si adults si on campthursday, july 18, 1974 br · \ • —

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\ —<«••-..'.,.:,• . ; ' » . ' ' ' » - Pa ge 1 2CRSNF0lRD (N:J;) CITIZEN AND CHftONlGLE Thursday, July 11,1974 RESTAURANT GUIDE Chu Dynasty (Polynesian)...Sum-Sat, noon -11:30 Malor Credit'Cards Accepted , ( "Geiger'S"-(American--Features—Homemade Apple Pie) Sun.-Sat. 11:30-10 M.lior Credit Cirdi Acci-pU'd Tower Steak House (Traditional) Daily 11 1Q;3O, Sun. 1 : 10:30 Maior Credit Cards Accepted Coachman lnn_(Traditional) Daily 7 • 10 P.M. Entertainment Malor Credit Cards Accepted Mario's (International) Mon.Th.urs-: 12-2 & 5-10 Fri 12 2 &5 11 Sat. 5-11 Sun. V9 amorce on expressft.pmer's Club Nanina's (Italian.) Sun..Mon. T'h'urs. 12 - 2„ 8,5- 10 Fri. 12 2& 5 11 Sat. 5- 11 Sun. 1 -'.9. M.lipr Credit Cards Acceo'od Pete. & Charlie's (Traditional) Mon.Sat. 11-1 A.M. Major trtdit Cards Accepted Tre.tola's (Continental) Tues-.Thurs. U:30- Board TGARWOOD-the"" 77 regular "The liexT regular" 'public" public-meeting of the board of board meeting will be held on education scheduled, for July August 20. 16, has been canceled. _ , SI ADULTS SI Escape Is Everything! nfUE Rlc UKBHW8TII HOffmHR $1 ADULTS $1 PARK "•;; w'-^ 1 Wm. Pitt lrm(Traditional) TuesSat. 12-9 Sun 'til 8 M<»ior Credi! Cards Accepted , # - Union Pkwy Exit 138 - ' Gallopinf Hill Rd (S Points) MU 7 0707 Closed Sun and . Mon ' Since 1930 a Favorite for Gourmets Continental Cuisine Luncheon, Dinner - Cocktail Lounge ' Recommended by CUE "' DIRTY CRAZY LARRY UCtURD UMJiUMM DVMICAMICM uiiEt COIUHI ^ E L BROOKS' R MQUtlWUCM 'There's Only One' Open 24 Hours A Day . foFthe frnesf food in Cfanfdrai JEW CRAWFORD DI1R opposite the R.R. Station FIRST MORTAR BOARDS —35th graduation class of the Geraldine Nursery School and Kindergarten at Forest and North .Ayes, is pictured with faculty.' Young, graduates are,, left to right, Gina Miragliotta, Douglas Cramer, R. Geoffrey Doyle, Denise Dudas, Kelly Mclnerney, Douglas AAagiera, Kenneth Toby, Curt Huegel, Todd Grossman, Jill DiGioia, Michele Zinone. Faculty members at left are Julia Magee, Seton Perkins Smith and Penny Lockhead; in playhouse, Henrietta Spotts and Kathy Ruday, anfd at right, Vera Krutzner, Monica D. MeIrWney.and Monica F. Deubel, director, Woman from India mixes business, intellectual interests ( u< f.j a '(m wtr— PRIVATE PARTIES 10 TO 200 Savani Indu Zaverdas is a, 22-year-old woman with a master's degree in economics. But that doesn't stop her-from^ finding an outlet for her in- tellectual—interests at Union College, a two-year com- munity college. Indu (her first name) arrived from India, her native "countryrmore thana year ago" to work in sales with her brother who owns and operates Savani Imports, Inc., North Ave., Westfield, a boutique carrying genuine Indian clothers, handicrafts and jewelry. She loves work and finds the experience a valuable route to meet Americans, but she also wanted to., take ..some. -College.. courses/ This summer, she enrolled at Union College. "I had. taken some psychology in India so at Union College I enrolled in abnormal psychology and a developmental English course to improve my speech and written communications," Indu commented. —*• No differences Indu does not recognize any major differences between "Smerican and Tncli'an college students; Slie says there are good and not-so-good in both countries, but she does find the professors; in, the;IJnited. States more liberally educated. "In India, most of my professors were from my local area so their experiences were restricted," Indu explained. "Here the teachers.may have often worked in another field, sometimesnot even related to what they Teach. And it is not Unusual to have a professor who has lived somewhere else -hls-wholeJife." simple. Here, job and educational pressures seem to overshadow day-to-day living, Indu thinks,„„,: i Despite this opinion, Indu does a lot of entertaining in her Westfield home. She frequently has friends over, lots of Indians she's met through social groups and many Americans she's met through school, the store, or the yoga classes her brother teaches part-time. An evening with Indu would usually in- clude a homemade Indian. dinner, complete with curry, but' does: not plan to stay permanently, The youngest, of seven children, Indu misses her parents>_-her_£alher _is a retired law clerk--and her many friends. She said the widespread illiteracy and poverty and numerous social projects make it almost vital for aperson of her background and education- to return to make a contribution. - "It's nothing personal against Americans," Indu added.. "I think it's only natural for a person towant to return home after a few years THE RED CABOOSE A N ICE PLACE FOR NICE PEOPL E TOM & l),\VE'.SIl.VA YOUR HOSTS A Delightful He* ADULT COCKTAIL PUB 78 NORTH AVE, GARWOOD . I) h-.'hli'il I'.il^in: 1 !i*t THE ARCH PRESENTS MONDAY SPECIAL Broiled Prime Sirloin Steak Baked Potato Salad Bar SC50 _ T H U R^D A Y— PRIME RIBSPECIAL . 2. Salad Bar 3. Pasta of the Day 4. Prime Rib and BaVed Potato MILLBURN LUNCHEON COCKTAILS DINNER AFTER THEATRE DRexel 6-1724 _J.ridu also believes her "special dessert. She also coumrymeh~are much more enjoys music, particularly- "socrabler-than—Arrrertcansf- Actiyities are spontaneous, p , people are friendly.and life is Plans to return indu likes the United States, Who knows, maybe by then Indu will have not only a master-s—degree—but—ah- associate degree from Union College, DINNERMUSIG LOU SPADA &CHARLES NUNZIO • TUE. THRU SAT. EVERY FRIDAY IN OUR LOUNGE JAMIE GACOS COMPOS ER^PER FORMER AUTHENTIC POLYNESIAN CUISINE S Mm, t. OrJril to , t JACQUES BREL 1974 SEASON tM* by Vmjtt Bwry ' Delaware Hiver brings out Ihe Dest . . .(Soil aside. Shawnee .2 outdoor poqlsjennis n K r r r i liqui ng a ncl nearby horseback riding. 396.000 foet ir.75 miles . Irom the GW Bridge on Route 80 Then it's just 80 steps to your golf cart and 27 famous. . challenging holes The exceptional scenery overlooking the has to offer olfers great food Sh Fred Waring's Awnee I'a (i >r rL'M'rv.IlK irv. .inci mlortn.ilic irw >n ;itiilili (.ILJlt.lan.iily-.inununxiull.uljii'.. uuuii.-.urc.iii ...,.- i/'W'M;'! lbt-HI (clin.'rU il-MI'-i ["•<:• 'M.|,| [Ir.iin ciYc;i- coei v.ii xr/7 it.n 1 H''Hi j . V I - '.)':<BO I Kill free 1 tinnt'olhi.'f *>t. jlr l :.) EXTENDED MIDWEEK GOLF VACATION '31 per day* Minimum 5 nights (Sun .thru Thurs ) i.ncludos.. un-. limited fjolf- Irom ,day. ol arrival thru day ol dgpar- luro. 3 moals lor each,tiig'hl ol stay, swimming. toVinis. Addll.-nights $27.* v *Por• pore. dbl. occ . ptyu tan & Qraiuilios Goll paM not includoti American Express ond Dinar's Clufj C<ird<, Honor rd For M(U''V.itions-c,ill 12011 379 3 r j3fi B / l0'M0" 1 '' furnpiki'; ShoiV HilK.-NowJoimy-- Oppn .7 il.i.ys RESERVATIONS 635-2323 94 MAIN ST.. CHATHAM CLOSED MONDAY + CABARET * ENTERTAINMENT Now through September 15 "MEASURE FOR MEASURE" "William Shakespeare "UNDER MILK WOOD" • Dyliin Thomas "J.B." "Archibald "RICHARD H" . -•'William Shakospaare STEAMBATH" Bruce Jav Friedman "MONDAY NIGHT SPECIALS" Mimi, Music, Dane* & Drama. Now thru Sept. 9 July 15th '"• ' •Dance Co. Ensotnblo In Repertory," Drew University Campus Madison, New Jersey 0794O (201) 377-4487 N.J. j only Proiaaional (Acton Equity) Repertory Company and it's only minutes from your home. TAKES OVER—Allen J. Rooney of* 23 Burchfield Ave., left, new president of | Bayonne Rotary Club, receives gavel of office from William Ghin,' his predecessor. In center is Charles ,,F. Fiumefreddb,. installing officer. The new club president is an executive of Cibas-Geigy. OCEAN GROVE NEPTUNE TWP.'s OCEANFRONT FOR A GREAT WRITE FOR COLOR BROCHURE PUBLICITY BUREAU, P.O. BOX 277 v OCEAN GROVE, N.J, 07756 THE FRIENDLY HOTEL NOW PLAYING THE SuiNJshiNE B o y s " JULY 9 - AUGUST 4 Performances: Tues., Wed . Thurs, Fri at 830, Sal at 5 4.9 30; Sun. at 7 30, Thursday Mai. at 2 - Phone order* accepted ECU - 378-4343 WARREN ON THE OCEAN SPRING LAKE. N. J. 07162 Private Boach Glorious Surl Private Pool All Sports Cheerful Room Soilings Supervised Children's Activities Wondortul Food ATTRACTIVE RATES Write tor Qrochuru Resorvallonj Mgr Mary G LOoo PHONE 201-449-8800|», FREE PARKING. Serving Cranford, Kenilworth and Garwood VOL. .81 No. 2d Published Every Thursday Thursday, July 18, 1974 on camp br Second Class Postage Paid Cranford N.J. 07016 15 CENTS , i '•/A detective bureau in- vestigation into parents' mistreated youngsters at the Recreation Department's three-day summer camp last week got underway yesterday at the direction of Police Chief -Matthew—TV-Haney.—-- The camp, known as Cranford West, is located in Hope Township, County. The police investigation, which., is non-criminal . in -nature, is being made at the request of Robert Kniss, recreatjoji; jjirector, and Township Administrator Sidney Stone. Kniss~met yesterday with seven protesting parents of the redden the stomach area, campers. . Kniss told the-parents that . The parents charged that the .camp staff denied-any. some of ifie camperssuffered ''nialicious or sadisticintent't" injuries at the hands of camp .on the part of the counselors. counselors and were exposed "- :Jl ' c "' : " : " wn " A to "scandalous language." Some demanded the ouster of He said Schweining and Petrick have "excellent records" as lifeguards and Schweining is especially popular among youngsters at, the pools. '.''••' .._l Kniss conceded J h a t . t h e counselor^ were "guilty of poor judgment" in allowing the ./horseplay" to get out of hand. Kniss said that the camp. in ' "horseplay" with \Ke\staff reported considerable younpters, 7 ihcrudihg7""pink^roughhousing-7among the belly 1 ' -encounters in whiclv youngsters themselves. He short blows are struck, t o ^ - ^ "»»"»•<• **' •> c °" 1 " lc -William Schweininfr and Jed Petrick, 17-year-old coun- selors who also serve as lards at the municipal pools ahd-wljayolunteered for the camp jobs. 'Pink-belly" encoi»Hers According to Knissv . the counselors admitted engaging question as to who is responsible" for the injuries to the youngsters. \- ^ : -Althoughrnone-of-the tfiirty- six 8 to 11-year-olds at the camp was hurt seriously, one 11-year-old bore bruises on the st,oma"ch, arms and legs. Others also returned home force jn disciplining the campers. He later met with Sidjney^_ Stme, township^ad- istratqr^lhe"fAVOaskeU have beejH disciplined at the outset by being returned to iheir homes.- q Chief Haney to> look into the complaints, "as an internal, non-criminal investigation." Front the reports of parents, campers and the counselors Th nT there is a with bruises. Reach impasse Kniss -met yesterday ,with five mothers and two fathers of the campers. The session reached ah impasse when two of the, parents demanded that Schweining and Petrick be discharged. Kniss refused to fire the two on the grounds that he ha'd no' evidence of the use of physical p Themselves, the nTree-day camping trip had spmewh'at riotous overtones from the time the bus trip to Warren County got underway, . Bus ride hectic , ; * The youngsters reported considerable disorder and use Of improper language on the ride to camp! Kniss said that, in retrospect, he believes that offending "youngsters' should j selors told of "horseplay" be- tween the leaders and-the boys, the latter complaining of being hurt by thecounselors in the "pink belly" exchanges. ir The counselors said it was •"'air in fun" and the boys would jump on them in groups. The campers also corn- plained of enduring hurts at the hands of counselors in the ourse of "running the youngster runs, through a. group whicfT is swatting at them. Thrown in water . , Parents protested to Kniss iHat the objections. Kniss criticized his counselors' conduct in this regard, pointing out that they rsupposed-tobeiactingias; •lifeguards. Paul Hogan, who at 20 was a senior counselor; explained the camp staff's side of the capers to the parents and had thrown their, children off the camp dock into the water repeatedly, even'in spite of y part of the counselors. He reported seeing one 11-year- old: Strike another—-in—the stomach so hard as to cause the victim to cry for an hour, and said the youngsters engaged-in—considerable physical roughhousing among themselves. ' ' The,camp was under, the direction of Mrs. Jeffrey Dillon, wife of the townsHip ~recrealion~supervisor.-.-Mrs! Dillon, had the job of cooking most of the meals and thils Continued on Page 2--. N.J. tax \ here Warning signs of the rough road confronting Governor Byrne's- income tax plan, which squeaked through the Assembly Monday by a vote of . 41 to 38, were evident at a program while merely outlining it, "." .'- • Misunderstanding. < Speakers . from the floor • reported they had/, been advised the tax plan would : -—-——public hearing on the-propo'sal---affeet-senior-citizens and- ' *1 FIREWORKS FALLOUT—This'assortment.of aerial debris from the Cranford July 4 fireworks display landed on rooftops, lawns and driveways in the section of Kenilworth adjoining OrangeAve. Junior High field where display was held Items,-include canister UC:, townshipj* . ,• ' ' - " <Photo by (-'red Sonntan fragments, reports and undetonated sky "sparkler: Kenilworth onlookers, who dodged smouldering .particles and stood by. with, lawn hoses, protested toMayor Henry E. Hinsenkamp Jr. (Stop^ and another.photo Page 7.) ____" ^ zone Talks that conceivably could lead to an out-of-court 7settlernent"of- i -litigation-be- tween the township and Union College over educational zoning restrictions have been going on without fanfare. The college's suit tovoid the Township's "E (Educational)- 1" section of the township zoning ordinance is still pending in the law division of the state Superior Court. The school is seeking to void the zoning regulation on the grounds it has the. effect of controiing educational policy and restricts the development of the institution. Representatives ~of~5bth" sides would like to avoid the costly and time-consuming procedure of litigation, and introductory discussions have been undertaken in a con- ciliatory atmosphere. Land use discussed The r T o w n s h i p ' s requirement that 65 per cent of land usage on the campus be. ~dpen space is under discussion, as well as the possible easing by the township of the requirement of an-automobileparking space, for-each enrolled student. While the college disputes the right of the municipality to regulate campus land usage, it is said to believe that 40 per cent open space would be tSorereasonable : "an"d"po"ssibly: accommodate its expansion plans, at least in some areas^ A .7 per cent parking space for each • student has been ad- vanced as a more reasonable regulation. As stated by township of- approval for restaurant ••••••»••• [APPEARING 6 NITES a Week in the COACHMAN LOUNGE COURT OF APPEAL Dining Room Open Breakfast Lunch & Dinner Late Evening Menu Coming Attractions NATIONAL SCENE GostciMian I IBANQUET FACILITIES From 20 - 800 Hmaurant GARDEN STATE PKWY. ON EXIT 136, CRANFORD, NJ., PHONE (201) 272 -4700 . /// updated ttrnpo ON FRIDAYSAND SATURDAYS proudly hosts JACK ARNOLD PRESS and His Orchestra LOCATED IN WELL-LIGHTED SUBURBAN PLAZA 141 SO. HARRISON ST., EAST ORANGE Dancing All Evening to the Delightful Music of JACK ARNOLD PRESS and His Orchestra Tuesday Evening Prime Rib Night $5.95 Enjoy A Nostktlgic Evening of Banjo Music • Of course, we have our Italian Gourmet Smorgasbord . for the entire family on Sunday, from 2 to8 P.M. RESERVATIONSPLEASE .. . CALL 677-1015 WINE OF-THEMONTH JULYSELECTION Our Own Direct Import from Germany ,. = _ Moselbliimchen * German Mosel Wine A delightfully refreshing semi-dry white wine, for outdoor,'or warm-weather menus. WINES AND LIQUOR! , FREE PARKING IN REAR UM RMT Entrance 30 EastmanSt. Cranford (opp. Theatre) 23-02. Bottle $18.25 per case DIAL 276-1044 OUR WINE UME FREE DfUVERY A plan to convert the farmer Arco gasoline station at the South and Centennial Aves. into a restaurant will have to meet review by the Township Planning Board attorney to determine if it meets the requirements of the Cranford Flood Plain Ordinance and the recent township moratorium . on building in the flood plain. .The boar.d ceferred ihe matter toits attorney, Donald "Greightonv last Wednesday after Alfred C. Cascarina, Northeast region real estate manager for Chicken Unlimited Inc. of Ft. Lee revealed at the board meeting, -that his firm, wants-to remove the porcelain from the outside of the structure and replace it with brickface and make other alterations to fit in with the colonial motif of the "proposed restaurant. Cascarina also said the facility Would have no outside service and would require parking space for about 30 cars. Referred to counsel Board member John Duryee. asked the board to turn the matter over to Creighton because the Arco station is in the flood plain area. Board secretary Dennis Irlbeck, acting chairman, reminded the restaurant of- ficial that He may have to produce affadavits from witnesses proving the.site is not .subject to;., extensive. .flooding. —Thfr board postponed .until its workshop meeting a\ discussion on the request by' Graber-Rogg Associates of 1 Cranford that the board waive minimum parking space requirements on proposed 10,000 square foot extension of the firm's warehouse facilities at.Jackson Drive to enable it to put in more shrubbery. ^The Township zoning or- dinance requires % parking spaces for the proposed,.,, ex- tension while Graber-Rogg wants to limit its parking to 30 spaces. -.'"' Variance requests """Harding —Brown of Elizabeth, attorney for the firm, told the board that his client now has two requests for vaf iances before the board of adjustment.. If the 'two. variance requests, for lesser sideyard measurements, are granted,.he says the company will be able to plant more trees instead of extending parking i spaces into a residential z.one bordering Lindeik .-._.- .... _: .... •: .•._ .... -. •-_. ; .„•_.. The board must give its _ approval J)efpre_an_exception to the parking . requirements~~ can be granted. Referred to the township . engineering department was a request by the Union County Park Commission that the township sell it about 5,500 square feet of land near Lincoln Park lEast, just jbove the old Doescher's Mill. The commission wants to ex- change that land with the Cranford Hall Nursing Home for about (>,800 square feet of adjacent land on the nursing facility property. ficials, the municipality adopted the educational zone restrictions in an effort to protect the residential area surrounding the campus. The township continues to be . bound by this motivation. Union College has expanded ; farbey.ond its original concept of a junior college for 800 students, Enrollment is now -close to the 1,400 mark and growing. A factor in expansion plans has been the return of adults to earlier educational pursuits." •'.•.••• , Fine arts school .. The need for a fine arts schooFas welllisToMrfcreased" gymnasium, land recreation facilities has'Haeen growing at the college, but such physical expansion- is ruled out by the open space provision of the zoning law. The fapt such growth is blocked is interpreted by college officials as a I attempt to control educiitior al policy by local fiat. Th^ctjnEgelSels . the municipal re4_rTctidjns prevent it frora^nSouftling itself" into the /kind orin- stitution policy makers^want it to become. V Township officials po\nt out that there is no effort on their part to interfere with the educational program, but\that their interesrisa~continmng one to preserve the esthetic and resiflential charac- teristics of the area. The college expresses a willingness to comply with- other zoning restrictions in the ~comw\nnity7TSUch~as-"building"" setbacks, structural, regulations and the like. However, it contends that only the N.J. Department of Higher .Education has the right to rule on matters which affect" educational policy. in Township Hall . Friday night. , ; Lack of • public un- derstanding of thg proposal and disenchantment with some of its provisions were' apparent at the meeting here, although several speakers upheld the income tax as the only equitable" means of carrying out the state Supreme Court's mandate to reform the system of firian- ging-edueation. •—— Oth District Assemblymen Joseph L. Garrubbo and John cCarthy, both Democrats ted in the Byrne landslide November, sponsored the feting here and both voted gainst the tax plan on onday. Both criticized the tax distribution plan for "penalizing" communities for industriaL ra tables. Senate vote Monday ... The tax bill is scheduled for vote Monday in the State Senate, where some observers feel it will have an even more difficult time than in the Assembly. The measure has yet to receive 1 a single favorable vote from; a Republican. If Garrubbo and McCarthy sought justification for their negative votes on the .income rent payers adversely, although specifics 'of the plan would benefit these grqups: . •Complicated formula. Orin Kramer, state : treasurer's aide arid a promoter of the Byrne plan,,sought to explain the ._ 27-per-eent property tax reduction in Cranford and —benefits—accruing—wage- earners from the "circuit- breaker" or real estate tax paymext cutoff at certain income levels. Kramer's hypothetical cases, such, as benefits on a $5,000-a- year income arid $3.0,000 property valuation, bore little relationship to actual .' situations. • Hack" of"~credlbility7 T Speakers from the floor cited promises vs. per- formances of new state "" ,. Continued on Page 2 Police brings five arrest^ A police crackdown on. disorderly young people in the vicinity of Cleveland School over the weekend resulted- in five arrests and charges in- volving drugs and the con- sumption of alcohol in public places: Acting on complaints by school officials of.discarded bottles and cans in the area of the school, police ur-r^r the', direction of .Acting;Chief A. Frank Burr kept clones sur- veillance of the vicinity-and the.arrests resulted. Police arrested three juveniles on charges of violating a local ordinance prohibiting public con- sumption of alcohol adopted by the Township Committee early this year. A 20-year-old, William Sugalski of 36 Roselle tax plan, they found it at the Ave., was ...arrested; on a meeting in the~T6~wnship Hall similar charge by Patrolman meeting room attended by more than 100 from this community and the surrounding area. A number "of the factors which are working against the tax program .surfaced at the session/They included: -_•• ConfusidriT^ Garrubbo htt i yg explain that-.th'ey were in favor of the income tax concept, but opposed the formula un'der which it would be imposed. They were constantly accused of supporting the Byrne Gregory Drexler at the nearby town parking lot in Miln St.- ~ Another 20 : year-old- y o u t h — ^ T ^ was arrested by ; Patrolman Drexler on_the school grounds on a charge of distributing controlled dangerous sub- stances .(drugs )...on a. warrant issued by the Union County sherifPs-offieer-He-^as-John E. Kelly of 308 Prospect Avenue. Weapon charge One of the juveniles arrested on the drinking charge was a girl. In other police action, Thomas J. Camicia, 21, of 11 Roselle Ave., was arrested Saturday by Patrolman John Lawney and William Ther- mann on charges orjrug violations and carrying a concealed dangerous weapon. Camicia was involved in an auto accident in Myrtle St. near Centennial Ave. and treated at 'Elizabeth General Hospital for a leg injury. Police reported finding a "spring-loaded" knife in the car, a quantity of controlled dangerous substances in the form of pills, and marijuana amounting to less than 25 grams. . Camicia was released in $2,500 bail for hearing before Municipal Judge Charles J. Stevens on August 13. Also on. Saturday, Patrolman Jerome Andrews arrested . Marjorie Ann Johnson, 22, of 3 John St., Summit, on a charge of possessing a ^icycle which a boy from Clark Township said had been stolen outside the Pathmark store, in W. South Ave. The woman said she did not intend to keep the bike. Head-on crash Two victims of a head-on automobile crash in South Ave. E. near the Garden State Parkway overpass were taken to Rahway Hospital on Thurs- day in police vehicles. They ;were Pamela J-, Spagnubla, 21, of SkyTop Gardens, Parlin, / N.J., and Ronald C Voegel, 17, of 542 Jackson Ave., Elizabeth. Miss Spagnuola, who was driving west, suf- fered a fractured jaw and laceration of the mouth. Vogel, who was eastbouhd, suffered a possible concussion of the brain and "lacerations': of ~ the forehead and mouth. Hocage^ House shuts its doors The Hbcajgee House^islio" more. ;- . " After serving four years as a refuge/for youths and their ~and"toldthetn"what-thejrcould- do about:it." The administrator said alcohol has replaced drugs on on liiiiiilliiiiliiiiitiiiiiillililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililllliiiuiilliiiilliililliliiiiiUiiliiiillliliilHiliill Chronicle contents STARDUST & BRASS show draws 3,000. Pictures, story Page 8? -••'•'•• .,. DOOR-TO-DOOR pollticalcampalgn.underway. Page 3. : Arts Calendar- Church .Classified .... .-fditorlal ..... .12 Garwood , 7 ..6- Kenilworth . .... 6,7 .10 Social 5 ,,4 Sports ...... ,y 11, 12 IIIIIIIIIUJIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIII1IIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II Truck parking . Acting on a letter from Mrs, Boris G. Knesvic of 123 Thomas St., the board referred to Creighton a request to see what the township can do to stop trijek .packing- on tiouth Avenue near Thom'aV and High Streets. Board member Dr. Clair W. Klynil Jr. called for "an in- tensive investigation" of truck parking in tho township to find out which firms or residents are allowed to park trucks: outside and how long they have been permitted to do so. problems, Hocagee closed its the youth scene, and that there doors last week and put the is more acceptance and less the lawn for mystery about this habit. "The reduction in the drinking age limit and the social use'of alcohol in the home, has 1 made' drinking acceptable," Klempa ob- served. "Most .young people are not aware of the problems it canlead to later on." - Had large staff •-- Throughout its existence, Hocagee ."House emphasized the availability of its staff for discussion ofa wide range of furnishings pickup. "Things had slackened to a point it was nolonger feasible to keep going," was the comment of Robert Klempa of 5.00 Riverside Drive, who (leaded the program at the house. Attendance at Hocagee had dropped fromHSQ who visited nightly when the program was initiated toa mere five of six who dropped in each night -this summer. „.____ problems encguntered J>y To the latter, it was simply youth, such as difficulties at "a place to go." A Crane homestead The 19th Century residence at 42 Springfield Ave. in which the program was conducted is owned by Mrs. Harriet Lichtenstein of Elizabeth. It will be rerented for residential use. The house formerly was owned by members—-pf thc- founding Crane family. The Hocagee program was. operated under the aegis of the Mayor's Committee on Drug Abuse, of which Klempa home, in school or with police. The program had the ser- vices of a staff of from 20 to 25 volunteers, including psychiatric social workers, nurses, teachers, attorneys and businessmen. They made themselves available to discuss problems relating to their speeialities-that-young people felt they could not discuss with parents or teachers. The program was funded by the township, with donations "Was~the~pnid administrator.- of furnitureand equipment as ALL OVER — Hocagee House at-*42 Springfield Ave., once a Crane family residence, shuts down after four .years serving township youth. Furniture was put out tor pickup. He had succeeded Joseph Sharp, the original ad- ministrator. Klempa attributed the dropoff in attendance as due to a considerable extent to the reduction in the drug problem locally.- -... - - Provided drug information "The kids found when they started using drugs that they had nounderstanding of them and the effects they had," Klempa observed, "but the> were interested in finding out. \Ve provided the information. well as of personal services being made by its supporters. For the first 18 months it was housed on an upper floor of the Cerebral Palsy Center at Holly St. and Springfield Ave. across the street from its last location... Persons identified with the program expressed gratification with theresults it accomplished among troubled youths, andcited numerous instances in which it helped untracked young people back on course. *c L. _.\ v .!":.;>;• ..'—i.. .' '

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Page 1: SI ADULTS SI on campThursday, July 18, 1974 br · \ • —

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-Page12CRSNF0lRD (N:J;) CITIZEN AND CHftONlGLE Thursday, July 11,1974

RESTAURANTGUIDE

Chu Dynasty (Polynesian)...Sum-Sat, noon-11:30 Malor Credit'Cards Accepted ,(

"Geiger'S"-(American--Features—HomemadeApple Pie) Sun.-Sat. 11:30-10

M.lior Credit Cirdi Acci-pU'd

Tower Steak House (Traditional) Daily 111Q;3O, Sun. 1 : 10:30 Maior Credit Cards Accepted

Coachman lnn_(Traditional) Daily 7 • 10P . M . E n t e r t a i n m e n t Malor Credit Cards Accepted

Mario's ( Internat ional) Mon.Th.urs-: 12-2 &5-10 Fr i 12 2 & 5 11 Sat. 5-11 Sun. V9

amorce on express ft. pmer's Club

Nanina's (Italian.) Sun..Mon. • T'h'urs. 12 - 2 „8,5- 10 Fr i . 12 2& 5 • 11 Sat. 5- 11 Sun. 1 -'.9.

M.lipr Credit Cards Acceo'od

Pete. & Charlie's (Traditional) Mon.Sat.11-1 A . M . Major trtdit Cards Accepted

• Tre.tola's (Continental) Tues-.Thurs. U:30-

BoardTGARWOOD-the""77regular "The liexT regular" 'public"public-meeting of the board of board meeting will be held oneducation scheduled, for July August 20.16, has been canceled. • • _ • ,

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FIRST MORTAR BOARDS —35th graduation class of the GeraldineNursery School and Kindergarten at Forest and North .Ayes, ispictured with faculty.' Young, graduates are,, left to right, GinaMiragliotta, Douglas Cramer, R. Geoffrey Doyle, Denise Dudas,Kelly Mclnerney, Douglas AAagiera, Kenneth Toby, Curt Huegel,

Todd Grossman, Jill DiGioia, Michele Zinone. Faculty members atleft are Julia Magee, Seton Perkins Smith and Penny Lockhead; inplayhouse, Henrietta Spotts and Kathy Ruday, anfd at right, VeraKrutzner, Monica D. MeIrWney.and Monica F. Deubel, director,

Woman from India mixes business, intellectual interests

( u<

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wtr—PRIVATE PARTIES 10 TO 200

Savani Indu Zaverdas is a,22-year-old woman with amaster's degree in economics.But that doesn't stop her-from^finding an outlet for her in-tellectual—interests at UnionCollege, a two-year com-munity college. •

Indu (her first name)arrived from India, her native

"countryrmore thana year ago"to work in sales with herbrother who owns andoperates Savani Imports, Inc.,North Ave., Westfield, aboutique carrying genuineIndian clothers, handicraftsand jewelry. She loves

work and finds the experiencea valuable route to meetAmericans, but she alsowanted to., take ..some. -College..courses/ This summer, sheenrolled at Union College.

"I had. taken somepsychology in India so atUnion College I enrolled inabnormal psychology and adevelopmental English courseto improve my speech andwritten communications,"Indu commented. • • —*•

No differencesIndu does not recognize any

major differences between"Smerican and Tncli'an college

students; Slie says there aregood and not-so-good in bothcountries, but she does findthe professors; in, the;IJnited.States more liberallyeducated. •

"In India, most of myprofessors were from my localarea so their experiences wererestricted," Indu explained."Here the teachers.may haveoften worked in another field,sometimesnot even related towhat they Teach. And it is notUnusual to have a professorwho has lived somewhere else-hls-wholeJife."

simple. Here, job andeducational pressures seem toovershadow day-to-day living,Indu thinks,„„,: i

Despite this opinion, Indudoes a lot of entertaining inher Westfield home. Shefrequently has friends over,lots of Indians she's metthrough social groups andmany Americans she's metthrough school, the store, orthe yoga classes her brotherteaches part-time. An eveningwith Indu would usually in-clude a homemade Indian.dinner, complete with curry,

• but' does: not plan to staypermanently, The youngest, ofseven children, Indu missesher parents>_-her_£alher _is aretired law clerk--and hermany friends. She said the •widespread illiteracy andpoverty and numerous socialprojects make it almost vitalfor a person of her backgroundand education- to return tomake a contribution. -

"It 's nothing personalagainst Americans," Induadded.. "I think it's onlynatural for a person towant toreturn home after a few years

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_J.ridu also believes her "special dessert. She alsocoumrymeh~are much more enjoys music, particularly-"socrabler-than—Arrrertcansf-Actiyities are spontaneous,p ,people are friendly.and life is

Plans to returnindu likes the United States,

Who knows, maybe by thenIndu will have not only amaster-s—degree—but—ah-associate degree from UnionCollege,

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TAKES OVER—Allen J.Rooney of* 23 BurchfieldAve., left, new president of

| Bayonne Rotary Club,receives gavel of officefrom William Ghin,' hispredecessor. In center isCharles ,,F. Fiumefreddb,.installing officer. The newclub president is anexecutive of Cibas-Geigy.

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on camp brSecond Class Postage Paid Cranford N.J. 07016 15 CENTS

, i

'•/A detective bureau in-vestigation into parents'

mistreated youngsters at theRecreation Department'sthree-day summer camp lastweek got underway yesterdayat the direction of Police Chief

-Matthew—TV-Haney.—--The camp, known as

Cranford West, is located inHope Township,County.

The police investigation,which., is non-criminal . in

-nature, is being made at therequest of Robert Kniss,recreatjoji; jjirector, andTownship AdministratorSidney Stone. Kniss~metyesterday with seven

protesting parents of the redden the stomach area,campers. . Kniss told the-parents that. The parents charged that the .camp staff denied-any.some of ifie camperssuffered ''nialicious or sadisticintent't"injuries at the hands of camp .on the part of the counselors.counselors and were exposed " - — : J l ' c " ' : " : " w n"A

to "scandalous language."Some demanded the ouster of

He said Schweining andPetrick have "excellentrecords" as lifeguards andSchweining is especiallypopular among youngsters at,the pools. ' . ' ' • • '.._l Kniss conceded J h a t . t h ecounselor^ were "guilty ofpoor judgment" in allowingthe ./horseplay" to get out ofhand.

Kniss said that the camp.in ' "horseplay" with \Ke\staff reported considerableyounpters, 7ihcrudihg7""pink^roughhousing-7among thebelly1' -encounters in whiclv youngsters themselves. Heshort blows are struck, t o ^ - ^ "»»"»•<• **' •> c ° " 1 " l c

-William Schweininfr and JedPetrick, 17-year-old coun-selors who also serve as

lards at the municipalpools ahd-wljayolunteered forthe camp jobs.

'Pink-belly" encoi»HersAccording to Knissv . the

counselors admitted engaging

question as to who isresponsible" for the injuries tothe youngsters. \- ^

:-Althoughrnone-of-the tfiirty-six 8 to 11-year-olds at thecamp was hurt seriously, one11-year-old bore bruises on thest,oma"ch, arms and legs.Others also returned home

force jn disciplining thecampers. He later met withSidjney^_ Stme, township^ad-

istratqr^lhe"fAVOaskeU

have beejH disciplined at theoutset by being returned toiheir homes.-

qChief Haney to> look into thecomplaints, "as an internal,non-criminal investigation."

Front the reports of parents,campers and the counselorsTh nT

there is a

with bruises.Reach impasse

Kniss -met yesterday ,withfive mothers and two fathersof the campers. The sessionreached ah impasse when twoof the, parents demanded thatSchweining and Petrick bedischarged.

Kniss refused to fire the twoon the grounds that he ha'd no'evidence of the use of physical

pThemselves, the nTree-daycamping trip had spmewh'atriotous overtones from thetime the bus trip to WarrenCounty got underway, .

Bus ride hectic , ; *The youngsters reported

considerable disorder and useOf improper language on theride to camp! Kniss said that,in retrospect, he believes thatoffending "youngsters' should

j

selors told of "horseplay" be-tween the leaders and-theboys, the latter complaining ofbeing hurt by thecounselors inthe "pink belly" exchanges.

irThe counselors said it was •"'airin fun" and the boys wouldjump on them in groups.

The campers also corn-

plained of enduring hurts atthe hands of counselors in the

ourse of "running the

youngster runs, through a.group whicfT is swatting atthem.

Thrown in water . ,Parents protested to Kniss

iHat the

objections. Kniss criticized hiscounselors' conduct in thisregard, pointing out that they

rsupposed-tobeiactingias;•lifeguards.

Paul Hogan, who at 20 was asenior counselor; explainedthe camp staff's side of thecapers to the parents and

had thrown their, children offthe camp dock into the waterrepeatedly, even'in spite of

ypart of the counselors. Hereported seeing one 11-year-old: Strike another—-in—the

stomach so hard as to causethe victim to cry for an hour,and said the youngstersengaged-in—considerablephysical roughhousing amongthemselves. ' '

The,camp was under, thedirection of Mrs. JeffreyDillon, wife of the townsHip

~recrealion~supervisor.-.-Mrs!Dillon, had the job of cookingmost of the meals and thils

Continued on Page 2--.

N.J. tax\

hereWarning signs of the rough

road confronting GovernorByrne's- income tax plan,which squeaked through theAssembly Monday by a vote of .41 to 38, were evident at a

program while merelyoutlining it, "." .'-• Misunderstanding. <Speakers . from the floor

• reported they had/, beenadvised the tax plan would

:-—-——public hearing on the-propo'sal---affeet-senior-citizens and-

' *1

FIREWORKS FALLOUT—This'assortment.of aerial debris fromthe Cranford July 4 fireworks display landed on rooftops, lawns anddriveways in the section of Kenilworth adjoining Orange Ave.Junior High field where display was held Items,-include canister

UC:, townshipj*

. ,• ' ' - " <Photo by (-'red Sonntan

fragments, reports and undetonated sky "sparkler: Kenilworthonlookers, who dodged smouldering .particles and stood by. with,lawn hoses, protested to Mayor Henry E. Hinsenkamp Jr. (Stop^and another.photo Page 7.) ____" ^

zoneTalks that conceivably

could lead to an out-of-court7settlernent"of-i-litigation-be-tween the township and UnionCollege over educationalzoning restrictions have beengoing on without fanfare.

The college's suit to void theTownship's "E (Educational)-

• 1" section of the townshipzoning ordinance is stillpending in the law division ofthe state Superior Court.

The school is seeking to voidthe zoning regulation on thegrounds i t has the. effect ofcontroiing educational policy

and restricts the developmentof the institution.

Representatives ~of~5bth"sides would like to avoid thecostly and time-consumingprocedure of litigation, andintroductory discussions havebeen undertaken in a con-ciliatory atmosphere.

Land use discussed

T h e r T o w n s h i p ' srequirement that 65 per centof land usage on the campusbe. ~dpen space is underdiscussion, as well as the

possible easing by thetownship of the requirement ofan-automobileparking space,for-each enrolled student.

While the college disputesthe right of the municipality toregulate campus land usage,it is said to believe that 40 percent open space would betSorereasonable:"an"d"po"ssibly:accommodate its expansionplans, at least in some areas^A .7 per cent parking space foreach • student has been ad-vanced as a more reasonableregulation.

As stated by township of-

approval for restaurant

• • • • • • • » • • •

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A plan to convert the farmerArco gasoline station at theSouth and Centennial Aves.into a restaurant will have tomeet review by the TownshipPlanning Board attorney todetermine if it meets therequirements of the CranfordFlood Plain Ordinance and therecent township moratorium

. on building in the flood plain..The boar.d ceferred i he

matter to its attorney, Donald"Greightonv last Wednesdayafter Alfred C. Cascarina,Northeast region real estatemanager for ChickenUnlimited Inc. of Ft. Leerevealed at the board meeting,

-that his firm, wants-to removethe porcelain from the outsideof the structure and replace itwith brickface and make otheralterations to fit in with thecolonial motif of the "proposedrestaurant.

Cascarina also said thefacility Would have no outsideservice and would requireparking space for about 30cars.

Referred to counselBoard member John

Duryee. asked the board toturn the matter over toCreighton because the Arcostation is in the flood plainarea.

Board secretary DennisIrlbeck, acting chairman,reminded the restaurant of-ficial that He may have toproduce affadavits fromwitnesses proving the.site isnot .subject to;., extensive.

.flooding.—Thfr board postponed .untilits workshop meeting a\discussion on the request by'Graber-Rogg Associates of1

Cranford that the board waiveminimum parking spacerequirements on proposed10,000 square foot extension ofthe firm's warehouse facilitiesat.Jackson Drive to enable itto put in more shrubbery.

^The Township zoning or-dinance requires % parkingspaces for the proposed,.,, ex-tension while Graber-Roggwants to limit its parking to 30spaces. - . ' " '

Variance requests"""Harding —Brown of

Elizabeth, attorney for the

firm, told the board that hisclient now has two requestsfor vaf iances before the boardof adjustment.. If the 'two.variance requests, for lessersideyard measurements, aregranted,.he says the companywill be able to plant moretrees instead of extendingparking i spaces into aresidential z.one borderingL i n d e i k .-._.-...._:....•: .•._....-. •-_. ; .„•_..

The board must give its_ approval J)efpre_an_exceptionto the parking . requirements~~can be granted.

Referred to the township. engineering department was arequest by the Union CountyPark Commission that thetownship sell it about 5,500square feet of land nearLincoln Park lEast, just jbovethe old Doescher's Mill. Thecommission wants to ex-change that land with theCranford Hall Nursing Homefor about (>,800 square feet ofadjacent land on the nursingfacility property.

ficials, the municipalityadopted the educational zonerestrictions in an effort toprotect the residential areasurrounding the campus. Thetownship continues to be

. bound by this motivation.

Union College has expanded; farbey.ond its original conceptof a junior college for 800students, Enrollment is now

-close to the 1,400 mark andgrowing. A factor in expansionplans has been the return ofadults to earlier educationalp u r s u i t s . " • • ' . • . • • •

, Fine arts school

.. The need for a fine artsschooFas welllisToMrfcreased"gymnasium, land recreationfacilities has'Haeen growing atthe college, but such physicalexpansion- is ruled out by theopen space provision of thezoning law.

The fapt such growth is

blocked is interpreted bycollege officials as a I attemptto control educiitior al policyby local fiat. Th^ctjnEgelSels .the municipal re4_rTctidjnsprevent it frora^nSouftlingitself" into the /kind o r i n -stitution policy makers^want itto become. V

Township officials po\nt outthat there is no effort on theirpart to interfere with theeducational program, but\thattheir interesrisa~continmngone to preserve the estheticand resiflential charac-teristics of the area.

The college expresses awillingness to comply with-other zoning restrictions in the

~comw\nnity7TSUch~as-"building""s e t b a c k s , s t r u c t u r a l ,regulations and the like.However, it contends that onlythe N.J. Department of Higher.Education has the right to ruleon matters which affect"educational policy.

in Township Hall . Fridaynight. , ;

Lack of • public un-derstanding of thg proposaland disenchantment withsome of its provisions were'apparent at the meeting here,although several speakersupheld the income tax as theonly equitable" means ofcarrying out the stateSupreme Court's mandate toreform the system of firian-ging-edueation. —•——

Oth District AssemblymenJoseph L. Garrubbo and John

cCarthy, both Democratsted in the Byrne landslideNovember, sponsored the

feting here and both votedgainst the tax plan ononday. Both criticized the

tax distribution plan for"penalizing" communities forindustriaL ra tables.

Senate vote Monday ...The tax bill is scheduled for

vote Monday in the StateSenate, where some observersfeel it will have an even moredifficult time than in theAssembly. The measure hasyet to receive1 a singlefavorable vote from; aRepublican.

If Garrubbo and McCarthysought justification for theirnegative votes on the .income

rent payers adversely,although specifics 'of theplan would benefit thesegrqups: .•Complicated formula.

Orin Kramer, s tate: treasurer's aide arid a

promoter of the Byrneplan,,sought to explain the

._ 27-per-eent property taxreduction in Cranford and

—benefits—accruing—wage-earners from the "circuit-breaker" or real estatetax paymext cutoff atcertain income levels.Kramer's hypothetical

cases, such, as benefits ona $5,000-a- year incomearid $3.0,000 propertyvaluation, bore littlerelationship to actual .'situations.

• Hack" of"~credlbility7T

Speakers from the floorcited promises vs. per-formances of new state

"" ,. Continued on Page 2

Policebrings five arrest^

A police crackdown on.disorderly young people in thevicinity of Cleveland Schoolover the weekend resulted- infive arrests and charges in-volving drugs and the con-sumption of alcohol in publicplaces:

Acting on complaints byschool officials of.discardedbottles and cans in the area ofthe school, police ur-r^r the',direction of .Acting;Chief A.Frank Burr kept clones sur-veillance of the vicinity-andthe.arrests resulted.

Police arrested threejuveniles on charges ofviolating a local ordinanceprohibiting public • con-sumption of alcohol adoptedby the Township Committeeearly this year. A 20-year-old,William Sugalski of 36 Roselle

tax plan, they found it at the Ave., was ...arrested; on ameeting in the~T6~wnship Hall similar charge by Patrolmanmeeting room attended bymore than 100 from thiscommunity and t h esurrounding area.

A number "of the factorswhich are working against thetax program .surfaced at thesession/They included:-_•• ConfusidriT^ Garrubbo

h t t iyg

explain that-.th'ey were infavor of the income taxconcept, but opposed theformula un'der which itwould be imposed. Theywere constantly accusedof supporting the Byrne

Gregory Drexler at the nearbytown parking lot in Miln St.-~ Another 20:year-old- y o u t h — ^ T ^was arrested by; PatrolmanDrexler on_the school groundson a charge of distributingcontrolled dangerous sub-stances .(drugs )...on a. warrantissued by the Union CountysherifPs-offieer-He-^as-JohnE. Kelly of 308 ProspectAvenue.

Weapon charge

One of the juvenilesarrested on the drinkingcharge was a girl.

In other police action,Thomas J. Camicia, 21, of 11Roselle Ave., was arrestedSaturday by Patrolman JohnLawney and William Ther-mann on charges o r j r u gviolations and carrying aconcealed dangerous weapon.

Camicia was involved in anauto accident in Myrtle St.near Centennial Ave. andtreated at 'Elizabeth GeneralHospital for a leg injury.Police reported finding a"spring-loaded" knife in thecar, a quantity of controlleddangerous substances in theform of pills, and marijuanaamounting to less than 25grams. .

Camicia was released in$2,500 bail for hearing beforeMunicipal Judge Charles J.Stevens on August 13.

Also on . Saturday,Patrolman Jerome Andrewsarrested . Marjorie Ann

Johnson, 22, of 3 John St.,Summit, on a charge ofpossessing a icycle which aboy from Clark Township saidhad been stolen outside thePathmark store, in W. SouthAve. The woman said she didnot intend to keep the bike.

Head-on crashTwo victims of a head-on

automobile crash in SouthAve. E. near the Garden StateParkway overpass were takento Rahway Hospital on Thurs-day in police vehicles. They

;were Pamela J-, Spagnubla, 21,of Sky Top Gardens, Parl in, /N.J., and Ronald C Voegel,17, of 542 Jackson Ave.,Elizabeth. Miss Spagnuola,who was driving west, suf-fered a fractured jaw andlaceration of the mouth.Vogel, who was eastbouhd,suffered a possible concussionof the brain and "lacerations': of ~the forehead and mouth.

Hocage^ Houseshuts its doors

The Hbcajgee House^islio"more. ;- . "

After serving four years as arefuge/for youths and their

~and"toldthetn"what-thejrcould-do about:it."

The administrator saidalcohol has replaced drugs on

on

liiiiiilliiiiliiiiitiiiiiillililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililllliiiuiilliiiilliililliliiiiiUiiliiiillliliilHiliill

Chronicle contentsSTARDUST & BRASS show draws 3,000. Pictures,s t o r y P a g e 8 ? -••'• '•• .,.

DOOR-TO-DOOR pollticalcampalgn.underway. Page3. :

Arts Calendar-Church

.Classified . . . ..-fditorlal . . . . .

.12 Garwood , 7

..6- Kenilworth . ....6,7

.10 Social 5,,4 Sports. . . . . . ,y 11, 12

IIIIIIIIIUJIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIII1IIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1II

Truck parking. Acting on a letter fromMrs, Boris G. Knesvic of 123Thomas St., the boardreferred to Creighton arequest to see what thetownship can do to stop trijek

.packing- on tiouth Avenue nearThom'aV and High Streets.

Board member Dr. Clair W.Klynil Jr. called for "an in-tensive investigation" of truckparking in tho township to findout which firms or residentsare allowed to park trucks:outside and how long theyhave been permitted to do so.

problems, Hocagee closed its the youth scene, and that theredoors last week and put the is more acceptance and less

the lawn for mystery about this habit."The reduction in the

drinking age limit and thesocial use'of alcohol in thehome, has1 made' drinkingacceptable," Klempa ob-served. "Most .young peopleare not aware of the problemsit can lead to later on."

- Had large staff•-- Throughout its existence,Hocagee ."House emphasizedthe availability of its staff fordiscussion ofa wide range of

furnishingspickup.

"Things had slackened to apoint it was no longer feasibleto keep going," was thecomment of Robert Klempa of5.00 Riverside Drive, who(leaded the program at thehouse.

Attendance at Hocagee haddropped fromHSQ who visitednightly when the program wasinitiated to a mere five of sixwho dropped in each night

-this summer. „.____ problems encguntered J>yTo the latter, it was simply youth, such as difficulties at

"a place to go."A Crane homestead

The 19th Century residenceat 42 Springfield Ave. in whichthe program was conducted isowned by Mrs. HarrietLichtenstein of Elizabeth. Itwill be rerented for residentialuse. The house formerly wasowned by members—-pf thc-founding Crane family.

The Hocagee program was.operated under the aegis ofthe Mayor's Committee onDrug Abuse, of which Klempa

home, in school or with police.The program had the ser-

vices of a staff of from 20 to 25v o l u n t e e r s , i n c l u d i n gpsychiatric social workers,nurses, teachers, attorneysand businessmen. They madethemselves available todiscuss problems relating totheir speeialities-that-youngpeople felt they could notdiscuss with parents orteachers.

The program was funded bythe township, with donations

"Was~the~pnid administrator.- of furnitureand equipment as

ALL OVER — Hocagee House at-*42 Springfield Ave.,once a Crane family residence, shuts down after four

.years serving township youth. Furniture was put outtor pickup.

He had succeeded JosephSharp, the original ad-ministrator.

Klempa attributed thedropoff in attendance as due toa considerable extent to thereduction in the drug probleml o c a l l y . - • • -... • - — -

Provided drug information"The kids found when they

started using drugs that theyhad no understanding of themand the effects they had,"Klempa observed, "but the>were interested in finding out.\Ve provided the information.

well as of personal servicesbeing made by its supporters.For the first 18 months it washoused on an upper floor of theCerebral Palsy Center atHolly St. and Springfield Ave.across the street from its lastlocation...

Persons identified with thep r o g r a m e x p r e s s e dgratification with theresults itaccomplished among troubledyouths, and cited numerousinstances in which it helpeduntracked young people backon course. *c

L.

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Page2 CRANFORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday.-July 18.1974

trwomei^^' Continued from Page I

.taxes in the past. Me-i- fcarthy said the built-in

property tax cut for..iCranford. "could be wiped

. / o u t " by the "townihTp"s/ current /revaluation .

program.'Bottomless pit'

1 One speaker, Robert__. Steiner, described the record

~ of state taxes since~lne im~position of the sales tax in 1965as "a bottomless pit." Hecited the sales and race tracklevies and the state "lottery asproposed solutions to> finan-cing education which havefailed_in their missions.

Skepticism was expressedover whether achievement of

i i , tincl efficient. 'education/for all.as mandate^by the state constitution wasa matter of money. One

^speaker branded the edict as_"sp vague as to., b'emeaningless."

McCarthy stated thatNewark at the cost of $1.70"per pupil is the "second-highest funded city in 'the

proposed increase from 30 percent to 5(i per cent in ,statefunding was raised. Kramersaid $3 million of the income

iricorne tax "penalizes "pro-duction" and said its burden"falls hardest on middle-income and.senio.r_.citizens."

Other speakers o'|)|y>sing ther " T r 3 ~ f h i r : ~ 'administer the tax and the

rest go back to the com-munities." which would makethe decision on what . isthorough and efficienteducation.

nation for education11" and'that"•money has not solved theproblem. His suggestion that,"instead of busing pupils theybus in teachers" drew ap-plause.

The question of whether"home rule" in educationwould'be jeopardized by the

TROOP^JSPAPER DRIVE

July 2ttth, Sat. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. =g

B July ^lth, Sun. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. g

Trailers WM M^P^^ed ,Sin St. Michjetf^ckiml ~~

pn ng lot.All scrap paper, magazines and flat cardboard tied in ==|bundles or wrapped in paper bags-it possible,.

.... Walter E. Cooper: aCranford attorney, declaredhimself "already hit with astate income tax in the form ofa gross' receipts tax," andnoted that "unorganized"small businessmen are taxedon the"tools of their trade—books, typewriters and addingmachines."

Cooper acited the U.S.income-tax—wh-ieh-star-ted-Gut—at 1 per cent and you had to'make a lot of money to pay,and now everybody who earnsa couple of thousand dollars ist a x e d . " • • ' . • ' • .

"Don't impose a state in-come tax," Cooper urged,"cut ou: the fat (in'stategovernment-.!!' __,/'...-. . _ _..

A resident of-' Westfield,which under the income taxplan would receive $3.6 morefrom the state for schools thanat present, nonetheless calledfor aivamendment to the state

_c.onsitjtutiqn "enabling localproperty taxes to support local

d t i " Sh t d d th

..standard be "the besteducation the local com-munity can afford," and thatmoney for schools be obtainedby "laying off half the people

-in-Trenton.-*!One speaker in favor of the

income tax described it as"the best and most efficientuse'of our resources," andsaid the people of Cranfordmust consider the people ofCamden and Elizabeth: "Theproblems of the people ofElizabeth are my problems,"the speaker said. '

v:(tflts l^cal taxes—Another-§Fanf6rd—resident-in favor of the income taxstated: "In_the last threeye^rs my property taxes havegone up 30 per cent. I maysoon have to pack, out of myhome. In a few vears my taxeswill be more than my mort-gage payments."

The speaker, said Cranfordparents must realize thatwhen their children 'marrythey, .will have to moveelsewhere because they won'tbe able to afford a home here.

Another Cranford speakerwho supported the income tax

eliminating the property taxas a source of educationrevenue. -• r ' - .-• .-

Miss Mary A. Sullivan askedthe assemblymen, who

-reported their:maila&30O to 1against the income tax,whether the writers offeralternate proposals and if theyare aware that a new means offunding education is "ab-solutely necessary."

A flier from vthe Birch TaxReform Movement of CentralNew Jersey opposing ad-ditional state taxes washanded those" entering themeeting. ' . • ' " .

Two ramblesin reservationthls^weekend

Twp rambles in the Wat-chung Reservation are listedthis weekend for "membersand guests of The UnionCounty Hiking Club.

The Saturday walk of aboutsix miles will begin at 1Q a.m.at the parking lot of theTrailside Nature and ScienceCenter.

On Sunday the ramble willform at the Seeley's Pond

rking area in the Reser-ation'at 8:30 a.m. Two or

ks employes,officials at odds

|Bs education." She contended thecalled for financing schoolsentirely through this levyjand

pwill be rrtade.

SIGH-TING THE STARS— Trie"'new 7 1 Q-irich"refractor telescope at Union College's Sperry Ob-,ser va tor y wil l be focused on the starsFriday, July 26>when Amateur Astronomers^ Inc., the organizationwhich operates the observatory with Union College^hosts a star frarty for the general pubjje. Th£-

ri and rnnsturtpH hy AAI members/

The employees of the I^ublicWorksTDepartmentrwho haye~applied for membership 'in anInternational TeamstersUnion local, are at odds, withtownship officials regardingwhat they contend was apromise to raise their pay 18

jper cent.Sidney Stone, township

administrator, denied theemployees had been promisedany pay increase this year andsaid the dispute is apparentlyover a difference of in-terpretation of theJ.8 percent,which he said represents anincrease in the percentage ofovertime which the employees

-are receiving-as the result bf-a-reductibn in their standardwork week.

The Township Committeetnis year reduced the workweek from 47V.;'to 40 hours.This was done as the result ofa federal law setting a basework Week of 40 hours for.municipal employees. •'

Seek September increasePublic Works Superin-

tendent Wayne Wingard,

ineligible for unionmeriiberihip inasmuch as heis a supervisor, declared the30 ernployes had beenpromised an 18 per cent payincrease by TownshipEngineer Gregory Sgroi.

Wingard accused Sgroi of' a."snow job*' and said thereduction of hours did not^putmore money in the pockets ofEmployes. Wingard said hewould rather nothave his job"if I have to turn my men downandthey can't make a living."

Eugene Gordon, anassistant foreman, said theemployees want improvedtoilet facilities and a showerat the departmentheadquartersjn Meeker Ave.

A hearing on a "consentelection" for union mem-bership for Public , .Worksemployees will'T5e~Kel<i nextThursday at the PublicEmploye -Relations Com-mission"(PERC>" in_ Trenton.

Letters to the Editor must, be sighedand have a return address. TheChronicle reserves the right to editletters for length.

walking tour of_, ^—^-Barbara—Grande.,—David—schedule, includes;.a_series_oT_1

Shor and ;. Jack Lee."Democratic, candidataes forCrariford's Township Com-mittee and • township clerkbegan walking door to doorTuesday night with the goal ofmeeting every voter inCranford.

"Barbara, David and Jackwill be walking almost everynight ffom now untilNovember," said Katie Engle,campaign manager forBrande, Shor and Lee.

"In addition to their door-to-dobr walking, the candidates'

Opening Saturday, July 20 th . . .

f OP your added

Will be one of 13 Telescopes in the star gazing eventwhig:h begins at dusk. (Story on page 4.)

Police opening probeof brutality chargesContinued from Page 1

was not in a.. position tosupervise the activities of thecampers and counselors.

Hogan conceded the youngcounselors "showed signs ofimmaturity." ——

Action soughtNot all the protesting

parents felt that the_youngcounselors should. be

—discharged from therecreation staff, but all agreed"something should be done;"

. One parent declared that asupervisor "who could be thiscruel .even in fun" would becapable of inflicting seriousharm. '

replies as "it was OK if youdon't mind being bruised,1—or,"I wouldn't go back again."

Kniss said any actionagainst the "counselors as aresult of the parents' corn-plaints' will await the in-vestigation by police.

""Impartial evaluation'—••;--•According to Kniss, he and

Stone asked Haney to look intothe charges so the recreationdepartment would not' beaccused of investigating it-self. He said he hoped an"impartial evaluation" bytrained police would sub-

h

younger campers were"terrified" and took seriouslythreats that they would bethrown under the shower,rhey said they expected theirchildren would be trained inwater safety rather thanthrown in the water.

The complaining parentssaid that when they askedtheir young sons how theyenjoyed camp they got such

stantiate what he told theparents and settle the issue._ Cranford West has been

;ed_by_thfi_BfiCteationDepartment for the last threeyears as a short-termsummer camp. Since the.1920's it had been run by theCranford Boys' Camp, whichis in the process of deeding'the 25racre site, which in-cludes a small lake, to thetownship.

This week a group of sevengirls from the township are atthe camp.

WOOD WALKERDivision of First Regional Securities Inc.

MEMBERSTOCK EXCHANGE

SINCE 1869 '"•'

:mEhirfiitreeF

Open Thurs. Eves. 7 -9 P.M. 232-2686

Famous Roux tints and rinses color your hairfor a variety of effects. They cover gray, lighten hair,

,anci achieve other brilliant, beautiful results.Why not come,in for a shampoo,. ,

3 appolrftTrientS)

CREME HAIR TINT

Touch-up camplstawith shampoo and sat, $6.00

RINSES IN—SHAMPOOS OUT

Shampoo,set and rinse, $ 3 . 0 0

Style Rite Beauty Salons. Home of the $2.00 shampoo and set.No dppoirttmonts. Extra tor-long hair. 50^' .iddilional on all services

: Friday, Sliturd.iy nnd d<iy boforo Xohdays,'"Opon Mon.. Tues i t Wod., 9 • &:3O; Thurs., 9 • 8; Fri., 8:30 - 8; Sal., 8 - 5 : 3 0

18 No. Union Ave.

NOTICE OF APPLICATIONake notice that applicaftorThasbeen

made to the Township Committee of theTownshlpof Crantord, N.J. to transfer toYE OLDE RATHSKELLER OFCRANFORD, trading as "Ye OldeRathskeller" for premises located at 533Centennial AVenuo, Cranford, N.J. the

, Consumption License No,.C 6 heretofore Issued to Joseph DITullo,trading as "Ye Olde Rathskeller" alsoas '.'Joe D's Rathskeller" for thepremises located at' 523 CentennialAvenue, Cranford, N.J.

Names and addresses of the officersand stockholders are:

President: •Katherlne E, Uhrle, ,523Centennial AVeWue, Cranford, N.J.

Secretary: Edward Schueler, 12 RoseTerrace, Clark, N.J. •

Objections, If any, should be madeImmediately In writing to Clerk of theTownshlpof Cranford, N.J.

YEOLDE RATHSKELLER OFCRAN^ORD

by Katherlne E.Uhrie, President. -523 Contennlal Avenue

• Cranford, New JerseyDated: July 1), 18, 1974I ee il.t 40 .

BOROUGH OF GARWOODGARWOOD, NEW JERSEY

PROPOSEDORDlNANCENO.74-4AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FORTHE RESHAPING, SCARIFYING AND »RESURFACING OF PORTIONS OFHAZEL AVENUE AND LOCUSTAVENUE IN THE BOROUGH OFGARWOOD, COUNTY OF UNION,STATE OF NEW JERSEY, AND TO

-MAKE--AN—AP-PROBRIAT!ON-OF-_140,000.00 TO FINANCE A PORTION1

OF SAID IMPROVEMENT AND, TO.PROVIDE FOR THE ISSUANCE OFBOND ANTICIPATION NOTES INANTICIPATION OF SUCH BONDS.

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE MAYORAND COUNCIL of the Borough ofGarwood, In the County of Union, "Stateof New Jersey: —

Section 1: The Borough of Garwood, Inthe County of Union, shall reshape andscarify portions pf Hazel Avenue andLocust Avenue where necessary andresurface Haiel Avenue from CenterStreet.to East Street and Locust Avenuefrom East Street to West Street.

Section 2: It Is anticipated that thesum of S40.000 Will be required for theacccompllshmentof the work set forth inSection 1. The sum of $2,000.00 of saidamount Is available to the Borough from

neighborhood coffe«meetings, appearances at "•bo.railroad station and the Pat n-mark plus a number ofOther events which will beannounced," added Ms.Engle. . —-... |

The candidates began in-troducing themselves toCranford residents July 4 atthe Orange Avenue com-munity pool.

Barbara, David and Jackare candidates with greatenergy and enthusiasm. Theyare eager to meet with anddiscuss their objectives withalll the people of Cranford,"stafeaittsTEngle.

A. social worker forAssociated Catholic .Charitiesin Newark, Miss Brande isalso a marriage counselor anda field instructor for FordhamUniversity School of SocialWork. A niember of the UnionCounty Women's PoliticalCaucus, Miss —Brande suc-

cessf ul ly __coor di nated __the _State Senate campaign of.Alexander J. Menza and"'headed the yqter registrationdrive in Cranford. Sherepresents Crahford's 26thdistrict to the Union CFuntyDemocratic Committee.

After serving as president ofCranford's- Flood ActionCommittee, Shor decided toenter politics. He is an at-torney and a former assistantprofessor of political scienceat Jersey City State College.He is a former VISTAvolunteer, a" member of the

American Civil Liberties"Union~Corhmon~CauseT~the'r

Sierra Club a nd? the Cra.nfordDemocratic Club. ~" - "*

Lee, candidate for townshipclerk, has been active in civicand political activities inCranford. He is the industrialsales representative for RapidRoller Cornpany inSpririgfield. For the past th r e e

years, Lee has representedCranford's 31st district to theUnion County DemocraticCommittee. He is also amember of the CranfordDemocratic Club.

jCoastJ-guardsinaii—leaves £or_Arctie=^KENILWORTH— Coast

"Guard Electrician's MateThird Class James K. Davjd,son of Mr. and Mrs. CharlesDavid Jr. of 248 N. 20th St;, lefthis homeport of Long Beach,Calif., aboard the Coast GuardCutter Burton Island.

During a three and one-half

• month deployment above theArctic Circle, he and hisshipmates^will be repairingnavigational aids, workingwith a Navy research team,servicing'shore aids andconducting a geologicalsurvey of the continental shelf

.off Alaska:....' r L..11

Thursday, July 18,1974 CRANFORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Page 3

Paper drive profitsto send scouts to Fla.

Boy Scout Troop 178 of St.Michael's Church will conductits monthly paper drive

T"Saf urday Trom"9~a7m7 to^TpTrnTand Sunday* from 11 a.m. to 2p.m. • . •.

A trailer will be parked atSt. Michael's School parkinglot and scouts will unloadpaper from all cars. ' . . - . '

Paper, magazines and flatcardboard should be tied inbundles or in paper bags to

• make packing and handlingeasier. All scrap paper

:• collected is recycled.

The proceeds from the

paper drive will be used for atrip to Disney World in Floridanext month. Scouts have been

~wprklng~on"::"tund-Taising-;projects for several nioiiths tofinance the trip.

HONORSTUDENT• • • ' / '

Ellen Donahue or /209.

Scherrer St., concluded hersecond year at Mother Seton/'Regional High School, Clark/with, an A average. She alsoreceived an award in biologyand was elected president ofthe Psychology Club for nextyear.- . . / . . : / . ' .•

•Vf'S

WALKING, TALKING— Democratic candidates for the Cranford TownshipCommittee, David Shor and Barbara Brande, discuss issues with Joseph Walsh,president of the Senior Citizens Club of Cranford. The candidates began walking

:door4ordoor_o,n£allowsHill^ -1 J

Special Limousine ServiceTrips to all airports, railway stations & piers

CHestnutir2581 — BRidge 6-2272

Limousines for weddings— Trips to anyplace

—Prices Very Reasonable—

the new Cranford Autobank of UCTCChestnut St. at Walnut Ave.

NEW Four "drive-up" stations to serve you

H I E 1 A I Fast pneumatic tube system thatNEW ti ihandles your transactions in seconds

Expanded off-street parking areafor Cranford customers

'' banking service CHESTNUT STHEET

< " •

Drive in . . . Drive outand see wjiat banking convenience is all aftoifl

591/2 banking hours a weekBanking Hours —Cranford Autobank

Monday thru Wednesday • Thursday and Friday Saturday ,7:30 a.m. to 6 00 p.m - 7 30 a m to 8 00 p m 9 00. a m to 12 noon

united countiestrust companywhere good things start to happen __rA;mt),,.r ol fi;fl,;f,il H.".;ITVI.' SyJ.'ni • Fi.-diiriil Oi.'txteil Insurance CoiponUon

Cranford Autobank-Chestnut Street at Walnut Avenue1 Cranford Off ice- 100 South Avenue, East

You'll Find ThemCranford....

Watch For TheJULY SALES M DAYSSection in m Next Week's(!Htrouicle....M...and SAVE!1.

Public Service Advertising by The

(ftrhnforb Cttfeen

1974 as well as a certain reserve carriedover from the year 1973. The sum ofwa.OOO.OO Is hereby appropriated to thepayment of the cost of said Improvements. Such appropriation shall be

—met from the proceeds of the bonds-authorized.and the down payment ap-' proprlated by this ordinance. No part ofthe cost of said purpose shall be assessedagainst property especially benefited.

.Section 3: It Is hareby determined andstated and O) the making of such Improvementslhereafter referred to aspurpose) Is not a current expense, of said

." Borough; and t2) It Is" necessary 40finance said purpose by the Issuance otobligations of said Borough pursuant tothe Local Bond Law of New Jersey; and(3) the estimated cost of the purposed140,000.00; and S2,ooo.op of said sum Is tobe provided by the doWn payment

' hereinafter appropriated to finance saidpurpose ahd (5) the estimatedmaximum amount of bonds or notesnecessary to be Issued tor said purpose

. Is S38.O0O.0O and (6) the cost of suchpurpose as hereinbefore, stated includesthe aggregate amount of 54.000 00 whichIs estimated, to be necessary to financethe cost of such purpose, Including accounting inspection costs, legal expensesa,nd other expenses, including Interest onsuch obligations to the extent permittedby 40A:2-20 of the Local Bond Law.

Section 4: It is hereby determined andstajed that monies exceeding .. .2,000.00

' appropriated for down payments onCapital Improvements for the CapitalImprovement Fund.. In budgetsheretofore adopted for said Borough

~~and"-*rom~certaln State~Ald—POndsallowed-by the1 Formula Method as wellas certain reserve funds heretoforeappropriated for said purposes are nowavailable lo finance said purpose. Thesum of 12,000.00 Is hereby appropriatedfrom such monies to the payment of thecost of said purpose.

Section 5: To finance said purpose,,bonds o( said-Borough of an aggregateprincipal amount not exceeding

—«8.000.00=ar«^hereby-aothortied-to^boIssued pursuant to said Local Bond Law.Said bonds shall bear Interest at a ratowhich shall not exceed 6 per annum. Allmatters with respect to said bonds notdetermined by this ordinance shall bedetermined by resolutions tohereafter adopted-

Section &• To finance said purpose,bond anticipation notes ol said Boroughof an aggregate principal amount notexceeding 136,000.00 are hereby,authorized to be Issued pursuant to saidLocal Bond Law in anticipation of theIssuance of said bonds. Said notes shallbear interest at a rate which shall notexceed 4 per annum, and may borenewed from time to time pursuant toand within the limitations prescribed bysaid law. All matters with respect to saidnotes not determined by this, ordinanceshall bedetermlned by resolutions to beherafter adopted. In the event that thebonds ire Issued pursuant to this ordlnance, the aggregate'amount ol noteshereby authorized to be Issued ihareduced by an amount equal to theprincipal amount of th e bonds so Issued.If the aggregate amount of outstandingbonds and notes Issued pursuant to thisordinance shall at any time exceed thesum first mentioned In thjs section, the'monies raised by the Issuance of saidbonds shall, to not less than the amountof such excess, be applied to thepayment of such notes then outstanding.

Section 7: 11 Is here uy determined anddeclared that the period of usefulness olsaid purpose, accorlno to Its reasonablelife, Is a period of ten (10) years compuled from the date ot said bonds.

Section B: It Is hereby determined andstated that tho Supplemental DebtStatement required by said Local BondLaw-has been duly made and filed In thftoffice of the Borough Clerk of san

- Borough and .that- such .statement sa.. tiled shows that the oross debts of said

Borough as defined in Section JO A; 243of said Local Bond Law, Is Increased bythis ordinance bv «8.000.00 and that theIssuance of - the bonds iind notesauthorized by this ordinance will bewithin all debt limitations proscribed bysaid Local Bond Law

Section 9: .This Ordinance shall takoeffect immediately upon passage andpublication according to law.

JOHN J. MCCARTHY,Mayor

ATTEST:PHYLLIS MONE, ;•Borough Clerk

NOTICEThe foregoing' 'ordinance was in

troduced and passed on first reading at aregular meeting of the Mayor andCouncil of the Borough of Garwood, N.J,,held on Tuesday, July V, IV74, and Will beconsidered for final passage after apublic hearing, at another regularmeeting of said Mayor and Council al'theMunicipal Building, Garwood, NewJersey, on Tuesday, August 13, lv/4, ale:30 p.m. (prevailing time) or as soontherafior as said matter can be reached.

PHYLLIS MONKBorough Clerk

Dated: July le, W74

I re Ml U

just sit bade, relax and

enjoy comfortable savings

on rockers aTid fe^lIhWs 7^

Enjoy comfort as well as savings —-

morning, upon.and night! They're•d-l-l——

specially priced during our fine furniture

sale.1 Choose your favorite style with .

'durable, soil-resistant upholstery now!

A. avocado green napped recliner, 239r00

B. rust-color pine arm recliner, 199.00'

C. green napped traditional recliner, .229.00

•D: brown/rust colonial wing, recliner,., 229.0.0

E. green napped' traditional"'recliner, 189.00

F. brown vinyl contemporary recliner, 169.00

Charge IO»f Hahne'il LivlngltpU opt" 6 mohKilU'j 'til ?JO--Wotfl leld 6 ni.iliii 'til 9;00--Mont<l<ilr 'n\ 9:00 ord N e w a r k 'til 8:00 Mon, W.ul., Fri. ni,,his

L ^ - , ' :i

« ' V v ' ? - . ^ 1 - i . - ' M - . - . - • • > : - : - * ' • • > : . • - . • • ' •

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.JTCITIZKN AND CHRONieHE-Thureday, July 18,1974

Hocagee HouseHocagee House close5 Jts floors

last week after establishing acommendable if comparativelyshort-lived record of/Service to thecommuirity.

Over a four-year period, theHocagep program provided help foryouths^who felt they had no placeelse to go with their problems. Theseybung people found a sympatheticear at /Hocagee House when theyencountered stone walls at home, inschpol^Felse where!

t h program was the progeny of;;the "Mayor's Committee'* on DrugAbuse, composed of a mixed-agegroup which bridged the generationgap to bring about an understanding

\pf_a,Qpmmunitywide problem. It wasadministered by a volunteer staff ofspecialists in~.fie.lds in whichsolutions could be sought,.

—Drugs7wer,enot-the-qnly problem

Tax plan resistanceThe problems Governor Brendan

T; Byrne is encountering gettingfellow Democrats in the Legislatureto put across his income, taxprogram come as no surprise to

' those who attended a hearing on theplan in Cranford Friclay night..

In spite of the fact that Byrne's'party has a. large majority in boththe Senate and Assembly, thegovernor js_encountering serious

to enactment7 of "his

area"in^which" the'program~wasinvolved. Difficulties at home, inschool or even with law enforcementofficers were explored and in manyinstances solved: Hocagee's , doorswere always open to young peoplewho had or felt they had problemswith which they could not cope.

The hard drug problem has eased,and young people appear to beturning t© alcohol for the "kicks" orescape which drugs provided. Beings-tong-estaMished—institution—tbimmediate problems associatedwith drinking are well recognizedand the usage has general ac-ceptance. The days of • reckoningcome later on.

When Hocagee was establishedfour years l^oT it "Was" ;ah idea whosetime has come. It is perhaps now ofthe past, but its imprint.is an in-delible

comply with the Supreme Courtmandate for reforming the presentsystem of financing education seemto be at the core of the difficulties ofgetting the Byrne plan across.

The formula is complicated; andwith well-warranted skepticism ofnew taxes, such a program could notreceive public acceptance unlessfully understood. The' lessons ofincome tax plan failure of formerGovernors-Hughes and Cahill -seem.;noHo have been learned well by,theByrne people. More than a short-course public education program isnecessary to put across an income

* • " " • • / - . * • • . • . • * * - , . . ' • . • • • • • • i

KiWahis Club awards grantsFive June graduates of

Cr^inford High School wererecently awarded grants in-aid for college totaling $1,250•by the Cranford Kiwanis Club.Each—student—received—an-award of j$250-

The winners are-'-ArleneGrossman of 28 MansionTerr., Susan Prisco of 103Hillcres.t> Ave. and JoanRomano of 40 Grove St., whoall will attend Trenton State

College; Dennis De Jianne of11 Wade Ave., who Will entr.Duke University., tis—*-apsychology major, and ArthurPlayle of 352 i-Retford Aye.,

-who—will—enroll^-at—AuburnUniversity to "study ar-chitecture.

The grants^in-aid a r eawarded annually by the club,which honored this year'swinners at a dinner meeting atMarisa's Restaurant.

Community calendar' "A J " '

Pool office hours for picture-taking, card validating and cardpick-up are Monday through Thursday from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.

Saturday, July 209-4' p.m.-Boy Scout Troop 178 scrap paper-drive at St.

Michael's School parking lot.10-4 p.m.-Glass, tin, aluminum collection at the recycling

cerjter, Meeker Ave.

Tuesday, July 23 /10:30 a.m. arid 12 p.m.-Free movies at the Public library-

"People Soup" and "The Doughnuts."8:30 p.m.-Township Committee meeting at the Municipal

Building. _•....;.'__ .___ •_

- .1-

COLLEGE BOUND — Arlene, G.rossmann, SusanPrisco and Joan Romano, left tb right, were awardedgrants of $250 each for college by the CranfordKiwanis Club. The club.honored the girjsj.at a recentdinner meeting at AAariSa's Restaurant. Club mem-

bers pictured from left are Cass Bolanqwski,president; Pat White, pick Howlett"and Larry Bon-nell. Not shown are Dennis DeJianne and ArthurPlayle, who also were awarded $250 grants.

we wereBy Arthur and Hazel Burditt

\ - 5 Years AgoElizabethtown Water Co. assured Mayor Edward K. GUI of

adequacy of water supply for Ctanford.Board of Education named Stuart Dv Douglas of Sparta to

new post as school business administrator.Board of Education postponed family living program in

schools Until committee is appointed to review material forcurriculum. - - •

To the Editor-:

tax however meritorious it may be t 0 Mayor Henry E. Hin-^ my complaint. I would have lightly. I feel• ' . . / . - • • * _.. c an lr o yvn v\ Tv* s\r\ li-tlir 1 9 • ' nlor*1' f r t lH t Vi_am si Y\ f\ i i t • ia V G T S c l t i o n ' S h o u ladrrnnktrarnr<; must reali7e s e n k a mP Jr- o naaminisiraiors mubi realize, n T „. 1ft

12:On June 24; 1974, at 3 p.m. I

oppositionprogram. ; "

The tax. plan narrowly squeakedthrough the Assembly by aminimum margin, of .41 to 38 onMonday, with one Republican ab-staining. All other minority mem-bers voted against the.tax.:-So serious is the opposition to the

tax plan in the Senate that Byrne isendeavoring to postpone the votefrom next Monday to Thursday to

"give him more time fo~ swing™ statewidFcommunTfy: - were touching the wires. Ourwavering senators over to his side. However prettily it may be D.P.W. stated that Public

The 20th District, assemblymen, packaged, a brain-truster plan with Service takes care of branchesJoseph L. Garrubbo and John J. something to appease, almostMcCarthy, Democrats who spon- everyone does not appear'to be thesored the Cranford-meeting, found best way to go.plenty here to substantiate theirstands against the program. Bothvoted no Monday.

Confusion over the plan, lack of

since they took my name and.address, over the phone, when

cut off in several homes on'Beech St.—until Public Ser-

they arrived the men should vice came to restore it.have talked with me sol could I am extremely upset that a

June 24th. When I explainedabout the unfortunate incidentof July 9, he contradicted me.He said I didn't mention

Following is a letter written have explained the reason for citizen's complaint is taken so branches were touching wires

told them about aprevious accident ,r (which 1

direct con-place

with the citizen Who lodges theand the Courts accept the hard tact c a i j e c | the Cranford Depart- had mentioned over the phone complaint. I do riot understandthat tax reform is a long, tedious ment of Public Works and " " . . . - . • - . . - . . . .procedure to be developed Step-by- reported hanging branches onstep after thorough deliberations ' * '""'""

.. ... . of

the tree in front of our house.,. At that time, I also informedJJh_*m_JJiaL^QrM_J^aMhes

to the D.P.W: where a neigh-bor's car was damagedbecause of another branchfalling from this tree a few _ _ . „„ _, __. „.,._years ago). Instead they just called before 9 a.m. the' next would "have To come" if bran"

hoyrras arlayman noticed thishanging branch but the socalled "exper t s" in our

for he would have written itdown in the "book'.' Iremember immediately afterhanging the phone up on June24;repeatine theconversationto my friend who was in myhouse. This friend remembers

D.P.W. didn't. Being so upset I discussing that Public Servicecalled before 9 a m the next id h t i b

left. morning t o speak ches were touching wires; TooOn July 9t 1974, at 8:45 p.m. with the D.P.W. Director. I bad the D.P.W. doesn't tape and Nomaheean Ct? nan a KflHnus accident as a u/at; lr»lH npithpr he nr>r the I./>»A»J » » m . u : - i . „. n . . t..n - « i u ijvuioi^aii vi.

10 Years AgoUnion Junior College to begin construction of William

Miller Sperry Memorial Observatory. •Board of Education announced no rent will be charged

Cranfprd Adult School for use of school building at least forfirst semester.

Fifty-three per sent of graduation class at Cranford HighSchool to attend two or four-year colleges or nursing schools.

20 Years AgoUtuted Fund goal for 1954 is $20,000.United Homes, Inc. of Clifton will build 44 homes on the old

HPRR prnpprty opposite the new Walnut Avenue School. G & HConstruction Co. will build 60 homes near County Park Rd.

public understanding and a haste to outlined is needed—but fast.

Public to gaze aL stars

touching wires buf~ they(Jtt.P.W.) would come and lookat'it, About four days later,purely 'by chance, I noticed

It is to be hoped that it will not be some men from the D.P.W.three strikes and out for New Jersey outside looking at the tree.tax reform. An approach with inputmore broadly conceived and

we had a serious accident as a was told neither he nor theresult of the^AjD.P.W. D.P.W. .foreman were in. Imisjudgment concerning this asked that they call me when

fell

They were there for ap-proximately 2 minutes. 1 feel

tree. The large branchcausing an explosion as itcame in contact with thewires. This in turn caused

it was convenient for them. Iam still waiting to hear fromthem and it's Friday, July 12.

The man at D.P.W. who

record complaints so the fullcomplaint would be heard andcould ndt be denied later on.

Hopefully,, the incident __of_July 9th, will not reoccur, forour children might not be as

dangerous sparks to fly and as takes the complaints was the fortunate next time,a final result electricity was same man T had talked with on "" "Lydia Lehner

42 Beech St.

nOteS birds at shore Good deed\

If it's true that wishing on astar makes dreams come true,then Friday, July 26, will be anight for dreaming at theSperry Observatory at UnionCollege.

. Amateur. Astronomers, Inc.,which operates the ob-servatory jointly with Union

i g p gparty for the general publicand guests will be able to traintheir eye on literally millionsof stars, dream a dream andlvlsh~accordlng to "Prof.

The observatory";reflector and 10-inch refractortelescopes will be augmentedby 11 ADll aadditiohaltelescopes for the publicviewing, Prof. White said.Each telescope will be focusedon a different astronomicalobject and a qualified ob-

explain to the viewer just whathe or she is seeing.

Galaxies, nebulae, s tars ,constellations and doublestars are arriong the heavenly

more familiar constellaUons c a r ^ f o r sti-ing beans Here inhatshould be v«sible thro.ugh S t 6 sHarborfhe laugh ing g u l l

the telescopes on July 26. t a k e s t h e p l a c e of UhK

e h*r^gAAI members who will be gull that frequents the, more

providing the additional ..northern shore areas and ofthe pigeon that comes.to theback.yard in.Cranford for ahandout. Whenever we haveleftover fish and there isn'tenough-for-salad—er-chitken-skins or any.other fatty food,we put it out in the back yardand then

telescopes and serving- ascelestial guides include:Arthur Cacella of EastBrunswick, George Chaplenko

By Farris Swackhamcr'" ~ • visitors. Mockingbirds run west coast via the hand of To the Editor:STONE HARBOR—! along our neighbor's fence to man. Some enterprising "Rave Notices" to a couple

Laughing gulls don't appear to get ahgndout of raisins. House fellow trapped some of these of teenagers, Larry Hicks and• •"••••' v . sparrows roost in one of the finches out near Los Angeles, Rich Lewis who took time to

few trees on the island just named them Hollywood fin- do a good deed and wouldacrpss the street from our ches, and shipped them east in accept no rewards for doing it.house.Their chirping is often cages to dealers in the New Coming from tfie market atthe first sovmd we hear in the York metropolitan area. 9:45 p.m: my. car had a flatmorning—about five or so. Federal wildlife authorities Jire. I pulled over to the curb

got windof the shipment and and . before getting to theadvised the dealers'that" they phone, asked the boys (who

Patrick J. White, observatory^ objects the telescopes will

Linden, James P. Flood ofClark, Stephen M. .Glick ofMorris Plains, Richard J.Kelly of Iselin, LeonardSchoen of Morris PlainsrPaulE. Scraggs of. Clark", Robert

There's a pair of cardinalsaround the firehouse but theynever seem to make ,our yard.

-Occasionally—aacross the sandy soil that

had best free the birds since, were strangers) if they knew a

Cranford Swimming Club to open, Sunday. Two hundredsixty families are members.

A series of roller skating parties is scheduled for So. UnionAve. parking lot each Monday and Thursday evehTng,";sponsored by the township recreation commission.

Parkway now open from Hillside to Woodbridge.

30 Years AgoTent meetings will be held by Christian Missionary and

Alliance Church at Retford Ave. and Cherry St. Speakersinclude Jack Wyrtzen, noted youth speaker. .

• • • . • : i "

• 40 Years* Ago"Mrs. Miriam Cromwell, 73, died at the home of her brother,

John, in Allenhurst where they moved 14 years ago after 50years in Cranford. She was the originator of the Christian and

. Missionary Alliance Church in Cranford and lived in the oldCromwell homestead on Walnut Ave. (Site of Temple Beth-El), ' • • . " • • - • • • • . • • • • ' . •

* 60 Years AgoGeorge Beyers, injured" while removing carnival

decorations at the Cranford Hotel, is out of bed at Elizabeth

y supports two or .... threerun for 'the rear'L manicured lawns in"the area

door. • "• but not very often. Haven'tWhen the food,is put out on l j

the pebbles in the corner-of the

ends course

alone, Prof. White noted, isestimated to include a halfbillion stars.

Ursa Major, which includesthe big dipper, and UrsaMinor, which includes •••"thelittle dipper and Polaris, the

Teeters.- of New^Shcewsbur*^:.yard.;., there may not - be a - -^ _New arrival •

free.T h e freed birds first took up

y residence on Long Island butsejjn a bluejay on the island soon spread to the surroun-since we've been here. ding area, many, wintering

States, they were entitled to be I was out of gashave a flat tire.

They offered, very proudly,to.change it for me. They did agreat job. Let's tell everyone!

Who likes' teenagers? I do.

y u ,„_...„,.

, I"said "no<", I Village ImDrdvei

League lines....

Superior Court Judge HarryV. Osborne Jr. of 5 DartmouthRd. recently completed a four- n o r t h s t a r a t ^e l iP o f

week education course at the l l t t l e dipper, are among theNational College of the StateJudiciary.

Located on the University ofNevada, Reno campus, theNational College acts as theeducational branch of theAmerican Bar AssociationJudicialDivision,

Entering its eleventh year,the National College haspioneered the field of judicialeducation in this country

The in-depth course of study —j — ,..,„„ ^..&.u..u „ ..,v«.jin which Judge Osborne shores lay forests and deserts,participated included lee- There were mountains andtures, . workshops andorganized discussion groups.An experienced judicialfaculty, — augmented byprofessional specialists, from

Alan P. Witzgall of.Gut-tenberg, and Lester .Yuill ofHillside.

The' star party willl getunderway at dusk. There is noadmission and all arewelcome to attend, Schoen,party chairman said. The rain-date is Saturday, July 27.

near Philadelphia^ Solaughing, gull anywhere in.sight. Before we start up theback-steps, however, thecewill be three or imore fightingover the scraps. But the stringbeans didn't go over so well.

Aside from shore birds, theisland on which Stone Harboris located has few avian

80 Years AgoLock-up cage arrived and has been securely fastened in

_ room under the Hose House. Now.,the dog pound can be used.Mrs, Margaret Smith Before it had only three sides^as^the lock-up formed the

< ^ J £ f u ^ :T h W e i y n , p ythat I don;t remember seeing sipped fellow singing from thein past yearg—a. house finch wire is d new arrival for StoneHe sings at the top oMna-voice—Harbor-.from the phone wire stretch-ing across the street.

You'll recall that these

2nd-year visitorsA pair of barn swallows

nested for the second year

Honor roll at Hillside Ave.linnets, as they are sometimes "over the door of the Wetlandscalled, came Jjere from -the Institute'just across the bridge j u n j o r

from where we stay. At least I n 0 U n c e d

ravaging our land

When our forefathers direction in settlement andarrived here two centuries ago growth policies. Yellowstone

Administration they set foot on the shores of a"' 'remarkableland. Though they

did not krtow it at the time theywere moving in on one of themost beautiful and variedcontinents of ....the world.Beyond'New England's rocky

throughout the United States,systematically coveredsubjects including: evidence,sentencing, probation,criminal law, court ad-mihistration, communityrelations, jury and specialproblems of the judge.

plains and jungles and some ofthe most fertile land in theworld. And under the landwere rich' mineral deposits. Itseems as though this land hadeverything. But out-f o r e f a t h e r s b r o u g h t *io.something new to the land. So here we are in

National Park was .created.Only one-sixth plan

Once the federal govern-ment grants or sells its land itis, constitutionally, out of itscontrol. as far as planningpolicies go. Land use planningis one of the rights reserved tothe states by the 10th amepd-rflent. However, virtuallyevery state has left land useplanning to the localities'. Ofsome (SO,000 communitiesauthorized to do such plan-ning, about 10,000 actually do

Marketing postfor Roche- Eugene C. Roche of Gran-ford has been named

Burton L. Mandell, prin-cipal of Hillside. Avenue

j ^ h School an-the following

(The (Crau.forb"

PublisherMary Louise Sprague

Associate PublisherCartc-r J. BennettGeneral ManagerJ. Patrick Trench

EditorJosefch G. Rush

News EditorsCarol Bunck, Rosalie (iross

Advertising ManagerDavid Laibow

Unlike the Indians who livedhere and who belived thiit onelives with the earth, theEuropeans held that one liveson the earth—and uses it.

From the very beginning ofour national life the federalgovernment has been apowerful force in shaping landuse policies. From the mid1800's, when the. governmentheld about 76 percent, of the,U.S. mainland it began to actas a cortduit-acqtiiring andthen dispersing land to privateownership through sale orgrant. Remember yourAmerican history .courses?The Northwest Ordinance of1785, the. Preemption Act of1820, the Homestead Act of18*52? By 1872, however, thef e d e r a l g o v e r n men t

x derjionstruted a- change of

inherent in government, sothat controls may be exer-cised fox the general welfare.In New Jersey-it--is. clearly..- marke t ing - .deve lopmen tdefined by enabling legislation manager for patient carewhich allows towns to have nroducts in Johnson &planning and zoning boards,Eminent domain is anotherpower of government whichallows it to condemn andpurchase land for public uses,such as highways and parks.This is not often used, though,because of the expense in-volved. The government 'spower to tax could be used as atool for better land piUcies.

could dispel the

of humans just a few scantfeet from their home doesn'tseem to bother them at all.

I remember one year whena pair-nested underneath awooden dock that was in dailyuse.- When •someone-arrived"Di*mDnd— t- lnda-JDonahue. SandM. Zebrow.K!,. si^an ?«rn*x?'J|!sr

SEVENTH GRADECynthia Anderson, Sherrlll Austin,

Jonathan Banks, Susan Bartocci, AnnBuontempo, Eileen Byrne, MichaelCal Kano. Debra Carralat, John Cregsn,Barbara Cohn, John Cosmpglos, Ranld

Donna Erickson, Steven Farbman,William Gargano, Anthonv Garrett, LoriGat«sy, Diana Gavey, Lori Gelger,David Goeddert, Gerald Green, LynnGreenfield, Delrdre Hahn, CarrieHellenbrecht, Laurence Jones, TedKreltzman, Raymond Kunimann, JoanLae iu , Pablo Lalguna, Walter Laurel,Sarah Laurenson, Stephen AAarkowlch,Susah Leach, James Mclntyre, Carrie vMorris, Davfd Oldam, StanleyOlsiewskl, Linda Orlando, Linda Pelosl,Renee Saal, Andy Sahaidakowskl,August Semple, Roxanne Sllberto, DoraSmith, Betty Lou Stlrrat, TracevStrauss; Wayne Tyler, "Shelley Wang,Karen Wolf, Suellyn Wyatt. John

on the dock, the birds flew outand then returned- whensupposed danger had passed.

Tree swallows join withtheir cousins, flying low overthe salt marsh that surroundsthe institute, 'catching

Durham, Josephine Dilok, Jody Ehrlcti, Zlongas.

City." The last U.S. census determines the developmenttold us the 71 percent of. the of many a town. Public ex-population lives in urban penditufe for airports, high-places-on two per cent of the ways and the like can spurland... The land for intense development,metropolitan purposes isexpanding, most of the growthbeing in the suburbs (formerlyknown as farmland). Thedevelopment has wroughthavoc with the environment,changed the socjal structure, of government together withand is gobbling up one of our the overall practice of plan-most basic1 resources-land, Ifthe present trend of

-development continues.•hyitheyear 2MJ0 we will have lised upall the land we have and belooking for 50 million ..ad-ditional acres.

Have tools to cop*-Government dots, however,

have the tools to cope with thesituation. Police power is

productsJohnson International'sMarketing DevelopmentCenter.

Roche joined Johnson &Johnson's hospital division in1955 as a sales representative . -in San Diego and Los Angeles, jmosquitos and green headCalif' He-also served as• a-f'-S5- S o O n t h e r e w i l1 b<i f l o <* s

division sales trainer before numbering in the thousandsbeing transferred tothe home getting ready to fly south,offices in New Brunswick as a Matty of the birds will linger

in 1%4 He i n t o November but they start-gathering,,.iti-Jate_July._an<l_J/eyin asked the public to join

August. 'the

Levin criticizes Nixonin speech at college

Stating that "the respon-sibility to criticizenecessitates the responsibilityto participate," DemocraticCongressional nominee Adam

Government, after being"largely responsible for theshape toe are in, has'the toolsat hand to save us fromdisaster. Careful use andcoordination of these .powers

ning is, unfortunately, yet tobe realized.

product director andpromotions manager forpatient care division.

A native of Beverly Hills,Calif., Roche graduated.fromthe University of California atLos Angeles. He is a memberof the American ManagementAssociation and the AmericanTrauma Society.

Mrs. Roche is the formerLucila CampbellJ of LosAngeles. The Roches have fivechildren. '

ourselves and what we wantfrom our government."

In a speech to Union Collegestudents last week, Levin saidthe current "stigma" over the

i results "not from

\.

i-Kobasowis held

—-The-marriage'-of-Miss-Anna-K. Kobasowsky, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. John'Kobasowsky of 14 ElmoraA^., to Robert Ricci, son ofMr. and Mrs. $amuel Ricci ofPlainfield,. took placeSaturday afternoon in St.

Sweet Adelines

to rehearse hereThe Madison Hill Chapter of

Sweet Adelines Inc. will holdits nfext rehear$al Wednesdayfrom 7:30 to 11 p.m. at theCranford[Community Center.All women who like to sing areinvited to attend.

The chorus, which sings infour-part barbershop har-mony style, will present aconcert Aug. 6 at 7:30 p.m. atthe Middlesex County Fair,New Brunswick.

p t _Village Improvement Association asks for visiting nurse.

Cancer Society installs WeiglyAs of July I, Jphn G. Weigly Weigly was officially installed

assumed the' -yluties of j u i y ^ the unit's executivey p

assumed the' -yluties of j u i y the unit's executive

Union County Unit office. d

, president.

Fire callsJuly 8, 10:33 a.m., Hillside Ave., railroad ties.

1:24 p.m., North Ave. Station, railroad engine.2:48 p.m., Christiana St., grassfire.8:59 p.m., Riverside Drive, grass fire.

July 9, 7:15 a.m., South Ave., railroad ties.11:22 a.m., Riverside Drive, false alarrh4:27 p.m., Springfield Aye., tractor fire.*

July 10, 1:15 a.m., Mohawk Drive, grass fire12:30 p.m., Centennial Ave., railroad ties.2:54 p.m., North Avenue E., washdown.5:20 p.m., South Ave., dumpster fire.1 •-• -'5:42 p.m., Myrtle St., automatic alarm.

July 11, 10:27 a.m., Hillside Ave., hot water heater.1:30 p.m.,-Sylvester St., garage fire.. .4:26 p.m., Balmiere Road, faulty oil burner.

July 13, 2:03 p.m., Holly St., rubbish fire-. -'10:17 p.m., High St., house fire.

July 14,10:20 p.m., North Avenue E., automobile fire.

off but instead from a generalcorruption of spirit that hasreached us all."

The Union County Democratsaid "bold and imaginitiveleadership that is not afraid tostand up for the public's in-terest is urgently needed inWashington. Congress can nolonger allow the executivebranch to dictate policy, butmust be. its own initiator."

Levin, who criticizedPresident Nixon for slicing offalmost $500 million from three,key health-programs and hissevere curtailment of legalassis tance p rograms ,declared, "We are a nation ledby a President who has time,aid and money for everythingbut the American people."

<**

EIGHTH ORADEJohn Bauer, Michael Copoblanco,

Dana Chandler, Steven Chester, JamesColuccj, Christie Curry, MichaelDlckstein, Thomas Donovan, ElliottDorln, James Forreitol, Mary AnnGallucel, Lynn Glkkman, Laura.Goodspeed, ZVQmunt Gorool. JonathanGreenberg, Maria Gross, Paul Hopkins/Jeanne Hughes, Thomas Jackowjkl,Donna Jonas, Marianne Kalescky, JayKlein, Karen koast, Maria Laezia,Susan Lank, Neal Lerner, KevinMackemull, llene Maiur , DebraMichael, Michael Miller, Lisa Ostapc-zuk, Kevin Owens, Vivian Pastutyn,,Alice Plpala, Barbara Rogers, SharonRoth. CVMhl* 5£hn«hi OreflS Schwao,er,Joanne Shaffer, James Shubert", Linda'Slragusa, Steven Sniethy, DonnaSwanson, Beth Weiss, Linda Wolf.

NINTH ORADESusan Ackerrrtann, Bruce Baker, Glen

Baldwin, Kenneth Blngham, BernadetteBrady, Robin Buchanan, Robin Bucher,Patricia Christen, Janet Clcarlello,Nancy Curry, Christopher Damm, AlanDeotsch, Thomas DlGeb'rglo, JamesEngelhardt, Karen Fedorchak, ShelleyFischer, Jane Flt ipatr lcK. MarkGallucel, Ellen Grsbofl, Wendy LeeHobble, Patricia Inchallk, DeborahJohnson, Charles Kardel, Edith Laeno,Donna Lefkovlc. Linda AAacNamaraiNoll Markowl t i , Eileen McCarthy,'Elizabeth O'Leary, Margaret O'Leary,Michael O'Loary, Kenneth Oldam,

^Lawrence PaUl, Linda Pickering, MlndlRablnowltiV Donna R»stellfr~Anlonle-Rlzio, Richard Schwalbach, CherylSegebade, Peggy Seymour, EllisTalbert, Joanne Woodruff, DianeZemboUlls.

The Crartlord Cltllert and Chronicle

Is published every Thursday by the

RlvervleW Publishing Co., Tnc, a

Corporation at 21-33 Alden Street,

Cranford, N.J. Subscription r«t»«by

mall postpaid oney«ar, within Union

County J/.OO, In N.J., jr.5O;

elsewhere.In U.S. lio.50; ov/erseas,

115.00. Official newspaper lor

CrarWord, Kenllworlh and Garwood.

Second Class. Postage Paid at

Cranforci N«w Jorsoy U70U.

Telephone (3O1I 2H 4000.

LEARNELECTROLYSIS

the KREE way. . .Rewarding career Inpermanent hair removal;

Age no barrier. :Pull or part time. .

Day or Eve. Men. women.Come..write or phone JTor

FREE BOOKLET K.

a</ELECTROLYSIS

HI W. 42 St, H.I. 10031 • (211) 2 i M I I dWORLDS FAMOUS T RAIN INC C l l - M R

-dJ_mixlK CJi_u.rch.Elizabeth,' Rev. Joseph Fedorck,pastor, officiated ai theceremony, which was followedby a .reception at St.Vladimir's Parish.Hall.

Escorted by her father, thebride had her sister, Mrs.Gerald Sterenczak, as matron

.of honor. Other bridal at-tendant's were Mrs. PaulMaf Shall,. Miss NadiaCerk'ownyk, Miss1. DonnaKupczak and Miss DonnaMelnyk.

Paul Marshall served as.._:..best_rnan for:_his brother-in-

law.. Ushers included GeraldSterenczak, Edward Land-messer Jr. and Ronald andRobert Ricci, brothers of thebridegroom.

v The bride; a graduate ofCranford High School andUnion County Technical In-stitute, Scotch Plains, is amedical technician at South

• Amboy Memorial Hospital.

Her husband, also agraduate of Union CountyTechnical Institute, where hestudiedprinting,isemployedby Tenco, a division of Coca-Cola in Linden. >••

The newlyweds will niake;, their home in Plainfield

following a honeymoon in thei

Local residentto manageWiss storey

Albert Mandel of 10 Rutgers-Rd.—has—been—appointedmanager of Wiss Jewelerstore in Short Hills Mall.-Mandel has been in the

jewelry business for 30 years,including five years with theWiss organization* He movesto his new position after three,and one-half years asmanager of the Wiss store inWoodbridge Center, whichwas . opened . under hisguidance. Before that, he wasassistant manager of the Wissstore in;Willowbrook Mall forone and one-half years, andhad his own jewelry businessin Elizabeth for 25 years. .,•

JMandel . is a graduateThomas Jefferson High: Schoolin Elizabeth. He is a memberof Mt. Nebo Masonic Lodge inElizabeth, and the Knights ofPythias of Cranford. Marriedto the former FlorenceSchesinger, Mandell has twochildren.

Mrs. Robert Ricci

PhotographyRemembers...

days you can't forget

Fine Portrait .Photography by

BERGEN STUDIO34 North Avenue, West. 276-1024

Hadassah chapterschedules brunchA bilffet brunch will be held sponsored by her regular

by the -Roselle-Cranford membership committee, with-Chapte'r.~of Hadassah-in-Jhe^no—funds I. comings fromgarden of Mrs. Harriet Gross Hadassah. She said the garden

party is one of several unusual

SALE15 PER CENT DISCOUNT ON ALL

MERCHANDISEEXCEPT CONSIGNED ITEMS

;••• at PtUMOUIN. LTD.V July 10-26. 1974

4 New Providence Road, MountainsideMonday thru Saturday, 10 A.M. - 5 P.M.

Telephone 233-1999

of Cranford, chapterpresident, on Wednesday from11 a.m. to 2 prn.

More than 130 annualmembers and 50 prospectivemembers hiave received in-vitations with original versewritten by Mrs. Cina Balot,membership vice president,and original art work by Mrs.Etta Leff. . .

According to Mrs. Cina^^^"func-^—chairmanr'

functions planned this year,leading up to the chapter's25th anniversary celebrationthis January. ;

Mrs. Balot's committee"includes Mrs. Sara Sofman,re-enrollment chairman; Mrs.Toby Tabot, retentionchairman; Mrs. Leff, lifemembership chairman; Mrs.Barbara Ginsberg, financial

; *r Airman First Class GeorgeA. Crirrimins, son of Mr. andMrs. Arthur Crimmins of 110Beech~Sl.,.has graduated atKeesler AFB, Miss., from theU.' S; Air -Force - c o m -municat ions . equipmentrepairman course conductedby the Air training Com-mand. , _ :

The airman, who was taughtinstallation and maintenanceof high-powered groundcommunications equipment,is being assigned toBergstrom AFB Texas forduty with a unit mthci TacticalAir Co-mmand;

CRUISE CARIBBEANMr. and Mrs. John T. Flis of

3 Dartmouth Rd. havereturned from a 4-dayCaribbean cruise aboard . theRoyal Caribbean Cruise Lineship Nordic Prince. Portsvisited were Miami, Fla.; SanJuan, Puerto Rico; StThomas, Virgin Islands; Fortde France; Martinique;Caracas, "Venezuela; Oran-

Thursday, July 1*8,1974 CRANFGRD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE f^ge &-

College (tornerThe University'of Dayton;

Ohio, has announced thenames of four Cranfordresidents who are on thedean'^ list for the second termof the 1973 74 academic year."Tfiiy— 'CARTHY and JOAN T.SAHRADNIK, College of Artsand Sciences; BARBARA J.O'BRIEN, School' ofEducation, and RICHARD P.BINGHAM, School ofEngineering.

• BRENDA GELFMAN,daughter of Mr, and Mrs.Hymari Gelfman of 505 HighSt., has1 been named to , thedean's list for the spring"semester at TempleUniversity, Philadelphia, Pa.

H. THEODORE OSBORNE,son of Superior Court Judgeand Mrs. Harry V. Osborne Jr.of 5 Dartmouth Rd., is on thedean's list for the spring termat the School of Fine Arts at

Ohio. Osborne, who hascompleted his third year, isstudying architecture. .•'••

VOLUNTEERS SOUGHTFISH, the local

organization providingservice in emergencies, isin need of young mot

~ volunteers. Those willing tohelp are asked to contactMrs. Dianne Wengert (276-3951) or Mrs. Edith Coogan(276-8226).

L STUDIO OFx PHOTOGRAPHY

WEDDINGS* PORTRAITS • BARMITZVAHS

276774911 NORTH AVENUE EAST, C RAN FOR D

(OPPOSITE C.R.R. STATION)

Mrs. Mark Ciullo. . ' f

Deborah Mc£xowanweds Mark Giullo

Grctnford Pharmacies

Serve you 7 days-a

OEENSUMDA

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tionu this unprecedentedRummer festivity ^is being

Couple attendstrailer rally

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J.Ulichny of 7 Behnert PI. wereamong 3,943 travel trailer

, families attending the 17thinternational rally of the

>• Wally Byam Caravan Club atthe Notre Dame Campus inSouth Bend, Ind., June 28through July 4.

Ulichny is an accountantwith Lockheed ElectronicsCo., and his wife, Gladys, isrecording secretary for theWatchung Unit of New JerseyWBCCI. She was ah alternate^delegate to the official In-ternational meeting,

frailer-i-sts" ' at tendedr e p r e s e n t i n g , l o c a l

|~recreationaHehicle-groups-of-every; state -including Hawaiiand Alaska, every province ofCanada, parts of Mexico and afew other nations.

Hadassah, the woman'sZionist organization ofAmerica, has been per-

works. At this point,

the largest task, it faces issupporting the world famousriH a d a s s a h M e d i c a lOrganization with hospitalsand village clinics in Israelthat serve as centers ofhealing for the generalpopulation, instruction cen-ters for doctors and nursesand world famous researchcenters. Youth Aliah, anothertrusteeship of Hadassah, ispresently helping Russianyouth who emegrated to Israelresettle and adjust to • theirnew lives.

Because diies as well as"funds from fund raisingprojects are dsed to supportHadassah's .philanthropicworKS, it is hoped "that anincreasing number of new

-members---will-—join^—the-Roselle-Cranford Chapter _ofHadassah on its anniversaryyear, a spokesman for thegroup said.

The Kingdom" Hall ofJehovah's Witnesses, inBratlley Beach was-the settingfor the July 13 wedding of MissDeborah Ann McGowan,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.James M. McGowan of PointPleasant Beach, formerly ofGarwood, and Mark Ciullo,son of Mr. and Mrs. John A....Ciullo of Toms River, for-merly of Cranford.

Mr..Salvatore Corbisero,Elder in the Point Pleasant

Curacao; Port Antonio,Jamaica, and Port-au-Prince,Haiti.

CLASSHASLUNCHEONMrs. Adrienne Jagerman's

fourlh grade class atRoosevelt School recently heldan international luncheon asthe culminating activity in aunit on customs and culturesof the World. Various in-ternational dishes wereprepared by parents, and the

g _Congregation of JehovafTsWitnesses, officiated at the,double ring ceremony, Areception followed at Doolan'sMotor Lodge, Spring LakeHeights. . \ • ' - . . *

The bride was given inmarriage by her father. Thematron of honor was thebride's aunt, Mrs. SandraLabracio, who tesides in theParkway Village Apartmentshere, and bridesn1aidsxwereMiss Phyllis Bruno of P.ointPleasant Beach, a' friendxof

Toms LRiver;—sisters-of—;tb.e —bridegroom.

Donald R. Dieffenbach ofElizabeth, a friend . of thebridegroom, served as bestman, and ushers were FrankScioscia, brother-in-law of the-bridegroom, Mark Hollowayof Neptune, and Eric Mobergof Gilford Park, friends of thebridegroom. -

The bride attended theLincoln School in Garwoodand graduated from Point

~Ple^5STtr"BeachrHigtrSchoolHer husband graduated

from Cranford High Schooland is employed by Mar-JonSportswear, in Carteret.

After a wedding trip toBermuda, the couple willreside in Toms River.

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* V ;

*.'•;

Page 4: SI ADULTS SI on campThursday, July 18, 1974 br · \ • —

Page6CRANF0RD(N.J.) CITIZEN AMD CHRONICLE Thursday,July 18,197-1

R&v. Evans to> leaa serviceat Osceola Presbyterianat the Osceola PresbyterianChurch, Clark, the next threeSundays, July 21, 28 and Aug.4. Services are from 10 to 10:45

pPrior

positions

toMr.

teachingEvans served

"Thomas~R".GHEvans—later-«f;religion-and-Gcrman;--a5—pastor—of—the"will conduct worship services a posl he held until June 1973, Presbytrerian Church of

Marjayunk, Philadelphia, Pa.,,and : Bethany UnitedPre sby t e r i an Church,Bloomfield.

For the past 11 years, he• . * • served the Madison Avenue,

next weeka.m. v .

Mr. Evans was professor ofNew Testament and Greek inBloomfield Seminary from1955 until it closed in 1960. He1955 until itclosed in 1960. He /_Bpy Scout 1 roop 44, of thethen assumed a DrofessorshipJjf0^1?, Presbyterian Churchof religion and Greek, and ^ ^ f f ^ S S S

PRAYER IS MORETHAN JUST W O P S

Litten to thi?radio program

Sundayover stations

WPAT930 KH 7:15 A.M.

WER A1590 KH 8*15 A.M.

WVNJ620 KH 9:45 A.M.

THE TROTHTHATHEAIS

A ChrlttUn Scltncf ndlo »«ri«i

United Presbyterian Churchof Elizabeth, as stated supply,or temporary minister.

Rev. Evans received hisA.B. degree from JuniataColjge and his Th.B and Th. Mdegrees from PrincetonTheological Seminary. He hasdone graduate studies in theUniversity of Basel, Swit-zerland, arid TucbingX'rr,"Germany. He also has studiedat Drew University and thispast summer in the University

-of Heidelberg, Germany.. . . . '.„«,,„„. » . -J Other members of his..K-EWLWORTH--In,a study_, r a m . . l c h j s w i f e ; . R u t h , .

presently organist-choirdirector of Broughton UnitedP r e s b y t e r i a n Church,Bloomfield; a daughter, Ruth,college graduate who com-pleted a year at the Katherine

Thursday between (i: 30 and9:30 p.m. "'• ,

Scouts, will'be on hand in thechurch • parking' lot to loadscrap paper onto a truck.

Pastor to preach

on Book of Kings

of an Old Testament passage^from the first book of Kings,

--Rev-.-Ma-ry-in-W. Green, pastorof. Community UnitedMethodist Church inKenilworth, ...will preachSunday at the 9:30 a.m. ser-vice on the topic, "A MessageFrom a Juniper Tree."JRev'. Donald Knott,

•assistant•- wi 11 direel theprayers and hymn sing.

•' ' • '; '• '• ' : ': ;: V ' / '''''''/" ; '':y """ '' \ ' '' ' ' ' " ' l ^ ^ ^ ; t ^ %•":-y..

— * ~

; • ' " —

opfen&AugiThursday, July 18,1974 CRANFORD.'(N. J.) C If IZEN AND CHRONICLE Page 7.

KENILWORTH— .pbr thetenth consecutive/year St.Theresa's Church/will sponsor

Karnival"j*hich will beknown this^year as "DoubleKarnivajK ' <• , •

TheXarnival will be in twosets/of days. It will begin onP^iday.^Aug. 23, and continue

til midnight of "Sunday,August 25. ThejKarnival willresume the Allowing Thurs-day, Aug. 29, and end atmidnight on Labor Day, Sept.2. ;'

International dinners suchas Polish, Germari, Italianand American dishes will beserved each night. In addition

to the^ftnriers, there wtUHEe anassortment of foods served

-under the .140 foot long "big various organizations in the•-tnp"-rrrir kitchen: —"—"

Other attractions include

"drum and bugle corps alongwith 'floats sponsored by

"double" car raffle, games ofchance, rides and en-tertainment nightly; with achildren's matinee special at4:30 p.m: Labor Day.

On Sunday, Aug. 25 at 5p.m., the Kamival will featurea parade with competitive

Any civic, religious orfraternal organizations in-terested in entering the floatcompetition, may contact St.Theresa's Rectory or paradechairlady, MrsT GeorgeFehrenbacher, 428 N. lfith St.Prizes will be awarded to theoutstanding flPats.

George B. Worth, 85,, ofWestfield died Sunday at thehome of his daughter, Mrs.

SUMMER YARN—is being needled into/emBroidery by Elizabeth Hervleus of

School, Kenilworth. She is among 2i9ri?udents enrolled in the session, which willc o n c l u d e A u g . 2. ••. . - •_• • • ' . ' . . •~~~v

GrjaMordy 1976: bicentennialproject will bean everlastingmemorial for all futuregenerations," said RobertCrane during the weeklyluncheon .> meeting -of the

.•Cranford, alter a brief illness._ Cranford Rotary J^lub at theHe was born in Rahway and Coachman InnJast Thursday,

lived in Westfield-most of-his--In-a rslide_presentation,life. He was proprietor of the assisted by Arthur Burditt,

Crane traced the development

Crane outlines-plansof Heritage Corridor

"The Heritage Corridor, require tremendous work by' "' the: community, thespeaker

said. Financial support, ishoped for from charitablefoundations, governmentenvironmental agencies, thetownship and-individuals

Gibbs School in New York; adaughter, Dorothea, who willbe a junior at Juniata Collegenext fall; and a son, Thomas,who will be* a sbphorrioro ;atHaverford College this fall.'

HEBI£ATED TO DIGNIFIEDSERVICE SINCE 1897

FUNERAL DIRECTORS —1 /

DAVID B.XRABIELWltiUAlVfATD'OYLE

i. FREDRIUCK POPPY

WESTFIELD: 318 East Broad St., Fred H. Gray,.Jj^manager 233-014jCRANFORD: 12 Springfield Avc,, WUliam A. Dsfyk, manager 276-009.2

ituanes

Andre w/A.MacPherson

Funeral services far An-drew A. MacPherson. wereconducted yesterday at the

y, Memorial FuneralJHome, 12 Springfield Avp. j y.Rev. ~JohTi R. DexheirnerTpastor of the Cranford UnitedMethodist Church. Intermenttook place in Fair^iewCemetery, Westfield..-MroMacPherson, 76, of 207Retford Avc. died Sunday inAlexian Brothers Hospital,Elizabeth, after a briefillness.

He was born in Port Errol,Scotland, and came to theUnited States in 1921. He lived

The Big Time RateComes

earn

in Jersey City.before movingto Cranford in 1934.. He retired in 19G4 as anengineer with, the-Genjra:!-•Railroad-of New Jerse"y"aft.'ermany years service.

Mr. MacPherson was amember of the UnitedMethodist Church, Local 688 of

-the —Brotherhood——oLLocomotive Engineers and alife member of Bruce andThistle Lodge 312, F&AM. Heserved with .the Royal ArmyCorps of Scotland duringWorld War I and was a markmaster of the Grand I odge of-Scotland.

He and his wife, Mrs. OlgaMatthews1 MacPherson,celebrated their 50th weddinganniversary in December.

Also surviving are a son,"Robert oTXintlen; a. daughter,Mrs. Dorothy Nelson ofCranford; a sister, MissIsabella MacPherson of New.York, and three grand-children.

Mrs. HoetzelGARWOOD - Funeral

services for Mrs. ElizabethDiidick. KoetzeL were con-ducted Monday at the DooleyColonial Home, 556 WestfieldAve., , West field, • with Rev.Stephen Szabo, pastor of St.Paul's United Church of,Christ, officiating-.- Intermenttook place m GracclandMemorial Park, Kenilworth,with Rev. Szabo reading thecommittal prayers-

Mrs. Hoetzel,- 74, of 223

Third Ave. died Thursday atthe Ashbrook Nursing andConvalescent Center in ScotchPlains after a long illness." Sh'e.Was born in Germanyand lived in Garwood 35jears.

The widow of JosephHoetzel who died in 1960, she issurvived by two brothers,-Edward~RT—Dudick—of—'Gar-wood - and Karl Dudick .andtwo sisters, Mrs. Maria Fallerland Mrs. Fannie Stadler, allin Germany. :

and plans for the community'sbicentennial project, whichwill have the support^ oftownship officials, majorcommunity organizations andgroups, as well as individuals.

The .main thrust of theHeritage Corridor, Craneexplained, will be a large-,scale plan .to '-improve,beautify and preserve thetown's natural river areas.Beginning at the canoe club onthe north and extending toDroescher's Mill on the south;the project calls1 for con-

Mrs.Rose M. Galasso, 65, of 25

Mendell Ave. died Thursdayat Rahway Hospital; Rahway,after a long illness.

She was born in New YorkCity and lived in Cranfordeight years..

Mrs, Galasso was a com-municant of. St. John theApostle .Church, Cl^rk.

Her husband, AnthonyGalasso, died in 1960.

Mrs. Galasso is survived bytwo daughters, Mrs. James V.Coppola, with whom she livedand Mrs. Richard J. Quinn ofWestfield; a brother, JosephGeraci of Long Island; asister, Mrs. "Josephi.ne Gard-ner of Brooklyn, and four

•grandchildren,The funeral was held

Saturday from the DooleyFuncraLHome. 218 NorthAve., W. A funeral mass wascelebrated" at St,.. John theApostle Church, Clark. In-terment took place in CalvaryCemetery, Long Island City,N . V . ' "•

West Confectionery Storesince its founding in 1926.

Mr. Worth was an exemptfireman of Westfield and amember of Grace/OrthodoxPresbyterian Church.: His wife was the late Mrs.Lillian Hahn Worth.

In addition to his daughter^he is survived by two sons,Robert V. of Scotch Plains and

.'•• Thomas F. of i Westfield, andfive grandchildren. .

Funeral services wereyesterday at the Gray FuneralHome, 318 E. Broad St.,Westfield'; Interment tookplace in Fairview Cemetery, structions varying from small

-. . . . , - , , ->-—river"sitting-areas;~littleplazas along the water's edge,improved plantings and trails,a lighted gazebo, as well asrecreation and play areas withpicnic facilities. •

N. To realize even a smallClark, 79, of 31 N. portion of this,- major

Eighth St. were conducted restoration plan by',1976 willMonday at the Dooley FuneralHome, 218 North Ave., W,,Cranford, by Rev. Vincente M.DeGlaro, assistant pastor ofSt. Theresa's Church"?t.erment Took placeGraceland'Memorial Parkwith Rev. DeClaro reading thecommittal prayers.

Mrs. Clark, died Friday atthe Greenfield ConvalescentCenter, Sorrier/vilie< after along illness.

She was born in Astoria,N.Y., lived in Newark 20 yearsand in Kenilworth 26 years.

Thewidow of William Clark,she is survived by a brother,Alfred Ricker of SantaMonica, Calif. •

Mrs. ClarkKENILWORTH-- Funeral

According to Crane,Heritage Corridor began with

Committee in 1971 which was-headed by Rotarian -BuddyBergen. A memorial com-mittee_a*orking under NormanRoden conceived the idea of

the river project, which hasbeen developed into a masterplan under-the supervision ofThomas H. Kummer, land-scape architect of WestChester, Pa. Copies of the planwere distributed at themeeting. • ;

One of the ways Rotary haschosen to contribute to thiscommunity effort will be torestore some-original sawmillmachinery and a cider press

-which-has-been^donated by~two of its members.

Charles Speth presided.Crane was introduced by JackJames, program chairman.

teacher

'Eight foreign languagefaculty members from theUnion County Regional HighSchool District are participating in a summerworkshop to develop teachingskills for individualized instruction of Spanish andFrench.

Among the teachers is Mrs.Leonora Fleming of DavidBrcarley Regional HighSchool, Kenilworth.The in-dividualized instruction offoreign languages permitsstudents to work at their ownpace as individuals or in small

hhevaluate the progress of eachstudent by' examining theindividuals' advancement inspecially designed learningpackets and by the students'advancement in oral usageand comprehension of thelanguage, according to AugustGaprio, Foreign -languagecoordinator:1"^ — —-English is left outside the

individualized instructedforeign language classroom

' . . . - • < - _ . - • : where students are expectedUNDER FIRE— Mrs. Peter Alfano of 63 Windsor fineworks display at Orange Ave. Junior High School to converse only in the second

fieljd'which descended on their property and that ofneighbors during display. Breezeicarried objects ontoproperties to the north of field.

FACULTY FOCUS— on developing teaching skillsin the individualized instruction of Spanish classes is

Jn43ri)gcBssJn4he-Ltaioii-County-RegionaI High School-Foreign Languages Workshop by teachers, left toright, Mrs. Shirley Voge i, Arthur L. Johnson Regional

-Regional High -School; -Mrs . , Goldie Gluckman,

Governor Livingston Regional High School; JamesFarrell, Jonathan Dayton Regional High School,•

—AugustXaprio, coordinator of foreign languages-^Mp&H—•Diane Zdanowski, Governor Livingston Regional HighSchool;, and Mrs. Marian Calendrillo, JonathanDaytonRegionaUHigh. School. --- - ^ . ,_:

We SERVICE What We Sell!][ac6, Kenilwprth' wjth sop, Nicky, 12, left, and

daughter Toni, 13, with fallout from Cranford

Fireworks debris protestedb i Si

Illinois warrant

leads to arrest

— Eighteenresidents oL- Kenilworthstreets bordering OrangeAvenue Junior High School

h

the backyard of Mr. and Mrs.Peter Alfano at 63 WindsorPlace. The report wasdetonated by the youngster's

and burned fpjr. quite sometime, that my husband had toput them out with the hose.

"We could hot enjoy the

SignersWindsor Place residents

who also signed the petition ~ a r r e s t e d

included

field in Cranford have com- father with the help of neigh- fireworks since we had to keep

Collegians1 Three Cranford residents

In_:—are—on_the—spr-ing—semester-i n dean's list at Lafayette

College, Easton, Pa. They areKEITH DEEN of 216 OakLane, sophomore, and DAVIDFARER of 312 Denman Rd.and GAIL PITTENGER of 9Indian Spring Rd., juniors.

JOHN J.DIFABIO

i{fUHintf_l\iiiiii({IlUullllE~lMUInl»

Gutters-Leaders

1 ' • " '

Henry E. Hinsenkamp Jr.about flaming debris fromthat township's July 4fireworks display landing ontheir homes and properties.

The smouldering falloutthreatened the homes and

-even physical persons ofKenilwprth onlookers to thenorth of the field from whichthe fireworks shot into the sky,

Mrs. Ronald Eysoldt of 68-Windsor—PJace-reported that:one smouldering , emberlanded in her hair and anotherglanced off her arm. She wasseated in her driveway watch-ing the display at the time.

An undetonated repdrt fellwithindnches of a youngster in

borsrUsed lawn hoses- 7

. Residents of Windsor Placestood by during the displaytraining lawn hoses on thefalling debris. One flamingpiece landed in a tree bor-dering a Windsor Placebackyard and glowed for anhour.

The petitioners, who in-cluded nine couples, affixedtheir signatures to a letter to

ducking to'keep from gellinghit with the sparks and piecesof the original fireworks thatwere as big as a grapefruit,one of which was not explodedand had to be manuallydisassembled and destroyed.

"We have saved some of thepieces. You couldn't believe itunless you saw for yourself:how terrible this was.

'I'm hoping that you decide

. David C. Mackey of 178Nojljj Lehigh Ave, was

yesterday on aMr:,, and; Mrs. ?harMeof

Kau'1

0,thf/t ?«< bailand Mrs L J111111?111^ by Detective Gordon> ™A i\/f ' n*.j J. Ostrowsky and Patrolman I

Mrs. Ernest Sposaro, No. 67.Other signers were Mr. andMelvin S. Thome of 400Coolidge Drive, Mr,; and Mrs.Karl Fielder of 388 Coolidge

Thomasarid]

and Mrs. Robert Keller of 416se Ter.The Cranford display was

the first held at the^Qtange

DFFEY'S hill :i it/1

AUTHORIZEDDEALER SERVICE!

•Vi

J\

J o l i n

The arrest was made on awarrant from Mason County,Ul. Police said Mackey is afornier resident of Canton, 111.,

has lived in Cranford forseveral months.

Alfano. The letter stated:"As the fireworks were shot

up, the large_pieces and largesparks'"wert.scattered overour roof tops, property, thestreet and my pool.. Thesparks that fell were so large,

Ave. field. Itconducted at

was

display at Orange Avenue. I'mforwarding one copy of thisletter to Kenilworth's MayorConrad and one copy to theCranford Chronicle because Ifeelthat they should be awareof thissituation."

county'stR

Mackey was arrested at the; IE.F,Brilten Co! plant in SouthAve. W., where he worked as a

^ , . H e i s t o b e a r r a i g n e dbefore-Gounty Judge Williamo ^ ^ v r t j t l t t l

TheChryslerAirtempHOMO

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RISE J. DMYTRIW of 274Bloomingdale Ave. has beennamed to the deanjs list "atButler University, In-dianapolis, Ind., for thesecond semester of the 1973-4college year.

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Hearing testsSet For

""ElizabethFfee electronic hearing

tests' wi l l be given atBeltone Hearing . AidService offices on Thur-sday and Friday.

Factory-trained hearingaid specialists will be at allof the offices listed below toperform the tests. : •

Anyone who has troublehearing or understandingIs welcome lo have a testusing the latest electronicequipment to determine hisor her .particular loss.Diagrams showlng"how theear works and some of thecausrs of hearing loss willbe av?Mable.

hearing lest at least once a :year If there is any troubleat all hearing clearly. Even 'people' now wearing <j.-h'Viring aid or those yitfbhave been told. nothingcould be done for themshould have a hearing testand find out about the

correction.The free hearing tests

will be given at Beltone, 11Broad St.. Elizabeth. .Thursday and'Friday. Ifyou can't get there on

.Thursday or Friday, call353-7686 and arrange for anappointment at anothertime.

DEP rejects firm's planfor condominium at shore

GARWOOD- Because of its the south, Washington Streetpotential adverse impact on tin the north, and Dock Streetthe character andcharacter and en-vironment of Toms River,New Jerseyj - EnvironmentalCommissioner David J.Bardin last^jVednesday deniedan application by theLehigh Construction Companyof Garwood to build a 10-story,220-unit condominium in thatDover Township, OceanCounty community.

The projecC whose site isTwundecTBy the TofruTRiy er W,

Knights namenew officers

on the west, has formal ap-proval from Dover Township.

The action is the first fullopinion ' i ssued by theDepartment of EnvironmentalProtection (DEP) explainingthe reasons for its decision ona particular application. It isthe sixth decision and the firstdenial of a permit applicationunder the Coastal AreaFacility Review Act, . whichwenlTlnlo elfec^lasrHSejFtember. . ^ . •

The purpose of the act is todedicate the coastal area "tothose kinds of land uses whichpromote the public health,

^ G A R W O O D - Martin safety, and welfarer and are_Eares£_was_recently^lected_ reasonably consistent with the• grand knight of Msgr. John M.

Walsh "Council 5437, Knights ofColumbus.

Other newly elected officersinclude the following: DennisMcCarthy, deputy grandknight; Edward Estwanick,

.chancellor; Nicholas Lo Bue,warden; Robert Egles, insideguard; John Kalainikas,outside guard; " JosephPorubsky, advocate; JohnMcCarthy, treasurer, andJohn Masterson, RaymondGleason and Michael Gallucci,trustees.

be visible from much ofBarnegat Bay.

2. It would be located besideand would add traffic toalready congested streets.

3. It would be out ofcharacter with its surroun-dings.

4. A portion of the site isoccupied by a 113-year-oldVictorian mansion, the MottPlace/which the property'sowner intended to raze unlesspublic authorities provided.,

residents often crowded out .proceedings scheaaied. Thethe Cranford spectators and it alleged offenses occurred^in.was decided to localize the November. 1972.event this year.

Garwood calendar]Thursday, July 18

. 9 a.m.-Arts and crafts at Hartman Park and MemorialField . .

9:45-10:45 a.m.-Girls Basketball League at MemorialField. , .Friday. July 19 ' -

9:45 and 10:45 a.m.-Girls Softball League at MemorialField. -Saturday, July 20-

9 a.m.-noon-Recycling at Casale Parking Lot.Monday. July 22

9:45 and 10.;45 -Major League Basketball for seventh, and .eighth grade boys at Hartman Park.

Noon-Rotary Club meets at Coachman Inn, Cranford.Tuesday, July 23 "

9 a.m.-Arts and crafts at Memorial Field and HartmanPark. , . . . . - . • •

9:45 and 10:45 a.m.-Minor League Basketball for boys infourth "through sixth grades. r~

10:30 a.m.-Woman's Guild of St. Paul's sewing groupmeets.

in

_ W e d n e s d a y , - J u l y 24 , •-. • _•preservation. The building 9:45 a .m. -Co^ed field hockey at Memorial Field,appears in the inventory of the 8 p.m.-Suburban Mothers of Twins and Triplets meeting atstates-historic sites. First National Bank, Roselle.

5. Air quality in Toms River 8 : 3 0 p.m._Movie at Washington School,-does not meet the eight-hour Thursday. July 25average maximum carbon; 9 a .m . . .Arts ari'd crafts at Hartman Park and Memorialmonoxide primary standard. Fjeid, • • "

area.

Declines conimentLehigh, which has offices at

300 South Ave., declinedcomment on the decision.

Emphasizing the need tobalance considerations ofenvironmental protection andcommunity-character withsocial and economic needs,Bardin cited factors playing arole in the decision, including:

1. The building would be thehighest in the area, and would

days last year. The primarystandard is established by thefederal government to protectpublic health.

Could appealLehigh may appeal the

decision to the Coastal AreaReview Board (consisting ofBardin, Labor and IndustryCommissioner, Joseph A.Hoffman, and CommunityAffairs CommissionerPatricia Q.Sheehan).'Lehighalso could request a plenary(or quasi-judicial) hearingbefore a DEP hearing officer.

9:45 and 10:45 a.m.-Girls Basketball League at Memorial •.'Field. . . - - • " . -Friday, July 269:45 and 10:45-Girls Softball League at Memorial Field.

Program set for joggersWednesdays andKENILWORTH-- The

Kenilworth RecreationDepartment will sponsor ajogging program for men andwomen beginning tomorrow at8 p.m. Joggers should meet bythe snack stand at the DavidBrearley , Regional HighSchool running track on

Mondays,Fridays.

The program will follow theguidelines of the aerobicsprogram adopted by the AirForce. Those wishing to at-tend are advised to have aphysical checkup.

Cold drinks will be fur-nished.

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Page 5: SI ADULTS SI on campThursday, July 18, 1974 br · \ • —

. ' • , > O ' " . J • ! ' • ' " • • • ' . ' • " ' X ;

, - -• , to.,'

P a g e 8 CRANFORD (N.J.) Clfi'ZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday. -Kily 1H. 1974.

'

A *

A \ !*• •

t'. • \ ' .

X-',

Second-place Bridgemen. of SL Andrew CYO,Bayonne, present snappy line of snare drums.

l.V -/'

V ^

The eighth annual "Stardustand Brass" show, held Sunday

t at Memorial Field, drew a"Tcapacitycrowdtigain OFOVCT'3,000 people and was hailed byits sponsors as "a huge siiccess." A dozen marching unitsperformed.

The Long Island Kingsmenof Kings Park, L.I. emergedas first place winners in theafternoon Garden StateCircuit show /with theSecaucus Meadowlar,ks takingthe second place trophy andthe Westchester Horizons-placing third. Staten Island'sHoly Child Marching 100placed fourth; the Imperial

-Guardsrnen of^TJivingMonTfifth "and the EatontownRoy ales sixth..

1973 vifinner repeats" •. ' ' o

In the Class. A Open In-vitational show held that

~evenling^ther''"Mucfiac.h6s~o'r'''Hawthorne, N.J;, fielding 47bugles, a 30 man percussionsection, 24 flash flags, a largecolor guard and ten rifles,retained their 1973 title. Theirselections of Malaguena, HoeT)own and Carnival Melodiesdrew a rousing ovation fromthe attendance.

St. , Andrew's CYOBridgemen from Bayonneand the Emerald Cadets ofNew Haven, Conn, won secondand third place trophiesrespectively, with the AH Girl.Audubon Bon Bons placing

""fourlhytReXiMCC Warriorsof ~New York fifth and Brooklyn'sO.L.P.H. Ridgemen sixth.

Flanagan, honored

Prior to presentation of the; Class A trophies, Vincent.

Flanagan, former directorand one of the founders of thePatriots, was presented with a ,plaque in appreciation for hisefforts on behalf of thePatriots' Drum and BugleCorps. PresenGrtwrTTof"plaque was made'by-RichrdDonovan, busiriess^managerand co-founder'of the corps.Patriot VDrum MajoretteAlicjeann- Dowzycki was

^prese^ted with a trophy for'"' individual achievement by

parmen Cirlincione, director'of the Patriots.

•>••-#?

^

m;

• •*!¥(,••'•

Miss Kanejna med editor/•-,.' LeslJe'R. Kane, daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Allan C. Kane of105 Wilshire Dr., has beenprompted to editor of the Red

—Shield—Newsr-the~nationwidecorporate newspaper ofRoyal-Globe Insu ranceCompanies.

Miss Kane joined Royal-Globe in 1973 as editorialassistant and "later served asassistant ' editor. Beforecoming to the company, she

• WQFtced as public relationssistant at Phelps Dodge

Industries. Miss Kane wasgraduated cum laude fromBoston University in" 1972.

The Red Shield News is sentto Royal-Globe's 7,000 em-ployees throughout thecountry! Royal-Globe In-surancer:CDinpaniesr?in~theUnited States are part of theRoyal Insurance Group,w h o s e w o r 1 d w i d eheadquarters are in London.

2nd summerThursday, July 18,1974 CRANFORDjttf.J.)

1 , . ' " • , ' • • . - « . ' •

summer session at UnionCollege will open Monday with

-almost nirtety credit and non-credit courses being offered inrday and evening sessions, it

Bernard Solon, director of thesummer session. •

Summer Session II will beconducted at the CranfordCampus of Union College only,

Sjalvatore namedDr. Augusto Salvatore of

Dr. Solon said. Clashes will^""m(Mt'~f6ur~daxsr"''p^r=;'w6eI{r

Mondays through Thursday,and will continue throughThursday, August 29.

Courses at Union CollegeJ?Ar?'!iiL__!r€:?.nJI!iLn _ ail?Lsophomore offerings JaTJqur-yearcolleges and universitiesand are open to currentcollege students, qualifiedhigh school juniors andseniors, recent high school

to state committeeR e g i o n a l I n d u s t r i a l

graduates and other adults. In-person registration forSenior citizens are perjnttted Summer"Session ~ H ^ir tSf i rto attent tuition-free. Held on Thursday evening,

During the summer session; July 18, from 6 to 9 p.m. atcourses ' i n English, the Cranford Campus, Dr.mathematics, natural and Solon said. Tuition is $14 persocial sciences, business, credit for Union Countyforeign languages, ancTlhe residents. - - .-. . •fine arts willl be c6nducted Additional informationNon-credit courses in, com- about the summer session atm u n i c a t i o n s s k i l l s Union College and applicationmathematics, and science will| procedures may be obtainedbe taught as well. Dr. Solon by contacting the director atadded. .' 276-2600.

g R e g i o n a l I n d u s t r i a lPlainfielo^chairin<ian of the. Technology Committee of themathematics department at s t a t e / Department ofUnion College, has been Educationreappointed to the Northern /

V:f

All-girl Audubon, N.J., Bon Bons beat Ml marching rhythm Vyrfearned fourth place in Class A.

Cranford's own Patriots drum smartly under the lights at Memorial Fi^ during exhibition,• • • • • • • • • • -

: / • - • • • • • • „ - i . / ; , ' • : /

The Patriots will be incompetition Saturday, July 20at 7:30. at the EatontownRoyales show in Asbury Park,and Sunday, July 21, at i:30,atthe Imperial Guardsmen showin Livingston. _

"Senior Corps of New York Skyliners' enliven afternoon proceedings with an exhibition

Kohler-MacBean announces changes in executive staff

Announce That

' " ' M I T ^ - C A R L S O N

6 Vydod Place, Cranford

'''Ts~Nlfw~4ii'S'O'cmted-:--With—-—--

Our Office As A

SALES ASSOCIATE

G . E . H O W L A N D , I N C .- • ! ' ''

•Realtor

Koh.er-MacB.an Agency

1 3 Eastman St. 276-5900

of employee of the Insurance. « ~— . - , - . , - Company-of-North America^has announced executive staff joined the Agency in 1951,-changcs-eff ecti.ve.July 1. li>7J^_aiidiQr.aj^lurrLbe]iiofj/_ears hasRoy H." MacBean has been served as thejigency's vice-elected to serve as chairmanof the insurance agency'sboard of directors, whileWinfield J. Kohler, CPCU,became president andtreasurer of the firm. Charles

: -FT- •GiHet-te-has-beoh-olectcd-Insurance' Agents, and is apast-president of the Cran-ford Kiwanis Club. In 1967, he-received his. professionalinsurance designation of

president. He has served aspresident of the Cranford.Bus iness Assoc ia t ion.(predecessor .to the Cranford-Chamber of Commerce),president of the Union County

vice-president, and Gerald L.Tarter appointed to theposition of sales manager.

representative in, variousnorthern New Jersey'counties

1 including Union, Somersetjmd Middlesex. Bud's many

* outside actmtielPTM'lude"-membership in the CranfordKiwanis Club. He has com-pleted a wide scope of in-surance . courses andexaminations which havequalified him to sell .land

^s£r^ic^alHonrj_sj}f_grppertj|;-casualty insurance, as well aS~

health and life

Having recently celebratedits 50th anniversary, ofTOprBsehtjgfcthe "TravelersInsuranc^Bbmpany, theagency is theTravelers largestproperty-casualty agent inNew Jersey. With its staff ofeleven, the agency continuesto handle insurance ex-

clusively, just as it has sinceite"foWdin'gl0917. Although"

a majority of theare located in «.^ ..r-.—.central section of New^Jefsey;the agency also handles some

-commercial -risks in^other.areas. With the new executivestaff appointments, the

. agency plans to continue itsprogram of professionalinsurance service which hasmade possible a pattern ofsteady and solid growth over

Roy MacBean was formerlyemployed ars~a special agentby the Insurance Company ofNorth America prior to for-ming; a partnership withEdwardL. Hedcnbcrg.in 1945,at which time the agencybecame knoWn as Hedenb'erg-MacBean Agency. Followingincorporation.of the agency in1950, Mr. MacBean served asits president and treasurer

CPCU (Chartered PropertyCasualty Underwriter).

Chuck Gillette, newly-'' elected vice-president, came

with the agency in 1968 afterhaving been employed as anunderwriter with theTravelers Insurance Com-pany of'Hartford. Chuckearned his B.S. degree from

Police incident draws $390 finesM * . .. 4 i. . : „„„,! nccmill unrl hnttprv

We've GotThe

US presiuuiu emu U C M U I I . . ^ui.,v,u . . . - - ^ - D — - - • - -

until the present date. Hoy has the Scltool of Insurance of theWpn"verv^ctTveTn'"Uie~N7"Jr--DniversftjrorCohnecticut~jJ!e

barrel Jackson of 186.Fabyan Place, Newark, wasfined $355 and assessed courtcosts of $35 last week byMunicipal Judge Charles J.Stevens on charges resultingfrom his alleged ramming of apolice car driven byPatrol man Jerome AndrewsoniJune 2. '

who . was

fines and court costs assessedincluded: Attempting toelude a police officer, $100;driving a motor vehiclewithout the owner's per-mission, $100; carelessdriving, $75 fine, $15 costs;driving an uninsured motorvehicle, $50 fine, $15 costs;

assault and battery onPatrolman Andrews, $25, anddriving without a license, $5fine and $5 costs.

Judge" Stevens orderedJackson to pay the fines andcourt costs in weekly in-stallments. * ' . - • '

Association of IndependentInsurance Agents, havingserved as its president andlater as its state-national

•• director. A past-president iofthe Cranford BusinessAssociation, MacBean is . amember of the CranfordRotary Club and a director ofthe.Capital Savings & LoanAssociation.

is a member of the. CranfordRotary Club, and recentlyserved as President of theCranford Chamber of Com-merce.

Bud Tarter, newly-appointed sales manager,came' to the! agency in 1072. Hepreviously was with theClaims department of theTravelers in Newark, serving

.WmJKohler., .als.o._a_former [u \\\p ...£jip.acjty_ of claims

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^..^ , faced a total of 14charges, brought by Andrews.Some counts were mergedwith others and somedismissed.

According to the patrolman,Jackson failed to halt the carhe was driving when signalledto do so, and then rammed thepolice, car when it pulled infront of him..

The charges of which. Jacksonwas found guilty and

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Water rate hearingAugust 18'has'been set-for a -The companyJsalso_asking

hearing by the State Board of for an 8.8 per cent increase forPublic Utility Commissioners the last Jour months of theon the Elizabethtown Watercurrent-year-in-order to meetCo. application for a 19 per current financial needs, Thiscent hike in its water' rates, if interim hike, which would begranted, the hike would raise effective in September, wouldthe average'household water provide $1.8 million inbill about $1 amorith. revenue.^ v

In addition to Cranford, the Elizabethtown said thewater company serves 39 interim raises is needed tomunicipalities 'in Union, meet a high debt ratioMiddlesex, Somerset, Mercer preventing it from raising newand Hunterdon counties. capital.

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Also pictured are, from left,grand knight, Mr. Leslie,chairman Roy Bowman.

Edmund Smyth, past

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Researchers planning to visit residents- PHILADELPHIA— Resi-"areas which, have been af-dertts of Cranford will be fected by flooding.among those interviewed by Other New Jersey com-:'representatives of Temple munities to'..be cwerettinclude :University's Institute forSurvey Research in a study of

Clark Township, Elizabeth,Plainfieldj Pompton Lakes,Wayne Township and AtlanticCity. ....-.,,.:. • ...:.

UC veterans- program• ^ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • * * * gets b o o s t f rom U. S /

THIRDQUARTERLY INSWLMENT

Union College has beenawarded an $18,207 grant bythe U.S. Office of Educationunder its veterans cost ofinstruction-program,—it -was—announced today by Dr. .Albert E, Meder Jr., actingpresident.

This is the second year thatUnion College has receivedfederal support for itsveterans' programs, Dr.Meder said.

Union College and UnionCounty Technical "Institute,which together comprise thecommunity college system forUnion County, maintain a

The college also maintainscontacts .with veteransorganizations and recentlydischarged veterans to inform

—them-of the educationalbenefits and opportunitiesavailable to them under the GI. Bill. .

Union College hasrecognized the special needsof veterans since World War

The interview time takesapproximately an hour. Thestudy is sponsored byeconomists _and socialscientists at the WnartohSchool ; of the University ofPennsylvania.

"The researchers areparticularly interested in thedecision-making factorsrelated to the purchase offlood and earthquake in-surance," Dr. Richard B.,Vanderveer; director of thestudy, stated. "Information

-gathered -through-this^survey-will be useful in providinginsights into the kinds of lossespeople suffer when a naturaldisaster occurs. Based on thissurvey and other projects, theresearchers hope to be able to

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RICHARD HARTIG

t TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD

TAX COLLECTION DEPT.

fairs to provide specialeducational and counselingservices to returning ser-vicemen and women. The twoinstitutions have a combinedveteran enrollment of 592.

To ease the adjustmentfrom military to collegiatelife, the college and the.technical institute offerremedial and refreshercourses for veterans, tutoring,and-intensive counseling,including peer counseling.

wereservicemen and women. TJhatpolicy has been maintainedsince and every effort is madeto assure the veteran a suc-cessful educational ex-

-periericev-Dr—Meder-said^—"Partly as a result of this

policy," Dr. Meder padded,

ways tofrom the

that can oc-protecfthe"financial losses-cur."

He . also. emphasized theimportance of the cooperation

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Union College has long had a ' statistically representative ofspecial attraction fpr the attitudes and opinions ofveterans. Alpha Sigma Mu,veteran's fraternity, is one ofthe most active organizationson campus and veterans haveplayed a leading role instudent government andathletics at Union College.

"Today, when veteransbenefits don't go as far as theyhave in the past, UnionCollege has become evenmore attractive to formerservicemen and women. Thecollege's annual tuition.of $350

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Holding on to agood credit standing iis tough but vitalto PSE&G and you!If you've ever had to borrow moneyto buv a home or for any reason, youknow that the amount you can bor-row depends on your credit standing.It's the same with PSE&G.

PSE&G relies heavily on invest-ors to finance expansion of its facili-ties which, in turn, help provide youwith reliable electric and gas service.And the only way PSE&G can dothis is by maintaining a sound finan-cial structure that produces a ^oodcredit standing. If PSE&G doesn't of-fer investors a reasonable return ontheir dollar, they will put their moneyelsewhere.$2.8 billion needed (or construe-

—.vtion;"Without-j good credit standingand the investor support that goeswith it, PSE&G would not be able toraise the $2.8 billion needed for con-struction now through 1978, If thathappens, we're all in serious trouble. ~

A good credit standing alsomeans that the interesf-ratcs we payfor borrowecJLjruniey_wi.ll_be Jower_

. Still, even with an attractive creditstanding, utilities are now payingnearly double the interest on money

-y

taxes, interest, arid environmentalrequirements incurred to serve you.It's tough but vital to PSE&G . . .and you! ,

In summary, PSE&G asks yourunderstanding of this economic truth.PSE&Gys financial health and a highlevel of electric and gas service arcinseparable. Indeed, the days ofcheap energy are overTAnd. yg d o n Tlike it any more than you do.

borrowed than thdy were jn__1965.Everything is going up!

The days of cheap energy areover. In years past, when costs main-,tained a relatively stable rate of in-crease, PSE&G could balance those-increases-through-advances in tech-nology, economies, and increasedenergy usage by customers. But since1969, costs have gotten out of hand.

—" Today, inflation has reallycaught up with PSE&G, and the sadfact is that electric and gas rates willcontinue to rise along with the costof other goods and services. It's theonly-uay PSE&G carrhope to cover,the ballooning costs of construction,materials, fuel, mainttinancev labor,

ei*.

FREE BOOKLETS '.Two new bookletf , . \explain why electric \and gas bills are _•Increasing. To receive* Iyour free copies, 'simply return coupon. •

PSE&Q . •P.O. Box 10020 I

Please send ma, at no charga, your nowbooklets, "Why your electric bill la In-creasing," and "Why your ga* bill IsIncreasing."

I

Addreii

City -State) .._,_Zlp_

RETURN THIS COUPON NOW! S:

PSEGThe Energy People

v • i

Page 6: SI ADULTS SI on campThursday, July 18, 1974 br · \ • —

-—(•—»••

•• -• M l

— - - — j . ..a..•—L<

Page 10 CRANFORD (N.J!) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday! July 18,197,4: . ' , . ! • • * •

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE HELPWANTfcD

ALMOST NEW- 2FAM1LYPRICED AT $65,900

car garage,

WADE ASSOCIATESREALTORS

WATKINS-.Part-time..sales^.openings. - Male, of ••• (emale. Schedule own hours and• income in a business ot'your o.wn.

For details . write: Mail SalesDivision, Box 10, WatkinsProducts, Inc:,1 Winona, Minnesota55987

DENTAL . ASSISTANT, CHAlRSlDEEXPERIENCE PREFERRED,•;' NOTNECESSARY.-Must also type apdassume occasional receptionistduties. Millburn professionalbuilding. Call 376-6266, evenings,46.7-8556.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITYTrpWdTn|r~CofpoTatlb'h looks to11

develop in (his area. Need good1 stable happily married individuals25-40 years of age. Good profits,bonus, retirement. . and profitsharing. • For qualifying interviewcal l276• 9545or ]

RENTALSAp»rtm»nt Unfurnuh«d

51/; room luxury apartment. 2 'bedrooms and ;> baths, dishwasher

• and air-condition—Call 276-2687.

PERSONALS

23 N o r t h A v e n u e , East Cranford.276-1053

Res. Sales Mgr. , Doris Coyle, 276179)

BOYLESELECTED LISTINGS

OPEN HOUSE .Sunday, July 21

. . : 2-5 p.m.259 Hemlock Ave.

_— GarwoodInspprt this irnmnrillatebedroom New England Cape on a «desrrablebeautifully landscaped 80 x 100 ideal lorlot adjoining Unami Park. You'll -executivelove it!! • ; • . . • \

EXECUTIVE COLONIALAn exceptional' home lor aparticular family*-. 5 bedrooms,3 baths -acccniuate -this ex-ceptionally lovely home situated•nn n 1 ?ri » ?75 lilt jn ,1 most.

area. This home isthe professional or

HAVE YOU SEEN OUR GALLERY OF HOMES?STOP IN

RESIDENTIAL-SALES MANAGER, MAVKOEHLER- J v . . . . . • •

S30 South Ave,, East, Cranford1)43 E. Jersey St., Elizabeth

Galleries in Morristown & Bernards vi/le

Weekdays9-8; Saturdays9-4; Sunday 11-3

isssssssssssssssssssssssiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirniiniiiiiniiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii

EXECUTIVE

NURSING & HOMECARE

RN'S. LPN's, home health aides &.companions. Part-time, tem-

porary or lull time. Experienced,bonded. Reasonable rates.

HOMEMAKERS "UPJOHN

IS Alrien St., Cranford 277-5800

Person/needed days to care for 3.. elemerr. school age boys in, Kenilworth. 289-0665, 9 a.m.-5

p. m Mon. thru'Fri.

BOOK KEEPER.Sales Engineer firm. Full time (not full

charge)! Please phone for ap-pointment. Roden Co., Cranford(201) 276-7330.

WANT TO EARN MONEY-BUT NOT 9TO 5? Be an AVON Representative.Set your own hours. Pick your owndays. Interested? Call : 353-4880.

MAIL CLERK DRIVERMiscellaneous office duties. Must

have a clear driving record.

Hom»

SHORT HILLS, furnished or un-furnished:1' 2,4 Hobart Ave. nowavailable. 8 large rooms, 4 baths, Igarages. Near everything. Bestoffer over $450 per month. This isnot my office house. Dr. CornellGrossman, 46 Old Short Hills Rd.-376-0006.

ViMtlan EUnUU - -'

LONG BEACH ISLAND -BRANT BEACH1 and 2 week rentals still availablefor early July.' Ocean front and

„ ocean block. Ager Realty, 3310 BayAve., Brant Beach, N.J. 08008.Call:(609) 494-2560.

GARAGE SALE-Salurday, July 20- 9«.m. to 6 p m 105 Eggpwood Rd ,Cranford. Proceeds to i!o toWoodbridge State School for theChromosome Study.

t | | ( , | II i l 'I

U w l C»r» ...

I Wouldn't Drive itto Florida...

,. but it 's the perfect car to drivejustabout anywhere else in thesuburban area. 1971 ChevyChevelle station wagon, automatictransmission. Good condit ion.Priced at $1400 for quick sale.376-1200. daytime. 379-486?evenings. • -

BACKYARD SALE-Benefit of the Order1 of the Amaranth. Household items,

this'8 that=new& oldrJuly19-20"10-4 p.m. .31 Bloomingdale Ave.,Cranford

CEMETERY PLOT - Private party-.—Jieeds-cash-i295.-4rdouble graves-

(8 burials) Graceland Mem'I Pk.Nonsectariafl. Will divide 352-3967(355-9222 eves, and wk. ends).

CEMETEBY . PLOTS - GracelandMemorial Path. Kenilworth, N.J.Write: "Plots" - P.O. Box 123,High Bridge, N.J. 08829.

ANTIQUES ,. • . • . - . •Old photographs or parts, in any Will the young man .in the blue dune

' conditiorL_Edison,i.yictrola. ieic,_—iuBJU'i-*!!.0. pi.Gked. up the tennis.Old records, cylinders or 78's Also " racquet ori Springfield Ave,music boxes Call 272-7444 8-5 Sunday morning around 10 a mp m weekdays Please call 276-1857 REWARD

. - i n , * ' " , ' ' n i i i i i l r i — ! • • • • - - " i

Champion Yanks6-5

HELP WANTED

• LABORATORY INSTRUCTORFull time position, central New Jersey-'College. Masters^ degree or

...back.groun_d in- hqrticyJUije'_ Ji_.bolony preferred. Modern

; fac i l i t ies^ excellent working""c'6i»9itionsi'~Sepf. opening. ITeply:*

• . Box 189Carnford, N.J. 07016

Equal Opportunity Employer

Apply or cairpersonnel-276^0~00 -THE J-B. WILLIAMS 80., INC. .

750 Walnut Ave. . Cran'ord, N.J.

Equal Opportunity Employer M/ F

INSURANCE TRAINEE.Jnsi.de eternal .J.Q.b.fQj:,.spmeone_who_.

will be trained in certaia aspects, of(he insurance business. Candevelop into a.career job. Startingsalary 590 Fee paid. Call:

RtAl tSTATE flPPg*>SfltS

PHIL p. HENEHAN, SRA• • Society of .

' Real Estate Appraisers2b Alden Street, Cranford

-276-7933—

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST "Instrument level, very good op-

p o r t u n i t y fo r beginner. Goo.dsalary. •

RITA GIRLlOAWenSt.. Z':.'..

Cranford 2X2 4943

m RITA GIRL'10 Alden St:

Cranford 272-4943

NANCY'S108 Walnut Ave.Cranford, N.J.

9:30- 5 P;M.Mon. thru Sat.

""CENTER-HA tL~ COLO N I A t ~ r , — \ ~ ]

In this lovely split level home 5with 4 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, 2 =

car garage,' large tree shadedlot. Why not see it for yourself,Call-we'll be glad, to show youthrough,1 -. • ' • • .

PHIL F. HENEHAN 1

AIDESLIVE IN

Private duty cases for experiencedaides, for week-ends, few days,longer term. Work when you wish &help famili.es in need. Excellentpay, benefits,, ho fee.

MOAAEAAA-KE.RS

BEAUTICIANS ..'. J .HITCH YOUR.WAGON TO ft MIRACLE!" «'••Wow's your chance.to change the •. direction your career's taking. I'm

. Stu Shaw, and I'm telling you thatour "Miracle on North WoodAvenue" can hardly handle thebusiness- Thanks' to. good ad-vertising and great -hair-styling.We're looking for 3 more-and ifyou've got imagination and am-bition, you could be just right for

• us. Good.pay, rewarding-work'and(unpeople. Be part of the miracle--

—cal l -me- today!— ; —j— ' " - * - •

SALE • • - ,10 PER CENT OFF ON ALL

MERCHANDISE

Call 272-5056Estate Sales

REALTOR

25 Alden Street

276-7933-Multiple Msting-Service-

f '

jEj/enings Call

Kathleen JenkirW'^' 272-6647 5JohnA.Thiesz . ^ \ 276-1564 |

Millar' 2722755 |Jack Millar' 272-2755 |

D. S. KUZSMA

115 MUn Street C^nlord272-8337 \

Multiple Listing ServiceEvenings Call

Betty LloydLee RajikowsULouise MarinoEdward JankowskiJoanKo«nigJames MarinoRoy Douglass

232-6437276-2755276-1023232-7942789-0408276-1796276-4046

9 spacious rooms, 21/? baths,car garage. Central air-conditioning. Beautiful' con-dition.. Built . 1958-Primelocation i'rt Broqkside and highschool area. $78,500 :

—-BLOOMINGDALLSGIJOOL .Lovely Cofonial featuring 3 largebedroo'rns, spacious living room'and dining room.. Modernkitchen, very deep lot (190')Reduced to $51,000.

FOUR BEDROOM COLONIAL'With a 1st floor den, IV: baths,utt—garage—0WNER-T-R-AN-S-—gFERRED. $52; 900. CALL

'TODAY! ' ' • -

EXCLUSIVE AGENTOF HOMEMICA

Th« NatUn't LMdlltf Horn.Finding Service

Janet Barton 276-1949Beverly Murray 276-2239H«lenStine 272-7064Isabel Taylor 272-6086

UPJOHN

15 Alden St., Cranford'- 272-5800

S E R V I C E S , ~"~~ •"

TURKEYNEEDS A HOMEBlack, spayed, female, cat. Sleekand beautiful. Friendly, andcharming. Great mouser. Can youresist? CALL: Turkey's Asthmatic,

Stuarts

G. G. NUNN(Realtors and Insurors

181 North Ave., E. 4.276-8110

CARPENTRY - attics, basements,complete jobs-include permits.Also small jobs; doors,1 windows,gutter and* leaders. After' 6 P.M.call: 486-2170.

HomeI m p ro vemT?nTs~~

' * I " I I I SlIMAItS•*' NIGH r APPOIN1MINIS

". . * I Ul IV INSURED. .._

EDRICHREMODELING

272-6334

Carpentry, .paneling, rec.rooms,painting, general repair, im-provements. DAVE or ROGER-276-4918 or 561-3361.

' -BEAUTY SALON112 North Wood Ave.

' 486-9771Linden

SAVE GAS

SHOP CRANFORD

TELLERS•'•'"'• is your experience

adding Bp inhe career you deserve?Take "a long look ahead; '

if you'f-e certain that the position you holdnow promises ample rewards for capableeHoPt—fnow-and-in-the-future—we-advise-you to stay, right where you are. But ifyou're doubtful about your chances to moveahead, .consider what we have to offer.

First National State begins by paying^eXceireift~T~"s:a~r'ariei5~"""«and providingunequalled benefits for savings andcommercial tellers. But that's only thestart! What we're looking for is bankingtalent, people who want a future com-mensurate with their abilities. Busy,dynamic First National State with Itsheadquarters in Newark and 30 branchoffices is building its future on people oftalent. With our rapid growth and our policyof promoting people from within, there isplenty of room for you to soar. • -

The future may be closer thahypu think.

Please apply any weekday9-::3-<LA.JVU|pJ3iA^

BANK OF NEW JERSEY500 Broad Street, Newark, N.J. . ;

An Equal Opportunity Employer

WE NEED YOU!...and it shows in a dozen differentways, .To name just a few of our in-ducements for capablesecretaries

, .• An attractive salary . . . andthe chance to earn more inhigher positions

Hnterpstingrwork-inr pleasant-surroundings with enoughvariety and challenge tomake the days fly by

• Grand people to work with

• Many benefits from weeks-..--lohg—v-acations to 12 paid

holidays, insurance, and ahospitalizatiori plan thatCushions you against theheaviest bills

If you're good at steno and.typing,the red carpet is out for you inNewark and in many of our 30branch offices, Some of oursuburban openings may be rightin ypur town. • .. ' „

Please apply any weekday9:30 A M . to 3:30 P.M.

- at our Personnel Dept.

The American Leaguepennantrwinning Yankeesbeat the National League"Braves B=5l«nhefinargariievDf:the eight team playoff tour-nament last Wednesday at theAlbert Antoine field...

Mike Prussack was thestarting pitcher for the Yanks,facing John Oldam of theBraves.

The Yankees had seven hits,one each for Tom Lies, JimMcGean, Joe Scotti, MikePrussack, Dave Pahren,Glenn Skoog and Jeff Anceiin.

Gathering four hits for theBraves Were Steve Lissnerwith two! Ed Helmstetter, andDan Miller, a double.

Neither team scored in thefirst inning^The Braveslkew

.first blood in the second asLissner drove in two runs. The,Yanks came back with one runin-the-second-with -Ancelincredited with the RBI.

'•"'• HelmsletteF andHLTssnerdrove in three runs for the

BANK OF NEW JERSEY

\ 500 Broad Street, Newark, N.J.Art Equal Opportunity Employer

276-6000CRAIMFORD

276-6000

ALUMINUM PRODUCTS AUTO DEALERS BANKS DECORATORS LANDSCAPING

DELIGHTFULYARD

will), hhis -just, listed spotlessbrick and frame three bedroomhome with two fireplaces, denand family-room. The front yardhas a beautiful lawn, shrubs andflowers... the rear yard offerstrue privacy with lawn, patio a.ndnatural 'wooded area with

•g'fo~uTfd~c~oWr7 C'crtrftfl a i rconditioning for your year roundcomf.orl. Available for quickpossession. $53,900

MOVING OUTQF STATERELO Infor-Citv Relocation

See viceCAN HELP YOU!

G I . HOWLAND, INC..... REALTOR

276-590013 Eastman St.,

Cranford

SHAHEEN AGENCYREALTORS

. 1 5 North Ave., E.274-1900 and 774-0777

Associates:

Mirguerite Rearwin 276-4486Eleanor Bridfield 276-7319Ruth P. Detering 276-8922Paul P Mimpson 2766576Susan Humphrey 276-3453Helen (Cyn) Gallant 272-8576Clemy Grjbowski 241-7860

Janet Milden 276-4460.

. , S? YEARS Of SERVICE

• • • » • • •»»• • • " • " ,"

HEMMING AND SMALL DRESSALTERATIONS. CALL 276-7784.

LIFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS, INC.

Home Improvement productsStorm Windows and Doors

2/6-3205102 South Ave., W. Cranford

AUTO REPAIRS

Landscaping - Reasonable rates. 'I8ti-4339 after 4 p.m.

MASON WORKWATER PROOF ING and

REPAIRSSteps, walks, patios, drains

Call 274-3520

HOUSE PAINTING - INTERIOR-ANDEXTERIOR. REASONABLE RATES...

•• CALL: 276-5774.-. ,' , ' -

CHARMING CAPE COD1ST TIME OPPCRED

viht: room with fireplace. Jri dining room, kitchen. 2..iwdrooms. and tile bath on the

1st lloor Hiice dormitorybedroom on second doorPanelled rec room in basementCentrally air-conditioned on 1stlloor, garage, Excellent areaSee this new listing today$43,900

VICTOR DENNIS

----Frienestimate. Call ED at 276-6775.

PAINTING—EXTERIOR-INTERIOREXPERT-INSURED M BARICH-276-65430

ROOFINGRe roofin(!_ self- seal shingles

Senmlnss giittor.s-.leadersFree estimnles-Guaranteed ^_

KonMcGralh 272-65fl'7Fully insured

BODYARTGeorge W. kocheraCollision Specialist^

Auto &-TruckRe/inishing

24 Hour TowingBody_& Fender Shop

S H O P : 789-0330R E S : 789-0o04

• 6 North Avenue Garwood

• OPEN HQUSE

JLLUXEpOPLACL' SUN. 2-5

4 BEDROOM COLONIAt

possible mother - daughter orjust right for a growing family

.,1st floor has- living room withfireplace, .-ful l "dining room,modern kitchen, don, bedroomand bath,-3 bedrooms, and bathon 2nd floor round- out thischarming home. Located closeto elementary and If highschool-in A-l location. FAIRLYPRICED. . '

McPHERSON

REALTY CO.

Open Daily 9-519 Alden S t r

Suiu'av 1-5

REALTOR2 Alden St.

274-76)8Cranford

ALUMINUM SHOWROOMPorch and Patio Enclosures

CRANFORD

Servicenter,Ken M«ier, Prop.

GENERAL REPAIRSTIRES BATTERIES

276980023 South Ave. W Cranford

TWINBORO p T O CORP.Authorized F O R D

Dealer Since 1920 •Sales Service. Rentals

Open Eves, til 9:30- Sat. 1116:00

245-6100158 Westfidd Ave. Roselle Park

For Convenient"Full S e r v i c e " Banking

CHANFOHD OFFICE931-6831

100 South Ave. E.CRANFORD AUTOBANK

Chestnut St. & Walnut Ave.931-6833

united countiestrust company

where good thingsstart to happen

Member Federal Reserve System'Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

TERMINALMILL END STORES, INC.

Cuitom-MadeDRAPERIES

I, SLIP COVERS.Large i«lectio<1 olFabrics by Vird

or BoltFoam RubberHeadquarter!

Draoarv Hardware

Interior DecoratingSpecialists

lall l,V\-!llll,962 Stuyvesant Avenue, Union

LANDSCAPINGIndustrial - Residential. • Designing

ROBERTS & WIESE27M284 276-32S1

124 THOMAS ST. CRANFORD

PLUMBERS

& TOYEr J.T. Griffin, Prop.

PLUMBING - HEATINGS TINNING276-0269

206 South Ave., E. Cranford

LUMBER

REILLYoiDSMOBILE INCAuthorized „OLDSMOBILE

Sales & Service232-7651

560 North Aye , E. Westfield

BUILDING MATERIALS FUEL OIL

BANKS

J .S. IRVING COMPANYLumber av MHIwork

• - ol Every De».cHp«loiiFoil Oil..:o» Burners

. Hardware. ..Paint*

600 South Ave., W., Wc»t(leld

REEL-STRONG FUEL III."Dependable, Friendly Service

^Ince 1»3S

Heating OilsInstallations Service

3 North Ave. E. Crj»)n<ord276-0900

BUILDERS'GENERAL.SUPPLY m ^

'jMtrib'erBuilding Materials '

MMworkD i a l 2760505

336 Centennial Ave., Cranlord

CHAPMANBROS.

Plumbing- Heating - Cooling- Repairs -Alterations ;

Air Conditioning276-1320

36^North Ave;, E. Cranford

MOVERS

CAPITAL

«>••«>•

THEDEACON

AGENCY, INC.276-5051

OpenTues. and Thurs.

evenings

«>••*«>•«>

•'-•'-•• 5 H O R T H I L L S

TRANSFERRED EXECUHVr -i I m-- m«dia|e occiipjncy Newly

Ucc'orafcd. lop aroa FnRlisiiColonial LK LI). rP. UR. If.country kitchen.- Fjm KM. .i Blf.

' ; "2V;"Baths;""a'rif;"A(7,". VOW'"1IYXP!7"Principals only. High^O's :V/(>-6476, or weekdays, 212-75C-3J<1'J

CLASSIFIED ADSCall 276-6000

Deadline Tuesday 3 P.M.

Mature male - female taxi drivers.Full or part-time. Call: 276-0081alter 6 P.M.

Part-lime school bus driver. 7s9 a.m.and or 2-4 p.m. Must be 20 yr^.

or over. Good pay-Call 789-1119.

ACT NOW • Join the oldest Toy 4 (JiltParty Plan in the Country -our'27thYear! Commissions up to JU m:rcent. Free Sample Kit. Call or writeSAN'JA's Parties, Avon, Conn.06001. Tel, 1(203)6/3-3-155. ALSOBOOKING PARTIES

Jalousies Awning Windows -

Nuprirue Replacement' Windows

Storm andScreen Combinations

Combination Doors 25 styles

LIFETIME ALUMINUM /PRODUCES, I N C /

102 South AWB_W£-2W-3205

BENNER S SERVICE POOL does mqiteverything. Carpentry, Plumbing,

^Remodeling. Electric Wiring,Appliance Repairs. Call 276-3356.

HOME CLEANINGWindow washing*, doors scrubbed

and waxed, raneling cleaned ^waxed & tarpoti cleaned. CALL:245-6916-b«<ore 10 a.m. alter 4p. m.

C L E A N E D

R U B B I S H R E M O V A L

ca l l

John Bordcn

274 iSH

WANTED TO BUY

Old or ,irili(|u.i! furniture;, class, chin.)iind bric-a-brac. Anything iirtiisu.ilCall VNANCY" 272-5056 .

LIONEL, Amfcricin I'lycr. IVKS andother trains. Immediate cash. Willpay to $2,000." 464-8-148: eves.4M-P692.

AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONIncorporated 1IJ87,

Insured SavingsHours: M o n . t o F r i .

8:30-6:00Thurs. Eve.6-8

Saturday 9 A.M. - Noon276-5550^

2 N. Union Ave. 655 RaritanRoadCranford Cranford

RESIDENTIAL 8, COMMERCIALCONTRACTORS

IU2fi CHESTNUT STREETR O B E L L E . N . *I.. ay 2 0'J"

CABINETRYFUNERAL HOMES

AUTO DEALERS

ROTCHFORD433 North Aye.. East

-Westfield. N. J l">

- • >

r»FRONT WMt'EL OI1IVE

BANKMember

Federal Reserve SystemFederal DepositInsurance Corp.

i n Boulevard,kcnilvvnrlh

COMPLETE KITCHENSBY DUDICK & SONCustom e*bin«trv

Built-in Appllancct

Visit our Showroom. or call

789-1790

DOOLMFUNERAL SERVICE

Funeral Directors

- 276-0255218 North Ave , W. Cranfoid

HENRY P.Moving& S

Packing241 North Ave., W.

WestfleW

232-4464

REYNOLDSPLUMBING & HEATING, INC.

GeoCuozzo TonyDiFabio. Over 35 Yrs. Experience

Bathroom and KitchenModernizations

SERVICE SALES REPAIRS. We Do

The Complete Job

REASONABLE RATES

158 North. Ave., E. Cranford

POOLS

CLEANERS

phrt LiUndefererl

\fut Storage VaultWedding Gowns Cleaned

276-330044 North Ave., E. Cranford

Huneral Directors12 Springfield Ave., Cranford.- N.J.:

276-0092 '

FURNITURE

I:Iiik ID.

AuthorisedBUICk

Sales & ServiceGMC TRUCK SALES

GOOO USED CARS139 N. Broad St. Ellzaiwth

I

THE NATIONALSTATE BANK

_-.. >S-ir.iiL.SincuJLU2 __.__

CftANFORDOFFICe

643 Raritan Road388-0800Offering You

Complete "One Stop" Banking

Members FD1CAhnpto IFreo Cu.

Parking

SHOP

CRANFORD

EXPERT

FURNITURE STRIPPING

& REFINISHING

LOWRATESWE PICK UP & DELIVER

C A L L 354-0798

This space

e*ii s§jl

pur s»t*iet

Call

27&6OOO

• * • * •BUSTERCRABBEPOOLS

y Genie>poolsInc.

PoolFull Line of Chemicals

Call 276-3691

I TAILORING

ALTERATIONS - REPAIRSALL TYpfesOF CLOTHING

- Reasonable -MARIO FERREIRA

Pormerlv withCranford Cleaners

CALL: 276-6005 or 925-3733

TELEVISION

CONTRACTORS HARDWARE

CLARK OFFICES

Summit and ElizabethTrust Company

1060 Raritan Rd. 10 We»tflild Avo

3314300Member FDIC

DAVIS BROS.BENNINGCR CO

Jack DavisChuck BeVmingcr

AltaratioftsAdditions

Remodeling

Free Estimates

CALL CRAitfFORD

276-1474 276-87S8

Indoor & OutdoorTool Rentals

Chain SIMS Sewer SnakesElec. Sanders ' Power HammersFloor Sanders Sump Pumps

• 215-6040212 Chestnut St.

Roselle Park, N.J. 'Brin|thItAd

Get I SO off on any Rental.

SUNSET IM:TELEVISION

789 -0606j 15 South Ave. Garwood

TV SERVICE"OUR BASK COMMODITY '

Sates & S«rvlc*Color, Black & White

HIFI & StereoRadios-Antenna InslaHalioni

Air Conditioners

NURSING HOMES WATCH REPAIR

CRANFORD HALLMRSING HOME

12Acri EstateFlreprool Buildings

Reglsfowntbrses In Charge276-7100

600 Lincoln Pk , E Cranlord

^aaw^

walcR7 WALNUTCRAHFONO,

KMM«ir ^n«|lWATCHES «, CLOCKSR epa>r> Don* On The

Premliet

anei JewatrvHIeaairt

Avl. tf) *I97flNJ. *I*-**IVi

Oar landlord lias reluaed !• -extend our Warebouae leau I& our itoraie faollltlei *Cycle: Showroom i n all1

Jammed to ~tl» celling withCycles! Over 689 new It 'used Blkta muil be lold.eoit, price * profit makeno difference . . . . wo arenow forced to lower priceseven further — make anyoffer oo (beta new Blkea!

.-'. ... '. U»T.

. CB 750ce 9/UZ4"J4 110NOA 550 t l 7 0 9

Tourlnf . SllOt.1 4 HONDA jeOco

Braves in the fourth inning togive them a 5-1 lead.

Joe Scotti took over the~mouhd~Tor~The~Yahks~in~lhefourth inning.' TTie Yanks got three runs inthe fifth inning to trail 5-4.Pahren and Prussack drove inLies, McGean and Scotti.

In the sixth and final inning,Joe Scotti shut out the Braves.The Braves brought in reliefpitcher, Bob Jessie.

Yankee Glen'Skoog openedthe inning with a single, Alexp'Addio grounded to first- foran out with Skoog taking ,second. Pat Brown alsogrounded to first for putnumber two. Tom Liesiingled^-nrvoving-Skopg—to—

third, then Des stole second.Jim McGean walked andfinally Joe Scotti singled toleft scoring both Skoog andLies to l ive the Yanks the 6:5victory and the championship.

The Yanks hacL one of thebest seasons ever in CranfordBasebaJULeague history, firstwinning the American Leaguepennant with a 20-1 record andthen following it up with theplayoff championship^

Clara Bartontournament

opens SundayFifteen eight-year-old boys

have been selected from theCranford Baseball jLeague'sUnami and NomaheganLeagues to compete in theClara Barton Tournament inFords.

The boys selected are; Andy'• Acton, David Biddulph, Peter.

Brown, Doug Chapman, VinceD'Addio, Peter Delsandro,Chris Dougherty, Bob Kenny,Jeff Lawler, Brian Obie, KeithO'Donnell, Ronnie Papa, ScottStevens, J im-Trot ter andKevin - Wetherell, Themanager is John Gargario.Coaches are Frank Bellomoand Al Jacobson. Scorekeeper

-7-- ThursdayrJulyl8vi974eRANFO^U>VrJ'J.^CITIZENANDGHIlOWCI^fiageiix-~-:f:^

Swim team opens seasoii with 3 win-The~ Cranford

and Parks Department swimt^mopened its season with

CranFordl67-Cedar Grove 121Cranford won its first meet

h M dGrove. Taking first placeribbons were Bonnie Jacob-son, eight-year-old and underfreestyle; Sherry Baublis, 12-ubackstroke; Janet Mitchell,13-14 backstroke; MaureenKeenan, 15-17 backstroke; andMark ' Smith, 15-17backstroke.

Also winning for Cranfordwere Mike Sommerlad, 12-ubreaststroke; Jim Carvalho,13-14 breaststroke; • MarceyPearlman, 15-17 breaststroke,

14 . freestyle; and MarceyPearlman, 15-17 freestyle.

The relajjearns won (iye_of_the six events" ~

CranforrM^O-Maplewood 124Five records were broken

Wednesday in the swim meetheld at Maplewood "whichCranford won 170-124.

Sherry Baublis, 12-u, swamthe 50-yard freestyle in 0:36;breaking last year's record of0:37.6. Doug Cermak, 12-u,broke the same record forboys by swimming in 0:34.8.

MikeSommerlad swam the

ration

50ryard breast stroke in .0:39.7,-beating the 0:40.9 record set in1971. Marcey Pearleman swanthe 50-yard breaststroke in0:35:9. breaking last year's0:36.2 record.

The 12-u boys' freestyle 1.00yardTelajrteamrDon^BalcerrGreg Jub;n, Mike Sommerladand Matt Dyer, finished • in0:57.1, breaking the 1971record of 0:57.5.

Winning other events forCranford were MaureenKeenan, Betsy Chase, AnneCoogan, Ann Dooley, KathyDempsey, Mark Smith, JanetMitchell ', and John Specht.

The relay teams won threeout of five events..

Cranford 253Highland 197Echo Lake 127

-The first triangular meet of

for Cranford werey Mike'•McAdarn, Jenny Smith, ScitLaubach, Anne Coogan, Ann.Dooley, Kathy Dempsey, MikeSommerlad, Mary DelleDonne and Cliff Smith. Doug

YOU'RE OUT — Yankee baserunner Joe Scotti is being tagged out at home plateby Braves catcher, Rich Genova, in the final playoffgame which the Yanks won 6-5 . . • • , • ' • " '.:•-..:•:.'' . • • • ' . ' • • • • • : ; • . • ' • /

for county swim meet at Cranford with Cranfordoutscoring Highland SwimClub and Echo Lake' Swim

The deadlines for entries^in"the 48th annual Union County.:swimming meets will beThursday and Friday Aug. 1and 2. The meet for girls and

-women will be-Tuesday Aug.6, and the competition for boysand men will be the followingevening, Aug. 7.

Both meets will be at ' theRahway Pool, Rah way, underthe auspices of The UnionCounty Park ComrriissioriTEntries for girls and womenmust be received by Aug. 1at noon by. Jack Bir-mingham, Superintendent ofRecreation, The Union CountyPark Commission, P.O. Box275, Elizabeth, N.J. 07207.Entries for boys arid menmust be'in by noon Aug, 2.

1—-The-meetsare-t.residents of Union County.Entrants must be amateurs.Diving events will begin at6:30p.m., swFfnming events at7;30 p.m.

merla'd won the 100-yardmedley.

.- Cranford's relay teamsplaced first in five out of sixevents. Swimming for thewinning teams wereC. Rehill,M. Sommerlad, D. Baker andR. Briscoe, boys' 10-u L. Ryan,K. Wolfram, K. Forsythe andP. Bauglis, girls; 10-u; D.Cermak, B. Dooley, E.Gleadell, and M. Marks, boys;y11-12; and B. Chase, A,'Dooley, J. Mitchell: and L.Cermak, girls; 13-14.

In the first diving com-petitiortrheld with a Cranfordswipn meet MarkSrriith placed

. fii'st and Paul Smith andKathy Dempsey finishedsecond. -..'

A competitor may- enteronly two events plus diving.The entry fee of $1 per eventmust accompany the entryblank filled out with ap-propriate information.

Entry blanks are nowavailable.

Prizes in each of the twoevening meets will be. medalsfor first, second and thirdplaces. ' -.

Racing Now thru August 24~ EXACTA ii

• j rybNMOUTH PAHKrOoeanport.N.J.-2 miles (rom Garden St. Pirkwiy, Exit 105

SPECIAL BUSES, Garden Si. F*arkW9y: Lv. PottAulh. Term., 8 Aue. & 41 St., to lo 12:20 Daily

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POST 2 PM • Daily Double 1:50 PM

SWEET TASTE OF VICTORY — The Yankees, champions of the CranfordBaseball League, are enjoying a^victory celebration at the home of coach VinceMcGean of 503 Casino Ave. following the team's win over the Braves. ManagerVic Gatto is holding a victory cake- Coaches Al Lies and Erik Skoog are in rearwhile champion ballplayers refresh with a soft drink.

Ball- team splits in tourney

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USED HONDAS!

Fifteen nine-year-old boyshave been selected from theUnami and NomaheganLeagues to compete in thefirst annual East BrunswickInvitational Baseball Tour-nament, a double eliminationtournament with all gamesbeing played at ShowcaseField, East Brunswick.

The boys selected are: JonActon, Joe Denci, Mike

The Cranford Cobras nipped Colineri, Jeff Manhardt, MikeStevens, Connie Rehill, ChrisObie, Scott .Wetherell, JohnPawowitz, Ricky Bross, BobVetter, Anthony Ferrone,Steve DiiBella, Drew Scott andJoe DelGrippo. Co-managersare IrV Lenhoff and Joe

Cranford scored both runs in DelGHpl»T*The~coache's are

is Kurt O'Donnell.

The first game will*' beplayed Sunday at §:30 p'.m.against Roselle Park at FordsPark.

Cobras bestRahway 2-1

o a ppthe Rahway Recreationbaseball team 2-1 Saturday inIntracounty League play.

The Cobras' record is 4-4.They are in third placeDivision A.

in

1 1*70 •Minltrafl

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1 1973 CB-11S1 1971 8L-175

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the first inning oh a bases-loaded force play at secondfollowed by iLen Jacobs' singleto score the second tally.Cranford posted eight runs XoRahway's five.

1 1971 QA-501 1973 OA-501 19T1 QA-501 1970 CT-701 1971 CT-T0J 1971 .

CT-70H1 B-1702 1973 X B 7 5t 1966 CA-77

-1-

ATC-901 1973

ATC901 1%9 SL-S01 196S CA-951 1971 C H 0 011972

CI.-1MK31 1961

CL-125A1 1972 SI.-US1 1971 8UL251 1971 CL-1601 1973

CB-175K81 1969 CL-1751 1970 CL-17S11971 ct-nsI im CL-ns1 1973 CL-175t 1973

CL-17SK*1 1972 CB-175

l itm • .CB-3504

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CB-35AK42 1968 CB-3M2-1S71CB-359-

1 1969 C13501 1972 8L-35O1 1973 8L-J501 1972 CB-1501 1973 CB-4501 CB-4MK4» 1M73 .

CB-450 K»-1 1972

OB450K51 1961 CL-4SO1 1973 OL-4501 1970

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Work done including Sunday 'till 8P.M. Call for Appointment.

Ed Scott and Nick' Frungillo.Scorekeepers are GaryLenhoff and Bill Gargano.Batboy is Todd Scott.

Cranford 3-Jamesburg 0 —Cranford's first game was

played last Friday night- ' against-Jamesburg-Granford

Manhardt and a walk" to BoTFVetter to load the bases. ChrisObie belted a long double toscore the two runs.

Jam.esburg's only scoringthreat came in the third inning"with two men on. An infieldsingle seemed to have allrunners safe, but. an alertthird baseman, Steve DiBella,tagged the runner when he

.over-ran third base to end "theinning.' *

Mike Colineri, on the moundfor Cranford, went all the waypitching a strong two-hit shutout "while collecting 11strikeouts and giving up onlythree walks.

Drew Scott, catching forCranford, held the fewJamesburg runners with somefine defensive back-stopping.

East Brunswick 11• _ • , Cranford 6

Cratiford's second game inthe tournament was playedSunday afternoon against astrong-East-Brunswick teamr

single BjT~ScolT~walk to Chris

came away the winner 3=0T~~~~EasT~Brunswick came awayCranford's first run came in

the bottom "of the second in-ning after three walks to loadthe bases, Chris Obie singledsharply to center field for hisfirst RBI. The. second runner

the winner 11-6.Cranford's first two runs

came in the bottom of tfye fifth

Kent shootsstrong throw fromJamesburg's centerfielder.

Cranford added two moreruns in the fifth on a walk to.Steve DiBella, a single by Jeff

USED YAMAHAS!1—19*7, 1—19R». 1—1970,

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An air conditioned Beetlefor *2825.

Now through July 31st

Wynn Kent shot a 145-yardhble-in-one Sunday at the TwinBrooks Country Club inWatchung on the 13th hole. Heused a seven iron.

Kent was entered in a three-guys-and-a-gal tournamentwith Barbara Dee, NormanZeichner and Allan ; Roberts.

Netsters

In the first match ofCranford's Youth TennisLeague, Cranford wasdefeated by~ Watchuftg,"•4% to

Tirst singles player, BobHammerl, and second singlesplayer, Rose Marie Haddad,both lost in well-playedmatches to Mark Post and hisbrother, David. Nancy

-Neuman, playing thirdsingljes,i.Jos.t J Q _ a__strq.ng

after aWetherell, aObie and a single by. MikeColineri; Joe DelGripposingled home the first run andJeff Manhardt singled homethe second run.

Cranford added four moreruns in the bottom of the sixthon three successive singles byDrew Scott,1; Scott Wetherelland Joe Denci to load thebases. Chris Obie banged out along double to drive in tworuns. Mike Colineri promptlyfollowed with another longdouble to drive in two moretuns. __

Cranford collected three,more singles --by JoeDelGrippo, Anthony Ferroneand Jeff Manhardt. Sharingpitching chores for Cranfordwere Joe DelGrippo, ChrisObie, Jon Acton and BobVetter.

Some fine defensive playswere made by Cranford, On aball hit sharply back to themound, Jon Acton three home-

ToThe catcher, Drew ScoftTfoTnail the runner trying to score!Joe DelGrippo made a finecatch of a ball hit deep tocenter field. On a ball hitsharply down the first.base;lineJWike _;Oolineri_stepJQed_on_first and cut loose with a

"perfecT'throw tcrhomCTvhere-Drew Scott tagged the runnerfor a double play. J

Cranford's nine-year-oldteam will play tomorrownight at 8 p.m. at ShowcaseField in East Brunswick.

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Watchung player, BobNiegish, Carol Bishe, playingfourth singles defeated heropponent, >Susan Hutar.

The doubles team of BrianLevine and Jack Lynch lost toDoug Flannelly and KenSebesky, after giving thejrolder opponents some roughcompetition. Michelle Aneolinand Mary Ushay were hardpressed before winning 9-7against Susan Flannelly andDonna Rosamilia. GeorgePoulos and Craig Weiner woreon their- way to victoryagainst Dell Riffat and KevinSebesky before rain halted thematch at 5-4.

The next match is today atScotch Plains, 2 p,m.

1 " A - ~ " - -

• • ' • , J

Page 7: SI ADULTS SI on campThursday, July 18, 1974 br · \ • —

; ' r ' •"• r• » , • • ' " •

• » ! • • '• . ' i

• r

PagC12CRANF0RD (N.Jv) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday, July 18,1974

Olympic winners^—The -town junior1 Olympicswere held July 12 at MemorialField. Winners will par-tidDate in statejfinals July 24

Tine 26th annual New JerseyPlayground Olympics issponsored by^ the N.J.Recreation and Parks

Association, '/ Inc. incooperation with the NewJersey Amateur . AthleticUnion. The garni* will beginhere at 9:30 a m

The Cranford winners~are:

distance. Joe Milazzo,

Br.ook.side Playground; soft-ball pitch for accuracy, Eddie

•"Helmste t ter , Linc-oln;basketball foul shooting, PatDougherty, Roosevelt; 50-yard dash, Roger Thomas,Adams; running broad jump,

Memo on DiningBy Mary F. Peo

A luxurious elegant restaurant specializing in Continental cuisine •The Arch. . - - . ' . . .

Situated on a hilltop just off Morris Tpke. in Short Hills, The Arch.is well ktVoWrirwhether for informal luncheons in the lounge or. moreformal repast in the main dining room. Immediately upon entering ilis apparent that function and design have been incorporated k> bringthe light and beauty of the outdoors, within.-Fountains'and in-dividually landscaped scenes are framed by large picture windows.floor to ceiling glass gives a light, spacious effect.

Since acquiring the restaurant Nov. 4, 1972, the present ownerhas maintained the high standards that have, set The Arch apart.Foods are fresh and prepared with care. Servicwjs superb Ourwaiter and attendants wejj^gracious_a£djinhurried and always thereto served An*extensive menu includes "speaaffiesTsUCii as"coldpoSched Columbian salmon in aspic or roast rack of lamb Nicoisc Adelicately flavored brook trout stuffed with crabmeat was ourchoice. Prime ribs also at our table was lean and succulent .Dinner isbegun with a bowl of fresh vegetables in ice and culminated with a!

"IKcTdujTseleciion f rmfTf f i (nf iSWI~HrTHMr^eve? your faTTOTCTiFexcellent rum cake, fresh with cream and whole strawberries, or-a-true cream cheesy cake, fresh fruit, pies, parfaits, and many othersalso were available.'-•

Jamie Gacos, composer, performs Friday evenings in the'lounge,'dancing on Saturday to the Sentimentalists from 9 P.M. Forreservation's call 379-35357"7

Beginning Monday evening and continuing each Mon.-Fn TheArch will feature a selection of complete dinners from S4r95 •-$-7_

The Arch is closed on Sundays and is available at that time lorcatering. Call Michael or'ba'nte. for details.

Opposite American Legion Hs• Parking in Rear

CARRY OUTFOOD SHOPPE

Midget girls-softball throwfor distance, Beth Stobierski,Lincoln; softball pitch foraccuracy, Mary Ondish,"Livingston; standing broadjump, Mary Oridish; 50-yarddash, Susan Rosenthal,Recreation Track.

Junior bo-ys-softbalL.throw-for distance, Vernon Dean,Johnson; basketball foul,shooting, Kyle Sales, Johnson;

running broad jump. BobSpecht, Livingston; 50-yarddash. Bob Specht, 200-yardrelay, R. Thomas. D. Ellis, J.

-Williams and J. Thomas._alLfrom Adams.

Junior girls-softball throwfor distance, Natalie

JStobierski, Lincoln; softballpitch~fpr'~accuracy, MTcTfelcFSherman, Lincoln; staridingbroad jump, NatalieStobierski; 50-yard dash,Mary Ann Zoeller, Adams;200:yard relay, Korner, "NT-Stobierski, J. Helmstetter andB. Stobierski, all from Lin-coln. ' • , • • • •

Intermediate boys-softballthrow for distance, John"Hearns, Johnson; runningbroad jump, Rail . Elder,Johnson; 1200-yard .dash,.Kevin -Sales, Johnson; 200-yard relay, C McGiel, K.Sides, J. Dome and R. Elder,all from Johnson.

Intermediate girls-softballthrow ' for distance, CaroleBishe, Recreation Track;softball pitch for accuracy, -Diane Helmstetter, Lincoln;standing broad jump;Helmstetter; 75-yardCarole Bishe-Recreation

A rts calendar" • • • • • - A R T " - " " • : " . " '•"

July 18- SUmmp Art Center1 tlber, clay,metal show, 7 lo 10 p,m. at 6B Elm St.,Summit. ' •'•' • '

; " 7 — M U S I C " • • . - •

July 23- Concert by Odetta, the vocalist,Theater (or Performing Arts, Kenrt

•—College,—ft-p-m.—£r-co,.-.advance. •

July'34—Joe Gatto Jan Combo, Summer Arts Festival, lEcho Lako Park,

_B:30 p.m. Free, ' '• •' .July, 35-24—Allen Family, barbershlp to

hot rock vocalists, Garden Sta>o ArtsCenter, U a.m. fo r youth groupb.Free. "

July lfr, 25, JU,V..Aug. 3, 1)- "MeasOrelor Measure:"" Shakespeare FestivalDrew University/

July 20,27, A u 0 . 3,10, .17, 24, 31- ' "UnderMilk Wood." Shakespeare Festival

-Drew University, -T --~July it, 20, 24, Aug. 1, 4, i, 13, 14, 21, 24—

"J.B. Shakespeare Festival, DrewUniversity.

Sales Days Now ru tijraay

THEATER

"A Doll House," starringPlay House,

July 18-27Jack Ciano,... FoothillMiddlesex.

July 18-Aug. 4—"The Sunshine Boys,Paper Mill Playhouse, Mlllburn. •

25, n, 30—"Richard I I " Shakespeare'Festival, Drew University

Aug. B,9, 10, 15, 20, 73,17, J?. 3), Aufl. 3, 5,7, 10-15-"Steambalh." , (Not forchildren, Shakespeare. FestivalDrew Unlverslty.July 18 through 21,2$through 27- "Luv. " Hamilton MurrayTheater, Princeton University

Aug. 1 through 4, a through 11—"BabyWant a Kiss."' Hamilton MurrayTheater, Princeton University •

Aug. ts through IB, 22 through 25—"TheLion In Winter." Hamilton MurrayTheater, Pj-lncetbn University.

Weekends through Aug. lo--"p|ay ItAgain Sam."Roland's Stoakhouse, U9

' W. Westfleld-Ave., Roselle Park. • '

Basketball marathonends after 10 days

AMERICAN LEAGUE ALL-STARS are wearingvictory grins after defeating the National League all-stars 10-5 recently. In the^front ro\V/ from\left, areGaryLenhoff and Paul •/ Smith; middle row, TonySalvo, Doug Cermak, Tom Lies, Bob. Shutt'ner, Jim

AAcNamara, Roger Thomas, Dave AAoran, GreglLawlorand Rob Faber; back row, Bill Garrett/ChrisAAeade, joe Warren, Mike Prussack, Phil McGovern,Joe Scotti, Mike Storch, Marty Marks and DavePahren. • • .

Gatto jazz unit sets program at Echo Park

Ten days of round-the-clockbasketball play came to anend yesterday at noon at theFirst Presbyterian Church.

_^e jJbjsketbaJlljnafaUipn,_organized by a group ofOrange Avenue Junior HighSchool students, raised morethan $300 for One to One, anorganization that; aidsretarded children.

— O n e — o f — t h ejorgflnizers, Paulholds the record

peared during the day andearly evening: The purpose,she emphasized, was not :iowin, "just to make mpney."

Funds-were raised throughdonations from citizens and

Morley,for the

a certain amount for eachhour a child spent on thecourt,

The Presbyterian churchoffered the group use of itsgymnasium, but was not of-'ficially involved in the drive.

The Joe Gatto Jazz Combowill present a program in TheUnion County, Park Com-mission's Summer ArtsFestival in Echo Lake Park,•JvVestfield1 and Mountainside,on Wednesday, July 24,b«gi]nnmg__a!J!j30_p.m. Rain

Diane - datc-~is -Thursday, July" 257dash, There is no charge for the

ARCHPRESENTS

MONDAYTHRU

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YOUR CHOiCEPrime Rib S5.9S

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396.000 feel,or 75 milesIrom the •

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d2ZJchallengmg holes The

exceptional scenery overlooking theDelaware River brings out the best that goll has to offer

Goll aside. Shawnee offers'great food2 outdoor pools, tennis

lishihg. hiking, antiquing andnearb.y horseback riding

Fred Warintj's

in OH

nni n ,K( i l i lM>n<H

EXTENDED MIDWEEKGOLF VACATION

Minimum 5 nights (SunIhru Thurs ) includes un-Jimilod. goll Irom diiy olarrival Ihru day ol dopai-luro, 3 moals lor each nighlol slay, swimming, lonmsAddll. nights .$27.*•Por POIG , dbl occ . plusia» &• oMlml'ias GOI.I._J.,-IIInot includot] •

concert. .;The" group is a blend of

talenteoLmusicians _who_hav.e...been featur.ed as individuals inpast years with some of thebetter known big-show bands.All now live in the UnionCounty area and play local-engagements-such-as at thePlainfield Country Club.

The leader, Joe Gatto ofCranford, was featured forfive years with the IlerbieFields Orchestra., which ap-peared at major theaters such

Kenilworth teamslose on diamond-

KENILWORTH-- Kenil-wortH Sports dropped two

as the Paramount and the of Musicians, Local 151,Strand in New York City. He through a grant from therecorded --Dardinella 'Wor--MusK^Performanee-Trustj7, • , Fund, a public service

On the saxaphone is John organization created andPlacca, who played with the financed by the recordingCharles Spivak Orchestra industries under agreementamong others. Mick Sabatelli, with the Federation,on the trumpet, also wellknown in the local - area^,played with the Shorty•Sherroch Orchestra.

longest continuous time on thecourt—18 hours:

young people who par-ticipated, many of them fromoff the street. Less than 100participants had been, ex-pected.

14t W.VVMtfUld Av*.- Roatll* Puk, NJ.

Frank Marrodi has beenpersussionist with the BatonRouge, La. Symphony andmany stage bands. Others inthe group are of- similar-calibre.

A guest soloist will alsoparticipate in the program.

The appearance of the Joe-

Betsy Petrick, another ofthe Orange Ave. organizers,noted that male players

-females_.by^ a

Other programs in theSummer Arts Festival. willfollow on succeeding Wed-nesday nights ..thro.ugh.AugU5.tw.outaumbe±ed.

Entrance to Echo Lake wide margin, as only 15 t<T2(r-Park is frorri Springfield girls took to-the court. MostAvenue -and Mill Lane.Spectators should bring lawnchairs or blankets for seating.

A Park Commission"events ' telephone number,353-8410, will provide in-formation in case of doubt

(court.players were between 13 and15 years of age.

Games took place even inthe wee hours, according toBetsy, but most players ap-

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County Twilight League toremain in last place with a 2-12record.

Kenilworth was blanked 14-0.Tuesday by Linden and lostThursday to Westfield Mer-chants 11-4." .

In theJLJnion County League,Kenilworth Sports lost adouble header Sunday toWestfield by scores of 10-0 and10:2. The team also occupiesthe cellar in the AmericanDivision of the league with a 1-9 record. " . . . : ,

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C^to"X:brn1)oT:frEchir TLake" about-.- whether - a ' post-Park will be- in cooperation ponement to the rain date iswith the American Federation necessary. . '

Pittingerto play ingolf classic

Five New- Jersey youthsincluding. Mark Pit-linger, 16,

.of 9 Indiaji Springs Rd. are^heading for1 the National In-surance Youth Golf Classic,Aug.^lfi-20, at the AlpineCountry^XHub; Cranston, R.I.

The youngsters were thefinalists in the New JerseyAssociation of Independent< Insurance Agents preliminaryround held recently at theForsgate Country Club,Jamesburg.

Fittinger.shot a 76 and 77-inthe 36-hole medal play.

The New Jersey finalistswere tops in a field 9J70 in" thefinal round. More' than 300youths from alLover the state

r.play_edJ_±

for the~nament-will~begin-Saturday7"

Aug. 3 at 9:30 a.m. at theWarinanco Park tennis courts

"in Roselle.:,The entries may be filed at

the Cedar Brook Park Courtsin Plainfield or the RahwayRiver Park, Rahway, courts,as well as at Warinanco Park.The tournament is sponsoredby The Union County ParkCommission and is open toresidents of Union County.

Mark Pittinger

Mixed doublestourney Aug. 3

Entries will close Sunday,July 28, for the 29Jh-1mnualUnion County jootoced doubles

fourth annual event.

The National InsuranceYouth Golf Classic is spon-sored by the NationalAssociation of InsuranceAgents.

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11!VOL. 81 No. 30 Published Every. Thursday Thursday, July 25,1974.

Second Class Postage Paid ,Cranfor'd N.J. 07016 15 CENTS.

Camp 'tightening up' due

Mayor—Henry E.senkamp Jr. and TownshipCommitteeman Burton S,Goodman will study thesituatipn at Cranford Westcamp "wi th~an eye totightening up the ad-ministration," the mayor .haspledged.' Goodman's PublicAffairs department hadjurisdiction over recreation'operations. .

Hinsenkamp at a TownshipCommittee meeting Tuesday

-night announced that a report report-concluded-that—the-by Police Chief Matthew T; "charge of- brutality wasHaney found evidence of^^exaggerated and without"horseplay but not brutality" proper foundation." Heon the part of camp coun-selors .-He added thatihe chieffound : no cause fordisciplinary action against harsh light.'.'two 17-year-old counselorswhose dismissal had beenasked by some parents ofcampers.

Says charge exaggeratedThe mayor said the chief's

quoted the report as statingthat the charges have put theincident "in an unnecessary

Hinsenkamp said thecommittee had decided towithhold the report "becausewe have not absolutelydigested it, only the

highlights,- and -iU containsnames • of residents and.children (campers) and it isnot necessary to air theirnames." .

According to Hinsenkamp,the chief's report stated that"parents (of the campers)may have overreacted andresponded too strongly" inbringing the charges.

The mayor said he was

-gratified the chief found no-through anreason to take disciplinary b r u t a l i t yaction against, the coun-selors." '

'Stellar records'

"They both -.have stellarr e c o r d s , " Hinsenkampcommented. '"This was thekind of horseolav I used to getinvolved in and get bruisesand scratches on my a rm/ '

The mayor said the parentsof the counselors "have been

awful lot asin d i c a t e s

m a l i c i o u s n e s s a n dcapriciousness', and it isdisturbing to see" young boysassociated with this."

Hinsenkamp noted that noneof the" campers who claim tohave been mistreated werecommitted to a doctor's careor for observation. "They hadjust normal scratches andbruises," the mayor com-

mented.Goodman said the chief had

been. asked to conduct hisinvestigation because "we didnotwant a whitewash type.of.

Foresaw problems

"The Recreation Depart-ment recognized that campproblems would be en-countered," Goodman said •"Where do we get trainedcounselors? Two experienced

boys were prevented fromattending because of theirregular jobs. . .

. "We will make 'a carefulstudy of the report (of Jhe_;chief) and reanalyze the wholeoperation to see where we'regoing." .•":— — —

Committeeman Jack B.McVey said he was "upset tosee children's names andwords like .'brutality' andthem having ho opportunity, to

defend themselves.""The press overreacted in

this instance," McVey stated."It's okay, to sell newspapers,but consider, what you do toh i l d 1 1 ^

p^ in con-,elusion he questioned thewisdom of releasing thechief's report "while emotions*are dominating" and said itmight be well '"to wait iUlogic surfaces/'

Newzoning

By Ruth BanksPresentations of proposed

zoning changes, made at aPlanning Board meeting lastweek, generated so many

-^questions and comments from

tinuedT^at the next board 'meeting in August i.

The changes involvecreation of a new mediumdensity apartment zone,rezoning portions ofSpringfield Ave. and North.;Union Aves. for officebuildings and rezoning sec-

, tions of the block bound bySpringfield Ave., Miln, Aldenand Holly Sts. for townhouses.

Harvey Wfoskowitz, thePlanning Board consultant,likened the proposed zoningchanges to the chain reactionincurred when oneredecorates a home. You maynot hay^e-intended to recoverthe couch, make new drapesand buy a new rug when youpainted the walls, but onething leads to another, heobserved. N -

So it is with planning, theconsultant said. Once-theboard saw the necessity fordrawing up guidelines for

—apartment—houses—alTd^cbn"solidating them within anapartment zone, . otherchanges became obvious. ',

Moskdwitz emphasized thatcreation of the new

^(residential)Vzonejfoes not _—mean-an expansion of-mediunv-

density areas; it _i_s sunpjy a~ref lee t iorK^of ~tfie "exis t ing"conditions. Originally zonedfor 2-family residences, theareas included in the proposednew apartment zone are no

.longer occupied by 2-familyresidences but by apartmenthouses which came aboutpiecemeal.

Mandated by court

For example, the RiversideDrive apartments are beingconstructed on the basis of ajudge's decision, John

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Cranford(opp. Theatre)

chairman, explained. Theapplicant sought reliefbecause no ordinance in thetownship applies to theseapartments. Appealed fromthe Board of Adjustmentdenial to the court, the laterimposed its own standards.

If we don't want standardsimposed on us by peopleoutside the community, thenwe must set our own stan-dards, VassaUo maintained.

_Wha( is at stake, the chairmaninferred, is the right of acommunity to determine howland should be used to meetthe needs of the community.

Without controls, Vassahopointed out, the town is at themercy of any applicant askingfor variances.,

Good planning and zoningconcepts, My>skowitz said,start with high-intensitybusiness use, that is thecentral business- district,

' surrounded by a lower in»,- tensity business-professional-

commercial use, in turnbounded by high-intensityresidential use, such asapartments, then giving way

. to lower-intensity residentialuse, such as townhouses, andfinally ^ to low:intensity

increase iniremen

The Township Committeepassed on . first readingTuesday night an ordinance agreementg t i fi i

compensated overtime:Stone has yet to reach an

with thegranting firemen a pay in- _Pair.olmen'screase, of 9 per cent. If Association onadopted, the raise will beretroactive to January 1.

Benevolentterms of a

contract with local police.

The committee adopted anamendment to the townshippersonnel ordinance providing

for overtime pay or com-pensatory time off for em-ployees working over 40 hoursa week. This is to comply with^federal regiilaiion.

The ordinance increases thesalary of a fireman after fouryears of service to $12,590from $11,550.

The scale for fewer years'service follows: First year,$10,072 from $9,240; secondyear, $10,104 from $9,270;third year, $10,873 from$9,975; fourth year, $11,761from $10,790. Twenty-fourfiremen are affected at anannual cost of approximately$25,00.

The contract, negotiated byTownship AdministratorSidney Stone and Firemen's

. M u t u a 1 • :B e n e v o J e n. t

•4

A lighted cigaret or matchhas been listed as the probablecause of the township's firstfatal; fire in more than sevenyears. .

The fatality occurred lastThursday at 4:30 a.m. whenthe body of Mrs. DorothyKing,-84-years old,-was-found-on the first floor of her homeat 7 Mitchell Place

The previous fire death,k which occurred on January 7,

1967; was of an infant whoperished. in a blaze whichoccurred in a row of

AssociatiQn__xepr-eserLtati-V-fiS.t_Jenements from Nos. 2 to 20contains abenefits.

number of fringe

Overtime pay

The latter include straighttime pay for overtime after 40hours a week; increase in paidholidays from 9 to 12; par-

Elise St. Other occupants ofthe tenements escaped theblaze:

In last week's fire, the bodyof Mrs. King was found fullyclothed and slumped on thedining room floor. Fire of-ficials theorized she had risen-

area of the living room chairwas heavily charred. Mrs.king, who lived alone, ap-parently died of asphyxiation.

Firemen under CaptainClark Duckworth responded tothe alarm sounded by phoneby neighbors of Mrs. King.

-Smoke—was—pouring—from.upper windows of the l'as to ry , aluminum-sidedstructure, and a second alarmwas sounded immediately.

Patrolmen injuredFiremen and police sought

to gain entrance to the home insearch of possible victims, butwere-driven back, by flamesfrom first-floor windows andthe front door of the home.

Radio Patrolman JeromeAndrews and Linn Lockwoodwere taken to RahwayHospital and treated forsmoke inhalation and minor

-.-——-~ ticipation- in a -basic: dental -from a .ehair.in.the living room...care plan arid increasedclothing allowance to $300 ayear from $200. •. Township CommitteemanJack C. McVey said from 2 to 3per cent of the firemen's work

alter ffieHfire erupted and"started towards the rear of thehouse to escape flames in thefront.

Chair area charred 'A quantity of Cigarets was

found in: the home, and the

?ffeTme"rt~a"dv'anced~llines into,position and search-ed the building. All off-dutyfiremen as well as callmenand civil defense personnelhad been called to duty on thefirst alarm as standard

procedure. Two ambulances'of the Firs t Aid Squadresponded on the secondalarm. Backtaps weresounded at 6:57 a.m.

Mrs; King Was born inJersey City and lived inCranford the last 21 years. Shewas a member of Eastern Starof Jersey City.

Mrs. King was the widow ofthe late James J. Henry whodied iri 1937 and of William M.King who died in 1967.

Surviving are three sons,James J. Henry of FairHaven, William S. Henry of"Kenilworth and John F. Henryof Long Beach, Calif; twosisters, Mrs. Mabel Baronand Mrs. Frances Martke,both of Jersey City, sixgrandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Funeral services were heldSaturday at the Gray

Springfield Ave. with Rev.Paul H. Letiecq of the FirstPresbyterian Church of-ficiating. Interment took placein Bayview Cemetery, JerseyCitV

iiiiiiimiiHiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiuiiiiinii

Okay $68,435 bidsfor works equipment

Bids" totaling $68,435 for involving Carolina, Georgiapurchase of Public Works and Rutgers.Sts. and WilshireDepartment equipment were Drive. Bids also will be askedawarded Tuesday night by the for- Rahway RiverTownship Committee. -bulkheading near Crescent

Place.

B-I—Central business,,Br2-^Gen«|ral businessVL-2—^1 fani. residenceR-3-r-l fam. residenceR-4—-1, 2 fam. residence

..-ft-S-^TownhouseK-ft^-Oarden' apartnrrent-R.7—Medium density aptOB-3—Office building

In R-4 zone now In R'2 zone now

Heavy lines on map outline proposed apartment zone (k-7) and realignment of others.

residential use, such as oneand two-family homes.

This kind of planningprovides additional housing;expands business and com-mercial uses, yet protectsresidential areas frompiecemeal incursions,, theconsultant said.

The board announcedproposed expansion of thetownhouse, or tt(residential5) zone, created a few yearsago in response to develop-ment pressures along NorthAve. It stipulates t) units peracre. The land the board nowproposes to include in the R-5zone lies along SpringfieldAve,, bounded partially by theRahway River on.the northand east, and the site occupiedby the Cerebral Palsy Centeron the west.

Included xv 'he proposedOB (office building) :i zonewould be the land how i.vcupied by the Christian

Science Church, the rear ofCleveland School, thePresbyterian Church, theMunicipal Building, CranePark and Gray> FuneralJlome. _ _ •

This area Ts on"the fringe ofthe business district. Some-ofit lias been at the center ofc o n t r o v e r s i a l l a n d - u s edevelopment, for many years,and much of it is in what is •called transitional-use areas.

In response to questionsconcerning land use in theflood plain, Vas.-alloacknowledged that the MasterPlan had designated some ofthe land as open spaces, butthat the present flood plainordinance would cover thatusage. Me also emphasizedthat the board had made, aconcerted effort within thepast year to require thedevelopment of onsite waterdetention methods in manynew building areas.

Bicycle thefts rise,Lock warning issued

The committee approved acontract .for..-pucchase....o.L.a-ehepr-y-pickcrl-typc. aerial ..lift ,„for $27,500 from the Cum-ming' Co. of South Ave.,Garwood.

Purchase of a $26,500 front-end loader to be used in river-widening and other operationsfrom Case Power & Equip-ment Co. of Totowa was ap-proved, and the bid of NorthJersey Equipment. Co. tosupply a water jet sewercleaning machine for $14,435was accepted.

PARKING RESTRICTIONS in college area delayed.Page 3.

9-YEAR-OLDS reach baseball tourney semi-finals.. Page 9.

Church 2 Kenilworth :6Classified 8 Social 5Editorial .. ..:''. •• • 4 Sports 9Garwood -7 •

A warning to bicycle ownersto lock- their^ vehicleswherever • parked, even intheir own garages, was issuedtoday by Police Traffic SafetyOfficer Thomas Kane.

The alert was the result of arecent seasonal wave of.bicycle, thefts. According toKane; 54 vehicles werereported stolen during themonth between'June 21 andlast Monday.

Bicycle thefts have in-creased this year over last,with 156 stolen so far com-pared with 112 at the end ofJuly in IU73:

Thefts at |x>ols -Kane said .the rale of thefts

usualjy increases with the

opening of the municipalpools, where a . number, ofunlocked vehicles are parked.Kane said-a recent survey ofthe pool racks indicated about10 per cent of the bikesunlocked.

Recent thefts have occurredfrom garages of the owners,with two io-speed bikes in-volved. Kane said the in-creased value of the vehiclesmay be, a factor in the higherrate of thefts.

According to the officer,Cranford is participating in anew county wide computer"operation— in which in-formation of theft andrecovery of bikes is recorded'instantly.

Other committee storiesPages 3 and-i

/The committee ^approved a"time, and material" costprogram not to exceed $14,250with Peru) Bower Inc. of.Linden for installation of a 12-inch-sanitary sewer siphon inthe Rahway River at theSpringfield Aye. bridge. Thesiphon will be lower than theone requiring replacement"inasmuch as the river bod is toIH.' lowered in connection withthe flood control ^program.

The committee also .agreedto call for bids on 2.700 tons olbituminous surfacing for the197-1 street .repaving program

HOLOCAUST - - Volunteer CaJIman Donald Mohr outside house at 7 MitchellPlace after he and other firefighters extinguished early morning blaze that tooklife of 84 year-old woman'. • • '

• I L .