3iaKge§ tdpage.

It summarizes a massivedocument, the largest or-dinance here in recent years.The ordinance would replacethe zoning ordinance that hasgoverned land use, with somemodifications, for 20 years.

parking lot, or a six-story •building with the first twofloors used for parking in abuilding no higher than 60 feet.

W YSome ofthte land/in the zorie

is in the flood-way. Bycreating this zone under

consolidate the businessdistrict include allowing onlyretail stores on the first floorof buildings in the B-l zone,along^vjortMJnion Avenue andone block on Walnut Avenue,and allow only service shops,such as cleapprs, -nn_the_fkst

e-zonlng section -of- the careful restrictions^-the-boardomnibus land use law includes hopes to encourage construc-

tion that would upgrade the

MASTER PLAN attracts comments from citizens at public hearing before PlanningBoard last Thursday. Douglas Woodson, a businessman, left, speaks fo'iioardmembers. From left: Raymond Molnar, James Williams, Ellen Curclo, Tom O'Brien,Bernlce Shor, Ronald AAarotta, John Vassallo, chairman, Robert X|eissler, attorneyWilliam Holzapfei and consultants Thomas AAarch and Jerry Lenaz.

Plannin^JJmt-Llnveils NewMaster Plan For Public

By TOM 11AYDONA public hearing on the new

master plan for Cranfordprovided an opportunity forcitizens to comment. About 50people attended a number ofthem criticized some of theproposals, including the ideato put a supermarket along"Miln Street and extendingGallows Hill Road to North'Avenue.

The comments came at thefirst public hearing lastThursday, from residents whoclaimed the plan further splitthe township Into north and

south sections and should be expiaining the process used toreviewed before being c r e a t e t h e p ) a n a n d i t sadopted.

theAs a result of the vocalarguments against the plan,which the township has beendeveloping for the past yearwith--, tho planning firm ofRaymond, Parish, Pine andWeiner atra cost of $39,000, thepublic hearing was continuedand scheduled to-reopen lastnight.

The meeting opened with a90-minute slide presentationby Thomas March and JerryLenaz of the planning firm,

CRAZY EDDIE'SPRIVACY

SALE

PLANNING ON STAYING HOME THIS SUMMER? A LOT O«= US MAYHAVE TO....HOW ABOUT SOME PRIVACY7 FOR THE NEXT TWO

vyeEKS,wervvttt o r RUNtttNGTA-coupON SALE bis HEMLOCK;PINES. ARBORVATAE AND PRIVET HEDGE.

2 0 % 0 F F ON S OR MORE PLANTS MENTIONED ABOVE. PLUSMANY OTHER SCREEN PLANTS. OFFER OOOD WHILE SUPPLYLASTS.

Mr..Ms.

Address:. J- -

This COUPON Good For 20% OFF AnyHemlock, White Pine, Arborvatae andPrivet Hedge.

Don't Forget • No Coupon • No Discount

WILLIAMS NURSERY524SPRI1NGPIELD AVK.. WESTFIELD

OPPOSITE ECHO LAKE COUNTRY CLUB - 232-4076'Open bvfefyaay trow 9:66 A.Mfto 5:00 P.M.

plan, ingredients.

The two planners reviewedpopulation . and economictrends to show, that Cranford,which is largely developed,has an aging population,which in the future will becomprised of moreprofessional and governmentworkers. -

Devoting most of thepresentation on the centralbusiness district, Lenazcharacterized the downtownarea as a "gem" that neededto be "polished" to create a"village" atmosphere.

He added the master planshould be viewed as a "con-ceptual guide" for the town-ship and the proposals in itwould be implementedthrough zoning ordinances.

Most of the. comments fromthe, public attacked theproposal for the township toseek development of a super-market on Miln Street, and theplan to extend Gallows HillRoad to North Avenue Westand Brookside Place toSpringfield Avenue.

"Why should we concen-trate our efforts for a super-market on the north side? Whynot the south side?" queriedMarie L. Gray, of 11 ParkAve., echoing comments ofothers who-felt, the plan em-phasized, the business areanorth of the railroad to thedetriment of the southernbusiness section.

17 different" district designa-tions. Eight Qf these areresidential, ranging from onefamily detached residences toapartment residences.

There are three businessdistricts, one for centralbusiness retail, one for centralbusiness service, and one forneighborhood business, whichcovers such areas as Cen-tennial Avenue. " •

There are three officedistricts. One covers the lowdensity area off Birchwoodand Orange avenues. Anothertreats medium density officesalong North Avenue East andSouth Avenue West. The thirdis a new high density officezone proposed for SouthAvenue below the railroadstation.

The full ordinance is toolarge tojpublish in its entirety,but the map and the attendinglegal advertisements on thispage summarize it. Fullcopies of the draft areavailable for perusal at the

would upgradeland, while "Reducing the totaldeveloped area, thus openingsome of the land in the flood-way.~U—BIKE'RACKSTo implement another

recommendation of themaster plan, encouragingalternate modes of trans-portation, the ordinancerequires bicycle rapks beincluded in all site plans formulti-family housing projectsand non-residential buildings.One space would be requiredfor each residential unit, andone space for every ten carspaces in • non-residentialzones, would be required. •

In a joint meeting Tuesday,Gene Marino of the TownshipCommittee Said he was op-'*posed to mandated racks.Patrick MfcDonough of theBoard of Adjustment said, theregulation was "vague.-'Barbara Brande of the Town-ship Committee said some-thing "less restrictive" might

Municipal Building-and the.. bejn order ."The general senseLibrary, where they may be Tuesday was to come up withchecked out.

Deliberations continue atthe Township Committeeworkshop session nextTuesday, pointing towardfinal reading and passageJune 12. '•

Many of the items in theordinance have been reportedin The Chronicle fromPlanning Board sessions overrecent months. Some of these,along with other components,are'summarized below:

NEW OFFICE ZONETo generate activity around

different language.BUSINESS DISTRICTS

The master plan also en-courages the concentration ofbusiness in the downtownarea. Thus zoning changeshave been made around thestores on Centennial Avenuefrom Lincoln to Hillsideavenues, which leaves allexisting stores' in businesszones, but expands residentialzones to include all houses inthe area. Presently someexisting houses are zoned forbusiness, as is the land along

flnof nf thp hiiilHIngs In thft R=2zone, along most of Walnutand South Avenue in thecentral business district.

PROFESSIONALSOccupant-professional, a

zoning designation that allowsprofessions to work and live ina residential dwelling, will beallowed in every residentialzone except rnulti-familyzones.

Homeowners along NorthAvenue East, whose homes

were in multi-family andbusiness zones, had arguedbefore the board >and Town-ship Committee to allow oc-cupant-professional uses fortheir area. Their plans weretaken into consideration.

Strict restrictions concern-ing parking and the number ofemployes have also beenincluded in the ordinance toregulate this use.

CHURCHESThe ordinance also changes

regulations of the location ofchurches, which presently arepermitted in any residentialzone. The ordinance requiresthat churches be - built onarterial roads and on aminimum lot size of. one acre'.

SIGNSSeven- full—pages of the

proposed law deal with signs.At the meeting • of variousmunicipal bodies Tuesday,Timothy O'Leary of the Boardof Adjustment said he ob-jected to free standing signsand John Duryee of thePlanning Board said he wouldprefer no signs at all.However, the ordinance would

CURRENT ZONES— The new zoning map for Cranford Is on the preceding page.Here's the old one, which with some modifications has served township for twodedades. Proposed new ordinance would expand the number of residential zones toeight. •

permit various signs, but it isdescribedbjrO'fcearyas "one"of the most restrictive in thearea." ^

" FENCESThere are numerous fence

regulations. The ordinancewould continue the current sixfoot maximum height offences. One exception: eightfoot security fences in in-dustrial areas.

A Debate Over Town As It Is Or As It Ought To BeThe debate that surfaced Zonine Board of Adiuslmenl, and residents of North Avenue Adjustment, said the zoning zones were don#»The debate that surfaced

this week over the residentialportions of the proposed landordinance law reflected adifference in philosophyamong, those who support itarid those who challenge it.

John Duryee, member of thePlanning Board who was

Zoning Board of Adjustment, and residents of North Avenuecontends that the goal of the East successfully argued for

professional use of large.homes to retain the characterof their neighborhood.

The issue over theresidential districts is

township should be to zone forwhat a neighborhood shouldbe, not for what it is already.

Before this week, debatesover, other, aspects of themaster, plan and the land useordinance reflected somethingof these different views.

eightsum-

marized on Page 1. TheTownship Committee and thetwo appointed boards Wactive in creation of the entire

Y^u-resaymg^^Me<Hmd-docnmenr3anriliaTlhegoal In the -downtown, for scheduled-toTneet-^again lastclass citizen^ charged was to establish residential example, zprting changes have night to discuss the ordinance.

zones that reflect conditions been proposed to encourage ~'

unit would have to be morediligent. Another member, neighborhood on the same sideTheron Weeks Jr. predictedv of the street. If the town wasthey would have a difficult -not so fully developed, shetime with spot zoning. Bernice said, neater lines might haveShor and John Duryee, among, been drawn, but "Cranfordothers, said that the term has varied development and"spot zoning" was not an the new ordinance recognizesapprQpriate_as-a_descr4ptlon-for"the ffewoFdmarice. Still

which are defined as any.accessory use of a dwellingunit for gain, the ordinancerequires that not more than 20per cent of total floor space beused for the work, no morethan one non-resident beemployed, no signs be posted,no retail business be con-ducted on the premises, andno supplies or materials bedelivered to the dwelling unitexcept in the resident's ownpassenger vehicle. Ralph'Taylor, former ^attorney for

. t h e Board of Adjustment, saidzones were done according to this section is unenforceablelot frontage and sizes in the a n d ) among other things,

TVANTENNAS— No TV-antennas are per-mitted on the roofs of multi-family dwellings.

HANGING CLOTHES"Drying yards shall be

prohibited", in multi-familydevelopments. Sorry folks,that nieans, no clotheslines.

HOMEWORKhome occupations,For

. ng other things,would ban paperbijy^and girlshere.

LEGAL NOTICE .,TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD

PROPOSED ORDINANCE NO. W-18

Douglas WSodsBh, owner of abuilding at 6 South Avenue,'East, who contended the planproposed to upgrade thenorthern side but give littleconsideration to the southernarea.

The master plan includesproposals to widen sidewalks

- on North Union Avenue fromNorth to Springfield avenues,larrd";. construct pedestrianplazas on"Nfirth Avenue.

Lenaz explained that whilethe presentation that nighthighlighted the north side,nroprwnk were hlSO

as they are today. He said thatthis approach represented aradical change frOm pastprocedures. '•

A leading proponent of theopposite approach, Timothy'O'Leary, a member of the

retail and service businessesin selected areas, with a goalof retaining the viability of themerchandising center .Residents in the Carol Courtarea have complained about aproposal toy townhouses there

That meeting was after thedeadline for this paper.Following ,are additionalcomments made at themeeting the night before.

Richard Rosenberg, aformer. .Planning , Boardmember now on the Board of

frosH!

We're Your One

_ IoiOhe-southe*n-section of thebusiness district.

People also objected to thelocation proposed for the,supermarket, along Miln

h

Featuring...

tared. And Batwus,The Energy Saver*!

Union Cotmif's largestFaU Strict Moped Deahr.

BOULEVARD1 BICYCLE

CENTERI-- i

\

604 Botilevard-Kenilworth

Union County's friendliest Bike Shop. =~

7 yproprietor could not be foundfor the Pathmark store in theevent that company leaves asit intends.

Mayor Raymond Molnarexplained the township wasattempting to keep Pathmarkin Cranford, through legalaction and offers of more land,but stated the company had alease on the property ex-tending to 1986 and couldprevent another food marketfrom occupying the location.

Residents also protested theplan to extend/ Gallows HillRoad to North Avenue, and

-JBruokside Place to SpringfieldAvenue, saying it would in-crease—-commuter—trttHte^—.through an industrial area and

-rgute traffic past Brookside •ScEool.

Despite the negativecomments, which includedopposition to the townhousesproposed for Van BurenAvenue, Planning Boardmember John Vassallo said hewas "distressed" by the"apathy" shown by com-munity by not attending thepublic^ hearing in greater*•numbers,

Hubbard Serves

Cultural BoardMrs. Marie B. Hubbard of

Cranford has been appointedto the Cultural and HeritagePrograms Advisory Board ofUnion County.

She is the principal of SchoolNumber ^TwoAifl-jLlnden. Shewill, corapTefe~Ian—unexpired

,4ernvofv ^ b s e -Marie Gattbvnl-ittft- '(jl Ctfanford.* whoresigned. The Board of Chosen—Freeholders selected her andMrs ~Ruth Sprague ofBerkeley Heights. ' • ' • ; ' • '

another, Patrick McDonough,said the current procedure oflooking at other homes within200 feet would become"irrelevant."

Timothy O'Leary ofBoard- of, Adjustment, apersistent critic of the neweight-district plan, said hewould be happier with large

ines. as now exist, won If

O'Leary said the map wasmade up of "little inroads,zigs and doodles here andthere."

Tom Davis, Bqard of.. Adjustment chairman, saidine" the plan would make their job

morejdifficult. The boardattorney, David Kinnear, saidthe new ordinance as a-whole"could be subject to greater

l | p l b l ^ — T

No. 79-ISi being an Ordinance entitled"AH brdlriapceof the Township ofcranford establishing aPlanhlnoBoardand Board qfAdlustment pursuant to the'Municipal "kand Use Law' (N.J.S.A.

40:55D-l, et 'seq.l; providing fdr thepowers of said boards; fixing theprocedures governing applications tosaid boards and appeals therefrom;providing regulations .governing sub-divisions, site plans, soil erosion andsediment control, flood pla'ns Ond thofuture use of land'and buildings" wasIntroduced at a meeting of the TownshipCommittee of the Township of Cranfordheld on May 23, 1979, and given Its firstreading and the same was then! ordered

iey.were to have many non-conforming uses, which is alsothe present case.

Mrs. Shor. challengedO'Leary at several points,aying that the new law was

Robert Kleissler, PlanningBoard chairman, said "we'reheaded in the right direction,"He said tharsimie Cranford

rmostly developed the goal

p y v 0 f a t - « BOrdinance will be further considered fofinal reading and adoption at a meetingol the Township Committee to be held Inthe Municipal Building, Cranlord, NewJersey, on the 1 Jth day of Juno 1«W, at 8p.m., at which time andplsco a_|[ WrSWfeIhterosled will fie oivervan oppflrlonlty tobf hunrrt r n n » l < ' ' "

carefully prepared and that wasto:'upgrad&Vacant"land.* Article vi, "section B., sub-section 3.WHllnvW tl/*lwn»\fsvl u n w j "Zoning Map;V also Article VI, SectionW i l l i a m HOIZapiei , OOaru -C."Schedule of Zone District Area, Yard •

R i i f i i n ^ c Q ^ p m i n i i r attorney, alsp,used the word and^Buiidingjjequireme'nts."D U S l I i e S S " S e m i n a r "nn»radinc<" to dpqrrrho thtt' T h* malnot>|ectlVBa and provisions of

upgrading 10 aescrioe me the proposed ordinance are asset (orth.newJaW^ —, In-the-Htle-above;—-

Www,

Four In a te Track Meet,

ByPETEDURNINGCranford will

hy pt ltrack

bey

and field athletes instate meefcrthis Saturday; butone of, if not the best localrunner, Mary Beth Hogan,might not compete.-'-^^WmeJtQttLthe boys varsityteam, Tom Cobkr DonHeyburn and Scott VanWhy,qualified in the state sectional

pionship , , • '•"• r ^This may exclude her from

h p i s h i p s denpite the"factthat she placed second inthe mile race in the state all-groups championships lastyear. .

Bob Specht almost becamesecond local field competitorto qualify in the pole vault"

Global Clobbers VFWJLandJM Downs Clar

Thursday, May 31,1979 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Page 13

— ByMIKEO'BRJENGlobal Carpet Cleaning

avenged last year's playoff

defeat by thrashing the24 to 2, in the most lopsided

. contest nf ,-the season

waiver is being sought to allowHogan in the mile and two-mile races! - •

KnlkHtelntookBecondinthe

state group championshipscheduled for this Saturday.

Jamie Kalksteln of the girls'varsity team, qualified for thegroup championship jn boththe quarter mile race and longjump events.

.Hogan was sick and could.not compete in the sections toqualify for the' group cham-

"quatter'inile witli a time of 61seconds. She was fourth in the

~Iong jump with a leap of 15feet, 5 inches.

Despite a leg injury,Heyburn took second in' thepole vault, clearing 14 feet.

VanWhy placed third in thetwo-mile race and Tom Cookwas second in discus with athrow of 150 feet.

Simpson pliced ninth inJJi£two-mile race. LL. '. - .

Wtindar Gorgol suffered afrustrating loss, being nippedat the tape in the half-mile •race to finish sixth. The topfivj^finjghjejafegojon-to^the

Record at 12 and 7With Victory Over Roselle

By COLLEEN MEYERf k i d 4 t e

ROSELLE1-TRANF0RP5-

group championships. Laurie 12 to* 7 this week as theySullivan placed seventh in the defeated Roselle 5 to 1 attwo-mile.

In otherhome. Due to the-inclementweather the Cougars, onlyplayed one game this week.

Cranford closes out itsbaseball season today as theCougars host the. Comets ofHillside at Memorial Field at3:45 p.m.

Booster

SWIM CHAMPS — Cranford swimmers who won In the'iTS?,."5 s P e c ' 8 ' Olympics champions for UnionMiddlesex Counties May 19 at the Centennial AvenuePool were, seated from left Gary Frey, Troy David, g^e n~ iMlchaelJonesand Billy Chester; standing Linda Serpa, U t rOOl

-GficteudeWoods, Jbhn Johnson and Cindy Bldgood. Theswimmers are from the classes of Richard Gels andMary Lou Hanf. The classes swim on a weekly basisunder the direction of pool manager Judy Korsch.

track and fieldaction, the boys team defeatedLinden last week, as Cook tookfirst and third in the discusarid shot put respectively. JeffKarl was first in the javelin,followed t>y teammate EdHolub in third.-VanWhy wonv both thequarter-mile arid half-mileraces, and Specht and Bruce ^ ^ #Pak finished one-two in the I l i TO Y1 £ » ! •intermediate hurdles. Pak *•**• " * ' * • - ' *also won the high Hurdles i» o •

TS. »„* „«.«»SeniorsDomaratius finished first and The Cranford Booster Clubthird in the two-mile race will hold .its Annual Sportsrespectively. Kevin Simpson Award Dinner honoririg seniorscored with second place in athlete, cheerleaders andthe mile and Mike Denci took band members who par-third in both the mile and half- ticipated in 1978-1979 Cranfordmile races. Kyle Sales and High School programs,sophomores Dave Ellis and The dinner will be at 7 p.m.MawiSmithiiedJotffrstin the~at the Coachman-Inn on June-

jump, 14.and Juan Sanchez also KT

scored in the long jump, t h e ^ C Whundred yard dash and the220-yard run. C o a c hMVM*G T i l l M * D a v e Roeerson will be

diving coach and assistant"C i r i « i . . swim team coach for thisjTOf V a l i d a t i o n summer at the municipal

pools.

Effective Monday, June 4,additional hours will beprovided for pool cardvalidation as follows: Monday

Rogerson has been active inswimming and diving since1968. He has spent the past twoyears working at pools andcoaching diving. He is mostinterested in working with the

Garwood Little LeagueRonafd iTvMhi^ l ! !^" ! ! 1 " 0 1 1 " '^ RotarV s •? * «nd ToW" Pharmacythe Sea? anH i n i V J ^ . h o ? \ * r o n P* defeated Oav\6 Murray II to J. Oarwood

*££?$&• ZA ."TS^ri,.H5!# £7 ""•* *™« °«™" -""-v«banlnd th» pitching of David Blackford, ' w idefeated ABC 7t»awlth John Glndfl and ABC 6 3Prank Hoatart hIMIno horn, r u l l i ; PBA 53. I". Jh» minor league David Murray VFW 44

^ ? " t * ! ? OarW<xx* Savlno* and Loan 10 KC itto 7. Town Pharmacy nipped G»rwood

" Dave Oldam raked hisrecord to 3 and 0 as theCougars topped the Rams 5 tol in Cranford.

Cranford put the first runson the Scoreboard with two inthe bottom of the first inning.Dave Daniels walked andscored as Greg Kalesckybelted his second homerun ofthe season.

The Cougars picked Upanother run in the fourth asKalescky reached base on afielders' choice and scored ona single by Steve Lissner,Cranford added another run inthe bottom of the fifth inningas Rob Faber walked andscored on three consecutiveRoselle errors.-

The locals scored their lastrun in the bottom of the sixth.Dave Moran reached base onan error, stole second, went to

JDooley ReturnsAs Swim Coach

Joe Dooley will return ashead swim team coach andwater polo coach this summerfor the Recreation and ParksDepartment.

Dooley has been activeswimming this past season atthe University of Richmondwhere he lettered in swim-ming and water polo. Hisswimming records includefour first places in the state ofVirginia in 50 and 100 in-dividuals, 400 andJ)00 relayfreestyle.

He has also set four schoolrecords in the same events.

third on an error, and scored—oiraslftglg^Trm McOoverriT

Roselle's lone run came inthe top of the seventh.

Collecting hits for Cranfordwere: Greg Kalescky,homerun; Tim McGovern,Don Putzer^nd Steve Lissner,one single each.

ROSBLLE000 .000 1 1 5 6

CRANPOBD500 UT X 5 4 1

Beroen and Hoffman; Oldam, Lies (7)-andH«loic)cy.-P«r»dl»o. D (5)

Cranford men's softballleague. Mike Ramar ledGlobal with four hits, whileTom Lawler, Joe Aliseo, BobDon,neHy, and RayRomanowski contributedthree each to the 23 hit on-slaught. Scot Jones had threehits for the VFW.

J it M express seftTaf least

thru Fridays, 2 to 4 p.m. These young children arid developingare in addition to the regularly each diver and swimmer toscheduled evening hours, their best while enjoyingMonday thru Thursdays, 6 themselves as they, progress, <• Joe's team placed sixth inp.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday reports Elaine Elkins, water polo in the Easterns.mornings 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. To aquatics director.facilitate processing, werequest everyone to bring theproper identification-birthppcertificates for children,drivers license or voters cardsfor adults.

NEW CHAIRS,Ihe Township Committee

has approved purchase of 400upright chairs for usetwo outdoor~pools.

pHis philosophy for both theswimming and water polateams is to have as manychildren involved "workingbut having fun and trying tofurther themselves forcompetitive areas."

StudentsGainLetters

Eleven Cranford residentsand three Kenilworthresidents are among 65 UnionCollege students who wereawarded letters for theirparticipation in seven inter-collegiate teams during the1978--79 academic year at theannual Awards Night on May.24 at the Cranford Campus.

Union College sponsorsintercollegiate teams for menin soccer, wrestling, basket-ball, "gOffifncrTennis and forwomen in basketball andtennis. Union College is amember of the Garden StateAthletic Conference and theNational Junior CollegeAthletic Association.

Cranford residents whoreceived varsity letters in-clude: Steven Edelman,Kevin Keimig and JaySweifach for tennis; CathleenCampbell, Corrine Cannone,Ann Doolejr, DeniseMcNerney, Marisa Tuccio,and Nancy vonBulow fortennis; Dan Karalis for golfand Ann Dooley and SharonFord for basketball.

Kenilworth residents whoreceived varsity letters wereSteve Hoffman for soccer, andMark Wills and Chris Kuriawafor basketball.

ten men to the plate in each ofthe first three innings" toclobber Clai-k Door, 23 to 4.

Strong pitching by JoeCarlucci and a pair of doublesby Pete Vergalla led Buffy'sTavern to a 7 to 3 win overTequilla Sunrise.- Mike' Occihomered for Buffy's, DonHardman and FrankDcllasera-had two hits apiece"for Tequilla.

Rich Reid, a first year-pitcher for the Elks, continuedto look impressive, beating J& M Express 12 to 2. Reidstruck out five and gave uponly six hits.

Billy Lawer staked ClarkDoor to a 3 to 1 lead in the firstinning with a three run homer,but Pat O'Connel surrenderedonly two hits the rest of theway as Global CarpetCleaning won their third, 6 to3.

Buffy's Tavern blastedthree Bloomingdale Bomberpitchers for 18 hits to hand thenew team their first loss, 22 to6. For Buffy's, Andy Hoffmanhomered, Pete CoStanzotripled, and Mike Occi had twohits to raise his average to.875.

Successive doubles an thefifth inning by Spanky•Prutzman, Billy Pawlick, RayRomanowski, and Paul South-wick helped Global CarpetCleaning overcome Joe D'sRathskeller 11 to 5. PatO'Connel survived an 11-hitattack to win his second.

FAST RUNNER — Linda Serpa runs In the area 5special Olympics. She is one of 11 runners fromCranford to qualify for the state meet.

Students Win Ribbons

Standings as of May 2}National Division

Buffy's TavernD. Ryan and SonsBloomingdale BombersToqullla SunriseSuburban Post ControlChockmate

A m e r i c a n D I vW

Global Carp<t CleanorsCranford ElksJ and AA ExpressV F W Post 335Clark DoorJoe D's Rathskeller

W321100

1 s

4 "22100

L00

113

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01113

1 3

Thirty Cranford schoolstudents won ribbons inregional competition for theNew Jersey Tournament ofChampions recently. This is astatewide program of physicalfitness, sports training andathletic competition forlearning disabled students,designed to instill self con-fidence.

Twenty students won first orsecond place in their agedivision and will be competingfor top state honors on June 2at Monmouth College'.Students compete in track,field or swimming events.

Cranford's best chances fortop state honors rest in the 10and 11 year old 100 yard relayswim team from BrooksideSchool. The four members,Michele Arthur, Mark Can-non, Dianne Galavage and SueVaiconis swam the 100 yardsin l min. 17.2 seconds beatingthe other eight teams of 14 to17 year olds.

Students participating intournaments include Steven

Arthur, Donald Eckloff, DavidKane, Russell Carter, JamesPiegari, Matthew Andriola,Louis Tami, Tommy Trotta,"Joey Lopez, Joseph Weh,Jennifer O'Donnell, KimberlyReagan, Patricia Hand, DawnRowles, Scott Engle, KevinGallagher, Jim Kleinhans,Richard Mabee, BobPatricco,Kelly Piwoski; MTcHele AT0iur7Mark Cannon, DianneGalavage, Sue Vaiconis,Bonnie Bowles, ScottGlucksman, Rob Lepanto,Lisa Titel, Brett Wagner,Classroom teachers ac-companying them were JeanKnight, Emily Nunzio, Joan"Salindino and Kathy Layman.

RAILROADERSA representative from the

Wildwood Crest Motel will beguest speaker on June 2 at 11a.m. at the RetiredRailroader's Club at theSenior Citizen Center at 1306Esterbrook AVe., in RahWay.

Recent CBL ActionNomahegan

. Von Jack Durnlik's horM run to straight•Way center field. John1 Nlland followedWltti a single artft later scored op AdamStein's single. -

The Mohicans'retaliated 1n their half

Apaches) MohawkilThe. National BanV oT New Jersey

Aoaehes came (rom behind to edge theMartin Jeweler* Mohawks 3 to 1. TheApachea were abla to oat only on* hit offT.R. and' Frank Colarusto wh"o bothpitched a strong oame for the Mohawks.The on* Apache hit w a t t triple, In thelast of the fifth, by Chris DIBella,scoring Paul Salvatorlello and BrianMahoney. DIBella then scored' the.winning, run on an overthrow to third

. Leading a slx-hlt Mohawk attack was,Prank Colarusso with two hits. HowieShdllcrou had a hit and scored a run.

,whlle M lk t Orlmihaw also had'a hit,

Played well In the field highlighted,bytwo sparkling defensive plsyes by Dansochovlc of the Reds.

Olants 3 Braves IjJrLa_momid-duei-Uih«r« s»ch pllch«

Robert Hwang, a second <HB\ triple by•John CaDeiia, arid a third sliiglaThe Mohicans retaliated In their half

of the first with all 6 of thalr runs scoringto take a 4 to 4 lead. A RBI tingle byRobert Hwang, a two RBI triple by JohnCapexia. and a three RBI single by JohnLehner accounted for all the Mohican

'offense for the afternoon.Two unassisted fielding gemt by Jack

Durnlak and John Stltt, In the secondInning, enabled Jamie O'Reilly to finishout the Inning unscathed. Stltt took overthe pitching chores In the third Inningand turned In tour brilliant Innings ofpitching. Walking one barter In eachInning, ha struck out the side each time.

t h e s e c o n d , ; ' . . • . •• ' : . • . . . ' . • '

James Woods came Into pitch,(or theChloMws In the «4cond, shutting off t h .Lehapes' hitting, John Newman end

t-onope MMJO. . Gtints bested the Capital SavingsPltchlnb te??ihi,"-V?!22r J . . r h n . a r»ves. John Swandrak on the mound

A ™ i J J L i M n l ^ 7 ^ 2 * « , S ? iu 5 h m l i . ( o r t h » G l « n t « struck out 15 better, end

Apgar striking out 7 and Scott Neville w v o u p h | f 8 t 0 iOB M s y o r , a n d R o n

Melao.Joe Mayors struck out eight Giants

end was reached by Pat Fehy and KenBunlewskl (or singles.

Cubs 1 Cerdlnals JIn a well played, close game, the

Cranlord Pollcomen's Wives dubsdefeatod the Betty Ann Bakery

Romano had a single. and • PeterHarrington also had a single, driving Inthe first Mohawk run, .

Sharing the pitching for the Apacheswere Peter Fabrlelle and Keith Slattery, ground out, and scored trjei t!«!nO j-wr\ .Abram walked, followedjKkHearin»ky-r-Marsrtaifra'^«nd;3i^^StephenTVlll(|eWiikr"played a strong followed with hit second hit of the day, ware made by Jeff Banes

top of the third to bring the Nava|os<within 1 run of the Mohicans.

Durnlak led off the top of the sixth witha single, went to third on John Nlland's

striking out a. Pitching tor the Crees wasSeth Schwartz striking out U, MikeByrne walked and Scott Neville singledhim home. Dave Glegerlch walked andSteve Charney singled him home for theCrows. The Crees fought back. BobBarrett walked and Steve Nlrp had anInsld* the park homer to tie 2 to 2. Crows'Bill Mansfield, Steve Charney, DaveGlegerlch walked. Mike Abram got hitby a pitch (or the Crowt to go ahead 3 to1. Crees came back again. Dan Rlley andTodd Heller walked then Seth Schwarti b u s t open „ 3 , 0 j p|tchlniLdu«l batwoon

Oth-ln^fOwMtad-lt-up-es—TBaa-S?6tr and•tfTTKIelKiorge" ToddIt by a pitch. ChrlS Apoar struck out 10 Pirates, walked one and hit

two batters, whllo Eric struck out 12 oftho league leaders and walkdtt But four.

The Dodgers lumped of( to a 2 to 0 loadIn tho first on two walks and a single byKeith Bhhian as." Kla(nsg'rg.«n settled

and struck but five Dodgers In a

heCardinals, 4 to 3.

Dodgers u Pirates 1 -Dodgers boat the PJratei t to 2

scoring three runs In the last Inning to

yp y p c . r i Apgarsacraflced him over to second and ScottNeville singled him home. The Creesdidn't score In the, sixth. The Crows'Steve Charney, Ken Curtis and Mike

lk ll by Mike

E^WATCLIMBER wlHJsftone of ten elernents of forthcoming "fun andfitness" traU-for. which fundingHBeglns with the Chronicle, Run June 3. This,unithelp? develop upper arm muscles. Registration forms for'the1 townwlde run w eavailable at The Chronicle bfffce and at the Community . Center. Threewill take place to benefit trail scheduled for Nomahegan Park.

A oneway seminar that willexplore the skills needed tolaunch a business venture,and the pitfalls to avoid will be

Jield at Union College Satur-day, MayJ9, from 9 a.m. to 4p.m.

The seminar, which is co-sponsored by the college,SCORE (Service Corps 'ofRetired Executives) and ACE.(Active Corps of Executives)of the Small BusinessAdministration, will focus onthe legal and. financial

... .problems, accounting and tax-needs, , advertising -afid

promotion skills involved In asuccessful business venture,according.to Dr. Frank Dee,dean of special services andcontinuing, education at theCollege.,,

nnini*^n!rwt=^h f ( ' f e !* i < ; o p l M -•«*-*>*—preposed-.r^C^: Ordinance are on file and available (or

M a t t s o n , public examination and 'acquisition Int h a t thft n n w m n n l h e o f < l c* of t t w Township Clerk.i n a i i n e "ew map BV 0 R D E R 0 F T H e M A y o B A N D

doesnt accurately reflect the MEMBERS OF THE TOWNSHIPneighborhoods. -D?teTTMayE3i iw

•• * F«ai"$13.M

TOWNSHIP OF CRANPORD , >UNION COUNTY, N.J. :

\ Notes (or Schedule 1a- 1st 5,000 square fe«t 01 lot area: 50 percent; 2nd 5,000 square feet o( lot area: M

per cent. Remainder over 10,000 square feet of lot area; 10 per cent.b • Maxjmum and minimum, figures.c- Minimum of 150'oil tone lot line. . . .d - Minimum of 200'II one side abuts zone lot line.e - Whichever Is' greater.( • Whlqhever Is less. • , —g - See Article V I , Section E, subsection 2, paragraph b (3) lor penthouse,

exceptions. ' ' .- '•h As Required by setback. :••*.' .I • At leastOO per cent of the first story area shall be used for parking. Foe each

additional story containing at least SO per cent parking, one additional story offloor space sh»(l>lt».lp«rmltted up to a maximum height of 65 feet pluspenthouse. . . . . . . . . _ .

I In the R'l Ihroujjh ^R-5 tones/ the minimum front yard setback shall bemaintained'except where a. prevailing setback has been established onImpr*v«dkil4 within 5o0lt»( the-sub|ed'lot .-••TH»pr«v8Hlna:WTt)iick''t hallgovern except that no front yard shall, be less than the minimum setbackbelowdrijeed be preater than the maximum set forth below: , *«•—

Zone y ' ' ' Minimum Maximum •R-1 .,• / . J J ' " • • • ' . • - « 'R 'V / : • 3 5 , ' • , • • • ' I 4 5R'3thVuR-5 • . 20 31oatedi May 31/IW ' .

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AREA, YARD * BUILDING'REO

MINIMUM SIZE OF_ LOTS

..interior Loft

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MINIMUM BEOUIREO YARDS

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Sld« Yard(on*)

1014 ol. width

HulldlHtf I D

SldoYsrd(bath)

10% of Width

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U'K of widthU'K of wid.)y win. (•

io'ojJlStnS«» Article VI, Mellon P lor i-«qulr8mont<»pplle«ble to B-l *on«

Yard'

M»v, FloorV Area Hatio

( P A N ) .

MAX. HEIOHT

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AcceiioryStructure

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Maximump«rcant—oitot.ln

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tram xfroMst.rltpht-dl-way that

minimum,lotaren

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Minimum- .distance

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Date ol Publlcatloh: May 31,

TT-.

168,88 -.BE'NOTBS''POU »CH|epULe'.V , Cis*,','

1 1 1 . Ch«y«t\nn 3The National Bank of New Jersey

Apaches exploded for 1» hlte In defeatingth* Horan Lumbar Cheyennes 21 to 5.Jack Zarlnsky and Chris OIBella shared

-advawced t» third on-Braiidon Owing*' Olanarien both at first as both saved third on 8ln.glt.TiaV Todd" Scott and Chrissingle, andscored the winning run when runs for each team. •• r * KomlnekBrian Dunlgan was hit by- a pitch withthe bates loaded. ' , • United Counties Trust

Pawnees 13. .Mohicans 7 ShawneesGray's Funeral Home Pawnees edged PlnaJJpuse'of Cranford

the pitching (or the Apaches, who won. closer to first plsce w i t h * 13 to 7 victory-IrSiuolstht,lr seventh strain"! gam*, while Dave -over the A.M.Brown Mphlcarts. Pllchlng "Pathmark of Cranford CreesBarbotarTommy Paooulatos-and Panny—(orth«-Pawrt«t» were Davltl-Nardstrom—Wlttle-JImm^MceB ----P»l#l«no-p««J>«iH«Mhe-<Ohevemw«; 8na-3DWptiXltfe?ld; The pawnees had a qhlcasaws

T V J H E Apache offense Was lead by totafof nine hits. The big1 bats were J.BrWllllamsComancti«et~Stephen Mlie|ew*kl with a single, David Hecht, home run and single, four Cranlord May Cees Crowsdouble, t f lp!t , -5RBIt and scored twice; RBIs. and James Plegarl. triple and Force Appliances LenepesJ»ck Zarlnsky, thre hits, two RBIs and three RBIs. Also hitting for the Pawnees Baron's Drugs Huront^.^a *-..„.•-..„•. ^ . .^ « . ^ . ^ . - were Joseph Utt«rlo1tWi>.singles, two

RBIs; Mark Fqlkart, double, two RBIs,;David Nordstrom, single, two rblj GaryUrbanskl, single; and Greg Meti,.slnole.

Pitching for the Mohicans (or the.entire oame was*Michael McGulre. ThMohicans' attack was led by Mich

W..

scored four runs; Keith.Slattefy, twohits, 5 RBIs and secored twice; ChrisDIBella, t h r u hits, scored once and had3 RBIs. Darren Geltsler had. a basesloaded triple, a single and scored onceand Paul Selvatorlello helped with twohits. 1 RBIs and scored three limes. JeffLamb hud the remaining two. hits and Brlgando, two singles, two RBlsj Gregscored three times while J immy " Ryan, on« single and two RBis; JohnMcHugh scored four times. Paul Nliolek '--•"— • —-• - - • • - - -•-•• •-• •scored the remaining Apache run andliad one run batted In.

Dave Barbosa had a home run, asingle, two WBIs and scored once whileTommy Paaoulatos had a triple, an RBI.and scored far the Cheyennes, MarePalmlerl had a hit, an RBI and scored arun and Oregolrt Merclar, a hit and oneRBI. Philip. Ka,n* had the remainingCheyenne hit,

National!% League

Cepezia, Larry Oolden and John Uehnereach had one RBI,

UnamiLeague

semlnolesu Ch*rokKs;Jim Donnelly pitched the Gibson

Chleataws 14 Hur«ni4A 13-run oOt-burst In the fourth, fueled

by 14 walks lifted Little Jimmy's Ices'win ovi

over the Union County VolkswagonCherokeet for his third win without adefeat. Hitting tor the semlnolet wereDonnelly, Hank Rlley, Larry Grant,Brian Perdek aqd Bob Plianowskl. ,

Matt lanello, one hit. and JimO'Donnell two, one a grand slam.homerun and « total of six RBli lad theChtrokeet,. • \ •'. . '-,, „

M«va|osto; etteyemtMeThe victor Dennis Realtor Navalbs,

exploded for 8 rt)n» In the top o( the sixth' ' to defeat the Horan Lumber

The CheyennVi were cMstlno alontfoht 2 l d t h h S I i ith t

The CheyennVi were c M n o a l o t f ha * to 2 lead through S Innings with rtiostor the scoring being done by Mike Kelley--

h d h d a RBI R

The Huront built a 4 to 1 lead In tho topof the- fourth innlng/wlth * tiilbl* (tornMlchaer~liasse, doubles by JohnB6rytieWskl and Robert Gall,-and atingle (rom Michael Mlttlar, HowWer,the Chlct dver cawe this margin with agrand.' slam home . run by ' RonaldSchfoedeV and a bases loaded triple byD a v e M f l n t i n l . r . v - ':•'.'•,' "••••' • ,•••••• • • ' •

Little Jimmy's Chics got strongPitching from John Newman and James-Woods to even their record at 3 and 3.Pitching tor the Hurons war* Jeff Smith,MI'cha«l'Mltt|er, Jeff,Bart ahd MichaelEati..,-;^--,,;-;,.;^;,;:;;,^,.;;^:',:- "-

5h»Wn»ef24 ; Cominchees 4

Plratel 1• Bonner Auto,Body pirates lumped off,

to a quick lead on Hits by Kris Wostra-and Steve Plschec In the first Inningagainst the Capital Savings Braves.The Braves pushed threo runs across Inthe second Inning on singles by TimNestor and Pat Galbralthi to tako thelead; Westra's home run with Fischeraboard lit the top of the third gavo thelead back, to the Pirates. The game wasknotted (our all going Into the bottom ofthe fifth when ihv Braves scored tlvotimes. The Pirates were able to scorethlree In the top.of the sixth.

Mike Bracuto and Pat Galbralth woreoh the mound-.for the. Braves whileWestra went the rout* for the Pirates,striking out seven.

• T|m Mentor, Had the big bat lor theBraves getting three hits while MikeBracutoahdKenyHelmstettereach hadtwo hits, to go along with Galbralth'stwo. Jo« Mayers, Ron Melao and ChrisMoors all chipped In with singles.

Fischer .and Westra (inch had three-tmtr*9T*1ti»*prra)esT John Wyclsksladoubled, Rich Bornstebt and Rich Orslnlsingles, '• : ,•'• : Dodgorn Phillies0 .

KohlorM'aoBean Dodgers shut out theRobblns and Allison Phillies 8 to o behindthe combined hurling ol Keith Ehman,who pitched the (Irst five Innlnfis, andChris:KomtnWt.Bhman struck oonilgW

Tho Pirates got single runs In tholourth and fifth Innings as Kris Westra

2 was sate on an orror and scored on JohnWyclskala's long slnglo to right field.

2. Pele Noon led off the fifth with a slnglo2 scorlno on Rich Bornsteln's single The-"DOdgersircoWa i In thd W ol'tho sixth3 l?n four straight hlt» nnri J\ hmnuJnjmnri-*• .walk to break opon tho game. Scott,4 singled; Ehman, doubled, Komlnek,* singles and E J Ryan doubled. Evan5 Marcus Walkod and after Klelnsorgon

struck out tho next 2 batters, he walkodTom Ford to force In the final run.

Giants6 Phillies]Howard Meltier was on the mound for

the Klwanls Club Giants (or theflrsltlmoand allowed only one run In the 3 Inningshe workod and struck out three. JohnKalamaras shared tho mound lor theGiants and he held the Phillies to 1 runs.Kalamaras, Moltier and John Kllmokall doubled and John Swandrak and KenBunlowskl hit singles.

Jolf Doherty and Ken French woro ontho mound for lhe Phillies and combinedto strike out six Giants. Hitting lor thoPhllllosworo Kovln Duffy, Dan Sololckland Rich Hen.

Cubsli Braves 5. In another game that was mado up duoto rain tho previous Wook, Tho CranfordPollcomen's Wives Cubs' dofoatod thoCapital-Savings Bravos 8 to 5.

W LKohlor MacBoon Dodgers tl 0.Cranford Elks Rods & 3Cranford Policemen's WivesCubsCapital Savings DravosBonner Auto Body PiratesKlwanls Club GiantsBetty Ann Bakery CardinalsRobblns8, Allison Phillies.

Who had a home run apd 2 RBIs, Ryan Reggie Brown;,siartlrtg hit secondGaryey.whq wiss I Mr I and. alto had S dame; was supported by » »5-1»lf attackRBI»i andT tBiTi PSgoitatos who had a •:that .scored 24, runs. Th» Ehswnees , , T V , - ••7•-.•n- - r w••--,-•-•-,-M slnale. OthVlmporfant hits for the «tjifted off in the (Irst Inning tcorlhg ••"<* wniked three,while Komlnek strucktheyenmis' were' delivered by Cralg'~Wiht runson tour.hltt, two triplet and a . out the. slo> n h tone Inning, -pMoceno, Dave -Bafbosa, and .Marc double, a single arid i walk»j They.also . .-).•('. Doherty started for the Phllilos.

, P a l m l e r l . •' . . ' • • . ' . ';•' ','• • • ' ' - - •

CougarLeague

' A single by Shawn McKlnney, a doubleby S*tn WarhaftlO. and a tingle, by

The Navalosl!ad baie» loaded»hd two RBIs;- Louis Tami, two'doubtes,outsWh«"JohniStl«SrwSt)?th?55-«B| «BI»; ;Mlk» S«SK«yhW<l,^n9l«,double to bring th*Nava|os within t run •*BJ/-' •PiJP.ob-^ l}^?*f>''' h t!*n* r£ 'f'R1''«• th* Cheytnneti A walk, arid an Infield ,«lhgl*, i R.BU. Ralph**rpa had J walks,»IWilebyJohnNiiand lwhowa»afor3iSr| « * M i « Brown, allowed 5; runs on /six• • ' • • -•• - • " • — •••' • - • • • • • W a l k s a n d a n *nt«r\ I n t h * t h l r , d , I n n i n g .

He pitched lour1-Innings striking out 11while walking 13 and hitting on* batterfor. Hie>day. -SeqaqcpWched the last two,t t l k l t f u r and Walki th i hi

. scored 3 In. the tecond, 4 In th* third, 5 In ,:flivl"t>- w*y_lo-Kontty Fronch^ In theth» filth, and a In the^slkth. .Hit* were by ,'ourth Inning. Jeff andKenpyoach struckBob Jones, double, Jjhgle, one RBI; out (our Dodoers but were hurt byCleaver Romson, tingles triple) Reggie l«Plno elpht walks. TheDodgors onlyBrown, two triples, W ROIs;, Junior hatftlx hlfs.fhrls Komlnek trying two,

•»-d<M*l*r«»¥^PT ^^ Toctd Scolt a double with two.men onand Keith pitman with a home run with

Bearcats I Lynx 2r The Bearcats stopped the 'Knights of

Columbus Lynx 3 to 2. Joe Bush and. Chris' Sarposkl pitched six exciting- Innings which ended In a 2 to 3 tic. Notuntil the eighth Inning"wasWIio g imedocldod when tho Bearcats' JerryCaprlo doubled, Michael Crlncollwalkod, and Joe Bush singled to end thogame Bush gave up throe hits anal

Even when the only datesyou had came out of a history book,

she made it seem like ran..... /Call her up tonight.

the day, loaded th* bates again. J imleO'RIelly, also 3 for 3, smacked another

- three RBI double giving the Nayaloi the"' lead for good. Jack DurnlaK, pitching t h *

entire, game, striking out, )3 battersalong th* way, set the cheyehnei down InoW#r In th* bottom of,,.tho sKttt to

K * ' t h * victory,

? * * p Tand struck out 11. Hits for the Boarcots

and Keit Ehino with e ru camo from Crlncol|, a double; Bush, twoScolt /aboard The Phillies big .gun-Was-i^-slnges; Shoun Legers, a double; Casper 'Ke|iny French with two doubles and a ' Reeves Jr., a slnglo and Jorry Cnpllo a»lnole..'Rltli,Her« had » double. end.Mlke ,- double. Lynx hitters wore Tony Trolsl, s.Schneider had a single. • ' • single .•''nd John Muj-phy, a single und n

Phillies.* Redi 2 ' doubiu. ,Kevln-Dully pitched t t '

or Hieday SqaqpWced he ast two,.ttrlklnp out four and Walking thwie in hisfirst mound aptNtaranc*. pitching (orthe<;omanch«e,s was Bgt«h'Holland strikingout 12 men. HlttlAa for the Comanchtes

1 > • ..^ ,M ^ f l l^ . . I . I I L . . * l s l i . . l l . . . . • . . k i . . l ft I , J V 1 lm l" "ITfc'Jl .'^"

_ r . , , r a .strong twohltt«c,' atrlklnq • out SIH J O . lead theRobblns and Allison Phillies to. their first •win of the year over (Me cranfqrd Elks

CiarcatsBlue Division

*'

' ; I

' • " " • ' ' " ' ' ' * ' ' * "

i l . 1'. ., ' , _ t . ,. .' ' r f ' . :. v; .;:;;:,:.::igx—-r^'.:i,;.,;:..::;;;:,.; ,S^i^^^ Wi$i^:Mj::^M&M-*-••;-

the Nava|o* lumped out to a quick 4 'runliad. In th* top of th* first/when. e a r s a c k C a k «o«k»d aBry«nCaStllmor»walH*d,'Wenlto»hlrt,'hdml» run. In th» first Ihnlrio with twoon John Stiff's double, with both scarlnfl w«n pn ti^ii, LMnardo Sas«O/trlpled In

', '"••'• • • : • • i ' • / • • : - l ' ' ' v > : " ^ ^ ' " ^ v ! 7 ; ; i - ' ' ; : ' i ' i ' v ' ' i ^ ' - v ' \ " ' : ' i ; : ' • • • ' : - ' - ^ J : t '"••

. Tr,_. . . the WBund as well as theLenape's hitting wa» Jack Clnrkln andLeonardo Sas«o..J«ck Clarkln socktid »:.> . ' J i . \ ' a ' u i . l i , . • m ' > . • . '

T h r Phillies broke a 3 to 3 tie with '4Mti'tn the filth InnlnPito win,It. Mlku

Schneldec led the attack for The PhlllieVwith throe hits, including .'two doubles.Rich Harf, Jeff Dohorty and Ken-French1 eplece.,Als»hlt<l"B for the

re Jonjth»n...Aj'mus arids r r y i - g r B n y . ; ' ' ' . ' ' ( \

. Alan Sllberand-Dsn Sochovlc. sharedlhe molnd duties tor the Reds, strikingout «. 'Hlttlpg lor the Reds Were RobBrunton and.'Alan Sllbor. Both .toarns

' Piiman , JPanthersLeopardsJaguars ..., . .

Gold d i v i s i o n

You don't have fb wairuntil the next reunion'to ..get together"with your

- -friends-from scrhool, - ^Because they 'nfright

at your fingertips, Whenyou phone>

\biu:anspend five—^minutes chatting with an ,t/i• old classmate in St. Louis, . "'Mo., Santii Fe, N.M.\ V'Hl, Kim - I mean, Professor!

or San Francisco, Gal.,for no mojethan $1.33 plustax, after 5 RM. weekdaysancTSuhday*

And it's even less•frc^rmRM. to 8 A.M.everyday. Or all day Satur-day. And Sunday till 5JBJML-

Reach out and touch:""someuijife. By phene. It'llmake you both f l d

•: Lynx ' ' . " ' .Bobcats .

•Wi ldcats • .

• L i o n s ••'•-.Wolverines . ^

Reach out and touch someone•M.iximum i.ni' lur ,iexcept Al.i*Li.Mid'H.iiwuM-

urvr,it»> .iv.iM.imT, \\< on\

t!C-.. .1

T 1

4.

Page 8:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

i ; i'

Page 14 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, May 31,1979

Graskewitz-DeAngelo VIA Makes GontriBiitiaii«and Mrs.. Edward F~

Graskewitz of 355 S. UnionAve, announce the mgagtv

Tina^aez, Mr. Pugh Wed

Mr. and Mrs! K. Pugh

BOOK SALEThe Clark Public Library

will hold its annual book saleon the grounds of the librarythe week of June -f through 8.In case of rain, the sale will bein the library meeting room.All hardcover books.will be 10cents and magazines andpaperbacks are 5 cents.

Tina Paez, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Chariee- Paez ofCranford, was married toKenneth Pugh, son of Mr. andMrs. Samuel Pugh of Clark,April 21 in St. Michael Church.Rev. John Oates officiated. Areception followed at BigStash s, Linden.

Escorted by her father, thebride had Mary RoseBollwage as maid of honor.John Carno served as best

Miss GattoBetrothed t<6>John Gonvery

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gatto of7 Ramsgate Rd., announce theengagement of their daughter,Janet, to John Convery, son ofMr. and Mrs. ThomasConvery.1 of 165 West LakeAvenue, Rahway.

Miss- GattOr is a 1976graduate of Trenton StateCollege and is employed in theaccounting department atYara Engineering Cor-poration in Elizabeth. Mr.Convery is a 1976 graduate ofRutgers College in NewBrunswick and a May, 1979graduate of Rutgers!School of,Law in Camden.

A 1980 wedding is planned.

man. Ushers were CharlesPaez Jr. and Michael Paez.

Mrs. Pugh is a graduate ofCranford High iSchooIr She isemployed by the RockbestosCompany as a clerk typist.Mr. Pugh is a graduate ofArthur L. Johnson RegionalHigh School. He is employedby the Walter Kidde. Companyas a fire extinguisherspecialist. __

mentrof tbpirdaughterrCaW)!Anne, to John ThomasDeAngelo, son of Mr. and Mrs.Joeph DeAngelo of 10 Hazel St.

Miss Graskewitz and Mr.DeAngelo are both graduatesof Cranford High School andUnion County TechnicalInstitute. Sfiels employed byDr. I.J. Post in Millburn as adental hygienist. Her fiance isemployed at his parents' SubStop Delicatessen in Rosellewhile seeking employment asa dental laboratory tech-nician.

The couple will be marriedin 1980. Carol Graskewitz

Rosarians Plan

.-The —eranford— Village, First Aid Squad; $200rFISH National—Association;- forImprovement Association at of Cranford; $200? Jaws of Patients on iHemodialysisi t l t f g t d t ^contribute $1,375 to the Birthday Memorial Tree- Women Wood drive refresbrfollowjng charities: $300, Cranford ' /Hor t icu l tu ra l ments; $50; CerebfarPstey~o?•Cwmiopd, F a m i l y — G a w s — S o e k t j ^ M ^ ^ F A V ^ u w i i ^ ^Association;* $200, Cranford and scholarship projects; $75, Institute; and $20, an evening

" o f cards for patients at LyonsHospital.

Mrs. James Stine waspresented - with . a pastpresident's pin and a gift fromthe member^ 6f the board inappreciation for her two yearsservice.

Mrs. Jdhn MacWhirterreceived a first prize for atinsel painting tray at theNJSFWC convention atPlayboy Resort. MrsJ._iJJberLFresolone. received a secondprize and' honorable mention

; for flower arrangements.

AJMiisicaljo July 3i s»ttuma ware from j . Z ' rnaay. 7:30, » :JJ p .m , , Saturday and' V ' "•

%&tiyndz££ >?HFJj

p.m., throuoh Julv.li pit firing pottery-w«r((»hop,-1tHtiira»V and Sunday, los.m.

lo J a.m.. m « i « '

'>0

To Benefit AFSMrs. William Finnegan III,Mrs. Henry Dreyer1, Mrs. J.J.Cullinen, Mrs. TheodoreZebrowski, Mrs. Meyer, andMrs. Kenneth Kaiser. -'

In case of rain, the eventwill be held Sunday at thesame time and place.

Janet Gatto

I t

at.

Where fine cuisine ... a tradition over the years ... is served inthe casual elegance ot today! . . .

Come in for Cocktails, Lunch or Dinner to enjoy tender agedsteaks, the freshest of seafood or socially selectiM nature yealall served with farrh-fre^h vegetables and crisp%aladfei gracedwith Raymond's own dressings. Fine wines. A great place tobring the young adults home-from'school!

Lunch: from 11:30Dinner: from 5p.m. to 9:30p.m.

Friday and Saturday 'til 10:30p.m.Family Sunday Dinner J 3 p.m. to 9:p.m.

109 North Ave. W., cw. central A v.. Westfield • 233-5150, Major CreditCarda Accepted

St. Michael Church RosarySociety will conclude theseason with a hospitality hourand dinner Monday at 6:30p.m. in the school cafeteria.Tickets are available fromMrs, Florence McCloskey orMrs. Dolores Freslone.

Mrs. Elaine Callaghan,chairman of the nominating

alnut PTAInstalls Slate

Walnut Avenue School heldits annual spring concert May23 and the new PTA slate ofofficers was installed by Mrs.Elizabeth Duffy, •• a fornjerteacher.

The officers are: -president,Margaret Bracuto; first vicepresident, Joann Nazarro;second vice president, LindaEberling; third ' vicepresident, Joseph V. Gallucci;recording .secretary,- JuneG a l l ; c o r r e s p o n d i n gsecretary, Barbara Pen-schow; treasurer, EleanorNovy.

The chorus, directed byCarolann Aspray, and theband, directed by DennisConnelly, performed. Astudent art show wasdisplayed by ' FlorenceSperling.

Walnut's bicycle rodeo istoday with rain datetomorrow.

The PTA will be celebrating"Children's Day" June 8and the children will be givena small treat from the PTA.

committee, announced Mrs.Freslone will serve a secondterm as president, Mrs. GloriaHoeffler, first vice president;Mrs. Agnes Novotny, secondvice president; Mrs. MarieGallagher, treasurer;. Mrs.Catherine Schultz, recordingsecretary; and Mrs. AuroraRakowiecki, correspondingsecretary. -»

Installation of officers willfollow the dinner. .Othermembers of the nominatingcommittee were Mrs.Catherine Sizer, Mrs. MaryEllen Keenan and Mrs.Eleanor Sherrier.

A magic show will bepresented.

Club MemberHonored ByNJ Federation

At the 85th annual con-vention of the New JerseyState Federation of Women'sClubs, Colony Club memberswere present at the tribute toMrs. Richard Mauter who wasplaced on the state honor roll.

Mrs. Mauter has been aColony Club member for 15years and has held manyoffices and served" onnumerous committees.' Thetribute read by club presidentMrs. Fyfe Dollar detailed the'club's recognition of Mrs.Mauter's outstanding con-tribution to the club, com-munity and federation.

A bouquet; of ted roses wasresentedvt^i/Its; Mauter4^

The Cranford Chapter of theAmericari Field Service willsponsor a benefit champagnelawn party Saturday from. 8 to8 p.m. in the garden of theWilliam ti. Meyer home at 313N. Union Ave.

The public is invited. Anadmission donation of $4 perperson will be requested.Guests will enjoy hot and coldhors d'oeijvres, champagne, xt

^rJ-puh'chr'lWusic^vlJjrbe^saie wiU begin tomorrow atsupplied. , ^ „ the 110 Walnut Ave. thrift shop

The party is beihg held for - -the benefit of the AFS scholar-ship fund which supports thehigh school student exchangeprogram.'

Tickets may be obtainedfrommembers of.the planning

Jumble Store Starts Sale

all mer-upstairs

The Jumble Store is ownedby the Junior League ofElizabeth-Plainfleld and isstaffed by League membersand by community volunteers,

committee: Mrs. GeorgeGrove, Mrs. Clarence Quain,

Club Plants

At Park 1The Spadenhoe Garden Club

recently planted geraniumsand .dogwood trees atMemorial Park. Three of thetrees were contributed by theclub and another was donatedby Ronald Choinacki of 501.Central Avenue.

At a recent meeting at thehome of Mrs. Mary Krowicki,the following officers wereinstalled: Mrs. Anne M.Santulli, president, suc-ceeding Mrs.. GertrudeKurisdo; Mrs. Eleanor Leone,vice" president; Mrs. ConnieCutonello, secretary; Mrs.Emily DeCillis, correspondingsecretary; and Mrs. MargaretSmith, treasurer.

The club completed plansfor the annual June lawn partyat the home of Mr. and Mrs.Edward Ostrove of 106WilshireDr.

and half price onchandise in theconsignment shop.

The store will close for the many of whom have given twosummer at 4 p.m. Wednesday, to four hours each week for 10June6 and must be cleared of to 25 years. Mrs. Lynnall merchandise (children's, Tweedle; store chairman, will

host a coffee for all

MR. AND MRS. ROBERTROYLE of Cranford areaboard the S. S. Rotterdamof Holland AmericaCruises op a cruise , to

STAGE MANAGER v

Sandra Goodman, of 614Riversfde Dr., was stagemanager of ''Exit theKirig," a prodtfetion of the

-NewarkrA^ademy-FinenrtrtsDepartment. She is a studentat the academy, the Ionescoplay was presented recently atKBS Cafe Theatre in EnniOrange. ".'

League Playst

At RutgersThe Junior League of

men's, and women's clothing! host a coffee for all storehousewares, linens) to allow volunteers ThutsdayrJune 7the volunteer staff to "spruce, at 10 a.m. at her home inup" the store, interior andWestfiefd.completely restock for next ~The profits from the thrift

and consignment shops areshared by the Communityt r u s t lFund;~pf the TJunWrlLeague and by CranfordFamily Care for worthwhileprojects in Cranford andthroughout Union. County.

_ Ariyone. interested in volun-c h i l d r e n , g f e e r i n g for two hours service

theatre production of "Sir Slob£nd the Princess" at 'Expo79', a nieeting held-at RutgersUniversity May 18 sponsoredby the state Department bfEducation and the Center forInfancy and Early Childhoodat Rutgers University.

"Sir Slob and the Princess"was directed by Ed Robinsonof TCranford. Cast membersincluded Mrs. Richard Salwayand Mrs. William Gabel ofCranford. Assistant chairmanof children's theatre is Mrs.Donald Smith of Cranford.

per week should contact Mrs.Joanne McDonough, 272-5712.

FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYSNOW THRU JUNE 9

AT 8:40..SUNDAY, JUNe-iAT-730.

- /••s«rv« llcket* by phon«

BOXOPfMCg 276-7811

CRANFORD, N.J.

CHS Singers

Club Cited for Entertain PTA

Flower ShowMrs. Roman Popiel, currentphilanthropic chairman and

^mmedtate •past'presidentr & "

Epsilon Sigma Omicron-awards were presented at theannual luncheon of theWednesday Morning Clubrecently at the Chanticler,Millburn.

11 This reading sororitypresented a Second Centuryaward to Mrs. H.E. Young forreading and reviewing 200books; Mrs. Young is the firstpersofriirthe state to receive"this award. Mrs. J.J. Welshreceived membership into thesociety! for reading andreviewing-20rbooks. "

—Mrs. A.R.'Mirantejeceived-third place state award for herbook review of "Natural

Lodge GoingTo The Races

Amaranth Lodge willsponsor a bus trip toMeadowlands RacewayThursday, JUne 21.

The bus will leave from theMjksojm; Temple, South

/AlenueSltt'Thomas^Street, a t -6\jbp.m.The $10cost includestherous and a reserved seat inthe clubhouser. Call S. Wallace,

A certificate with gold sealwas presented1 to The GreenThumb Garden Club by theGjrjeal£ubj)f,,taits 54th annual meeting May 23 pieces culminating with a

Hotel,-- edley from "Sound of.

Lincoln School. PTA spon-sored an evening of food andentertainment May 24.• The Madrigal • Singers ofCranford High School, underthe direction of Scott

YTHINGrGOBS

Price!On Consignment items

JUNE5&6ONLY$1 Bag DayOn Thrift Items -June 1-6

THE JUMBLE STORE110 Walnut Ave. Cranford

Tues.-Frl.to-4 Thurs.7-9

at the MarriottSomerset.

It was awarded, for theclub's flower show, "...andthen came Springl", whichwas in May, 1978. Mrs.Herbert Hasmip, chairmanand Mrs. James K'JMeyer, co-chairman,meeting.

attended- the

Bike RodeoAt Lincoln

Music,1' '• for which theyreceived a standing ovation.

Newest Board of Education:member Charles McCartyattended. Mary Ann. Fiorellowas in charge of arrange-ments.

ARTCLASSfcSThe Summit Art Center is

offering a summer schedule oLrctosW"atfd"^6rlcs¥6p8; Tor7

children and adults. Call 273-9121 for a brochure.

tioris.

Templci School

—Lincoln- Bchool-PTA-sponr-sored4ts-aHB«fll bicycle safety-rodeo for its fourth and fifthgraders1 on May 17.

TLEATWATtKET ' -'Greater Westfield

at unbeatable prices.

A beat beyonsLuJjl. technology...(re-value: The new Pulsar QuartzCollection. Offering true quartzaccuracy and dependability. In an •array of styles to meet.every life-style. Ultra-slim dress, sports,contemporary digitals, day/datecalendars. For men and women.See them...face to face...at MartinJewelers.

Digital Alarm...$85.Slim Analog Dr.ess...$95.

Black Dial Day/Date...$85.Slim Analog Dress...$85.

Elegant Contemporary...$100.

m•* r'n!.

yGilbert White. Has Open House

$1 JII.I.»KIITS SI

mm T it*

lit IM

Rabbit

$1 I1I.I.SKHTS $1

The Temple Nursery Schoolwill hold an open house June 4and June 5 and is invitingprospective registrants andtheir parents, It is located atTemple Beth-El at 338 WalnutAvenuer- '

sion—of— the—non-

y t f DariaBrown arranged for- Officer•Too WltknwHlfl, nf the- Crnn-

~ford police force, to set up an

Chapter of Women's_Amejrican ORT will apnnanr nflea market Sunday at theSouth Avenue railroad station

-paipfciflg-teHn-WestfieldHrom-

INTHK2SU> CXNTtMV"

sectarian school is conductedby two state , certifiedteachers. The school isequipped with a gym, piano,art corner, puppet theatre,carpentry corner, and otherlearning centers. For moreinformation about the openhouse, call 276-9231.

obstacle course on which'thechildren could test theirbicycle control. He wasassisted by physical education-instructor Robert Sadowskl.All who passed were givensafe bicycle driver cards.

Assisting were Nan Dibella,Betty Ewing, Mary AnnFiorlllo, Mary Hull, RopeMacNamara, Anna MayMcKay, Ann Ugone, an*.—Linda Wa)aszek_.

TMe Board of Education meeli thethird Tueiday ot each month at boardroom at Lincoln School at e p.m. ,

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rain date isJune 10.

RICHARD SHEINBLATT, P.P.S,,P.A.

•General Dentistry

• Orthodontics•Periodontics .. - -•Endbdontics•Reconstructive Dentistry

.1 Inhalation ISedatibn ._(Nitrous Oxide)

•Intravenous Analgesia

- Hours-By Appointment -

221Ghe$tnut Stteet

245-1615

at

CJIARMING TUDOR

On Cranford's north side, this large, well manicured home'Isunusuallynlce-bothtolookatandtollveio. . <

A 14' square entrance hall, 22.6x.l36 living room with chestnut fiFTm,cove molding, attractive fireplace with pretty closets on each side, a

-T5.4^-l4.6-idl.nlrtg'-room- wHh chestnut^rlrn~a.nd "cover moldlrtgr" a"panelled and beamed celling 18x15 den, a cheerful kitchen with goodeating space and,ajjow^er room-all on the first. :.!'. .• . V

Three bedrooms, 2.tiled baths on the second arid a laroe; panelleddormitory room on the third. -

A lot of wall to wall carpeting, large finished rec room In the base-ment - many, many extras. — —

May we show IJto you?' '

BANPOLPH-wi£€3MAiN GO.••• : ; Multiple Listing Members. ' .. .

153 232-6609

WITH OCtiASIONS YOU'LL CHERISHFOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE

GRADUATION

WEDDINGSREMEMBER THE HOLIDAYS AGAIN AND AGAIN

IN COLORFUL EXTRA PRINTS . . .USE THESE COUPONS TO SAVE EVEN MORE

~— OFF OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES ..

2 IFWTHE <4PRICE OF •

• Madtf from sanib color-neo- ,'Ont single order per .coupon, . •

FOR

One glnglo order par coupon.'1

Wit&$MG:'• \£rir~?r

UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE:PHOTO PLAZA WILL BUY BACK ANVOPVOUfl PRINTS IP YOU ARECilSISAriSFWFOR ANY REASON,

24 HR. SERVICE^MpSTCOLOR, PRINT ROLLS

d C i |' . • . . • - , ' • « • • . ' .

' , - . i . - - ' . •• '• . / . v - . ' ; : . - ; ' : ' . • • • • ; • • • . ; • • . ' • , ( ! , • • > • : ' . • • : ' • • ; • / • • - • ' - ^ r ' • ' . . ' : . • ' • • : : • ; ' ; ' , ' • < ; r . . ' : >

\h,l

w«rk»hop,itHtOl7nSVto 5 p.m., J73;»1JI.

MUIIC.W*ttrl6e Village, Stohhop*, M»xln«

Sullivan with 1h« Ed Polcer'* Jau Band,Sunday, 3 p.m., it.to adults, «5Ochildren.

THEATRE - i r -crahlord Dramatic Club, '8 Wlnana

Ave., "company," to June », FCldaysand Saturday!, 8:io p.m.; Sunday, 7:30p.m., 27* M i l . t

Edlten Valley Playheuie, "Vanities,"through June 10, Fridays and Saturdays,950 p .mj Sundays, 7:30 p.m., 754-4488.

New Jersey Public Theatre, 118 SouthAve. E., "Side by Side by Sondhelm," toJune 1«, Thursday and Friday, 8:30p rrv; Saturday! 10 p.m./ Sunday, 7:30p.m.i "Miss Margarlda's W a y , "Ssturday, 7 p.m., 351S033 or 37J-5704.

N iw^ ie rny Theatre Forum, 233 E.Front St.. Plalnfleld, "Side by Side bySondhelm," Thursday to Saturday, 8p.m.; Sunday, 3 p.m., 757-58D8.

Paper Mill Playhouse, Millburn, "TheStudent Prince," to July 1, 374-4343. i.

MOVIBSCrantord Twin 1, "The Champ,"

weekdays, 7:15, *:35 p.m.; Saturday andSunday* J:1S,. 4.i40J_Z;05,- S:M p.m.;tw i in rTonToht only, "Beyond" thePoseidon Adventure," 7:30, 9:45 p.m.;

A 1 W S ! ? J T * 1 1 ' '• I'?**""1 •he Poseidon* * • ; weekdays, 7, 9:15 p.m.,

I'M *'?« i i;»:*P.m.; .Sunday, J:lo,4:30, 6:V, B-.io p.rri.j Twin a, "Chinssyndrome," weekday*, 7:15, 9:35 p.m ;

o.li P ' m - ; S u n d»V. 3. 4:35, 6-.SS,

By TOM HAYDON"Company/ 1 Stephen

-^IndheiinVHiHtisieaf-teok-^atr

Lost Picture Show. Union, "Dawn ofthe Dead," weekdays, 7:15, 9:30 p.m./Saturday, 5, 7;M, 9:45 p.m.j Sunday,2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 p.m. ,

Maplewood Theater, "ChinaSyndrome," weekdays, 7/ 9:15 p.m.;Saturday, J:30, 4:50, 7 7:W), »:30 p.m.;Sunday, 2:15, 4:40, 7, 9:10 p.m.old Rahway, "Sunnyslde," Friday, 7:30,9:30 p.m,; Saturday, 1:45, 3:45, 5:45,7:45, 9:45 p.m.; Sunday, 2, 3:50, 5:40,7:30,9:20 p.m. weekdays, 7:15, 9:05 p.m.

Park Theatre, Roselle Park,"Heroes," weekdays, 7:30 p.m.;Saturday, J, 5:15, 8:35 p.m.; Sunday.3:55, 7:30 p.m.; ''Buck Rogers,"

-weekdays, 9:20 p.m.; Saturday, 3:50,7:05, 10:35p.m.; Sunday, J:J5, 5:45, 9:30p.m. . ' . . "i

Strand Theater, Summit, "Get OutYour Handkerchiefs/' weekdays.,startlntr Friday,~T:J5. ' : ' S p .m. ;Saturday, 4, 5:30, 7:45, 9:45 p.m.;Sunday, 4, 5:50, 7:45,9:45 p.m.

Pianists Win AwardsSeven piano students of

Dawn Adams won awardsMay 20 in the Music Educators

lion's annual auditionsCollege.

•_bf1 of

107 Hampton Rd., received asuperior rating of 95.

•The following earnedratings of excellent, which isfrom 90 to &3: Linda Bunting,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. AlexBunting of 10 Retford Ave.;Meredith Hallahan, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Hallahan of 24Madison Ave.; JenniferMcCord, daughter of Mr. andMrs. Peter McCord of '4

Exercise JazzClass on Tap

The Cranford- Recreationand Parks Department willoffer evening classes foradults in exercise jaiz at theCommunity Center startingtomorrow. A second class willbegin Tuesday, June 12.

Each session will run eightweeks from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Thefee is $30. The course isdesigned to obtain- bodytonality through dance.

Bob Selig, instructor, hasstudied ballet, jazz, tap andmime at H.B. studios in NewYork, and privately (through-out New Jersey. He has ap j

peared in numerous musicals,most recently in the nationaltouring company of "God-

Berkeley PI.; and ChareseThompson of Linden.

Robert Espuga, son of Mr.and Mrs. Anthony Espuga of.25 Locust Dr., received a verygood rating of 88. He also wona three-year gold pin for

. maintaining an average of 90for the past three years.Melissa 'McCord, daughter ofMr. and Mrs, Peter McCord of4 Berkeley PI., also received arating of very good.

These students will performat a recital at Trinity ChurchJune-7 at 6:30 p.m.

18 ResidentsAid Hospital

Samuel Marino is not theonly Cranford resident toserve.Rahway Hospital as avolunteer. He has logged 8,300hours over the past ten yearsiby the end of 1978 (see page 1story). But 17 other <$localresidents were alsorecognized at ceremonies at

several talented performerswhose abilities are well usedthrough "the numerous solos.

One strong performance, forexample, is given by Bob Pellsin the role of Harry. Pellsleads in the song "Sorry-Grateful" which tells of ahusband's feelings of beingtrapped in a marriage yetsimultaneously fearing to bewithout his mate.

Sondheim has used thesemostly unconnected butflowing scenes to describe thefeelings, fears and insecuri-ties of husbands, wives', loversand strangers in the rushingworld of New York City. Thesong about strangers, entitled"Another Hundred People."sung by Moira O'Brien in therole of Marta, shows thecasual way in which peoplemeet and form relationships.

The song "Getting MarriedToday," led by Janice Lynn inthe role of Amy, explores thefears of a young womandeeply in love, but afraid toaccept the commitment ofmarriage..

The show climaxes withDiGiovine realizing one needsthe joys and pain of marriage

. ~ as he sings "Being Alive."$25.The first class will be n H . v

devoted to-materials and p a l l e t JLeSSOllSmethods. The course isdesigned with an in- c . P A l ldividualjzed approach so that S e t ICTT Adl i l tSeach student can progress

marriage through the eyes ofa bachelor and _his marriedfriends, which opened Fridayin Cranford. is another in along line of successfulproductions by the CranfordDramatic Cliib. /

The play is a series of scenesdealing with the problemsfaced by people bored withyears of marriage and theloneliness of being middleaged and not married.

Ron DIGiofyine carries theshow through the changingscenes as the 35-year-oldbachelor who has as friendsseveral middle-aged marriedcouples.

He is joined in the show by

Town OffersArt ClassesThe Cranford Recreation

and Parks Department willoffer art classes in sketchingand oil painting starting June11. The classes, for adults, willmeet Monday evenings once aweek from 7:30 to 9 p.m. The

our Masons to BeSnored for SS^T^T!^1?.

Thursday, May 31.1979 CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE P a g e . §

Roselle Catholic

Barbara Kraiise

Resident

To Solo

Jge-iaftHMrnWvlrwill honor four members fortheir long service to Masonryat a dinner Monday at 6:30p.m. at the lodge building atSouth Avenue and ThomasStreet. A meeting will follow at7:30 p.m.

Those to be honored are:Harvey. H. Myers of 509Lincoln Park E. and'WilliamJ. Fredrick of Bricktown, bothfor 60 years service, andWalter. E. Ousterman ofWestfield and Bernard " H.Dreifoos of Roselle Park willbe cited for 50 years.

Myers will receive his 60-year wreath. He is a past

Dreifoos, former mayor ofRoselle Park from 1945 to 1952,is a retired public accountantand was a founding member ofthe Amateur Astronomerslocated at Union College.

Edgar N. Peppier, grandmaster of. Masons of New•Jersey, will visit the lodge forthe special event. For moreinformation call 276-7059. •

Receive

The following Cna&tord, stiidents-are-among—the—142—|

senior graduating fromRoselle Catholic High SchoolSaturday at 10 a m RoccoDelia Serra, William J. Fit-zula, William D. Gargano,Benjamin J. Hickey, JamesW. McNamara III, Keith EMcNevins, Neil Shuttner, andLawrence L. Watson.

and.

SlipcoversCRANFORD '

KNITTING & FABRIC"17 NORTH AVE., W. CR.

276-5505

Six Cranford residents areamong 17 Union Colleeestudents ^ who receivedacademic i #£

student can progressaccording to his or her ability.

Jeff Van De Mark, a localartist, will instruct. Agraduate of Newark. School ofFine and Industrial Arts, heworks" from a studio in hishome.. To register or for furtherinformation .contact therecreation department, 276-8900, weekdays.

Mrs. Blanche Isinger, Mrs.Virginia Yuill, Mrs. EleanorGladis and Mrs. FlorenceWahner have all put in 1,000 ormore hours. The other

For further informationoregistercontacrBSbTSeligT

276-5792, or the Recreation andParks Dept, 276-8900 week-days.

WANT TOGETAWAY

FROM IT ALL?

Well helpyou.

112 NORTH AVE., W.CRANFORD

Opp. Rustic Mill DinerByrton Goodman

2764099

Has ExhibitThe New Dawn Arts Collec-

tive and Community Gallery,both of Elizabeth, announcean exhibition of photographsby Theo Robinson to bedisplayed at the Continental

• Copper and Steel Corporation,12 Commerce Drive, Cran-ford, from June 4 to 29.

Robinson, a Garwoodresident, uses black and whitephotography to record every-daylife in New Jersey rangingfrom small town residents andstorefronts to seasonal evolu-tion of a particular tree in thegreat swamp in Chatham.

- -A-nr—J-Tnrt gSfhTbTtionT"Breaking out" by GraceBishko, will run June 1 to 22, at

J a n o v s i k T r e a t e d the New D a w n Gallery, 1140-. . . E. Jersey St., Elizabeth.

Iii P T A Magazine ^OSTOMY ASSOCIATIONe The United Ostomy

Association meets Tuesday atthe Schering-Plough Corp.,Kenilworth at 8 p.m. Ray Wolfof United Surgical will speak.Refreshments wlll.be served.

The Cranford Recreationand Parks Department willoffer lessons for adults inclassical ballet at the Com-munity Center Wednesdayevenings from 7:30 to 8:30p.m. The class will start June13 and run for 10 weeks. Thecost is $25.

Instructor Diane Morrisstudied 10 years at theAmerican School of Balletwhile it was under thedirection of George, Balan-chlne. She was the youngestperson to receive a scholar-ship to the school. Mrs. Morrishas appeared on televisionand has taught ballet for sevenyears in New York and NewJersey.

To register, call Mrs. Morrisafter 4 p.m. at 272-9308.

WalkerT Mrs Rose James,M r s ^ a u r a E , M

D a v e y F i f e I d e r i Mrs. Plor-• * , 0 > N e l l I M r g F e l i c e

R a p p a p o r t iwillis; P tR a p p a p o r t i MrsTTHelelwillis,; Patricia Flanagan,M l % 'Adrierine Jagerman!Mrs. Vita Lee, George

Ruth Janovsik, principalof Livingston School, wasfeatured in the current-issue ofNew Jersey Parent-Teacher,the state PTA magazine.

Theunagazinenoted that her-"most cherished honor" in 50years of service here wasdesignation as honorary lifemember of the N.J. Congressof Parents and Teaehers in

" WANTEDTO BUY

American 19th & 20thCentury Paintings By

Oliver Tarbell EddyCharles Lorlng ElliottGoorgo p. "Pop" Hart^^JiBODdomao—Z

Louis LozowlckAndrew MolrosoWilliam R Miller

William Sldnoy MountC.R.W. Novlnson

William Tyloo RnnnoyWilliam Trosl Richards

T. Worlhlnglon WhilUedge

Collections or Single Item~1

1450 Bro.idwjyNew York, NY. 10018

(212)391-0385ues.-Sat. 9:30-5 I'M.

Barbara Krause, mezzo-soprano, of Cranford, will be a.guest soloist at the springconcert of the Scotch Plains-Fanwood Community ChorusSunday at 4 p.m. Presentedat the Fanwood PresbyterianChurch under the direction ofRandy Waller, -the programwill include choral and soloworks of sacred musicthrough the ages.

Mrs. Krause will singM o z a r t ' s " L a u d a t eDominum" from "TheSolemn Vespers, of the Con-fessor," often termed "themost magical of all Mozart'svocal writing," a WilliamLa wrence. arrrangement- of"Let Us Break BreadTogether," and H. Parry's "IWas Glad When They SaidUnto Me."

.. She is a student of VirginiaToenes of Westfield and hasperformed with the OperaTheatre of New Jersey, St.Michael Choral Society, theMusical Club of Westfield, andthe Cranford Dramatic Club.

She is the wife of Dr. FrankW. Krause.

ART SHOWThe Scotch Plains-Fanwood

Art Association will hold itsfirst outdoor art show and saleon the downtown streets ofScotch Plains Saturday from10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Raindate isJune 9.

visor in 1962 after 35 yearsservice. ,

Fredrick, who is 86 yearsold, also will receive a 60-yearwreath.

Ousterman, a semi-retiredreal estate and insurancebroker in New York City,served as worshipful m&sterin 1943. He then served asgrand organist from 1944 to1946 and was elected a grandlodge trustee in 1948, serving

writing award; Allen Burtonof 56 Spruce St., freshmanchemistry award; ThomasO'Neill of 204 Beech St.,Edward Kessler MemorialBiology Award; BrianPawlowski of 308 N. UnionAve., mathematics excellenceaward; Claire Shamey of 12Kensington Ave., BielefeldMemorial Spanish Award;and Sue VanArnum of 6Madison Ave., Prof. David G.Fables Jr., Memorial BiologyAward.

Specializing In IndividualHaircutting!

r i ^^^B^^Hr^^uf

FOR MEN A WOMENAsk about our unisexcoloring, frostlngs Apermanenta

-272.2960Hair Connection

111 N. Union Avc,Civ» Open Thurs.eve.

MM

A CAMP IN CRANFORD?Weil AlmostII!

The Recreation Department an<#*theCranford West Committee present foryour, enipyment CRANFORD WESTlocated iustoff Interstate 80 In Hope, N.J.Just IV2 hours drive through sceniccountryside.

RESERVE A SPACE TODAYCAMPSITES - CABINS

The Beautiful Silver Lake forSWIMMING • FISHING • BOATING

CALL 276-6767OR STOP BY THE COMMUNITY CENTER

N.J.'sOWNBIGAPPL

Now Appearing In Our Lounge

THRU JUNE 2

RICH KELLY SHOWComing Monday, June 4

Michael Mauro Show

FROM 20-500b 2/2-4700

195TT

SUMMER WORKSHOPTh W

RPThe Westfield Summer

Workshop will offer classesfor— more—than' 40--musicaLinstruments .from beginnerlevel to more advancedclasses, plus classes in danceand the fine arts. Studentsenrolling in instrumentcourses should bring them forinterview and class placementon one of the following-dates rSaturday, 9a.m. to l p.m., andschool days through Junefrom 3:30 to 4:30 in Room 1JJ3-fltaBdison Junior High, 800Rahway Ave., Westfield.

HONOR ROLLJohn Erbeck of Cranford is

on the honor roll at Seton HallPreparatory School in SouthOrange.

into

DflVID J. mEEKERfl PROFESSIONfiL CORPORflTION

COUNSELLORS AT LflW—r—for legal services

Purchase of existing one familyhouse.... ..—..... ,...,..« $300

Sale of single family house -l U l C I 7l__Unlun._Co........,.,.M...,..I."'. ...7...ii..,$iys

Formation of New jersey BusinessCorporation....... « ..$1$S1

Adoption tnju_approved 1.y . ^ ; i ,;.<200~

Husband/;wiffl.'- trust... . . . . , r y ,

• Approved out of pocket expenses areadditional. r ~

• Fees for other legal services renderedare available upon request,

7 ^ '

. BrparfSt, Westfll'.'j- ir^ 'i*^

QtGHEZ

Nfl

Our Discount20% OF p

NO ALTERATIONSitetOFF

free alteratlons-

SlreS 4 -16

JOLLY TROLLEYSALOON

Steak specialties are featured inthe up-tempo spirit Of the authen-tic turn-of-the-century saloon and

"restaurant ~

U 1 1 NORTH AVE., WESTFIELD 232-1207

CHARLIE BROWN (I)

I[Everythingto yourtaste...even the price.'

fhtiolal

ParkwayExit 138 at

the S PointsL Union, N.J.

Z)

ne • CockUd

687-07071[Closed Sun.,Mon.l

Elegant DiningAt Affordable Prices

u IN THE

0

Enjoy quiet intimate dining in anostalg!c__simasDJiara_!ha£s—softly

lighled by Tiffany lamps. Featuringchoice steaks and other housespecialties. L

756-1181 65 STIRLING RD., WARREN

WHAT'S YOUR BEEF ( I I )The rustic spirit remains in this turn-of-the-century meathouso beautifullyconverted into a charming dining facility.Start off at the olde butcher's counter andselect your own cut of beef to be prepared(o your specifications.

254 E. THIRD ST., PLAIKFJFI P

SPOTLIGHT'

SEYMOUR'SSeymour's, located at 2376 North

Avenue, Scotch Plaint, Nsw Jersayfeatures » nautical menu of dinners. For asavory appetizer, shrimp and i l u m e r iare offered. One of the.many «ntr««s from"The Captain'* T a b l * " I i brolltd"Captain's Plata," a combination offlounder, shrimp scallops and king crab.From the "First Mate's Order," thare areselections from Land and from Scajcombinations of steak and scampi, orsteak and scallops and teyeral moreItems. From the "Ship's Locker," you mayselect a carafe or glass of your favorite•wmeT-cocfctatt" ipw la l i Include a PlnaColada S t b B

RISTORANTE

Cocktails •DanringEntertainment Thurs. Fri. & Sat

CHICKEN PARMIGIANAwith salad, spaghetti, Icecream :—"Jcj95~

Roselle Shopping Center586 Raritan Rd., Roselle

245-9827

SEYMOURS

The acclaimed seafood dishes) - with' itsspecialty house (extensive weathered nautical decorselection gf clam, shrimp, - brings the enlivening

jobster and many other sea air to Scotch Plains

2376 NORTH AVE.SCOTCH PLAINS

232-3443

fflake neat and cool summer^i'esslng-youf first effort of

business. TfH Chez-Na..L,

CHEZ - Nfl

WHAT'S YOUR BEEF (V)Enjoy the nostalgic decor and relaxingcasual atmosphere of this papular steak-house. Entertainment leatured downstaluIn the Third Avenue Saloon.

RAWTAN.JId. (RT. 27) ( N. 3rd AVE., 5 4 5 - m r " HIGHLAND PARK

1O8 Westfield

"THE SUPREME .IN CONTINENTAL CUISINE!

Colida, Strawberry or Banana Daiquiri.From "The Keg," ra<r*shlng cold bear canbe had.

In an Informal family type atmospherewith a weathered nautical decor,(porthole windows, beamed ceiling, warmwood paneling), en|oy ganerout portions offood at affordable prices.

Seymour's is a popular . eating placewhere Chef Carl Sanford's culinary skillsproduce mouth-watering seafood entrees.His specialties Include, trout, snapper,lobster tails and all fish in season. Be sureto try his homemade f rench onion soup andcheck the blackboard for dally specials.Tossed salad, baked potato or steak friesare Included with dinner. A variety ofhearty sandwiches are always available.

Seymour's Is open 7 days a weak. Lunchis served Monday through Saturday from11:30, and dinner Is served every night.Open Sundays from 1:00 until HiJO P.M.Closed: Christmas Day and ThanksgivingDay.

Directions: Garden State Parkway to^E*lt • U7, West on North Avenue to

Seymour's In Scotch Plains. Large parkingarea available. Ma|or credit cardshonored. Telephone.- 201-233.144).

By Mary E. BeckerThe Cranford Chronicle

Businessman'sBUFFET LUNCHEON

Hoi A COW UMMiju, wr—."All you can • • • " ^ ^

FIRESITE

RESTAURANT

ItalianAmerican Cuisine

COCKTAILSENTERTAINMENT

DINNERS* LUNCHEON

SUNDAY BRUNCH

Clwd Mondiyi

mj342 Springfield Ave.

Gillette 047-0697 .

SumptuousSundayBrunch

New Orleans StyleWITH LIYE

ENTERTAINMENTUr»fiuinuit & I online •, , '

Sheraton Inn, Newark AirportU.S. 1 &9, Elizabeth 527-1600

IINFORMALOPEN J DAYSREASONABLE PRICEFAMILY RESTAURANTS

Entertainment Nightly e Reduced Pr lc«Dinners Mon • Frl . e 27 Beef & Seafood MetiULi

37~rUfm"Salad & Bread Bar

BEEF "n ALE House » S f t1745 Amwell Road

Somerset »73 3M0

NightlyEntertainmentarid Dancing

3000 Park AvenueSouth Plajnfield, N. J; or

Phone: (301) 755-41*1

$3.95. piu* tax~Caralulty

DINIWD*KNYHRVAINMHNT

l<bAV«AW*BKEXIT 115, o.i. Pkwy.CLA»KNJS^:oiV

cbcraAiLsCHILDREN'S MENU

540 Springfield Av«.V i m t f l l i ^ '

0KN>MVS ' ILUNCHEON .orNNOI

. - -r. , . . , ^ J J

:-::;i:.-:.[-Vif

W'Wfc.' ?4t

Page 9:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

CRANFORD <N.J.) CHRONICLE

e!6- Thursday, May 31,1979

Bike-a-thon Here tortic Fibrosis

By ROSALIE GROSSKENIlJwORTH - The

caustic 5%-week primarycampaign between theRegular Democratic can-didates and the IndependentDemocratic slate comes toend Tuesday as, voters maketheir preferences between 7a.m. and 8 p.m: at theborough's usual pollingplaces . .. ' „• • '

Incumbent Mayor LivioMancino is seeking theDemocratic nomination to runfor a second four-year term.He is challenged by Council-man John Ueltzhoeffer.

Ueltzhoeffer ha,s the regularparty line on the ballot and isrunning on the ticket withincumbent Borgugh Councilmembers Richard McCor-mack and Mary Kellv who.are_seeking the nomination fortheir second three-year terms.

Mancino's running matesfor council nominations areGary Rowinski and MarioDiBella, along with DorothyHimpele running unopposedfor tax collector.

The Republicans did not filepetitions for the mayoralty orthe two council seats for-thethird consecutive year, butare still hoping to raljy arounda write-in "slate Tuesday togive the Democrats someopposition in November.

The primary campaign hasseen a stinging exchange ofcharges between the- two

camps rather than adiscussion of issues. Mancinohas pointed to his record inoffice as one of accomplish-ment for the borough whileclaiming his opponents, allmembers of council, haveaccomplished nothing exceptobstructionism.

Ueltzhoeffer and his runningmates have, on the other hand,attacked Mancino "forpoliticizing the operation ofthe borough and say they willbring unity and a businesslikeapproach to local government.

For TaxCollector

uesdayFor Mayor

_KEl^WOJaTH^lie4te*dd^Brearley Varsity Club" Is the fourth' grade to par-conducting a bike-a-thon to ticlpate. They will cycle a two-beneflt cystic fibrosis mile route through the centerSaturday, June 9 starting at 10 of Kehilworth, striving for a~y ga. n*r~ tAr the high schoolparking lot. , - .>_The World of Sports store

here is donating a 10-speedbicycle to be awarded toLUWIparticipant with the largestamount of moneyT collectedfor the foundation. ,' ,

, gtotal of 20 miles: CompletioTTsheets totaling $25 in sponsorsqualifies the participant for an"I Survived" tee-shirt.

Anyone willing to bicycle,help out or sponsor othersshould contact Robert Taylorat Brearley. 272-7500.

THieves Busy DiifihgThe Holiday Weekend

u Thursday, May 31.1979 CRANFORD (N J.) CHRONICLE P age 17

i^Sinax^

managers for thei Independent w o r k e d a^f ijjfindfc t

KENILWORTHr- Burglarsbroke through ceilings in twobuildings on N. MichiganAvenue last weekend, stealingpetty: cash from both places,according to police.^ E C S f l

stolen from a truck in the lot ofBrent Material Co., N. 14thStreet, between Friday andTuesday morning. Theproperty was valued at $600.

A l t l i i L

Uvio Mancino

fTSRACING TIMEat Beautiful

John Ueltzhoeffer

For Council

Mario DiBella Mary Kelly

Xhvu Sept. 3New exciting facilities add to your pleasure.World's most advanced computerized wager-ing permits all buying and cashing of tickets insingle transaction.

NO MINIMUM AGEFor new group plan, 10 or more, call Maria201/222-5100.

Senior Citizens, Fridays only $1.25-$2.25.9 Thoroughbred Races • Post Time 1:30 daily

OCEANfOHT, NEW JERSEY2jmiles from Garden St. Pkway. Exit 105

EmployesProducts, Inc., at No. 505reported early Tuesday thatthe office had been broken intosometime between Saturdayafternoon and Monday after-noon.

Police also received a reportTuesday of a break-in at theJacobson Manufacturing- Co.Inc.; No; 530.". Since access to bothbuildings was gained throughthe roofs, and since it ap-peared the burglar.or burglarshad gone through crawlspaces in both buildings toavoid alarms, police believethe two crimes are related,

Police would not disclosethe amount stolen other thanto say it'was "petty cash."

Four tires and wheels were

Paint Sprayed

•I On 5 CarsKENILWORTH- Vandals

with spray paint damaged fivecars in the vicinity of Com-monwealth Road Sunday

-night.

A color televisionreported stolen from Holiday

%Inn at 7:45 a.m. Tuesday. Aclerk at the motel told policethe theft .occured betweenmidnight Monday and when itwas reported. Police said adoor to room had been priedopen to gain access to thetelevision which was valued at$450; • _.__;.__..

Senior CitizensSlate

KENILW.ORTH- TheKenilworth Senior CitizensClub will meet, Wednesday atthe.Veterans' Center, S..21stStreet at 1 p.m. *

Lillian Lasser of theR.S.V.P. reports the groupvolunteered 43 hours at theLung and Arthritis Foun-dation in April. Workete wereJack Landau, Lillian Lasser,May Morrison, Alice Oehler,Liddy Thomas, Jo Gartlingand Martha Keying. LillianLasser worked 47% hours "atthe Elizabeth GeneralHospital, Irene Bittrolff, 75hours and Marge Kozmutza,^ t M i l G l

KENILWORTH HUSTLE — BoroOgh residents are learning the hustle and otherLatin dances under the directlpn.pf Jules "dubay, with partner at right. The weeklylessons at Harding School closed Monday, but the Recreation Committee promisesmore lessons next year. Photo by John Downey.

Dinner SetendarFriday, June 1-

Curbsjde recycling for area south of Boulevard.linittgj^h^ndjBthTgradesi-

BrearteyiildzSaturday, June 2• 10 a.m. - Girls' Softball, Harding School.

12-3 p.m. - Women's softball, Brearley field.Monday, June 4 ' . <

3-5 p.m. - Boys' weight training, 7th and 8th grades,Brearley field.

7-9 p.m. - Tax office open.7 p^m. - Municipal Court.7:30 p.m. - Historical Society meeting.

Tuesday, June 5Mp.m. - Women's softball, Brearley field.7-9 p.m. - Building inspector's office open.7-9 p.m. - Zoning enforcement office open.

Wednesday, June 612:15 p.m. - Rotary Club meeting, Raven's Nest.3-5 p.m, - Boys' weight training, 7th and 8th grades,.

Brearley field, - _8 p.m. -Planning Board meeting.8 p.m. - Borough Council workshop meeting.

Thursday, June 7 ' . ' . ' ' . ' ,1-4 p.m. - Welfare director's office open.4-5 p.m. - Building inspector's office open. <« W d m ' ' i f t l f f i U r B ^ I ; f i I d ' '

Richard! McCormack Gait Rowinski

Police received a reportfrom Robert Kucab, of 3Commonwealth Rd., at 10:32pm. that a car belonging tohis guest had been sprayed.

Rachel Thomas, of 18Commonwealth, reported at12 15 a.m. Monday that hercar had been sprayed. Policealso found paint on cars at 14Park Dr., 15 Shady La., and 10Park Dr. All tho»palnt was thesame color.. ;: ;r

T- ;~-A three-foot, decorative

Windmill was stolen last week-end from the front lawn ofPearl Strunck, of 541 Newark

. Ave . —•-:

At the recent birthday partythe following members werehonored: Betty Johnson, AnnaSabolchick, Alice Oehler,Marion Goodreds, LenaKaufman and Henry Foerster.

Landau announced anotherbirthday party June 10 at theclub. Mrs. Sabolchickreceived a centerpiece offlowers from some of herfriends.

There are a few tickets forthe Art Center for/June 1. See/Landau. SOphle /Strack an-nounced there are still sometickets for the Maine trip'June24 to 29.

Derkowskl of Kenllwc-J. big hog at the graduation

ceremonies of the Elizabeth General Hospital School ofNursing. v ; -

For CiravolbKENILWORTH-A retire-

ment dliuierforSanTCIrayolowill take place at the Knightsof Columbus Hall, MarketStreet and Woodland Avenue,June 15 at 7:30 p.m.

Ciravolo is retiring after 25years of service to theborough. He started workingwith the road department andthen. became superintendentof parks and recreation, whichhe has done for the last 22years.'Tickets can be obtained bycontacting either the healthdepartment -office, 276-2740,tax collector's offlce,.276-580l,or borough clerk's office, 276-0090. - - — : - - ;

Artist to ShowCollageTechnique

KENILWORTH - JosephRossi, AWS, pointer, artteacher and lecturer willdemonstrate his acrylic-collage wlth_ti8sue_paper_

to the members arfriends' of the Kenilworth ArtAssociation at the meetingMonday hi the RecreationCenter at 8 p.m. The public isinvited.

A resident of Clifton, heattended the Newark School ofFine and Industrial Art andColumbia University. He Isteaching at 'Summit ArtCenter, Newark School of Fineand Industrial Art, duCretSchool of Art, and the ArtStudents League, N.Y.C.,plus private classes. He Is amember of. the., . AudubonArtistsl Salmagundl Club,North Shore .Art Associationand-Society-oftllustratoTS

JKotcJLannounced the followingspecial event dates:

Saturday: "Meet the can-didates Coffee-Wagon" at theBoulevard and 20thlStreet, 1 to4 p.m.

Sunday: Rally for friendsand supporters a t . Paul'sLounge, < Route 22 andMichigan Ave., 6 to 10 p.m.1

Detail^ of Platform•r.ufSiSSw1*;-, D e m 0 ° ' a n d-h l™»i»g "lates on theratic isndidate for; mayor, regular Democratic

! ticket. Council-

woman„ MaryC i I '

man„ Mary:.KeHC o u n c i I m'a rt;."r j J i T JMcCormack, "this week

l H t ^ oWbeir-

Building, Boulevard, 8:30 to 10p.m. )

All even t s - a re free.^Residents may call daily, 4 to10 prm.7 27618010 or 276^012, ifthey have any questions ofMayor- Livid Mancino and hisrunning'. mates GaryRowinsky, Mario DiBella orDot Himpele.

ancino: OpponentsCampaign by Innuendo

Ueltizihbeffer: Rejectteer

KENILWORTH-, Demo- political deals but methodic-cratic candidate for mayor, ally and by a consensus of allJohn Ueltzhoeffer, called this elective and- appointive of-week for "an end to the con- frcials in tune with thefusion and the arrogance that peoples' wishes."has characterized the ad- r He'said 4hat with the spiritministration of the last four of unity and community prideyears." that he and his running mates,

. _ , — Councilwoman-Mary -Kelly-Ueltzhdefrer rioted that the and Councilman Richard;

"trivia) but frantic politicalclimate df the mayor's officehas simply had to impair itseffectiveness in running theserious business of the town,"

The candidate, now in hisd

McCormack,- would generatewould make "government ofthe people a reality not merelya clidhe."

Club BacksRegular Slate

KENILWORTH-- John

_ „ nowsecond term as" councilman,urged the voters to "reject theoldpolitics" and to show theirdisapproval of any "eleventh-hour, low-level, mud-slingingstrategy" that would brings Ueltzhoeffer, Regularfurther embarassment to the Democratic candidate forcommunity. "In the name ofefficiency and order in localgovernment," Ueltzhoefferurged, "let us turn away fromthe unpleasant course thatcould even see the very zoningcharacter of the town drastic-ally changed to one of multiplea y changed to one of multiple .«.„,„„.„,dwellings, high rises and jhe_ aUts-monthllikjf^OT^grr' H

mayor, Richard McCormack,Regular Democratic can-didate, for councilman; andMary Kelly, regularDemocratic candidate forc o u n c i l w o m a n , wereunanimously endorsed by theKenilworth Democratic Club

-fterurged "...getting down to amature approach to theserious problems that con-front us.

Ueltzhoeffer promised anadministration that wouldgovern "not by whim nor by

ly-meetingMay-23Min's Restaurant.atAngeand

• i • ~

All three are members ofthe Borough Council.McCormack a>id Mrs. Kellyare seeking reelection to theirsecond terms. Ueltzhoeffer isserving in his fourth year. •

KENILWORTH-' MayorLivio Mancino and his runningmates Gary Rowinsky, MarioDiBella, and Dot Himpeleissued the following statementat a recent workers' meeting:

HWe have attempted andshaJL continue in these final

-days—to-^run—a- dignifiedcampaign based on the issuesand our qualifications. It isapparent that our opponentsappear to have taken the usualpolitical road, that being tomake charges, innuendos anddebasing remarks, withoutever addressing the issues orto tell their accomplishments.-Why? It is so blatantly obviousthat they need not explain, fortheir record is very clear—itreads 'nothing.'"

Mancino said:"Our opponents' theme is a

.call and pledge of unity, nowwhen it is election time. Surelysome of; this united effortcould and should have beenUsed many times in the pastfour years on voting mattersby my mayoral opponent andhis two running mates. Yet,the word or its meaninghardly ever applied on any-thing I ever recommended orsought for the benefit of thecommunity: Obviously, thisconstant opposition caused allthe press coverage, but theyhave now attempted to holdme responsible. Strange, for I

_ donl_eyjBn_vQte^—i—^-"Yet, in spite of theconstant

lack of cooperation and helpfrom the two councUmenseeking reelection and thecouncilman seeking themayoralty, I still can be proud

, of the many accomplishmentsI have achieved for the

community. Do they haye anyaccomplishments? If so, whenwill they tell .the voters?Imagine how much more Icould have brought* thecpmmunity , if thes^ in-'divlduals worked with me.

"I'm sure that manyresidents'realize, even if myopponents don't, that many ofmy accomplishments for theborough have come from out-side the community. Thisrequired the attending ofmany meetings plus help,cooperation, unity and hard.work, which my opponentsnever gave. Still my in-dividual—efforts7~plus" helpfrom -some local citizens,produced results as the recordshows.

"That Is why I must urgeall Democratic voters, whilealso welcoming . theIndependent voter, to vote forour team of candidates. Withmy years of municipal back-ground and our combinedbusiness experience, ability,dedication, and a sincerecommitment io join efforts by

irking with me certainly willk\iep Kenilworth as good as itifij todayjhjle working to

irove tomorrow."

LEADS ROUNDTABLEDr. Donald Merachnik,

superintendent of schools forthe. -Union—County— RegionalHigh School District No. 1,was reelected president of theUnion County Superin-tendents' Roundtable for 1979-80.Robert Lachenauer,^superintendent in NewProvidence, was electedTreasurer.

J>.

TH^UNITY TEAMWe've been serving you for years!

MATURE, BUSINESS-LIKE & EFFECTIVE ADMINISTRATION!

iWhaVWho' Includes FWLocal Students at UC wins A«

KENILWORTH-- HelenEta&0Jvski-312 N. 21st St.;Deborah Ridings, 220Boulevard, and Dennis Ross,15 N.- 6th St., are among 43students from Union College,Cranford, and Union CountyTechnical Institute, Scotch

editor, feature editor, newseditor, editor-in-chief, andstudent advisor.' He wascaptain of the College's SunDevil Intramural footballteam and has coachedCatholic Youth Organization

KENILWORTH- Amy Paul,a first grader at HardingSchool, has won a prize in theart contest sponsored by theDepartment of Transportationin observance of NationalTransportation Week.

basketballand ..a.-girls' Little _Amy won. atL honm-Ahi«

Miss Ridings was among 10 competition foredition ofWho* Who Among students who were honored for throughgradea*.

h Students in American; Junior their uarticipatitMr in extra:- w e r e ^ S n c e d ^ 7 GoColleges.. -, curricular activities. Rryirifln B

^ wee^elecfeX^taclusion in the. 1978-1979

RE-ELECTn p • • •

COUNCILMary Kelly

8F

RichardMcCormackJ

9F

ULTZHQEPCPRe-Elect ForCouncil

Kelly &McCormacI

Regular Democratic

Mrs. Derkowski, a nursingstudent at Elizabeth GeneralHospital School 6f Nursing,

_was; on the president's list andreceived : special coni-

ELECTFor

MAYOR

JohnUeltehoeffer

courses., The mother of twojchildren J \ t o J3erkowskLwas-chairman for the March ofDimes Mother's March.

Miss Ridings, manager ofthe-student radio station at,Union College, was a liberal ;

1 j ^ ^ fca t I

It In

FOTE7F

the dean's list and the-presi-dent's list. She studied underan American Association ofUniversity Woman scholar-ship, served as second vicepresident of Phi Theta Kappa,the national honorary societyfor two-year colleges, andparticipated in a work-studyprogram rof tutoring ;in

JSpanish. She was active inintramural softball.

Ross, a liberal arts major,served the college's studentnewspaper as _ managing

irdniportdtlon to

Meadowjandt Race TrackIvary Night

Rahway Train Station-4:00Departure Linden Train Station • 4:15

times: , Broad & Jersey$t* . t Eiiwbeth 4:30

For Departure Information--

Cull: Beviano Chartered Service

lGft,-s.

• END THE NONSENSE IN BOROUGH HALLEND THE BAD PUBLICITY FOR

GettingBugged?

• ELECT ANEW AND RESPOi^SIBI^^DMINISf RATIOIV •• ••:

• TOGETH^R-LET« MAKE A KENILWORTH;WE^CAN:ALL BE PROUDOf

VOTE THE REGULAR DEMOCRATIC ORGANIZATIONAL LINE

CALL

TREE EXPERT CO.

322-9109f a l d tor by Carol Caruso, Trams.'

. ' : i ' ' , ' • : ' . ' ' ' '

• • , ; • : , .

campaign platform.It calls for a beautification

program for the Boulevardand business areas, a system-atic program of street repairs,and a "genuine" flood control"program.

Calling themselves the"Unity Team," the threeincumbent council membershave also committed them-selves to an innovative, up-graded recreational program,a liaison between the local andregional school boards and thegoverning body, more "andmeaningful" input by boroughdepartment heads at meetingswith the council, continuedimprovement of senior citizenprojects such as a seniorcitizens shuttle bus, and plan-ned maintenance services forsewers, streams, and trees.

Ueltzhoeffer, Kelly, andMcCormack said that anothertop priority of a new ad-ministration would be "therestoration of civic interestand pride in the borough and abusiness-like, non-political,approach to the fiscal andlegal affairs of the com-munity.

Ueltzhoeffer said that hisadministration would be notone of "words, endless, emp-ty, angry, divisive embarrass-ing words," but one,of solid,efficient performance.

~{ STOCK PURCHASEKENILWORTH- Schering-

Plough Corporation has an-noahced that it will purchaseup to 1,200,000 shares of thecorporation's common stockin open market or privatetransactions during theremainder of 1979 to be usedfor the future requirements ofits employe benefit plans andother corporate "purposes. In1978, the corporation pur-chased 792,500 shares of HscommbrTslbck in sucfi" trans-actions.

MEETING CHANGEDKENILWORTH-- The

Borough Council workshopmeeting scheduled 'for_._Tuesday will be heldat 8 p.m.Wednesday because of theprimary election June 5.

flit it.map

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SNAPPER walk-behind mowers can broadcast or vacuum, and with Inex-pensive optional attachments you can mulch cuttings for lawn foodand won't have to rake or shred leaves so the catcher will hold overtwice as many. SNAPPER extra "High Vacuum" riders can broadcast,bag and vacuum cuttings, leaves and other light litter, even duringhigh moisture conditions.

Any way you cut it... it's a snap with a SNAPPERI

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MULCHEMZEM$32.00

KPM DisTRrBUTOns:KENv

Mowers • fillers • Tractors

LA GRANDE, INC.349 South Avenue E.

Westfield

T&J LAWNMOWER SERVICE332 North Avenue E.

Cranford

PIERSON'SMILLCO.697 Valley Street

Ma pie wood

ANDERSON LAWNMOWER& GARDEN SUPPLIES ;

1719 E. Second Street (Scotch Plains i

•^ iiiW.-:

VOTEMr. and Mrs. Joseph AmorosoMrs. E. AlmoneJoseph AmorosoAnthony AllceaAnn Allcea

. Mike Alicea - ' _ ^Grace BrasserMr. and Mrs. BenkoMr. and Mrs. John BeninatiMary BoeP. BaldaccliniMr. and Mrs. Charles BuererBill Bleirvein ,Terri Barbella

Mark DavidJim DavidMr. and Mrs. Charles DavidMr. and Mrs. Joe DivorskyMr. and Mrs. Dan DiFabloLaur i jpay id .Mr. and Mrs. R. DeMaioR. DeMa'ioT4 DeMaioDiNucci Family ••Mr. and Mrs.«... a . .u Mrs.^E. DeCarolisMr. L. DeCarolisV. DeMaio.

-Mr. and Mrs. Edward'J. FergusowMr^ndMra

—Mr-"and-Mr8,-Frank Corcione,Dave Curtin, Jr.Walter Caldwell * ,Martin CurleyMr. and Mrs! V. ColonnaFrank Corcione, Sr.Mr, and Mrs. Joseph CocuzzaMr. and Mrs. Al ChalenskiMr: and Mrs. Joseph CrisclJRusty CorcioneMichael Corcione ;„ .Mr. and Mrs. R. CarusoMr. and Mrs. David CurtinJo Ann CaplzanoMr. and Mrs. William ChangoTimmy CarboneMr. and Mrs. Jeff Corclohe

TMr»and Mrs. William Cortez: Mir. H. Cortez ' .,

Mr. and Mrs. A. Costa .Angelo CardellaMr. and Mrs. M. CuppariMr. and Mrs. Di CdsaleChuck David .Mf; and.Mrs. Robert DeBlasio

Jr.

•<3rgg.bav^,Mr. and-Mrs. William DowdMr; and Mrs, Brent pavidPatricia DeEdwardb '•:;••

Michael Eevola -Mr. and Mrs. Vincent FevolaPeter FicoFriendMrs. Stella FischerS. GrenciMr. V. GalassoMr. E. GalassoKen HarmsMr. and Mrs. W. HoagBetty HoagMr. and Mrs. B. HrynkiewiczJane Hrynkiewicz

, r. Thomas Hrynkiewicz— ~— Stephen Hrynkiewicz

Mr. and Mrs. L. HrynkiewiczHoward HimpeleMarion HimpeleMargaret Himpele l

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hodapp .,Bob Hodapp

' Mr. and Mrs. j . B. Havankj, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. R. InfantinoEvelyn InfantinoJulutte InfantinoGeorge Jorn "Mr. and Mrs.* R. JeansWarren t . Jaeckel

THE CANDIDATES: left to right, Gary Rowinsky, MajMoDl^el la,"Dorothy Himpele & Livio Mancino.

Mr. and Mrs. Steve KotchDiane KingViola KaiserMr. and Mrs. Edward KnechtMr. and Mrs. Gary KingMr. and iMrs. J. KotchMr. and Mrs. F. KeenanLisa KeenanMr. and Mrs. W. Kurzman

Mr. and Mrs. Robert ReuterJanis ReuterLisa ReuterRobert J. ReuterMr. and Mrs. H. ReynoldsJoseph RegoFrank RuggiczoElizabeth RehbergerMr. and Mrs. John Rowinsky

• • • • • • \

We, the undersigned, endorse Mayor Mancino and his running mates, Gary Rowinsky, MarioDiBella & Dorothy Himpele. They will bring to the governing body the most in experience,ability and integrity; with a committment to keep Kenilworth as good as it is today, whileworking to improve tomorrow. \

We therefore urge all registered Democrats and Independents to join all of us by supportingthe "G" Team with your vote on June 5Jb, in the Democratic Primary!

Albert LospinosoMr. and Mrs. Carl LaCostaLoretta & RayMr^and Mrs. D. Lenaz—-L. LospinosoMr. and MrsT-John-Mararao—Mrs. R.' MorelliJoseph MaseRose MaseMr. and Mrs. John MarcsisinMr. and Mrs. MasulloMr. and Mrs. P. NataleMrs. Martin OjiaScott PhillipsMr. and Mrs. John PiretMr. and Mrs. Paul PoliseoJoseph PoliseoThomas H. PhillipsMaryann PepeGene PepeMr. and Mrs. Steve PunkMargaret PoschnerMr. and Mrs. E. ProkopikRenee PicaroniJoseph PantanoAnthony PantanoPasquale Pantano-Beatrice PantanoRose PepeMr. and Mrs. N. QuinionMr. and Mrs. J. Rusiniak i."Mr. and Mrs. J. RustucciMr. and Mrs. J Rembish

~K6h RbwinskySandra RowinskyMr. and Mrs. Dominiek ReitrovatoCarmine RideutoChet Rusiniak -Victor Smith

—Mr. and'Mrs: Edward Sudnick"Mrs. Carmela StonerEmil ScuorzoMr. and Mrs. Richard SchefflerMike SabolRussell SwiatekGregory SwiatekRita SwiatekMr. and Mrs. Frank SilettiMr. and Mrs. George Schlenker_Karl SchlenkerKathy SchlenkerMr. and Mrs. J. StanleyR. StonerMr. and Mrs. Fred SoosJoseph TripodiD. Tripodi v

Mr. and Mrs. Robert TribodiMr. and Mrs. Antony TripodiMr. and Mrs. N. TioianoMrs. Loretta Tinnuella ;

Nicholas VillainMr. and Mrs. L. VitaleRichard VitaleMr. and Mrs. Sam VitaleMr.jind Mrs. WaldemoreMr. and Mrs7~K. ZelinskiMr. and Mrs. Zuchowski

DEMOCRATIC TEAM THAT WILL WORK FOR YOU

-'—i i l ;

Wfct*t4.4«<«*4/ '

LivioMANCINO

IndependentDemocrats

for A BetterKenilworth

8GGary

ROWINSKYIndependentDemocrats

For A BetterKenilworth

9GMario

DI BELLAIndependentDemocrats

For A BetterKenilworth

1OGDorothy

HIMPELEIndependent

, DemocratsFor A BetterKflnJIworth

A!';

', JUNE 5thPajd for by the above rva.rned Citizens To Elact Mancino, Rowinsky, Dl^ella & Himpele

ONLYYOUR VOTE

CAN IMPROVETHE QUALITif OF

TtfE COUNCIL

• . , . • . , " — • • : .•:•.•,. • , • ' . . • • j T " 7 i r v . : " '

;'t::'i.;..r;::.'^^.'.a,Jr~rr-;~*T*'K "

.':rx:<--!i:i:.'Mii'ii,ii~

• 1 ' *

• ' • < . . ' • . • ' . ' . ' • • ' : *

' . I * ' •

• « ^

v—--

• r •, ^ <•••••<•,•<, i..^t!ff\.;^ - j - \ J ' | 0 1

Page 10:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

-3

i

CRANFORTMN.J.) CHRONICLE

Page 18 Thursday. May 31,1979,

School Board to Try AgainTomorrow to Elect PreXy

By ROSALIE GROSSGARWOOD- The Board of

"Education will' try againtomorrow night to choose apresident and vice presidentafter eight members were•deadlocked lafct Thursday.

• - The meeting is at 8 p.m. atLincoln School.

*" L a s t T h u r s d a y ' sreorganization meeting endedafter 23 minutes when theboard cast four ballots eachfor Phyllis Smolley and JamesMcDonald for president.

Joseph • Fuentes, who wasabsent last Thursday becauseof work, will be the key vote Intomorrow's balloting. Whencontacted by The Chronicleyesterday, he said he had not

for Miss Smolley were EarlFalrchild, Bette Schnell andMiss Smolley. Voting forMcDonald were the three newmembers of the board:McDonald, Edward Olenickand Michael Wolski.

Following a brief recess,Rev. Robert Rlschmjsnn andJohn DeStefanis arrived.Another vote was taken with

STUDENT AWARDGARWOOD- Georgia

Christopher 6T501 Center St. isamong 17 Union College,students who receivedacademic awards and prizesat the annual awards nightMay 24. She received the John

Biology

Rev, Rischmann voting forMiss Smolley and DeStefanisbacking McDonald^ ±

After adjourning themeeting, the board contactedcounty schools superintendentJames Clancy who instructedthe board to arrange anothermeeting. He said he firmlybelieved the board shouldmake its own decision withoutI t f

Industrial^onimercialZirjne• • • • • • • • . . • • . - . • • • • • . ' - . . • • • • r

^GARWOOD- A proposal to economic and dvic^tability." Recommended prohibiteditzong- the~^ini[|usU:ialj, aflea The—Btudy^Troted^L the ± use?—include^ businessesalong Norpi and South Avenue industrial »one is in a state of cbn^iictedoutside the confinesinto a combination industrial-, riffling following the "shiftcommercial (I-C) zone'will be away front rail-centereddiscussed at a Planning Board locations to -industrial sitesworkshop tonight al 8 p.m. , along major highways.k s o p g t at 8 p. alng major h i g a y

The—induatriak»mme«;ial—^e-plannfir-recomaiendsfeasibility study was prepared the permitted uses include-

of a DUilfflna princicenters^pj&nt ocJa'undrycomrnerrlaUpa

sdeeconf inesused car sales as

amusementcleaning

ency, and-^lot-or

by the boroiigh planner Wayne industrial, -manufacturing,Kulick of Jaman Engineering business, administrative,Assojciatesrltandolph,who^ professional offices and

commercial uses only.Commercial uses' would in-clude a variety of retail and

garage.

READY FC)R MUSTER Fireman Henry Piekarski, son .Billy/ and Dalmatian

of the proposed master plan.The original document left

the industrial zone in tact, butthe Planning Board requestedmore data on a combinationzone. ' • . ' : - : .'•;' • . • " • • • • • ,

The study recommends the

wholesale businesses .

Tonight's meeting is areview session by the Plan-ning Board. The board Has seta tentative date of June 27 fora public hearing on the I-Czone proposal.

interference from him. The "Buttons" will again ao for a ride in the annual Antique Fire Apparatus Muster Indeadline for the board to Newark Sunday. Events begin at 1 p.m. The Plekarskl's:wJH_rjde Iftjha J924 American

ySiburn Memorial

yet made up his mind whether- Award.to vote for Miss Smolley -m . gnNiMr'tan-nnMcTM\na\l\ ZONING BOARDwcuonaic. ^ ^ ^ GARWOOD- The Board ofaken last week. The first, A d j u s t m e n t m e e t i n gWith'six members present, scheduledjor June 5 has beenresulted in a 3 to 3 tie. Voting rescheduled for June 8.

LaFrance AAetorlzed^Pornper restored by "the Antique-Fire Pumpers Association ofBefore voting on successor Garwood.

to Mrs. Schnell as president,board secretary JamesCummings administered theoath of office to the fourwinners in April's election.Miss Smolley was seated for asecond three-year term.McDonald and Olenick weresworn in for their first three-year terms and Wolski wasseated for a two-year unex-pired term.

PTA invites everyone to its..from-40ia.m.

Saturday" v youth in the

REAL ESTATE HELP WANTED

f When You invest In Real EstaInvest In Our Experience.

the entire borough's social,

\

Garwood CalendarThursday, May 31

8:30 p.m. - Knights of Columbus Council 5437 meeting, 37South Ave. "Friday, June 1

8 p.m. - Board of Education reorganization meeting,Lincoln School. '•Saturday. June 2

10 a.m.-4 p.m. - PTA fair, Washington Schoolplayground.

7:30 p.m. - Bingo at St. Anne School.Manila v. June 4

12;15 p.m. - Rotary Club meeting, Marisa's.Tuesday, June 5

10 a~.W. - Tuesday Morning Group, St. Paul's Church.7:30 p,m. - Bingo at St. Anne School. —

Wednesday, June 67:30 p.m. - VFW Ladies Auxiliary meeting, post home.8 p.m. - Public library board of trustees meeting. <\

MemorialPreserve the Peace

of Middlesex told those who

School playground.There will be rides, games,

prizes, white elephant sales,Chinese auction, refreshmentsand (more, >'.

The PTA U»y 17 awarded

GARWOOD- "The best wayto honor our dead is not to let ft

?pen again," Gene Mastro

calContestPrimaries

in

attended a memorial seryice Joan Toth for her outstanding- RosVstoThonoring local deceased • «««,.««,.veterans Monday at Bay LeafPost Memorial home at 221South Ave, The event wassponsored by Bay Leaf PosL -r-i * «6807, VFW and the Auxiliary, r f i f l f t m t i r i r i

Mastro, who served With tee *• ^ W » * » U U I 182nd Division Arrboiirhe

community.—^Uso^banona^^trevteningwere ,lne-new K I A officers.They are: - president,Rosalie Gaeta; first vicepresident, Patricia Haydu;second vice president, LouiseJohnson; recording secretary,DoloreT Kresge; correspond-ing secretary, PatriciaLawrence; and

Clubwoman Electedtt

GARW0OD=> The Garwood Mountainsideh ' C l b ti

CAREER PLANNINGCareer Life Planning will be

the topic of a series of work-shops and team meetings heldduring the spring and summerby Womanpower Projects,Inc., a-notepcc""firm -devoted to

SAFE BOATINGThe Watchung Power

Squadron and Flotilla 46, U, S.Coast Guard Auxiliary, arejoining forces for "SafeBoating Week" at the Sears

rQ The turnout in

Tuesday's primary Is ex-pected to be light as there areno local or statewide contestsas drawfftg cards.

The local Democratic andRepublican candidates for thetwo Borough Council, nomina-tions are unopposed, Vying'forthree-year terms' are in-*

b R

i n e S during. World War II, received-H°i?-?"'B Club announcesthftLisectetaryg j J I , receivedthe Purple Heart and'a BronzeStar. He told about his warexperiences and urged all totake an active part inpreserving peace. .. George fifelchel, a pastcommander of the local postand past commander of theDepartment of N. J., alsospoke. George - Rodner, whowas in charge of arrange-cumbent Republican Council

m'an "Walter Maszczak amt~=4nents, was the master 7©frunning mate Dominic V. ceremonies.Carrea. Thny wl)l

career june 4 through 6 from 8:30 to 9 Democrats Wlljiam Melkad i t 2

ag—in__the-

counseling and health related £ T ™ $ e t y in S o n s an<* Vincent leckman in.thepromts. Call MarTeiSe-Crosby knd'decals will be givento all November election.

boasts trailered to Sears.pjMainker, 635-8867.

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D A V I S BROS.

Jack Davis

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Elizabeth

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FORD

_ Authorized FORD—Dealer Since TOOSa les- • Service- Renta Ii

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2456100'158 yxeilfield Aye Roielle P»rk

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c.ial- Discounts toallSenior Citizens

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where good things

b « r I Vrti PflMllt Inturainet Corp.

DECORATORS

964-3386—24 h r

TERMINALMILL END STORES, Inc.

FUEL OIL

ganki* Juei C

Republican Rose Stoj isunopposed for a four-yearterm as tax collector-treasurer. .

There are no contests forseats on the county committeein both parties.

Polls will be open from 7a.m. to 8 p.m.STUDENT ASTRONOMERS

KENILWORTHrL.. Robjerl.RzepllnSki and RichardMoritz, both of DavidBrearley High School, areamong Union County highschool students who recently

^ttetHied^rif thHiH

ceremony were Fred Uhnold,post commander, Bob Reuter,senior vice commander, andMiss Florence Castaldo,president of the auxiliary.

The presentation of the flagand'post colors was by CubScout Den 4 and Boy ScoutTroop 76. Margaret Klnriey.William Kinney and MargaretWagner recited '<Xn FlandersFields Poppies Blow." Tapswere by James Nordhausen.

Refreshments were servedby members of the. auxiliary.

BOOKSALJE

Arthur Tonneson waselected to the office of trusteeto serve as chairman of thepublic affairs department,New Jersey State Federationof Women's Clubs. Theelection was held at the recentconvention in Great Gorge atthe PteybOy Club,

Mrs, Tonnesen is first; vicepresident of the GarwoodWoman's Club; bylaws chair-man of the Past Presidents'Club, Sixth District; and hadjust completed a two-yearterm as' northern vicechairman, Public Affair*Department; She is pastpresident of the MountainsideWoman's Club. • >

She was the first Womanelected to" the WatchungBorough Council-, and----in

serves astq-Jthe^ -Local

Assistance Board, is amember of the municipalelection board, and was aformer member of theCultural and HeritageCommittee. She is married toHans Arthur Tonnesen andresides at 268 Friar Lane,Mountainside, , ._':

TheGarwood Woman's Clubnominated Mrs. Tonnesen forthe state office. In its 40-yearhistory, this ls_ the first time

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124 Spring Garden St.(between Holly & West End)

1.31 M

member serve as tin electedtrustee to the NJSFJrYXLJMrs.Tonnesen will also be adelegate of the GarwoodWoman's Club to the generalfederation convention in NewOrleans from June 4 to June 9.

at BrearleyKENlLWORTH- A clarinet

workshop and clirilc.was heldyesterday at David BrearleyHigh School

astronomy at Union College'sSperry—Obser ya tory— conducted by members ' ofAmateur Astronomers, inc.'

Robert Risden, InstrumentalIhe-in-—

discarded and donated books:magazines and paperbacks.

i School. He servedas clarinetist with theMetropolitan Opera and RadioCity Music Hflfi.

The clinic Was designed tot t h k i l l f B l

n^_.paflde.cJ_lRAnch.. f ea tu r i no -^bedrooms, 2V2 baths, den, family room &

, lots more. Stop In for a guided tour.• • <

FIVE BEDROOM COLONIALMade to order for large family. 10 spacious*rooms, V/2 baths, situated on 100 x 150 lot in,one of Crawford's; best areas. Two car(detached garggeTTiot-water baseboard,heat.

HOUSEKEEPER 2 3 daysper week, experienced. Forworking Mother, Call after5 p.m. 232-2850

LABORER-PUBLICWORKS DEPARTMENT

Fringe Benefits. ApplyBorough Clerk's Office,Municipal Building, 547Boulevard, Kenllworth.276-9O90

,TELEPHONEOPERATORS For

REAL ESTATE SINCE 1905530 SOUTH AVE. E., CRANFORD-272-9444

'540 NORTH AVE., UNION - 353-4200Galleries in Morristown & Summit

Health Organization inUhlon. Must have goodclear speaking voice. Dayor night shift. 9 a.m. to 5p.m. or5p.m. to° p.m. Call687-3450

TYPIST~~Permanent part t ime

Hours 1 -5:30p.m.Exp. typist wi th secretarialskills. New office bldg.Cranford. 276-3811.

L E G A L S E C R E T A R Yneeded for Elizabeth t r ia la t to rney. A l l 'benef i ts ,experience only. Call 467-3461 •«

OPPORTUNITY

Thursday. May 31,1979CRANFORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Page 1?

BOARD MEETING *There will be" a regular

eRegional High School DistrictNo, l Board of EducationTuesday at 8 p.m. in the i n -structional media center ofDavid Brearley High School.

**

^CADILLAC

BRAKES-DISC

29.762 whe«|j7 whwllJ i

• ALL AMERICAN

•CARS ' wh»«ll

• —Whll« You Walt—

£"»«*"«i ^• W. ILMOM Kf(pH UMtOtlTl* J

I Klmore Au« Cor Brico eel Ji ,_4 Geoefte t, Btvwiy Clr. I I ) » u •

TGfnrYfiWEW£nr Barbara Cohn kisses HerrHamann goodbye at a farewell party given by GermanClub for German exchange students- Hamann waschapefone. Looking oh are Michael Blasuccl, left,acting assistant principal at the high school, and TedKreitzman, president of the German Club.

Auf-WiedersehenNew German Friends

CREATIVE CIRCLE CO.needs part time workers,Must be Interested In craftssuch as crewel, needlepointand latch hooking. Willtrain. Party plan. Nodelivering. No Quotas, nodeductions for hostessgifts. Call Mrs. Solar 201-444-0293

Each office Id Independently owned and operated

D.S. Kuzsma 115 miLN $T.. CRRNFORD 272-8337

OPEN SUNDAY 1 4602 LINDEN

Mrs. H. Arthur Tonne$en

TOWNSHIP' OP CRANFORDCttANFORD, NEW JERSEY

ORDINANCENO.W-W -

AN ORDINANCE AUTHORIZINGTHE USE OP THB PATRICK- • Jr-fcUr J . WAUfBR- C O FALBERT H. ANTOIHE

an? SHy«ndl.lv» tentht (W0.5) (Ml to *

Thjnce, «lxth, south 40 dtar**, iijn|nutM#Mt, one hundred Ihlrty-ilxartdJ0nVWn« hundredth! (1M.«) to a (JointlUta~north«rl|f..«d«-Of V«|» BUr»n

.^"jce, ««w)nt^yuth 4»d»ar»Mi arth 4»d»northerl- - . J B E R T STREET LITTLE LEAGUE ""nuwi watt along th« northerly tide Of

FIELDS BY THE CRANPORD BASE- Y«» *ur*n Av«nU»,-. two hundfed andBALLXeASUES.INC. POR A TERM . |wert.»y«lve (M5) feet to (he (Mint ofOP FIVE YEARS. Befllnnlnfl.

t ^ P ™ " W VJ. 3,4,5, i,.1 andon of td

YBE I t ORDAINED by the ToW

__CQramltt««otthe.Town«hlp rt CraNew Jersey;

P? « W» VJ. 3,4,5, i,.1 and^ - ' M l f l POJilon of now vacated-

»AvenUe««ihownntheCreh«brt

i t h r t f BeMbilir-Inc. a nonprofit eorpor«tl*n,

~ r Met«f»ndboiind» cmcrlpiron o* N6HHSlda-fiaMballPlaldiat Lambert Str*it

pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40A:1]-14,to arid permission to use the

Patrick J. Grail, J. Walter C<X/««, AlbertH. Antolno and Lambert Little Leaouof-leldj,' hereinafter more particularlydescribed, (or the purpose of conductingLittle L8»flue Baseball games andmalntalnlnarefreshment stands thereon

A P P R E C I A T I O N - i . AAavrtt" lAhh I' kAr£s*eih\i n r o . a w t e w a period6f five IS) years, terminable«7* ^ • . i . • ™ y o " J p n n - j . / w c y a r t n y p resents on * month's notice irthe premi»eii are

•.gift-of: a p p r e c i a t i o n t o f o r m e r b o r o u g h c l e r k P h y l l i s ne«dedv.«>r; public purposes o r m the••••••• ••••---••- • - - • • . - • . . . . . • . * • „ _ _ . ' event. OH Uefault, pursuant to a. 'license

"aorjeetnuitt ,ln form and substancesatisfactory to.the Township Engineerand Township A^oroe/' S«'d LittleLeague Fields 'ar« more particularlydescribed as follows:

• PATlilCtCJ.ORALLAND '

g p p i o r e r booug clerk PhMone who resHjrted recently to move to Toms River.

, ALL that tract or parcel of land andpremises; situated, lying and being Inthe Township of Cranford, Uhlon County,and State of New Jersey, moreparticularly bounded and described «•fo l lows: . • • • • . .

—eiglrthlnfl »f »~ Bolnr: In" theeasterly side of McClellan sti

pt \ ,; .Thefet/vfourttt;. hortl) jal d«gree», « .m(ne«es, 30 lecorid* West'«. distance of

d O d d J J t t i

Cuttom MadebRAPERIES

*5t lPC0VERSin your homeJust $2.50• Floor Waxing• JinHoital, S«rv)t<• Rug Shimpoolni• Slit* UcMttd'PcttControl

AlterationsAdditions

Remodeling

Free Estimates

PabrlobyYtrdoi-BoH

Hndi|iiiriinartptry hirdwir*

General RepairsFully Insured

Free Estimates BLAZER MAINTENANCEcall 353-7499

campltUly Iniurtd ft Bond**

Interior Decorating'••"•' Specialists • . • ,

Call 688-9416i>62 Stuvve«ant Avenue Union

CALL CRANFORO

272J-5177

HOME IMPROVEMENT INSURANCE

GUTTERS& LEADERSThoroughly CleanedFlushed and Insured

R E E U I WFUEL CO

Dependable, Friendly Servic- Since 1925

HEATING'OILSINSTALLATIONS

SERVICE549 Lexington Ave..,

CRANFORD~276*0900

ANTHONY VCRLOTTIContracting, Inc.

Interior A Exterior -

Residential a Commercialttfef«r«Hce$ on Request

Fully Insured Metnbtr NRA

241-8520

Minor Tree TrimmingPROMPT EFFICIENT

SERVICE

226-7379

BUI'llDINGi-MATpRIALSMlbLWORK

Me CENTENNIAL AVE.

PLUMBERS PLUMBERS TELEVISION REPAIR

REYNOLDS AIDOTVSERVICE COMPANYCHAPMAN BROS. BARRY M.PLUMBING ft HEATING INC.

G^o. Cuo/ro. . • , • Tonny DIFatsloOver 35 Yf i i Experience

SAME DAY SERVICE • Heating—CoolingAlt0ratlons-'RepAir Conditioning

IAMB OAY «B«VIC«« M M t J l b )PLUMIIINO 8, HEATINt

RESI6ENTIALBLACK »yv.H IT eBathroom and Kitchen ,

ModernizationsSERVICE , SALES, • : REPAIRS

" - . - Wo.Oo •.••:' - '•;

Tho Complete Job' .REASONABLE RATES "

COMMERCIALREPAfRS «INSTALLATIONS

» St»tlon«rv . , . . , . • R e i u m t l ' .e Envelopes., ', * C»(aioa Sheeli

FREEPlCKUPADaiVERV ANTENNA INSTALLATION

276-5367 34 NORTH AVe £.CRANfORD .-.•UA NORTH AVENUE E.

y-: ,r CRANFORD ;

Block M8, Included, Lots 1 through gInclusive as shown on the Cranford tax

. A / l a p s . ' •. •••• •' . < • •

. . • •••• , ' T B A c t J - .•'•' \ - yBeolnnlno at & point made by the

. Intersection of the easterly side ofLambert street and the southerly tide ofVan Buren Avenue; •

Thence, tlrit, north 4», dedroes, »mlnuteseasf, along fhe northerly side ofVan Buren Avenue, two hundred-andtwenty-five (2U) feet,to a point; •

Thence, second, wuth 40 degreetV S3minutes east, one hundred CloO) feetfoapoint; ' •

Thence, third, south 4« degree*, eminutes west, two hundred end twenty-five COS) feel to a polnWn the easterlyside of Lambed Street; •

Ttience, fourth, north <w d«ore»«^S2minutes West, aloha the eatftrly side ofLambert Street on*hundred (100) fe*» toa point or placed Beolnnlno. / .. Also Known at Lot* 1,2; 3,4, S, e , i and8, Block W at Ihowrlon the Cranford

• T e X f M a p . . . : , ; - . ; ; : . - . , ' , - • • • ' , . . , . • • • , . ... w

SECTION 1. The officer or employeeonslblewthe enforcement of the

ft you-nave^been-looklngfor-arjdeHghtfoi .Tydor horner brick ^friiSiecon&tlii ictfor#i!please come to take a look at this verylovely home offering: 4 bedrooms, 2 bathson 2nd floor, l bedroom & bath on 3rd floor.

1st floor has entrance foyer, large living-roemrflreplerceTformaflndtnlngrroom, familyroom, modern kitchen, powder room &enclosed sun porch. .

•college Estates Section*4Bdrms/2V3Baths

Finest quality thru-out!Features formal entry hall,33 ft. paneled family room.W French doors leading tolarge landscaped rearyar-dr-foFmal blnlng-roonrrwodenrTmff - 2 -^

nattached$ll>,900.

c , 2 ^ r

garage. Asking

J86-1800BROUMni KRAMER REALTORSa.1415 MORRIS t v t , UNION. N ; .^ \ OPCN ) O«VS 9 9 JT

YOUR CHILDREN WILLBLSURROUNDED BY ANIDEflL NEIGHBORHOOD

The grade school and high school are withinwalking dlstance...and...it's close to town.Freshly painted exterior, new driveway - acomfortably sized living room with afireplace, three bedrooms upstairs and acozy den for your leisure moments.

£74.900

FOR SALE

TAXI BUSINESSfor Sale. Box 255 c/6Cranford Chrorrlcle, 21Alden St., Cranford

COLE1MAN CAMPERExcellent Condition Sleeps6, sink, stove 8. Ice box.Many extras. $950. 276-2038after 6 • p.m.

The Cranford High SchoolGerman Club, under thesupervision of Mrs. MildredPrice, presented a farewellparty last month to thevisiting students from- Sted-thagen, Germany. Thestudents had been in Cranfordand Roselle Park for threeweeks._Four were hosted hereby Ted Kreitzman, ReneeSaal, Barbara Cohn andStephanie Paul. The other 11students stayed in RosellePark.

The farewell party featureda performance by the highschool jazz band, and talks by .Supt. Robert D. Paul; prin-

I cipal Robert Seyfarth; HerrHamann, the German

I c h a i r m a n ; K r e i t z m a n ,German Club president; andMrs. Price.

The German students werepresented with an Americanand German flag pin and theGerman Club provided a sheetcake.

The club expressed itsappreciation to all who par-ticipated in the farewell party.

HAROLD F.ftENNER, INC.BODY AND FENDER

STRAIGHTENING

ANDTOWING

'•^Estimates Furnished

27G-I111 >U\-U240« SOUTH AVE., E.

CRANFORD, N.J.

Obituaries

WANTED

ton ealt1

PETS

—— 'JBfealfor -Notary .public -

106 N. Union Ave. Cranford272-4020

VERMONT-CASTLETONAREA

^BR cape plus 2 acres,—Low—40%;—Acreage -Sl-,000-

per acre. 802-247-4809

WE NEED OLD suitcases,any condition to transportDolls for 'free ;shows to

-nursing homes— &educational prefects. Donot throw away old lace,old materials, doll partsany condition. Pleasedonate to the Good FairyDoll Hospital & Museum,205 Walnut Ave. Cranford,N. J. We buy and repairdolls. 276-3815

A D O R A B L E F R E EKITTENS available. Needa loving home. 6V3 weeksOld. Ca|l 272-8445 12 to 90 ' '

I

PasqualeScorese Jr.

KENILWORTH-- A funerafmass for Pasquale ScoreseJr., 30, of 568 Newark Avenue,was offered yesterday at St.Theresa Church.. Intermentwas in Graceland MemorialPark.

Mr. Scorese died Saturdayin St. Vincent Hospital, NewYork..

Born in Jersey City, he livedin Kenilworth 25 years.

He was employed by hisfather as an upholsterer atQuality Decorators for sevenyears.

Surviving are his wife Mrs.Marie Scorese; two sons,Savino and Pasquale; hisparents, Mr. and Mrs.Pasquale Scorese Sr. ofKenilworth; a brother, Daveof Kenilworth; four sisters,Mrs. Carmela Holt ofKenilworth, Mrs. JeanMajocha of Garwood, and theMisses Dianna and Rita

-SeercBe, bftjh^of

SERVICES (- ahornis grandparents, Mr. and

.Mrs. Savino Scorese ofKeniJworth.

CLEANCARS

WANTEDJEMWEIN i

VOLKSWAGEN;900 E. Elizabeth Ave"Linden. 466-6200

This is theseason for BLACK

CARPENTERANTS

T COMOA. • / th* OU11I A Urpmtl

OLD LIONEL TRAINSDon't take first offer! Callma Lasil.274.3708 .

I N T E R I O R A N DE X T E R I O R pa in t ing ,p r o f e s s i o n a l w o r k ,reasonable rates, qualitypainting, fully Insured,local references. CallSteve, 272-4033; If noanswer, 447-3993.

1 - 4

EXPANDED RANCH

15 Heathermeade PLce

1 (340,0) feet from th» corner formed by [l<:«i««l>g<-eem«nt shall bettuf Townshipthe northeasterly side of Cleary street Engineer, br such other -officer orand Iheioutheasterly side M McCWI'an «mployee of the township 81 theStreet; : , • ,• • • , • •' Township Committee may designate.-Thence, «|r»tj north W degrees, ,34 ••' SECTION";3..; SAID'• Llttl* League

•, )minutet, 40 seconds east along the louthof!*.1'1* »h|»ll.be maintained by and at theeasterly tide of MeCMan Street about .**».*• «»d »><p«n»e Of cranford Baseballfive hiiftdred and twenty (3M.0) feet to e1 Leagues, inc. lita condition satisfactorypoint in the westirlV right-of-way. «»,thetlt«.ttW/enolneei' exaeptlhe grass whichGarden state parkway/ . • ,•<•• will be.eut,by the Township ' ' : . '

Thente/ 'wi«(>iid.~IIJr~"ti southerly, SECTION 4, CRA.N£|9BP Baseball"direction alono the Westerly rldht-of-w«y L»«ou«5, Inc. *h«ir«nnM8llf submit aof the Garden State Parkway about <wo '*V>ri to the. offlcef of \ employee'hundred and sixty <34>.O) feet to a point' responsible for the enforcement of theof IntersectI6n with the' norihWeSterly condition of the «or«eTfierit »*lflno forth

• side of.,'Buchanan street;: * - .:. the uses, to which property waV butThence, third, south 57 deortet, *4 'durlho each year; thf activities l iWer

minutes, «.second* weitalono said taken Ip^f.urtherance,, of • thai public1 northwesterly side of Buchanan-Street"P«rpoie for. Which, property 'was

Don't pass up this delightful home situatedIn Brookslde school area and offehsdlvingT

- room, large fcitchen with dining area, utilityroom, 2 bedrooms & bath, large screen* "porch.

• • . i< ' . . . "

2nd floor has attractive bedroom plus roomfor additional room and bath. Park likeproperty plus attached garage priced 70's.

McPHERSON REALTY CO.276-0400

19 ALDEN STRiET CRANFORDOPEN DAILY »«5; SUNDAY M ; THURSDAY 7.9

COMING

MEMBER

OF HOMES

TO

CRANFORD!

HELP WANTED

HOUSING

, :pypo i» Tor Which property ,.«/*»about three hundred and fifty (iso.0) leet demised, theapproKlmate value'or'.eost;to a.polntJ- v,-\ •;•.•;•• ,, • ' r • J'*n». M iu th activities In.furlttwanW

T h e f e t f o u r t t t ; hortl) j a l d r e « ft' »u<*'purRo«»^nd #naHl rwat lo i i :M, ft u<*purRo«»,^nd #naHlrwatloii:Mtance of <«• continued tax exempt status of th«

nto*-;plao« noH0rof|t:cOr»ioratl«n 0.ur«uaht.to;1»otH

WmStm% dt.lrnt.

"rtmi»ii in lUuuiM- tt may be ' deemed' rie<;essary or,-Be1?.". w *« ' ' • • .»"•« appropriate to carry but the purpose* o»

J the foregoInQ ordinance. '

ofae«rtt<fAd»(ni Av«nu«

1 Thtnca* tacond, (torth 49 dearees, 4ltnlnu7t«)»»aco«d«.a.t,.lonii™'c.nUrline of nflw Vacated Adimi Avtnu*

i.jJgWW*H. and nm. hundredth. ( I * 0»)^feet *<»a point;;••: Thenc*. third, lout* 40 degre««, JJ.. .mlnutei, n lecpjua >«tr4hlrty, (M) f<»tr

to a point In the southe»-ly side of now; Vcated Adain A W U j V l ^

Thenc«, putth, »outh *Ude8re«», M: minute*^ 4 second* east, two hundred

"•;,threeand/otiy-fourhundredth! (30J44i

I«od ! M «c* .h* l l t r t .Publication •<ter-»lpal

oVlded by law ' ~RHym

STATEMENT' -—The ftiregolng ordinance vwdof l ted,

at emended, at a meeUng of th*\ Township commltteeof the Township ofcrantord/ N X , on Tuesday May V,

tt, on* tiunfcVtw. i g'^'. '.yiaa1--

dred

YOU CAN HUFF —YOU tAN PUFF

BUT YOU WON'T BLOWTHIS BHICK

TWO FAMILY DOWN IExcellent home with a Good Income...

: anti bath dh each floor. Finishedbasement w l i R ^ t a v i

Separate heating arid utilities,2 car Detached Garage.Easy Walk to< Towh...Prl^ed^at $110*000 ;' y ^

IHI Norlh Av* E.,Ci(<t|i(or<r

aUUlam C. Klumas. S.R.A.SENIOR RESIDENTIAL

APPRAISERSociety of Real Estate

AppraisersKLUMAS &GAIS««3 Rarltan Rd. •Cranford, N.J.

272-41( 0

BERG AGENCYwill, buy your *

house for cash.No red tape.Fast service, •---

CAUJLAHJRY'

RENTALS

young: chi ld .seeking oner... bedroom apt. In local grea., :i"'RjS!Jr)trirh s II? I e w i t h

references^ • Immedia tebec " p a n c V 35 *• 3903;-daytlrrte: 245-2127 after- 5,

; P . r n . ' • ; . ; _ • ; / " . l .. .. < •'

SALES POSITIONSOPEN

Licensed or UnlicensedFind out about: ~~ "

Boyle Training CenterAudio/Video Gallery

-..Training ProgramNational Gallery Leads

Advanced Promotional &.'. Merchandising Program

; with ohe of N. J.'s oldest•'and .rmret .progressive

firms.'.. . . . 'Por Confidential Interviewcall Mrs. Koehler-272-94.14or. Mtts;.:,Brewster-353-4200

Positions Open In

Morr<lst<iwn-benv/l|le

CLERK TYPIST for smalloffice in Crantord. ReplyP.O. Box 863, Cranford.

Z ™ tYBIST, C&ARFORD.INDUSTRIAL PARK Fulltime position avail, foraccurate speed typist. CallMrs. Schmidt, International RehabilitationAssoc. 272-8460 forInterview.

SALES AGENTWANTED

We heed a dynamic man orwoman to sell our exclusivecalendars and an extensiveline of advertisingspecialties/business gifts.If Vou have a past history ofsdles success or wish tobegin a career in sales, youcan benefit from one of themost lucrative commissionstructures In our Industry.What we .need Is anIndividual who can dealdirectly with businessmenwho use calendars andspecialty Items topromote their business.This Is an excellent timefor you to associate your-self with The Thos. D.Murphy Co., a pioneer Inthe advertising field • since1888. Your Initiative, andplanning wi l l determineyour growth and successwith our establishedcompany. Your accountsace prgjeotted and repeatorders make money for

• you. I'fi you can organle-your time and work with aminimum of supervision, •this can be an excellent fulltime or part time, business

-for you. Write BobMcKenzle, Market ingMfcnager, The Thos. D. .Murphy Ccu, J?O, Box 122Locust ^ ^

115*0.

ISTAMPS .

U.S. PLATE BLOCKS,Singles, Accumulations,Collections, Canada^ Top

. Prices pa.iar"Ca'ir~5lf"B'O11.

)ECORCOMPLETE DECORAT-ING SERVICE Draperiesand slip covers custommade (your fabric orm i n e ) , c o m p l e t e l yInstallod.—Woven •• wood;

OLD CARS WANTED:Cad i l l ac , P re-1950,Packards, Buicks, Pre-1970Call 549-8974

levelor and Roman shades.Also draperies cleaned,altered and rehung at a

_syrprlslngly low cost.DISCOUNTED

CLASSIFIED AD RATESPRIVATE PARTY ADS ONLY

3 $1 00LINES I .-

Maximum 12 words.Each additional word TOCAM 97fi-60QQ

M| GARAGE SALES! ^ _ Z*Z> ~ ^' I j m m j VERL0TT| j Friedrich

YARD SALE, 414 OrangeAve., Cranford. BenefitHoly Family AcademyJune 2 & 3, 10-4

GARAGE SALEJUNE 16 & 17th

9 A.M.-4 P.M.14 CRANFORD AVE.Knights of Pythias

Cranford Lodge No. 175

J Complete Remodeling d

f Residential & Commercial IReferences on Request

I Member NRA I

, 241-8520 :HOME IMPROVEMENTS

FREE ESTIMATESNIOHTAPPOINTMENTS

FULLY INSURED

KDRICII REMODELINGRUMMAGE SALE

NEW&NEARLYNEW'SUN&MON-JUNE3&4

10-5TEMPLE BETH-EL

338 Walnut Ave.Cranford

SERVICES

ALUMINUM SHOWROOM

Porch jnd Patio Enclosures

Jalousies Awning Windows

NupriMe ReplacementWindows

Storm andScreen Combinations

Combination DiBori Ii Styles

LIFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS INC

W 37&.}fOS

PAINTING - Interior andexterior. Call 276-5774

ONE DAYMOVINGLocal Shore Long Dist.

RAASERMOVING &STORAGE

589-6660. PUC251

MASON WORKWATERPttOOFINOind

REPAIRSSteps, walks, patlot, drain*

C

PLAN AHEAToBnjoy A GoohSummr

WINDOWAIRCONDITIONERS

Last Longer - Cost Less to Operate

PRESEASON PRICES-SAVE UP TO MOO

FREE IN-HOME SURVEYSALES-SERVICE - INSTALLATION

Window or thru the Wall

CALL TODAY276-1160

Seiwcei!#l!fTHE COMPAN Y THA T CA PES

Mombeir of Cranford Chamber of Commerce218 CENTENNIAL AVE. • CRANFORD 276-1160

STEREOT.V. REPAIR

9 out of lOi«pairsdone in your home

,18 Years .Experience

PROFESSIONAL/ELECTRONICS

ftENiLWOHTH3 bedroom house for1 rent,. .

•/•V.i 'bath's, ppe.ii fireplace, - |Targe back porch,- $450 a-

' nionth plus utilities, Call637-4040 \ ' , .

• ADMINISTRAtlVE/CONFIDENTIA/ - : ; • , , - • • • ' ; ; • ; , S E C t t l T A R Y ' • ' • : '

.forl.for supeyinWndent ^ftstHiwh7^t>faiT^egtitlabl^SeTWresume to Mr. Bruce Buckley, superintendent, Q)schools,;;Lincoln' School, Garwood, N. J. 07027, EqualOpportunity Employer. . . • ..

VENDORS WANTEDFocUnlon College AJyrnnl Association's 2nd. Annual

•nK 'Ffoa-Market on Saturday June 2nd.from 9 A,AA. to SP.M. Rain date June?. Double car space only S12. Evenletter than last years, For Info call 27o-2o00 ext, 208.

MEMORIAL DAY SALE_

FRI, SAT, MAY 25, 26

20% OFF 'SS^SSiJCUSTOMT-SHIRTST-BHIRTS • lERSEYS • UNIFORMSSWEATSHIRTS • WINDBREAKERS

TRACK: SHORTS • rmtctcm

-Wvi-i ' Vv

'" • • • • • • ' " : : ; ' ; ' ^ ' • ' • • S - 1 : • . '• '• '• '••' ' | ^ ^ -

.v?tsar.T—--

?Mk 1 ' ' ' . 'i'.fc'.(.^'r';,.V1.I.VlJ«^;.U^'i-'.'^.

Page 11:  · 5/31/1979  · "T- • '•'- "T Page 18 CRANPORD (N.J.) CHRONICLE Thursday, LEGALS BOROUGH OF GAR WOOD GARWOOD, W EW JERSEY PROPOSED ORDINANCE PUBLIC NOTICE i hereby glven-that,

Page20CRANFORD (N.J.).CHRONlCLEThuHaay,May 31,1979

The latest in dUWL Psycholoir,- . . ^ w i , , ™ - t o look fora / . Every Saturday show 1

The following questions and answers areexcerpts from "The Chudchology Bookwritten by the kindergarten children in Mrs.Maxine Sang's class at ^rooksidei MaceSchool. They represent the children ssuggestions on how to handle some of themost common problems of parenting .

The children were asked to prfeterid theywere grown-ups faced with child rearingquestlons^rmulated by Mr* Sang. Thdrsolutions ranged from reasoning to strictbehavior modification, from compromise toshades of Marquis deSadeMcjutte ypical ofthe 5 to 6_year old sense of justice, their

— teacher-asSUtes-usL—. 1—J.—„-The books were dedicated to their mothers

and given as Mother's Day gifts.What would you do_or say If you were a

mommy and your little boy_or girl wouldn ton to bed? ' L

"Go toyour room orl'll give you away toyourljrandma and grandpa.-" ".'i.Y "I'm not fooling, I'" drop you on the

•i-eii them- you'll.: throw them out thewindow and they can sleep on the grass.

Sing a song, the same song over and overand over again until they can't stand it andgo to sleep. ,

Give him his favorite teddy bear.Hug her and cradle her.Carry her up to bed and hold on tight.How can you keep* child In bed who keeps

• B C B S ""brick wall around the bed. Put alittle door on theside so mommy can takethe child out in the morning if he has to go tothe bathroom. ,

Lay on them until morning. .Buy a big (iage and put it on the bed.Hire a soldier to guard him.Give a toy to the child to take to bed like a

doll or an elephant. Do not use a real

^Makeyour voice real low and sound angryand say, "Stop getting out of bed. If thatdoesn't work, say, "Please

v Nallthe'chira's'paTamRs-to-the bed—------Plav musiirfoThim.What should yo^do4f your chl dren are

fighting and the big *ne hits the little one?Put him in the doghouse.Fly her away to Cincinnati.Give him thirty lashes.Yell at her ahd say, *'Go to your room

without supper tonight."Feed him and then send him^o bedWhat do you do if the little child Is hitting

thThe<gchildOshould havejo supper for twoweeks, just a big lunch.

Put the child In the garbage can.""Put her outside and lie her to a tree.

No TV for two weeks.SeAlthe childtonursery school.*E they bL

other kids>tnursery 8chool,^\ey won thit—tv, -»- u~uv««.« p ^ «\flters BO mticn., .

Call the police and;ask them to J « ~ * ^ •-•little>y witharedstripedshirt who doecn t

come when you calLPut him in the freezer until: he turns biue^Set S u n k and lock the child in the room

with the skunk. Then when youcall hinv toTome out (the child)' hirwill come quickly

What should a mother 'do If she and her ,husband are going on vacation and thechild does not want to stay homer

Tell the child, "Stay home with the baby-sitter and she'll feed you," •

Tell them, "You have to stay with grand-ma and grandpa and they'll take you to the

- ^ S e m ' t t a t i f ^ e n y l a y a t t h e i r - f r i e n d ' shouse every day, they won't miss you so

m i 'd tell them they could come, but I reallywouldn't mean it. Then I would pack theirSuitcases and I would whisper to their father,to take them to their grandmothers andgrandfather's.

Say, "Stop that pouting and go up to your

Every Saturday show her how to take care

J ^ W lUt your mother"

uon i worry, grandma and.grandpa canhelp you if you have any problems.

One night puW«hem to bed and makebelieve you're going to bed too and thensneak out and go on jfour vacatton. _

Tell them they can stay up until midnightIf thev stay with a babysitter.

I would say I would be backin one day, butI'd really stay three weeks. *<

Tell them that if they stay with a baby-sitter you'll bring them a toy. • - -

"ell them to stay with their cousin andthey'll have a lot of fun and they won't haveto clean up their room. - ,

You can stay with your best friend andplay with all her toys.

How can you keep a child busy If you haveto take a long Vide In the car?

„ „ , ^A'teyer ye lUt your mother."Don't burp at the table. |

: DotiTsTeaVtbys from your frienas.Never spill soda on a neighbor's couch.What should a mother do wjth a child who

refuses to go to school7 t-.'Call up Mrs. Collins and say my child

won't be in school today because she s

%ri^e the child to school and say/'You'regoing to school and there's nothing else to

'''say, "You better go to school or you won'tlearn to read and-Wrtte-J.' _.__. .

—Tattthw-rhild-toito-tosehooWr-you-ll-caii—the ponce and the police will say, "Do youwant to go to school or to jail?" i .

Say "O.K., you can stay home today, butyou have to go tomorrow."

Go to school or I'll sue you.I want you to go to school and learn to read

because I don't want to have to teach you toreifyou don't go to school you couldVow upto Mve bad manners. . . . .

What should a mother do If her child Issick and still wants to go to school? .

Tell the child If you go to school, you Hmake the teacher sick and then you'll haveto have a substitute." ,..

Give the child a whole lot of aspirin so he 1get better and be able to go to school the next

^Explain that If the child goes to school, shewill make the other children sick also.

TeffXe child if you go toschool, you'll getsicker and then you'll have to stay home 31

. v •

Ruth J wCranlprd

i

an-theto Cranlprd e d u n ,

tributes fttira Uvingstp^Schoo* t d t h e t a t a testimonial

p^YoSYou have to have airest. The other teachers

rwilldothewprk.'f- K^lnTJ^eyy.1st grade.

You are a sympathetic, amusing prln-l I Stak you should get a regard for

r t o - a school for 50 years!^ . •Holly Torgerfen.

- ^ - 4 - - ' : . • •>:':•:•'•• '"'.•.''•:':'-' i n d g r a d e .

1 wish to the near future^that_ you Btayhealthy-ahd wealthy." ^

week. Photos, by G r e g ^ ^ " ! ^

« *

tonoDDine the bubbles-will keep —- . ..^Bring a bag in « s e ' t t e y i b « » * up andopen the windows right away-

Let them write on a pad.Bring toys and paper dolls.Plav cards with them.What should you do If the children start

fighting with each other In the car?Stop and buy them something Sft they'll be

astop the car and spank them.Buy them ice cream and napkins so they

can't use their hands to fight.I'd throw ttiem out of the car, then it would

be quiet.' rtw»w»VnuldbeTell them to stop fighting or there couia we

accident.

•reil the child if they go to school sick andmake everyone else sick, then sooner orlater they will be the only child in school andwon't have anyone to play with at plajrtime.

Explain to the c h i l d r e n you breathe, thegerms come put of you and float in the afr.The teacher has to call your mother to takeyou home. Your mother will have to take

-the-germs-iiome-too.

grade.

"I am glaoUhat we had yoil for 56 years./ Shawn Irwto,

.—^ 2nd grade.ullfy titiftt "Ih first grade I remember that Mrs. J.?afloltias1—toBkrthe firWgriideio {heather *»r.- iw$u

mad at first, but then she 6al.d, 'Your headsim not hurt now. The other grade is so1 o u d " Sutann* Kalescky,

•• • - ' "• . ' . ' • ' * 3 r d . g r a d e .

"When I waBin kindergarten she sent inest well cards when I was sick."

Michelle Ann Meade,3rd grade.

• • . . . . • • # • • • . .

Our Mrs. 3. is a leader of all, .1 never know when I will meet her In.the

K j ^ s t f s j w , h a l l '•'•'• •' • ' • •• •" r i

• 1 * ^ ^ Sometimes she smiles and gien givesja

c

^ , , 4th grade&M.&- -I've seen.some people In schboling for

ienrB0me ucui«p m =*-• v——o --ri, some maybe 10, some even 20,

t f ^ ^ B i i :- From'bruises to vanaialisra,toj:uts, , „

K B : YoStheSeS ^

What should you tell your children to getthem to brush their.teeth? ut

"Brush your teeth or you'll ge cavitiesand the dentist will have to do your molars.He'll have to put silver things in themlf hedoes that, your teeth get smaller and

S™ You'll nave .to have braces put on your

Tell them, that if they don't brush their'teeth, they will all fall out. , .

Take away all candy.Tell them, "If you don't brush your teeth,

you'll get cavities and you'll never £hew

>a«5.ain# • •. • ,-.,:•• .u.-...- " " " t ^ all you ' l l h a v e l e f t

-audwfaeiarJjIne specimens o t v ^ i i f ^ S ^ ^ t s ^More and Miurej«~.= ^-r-^-"='vRunning wfound trymg to-do her

- Shwing 4ier;love with people, >.

^Jdlyrrand-toaBt-go-together.^Mr8. J. andchildren go together, / .

'All the things she does for us are great,N<) more hating, move mo;^ loving,

or iwo

y&Re&d 82 books to them so they won't haveany time to fight.

Stand the fighter in the corner.What should a mother do if a child uses

bad words?Squirt toothpaste up his nose.Sew a zipper on her mouth. .Make the child sit on the steps for four

8Glve the child the soap treatment.rrputsoap (n his mouth.-_..- -i- „ . . _

They won't do it anymore if you put salt uptheir nose.

Put tape on her mouth. . . . . . .Cut the child's favorite teddy bear in half.

- th* child to bed right after school for

^StfSp^h^rarmrfown^i^the-seat-beit-"Don't fight," I'd say, ''because if you do

andToirgerhurtrwe-don't^ have any-iand--,aids." J . ' . . ' ,

What should a mommy do if her childrencomplain that they don't have anything to doat home? . -

Tell "them to go watch TV.Tell them to rake the yard,Go to the movies if you can do it without

crossing the street. •"TracflcepIayTnT^se1 5 3 1 1 '~^.~^our

_father. _ _ ." Bringfihem fothe Parlc . - . -- --••-•-

Say,"You have a lot of things to do, now goand do them." ,

The mommy could ride bikes around theblock with the children.

every day He snouiu UHC^R »•• ""K~ "~brushes. At the end of the\week, give WTO a

Tell them new teeth cost $5,000."If you don't brush your teeth, they will

fall out and you won't be able toJalk.Remember j Vou cannot eat without teeui.

How can yiu tell If your children brushed

1 Lookand see if their teeth are aft white. Iftiiey are, you'll know they brushed.

So we'd better sta;rt showing our- iove too,' I like heira Whole bunchl

Kindly is the Way she does I

4thgrade

iors Reflect

were released after the 1

-fhini i iuwuvw'w - "Why Jlflll't VOU S

child she cannot play with her What should the inutliei

Trust the child and ask'llnm^'" " S m e i n h e t r b r e a t h r — - — -

How can you get your children to hang uptheir cfiihesY""" . •., -. Man,,t

Say, "Go to your room and don't come outuntil you hang up your Clothes-"

^Tellthe. child she cfrTenasior ten weektf. : . • •• ,

Make Ihe child .alt on the floor infront ofthe TV...but Boa't turn it on. .^....^

How would you explain to a child that hehhl f l t tTls t - te lh i te^ " ~

What shouia we muuici do-lfrofter having ,tried^ll these suggettlonsrthetjhlWren^tlll-complain they have noQi&lg to doT -

Tell them to do whatever it was they didover again.

^SKi ran^ rBHigh School seniorsand their answers reflect the general mood

^ "I didn't think that my years at Cranford r

High School were that bad. It did get w^dw^ i ^ a m v senior year, though. Wb*t ^McGrath.

orTell them that God doesn't like ItTelling lies is bad and when you grow up

you could go to jail for it.Tell them nt one likes people who lie.Explain to the child she will lose a lot of

ft* if* rids * tIf you try to protect yourself with lies, you

only get in trouble with your lies.Tell them something bad could happen to

your nose. • ". ' .What should you do or say to a child who

won't eat dinner?Say, "If you don't want to eat supper, you

don't have to, so go to your room."I would say, "Make your own supper."If you don't want to eat what Unade for

dinner, go to your grandma's .and eat,"Try it, try a little bit, maybeyou'll like"I'm notgcwng-to (MQkJnyjmore;''

, . „ . _T— - .—-.4 . nw 11*11 tit& Vnlll* I

er ugtuu. ,Spn>l \h"m '" their grandmother s.

~Say; "We're > l n g to ja t \n.B few-minutes," and then send the child to the

tffiS

t hang up your.—.—. ....rcomeove*rSBSpnore because

"that'says,

%^^fla^im^tiw|a peanut butter .and Jelly sandwich "

"If you don't eat your dinner, I'll give it to

UlIta3fy" scare the chiid by saying, "NoMcDooalitaJor eight wesks." , •

What should you do or say to a child whodoes not cante when you call? .. ...

Lasso him with a rope. . ' , .Scarelier. Hide some place aw* when she

walks by, jump Wt.and say "Weck^

i with $16.00 and hecan buy two big apple pies.

Say, "That's it, go to..youLXOom,.

What should you do with children whowon't do their homework? .... Lock him in his room, glue a pen onto hls-finger and tie him into a chair.

Say "youbetter do your homework or 111call your father and he'll spank you.

Tell the child to do his homework and youwill help him with it. •_•••- •.

Tell the children that if they do theirhomework you will take them, to the beach.

No-TV .for 100 weeks if th<fhomework isn .t-

°Have a little cage that you can-drop oyerhim until he finishes it. - •• '• • -

Tell them they don't have to go to school

Telfthem nolto go to school because/Jfthey don't do their homework it must meanthey don't like school. ' < ' •

Wfial should a mommy teach a child sothat tHe child will be polite?

Don't eat with your hands. •Don't smoke. •'..-''•' • ,'""•".~ :-:'Don't hit people when you *go by them.Don't try to eat everything' with, (uspoow-

L, ]Open the door when someone knocks.

Let them leave their clothes laying around,every day and pick them up once a week.

fell them, ';Plck up your clothes becauseif thev get dirty, I won't wash them.

K i t do you do with a baby who cries

'Mfiut*{he*baby downstairs on a mattress inthe'cradle and let the baby watch,TV^ntil;,

blows, wind blows on' you so

n; his favorite blanket andpi bmky

I the baby fa your bed!*£$)**n h^ |

: i s n *

we need is laeking-

w

oe mffl^ot-soda-."ngalf nno "hut!the_

door

^^^^i iSi thchl ldr t^whoattBk*|Or;B tpy ^he» you takethipm * ¥

Taite him hbtirie and put him to b eh e giibuldh'task for H* toy every time.,

?[• Buy s o m e ^ l h g ^ ^ k . ^ ^ . : . L--Bring ^ s t i t f f t ^ ^ i r " ? ^ ^

T ^ p SnetHand ^onH ^urb^yoU While^ X g M s h o p t o l n g . ^ ''"<••" '•••• £ "

' • i b u y her vm toY> 1, ' tL JL^AA

r tne;mapnme,;»i o «*~rj ; .iHeba^whejreirthas^

km

arid ut as;12tlv grade

^i«Oie-trettd I've 'seen, w j j e j a f t t ; th^e

~'miTi)lic1fe^WvbaBiC8 movement that hasenciouraged sameness aiid unUormlty

. ' 3°u?cUvldU8lit^^I Sams, the ciuing<»f the r-«—"»-«" r * e

I* 'w»hnni>ahMt teachers ai

y;i&r. •XPftztetiXr''

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• ' I , - . : . • • . : : : ; .1.

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